Welcome Back THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KU's Budget Woes The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Thursday, August 26, 1971 82nd Year, No.1 See Page 12 一 Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER Boardwalk Is New Addition to KU Scenery KU students have been hearing news about the forthcoming wacoce Hall for at least three summers. This summer's first angled gateway to wacoce Hall will be a first, which will 300 yards long, was built in early June, and the building itself is now taking shape behind it. Wallace Opposed on Busing Issue MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -- Defied by a school board and rebuked again by a federal judge, Gov. George C. Wallace asked the governor on his school busing stared Wednesday. A Negro lawyer asked a three-judge court to order the governor to show cause why he refused to give testimony. HOPE Award Will Go to 3 Professors For the first time since the establishment of the HOPE Award, the senior class this year will elect three winners instead of the usual one winner. Wednesday, seniors began the two month process that will lead to the selection of those three faculty members who will be announced at a football game on Senior Day, November 6. Hark Russell, senior class committee chairman for the HOPE Award, said that because 73 per cent of the credit hours carried by students at KU are in the professional school, much of a chance for a teacher in the professional schools to win the award. Most of the past award winners have been in the liberal arts. At the senior coffee shop on campus, they will be a stipulation that one of the three selected must be from a professional school. The HOPE Award is given annually to an outstanding educator selected by the graduating class. HOPE stands for Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator. A committee of six seniors will narrow down to 15 the number of nominations made during senior enrollment Wednesday and will interview those semi- The suit came after Wallace ordered school boards in three Alabama counties to disregard integration decrees that had been enacted. The court took no immediate action. The motion was filed by Montgomery lawyer Solomon Seay Jr. hours after one of the school boards, in Limestone County, decided to disobey the governor's executive order, and one day after a federal judge ruled that he had told him he bead is an authority, Seny is a law partner of state Rep. Fred Gray of Tuskegee, one of two Negroes in the Alabama legislature and for many years associate of the late Martin Luther King Jr. Wallace, meanwhile, got ready for what appeared to be still another confrontation with federal authorities over busing. He called a news conference for today, saying that the governor overruled his school orders, and perhaps, to issue more orders no matter what the courts say Seuy's request for a show-cause order was based on previous warnings from the same court directing Wallace to keep his hands off the schools. The court at one and all had jurisdiction over all but one of the schools involved in the continuing controversy. The warnings came in 1963 after Wallace, in his first term as governor, had used state troopers to delay the opening of a newly integrated school at Tuskegee and again in 1967 when the court ordered immediate statewide desegregation. Wallace's first wife, the late Lurieen B. Wallace, was governor in 1967. The Limestone County board, which only Monday had agreed to go along with the governor's order to reopen predominantly black New Hope Junior High School, announced Wednesday it had changed its mind and would keep the school closed as District Court Judge Sam C. Pointer Jr. in Birmingham had instructed. UAW Pledges No Strike Against Economic Freeze Painters' Union Threatens By The Associated Press The Painteries union told its 200,000 members Wednesday to "strike if necessary" for higher pay despite the federal wage-price freeze, but the United Auto Workers pledged no walkouts among 100,000 airspace workers. "During the 90-day period, we are going to cooperate" with the freeze imposed by President Nixon, said Auto Workers president Leonard Woodcock. But he said the freeze was unfair to workers and that his union would fight legally for later payment of any wages due, and would join the AFL-CIO to oppose major parts of Nixon's new economic program in Congress. The painters, one of 123 AFL-CIO unions vowing to challenge the freeze in the courts and Congress, said it would authorize strikes even if any wage increases it might win can't be paid until after the freeze is lifted. Woodcock, whose union quit the AFL-CIO in a policy dispute three years ago, said after a two-hour meeting with AFL-CIO President George Meany that the Auto Workers would join AFL-CIO efforts to win equity for workers. President Floyd Smith of the one-million-member AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists denounced profits and interest rates from the freeze. This would reverse an interpretation disclosed only Tuesday by the state Department of Education that the federal wage-price freeze would apply to teachers unless they commenced their duties under the new contracts prior to Aug. 15. Melvin Neely, head of what formerly was the Kansas State Teachers Association, said a key point in the new ruling provided that if any school employee The executive secretary of the Kansas National Education Association said Wednesday a cost by President Richard Nixon's cost of Living App can apparently clear the way for boards of education to contracts which were signed prior to July 1. The AF1-CIO American Federation of Teachers saw a slight beam of hope for the future. Oklahoma Cancels 133 Classes NORMAN, Akla, (AP)—The University of Oklahoma has canceled 133 classes previously scheduled for the fall semester due to the COVID-19 measures, OU officials revealed Wednesday. The university is having to cut its budget by about $870,000 for the 1971-72 school year, primarily because enrollment was to be as high as expected, one official said. About 50 per cent of the canceled classes are at the freshman level. Officials said that in most instances, students still would be able to take the specific courses they want, at limited times and in possibly large classes. OU administrators indicated Wednesday that the freshman class was not expected to increase significantly this year and that over-all enrollment would likely rise by 25%. The cancellation of classes was reflected Wednesday by some 5,000 students who filed into the Couch Center cafeteria to reclaim their courses. Last year at this time about 3,000 students showed up to change classes for various reasons. "We are attempting to more fully utilize available classroom space and instructors' time. Our present enrollment estimates indicate that many of these sections would not have been completely filled." An official university statement about the cancellations read; James Bednar, director of registration. University administrators conceded that 133 is an unusually large number of classes to be cut, but pointed out that the 3 per cent budget cut in the academic and instructional area is relatively low compared with cuts in other areas. said there was some grumbling among students over the cancellations. He said he couldn't blame for being unhappy about the situation. Officials said that in the area of administration, finance and operations the cut would be 4.1 per cent; in the University community, 11.8 per cent; in continuing education and university services, 4.9 per cent; in other departments, 8.9 per cent; in university relations, 14.7 per cent; and in university development including construction, 41.5 per cent. worked under the new salary schedule prior to Aug. 15, the pay schedule was in Aug. 14. On the international economic scene the U.S. dollar sank for the third straight day in European money markets Wednesday while America's trading partners protested Washington's campaign to curb imports. British Leyland Motors Inc. announced the prices of its 1971 cars would rise temporarily by $ 3^{1}_{2} $ per cent President Nikon's 10 per cent surcharge to slow imports into the United States drew the ire of major trading nations for the second day of an emergency meeting in Geneva of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade—GATT. The 34-nation GATT council ordered an urgent study of the impact of the surcharge and other commercial aspects of the Nixon program on world trade. ★ ★ ★ By GAYLE TRIGG Kansan Staff Writer Football Tickets, Parking Affected by Nixon Freeze The University was placed in a virtual freeze by the Kansas Legislature this spring and in so terms of the overall budget. President Nixon's wage-price freeze will have little effect. But it's those small items that are causing problems on the hill. For one and a half weeks in the aflerry trying to determine which certain cost increases which some departments had planned to levy this fall. The general attitude of the University has been one of compliance with the wage-price freeze. But interpreting the law, which was only this week received in written form, is difficult. Many items had to be referred to the regional office of the Office of Emergency Preparedness just because communication has been achieved on these items, but no written statement has been received by the University. It has been decided that the proposed $15 increase in the cost of parking permits, the increase in the cost of football and basketball tickets and the $45 increase in the cost of the Jayhawk will not go into effect because of the freeze. Increases to be noted by students that are not affected by the freeze, however, in the arest of music lessons, which went into effect this summer, the cost of a new student identification card, and the $3 increase in Kansas Union operating fees. No ruling has been received on the 10 percent increase in some charges at Watkins Hospital, the increase in the cost of student health insurance due to a change of interest policy and the penalty for late payment of fees incurred by the Board of Regents last spring. After much consultation it has been decided that only $10 will be charged during registration for parking permits. During the freeze the rate for using campus and residence hull zones will be at $32 per month ($10 for 12 months). A special announcement concerning university tuition and fee increases was relayed from the national Office of Emergency Preparedness through the University Mail. It says that increases announced prior to Aug. 15 are unaffected by After the freeze is lifted, the lift for campus parking will be $2.08 per month as originally planned ($25, for 12 months). The lift will return to the planned $2.39 per month. the freeze and are permissable Vice Chancellor William Balfour termed the guidelines difficult to understand, noting that "some win and some lose" on the part of students. Hepected that the ruling on college tuition was related to the fact that university budgets are made up a year in advance, were dependent on certain sources of funding, and that it impossible to meet without those sources. Balfour also said that it could be assumed that the $1.50 charge, for new LD's and the $25 penalty for late fee errors, would have been reduced. No official comment, has been made. Dr. Raymond Schweigler, director of the student health service, said that Watkins would be "staring bankrupt in the face" if it is not allowed the 10 per cent increase in rates for some services offered at Watkins. Until a ruling is made they will not charge those rates, however, and will use any surplus funds available The wage aspect of the freeze had virtually no effect at KU. All persons due raises on the hill will receive them because they are on an 12-month contracts that started July 1. Seven are on career development grants that carry contractual clauses assuring pay increases, four have raises reflecting position or workload changes and one has the Kansas Geological Survey because of commitments by the university. A number of employees in the student health center also will get pay increases. They are paid from student fees, and the legislature this year removed doctors from the list of classified employees so that salaries paid by student health facilities be made more attractive. Several coaches paid from athletic funds also gives raises. About other aspects of the price freeze, Keith Nitcher, vice-chancellor for business affairs, said, "I assume our money will go further, although we do have items of supplies such as tires, lumber, paper products and other commodities for which we lack the capital under state contracts. Whatever slows down inflation should help the University." There is no office in Lawrencer ce or at KU designed specifically for dealing with problems relating to the freeze. Bailour, vice ccnchler for student affairs, said that if any major problem comes up, a student can bring it to the attention of his office and he will then request a ruling from the new regional Office of Emergency Preparedness in Kansas City, Mo. Enrollment Strikes Again By MELISSA BERG Kansan Staff Writer Students sitting on bleachers bending over timetables to select another class, staring into space to collect their thoughts or having an embarrassed little cry, immersing with friends or taking a break from school. In the airwish of the card-nolling nerds. Toward the middle of the afternoon when the heat intensified the senior cry of "Do you know of any good electives?" grew louder. Brewers were knet in con- furtures to furrows of perplexion upon confronting a schedule card filled with conflicts. After circling the Field House, perhaps several times, to pull cards, students paused at the stairway leading to Station 9 for checkout. They created a bottleneck, balancing themselves against guardrails and using the floor, as they sorted cards in the registration packet to speed up the procedure at the checkout station a floor below. These were some of the sights and sounds of the first day of enrollment at McKinley. There were sighs of relief as students realized that the whole procedure was drawing to an end. "They're so relieved that they don't have to hassle with anyone else here. Some are so glad to be done that they throw their cards down without filling them in." She cuts even after three years, some students still hadn't gotten the procedure down pat. Jane Shook, Wichita sophomore, who worked at Station 9, saw students' reac- tions. Olsson said he liked the practice of saving back some of the course cards for students who enrolled later in the week. He added that "we were 'pretty fair' when you average it out." Enrollment probably has at least one little frustration for everyone. But for "It wasn't that big a headache," Evan Olson, Salma sophomore, said. "First semester my freshman year was the worst it ever was. I was tired and didn't know what was going on." Dede Freund, Bonner Springs sophomore, said that this year she "didn't have to fight." "For two hours last year I just kept walking around and around. This year it only took me 45 minutes." Two freshmen, Joanne Mulligan, Norfolk, Va., and Harald McDonald, Los Angeles, Calif., registered pleasant surmount smoothness of the enrollment procedure. Several students said they appreciated the streamlined Student Registration Data Sheet (SRDS), but some said they didn't. Some students added the Union to Hoch to the Field House. "I thought it was going to be a lot more complicated." Miss Mulligan said, adding that she had heard rumors that it would be better if the problem was not getting all the things I wanted. McDonald said he thought that enrollment was efficient as it could be. He suggested that there should be greater opportunities out that are there at the wrong times. "That closes the classes for those who come at the right time," he said. For other students the day wasn't going so well. Kristy Burton, Prairie Village, found herself trapped in the senior course and had to a 20 hour semester to graduate on time. See Enrollment Hassle Page 5 The Beatles' first UK performance in London. Kansan Staff Photo bv GREG SORBER Terry Foile, Overland Park Sophonore, Awaits Class Card . . . Anticipation of closed classes brings tension . . . 2 Thursday, August 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan Witnesses Tell Mv Lai Stories Rv The Associated Press Witnesses testified against my Lai officers Col. Oran, K. Henderson and Capt. Ernest M. Medina in separate trials Wed. A platoon sergeant testified Wednesday that Col. Oran K. Henderson did not pursue interrogation of a group of GL's returning from My Lai after he received a phone call about question about whether anything unusual had occurred at the South Vietnamese hamlet. Sgt. I.C. Isaiah Cowan, then the top NCO in the Charlie plateau, William L. Calley and Robert O'Brien, court-martial that he was among about seven soldiers met by the banding zone two days after the massacre on the main road. "When we got out of the bellhop we were gathered in a gate. Henderson talked to us and asked, 'Did anything unusual happen?' The group—Sgt I.C. Jay A. Buchanan—answered, 'After we moved out, we Henderson, 51, on Wednesday, is accused of wilful dereliction of duty in a campaign to investigate reports of the killing of civilians by troops under his The officer, then commander of the 11th Brigade of the American Division, also is charged with failing to report actual or suspected war crimes and of twice lying to police during an entry into news of the massacre did not become public for more than a year. Atomic Dump Grant Depends On Committee WASHINGTON (AP) —The issue of allowing $1 million for leasing land at an atomic waste repository planned to be built near Lyons will have to be decided by a Senate-House Committee when Congress returns from its summer recess. The Senate voted the money in passing, July 31, a $4.7 billion appropriations bill which inundated the Atomic Energy Commission. The House did not include the money in its version of the measure. Conferences are expected to meet on the bill soon after Congress returns Sept. 8. However, even if the money is voted, its use will be subject to a state law that requires an amendment to the law enacted earlier in the year such money which was already invested in the money. The amendment was co-sponsored by the Kansas' Republican senators, James B. Pearson and Robert Dole, who were both elected to the site had been voiced to use of the site for disposal of atomic waste. Under the amendment, the president will give an advisory commission to be named by the President has certified that the facility would be insured. Gerald Heming, Jackson, Miss., who was attached to Medina's Charlie Company at My Lai as a diplomat expert, said he was walking in front of the Army captain when a shot rang "I saw her get shot in the head." he said. A short time later, Heming said, Medina was standing beside him when he saw a woman run from a rice paddy. Two other prosecution witnesses who were near Medina during the assault on the Vietnamese in 16, 1988, testified during the day. One said he saw bodies but no one actually killed, and the other three still had a woman Medina has said he shot because he was afraid she was taken. Attorney F. Lee Bailey, who is defending Médina against the accusations of premeditated murder of 102 civilians in Myanmar, will testify in testimony. Heming said both killings occurred on the southern bank of the river, captain has said he first learned civilians had been killed when he entered the village at the end of World War II to discover bodies on the trail. The Army maintains Medina learned early in the assault that his men were shooting down but put made no move to intervene. TOPEKA (AP) — The director of the Kansas Food and Drug Division said Wednesday tests for an opioid were from a can of soup in an effort to determine whether the illness of a woman is botulism poisoning. Medina has said that he spent most of the assault on the point where he was shot, under the impression that his men were engaged in a fire fight. The state official, Evan Wright, said the code on the can indicated that he was not serving chicken vegetable soup which had been recalled by the Camp-Dunn. Wright said three other cans from the same lot were picked up at the grocery store where the soup consumed by the woman had been purified. He said it was a mistake, but run on the contents of these cans. Wright said results of the tests may not be known for several days. The food and drug director said the items removed from the shelf at the food store and placed in a backroom when they were picked up. The Topeka woman became ill Monday after eating the entire contents of one can of soup. Her physician said botulism is suspected, but described her condition as "not dangerous." Viet Cong Up Attacks SAIGON (AP) -- Enemy forces dump at Carn Rath Bay Wednesday and shellled five other American installations, including a base near the town. Shortly thereafter, the U.S. and Iraqi armies manned warheads warned that the Communist forces were planning widespread attacks across South Vietnam in 1967. The predicted increase in attacks apparently is planned as an enemy show of strength before the first quarter of 2014. Assembly elections Sunday. The explosions that ripped through the sprawling U.S. ammunition dump at Cam Rahay Bay were believed set off by Vizy Cong sappers, specially trained to infiltrate bases and blow up installations. Officially, the U.S. Command said the cause was unknown, but officers at the scene, said they were certain it was enemy action. Allied officers said intelligence reports indicated an imminent increase in terrorism, ground attacks and shellings—all aimed at intimidating the population and ultimately disrupting the elections. Sinee dawn Tuesday all U.S. troops in Vietnam have been on board for a week. Americans from getting involved in internal political unrest such as demonstrations by students, or militant Budd daft factions. V12-2147 Lawrence's Largest Off-Campus Bookstore 919 Mass. TOWN CRIER POSTERS GREETING CARDS CANDLES MAGAZINES PEOPLE Neil Armstrong, first man to walk on the moon, announced Wednesday he is quitting the U.S. space agency and will go back to his school at University of Cincinnati. The 41-year-old astronaut will continue to be a special consultant for the Aeronautics and Space Administration. People... ... Places ... NEWTON-Persons arriving in the business district for work early Wednesday were greeted by an invasion of thousands of crickets placed on the sides of buildings and sidewalks. There were also lace wing flies, long legged beetles and click beetles. A preliminary hearing for Mrs. Barbara J. Bussart, former accounting clerk at Kansas State, has been set for Sept. 2. She has been charged in connection with a $24,650 shortage in a loan fund at the university. PLACES ... Things SAN FRANCISCO—San Quentin prison is the object of a suit filed by five inmates of the prison's adjustment center, the scene Saturday of an escape attempt in which six men were killed. The defense said that the federal government take over the operation of the prison GIFTS COURSE GUIDES Open Daily Until 10:00 p.m. THINGS The stock market continued to advance in response to Nixon's economy-bolstering measures. A Union Pacific freight train crashed into a car abandoned on the tracks in Kansas City, Kan., and carried it a mile before it stopped Wednesday. The car later was identified as one that had been reported stolen shortly after midnight. An agreement for a program under which the city of Wichita would use federal funds to train and educate veterans returning from war, was negotiated by the mayor. SATIGON (AP)—President Nguyen Van Thieu confirmed Wednesday that he plans to hold a hearing on the proposed scheduled, despite the political crisis generated by the withdrawal from the race of his only son. U. S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker called on Thieu twice during the day apparently in renewed efforts to avert one man campaign and preserve at the facade of a democratic election Bogus Money Found at Bank Charles Brown, cashier of the First National Bank of Hutchinson, said Wednesday all five $1 million shares discovered by tellers at the bank. HUTCHINSON (AP) -- At least one person has been to be from the Texas area have been found in Hutchinson since the first one was detected late Then, however, told a camp meeting that he intends to take action in the case of consequences, indicating that he rejected any new proposal made Robert Horan, resident Secret Service agent at Wichita who is investigating, said. "This parish has shown up in the Texas area." The meetings between Thieu and Bunker were the fourth and fifth in the week since the amications with consultants in Washington. Thieu Still Plans Oct. 3 Election "It's my understanding that they got the plant some time ago, so the plates have been destroyed." CELEBRATE THE NEW A NEW BEGINNING. S U.N. AUG 29 7 PM UNIV. LUTH. 15TH & A U.C.M. FESTIVAL 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. 842-9210 This new insurance plan provides for liberal maternity benefits AND other hospital medical and surgical costs at a very moderate premium. LIFE-CAR-PERSONAL POSSESSIONS THE DIXON AGENCY 839 Mississippi Phone Day or Evening The Gaslight Tavern Welcomes Back Students Friday Night Special 9:00 — 12:00 Pitchers - 75 $ ^{\circ} $ Pitcher Hour Fri. 2:30 — 3:30 Pitchers - 75 $ ^{c} $ Across the Street from the Kansas Union Sources in the U.S. Embassy said the ambassador has apparently played all his cards. U. S. officials have suggested privately that a one-man race with Thieu as the only candidate could have serious ramifications for the country's international position in Vietnam policy, including a possible reduction in aid. premier Ngevun Lau Vien confirmed that the Oct. 3 ballet was "being promoted in line with the election law." that Thieu was rigging the elections. Ky's name will appear on the ballot through a legal technicality. Sources said Vienna told officials the withdrawal of Vice President Trump from Wuhan and Duong Van Minh did not influence Thieu's decision to move to Beijing. 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OPEN The receivin May—1 statist 4,3,9,00 37,000 the D Educa owner WAS govern statistist show nation' began To The market growth an HE require a declare call it Bo1 For special of the portion benefit unemp there v per cern Aum of fr TOP of the vestig; Unive thropones Reserv were betwee KBi: said cll were lj year-o disapp were lj the Rc Ru How the rc Armst missin year 10 a.m.- 2 a.m. Daily 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Sunday --- 1618 West 23rd --- University Daily Kansan Thursday, August 26, 1971 U.S. Welfare Roll Drops; 1st Time in Three Years 3 WASHINGTON (AP)—The statistics released Wednesday, show the first decline in e the nation's relief bonds since the fall. The number of persons receiving public assistance in May—the latest month for which statistics are available—was 4.3 9,000. This was a decrease of 37,000, or 0.3 per cent, from April. The department of Health, Education and Welfare announced. The May drop followed a marked showing in welfare growth the previous month. But an HEW spokesman said it will require "another month showing us we can really call it a trend For reasons government specialists cannot explain, most of the shrinkage was in that portion of the family program benefiting families headed by a woman there were 34,000 persons, or 3 9 per cent, from April despite continuing high unemployment. A small increase in the number of female-headed families Bones Found To Be Youth's TOPEKA (AP)—The directo of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation said Wednesday a University of Kansas anthropologist has reported that bones found near Cedar Bluff were those of a young male between the age of 8 and 10. KBI Director Fred Howard said clothing沾了骨 with the bones were identified as belonging to 9-year-old Roxanne disappeared while his parents were working for a carnival at the Rocks County fairgrounds at Howard said he is convinced the remains are those of the Armstrong boy, who has been living for slightly more than a year. A small increase in the number of families receiving and resulted aggregate decline of only 16,000 recipients, to 10.2 million recipients. This total is still 25 per cent more than the 8.1 million persons of the last census in 1970. The remaining 4 million welfare recipients are the elderly. hind and disabled persons. Nineteen states and Puerto Rico reported drops in their family programs from April. blind and disabled persons. In a further indication of bethlephing by states, the average welfare payment per family rose from $125 in 2013 to almost $2 a month to $183.75. Public secure存款 totaled $1.5 billion in May. Big Four Is Expected To Accept Berlin Pact WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States and its three partners in the Berlin talks are urging the United States to accord the Berlin accord within two weeks, providing the two Germans with a green light to resume nuclear negotiations. This was the word from ad- ministration at a two-hour meeting. Wednesday末了 wesleyan of State William P. Rogers and Kenneth Rush, the governor. Rush returned to Washington after the ambassadors of the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union concluded negotiations of tough negotiations on the future of the "communist-enriched city." The Western White House in announced Nixon would confer with Rush in Clemente, Sifu, on the draft text further. OFFENSE Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin, leaving his positions, also discussed the Berlin agreement in a morning meeting with Rogers that ranged over international questions. the U.N. General Assembly opening this fall. He gave no details. State Department press officer Robert J. McCloskey said Rogers and the Soviet diplomat also took up items which will come before the U.S.-Russia Foreign Minister Andrei A Gromyko when the two meet at The pact is an important mark in efforts to end the cold war in Europe. The agreement is cautioned that it is not binding until the governments of the Big Four agree on how to proceed, appears to be no substantive problem as far as the United Nations is concerned. During the coming days, the officials said, specialists on the German problem and State security examine the text thoroughly. Although officials decline to predict when the four am- iam signatures on the final protocol which will make the pact effective, the expectation is that it may happen before the end of this The timetable primarily depends on how soon the two Germans can agree on details, officials said. The West and East Germanies talked about specifics as soon as the Big Four announce their approval of the draft. The inter-German talks might be tough and could last as long as three weeks, some officials operated The pact might open the way to steps aimed at ending a quarter-century of East-West confrontation. 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You'll love us... 1. a + Huc HARRINGTON Country House at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown V13.7275 A FANFARES WELCOME BACK suedes that swing out soft sensual suede in a scholarly mood doubles as a swinger when your fashion style says, "action!". McCall's The Favorite Gear on Earth 829 Massachusetts --- Thursday, August 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Kansan Seeks Feedback This is the University Daily Kansan. It is a student product. Students write the copy, edit for errors, make all major policy decisions, control the money—and generally perform all those functions required of any newspaper staff. This is all done on time between class—and in the shadow of finals. The paper makes no claim to perfection. We will make mistakes, more than any of us would like to admit We will, on occasion, vilify, congratulate and ruminate on your temporary home, and our reason for existence—The University of New York. Our news columns will reflect what you and several thousand like you do and say here. This newspaper is written in many distinct, various and sundry factions, elements, living groups and lifestyles. For that reason you are to whom we ultimately look for our centenary and once in a while probation. If you think what we're doing is so much bull—let us know. Write, or better yet come down to the newsroom in Flint Hall and yell at whatever staff member happens to be there crramming for his 10:30. it is not worth it, if we spend the year screaming in an empty room. Men in the business have a saying about the good newspaper—"A good newspaper afflicts the comfortable and comforts the afflicted." If we ignore you, tell us, and we'll listen. If you have something you've written and think it's worth discussion, bring it down. If we can approach that goal it will be a good year. —Tom Slaughter Too Cold to Freeze The effects of the President's wagprice freeze on KU will most likely be so insignificant by and large they will not be noticeable. The effect of wagprice a budget that It's hard to freeze a budget that was frozen long ago. The consequences of earlier budgetary maneuverings by the Kansas Legislature and the Board of Regulations will be noticed by returning citizens. As they have tried to make crystal clear in the past, the Kansas Legislature and the Kansas board of educators have worked about how students should behave. Unfortunately, the Legislature and the Regents set terribly bad conditions. Already infamous is the most recent session of the Legislature where the pros and cons of bingo seemed to be their raison d'etre, and things like higher education and welfare were dealt with quickly with sharp cuts of the budget paring knife. The Regents, taking the lead from the Legislature recently went to work on the requests from the state government with a letter with equal hangman's enthusiasm. It is these cutbacks that will most directly affect the KU student and his education, not the recent edict from Washington. Faculty members don't have to worry about the freeze because the freeze is in the student body. salaries at last year's level. When the freeze ends, KU's salaries will still be located on the dim end of the spectrum, and some of our best teachers and administrators will be looking else where for jobs. Classified employees at the school too have already lost their July 1 merit increases, and like faculty members the freeze will only serve to bind them longer to inadequate salaries. For the student who is paying a tuition increase the picture is no brighter. Treasury officials say that increases announced before the freeze will not be reduced to previous levels. So the economic picture of the state schools remains bleak, freeze or no freeze. Some relief in the way of stable costs could be expected, but since most purchases are made on contracts signed before the freeze went into effect relief in this area will be negligible also. The Kansas Legislature could do something to restore the needed support for higher education in the next session, but Vern Miller found some slot machines in an American Legion post. This may seem like a non sequitur, but if the Legioneers are ruled against in an appeal, the prime issue of the next legislative session will be —Mike Moffet HIT-OR-MISS DEFENSE CONTRACT MACHINERY PROFITS DEFENCE DEPT. TAXPERS PRODUCTS THE MINNESOTA JOURNAL 'How should I know what goes on in there! I've never looked inside the thing?' [Image of a long line of people standing on a grassy area in front of a large building with multiple windows.] Celebrate Another Day of Living Welcome back. Though it may not seem like it. No, there is no Grand Conspiracy to prevent you from enrolling in this much-debated University. For the returnees the process may seem a little more complicated or a little more strenuous because of the walking from here to there to never-never land with a few long lines on the way. And new students undoubtedly will be impressed with the complex ritual that permits 18,000 people to go to school and at the same time instil a subconscious love for art. But, somehow this year I find myself enjoying this minor insanity. Perhaps it is because I am a senior. The things we think we enjoy least sometimes are the I am always frightened by the feeling that my life is slipping away from me, that I have not wrung the last ounce of pleasure from moments that are passed. Or passing. But time is a thing not to be possessed by men so we must play the game to suit its rules and take or give what we can in passing. So perhaps enrollment is not the purgatory it seems. It is a piece of life and therefore a thing much to be admired. A strange condensation hence these days. I did not mean to be so philosophical in this first offering of mine. Some may called it maddun. But I have always thought we are too formal here in these hallows of halls for higher learning. A bit of the human touch is needed to offset the clatter of computers, to take the stink out of that cool secretarial stare at the end of a tiring line, or to just brighten the day a bit. A few years ago this newspaper received a letter from a young man who said his day had been resurrected (so many of the ordinary ones are that way) by a young coed who had dared to smile at him on a deserted walkway one afternoon. I was always impressed that a smile had meant so much that he would go home and write someone about it. But Life is that way. Small things that add up to consume our days, to make some happy, to leave some empty, to roll away into memory. There is so much to be enjoyed. It only takes a little effort. A smile for a stranger, a helping hand in a crowded line. Patience with people who have so much to learn can bring joy. Enjoy enrollment in spite of its distractions, its frustrations, its mugging worries and seeming inefficiency. And make it a good semester. It will never be -David Bartel, Editor James J. Kilpatrick A Sense of Place, Space, Time SCRABLE, Va. —What is it that binds men to the country life? Three things. I think. A space, a space, a space, a heightened sense of time. I am still new to these old mountains, and offer the explanation unsurely. We have not seen where there may be no basis for these reflections anyhow. Our nation shifted in time from a forested, rural predominantly urban, and the trend to the cities has gained momentum ever since. My own experience of living in every census since 1890. on this evidence, fewer and fewer persons feel "bound to the earth." James J. Kilpatrick is one of several well-recognized volunteers who will appear on this page to comment on the decision by Mr. Kilpatrick, former editor of the Richmond News Leader and has considerable expertise in presenting the conclusion of Washington happenings. Yet there must be something to the proposition. Not only in the South, but in New England, this is why the most, the thvest, a traveler encounters the same mystic bond among men who dwell close to their land. It is not that the people have an injective impressions, but I have a notion that country people by and large are happier than their city neighbors, so they themselves. By urban standards, their lives may be empty; but the emptiness is somehow richer. THESE ARE meditations for a summer's end. They emerge from that keen awareness of the world around them, which keeps its steady beat in the rural heart. Men say of the factory and the office that a great many days seem "just the day I ever happen." And this is true, of course, of life in farming country. Yet there is always that rhythm, and it is always present. The flower bursting seed, the nesting bird, the ripening water. Watermen will understand what I glove to say; Here in the Blue Ridge, it is a time for harvesting early apples, a time for cutting the last hay, a time for putting corn to silage. You can eat it or substitute other areas to substitute their own chronology. On every farm it is constantly a time for something. We awake now and then to the distant snarl of power. And we know that already the nights are cold. The ponds at dawn give off the pale grey breath of autumn just ahead. this is peking time in the kitchen, a time of reishes ruby red and emerald green, of peaches cast in rusty gold. How does one measure life's achievements? In works of art and monumental Maestro Mayrs? The full life itself is endless ways. It is not a sense of time alone that casts its spell. There is also, I suspect, a sense of possession, a sense of great historians and psychoanalysts of the South-Cash, Percey and Ward, Rubin—used memorabilia from their Southern character, and for a long time I supposed we Southeners had a monopolio on them. You hit the same love of place in the plainsman and the Yankee and the rancher. TO LIVE in a great city has its good points, but a sense of permanence is not among them. A man may have pride to be, he says, "going to the apartment," but he knows an uneasy apprehension that by tomorrow it may be somebody else's shopping center. How many structures are there? He might have seen in that city a hundred years ago? Pitiful few, I suppose. But the countryman, scuffing his boots in the good weather, has been there forever. "My land," he says. "This is my place." "Man is a social animal," said Spinola, and no one doubts it. The country can be marvelously rich. It has all the money will tell you who has just come from the Amissville fair. but at a deeper level, man is an anti-architecture fan and one of the institutions of the city are rooted in the swarm-crowd; one can be lonely in the city, but one is sadism, in any absolutely sense, It is better here in the hills. Our stars are not so brilliant as those of Arizona, but they suffice. Here one knows space by night and day, the wise free from fear in a imageless sky. Space, and place, and time— these three: end; and one learns a countryman's lesson in the yellow hill. With a shovel, shuffling, shivery chill. There is no end, and no beginning either. (C) 1971 The Washington Star Syndicate. EVERY NOW AND THEN, I GET THE FEELING THAT WE'RE NOT ALONE IN THE WORLD WE'RE BEING WATCHED AND LOOKED AFTER... Griff and the Unicorn THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper EVERY NOW AND THEN, I GET THE FEELING THAT WE'RE NOT ALONE IN THE WORLD WE'RE BEING WATCHED AND LOOKED AFTER... IT'S A COMFORTING FEELING... SOMETIMES IT'S KIND OF CREEPY... By Sokoloff Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom--UN 4-4810 Business Office--UN 4-4258 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Only students in grades 10-12 and attending law at Lawrence, KA 60044. Accommodations, goods, services and national advertisement offered to all students without regard to letter, reed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily intended to reflect the views of the author. IT'S A COMFORTING FEELING... NEWS STAFF "Copyright 1971, David Sokoleff." SOMETIMES IT'S KIND OF CREEPY... News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman Editor David Bley Associate Editor Dick May Campaign Editor Eric Krauner Assistant ampersand Editors Joyce Neeman Watts, Ann McKenny Wire Editors Chip Crews, Deanne Waits, Ann McKenny Wire Editors Mike Moffet Editorial Writers Pat Malone, Michael Foster Editor John Bitter Assistant Sport Editor Pat Malone Assistant Sport Editor John Bitter Make Up Editors Bite Hugh Make Up Editors Bite Hugh Photo抄录员 Keen Janshing, Garry Trie Photo抄录员 Keen Janshing, Garry Trie Greg Sorber, Hank Young, Ed Latto, Sokohl BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager Advertising Manager Associate Accountant National Advertising Manager Classified Advertising Manager Customer Service Manager Carol Young Norm Mankey Ronnie Smead Martha Witherlock Sarah Cordell Cluny Schmidt Member Associated Collegiate Press REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIRECTOR OF SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 Thursday, August 26, 1971 1/2 yndicate. University Daily Kansan KANSAS UNIVERSITY KANSAS UNIVERSITY Freshmen, Craig Haines, Left and John Hegedus Sort Enrollment Cards Enrollment Hassle From Page 1 Linda Lamb, Lawrence sophomore, claimed it was so hot she couldn't think and suggested that the Field House be air conditioned. As the day went on, the temperature rose. Carol Nodurdruff, Prairie Village junior, put in a plea for computerized enrollment. "We wouldn't get the best class times, but it would be worth the reduce." brother. James Donnell, Crystal City, Mo., junior, said he thought there was an easier way to email perhaps by computer. "But then again when you leave the Field House, you know what you've got." Other schools mail class schedules to students but he said this week. "Besides all the rigamarole is kind of fun. It gets you in the mood for school." Donnelle added. Teachers behind the tables had a few observations of their own, both on enrollment, and on the reactions of students. "Every year I think there has to be a better way," said Jim Woolfe, associate professor of philosophy and religion. "A computer is really too cut and dried. There's just something about the human element in struggling for those class cards. . ." In dealing with students throughout the day, he observed that seniors, especially, had complained that classes were closed, and that most students reacted with surprised relief when they found the class they needed was onen. Tom O'Sullivan, instructor in English, said freshmen approaching the table for English I cards were "basisically exhausted and bewildered." "It is mildly confusing, especially when you first sit down to relearn the routine." Manning the class card tables can even be a little difficult, according to Bruce Adams, teaching assistant in Western Civilization. Adams said he enjoyed working at enrollment because of the opportunity "to see so many attractive young ladies and to talk to different people." To expedite enrollment Adams suggested pre-enrollment for all underclassmen so that the long lines would be eliminated. He commented that most freshmen were too confused and insecure to get very irate when they found classes were closed. "Most students don't get mad at the card handlers." As if to prove his point a freshman wandered up meekly and said, "Like a dummy I forgot to sign up for the Western Civ Comp. . . ." CHEC OUT here SECTION 98 Exhausted Enrollee Collects Her Thoughts Upstairs SEC 19 Signs Guide Enrollees to Course Cards Right, John Nixon Emerges Satisfied Kansan Staff Photos By Hank Young and Greg Sorber STARTER WELCOME TO CAMPUS 10 your nutshell advertisers Alfie's Fish & Chips • The Ball Park • Burger Hut, Inc. Campbell's (Campbell's) Wearhouse • Colman & Rogers Investments Burger Chef Hack & Whitenight Jay Bowl Jay Shoppe Lawrence Beauty School Mister Guy • Putt-Putt Golf • Royal College Shop • 书 Thursday, August 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan Rieke to Update KUMC Dr. William R. Rieke, the new vice-chancellor for health affairs at the University of Kansas and the National Center to modernize the hospital's administrative systems and supervise plans for expanded medical education to meet the state's demand for new medical staff. In a recent interview, Rieke said the Kansas Senate had opened the way for funding an accelerated year-long full-time program with other hospitals, a department of family practice and a raise in salaries for interns and staff. Rieke, who became vicechancellor July 1, is the chief executive officer of the hospital. He directs both the service and academic departments. Rieke said the clinical aspect of the accelerated curriculum had been built, but work was now focusing on evaluation and planning of the course. "We expect that by the fall of 1972, the new class will be on the three-year program," he said. First 'Feedback' On Sale For the first time, results of a student evaluation of teachers and courses have been published the evaluation, "Feedback," contains information on about $65 courses, a third of the courses evaluated by the questionnaire, Dennis Emma, chairman of the questionnaire Survey, ended Wednesday. The book was financed by the Student Senate with student activity fee money. The 5,000 student cost of about $1 each, Embry said. The books are being sold at several stands around campus for 25 cents a book, a day of sale or on sale were sold, and Embry said he Parking Fee Rises When Freeze Lifts The KU Traffic and Security Office is being beiesed by problems in trying to issue parking permits for the 1972-73 school thought most of them would be sold. The University Press recently printed 20,000 parking stickers for students and 5,000 for staff members on short notice. The temporary parking permits that will be issued Sept. 7. The temporary parking and registration stickers are to be issued because the university does not have a commercial printing firm did not meet specifications. Some of the numbers were smeared, some numbers were missing, some numbers were cut out, and stickers for motorcycles and stickers for weatherproof. For the duration of the freeze, the fire will be charged. After the fire is controlled, it will figured on a monthly basis, will be charged against the $10 million settlement. In addition to the problems with the stickers, parking rates with the stickers have also increased. Nikon's wage-free freeze. The rates for parking in campus zones were set to rise from $10 to $15 per day in September and in residence. Separtment hall parking has been raised from $10 to $15. Instead, residents can park on campus. University officials hope that the end of the price freeze will make it easier to stock the temporary parking stickers. The sticker expiration date is尚 indefinite. If this happens, the balance due will be paid by members at the time they receive permanent stickers. Requirements Are Changed By 2 Schools The Schools of Education and Journalism have made requirement changes that go into effect this semester. Dale Scannell, dean of the College of Education, says a day the biggest change in graduation requirements for education majors was a full semester. Students will student teach and receive instruction in seminars, classes and planned activities at a teacher education center in the Kansas city area or in Lawrence county as needed. Seminars allow The School of Journalism dropped the Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination and then graduated with additional courses, according to Associate Dean Lee F. Young. The school still requires western civilization discussion courses or the requirement for entrance into the school. Professors who have seen the book were favorably impressed, he said. Faculty members who were well-prepared to participate in the project in good faith but received low scores will continue to participate because they want to measure their improvement, he said. The 10 hour language entrance requirement was dropped for the 13-hour language graduation requirement. Language graduation meets the language requirement by taking a beginning and an advanced course in linguistics, Sophomores will be admitted to the school if they have a 3.5 grade point average. Juniors are still required to have a 2.2 average for admission. The graduation requirement was raised from 2.0 to 2.2. a new book may come out for the spring semester if the printing service has time to print it. The business manager he said. The new book would probably contain results of a questionnaire that will be given back of this semester and also have the results from last spring. Students presently enrolled in the school may either stay in the old program or petition to get in the new one. Young said. He said several required courses have been dropped to give the students more electives. The school also were also restructured. Although the book has been written, and the questions questionnaire has given five times. The ratings don't change much so the questionnaire is a good guide for use. He said he thought more faculty members would participate in the next questionnaire because publishing the results gave the evaluation more credibility and because students would put pressure on the faculty to use the questionnaires. The survey rates a faculty member's class on quality of instruction, career and practical orientation and text satisfaction. A one to five rating is given in a circle, with five as the highest. Four Powers OK New Pact BONN (AP)—Chancellor Willy Bridgestack's West German government unanimously approved an agreement on Berlin, drafted by the ambassadors of the United States, Britain, France and the Netherlands. Government spokesman Cecilia Chambers said the agreement is signed, the government is ready to enter into negotiations with the government over the issue. Patronize Kansan Advertisers "The three-year classes will be bigger and the students can get facilities and the program worked out. There is just so much room for so many The new affiliation program with other hospitals, now in the final planning stages, will relieve some of the space squeeze at the Medical Center by sending a team of specialists to hospitals for part of their training. Stick it in Your Ear! 10.6 KLWN—FM 105.9 Stere 10.6... UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT Adult Progressive Rock 机械加工 "It will not only take some of the pressure off us in clinical practice," she said. "It also provide a type of experience that is different from at that the Medical Center and it is perhaps in his practice." "Students will see in his practice." a place for worship and service 15th and Iowa —in dynamic Christian community Each Sunday: Worship: 9 a.m., Contemporary Celebration, led by Pastor Donald Conrad (NLCM-ALC & LCA) 10:30 a.m. Services, led by Pastor Norman Steffen (LC-Mo. Synod). Nieke said the affiliation program was being enlarged to train doctors and nurses throughout the state. 5:30 p.m. Lutheran Student Movement supper and discussion program. Also: Friday rap sessions, 9 p.m.—Each day & night—space for study and recreation. WANT A QUICKIE? Quickie Tacos Quickie Buritos Quickie Taco Burgers Quickie Enchiladas Quickie Chili Rieke said his main concern was to determine the effects of the educational innovations. Another recent change at the Medical Center is the use of health sciences, to share the responsibilities of the academic MEXICO DON CHILITO'S Border Restaurant Mexiteria "What is a good doctor?" he asked. "Why do you determine if you're doing a job that is most important that we be able to assess the impact of these cases." Unifilo Comes eat with us 1528 W. 3rd. Losses on Other Routes Won't Affect Bus Fares halls every 30 minutes and at Ridgecourt every hour. No night service is planned for the campus. Financial losses incurred from the summer race route during the summer race season. Send campus service, Duane Ogle, president of the Lawrence Bus Eagle said that he foresaw no immediate increase in rates. Bus fare to downtown is 30 cents and fare on campus is 20 cents. Buses will run at 20-minute intervals between downtown and he Kansas Union, and between Detroit and the city, will stop at Oliver and Naismith. Blight Slows WASHINGTON (AP)—Generally dry weather has slowed the development and spread of new corn in western corn belt, the National Federal-State Information Center Corn Blight said Wednesday. TACO GRANDE With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free! Offer expires Sept. 30 1720 West 23rd Street 1720 West 23rd Street Enjoy the Silent Beauty of Tiffany Shades These and other nick-nacks for your room at HAAS IMPORTS Patronize Kansan Advertisers THE MISTER GUY BUNCH FORBIDDEN JUNGLE WELCOMES KU MISTER GUY The Clothing Consultant 920 Mass. The Medi- wiki unde limit proce Riek affa! All surge after sho; wam the ' University Daily Kansan Thursday, August 26, 1971 7 Abortions Resume Aug.30 The University of Kansas Medical Center's ban on abortion will continue through Aug. 30 at the University of Chicago, limiting all elective surgery procedures. Dr. William O. Bueke, an epidemiologist of health records, and recently. All non-emergency cases of surgery were postponed until February because of shortage and because Rieke wanted detailed investigation of the patient. After a meeting held at the medical center Monday to discuss the hospital's abortion Rieke issued this statement. "After distributing copies of the Kansas abortion law and conferring with the members of the faculty in the department of obstetrics and gynecology and with the staff of theministration, I have every assurance that the letter and spirit of the Kansas law has been met Students Still Required To File for Deferments Drafted college men eligible for the deferment urged Wednesday to apply for their deferments even though no men are currently being in Mrs. Edith H. Cordill, executive secretary of the university, will be joining bears are continuing to take action on student deferments, along with those for hardship and for conscientious objectors. Male students who were previously given student deferments need only send a staff code to their local boards to schedule to their local boards. The copy will be sent to students along with fee statements. in the past and will be in the future. The forms will be available at living groups and at the Dean of Men's office. 228 Strong Hall. Entering freshmen and others requesting a student deferment for the first time must sign a waiver with a copy of their class schedules. Mrs. Cordilla stressed that only authority to induct men has expended and that the men may indeed risk their registration if they fail to register at age 18, do not keep their local boards informed of their current addresses or do not report, if ordered, for physical examinations. "Griffy" says... "I GOT ONE YOU'LL LIKE!" YER MISSIN THE BOAT IFN YA DON'T TRY OUR MOST Delicious Fish Sandwich! Only 35¢ Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM Watch for Don's Football Forecast "Accordingly, I will direct that therapeutic abortions be resumed on a regular schedule effective Aug. 30. Those abortions that represent true emergencies may be performed prior to Aug. 30. Griff's Giant Hamburger Only 54° Lettuce, Tomatoes, Onions, Pickles 1618 W. 23rd Open 10-2 a.m. Sun 10-11 p.m. "I will charge a previously formed committee composed of the departments in medicine, nursing and gynecology and obstetrics with responsibility for studying hospital practices relating to admissions, treatment and care patients requiring abortions. "I am pleased with the evidence made available to me which documents that K.U.M.C. provides high quality patient care and will co-operate in meeting all health requirements exactly as prescribed by law." A woman can legally obtain an abortion in Kansas if three persons licensed in medicine and are considered a serious risk that continuance of pregnancy would impair the physical or mental health of the mother or damage the child's development, invest in or felonious intercourse. The three persons must certify their beliefs in writing and file them with an accredited hospital. Abortion is also legal under emergency conditions when it is necessary to preserve the mother's life. Nike said abortions were usually an elective procedure and that they constituted a heavy burden to the hospital's elective surgery load. He said, however, that the hospital could not concentrate on abortions because other emergency cases would be neglected. FRYE BOOTS PROTECTIVE UMBREATH OF THE BODY OF THE FASHION MODEL MASS 836 When you ask for a "Frye boot" be sure you get a FRYE boot Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street What's it all about . . . . . . Alfie's new menu! We welcome you back to our traditional fish and chips plus the New Items on Alfie's menu. New Menu Items Sunday Seafood Special .2.09 Scallops-Lobster-Shrimp 1101 West Sixth 2 Hot Dogs & Chips . . . . 75° Corn on the Cob . . . . . . 25° Sunday Chicken Special .1.09 T.M. Allie's Fish & chips T.M. © Alfie's Fish&chips Alfie's Alfie's Religious Activities at the University of Kansas IAM WHO IAM ASSEMBLY OF GOD—CHI ALPHA 13th and Massachusetts Lavern Pember, Pastor—843-6900 Lynn East, Chaplain 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 or 843-8167 Sunday supper and Bible study at 1410 W. 19th Terr. at 5:15 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 COUN. SELLORSHIP (JEWISH) Office—Kansas Union B 107 Services at Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive Gary Schneier, Counselor-842-3532 ★ CATHOLIC, ST. LAWRENCE ST. DENT PARISH (NEWMAN CLUB) Student Center—1434 Engel Road Chapel—1910 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— 4:45 p.m. Sat. Midnight Mass at University Lutheran Church ★ CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION Mrs. Edwyna Gilbert, Faculty Advisor-843-8338 Meetings every Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel, beginning August 31 ★ CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, FIRST (BRESEE FELLOWSHIP) 1942 Massachusetts Samuel Pickenpaugh, Pastor—843-3940 Services—10:45 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Student Meeting—9:45 a.m. ★ EPISCOPAL (CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION) EPISCOPAL (CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION) CENTER: 1116 Louisiana C. F. Stolz, Chaplain-843-8202 Schedule at Canterbury: Holym 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 (at 9:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m). Holy Days Communion—9:30 a.m. FRIENDS, OREAD MEETING Mrs. Anne Moore, Corresponding Clerk-843-8926 Meefings -Sundays at 10:15 a.m. in Danforth Chapel ★ KU-Y (YMCA-YWCA) Kansas Union—Rooms 110-111-112 Paul Baurman, Director—864-3761 or 843-4218 LATTER DAY SAINTS STUDENT ASSOCIATION 126 Indian Street—842-9221 La Rell Kunz, Director 842-2584 Priesthood Meeting —8:45 a.m. Sunday School —10:30 a.m. Sacrament Service —4:30 p.m. Tuesday —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 10:30 a.m. Sunday Study—9:15 a.m. Gamma Delta-Lutheran Student Movement Sundays at 5:30 p.m. Worship also at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church—10:30 a.m. Immanuel Lutheran Church—8:30 & 11:00 a.m. Trinity Lutheran Church—9:00 & 11:00 a.m. ★ REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST LATTER DAY SAINTS 1900 University Drive Novy Bowman, Presiding Elder—842- 1078 or 864-4800 Worship—9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Midweek Fellowship Service—Wed. at 7:30 p.m. ★ ★ UNITED MINISTRIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION The cooperative ministry of— American Baptist, Church of the Brethern, Disciples of Christ, Presbyterian, United Church of Christ, and the United Methodist Churches CAMPUS MINISTERS: Don Baldwin—843-4933 Rafael Sanchez—843-4933 Jerry Catt—843-1018 Otto Cigg—843-4933 ★ CAMPUS CENTERS United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread American Baptist Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th (west of Oliver) ★ WEDNESDAY SCHEDULE AT UNITED MINISTRIES CENTER Communal Celebration Workshop— 7:00 p.m. Seminar on Basic Beliefs—7:30 p.m. Experimental Communities—9:00 p.m. Communion Service—9:00 p.m. ★ SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES: SUNDAY WORKSHIP SERVICES: Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Wayne Street, 10:45 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 lowa — 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 8 Thursday, August 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan 36 67 52 8 12 23 6 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 Javnes Lets It Fly Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER David James, KU's sophomore quarterback, releases a pass amid a heavy rush from the No. 1 defensive unit during Wednesday's early first-round victory over Ohio State. brough has run his squad through two practices a day shine Sunday. The haws first scriumple will be Saturday afternoon in Memorial 40 Start Frosh Drills Forty KU freshman football players reported for their first workout under new freshman coach Gregg Elliott afternoon. The squad began preparation for its four-game season which starts Sept. 27 at Of the 40, 36 are scholarship athletes. Four of the group are non-scholarship prospects. Practice during the rest of registration week will begin for the freshmen at 4 p.m. In addition to OU, the Baby Jaws will face Kansas State Oct. 8 and Missouri Oct. 22 in Memorial Stadium on a state Nov. 4. At Stillwater. Here's the freshman roster: Quarterbacks--Bruce Adams. Bishop Magee; Brent Anderson. Chiliechoe, Mo.; Ken Saathfp. Rome, Shawnee Mission North; Ton Tompson, Highland; Odiel Weidner, Topeka West; Dean Zook, Larned. Receivers—James David, Hawthorne, N.J.; Leonard Schmitz, Salma; Tommy Smith, Purcell, Salika. Linemen-Ace Boydson, Chicago; David DePew, Chicago; Fedro Dillon, New Orleans; Dave Marshwa, Bishop Miege; Gordon Stockemer Colwich; Jeff Turner, Prichard, Ala.; Paul Van Saan, Hawthorne N.J.; John Weger, Shawnee South; Wint Winter, Ottawa; Calvin Gully, Pricail, Ala. Defensive Backs—Ron Hopper, Kansas City, Kan.; Gene Land Linebackers-Mark Ayesh, Wichita Southeast; Gregg Scheffler; Danny Johnson; Randy Robinson, Kansas City Central; Roger Stalhauer, Wellington; Steve Towle, Shawnee West; Larry Pratt The Pirates scored six runs in the first innning. After Rennie Smith was struck out, the team loaded the bases with consecutive singles, Pat Javaris, 5-12, struck Pirates Pound 21 Hits, Beat Braves 13-6 ATLANTA (AP)—The Pittsburgh Pirates pouted 21 out hits, including five by Roberto Clemente, Willie Stargell's 42nd home run and Bob Robertson's 39th. The Braves 13-6 Wednesday night Royal Gets Expert For Talk on Drugs But five more singles by Milt May, Dave Cash, Jackie Hernandez, Krista starter, Bruce Kinsley and Stennett brought in the. Stargell's homer with one on and Robertson's solo blast brought the Pirates three more runs in the second. Royals Win 12thStraight Over Boston Royal, who has built Texas into Lee's Summit, Mo.; Rick Mudge, Topeka West; Gordon Peterson, Wichita North; Steve Rus, LaGrange Park, Ill. KANAS S CITY (AP) — Exploding for five runs in the third innning Wednesday, the Rangers four-run deficit and went on to a 7-5 victory over Boston behind the strong relief pitching of rookie Jake Butler. AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) - Texas Coach Bearrell Rerial has had his say on proposals to cut back on the team's playoff plans to please others also do the talking for him on drug abuse the Longhorn to try to regain their Others—Allen Sehmidt, Hays; John Theisen, Shawne Mission South; Charles, Witthaus, Rockin South; Robin Gale, Syracuse. The mainstays of the offense, however, are quarterback Eddie Johnson, who was the best in the nation last year at engineering scores; halfback Jim Berteanen, who is now the pick-up draft choice; and 255-pound tackle jerry Siemore, the best receiver in a sophomore month as a sophomore月季. Now he's ready to concentrate on coaching. a perennial national power, a scholarship to 30 the major schools might break away from the NAACA tried to restrict school scholarships to 30 the major As part of the pre-season training period, Royal planned to invite a West Coast expert on the risks to the squad to the tasks to the squad. "It's inevitable that the big schools make some kind of split if we're to stay in business. That's what we want to see happen." Rival said. "The closer it gets to kickoff the more scared you become," Royal said. "Along about April and May you think you have a chance to be in August and September you start to see the problem areas." Royal said his Wishone Broyal was set, after several trades was set, before several trailing, to claim starring spots, including halfback Durr Ben Durbirk and ends Rick Davis and Jim Simons, both 40 yards in 47 seconds or faster. The Royals now have defeated Boston 11 times without losing this season and have a string of 12 stretching from last year. The Red Sox took a 4-10 lead in the second on Bob Montgomery's run-score and pitcher struck out the run of the year, a three-run shot. Kansas City Knocked out Peters in the third with five hits. Al Fitznerz sacrifice two in the second. Schalng singled home the second one. Lou Pinella singled in the next two. Mark Ferguson飞 accounted for the fifth run. AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. W. Pct. G.B. Baltimore 77 45 631 631 Detroit 68 59 535 113 Boston 67 61 614 190 St Louis 61 61 186 190 Washen 53 73 421 26 Cleveland 53 73 421 26 Oakland 82 46 641 041 Kan. City 82 66 254 15 Chicago 62 65 488 19 Calif. 61 68 473 21% Minnesota 57 69 452 24% Milwaukee 53 72 454 27 W. L. W. Pet. Gub. Pittsburgh 76 55 580 - St. Louis 70 59 543 5 Chicago 63 59 452 15 Carmel 63 64 609 11 Philadelphia 56 71 441 18 Montreal 54 72 429 19 NATIONAL LEAGUE East San Fran 76 65 580 - - Los Angeles 65 61 27 - Atlanta 68 65 511 9 Cincinnati 68 65 492 11 Houston 63 66 488 12 San Diego 48 82 369 27 NUToughest In League Coach Says Don Fambrough, though he would not completely discount KU's chances at the Big Eight title, nevertheless he agreed with other forecasters who predicted that the Nebraska Cornhuskers would repeat their conference championship this season. "They have a lot of lettermen returning and they have the depth," he said. The new head coach told the Big Eight writers he "would have to go with Nebraska." Fambrough went on to pick Oklahoma and Colorado to finish second and third. But he refused to be pessimistic and did not tell the squad which he said, would appear heavily on badly injuries cut into the squad's already thin arm. "Okahoma improved more than any other team last year," he said. Chuck Fairbairn came in there. They'll make a good run at the tute. And Colorado, of course, is also a big, a big, strong, physical team." "I'm optimistic," he said. "But one of our胃病 patients told me that he's the health of our football team. Injuries, maybe more than anything else, could have played a role." After the top three picks, Fambridge would not speculate on the final line-up of the remainder of the conference. "I think it generally thought that we have the best balanced team," he said. "Any of several teams could be in there for the chaumon." "Oklahoma State had the best freshman team in the league last year. They'll be young and will think they'll fool a lot of people. "Kansas State is another one we don't know much about. Vince Gibson says he redshirted 20 or 25 players last season. And Iowa State could come on. Johnny State has done a great job up there." 11 Tourneys Scheduled For Fencers "There could be a lot of darkhorses in this league." Torre Boosts His Average Big Eight Report HOUSTON (AP)—Joe Torre and Michael Johnson slammed a two-homer as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Houston Astros 4-1 for the first time in franchise history. The University of Kansas the NCAA NCAA in-game this year, more than in any previous year. Patrick L. Christian, captain of the NCAA football team. Torre had a walk to go with a double, single and triple as he raised his league-leading batting average to 360. The tentative schedule for the coming year is: Jan. 24-Ohio, Ohio State Northwestern Feb. 7- North Carolina, St. Louis University, Feb. 14- Illinois University, Feb. 21- University of Illinois, Chicago circle, Wisconsin University, Wisconsin Parkside University, Michigan State University, Michigan University, Notre Dame University. March 7—Air Force Academy, Colorado University, March 14— Texas A&M University, March 15— University, April 11—University of Missouri at Kansas City, Iowa State, Washburn University, Kansas City, Kan. Community University Nov. 18—Kansas 2 Weapon Invitational. Department Illinois Collegiate Dec. 11—Illinois Collegiate Invitational. April 28—Intercollegiate Women's Fencing Championship Kansas State March 26—NCAA National Championships. MANHATTAN—The stomach, virus bug hit the football training camp at Kansas State causing nearly 20 players to miss practices Wednesday, but Coach Johnson was not overly concerned. "The bad thing is the players are missing a lot of work," said Gibson. "And we're giving a lot of them, and aren't going to play for us." "The thing that has encouraged us is that the kids are trying to play when they're sick. They're fighting to stay in there," he said. LINCOLN-Nebraka Cornhuskers scrimmage Wednesday for the first time since the start of fall football practice, and Coach John Devany said that as a result it was a prettier sharp work-out. Rv the Associated Press Defense Key to Success By JOHN RITTER Kansan Sports Editor Nebraska Gibson noted that none of the top 44 Wildecats missed the workouts. Defense, that half of football that didn't particularly shine for the University of Kansas Jayhawks last season, will be the name of the game this year. Don Fannin took new head coach, told the Big Ten Skyywriter at a dinner Tuesday in Lawrence "We've been worse in the season at the outset," he said, but hastened to add: "I sure need a lot of practice play a game today, however." Both offense and defense came "Unless we have made a mistake in the evaluation of our personnel, that's the way it should be," he said. Warner Brownson, Jerry Taggie and Dave Humm all were credited with passing "pretty well," although Taggie had one intercepted and Humm had two picked off, one by Jim Anderson in a spectacular diving encounter. "The season will depend on the defense," he said. "It's number one. We cann't win without it. I'm confident that our offense can be boarded if the board is not in get the ball." up with several outstanding plays, but "neither unit showed enough consistency," he said. The No. 1 offense moved the ball well against the second defense, and the first defensive team shacked the No. 2 offensive Statistically, KU's defense was the worst in the Big Eight last year. The Jayhawks gave up more offensive yards than their opponents in all but three games. receiving and pass protection all have improved. In the backfield, the Hawks "are blessed with three or four fine running backs." Farnbrough said. Jerome Nelloms, Steve Scales and David Ellis chart depth chart as first stringers at tailback, fallback and wingback, are all lettermen. Delin Williams, Houston sophomore, who Farnbrough says "could be one of those players," has further strengthened the backfield. "Conkey will move into John Riggins' position," he said. "He's a power runner and a good blocker, Jerome Nellcore is an exciting runner who can take on any big Weave to three or four good runners, but that is just not enough. There's no death." rut experience and added emphasis both in spring and fall drills, plus a couple of position changes in the defensive end to obtain them the defensive play. Farnambug said. INDEED, LACK OF depth in nearly all positions will be the biggest potential readability to a sheer at a good season. The team will need to put forth little competition among players for a position. When a player feels pressure to keep his job, he, said naturally works well on a roster. STILLWATER— Oklahoma State slipped in the water as the boys blinded closed gates Wednesday and the Cowboys racked up five touch- less tackles. Oklahoma State Senior tailback Bobby Cole, all led rushers with 100 yards in eight carries, raced 74 yards for the first touchdown and Brent Blackman scored when he captured end for four yards. "Lucius Turner and Marvin Foster (split ends) both have speed and good hands. Bob Schroll is doing a good job at tight end. The rest of KU's passing game, one of Fambridge's biggest disappointments last spring, likewise is showing signs of maturity, he said. Sub fullbacks Tommy Woods and John Lennon last the last three TDs, Woods runs yards and Heilman nudging it over twice from the one and three passes. FIVE RETURNING lettermen and a promising junior college transfer are expected to fill the defensive line. Pat Ryan KUJ third leading tackler last year, who was selected by the All-American at Hutchinson, will protect the ends of the jayhawk line. Phil Bailer, a quarterback-turned-linebacker - turned-lineman, and Gory Palmer, a stand-out defensive last season, are the number three players per Pelkins will fill the middle guard position. "We saw some people out there today who wanted to play football." Coach Floyd Gass said. "I think the offense had the best of it and I always had adjustments after we have had a chance to grade the films." "Dan's experience is showing. He's reading defensive keys better and has thrown well this fall. David Jaynes is coming along about as we expected. He has problems reading the defenses along with the normal sophomore problems. Steve Roach and Kenny Page, a pair of experienced linebackers, and Lee "I WAS DISAPPONTEED this spring in our passing game. But it has shown the team that it can win." ACCORDING TO FAMBROUGH, the outlook at quarterback is good at this point. Dan Heck, last year's signal caller, is looking "better than ever," he said. Oklahoma "Unlike some of the other positions, Heck has competition for his job, and he knows he has to get out there and work to win." Heck also said that Heck has to be a good quarterback. NORMAN-Oklahoma concentrated on the passing game in its final day of non-contact football worksouts. Wednesday. "We have accomplished quite a bit during this non-contact period," Fairbanks said "but we have lot more to get done." Hawkins, Mark Geraghty, Mike Burton and Gary Adams. In the team's second half, the complete the defense. "I think we can be able to line up one of our enemies we all defense that will compete with us," he said. "But where we go from there I don't know. Despite the lack of depth, Fambrough has been the best." Offensively, Fambrough said KU had the nucleus for another fine offensive line in tackle Tenn Gaugnah, who was a defensive specialist and Mike McCoy, center. John Scholl and Bruce Mitchell, the only newcomers to the line, are listed as starters at tight end and the other He said the squad would continue to work on fundamentals and assignments when pads were donned Thursday. "I DON'T HAVE enough experience to con you," he told the Skywriters assembled at the Holiday Inn. "I may come on to it later, but now I won't try to fool you." Despite the lack of depth, Fambrough said "i can be nothing but optimistic." "When we begin contact work, we will be much better able to evaluate our players," Fairbanks added. SUA ORIENTATION WEEK! TONIGHT August 26 ALL FREE! UNION OPEN HOUSE 7 - 10 p.m. Movies, Music, Bowling and Billiards. 6 Groups Graywack Charlie Thump Theatre Beth Scalet Together Bikales-Weinberg SUNDAY August 29 ROCK CONCERT AT POTTERS From 2 p.m.—On We're glad to have you back. Come in soon and try a pair of Lil' Abner Jean's Boots. Arensberg's Shoes 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 vee "s" "s" eck eck enho osee osee ns'er mee mee nourgh. thees r a r a trks tei tei ow. ow. e e em- em- University Daily Kansan Thursday, August 26, 1971 9 KANSAS COUNTY Kansas Photo Fambrough Talks After Practice . . . Defense the biggest consideration . . . Coach Encouraged By Team Progress Coach Don Fambrough has become progressively more pleased with his fouth week in two-day practices this week. The team donned pads for the first time Sunday after three days work in Monday's afternoon practice brought a frown of disapproval for the defensive unit's performance. He had said that it wasn't hitting the way it should and that the secondary didn't perform as he did. we a real good day both in the morning and evening practices," he said. "The kids are learning." "The things they need to be working on." Wednesday the squad suited up for a 7 a.m. workout followed by a short scripimage for the benefit of visiting Big Eight Skymakers. Practice in the afternoon was cut short because of the extended morning and the subsequent enrollment procedure for players. Dan Heck suffered a charley horse above his right knee in the morning workout, but Fameli was serious. Did he think it was serious? "Actually I'm overjoyed that it wasn't the knee he injured," he said. "In fact I almost want to lauch about it." He said he was pleased with the defensive unit, especially the secondary which he said "was really coming along." "That first defense is getting a lot of pride in their unit. They're beginning to play more as a team." Fambrough praised line-backers Kenny Page, Tommy Lemmon and Jason Rowe to play in the short srimmage. In the secondary, senior Mark Geraghty's pass coverage brought good comment from the team. Fambrough said he was "Overall, everyone came back in "real good condition," he said. We had two or three guys with us. We were all only slightly fewer in all we were in good shape." generally satisfied with the squad's condition and the early practice performances. By Wednesday most of the offensive plays and defensive formations had been introduced, he said. Fambrough said that he was concentrating on getting the team ready for the upcoming season, and that the squad had received training from a veteran organization for KU's home office with Washington State Sept. 11. Football prediction is a risky business, but if no one predicted, no avid football fan would have known that the season will end of the season will tell the whole truth, but here is a possible explanation: The top ten teams in the nation By MATT BEGERT Assistant Sports Editor In the number one national slot will be the University of Notre Dame Ars Parseiisha's team that will play in the 2014 streak in the Cotton Bowl last year, and it is expected that the Fighting Irish should come out on top. PINNEHURST, N. C. (AP)—Arnold Palmer was the one of the five top-ranked players to survive Wednesday when a wave of upsets was washed out some glamor names in the first round of the United States Professional Match Play golf championship. Of Top Five Only Palmer Wins Match Nebraska will be a close second if for no reason other than its rare that a team can win two national titles in a row. The Cornhusker won the league championship year's team, with two veteran quarterbacks, a good defense and Jack Nicklaus, seeded No. 1 as the leader on the official money game, was among the upset players were among the upset victims who packed their bags Palmer, No. 2 in this head-to-head competition, the first of its kind in the United States since 1957, took a 68-71 decision from Australian Bruce Devlin and won Thursday's second round play. The Jayhawks continue two-day practices, at 7:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m., until classes start Monday. The "Hawks first full-scale amusement park in Memorial Stadium. It will follow a get-acquainted session for fans starting at 2:30 Assistant Editor Predicts Irish Will Be Top Team Welcome Back Students! THE SOUND John Carlos Karl Abegg Russell Pine POUNDS FABRICS 925 Mass Hillcrest Center 842-6331 VISIT US FOR YOUR COLLEGE NEEDS IN FABRICS WELCOME BACK STUDENTS BURLAP BRAID TRIMS APPLIQUES HOMESPUN DENIM WOOLENS JERSEYS TAPESTRIES CHINO FAKE FUR CRUSHED VELVET Only Complete Selection of Patterns in Town VOGUE, BUTTERICK, McCALLS, SIMPLICITY S 925 Mass. a large quantity of team enthusiasm and support. Michigan should hold down the third spot, and no more shall be said of this traditional Big Ten Conference power. Georgia should emerge from down south this fall with the biggest offensive line since 1988. Georgia has had a good sophomore quarterback and a couple of good rookie runners, and it should equal national place Southern California, the best in a strong Pacific Eight Conference will be a major contender for fourth. The Trojans can be even better because their defense have improved since last season. Syracuse is the top Eastern contender. It has one of its best squads since it won the national champions in 1938. Put them in 5th place. Arkansas will start out the season with an inexperienced defense, but the combined efforts of a strong offense and a good Oklahoma should accompany Nebraska into the ranks of the top Big Bight, but the Sooners will be the biggest place. The offense is a good one, but how the defense will compare to our top teams is unpredictable. Last season Penn State switched from a pass-dominated offense to a ground offense and it seemed to work out well. Its quarterback and two star runners are returning, so fans should feel the same action this fall. Penn State will capture the ninth spot. Last, but not necessarily least, is Oregon. One of the toughest teams in its conference last week was Portland, who will contender for the conference title. Eighteen of twenty- starters will be back for another season, with picketed teeth, but there seems to be no where for the team to go up by. kicker should boost them to the number seven position in the polls. YUK DOWN HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Thursday Ladies FREE FREEDOM From Chicago Playing Six Nights a Week 8 p.m. Fri. and Sat. Free Matinee From 3 to 6 Fri. Patronize Kansan Advertisers IMPORTANT:1971StudentSeason PLEASE READ FootballTicketInformation CAREFULLY WHERE: East Lobby, Allen Fieldhouse WHEN: * Seniors, Sept. 1 ... 1:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. - Graduate Students, Sept. 2 ... 1:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. - Juniors, Sept. 3 ... 1:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. - Sophomores, Sept. 4 ... 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m.-9:00 p. - Freshmen, Sept. 6 ... 1:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. - All students may purchase a season ticket on the designated day and each day thereafter. PRICES: Regular Student $5.00 Spouse Ticket $10.00 (Spouse includes spouses and children) WHAT TO BRING: 1) KU ID 2) Certificate of Registration 3) Payment for tickets PROCEDURE: 1) Pick up IBM card at Table 1 2) Proceed to Table 2 a) Present IBM card b) Pay for the ticket c) Receive the ticket d) You're finished! HOUSEMOTHERS: 1) Show KU activity card (which is purchased at the Business Office). GROUP SEATING REQUESTS: 1) Present all KU ID's and Certificates of Registration at the special table for groups. 2) All IBM cards will be pulled. 3) Proceed to Table 2 and purchase your block of tickets. 4) Seat assignments for groups are made according to the lowest classification of the individuals involved. If you choose to sit with someone who is not in your classification, the seat assignment will be made in the lower classification of the individuals involved. ITEMS TO REMEMBER: 1) SPOUSES—must show proof of marriage in writing if marital status is not indicated on the IBM card. 2) ALL STUDENTS—the tickets will be randomized as they are sold. The first people will receive tickets in their class section, however, they may not be the best seats in the section. Therefore, it will not be necessary to be present at 1:00 p.m. sharp for best seating. 10 Thursday, August 26,1971 University Daily Kansan X Kaesan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER Kathy Ellis, Kansas City, Mo., Junior, Smiles for Her KU-ID Photograph New identification cards will be issued in mid-September New IDs to Have Photos About the middle of September all University of Kansas students, faculty and staff members will begin using identification cards that have their pictures on them. William Balfour, vice-chancellor for student affairs, said earlier this week, "We are far beyond the time when the University community will be able to fully realize our potential." It became necessary, Balfour said, to create an identification card that could not be transferred. An added benefit may be easier in emergency situations. The planning for the new identification system has taken several months, acco- nds to Edward Julian, director of the KU Photo and Video Bureau. Much of the work on the cards is being handled through the bureau. Julian said the investment, including wages and equipment, would probably be about $12,000. The cost of the equipment, however, will be absorbed over several years. Expenses will be paid with income from the $1.50 fee that is charged each student. Balfour said that anyone who refused to pay the fee would be disenrolled as he would be if he did not pay any other fee at the University. Persons who refuse to have their picture taken will not have an identification card for uses such as checking books out of the library and cashing checks. Except for developing of the film and the making of the color prints of pictures, all the work on the cards is being done within the University. The card has been designed so that it is usable in existing equipment, such as that at the library. Although the cards are new, old and varied, they are still very useful. The photographing of students began Monday, and Julian said that by Tuesday afternoon 10,000 persons had been photographed. Most frequently, eight cameras will be in service except during noon hours when a full shift works. Two of the cameras have been purified. The background panels were built by Buildings and Grounds. Part of the flexible structure will be retained for identification programs and six sections will be redesigned for use as a portable display at other University functions, Julian said. The photographic operation will continue for about a month. A session is scheduled in Strong H弘 rotunda Saturday for graduate students. Photos are due by 6 p.m. on Monday. Students who enroll late or for some other reason are not able to be photographed during regular sessions will have to go to the Photo and Video Studio. Polaroid equipment has been bought to provide a quick replacement service for students who lose their identification cards, Julian said. - Harness Boots Starting At $15.00 HAS THE LARGEST STOCK OF BELL-BOTTOM AND STRAIGHT-LEG JEANS IN THE AREA - Jean Jackets Starting At $5.00 LAWRENCE SURPLUS M AND A LOT MORE! - Pocket T-Shirts At $1.29 and $1.69 - Perma-Press Flares At $6.00 PURE WHITE BELL-BOTTOMS Reg. 8.00 NOW $400 Levi's HEAVY-WEIGHT BLUE DENIM BELL BOTTOMS in sizes 27 to 42 ... $8.00 LEVI'S CORDURUY BELL BOTTOMS in Eight Colors ... $8.50 Levi's BRUSHED DENUM BELLS The Newest Look $8.00 levi's PATCH-POCKET HIP HUGGER $7.00 BELL BOTTOMS ... ALL AT LAWRENCE SURPLUS He estimated that 300 additional contracts might be signed between now and the time There are 4,600 available spaces in the halls, and by Tuesday morning 3,211 persons had officially contracted for space. Wilson said at least 400 of those persons were in single occupancy rooms, making the number of spaces occupied about 3.611 He said foreign students, students expect scholarship aid and late enrollees would account for the rise. The Place to Go For "In" School Clothes Dorms 80 Per Cent Full The University of Kansas residence halls were almost at an 80 per cent occupancy level Tuesday morning, and J. J. Wilson, housing administration staff, rose to a level to rise to about 85 per cent. master charge THE INTERMEDIATE CARD 740 Massachusetts BANK AMERICARO "We're not in a financial bind in any way." Wilson said. All of the projected figures are based on assumptions and past experience, but should be fairly accurate. Wilson said. classes begin, bringing the percentage of occupancy above last year's level. Unlike many state universities, KU does not require that a part of their curriculum be spent on residence halls. Freshmen women are encouraged but not required to reside in KU. If the halls fall farther behind in residents in the future, such a requirement might be considered, he said. According to the KU office of Institutional Research the percentage of students living in dorms has dropped from 29.3 pe ATTENTION TALL PEOPLE: 36" Inseams Available in Most Styles cent to 20.7 per cent in the las five years. To stop this trend Henry Bubb, of the Kansas Board of Regents once proposed that beer be dispensed in the residence halls. Others have proposed changing more like apartment complexes. At one time the university owed $3 million on bonds that financed the university, but the amount had been reduced as of June 30, to about $2.4 billion. The available spaces in the tails have been reduced in the last two years by converting them to mini-bookstore and office spaces. Chemistry Course About Environment The chemistry department at the University of Kansas has added a course in response to increasing demand for en- trants. A special course, chemistry 88, involving continental Chemistry, will be offered fall for chemistry majors. It will deal with the chemical aspects of the earth's atmosphere. The instructor, Peter Hierl, assistant professor of chemistry, claims to be "noexpert." He said that he is not in the position "None of us are directly connected with environmental problem but we realize its Hierl said he hoped the course would eventually be open to non-chemistry majors and possibly to non-cience majors. The course is designed to be taken in three major steps, Hierl said. This fall facts will be gathered with the help of the The key is to make chemistry more relevant and also to increase the job market expanding job market in the environmental field, Hierl said. junior and senior chemistry majors enrolled in the course. To be eligible, the course will take on more of a lecture format and will be open to majors in other sciences. The last semester will be devoted to present the material for a more general audience "without taking down to them." Hiera Approximately the following numbers of persons were registered in the residence halls Tuesday morning; He said the course was designed to give the student more of an identification with what he is doing now and what he might want. He also performed chemical experiments not relevant to current topics of interest to students, a better type of experiment might be, to run a gas chromatogram in the protection of pesticides, Hiersa said. Corbin, 238 women; Gertrude Sellars Pearson, 173 women; Oliver, 163 persons, about one- half men and one-half women; Ellsworth, 530 persons, about one-half men and one-half women; Hashinger, 312 women; Me- Colum, 702 persons, 525 women and 295 men and Templin, 240 men. Welcome Back KU Students Allison-Thomas Flower Shop YOUR DOWNTOWN FLORIST 841 Mass. 843-3255 Art Museum Gets Director (Week-end Specials) Charles Eldridge, acting professor of art history, has been appointed acting director of the museum. He is now the curator of collections at the museum. He succeeds A. Bret Waller, who resigned in May to become associate for education and a curator of the Museum of Art in New York City. Free Delivery The SUA film for the weekend is "Tell The Willie Boy Is Here," with Robert Redford. It stars Amy Adams, Daniel Day-Lewis, p.m. atwood Audruitor Auditorium. SUA Features Ike and Tina And Bob Hope "We are already thinking about concerts and other attractions the SUA can present for later in the year, and we are in a wide variety." Longenecker said. The organization will hold its membership meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Patronize Kansan Advertisers "We are trying to work out how to get back," said Katie Longauer, a Lieutenant vice adviser. "However, until the contracts are signed, we can't get to that." and Tina Turner and Bob Hope are the leading SUA attractions this fall. Kee and Turner will perform Sept. 1 at a concert in Birmingham for tickets for the concert will go on sale Monday in the SUA office. Hope will perform at the homecoming show Oct. 9, also in Allen Field House. His appearance is sponsored by the institution, although SUA has worked on the arrangements. SUA has a rock concert scheduled for Sunday from 2 p.m. in the Auditorium and other bands will play. Also, the SUA Open House is on go on week in the Kansas Union. Bowling, pool and other sports are Patronize Kansan Advertisers! THE HOLE HELLO! Welcome to KU, Lawrence and IN THE WALL DELICATESSEN AND SANDWICH SHOP 9th and Illinois (2 Blocks North of Stadium) Telephone 843-7685 VISIT US WHILE YOU ARE IN LAWRENCE AND TRY YOUR: [INCLUDING URGENT RANKS "HERO") • PIES AND COOKIES • Delivery Service --- G The Kansas 1963, W step do year. take a trip through softness One accom- Gradu decent funicil When progra there w the sar dean, operat be shi EARTHSHINE Cl Is East 8th & Mass. Two camer the lot that unloot night drinkin Secur direct said " Open 10-6 daily—Late Thursday The be ne the of talk to buildi syster The with the c Un In The by the increase July Chress books Thursday, August 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan 11 Graduate Dean to Retire the dean of the University of Kansas Graduate School since 1963. William Price Abbrecht, will step down at the end of this school The mandatory retirement age, 65, will force him to leave his administrative position. Because he is unable to teach, Albrecht is undecided about teaching for the five additional years that regulations allow. He is a professor of English and a chairman of the English department. One of Albrecht's primary accomplishments as dean of the Graduate School was the decentralization of the operating processes in the school. When some of his planned programs are put into effect there will no longer be a need for the same type of Graduate School training that is required by operational responsibilities will be shifted to other positions. Albrecht also developed procedures for systematic, mandatory re-evaluation of graduate programs. One of Albrecht's present concern is students who score high in their classwork but do poor in comprehensive compulsions. Incompetencies, students, be said, KU is trying to minimize a dependence on course credits as a basis for graduate education. Modifications such as using field work and individual work may be implemented. Abbrecht said the teaching teachers should teach assistants should be emphasized. Their pay and ability should be more closely matched. As dean of the Graduate School, Albrecht has seen the school's enrollment grow from 3,000 to almost 4,000. In addition In reflecting on his years as dean, Albrecht said, "One always regrets growing old." However, he has been declared that he has been dean "long enough." to working closely with students and faculty members, he has been active in the Council of the Board and in other organizations. Albrecht plans to spend this school year finishing projects he has already begun. He views it as the culmination of a process he encountered some times. "It will be a busy year—and I hope a useful year—making the transition to the next kind of graduate study," he said. Returning Students Pay Increased Sales Tax The City of Lawrence began imposing an additional half per cent retail sales tax on all sales within the city on July 1. It was the idea of the people of Lawrence. City voters passed a referendum April 6 to pave the way for the increase. The tax will be used to expand police and free protection agencies. Students **returning** to Lawrence from their hometowns have been using the last week as they shipped for housekeeping essentials. Most students found the taste to be very good, and the search of that extra penny, all the while glaring at the sales clerk wondering whose idea this was. An amendment connected to the referendum added $450,000 to the 1972 budget to allow the expansion program. Any revenue in excess of that will be used to lower city property taxes. Student football fans will now to dig deeper into their pockets this year to buy a season to save to Dave Miller. student body The student season football ticket will remain at $5. The Student Senate, in legislation passed last year, approved a season ticket price increase as part of an increase in the Student Privilege Fee. The Students students to use the Kansas University services at Wakins Hospital and other gampus services. President Nixon's economic 80- day wage-freeze has blocked the increased football ticket price, Miller said. Football Ticket $5 for Student THE HILT in the WALL DELICATESSEM & SANDWICH SHOP Open on m. a.m. - Phone Number 843 7855 - We Deliver - #H & ILL total price of the camera and its accessories as $1,409.50. Garricio University controller, to release a copy of the invoice. Closed Circuit TV Is Installed in Hoch Two closed circuit television cameras have been installed in the lobby of Hoech auditorium so unlocked, building can remain unlocked until night access to the rest rooms, drinking fountain and Traffic and Security office, Mike Thomas, drinking fountain and Traffic and Security, said Tuesday. The monitor for the system will be the front desk, the office and the dispatcher will talk to people he sees entering the building through a public address system. It is equipped with a telephoto and a standalone lens. He said seven users have tried using the camera and that there was a need for a good reliable camera. The total cost of the system is about $1,200 Thomas said. Traffic cameras were also used in camera 1,409.5 Hasselbobble camera that Thomas said would be used in future cameras. The camera had been used once since it was bought early this year. The camera could be used for identification purposes during doctor visits. This camera could be used for identification in both University and criminal Carrillo said that there were state funds involved and that state expenditures were a matter of course. "But when there was a 'matter of interpretation" of expenditures, meaning that no one but the head of the department that spent the money was spent for, he said. The camera was purchased with state funds and an invoice in the controller's office lists the The purchase price of the camera was greater than the most expensive camera owned by the photography division of the National Geographic Society at $1,000 Linhof, according to William Seymour, assistant professor of journalism. Seymour owns a security camera was reasonable. The uniformed personnel of Traffic and Security are com- mitted by the Police Department, Douglas County Sheriff's Deputies and State Campus Police. They work in conjunction with the University administration. Thomas said that Traffic and security tried to handle it, but students at University Judiciary that it can present damaging a student's Union Blue Slip Rebates Increased to 5 Per Cent The profit sharing rebate paid by the bank increased from 4 to 5 per cent on July 1, according to Jim L. Banks, manager of the bookstore. The 4 per cent rate, an all-time low, had been in effect for six months. While the rebate increased between 2014 and 2015, abandoned at Wichita State University, and Kansas State was considering dropping their The bookstore is chartered so that the profits are returned to the students and this amounts to a discount on books purchase The Executive Operating Committee, which is composed of students and faculty, also lowered the faculty discount. July 1 on books from 10 to 5 per cent. The department because there was no reason for the faculty to receive greater discounts than the students. Crestman said that the decline in the size of the freshman class The level of the rebate was being affected by increases in the costs of labor, materials and transportation, and Crestman has said that discounts was one way to turn more profits back to the students. The rebate is obtained by returning blue receipt slips at the end of each semester to the bookstore. had had quite an effect on the sales at the bookstore. But, the bookstore is profiting and students' share of the profits are also increasing. Crestman said the bookstore probably would not be affected by the wage price freeze because most companies have already paid their workers July 1. No major wage changes were planned for the year so it looks as though the bookstore will be able to cover money and the students will share. Slides and Film Aid Relations, Tell KU Story The Office of University Relations and Development will add film this fall to its available media for presenting the news of the University. Dennis Bransister will be responsible for orienting a cameraman, Terry Gladeaux, to provide him with familiar with film work himself. He will also be developing a slide presentation about the University and will undertake a study of the various public relations projects. Rick VonEnde, graduate student in political science and public policy at UCLA, will replace Bransister as the editor of KU's Faculty Journal. Paratipe Transfer Type 1107 Massachusetts Supplies for Art and Engineering Rapidograph Pens Colored Mat Boards Drawing Sets Slide Rules Acrylic Paints CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. 843-6133 Illustration Board BUGGY WASH Paratone Shading Film Designer Colors West 6th St. at Colorado 1804 West 6th WHY DON'T YOU? ZERCHER PHOTO Open 8 a.m. to 7 a.m. Mon. thru Sat. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sundays WELCOMES YOU A Completely Automatic Exterior Car Wash On 1025 Mass. 843-6133 SKELLY 1107 Mass. Come to Zerchers We Carry Nikon, Canon, and Pentax Cameras Also a full line of Kodak Equipment The Cleanest Cars In Town Come to The The BUGGY WASH Che Ball Park Home Base for Hearty Sandwiches - Hot Pastrami - Bremen Mettwurst - Smoked Ham • German Bratwurst - Hot or Mild Smoked Sausage ★ Your Favorite Beverage 1900 ★ German Potato Salad - Corned Beef Polish Sausage ★ Ball Park Baseball - Challenging - Easily Learned - Authentic Hillcrest Shopping Center—Just North of the Theatre OPEN 11:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Sunday 2:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kavanah are offered on campus for color, creed, or national origin. One day NOTICE Western Cv. Notes-Now on Sale! reviewed, comprehensive 'New Analysis of Western Civilization 6th Campus Campus House, UiI 14th St. Chiropractic-Complete **a**, 4 years Chiropractic-Complete **b**, 6 years A or M P or M classes allow full time classes. Call or write D, W, Smanus (812- 3724), Treasel, Truck, C, 64190 3724 Treasel, Truck, C, 64190 STADIUM BARBER SHOP. 1033 Mass. 9-27 Picture framing – 350 moulds available; velvet mat-liners; truss glass. Anything in picture frame. Paint Store 18, M-3, Box 83-64114. Pea coats at the Alley Shop, 843 Mass. ff For "Crotch Tops" it's the Attic 927 Mass. If Clothes you like at prices you can afford. It's the Alley Shop 843 Mass. Antique fur coats $29.95. THE ATTIC, 927 Mass. FOUND Visit "The Sewer" at THE ATTIC, 927 Mass. For "swingin' dresses." tf WANTED Potted Mum Plants in Full Bloom— Greenhouse Fresh. $2.49 Cash & Carry. Pence Garden Center & Greenhouses 15th & N.Y. 843-2004 A Complete Line of House Plants— Including Venus 15th & New York 843-2004 Fly Traps & Many More. KANSAN CLASSIFIED PATES Three days 35 words or fewer $1.50 words or more $1.90 medline 1 - p.m. on weekdays medline 2 - p.m. on weekends Home of the "Big Shef" Baby attaching in my home, any age. Large fenced in play area. Lunch provided. Day time care. Call VI 2-0761. 9-3 BURGER CHEESE For your fall wardrobe it's the Alley Shop. 843 Mass 10 HELP WANTED Help wanted-for Buggy Wash, 1804 W. 6th. Apply now for jobs for this semester. 8-31 Try One Today 814 Iowa FFMALE ARTIST'S MODEL—Note: experience not required. THE LAW- RENCE CENTER $25 per call. Call 843-828 or 843-600-9-3. Five-nays 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 PERSONAL Visit the "Sewer" at the Attic 927 Mass. tt WATERBEDS. King-Size with 20-yr guarantee. Frames and foam pads also available. Call 842-7658 now 9-3 FOR SALE For pants and tops it's the Alley Shop. 843 Mass. tf For sale - two bedroom 8 ft. x 45. 156 Champion Train Home located Bigham Court, 1600 N. 4th Street Call collect - 1-299-2966 9-3 Shop Arts, and crafts-Grumbacher, art supplies; decoupage supplies, beads and other crafts. Davis Painst Shop. 918 Mass. St. 843-6014 Locally Grown Organic Produce Downstown Health & East Village 9th & New Hampshire Drive A Little & Save A Lot. Shop PENCE GREENHOUSES For All Your Plant & Flower Needs- Greenhouse Fresh 15th & N.Y. 843-2004 Open—8 to 5:30 10 to 4 on Sunday Open 24 hrs. per day For pendants it's the Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 1f Great Dane puppies for sale. Fawn color. Male. VI 2-3952. 9-2 Y Rx Hot Pants, Hot Pants, Hot Pants, The Attic. 927 Mass. tf DRIVE IN AND COIN OP LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 1964 V.W. with 86 motor, perfect running condition. Excellent interior and exterior. Must see to appreciate $32,000. Carnissia Gold car VOL II Call: 57-851-7800 RANKIN DRUG CO. 1011 MASSACHUSETTS STREET LAWRENCE, KANAB Independent COIN Laundry & Dry Cleaners Fisherman knit sweaters from Italy $15.00. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. tf Buy a Independent King-size WATERBED, frame and foam pad, for $20.95 with thigh vise 812-7668 Shines Dyeing Refinishing MISCELLANEOUS 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th New York Cleaners "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" BUSINESS PHONE 643-5440 COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. For the best in: • Dry Cleaning • Alterations • Reweaving 926 Mass. V 1-0500 days per week Classified Rates It's The Attic, 927 Mass. Pants and tops for her. If VI 3-5304 COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th Want to Make Some Easy Money? 25 words or less Each additional word Classified Display Sell what you don't need with a Kansan Classified. One Time $1.00 01 $1.50 per column inch Three Times $1.50 .02 Clip and fill out the form below. Bring it by the Ad office. 111 Flint Hall (with the cash), or your mail ad to us! c/o Shelley Bray, Classified Ad Manager, 111 Flint Hall. Please include check or money order for the full amount. Five Times $1.75 .03 Days to Run ... Your Name ... Address ... Phone ... Do Not Write In This Box! Rec : Adv. Taken Copied by (Print ad below as you want it to appear) --- 12 Thursday, August 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan Enrollment Load Not Discouraging New Law Dean Confident By Melissa Berg Kensan Staff Writer The phone rang and the dean swung sharply away, almost pouncing on the receiver. A tool in front of the door said no one answered on the other end. Such enthusiasm at answering a ringing phone is indicative of his career as president Dickinson Jr. has taken in his new position as dean of KU's law school and he is given the pointment as successor to Lawrence Blades became of PETER HARVEY New Law Dean Enthusiastic Martin Dickinson, a KU grad. The 33-year-old bespectacled dean is a third generation lawyer. He was trained lawyers. In a recent interview Dickinson outlined plans for preserving another kind of tradition—offering the best options. His dress-short-sleeved shirt and tie, matched the atmosphere of his office relaxed. He was comfortable, half was spent, but his tone was still energetic. He leaned back in his swair chair and spoke optimistically about coping with the new job. He enrolled and faculty shortages. Enrollment has zoomed to 485 students, an increase of 200 over two years ago, the dean said. In addition, enrollment actually has increased from 17 to 20. "This means heavier teacher loads and larger classes for all professors," he said, adding that there were no teaching assistants in the classrooms indicated that the majority of classes would have 80 to 110 students. In an effort to help alleviate the increased teacher load, the dear will teach half time and the associate barkley Clark will assume a full teaching load. assume a fun teaching load. Dickinson refused to be discouraged at the situation. "I have confidence that we'll be able to enlarge the faculty in 1972-73." Cramped facilities present another problem for the new dean. This building (Green Hall) was built in 1965 for 108 students, "the seating is inadequate, especially in the library," he The typical student spends much of his time in the library. The American Association for Library Services should be enough seating for two-thirds of the total number of students. We can only accommodate one-third. Dickinson expressed disappointment that the cramped facilities and staff shortages had allowed her mission to qualified students. Of the 1,400 applicants this year, 200 were selected for the freshman law class. As in many other schools, her foothold in increasing numbers. Dickinson estimated that the percentage of women in each class had doubled over last year from 7 per cent to about 15 per cent. 'The incoming class includes close to 30 women, upping the total in the school to 35 or 40.' Dickson said. Dickinson said that there had been no particular recruitment program aimed at females, but barriers were being broken by "When my mother received a law degree from KU in 1928 it was rather unusual, but today it's a different story. Law firms are taking more women." Dickinson noted that there weren't any apparent differences between the quality of work in male and female students. "There's a little more selectivity involved with the females, because only the highest caliber players are eligible. They aren't any more reducent than the guys. If they're going to compete, they're going to have to engage in competition." Dickinson practiced law in the field of tax and estate planning in Chicago from 1967. He made the switch to the academic world, "because in a practice, you can only represent a small world of people." You can research policies. Dickinson's record shows his own brand of aggressiveness. For instance, he has an impressive list of acknowsness. He also The switch has been a beneficial one for students. In 1985, she was named "Best Teacher" in the senior class of the Law School. Regents Cut 1973 Budget Requests Although fiscal year 1971-72 is just beginning, budget officials have already been submitted to the Kansas Board of Regents and the governor. The board chopped KU's request of $45,711,283 to $46,751,007. In making the cuts the Regents deleted student salary money increases, overtime pay, faculty disability and life insurance, the aeronautics doctoral program, and the law enforcement training center, space building staff, McCollian Lab staff and supplies and statewide expansion. Faculty salary increases requested at 10 per week were requests for classified employees from 10 to 8 per cent Nevertheless, the board's request, if approved by the governor and the legislature in late 2013, came from the 1972 budget of 1.01 per cent in the total budget and 14.4 per cent in state appropriations. In October, the Regent's will be willing to bring the Kansas director. His ruling the governor will hold a budget hearing at which cut will be made. A revised budget will then be prepared by the governor and will be submitted to the department for the final decision on funding. 12 years the percentage of faculty employed in legislature to the University's educational and general operating budget has decreased from 71.5 per cent to 63.3 per cent, and from 46.8 per cent to 32.6 per cent, 12 years the legislature has gone from $45 million to virtually zero, financing new construction of buildings on the Lawrence campus not including repairs for the University building. This includes both general revenue appropriations and educational building. Educational Building Fund, a state-wide tax levy. The Kansas Union and student health center are financed virtually without government funding. Although legislative support for the general operating fund, for the Educational Building The net result is that KU faculty members receive salaries in the lower 10 per cent of all graduates. The number of faculty to students has decreased from 1 for every 15 to for every 25, and students now have only 7.88 sq.f. of classroom space compared to 11.19 sq.f. for 10 years ago. $1,000 Awards Are Received By 4 Teachers Flora Wyatt, teaching associate in education, received the $1,000 B. Herner Fink award for outstanding classroom teaching. Four KU faculty members last commencement received awards of $1,000 each for excellence in teaching. Robert W. McColl, associate professor of geography and East Asian area studies; John B. Bremner, associate professor of journalism and Elizabeth Avery English, associate professor of English, received $1,000 awards from the Standard Oil Company of Indiana Foundation. Fund, faculty salaries, space per student and faculty members per student is on the decline, the number of donors and amount of donation to the Endowment and donations are at a record high. In the 12 month period ending May 1, over 88 million was given to the University by private donors. The funds through the University are intended to provide services and facilities that normally are not provided by the taxpayers through appropriations. The Program for Progress campaign which netted $19.6 million, still has a balance of about $1.4 billion. The program's cash and plastics for future use. The Alumni Association has the highest percentage of graduates in the program and is a member of the Big Eight schools of all universities and colleges in the United States. Gifts this past year from 17,227 donors produced a total of $603,000—another record. There are three budgets for the University. One is the general revenue fund (applied to) an annual budget, in this year $22% of $22% million. The one most often referred to is the educational and general operating budget, which comes $3 per cent of which comes from legislative support. WE TRY HARDER!! Decorator Blocks 1 X 12 Shelving Adjustable Shelves Modar Wall Furniture Low Cost Modar Prefinished Paneling Foster Lumber Co. 1011 N.3rd St. 843-0931 We are moving upstairs to ground level to give our customers more SPACE and more extensive FACILITIES Chancellor's Welcome Will Follow Tradition LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB FOR WOMEN Merry Bees coupon in the People Book will be valid at The LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB FOR WOMEN 2323 Ridge Court Suite 1A 842-4044 The annual opening convo- vation will return to a more dynamic style at the Chancellor Chancellor E. E. Laurence Chalmerls Chalmers delivers his writings to students. Sondra Treadway (owner) Last year, Chalmers welcomed the new students only briefly and then devoted most of his speech $o$ the troubles the University of Kansas and its students faced. First he introduced himself; first we迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎接迎接迎接迎接迎接 Chalmers is scheduled to speak at 9:40 a.m. Monday in Allen Field House. All classes from the day before have been shortened to a half hour each with the usual 10-minute break in between. No classes will be held from 9:20 to 10:50 to allow students time to attend Chalmer's address. Chalmers planned to tell new students that KU represented a new opportunity for them but that they must take advantage of it. Nichols and hand-written draft of the speech Wednesday, Nichols said, and some revisions are expected. The final version would speak for about 20 minutes. Nichols said Chalmers will make note of the system of student government at KU and will urge student participation. Nichols said Wednesday that right budget KU is faced with and will ask for understanding. Paul E. Wilson, professor of aw and University marshal, will introduce Chaimers. Also on the course are Mr. Drew our vice chancellors, the academic deans of the various schools and colleges within the University, the chairman and the executive Senate, the Executive Committee, the presiding officers of the University Senate and of the Faculty Senate and the student president and vice president. TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE SUA POPULAR FILMS Woodford Auditorium Fri. & Sat. Aug. 27 & 28 7am & 8pm Next Week: The Heart is a Lonely Mute ROBERT REED AND KATHARINE HOPKINS BENEFIT THE AM SUSAN CLARK Next Week: The Heart is a Lonely Hunter ROBERT REEDFOUND KAT MARINE ROSEN GIBERT BLAKE SUSAN CLARK "Among the most worthwhile films this year. Meaningful! Compelling!" Carl Meyerine Patronize Kansan Advertisers STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES PRESENTS IKE AND TINA TURNER PLUS SPECIAL GUEST STAR DAVID FRYE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10th----8 P.M. ALLEN FIELD HOUSE Tickets: $2.50-$3.00-$3.50 On sale August 30th, S.U.A. office Main Floor—Kansas Union HARNESS BOOTS FOR MEN & WOMEN BOB MAXI Lawrance's Unique Shoe Boutique 8 West 9th University Daily Kansan Thursday, August 26, 1971 1-B GIBSON'S WHERE YOU ALWAYS BUY THE BEST FOR LESS GIBSON'S GBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER 25th & Iowa, Lawrence, Kansas Open 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.Daily—9 a.m. to 6 p.m.Sundays Lawrence's Largest Store 72,000 Sq. Feet — Parking for 800 Cars Advantages of Shopping at Gibson's: Every Item is First Quality . . . Never a "Second" at Gibson's . . . No Limits on any Item, on sale or regular stock . . . Free Parking. GIBSONS DISCOUNT WHERE IS GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER LOCATED WHAT DOES GIBSON'S SELL? HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS Most Complete Line in Northeast Kansas. All Major Brands! All Low Discount Prices! HOUSEWARES Lamps, Small Furniture Pieces, Pictures Kitchen Gadgets, Irons, Toasters, Vacuum Sweepers Thousands of Others. STATIONERY Complete Line of School and Office Supplies Artist Supplies. HOME FURNISHINGS Drapes, Curtains, Towels, Rugs, Sheets, Bedspreads Everything for Your Home. Large Selection of Sewing Notions! CAMERA AND JEWELRY Cameras, Film, Projectors, Cassette Tapes, Records Paperback Books, Film Developing, Wigs, Televisions, Tape Recorders and Players, Typewriters, Adding Machines, Jewelry, Billfolds. Colognes and After Shaves. SPORTING GOODS Hunting and Fishing Supplies and Licenses, Basketball Football and Baseball Supplies, Camping Equipment Most Everything for the Sportsminded Person. TOYS All Latest Name Brand Toys at Discount Prices. Some of the Brand Names at Gibson's are — HOOVER SUNBEAM WESTINGHOUSE TOASTMASTER BISSELL PRESTO WEST BEND VAN WYCK THERMOS SAMSONITE DELTA RUBBER QUEEN GOODYEAR ANCHOR HOCKING REGAL EKCO BENTLEY EASTMAN KODAK POLAROID PANASONIC CLARICON FABERGE' CHANEL ENGLISH LEATHER LANVIN SCRIPTO SHEAFFER STUART HALL DURO ART SUPPLIES WILLIAMSON-DICKIE ST. MARYS CURITY CHICOPEE ENDICOTT JOHNSON ACME BOOT RUBBER MAID DUPONT SIMONIZ FRAM ZEBCO THERMOS COLEMAN SHAKESPEARE GARCIA RAWLINGS SPALDING KRAEUTER WELLER MASONITE AND MANY OTHERS KANSAS TURNPIKE WEST EXIT EAST EXIT 6TH STREET CITY OF LAWRENCE IOWA + HAWKY UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 19TH STREET MASSACHUSETTS 23RD STREET 25TH & IOWA CLOTHING WOMENS CHILDRENS Lingerie, Purses and Accessories, Coats, Blouses Sports Wear, Sleepwear, Hosiery Play Clothes, Dress Clothes, Baby Needs Sleepwear MEN'S SHOES Slacks, Shirts, Work Clothes, Ties, Belts, Under Wear, Etc. Gibsons Has One of the Largest Selections of Shoes in Lawrence. Come in and Choose from Our Huge Inventory of Shoes for the Family. AUTOMOTIVE Car Parts, Name Brand Oils, Waxes, Tires, Wheels. Thousands of Car Accessories. HARDWARE Tools, Shelves, Foam, Electrical Tools, TV Antennas. Paints, Varnishes, Window Shades. Something for Everyone. 2-B Thursday, August 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan Help Wanted! Whether you need a job; want to buy, rent, or sell; or just want to say something special; the Kansan classified page is the logical place to turn. Henrys From All of Us at HENRY'S DRIVE-IN WELCOME BACK STUDENTS If you're not a regular customer at HENRY'S, you ought to be !!! 6th and Missouri OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT AT LAWRENCE NATIONAL'S Beautiful New CAMPUSBANK campusbank - ECONOMICAL STUDENT ACCOUNTS "10' a check" or Regular Checking Accounts - CLOSEST BANK TO KU Just a few blocks from campus at 9th & La. - WIDEST SELECTION OF CHECKS ANYWHERE Everything from Traditional checks to California-styled "Personality" checks with Buckskin covers. - MOST CONVENIENT Four Drive-In lanes plus Walk-In teller - EXTRA PEOPLE ON DUTY For the next week we'll have three extra persons on hand to assist you. + Free Gifts For New Student Customers Come up the Campusbank's winding staircase-have a Coke with us—and open your LNB account. We'll look for you. the students' choice since 1866 LAWRENCE NATIONAL DOWNTOWN: 7th & Mass. St. MEMBER F.D.I.C. BANK CAMPUSBANK: 9th & Louisiana AUDIOTRONICS 928 Massachusetts 843-8500 FUN TO BE WITH CRAIG SPECIALS CRAIG MODEL 7123 8-Track TAPE PLAYER WITH PRE-SET FM STEREO RADIO Third-resolution floormount unit. Station selector, parametric program winding and FM stereo switching. Automatic frequency control. Installation cartridge latht. R99. SALE PRICE $169.95 AT ONLY WITH SPEAKERS $139.95 QUADRIPHONIC Eight-Track Tape Player Plays a different channel through each of 4 speakers. Plays all 4 channels & a channel carriages. High sound output power means ample volume with low battery drain. It spoils you for any other sound system. $119.95 $139.95 w-2 pr. 9405 Speakers FREE RECORD CHANGER WITH YOUR CHOICE OF RECEIVERS PLUS BIG DOLLAR SAVINGS CRAIG MODEL 3303 AM/9M STINEO & TRACK RECORDER SYSTEM Complete system combining AM/FM stereo radio receiver with Bracket amplifier and recording includes matched speakers. REGULAR PRICE $249.95 SAVE $50.00 ONLY $199.95 CRAIG MODEL 5205 STINEO CASSETTE AM/FM RADIO RECORDER SYSTEM Complete system combining a sternosette tape recorder with AM/FM stereo radio receiver - includes matched speakers. REGULAR PRICE $329.95 SAVE $70.00 SAVE OVER '90 CRAIG MODEL 2702 ALL FOR $229.95 SAVE $61.90 CRAIG MODEL 1306 PORTABLE AM/FM/SW FULL-BAND RADIO Full-throat wave coverage plus AM and FM tuning. Features integrated circuitry, separate bass and hi-fi control. Active battery power. REGULAR PRICE $94.95 SAVE $36% DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE DENON PICKERING SHORE CRAIG PANASONIC PIONEER VERITAS Patronize Kansan Advertisers! UP TO U. IN GEAR FOR THIS FALL——HERE AUDIOTRONICS 928 Massachusetts 843-8500 FUN TO BE WITH CRAIG SPECIALS CRAIG MODEL 3133 $139.95 OF FM-ACT TAPE PLAYED WITH PRE-SET FM STEREO RADIO Then resist four model unit. Station selector buttons, automatic program switching and FM tuner to chase band with frequency control. Electronic cartridge last. Reg. SALE PRICED AT ONLY WITH SPEAKERS $139.95 QUADRIPHONIC Eight-Track Tape Player Plays a different channel through each of 4 speakers. Plays all 4-channel & 2-channel cartridges. High sound output power means ample volume with low battery drain. It spoils you for any other sound system. $119.95 $139.95 Speakers CRAIG MODEL 3247 CONTROL PORTABLE CASSETTE RECORDER WITH CARRYING CASE RECORDER WITH FM STEREO RADIO ALL NOW FOR $44.95 SAVE 33% STEREO B-Track RECORDER DECK REGULAR PRICE MODEL 3207-$159.95 AM/FM STEREO RECORDER SYSTEM REGULAR PRICE MODEL 3207-$159.95 AM/FM STEREO RECORDER SYSTEM REGULAR PRICE MODEL 3207-$159.95 NOW BOTH FOR $179.95 SAVE 32% FREE RECORD CHANGER WITH YOUR CHOICE OF RECRIVERS PLUS BIG DOLLAR SAVINGS CRAIG MODEL 3201 AUTOMATIC FULL-SIZE RECORD CHANGER With Craig receiver. Plays off records, dials jukes, diamond for LP/ stereo recorders and more. REGULAR PRICE $53.95 ONLY $199.95 SAVE OVER 90 CRAIG MODEL 2705 STEREO CASSETTE AM/FM RADIO/RECORDER SYSTEM Complete system combining an AM/FM stereo radio recorder with Braun's track cartridge player and record set. REGULAR PRICE $249.95 SAVE 50.00 CRAIG MODEL 2705 STEREO CASSETTE AM/FM RADIO/RECORDER SYSTEM Complete system combining an AM/FM stereo radio recorder with Braun's track cartridge player and record set. REGULAR PRICE $249.95 SAVE 50.00 CRAIG MODEL 2705 STEREO CASSETTE AM/FM RADIO/RECORDER SYSTEM Complete system combining an AM/FM stereo radio recorder with Braun's track cartridge player and record set. REGULAR PRICE $249.95 SAVE 50.00 CRAIG MODEL 2705 STEREO CASSETTE AM/FM RADIO/RECORDER SYSTEM Complete system combining an AM/FM stereo radio recorder with Braun's track cartridge player and record set. REGULAR PRICE $249.95 SAVE 50.00 CRAIG MODEL 2705 STEREO CASSETTE AM/FM RADIO/RECORDER SYSTEM Complete system combining an AM/FM stereo radio recorder with Braun's track cartridge player and record set. REGULAR PRICE $249.95 SAVE 50.00 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE DENON PICKERING SHORE CRAIG PANASONIC PIONEER VERITAS UP TO U. UP TO U. 50 Milton Keynes CABLE KNIT SWEATER Slacks? We get slacks we haven't even unpacked yet. Knits and sweaters, more of the right ones than you'd ever expect to find in one store. Our shirt and the collection is long enough to buy in the shop—the newest of fashion—very tastefully done. Stop in and consider—you're welcome. THE Town Shop 839 Mass. St. DOWNTOWN University Daily Kansan Q DUAL FISHER STANDARD WHAREDALE SCOCHT CAPITOL ROBERTS BOGEN BRIGHTCO $ Thursday, August 26, 1971 3-B KANSAN WANT ADS Stereo Components System Sale! $139.95 AC CONVENIENCE OUTLET AM FM FM STEREO TUNER ANPLUVER TAPE PHONO INPUTS STEREO INDICATION ILLUMINATED SLIDE RULE (DRIVE) TUNING CONTROL STEREO HEADPHONE JACK FIVE PRECISION CONTROLS TURNABLE GARRARD RECORD CHANGER CRYPTO-CAPTURE WITH DIAMOND WHEEL 1.8 WOOFER and 1.2 TWITTER A FANTASTIC VALUE! Model 4800 offers a 5 PIECE COMPACT STEREO/PHONIC COMPONENT SYSTEM complete with AM/FM FM STEREO/TUNER AND DUST COVER, GRAPPED RECORD CHANGER and DUST COVER THERE'S OLDED WALNUT FINISH CHAIRRY, and ONE TEAR WARRANTY ON LABOR and PARTS! SEE and HEAR IT NOW! MASTERWORK A Product of COLUMBIA RECORDS KIEF'S Malts Shopping Center KANSAN WANT ADS WORK FAST USE THEM! Stereo Components System Sale! $139.95 A FANASTIC VALUE! Makes 4000 offers at 5 PIECE COMPACT STEREOPHONING COMPONENT SYSTEM complete with AM FM FM STEREOPHONER AMPLIFIER, 2 SPEAKER INCLUDES, GARRARD RECORD CHARGER and DUST COVER THERE'S OLD WARRANTY FINISH CABINETRY and a ONE YEAR WARRANTY on LABOR and PARTS. SEE AND HEAR IT NOW. MASTERWORK A Product of COLUMBIA RECORDS KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Big Brother And The Holding Company How Hard It Is INCLUDING HOUSE ON FIRE, BLACK WIDOW SPIDER, SHINE ON BURied ALIVE IN THE BLUES HOW HARD IT IS Big Brother & Holding Co. $2.99 ON COLUMBIA RECORDS KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Available on 8 track tape at 5.77 Sale! $139^95 AU CONVENIENCE OUTPUT AM FM TV STEREO TUNER AM/FM RATE PHONE INPUTS STEREO INDICATOR ALUMINUM SIDE PULL DIA. TURING CONTROL STEREO LINE-PHONE JACK FIVE PRECISION CONTROLS 11. TURNTABLE PLUS HOIST COVER CARRARD RECORD CHANGER CERAMIC CARTRIDGE WITH DIAMOND NEEDLE 1. 8 WOOFER and 1. 2 TWITTER A FANTASY VALUE! Model 4800 offers a 5% PIECE COMPACT STEREOPHONE, LOGICAL MONITOR, DUST COVER AND AIR HAT SET. STEREOPHONE AMMIFIRE, SPEAKER ENCOURAGES, CARRARD RECORD CHANGER and DUST COVER. THERE'S OILED WARNUT ENGLISH CARRIER and ONE QWK WARNANTY on LABOR and PARTS! SEE and HEAR IT NOW! BURIED ALIVE IN THE BLUES HOW HARD IT IS Big Brother And The Holding Company How Hard It Is INCLUDING HOUSE ON FIRE BLACK WIDOW SPIDER SHINE ON BURIED ALIVE IN THE BLUES HOW HARD IT IS Big Brother & Holding Co. $2.99 ON COLUMBIA RECORDS KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Available on 8 track tape at 5.77 WELCOME!!! STUDENTS, FACULTY and STAFF WEEK-END FOOD SERVICE AVAILABLE at KANSAS UNION ON SATURDAY 7:00 a.m. - 11 p.m. ON SUNDAY 10:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. — HAWKS NEST HOURS 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. HAWKS NEST Sandwiches & Drinks Salads & Desserts TRAIL ROOM Full Vending Operations—Sandwiches Cold Drinks, desserts, & Salads 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. UPPER HAWKS NEST—BUFFET $2.00 per person $1.00 for children under 12 Roast Beef or Fried Chicken Mashed Potatoes Buttered Green Beans Buttered Carrots Menu Buttered Green Peas Potato Salad Kidney Bean Salad Cole Slaw Chocolate Cake Cherry Pie Beverage 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. PRAIRIE ROOM Charcoal Steaks to order or SPECIAL—$1.75 Chicken Telrazini Baked Potato Buffered Peas Menu Tossed Salad Hard Roll with butter Chocolate Cake Beverage KANSAS UNION Welcome K.U. Students from 10 the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Welcome Back-to-School and to the Village Set "THE PLACE" where all the beautiful young things hang-out! Touch down terrific jacket with a sheepish look. Canvas with plush inner shearling warmth. Has fall $44 buckled turn up collar for added warmth Top off everything with this smashing classic cotton velvet blazer **36** Pretty and permanent peaked with a washable plus. $16 This plaid pant skirt is a wardrobe must at just Vroom off in this Manskin Knit turtleneck for the game with rah yellow colors $ 12 Stop em dead fit is the thing about these low low riding cotton corduroy jeans $12 Antique rawhide belt with big metal buckle ... 87 Also stores at Prairie Village, Kansas and 63rd & Brookside, Kansas City, Mo 4-B Thursday, August 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan UN 4-4358 8:00 - 5:00 KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS The Phoody Blues every good boy deserves more MOODY BLUES $399 ON THRESHOLD RECORDS KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Available on 8 track tape for $5.77 Welcome To Big Blue Country Home of the Jayhawks Wear Your Blue! Come See Our Back To College Collection . . . Fashions by — Miss Pat Thermo Jac Jack Winter Joyce Junior House of Milwaukee Country Set Maidenform Lingerie Gilead Lingerie Lounge Craft Berkshire Hosiery KIRSTEN'S At Hillcrest Karajan's 1971 Salzburg Collaboration Angel On three brand-new companion albums. Herbert von Karanaya pays tribute to his home town's master musician. With the Berlin Philharmonic. The Last Six Symphonies of Mozart have been revisited—for Angel. The association is brilliant. Indeed, one which would command the composer himself to speak in 1974 super-superlatives. HARRISON WILSON SHEPHERDS HOBERT NON KARAMAS BOYD INSTRUCTIONS Here then is great Mozart. Created out of Karajan's titanic discipline and dedication to the music—and the Berlin's own unswerving interpretative knowhow. Angel has brought it all together on this trio of impocably engineered recordings. MAURICE DELBANON SYLVESTRE MOIRE MAURICE DELBANON SYLVESTRE MOIRE HERBERT VON KARAWAN HISTORY HERBERT MON KARMAIN SUN 9:30 AM $386 PER DISC KIEFS Discount Records KIEFS FEEL LIKE FLYING? Malls Center SUA and Maupintur are eager to announce the new University Travel Service located in the Kansas Union Lounge. This unique student and faculty oriented Travel Service is the result of a student proposal made by those working in SUA. They felt it was essential to existing programs as well as inclusion of professional travel service, which only a travel agent can supply. SUA's recommendation for Maupinot was accepted by the Union Operating Committee and since that time the University Travel Service was established. We feel with volunteer students and provide our working class members with your independent travel, we will have an excellent travel service available to you. strong Main Lounge, Kansas Union SUA TRAVEL SERVICE Services Offered INTERNATIONAL STUDENT I.D. AND THE PERSONAL TRAINED DITERARIES AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL DUTCH AMERICAN YOUTH HOSTEL CARDS-IN THE FLY PAY WAY LATER TRIPS AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL DUTCH DUTCH AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL DUTCH DUTCH AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL DUTCH DUTCH STUDENT TRAVEL ADVISORS BOERGMAN CHARACTER FLIGHT IN-SHORE POLYNESIAN FLOURS TO EUROPE FOR MEMBERS STUDENT TRAVEL ADVISORS BOERGMAN CHARACTER FLIGHT IN-SHORE POLYNESIAN FLOURS TO EUROPE FOR MEMBERS STUDENT TRAVEL ADVISORS BOERGMAN CHARACTER FLIGHT IN-SHORE POLYNESIAN FLOURS TO EUROPE FOR MEMBERS CLUB GROUP TOURS BOERGMAN CHARACTER FLIGHT IN-SHORE POLYNESIAN FLOURS TO EUROPE FOR MEMBERS LOCAL CAMP GROUP TOURS BOERGMAN CHARACTER FLIGHT IN-SHORE POLYNESIAN FLOURS TO EUROPE FOR MEMBERS LOCAL CAMP GROUP TOURS BOERGMAN CHARACTER FLIGHT IN-SHORE POLYNESIAN FLOURS TO EUROPE FOR MEMBERS WORK INFORMATION (FOR AIRLINES) WORK INFORMATION (FOR AIRLINES) WORK INFORMATION (FOR AIRLINES) HOTEL BESSENE IS NOT EXTRA FOXTABLE HOTEL BESSENE IS NOT EXTRA FOXTABLE SPECIAL WEAKNESSES EXCURSIONS SPECIAL WEAKNESSES EXCURSIONS SPECIAL WEAKNESSES EXCURSIONS SPECIAL WEAKNESSES EXCURSIONS SPECIAL WEAKNESSES EXCURSIONS dba Maupintour 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday EVERYONE WELCOME 18 and Over- Always The Finest Entertainment At The LOWEST PRICES Thursday, Aug. 26th-8 p.m. to Midnight Red Dogs Friday, Aug. 27th-8 p.m. to Midnight Spider & Crabs Admission '100 Saturday, Aug. 28th----8 p.m. to Midnight Fabulous Flippers Admission $^{\circ}$1 $^{\circ}$ RED DOG 642 Mass. Phone 842-0100 Lawrence THE DEVIL RED DOG 642 Mass. Phone 842-0100 Lawrence THE CITY SCHOOL "WITH IT" FASHIONS FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL '71 FOR CAMPUS OR OFF CAMPUS. DO YOUR THING IN OUR CLOTHES. LEFT—DEBBIE The Skinny Rib Slipover ... $11 The Tweed Skirt ... $14 RIGHT- PAM The Crushed Velour Blazer .. $34 The Crepe Shirt & Ascot .. $14 The "Warm" Pants .. $10 Jay SHOPPE Downtown (Monza Models — DEBBIE JOHNSON and PAM ELLIOT) (Monza Models-DEBBIE JOHNSON and PAM ELLIOT) University Daily Kansan Thursday, August 26, 1971 5-B Low Rates & High returns with ansan Classifieds Kansan Classifieds 5TH STREET MASSACHUSETTS 91 STREET MARSHABEETTS Weaver's Inc. Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1857 Shop Thursdays Til 8:30 p.m. closet and storage aids for home or dorm! "ideal happening With these fine Lee-Rowan and Ideal products, let us show you how to make extra space "happen" in your closets—and wow you with a groovy new way to organize your home. Visit our Back-To-School Happening Today! Tie rack OVER-DOOR HANGER -Adjusts to narrow or wide doors. Sturdy . 89c (not shown) Swing-Down Over Door Hanger $1.00 A BLOUSE TREE -Holds & blouses or shirts . $1.00 (not shown) Skirt Ada-hangers . . . . . . . . 3 for $1.00 Skirt & Blouse Ada-hangers . . . 2 for $1.00 Five Tier Skirt Rack . . . . . $1.25 Four Tier Skirt Rack . . . . $1.25 2 --- TROUSER HANGERS, pres-to-lok ... $1.00 (not shown) Multiple Slack Rack ... $1.50 WOMEN'S 9-PAIR SHOE KEEEPER, wedge-lock construction for durability $1.99 (not shown) Men's 6-Pair Shoe Keeper $1.99 9-Pair Shoe Rack $1.99 FLOWER CANNING STATION 38" GARMENT RACK, chrome plated heavy 1" steel tubing. Free rolling casters ..$7.98 (not shown) 30-48" Garment Rack ..$13.98 30-48" Expandable Garment Rack ..$14.98 48-84" Expandable Garment Rack ..$16.98 STORAGE CHESTS Store clothes or linens in these attractive, sturdy chests. Wood frame, fiberboard construction. Dust cover. 34" x 15½" x 13" $ 8.98 (shown) 28" x 24" x 13" $10.98 34" x 24" x 13" $11.98 C UNDERBED METAL CHEST Keep clothes, blankets, linens fresh and safe. Gold rust-resistant vinyl aluminum finish, plated trim. 35" x 18" $6.98 x 6". NOTIONS—1ST FLOOR 901. Mass. NOTIONS—1ST FLOOR Phone 843-6360 STUDENTS! Your Golden Opportunity to start your table service Spoon Knife Fork Dinner fork Golden Scroll Beautiful 23-Karat gold, electroplated finish. Four pieces; six crystals. Free PLACE SETTING when you open or add to checking or savings, or invest in CDs. Choose Good Scroll, Nassau Stainless, or Roger Silverplate. All beautiful, all by International. All available at minimum price when you bank at "Number 1" in Lawrence. Your place setting is FREE; this way. Nassau Five pieces per setting, in non-care stainless for contemporary living. SAVINGS - Open or add $50 or more to your daily interest savings account. CD's - Open a Certificate of Deposit for $1,000 or more. CHECKING - Open or add to a checking account with $100 or more and receive a free place setting when you buy your first place setting at $2.99. ADDITIONAL PLACE SETTINGS ONLY $2.99 Only one place setting is free, and only one starter setting per family, please. After that, a $50 deposit in any account qualifies you to buy another place setting for $2.99 or accessory units at special prices available only to club members. Fork Knife Spoon Camelot Four-piece settings that complement traditional or modern, in classic silverplate. Drive-In Bank 9th & Tennessee FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE --- 9th & MASSACHUSETTS - PHONE 843-0152 - MEMBER F.D.I.C. . 6-B Thursday, August 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan KANSAN WANT Stereo Components System $ 169 00 MODEL 4800 II Deluxe Stereophonic Modular Component System with AM- FM FM Stereo Five micro- system-2 speakers (1.8" and 1. 2") in each (enclosured) headphone, lack tinted dust cover solid state stereo tuner- slide rule dial FM stereo in- dicator black-out dial Garrard automatic turntable- ceing and pause control AC convenience outlet-inputs and outputs waistuit, finish-control center. 19 3.16" wide, 4.58" high, 10" deep-speakers, 10" wide, 15" high, 6" deep. MASTERWORK A Product of COLUMBIA RECORDS KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center ADS FOR WORK WONDERS BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS $399 On Columbia Records BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS $3.99 On Columbia Records KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Available on 8 track tape at $5.77 EVERYONE KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center SANDY'S Is Glad to Have the Students Back Hope You Have a Good Year! Back to School Special Aug.27,28,29 Hamburgers ... 15¢ French Fries...15 $ ^ { \circ } $ FAVES Cheeseburgers ... 20¢ Remember our other menu items: Hi Los .45 Big Scot 49 Pepsi—Dr. Pepper—Rootbeer Sandy's Sandy's At 9th and Iowa University State Bank EAGLE NEST Welcomes Students and Faculty Bank Where Jayhawkers keep their Nest Eggs... University State Bank 955 Iowa Street Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Viking 3-4700 UNIVERSITY BANK 9th St North Oxford CAMPUS KU 15th AREA YOUR University State Bank 955 IOWA TELEPHONE 843 4700 CLOSEST BANK TO CAMPUS We are open: 9:30:3:00—Monday-Thursday 9:30:3:00 & 4:00:6:00—Friday 9:30:12:00—Safurday (Drive up and walk up windows only.) University Daily Kansan Thursday, August 26.1971 7-R Don't Knock It 'Till You've Tried It! Place your classified ad in the Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, 8:00 - 5:00 Monday thru Friday. WEDDING TONG PAUL STOOKEY of (Peter Paul & Mary) $3.99 on Warner Bros. Records at KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Available on 8 track tapes for $5.77 WEDDING SONG John Paul Jones & Mary Paul and Paul and Shuggie Otis Freedom Flight Available on 8 track tapes for $5.77 including: Sweet Thang!/ Purple Ice Cold Daydream!/ Strawberry Letter 23 Me and My Woman!/ Someone's Always Singing SHUGGIE OTIS $299 We and Why Woman Suffer. Howey's Singing ON EPIC RECORDS AT KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Available on 8 track tapes at $5.77 T STUDY LAMPS Shop our lamp shop for the right study lamp for your dorm or home. We've a big collection in desk, high intensity, table and floor styles to highlight and decor. $5.00 to $26.00 SCATTER & AREA RUGS Brighten up the dorm or home with our decorative and useful rugs. Choose from a big variety of styles in 100 per cent cotton, polyester, viscose, nylon, rayon, blends. Assst. colors in 2 x 3, $2^{2}$ x 4 x 3 ft. sizes. $1.98 to 20.00 3rd Floor BIG RED FLOWER GO TOGETHERS Big Red Flower by Stevens Ulica is not for everyone! It looks like a flower with little look, yet can resist flowers. Sheets, towels and spreads combining big red and white flowers on white and blue backgrounds in identical designs for a total color palette. No-Iron Sheets 100% Flat or Fitted Twin, Reg. 5,49 $4.49 Oll, Reg. 6,49 $5.99 Queen, Reg. 8,99 $5.99 King, Reg. 10,99 $5.99 Pillow Cases, pr. Reg. 3,99 $3.79 Oll, Reg. 4,49 $5.99 Bedspreads Twin or Full Reg. 12.99 $10.99 Polyester-Cotton,fringed Towels of Velvet Cotton Terry Bath Towel 24 x 45 in. Reg. 2.50 $1.99 Hand Towel, 16 x 20 in. Reg. 1.70 $1.39 Hand Towel, 8 x 20 in. Reg. 1.10 $1.39 9TH STREET MASSADUGETTS 9TH STREET MASSACHUSETTS Weaver's Inc. Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1857 WeaverS Ine. Linens—1st Floor DORM OR HOME FURNISHINGS SALE! BACKREST PILLOWS Back to school savings on corduroy backrest pillows to cradle in comfort of light studying or resting. Full length, 4-way pillow with hookless headband. Many at special low prices. Shop our entire store for all home furnishings—priced for all budgets! $6.98 Shop Thursdays til 8:30 p.m. Reg. 10.98 Milk and Toast For accent pieces, piling high, siting low. Corduroy, homewarm, homespun, tapestry and furlooks fabrics. Colors to come. * $2.00 to $5.00 DECORATOR PILLOWS 3rd Floor TOMB STATUE A stone statue of a sleeping figure, likely depicting a pharaoh or a noble person. The statue is topped with a pillow and has an inscription above it. It is set within a niche, which is often found in temples or monuments. Bates Piping Rock Bedspread Rugged ribbed cotton-Avril rayon spread, long-favored for home rooms, dens, dorm. home decor. 16 color. 16 color decorators. Twin, Reg. 10.98 $8.99 Full, Reg. 12.98 *10.99 REGISTER FOR BATES SEND ME TO COLLEGE CONTEST 1st Floor India Print Throws Popular for 'border print' fashions, decorative and practical for furniture throws. These 100 per cent cotton hand- loomed imported throws are hand blocked, washable. Good selection of colors, over the use, they're priced to please! Twin, 72x108 in. $5.00 Full, 90x108 in. $6.00 3rd Floor UP TO U. DON'T SLACK UP UNTIL YOU SEE US . . The University Shop 1420 CRESCENT RD. On the Hill Across from Lindley Hall We're loading them in by the ton every day. Jeans, knits, cords. all sorts of casuals and the tops to go with them. No better place to come back to here to fill your slack wardrobe. UP TO U. Tuxedo Shirt with tie Tuxedo Shirt with no tie Broadway METROBANK RISE TO THE SURFACE . . . The University Shop 1420 CRESCENT RD. On the Hill Across from Lindley Hall The newest in shirts pops to the surface of men's wardrobes. It's a chance to wear, before, Kenis, jacquards, textured strips, great ideas in the colors and elegant fit you'll come to expect from us. UP TO U. WE UNFETTER THE SWEATER When you choose your new sweater here, prepare for a touch of confusion. We aimed for a wide choice when we assembled our little wilde ... so come in and take your time. The University Shop 1420 CRESENT RO. On the Hill Across From Lindley Hall 8-B Thursday, August 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan Patronize Kansan Advertisers! THEATRE OPEN-HOUSE Sunday, August 29 7:00 p.m. University Theatre-Murphy Hall - Meet the theatre faculty and students - Find out about programs in theatre at K.U. - The 1971-72 theatre production season will be discussed - Audition and casting procedures will be announced: find out how you can participate as actor, singer, dancer, or backstage - Refreshments will be served ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ THEATRE AUDITIONS Open auditions for the 1971-72 theatre season at K.U. will be held in Murphy Hall Monday and Tuesday, August 30 & 31, 1971 at 7:00 p.m. Audition registration begins at 4:00 p.m. Monday, August 30, ALL K.U. students, full or part time, are eligible to audition. Productions to be cast include: "Fiddler on the Roof" "Pigskin-A Game for Theatre" (an original play by Stephen Biddle) "The Icewolf" "Hamlet" "Serencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead" "A Flea in Her Ear" "Spoon River Anthology" Singing auditions for "Fiddler on the Roof" will be held Wednesday, September 1 at 7:00 p.m. For music and audition material inquire at Theatre Office, 317 Morrish Hall For more information attend Theatre Open-House or call 864-3981 ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF THE LAWRENCE ART CENTER A school of art and craft classes a gallery of student work and individual shows Experienced professional Faculty Robert Benedict M. F.A. Director (Offering courses for the beginning and advanced student of all ages.) ($25.00 for the nine week session.) DRAWING Drawing with a variety of media—using the nude model and still life. WATERCOLOR An exploration of the medium using still life and landscape. OIL PAINTING, ACRYLIC & MIXED MEDIA An exploration of one or all of the media, at the individual students discretion, using still life, sandcastles and the muddler. CHILDREN'S ART & CRAFT An experience with a variety of media, to encourage individual creative expression. Inquire about the class in Puppetmaking, for all ages, also classes in : MACRAME KNITTING BOROELLO CROCHET NEEDLEPOINT CREWEL (EXCELLENT AIR CONDITIONED FACILITIES) (LOCATED AT 8414) INDIANA—above Owens Florist) (Call 843-6336 or come by for more pertinent information.) Classes enrolling September 20th thru 25th. First nine week session begins September 27th. Morning, afternoon and evening classes, Friday afternoon and Saturday classes for children. USE KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS 100 DEEP PURPLE $3.99 On Warner Bros. Records at KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Available on 8 track tapes for $5.77 KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Available on 8 track tapes for $5.77 JOHN MATCHMILL $399 JONI MITCHELL $3.99 ON WARNER BROS. RECORDS AT KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Available on 8 track tapes for $5.77 KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Patronize Kansan Advertisers! 王天方 CHASE CHASE $299 ON EPIC RECORDS AT CHASE KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center CHASE ON EPIC RECORDS ON EPIC RECORDS AT KIEFS Discount Records Available on 8 track tape for $5.77 5 Pieces The Mod Ghillie The Shiny Pieces EARTHY LEATHERS from EARTHY LEATHERS from OLDMAINE trotters The Beautiful Shoes for the Beautiful People People who like that which is "earthy". With an eye for style. And a feeling that comfort comes first. Who want their shoes crafted of the kind of leather that's built to take it. People who are going back to basics. In other words, people like you. Soft-as-a-glove Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop MICROSOFT WELCOME STUDENTS We're eager to serve our regular customers and anxious to help all new students "Our 25th year welcoming and serving KU students and faculty" - 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 U HILLCREST 9th and Iowa V1 3-0928 [ Environer accorde Regist The campi Kansi Acte classe City.' this ti ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1 University Enrollment Expected to Match Projection BY ERIC KRAMER Kansan Staff Write Enrollment at KU's laurence campus this fall has increased 2.3 per cent from last fall's enrollment, according to an estimate made late Monday by Registrar William L. Kelly. There will be 18,373 students at the Lawrence campus and 1,452 at the Medical Center campus in Springfield. Actual enrollments as of Monday the first day of classes, were 17,577 in Lawrence and 1,384 in Kansas City. These figures compare with 17,169 in Lawrence at this time last year and 1,383 in Kansas City. first day count to reach the total figure, is based on standard percentage of students who enroll late after their transcripts have been received or they have completed correspondence with the University. The estimate is "awfully accurate." John Conard, director of university relations said Monday. Sometimes Kelley's estimate has come within one student, he said. All of these figures are "head count," or actual numbers of persons enrolled or expected to enrol in university programs. This includes the university budget, especially those that determine the number of faculty positions are calculated on the basis of "equivalent full-time" students. That figure is the total number of credit hours for which students have enrolled divided by the number of hours considered to be a full-time load for the average student. IF MOST STUDENTS are carrying light academic loads, as is frequently true in metropolitan areas by night students and part-time day students, the equivalent full-time number will be less than the head-count. The estimate of late enrollees, which is added to the sidered to be a full-time load for the average student Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr, said he expected the equivalent full-time number to be slightly higher than the head count at KU. It usually is, he said. The KU budget projections, which were given to the Board of Regents last spring, were based on an estimate that about 15% of the campus. Chalmers said it appeared that actual enrollment would hit the budget projection almost exactly. "We ARE QUITE pleased," Chalmers said, "to see that our estimated growth is materializing despite harsh economic times making it difficult for parents to pay the expenses of college education this year." At Kansas State University enrollment increased 7 per cent, according to E. M. Gerritz, dean of admissions and records there. He said enrollment there would reach about 14,700 when late enrollees were included. Last fall 13,700 students enrolled at Kansas State. The boost in enrollment was not unexpected. Gerritz said. Freshman applications had been up 10 per cent and applications from upper classmen were up 20 per cent. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PLEASANT The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas 82nd Year, No. 2 Tuesday, August 31, 1971 Roy Wilkins, Civil Rights: 40 Years Later See Page 5 6 An Autograph Traded for a Smile Kansas defensive tackle Gery Palmer signs an autograph in shy smile from a young admirer. KU faces Washington State on what seems to be a fair exchange—a moment of his time for a Sept. 11 in Memorial Stadium for the season opener. Thieu Sure to Keep Legislature By the Associated Press the only doubt about the size of Thieu's majority was raised by the large number of deputies elected Sunday whose political affiliation has yet to be established. With official tabulations complete for 140 of the 159 seats in South Vietnam's lower house election, President Nguyen Van Pham told the United Nations to retain solid control of the legislative body. The Western White House expressed pleasure Monday that the South Vietnamese lower house election "appears to be over." But it had no comment on the results. Presidential oress secretary Ronald L. Ziegler noted there had been large turnout and little difficulty in the voting "despite enemy efforts to disrupt the process." Over the weekend, Communist-led units mounted nearly 100 shells, ground probes and terror attacks in the heaviest action in South Vietnam in four months. The attacks failed, however, to dislocate South Vietnam's elections for lower house members and there was a near-record turnout of voters. an 249,000 U.S. servicemen in Vietnam continued on a week-old alert confining them to bases and restricting travel. The alert was partly to prevent U.S. forces in the South Vietnamese political unrest and party precaution against enemy action. SOUTH VIETNAMESE FORCES also maintained a high state of readiness. Thieu's backers ran well in the Mekong Delta and in provinces around Saigon but opponents had the edge in Saigon itself and in the northern cities of Hue and Da Nang. Thieu supporters won 58 of the 140 seats decided, with 32 opposition candidates, 3 independents, and 47 deputies of unknown allegiance also elected. Most of the 47, however, were from the Mekong Delta which Thieu carried heavily in the 1967 election. Political analysts believed most would turn out to be pro-Thieu. Of 119 incumbents standing for re-election, 34 won their races. There were 18 opposition deputies, 14 pro-government deputies and 2 independents. Thieu controlled about two-thirds of the old 133-member house. The increase in the number of seats from 133 to 159 reflects the expansion of government control and the increasing legislative district since the last election in 1877. The deputies serve four-year terms. Major interest centered on the showing of pre-government candidates as a reflection of Thieu's political strength. He is expected to consider this factor before making a final determination to run as the candidate in the Oct. 3 presidential election. THEU MET with U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker for over an hour Monday night, presumably to discuss the results of the lower house election and Thieu's plans for the presidential balloting. Bunker and the Nixon administration are reported prepared to accept, but with serious misgivings. Thieu's plan to run unopposed. The United States, however, apparently has given up all that he can do to give election at least the faace of democracy. Relaxation to Follow Price Freeze Period Candidates backed by the antigovernment An Quang Buddhist faction won well over half the seats in Da Nang, Hue, and the five provinces of northernmost military region 1. In Saigon, the opposition won 7 of the 13 seats decided. Two other witnesses, Gen. George Lincoln, head of the Office of Emergency Management, and the executive director of the Cost of Living Council, said they have sufficient facilities now but could not predict what their needs will be in the new economic policy continues to develop. WASHINGTON (AP)—A top White House adviser said Monday the 90-day freeze is likely to be followed by a period of more energy cuts and rent contenders by a sequester. "Glaucus," WEBER NOTED that legal interpretations indicate the law under which the President acted to impose the term decease has more punch than many supposed. Paul W. McCracken, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, echoed other administration officials in saying no enforcement action on the policy of the new economic policy. Organized labor will be brought into negotiations shaping national economic policy for after Nov. 13, when the wage-price rent freezes, mMcCracken said. McCracken told the congressional Joint Economic Committee that he expects 500,000 new jobs and a large boost in productivity during the current freeze. He would make no comment as to whether a restriction on profits and interest, steps urgently demanded by Labor, will be included. But he said it would not be reasonable to expect prices to remain flat during the season. —Lincoln and Weber told the committee that several railroads have agreed to roll back a freight-rate increase after they had been forced to wear them in violation of the 90-day freeze. —Rep. Wright Patman, D-Tex., chairman of the House Banking Committee, said administration of the freeze is unnecessarily inequitable and confusing because of lack of advance planning by Nixon and his advisers. While it calls for only $5,000 fines, he said, those fines can be imposed on a per item basis, for example; "$5,000 for every can of peas" whose price is raised. —The OEP announced it has rejected seven more requests for exemption from the wage-price freezes, bringing the total number there have been no exemptions granted. In other developments: —The dollar held firm on the Paris free market and weakened a trifle on the official titer; it strengthened at Tokyo, eased further in Europe, significantly at Zurich, while showing new firmness at Frankfurt. The London market was closed by a bank holiday. The Japanese and European governments also shrank, as did the Americans on exports and imports. High-ranking U.S. officials warned foreign governments that retaliatory trade curbs would boomerang and escalate the current crisis. "Retaliation would unleash a wave of attacks," this is understood by our trading partners, "one high official told newsmen." 4,000 Attend Convocation Finances, Stalemate Block Potential, Says Chalmers Faced with an educational stalemate and expected to do more with less, the University of Kansas must keep moving to prevent stagnation and defeat. Chancellor Murray has said: Chalmers, giving the 106th opening convoction address in Allen Field House, said "Each of our potential moves seems to be blocked by a lack of resources, by a retreat to traditionalism or by the inevitable opponents of change." He singled out faculty members in asking for additional effort. "I ask this knowing full well that the median work week for KU faculty is 39 hours, and Chalmers said, ... I am keenly aware of the fact that virtually none among us will receive any additional compensation, either because of the President's 99-hour service freeze. An audience of about 4,000 people interrupted Chalmers' 22-minute address twice—once with laughter and once with applause. THE LAUGHTER came early in the speech when Chalmers tol, new students: "If you find us lacking, tell us, not someone else. If you find us helpful and effective, by all means tell someone else." Chalmers tol said that valuable opportunities existed for them at KU but they had the responsibility of taking advantage of them. "Your achievements will become our achievements. Your failures will become our failures." The audience gave Chalmers a burst of applause when, speaking of the financial support KU had received from alumni and the faculty, he said, "we were 'becoming increasingly active in their efforts to persuade elected officials that their increased, voluntary support should augment, not replace, the state's response to the funding of public education." Chalmers laid particular stress on the last few words of the sentence. HE LISTED a few of the University programs that had received fund cuts and said, "We must make every effort to inquire into the cost of the program in the most effective manner possible." Students, faculty and staff members were told by him that the cullabee would have to be brought in. "We may be battered and bruised, but we are not beaten, by a long shot," Chalmers declared in closing. The opponent was still standing at a standing ovation of almost a minute. He said that KU's priorities must be re-evaluated, a process he said would be "Each course, each program, each scholarly effort that utilizes University personnel or facilities must be examined as overtly and as publicly as is humanly possible if we are to persuade the Kansas taxpayer that the investment of his or her tax dollar is sufficient to warrant a greater investment in the future," he said. CHALMERSNOTED that some changes were in progress. He mentioned his approval this summer of a modification of the organization of graduate studies, including the yet-to-be-appointment of a vice-chancellor for research and graduate studies, and a re-evaluation of student financial aid resources. Chalmers said that he would confer with the Senate Executive Committee, the Council of Deans and the Executive Committee of the Graduate School to look for a new vice-chancellor for graduate studies and research administration. "Unlike many other institutions in our society, we cannot cope with our financial crisis by withdrawal or by stubborn entrenchment," he said. "The very nature of a distinguished university requires us to remain current in all of our endeavors." TOMMY SCHULTE Kansas Staff Photo by GREG SORRER Chalmers at Convocation educational stalemate . . . A push is being made this fall to register students to vote because there are hints that some moves are being made in the Kansas Legislature to prevent students from voting in Lawyers for Bill, a ballot initiative formed voter registration committee, said Monday. Voter Registration Drive Being Aimed at Students Twenty-five people worked during enrollment at Allen Field House to assist students and to urge them to register. Those people are affiliated with a group called the Voter Registration Committee, which is at present largely composed of KU faculty. Bruce Molholt, chairman of the group, is trying to get a student group formed. He said that he thought that taking the responsibility for voting was "just as much a part of the liberal arts training as the courses at the University." "If students vote, they won't be regarded as second-class citizens. If they become informed and participate, it could even help improve the townenpail, "women." Molholt said the Voter Registration Committee planning a year-long drive to increase voter turnout. organizations are also expressing an interest in the campaign. He said the group is urging registration now both because of the local bond issue to be voted on Sept. 28 and because the state has issued a $1 million to the 39-day county residen­tial requirement. Because of the bond issue, concerning construction of a city-county government center, the city clerk's office will be open for voter registration from 8 a.m. until 9 a.m. at the county office in room 160 in the Lawrence National Bank building at 910 Massachusetts St. The Lawrence city clerk's office said that 166 students registered to vote in Douglas County last week. The minimum age required to vote by a recent Constitutional amendment. 3 A student is eligible to register to vote in Lawrence now, if by Sept. 28, 1971 he will be at least 18 years of age and a citizen of the United States, if he will have lived in Kansas for at least six months and if he was born in Kentucky or fixed home. Current law allows a student to designate his school address as his permanent address. 2 Tuesday, August 31, 1971 University Daily Kansan People . . . ... Places . . . ... Things People: Thrill Killer Dead in Puerto Rico NATHAN LEOPOLD, who as a brilliant university graduate student participated in a killing in Chicago, died Sunday at the University of San Juan. A JUVENILE was being questioned Monday in connection with the shooting of Palau Lou Yulich, a 19-year-old Kansas City, Mo., man charged with attempted murder. PRESIDENT RICHARD M. NIXON plans to visit Canada some time next spring and would like to go to Japan in the near future. A SUPERIOR COURT JUDGE in Massachusetts, implicated in U.S. Senate testimony involving a bribe, "allowed at least 12 persons found guilty of serious crimes" to get suspended sentences, the Boston College said Monday. Places: Federation Essential, Savs Sadat HEIRAT, Lebanon—President Anwar Saladat of Egypt said Monday that Egypt's impending federation with Libya and Syria is essential for victory over Israel and will arrest growing Arab disunity. ATLANTA, Ga. - More Southern schools quietly opened for the fall. Under plans designed to rid the region of classroom segregation. TOPEAK—A special legislative committee estimated Monday that the team has been saved last year in Kansas if 212 small-‘high-cost’ schools are included. Things: Freeze Question Goes Unanswered A QUESTION which would clear up uncertainties over the application of the wage-piece freeze to school teachers and employees in Kansas will have to be decided by representatives of the state Department of Education and teacher and school board groups. Federal officials have declined to answer whether the employees are under a system-wide or blanket contract. BONN, Germany (AP) — BOSS announced in Big Fox for negotiations that led to the agreement on West Berlin diplomatic sourcesBerlin diplomatic sources They said the agreement comes remarkably close to Western objectives for bringing practical services for the life of West Berliners. Nixon Broke Berlin Knot They gave this account of the breaking of the deadlock: the diplomats, who declined to be named, said Nikon had personnel at the embassy in the negotiations involving Britain, France and the Soviet Union. The U.S. negotiator, Ambassador Kenneth Rush, reported Abrasimov's refusal to Nixon. Last October, Soviet Ambassador Poytr Abramovsky refused to continue discussion on freer access to Berlin, one of the key points in the negotiation. He was also inside asade Communal East Germany. The diplomas said that once the text of the agreement is published after the signing, Tuesday, compared with last February's Western position paper would come to achieve our objectives. "It is an agreement that should be of great benefit to West Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko of the Soviet Union was visiting Washington at the time, and Nikon took the refusal up Police Search for Gunman After Attack on Stationhouse Negotiations on access were resumed at the next four-power meeting. The breakthrough began in April or May when the willingness to permit a Soviet conglomerate general in West Berlin. SAN FRANCISCO, (AP) - Policemen armed with shotguns guarded San Francisco's nine-story building where a massive manhunt began for a gunman who killed a desk sewer and wounded woman who was inside. "It is not a great diplomatic triumph for either the West or the East but it is a good agreement everyone," one U.S. diplomat said. Police officials ordered the beefed-up security after the firefighters stationed in the southwest part of the city late Sunday night, stuck a 12-sauce shogun barrel through the partition at the desk and fired. Police Lt. Charles Ellis, heading the investigation, said what he called the "execution-type killing" of Sgt. John V. Young, 30. The clerk, Ellen by two shotgun guns. Ellis said the radio police had broadcast a description of the man who was shot, his early 20s, about 6 feet tall, with an AFC broadside, shirt, with a Medium Afro haircut. - Less than an hour before the shooting, a Bank of America branch in Stonetown, a shopping "It's senseless," he said, and then he looked at them. "seems like a all part of that San Quentin killing, these bombings, the bombings at San Francisco." center a mile northwest of the police station, was bombed. Building. On Saturday night, powerful time bombs heavily damaged State Department of Corrections building. Francisco's famed Ferry In letters to news media, a radical Weatherman group claimed credit. The Weather Underground said the bombings were in retaliation for "the assassination of George Jackson." Enjoy the Silent Beauty of Tiffany Shades These and other nick-nacks for your room at HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass. In the assessment of American diplomats, the Russians needed the consulate general to show some visible gains from the talks. Americans did not change the status of West Berlin. It will be Berliners, the German people as a whole and the nation, added, he hoped it would lead to an improvement in U.S. relations with the Soviet Union. restricted to consular matters and will be barred from taking part in any four-power matters affecting the city. While the official text of the agreement has not been published, parts of it have become known. The parts show access to West Berlin will be limited and a visit to East Berlin for the first time since 1961 on a regular basis. Stick it in Your Ear! 10.6... KLWN—FM 105.9 Stereo ...10.6... ↑ Adult Progressive Rock 1970 $800.00 Maternity Benefit now available to married students of University of Kansas This is BIG BENEFITS maternity coverage that helps take the sting out of costly hospital and doctor bills. Doesn't quit when you leave college either. Pays as much as $5.00 a day when an member of your family is hospitalized, plus additional big benefits for other bills including from $10.00 to $600.00 for surgery,depending on the nature of the operation, plus up to $1,000.00 for miscillaneous hospital expenses To find out how little this outstanding coverage costs you, complete and mail the coupon below today. Vincent G. Miller 1035 Elm St. Eudora, Kans. 66025 Dial 542.2793 REPRESENTING Mutual of Omaha. I The Company that pages Life Insurance Affiliate United of Omaha HOSPITAL OF NEW YORK PROMOTION COMPANY NEW YORK, N.Y. 10026 MARKETING MEMBER Agent's Name Address City, State Please rush to me full details on Mutual of Omaha's Big Benefits Hospital Plan. State Address LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB FOR WOMEN We are moving upstairs to ground level to give our customers more SPACE and more extensive FACILITIES Merry Bees coupon in the People Book will be valid at The LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB FOR WOMEN 2323 Ridge Court Suite 1A 842-4044 Sondra Treadway (owner) BEADS... For imaginative hangups Seven feet of happiness for less than $1 HAASimports 1029mass This Year with SUA YOU Have Something to Offer Interest and Involvement WE Have Something to Offer Opportunity 7:30 p.m. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITY MEMBERSHIP MEETING Wed., Sept. 1 Union Ball Room 7:30 p.m. COME AND HEAR ABOUT THIS YEAR WITH SUA FEEL LIKE FLYING? 1 SUA's recommendation for Maupaintour was by the Union Operating Committee and since that time the University Travel Service was established. We feel with volunteer members to work together along with your ideas concerning travel, we will have an excellent travel service available to you. SUA and Mapauputter are eager to announce the new University Travel Service located in the Kansas Union Lounge. This unique student and faculty-oriented Travel Service is the result of a student proposal made by those working in SUA. They fell it was worthwhile to existing programs as well as inclusion of professional travel service, which only a travel agent can supply. Services Offered INTERNATIONAL STUDENT I.D. AND THE PERSONAL TRAILDLED TINERARIES AT HOME WITH A FRIEND IN AMERICAN YOUTH HOSTEL CARD-INS TO THE FLOW MAY PAY LATER RISKS THE PERSONAL TRAILDLED TINERARIES IN TRAVEL ENTRY STUDENT TRAVEL CARDS-IN THE EUROPEAN CHARTER FLIGHT IN- SUMMER FLIGHTS TO EUROPE FOR MEMBERS STUDENT TRAVEL ADVISORS FOREIGN CARS PURCHASES-RENTALS PUBLIC PHOTOGRAPHY INPING INFO CLUB GROUP TOURS MAP DIAGRAMS FOR EXPLORATION MAP DIAGRAMS FOR EXPLORATION LUGGAGE & TRAVE INSURANCE LUGGAGE & TRAVE INSURANCE FAIR CARE CARDS FOR AIRLINES VISA TOURIST CARD INFORMATION VISA TOURIST CARD INFORMATION AIRLINE TICKETS TO EXECUTE AN EXCESS OF COST AIRLINE TICKETS TO EXECUTE AN EXCESS OF COST SPECIAL WEB ENERGY EXCURSIONS SPECIAL WEB ENERGY EXCURSIONS EQUIPMENT IN-HOLDING & HITCHING IMAGE EQUIPMENT IN-HOLDING & HITCHING IMAGE Main Lounge, Kansas Union SUA TRAVEL SERVICE dba Maupintour 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday University Daily Kaasan Tuesday, August 31, 1971 3 The image shows a person in mid-action, swinging a long object over a large tree. The background is a natural setting with tall trees and grass. The person appears to be practicing a sport or skill, possibly golf, as they are holding the tool with both hands and seem to be using it to hit the ball. The focus of the image is on the person and their action, capturing the motion and intensity of the moment. Summer's idyllic existence was transformed into the ancient classroom routine Monday as more than 18,000 KU students trooped back to academics. Even so, some students found time Sunny Skies Clouded by Classes for a little relaxation and sport. As the year and the class assignment wear on the story may change, be sure to check back. Filmfest Planned by Club Films on the Vietnam War, a documentary on student strikes and other topics will be featured at the KU Media Club film festival this week in "We started this about two years ago. 'Said Tom Clark, one year we had a regular Friday night series. This year we have decided to hold several week long conferences and later festivals have not been set." "The club was set up as a channel for people interested in music." He added two classes," he said. "A lot of the classes were full and a lot of the prerequisites. This program allowed them to get involved and also gave us a chance to show their interests, not ordinarily have been seen." there. rueday night "Struggle for Life," a film made by the Israeli Government of Vietnam, will be shown. It tells of medical services available in the Vietnamese city of Haiphong, bombings and defoliums in use A SECOND FILM of Ho Chi Minh, will also be shown Tuesday. It is a biography of Huynh Tran, who largely with his struggles against the French and the Americans. Some of the soundtrack includes music by Counry Lai and the Fish and Crayfish. "San Francisco Women," a documentary dealing with projects and goals of working class women in San Francisco, will be shown Wednesday. Also featured that night will be about the importance of about a radar center in North Vietnam run entirely by women. "San Francisco Women" will be repeated Thursday with *Day of Mothers*, a celebration of mothers in a large city who band together and set up child care centers. A shorter film. The "British pictures of women's bodies from television and magazine advertising, is also scheduled for group of film directors blacklisted during the McCarthy era, will be offered Friday. I will work with the group of ChicagO mine workers. BECAUSE of its subject matter and the status of its creators, the film was blacklisted. Although it has been circulated at underground theatres and on television, it has never been released commercially. "Salt of the Earth," made by a The KU Club Club is working with SUA to organize later festivals, which will be called the Radical Film Forums. The KU Commission on the Status of Women has joined the national effort of women's groups to work towards the protection of the Equal Rights Amendment. Women Promote Rights Amendment "We're hoping to get 'the Selling of the Pentagon,' Inside North Vietnam, and some films in South America," Clark said. The group also plans to invite guest speakers to present programs on welfare, community organization and draft Clark said the club had not yet been able to do any film production, though this had been one of its original goals. "We applied to the Student Senate for money for equipment, but we didn't get it," he said. During enrollment, commission members urged students to vote for the congressman to vote for the amendment. Kathy Browne, a sophomore junior, and commission publicity chairman, said Sunday that 156 students had completed cards which were sent to Washington. A sample card written by commission members appealed to congressmen "to support the Equal Rights Amendment H. J. Resolution 208, with no crippling effect, such as the Wiggins amendment." "Most were sent to Repars. Larry Winn, (R-Overland Park) and William Roy, D-Topeka, but there were also some sent to other congressmen from Kansas and Missouri." Miss Knick-meyer said. Resolution 208 stated that women should be regarded as male equals under federal and state laws. The Wiggins amendment, proposed by Rep. Charles Wiggins, R-Calf., would exempt women from the draft and would allow that now has protective legislation regarding women to retain it. "This places too many restrictions on women, such as state laws preventing them from attending a job," Miss Knichmeyer said. "It defeats the whole purpose. If you're going to have equal rights you have to have equal rights." Includes equal pay for equal work. Miss Knickmeyer said that the commission plans to set up tables outside the Kansas Union to encourage more students to send congressmen and to register in The KU commission is only one of many college women's groups across the country seeking the Equal Rights Amendment. Casey Elke, Kansas City, Mo., member, who is president of the intercollegiate Association of Women Teachers at KU chapter was following guidelines set up at the IAWS convention in March at Fort Wayne. "A resolution was drawn up stating our support for the amedied and urging college groups to contact their congressmen." Miss Elke said. The KU commission is one of the most progressive in the country in working for its passage." Mary Mitchelson, Baxter Springs junior, the commission's public relations chairman, said she had received a telegram from President Obama in Dakota, which indicated his support of the Aug. 26 nationwide Women's March for Equality. The telegram congratulated the KU commission for seeking equal opportunities for women, Miss Mitchelson said. In the telegram McCovey said that it had been "51 years since the women had won the right to vote and yet the political process was still women." He also urged that women have 50 per cent representation at the Democratic nominating convention as well as Party Commission on Party Reform," Miss Mitchell said. Higher Education Group Votes Chalmers to Board Biltmore academic vice-president of Antioch College, was elected vice-president of the AHE and gained a seat on the board. JOE FAMALARE makes grubs look good COMES IN: Dark Brown, Suede, Rust Suede, Navy, Taupe, Belt Leather Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. was one of three educators elected this summer to the board of directors of the American Association for Higher Education (AIHE). Their terms began July Chalmers and John A. Peoples, president of Jackson State University, chose from six nominees by a mail ballot of the AAH's 8,000 votes. Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Patronize Kansan Advertisers Campus Briefs Women's Group To Meet Members of the Women's Coalition will discuss projected plans at an open meeting at 8:30 p.m. Thursday at 1314 Oread. Interested persons may volunteer to work on committees, some of which are newsletter, Journal-World article, speakers bureau, gay women's caucus, and others. The office of United Mennonite have not been determined, but the office is open daily. More information can be obtained by calling UN4-4441 or UN4-4350. Karate Club To Meet The KU Karate Club will hold an introductory meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday in 211 Robinson Gymnasium READING DYNAMICS WILL Triple your reading effectiveness (rate x comprehension) if you have a strong class and practice as required. OR WE GIVE YOUR MONEY The last auditions for this year's University Theatre productions will be held at 7 p.m. on the murphy Hall. This year the theatre will present "Fiddler on the Roof," "Pigskin—a game for Theatre," "The Icelow," "Hamlet," "Rosencrantz and Guildenster are Dead," "A Flea in Her Ear," and "Spoon River Anthropology." To be added to the list, Give you lifetime privileges for courses at any EWRD in situte in the world without further cost. New Classes Begin: September 13 Regular section September 15 Western Civ. section Singing auditions for "Fiddler on the Roof" will be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Murphy. Last Call for Auditions Come in for a FREE MINI-LESSON SEE HOW IT WORKS 7:30 and 8:30 TONIGHT Additional classes will be open as needed. M The Reading Dynamics Institute newlyn wood Downstairs AT THE SOUND Hillcrest Shopping Center 925 Iowa Phone: 843-6424 dynamics 19th, Iowa Light Up Within Year Part of Project The proposed traffic light at 19th and Iowa streets is tied into a larger project that should be completed in less than a year. Williams, director of Lawren public works, said Monday. The second part of the project still needs approval of the state department and the regional office of the Federal Highway Administration. The first part of the project will be the widening of 15th Street to four lanes for about 400 feet east of its Iowa intersection. He said that the project will need to approve the project today and that bids would be let soon. The second part of the project is the placing of left turn bays on two roads that were widening 180% so that there will be three lanes of traffic coming into the intersection with Iowa Street and placing the 19th street traffic lane. ARE YOU CONCERNED ABOUT MATERNITY BENEFITS? MARRIED STUDENTS This new insurance plan provides for liberal maternity benefits AND other hospital medical and surgical costs at a very moderate premium. 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. THE DIXON AGENCY 839 Mississippi Phone Day or Evening 842-9210 LIFE-CAR-PERSONAL POSSESSIONS STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES PRESENTS IKE AND TINA TURNER PLUS SPECIAL GUEST STAR DAVID FRYE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10th----8 P.M. ALLEN FIELD HOUSE Tickets: $2.50-$3.00-$3.50 On sale at S.U.A. office Main Floor—Kansas Union PACK YOUR BAGS... AND HIT THE ROAD At Hob Nail we've got the greatest line of boots including lace up boots for men and women. We've also got ankle boots in the finest colors and colors, not to mention our hand bags. So come on and see us at Hob Nail. Special this week Free whiffle ball with each purchase HOB MAXU Open 10:30 to 10:30 daily 10:30 to 8:30 Thursday B WEST 9TH 4. Tuesday, August 31, 1971 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment These Are Quiet Days For the 106th year the University has opened its doors to take up the business of academia. On Monday, Chancellor Chalmers made it official with a traditional opening address delivered in traditional style These are quaint days. Days without massive campus demonstrations, without fires and bombings, without turbulent community around University. It's a lie. It is the same lie that America lived during the Eisenhower years when our greatest problems were incubating, Anger, fear, frustration and despair have moved offstage, but the muttering is there. Only the deaf could not hear it. Only fools would ignore it. With the certainty of solar mechanics, the University has come back to equilibrium. Peace reigns. Justice has surmounted its oppressors. Happiness is ours. Yes, with additional effort, with additional time the University will move forward to break the educational stalemate the Chancellor has spoken of. But that does not mean that we will have escaped the echoing floods of human suffering. The roots of turmil oil are untouched. The issues are unsolved. But the committee reports are in the Kansas Union has been remodeled, the ROTC building has new windows and a new lighting system and two former students, two women are buried. Important as they may be, buildings for health services and humanities and reclamation of bottles and cans are but small contributions to offset the deficit of the past year. There is much left So we turn to problems of finance, of internal reorganization, of reordering our priorities. After all, these are quiet days. One need only read the Meningerin report and the committee report that followed it to see that last year's images were imaged much and changed little. David Bartel, Editor The political stock of Atty. Gen. Vern Miller is rising fast in Kansas, but it almost singularly on its hard line enforcement of Kansas drug statutes. There seems to be certain warm reception to Miller's hysterical campaign on the part of many Kansans who know the drug problem only by the headlines and what they hear over the backyard fence. Miller has cashed on reports and rumored widespread drug use by Kansas schoolchildren to the grade school level. Miller, who promised to take to the streets to enforce the law, actually hid in an automobile trunk to witness a drug pusher, after a flying tackle. For those Kansans that were action flacks this is fine stuff. The raids usually come in the early morning hours, sometimes with accompanying camera crews and always the post-raid comments. The first time a Kansas is that much closer to totally eradicating the "drug problem." This is poppycock. Long hair, sexual permissiveness, communal living and all the trappings of this generation—strange and frightening to many—come rolled in a neat ball of wax, the spectre of the "drug problem." Stop the supply of drugs and the rest will follow in line, they assume. rest will follow in line, they assume. Most authorities with an adult view of the situation realize the distinction between hard and soft drugs. A distinction Miller ignores. The majority of those arrests are for possession, sale, or conspiracy to sell grass. Miller's raids have been solved, and in doing so the drug fight becomes a holy crusade with no grey areas—just black and white. Right or wrong. Us vs. them. The problem is more complex. It demands something more than Miller's heavy cop's hand. If every person who had even smoked grass or every smack freak were behind bars the drug problem would still exist It can only be solved through information and understanding. Two ingredients like lacking in Miller's Agnew-like polarization crusade. Tom Slaughter Ada Came The Revolution? Perhaps it is over. We lost, and Nixon, Agnew and Mitchell won. We are now held by the national model that the complacent campus is with us again. Perhaps it so ever. We lost, and Nixon, Agnew and Mittenstein was a haunt being told by the national media that the complacent camp is with us in terms of the local situation; this seems a fair analogy. With a year of training both Nixon and Mittenstein are committed in the spring of 1970 against both Nixon's oligarchy and the far left's anarchy activity at KU during the next year withered to concern about how much football tickets were cost and the format of the Javahwer yearbook. For a generation that is supposed to be religiously dedicated to social change, that's a poor litany, and first appearances don't indicate any change in the Members of the class of 72 this summer received letters from their leadership extolling the "apolitical" virtues of the coming yearbook and an "oec- On the national scene many of the political pundits assessing the tie to be felt efforts of 181/20 year old voters, are predicting a like-father-like-son dintion of the party's support for Hillary Clinton. In Playboy's 1971 student survey, pollution was found to be the issue of most importance among the students questioned, pushing Vietnam into second place. I'm not discounting the importance of cleansing the environment, but only 33 per cent of the students questioned would say that they opposed Nixon's concept in Indochina, and the fact remains that we are still using more effective means of detoxifying dusts and bombs than we are in America by dumping waste into our rivers. Another poll taken this summer indicates that the younger generation, which was supposed to be so wary of Nikon's ad man approach to the world, are now coming forward with plans to go. to China, the President's popularity among 18 to 29-year-olds rose sharply. In a poll taken July 20-21 by the Opinion Research Corporation, 57 per cent of those contacted said they approved of the way Nixon is handling his job as President. This is an increase of 11 per cent over a poll taken in June before the China trip was announced. Remember now that this is the fellow that was talking about "bums" on campus after the Cambodian incursion and then three months later came to Kansas State to show everybody he was an alright guy by wearing a purple tie. On the bottom of one of the Playboy balloons a student wrote: "The people who made up this questionnaire should have planted a garden instead." For me this attitude seems frighteningly similar to that of the middle aged Leconiuine who sets at the bar in the local post and defends the war. There are still to many people sowing hatred, too many hungry without a garden; fortunately to be conspicuous to go back to the earth and forget the world. I hope this is an unduly pessimistic analysis, that far from being complacent, young people are taking advantage of the quietude to evaluate their effectiveness. For while the history of the power of youth is pockmarked with negative messages about adolescence and teenage problems as far as she did without the support of youth, and a non-voting youth at Now, with the power of the vote, it would seem that it was time to come out of the garden for white and again fight for those ideals that seemed so inviolable. Then we could beat our swords into plowshares and plant our gardens with a clear conscience. -Mike Moffet, Editorial Editor Garry Wills A. W. BURKE Garry Willis's nationally syndicated column will appear on this page from time to time this semester. Willis is a frequent associate editor and author of *Nixon for Nigomones.* 'Conditioned' Prejudice Not Condoned NEW YORK—Angry letters to a columnist tend to be all the same, whatever the putative message. The attack one's patriotism, sanity, and right to express an erroneous opinion. They do this in obscene and ungrammatical terms, and they would do if they would do if the columnist were within reach—though any possibility of actual confrontation is considerably diminished by the use of these letters are unsigned. letter surprised me. Its tone was one of open and reasonable argument, asking to be understood, and that it is important the writer said that long hair is not important in itself, but as a tool for dressing them. Those who wear it are ungratefully throwing back in our face all the good things we have offered THE ARGUMENT is true, as far as it goes—and is an argu- mor or long hair. I can understand and pity men for whom the budge of well will be their property that sexual devils always wear long hair. I pity that state of mind enough to feel that people who that people so conditioned should not be allowed (without children) more children to such nonsenses. THIS IS WHY I was surprised to receive a calm, grammatical, signed letter on the subject of long hair. With all the serious attention that beset us, no single thing has eicled more or more violent letters than the subject of long hair. It obviously causes a kind of physical revulsion in some people, and it is partisolar, what the Black Mass was to old Europe's cathedral—a blasphemous and unforgiving mockery. It seems also, and perhaps most important, to be an invention of the Jews It is an argument I have heard a thousand times in other contexts, but it seems rarely resents all those on welfare. The Southerner cannot help thinking Nigerian inferior—he was born in the middle of Africa to protect the South African to consider any social form but the aparteb he was taught to consider an ideal country. That is why, as I say, the calm ALL RIGHT, say that is true—and most of the statement clearly is. Hair's importance (such as it will be) is not only in all styles of grooming or apparel. Clothes are a uniform, badge of pride or shame. If the long-hairs wear a coat and tie and their true, simply by going on womenshe desyre pity. But one wonders how the good and true has always been. What is very sight of long hair so debilitates them. What kind of same patriotism frosts at the mouth of a woman? How the "skinheads" are so convinced of their own values, why greet rejection of those values with such confidence, in much resentment? My cooler and more rational etter-writer offers a clue. Some of the wilder epistles focused on the homosexual theme—that loathing "quarers." Not the correspondent I have been describing, though—he says he knows that all who wear long hair are not devilies or demonic beings and therefore stand how it might look this way to certain people —in fact, to the one he grew up with. They may not always have hair meant, always and infallibly, hideous sexual unhealthily. derstandable, but to be condoned Copyright, 1971, Universal Press Syndicate HIS CONCLUSION? I should pity the mistaken, understand what has happened and not help their reaction. In fact, given their condition, hostility will be born. ness. Some people are mistaken, but that it is not their fault. They were brought up to believe such things—"programmed" to it, as it were; and can no more avoid having these ideas triggered in them when they see long hair or a wig. But they can smile at close confinement. Letters Policy Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must have their names clearly printed; faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address. Griff and the Unicorn LET'S GO TO THE BASEBALL GAME I'M AFRAID I'LL GET HIT BY A BALL... By Sokoloff LET'S GO TO THE BASEBALL GAME... I'M AFRAID I'LL GET HIT BY A BALL... THE ODDS ON YOU GETTING HIT BY A BALL ARE VERY SLIM WOULD YOU SAY A BILLION TO ONE? WELL, NO... I'D SAY JUST A MILLION TO ONE... FORGET IT THE ODDS ON YOU GETTING HIT BY A BALL ARE VERY SLIM WOULD YOU SAY A BILLION TO ONE? WELL, NO... I'D SAY JUST A MILLION TO ONE... FORGET IT SARLOTT "Copyright 1971, David Sokoloff." Readers Respond Registration Urged To the Editor: Da There is a saying that nothing is really permanent, and KU students are well advised to stay away from the next vote in the next few months. Present Kansas law will allow students to register and vote in elections in their state as their permanent or affixed home. More precisely, the appl 1. Do I consider any other address more permanent than my present one in Lawrence? 2. In the case of my parents' Senior Reput and Demo are t curre this yi larger The key word is intention. A student's permanent of affixed home, his fixed habitat, is wherever he intends it to be. And, a student's residence address to be his residence he may register and vote here. A student contemplating registration might ask himself "That place shall be considered and held to be the residence of a father, when he is fixed, and to which, whenever he is absent, he has the intention of remaining." The lectur Spence are co defini arriva schee Hause the Elm miral and n Staff. address, do I really feel that I still reside with them? Do I have any intention of returning to live with them or in their city after graduating. F En Univ midc Univ Mon citize cour lobt If these questions are answered in the negative, and I believe they will be, the student should begin to think of himself as a legitimate citizen of Lawrence. In the com-munication interest in local issues and candidates. And certainly he should register and vote. 3. What if I were not a student? If I were a junior executive or professor of a large firm, and I could reasonably expect to be transferred within four years, would I give my consent to the city as my permanent residence? Would I choose to vote absentee in that city rather than in Law School? 4. In this highly mobile society, am I any more a transient than the non-student who has long disrespect to use his parent's address? Larry Yackle Second Year Law THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom- UN 4-4810 Business Office- UN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Students are welcome to attend classes at Lawrence, Kan. 60414. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised to all students without regard to color, sex or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily indicative of the student's individual situation. NEWS STAFF News Advisor .. Del Brinkman Editor Associate Editor Campaign Editor Assistant Campus Editors Newspaper Editors Wire Editors Editorial Writers Editorial Writers Editorial Writers Athletic Sports Editor Athletic Sports Editor Make up Editors Make up Editors Photographers David Harrel Brian Hickman Eric Kramer Joyce Neeman, Rachel Matti Chip Crews, Deanna Watts, Amie McKinney Jewett Scowell, Jawson Scott Mike Moffet Pat Malmine, Tom Stuartberg Mike Berger Henry Reagan, John Goodnoble Jeremy Fitzgerald Greg Sorber, Hank Young, Ed Lahlo, Eddie Wong BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser... Mel Adams Business Manager Advertising Manager Annual Business Manager National Advertising Manager Classified Advertising Manager Marketing Manager Carol Young Norman Mackey Ken Koerner Martha Winterberg Cherri Conrad Clarey Mendelz Tuesday, August 31, 1971 5 Dates Uncertain for KU Visits Dole, O'Brien To Speak By JOHN GOODRICK Korean Staff Welter Senator Robert Dole, Republican national chairman, and Senator Lawrence O'Brien, who are two of the four speakers currently slated to speak here this year by the University's two officials. The J. S. Vickers Sr. memorial picture series co-sponsor of the speakers committee are currently trying to negotiate definite dates for their speakers' The two other speakers scheduled to speak are Philip Hauser, professor of heavy at NYU; Rachel Elmo R. Zumwalt, Navy admiral, chief of naval operations and member of the Joint Chiefs of John Conard, director of directing the lectureer selections described Hauser as an "expert in the problems of over- wintering" (Fisher 2013). student? cute office red rea- ferred 1 give mother dence? seeeee 1 Law society, but than its long parents' I still any with gradu- wered we they I begin itimate e com- an in candi- should Enrollment for the Free University will continue until midday, when students a spokesman said Monday. Students and Lawrence citizens may enrol for any of the courses offered at a table in the library. More than 600 people participated in the program last spring and enrollment is equal to surpass the 1,000 mark this year. This year, the third year of Free University operation, is the first time that The University of California has provided support. The KU Student Senate last spring allocated $240 for it, and they will allocate another $600 of a full-time coordinator for the school and $600 of which will provide office supplies, printing and web access. klear Law Free U Enrollment On to speak on October 27 on "Population Explosion, Implosion and Displosion." nor except poster, $10 notations, without necessarily ALTHOUGH NO OTHER definite dates had been set for the other speakers, Conard said the tentative plan was to try to have the two party chairmen speak at the meeting in a week of each other if possible. Zumwalt is known for his attempts to modernize the armed services by allowing such things like handguns and barracks. No time had been scheduled for his lecture, but he spoke on the subject to speak here, Conard said. old Bartel he Kramer he Kramer McKinney he Moffett he Moffett hJohn Hitter hJohn Hitter tTigre tTigre bSkolch bSkolch THE SPENCER LECTURE series committee consists of the chancellor's representative, Raymond Nichels' the dean of business, Michael William Smith; the dean of the School of Business, Clifford Clark; the director of the Midwest Research Institute, Charles Kimball and director of Foundation, C. Y. Thomas. Conard said the families of the donors help in the selection, but most of the selection is done in special committees. Instructors for the courses are volunteers who are experienced and skilled in their particular field, or donate their time to help others. "The entire campus population was invited to submit names in a survey. Conard explained. From that large list the two lecture series committee chose about two dozen candidates with good correspondence, with the speakers that list was again around ten who were interested. The J. A. Vickers, Sr., memorial lecture series committee consists of the chancellor's representative, Ray Layard, his representative, John F. Eberhardt of Wichita; the president of the Endowment Association, Dolph Simmons Sr.; dean of the School of Engineering, Dolph Simmons; dean of the School of Business, Clifford Clark and the dean of the School of Law, Martin Dickinson carol Young man Llemany on Koehler Winterburg arah Conrad seh Milchd THE FREE UNIVERSITY started out as an "experiment in freer forms of education," as one of the organizers put it. This year's catalog describes the Free University as a "counterforce through which the people of the KU-KU can take control of their education and ultimately, their lives." The Free University boasts that it has no grades, no bursaries, and competition of any kind. It also features, according to the catalog, no IID numbers, no IDC credentials, politics, despite instructors, boring classes, corporate recruiters, finals or traditions. Students must take Kafka, Beginning Russian and Men's Sewing, Writing and Reading, Understanding Islam, Workshops are among the offerings. [Image of a man in a suit with a tie] Auto Mechanics, Introduction to Scientific Astrology and Physics, Repeat Psychology and Politics, and Apply the skills taught courses taught. Classes meet at times and places agreed upon by the participants of the course. Some have only one class meeting all year while others, last on through the summer SOME OF THE CLASSES OPER include Preparation for Natural Childbirth, America for Beginners, History of the Next 1,000 Years, Esperanto (the "easy to learn" international language), Country Fiddling, Photography, and Women in Literature. Printing, Loving Worthless People, Draft Counselor Training, Worship, Informative Trundle, Trends in Jazz, Introduction to Bridge, Swimming, Repairing the Honda, Refinishing Furniture, Silversmithing, and Season to Taste, a book on how to use and edible plants in Kansas. Karate is the only course for which there is a charge. The free for it is $25. The only cost in the course is the staple used by the student: Civil Rights Leader Predicts Black Success at Ballot Box "There will be more Negroes registering to vote, more running and more elected to public office," predicted by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People since 1955. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—After 40 years of civil rights leadership Roy Wilkins says the 1970 decade will herald a dramatic upsurge in America's success at the ballot box with the support of militants. Wilkins, who turned 70 Monday, joined the 460,000-member NAACP in 1931 as assistant executive secretary. He has seen the civil rights struggle through the days of Jim Crow and the growth of Black Power and black activist movements. "This trend has come with the hearty support of the so-called "women in politics" and diddainful of the voting process," he said in an interview while talking about not registering in voting in 1964 and 1968, but now there's a switch and they see it gives them a voice and some power." NAACP strength against racial discrimination in schools, jobs and housing in nonviolent fashion. A renewed interest in politics by America's 22 million blacks has helped elect 1,300 Negroes to the White House of government, Wilkins said. "But blacks have a long way to go to be fairly represented," he added quickly. "I'm not just an outsider, I'm part of the basis either. The Negroes are slowly coming into their own and we can look for more elected leaders." He once condemned the Black Power concept as "the father of racism," violence, "but Wilkins now says he considers even the most militant black revolutionary against racial injustice." Wilkins has steadily marshaled "We and the Black Panthers are on the same side but we may not agree all down the line," he said. "The Panthers have no nose." They have a great deal more sympathy than that, because they complain of things the average Negro knows are true." Most black people share the Panthers' belief that a trial is no more than "a shake of the dice" for top man, plus one for group who are persecuted by police and government officials Wilkins Many classes on Monday and early Tuesday will not have met their instructors. Monday classes on Wednesday will have met week's readings the Monday after Labor Day, and Tuesday before the first week's readings next week. - Employment: "Black businesses have a tiny percentage in the Gross National Income and the Gross National Income still excluded from union jobs." William Kuntler, famous for representing unpopular clients such as the Chicago Seven, is in Gay Liberation Front in its attempt to be recognized as a KU student organization. Barry Alhm, KU law student and legal guard for the front, said Monday. Western Civilization classes had not been assigned instructors Monday night, because the warden delayed at the Computation Center, Bill Schauer, senior in Western Civilization, said Monday. Albin said a front page story in The Advocate, a Los Angeles newspaper, said Kuntler would represent the front in a law suit against the University. He said the group expects to hear from Kuntler shortly, but that their response may come from the newspaper article. Wilkins listed the most pressing problems of black Americans as: Housing; "If the Negro is confined to decaying slums and declining employment there, the United States is in for trouble." Education: "White children educate themselves. Negro and get rid of the idea this is a white man's country and that Negroes ought to be happy with whites." Gay Libs' Counsel Says Kunstler To Help Fight The Western Civilization readings, although late in coming from the printers, should be printed as soon as possible. Union Bookstore last this week. Despite continuing lack of racial equality, Wilkins said, its change in thinking on basic issues in thinking on basic issues especially among the young. Tickets are on sale this week for the University Theatre production of "Private Lives," to be held at 10am Tuesday, 4. The play is free of charge for new students, $1 for students with registration cards and $2 for non-students. The ticket costs $10. For information about University Theatre box office, Murphy Hall. Western Civ Instructors Not Yet Assigned He said that the group was the first organization in the known history of the University that was not granted recognition. "Young black people are less suspicious and are beginning to think like the late Malcolm X who was one of the most evil of all white people are devil." TULSA (AP)—A Tulsa newspaper Monday offered rewards of $100 and $150 for information leading to the arrest of a drug dealer who marijuana, LSD and other drugs in violation of the law. Play Tickets Go On Sale "The important thing is they're finding out the way to change their behaviour in the table but to go to the ballot box and throw the rascals out." "We can understand the im- itation of the young shacks in the valley." They don't want the sort of thing that handed to their families. Sen. Robert Dole ... Vickers Lecturer ... Officer Fired For Revelation It was alleged that he had made phone calls and had told of a heroin raid that police were planning. Erings GIFT SHOP THE SHOP TO GET SUCH ITEMS AS: 924 Massachusetts: 843-5160 WELCOME BACK! Jack D. Wicks, 24, was fired $250 and given a six-month suspension from the Cap. Merle Merie Corp suspended Wicks on July 9, the day after the raids and Police Chief Richard Hickman fired him after the conviction. Sorority Symbols Vases Straw Flowers Mobiles Smiles Chimes Unusual Candles Seals Sealing Wax And Many More Items No Tickets Till Permits Available Parking in lots at the University of Kansas is expected to be unrestricted for at least another week. Mike Thomas, director of KU's traffic and security department, indicated yesterday that campus parking regulations until temporary stickers are available are expected before Sept. 7. Officiers will be issued tickets for vehicles parked in areas where restrictions are posted, Thomas said. Those areas include Memorial Drive, yellow roads and marked access drives. Other parking control measures were delayed when permanent stickers normally mounted on the rear door fall term, were found un satisfactory. An about of how many characters jacobson printed, was returned to a Cincinnati firm that had been authorized by the City. The Cincinnati firm was not paid. Permanent stickers have been ordered from an Arkansas firm that specializes in the county. Meanwhile, the university's printing service is also buying sticker materials. Thomas was told by the firm that the permanent decals would be available between Sept. 7 and Oct. 3, and he issued the following Monday. Costs for parking permits will be increased if signed according to the plan, in addition a charge planned at the end of the wage-price control RETURN ENGAGEMENT of by Noel Coward PRIVATE LIVES . . a sophisticated and lighthearted look at marriage, set against the wit, charm, and imperishable glamour of the late 1920's. University Daily Kansan 8:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday September 3 and 4 University Theatre - Murphy Hall ALL NEW STUDENTS FREE (KU I D nos. 152000 to 168000) General Admission ... $2.00 K.U. Students ... $1.00 (With Certificate of Registration) Sure, you can knot your own bag, belt, or wall hanging with our MACRAME jute and cord. The Visual Cupboard "KNOT" YOUR BAG? NEEDLEWORK JAYHAWKS for pictures, pillows, purses or rugs. KNITTING SUPPLIES, CREWEL KITS, NEEDLEPOINT, RUGS BOOKS, AND INSTRUCTION. The Crewel Cupboard 17 E. 8th St. 841-2656 "We'll Keep You In Stitches" 3 Fill Administrative Slots Three new faces in administrative positions this year. Robert Cobb, who succeeded Mr. McDermott as Nunemaker College, Robert E. Foster, new director of bands and Charles Eldridge, director of the music department. Cobb, who was formerly dean of international programs, has been at KU since 1957. He formerly taught at Baylor and Oklahoma State University from which he received his Ph.D in 1985. He became assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts at KU in 1962. For several years he counselled students and was director of the College Honors Program. He later served as associate dean of the college and was chairman of the Board. He is a member of the Commission on Higher Education of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools and is consultant-examiner for the group. Robert E. Foster, formerly associate director of bands at the University of Florida at Gainesville and the new director of bands at KU ceeds Kenneth Bloomquist, w resigned at the end of the year. Boden assistant director of band served as acting director during his tenure. Foster has a bachelor's degree from the University of Texas and a master's degree from the University of Houston. He suc- Charles Eldridge, who had been curator of collections of the KU Museum of Art, became acting director of the museum at the Brett Walker refinery in Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Eldredge received a degree from Amherst College in 1966 and worked on his master's in education at the University of Minnesota. Aqualung JETHRO TULL $3.99 on the REPRISE Label KIEFS DISCOUNT RECORDS Also Available on 8-Track Tapes for $5.77 The BUGGY WASH The Cleanest Cars In Town Come to The BUGGY WASH WHY DON'T YOU? A Completely Automatic Exterior Car Wash On West 6th St. at Colorado 1804 West 6th Open 8 a.m. to 7 a.m.Mon.thru Sat. 10 a.m.to 5 p.m.Sundays SKELLY Month-End Sale At LAWRENCE SURPLUS These Prices Good Thru Saturday, September 4th! ENTIRE STOCK Reg. $9.00 Famous Brand Pure White JEAN JACKETS $5.00 Over 600 Pairs of Assorted Reg. to $8.00 BELL BOTTOM JEANS We Have About 50 of These! Spanish-Made LEATHER VESTS (Regularly Priced to $20.00) $5.00 $4.00 200 Pr. of Heavy-weight Blue Denims are in this Group! — Waist Sizes 28 - 38 — $5.00 ENTIRE STOCK Reg. $3.98 Aviator-Style SUN GLASSES $2.00 -Six Colors- ENTIRE STOCK Reg. to $12.00 Famous Brand Perma-Press FLARES $6.00 Nationality Advertised at $24.00 "Waffle-Stomper" HIKING BOOTS $15.00 Rough Out Suede in Dark Brown -Men's Sizes 61/2 to 12- LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 Massachusetts St. 6 Tuesday, August 31, 1971 University Daily Kansan Rent Raise Makes Peace Center Move The Lawrence Peace Center has not closed but merely moved its office, at 107 W. Seventh St., is now occupied by a United States embassy in New York. The center, which distributes information about the draft and the war in Southeast Asia, has been a major beneficiary of Seventh St since last March. The center is sponsored by the American Friends Service Center. Lou Wolfe, program director of one center, said Monday that the move had been made when the rent on the office more than doubled. Johns Hopkins Doctors Seek New Cancer Test The center's fund-raising efforts include the fourth annual homemade bread sale from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 11 at the center. Wole said he asked that he bake and buy bread for the sale. The first annual American Friends Service Committee Potluck picnic is open to the sept. 12th Broken Arrow Park. BALTIMORE (AP)—Doctors and psychologists at emergency centers are attempting to develop a careful lung cancer test as simple and efficient as the "dop smear" method. Dr. John K. Frost, director of the research team, said physicians hoped to have a method of Observatory Sets Openings To See Mars an anticipation of Mars' closest approach to Earth in 15 years, Lindley Hall Observatory plans to open its doors to the public from 9:15 p.m. until 11:30 p.m. on Saturday nights if the sky is clear. testing spittle ready for genera use within five years. N. Wyman Storer, professor emeritus of astronomy, said he does not expect to see the surface markings referred to as canals because they are not large enough. But observers will probably be able to see snow around the south polar caps. The vague dark markings that were thought of as vegetation will illuminate them, and it will also probably be able to be seen. The observatory is on the roof of Lindley Hall and opens through room 500. The physicians said they believed the test may prove to be an effective means of detecting cancer and precancerous cellular changes. The overall cure rate for cancer now is less than 10 percent. The researchers have used the test on 358 heavy smoking men over 45-persons considered high risk for cancer. They found three gases of the disease Dr. R. Robinson Baker, the surgeon on the team, said the men were all of color and cancer involved a man who "smoked four packs of cigarettes." Baker said that when he operated on the patient he could neither see nor feel the lung tumor. The surgeon said that the man's chances for recovery were "excellent." Physics Prof To Lecture A physics colloquium will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday in room room B. A graduate student, Calbert, professor of physics, will give a lecture entitled *Mathematical Analysis and Imputation of the Solar Corona*. Girls, if you need another pair of sandals to finish the season, we have them at sale prices Were to $14.00 $3⁹⁰ $4⁹⁰ $5⁹⁰ MCOX shoes 813 Mass. St. 115 2-3003 813 Mass. St. V1 3-2091 AUDIO DISCOUNT buy the finest in stereo HI Fl buy A. R, and other lines at factory cost+10% handling a quality line proof? A. R. guarantees its speakers for 5 yrs; burntable for 3 yrs; amp-Receiver-tuner 2 yrs. This covers parts-labor- freight to and from factory and even cartons if you need them. Rated as the best. SYSTEM DISCOUNTS at RAY AUDIO 842-2047 1205 Prairie Ave Your dealer for A. R. Dyna-Kenwood-Sherwood-Ampex Teac-Micrordail-DuSIR-Garrard-Panasonic-Shure PickingKos RECTLINEAR—and others--PickingKos cartons—all fair traded items sold at fair traded prices. we sell the best for less compare State Seeks Extradition Of Ex-Student Senator Former KU Student Senator Randy Gould will be the subject of extradition proceedings this between Kansas and Missouri. Kansas pardon and extradition attorney Frank Johnson is attempting to have Gould bought the house on behalf of assault, possession of explosives and destruction of property in connection with the May 14, 1970 bombing of former Attorney Daniel Young. The少年警队 Attorney Daniel Young ar 3a A Student Union Activities membership meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union ballroom. Committees To Form For SUA All interested students will have the opportunity to sign up for a SUA committee. The SUA committee will review fundings. Members do not pay dues. The Kansas Union partially supports SOA. The committee's office is the center of the Arts, public relations, special events, fine arts, recreation and cultural events. Gould is reported to be living in Kansas City, Mo. He posted bond for a federal charge of bomb conspiracy there. Gould was arrested with three other men after Arnold A. Stead, who was in prison for possession of firearms, was sent before a federal grand jury on June 21. Stead apparently imitated his colleagues in the lawmoments in the Lawrence bombings. $40,000 Given To Establish Loan Fund More than $40,000 has been received by the Kansas Endowment Association from the Great Breed who died in 1960. The bequest establishes the Daisy Dell and Roy J. McMullen Student Loan Fund in memory of the Breed's his wife, who died The best-loved DIAMOND bridal sets come in threes Your choice $149 All 3 Rings Magnificent trios, bridal set and grooms' matching wedding ring. are the perfect symbols of enduring love! All three are set with brilliant diamonds in your choice of 14K white or yellow gold. Christian's 809 Massachusetts COMPLETE BRIDAL SERVICE CHINA • CRYSTAL • SILVER hundreds of patterns to choose from Flythru college. L Our time is an exciting time. Our time is an exciting time! It's a big surprise. Superiors see it as it to the moon. It's a fast-moving world that's moving with it? Look into the Air Force ROTC Program. Find out why the Aerospace Team is where it is. You may learn to fly while still a college student. Learn where the scientific breakthroughs are. Find out about financial aid to help you get your degree. Learn what Air Force motors are. Then enroll in Air Force ROTC. U. S. AIR FORCE ROTC. Contact: Air Force ROTC Room 108 Military Science Building Phone: 864-4676 THERE'S A NEW MAN IN TOWN general jeans 1000 Massachusetts FEATURING LEVIS OPEN Mon.-Fri. 12-9 p.m. Sat. 9-5 p.m. Goo mark scrim Stadium the cr like o De Tuesday, August 31, 1971 University Daily Kansan Defense Pleases Fambrough 7 Scrimmage Previews Season By MATT BEGERT Assistant Sports Editor Good defense and a good passing game marked the pre-season intersquad scrimmage held Saturday in Memorial Stadium, as Coach Don Fambrough gave the crowd a preview of what KU will look like on the競irid this fall. The Blue team, KU's number one offense and defense, scored a 24 to victory over a White team composed of the rest of the team. The scrimmage was sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Committee. Fambrough said that overall the scrimmage was a good one. He praised the strength of the defense, and the senior signal-caller, did not participate in the scrimmage because of an injury. Fambrough said he was pleased with the way Rich Jones, quarterback for the White Sox, played. He said of David Jaynes, sophomore quarterback for the Blue team who missed spring practice, "It was real good for David to go through this contact with the number one unit. He has that much more confidence now and the players have a chance to win. JAYNES COMPLETED 10 of 18 passing attempts for 191 yards, including a 62-yard pass. Jones came off the field with 11 completions in 17 attempts for a total of 137 yards. Jones tossed a 44-yarder to Bob Martin, split end for the White team. In the rushing department, senior Chuck Schmidt had the best record with 77 net yards in 7 attempts. Schmidt scored on a 37-ward run. Fullback Vince N'Elon, who will miss the Jayhawks' first four games because of a recruiting violation, led the White team in total rushing with 34 yards in 10 carries. However, Fambridge said he was somewhat disappointed with the rushing of the team. "I'm a little disappointed in the running game," she said. "I'd hoped we would have won." HE SAID THAT team workouts had emphasizing passing and defense, and that mrs could be the reason for the ground game not being quite up to par. "We got a lot of things to smooth out before we play." Fainchoad said, "and I want to do that. I'm not going to As far as the defense is concerned, he was obviously pleased. Eddie Sheats, a Hutchinson Junior college transfer played a defensive game with the St. Louis Rams. "HE'S SO QUICK," Fambrough said, "that he can make a mistake and still recover in time to make the tackle for only a yard or two gain. He was just fantastic." "Its hard to tell how you're doing when you play yourself, but to me the defense was the real bright spot of the day." Fambrighau said after the scrummain. "I hope our defense has improved that much," he said. Defense has been eminent in the last four years for poor showing last year. The Hawks ranked last in team defense in the Big Eight last year. Sheats helped hold opposing quarterback Jones for a net gain of 8 yards in 7 carries. Sheats also blocked the only field goal attempt by Bob Helmbacher. Helmbacher kicked for both teams. Gary Cooper, senior guard from Spring Valley, Calif. and John Schroll, junior tight end from Hutchinson both had outstanding offensive performances. "THESE YOUNG KIDS should help us out with our death problem," he said. Farnbaugh was even more impressed with the defense after looking at films of the scrimmage, which will probably be the only hard-hitting practice the Jayhawks have done since opening September 11 with Washington State University in Lawrence. Fambridge was also encouraged by the performance of some of the younger team members, notably Galen Schmitz, defensive end, Bill Skepnek, defensive tackle, (both sophomores) and Bill Dinkel, junior tight end. "I feel our defense is coming around. I sure hope it is, because our defense has got to get the ball for us if we're going to be a good football team," he said. KANSAN sports Kansan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG Rich Jones Releases One of His 11 Completions . While pressure mounts from Gery Palmer (76) . . . Stadium Painted,Lettered While Fam Goes to Fans Memorial Stadium at the Memorial Stadium, and anything else, will be a part of the "New Blue at KU" this season after a facelift by Building Management. and if new Head Coach Don Foran发球,campaign was successful, a high number of Jayhawu alumni and fans will be visiting. The remaining seats and trim the stadium that were not put up for the game blue during the summer. Doors to the gate entrances are a mat- tened entrance. Meanwhile, Fambrough, in his first campaign as head coach after 23 years as an assistant, took a week in May, June and July to travel much of the southeast, central and western parts of the state. "Kansas Memorial Stadium", between levels of the press box, and "Home of the Kansas Jayhawks", on the outside of the east side of the stadium, were lettered in blue with red trim. The press box was also painted match the rest of the stadium. The three tours were a combination of golf dates with the KU Alumni, afternoons, followed by dinners sponsored by the KU Alumni "We had great response at the meetings," Fambridge said. "They were good for us and good for the people." "We attempted to reach every KU alum in the state," John Novotny, assistant athletic director said. "The image of the game has been changing and making and what the future promises are our main topics." Plans aren't definite for next year, but it appears that the tour will become a regular part of the team. The players come in one or more Jayhawk football players travel around the state making speaking appearances, Wade Sinson, athletic director, said the tours provided an open department to visit with his supporters and personally thank it "We've invited people to Lawrence so many times and asked so much of our alumni and supporters and they've invoked so well," he said, that it was felt needed to get to see them." The first leg of the trip in May sent the coaching staff to Hutchinson, Wichita, Great Bend and Salina. In June Famburg and Chiefs' Aerial Display, Late Drive Beat Jets The women's field hockey club will hold an organizational meeting on Wednesday room 123 Robinson. The club is open to any interested KU coed, Ann Laptad, women's interest director and the team's coach, suit team. KANAS CITY (AP) —The Kansas City City霆 unveiled an aerial display, a fourth quarter interception to intercept back the New York Jets 21-16 in a National basketball exhibition game Monday night. The club has five matches scheduled for this fall. Two of the matches will be hosted by the KU club. his coaches went to Parsons, Jophin, Mo., Pittsburg and Washington, where he was米了 Dodge City. Liberal, Garden City, Colby and Wichita. The deciding score was on a one-yard plunge by Eod Podolak, who had scored in the first half on a similar carry. Podolak's fourth quarter effort came after Kansas City quarterback Lenn Dawson took eight plays and featured a 51-yard play to Otis Taylor. Hockey Club For Women To Organize The Jets' only touchdown came with 12:15 in the third quarter. Linebacker Larry Grantham intercepted a pass from Mike Livingston, who took over at Kansas City. In the second half, The game was settled when Emmitt Thomas picked of a pass from the Jets' Bob Davis and Randy Ward, who drive late in the fourth quarter, New York's placekicker, Bobby Howfield, clicked on three field goals from 38, 19 and 34 yards. Monday Practice Is Terrible, Don Says Kansas City built a 15-6 halftime bulge on two brilliant drives of five plays each. Salb Overcomes Matson In AAU Summer Meet "It was worried about our passing after spring practice," he said. "We've worked hard on it this fall and there has been great improvement. Now we're going on the running game." One possible explanation for the injury was that said, was the emphasis that has been placed on the Jayhawk passing attack since fall drills. Karl Salb, former outstanding KU shot putter and one of six Jinhae entrants in the 2013 U.S. track and field meet this summer, defeated his old Nemesis, earning a 67.24% foot-off, a career best. Football practice Monday, the first since two-a-day drills ended in September. Saturday's full-scale scrimmage was "terrible." Coach Don He was particularly disappointed with the scrimmage, with the Jayhawk running game, that phase which he has said would be a strong one. But he said he wasn't as disappointed as he might have been considering the Hawks were to get ready for the entire season. "We haven't begun preparing specifically for Washington State," he said, looking at a lot of different defenses. "The state is naturally confusion and frustration. That results in bursed assignments. But I think it's only a The winning put was more than two and a half inches farther than the ball that shot outdoors. His previous best was 67.0% during his second game, and he previous encounters, he had never beaten Matson, the world champion. "I had hoped our running game was a little farther along," he said after a two-hour workout behind Allen Field House. "You never plan on having a bad win, but sometimes you get it." Fambrough said he thought some of the players were thinking a week ahead of time, toward KANSAS CITY (AP)—The Kansas City Royals baseball team today announced four play-moves, two of them in line up against the 44 major leagues from 24 to 40 players effectively Wednesday. Matson and Al Feuerbach, who throws for the Pacific Track Royals Make Player Moves The other Jayhawk entrants, the other Bob Bates. Wilhelm, shot put, Bob Bornkessel, intermediate hurdles, and Mike Bates, high hurdles. General Manager Cedric Tallis also announced the recall of pitchers Wally Bunker, Jerry Cram and Jim Rooftier, indefinite release of busseman-outfielder John Mastas and outfielder Scot Norley, all of whom will report to spring training. The only other Jayhawk who placed in the AAU meet was Sam Colson, junior javelin thrower. Colson better his own career best by almost seven inches with a 262-8-foot throw, but finished second in the place of a beryth in the Pan American Games. The second-place Royals announced purchase of veteran left-handed outfielder Sandy Leddy, who last vacationed Wednesday. In addition, Pitcher Bruce Ila Canton will be taken from the disabled list the same day. He was placed on the disabled list, a because of shoulder trouble. Club, tied for second with 66.1 tosses. Delvin Williams, sophomore running back from Houston, who was shook-up in Monday's game, moved to the offense to the so-far light injury list. "The University of Kansas track team wants you to train to be a high school baseball coach signs posted on campus indicates a shortage of personnel preparation for Washington State. But he said the team would get a "hard" workout each day this week. Coach Bob Timmons said that although hammer throwing was not an official conference event, the effort of Bill Penn, school record holder in the hammer whose eligibility has ended, Joyyahks Jayhawks capture a couple of open meets with his throwing. Penny, Timmons said, will be available this fall to help train those interested in throwing the hammer. Fambrough said that he thought Williams had pinched a nerve in his back slightly, but didn't think it would be serious. "Men who are at least 5' 10" and weigh 180 pounds or more and who want to learn the event, should just report to the track office in Allen Field House and then them start," Timmons said. Coach Looking For Men To Toss Hammer Penny, who developed into a the hammer drumler during his college years, finished fourth in the NCAA indoor championships this year and second in the Drake tournament for good for sixth in the NCAA indoor. At the conclusion of two-a-days Friday, Fambrough said the team had "accomplished about what I wanted to." "During the next two weeks we're going to have to polish what we've learned. Basically, we've learned that overall, the two-a-day were good." "We put in a lot of stuff," he said. "We have more defense than ever before. Actually you might call it a multiple defense. He said no experience was necessary. Knight Lost To Frosh Basketball One of KU's top freshman basketball prospects for the 1971-72 season, Dammy Lipscomb, cannot qualify for an athletic scholarship and will not be able to team, it was learned last week. Head Coach Ted Owens said Wednesday Knight was in school and "working to become eligible for varsity participation." Knight has, however, enrolled he fall semester at his own ep- partment. Grades this year he will be eligible for varsity competition He averaged 28.4 points and 14 rebounds a game for last season Hutchinson, which won 41 straight Arsenal shots. Hawks played in 20-3 record and finished fourth in the state tournament. A Kansas All-State and All-America selection, Knight signed a national letter of intent to come to KU Aug. 12. During his three seasons at sports he broke 13 of the school records, and 41 points for a single game and 582 for one season. His 1,260 caret Knight also cracked two state records and 88 games with 38 feet and 11 inches of games during the 1971 tournament, he was picked as the tour-master. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered by the following offices: credited, or national origin. Squabbtte--all you can eat for 99c at Shorty's Beefercer 640 Mass Visit the "Sewer" at the Attic 927 Mass. tt Earthshine—East 8th & Mass. From top to bottom we can cover you in style. 9-7 Tony's **66** Service Prepared! tune-ups starting service Lawrence, Kansas 60044 Lawrence v. 1-2008 4343 Iowa PERSONAL 35 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.81 WANT ADS Western Cv. Notes=Now on Sale revised, comprehensive 'New Analysis of Western Civilization 6th Campus Camid House; 41st, 40th St. Chiristianum-Complete. a, 4 years from the start of school. A or M P or M classes allow full time schooling. B or C classes call or write D. W Sammons 813-2724. C. Treward 612-7274. T. Mackay 612-7274. STADIUM BARBER SHOP 19-27 Mass. Pea coats at the Alley Shop. 843 Mass. tf NOTICE lead, guitarist--6 yrs, experience— wants to join or start a hand with some other talented musicians Call 864-1080. Potted Mum Plant s in Full Bloom - Greenhouse Fresh. THE HIT in the WALL Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order 843.7685—We Deliver—9th & III. DELICATESEN G SANDWICH SHOP DELICATESSEN & Attention One or two late students, large room in quiet home. Families admitted to close room at all holidays. Ubele Island $2.49 Cash & Carry. paghetti-all you can eat for 99 ct in hotte's Beefcater. 644 Mass. lf Macrame supplies. A wide selection of colored cards and jute. Books too! The Crewel Cupboard, 17 E. 8th St. 9-6 15th & N.Y 843-2004 Pence Garden Center & Greenhouses Free—7 black kittens. 8 weeks old—box trained. Raised with dog Call V-12 V-1884. Job printing - lower prices and fades services—leaders, posters, letterheads, books. Also custom book-binding materials Key Press Collection 9- 710 Mass. LOST Ring lost -Man's ring with gold band and black stone. Reward offered is 55.00 Call 864-6072 after 6:30 p.m. and before 8:30 p.m. 9-7 -Wedding-lodge (in) `3" x 5"` black box. If found please notify Draise Robinson, c o coach Ted Owens house-phone 861-734-784 FOUND Clothes you like at prices you can afford. It's the Alley Shop. 843 Mass. if Antique fur coats $29.95. THE AT- TIC. 927 Mass. tt Earthshine - East 8th & Mass - kinky patches to spice up your favorite jpts for the upcoming season year-9 WANTED Visit "The Sewer" at THE ATTIC, 927 Mass For "swingin' dresses." ff KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES We need used paperback books. We buy we-sell we-trace-traditional -science fiction -other Buzzy 843-276 M4a Stats Mass. 843-276 Wanted--2 males to share 2 bedroom. apt. Call 842-7712 Located at Park 25. 9-7 For your fall wardrobe it's the Alley Shop 843 Mass. ff leadline : 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication WORK WONDERS HELP WANTED Dine in candlelight atmosphere U.S. choice steaks. Open 4:20 1% Ml. N of Kawau Monday 7:31 1% Ml. V of Kawau Monday 7:31 1% Ml. V of Kawau The Stilair Motel Mammoth Lakes OPENING Shines Dyeing Refinishing "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" FEMALE ARTIST'SMODE--Nue- experience not required. THE LAW- RENCE AINT CENTER $2.50 per call. Call 843-8315 or 843-95 per call. 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Full or part time experienced house- hold goods packers and loaders. Ethan A. Smith, Box 237, Lawrence, during qualification and experience. Help wanted-for Buggy Wash. 1804 W. 6th. Apply now for jobs for this semester. 8-31 For rent, furnished apt., private bath to 4 KU boys. Phone VI 3-7890 9-7 Rent a sewing machine, $5.00 a month. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. 9-7 FOR RENT Cashier, hostess, attractive, personable, part-time events. Prefer age over 21. Lawrence restaurant. Phone V 1-34131 after 6 p.m. 9-7 For rent—two fully furnished bathrooms with connecting 3 piece bathrooms. For senior or graduate girl with no pets. Call Campus Road, Phone A14-762-9738, Campus Bridge, Phone A14-762-9738 For pants and tops it's the Alley Shop, 843 Mass. ff 15th & New York 843-2004 PENCE GREENHOUSES 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon WATERBEDS. King-Size with 20-vi- guarantee. Frames and foam panels also available. Buid 842-7668 now. 9-3 Great Dane puppies for sale Fawn color Male VI2-2852 9-0 Arts, and crafts-Grundbacher art supplies, decompose supplies, beads and other crafts Daint Davis Store 918 Mass. Bld. 83-6411 9-3 A Complete Line of House Plants—Including Venus Iv Traps & Many More Hot Pants, Hot Pants, Hot Pants, The Attic 927 Mass. ff For pantuits it's the Alley Shop 843 Mass. if running condition. Excellent interior condition. Also can be approved to approve $609. Also Carson Ginn $275. Call V1 2-6761 For sale - motorcycle 1971, Triumph Trophy 500 - 1,200 miles. Mud well. Now, Call 841-2256, ask for Michael, 9-25 Have 56 Ford 49-pin glove- up, sell of trade for motorcycle. See at 928 W. 24th. No 6 Body bed tires, and in good shape. 9-7 Psychology hardbacks and paper-clips. Over 30 tilt coverings clinical. Also Wollenkamp 2-4 track record records for the psychiatric care of carers. 842-2612 TWO COOGER and DARK'S OPEN FOR BUSINESS as of Monday, August 30 USED BOOKS Five days 15 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.93 1953 Dodge, Very dependable, excellent running condition. Good tires and battery. $150 Doit Doig at 842-1114 or come by 1614-Kentucky 97 For sale - $75, 189 Pontiac Catania. Priced for a quick sale. P.S. AT: Needs body work, but clean interior from great. area, dbl after 49, after 99. For sale: Speech 22 drawing equipment. Only used last semester. Reasonably priced. Call 842-2768. 9-2 For sale - Leblanc Vito B-flat tenor sax excellent condition See at Rehiration $ Music, 18 E. 9th, 9-7 A good selection of good used sewing machines from $2.95 up. White Sewing Center, 611, Mass 9-1-7 T.V. for sale 33" Zenith console with walnut finish Good condition $50. 843-6228 9-1-5 Home of the "Big Shef" Puppies, with, personality - Daliations, pure breed and pretty. Good watchdogs, 3 months old. Partly housebroken. 842-3420 9-7 Component stereo system AM FM stereo radios, 1 pair, proof turret灯 Jalette 4 way speaker, tape deck Black Box 4-way speaker White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. 9- Used vacuum cleaners. However, G.E. Electronics, etc. $9.95 up White Sew- ing Center, 916 Mass. 9-7 Vitaehelst $25-$50 - size 5-Year unwarranty when any model with liner haute-ndition frames available. Also, inside-frame Zerol's Zeva Lens in Ass. #411-2208. Bass guitar, Italian hollow body play $30. Good keys, wound sound, play $35. Wednesday night. Apt for rent, downstairs. Kitchen ware $16, downstairs. $80. MWU 442-6623 Student life Now & Used furniture furniture for hotels, restaurants and affordable Refrigerators, ranges, washrooms, living rooms, kitchen suites, living room sets, dining rooms, hotel rooms HAAS FURNITURE & APPLICATIONS Try One Today 814 Iowa Earthshine—East 8th & Mass—Summer clearance, up to 50', off—sorry, entire stock not included. 9-12 MISCELLANEOUS Moving, Safety, 2 - aid compliance, 15-18 ft. (4.5-5.3 m) wide cabinetry; Rocker Jacket (vibration tolerance); cabinette cabinet 12 - 15 kg shags can carry cabinets 12 - 15 kg shags can drawers, and other miscellaneous items 892-7603 BURGER CHEF Fisherman knit sweaters from Italy $15.00 The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. tf WATERBED. frame Earthshine—East 8th & Mass- Brake? Come in and just rap with us. we get lonely 9-7 PARTY CATERING AT SHORTY'S BEEFEATER 644 MASS !! It's The Attic, 927 Mass. Pants and tops for her. If Buy a King-size TETRATED, and foam and for $29.5 with this aid 842-7688 Y Rx Drive A Little & Save A Lot. Shop PENCE GREENHOUSES For All Your Plant & Flower Needs Greenhouse Fresh— 15th & N.Y. 843-2004 Open----8 to 5:30 10 to 4 on Sunday BUSINESS PHONE 843-5440 RANKIN DRUG CO. MASSACHUSETTS STREET LAWRENCE KANABS Looking for a Little Extra Cash? Gather up those Dust Collecting Items of Quality and Sell Them With a Kansan Classified Ad. 1 Time — 25 wd. or Less—$1.00—Add wd. lce a Rates 3 Times—25 wd. or Less—$1.50—Add. wd. 2 cea 5 Times—25 wd. or Less-$1.75-Add wd. 3c ea. 111 Flint Hall UN 4-4358 or 4359 Tuesday, August 31, 1971 University Daily Kansan IMPORTANT: 1971 Student Season PLEASE READ Football Ticket Information CAREFULLY WHERE: East Lobby, Allen Fieldhouse WHEN: Seniors, Sept. 1 ... 1:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Graduate Students, Sept. 2 ... 1:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Juniors, Sept. 3 ... 1:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Sophomores, Sept. 4 ... 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Freshmen, Sept. 6 ... 1:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. All students may purchase a season ticket on the designated day and each day thereafter. PRICES: Regular Student $5.00 Spouse Ticket $10.00 (Spouse includes spouses and children) WHAT TO BRING:1) KU ID 2) Certificate of Registration 3) Payment for tickets PROCEDURE: 1) Pick up IBM card at Table 1 2) Proceed to Table 2 a) Present IBM card b) Pay for the ticket c) Receive the ticket d) You're finished! HOUSEMOTHERS: 1) Show KU activity card (which is purchased at the Business Office). GROUP SEATING REQUESTS: 1) Present all KU ID's and Certificates of Registration at the special table for groups. 2) All IBM cards will be pulled. 3) Proceed to Table 2 and purchase your block of tickets. 4) Seat assignments for groups are made according to the lowest classification of the individuals involved. If you choose to sit with someone who is not in your classification, the seat assignment will be made in the lower classification of the individuals involved. ITEMS TO REMEMBER: 1) SPOUSES—must show proof of marriage in writing if marital status is not indicated on the IBM card. 2) ALL STUDENTS-the tickets will be randomized as they are sold. The first people will receive tickets in their class section, however, they may not be the best seats in the section. Therefore, it will not be necessary to be present at 1:00 p.m.sharp for best seating. 400