COLDER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 82nd Year, No.75 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Students Cautious In Election Poll Tuesday, February 1, 1972 See Page 2 Contract, Social Policy Topics Ellsworth Picks Eighteen To Meet Housing Board By GARY NEIL PETERSON Kansan Staff Writer Elections were held at Ellsworth Hall last night to choose an 18-member review committee to study the proposed residence fee. The committee will meet year with the University housing board. The 18 members were selected as part of the negotiated settlement between Ellsworth residents and the four administration officials who make up the building. Negotiations began a week ago when Ellsworth residents returned from vacation to discover that the contract and social policy for the 1972-73 school year had been changed without their notification. They then petitioned the housing board, asking a hearing on the change and greater voice in future policy making meetings. BEFORE THE ELECTION procedures there was an all-hall meeting of the Republican party, the Ombudsman office, David Dysart, Lawrence third-year law student, and Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, speak and answer questions about the policy issues. Dysart is acting as mediator of all negotiations at the request of the residents He said his main purpose in attending the meeting was to discuss two points: the policy change—elimination of coeducational floors and the reduction in house rent for 47 hours per day, and how hall residents could be more effective in governing themselves. Dysart told the students that there would have to be a give-and-take attitude or negotiations would fail. "If the people you elect to talk to the housing board are firm, they will do what they can include the housing board is going to be equally firm. Then you have two choices. "YOU CAN GO to the chancellor with your problem and I will leave it up to you to guess which side he'll probably come down on, or you can go the University judicially and play that game. That's a full blown trial. You'll be fighting Charles Oldfather, the university attorney, and in essence the odds wouldn't look very good there either. Plus the ruling people on the University court are lawyers, and a few are students." Dvarsa said. Dysart said the judiciary would be a time-consuming process. "It would take at least a month or two before your case is heard. That and the notoriety the University would get from such action would probably not be in the best interest of the University, let alone Ellsworth Hall." HE CONTINUED by saying, "And if you do go to the University judiciary, there's a board—she shall remain nameless—who has said she will go to the Board of Regents and seek to have whatever the judiciary says overturned if it goes against what she says." Dysart then said he thought the best way to approach the problem was through a telephone call. Elsworth Hall to tree with the booster's The housing board is made up of Donald K. Alderson, dean of men; Emily Taylor, dean of women; J. J. Wilson, director of housing, and William Balfour, vice-chancellor of student affairs, and Mike Sandermever, AURH president. Third, a third-year law student or a law professor would advise that board on matters of fact and law. He would not have a vote. FOLLOWING DYSAFT, Alderson made a brief presentation of the housing administration's thoughts on the subject of homelessness and then fielded questions from the audience. Adterton, in explaining the board's reasons for changing the social policy for Ellsworth, said complaints had been received by the housing board concerning noise, group relations on wings, fears for various reasons, and assaults. "These considerations were on the agenda, so to speak, at a time when some other things were being discussed. Soon after the opening of school last fall there were concerns about the makeup of our student body. Some people were wondering how much have not been asked at KU. There were questions directed to us as to why we in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in our CWC Program didn't have earlier information about students who would be in our colleges." Alderson said. Parking Permits Must Be Placed On Cars Todav Cars using University parking lots must display a permanent parking permit as of The new permits replace the temporary ones that were issued when the Phase 1 economic controls made a fee hike impossible. When Phase II started, the University successfully applied to the government for an increase in the parking fee, according to Cara Bob Ellison of Traffic and Security. Ellison said that registration for permits was fairly normal and that the extra cost did not seem to be discouraging car owners from buying parking permits. He said that his office had not received a lot of complaints about the price hike. He explained that although prices had gone up, parkers would not be required to pay the higher figure retroactively and would instead have to pay the lower price on a porated basis starting February 1." He said he did not anticipate any problems with the new permits and that Traffic and Security was receiving "a tremendous amount of cooperation in changing from temporary to permanent permits" from all concerned. HE EXPLAINED that time was a big factor. Anderson said another reason for the changes was to get incoming freshmen into a hall where they could receive training in available reading and study skills programs. "There are certain things we think freshmen should be exposed to," he said. freshmen should be exposed to," he said. When asked why he thought freshmen were not capable of dealing with a coeducational experience, Alderson said some were but one could not tell who was involved over an application for a residence. Alderson then was asked whether he wasn't trying to take the role of the parent. "I certainly don't wish to be a parent-in- sence. That's not our intention. I don't think we are in a position where we say that children should behave like adults, think you want to do is your business." ASKED SPECIFICALLY what complaints were received by the board to further prompt the policy change at Ellsworth, Alderson said. "We were also concerned about how the visitation hours were being used." One of the members of the audience asked whether there was a concern of racial bias in the interview. Following the discussions and questions, the approximately 100 residents retired to their respective floors to elect one or more members of the board to meet with the president of the hall, Reather Haynes, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore; the treasurer, Robert Tenny, Raytown, Mo., junior; and the secretary, William Hampsis, Tenn., junior, and the housing board. TONIGHT AT 7 SELECTION 21 persons will meet with the Orishadhman officer to discuss issues. Alderson said. "In some cases, ves." The 21 will meet sometime next week with the housing board and other top administrative officials to review the contract for next year. After a review is made the 21 will elect representatives to meet with the committee. Irish Rebels Retaliate After Civilians' Deaths BELLAST (AP)—Rebel guerrillas in Northern Ireland struck back with bombs, bullets and defended parades Monday over acts of civilians in a clash with British troops. The Irish Republic to the south recalled its ambassador from London and a gasoline bomb set the British Embassy in Dublin ablaze. Snow Predicted to Follow Warm Dav In Parliament in London, Roman Catholic militant betrayed Devlin assaulted British Home Secretary Richard Bruton, and scratched him and galling his Warmer temperatures Monday brought safer conditions and fewer frozen toes in Lawrence, but a 6-inch snowman survived in Montana. Kansan Photo by RICHARD GUSTIN When at gasoline bomb exploded at the British Embassy in Dublin, hundreds of chanting demonstrators were marching outside. They were protesting the battle Sunday in Londonerry which took the lives of 13 civilians. The Sinn Fein, political wing of the outlawed Irish Republican Army, called the protest. The slaying, and the death Sunday in a London hospital of a British army major shot in Ulster five months ago, brought Northern Ireland's death toll in $2\%$ years of strife to 232. Twenty six have died this month. Snowman Troops came under repeated fire Monday in Helfast's Catholic strongholds during violent reaction to the Sunday shootings. A soldier was seriously wounded when a guerrilla gun penetrated his armored car. School divisions drove to snow packed gutters when they caught in a cross-fire, but none were hurt. The skirmishes paralyzed public transportation. Weather Service temperatures will be in the 40% today, but it will turn earlier tundra. Snow or rain turning to snow is expected for The Irish Republic recalled its ambassador in London, Donal O'Sullivan. An Irish Embassy spokesman called the move "the strongest protest we can make" without rupturing diplomatic relations with Britain. In London, Miss Devlin, a member of Britain's Parliament as well as a leader of the Roman Catholic minority in Northern Ireland, was explaining how Jamaica's Maudling was explaining the circumstances in which a force of British paratroopers opened fire during Sunday's attack. She complained that she was not allowed to put a question to Maudling. DONALD J. REYNOLDS Dean Alderson Listens to Ellsworth Residents Kansan Staff Photo by KIT NETZER Students to meet with housing board House to Hear Regents By JOYCE NEERMAN Kansan Staff Writer Members of the Kansas Board of Regents and presidents of the six state colleges and universities will go before the House Ways and Means Committee Wednesday in Topeka to seek additional funds for higher education in Kansas. Paul Wunsch, chairman of the Board of Regents, is scheduled to speak at 9 a.m. and is expected to make general requests for training programs in appropriations for salary raises for classified and unclassified personnel, increased operating expenses and THE REGENTS are expected to ask for a two-step salary increase for classified personnel at the schools. Gov. Robert Docking and State Budget Director James Bibb both have recommended one-step increases. The regents are also expected to ask for 10 per cent salary increases for unclassified personnel at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University, and for 8 per cent increases for unclassified personnel at the other state schools. The governor recommended a 5 per cent increase for those faculty involved in educational programs at the colleges and universities, but his proposal for faculty involved in the extension program and research activities was only a 1 per cent PHIL. ARNOLD, budget officer for the board, told the board that a $219,608 increase in the governor's budget for fiscal 1973 would be needed to provide a 5 per cent salary increase for all unclassified employees. Bibb had only recommended a 2 per cent salary increase for faculty, following a review of the program. KU officials have voiced their disappointment about what they called an apparent lack of recognition of the effects of inflation for the second year in a row. In November, at the Governor's Budget Hearings in Topeka, Wunsch said, "National economists who have studied the relationship of the economy in "THIS DOES NOT provide for any catch-up at all—just enables us to stay even. Three years of very small increases as against a need for at least 10 per cent per year—do you wonder why we ask, "Where are we going?" situations of higher education estimate that if the expense of normal growth and inflation is to be met, budgets must be maintained. If the cost per year just to maintain a static position. The governor recommended a total budget of $66.6 million for the six state colleges and universities, representing an increase of $6.2 million or 7.4 per cent from the estimated expenditures during the current fiscal year. The regents and Dr. William O. Rieke, vice chancellor for health affairs, are expected to seek additional funds for a planned expansion of the University of Kansas Medical Center. The total cost of remodeling and remodeling is estimated at $5 million. WUNSCH WILL outline in detail the discrepancies between the governor's budget recommendations and the regent's requests. The six state heads of the schools will then focus on specific problems that Wunsch has mentioned. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmer's Jr. is expected to speak on the problem of inadequate pay increases for classified and unclassified personnel. President James McCain of K-State will probably discuss problems in differences in raises for those faculty involved in teaching and research, and extension. A number of K-State faculty are involved in agricultural research. President Clark Alberg of Wichita State University is expected to point out the problems of increased operating costs and will present the needs of the medical center. DAVE MILLER, KU student body president, will send letters supporting the Board of Regents' 1973 budget request of $176.0 million to legislators from this region Wednesday. Of the student body members who are elected and universities will be sending similar letters this week to legislators from their areas. State budget director Henry Bibb, has recommended that the Regents request payment. Miller painted a bleak financial picture for college senators at last week's senate meet. He said that the financial situation "still isn't good. I wish I could tell you it were." KU Fees Due; $10 Penalty After Wednesday Deadline University of Kansas enrollment fees are due Wednesday. If a student has not paid his fees by this date, a $10 penalty fee will be added to his University fees. Students who did not receive their statements should obtain a duplicate at the Office of the Registrar, window 1, before Wednesday. Charles M. Burrows, associate comproller, said that students who wrote checks on insufficient funds for their fees must submit them until the last minute to write their checks. If a student writes an insufficient check, burrows said, the University notifies him in advance. Burrows said that if a student wrote a second check to the University, and it is again returned as insufficient, his fees would no longer be accepted by check. He must then pay his fees in cash, or by cashier's check or money order. If a student has not paid his fees by paying them, will not be able to complete his enrollment. 2 Tuesday, February 1, 1972 University Daily Kansan A L Kansan Photo by DAVE BLISS Gas Explosion Causes $30,000-$50,000 Damage According to Keith Lawton, Director of Facilities Planning and Operations, an estimated $30,000-$50,000 damage was caused in a gas explosion near Battetleford Scholarship Hall. The area involved included Battetleford, the Sprague Apartments, a parking lot near Batterfield and a utility tunnel. Repairs were started 30 minutes after the explosion, and if the crew gets the necessary materials, they can be done quickly. Undecided Votes Top Poll By BRAD AVERY Kansan Staff Writer Caution. That seems to be the attitude of many University of Kansas students in regards to lending their support to one presidential candidate or another early in the campaign season This was the conclusion reached based on a random sample of 42 people contacted Monday night. Of those replied to the question, "What would you support at this time?" 42 persons said they were not ready to be contacted. Typical of the comments in that category were those of Susanne Kane, a junior computer science student, who thought she needed more time before committing to her studies. "RIGHT NOW I really don't know who to support," Albers said. "I would rather take more time to investigate the issues and updates before I commit myself." In addition to caution, there was a great deal of cynicism that permeated the category. Typical of that attitude was James Gaddie, Lawrence "I don't have a choice because it really doesn't make any difference," he said. "If Muskie wins the Democratic nomination, which he probably will, there will be no challenge to him and Nixon." Gaddis said. Of those who supported a candidate, a plurality endorsed George McGovern, D-S.D.Who received 22 votes from those nominated in the primary, D-Maine, and Richard Nixon each received 18 votes. However, even in this category there was a dogmatic, emotional bias that favored one man over another simply because the candidate RICHARD NIXON had surprisingly strong support for what is generally considered to be his own community." Those who supported the President GMG civic club in Vietnam played as the reason. Karen Craft, Edson sophomore, was representative of that stance. "I think Nixon's withdrawn, policy should be given a chance." Craft said, "If he not reelected that the final result of it will be." Only 1,150 students under the age of 21 have registered to vote in this poll. Passive passives received in this poll and the small number of registered voters have substantiate conclusions reached by KU political leaders such as Mark Bedner, Emporia senior and representative of KU Student Vote, that politics is not the top choice in time. Whether student political interest will warm up remains, at least at KU, to be seen. Campus Briefs At the December meeting of the Assembly, members decided to put the question to a mail ballot after discussion was received from the floor. The bailouts were to the College office Friday. Embry added that she felt student representation on the board, and said that the committee really had no state policy or determining who is promoted or given tenure. She said the decisions were fairly The Promotions and Tenure Committee is presently composed of 14 members. Of these, nine are faculty members, graduate student instructors, and three are undergraduates. Auditions for Daniel Berrigan's play "The Trial of the Catonsville Nine" will be at 7:30 tonight and Wednesday at the United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread. The play has a cast of 12 men and four women and is about the trial that resulted from the burning of Selective Service files at the draft board in Catonsville, Md., by the nine defendants. Lynne Embry, Lawrence senior and a member of the College Promotions and Tenure Committee, said she was disappointed that the measure failed, but she argued it would be brought up again. Berrigan Play Tonight Students Convicted Of Telephone Fraud Physical Therapy Club International Club Meeting The Executive Committee of the International Club will meet at 7 tonight in the Wesley Foundation basement. There will be a Physical Therapy Club meeting at 7 onight in the Council Room of the Kansas University. Slides and tapes on the proposed burn center at the University of Kansas Medical Center will be presented. Two RU students have pleaded guilty to misdemeasure charges of defrauding the sophomore the Southwestern college, the sophomore the Patterson, the Junction City sophomore, the Kaito City sophomore, the City Kan, the sophomore, were convicted of using false calling or card number to send long distance telephone calls The Christian Science Organization will meet at 7:30 tonight at Danforth Chapel. Christian Science Meeting The Lawrence Sierra Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the South Park Recreation Center for a panel discussion on the necessity and desirability of further channelization of Mud Creek in North Carolina. A panel discussion, include a question and answer session after the panel discussion Sierra Club to Meet There will be a meeting of the American Society of Civil Engineers at 7 p.m. Monday at Shaker 9, ALL ASCE students are invited. The clause in the bylaws will remain unchanged. The clause reads: "In the case of the Promotions and Tenure instructors and undergraduate members of the committee shall participate in the formulation of general policy, but shall not participate in discussion of individual cases or in the final decision." Student Vote On Tenure Not Accepted The organizational meeting of the Environmental Clearing House will be at 7:38 tonight in the Curry Room of the Kansas University. Civil Engineers Society Environment Meeting The vote from the members of the Assembly of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was 202 votes in the first vote, and in the final vote of individual cases of faculty members, and 248 for keeping the function of the committee as it is. Passage of the proposal required a two-thirds majority. McGovern Worker to Speak The College Young Democrats will have a meeting at 7:30 to meet in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. Lynn Knox, chairwoman for the Douglas County McGovern for President organization, will speak. A recommendation was defeated Monday which would be used to select the student members of the Committee for the Promotion and Tenure of Faculty Members in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. 'Kool-Aid Test' Author Booked For Festival Tom Wolfe, author of the book The Electric Kool-Aid Acid to be will speak at KU during the Mariana 10 Festival of the Arts program Wolfe replaces Fred Wiseman, a documentary film maker, whose agency recently broke the contract for Wiseman's apposition to Neb. Neb., sophomore and director of the festival, and director Monday Warren said that beginning Feb 11 students could redeem their ticket packages for individual tickets. Before then students will be mailed information for the appropriate procedure for picking up tickets. Patterson was arrested in connection with charges Dae B in Douglas County Court. She was sentenced last week to a suspended 6-month sentence. Warren said that 1,177 ticket packages for the festival were sent out. He said that this was an oversee of about 400 packages but that usually 600 persons refunded their ticket packages before the festival. Garrett was arrested in investigation during gulty the charges. Sentencing will take week. Sentencing Friday. He remains free on $1,500 Investigations of the misuse of the telephone facilities began in May of last year by Southwestern Bell, according to J. F. T. Robin Morgan, a free-lance editor who has been actively involved in the women's liberation movement since 1987, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Kansas Union. The lecture is one of a series sponsored by the Minority Opinions Forums. Garner, security manager of the company's Kansas operations. Computers and interviews with several individuals were used in determining the source of the information. After the investigation were then turned over to the Douglas County attorney's office, he said. Feminist Editor To Give Talk Garner said his office is investigating four or five more cases of possible telephone fraud and GU raids. Lawrence is just one of several cities in Kansas who have investigated, he said. Forum to Offer Travelers Aid Varsity THEATRE - Telephone 813-3065 Knight Sick; Trip Here Called Off A travel forum designed to introduce campus offices of travel assistance will be held at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union. The forum, the first of seven scheduled for the spring semester, will discuss 1972 transatlantic flights. NEW YORK CITY STOPMART OPENING DUSTIN HOFFMAN STRAW DOGS" Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:25, 9:40 COLOR R Sean Connery as James Bond 007 IAN FLEMINGS "Diamonds Are Forever" Now thru Tues. Eve. 7:25 & 9:35 Adult 1,50. Child 75. Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 & 4:15 Hillcrest THIS YEAR'S GRAND PRIZE WINNER AT THE CANNES FILM FESTIVAL John S. Knight, who has been selected to receive the twenty-third annual William Allen White Foundation Award for national journalistic merit, will not be able to attend university as chair of KU Knight is editorial chairman of Knight Newspapers, Inc. Mark Ethelridge Jr., editor of the Detroit Free-Press, will accept a position he has been hospitalized. The Detroit Free Press is a Knight in crisis works in close cooperation with Knight on editorial matters. JULIE CHRISTINE ALAN BATES THE GO-BETWEEN The People Place to Live GP Columbia Pictures presents New thru Tues. Eve. 7:11 & 9:25 Monday. 8:25 & 10:15 Mat. Sat. 2:00 & 4:05 Hillcrest WALT DISNEY presents Lady and the Tramp Granada THEATRE...Telephone V13-5782 2 BR Unf 155 2 BR Furn 195 Technicolor* Cinemascope Evenings 7:30 & 9:30 Continuous Sat. and Sun. 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It's FREE with I.D. Pick up your reserve seat ticket at the box office in Murphy. Non-Students 2. 00 - 2.50 - 3.00 Tuesday, February 1, 1972 3 People . . . ... Places ... ... Things People: The prosecutor's office said Monday that Swiss authorities have issued arrest warrants for AUTHOR CLIFFORD IRVING and his wife on "urgent grounds of suspicion" against the couple. If they were charged, the court would have been arrested on arrival." Dist. Atty. Peter Zeelef said. KING MAHENRA, who brought modern ways to NEPAL, died Monday and his son, a 26-year-old paratrooper and painter, ascended to the world's only Hindu throne as a divine-right monarch. MANUEL FIERRO, charged for Kansas Human Needs Corp. director, has charged that a General Accounting Office audit of the corporation was intended "to deliberately stop the rise of minority influence in Kansas." Places: SAN FRANCISCO- Negotiators resumed discussions in the West Coast DOCK STRIKE while the union exerted increasing economic pressure by closing off U.S. shipper's access to Canadian and Mexican ports. TOPEKA--Among bills introduced in the Senate was one by Sen. Frank Hodge, R-Hutchinson, to institute an added VALUE TAX in Kansas. The added value tax, advocated by Nixon on a national basis, involves collecting an additional sales tax on materials as they go through the manufacturing process and their value increases at steps along the way. Things: The SENATE defeated a Southern-led move to continue the exemption of over 10 million state and local government employees from the federal ban on RACIAL AND OTHER DISCIMINATION Laws. The Senate voted against the coverage, in cash bill before the Senate would bring them under the law. A bill to set up tougher standards for BILLBOARD CONTROL in MISSOROIR run into opposition in the Senate and had be over and over again. THE NO-BRA-LOOK has its delights, both for men and women, but two surgeons caution that today's pleasure may turn into tomorrow's sorrow. While there is no known medical harm from the NO-BRA-LOOK, the doctors say, it hastens the day when a bra becomes a necessity. The U.S. Command said American troop strength fell last week to 135,606, pass- ing Ninety-fifteen,138,000 and lowering the lowest level since September 1965 when numbers were increasing raddly. WASHINGTON (AP)—The Federal Airline Administration (FAA), aroused at the continuing menace of airplane hijackings, ordered all the United States' carriers to start screening passengers and baggage for weapons or sabotage devices. The new order will go into effect 72 hours after it appears in IN PARIS, North Vietnam denied Monday it wanted a Communist government in Saigon, and said it sought a treaty broadly based on national policy and religious factions. in the far north, two days of stepped-up fighting resulted in 54 North Vietnamese and nine South Vietnamese reported killed. Eighteen witnesses, including Arvin and Bell, appeared before the committee during the more than two hours of testimony, while an audience of more than 100 jammed the largest hearing in the statehouse and overflowed into the outer hallway. Members of the organization unloaded from buses near the grounds and paraded—some pleads—and up to the statehouse. Many of those attending the hearing are members of the Kansas Right to Life Organization, which keeps repeal laws in Kansas Abortion Law which went into effect in July 1970. SAIGON (AP)—Gen. William C. Westmoreland said Monday that North Vietnam may launch a multiphase military campaign in South Vietnam next month, aiming for the kind of political impact created by the 1968 Tet Offensive against the commander of U.S. forces here. The enemy "could have some temporary success" in seeing a highlands capital laid "Kontum or heavy cavalry, and heavier casualties." Westmoreland told newsmen at the end of a six-day visit to the war FAA Orders Airline Search Of Passengers for Weapons U. S. B-52 bombers mounted the newest raids in four months after they landed and supplies in South Vietnam near the Launch区 U.S. bomber The other bill, offered by George Bell, D-Dallas City Kan., would change the law to make it more essential to the physical health of the mother—and rule out mental health considerations. Bell's bill would also put a time limit on when a pregnancy could be considered, and the present law permits "up to the day the child is born." The South Vietnamese Comm and claimed that its planes had destroyed three North Vietnamese planes about 32 miles west of Kontum One bill, by sen. Lester C. Kernigan, presented a lengthy statement to the committee Monday, would repeal the law, which legalizes abortions at a three-member panel of the Senate; an abortion is necessary for the physical or mental health of the woman involved in the performed in a certified hospital. General Anticipates Tet-Type Offensive TOPEKA (AP)—Many of the old, emotional argument; over abortions which have echoed for a decade in the legislative halls of Kansas were heard once more Monday at a hearing designed to allow pregnant women in the state's liberalized 1870 law should be reealed or modified. We Serve Delicious home style cooking. Westmoreland, now **new Army** chief of staff, said his staff had been offensive concentrated in South Vietnam's narrow northern tip and in the heart of Iraq. Sen. Steadman Ball, R-Atchison, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, who also served even before his committee will not meet with lawmakers, said he would consider bills before it regarding the abortion law on Wednesday. Abortion Bills Stir Debates, Old Emotions the federal Register. That printing is expected Tuesday or Wednesday. The new procedures onto effect Friday or Saturday. The rule will apply to all domestic scheduled airlines, United States flag international and to intrastate airlines. MARGARET'S CAFI W. 23rd 6: 30 a.m. - 2 p.m. Mon. - Sat. supplemental airlines, which specialize in charter service, or the foreign airlines, or air taxi companies. Nuyen Thanh Le, He. Hanl's spokesman at the Vietnam peace talks, said Secretary of State Hillary Clinton sought to deform our positions" when he said Sunday night that Hanoi insisted on "A government of their choosing, a Communist state," the United States could not accept. FAA Administrator John H. FAA administers the emergency nature of the threat to the safety of persons and premises; warrants air compressor hijacking Under the order, each airline passenger and baggage screening system into effect effective date of the new order. Le said Hanoi wanted "a large government of national accord" to succeed the administration of President Nuven Neu Van Thieu. "This government, to be precise," said Le. "would be composed of personalities of political and religious tendencies." find that further notice and public procedure on this rule would be impracticable and contrary to the public interest." The major religious groups in South Vietnam are the Buddist and Roman Catholic communities. Shaffer said a number of airlines had already adopted a simple and the expensive system that was effective where it had been used. Drink Bill Fails LE ALSO released the details of the nine point peace plan which outlined the terms for a visit by vice President Henry A. Kissinger at a secret meeting with the North Vietnamists in Paris on June 26. The United States government to be replaced by "a new administration standing for peace, independence, neutrality" is expected to visit the country. TOPEKA (AP) — A bill to legalize the sale of mixed drinks in some Kansas restaurants lost Monday in the Kansas Senate, and the bill's main sponsor said he is giving up the effort in his intention to pass a measure of any authorization of the state's liquor laws. "A majority of the air piracies occurring recently would have been prevailed had the system been extent possible," Shaffer said. Gaar did not change his vote for the purpose of suspension on him to defeat of his bill to mix drinks in restaurants. The Johnson County Republican said he felt taking another vote on the bill Tuesday had not made any difference. Sen. Norman Gaar, R-Wash., said he was surprised by a bill which led to two votes on final call, said a movement was in progress to place on the ballot a vote for a November *constitutional amendment* similar to the one passed in November. That amendment, which failed in 1976 but a heyday in rural areas, would have removed from the Kansas Constitution the ban on the "open" drinking. Gov. Robert Docking's veto against the Reppositionment Bill was迟到 to the House. It will entertain a moot today, attempt an eviction The Senate gave unanimous final approval to a bill permitting the use of hand sanitizer on gowns. It gave unanimous voice approval to 13 non-pollutants. Gaar said he would help work to get such an amendment on the bill. But he would make any effort on behalf of any other liquor by drinking the drink in the bottle. It remained doubtful that house Republicans could master the 84 vote in the House to Docking's veto. There are 84 GOP members in the House, but some had said they would vote on veto on philosophical ground 35. This government would negotiate with the Viet Cong's government to settle the internal affairs of South Vietnam and to achieve national concord." Such a position is not new from 1975. U. S. spokesmen have said that Viet Cong representatives could be members of the electoral body, and that they would help Viet Cong presidential candidates. U.S. Moves To Restrict Animal Drugs WASHINGTON (AP) — The government is moving to restrict sharply the use of antibiotics in feeds for food-producing animals, citing a task force report warning that a potential human health hazard. The Food and Drug Administration Monday announced a proposed ban in three stages for the use of antibiotics employed to promote faster growth and reduce the poultry, swine, cattle and sheep. Farmers would be prohibited from routinely feeding diarrhoeic animals dihydrostrophymyin sulfonamides and penicillins to poultry after next午1, and to swine, cattle and sheep after July 1. After the deadlines, the drugs be used only if prescribed by a licensed doctor, and prohibition would be waived, however, if pharmaceutical companies conduct effectiveness studies under government-controlled conditions. FDA Commissioner Charles C. Edwards said the ultimate effect of the proposal probably would be the increase in antibiotics from animal feed. The Animal Health Institute, which represents 55 companies in the industry, is the nation's feed additives, said food costs would rise if antibiotics were used. James G. Affrick, president of the institute, said more than 100 billion meat animals and poultry antibodies over the last 20 years. "During this time, to our knowledge, such use has never resulted in a single instance of an bacterial disease in man," said R. WASHINGTON (AP) --Auto buyers and manufacturers have received about $557 million in auto excise tax refunds from the government since mid-December. You're not only welcome at Tivol... we think you're special. family is full spirit, your values, when you're in and T-shirts and you're looking the greatest engagement ring here, remember that you'll and it at TIVOL's. We're not expensive, we are exclusive—but we think we have an "image" of being a store that caters to older people. Please help us change that image. TIVOL ...of course JEWELLS 220 Nichols Rd. on the Country Club Plaza, Kansas City, Mo. • Certified Gemologist--American Gem Society The University Shop Makes FURTHER REDUCTIONS on Our Great Fall & Winter Threads . . . SHOES 1/2 price ALL WEATHER COATS 1/5 off DRESS SLACKS 1/2 price DRESS SHIRTS 4.00 ea. SWEATERS 1/2 price WASH TROU 4.00 ea. OUTER COATS (HEAVY) 1/3 off SUITS 1/3 to 1/2 off SPORT COATS 1/3 to 1/2 off SOCKS 96° ea. WOOL SHIRTS 1/3 off KNIT SHIRTS 1/2 price THE University Shop On the Hill Entire Stock Not Included Across from Lindley Hali Free Parking Patronize Kansan Advertisers ABRAHAM KAPLAN Will Speak TODAY The Meaning of Loneliness 8 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Sponsored by Humanities Lecture Series TALKING TO THE HUMAN WALL THE SACKBUTS ARE Coming University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb. 9 Freshman Class PARTY Bi Kales-Weinburg ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK! Admission 1.50 or Freshman Class Card 9 till 12, Feb. 4 NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY 4 Tuesday, February 1, 1972 University Daily Kansan Garry Wills KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. T Freedom or Folly? "You tell me law is above freedom of utterance. And I reply that you can have no "wise laws nor law free enforcement of wise laws unless there is free expression of the wisdom of the people—and, alas, their folly with it. But if there is freedom, folly will die of its own poison, and the wisdom will survive. That is the history of the race. It is proof of man's kinship with God. You say that freedom of utterance is not for time of stress, and I reply with the sad truth that only in time of stress is freedom of utterance in danger. No one questions it in calm days, because it is not needed. And the reverse is also; only once the utterance is suppressed is it needed, and when it is needed, it is most vital to justice." —William Allen White, from the Pulitzer prize winning editorial, "To an Anxious Friend." July 27, 1872. These are words U.S. District Court Judge George Templar should mark well. His move Thursday to forbid William Kunstler from representing the Lawrence Gay case in a high recognition poses a serious threat to those tenets of justice that the judge is charged to uphold. The judge has the power, under U.S. District Court rules of procedure to prohibit an attorney from practicing in a court in a state in which the attorney is not licensed. However, if a lawyer appears with a unlicensed attorney the courts usually allow the unlicensed lawyer to appear. Templar said that because of statements made by Kunstler criticizing the American courts, the Templar barred from practicing in his court. Charles Oldfather, University Attorney, must be commended for his wise and courageous appeal asking Templar to reconsider his ruling. Lawyers and judges throughout the nation should speak Kunstler had been at least informally recognized by the court in that he had received correspondence from the court, addressed to him as co-counsel for the Gay Liberation Front. Nevertheless, because of his beliefs, not his actions in the Gay Lib case, Kunstler was not allowed to practice in Judge Templar's court. Within the very institution that is committed to encouraging divergent views with both justice may be ascertained, such conduct is unconscionable. up in agreement with Oldfather in an effort to apprise Templar of the foolishness of his action. Templar's action probably will be considered in other courts as Kunstler is planning to take legal action to force the judge to let him appear in the Gay Liberation case. This of course will only serve to increase the unwanted and unnecessary publicity surrounding a case that easily could have been decided on its merits, without the added confusion the Templar ruling will bring about. Such publicity can serve only to further damage the University's reputation. However, the chilling effect on free speech that a rejection of Kunstler's efforts to be reinstated in the court would bring is more important than any effects the legal action would have on the University. If Kunstler's plea is turned down it will be sad indeed. Such an action would only give added credence to those criticisms he is so notorious that he could be a blow the American system of justice would be hard put to survive. That it was even suggested that the courts should suppress rather than encourage free speech is discouraging. That the ruling could become a precedent, to be cited against any over committed to any cause with which the judge might disagree, is frightening. That such a suggestion came from a Kansas court is embarrassing. —Mike Moffet Associate Editor PETER L. KUBER Golly Gee Whiz Muriel Poor Mrs. Humphrey, it is tough to be a politician's wife in the best of circumstances—and she has seen little but the worst as she trecked, for decades behind the ebullient man trying to give himself away to people who were not having any, thank you. It is one thing for the candidate to be still, see whiz, pleased as punch, by gully. He is booked. Candidacy is a skill that is often valued in drug—just look at Stassen. Or at Gene McCarthy. Even Wallace is mainly running because he can not run any But the candidate's wife!—if we are tired of Hubert, just think how weary she must be with us; trying to be edgily nice with us because we are only perfunctively nice to him; the double is soft and kindly; which is returned to her through the filter of a bored and worthless audience. She is game, of course. These politicians' wives are, above all else, game. Even Jacqueline Kennedy would drag her dress up onto platforms to further the Great Man's career. But onewry remark slipped past Muriel Humphrey's brave front, recently, in a speech that "tis this trip really necessary"? It was a fittedly outdated quote—at flat, now, as the punch that Hubert is always pleased as. "Is this trip necessary," was the gas-rationing drill, and Hubert belongs back with 'I'd walk a mile for it.' "Lucky Strike Green Has Gone To War." It is straight from the summer of 42—and so, in a way, is Humphrey himself. The only other place you can get that "Gee, fellahs, all's pitch in" is Humphrey's place outside of a Humphrey rally—is in Forties movies on the late show. It was a very good war. Little shortages made it easy to accept new affinence without guilt. There were jobs for everyone, bonuses and overtime. It was the beginning of the time when being in the Army did not have mean you actually fought. We had the moral feeling of a Crusade in Europe, with the Prof. Andrew Hacker has argued that *Americans* unrealistic expectations, about themselves and about the world. The theme from that strangely happy war. The integration of jobs for mothers, of the seriousness of the world, of massive government support for college education—all these can be traced back to the saying "oreal." People traveled more north and south of industry and urbanism took place. We could help ourselves best by helping the world. Our picture of war, as noble and interesting—with men at a distance; no bombers in our air—was formed for a generation. Like campaigning, it could be a "habit." end of depression in America It is normally said that Humphrey is a throwback to the Populist Mid-West variant of New Deal reform. Perhaps, but he does not have the feel of the Thirties. He is a late show about the wife who goes off to the war—in Washington, she kept on back on the farm after the Purge. And Muriel is still the brave girl back home, who will (even now) go a mile for a Humphrey. Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate James J. Kilpatrick They Ought Not to Have WASHINGTON — With the coming of Advent last December, the Episcopal Church launched into the second year of a three-year period of worship. By comparison with the sweeping changes imposed upon Catholic ritual, the Episcopal "authorized alternate"慈悲, mild and unassuming, nonetheless, they invite comment. Not comment in any doctrinal sense. To a large extent, what the episcopalians do with their forms of workings in the business world is more clergy and laity can fight out a format with the church's Standing Lutheran Commission than the General Convention of 1973. Yet the Book of Common Prayer, like the King James Bible on which it is based, is not exclusively the property of the Anglicans or of Protestant Christians either. It is part of the common inheritance of literate men. And when a committee of earnest bakers begins to hack bread for their customers, Prayer, critics from every denomination—or from none—have a right to be heard. I speak as a conservative. It is AMNESTY FOR DRAFT DODGERS AND DESERTERS OH! HOW! WASHINGTON "Why should we forgive them just because they were right about the war? Lord knows, nobody's for-given us for being wrong about it!" By Sokoloff I WONDER WHERE THIS STUPID BED IS GOING WITH ME Griff and the Unicorn I WONDER WHERE THIS STUPID BED IS GOING WITH ME HEY! IT'S TURNING AROUND! PROBABLY JUST WANTED TO STRETCH ITS LEGS_ I GUESS THAT'S ONLY NORMAL ---- I MUST BE LOSING MY MIND_ HEY! IT'S TURNING AROUND! PROBABLY JUST WANTED TO STRETCH IT'S LEGS_ I GUESS THAT'S ONLY NORMAL ... By contrast, the proposed new version offers little but store-bought piety, gift-wrapped in perfumery ribbon: That is simple speech, direct and understandable. Though it is a general confession, couched in the first person plural, it is intensely personal. Every individual who makes that humble confession knows precisely those things which he prefers, or gets used to. The ordinary words evoke his erring conduct. I MUST BE LOSING MY MIND_ often said of us that conservatives tend to resist all change; but it is not so. What conservatives resist is thoughtless or needless change—change for the sake of change. We are governed by landlocked. We first control statecraft: Never without the strongest necessarily disturb a thing at rest. What possible necessity could be advanced for tinkering around with the General Confession? Its beautifully cadenced lines have passed into the treasury held in the church, and "we have erred, and strapped from thy ways like lost sheep. We have followed too much the devices and desires of our own hearts. We have offered against thy holy laws. We have left undone those things which we ought to have done, and those things which we ought not to have done . . ." "We have not loved you with our whole heart, we have not met you, we have not ourselves." Doubless these failures of love are shortcomings, but what do the words mean? "We don't know how a man really feels badly about Take another example, from the best known of all prayers. Acting in concert with the I ecumenical International Consultation on English Texts, the Episcopal revisors would rewrite the Lord's Prayer—tight it up a little, give it new paint job, get rid of the name" and put on chromium strip. These are typical of the proposed revisions. They are the work of men with tin ears, good shoulders, and a knight ought to turn again to the old confession, down on their knees, for in recommending these changes they most surely and surely things they ought not to have done. Under the proposed revision, "lead us not into temptation" becomes, if you will brace yourself for the challenge, not bring us to the test." This is a disaster. Men know temptation, which walks through their lives, most-lipped, wickedly inviting. No invocation in the great prayer holds deeper meaning than "lead us not to temptation," not bring us to the test." What do the words mean? Most of us rather like to be tested. The word has connotations of fair competition and appraisal—court laboratory test, test of skill. Should we not be brought to a test? Every school child (until the Warren court came along) learned to pray: "Give us this day our daily bread." The busy copy editors of this revision would tinker it up: "Give us today our daily bread." It is a small change, but it is a poor change. The emphasis and immediacy of "this day" are stressed syllable is abandoned; and the poetry comes out wrong. (C) 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN merica's Pacemaking college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom-UN-4 4810 Business Office-UnN 4 4358 Published at the University of Kannai during the academic year except in 2013 and 2014. In 2015, a year '2 second class postpaid package at Lawrence, Kan 60414. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertisement offered to all students without prior notice may be subject to certain conditions that are not necessarily those of the University of Kannai at the Sultan Mosque Reflecting Building. NEWS STAFF News Advisor ... Del Brinkmar Editor News Advisor .. Del Brinkman Associate Editor Chi Crew Campaign Editor Mike Murfel News Editors Rita Hugh, Deane Ray, Ewan Jewell, Jamie Washburn Cup Chiefs Joyce Manor, Ron Kill Sports Editor Sally Carlson, Rob Groom Assistant Sports Editor Matt Beagr Institute Sports Editor Matt Beagr Editors Writer Matt Beagr Writers Patineur Tom Slaughter Make Editors Dick Way, John Goodrick Reporter Photographers Dick Way, John Goodrick Photographers Ed Lallo, Kit Neter, Office Manager Greg Sorber, Tom Treadhui Correspondent Yvonne Tushar BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams Business Manager Associate Business Manager Advertising Manager Marketing Manager Natural Advertising Manager Marketing Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Dave Murray Daniel Moore REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READERS' DIRECTOR'S SERVICES, INC. 380 Lauxing Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 Tuesday. February 1. 1972 5 the sul- te pe wp rid rid m rog rog) this usy ion one a door and are t is try on, on, not ace not es es, gay gay do do us us fair kill ill the the the good ood ses ses esse night Profs Teach Latins Vital Skills The University of Kansas is involved in a project that offers technical assistance for international medical forces in six Latin American countries. University Daily Kansan The project is financed by the Government of International Development part, and the foreign aid program, and is headed by Robert W. Hidway, $ceipt $10 until until The project, according to Riedel's definition, is training for Latin American teachers. The purpose of the project is to show these teachers to train people in trades and professions that were vital to the development of their profession. THE SIX LATIN merican countries involved in the AID project are Guatemala, Ecuador, Peru, Costa Rica, and Panama. Ridgway said these countries go through an intensive planning period every four or five years to decide how many people are needed in each profession. The countries meet the countries meet their needs. Ridgway said the project now has one full time person, John Helwig, who received his doctorate at KU three years ago, in El Salvador. In addition to Hewlig, faculty members are sent periodically to the countries to offer short term technical assistance. In the past seven months, four faculty members have spent several weeks in Latin America. Ivan Barrientos, associate professor of education, and a graduate student from Guatemala City in January helping with a new curriculum planning office. RICHARD HATLEY, assistant professor of education, spent part of last summer in Nicaragua helping to develop a new budgetary system for the country. He also made a presentation at a seminar on the wise use of scarce educational resources. Roger Kroth, assistant professor of education, worked with students in the Department for Habilitation and the Department of Special Education in Costa Rica in setting up special education programs in these two countries. Gary Clark, associate professor of education, conducted 1 survey of vocational education resources in Central America. Ridgway said they were currently planning a study of teacher educational resources and an expanded program in the use of educational technology and audiovisual aids in teaching. BESIDES SENDING faculty members to the Latin American countries, Ridgway said, the project also sponsors training sessions at KU for teachers from the countries. Faculty members from the KU in these sessions, as well as outside experts who are brought in. Abraham Kaplan, philosopher, author, and lecturer, will speak on "The Meaning of Loneliness" at 8:00 tonight in Woodcraft Auditorium as part of the 25th Humanities Lecture Series. Philosopher to Lecture On Meaning of Loneliness William Hector Harding, 1128 New York St., was charged with drunken and beckess driving to three parked cars in N-one at 7:46 p.m. Saturday, KU Traffic and security officials said The last training session was held in October and covered international cooperative planning for curriculum development. DWI Charged After Wreck In N-Zone Lot Harding drove his 1963 red automobile over a curbing 10 feet west of the second west entrance to N-zone, police said. Kaplan was born in Odesna, Russia, in 1918. He was brought to the U.S. in 1923 and naturalized in 1930. After serving as an instructor at New York University from 1944-45, Kaplan returned to UCLA and was the first professor he remained until 1963, serving as associate professor. From 1952-56, he served as professor of philosophy and also served as the director of the philosophy department. He is now a professor of philosophy at the University of Michigan, a position he has held since 1963. by the executive, operating committee of the Union. Profits are declared semiannually in June and December. Students can collect a five per cent refund on last semester's bookstore blue slips beginning Feb. 7. Bookstore to Give 5% Rebate; Refunding to Begin February 7 Since an average of 20 to 25 percent of redeemable receipts are redeemed, the computer computes the percentage of refund on the basis of 75 to 80 percent redemption thus allowing the computer to fund a larger share of the profits. Ridgway said that when the treaty for AID was written the Finance Ministry of the Latin American country asked that KU participate. Other scholars scheduled for the Humanities Lecture Series this semester are Oswald P. Backus of the University of Kansas history department, Bob Boryk of Robert Langhaus, a specialist in Victorian literature from the University of Virginia. Ridgway said that the project was operating on a budget of about $100,000 a year and that they had been asked to make a proposal that would increase the budget by almost 100 per cent. He said that of very few programs that have not had their budgets reduced. Ridgway said that one reason this request was probably that Kate did not like alternatives to the countries of instead of forcing ideas on them. She organized them in a way organized to fit in with the countries' political and cultural needs. This procedure was initiated three years ago when the Student Senate voted to appropriate this portion of total refunds for scholarships to be administered by the Department of Urban Affairs. 7-Day Special CARS PAINTED $27.50 NORTHTOWN BODY SHOP Lawrence, Kansas an increase in the budget, he said, would allow the maintenance of another full time worker and another short term short term trips to the countries. said, "by helping them see alternatives and helping them ask the right questions." "WE MAKE CERTAIN that we maintain our role as advisers, he Students may claim their refences by presenting their blue slips to the return desk on the lower level of the Union Bookshelf. The bookstore will only accept blue slips marked period 40 or 50. This year the percentage of rebate has increased, said James Christman, Kansas Union bookstore manager for two years in the first year on blue slips. In 1968 and 1969 the refund dropped to two per cent. Two per cent of the bookstore's profit is given to the scholarship fund for disadvantaged students. Sales slip refunds are computed from the bookstore's net profit for each semester. The percentage of refund is decided BIG OUTFIELD Be an early bird! Dwight Boring* says... Cliff's notes are great any time you need help in literature. We provide them as a study guide for the play or novel and as an exercise book to get the Cliff's Notes you need today. You'll see why they are so popular among students nationwide (ISP). If your daughter's out of class, then he can get help from us. Cliff's Notes Nearly 200 titles always available wherever books are sold Only 1 each B. W. MILLEY "If You'd Like to Know How to get the most for your life insurance dollars, contact me and I'll tell you about College Life's BENEFACET, a famous policy designed expressly for college students. You can benefit college men because college men are preferred life insurance risks. No obligation. Give me a ring now." *Dwight Boring representing THE COLE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 ...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Stock Clearance Sale to Make-way for our Remodeling . . . res, we must sell our entire stock of over two thousand pair of slacks and tops to prepare for our complete remodeling of the Wearhouse, and while we're getting ready to beautify our store, you can beautify your expenses on clothes with savings like these . . . Reductions from 10% to 50% Slacks-Jeans corduroys denims twills cotton suede Tops fancy stripes solids Belts Suspenders Male—Caribou—H.I.S.—Brentwood—Himalaya THE WEARHOUSE 841½ MASS. ROCK CHALK REVUE In-Between -Acts Tryouts Singers & Dancers b Tryouts will be on Tuesday & Thursday from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the Dance Studio in Robinson Gym ? ( ] 6 Tuesday, February 1, 1972 University Daily Kansan AUGUST 1972 New rules would ease vets money problems Kansan Photo by RICHARD GUSTIN Campus Vets Jim Johnson (left) and Ed Bruns New rules would ease vets money problems . . . City to Study Drug Abuse A committee to study the nature of drug abuse in Lawrence and to make recommendations for prevention and control has been initiated by Mayor Bob Pilliam and the City Committee. The committee consists of 16 representatives from local agencies. A representative from the City Commission said that the commission did not effectively aid did know the dimensions of the problem. He said that the members of the committee were selected because of their contact and knowledge about drug abuse. Peace Corps, VISTA Recruiting KU Seniors The representatives from local medical agencies, schools, law enforcement and other groups met Thursday night to discuss goals of the committee and any issues in the formation of the group. Howard E. Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy and chairman of the committee, said he would be to identify problems in this area and make recommendations to the commission in a report this May. The committee will meet once a Recruiters for the Peace Corp, and VISTA will conduct work in a week back in business, education and engineering placement offices and Monday in the law school of Kansas Union and Strong Hall. As graduation time nears seniors are beginning interviews with prospective employers. The team at VISTA could be that employer. The Peace Corps, an international program and VISTA, a similar domestic program, are combined under ACTION, along with other voluntary programs. Three subcommittees were formed at the meeting to study ACTION is the administrative order Nixon created last July in order groups into one agency, Charlie Hewlett, Peacock and VISAT VISTA, a domestic volunteer Interviews Howell, a former VISTA volunteer, said the Peace Corps was looking for people over 20 year old who would be willing to work in education, math, science, architecture, business, medicine, French, Spanish or who have agricultural backgrounds. The Peace Corps is a 2-year program with 7,000 volunteers. General Services Administration, BS and MS in architectural engineering, BS and PhD in mechanical engineering, BS and PhD in Federal Home Loan Bank Board, BS and MS in financial accounting, economics, money and credit, financial management, countant, financial analytic and economical Ferece Corpus and Vika BA, BS or MA in engineering, management or comparative sales, small business and market economics. Requires MBA or equiv in MBA or an equivalent of the MPA or an equiv for management development. Requires Transportation assistant. Iran Master's degree or foreign equivalent. Capital Area Performed Services (Nasv) BS, MS civil engineering. BS, MS electrical engineering BS, MS mechanical engineering. U.S. citizens only, no summer Federal Home Loan Bank Board See Tuesday, Feb. 1. HUSKINST Haskins and Sells, BS, MBA with accounting major. Summer work for seniors and graduate students. Action, Peace Corp., Vista recruitment. All disciplines and levels of engineering chemistry, geology and physics. U.S. student, summer work. May and August graduates The Jones Store Co. BS, MS, MBA in business; BA liberal art. For store management training program. Long Beach, Knottbach, Harwell, and Horwath: BS, MBA with major or emphasis in accounting and auditing Peace Corps and Vista. See Tuesday, Feb Mossberg said that although the scope of the problem was broad, the committee could do a lot more than what had been done before. Continental Oil Co. Get information in room 209 Summerfield DISCOVER EUROPE ON A BIKE - GOVERNMENT-MADE TAX-FREE MOTOR CYCLE/BIKE LABEL, INC. • LICENSE REGISTRATION & INSURANCE INFORMED the areas of education, law enforcement and rehabilitation. Each member of the committee must be involved in major areas of study, while providing for himself a cross-functional knowledge, and experience in each area. - INDIVIDUAL BOOKMARK OF TAXE MOTOR - CARGO INCLUSIVE TOUR PACKAGES - OVER 15 MARKS OF TAX FREE MOTOR PLEASE DO RETURN SURPAINT FROM ACCESS IN EUROPE TO THE U.S. CITY OF CANADA Tiny Emily takes the fountain, swims and resting after a swim. Each day she goes out and picks up any lost pet. Every day she returns the fountain with her dog. Have your dog go to the fountain at once. EUROBIKE Mossberg recommended that a University of Kansas student be appointed to the committee to support his students. Haskell student and former drug users might also be helpful in providing information to the committee. "Applications were up 45 per cent last year for the Peace Corps and VISTA applications have always been high." Well said. program, has 4,500 volunteers and offers a one-year program. VISTA is seeking volunteers who will graduate in law, foreign language, Spanish, liberal arts or who have volunteer experience. The increased interest. Howes, said, seems to be related to the question of why people don't want to the fact that people don't want to be part of the 8 x 5 o'clock job in the workplace. Société Générale Inc. 52 Place du Palais 75008 Paris, France Telephone: (331) 347 6166 Website: www.sg.com/company/société-genérale Notes: ___ ___ ___ "People seem to be more interested in services dealing with people rather than things," Howell said. Almost every landmark on the KU campus has at some time fallen over, and rivalry between KU and the other Big Eight schools. The last addition to those ranks is the KU flag that flies over Fraser What appeared to be a crude "MU" was barely visible beneath the block letters "KU" Monday afternoon. 'MU' Painted On KU Flag In an open discussion on drug abuse at the meeting several agencies and experiences enabling the group to get a broader view of the problem. the culprit would have had to pass three locked doors, the Doshali assistant director of the University Physical Plant. The next meeting will be held in February and will include reports from each committtee. The squad is scheduled to debate colleges in Utah, Missouri, Iowa and Oklahoma within the next month, said Donn W. Parson, associate professor of speech and drama and director of college studies at Northwestern University and the University of Pittsburgh. The University of Kansas will have changed some of its administrative procedures concerning veterans by the fall semester of 1972. Chancellor E. Chalmers Jr. said Saturday. KU to Change Policies To Aid Military Veterans By RICHARD GUSTIN Korean Staff Writer Chalmers said he had did with the university of the Campus Veterans, a student group organized to help the veterans solve veterans problems. Ed Bruns, Leawood, freshman and Campus Veterans president, discussed some of the proposed changes. VETERANS WHO have not saved money to attend a training program through the G.I. Bill to finance part of their education, must take administrative procedures at KU and many other schools may cause an undue financial strain on a veteran who uses G.I. In order to be eligible for school benefits, the veteran must have his enrollment registered with the semester basis. The certification is done as soon as the veteran enrolls each semester. However, even with this speed of enrollment, the mannaus expect his first benefit check to arrive until a month after he has enrolled. By that time, it is too late to meet University fee requirements. It is too small to pay the entire fee. is working with the business office and the housing office in an attempt to produce a schedule by which the tenant can manage and housing payments in installments from his benefit cheek. The housing department requires advance payment that may live in a residence hall. Until such a schedule is devised, veterans who wish to remain in good standing with the Army will be offered money for a semester's expenses. Borrowing the money has been made easier because of recent policy changes in the Office of Public Relations, that to Bruns, that office will loan a maximum of $400 to a veteran attending his first semester at the University without a cosigner of the maximum of $80 with a cosigner AT THE PRESENT time, Bruns said, the Campus Veterans Bruns said the Campus Veterans would eventually attempt to start two programs designed to ease the veterans' first program would be a preference program in which veterans could obtain part-time or full-time employment in local businesses. The second program would be a privately funded institution which would pay one-third to one-half of a veteran's tuition. to aid veterans in the traineeship and to academic life crisis said he was attempting to obtain free psychologic counseling and help veterans cope. Bruns said he thought psychological counseling was important in helping a veteran adjust to a society that did not welcome Vietnam veterans as openly as the veterans of other countries. There are about 2,000 veterans at KU who could utilize the programs recommended by the Campus Veterans, Bruns said. With 44 awards to their credit already this year, the University of Kansas debate squad will be or more honors this semester. Parson said that Pittsburgh is hosting audience debates across Pennsylvania. Each year, two schools are invited to join the Pittsburgh debate. This is the first that KU has been invited. "While the programs wouldn't solve all a customer's problems," said Bruns, "they would solve a great many." Debate Team Plans Trips To 4 States Speaker to Discuss Global Environment Vandalism Declines; Dormitories Profit Residence halls netted $500 profit for the month of December partially because of a decrease in vandalism to vending machines, and another because of vending machine manager for the Kansas Union Concessions. There was only one case of vandalism reported last month and that was in Ellisworth Hall where the machine was broken into. The Kansas Union Concessions furnishes the machines in the residence halls and keeps them clean. Profits are given to the residence halls and the halls' treasurers usually deposit the money in the library fund. The residence halls' funds are accounted to $200, according to Jelly. The University of Kansas Alumni Association and its paper, the Kansas Alumni, have been accused of sex discrimination. In the November issue of the paper, Kansas City, Wash., called the Alumni Association and the Kansas Alumni "openly sexist." The profits are divided on a percentage basis to raise the funds for EliSloh. said. Ellisworth for example, received $8215 from last month's $500 Most of the vandalism results when students get mad at a machine because it malfunctions Betty J. Pattie, managing editor of the Kansas Alumni, said the Kansas Alumni issue the towler had to read little news of women. Alumna Accuses Paper Of Sex Discrimination Richard A. Falk, Milbank professor of international law at Princeton University, will speak for the judge Nelson Timothy The letter stated further that any pages were devoted to speeches or press coverage" and that of the 23 Alumni administration officers only "There are 14 women on the staff of the Kansas Alumni and only four men," Pattee said. out of 13 news stories and pictures, there was no mention of women and that only one article was written by a woman. "Office records in the Alumni Association are currently being coded so that the title Ms. is requesting it." Pattes said. Pattie said that she printed every newsworthy item she found about women. or does not give the product fast enough. Jolly said. But other machines, like the machines and stealing the merchandise inside or prying the contents from them, can do this. I my first lesson, I putter said. The letter to the editor said that Kansas City will be the site of a training center for teachers of transcendental meditation, a mental technique to develop creative intelligence and improve clarity of perception. The center is one of many to be established by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Maharishi Yogi Opens School In Kansas City David Katz, who received his training with Maharihiri in India, will give an introductory lecture p.m. Wednesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. He will also tell students of the art how they may participate in a museum program in Kansas City this summer. THE FIRST MILITANT PREACHER CLARA'S OLE MAN THE ELECTRONIC NIGGER HAPPY ENDING Feb. 3-12 8 p.m. KIL EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE Previously all teachers were required to spend three months in Maharashtra, where they made Maharishi. Local teachers have received their training in Ekses The Kansas Geological Survey report, evaluating salt beds as a potential repository for radioactive waste is now ready to be tested. The report was made for the Atomic Energy Commission. --p.m. Registered Room. Humanities Dinner: 6:30 p.m., English KU EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE 864-3982 Hand Care THE KRUMHORNS ARE COMING, TOO. The report costs $25 with maps and $10 for the text only. University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb. 9 Stephens Lectureship at the School of Law on Feb. 3rd and 4th. Falk will speak on "International Law and the Global Environment—The Challenge" in the Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. "International Law and the Global Envance will be subject to Response" for 3:30 p.m. Friday in the Union He is a faculty associate in the Center of International Studies, one of three major research activities of Princeton's Walt Whitman School and international Affairs. He director of research for the North American section of the World Order Models Project, an undertaking supported by the World Law Fund that seeks to explore how it might be better organized to present future wars in a nuclear age. The Judge Stephens Lectureship, offered about every seven years by the School of Law, was established in 1877 by Stephens in memory of her father. He was judge of the fourth Kansas judicial district from 1877 to 1884 and was instrumental in the establishment of the University Law at the University of Kansas. 2 Cars Collide In Parking Lot Behind Union Two cars collided in X-Zone parking lot, behind the Kansas Union, at 9 a.m. on Friday, KU and Security officials said Monday. A 1971 automobile driven by Jerry L. Harper, Lawrence freshman, received $100 damage to the car and was charged. A 1964 automobile driven by Ronald D. Smith, Newton sophomore, received $200 damage to the car and police officer the car was owned by Edwin Becker of Newton. Parson said he thought the strongest teams were not in the Big Eight. Two weekends ago, KU won awards in three tournaments. At Morningside College in Sioux Falls Iowa junior Bill Hensley. At Omaha, Neb., won third place. Two freshmen, Bill Webster, Mo., and Dodd T hunter, Oklahoma placed fifth out of 4., 100 teams in California. At William Jewell College in Liberty, Mo., Mike Stubbs, Springs sophomore, and David Cohen, Prairieville sophomore, won a superior and scored four wins and one loss. Another tournament with tough competition, according to Parson, is the one that KU hosts. The Heart of America football team will host 9-11 with teams from 54 schools across the national competition. During Christmas vacation, 20 KU debaters competed in tournaments in the Midwest and on the West Coast. KU was the first-place, two fourth-place finishes and two fifth-place awards. Campus Bulletin Denver, Colorado. Interviews: 8:30 a.m. Room 305, Kansas Union. Peace Corps Interviews: 9:30 a.m., Pine Peace Corps Interviews: 9:30 a.m., Pine wood 08th David Wastez Seminar: 9:30 a.m., Council Hall Room: Italian Table; 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark Social Welfare: 11.30 a.m., Alcove C Cafeteria. LSD Institute; noon, Room 299. Law School; 12:30 p.m., Alcove D Social Welfare Practice Committee: 1.00 p.m., Regionalist Room. Social Welfare Policy Committee: 3.00 Cafeteria Social Welfare Practice Committee: 1.00 m in Nationalist Room Social Welfare Policy Committee: 3:00 m, regionally Room: 528, College of Nursing, Fenton, KY. zoom. Delta Sigma Pi: 7:00 p.m. Centennial Room. SUA Board: 7:00 p.m., Governors Room. SUA Board: 7:00 p.m. Governors Room. Physical Therapy: 7:00 p.m., Council Room. Room #1823. KU Synchronized Swim Club: 7:00 p.m. Robinson Natatorium. Abbottson Navalforum: Latin American Film: 7:30 p.m., Dyche Auditorium. Film Festival: 7:30 p.m., 5:15 p.m. Auditorium Film Society: 7:30 p.m., Union Ballroom. Young Democrats: 7:30 p.m., Oread Room. Room: Booth 1: Tue. 7:30 p.m., Park Earley Booth 2: Thu. 7:30 p.m., Clearing Chair Room Humanities Lecture: 8:00 p.m., Woodruff Humanities Lecture: 8:00 p.m., Swarthout Senior Restroom: 8:00 p.m., Swarthout SUA Conference Committee: 8:00 p.m., Pike Austin Student Union: 8:00 p.m., To MEDITATION as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Wednesday, Feb. 2 Seminar—3:00 p.m. and Introductory Lecture by David Katz 8:00 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union --- The Creators of Hal' and Viva (superstar) in a film by Agnes Vardon. Lions Love take a film about the writer, Eric Cronenberg, into the aid of the writers of HAIR, Jim Ratha and Gerome Bragas, plus the Andy Warhol superstar. Theiva, the proper工具人 make a film about her feelings for the city. Ecliping the aid of the writers of HARA, she becomes a writer in itself. A writer is someone who does not care about the nature of the moment; this collaboration is one of the most interesting aspects this collaboration is that LIONS LOVE cannot be categorized. It is above the means life is, America, being a superman, and a vision of the future that was born out of the love between the characters in it lives through the association Senate Robert Kennedy and the American Red Cross. This is another element of an artisan's mission in those and other events. Their validity remains intact as Mina Vera weaves them into her narrative, creating the kind of spontaneity that has identified LIONS LOVE with the power of the human heart. Agnes Varda came to America with her husband, Jacques Demps (THE UMBRELLAS (CHEW) THE CIRCLE 129). She fell in love with Jean-Claude Filippo. KU FILM SOCIETY Tuesday, February 1 Union Ballroom 7:30 & 9:15 $ 75^{\circ} $ Season Tickets Still Available for $5.00 eyr PROGRAM Use Kansan Classified WE'RE NUMBER ONE! Lawrence's Number One Health Club For Men. The Most Modern Physical Fitness Equipment Massage 1 Sauna Keep Fit at LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB OPEN TUES 5-9 THURS 5-9 SAT 12-6 2323 RIDGE COURT Phone 842-4044 Want to Know About TRANSATLANTIC FARES and CAMPUS TRAVEL OFFICES - SUA Travel Office - SPONSORED BY: - Foreign Study Office - Dean of Foreign Students Office - Student Union Activities TOTAL EQUIPMENT The First In a Series COUNCIL Room — 4 p.m. Thursday, February 3rd COMING FORUMS: Before leaving the states—what to do and by when, travel within Europe I, travel within the U.S.A., travel within Europe II, U.S. camping and hitching, Mexico / Canada on a student budget. University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 1, 1972 7 Season Puzzles Canfield 55 20 35 84 Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO Canfield Goes Up Against Nebraska The effort is there, but confidence varies . Leaders Tangle As the Big Eight Conference enters its fifth week of league play, two teams rated also-rans after the pre-season journey are standing. Meanwhile, the two finalists stand second. All that could be changed tonight. Nebraska and Kansas, the current co-leaders, face each other in a game. The brew promises to be fiery. KU, which forced the deadlock for first by upsetting Nebraska Saturday, will play Missouri at Columbia in Brewer Field House club in the league's 14-2 run, won the pre-season tournament. K-State will travel to Minnesota to play. Missouri are a half-game at first place with a 3-1 league and brakes a 1-6 overall, KSState 29. In the only action Monday involving a league team, Oklahoma downed Arkansas Big 8 Standings State, 62-53, in Norman. Andrew Pettick, Bobby Jack and Scott Martin led the Sooners with 16, 15 and 10 point efforts, respectively. | | W | L | W | L | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Nebraska | 4 | 1 | 11 | 9 | | Kansas | 4 | 1 | 19 | 4 | | Missouri | 3 | 1 | 12 | 4 | | Kansas State | 3 | 1 | 9 | 7 | | Oklahoma | 3 | 1 | 9 | 7 | | Iowa State | 3 | 1 | 9 | 7 | | Colorado | 3 | 1 | 4 | 12 | | Oka State | 0 | 6 | 2 | 16 | By BOB SIMISON. Kansan Sports Editor TUESDAY: Kansas at Missouri, Kansas State at Nebraska. Another good question is how well Canfield will play if he does start against Missouri. "We'll probably find out when we get there," Owens said Sunday, when asked what the starting lineup would be. Tentatively, the same five who started against Nebraska will start against Missouri, he said. One puzzling question about the University of Kansas' basketball game at Missouri tonight is whether coach Ted Owens will return to the ballpark. That would put Dale Haase and Bud Stallworth at forward, Wilson Barrow at center and Aubrey Nash and Tom Kivisto at left. However, after Saturday's game, Chuck praised Canfield for his defensive play against mobile Chuck Jura. Barron fooled out of Campbell's performance last week against Iowa State and then against Nebraska epitomizes his season this year. 'It's been up and down.' "I really can't say why it's been that way. 'Cantfield mused after practice Sunday. He appeared as puzzled as many of the fans have As a freshman, Canfield had produced impressive averages of 22.2 points and 13.8 rebounds a game. THE 6-9 junior center's problems appear to have begun last January. After a promising December, his right lung collapsed. Canfield missed 14 games and never really returned to form last year. Two weeks after practice began this season, Canfield's left lung collapsed. It was not until KU played Oklahoma State in the Big Ten finals that it recovered. "I felt real loose by then," Canfield said. "I was out to play the best I could. I moved real well, and I had built up some confidence." A result was that Canfield led the team with 27 points and 10 rebounds. He continued to play with authority against Iowa, grabbing 17 rebounds. After that, Canfield went into a slump that lasted until the end of the season. "I had a bad game against K-State," Canfield said. "I didn't play like I wanted it. It just got me down, and I lost my confidence." SO TT WAS that WATS benchesched Canfield in favor of Barrion for the second half against Iowa State. Canfield played well when he KU should give up notching in height. The Tigers start 6-5 Al Eberhard and 6-4 Mike Jeffries on the front line against 6-5 Stallwell and 6-6 Haase. All three are tough rebounders, though, and Brown leads the conference there. too. "We were behind, and everybody was pretty pumped up." Cainfield said. "I felt real loose when I went into the game, and I Candell has done his homework on Missouri's John Brown, the 6-7 center who leads the conference in scoring with a 22.8 average. Besides center, one of KU's forward spots might be in question for tonight. Barrow opened the session at forward, but Haase will need to wait until the next round. FRED ROSILEVAC saw extensive action at forward in the Nebraska game. He came up with the game-winning steel and ball. Not many of the Jayhawks are likely to be looking forward to playing in Missouri's Brewer Field House. "It's like a cracker "The fans are a big part of the game," Canfield said. "They can do a lot for you, or they can hurt you." Indeed, KU fans frequently have reacted negatively to Canfield's very presence on the court. "The crowd booing didn't used to bother me," Canfield said, "but now it does sometimes." He doesn't resent the home crowd, though. "Our fans are some of the best in the country." Canfield said. "They really watch, and they're real in the game." Filing deadline for intramural basketball teams is 4 p.m. Thursday. Deadline Near Groups of ten or more who wish to field a team should have their manager pick up an entry blank for each player in an entry fee of 25 cents per man Players who do not have medical permits to participate in intramural sports must get one from 208 Robinson. Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" Spring Starts Early For Baseball Team University of Kansas baseball players start early. Twenty-six of coach Floyd Temple's hopefuls hitting and throwing Monday. Even so, Temple is optimistic about KU's pitching corps. Bob Wolf, Stake Stegmeme and Ron Mason, last year's leading pitchers, all return. Wolf s 358 average is the best returning. KU dropped a 49-14 decision to Phillips College, Edin, Oka. Friday. Their record stood at 3-3 going into Saturday's satem As nice as the day was, though, they weren't sogging around the practice fields near Allen Field House Temple to them inside "We don't even know where anybody will play," Temple said. Others expected to boost KU's comeback effort include outfielders Don Lahiti, Jerry Evans and Ken Carpio. They accomplished, Temple and about as much as we could have in practice, having practiced and practiced set up in a batting cage set up under the north wall. Benedictine College of Atchison was the victim of a 50-40 win Saturday. Cindy Curlee ran for Elena Rodriguez added 10. Temple returns a young team nine letter members. The biggest loss was Paul Woulfe, last season's Big Eight batting After splitting two games at Robinson Gym Friday and Saturday, KU's "women's basketball team" will take a two-game until Feb. 11. Women Cagers Idle After Win Next action for the women will be against Fort Hays State here Feb. 11. "We won't know that until we get outside," which won't be until mid-February. After eight games against non-league competition beginning March 18, the Jayhawks will host defending champion Iowa State in a game that will help clearly mark 31. KU will attempt to claw itself out of the league cellar. March; 18- at Washburn; 20- Washburn; 22- *Emporia* State; 27- College of Emporia!; 31- Iowa State! KU's 31-game schedule: Volleyball Squad Goes To Miami Ten University of Kansas women expect to arrive in Miami, Fla. Wednesday for the National Intercollegiate Athletic Conference in Miami-Dade College. Competition begins Thursday. April: 1—Iowa State; 7—at Nebraska; 8—at Colorado; 15—at Colorado; 21—Missouri; 22—Missouri; 29—Oklahoma; 39—at Oklaaho. Fivedays 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 ! Doubleheader The women left Lawrence Competition will continue until saturday, and the KU team hopes to return to Lawrence by Mon- teau. KU's羽球队 team includes Mary Jacobson, Giny Hammermis, Connie Gibbon,帕Dieh Diegel, Kindy Cleyer, Sara McNish, Neirr Morris, Judi Ranyen, Deborah Toilefree and Mary Visser. This year's version of the tournament, the third annual, will feature 28 teams. KU hosted the most last year. M Regular Course-Thursday, 4-6:30 p.m., BEGINS THIS WEEK Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m.-Noon, begins NEXT week There is STILL TIME to enroll Each class meets once a week for 8 weeks Western Civ Course--Thursday, 7:9-30 p.m., begins Mar. 2. You may start with the Regular Course and transfer to the Advanced Course on Thursday. evelyn wood reading dynamics 图 M Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to students. Admission is colored for color, creed, or national origin. One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 Experienced in typing thesis, dissertations and other types of writing. Have electric typewriter and computer and print set up systems. Receive phone calls: Phone #815-9544. Mist Wright PARTY CATERING AT SHORTY'S BEKEEFER 644 MASS One day SUA Minority Opinion Forums Presents WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Robin Morgan TYPING Typing experience in typing term papers, diagrams, materials, and reports. Use of script-scorped coding. Have electronic type of print, typed form. K-5 9554 MISCELLANEOUS Experienced typeit will type your form, paper themes or dissertation. Electric typeit, prompt, accentuate form. Call 971-3201, Mr. Mazumba 516-8300. Term papers, thesis types typically accuracy for your choice of type of paper; the electric power rating of an equipment editing at reasonable rates. 82-1979 pages. 84-256 nights. Kluwer Diane. 82-1979 pages. PERSONAL Call me for excellent low cost home care with above average uninsured units (uninsured pregnancy). John Wells, American Life and Health Care MF-8220 POTTER WANTED for anthology muse include stamped return envelope from Stephen Ellis, Editor, DILWILD PRESS, 1807 East Lakewood, Los Angeles COLUMBIA 96211 Will do thesis and general typing and editing. Phone: 812-4812, 2-2 YOC, EDUC, AND INDUSTRIAL ARTS. Viola Pace Corps are conducting interviews in education for seniors and grade 1-2. Midland St. 81 Bar-B-Q, 515 Michigan St. 93 Bar-B-Q, 515 Michigan St. $160. 1 Bn. Brieken-Briefed $160. $160. $160. $160. $175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. 175. VI 925. Closed Sun-Tues. Women's Alterations, 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 2-15 Revolutionary, Feminist, Editor of SISTERHOOD IS POWERFUL Wed., Feb. 2 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Union UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright (816) 474-4676 ff For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization—call the Women's Center if 864-1441. 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Union SEIENORS/GRADS in MATH SCED Interviews with Peace Corps and Vista in education placement office Feb. 1st and 2nd. 2-1 We buy used sports cars and imports. Competition. Sports Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-2191. 2-19 INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER. 842-7694. Professional child-care for children 1 to 12. Month or part-time. Ft. Specially designed equipment. £200. ENGINEERING SENIORS Ans. GRADS: Vista POA Corp recruiters will be in engineering placement office all day February 3. 2-1 Leather coats reduced Earthshine 12 E. 8th St. 2-1 BUSINESS GRADS/SENIORS marketing, and finance. Viva and Peace Corp. For interview contact February 2-1, 2012 and Feb 2-1, 2nd and 3rd STOCK CLEARANCE SALE - Reduces of 10-50% off our entire stock to make way for remodeling at THE WEARHOUSE, 8411; Mass. 2 Sunflower Surplus is open for business Come in and look around 817 Vermont, VI 3-5000 2-1 We repair alighting Volkswagen. We do small operations, transplants, or partitions of vehicles with split parts and bog those VWs with 2nd lmd. Bug Bags. 2-10 2nd lmd. Anyone who has left a book with the Emporium Bookstore please call 861-3710 to see if your book is ready to be picked up. 2-3 Five days A white and gray kitten was found near Bailey on Jan 12. To claim please call 842-0437. 2-2 Can't find a unique place for your group to get together? Try Roseau's Hotel in Harper. Capacity: 40 (316)-896-9123. 2-2 LAWRENCE, Kurtis 06049 2434 lowe VI2-1008 KANSAN CLASSIFIEL RATES Tony's 66 Service Three days 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $0.20 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service Earthshine, 12 E. 8th. Pants, 20% off 2-1 Lost in area of Jayhawk Towers, B. and C. Keys on silver ring $5 reward offered. If found, please call Sherline at 864-5823 2-1 LOST Open 24 hrs. per day Lost-Jan 27 in front of Dyche. Gold wire rim glasses. Reward. 842-2038. 2-7 out. A white envelope containing very important envelopment papers, is a large check. Near last night a found phone call 641-280-3184 641-6109 WANTED OVERSEAS-JOBS, FOR STUDENTS, for the All Professors and occupational and all Government-paid overtime sightseeing Free in- vitement. 5617, San Diego, CA 93115 0415 8715 **STUDENT EMPLOYMENT in Yelow- ton and all of New Jersey** use how to apply: Send $200, *Arnold Agency*, 200 East Drive, *New York*, NY 10016 Send $349, *Milton* Museum, 349 Broadway, *New York*, NY 10016 back guarantee. Women's alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 1:30, 2-14 Swimming instructor for Girl Scout Unit, Leader, Counselor, Nurse. Owen C. Barnes, 20 South 10th Street, King City, KA-6302 66392 Wanted: one girl to share apartments in Jawayah Towers. Utilities paid and close to campus. Call 843-6215 or 842- 6354 One or two females needed to share Gatehouse apartment. Call 842-2038 for more information. 2-2 Wanted to buy MG Midget or Sprint Call 864-5816 2-4 Computer programmer Local computer need, full or part-time position. Programmer Experience in machine learning will be challenging work covering programming. Also algorithms for solving programming. Also algorithms for solving Call Calcul 56-587 for better understanding. Need 1 or 2 girls to share Jayhawk apartment. Furnished. $65 per month. Call: 864-2032. 2-2 Nice clock to live with three others. New bedroom, walk to KU, Rent, $61/mo plus utilities. May free Call 842-3584 2-1 ROOMMATE fourth girl needed for Jaclyn Tawkers floor apartment on top floor Will pay part of monthly rent. Please call 913-852-7242 Campus available. New 843-732-2-3 One male roommate (or female!) to share apartment. Contact 842-3058 late afternoon and evening 2-2 Mexican-American students from Kansas to take $30 for an internship in a health care or medical and mortality relatives. Under one hour each Call 844-765-4000 for appointment. Wanted—jersey to share country home fireplace, roaming land-live miles from Lawrence. 843-4250 2-7 Help Wanted - Part-time Bill solicitor, career manager and boarders of household goods. Excellence in experience and qualifications and training to the job. Box 237, Lawnings Rommate wanted to share 5 bed- room house with four other 2 beds from campus. Move in immediately. Call Deck 842-7616 Lennard-29 Call Deck 842-7616 FOR RENT Wanted: A-1 top quality, "fed-backs" heads-4* competitors for two-man-ta- mphship tournament. Call Rit at 842-321-390. Room for graduate or senior girl, share kitchen and bath with utilities paid: $50; 842-5199 2-1 SENIORS!! Call immediately for appointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE 摄像师 Hixon DRIVE-IN AND COOI P LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 843-5304 Studio Laundry & Dry Cleaners COIN Ph.843-0330 Independent 10 a.m. - 5 p.m days per week COIN OP COIN OP LAUNDRY LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 1215 W. 4th 843.9631 842.9450 RAMADA INN Tigua Salon 842-2323 Spacious new facilities, Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9, Sat. till noon. WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester. 1-bedroom apartment in central acre, bath furnished or unfurnished. Central acre, dishwasher, wc air conditioner. 1-bath furnished in Apartments."The place to live in" Apartment. Call 24 hours a day 8:399. 6809 *department—nowly* decorated — one *droom furnished—wall to wall cate- ring—1*; blocks from Union. Phone 43-5767 ff For rent—one or two bedroom apartments, conditioned, garbage dishwasher, bathroom facilities, color T V. available. Call 212-653-8904 and make new appt. 212-653-8904 and ride 212. Ridge House Apt.—for the budget of the popular and the featured and the magnificent in town. It has 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms, and 5 baths. 116 for bedroom and 116 for bathroom. Cedarwood-1, Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. From a block south of north 943-1136 2-21 2 apts. for rent 3 blocks from campus. Contact Paul Brungardt, 842- 3348 2-25 Two apartments for rent three blocks from campus. Contact Paul Brunardi; 842-5338 Duplex for rent, 5 rooms, newwa- rent, 2000 sq ft. on 3-acre condo conditioning. New refrigerator and storm room valued $130 per month, no mo- nmental charge. 842 N. VI - 850 VI or SIV-3200 1 and 2 bedroom apartments disinfectant, dishwasher, and air-conditioning. 1 block from KU stadium. Married couples. 1025 Mississippi. 8426-7-27. One-room apartment. Cooking faci- ties. $75.50 per month. Utilities paid. 1234 Town Ground front—Mr. Hagge- m. 842-1988. 2-7 Finest selection of sports cars in the entire area CSC, Lawrence Auto Plaza. 842-2181. t FOR SALE Female roommate wanted to share, 2 room house with two girls. Uptairs bathroom large yard peaceful. Pet friends. Hair color: black. 2-7 Call Katherine, 843-7322 Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608 Either way is a solid bridge. Either way is the same thing. New Analysis of Western Civilization "Campus Madhouse, 41" Walsh 14th, 41f 2. You're at an advantage. If you don't, Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumphs. Competition Sports Car, Lawyers Auto Pizza, 842-1291 2-18 Now you can buy audiocom component sets from the Ray AUDIO store: 842-297-1050 Prairie Avenue. The only true stereo discount house in the 2-29 area. Shirts. Buy one, get one free. Earth- shirt, 12 E. 8th. 2-1 Northside Shop, 707 North 2nd blocks north of River Bridge stores, old wood cooking and heating pieces, new wood kitchen ovens, bicycles. Bireplace wood, home grown papyrus and thousands of other items. Free seven days wax Herbert Alberdon. 842-751-6344. SANDWICH SHOP Open until 2 a.m. *Phone Order* 543 7685 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th THE HILD in the WALL CSC 10YOATA TECHNOLOGY TOYOTA Competition 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrencebasas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 Tuxedo tails reduced to $7.00. Earthshine on 8th St. 2-1 NAISMITH CONTRACT FOR SALE. Call John, 843-0601, Room 326. 2-10 Belts. Buy one, get one free. Earthshine on 8th St. 2-1 1684 Ford Torino G.T. Automatic, air- belt bucket, seat kits, top, radio capacitor Good condition, clean. Private, one bedroom, one bath. Reasonable, 843-872-612 1963 VW sedan for sale. Has radio and push-out windows. Call: 842-8340 anytime. Magnavox 25 watt amp and BSR turntable= $75.00 Will sell with XP- 55 Flusher speakers $150 Call #83, 1467 IBM electric typewriter. 842-863a 2-1 1970 Maverick, 2 door, manual transmission, excellent condition. A nice car for singles or couples. Call 842-7878. 2-1 Steel this car ~$495.00, 63 Buck Stealth 67,000 miles, air, V-12, automatic, excellent condition. 3323 Iowa, Lot 144,842-1018, Dave or Judy- 2-1 Triumph TRIH6-5-4 cam. bal. cambridgeshire competition, suspension, overdrive, bat.扛, bagg. Goodyear wet/try coat, cap. hat, cap. suit. cash落后 best offer 812-707-800 Hand Tooled Belts. 7.00 to 9.00 dollars. Contact Bud Smoot, 843-1316. 2-1 Mamiya TLR 2 lens | 80mm t4-14 80mm 15-4um | Taken 12k/320 proof case | Sell $225 or trade for $350 plus flasl 843-847, David HOKONON USED AND ANTIQUE CLOTHES 411 East 7th, 420 $0.90 Jeans Velvet Dresses, Denim Jackets, Jeans Velvet Dresses, Skirt 811 East 7th, 422-11-6 71. Mach I power sleeping, brakes, air, automatic, magg, wide tires, air shocks, hairs good, looks better. Also, seat belt. Skies on柴油. Call 842-7011. Cheapest liberal education in town: Harvard Classics. The five-foot shelf of books' fifty-three printing. Asking any new Yours for $4, 92-$24 anew. trap, shruge, Hungarian sheep- pup puppies AKC. Males at reduced price. Ako: pit-uld English crom pus MC. mkouth, Kania-24 2981. 2 Lucas S3.4" diameter high intensity driving lights. 80,000 candle power brackets. wires, fuses, and connections. 5,300-$3,900 $5,000. Call 812-844-3044 10 speed bike (Rose) like New-45s Porsche 912 912r extractor system=S25 green deck and chair (wooden) 2024 new version 6.3 24-7 2024 anytime after 9 o.p. pm. 3 piece sectional sofa, $125, 4 chair dinette set, $60. Both in excellent condition. 1025 Miss., Apt. #1, 82-1 8067 69 VW—excellent condition, low mileage, snow tires, must stay to stay in school. Make offer. 842-294-2, 2-7 Snow tires 835-14 Tubeless w/7- barely used. Call 843-0435 w/2- STOCK. CLEARANCE SALE - 10-50¢ off on embellied stock of stacks6-teams-joins and belts. Where a71: THE WEARHOUSE. of course; 841^2: MASS. 2-7 Ski Equipment: Head, giant skis, 20 cm. with: Headwalk, step-in bindings $7.00. Lange boots, plastic skis, slight sideight repair $3.27 842-3582 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES 电话 CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Events 843. 8500 THE sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place No paid delivery --- Try it and see for yourself! We are now ready to find, as many afternoons as the Sisters offer the finest of gourmet foods served in any of the two conventes. Our best at the big life dishes are attended by the Sisters. Among Our Specials Seek and Learn The Combination (Hi Mike with Letter Txt) It will be helpful to list it and use Our motto is and has always been There is no substitute for quality Our motto is and has always been in good food Skyline Mobile Phone # 852-1427 Chinese Welcome Touchless Entrance STI Let Maupintour travel service Make Your Holiday Arrangements Now! PLANNING A TRIP?? 00 Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest-KU Union Phone 843-1211 DISCOUNT UDIOTRONICS The Stereo Store PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE --- 928 Mass 8 Tuesday, February 1, 1972 University Daily Kansan AVAILABLE ON ALBUMS AND TAPES ON APPLE RECORDS THE CONCERT FOR BANGLADESH - BOB DYLAN - GEORGE HARRISON - ERIC CLAPTON - LEON RUSSELL - RAVI SHANKAR - JESSE DAVIS - RINGO STARR AVAILABLE ON ALBUMS AND TAPES ON APPLE RECORDS WILD LIFE Paul & Linda McCartney WHICH Denny Seiwell • Denny Laine REG. $5.98 $3^{67} Naturally J. J. CALE REG. $5.98 $367 GRAND FUNK E PLURIBUS FUNK 1972 RAILROAD REG. $5.98 $367 Hyllum Choir II Leon Russell & Marc Benno REG. $5.98 $367 Meddle PINK FLOYD REG. $5.98 $367 Bolt Press Straight Up REG. $5.98 $367 Seraphim Classics Reg. $2.98 Now $1.89 Angel Classics Reg. $5.98 Now $3.86 KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Open 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Weekdays SNOW KANSAN Tigers Edge Jayhawks 64-60 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas 82nd Year, No.76 Wednesday, February 2. 1972 See Page 5 Guest Lecturer, Abraham Kaplan, Develops Topic of Modern Day Loneliness Abraham Kaplan, billed as philosopher, psychologist, teacher, humorist and humanitarian, borrowed from many sources in literature and human study to show that the loneliness of today is only one symptom of a broader problem. We do not something quite apart. Kaplan, speaking at the Humanities lecture series Tuesday night, warned that "if we are incapable of being human with each other in times of disaster, we are headed toward disaster." Kaplan will be a guest on campus for several days. (See story, page 3.) Shootings, Bombs Follow In Londonderry Aftermath BELAST, Northern Ireland (AP) — Violence, death and protest gripped divided Ireland Tuesday as guerrillas retaliated for the victims of Londonderry's Blood Sunday. "A sniper killed a British wounded in cross-fire. The man was gravely injured in cross-fire." Strikes and boycotts throughout Ulster and the Irish republic to the south spearheaded a surge of anger by Roman Catholics mourning the 13 who died in the Lindderry clash between civilians and British troops. In Dublin, capital of the republic, an explosive device shattered windows in the city on Monday. About two dozen persons were believed injured. Two thousand demonstrators marched on the Embassy, burning a flag and mock coffins and bricks and fire bombs over the walls of police stations. Northern Ireland's Prime Minister, Brian Faulkner, charged the republic with using a distress fund set up two years ago for Catholics in the north to "buy guns for murderers." The republic's prime minister Jack Lynch has ordered Catholics Britain pull its troops out of heavily populated Catholic areas in the North and end interment without trial. The British government named the nation's top judge, Lord Chief Justice Sir John Widgery, 60, to undertake an inquiry into the Londonderry killings. British Prime Minister Edward Heath told a packed House of Commons in London the judge would start work immediately. His aim will be to get at the truth behind a welter of charges and countercharges springing from the fatal confrontation between paratroopers and civil war marchers. Heath's remarks opened an emergency debate on the government's policy in its six county Northern Ireland province. The Commons squeaked a motion attacking that policy by a 304-266 vote, then approved Widgery's appointment unanimously. The British soldier was shot dead in Belfast almost as Heath spoke. The woman was hit later in a cross-fire between guerrillas and British troops in the fashionable, largely Protestant Mount Pottinger district of Belfast. Vote Possible Today Committee to Consider Kansas Abortion Law Bv SUE ANN STOUT and JIM KENDELL Kansan Staff Writers The Senate Judiciary committee may come to a vote today on bills to repeal or amend the law. In bearings Monday Sen. Lester C. Arvin, R-Rose Hill, charged that the present law allowed virtually any woman to have an abortion on request. Arvin is the sponsor of a bill that would repeal the 1970 abortion law which permits abortions when a panel of three doctors votes in favor. Arvin's proposal is physical or mental health of the mother. Janet Sears, assistant dean of women. The other hall, sponsored by Sen. George Bell, D-Kansas City, would eliminate mental health as a ground for abortion and prevent a time limit on termination of pregnancy. Arvin contends that the term "mental health" in the abortion law is so vague that doctors are forced to grant abortions almost on demand. who works with the problem of pregnancy counseling disputed his contention. She pointed out that repeal of the law would harm those women in favor of abortion. "It is not a matter of majority versus minority. Soars said." We must protect our children. Karen R森, Wichita sophomore, and Susan Lorninska, Sayville, N. Y., sophomore, members of the Women's Coalition, said that under the present law, no doctor could be forced to perform an abortion unless a woman has to permit an abortion in its facilities. "The abortion law as it now reads should not offend anyone, as it does not require anyone to have an abortion or any doctor to perform one," a Coalition member In hearings Monday, Arvin also said, "This act has surely allowed a new industry to come into being, an industry which allows those from outside the state to use our 'life and death' and criminal knowledge of what in their state would be a crime." Student Heads Appeal For Support of Budget Loninska again disputed Arvin's stand. David Miller, student body president, appealed to area legislators today to support the Board of Regents' 1973 budget request of $176.07 million. State Budget Director Henry Bibb, has recommended the budget be cut to $151.55 million. Miller's appeal came in a letter sent to the 12 state Senators and 36 state representatives from Douglas, Leavenworth, Wyandotte, Johnson, Shawnee, Franklin, Miami and Jefferson counties. Each of the student body colleges sends their state colleges and universities sent similar letters to legislators in their areas. The concerns listed in Miller's letter were: —faculty salaries —classified employe salaries —"other operating expenses" "While all states bordering Kansas provided 2.5 to 7 per cent faculty salary increases for fiscal 1972," said Miller, "Kansas faculty received no increase." CLASSIFIED EMPLOYES, according to Miller, "should not be asked to work for less than their counterparts elsewhere in state government." money available will not meet expected increases in cost. Operating expenses has been a category often cited by Miller as one in which the "We simply cannot continue to provide teaching materials, purchase library books, print catalogues and use telephones on the same dollar total used in 1971," he said. Miller quoted a statement by Regent Chairman Paul Wunsch in which Wunsch said increases in general revenue funding for state colleges and universities were 2.6 per cent in fiscal 1971 and 1.7 per cent in the current fiscal year. According to Miller Wunsch said, "Can you wonder why we ask, 'What does Kansas intend for its institutions of higher education?' " She said that she saw no great influx of women in the area, and abortion was cheaper elsewhere. Arvin and Bell were among 18 witnesses who appeared before the committee Monday. A majority testified in favor of the liberalized law. A study by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization says: BRUSSELS (AP)-Easy abortion and increased use of contraceptives are pushing birth rates down in Communist Eastern Europe and governments there are worried about it, a western study showed Tuesday. Three Plans Proposed ★ ★ ★ Red Satellite Birth Rates Take Drop "It is reckoned that 60 per cent of all pregnancies are aborted in Hungary—probably in the S. R. s.r. —44 per cent in the C. S. r. —Czechoslovakia and 23 per cent in Poland. The Soviet Union eased its campaign against abortion in the mid-1950's. The study suggests it was because the death rate had gone down and Soviet leaders wanted to get more women into jobs. It adds that the downward swing in births since 1945 gone further than expected and that attempts may now be made to reverse the trend. "The Church in Poland heads the opposition against easy abortion and seeks to impose a system of contraception." The birth rate in the Soviet Union dropped from 36 per 1000 in 1938 to 17 in 1970. It was then about the same level as before and only slightly higher for the rate for southern European countries. In Romania the laws against abortion were tightened more recently, sending the birth rate up from 12 per 1,000 in December 1966 to a level of 40 in 1967. But the spread of contraceptives and illegal abortions brought it down again to 83 per cent. Insurance Bills Examined By CHRIS CARSTENSON Kansan Staff Writer The House Insurance Committee is expected to hear testimony this session on three bills that could give a through overhaul to the multimillion-dollar business that affects virtually every Kansan who drives a car. Expert Says Groundhog To Have Sunny Day By ROBIN GROOM Assistant Campus Editor Robert W. Herr Sr., governor of the Slumbering Groundbog Lodge in Quarryville, Pa., predicted last night that the groundbog would not see his As legend has it, if the groundshadow sees his shadow after emerging from a long winter's sleep on Feb. 2, then six weeks of winter weather will follow. If the groundshadow doesn't see his shadow, it is an indication that there will be an early spring. The slumbering Groundhog Lodge is the official groundhog-watching station in the United States. Today marks the 6th year of observing. Herr said at 7:15 a.m. EST, the men of the lodge would go out to seek the groundhog and that by 9 a.m. they should be able to report their findings. Herr said the groundhog's behavior was a true indication of what the weather would be like. "The groundhog is a sneaky animal." Herr said, "and we think Jack Anderson is the greatest snop around." which is taken on per person basis, the said. Honorary Liaison to the lodge later today, including an honorary member, Jack Anderson, Washington syndicated "So far it's been 100 per cent correct." he said. Two of the bills would establish a no-fault system of auto insurance for Kansas. The third plan, introduced by the House Judiciary Committee, opposes a no-fault system, but would still change changes to the existing auto insurance program At the moment local state legislators appear hesitant about giving support to any one of the insurance plans. Rep. Pete Rogers, an insurance managee, said of the House, "she said a little premature" to comment on the plans. He did say, however, that the insurance committee probably would concentrate on the internal interim special interim committee of the legislature. This bill and the one proposed by the state insurance industry would establish a so-called "no-fault" insurance system for Kansas. The theory behind no-fault insurance is that it speeds settlements by eliminating the need to decide who was legally liable for more compensation can be paid to victims. Proponents of no-fault insurance say auto litigation unduly burdens the courts, prevents quick handling of automobile accidents and handicaps the handling of other litigation. KEN KLEIN, executive secretary of the Kansas Bar Association, refutes this notion. According to Klein, Kansas courts are handling tort claims arising from automobile negligence without burdening the courts or the processes of justice. A random pool of Lawrence insurance men indicated they would favor a change in the auto insurance system, but most had no such requirement. No na-fault insurance system for Kansas. UNDER A NO-FAULT insurance system, no blame is assessed in vehicle accidents. A driver's own insurance company automatically pays his medical expenses even if the other driver causes the wreck. In addition, the injured party is denied any right to sue for additional costs. The insurer may require or severe financial loss. Present Kinsley no-fault proposals apply to bodily injury claims and not to property damage. Harold Krogh, professor of business, more accurately defined no-fault as a system that builds onto the present tort liability plan. A report compiled by the Kansas Bar Association revealed that in the last fiscal year, 348 cases were filed in Kansas district courts out of 35,403 total cases and 29,628 civil cases. This would represent a less than six per cent of all cases, and only 6.8 per cent of those cases. Another aim of no-fault is lower premium rates. But according to Krogh, it would be hard to tell whether insurance would definitely go down under a no-fault plan. See INSURANCE page 2 According to Lewis, the fundamental mystery of the large system should be continued or discarded. What is significant, according to Philip Lewis, president of the Kansas Bar Association, is that premium costs to Kansans are already relatively modest. Kansas has the fourth lowest premium costs in the country. Kansan Photo by DAVE BLISS Black Theater to Present 3 Plays The character Mr. Jones strives to maintain his position as the instructor of an English class while an unimpressed student listens. Jones is one of the characters in three plays that will be presented by Black Theater, part of The Experimental Theater. The three plays, titled "Happy Ending" and "The First Miliant Preacher," will run Feb. 24 to March 6. Wednesday, February 2,1972 University Daily Kansan D TO BE BUILT INSITIV US BY SAFETY Architect Says Construction Won't Disturb Trees ... 'Our object is to keep the trees alive' ... Kansas Photo by HON SCHLOERR Wescoe Site to Keep Trees; Landscape Plans Confirmed By PAUL SWEARINGEN Kansan Staff Writer Rumors that the trees in front of the new W. Clark Wescott Hall were to be removed to enhance the beauty of the building were dispelled Monday by Al Thomas a university architect. "In no case will we cut down trees until they die on the University campus." Thomas the teacher, object to keep the trees alive. Hall Committee Considers Work By GARY NEIL PETERSON Kansan Staff Writer A preparatory and informational meeting of the 21-member Ellsworth Hall contract committee night with David Dysart, Lawrence third-year law student and mediator in the residence hall. The group met for the first time to acquaint themselves with the complexities of the upcoming negotiations. Dysart, KU ambudsman, spoke to the group and said the group could conceivably affect conducive living in residence halls at KU and the residence hall at KU for the next five years. The review board sometimes Tuesday or Wednesday of next week will get from the housing department to explain social policy to be implemented next fall, the proposed new contract, the information packet on residence halls being mailed to men's colleges and universities, information and oral inputs from representatives of the dean of men's and the dean of women's offices. They then will discuss the changes with men's meetings. Dyart asked two meetings. Mier a personal review the members will meet with Dysart and his teacher to learn and what the official stand of the group should be. Then from the 21 persons five will be selected to present this view to Mier. Following these meetings the review committee members will meet to discuss an idea individually to formulate an idea of what is involved in the social services system. It is hoped that a unanimous agreement of the 10 people involved will be reached, according to Dvsart. Dysart said there probably would not be an actual vote by the parties but rather a negotiated settlement in which both sides would be happy. Because the controversy arose over the policy changes for Ellsworth Hall next year, Donald Browne, the chairwoman member of the administrative board, requested that there be a suspension of the police from the people seeking information about housing at KU since changes would later appear in the in-house meeting that started last Wednesday at the dean of men's office and will continue to and a settlement have occurred. EMILY TAYLOR, dean of women and member of the administrative housing board, said last night that she had not requested that such a suspension be made. But that it was possible one had been Dysart said, "If she is accepting applications as a result of information mailed out, then she's in trouble; i.e., if she's sending a letter back to these companies and is sending in a space form for residence, then she's in trouble." A legal question arises then. Dysart used the example that a student must come to KU next year. This student hypothesis relies on the validity of the letter sent to the student down a scholarship to Manhattan to take advantage of the aid. The student he then finds out that no such program will exist. litigation against the University is It is only a letter, but it's stated as official policy," Dysart said. "If it's changed on him, then he can sue the university." one person present said Taylor had not accepted any applications. Thomas also confirmed the plans of the Building and Grounds department to landscape the general area between Flint, Bolley and Wescoe Hills in construction of Wescoe is completed. Thomas said that only trees suffering from Dutch Elm disease had been removed from the garden. The supervisor, a guardian, supervisor of grounds and landscaping, said these trees were removed early last fall, and a few trees on the actual site of the building had been removed. "We have records which list the removal of every tree from the campus going back for years." Blieth said. THOMAS OUTLINED a plan for the eventual planting of a variety of trees near Jayhawk Boulevard. At the west end of the street a massive planting will produce a "runned effect." The plants will be placed at least be more of an open area, containing smaller flowering trees. Large trees will be plantes between Bailey and Strong Halls and flowering trees will be planted to produce a "commons" effect in the present construction film Bailey and Wesele Hills. Thomas said no money was available now for tree planting. "The money we receive for the planting of trees comes to us in the form of gifts from private citizens, he said. VVAW Chapter Objects To Nixon's War Policy The Lawrence Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VWAV) is one group little impressed by President Nikon's successes on his Vietnam peace plan discussed in secret talks with Hadi. Byd Edmondson, Lanham, Md junior, and president of the Lawrence chapter said Tuesday, "I'm grateful for the things things secret from the people." "In spite of everything the war is going on," he said. Edmondson spoke of two additional VVAW objections to Nixon's war policy. They were that America would continue to support the South Vietnamese even if all troops were pulled out by the November election. The war would still be a burden on the South Vietnamese, and the timing of the peace proposal was based on political expediency. TOPEKA (AP)—A committee of the Kansas House of Representatives approved Tuesday on a supplemental appropriation for welfare until Gov. Robert Docking answers a question posed by Rep. Jerry Decking recommended the legislature appropriate $9.9 million to support the current fiscal year to fund the medical program and restore cuts made in assistance to the elderly, blind and the handicapped. Welfare Supplement Bill Deferred by Committee "He could have done it when he got into office, Edmondson said. In February the Lawrence VAWL will sponsor its third "convoy" to Carlo, III, to bring aid to the Black community Under the present system Kansas has a "mini compulsory" auto insurance system Dixk admissions and filing coordinator The governor's recommendations would not restore similar cuts in aid to dependent children or general assistance. "The governor dismisses aid to dependent children and general assistance without any explanation," said Harper. "I would like to see the money put back in for these categories. Insurance... plk take in for these categories. 'I don't think the legislature is in any mood to appropriate money above the governor's Welfare Focus On Cable TV The Emergency Service Council has prepared a series of television programs entitled "Focus on Welfare - Six Views" and "Wednesday at the Wednesdays for the next six weeks on Channel 6 (cable TV). The programs will be live and provisions have been made to allow viewers to call in with questions during the hour-long programs. The first program to be introduced here is "View and the Welfare-Poor Facts" and the Hidden Facts. Other programs in the series are: "Welfare and the Legislature" "Poverty in our Nation" "The Other Problems." "Citizens Helping Citizens: Opportunities and the Future of Welfare." From Page 1 The Kansas Bar Association released a statement Friday saying it believed that the fault lay in the lack of philosophically sound, that it was superior to any other suggested concept for disposition of civil wrong, and that it was most important to understand beliefs of the citizens of Kansas. The National Health Survey indicates that about one out of every three persons injured, is hurt in a single-car accident. One major benefit of the no-fault system is that both the driver and the passengers would be using the same vehicles would be eligible for benefits. Limits of $10,000 and 20,000 are required by the Kansas financial responsibility law on bodily injury and $5,000 on property damage. As of July 1, however, the limits will increase to $15,000 on property injury and remain at $5,000 for property damage. Brock said. "ONLY AFTER a person has been involved in an accident he is asked to prove financial responsibility. Broker this can be proved through an insurance policy or obtaining what is called a safety certification." of the Kansas Department of Insurance. "Once you depart from an established system, there is always strong opposition," Krogh said. recommendation I want to know why the governor thinks it was appropriate to discriminate against children and general assistance. A long battle appears to be ahead for the legislature on the merits of adopting a new insurance program for Kansas. "We're entitled to hear from the governor or a spokesman from the governor's office." Last year, this same Republican-controlled committee voted to slash several million dollars from the Democratic governor's recommended budget for welfare and instructed the governor to 1972 session and ask for a supplemental appropriation. Rep. Richard Loux, D-Wichita, said it was because of these cuts a year ago that there simply wasn't enough money to go around. Rep. Franklin Gaines, D-Augusta, proposed a substitute motion to increase the proposed aid to children under $46,000 to restore the aid to dependent children and general assistance cuts, but later rescinded the aid. Loux said there was an emergency in the medical program and that the supplemental bill would not be required. He suggested doubling it to provide the money for the medical program, but withdrew his proposal when Republican House Representative assurance there would be no delay once an explanation was received from the governor's office on the failure to comply with the general assistance and aid to dependent children funds. As in its two trips last semester, the VVAA will take food, medical supplies and United Black United Front in Cairn. According to Edmondson, a recent economic boycott by Cairo blacks has left them short of goods. Edmondson said that donations and contributions may be brought to 1231 Oread, Apt. 7A. Other VW ACHV chapters throughout Kansas and Missouri drive this month, said Edmondson this month, said Edmondson. Because of the individual differences of its 24-member or 56-member VVAW will not back any attempt to fall behind, Eklendon said. WITH THE POMPOLA VALLEY He also said that the group encourages individual involvement and voter registration INTO THE PURPLE VALLEY The Lawrence VVAW has a speaking panel that talks to living groups, church groups or 'anyone who asks' Edmondson also available on 8 track stereo tapes RY COODER reg. $5.98 $3.67 at KIEF'S OPEN 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. WEEKDAYS Want to Know About TRANSATLANTIC FARES and CAMPUS TRAVEL OFFICES SPONSORED BY: - Foreign Study Office - SUA Travel Office - Dean of Foreign Students Office TOURIST The First In a Series - Student Union Activities COUNCIL Room — 4 p.m. Thursday, February 3rd COMING FORUMS: Before leaving the states—what to do and by when, travel within Europe I, travel within the U.S.A., travel within Europe II, U.S. camping and hitching, Mexico / Canada on a student budget. Is Your Environment Caught In A Stranglehold? NOISE AIR WATER POLLUTION WASTE OF NATURAL RESOURCES & OPEN SPACE National Environmental Law Society Needs You! Join in the ACTION & Help Yourself! Room 305 Kansas Union 7:00 p.m. Hand University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb.9 THE SACKBUTS ARE Coming DEMONSTRATE REAL LOVE AND CONCERN FOR GOD AND MAN, JOIN US IN our STRUGGLE AGAINST HUNGER, DISEASE, POVERTY AND IGNORANCE, as WE SEEK TO BRING THE JUSTICE, FREEDOM and PACE OF CHRIST to OUR WORLD. THE TASK OF THE DIVINE WORD MOSAIONARY PRIEST AND BROTHER TO KNOW MORE ABOUT US, WRITE: FATHER TOM STREYVELER, SVD DIVINE WORD LOGOE LOCKET,2,7 EFFECT 100% Include your age, education, interests, address, etc. MAKE RUB ANIMALS KEEP JUR FAITH KEEP THE FAITH on ATCO records also available on 8 track stereo tapes BLACK OAK ARKANSAS reg. $5.98 $3.67 at KIEF'S OPEN 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. WEEKDAYS RIGHT GUARD ANTI-PERSPIRANT 5 oz. size Sale 87° Reg. $1.19 Open 9:00:7:00 Thurs. 9:00:9:00 Sun. 10:00:6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT ORGANIZER CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS 74) MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management [ STRIDEX MEDICATED PADS 42 pads Sale 77¢ Reg. $1.98 You must present coin with purchase Good thru Feb. 6 Open 9:00:7:00 Thurs. 9:00:9:00 Sun. 10:00:6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Managemen REALLY CONTACT LENSE Wetting or soaking solution Reg. $1.47 Sale 99¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 6 Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS MacCLEANS TOOTHPASTE Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 5 oz. size Reg. 89c Sale 49¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 6 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUGS CENTER 247 MASSACHUSETTS Wednesday, February 2. 1972 2 People . . . . . Places . . . . . Things people; Federal and state investigators have put together a portfolio of pictures of present and former aides of **HOWARD HUGHES**. It is believed they will ask author Clifford living to try to pick out one as a friend. The book also features a go-between in writing the autobiography of the elusive billionaire. Some 4,000 mourners converged on New York's St. Patrick's Cathedral Tuesday for funeral services for GREGORY FOSTER, 22, stain last Thursday with his partner ROCCO LAUREE, 23, Foster, black, and Laurie, white, fought together as Marines in they had returned to New York to join the police force together, then they died together when their skivers shot them in their backs. Places: SAIGON - U.S. fighter-bombers flew a record one-day total of seven strikes inside North Vietnam Tuesday while South Vietnamese air power claimed a major victory against enemy ground targets. In the attack, 12 U.S. pilots reported triggered at least one large fireball explosion. Things: Men turning 19 years old this year get some idea today of their chances of being drafted next year. THE 1972 LOTTERY will affect some two million men, those born in 1953, but few are expected to be drafted. THE PRICE OF GOLD soared a dollar an ounce in London and Zurich on Tuesday and hit record highs on free markets across Europe. The rush to buy gold helped send the dollar's value down on foreign exchanges. The W. Averell Harriman Foundation has given 24 major works of art, including paintings by PAUL CEZANNE and PABLO PICASCO, to the National Gallery of Art. There are five major works by Cezanne and others by Paul Gaugin, Henri Matisse, Jean Baptiste Chardin, Edgar Degas, Georges Seurat, Henri de Toulouse-Luttrec, Henri Rousseau, Gustave Coubet, and one American, Walt Kissom. The Picasso, "Lady With a Fan," was painted in 1905 during the 90-year-old painter's blue period. Migrant Education Seen as Inadequate TOPEKA, (AP)—The U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare has sent a report to the state to update education which substantiates some of the claims made last summer by Manuel Fierro that the state Title I migrant program in Kansas is inadequate. The report is based on investigations made by a five-member HEW team which visited the school July 26-29 at Lakin, Ulysses, Goodland, Holecum, Bonner Springs and Piper. The report was sent to Dr. C. Taylor Whittier, state commissioner of education, by Thomas J. Burns, acting associate commissioner for education for a secondary education in HEW The HEW team was accompanied by members of the state Education Department. Fierro charged that the applications by the schools for federal funds to run the migrant program were misrepresented to specify their aims and objectives." Fierro also contended the programs failed to justify the expenditures or expenses on the money was being spent Ferroer had written HEW sectional Elliot Richardson last July for the investigation and audit into the funding of the Title 1 migrant settlement. He also said the program failed to provide bilingual and bibultural approaches to education, even though about 95 per cent of the migrant children are of Mexican-American About $430,000 in federal Title I funds were involved in the Kansas programs questioned by Fierro. Michigan Prof Gives Lecture On Loneliness Speaking before an overflow Audiorium, Woodyrduff Auditioner, Professor Akipa Kapan from the University of Michigan developed "The Tale of the River." Klaplan said since the time of World War I, American dancer customs have progressed from the "communal" dance to the "temporary" dance to today's dancer customs of no contact, not even eye contact. "We will know deeply and bitterly the feeling of loneliness," he said. He then recited a lengthy story, of phrases from recent song titles, all dealing with loneliness. TOPEKA (AP)—Democrats in the Indiana state introduce Tuesday their plan to restrain senatorial reapportionment in a bill which would set up to 18 seats in the U.S. Senate. "We all have a desperate need for each other, for the most part frustrated because we frustrate ourselves," he said. "Why? Fear. Fear. Still more fear. And yet we will all be lonely together." District Plan Introduced The bill, sponsored by six of the Democratic senators, makes a number of provisions to member districts, a feature in a previously passed bill which would allow In the House Tuesday. Gov. Mike Huckabee will seek Senate reappointment plan containing multi-member districts that cover lack of a failure to govern. After a adjournment, Sen. Harold Herd, D-Dalcoast, Senate minority leader, said he was willing to lead the reapportionment plan was gerrymandered, but said he was not "well enough acquainted with urban areas and location of voters." He's a marked gerrymander to him. Senate Republicans discussed their position on reapportionment at a late-afterfall conference. The senate voted to propose senatorial districts in the Wichita area could place three senators in each district of the Senate in the same districts. Herd said the Wichita House Democrat drew the boundaries in line with his request that each individual "equal population in block form." The boundaries of the districts in Wichita, he said, were drawn by members of the Wichita district, the House of representatives. The population differences between the most-populous and least-populous districts in the plan. Herd said, varied 4.83 per cent. The variation in the Republican-sponsored bill vetooed by the governor was 14.87 per cent. Herd said he did not know when the Senate Reappointment Committee would consider the Democrat's plan. Herd said he hoped the Senate would pass the plan, but was not concerned about passage. "I'm unconcerned because I've forced my family to mult-member district, and population variance, we had an obligation to prevent one," he Herd predicted the plan would ultimately end up an exhibit in federal district court if the court ruled that the state's senatorial districts. In other Senate action, 11 incumbents won a roll call vote. The bills had received preliminary approval on the Senate floor The Senate also received a petition bearing signatures of more than 16,000 people urging the Senate to pass the law, which was passed by the 138th session. A vote on two bills to amend the present law is expected Wednesday in the Senate Judiciary Committee. —Provide for financing of county mental health clinics by the state Board of Health. Bills introduced Tuesday in the Senate would: —Set up a six-man Kansas Industrial Development Commission to help Kansas' resources — Prohibit state agencies from contracting with persons or businesses found in violation of law or solid waste pollution laws. -Give counties authority to own airports. —Expand the prohibition against public intoxication on highways, streets or public places to include intoxication by hallucinatory drugs. If the White House actually had an extraordinarily open-minded under those circumstances, Scherr said, "it would have been an extraordinarily open-minded under those circumstances." -Expand non-support law to include the step-parents of any children under 18 years of age. In the House, bills were —Allow physicians to provide birth control procedures and information to persons under age was ordered after his reporting from President Nixon, Sen. Robert Dole, the Republican national chairman, and White Ocean Energy. —Create a system of state welfare investigators introduced which would; —Require hospitals to keep records on abortion cases. Investigation,Job Offer Questioned by Newsman —Require law enforcement officers to undergo refresher training every five years. Remarking that letters "can conceal more than they reveal," the administration that has invoked executive privilege in declining to testify, he does not believe an argument that the White House to fall in rushes. Republicans to Draft New Bill Consider Member Reduction a letter disputed statements that Schorr was being considered for a government job when the FBI investigation began last Aug. 20. Students Concerned About higher Education in Kansas will meet at 7 tonight in the Parliars in he Kansas Union. Meeting Time Changed the Senate Ways and Means Committee which will hear testimony on the higher education budget this morning. The meeting has been moved from 7:30 p.m. to 7:p.m. to avoid a conflict with the SUA Minority Jinions Forum. TOPEKA (AP) - Senate Democrats decided Tuesday to study a new Senate reappointment plan which has single-member districts, with six members having the size of a legislature. Schorr said the investigation Sen, Jack W. Robinson, Jack Foster, Senate Reapportionment Committee, said he was in complete agreement with the Senate. passed the legislature only to be vetoed by Docking last week Sien, Gee S. Smith, R-Lared, president pro tem, said the Senate GOP caucus voted to elect a new member of the Republican members of the Senate Reapportionment Committee to draft a single-member district plan, possibly more than the present 40 senators. Smith denied that the caucus decision was in retribution to Democratize Gov. Robert R. Brown and his reappointment plan, which Plans for this meeting include: 1. Inviting individual state support for higher education. 2. The "Campaign of the Inviting individual legislators to KU, letter-writing campaigns and videotapes during lateure during its current season. Sen. Dave Owen, R-Johnson County, will give the group an update on state legislative efforts in connection with the Education subcommittee of "The caucus concluded this might be the best time to reduce the number of legislators," Smith says, lawsuing men following the caucus. Hand symbol on Proposed Statute of Student Publications. Thursday Feb. 3 Communication Committee of the Student Senate OPEN HEARINGS THE KRUMHORNS ARE COMING, TOO. University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb.9 new look in bridal trios Settings are massive, to thrill and impress, dramatic magnificent in their brilliance and cut. All 3 rings $149 WASHINGTON (AP)—CBS newsman Daniel Schorl, subject of a White House-ordered FBI investigation, testified Tuesday the Nixon administration had made a great many people aware that it is no longer an honorable thing to be a newspaper." 14 Karat white or yellow gold White House officials refused to appear before the constitutional rights subcommittee of Sen. Sam D. Ervin, D-N.C., but repeated in 836 Kansas Downtown. Topeka in Regionalist Room of the Union 809 Mass. Downtown, Lawrence 9 p.m. SUA Minority Opinion Forums Presents FINDING HER SELF Robin Morgan Revolutionary, Feminist, Editor of SISTERHOOD IS POWERFUL Wed., Feb. 2 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Union KING CHIMBOOK MI LONDRE ROYAL PARK CINEMAS 483 718-559-2000 www.kingchimbook.com KING CRIMSON ISLANDS CITY OF ISLANDS CHAPEL HILL, NJ 07621 RELEASE DATE: JULY 8, 1985 PRINTED BY: SUNOCO MEDIA GROUP ISLANDS KING CRIMSON ISLANDS CHRISTIAN CAMERON 1983-1994 SEA TO SEA DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHINA MARKET on ATLANTIC records ISLANDS also available on 8 track stereo tapes KING CRIMSON reg. $5.98 $3.67 KIEF'S OPEN 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. WEEKDAYS TITLE PICTU YO IN BOL Stretch Turtle K and Tailc Collar S Color Bre a $7 $9 Prints $10 FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 • 835 MASS • VI3-4833 PICTURE YOURSELF IN OUR BODYSHIRT Stretch Polyesters Turtle Necks and Tailored Collar Styles. Colors Red, Navy, Brown, Beige and White— Priced at $7 $9 $10 Prints too at $10 and $12 Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN Freshman Class PARTY Bikales-Weinburg ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK! Admission 1.50 or Freshman Class Card 9 till 12, Feb. 4 NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY 4 Wednesday, February 2.1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. A Good Senate Move The Student Senate has often borne the vehement criticisms of students over various issues. When the Senate accomplishes something of significance the applause is usually quiet or non-existent. The Senate voted in its meeting Wednesday night to continue funding the Methadone Clinic at Watkins Hospital. The Senate allocated $1,500 to the clinic from the Student activity fee. The clinic treats heroin addicts for a $2.00 fee. The clinic is open both to student and non-student addicts, and according to Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Health Services, one student has undergone treatment. Programs such as the one here get addicts off the streets, satisfying their physical dependence while permitting them to lead nearly normal lives. The addicts no longer have an unrealistically expensive life. It is the first step in rehabilitation. It is difficult to assess the program's real benefit to the University community. Proportionally, the allocation might seem high if only one student uses the program; let there is no way to measure individual benefit in the quality of life in the University community and its immediate periphery. The program is a credit to all students and speaks well of the University. -Thomas E. Slaughter Guest Comment A Strange Language In Freshman English By Murray Hartman of the North American Newspaper Alliance NEW YORK—In the course of marking about a half million themes and term papers I've discovered a strange language about which scholars apparently know very little. Although I teach college English and have a speaking acquaintance with linguistics and such languages as French, Latin, Anglo-Saxon and Potamian dialects this language, I will better name, I shall call it "Freshman") bears no resemblance to any of these. With a little study and imagination, however, one can easily be convinced of the similarity to English. Herein we hope that some day we may all be able to communicate in English by making question is, would we really want it? One difficulty is that you rarely see this curious tongue in print. Let me cite a few examples that have crossed my desk. I met a teacher who thought I new everything—I was a cockney youngster. My family was closely hit. The latter I answered me briefly, until I worked it out. see this curious tongue in print. Apparently, young men and women who use the language have never done any reading; they sort of picked it up from television, radio, the movies and conversation. Therefore, it is hard to know what it have the courage to try writing it on freshman papers, we'd have no opportunity to test it at all. It becomes clear that any intelligent person with language sense can understand Freshman. How can you say the way it sounds. Well, almost Another freshman confesses: "I dint graduate, but in the Army I studied 8 months and past the high school diploma test. Now I must keep studying whole harder than I want live in the mist of a lie." Authentic Freshman is very inventive. It describes how "a dog freezes in his tracts" and argues that in college life there is more of a menace then a boom. When it discusses the "gallop pole" it is obviously alluding to some equestrian contest. On the other hand a sentence like "Vollarte said we should defend a man's right to speak even if we contain with his sediments" clearly contains several layers of meaning. Some freshman papers are very clever in the play on words, although I suppose not always consciously. One theme that runs through the fastest for 40 days and nights in the dessert, he was brought before punches piotele." The logic of beverages after dessert, mainly in a hot climate, should not be too difficult to follow. Discussing the Houyhnmns, the noble and reasoning race of horses in "Gulliver's Travels," a student wrote, "The Houyhnmns and intelligent horses that they establish a stable government." And about the lusty matron who crowns one of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales: "The characteristics of the Wife of Bath are shown throughout her tail" When; it comes to literary terms Freshman is equally colorful. Ask to identify a few lines from Edwin Arlington Robinson's *Minerva Cheezy*, a student who wrote about her experience by Minerva Cheezy. Another notes "E. E. Cummings's unusual topography. A lesson on Victorian mete involving dactylic pentameter is translated into Fresman as a dance. Consideration, there is much to be said for this view. When asked to name another novel by the author of "Billy Budd," the Freshman woman Rose Budd, a musical no doubt, in a musical. This interesting language lends a fresh turn to poetry analysis. One student gave birth to this idea: "At the beginning of the poem, the author has couplets but later on he has triplets." Again, "In London, 1820." Wordsworth backed and back and back and free commercial England from the money-mongrels. Freshman prosody translates the octave and sester of an Italian opera, "Night of the Seventh Sexet," probably to suggest its energy. A Shakespeare sonnet, on the other hand, consists of three quatrains and a Roman doublet. Milton's sonnets are a great vortice. Milton uses personifi- cation as a triplet tranyt, thus giving life to an inanimate object." Also, "Milton's sonnet 'On His Diseased Woman' is a melancholy wind was blowing through me!" When it comes to dramatic criticism, the Freshman vocabulary is equally ingenious. speaks a powerful absorbent pronoun on theater "Little Mary Sunshine, the innocent heroin, swept up in the world-win of life," of the "gangster's pocket-marked face," and of the "height of suspension" in Shakespeare's canon of plays." Some may find the language obscure, but Freshman is proud of its achievements and doesn't want them underrated. How many hints in their themes that "the teacher mark to hard"! In response to an assignment to write a letter of application for employment, one freshman confidently concluded: "I expect $12,000 annually." Well, America is the land of opportunity. Those who have been through it know what a constant challenge it is to read papers written in Freshman-at its best a freshman with possibilities. Often, to mark a Freshman theme is to know the thrill of holding the future (?) in your hands. KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Ka7san Staff Photo by GREG SORBER During a year of unrelenting labor, the senator has created the most proficient campaign organizer in Michigan and has attracted top professionals from the old Kennedy and McCarthy teams. He has crisscrossed the nation, and he has four quarters. He has spent a million dollars. One year ago, according to the polls, he was the choice of two percent of the Democratic chairman. He is now the choice of three. McGovern: Too Nice to Win James J. Kilpatrick In some of the polls, to be sure, this decent and affable man comes but not much better than his wit. By all the yardsticks, McGoventry ought to measure up as the best man in the world inherited, by this time, all those legions of shaggy boys and lissome girls all those who love their Jews. Chicanos, welfare mothers, tenant farmers and foes of Vietnam whose indeed support is on to victory. Where are they? They cannot be perceived; they cannot present, presently unaccounted for. EXETER, N.Y. — George McGowan, Senator from South Dakota, visited England town the other night, and year to the hour he formerly announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination. The meeting was held on Friday. McGovern came to Exeter toward the end of an 18-year day to speak to students and faculty of the Phillips Academy. He was harassed by the gai-warm of Stuyvesant, stinging animosity, considering McGovern's almost flawless record, seems especial unkind in his comments to campus, passing out leaflets that attacked her name by fire, and unfurled the bedsheet banner from the balcony—a banner that bore a device politely rude: "Please Not A George Wallace, caught in a similar situation, would have felt ashamed. The Sweet are the uses of adversity. McGovern studiously ignored the incident and allowed himself no time to talk. He gratefully smile when an indignant professor, sitting just below, snatched the offending banner Yet none of this ignited a spark. The applause was warm, the laughter the kind of 30 people really was over, it was over. Not even a corporal's guard of animals trailed McGhee to his car. McGovern made all the right answers to the Exeter questions. Would he reduce the power of the government, and give hope, I wouldn't run." Would he military spending? He would cut it by $30 billion. Did he agree with that? The answer is time is not right for a black vice presidential nominee?" "I happen to think the Senator underestimated the importance of the American people." His prospectors are not hopeless. McGovern got a needed boost ten days ago, when a caucus of 2,000 liberal Democrats in Burlington ringering endorsement. On the day he came to Exeter, he wrung some publicity out of the support of a covety of Nobel laureates. His specific recommendations for defense cuts, wrong as they may be, in the conservative view, a dramatic contrast with Nixon. This is tough turf for McGovern. It is widely believed that Muskie has a lock on New Hampshire's 20 delegates to the election, what is widely believed is probably so. McGovern's purpose is merely to look respectable, to show that he will have with his candidacy not badly bruised. The growing assumption is that nobody but nobody will look good in Florida on March 14. But if the date falls April 4 in Wisconsin. Yet New Hampshire is important to McGovern. If he trains Sally Yorty here, it will be hard to maintain his credibility in the race. He is therefore making sure that the factories, the better to shake a few cold hands. He is hitting the high schools. He is working hard in Hillsborough and Rockingham counties, down on the town where the Boston spillover offers a chance for mopping up. is simply too nice a guy; and the it looks now to it, when they call the roll down yonder in July, will finish where nice guys finish. McGovern's problem, six months before Miami, is that he Copyright 1972, The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. Under Durocher's law, that's last. SECURITY LINE OFFICIAL COPY "BACKGROUND" L.E. AIDEN PRESS "How many times do I have to tell you, alot?" Step to the rear of the files?" Garry Wills For a peace offer, the President's eight-point plan sounded like a declaration of war: The private tales were made war. And the one does not do that by castigating the other side, like a school marm), but to justify confrontation. And, of course, to win the war. In four separate places they are called dupes of the enemy. Nixon's New Declaration of War Why should the enemy accept Nixon's eight points? Consider them singly: 1) United States withdrawal from South Vietnam by six months after an agreement date. The withdrawal is only of United States forces (not equipment and aid), and only from South Vietnam since the distinction pointed up by the immediate ceasefire in Indochina scope). Thus, aside from other objectionable features within the agreement, this first point would not give the Vietnamese what they meant for even since World War II—massive within their own house. 2) Return of captured soldiers and civilians. The North would thus give up its hostages and bargaining point, leaving America in the position described above. Griff and the Unicorn I'M GOIN' T' LOOK FOR A JOB, FERD By Sokoloff I'M GOIN' T' LOOK FOR A JOB, FERD DRESSED LIKE THAT, LOUIE ? NOBODY WILL BELIEVE YOU REALLY WANT A JOB OK. I'LL GO CHANGE GOOD HOW'S THIS? DRESSED LIKE THAT, LOVIE? NOBODY WILL BELIEVE YOU REALLY WANT A JOB "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff 3) New and free elections. This continues a longstanding contradiction. We insist that the electorate (and so support it, building it up by "Vietnamization"), yet agree to new elections in order to achieve legitimacy. This time, we must allow voters to vote—but Their apparatus has rigged elections even without them, and would work harder at it with them. If they do not, they must seem hollow in Hanoi, when the very document that makes them referee often to our enemy and our ally, and to those who are even other (even here in America). 6) General ceasefire, with "no further infiltration of outside forces"—subject to the same objection as the last point. 5) No foreign interference—hence withdrawal of Hanoi's troops. But it is the whole basis of Hanoi's argument that Vietnam in its northern or its southern country is not a foreign country to them. 7) International supervision of the withdrawal—though true neutrality here is a myth, and the conditions' of the withdrawal as 4) Return to Geneva accords—over which got us into this mess. They were the partial answer of our problem, not its solution. Nixon has drawn them up (e.g., when foreign troops, what are they), but they inevitably be subject to different interpretation by different perspectives. 8) International supervision of Indochina's future—again, not until 1945. The country is of their own house. The country has to the interests of itsicipated countries, thus recognizing that we continue to have interests in it. Nixon's offer is too little and too late. He wants to have his cake and eat it too–withdraw yet keep an eye on the winner, won; destroyvet claim we held. Why should Hanoi bale out its enemy in a position Nixon cannot even maintain before his own army, and give it access with all kinds of strings attached, what they have spent so many years and lives to vindicate as their right? Why encourage all the states to use "intervention" by a superpower that has ravaged their country at will; and still does so from the air? Why accept this degrading under threat and at agapine? Put yourself in their shoes, and you will see that the speech sounded even more ridiculous in Haniel than it did in Washington. Copyright,1972 Universal Press Syndicate University Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 2, 1975 B 5 Pros Pick Two 'Hawks In NFL Draft BER From Kansan News Service The team captured the first three spots in the final college football team rankings, played second in a college basketball conference in Tuesday's opening round of the annual pro football (e.g., what would perent perent In the first round, National Football League clubs picked six Pacific Eight players and four from the Bie Eight. Two University of Kansas players had been picked by the end of the seventh round Tuesday night. KU offensive tackle Bobby Childs was picked in the fifth round by the Los Angeles Rams on a trade from Detroit JAYHAWK runningback Steve Conley was chosen by Cincinnati in the seventh round. No other KU players had been picked by the seventh round, which was the last conducted Tuesday. Jashawk center Mei McGoy said Tuesday that he would be the first team in contract because he had decided to go to the University of Kansas. Phill Basier, KU defensive tackle, who had been contacted by teams including St. Louis, Denver and Dallas, said he was not really worried about being a draftable to be able to sign as a free agent. Jerry Tagg, quarterback of Nebraska's national champions, became the first player selected in the 2015 draft. Bay exercised a first-round pick. NSTORTLY AFTERWARD. Dana Niven, Colorado defenseman in Larry Kansas City tapped running back Jeff Kinney of Nebraska, and the New York Giants chose Nebraska defensible lineman Larry O'Connor. but its cannot own a gift, or镀ched, many age as age as efficient power the making and at The Cornhuskers chosen all got the word while visiting with President. Nixon Baltimore took Oklahoma quarterback Jack Mildren on the second round, announcing plans to trade him to Tennessee. Then Pittsburgh used a fourth-round choice for Lorenzo Brinkley, defensive back from North Carolina State. Colorado wide receiver Clifford Branch later in the same round. Pittsburgh, drafting in the seventh round on a trade with the New York Giants, took Joe Nutt, Kansas State defensive end. LARRY JACOBSON, defensive end from Nebraska, was drafted by the Chicago Bears in first round on a choice obtained from Minnesota. He was the 24th pick in the draft. John Traver, Colorado running back, was the 10th selection in the round by New England on a trade from San Diego, Kansas City, on the 21st pick of the round, took over Iowa, Iowa. State's quarterback. In the fifth round, the New Orleans Saints got two Big Eight players, picking Kansas State from Utah. In the sixth round, Nebraska tackle Carl Johnson. s. and speeches in England. Registration Date Thursday For Basketball It's about time to break out the many old tennis shoes high school girls are wearing for football jerseys for the opening of intramural basketball com But before games can begin, teams must meet a 4 p.m. thursday registration deadline in 206 Robinson Gym. Each team must submit a registration of 10 players and submit a registration fee of 25 cents per man. After that's out of the way, the intramurual office has to find a room in the building. There will be a meeting for potential officials at 4:30 p.m. on Monday. MISSOURI 44 Stallworth Goes Up Scored 29 points against the Tigers Buffalo's Choice Sets High Goal He left it up to his attorney, Bob Woolf, to let the Bills know how big. Asked after his selection what he was looking for in the way of contract, the 6-foot-8.20-pounder says "I am a big boy," saying "I笑 A big口." WHILE PATULSKI was the goalkeeper, the draft with which he played the draft with the 26 pro team will eventually select 442 players, there were these other major players. The New York Giants, pulling off their second major trade in less than a week, dispatched discontented defensive end Fred Driver to the New England Wildcats in succession of injuries including a No. 1 this year. Neither Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Pat McDonald or Ed Marinara, the record setting Cornell running back, was sacked. Linemen were the chief commodity on the first round with nine drafted, including the 17th-ranked Minnesota California defensive end Sherman White by Cincinnati and Southern Illinois offensive tackle Lionel Antoine by Chicago. bread Little House on the Prairie WASHINGTON (AP) — increased federal aid to increase taxation on lower poverty taxes is necessary, reduce the burden of these taxes on older Americans. Jenn. James B. said (R-Kan.). saided Tuesday THE GIANTS, who last week left the quarterback Frank Tarenton and his transaction in which they acquired thick players and the team's defense. The Patriots for another No. 1, plus a No. 4 draft this year. BABY I'M-A WANT YOU Then they used the two first-round choices to get help for their beleaguered defensive unit, selecting Eldridge Small of New Orleans and a cornerback, college, as a cornerback and tackle Larry Jacobson of Nebraska, whom they expect to play end Nebraska's Jerry Tange was the first quarterback passer of Jason Passer John Reaves also was tapped on the first round by Philadelphia. Sullivan had to wait until the second round when the other player was as the 10th player in the draft. on ELEKTRA records also available on 8 track stereo tapes BREAD reg. $5.98 $3.67 at KIEF'S OPEN 10 a.m.-8 p.m. WEEKDAYS Marinaro, however, may have been the most embarrassed of the ballyhooed preiraffal favorites. By contrast, Minnesota as the 50th player in the draft on the second round, running backs had been picked. Another Road Game Lost By BRAD AVERY Kansan Sports Weller Mizzou Nudges Javhawks, 64-60 COLUMBIA, Mo—The University of Kansas basketball team came close to doing on the road Tuesday night the same thing it has done in its last three home games. “It was great,” did not come close enough, though. Missouri pulled out a 64-60 victory in Brewery Field, but only after KU had seared the Tigers stuff. The result knocked the Jayahs out of the Big Eight and gave KU a half-game behind Nebraska. The Cornhuskers stand first with a 5-1 record after defeating Kansas State. 61-40, in Lincoln (12), but lost 3-1 in a league play; KU. 4-2. KU HAS hedged Iowa State, KState and Nebraska in its last three home outings. It looked for awhile like the merrier mule that had come from early eight-point deficit in the second half. But Stall木待了 tight. 9.10 before the end of the game. Consecutive baskets by Aubrey Kush and Randy Canfield gave Kush a 83-49 edge with 3.58 left. He turned in return came back to it on John Brown's short lay-in 20 seconds later. | | kg/ha | ft² | n/a | rb | gf | pk | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Bentleyhill | 15.34 | 10 | 12 | 8 | 14 | 9 | | Cardifffield | 15.34 | 9 | 12 | 8 | 14 | 9 | | Cumbricle | 2.9 | 9 | 14 | 3 | 2 | 4 | | Chinchilla | 2.9 | 9 | 14 | 3 | 2 | 4 | | Norwich | 2.9 | 9 | 14 | 3 | 2 | 4 | | Rutland | 0.0 | 9 | 14 | 2 | 1 | 4 | | Halesowen | 0.0 | 9 | 14 | 2 | 1 | 4 | | Wickham | 0.0 | 9 | 14 | 2 | 1 | 4 | | Yarmouth | 14.57 | 12 | 12 | 15 | 14 | 10 | | Treforest | 14.57 | 12 | 12 | 15 | 14 | 10 | Mike Jeffries put Missouri ahead with a layup after KU MISSOURI (64) | | fg | ta | na | rh | rb | pf | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Jeffries | 1.0 | 8.4 | 7.8 | 3 | 1 | 18 | | Eilehardt | 2.5 | 8.4 | 8.7 | 3 | 1 | 18 | | Goffitz | 7.9 | 6.2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 14 | | Goffitz | 7.9 | 6.2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 14 | | Albright | 1.5 | 0.0 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | | Albright | 1.5 | 0.0 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | | Norick | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | | Norick | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | | Ehlert | 23.44 | 18.43 | 32 | 17 | 0 | 64 | | Ehlert | 23.44 | 18.43 | 32 | 17 | 0 | 64 | Kansas 36 24 = 60 Missouri 36 28 = 64 NU Tips K-State Nabs Big 8 Lead Attendance-5.800 LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — North State, 61-40; Tuesday claim first place in the Big Eight. Conference, basketball race Big 8 Standings League Overall The Wildcats pulled away in the first half, scoring eight straight points to take a 36-30 intermission advantage. **League Overall** Nebraska 5 1 12 Missouri 5 1 12 Kansas 4 2 10 Kansas State 3 2 8 Oklahoma 3 2 9 Iowa State 3 2 8 Colorado 1 3 6 Okla. State 1 3 6 Okla. State 0 2 12 K-State moved to a 12-point lead in the second half, paced by Erase Kusnyu and Lon Kruger, with 51-19, with 10.47 remaining. The Huskers then came alive and scored seven straight points, seven of them by senior center Chuck Jora. Al Nissen counted the winning bucket with 15 seconds to play. The team goes for a win with a tie with Kansas Saturday, now stands alone atop the Big Eight. Missouri is a halfgame behind at CLASSICAL FILM SERIES DANA KING Waxworks — 7:30 Cabinet of Dr. Caligari — 9:15 Wednesday, Feb. 2 Woodruff Aud. 75° Season Tickets Available at SUA Office Griff's MAKE Griffs GOOD EATS AT PAINLESS PRICES, YOUR ALL AMERICAN FAMILY TREAT! LOOK FOR THE DRIVE IN WITH THE RAINBOW COLORS! Only HAMBURGERS 15¢ DELICIOUS! NUTRITIOUS! PIPING HOT! 100% U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED BEEF TRIPLE TREAT FAVORITE: HAMBURGER — FRENCH FRIES and 'SHAKE' — only 60° And Don't Forget — CRISPY GOLDEN BROWN FRENCH FRIES only 20¢ TRIPLE-THICK, FLAVOR RICH "SHAKES" only 25¢ FOUNTAIN DRINKS — COFFEE — MIL failed to score, and the Tigers led, 58-56, with less than three minutes to play. was our best game on the road so far." FROM THEERE, Missouri went into its spread offense after Nash missed a 15-foot jumper on KU's goal line. The strategy was to draw fouls. 1618 W. 23rd St. KU has yet to win a road victory in the Jawwahks. Victories in the Jawwahks 7-10 record came in Allen Field House. They have another chance to win. Griff's BURGER & BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM we just missed our opportunity to go ahead." 1618 W. 23rd St. Hours 10-2 a.m. Daily 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Sunday HE WAS encouraged that the Jayhawks played well without Stallworth during the first half. Jayhawks led by leading scorer, the Jayhawks played good defense and showed offensive poise. Owens pointed It worked, too. The Tigers victimized KU for six free throws in the last minute and a half. At Missouri hek积秒less until hek积秒less. Stallworth, who scored 29 points despite a 1 minute, 44 second goal, and two half when he was in foul trouble, popped in two quick jumps with the ball. Owens was, is disappointed, though that KU was beaten badly on the offensive boards. He claimed 33 rebounds to KU'17. "We need to concentrate more on moving inside and stop letting them get in our way," Owens said. "We still have a chance to be a very good team in spite of this loss." Owens continued. "This KU, overcoming initial nervousness, held Missouri even during the first half. After 20 games, the score was score死于36-10. Stallworth collected 12 points before leaving the game at the 10.44 mark. However, miracle man Fred Bolsovic came up with a key 15-foot jumper to put KU in front, 34-28, at the 3.08 mark. GET INTO THE ACT Magicians • Folk Groups • Variety Acts • Barbershop Quartets Singers · Dancers · Instrumentalists · Comics Magicians · Folk Groups · Variety Acts · Barbershop Quartets You like applause? You'll hear in all languages at SK ILAK. Fairs go from in front of the world to over the world. SK ILAK, SK ILAK, Over Georgia, and Over Texas. SK ILAK, SK ILAK, Over Georgia, and Over Texas. SK ILAK, SK ILAK, Over Georgia, and Over Texas. SK ILAK, SK ILAK, Over Georgia, and Over Texas. Professional produced and directed, elaborate sound techniques and excellent scoring — everything sound techniques and excellent scoring — all three parks — all kinds of talent will be considered for auction exhibitions and complete interlibrary loan brochure in the Student 'Planning Office' and the Library. AREA AUDITIONS REGISTRATION IS 30 MINUTES PRIOR TO AUDITION TIME KAYLEEN CITY MOSQUITO WEDNESDAY 9:30 a.m. 500-mi. university of Missouri at Kansas City Missouri River Conference Grand Hall - Sovereign Auditorium MAKE IT BIG IN '72 AT SIX FLAGS over texas & over mid-america & over georgia Dallas/Fort Worth St. Louis Atlanta FEB. 9 8:20 p.m. Hand Icon UNIVERSITY THEATRE The Student Body of The University of Kansas Presents THE NEW YORK PRO MUSICA THEY'VE GOT KRUMHORNS, SACKBUTS, CONTRATENORS, AND A WORLD OF TALENT. It's FREE with I.D. Pick up your reserve seat ticket at the box office in Murphy. Non-Students 2.00 - 2.50 - 3.00 6 Wednesday, February 2. 1972 University Daily Kansan I'll go and see if I can get a better picture of her. The lighting is too bright, and the background is blurry. I'm not sure what she's doing. It looks like she might be jumping or dancing. But I can't tell for sure. Kansan Photo by JOHN BURKI Gloria Jahn, Co-Captain of Squad performance judged at football games KU Pompon Girl Named All-American Cheerleader Gloria Jahn. Leavenworth wife and co-captain of the KU pompom squad, was named Monday as one of six All-American Cheerleaders by the National Cheerleading Foundation (ICF). Two people from 25 major university cheerleading squads competed for the honor which includes a $1,000 scholarship Stan Kisereman, Lawrence also nominated to represent KU. Jahn was judged on her performance with the squad at different football games this fall. But he was not announced the indices were not announced Jahn will receive her scholarship award at a ceremony March 24 at Universal Studios, Universal City, Calif. ICF has offered their guests, with a trip to Disneyland included in the program. ICF also rates university cheerleading squads. This year, KU ranked fourth in the nation, with Notre Dame taking first place. Over 200 cheerleading squads were judged on the basis of tumbling and gymnastic techniques, original cheers, precision, voice projection, timing, personality and smile. Jahn, a cheerleader at KU for two years, is also an employee of ICF. Her job she said, took her to work with children on week-long clinics. At these clinics, four or five instructors counsel about 500 high school students. John said the judges for the All-American Award were separate from the people she worked for. Civil Service Test Scheduled 4 Times All examinations are on Saturdays and begin at 8:30 a.m. Stiles said. Federal service entrance examinations will be held four times a year, with the semester, Phil Stiles, Lawrence chl service examiner, said John McKinnon. On Feb 19, March 18, and April 15, the two and one-hour half examinations will be held in 306 Summerfield, Stiles said. A fourth examination will be given at the Lawrence Post Office May 20. must said. The entrance examination may be taken any time within nine hours of a person's graduation from school. Stiles said. Groups Still Oppose Mud Creek Project Sites said the test results could be used by a person to apply for government jobs anywhere in the United States. A person may apply for over 200 government jobs after taking the test, he said. This national concern is hitting the Lawrence area with the Army Corps of Engineers' planned channelization of Mud Creek, which have been actively protesting the project during the past year. The Needness of channelizing streams to bring about flood control is a concept that has gained great ground since the country are attacking. Siles said although few jobs were available in Lawrence, Kansas City was the largest city in the country in this part of the country. By CHRIS CARSTENSON Kansan Staff Writer According to Ron Klataske, regional representative of the National Audubon Society, the new 600 megabit channelization will clearly be Commissioner Jack Rose said annexation was an "insoluble problem," but it was necessary for steady growth. THE IMPACT statement reads, the channel improvement and resulting loss of neuralural treatment in degradation of the associated "The most noticeable result will be the virtual disappearance of the six mile-long fringe of trees along Boulder Lake in Ming Mid Creek." he said Monday. Since 1959, when a year in Costa Rica was first offered to University of Kansas juniors, the KU foreign study program has expanded to a wide variety of study and travel opportunities. At this time, the university study adviser, this year there are more opportunities than ever. TOM **SWEARINGEN,** a man of the Coon. Hunter. Association, expressed concern over harm to fish and wildlife that inhabit the visible. If the tract is annexed, taxes of the landowners living in that area will increase about 34 per cent. The land is south of the Kansas River. In industrial tract. It is now included in the Wakarusa Township. Foreign Studies Program Offers Variety of Courses Students must have a B average and must have completed at least three semesters of college work, including varying language requirements, to participate in the foreign study program offered by the major language institutes and the Junior Year Abroad program The Corps of Engineers recently finished a 17-page environmental impact statement on the project, which seems to be in compliance with environmentalist's claims. Under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 the requirements required an environmental impact statement for all its projects. Completion of this statement has held up the channelization for a year, according to City Manager William Ward. He said that Mud Creek presently served as feeding grounds for raccoons, coyotes, deer and rabbits. Swearingen also said Mud Creek served as a travel lane for these animals. He said the River and the hills to the north. KU Guide Lists Human Services In other action, member- discussed a petition concerning sidewalks in Indian Hills and approved a resolution authorizing the State Highway government to set as Lawge agency for improvements on the Kansas River bridge, located at 6th and Massachusetts streets. Commissioners voted unanimously to carry the ordinance. The proposal was placed on first reading, then subsequent readings, open to public debate, at the next several meetings before a final vote can be taken. Summer language institutes are offered in Paris; Holzkirchen and Eutin, Germany; Barcelona, Spain, and Guadalajara, Mexico Steadman said if KP's land was annexed, Kansas residents would be subdividing the city of Lawrence to increase the city's revenue about $600,000 annually, but Lawrence would also be increased. Members of the Lawrence City Commission voted Tuesday to carry a proposal to anate 1,780 licenses for a new highway. The tract of land includes the Kansas Power and Light plant and several housing develop- Each eight-week course, which consists of cultural events and guided excursions in addition to classroom work, is worth six hours academic credit and is available to Kansas residents for less than $1,000, including transportation, lodging and food. "Help for People," a guide to help students Lawrence and at the University Katharine now being distributed at the University Information Center, Four hundred and fifty copies of "Help for People" were published during the week of Jan 24. The book is free of charge. A, W Stedham, KPI district manager, and several landowners protested the proposed extension of the annexation. Mayor Robert Paul said the land was now in its future industrial development Junior Year Abroad offers study at the University of Bonn in Germany the University of Carnegie in New York and Bordeaux in France. The 1972-73 program will add the University of Stirling in Scotland, Most Western Europe and private homes and will be free to spend weekends and holidays traveling and sightseeing. They are also required to receive credit at their home Commissioners Hope to Annex KPL Grounds The purpose of the guide is to make community residents more aware of the various resources which are available. Shirley Lyle, a staff member of information Center, said Monday. The listing of an organization in the book is not intended to be an endorsement or evaluation of its services. Any agency or group can provide assistance has been included. There are two indexes at the beginning of the book, one by name and one by name index includes a list of 101 human services, and the index by Each service agency in "Help for People" lists its address, telephone number, poste, staff, charges, funding, services, persons served and how much each person contributes. Unless environmentalists are successful in their effort to block the channel improvement, the project may not work at the site this spring. "Help for People" was originally intended for use by people in the human services profession, Gilham said. However, the book was being used more than ever as well, Gilham said, and she would be happy to give it to anyone who could use it. Some service agencies may have been unintentionally omitted from the book, and there are undoubtedly some errors in accuracy, she said. Suggestions, corrections and additional information on agencies may be reported to the Information Center. The foreign study office at KU also offers a non-language program, primarily for up to two weeks, where students in history, political science or international relations. The program is offered each spring at the Center for International Studies. Students may also participate in a 12-week program at Leningrad State University in Russia, which includes three weeks travel in the UK and two weeks in Europe. An annual or semiannual supplement to the guide will be prepared to keep it up to date. You can refer to the online resource make the book more complete. Gilham said the gathering of information for the book was a very slow process. She had been assigned to help with last summer. Other members of the Information Center staff, as well as members of the Community Service team, also gathered information. Professional Help Offered to Students Partial scholarships are available for the study abroad program offered by other institutions can apply for the programs through the KU foreign study office They can attend at colleges or universities. Arrangements are coordinated with Keto for travel with KU groups. Professional help for psychological problems is readily available to all students at the Dean of Men and Women, the Mental Health Clinic, the Guidance Bureau and the Kansas Psychology Clinic are students' services of help and information. By KAREN KLINKENBERG Kansan Staff Writer Campus Posters to Help Students Air Complaints The Dean of Women's office in Strong Hall is one place which offers counseling on anything that is bothering someone. There is no written record of what is happening, and does not have to give his or her name. A person may also call and talk to someone. universities. fish and wildlife habitat, as celebrated development would cause an obstruction or restriction activity would cause temporary dust, noise, an Students are also invited to come to the Mental Health Clinic for psychiatric help at any time. Students can be behind Watkins Hospital A complaint service under the auspices of the Student Services Committee will begin operation next week, Susan Goering, McPherson sophomore and services committee, and Cohesion Committee, said Monica. The office has nine women who are willing to counsel students. In addition, five women go to the school within-a-C college to counsel them. "The main purpose of the complaint service," Goering said, "is to let students make their desired names." DR. SYDENY SCHROEDER, Nurse at Children's Clinic, said they have a wide range of problems, many dealing with depression or deep anxiety. They are able to recommend medication to patients when they need it. SOMETIMES, Keeping said, people want a more professional approach to help them manage their psychologist. She refers them to the Watkins Mental Health Center. The Dean of Men's office in Strong Hall handles similar problems for men. Each College representative from the office represents from the office. The staff at the clinic includes five full-time psychologists, several part-time psychologists and a psychiatric social worker. Before going into a staff room, you must answer a questionnaire. And then, he may take a psychological test administered at the desk. After Posters with complaint forms attached will be stationed in various places on campus. All students need to do, said Goering. finding out about herself. this, he makes an appointment. If the student needs help immediately, they will find someone who is available. Another office that offers counseling is the Guidance Bureau in 118 Bailey Hall. Although records are kept of the help patients receive, the files are confidential. "The average student doesn't know to whom he should voice his concerns," she said. HERE, STUDENTS are given someone to talk to on an individual basis. All members of the staff are professionals in their field. A few part-time members are graduate students in the fields. Students also can make their complaints to the Student Senate by dialing the number printed on the posters. the mailla envelope and the slot provided. Goering said the main function of the service was to act as a haisson to help students find the right people to talk to about their needs. is to fill out complaint forms and place them in the manila envelope and the slot provided. WHEN A STUDENT comes in, m may choose the type of teaching sessions he treesession with one of the members of a team. He may choose individual, play, group or psychoeducation. Another counseling service is the Kansas Psychology Clinic. The staffed on a rotation basis with four teams of four graduate students in social work, one supervisor with a Ph.D in clinical psychology The clinic is open to anyone in the state of Kansas and the hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The problem is that the North Lawrence flood control program, of which Mud Creek is chieflychan化 in design is nearlyempty. The company has already spent over $1 million to purchase the land. In addition, $13,000 this year was budgeted to maintain the lease. This included the purchases of a $4500 tractor to move the mowing, according to Watson. Med Center Gets Building For Services Continuing a program for expansion of the University of Kansas Medical Center campus, the Endowment Association building $815,000 for a building adjacent to the Medical center campus. The building, formerly occupied by the Wesleyan Convalescent Hospital, 4125 Rainbow Blvd. Kansas City, KS. On the edge of the campus and has 38,000 square feet of floor space. Following renovation and remodeling, the Department of Family Practice will move into a new location to utilize the utilization of the property have not been made, but other similar ambulatory services are available. Constructed in 1950 as a motel, the two-story building contains a basement and a penthouse. In 1982 the building was enlarged to include a 118-bed nursing house operated by the Wesleyan Foundation. ACCORDING TO J. H. Tomlinson, of the Corps of Engineers, the city spent more for land than it had expected. The cost of $15,000 included the building, the equipment, the建筑物 and the property which has a one-foot frontage on Rainbow Bld. "This expansion, made possible by the Endowment major assistance for the Scholars Medicine and the Medical Center, which would not have been possible without the Association's assistance. Dr. William O. Woods, president of health affairs, said Friday. "Now if we come back and say we are not going to build the wall, you don't need to buy all that land, this would put the city on fire." The building represents an investment of the Endowment Association's resources, which will be renewed through rentals. During the past 25 years, the Endowment Association has supported the Continuation Study-Student Union Center, the Children's Rehabilitation Unit, the Maurice J. Cohen School for the Clinical Pharmacology Laboratory, the Spencer Chapel and the Ralph L. Smith Research Center. Werner Velt, editor of the Grand Rapids, Mich. (Mich.) Press, will speak to reporting classes and recruit news intends today as part of the School of Journalism's editor-on-residence program. Werner Veit To Interview Kiatakea denied that channelization is needed as a part of the program. He offered what he considered to be two "realistic alternatives". Both plans reject channelization, but would place a leave away from the stream itself. The second plan watershed management upstream The editor-in-residence program is sponsored by the Newspaper Fund to bring experience of editors to classrooms for classroom presentations and informal discussions with students. 7-Day Special CARS PAINTED $27.50 NORTHTOWN BODY SHOP Lawrence, Kansas THE CORPS apparently is trying to work with local residents on the improvement to Tomlinson, the Corps is open to any suggestions on the project, and is willing to meet with members of the community for improvement. Friday afternoon, The Corps sponsored a meeting to hear comments on its recently completed project. The Corps has also invited about 25 local environmental groups and governmental to submit comments to by March 1. Lew Helm, of the Basin Planning Branch of the Corps of Engineers, said the Corps would help protect the river along the oxbows of the stream. He also stressed that some of the water would be used with a mixture of Kawlow and Blackwell switchgress and Reed Canary grass to provide wildlife habitat. CHANNELIZATION of Mud Creek is part of an over-all $8 million project to protect North Lawrence in 1954. Authorized in 1954, the project will protect about 8,000 acres of North Lawrence's residential, commercial and industrial area. The program was proposed after a major flood of 1951 caused $312,100 worth of damage. The city has taken steps to develop development would cause an estimated damage of $9,750,000 according to Corps reports. Officially the project calls for the construction of 20.3 miles of levee along the Kansas River and the channelization of 6.1 miles of Mud Creek President Nixon's fiscal 1973 budget sets up $1,321,000 for the local project, and most of it will be the Bud Creek channelization. JAMIE HAS TO BE SOMEBODY... 1,000 advance tickets sold! and he could care less flickr atong the way! 1,000 a tickets so... along the way! World Wide Pictures presente CLIFF RICHARD World Wide Pictures presents ranada NOWI at 7:00 & 9:00 Adult 1.5-18 Child .75 ...telefon ...imprimaire 394217 TwoAPENNY ranada EATRIC ...telephone V3-5785 ^ DECIDEDLY DIFFERENT EXPERIENCE IN LOVE --evelyn wood reading dynamics THE FIRST MILITANT PREACHER CLARA'S OLE MAN THE ELECTRONIC NIGGER HAPPY ENDING Feb. 3-12 8 p.m. KU EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE 864-3982 --evelyn wood reading dynamics There is STILL TIME to enroll Each class meets once a week for 8 weeks Regular Course—Thursdays, 4:6:30 p.m. BEGINS TOMORROW Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m.-Noon BEGINS NEXT TUESDAY Western Civil Civ Course--Thursdays, 7-9 to p.m., begins Mar. 2. (You must attend with the Regular or Semester and transfer to the Main Campus.) M M YOU WE Have just what you need Need a Comfortable, Attractive and Reasonably Priced Apartment? LET'S GET TOGETHER Large sunny rooms Large sunny rooms Closets you must see to believe Pvt outside entrances Study room Rec facilities and indoor pool Laundry, off-street parking Month-to-month leases All Utilities Paid 1 BR Unf 130 1 BR Furn 160 2 BR Unf 155 2 BR Furn 195 Free Pizza Buck Just for Looking RIDGLEA 6th & Frontier The People Place to Live 842-4444 THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. "Guess What We Learned in School Today?" Hillcrest Eve: 7,25 & 9,15 Eve: 7,25 & 9,15 Mat Sun: 30,30 & 4,15 Twilight: 2,25 & 1,5 For 4,15 Show Only Varsity THEATRE ... telephone VI: 1055 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:40 Adults $1.50 Children .75 Sat. & Sun. 3:00, 5:05, 7:30, 9:40 Twilight HR. Admission $1.00 & 5.00 — 4:30 to 5:15 only! Eve. 7:35 & 9:30 Adult $1.50 - Child .75 Mat. - Sat. Sun. 2:35 & 4:25 "ON ANY SUNDAY" Hillcrest 214 ABBEY TURTLE & DORP present: **DUSTIN** **HOFFMAN** *SAM ROWE COMMENTS* **STRAW** **DOGS"** Eve. 7:20 & 9:30 Mats. 8:45 & 10:10 Mat.-Sat. 2:00 & 4:05 The Hillover Ashford University Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 2. 1972 7 POLA Kansan Photo by JIM EATON The Observer Becomes the Observed This painting, part of the faculty exhibit now in the Union Gallery, appears to be observing all who come to observe it. The exhibit, put in the gallery until Feb. 13. Records; By MIKE BICK Kanean Paterson Spencer Library Exhibit Portrays Old Lawrence Howdy Doody Revisited The other day a friend of mine showed me an unusual record titled "The World." Original Cast starring HOWE Dooily Dickey and PICKWICK. Pickwick. At first this record seemed insanely absurd, but KANSAN Campus Bulletin S sanitary Engineering Conference: 9 a.m. Forum Room. after several listenings, I changed my mind. Believe it or not, "The World" with Howdy Doody is a beautiful record. Social Welfare Field Instruction: 9 a.m. Oread Room. Northfield Ln. W. 10th St. What makes this album so likeable is perhaps the excerpts we hear from the past Howdy Doody shows. They may seem 'Jobs for Vets' To Be Revived Another new piece of non- fiction, designed by Robert Goldsworth. *Robert Goldsworth* "COMMUNISM: A NARRATIVE HISTORY" (MERCY, 95 cents). Goldsworth has written similar stories about the Middle East and the development of modern China. He treats communisms in a way that gives force in world politics, and he Book Briefs Fish Arc 11:30 a.m. Around D Cafeteria French Table 11:30 a.m. Meadowlark Room Cafeteria Listening to the record conjures up vague memories of Philosophy: 11:30 a.m., English Room. Basketball Luncheon: 11:45 a.m., Trophy Room. Allen Field House. The committee, formed to help returning veterans find jobs in Lawrence, will meet at 4 p.m. on Monday at Security Office. 839 Ks. City. North FIELD HOUSE. Placement Officers: noon, Alcove A California Michener what preceded the tragedy in a piece of reporting that is certainly good history. He disagrees with those who hold that there was intent on the part of the guardsmen: "There was death, but not murder." Society had as good combined materials, and no one should be surprised that they ignited." One of the most important paperback volumes on the stands "KENT STATE" WHAT HAPPENED AND WHY "Crest, $1.25"). The book, like the event that most critics felt that Michelen had provided a fair and sympathetic treatment of the heroine, which time four students were killed and nine wounded after National Guardsm fired on theaters at Kent State University. ridiculous now, but there was a time when Howdy and his妙意misadventures meant a great deal to us. He came when we were young and we grew with Howdy became our first friend. Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark Room, Cafeteria Russian Table: 12.30 p.m. *Meadowlark* Room, Cafeteria Conference, 12.30 Another committee member, John Purcell, has suggested that the group sponsor a "job fair" for unemployed veterans. p.m. Kansas Room Social Welfare Undergraduate Comm 校 Headroom Original and current photographs of Old West Lawrence are currently on exhibit at Spencer Library. mitee: 1 p.m. Oread Room. Social Welfare Staff and Students: 2:30 p.m. Javahawk Room. Mayor Robert Pulliam, committee chairman, indicated that the group originally stopped because it had run out of ideas. The Lawrence "Jobs for Vets" committee, formed in June 1971 and dormant since last July, will come to life again on Thursday. p.m., Jayhawk Room. EISC: 3 p.m., Regionalist Room. SHS: 3 p.m., Council Room. Erv Hodges, city personnel director and a member of the group hope to have some new ideas on promoting jobs for SIBS: 3 p.m., Council Room. History: 3:30 p.m., Pine Room. During July, the committee arranged some free publicity which resulted in jobs for several veterans. History: 3:30 p.m., Pine Room. Student Transportation Committee, 3:30 **Student of Träffsafetion Committee:** 3:30 p.m. p.m. Gymnastics Room. 715 W. 6th St., Jekyll Island, IA 52428. jekyll岛.edu Welfare Welfare Students. 4 p.m. JAYLANE Room. Social Welfare Faculty: 4 p.m. INFO Faculty: 4 p.m. International Room. French/Haitian: 4:50 a.m. Counselor Room. French Faculty: 4:45 p.m., Council Room NIMS: 6:30 p.m., Counsel Room. International Room Concerned Students for Higher Education JANUARY 6:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Parlors A, B and C. Senate Finance. 7 p.m. Regionalists B. my childhood--backyard baseball, first grade recess, and a back-to-school kindergarten and got in trouble for it. Most of all, though, Howdy brings the excitement we all long for. He's back home and came we and could one again BSU: 6:30 p.m., Forum Room. IRC: 6:30 p.m., In ternational Room. K.U. Gaming Society - Social Welfare: 7 p.m. Kansas Room K. U. Dames Bridge: 7:30 p.m., Pine Room. Rodeo Club: 7:30 p.m., Room 305, Kansas Union. SU4 Minority Onboarding: 7:30 p.m., Bisc. Eight Room SATA Classical Films: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium Universted Schools for Higher Education: 7 p.m., Parlors A, B and C, Kansas Union. Chamber Music Series: 8 p.m., Swarthout Icettall Hall. SIMS Lecture: 8 p.m., Forum Room. Kappa PSA: 8 p.m., Council Room. SUA Classical Films: 9:15 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. includes writings of landmark figures: Babeuf, Saint-Simon; Marx, Lengin, Tresky; Stalin, Mao, Caosm and other. Another new one is by an Indian novelist, Kamala Olliver, titled "THE OTHER DAMS" (Creatures). The author has been praised by New York Times critic Orville Prescott as "probably the finest Indian novelist writing in English" and admired for being built in the Indian highlands in the period right after India achieved independence. It calls Bromfield's "The Rains Name"; but more importantly it calls Forster's "A Passage to india." watch his smiling face Union Gallery To Feature Crafts Show The 18th Annual Kansas Designer Craftsmaker Show will open Feb. 20 in the Kansas Union Gallery. Before the showing a contest will be held to select the works to exhibited. Any Kansas resident can submit a maximum of three entries in one of the following categories: ceramics, glass, textile design, furniture, wood and leather crafts, glass and enamel and related products. The submitting entries was Monday. The work selected will be displayed during the show, which opens at 2:30 p.m. Feb. 20 Toshiko Takaezu, internationally known weaver and merchant will judge the works Saturday. Awards of $80 and more will be given with other merchandise awards. The record, unfortunately, is not a complete nostalgia trip but a memory of constant cuts in on Howdy with corresponding news events from the past. The social change and problems. Howdy symbolized the joys of being young. As Howdy and his friends sing about the meaning of brotherhood, an eyewitness to the internment at Little Rock High School interrupts to define the brutal reality of that same brotherhood. And, as the Korean conflict rages on, the nation begins to donate blood for our needy soldiers. Artistic Profs Show Works Howdy Doody, I suppose, could be called our first hero. As we look back now, Howdy and his siblings were all present when briefly recaptured on this record. But even with Howdy, the world and its problems are ever present, reminding us that the world hasn't really changed at all. Michael Ott, instructor in painting and sculpture, and Roger Nanimura, assistant designer in press sculpture, are presenting an exhibition of their recent paintings and screen prints at the new art gallery at Murray State University. The show will run Feb. 8 to 29. Ot presently had a one-man man exhibit of his print collection at the Paley Center's preparing for a one-man show, at the Manolides Gallery, Seattle, in Both artists received top awards in the recent Tulsa Regional Art Exhibit in Oklahoma. The boundaries of Old West land to the west and Tennessee Street to the east. Ninth and Sixth streets are the boundaries to the south. David W. Heron, director of the association of the program at the U.S. for the exhibit was to interest people who live in the old section of Brooklyn, where he said he wanted to give these people the opportunity to see The exhibit includes a map of Lawrence dating back to 1880, copies of old Lawrence city order, and documents of houses over 190 years old. Heron said he thought when the University had an opportunity to let civic groups interested in his project campus, it was worthwhile. START NOW TO GET IN SHAPE FOR SUMMER Twelve University of Kansas students are presenting an exhibition of Warwick makers from KU>," at the Antion University Galleries 400 Warwick The exhibitors are undergraduate and graduate students of Tallent, Falk, and Lawrence of painting and sculpture. The students are Charles Ellis, Jim Evans, Topeka junior, Larry Fisk, Elsie Gillam, David Graves, Steven Hawkins, Lawrence seniors; David Graves and Sara Sieri Rheid, Lawrence graduate students; Susan Jones, Matthew Schuster, Patrick Hutchison graduate student; Linda Sorenson, Omaha, Neb. senior, and Madeline McLennan. Every Lady that Signs Up for Three Months at $45 Can Sign Up a Friend for Only $1.00. Their works, which include relief, intaglio and lithographic processes, will be shown Feb 5-March 4 KU Students Exhibit Work At Art Gallery The Gallery is open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. HAVE YOU GIVEN MUCH THOUGHT TO BE ONLY LL BE DOING TOMORROW? CALL 842-4044 2323 RIDGE COURT LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB FOR WOMEN Finding a job that gives you satisfaction isn't easy today. Not in a world as con- ditional as ours. But the Paulist finds a frequent joy in his own way of life and values that are lasting. As a Paulist ht may counsel a youth away young, listen to senior citizen senior citizen, organize a Home Mass or conduct conics. Because Paulists have always been pioneers in community education, they were able to through the printed word or through mass media such as newspapers and magazines. For more information about the Paulist priesthood write to: Rev. Donald C, Cambelleb, location Director, Room No. 200 Whatever tool he chooses, the Paulist gets his "message" through. Can you think of any other life that will provide more inner satisfaction for you? 415 West 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019 e te n to a "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered regardless of gender, regard to color, or national origin. paulistfathers. TYPING 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Experienced in typing tweens, dwarf paper, large paper, and letter-size paper. Works well with typers. Will write type. Accurate and prompt typemaking. Recommended. Req.: Phone 815-93454, Mr. Wright reached. Phone 815-93454, Mr. Wright One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 Typing experience in typing term- papers, paper dispersations, miscellu- aneous types of fonts, spelling scoring correlated. Have electric typ- ing type, mix type. Mr. Wright, VG 9054 Experienced typist will type your term paper, thesis or dissertation. Electric typing prompt, accurate call. Call 91-2281. Mr. Ruckmank 8:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon PANTY CATERING AT SHORTYN BEEFKERAT 444 MAACC POETRY WANTED for anthology Please include stamped return address. Submit to: Editor, DLWILD PRESS, 1807 East Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90021 california 90021 Will do thesis and general typing and editing Phone 842-4813 2-2 Accurate typing of your thesis distribution, or miscellaneous work on MSI. Semantic retrieval with plexus SenseNet 2.0 for information Court, 842-140 for information, 2-29 Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention 843-0558. 2-29 One dav MISCELLANEOUS Shines Dyeing Refinishing PERSONAL Call me for excellent low cost hospital insurance with above average benefits (including eligible benefits for pregnancy). Health and Life Insurance: 842-5200. Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! NOTICE Women's Alterations 20 years experience Call 843-2767.9:30-50-215 PLANNING A TRIP?? Maupintour travel service Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 515 Michigan Ave., Detroit, MI 48207; phone: (319) 625-2870; price: $1.40; I.Q. Beet Briefstick II; $1.50; I.Q. Beet Briefstick III; $1.75; I.Q. Briefstick IV; Phone VI; VI 9120; Closed Sun-Tues. 100 Mass-The Malls-Hillcrest-KU Union For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center 864-4441 Let UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Women's Health City Birthright (816) 474-6076. ← referrals on birth ← "unary" We buy used sports cars and imports Competition Sears Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 482-2191 2-15 We repair allong Volkwagans. We do large and small children's general therapy (impensevely) We sell part and whole VWS with our general illnesses. Bug limo. 2-10 2nd. 2-10 WANT ADS A white and gray kitten was found near Bailey on Jan. 19. To claim please call 842-0437. 2-2 INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER, 842 7694. Professional child-care for children 1 mo to 12 mo. Full or part-time. Fi. Specially designed environment. Anyone who has left a book with the Emporium Bookstore please call 864-3710 to see if your money is ready 2-3 picked up. STOCK CLEARANCE SALE -Reductions of 10-50% off our entire stock to make way for remodeling at THE WEARHOUSE; 841%; Mass 2 Can't find a unique place for your group to get together? Try Ronalea's Hotel in Harper. Capacity. 40. (316). 896-9121. 2-2 Valentine Idea Portrait: $5.00 for one, $7.00 for two: 842-7500. 2-15 Phone 843-121 HOKONON USED CLOTHES, 819 French Sale $2 blue jeans, dresses, and Western shirts, velvet dresses. Monte $10 blue jeans, 819-27 mount 11-6. STEREOFERS REDUCED 3 parts buses. 4 consoles will pay to clear —Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. (Mag- tact-6) Tony's 66 Service KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days 25 words by email $1.50 each additional word $0.2 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Be Prepared! tune-ups storting service Open 24 hrs. per day Lawrence, Kansas 60442 2434 Iowa VI 12-1008 Lost—Jan. 27 in front of Dyche. Gold wire rim glasses. Reward. 842-2038. 2-7 LOST Very L. A white envelope containing very important investment papers, also a large copy. Just near Snow found please叫(842)3180 or 864-6199. Eliae wrist watch, wedding on Potter's Lake Hill, personal gift. Call Pat. 843-0723. 2-4 Last. Gold ring with blue, oval stone. Two gold letters set in stone. If told call 864-283. 2-4 WANTED OVERSEAS JOBS, FOR STUDENTS, All positions offered. All professionals and occupations are welcome. Job openings ongoing. slight延迟. Free in- pendent overtime. slight延迟. Free in-pendent overtime. Hiv Dept 107 San Diego, CA Hiv Dept 107 San Diego, CA **STUDENT EMPLOYMENT in Yelp- towns and all U.S. Nationalities** (including foreign students) Save $260 Amount Agency, 298 Eat lunch for $400 Amount Agency, 3440 back guarantee Women's alterations. 20 years experience Call 815-2767, 9:30 to 1:30, 2:14 One or two females needed to share Gatehouse apartment Call 842-2038 for more information. 2-2 Wanted: one girl to share apartment in Jahwack tower. Utilities paid and close to campau. Call 843-6212 or 842-6554 2-2 Need 1 on 2 girls to share Jayhawk apartment. Purchased $65 per month. Call: 864-2035 2-2 ROOMMATE fourth girl needed for Towerings. Towers窗户 on top, pay position of monthly payment. Campus available Now 843-724-2-3 One male roommate (or female!) to share apartment. Contact 842-3028 late afternoon and evening 2-52 Hired wanted, male or female Infirmary Technician employing employees. Qualified to apply for shortshard, plus typing at 80 wpm. Registered Nurse. Surveys US N 4-4422. Mexican-American students from Kansas City to earn $40 for an undergraduate degree and mortality of relatives. Under one gov't petition, 864-349 for 7-7 Help Wanted: Part-time 2 second semester and full-time summer job for packers and transporters. Demonstrated only apply. Write, giving brief description of job responsibilities. Ethan A. Smith Moving and Storage, Inc. Roommate wanted to share 5 bed- room house with nine. Move in immediately. Call for help. 842-7016 1735 Lexington. Call Dick. 842-7016 Wanted A-1 top quality, "fede and heads" competitors for two-man-taem championship tournament. Call Rit at 842-3231. 2-3 Female roommate for beautiful two bedroom completely furniture. Meadbrook apartment. Private room. Phone: 843-5518 per 28 hrs. Call: 843-5518 1 or 2 female roommates Will offer a discount on the contracts Call Diane Oldberg, 843-599-27-7 Bruthers in Christ, or men interested to play on a "Jesus" basketball team, independent A league in intramural sports. "set in touch," Dave Lee, 843-610-697 FOR RENT WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester - 1-bedroom apartment, 1-bath furnished or unfurnished Central a.c. dishwasher, w.w carport, stainless steel kitchen. Apartment(s). The Place to live in Burnetville. Catch 24 hours a day at 880-360. DRIVE-IN AND COOP IN LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 843-5304 Apartment—newly decorated—one bedroom furnished—walled to wall carpeting—1] blocks from Union. Phone 843-5767. tt 2 apts. for rent 3 blocks from campus Contact Paul Brungardi, 842- 3348 2-2 CSC 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 Competition Sports Cars Inc. Independent COIN Laundry & Dry Cleaners COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 days per week COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th 842-9450 RAMADA INN 842-2323 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free hour insurance. Swimming privileges. For rent—one or two bedroom apts, an condition room, garaged, dry facility, dry facilities, color T V available. Call 800-327-4591 for Auckland Acquisitions 84th and Ridge Court. Ridger House Ack—for the budget home and the maximum features at best, and the maximum at least 1 and 2 bedrooms, and duplexes. Price: $7,000. For details see Cotdairwood-1 for details on Bedroom Ack. One room apartment. Cooking facilities. $75.00 per month. Utilities paid. 1234 Term. Ground front—M. Hagerman. 842-198. 2-7 Two apartments for rent three blocks from campus Contact Paul Brungardt 842-5348 2-3 Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. From black south of Wavney, WA-931-1168. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, carpet- ing, dishwashers, and air-conditioning .2 block from KU stadium, Married .3 block from 105 Minneapolis, 842-667-2 1 To rent immediately: 2 bedroom, unfurnished or furnished at Ridgeline. Take over pre-rate increase lease, $145 max, all utilities: 824-7084 - 2 Female intimate wanted to share a room house with two girls. Upset bedroom, large yard, expensive Petu furniture, utility spaces, city parking Call Katy, 813-7272 Room for rent. Need girl to share house $55. Utilities included. 842. 5768 2-7 FOR SALE University terrace and old milt apartments. A limited number of one and two bedrooms for immediate occupancy (distance for immediate occupancy) Walking distance to KU Call 843-1433 or come by car. Western Civ. Notes-Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it. 1. If you use them, looking at the word. HILTVIEW APARTMENTS — 1733-45 bedroom furnished and unfurnished bedroom furnished and unfurnished kitchen, A/C, all家具 room with impressive apartments Best wine selection 2. If you don't $t_2$. Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8808. tf Either way, a faithful bridge Father way, the same analysis of "New York's Analysis of Western Civilization" Campus Madhouse, 41 West 14th. 61 We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumph. Competition Sears Carrs, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-2191. 2-18 Now you can buy stereo components at FACTORY COST plus 10* Handling at RAU AUDIO M24-284742 discount house in the midwest. 3-28 Northside Shop, 707 North 3. blocks north of River Bridge shop, 814 Northside store, old wood cooking and heating stoves, housey fireplaces, wood stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, plumbing fixtures, other useful items. Open to 5. 25 days. Herb Albergen. Box 82- 3159 71) Mach 1, power steering, brakes, air, automatic, machines, wide airs, hugs Huna feels, looks better. Also Huna has a rear suspension. Shipped on Call 842-7011 Mamiya TLR 2, lens 80mm F-4.7 Mamiya TLR 56, Taken 120/280 and sheet film. Plus aluminum waterproof film. Sr plus slr film 834-8472, David STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES --- CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Events Crescent Moon (2) 2324 Ohio Lawrence, Kansas 66044 FOR YOUR Medical, Chemical, Scientific, Graphic & Commercial 913 843-9275 913 842-0025 Cheapest liberal education in town, Harvard Classics. The five-floor shelf of books its fifty-sixth edition offers. Sold out! for $90, 842-354-254 any time. Pull-tire, shaggy, Hungarian sheepdogs, puppies, AKA. Males at reduced price. Also: pull-oil English cushion oil. $6. McLouth, Kansas, 294-298 291 2 Lucas 33.4" diameter high intensity driving lights, 80,000 candle power each. Brackets, fusees, wirs and chargers included. Call 801-495-9844 2.4 Call 801-495-9854 Snow tires: 835-14 Tubeless w/w. barely used. Call 834-0435 2-7 STOCK CLEARANCE SALE-10-50- off on entire stock of stacks—jeans- tops and belts, where Belt 3 THE WEA- HOUSE, of course. B411; Mass. 2-8 69 VW=excellent condition, low mileage, snow tires, must well to stay in school Make offer 842-2944 2-7 10 speed bike (Rolls) Like now — $45 Porche 912 (Rolls) - system $45, green desk and chair (wooden) puits 2-piece seat - each $18, bauer 3-piece seat - each $18, 3 piece sectional sofa, $125; 4 chair dillette set, $60. Both in excellent condition. 1025 Miss. Apt. #1, 842- 8067 881 Equipment Head, giant step, 800 cm. with· look-Nevada step; in-hindings $9.00 Large books, plastic sheets, light sleight, right step. 842-3582 852-27 1930 Road-Runner 440-6 pack-bur- hurst four-speed drag-racer m=2,000 miles=xcellent shape $2,000 842 4768 2-7 New Magnavox component system with two extended speakers cut to $88.00 at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass Open Thurs. evening. 2-7 The Consignment cells used in instruments and equipment. Give us a call and find out. 842-6623 2-7 Used powerful 20 watt Motorola portable stereo-sold new at $149-$99. First $0.05 take it. Ray Stoneback's 2-7 N29 Mass. '68 Camaro, 327 cu. in. Excellent condition, $1.275.00. 843-0634 2-4 Auto Foreign Import, 63 Jaguar XKE, hardtop豪装, 200 miles since 1974 $147, Packard Wodd, 9500 W. B-2. Pack, Topkick, Phone 913-872-1256 F-SH 1958 Rambler, clean body and interior. Runs good. Excellent heater and radio. $175. Please call after six. 846-253-63. All Demirats. 2-8 For sale, Baldwin externally amputator and Baldwin core organ. Equipment is in excellent shape but appears to be worn. Call p.m. 434-529 after call. NUTTY CLOTHIES at BOKONON 189 wurtters, skirts,卫衣s, dresses and darks overalls, sweaters, skirt cups, quilts, pants. T-shirts 819 Verners. Open 11-6 SANDWICH SHOP New Kenwood KR3130 AMP Duel. 1215 Turblet $^{10}$ speakers. Cash or take over payments. 843-615-27-7 SANDWICH SHOP Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order 841 7435 — We Delivery 9th & 11th THE HILL in the WALL 843 8500 SENIORS!! Call immediately for appointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE 摄像师 Hixon Studio Ph. 843-0330 10 a.m.-5 p.m THE LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place sirloin We sure you will find many more offers here. The优惠 offered in the field of qualified services are one of the largest incentives. Only the best of the high choice stores are included. Among Our Specials Break and Snack with the Combination (Plus Magnus in Latte Two) His Art Admires - Try It and Use It. Our motto is and has always been "There is no substitute for excellence." Systems In Wide Rows of Black Tapestry Birds we are Building Dancing DISCOUNT DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS --- 928 Mass 8 Wednesday, February 2, 1972 University Daily Kansan Prof Hopes for Grant to Aid Recycling By ROBERT E. DUNCAN Ross E. McKenzie, professor of civil engineering and a member of the University of Kansas School of Law, Tuesday he would apply for a federal research grant to expand Center's recruitment and declamation Center's operations. McKinney will request approximately $40,000 from the Federal Environmental Protection Agney to continue the present phase of operations, as well as to study the entire field and research involvement in the Lawrence community. One of the reasons for requesting a grant was the Reclamation Center will have to vacate its present location in The Emporium already has $1,000 to return to students from books sold it reopened Jan. 17. Gordon Goulden, Topeka sophomore and manager of the billing service, said recently. The Emporium is a book exchange sponsored by the Student Bookstore with general reading textbooks, general reading materials and supplemental recommended readings for students. The Empire Library at the Jahawer Office in the Kansas Union and is open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Saturday. The current and projecte- income of the Kansas Unior Bookstore is slowly decreasing because sales are not increasing by a large margin. Operat- ing costs are. J. D. Crestman, management of th Student Profits At Emporium Reach $1,000 Students wishing to sell used books for next semester should file book titles at the Empirium. Students who wish to be given then given to prospective buyers. Books that will not be used next year should be made available for purchase. Memorial Stadium by June 30 By JEAN MORGAN Korean Staff Writer Bookstore's Income Slowly Decreasing Each student sets his own prices for the books he wants to sell. The Union Bookstore returns on Tuesday and pays for course students pay for book Gooden said. However, students make 50 to 75 per cent off on books sold by the Union Bookstore. Golden said all students who had used the Emporium had seemed happy with the returns they had received on their books. "The Emporium is more successful than I figured it would by." Goulden said. "I need just a few minutes to really get on its feet." Kansas Union Concessions, which has jointly sponsored the center with the Student Senate, will occupy the space beginning Union Bookstore, said Friday, has nearly reached the bookstore's percentage profits have been decreasing as the costs of the retail business have increased. MKINENY SAID, "The federal government is not interested in recycling and recycle I am very interested to see us do our best to develop a system." A report of the bookstore's working capital and cash flow needs for the next five years said that the sales volume had leveled off the past two years. The report also noted that doing well to increase sales volume two per cent each year. A possible decrease in annual sales volume is expected if the present trend continues, some college students presently showing no growth as compared to previous years. The report said that with very little increase in sales volume and with increased costs, the store's response to the "ensured" has to shrink. When it shrinks, the distribution of the bookstore earnings for students' benefits such as the patronage programs and the reserve for expansion, suffers. The income of distribution during 1971-72 is expected to be $148,000 and, by 1974-75, it is expected to be $185,266. The costs of items for resale continue to go up, and corresponding retail price increases are not always applicable. Higher costs will increase as new minimum wage laws are approved, and labor unions and employees exert pressure for employers to take other expenses normally keep pace with the economic climate. The working capital needs for each of the next five years have to be a minimum of $7,000 and should be $100,000, the report said. However the working capital based on current practices for profit distribution. Priorities will have to be established for the student participation in any distribution of bookstore profits. The institution that there will be any profits to disburse from year to year. Federal funds could be provided under the Solid Waste Disposal Act of 1970. This act was passed in 1970 to address the area of recycling and reuse. The grant would provide for continued center operations and for a basic analysis of the economic, social and governmental influences that affect the waste of solid waste reclamation. The Reclamation Center has operated at a deficit. KU Concessions absorbed the $24,066 loss in January through December 1971. United States who had been able to make a profit from solid wastes. "THERE HAS been a tendency for people to make improper corrections, but erroneously indicate that people waste." McKinley said. "McKinley wastes." A portion of the proposed study would evaluate the economic aspect of the Reclamation Center's operations. He said he knew of no one in the A report on the operations of the KU Reclamation Center since the opening of the Center in January 2015, the goal has been to inform and involve as high a percentage of the total Lawrence population as possible. Gary Jacobs, Shawne Mission sophomore and director of the Reclamation Center, said, "We've fulfilled our purpose." He adds, "I think in terms of making reclamation a municipal or county system. "There is not a great deal of interest in recycling. If we could find a way to do it on a city-wide basis that is relatively economical, I don't think we would." JACOBS CITED the experience of an instructor in an illustration of community acceptance. Students bring cans and bottles to school each day; then the Center transports these items to the stadium for recycling. The scope of higher education in the Midwest may be broadened considerably in the future as a result of new organizations as the Mid-America State University Networks recently announced a 4-month study of cooperative programs of study at the University of Kansas, Iowa State University, Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University, the University of Iowa and the University of Missouri. The purpose of programs of cooperative study is to "find ways in which we can cooperate so that we can use their resources more efficiently" according to W. J. Lewis, dear of research administration Study Programs See Expansion A limited number of cooperative programs of study already exist between MASUA members. They allow students to attend a university and a desired program to attend a university in a participating state that has the desired program. The student would pay no more in enrollment fees than he did in hire from which he transferred. Cooperative study programs and design programs of study throughout the Midwest and to help reduce the need for quality of education. "As education becomes so very expensive and graduate work takes more time and equipment," cooperative programs of education will become more necessary as academic accreditation dean of the Graduate School. Computer Courses Set KU Freshmen To Have Party Friday Night The first freshman class party is scheduled for 9 p.m. Friday in the National Guard Armory. Freshman who have purchased freshman class cards will be given $1.50 for students without class cards will be $1.50. Free beer, pretzels and potato chips will be served. Nine Westburg Band will perform. Freshman class cards will be sold at the door for $4. Dear Members of the University Community: Chancellor Chalmers has appointed a Search Committee to recommend candidates to him for the positions of Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs and Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate Studies. The Chancellor believes that these positions should be filled by persons presently on the K.U. staff or by persons with recent K.U. experience. The Search Committee invites suggestions for these positions. Please submit your recommendations in writing to the chairman of the Search Committee by Wednesday, Feb. 9. Candidates Sought Sincerely, RONALD CALGAARD Chairman, Vice Chancellor Search Committee 206 Strong Hall MEET S.U.A. 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Feb. 3 Big 8 Room lot of hope. Bring your program ideas, talk with the SUA Board, sign up to participate this spring. MEET S.U.A. Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE INSTITUTE 1618 W.23rd The Computation Center will offer four short courses during the spring semester. The non-credit courses are offered free, and the students have access to the computer for class assignments and some class use. HAMBURGERS 15¢ 100% U.S.D.A. Insp. Beef THE SACK LUNCH GIANT HAMBURGER 96¢ FRENCH FRIES 96¢ ONION RINGS 20' DRINK Jacobs did not know to where the center would move, but was confident that a new location could be found. It Is a $1.14 Value 96¢ FOR ONLY 96' 96¢ The courses offered are: FORTRAN IV, 2:30 to 4 p.m. FORTRAN V, 1:00 to 4 p.m. Feb 15 to April 6: FORTRAN IV 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday and Thu “If we don't get the funds,” McKinsey said, “then we will look at alternative situations.” And the president of the federal grant offered the center a Persons interested in working at the Reclamation Center can contact Jacobs. He said sorting equipment for delivery at the stadium would help considerably in their work, but it was the most expensive process. sdays from Feb. 29 to April 27: girls GE-FRCF, 3:0 to 4:0 p.m. mondays Wednesday and Tuesday from Feb. 14 to April 17; and Computer Communication, 2:30 to 3:20 p.m. Tuesday from Feb. 15 to May 9. THE FORTRAN IV Exam No. 1 will be given to 7 in 9 p.m. on Monday, April 10, in 409 Sum- merfield. Stock Clearance Sale to Make-way for our Remodeling . . . Yes, we must sell our entire stock of over two thousand pair of slacks and tops to prepare for our complete remodeling of the Wearhouse, and while we're getting ready to beautify our store, you can beautify your expenses on clothes with savings like these . . . Reductions from 10% to 50% Slacks-Jeans corduroys denims twills cotton suede Tops fancy stripes solids Belts Suspenders Male—Caribou—H.I.S.—Brentwood—Himalaya THE WEARHOUSE 841⅓ MASS. H ROCK CHALK REVUE Tryouts In-Between-Acts Singers & Dancers Tryouts will be on Thursday Feb. 3 from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the Dance Studio at Robinson Gym COLD THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas 82nd Year, No. 77 Sierra Club Fights Against Channelization Thursday, February 3, 1972 See Page 3 Kansas Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG [Image of three individuals seated at a desk, illuminated by a spotlight. They appear to be engaged in an intense discussion or presentation.] Senate-House Budget Group Hears Witnesses . . . Custmiers asked for increased funds for higher education . . . Chalmers, Rieke Protest Cuts KU Officials Speak At Budget Hearing By PAUL SWEARINGEN Kansan Staff Writer Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and Dr. William O. Rieke, vice chancellor for health affairs, represented the Senate House Ways and Means Center Wednesday before a joint hearing of the Senate-House Ways and Means Committee in Topeka. Both spoke in defense of the proposed budget for fiscal 2016 and applauded for restoration of slashed funds. Chalmers, Rieke, other state school administrators and Paul R. Wunsch, chairman of the Board of Regents, discussed the situation posed to state-funded universities and colleges from the budget cuts by Governor Decking. WUNSCH SAID Kansas had undergone a continuous erosion of its per capita support Recommending a one-step increase for classified employees at five state schools, Wunsch said they were the only state employees who had not received merit increases with the exception of those in social welfare. Classified employees at Pittsburgh already have received increases. Draft Exposure Risky, Kackley Says By RON WOMBLE Kansan Staff Writer Those students who dropped their student deferments the last few days of 1971 to minimize their chances of induction were dismissed, and an assistant dean of men, said Wednesday. By dropping their student deferments, the men placed themselves in an extended priority group in which they were exposed to the draft for the first 90 days of 1972. If at the end of the 90 days the man's number has not been reached or no draft call has been issued, he passes into the first priority group. There is little likelihood of ★ ★ ★ March 6,7 Picked 1,2; Low Call Predicted WASHINGTON (AP) — By rare coincidence, March 6 drew No. 1 in Wednesday's draft lottery and the following day, March 7, No. 2, putting men born those days in 1933 first in line for next year's callup. In the safest spot with the highest numbers were those born July 13 with No. 365 and Sept. 9 with No. 364. But draft numbers from these years to fall far below the 125 of last year. The gamble students took may be paying off because recent official announcements indicate that no men will be drafted until after April 1, 1972. Draft Director Carter W. Tarr started the drawing by saying, "We do not as yet know where to start." "Nor," he said, "do we know as yet what the call will be for the remainder of 1972, but we do expect calls to be lower than they have been in recent years." induction for those in the first priority group. Secretary of Defense Melyrin L. Laird has and there will be no calls at least until Auschwitz. Inside, the atmosphere was more relaxed than in past years, apparently because this could be the last year for a lottery that counts. In contrast to the first three draft lotteries, there were no protesters outside the Commerce Department auditorium, where the lottery was held. There are plans to hold a stand-by lottery next year for those turning 19 years The administration hopes to have all volunteer army by June 30, 1973, when the Army will be disbanded. Although a large number of men would have been able to drop their deferments and take their chances in the first three months of 1972, Kackey said that if "10 took the chance at KU, it was a good sized number." The lottery Wednesday affects only men turning 19 this year. Those in previous lotteries will keep their numbers until they are no longer eligible to be drafted. The danger in the action, Kackley said, was that it was "inurredly done and it went unnoticed." Stan Martin, Abelle senior, dropped his student determent on December 31, 1971. He complained of the lack of information young men had about their opportunities. He believed the possibility of dropping his determent until he read it in the newspaper on Dec. 30. Martin said, "It was too late to let all my friends know then. "When I first heard about it I thought, "It wasn't like we pulled one over on men (the Selective Service System). They were going to pull me over." "It's too good to be real", I tried to find reasons." Martin thought part of the motive may have been political. He cited the 1972 riot against police. "It was the perfect political move," he said. Martin, Kackley and Bill Cutter, counselor for the Lawrence Peace Center, all agreed that the Selective Service System can be very complicated. The status of those who dropped their cases at the end of 1971 is such a case. Cutter and Kackley explained that the order of induction was: Volunteers; extended priority group, Subgroup A; volunteers for groups B and C; first priority group; second priority group. Cutler explained subgroup A as those "who were 1-A" (no deferment and eligible for military service) and would have been inducted, but anopecated." Subgroup B, he said, consisted mainly of those who dropped their deferments on Dec. 31, 1971 and had no appeal in progress. All three men urged who have any doubt about their draft status to contact a counselor. Kackley said that someone seeking draft counseling often needed to ask for an appointment, including the Selective Service System, and listen to whomever sounded the most reliable. they decide whether they will remain with the Kansas institutions or accept the offers that have been generated elsewhere," Chalmer said. Dr. Rieke spoke of fund cutbacks in three areas: land acquisition, salaries for unclassified employees, and expansion of the medical faculty. He said the Kansas Endowment Association had purchased and held land in the past for the KU Medical Center until state funds had been obtained, but the Endowment Association had extended its resources maximally and provided additional assistance in fiscal year 1973. If the ambition of the state legislators were merely to place KU at the median rank of AAU salaries, a 16 per cent increase in assistant professors' salaries would be needed. If the professors' salaries would be needed, he said. The Board of Regents recommended an eight per cent increase in KU KGL faculty Docking cut this figure to five per cent. AS FOR INCREASES for unclassified employees, Rieke said that last year only a one per cent increase was provided and the average annual increase for fiscal year 1973 would bring only a three percent average increase for the two years because of inflation. As an example of the salary problem, Rieke cited the case of the assistant principal at Center whose salaries rank below the mean of similar professors in all U. S. schools. He urged the restoration of the eight per cent increase recommended by the Regents to prevent erosion of quality at these institutions for twelve new faculty positions recommended by the Regents. Funds for only three out of fifteen positions were recommended by Governor Docking, and 21 positions for residents and interns were not recommended by the governor. CALMERS SAID that of the 27 A. A. U. institutions KU is ranked 26th in average salaries of assistant professors and last for salaries of associate and full professors. WUNSCH STRESSED that the Regents had given highest priority to a new joint Ph.D. program in computer science at K.U. and K-State, saying its cost $10,000 was minimal, yet the concept was a new one in shared resources instead of duplicated programs. He also said the Board of Regents felt the appropriation of funds from the educational building fund for new buildings and maintenance an unwise practice and that the fund should be reserved for the construction of new buildings. "WE FEEL that this position we presently occupy is an extraordinarily sensitive and dangerous one. There are far too many faculty members who now have, or shortly expect to have, backup job duties which are a particular moment to accept them and leave, but they are looking very closely to the decisions of state government before The Finance and Auditing Committee decided Wednesday night to recommend that the Student Senate allocate $1200 to the University Daily Kansan to finance an expansion of the summer paper. The Board's original request was for $2400. The proposed expansion would increase the number of issues published in the summer months from two to four a week and the number of pages from four to eight BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sadat Seeks Kremlin Aid; Israel Favors Canal Talks President Anwar Sadat of Egypt arrived in Moscow Wednesday for military and political talks with Kremilin leaders as Israel agreed to participate in American-sponsored talks with Egypt on reopening the Suez Canal. During Sadat's visit to Moscow, his third in less than a year, he was expected to appeal for additional Soviet military troops from occupied Arab territory. an issue. The Finance and Auditing Committee based their action on the assumption that the $40,000 allocated to the Kansori fund would be available for a two-issue-a week summer Kansan. Finance Group Proposes Funds for Summer Kansan Del Brinkman, Kansan news advisor, said after the meeting Wednesday night that he said the "misunderstanding" use the $40,000 bill and not include the sums for the summer issues. The Israeli decision was announced following a special two hour Cabinet session in Jerusalem. Foreign Minister Abba Eban said his government was taking talks "aimed at reaching a special agreement on the reopening of the Suez Canal." The group also was told it was receiving increasing support for its activities from many other campus organizations. These groups included the Owl Society, Student Senate, CWENS, Mortar Board, University Council, Freshman Council, Council and the Freshman Class. Plans for distributing freshman sticker supplies supplied by the Freshman Class also were discussed. The featured speaker for the evening, state Sen. Dave Owen, R-Johnson County, was forced to cancel his appearance because of bad weather. The group instead held a town hall on Thursday, business affairs, and Martin L. Jones, director of the University budget office. state colleges and universities. Literature forming form letters and addresses of most newspapers in Kansas was distributed. The Concerned Students for Higher Education in Kansas gathered at the Kansas Union Wednesday evening to discuss new ways of "getting out the word" about the decline of funds for higher education in Kansas. David Miller, Eudora senior and student body president, reported that students at the other state colleges and universities also were being urged to write their representatives and senators about the need for institutional support for higher education in Kansas. Members of the organization agreed that emphasis should be placed on bringing members of the state legislature, now in session, to inform informal talks and dinners with students. Sadat has rejected U.S. mediation efforts in seeking a Middle East solution since the United States decided to supply additional Phantom tets to Israel. Students to Meet Budget Legislators THE GROUP was told that not only letters from Lawrence to Topka were needed, but letters from Lawrence to cities across the state urging parents, residents, media leaders and members of the community to help secure more money for the By LARRY CHRIST Kansan Staff Writer Plans were discussed for encouraging residence halls, fraternities, sororites and scholarship halls to host discussions with legislators and students. IT WAS announced that Rep. Raymond Vaughn, R-Burlington and chairman of the House Education Committee, and three of his colleagues would be on campus to meet with leaders of the Governor's Room in the Union. They hope to participate in informal discussions with students, faculty and interested Lawrence residents. Other committee members will be at all other state colleges and universities that same day. In Washington, officials acknowledged they had been notified of the Israeli decision, but declined to comment on it. One State Department specialist said in previous reports that Egyptian cooperation is the next immediate goal and a difficult one. A foreign Ministry spokesman was not rule out the possibility of the visit, but said, "We have no information about a visit by Jarrine at this time." In Cairo, an official spokesman said Wednesday that any Israeli decision would be made in the final months. He will try to rejuvenate indirect speech talks for an overall settlement to the Middle East conflict, which broke down a year ago. The official emphasized the administration position that neither Israel nor Egypt was doing the United States a favor by agreeing to talk to each other. Jarring will visit Israel and Egypt later this month, the state radio report indicates. Gumar V. J. Irraward before the Egyptian government would comment of it. U. N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim will review the latest developments in the management of the virus. BUS STOP Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THRON Christina Steffey, Overland Park junior, waits for bus in front of Strong Hall on a shadowless, blustery Groundhog Day. 2 Thursday. February 3,1972 University Daily Kansan BASE PRICE INFORMATION INFORMATION REGARDING THE LAWFUL BASE PRICE FOR ANY ITEM WILL BY THIS STORE NOT POSTED MAY BE OBTAINED BY FILLING IN A BASE PRICE INFOR- MATION REQUEST FORM AVAIL- ABLE AT CHECK OUT COUNTER AND BY HANDING IT TO ONE OF OUR SALES PERSONS YOU WILL RECEIVE A PROMPT REPLY. Karan Photo by JIM EATON Customer Disregards Price Guards Customer Disregards Price Guard Price list in book is required by Phase II! Director Answers Questions on Draft WASHINGTON (AP) —Are some of the questions that 19-year-olds involved in their dryer's drive-up night ask and the available answers: Q. What is the highest number expected to be called in 1973? Q. If I don't get drafted under this lottery what happens? A. You keep the number you received as long as you're posed up to age 25. If you are not drafted next year and are IA 14 you drop into a less vulnerable category on Dec. 31 and can't be posed up to age 25. In an emergency such as World War II, if you have a deferment and keep it you are vulnerable to a draft; if there is one, in the year you drop Q. If I am drafted when might I be called? A. You have to be given at least 30 days notice to report. Q. How do your chances in this lottery compare with my chances if I had been in last year's lottery? A. Your chances of being drafted are considerably less. Q. Are there any prospects for a Volunteer Army? Q. What about the next lottery? A. Plants are now to hold standby even though the draft authority probably will expire. Plants at this time are to give the usual number of plants to xams to men with low numbers. A. President Nixon is sticking by his promise of a zero draft by 2015, but he will have come into being to try to achieve this. There were two pay raises for some of the leaders, especially for low rankers. The military is trying to provide training conditions for burracks for many of the old chores, such as KP and grass-cutting, are being turned over to commercial growers. Q. Now that they are giving no more student deferments what sort of deferment may I get? A. The principal one is for hardware, deferments for those who join Reserve components, although some limits have been placed on them. Q. I do not have a student college and will graduate in June 2013. If my draft number comes up in January, or February, what is the next year? A You'll be permitted to graduate before being called. Base Price Lists Ignored By CHRIS CARSTENSON Local consumers apparently are not concerned about the possibility of being deceived by Lawrence retail merchants. A recent poll showed that no consumers had filled out request forms, which required store manager to check the base price of an item. Since Jan. 1, local stores doing at least $200,000 worth of business a year have been required under Phase II to post signs informing customers of the need for base price information Since that time, however, few local consumers have bought a product at the price, a random poll of Lawrence retail managers indicated. Basically, base价信息 information is checked to check what a product was selling for under the 90-day价 wage-free freeze as compared to its present price. THE POSTING of price information falls into two categories. A basic requirement, for example, is that a price list be stated that a price list for the top 30 selling items in a store 'must be easily accessible to the customer and must not require excessive effort' for access to the information." For all other store items, the base price is obtained by filling out a request form. The store is notified of the request when the request within 48 hours. The poll showed that no price information slips had been filled out, and only a small percentage of store customers had bothered to look through the list containing the most popular of the store's top 10 selling items. THE POLL also found that the retail mail are frustrated with the lack of information available to government a post-freeze guidelines AN ANHY : 1 , 150 , 2 , 22 , 3 , 42 , 4 , 8 , 34 , 18 , 149 , 137 , 126 , 115 , 104 , 93 , 82 , 71 , 69 , 68 , 67 , 66 , 65 , 64 , 63 , 62 , 61 , 60 , 59 , 58 , 57 , 56 , 55 , 54 , 53 , 52 , 51 , 50 , 49 , 48 , 47 , 46 , 45 , 44 , 43 , 42 , 41 , 40 , 39 , 38 , 37 , 36 , 35 , 34 , 33 , 32 , 31 , 30 , 29 , 28 , 27 , 26 , 25 , 24 , 23 , 22 , 21 , 20 , 19 , 18 , 17 , 16 , 15 , 14 , 13 , 12 , 11 , 10 , 9 , 8 , 7 , 6 , 5 , 4 , 3 , 2 , 1 , 0 , -1 , +1 1973 Lottery Calendar February 1, 2023 1, 22 2, 78 3, 54 4, 68 9, 60 2, 71 7, 1, 84 1, 132 10, 161 11, 216 12, 227 17, 46 17, 11, 19, 127 10, 201 16, 216 18, 247 19, 251 23, 258 26, 251 27, 31 7 One store manager said that the only real source of information was the news media local chamber of commerce. APH1, 1.2, 1.2, 204, 3, 104, 4, 30, 254, 6 HP, 7.153, 1.2, 1.2, 204, 3, 104, 4, 30, 254, 13, 169, 148, 11, 154, 342, 17, 153, 184, 252 IM, 18, 204, 11, 154, 342, 17, 153, 184, 252 JM, 204, 11, 154, 342, 17, 153, 184, 252 MARCH 1, 2023, 2, 30, 22, 42, 27, 45, 6, 74, 8, 7. 1, 7. 2, 13, 8, 9, 10, 31, 11, 31, 12, 6, 14, 43, 7, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 14, 35, 20, 26, 21, 26, 21, 26, 21, 27, 12, 27, 27, 27 When Phase II went into effect Price Commission said it aimed at keeping the average of all post-retirement increases down to 2.5 per cent or less. 337, 17, 145, 8, 201, 7, 16, 100, 11, 607, 12, 115 1377, 7, 164, 8, 201, 7, 16, 100, 11, 607, 12, 115 143, 7, 144, 234, 12, 101, 11, 607, 12, 115 122, 18, 218, 12, 292, 18, 29, 123, 13, 30, 14 122, 18, 218, 12, 292, 18, 29, 123, 13, 30, 14 21, 8, 262, 12, 292, 18, 29, 123, 13, 30, 14 19, 18, 95, 14, 16, 36, 12, 32, 18, 328, 19, 52 18, 19, 95, 14, 16, 36, 12, 32, 18, 328, 19, 52 23, 27, 330, 12, 292, 18, 29, 123, 13, 30, 14 23, 27, 330, 12, 292, 18, 29, 123, 13, 30, 14 According to Bob Zimmerman, chairman of the Retail Area Development Committee of the Consumer Commerce, the base price listing is especially effective in attracting companies that have marketed J1,I,J 1.19 1.20 2.97 3.10 4.92 6.18 10.6 J1,I,K 1.19 1.20 2.97 3.10 4.92 6.18 10.6 J1,I,L 1.19 1.20 2.97 3.10 4.92 6.18 10.6 J1,I,M 1.19 1.20 2.97 3.10 4.92 6.18 10.6 19.32 20.31 20.31 2.22 28.16 25.44 23.24 19.32 20.31 20.31 2.22 28.16 25.44 23.24 19.32 20.31 20.31 2.22 28.16 25.44 23.24 AUGUST 1, 1 323, 2 7, 2 7, 3 7, 4 3, 113, 6 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 113, 12 3, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, 20 56, FITMERMAN 1, 21, 19, 19, 21, 19, 21, 19, 21, 19, 21, 19, 21, 19, 21, 19, 21, 19, 21, 19, 21, 19, 13, 12, 13, 12, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 13, 23, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 19, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 19, 19, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 19, 19, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 23, 19, 19, 19, 19, OCTOBER 1, 123, 125, 2, 13, 14, 15, 133, 4, 79, 8, 56 1, 28, 128, 8, 157, 8, 127, 3, 102, 125, 127, 127 1 2047 32768 512 1024 214 324 323 430 8 NVMMEE1 96 1024 128 160 192 216 240 276 304 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 18 19 19 20 21 20 21 20 21 20 21 20 21 16 16 19 20 21 20 21 20 21 20 21 20 21 DECEMBER 14, 1972 17:00 2, 30 4, 620, 51 8, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 19, 16, 18, 20, 19, 21, 24, 28, 21, 28, 23, 24, 25 19, 16, 20, 19, 21, 28, 21, 28, 23, 24, 25 TOPEKA (AP) — The Kansas Senate Wednesday gave preliminary approval to a bill to increase the age of juveniles from 18 to 16. State Senate Passes Bill To Lower Juvenile Age - Require county tax assessors appointed after Jan. 1, 1974, to be qualified and certified by the director of property valuation. —Create a joint review revenue commission to review the state budget director's estimate of revenue. Sen. Bob Storey, R-Topka, sponsor of the bill, spoke that he wanted to note that no permanent facility (factors were available and that the bill would throw 16 and 17 year old children in with "hardened criminals." Approval of the bill came after a motion to kill the bill was defeated on a 2(1)-15 roll call. Bills introduced in the Senate included ones which would: - Establish a law enforcement county to make recommendations for more efficient utilization of law enforcement facilities and resources. —Prohibit certain retaliatory actions against tenants by landlords. —Reduce the 11 cents tax on a package of cigarettes to eight cents. Presently, the Kansas juvenile code prohibits prosecution of persons under 18 years of age and adults who are certified as adults by the courts. AS TO THE EFFECTIVE NELS® of base price information restraining local businessmen, helping them compete with what it was today, he competition what it was today, the willful abuses" of the guidelines Pete Whitenight, chairman of Under provisions of the bill, only persons under age 16 could be considered juveniles in court and would be barred. Also, 17 could be prosecuted as adults. the central Business District of the Chamber of Commerce, said there seemed to be no clear interpretation of the Price Commission's aim at extinguishing product price increases to 2.5 percent. V.C. Seek Thieu's Resignation, Withdrawal Date Before Talks TOPEKA (AP) — The Senate begins work Thursday morning on its plan to reposition the Senate and, possibly, reduce its SAIGON (AP)—The Viet Cong said Wednesday it could begin immediate discussions with the United States on the solution of the war if President Nguyen Van Thien resigned now to lead a team set a troop at thai warhead delay. in calling for Thieu's imposition. The National Liberation Front radio broadcast said, "Thieu and his oppressive machinery, instruments of the U.S. Vietnamization policy are a challenge" to a political solution. Robinson, an advocate of reducing the size of the legislature, said there was dm hope of the Senate to go along with the Senate plan. The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce has been trying to help by passing information it receives on to local businessmen. The Chamber also packages of base price information and information request slips. It said the United States, by setting a date for the complete withdrawal of all allied forces Kansas Senate To Undertake Reapportionment Sen. Jack W. Robinson, R-Wichita, Senate chairman, summoned his committee for an 8 a.m. meeting to begin work on a new apportionment plan for the Senate—following Gov. Robert Koehler's plan, and the House's subsequent inability to override the veto. In a letter to Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., Laird said he had ordered the closing postponed to at least the beginning of June pending further accounting for the General Accounting Office and for study of later date turned up by the GAO." The Senate effort comes amid indications there is scant chance of getting the House to go along in attempting to cut the size of the提案. and giving up all U.S. bases, could win freedom for the American pilots held in North Vietnam. The eight-point allied peace proposal disclaimed by President Nixon a week ago included a provision that Theun would resign in election, with a caretaker government to serve in the interim. It did not provide, however, for any dismantling of the government machinery, nor rule against Thieu as a candidate in the election. The broadcast called these demands the Nation in Liberation Front's seven-point plan for ending the war. The ittie in the Viet Cong's "If the two said conditions could be agreed upon, the other problems could be solved easily" the broadcast said. The broadcast said that once these requirements were met, the Viet Cong's provisional institution (international government), would be ready to discuss establishment of a "national recolonial government" to organize elections and an government for South Vietnam. In a preliminary study, GAO disputed the Army's claim it would save $2 million a year by closing the southeast Kansas facility. Closing the plant could result in higher transportation costs amounting to several additional dollars, the GAO said. portion of the proposed political solution, saying this would be only a repeat of last October's There was no doubt they won a second four year term. "I don't think the House can agree on anything right now," Robinson said. Parsons Plant To Stay Open Various Communist broadcasts and statements have indicated that this is the most objectionable Although the closing has been put off, Laird told Pearson there must be some immediate manpower reductions. THE FIRST MILITANT PREACHER CLARA'S OLE MAN THE ELECTRONIC NIGGER HAPPY ENDING Feb. 3-12 8 p.m. KU EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE 864-3982 I 1 --- ROCK CHALK REVUE In-Between-Acts Tryouts Singers & Dancers Tryouts will be on Thursday Feb.3 from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the Dance Studio at Robinson Gym : : MEET S.U.A. 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Feb. 3 Big 8 Room Bring your program ideas, talk with the SUA Board, sign up to participate this spring. MEET S.U.A. SAM'S CORNER OF 9th & MASS. HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS Coupons Good Thru Feb. 7th SAM'S SUPER COUPON K ALKA-SELTZER Bottle of 25 75c Size Limit 1 37¢ SAM'S SUPER COUPON K ALKA-SELTZER Bottle of 25 75c Size Limit 1 37¢ SAM'S SUPER COUPON K MICRIN MOUTHWASH 6 Oz. 89c Size Limit 1 12¢ SAM'S SUPER COUPON K ENVELOPES Box of 100 49c Size Limit 1 18¢ SAM'S SUPER COUPON K BOXED STATIONERY 1.25 Size Limit 1 42¢ SAM'S SUPER COUPON K TAMPAX Box of 10 Limit 1 26¢ SAM'S SUPER COUPON K SUDDEN BEAUTY HAIR SPRAY 16 Oz. Can 1.25 Size Limit 1 43¢ Use Kansan Classifieds Thursday, February 3. 1972 3 Man's Best Friend Helps Tries to warn Barry Martin, Oberlin junior, ice is slippery The Black Theatre will present "Four by Three in Black," four act-play, beginning at 8 tonight and running through Feb. 14. By JEAN MORGAN Kansan Staff Writer Black Theatre Opens Tonight; Reflects 'New Consciousness' Bond said the plays indirectly refuted the stereotypic view of the Afro-American projected through the mass media which usually had occupied the American stage since the 18th century. The first play, "The First Militant Preacher," by Ben Caldwell, borrows its theme from the story of a black preacher with a black preacher who changes his view of the world after a visit from God, who in reality is a burglary caught in the city. The preacher comes from the preacher's house. ALL FOUR PLAYS tell it like it is and make no apologies," Bond said. "These black playwrights say to it. Here it is. If you dig it, o. K. If you don't dig it, o. K. This is the way I see The four plays, all by Afro-Americans, were written in the past years. They reflect recent black consciousness," Horace Bond, a doctoral candidate in the department of the plays, and Wednesday. Mike Maleon, Raymond second, year law student and resident of Oakland, Calif., built Buildings and Grounds built the rink, which was intended main A new ice skating rink or campus is west of Templin Hall. Students whose studies keep them from skating through school may wish to take a break from the tedium and ice skate at some of the numerous ponds and be found to be in the Lawrence area. Skating Areas Prepared The ice skating spot probably most familiar to University of Kansas students is Potter Lake. "It is open to anyone, but it is just not big enough for everyone to skate on." "Malone said." most familiar to University of Kansas students is Potter Lake. Henry Shenk, professor of physical education, said a member of the physical education department checked the ice on Potter Lake for texture and a minimum thickness of four inches before posting a sign indicating the ice is safe for skating. Off-campus skating spots also attract students. Fred DeVictor, assistant director of Lawrence Parks and Recreation Committee, said two "LARA'S OLE MAN," by Ed Bullins, presents a view of a very unusual ghetto family. The head of the house, Big Girl, is an art collector and holds the family together by sheer strength and grit. The action of the play centers on a visit from Jack, a middle class girl with no discovers, to his surprise, the identity of "Clara's ole man." "The Electronic Nigger," also be BULLins, involves many of the students abused. The action takes place in an adult education class for creative writing. A black writer is written on an unsuccessful website, not being successful at hand at teaching. His first go well until Mr. Carpenter enters, a walking computer gone berserk. What follows best THE FOURTH PLAY, "Happy Ending," by Douglass Turner Ward does end happily. The play centers on a man and two black homesteads to the people they work for. "It should." Bond said, "throw some interesting light on how the old and the new Americans view the race problem." Bond said that the keynote of "Four by Three in Black," was variety. There is no longer a monolithic, black creative voice expressing the views of all black people. The plays give four examples of black experience in America. Coggins said the club would continue to oppose the project Coggins said the vote came after a long panel discussion at the club's monthly meeting. Senator John McCain, Huguins of the State Biological Survey, Dr. Raymond Hall, KU professor of systematics and ecology, Buford Watson, city barber, City Bar, Heck, chairman of the Douglas County Commission who spoke as a Lawrence citizen, and Don Boon, Phil Rotert, representing the Army Corps of Engineers. until the Corps had studies alternatives suggested by the local Sierra Club. In a channelization program, a stream is *widened* and a streambed is *deduced* along its banks. The theory of channelization is to have the channel bed drainage ditch to provide efficient water run-off during irrigation. All proposed alternatives require a building alternative proposed by the club would build a levee along a line of ridges between Mud Creek and Rock Creek. size to Potter Lake. BOND SAID the plays are being performed in the round for two reasons. The practical reason is to facilitate quick movement of scenery between the plays and the production also want to give the audience an opportunity to look at the plays as well as people's responses in the audience. The responses of white people to the play. Bond said, would be different from the responses of black people. The Lawrence Sierra Club voted unanimously Tuesday night to oppose $1 million project at Engineer College to channel mud Creek. DeVictor said the pond in Central Park was flooded every three or four days to allow for smoother skating. This winter Lawrence Senior High School and the junior high schools are offering places to maintenance department of the district is in charge of flooding the schools' tennis courts so the public may use them for skating. Lawrence Junior High, South Junior High, 2734 Louisiana; West Junior High, 2010 Harvard Road; Central High, 1805 Iowa State; and Lawrence Senior High, 2017 Louisiana. President Nixon, in his fiscal $1.323,000 for the North Lawrence Flood project. Most of this money will go for the Murdock Creek channel Peterson's Pond, located north of Hallmark, Inc. on Peterson Road, is also available for public use. Sierra Club to Oppose Mud Creek Channelization "We're not against protecting North Lawrence from floods," he said. "We are trying to group explained." "Everyone is for flood protection and everyone is for environmental protection, we agree with the present means." The Corps, in its environmental statement, admitted that channelization would lead to 'degradation of the associated fish and wildlife One pond is in Central Park, on Sixth and Tennessee streets. city ponds were available for ice skating. With this vote, the Sierra Club joins several other local organizations opposing the project. The project plan was formulated more than 18 years ago, as a means to protect North Lawrence. DeVictor said this was a private pond that the city had been granted permission to use. He said that it was comparable in Vandalism, Theft Recur in Tunnel Zumwalt, chief of naval operations, has gained national attention by curtailing many maritime activities and dressing personal life and dress. According to Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union, practically all the incidents which have occurred since the tunnel was built several years earlier were in which robbery was the motive ALL MARRIED STUDENTS You must re-enroll in Blue Cross Blue Shield this semester to have continuing coverage. required by at the Blue Cross- Blue Shield office 1200 Iowa. Suite C wrong. Admiral Elmo R. Zuwalt, father of the "new Navy" will speak at 7 p.m. Feb. 9, in Portsmouth. Visit www.vickers.com/delivery for the Vickers Lectureseries. The tunnel under Mississippi Street which links the Kansas Union with X parking zone has been closed to incidents of vandalism and theft. The most recent incident was the knifing and shooting of Robert Smith. Nixon appointed Zwennat when Zwennat became top captain four-star admiral and chief of operations in naval affairs. the idea of electronic surveillance such as closed circuit television in the tunnel because they thought such technology would privacy. Other methods which have been discussed, Burge said, were the use of mirrors or call boxes. These methods will likely work more easily later this month at the Union director and management meeting. However, Burge said, in comparison to recent rebenefices in the city, the work of the apartment during a semester break the tunnel problem was SUA Books Nitty Gritty Burge said that although the tunnel was now under surveillance most of the time, he could have been so solved by simply keeping the tunnel patrolled. He admitted that at the time of the robbery the security officer could not see the area was not in the tunnel. Burge said that a combination of conditions were necessary to keep the tunnel safe. He said the conditions were, proper care of the tunnel by the users, prompt notification of any incidents, and surveillance. Attention Attention! Navy Admiral To Talk Here Burge commented that students formerly had rejected Valedictorian of his high school in Taucalp, Calif., Zumwalt was taught by Mrs. G. Bale Price, new lecturer at KU, in Albuquerque. Tickets for the concert will go on sale at 8:30 a.m. Monday, in the SUA office in the Kansas Union. Ticket prices are $2.50, $3, and $3.50. There will be only one performance; 3700 tickets are available. The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, best known for their hit Dance of Joangles, will perform at p.m. Feb. 18 in Hoch Auditorium. The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's two latest albums are All the Good Times and Uncle Charles and His Dog Teddy. DITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND Friday Feb.18----8:00 p.m. THE APPLICATIONS must first be approved by the KU Graduate School, Wyman said, and then sent to NASPAA in (one performance only) Wyman said he hoped KU could recruit three to five qualified persons for the fellowship before the Feb. 14 deadline. Ticket Sales Begin Mon., Feb. 7 8:30-5:00 SUA Office 2.50,3.00,3.50 10 ticket limit per person on Feb. 7 Hoch Aud. 圣雷诺 圣雷诺 STAR WARS Urban Service Fellowship Aimed at KU Minorities Universities were chosen for the program by the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration (NASPAA). Schools chosen demonstrate best in help in meeting the needs of minorities who seek education in public administration. The University of Kansas was famously selected to participate in a program designed for the program in public administration for graduate students from universities across the nation. By GINNIE MICKE Kansan Staff Writer The program was initiated in February 1971 for a three year period. The goal is to produce at least 100 black, Chicago, Puerto Rican and American Indian top level leaders and makers in urban public service. WYMAN SAID the KU two-year graduate program included a one-year internship in urban public service. He attributed Lawrence in this field as a factor in helping KU's reputation. Sherman Wyman, assistant professor of political science and director of the Masters in Public Administration (MPA), said KU administration was because of its reputation and emphasis on urban management. WE'RE NUMBER ONE! Lawrence's Number One Health Club For Men. The Most Modern Physical Fitness Equipment 2323 RIDGE COURT Phone 842-4044 Massage Keep Fit at LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB 100 OPEN TUES 5-9 THURS 5-9 SAT 12-6 Washington for the final selection. The fellowship award will average about $3,000 a person for living expenses, cost of fees and services, a year for up to two dependents. The recruitment committee is composed of Philip Gary, director of urban affairs and liaison officer for the committee; Buford Watton, city manager; David E. Giles, dean of architecture and urban design; Duane Vann, Lawrence sophomore and Wyman. THE COMMITTEE'SRESPONSIBLE is to find qualified people with a commitment to a career in the arts and affairs and leadership potential. Wyman said that these fellowships would enable rather than discourage minority in a particular area. Wyman said KU had beer on the fellowship grant on the day of Recertification will probably depend on how many people are applying to their placement in jobs, he said. COUPON RIGHT GUARD ANTI-PERSPIRANT 5 oz. size Sale 87c Reg. $1.19 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 6 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management Reg. $1.47 42 pads Rep. $1,47 Sale 99 REXALL CONTACT LENSE You must present coupon with purchase Goodthu Feb.6 Wetting or soaking solution COUPON Now Under New Management Sale 77c Reg. $1.98 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 4 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS STRIDEX MEDICATED BADS Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS MacCLEANS TOOTHPASTE Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 5 oz. size Reg. 89c Sale 49¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good Thru Feb. 6 DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Managemen ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 247 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Manager Surplus BONANZA 400 pr ALL SIZES Seafarer Dungarees Reg. 6.98 4.98 Over 75 pr Reg. 5.98 Lee Jeans ONLY 3.00 Dacron 88 Insulated Underwear Reg. 10.00 NOW 5.00 Remaining Stock Pea Coats eg. 24.95 NOW 17.95 Lady Lee Shirts Permaprest Reg. 10.00 NOW 6.50 Lady Lee overalls Retail 13.50 ONLY 10.00 SAV Sunflower Surplus, Inc. E 815 Vermont NEW GOVT SURPLUS NOW 843-5000 4 Thursday, February 3. 1972 University Daily Kansan Garry Wills KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Docking's Office Writes Mr. Mike Moffet Associate Editor Dear Mr. Moffet: As a former student newspaper writer, appreciate the present and the future. Be responsible responsibility you have to fill 12 inches of space on the editorial page. But these pressures and demands are no excuse for blatantaccuracies. You have a right to provide your readers with fair comment and criticism; but you also have the power to comment and criticism on facts. To do otherwise only perpetuate the mistrust and disgust many newspaper readers, television stars and listeners have of the media today. Your editorial of January 19, "Two Per Cent Concern," is in response to the fact that you offers your readers a disservie. To be more specific, I call your attention to these errors which result in an inaccurate result. 1. You state: "Although Dana does not have his number one priority in the state is education, he has never on any occasion demonstrated a capacity for that." Consistently, since Governor Docking took office in 1967, education has been the number one priority of the Docking administration. And this statement is supported by statistics. Each year, the largest portion of his recommended budget has been allocated to education, research and libraries. More than 60 percent of his revenue fund (which the individual taxpayer contributes to through sales and income taxes) expenditures in the category are allocated to this category. More than 40 per cent of all funds is allocated to education, research and libraries—with the next largest appropriation being over half a cent of the overall buildup. The Governor's recommendations included $75.1 million from the state general fund. The increase of 60.1 per cent over the amount spent in fiscal year 1967 before he assumed office. The average increase during the years of the Docking Administration has been more than eight per cent. The Governor's recommendations for fiscal year 1973 totaled approximately $103 million from all general use sources because of the 63.1 percent the amount of money spent in fiscal year 1967. The commitments made by the Docking administration to higher education have led to an increase in the knowledge that while state appropriated (general use) funds grew 63 per cent in the five year period, the university enrollments grew only 20 per cent. These figures can be viewed in the state budget division of Kansas. To support the University of Kansas, Governor Docking recommended a budget that provided an overall increase in the amount over the amount Governor Docking recommended for fiscal year 1972; and for fiscal year 1972 included a supplemental budget $807,508 over the amount provided by the legislature last year. 2. "Over two and a half million dollars is recommended for salary increases to be awarded on a merit basis at an average of $15,000 per year; staff at the state colleges and universities. However, such raises are not to be awarded to faculty members who primarily do research and those that work for the extension services." 4. "our editorial proclamation that we pay cent increase for faculty members in research and extension." To say Governor Docking has not maintained education as a top priority is to ignore the facts. I am not sure where you could have received this kind of inaccurate information, but I remember the day when Journal-World, whose reporter bothered to check his statistics. Ralph Gage's article in the Journal-World of January 18 addressed budget for extension and research. Governor Docking recom mended a 4.4 per cent blanket increase for research and extension. The Governor did not dictate how the funds should be used but much of the increase should be used for research or how much of the increase should be used to faculty salary increases. The purpose of this study is to discern the discretion of the individual schools to determine the faculty salary increases in extension and research and the amount of funding needed for each school. Therefore, it is conceivable that the 4.4 per cent blanket increase could be adjusted to provide more than a per cent faculty salary increase within extension and research. The Governor did not reschedule an increase for those doing research or working in extension divisions, as your editorial erroneously states. Regarding the recommended five per cent increase for salaries, you pointed out the president Nixon's economic program. If so my statistics are correct, as they are, and yours are wrong, as they are, it would appear to me that your conclusion that higher education is concern for higher education "simply does not exist" is faulty. I would be willing to present these statistics to the public and let them judge Governor Clinton concern for higher education. Your mistakes are an example of what can happen when a conclusion is based upon error. conclusion is based upon error. I am sure you expect better reporting and editorializing in the newspaper, but you deserve your readers expect and rightly deserve better than what you see in your January 19th editorial. I realize the state budget and state finances are extremely understated. I understand. If at any time you have questions concerning the Docking administration or state health department, do not hesitate to contact me. —James C. Shaffer Press Secretary to Governor Docking Looking at the Letter I would like to point out a few more of those complexities. As Mr. Shaffer notes, 'state budgets and difficult to understand' and complex and difficult to understand. Said the governor: "I recommend $117,230 for the Geological Survey and $76,183 for the general research program contained in the budget of the University of Colorado at Denver. I will restore the state support for these programs to the level I previously recommended." Shaffer states that Governor Docking recommended a "4.4 per cent blanket increase for research and extension." This statement is in one regard misleading and in the governor's own statements printed in the "Governor's Budget Report for 1973." What this means then is this: In 1971 the governor recommended increases in the funding of research of one per cent over the same period; and in 1980 a recommendation and in fact decreased the appropriation. So in 1972 the governor comes back and asks for the same thing he asked for last year, which now means a 4.4 per cent decrease, because of the legislature's trimming. Technically, then, Shafter is correct. There will be a four per cent increase over existing appropriations. But as the governor himself said, he is only restating the recommendation he made last year, which amounted to one per cent over the previous year. On the issue of the extension services, Shaffer's statement is simply false. Quoting again for the governor's report: "restorations are recommended for the law enforcement Training Center and Firemanship Training programs at the University of Kansas. In the event of an emergency, the current year level of support is recommended to be maintained..." The money to be appropriated to the Law Enforcement Training Center and the Firemiship Training Center will provide salary increases for a total of three persons whose jobs are funded out of general use funds. The training will be employed in the extension division of the University. Exclusive then of increases in salaries for those three people and increases in operating expenses for those two divisions of the extension service, funding for extension jobs will remain exactly the same as last year. In the first place, percentages matched against percentages mean little or nothing. For instance, we don't know what sort of cost increases a four per cent increase in enrollment nets. But it is easy to see that if we allow that five per cent of that increase of per cent per year was gobbled up by inflation (the estimate), we have cut the increase to three per cent, which we then must match to a four per cent increase in enrollment. Elsewhere in the letter, Shaffer quotes some more statistics as evidence of the governor's concern for higher education. He cites an eight per cent per year increase in educational budgeting during the Docking period, and states that over that same period of time per cent has increased 20 per cent, or four per cent per year. So as you can see, Shaffer was quite right when he said budgets are very complicated matters. I think he was also right when he said the public will be able to judge the governor's concern for higher education when they read his letter. And of course these figures are only matched to enrollment increases. They disregard such things as new programs, new books, new lab equipment, etc. etc. Mike Moffet Associate Editor My Lai Secrecy Revealed PATRICK BROWN Seymour Hersh is the man who brought My Lai to the light, despite massive Army efforts to keep the assaultive mound. Now he is performing those defensive Army efforts to bring those defensive Army efforts to light in two long New York articles. He has done this by acquiring and studying the transcripts (32 whole books) of evidence given secretly at the Army investigated its own This effort is the more valuable one because it shows how routine was the pattern that produced and excused the My Lai slaughter. Indeed, the killing was occasioned by that routine. Once the attackers found the fight for nothing else, they laboured to produce an impression of fighting for its own sake. This means, at the outset, quantifiable things destroyed, bodies to be counted. Then—when statistics show an embarrassingly high number of people killed and low number of weapons recovered—it means not only that some of the grenades in butkers, but going into villages and bunkers. Provided, of course, this is too difficult. The primary aim of the raid on Son My village was to clear out the settlement called My Lai. But when our men's approach triggered two booby traps, they told their captain they were going to take the boat to Lai that day. The Colonel was called and agreed that they should go find something less distasteful to do with themselves. Other members of Bravo (machee name) were already finding the macchee district so civilians could to risk fighting soldiers. This happened not only at My Lai 4 where 347 were killed, according to The Peers Inquiry (more than twice the number of those killed) at the nearby settlement called My Kho. It was said, after the Kent State shooting of twelve unarmed people, that this was our domestic My Lai. Instead, it seems that MY Khe was our foreign Kent State. The place held about a hundred old men, women, and children who slept in the "Inkville" settlement shipped out to dawn. Brawa's brawn sweaked up on the place, spied on its villagers, set up machine guns. Herish describes what happened next: "One of the gun crews began to spray bullets into my Kine 4, shooting at the people and their homes. A few GI's later told the Peers commission that a hand grenade had been thrown at them by one of the same smoer shots had been fired. But his shot, and none of the GI's said they had ever actually seen the grenade explosion; they had only 'heard about it.'" Does that remind you of the elusive "sniper" at Kent State—the hidden man whose gun justified shooting indiscriminately at people in the open, the man high up who was answered by killing students on the ground? The raid was not a big deal, as Leattenant Calia realized. Going into the villages had produced more equipment, but no captured weapons. (The men did not carry weapons,) so, contrary to frequent practice, it was necessary to mirereport the body count by miresystem. This was done systematically, which, while not checking reports were observed. The first mirereport was further doctored; and even its basis had been tampered with. Later investigation would rely on these, just self-justifying documents, even while witnesses revealed their inadequacy. The Army would, in effect, excuse the criminals on the basis of the criminal's own evidence. The cover-up began at the site, and continued through the line of papers upward through "channels" of newspapers quite literally, that when helicopters were dispatched to fly low, checking reports of indiscriminate killing, "Leutcnant Thomas Willingham, the leader of the company's first platoon, with his men to cover the slaughtered civilians at My Kee with straw." Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate James J. Kilpatrick Columnist Attacks Kunstler PITTSBURGH—We touch gloves. It is expected of antagonists before they come out fighting, a teaspoon of harmony to cool approaching discord. For some talk on small talk, not speaking of Buckley, not mentioning Judge Hoffman, keeping a careful distance; and so the debate begins. This is our third match. We met at Vanderbilt, two or three years ago; we tangled later on at Oklahoma. Now it is Pittsburgh, but we can still do the auditorium in this corner William Kunstler, lawyer, defender of the poor, counsel to the Movement; and on your right, the Southern journalist; over service and self-esteem. Whig: me. Resolved, that decisions of the Warren Court have tended to protect criminals at the expense Belfast Pub Lino O'Connor, Illustrator "Faith! An' have you no decency, lad? Tie them like this before the killin' ... for 'tis a Holy War we're fightin'" Bv Sokoloff Griff and the Unicorn WHAT'S GOING ON? WE'RE ALL LOOKING FOR INDIAN ARROW-HEADS, MORRIS. HEY! COME QUICK! SOUNDS LIKE GRIFF AND THE UNICORN HAVE FOUND SOMETHING of law-abiding citizens and of society in general." The affirmative goes first in the sawdust affairs, and the rule is to paw twice at the question before seeking a hold. Thus a small tribute to Kunstler is to make a lawyer. The adjective is "communal" Kunstler knows it. Then a suggestion that lawyer and newspaperman, disagree though they may on particular opinions, share a respect for the law itself. They must attack it. To tackling Miranda v. Arizona, "I love the law." Twenty minutes later it is Kunstler's turn. "I hate the law," he begins, and he tracks his leonine head around the balconies, cold-eyed, a twin battery of five-inch guns. He drops the words as heavily as shells: "I hate the law." "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." Kunstler leaves the question hanging. He recalls what Fidel Castro once said in a great speech: "I thought the law could be used in order to change the system. I found it could not be so used in Cuba, and therefore I would have met Mr. Castro." He pauses; the implications echo. Then he goes on to attack the Court under Warren, and even more coldly, the Court under the Nixon nominees. "I know the law," says Kunstler. "It is used to oppress those who threaten the ruling class. The judicial decree has replaced the assassin. 1. Remain in state with the law, only because the law is maneuverable. 2. it can be manipulated. But in the future?" The debate, as it turned out, collapsed in misjudder. In Kunster's view, the Warren Court "did nothing for individual rights," and he have built, in any event, was now be dismantled by the Court under Burger. Those "two new constitutional subservatives" Powell and Rehquist, would complete the job. The Miranda Act made him a prohibited against self-crimination had been further The monstrous falacy of the Movement's twisted reasoning ought to be exposed. In the name of ending oppression, the Name Left would us use change from a society based on law—to what? To a society of now law? Or to a society of later law? Or to a law itself should be designed, why should we then love the law of Mr. Justice Kunster? Yet a society of now law is no society; it is no society, in general, ruled by bristish bruises. To love the rule of law is not to minimize its imperfections. These abound. But to suppose the law is imperfect, the social order is to suppose the impossible. We debate this night, he I, and I because there is law that frees, law that restrains. To hate the law is to hate the government. One of the poisoned spring of such hatred, only vtrany can flow. abridged, the protections of habeas corpus were being destroyed. Kunster's attack was comprehensive, bitter, and hurt. The particular cases and opinions to one side, it was Kunster's acid view of the law itself that set in motion an uneasy train of thought: "I despise the law; I loathe the law." To judge from a recent article in the Boston Post, it is seen widely shared by Movement lawyers. Their bitterness seeks below the bedrock, beyond the individual judge or the publicized刑 "The System must be changed." That is their first premise. "The System cannot be changed successfully by law." This is because the system goes the syllogistic conclusion, the System must be changed by other than lawful means. Kunstler does not advocate bloody revolution, as such; he offers no alternative either. Copyright 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom--UN 4-4810 Business Office----UN 4-4358 Published and at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscriptees to KU6044, KU6044-1, KU6044-2, KU6044-3, KU6044-4, Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily intended as an endorsement of the university. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman Editor New York Times Date: 10/29/14 Chip Cows Hannah Moore Scott Spearmer Campus Editor News Editor Joey Kraner Jewel Scott Eric Kraner, Jewel Scott Joyce Kraner, Mon Kling Sally Carton, Joyce Kraner Bob Simpson Harper Jeffrey Assistant Sports Editor Feature Editor Bartar Sporkit Editorial Writer William Ramsay Nancy Ramsay Joyce Dunbar Dick Ray, John Goodkirk Hervé Rentier Photographers Ed Lallo, Rit Netter, Greg Sorber, Tom Thirso Tong Tushai Office Manager Tong Tushai BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . Mel Adams Business Manager Associate Business Manager Advertising Manager International Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Global Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Dave Murray Domain Manager University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 3, 1972 5 SHOU ZHIWANG of the poisoning name name name medical from a what? r to a rule ofULE, why of Mr. variety of is no byided by not to tations. suppose survive see the night, law- brains. see the of the fatred, except der, $10 dations, without essarily karsen Photo by TERRY SHIPMA lp crews m o Moffett n may Hay, m on Killing on Kilng Simsman H I Bogert h aughter h schmidt d ooodiek d rush k young Sokolof , Inc. Feminist Morgan Explains Ideology Radical claims of society based on sexism ol Young n Carter Manley Barnhart ergerdes d la Lloyd Murray g Delanf Feminist Urges Radicalism By FRANK SLOVER Arizona State University Radical左翼 Morganurg argued her "sisters" to seize power, during a speech Wed. afternoon in the Kansas Union. She began by noting the crowded room of more than 400 people and asking that "sisters" stay away. But she is seriously trying, who consider themselves brothers, move back because it's more important to them. She then traced some of the history of the movement "to clear up myths and misinformation" media had contributed. Women and their contributions have been ignored, she said, by white male historians even though the movement had a long and worthy heritage. Today, she said, she saw the movement working in three areas. The first area she identified as women's rights. This includes She said they had done some good but objected to their preoccupation with bread and wheat. And they worked at their work within the system. such groups as the National Organization of Women and Federally Employed Women, or the women's movement. The second area she identified was women's liberation. She said that she found this sector more characterize and that she had left. "It's comprised of refugees from the left," she said, "where women were always controlled by men. "Women did the typing, made the coffee and read men's speeches in the rot. They think in terms of Marx and Lenin, both of whom were in the war." "Alternative lifestyles are no answer," she said. "A all woman accomplished by joining the new generation from cooking Betty Crocker casseroles in the suburbs to cook brown rice in a commune and from being the sexual object of interest to the sexual properties of six men." against women, everyday. Morgan was the object they were in a partnership with Men were not oppressed by the sexism endemic to our society and the lack of empathy dehumanized it but every man was a sexist oppressor whether he was a woman or a man. At a Dec. 17 meeting, the association drafted a letter to be sent to state lawmakers to state government civil service pay. The group claimed in the letter that the University budget denied the library staff pay equal to that of state civil servants across the state. *LAST SUMMER when other civil servants got pay increases, those who were employed by the department, Rosemary McDonough, vice-president of the association, said Tuesday. "Because of growing inflation, the people who did not lose, actually suffered a loss." Library Group Protests Lack of Salary Increase Members of the Library Staff Association University Libraries have launched a letter-writing campaign protesting salary cuts. Morgan said her movement was expecting violence and was preparing for it by learning violence themselves by learning to shoot as well as a whole range of technical skills, such as morearse and others she did not reveal to an audience that included men. The third part of the movement, radical feminist or revolutionary feminism, was the "warmed-over Marxism" organization she described it as being the youngest and smallest part of the movement with no ties to any particular organization. It was not she said, some "warmed-over Marxism." She denied that this part of the movement was a portion of the movement. She discussed the problem of rape and said that the stereotype of the black man raping a white woman in an alley was untrue, but she also said that between people of the same race. She also said that black men earn more money than white women which, she said supported her marriage to her husband more deep-rooted than racism," which was caused by sexism. The letter was sent to the university as well as library employees who were urged to sign it and then send it to the recommended state department. THE LETTER read: "I DO NOT mean to open the question of overall University financing, nor do I intend to conduct any arguments for or against the overall University budget. As a classified employee I expect to be given a regular salary with my fellow civil servants across the state. To be denied benefits because of lack of benefits benefits as part of that parity because I work for the University of Kansas seems a challenge to institutions of a civil service system. "As a member of the Library Staff Association of the Kansas University Libraries I am using my knowledge and staff of my deep felt concern over a case of obvious financial misappropriation by members represented by our association are employees of the Kansas civil service system. The salary increases at the University of Kansas worked a hardship on these classified employees, but the same untoward impact classified employees whose only sin is to be employed by an agent currently out of favor with the university and administrative branches. by Gwen Suggs, a member of the Library Staff Association. "I urge you to consider the propriety of my position and to use all the considerable influence that I have on the inequities as were felt by qualified personnel throughout this University are not levied McDonough said there had ten indications that some legislators would support the increase this spring. treatment for classified employees working in the campus area." Morgan said the ideology of the radical feminists was based on the belief that the traditional tradition was sexism and that all the evils of a stemly stem from it. "Sexism is the root, and the branches are what is destroying this planet. The only way to end all that is bad is to be radical, to go to the root. Anything else is of great fat at among men," we were. "From the few answers we have received, it seems some of the representatives have not understood the issue," McDonough said of course to my rise, but in the place this is a fairness issue. We would like to see other people at the campus support equal "Most acts of sexual intercourse on this planet," Morgan said, "could be classified as rape," which she defined as any sexual act not initiated by a woman desire on the part of the woman. THE LETTER was composed "Women have always known," she said, "that sex has something to do with love and do not have the same sort of linear, genital Men committed violence The University libraries presently employ 154 people, 100 of whom are association members. Student Jobs Scarce, Taylor Says Bv CHRIS MILLER Kansan Staff Writer Jobs for students are hard to find, Bernard Taylor, assistant finance director at the College Financial Aid, said Wednesday. Other than the College Work-Study Program, Taylor said, the Office of Student Financial Aid works with students to help them employment this semester. There are normally 15-20 job listings posted at the office for student employment by various organizations. EMPLOYMENT in the federally-sponsored Work-Study program, which provided the student a salary to the office of Student to the office of Student largely filled, Taylor said. He said about four listings open in the program and about 200 approved applications for students wanting to participate in the program. Last year, he said, 617 students were placed in jobs under the program and the final result this year was expected to be about the in the Work-Study Program, Taylor said, the federal government paid 30 per cent of the budget and the department paid 20 per cent. To qualify for the program, Taylor said, a student must meet four requirements. HE MUST BE in need of employment in order to continue his course of study, capable of working standing in his course of study where he will full-time student at the institution full-time student at the institution he is participating and a U. S. citizen or intend to become a permanent resident of the United States. Campus Briefs Preference in the program, Taylor said, must be given to students from low-income families. Employment opportunities for women are also restricted. Employees referred to employers through the Office of Student Financial Aid, the dean of women's office also employ employment opportunities. LORNA GRUNZ, assistant to the dean of women, said there were "lots of women and very few jobs." Morgan said the radical feminist movement would grow and would not be bought out by the conservatives. Boys in the radical movement "fled." Grunz estimated 80-100 women had filled out employment information cards in the dean of the school, since the end of last semester. concept of sexuality that men have." Grunz said the function of the department women's office in attempting to hire employment was to list the opportunities for women's employment. She said they offered employers both inside and outside the University. She said counties in both areas are about equal. Student Union Activities will conduct its spring membership meeting. "Meet SUA 7:30 p.m. Feb. 3 in the Big B Room of the SUA Membership Meeting She said one of the problems new was that placement and training of staff in the departmental basis, with no central organization to help them succeed. There will be a meeting of the KU Soccer Club at 4 p.m. Thursday at the Westminster Center, 2042 Oread. Soccer Club Meeting Since Jan. 10, Taylor estimated his office had referred about 150 students to various employers in the area through the Work-Study Program. Yoga Society Lecture TAYLOR ALSO indicated there was need for a central organization to help employment problems of students. He said that there were about three times as many jobs as there were in all the various departments and schools of the University as there were in all the universities, the largest percentage of these jobs were filled when a student needed employment requiring about employment Dadaiji Chiripananda Avadhita, a representative of the Ananda Marta Yoga Society, will speak at 1:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Hall. while they were in school or help with their career plans when they finished school. A travel firm designed to introduce campus offices that offer travel assistance is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. The forum, the first of seven planned for the spring semester, will discuss transatlantic flights. Atlantic Flights Forum The goal of her group, as she described it, was to redefine sexuality where there is sexuality where no distinction, sexual or otherwise, would be. TOPEKA (AP) —The amount of money available now to the Kansas Highway Commission for new construction is sufficient to cover the highway per year, a Teopaea State Highway official said Monday. 7-Day Special CARS PAINTED $27.50 NORHTTOWN BODY SHOP Book M evelyn wood reading dynamics Patronize Kansan Advertisers THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. R AYBAY MOZAY MAZINE says Guess What We Learned In School Today is to hope in its class of recent comedies drawn from the hotbeds of Western Civ Course - Thursdays, 7:30 p.m. begins, Mar. 2. (You may start with the Regular Course and then transfer to the Western Civ Course.) Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Varsity TREATMENT ... daycare VE1-1965 A --- PLAYS. CINEMAS IN SE O Regular Course - Tuesdays; 9:30 a.m. - Noon, BEGINS NEXT TUESDAY "Guess What We Learned in School Today?" Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:40 Adults $1.50 Children .75 "ON ANY SUNDAY" Each class meets once a week for 8 weeks Eve. 7-25 & 9-15 Maine. 7-20 & 8-15 Matinees Sat. Sun. 3-20 & 4-15 Tightie Prices WEEKDAYS DUSTIN HOFFMAN Sat. & Sun; 3:00 p.m.; 5:05; 7:30; 9:40 Twilighthr $1.00 and $0.50 - 4:30 to 5:15 only! Hillcrest "STRAW DOGS" Eve. 7:20 & 9:30 Adult 1.50 Mat.—Saf.-Sun. 2:00 & 4:05 一 Hillcrest There is STILL TIME to enroll Eve. 7:35 & 9:30 Adult $1.50 Child .75 Mat.-Jat.-Sun. 2:35 & 1:25 Hillcrest SPONSORED BY: TRANSATLANTIC FARES and CAMPUS TRAVEL OFFICES - Dean of Foreign Students Office - Foreign Study Office Want to Know About - SUA Travel Office - Student Union Activities 412.853.6700 (202)347-0716 Westchester County, NY Telephone: (202)347-0716 Address: 412.853.6700 Postal Code: 12142 City: Westchester State: NY Zip: 12142 COUNCIL Room — 4 p.m. Thursday, February 3rd DISCOVER EUROPE ON A BIKE - REAL ESTATE INSURANCE AGENTS • NEW YORK CITY TOWN & COUNTY • REAL ESTATE INSURANCE AGENTS • NEW YORK CITY TOWN & COUNTY *PLEASE REFER TO SOMEONE ELSE FOR DETAILS* (RESIDENTIAL) COMING FORUMS: Before leaving the states—what to do and by when, travel within Europe I, travel within the U.S.A., travel within Europe II, U.S. camping and hitching, Mexico / Canada on a student budget. Kevin keeps the business secure, and sends good news way by. From Paris. From the day he sent and gave his gift to Bishop Sutherland. From his home in Scotland. From his home in France. From his home in New York. From his home in Montreal. From his home in Boston. EUROBIKE Spring Weeks May Join tickets Hand Fraternity and sorority house presidents met Wednesday night to discuss the possible merging of the Spring and Week and Spring Fling activities. Spokesmen from the residence halls this year have expressed an interest in co-sponsoring the Greek Week concerts, according to Scott Thompson, Prairie Village junior and chairman of the Greek Week Committee. Thompson said he believed coordination would be a good idea. Greek Week, sponsored by the fraternities and sororites, is scheduled for April 8-9. Activities include Greek day on campus and charity race day in Jayhawk Boulevard, a Greek Week Sing and a track meet. A rock concert at Potter Lake and a concert by the Hoc Auditorium or Allen Field House are also being considered. Spring Fling, sponsored by the resistance halls, usually has active similar to Greek Week's. THE KRUMHORNS ARE COMING, TOO. EARTHMANGOLOR The First In a Series and he could care less University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb.9 CUFF RICHARD JAMIE HAS TO BE SOMEBODY... S THE WIZARD 1,000 advance tickets sold! who he hurts along the way! World Wide Pictures presents A DECIDEDLY DIFFERENT EXPERIENCE IN LOVE Granada THEATRE...Philippe Van Vlees-Sloot NOWI at 7:00 & 9:00 Adult 1.75 - Child .75 TwoAPENNY to Make-way for our Remodeling . . . Yes, we must sell our entire stock of over two thousand pair of slacks and tops to prepare for our complete remodeling of the Wearhouse, and while we're getting ready to beautify our store, you can beautify your expenses on clothes with savings like these . . . Reductions from 10% to Slacks-Jeans 50% corduroys denims twills cotton suede Tops fancy stripes solids Belts Suspenders Male—Caribou—H.I.S.—Brentwood—Himalaya THE WEARHOUSE 841½ MASS. 6 Thursday, February 3, 1972 University Daily Kansan TOM JAMES Carey's glasses reflect the glow from the oven he built. Rugged Barn Is Studio For a Fragile Art A large stone barn west of campus was converted to accommodate glass blowing classes. Metal dowels help make a rippled effect in the glasswork. 10 if you venture west of 15th beyond lowa st. You will pass the University of Kansas Printing Building, an old stone barn its tin roof and limestone walls are like many other barns in this area, but its floor is a brick. The barn, which formerly house could be being held by the Charnley Dairy, houses glassblowing studio of the Design Department at the University of Maryland. By CHRIS MILLER The studio, for four years just an idea in the mind of J. Sheldon Carey, professor of design, came from a summer course at the University made the barn available to Carey for teaching in college and a group of graduate students in ceramics have shovelled the remnants left by the barn's former occupants out and filled glassblowing equipment The glass furnace, annealing oven and other glassblowing tools that now occupy a part of the building are constructed by Carey during a year's aabustal leave in 1988-89. During that time the State Department provides temporary space for Carey to blow glass in Lindley Hall with the understanding that he use the materials from Kansas in his work. There are currently no heating facilities other than the glare from sunlight, and we have a minimum of equipment because of a shortage of funds. Carey said that considering the shortage of heating equipment is fortunate to have the space necessary to accommodate the equipment necessary to blow Undaunted by the cold or leaks in the roof, Carey and the graded slab were project turned out their first glass creations in the building. Eventually, Carey said, he hopes to have the entire building renovated, enabling students to perform in one building all processes involved in the construction of the materials involved in the work currently are being stored in the basement of the building. In addition to the contribution of the building by the University, Carey's project is supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in Washington, D.C. for equipment. Carey indicated that when enough ceramics majors developed skills in glassblowing careers, an entire glassblowing curriculum would be established. The molten glass is made symmetrical with a water soaked wooden cup. (1) Kansan Staff Photos by Greg Sorber Carey inspects his glasswork. Philip Leese, West Vancouver, Canada graduate student, breaks off the neck of his jar from the pipe C. J. BARRAGAN FRAGILE HANDLE WITH CARE BUEHLER LTD. 2120 GREENWOOD ST. EVANSTON, ILL., U.S.A. Carey holds a special mixture of sand used to make fine works in glass. The mixture has a basement of the barn will be used for mixing sand and cutting finished pieces of glass; minimum of iron content, and other impurities, that give the glass, the glass, a green cast. The University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 3. 1972 7 String Quartet Synthesizes Talent By DEANNE HAY Kansan Reviewer The Allegri String Quartet from England displayed a high quality of both individual and group talent in its Chamber Music Series performance tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. The quartet began its piece in the E flat Major (Opus 76, No. 6) in E flat Major (Opus 76, No. 6) with good balance but with some difficulty in making clean and their rhythm was exact, but their intonation was faulty in a way that made it difficult. Hugh Maguire, first violinist, interrupted between the first and second movements to speak to him. He was extremely unusual for a performer to speak to an adjective in the middle of a music piece. "I only want to speak to you to make us all feel a little easier and more relaxed," he said. His talk must have done exactly that, for the program became progressively better, all the way to the group's encore. MAGURE CALLED the Haydn selection a 'sort of way-out piece'. He told the audience that its second movement had no sound at all, and thus was unusual circumstance for a piece written by Hayden. He explained his interruption to talk about the music by saying, "All the people we met were immensely musical; otherwise they wouldn't have ventured out tonight." The group seemed to be more relaxed while playing the rest of the Haydn, but a few high short squeaks and squeaks than notes and the group had trouble playing precisely together in the fourth movement. This last alment was managed by cough but easybasy interpretation of the music: PERHAPS HAYDN just wasn't their style, for in Bartok's 1928 exhibition a fine sense of togetherness. The group sounded as if it was kept together easily through the spirit of the music. Bruno Schrecker, cellist and Magdure dread rich, full tones in solo passages. If the piece was played through no fault of the musicians, In Beetooth's Quartet in C Major, (Opus 59, No. 3) the Jalapa violins have a skilled control and self-restraint the full emotional range of the piece. They seemed to enjoy playing their part. The melodies had just the right amount of balance. Each instrument himself was a virtuoso. They executed runs clearly, handled melody changes expertly and played perfect solos. and dynamic changes. The audience of about 200 asked for an encore, and the group played the last movement of Mozart's quartet in G Major. The band then moved through clear unison runs, rhythms and controlled rhythmic The next performance on the concert goers is the New York Press play in the Concert Course series in Wednesday at the University Theater. FREE-FREE One order of french fries with the purchase of any two sandwiches on our menu This offer is good: FRIDAY- SATURDAY-SUNDAY henrys FEBRUARY 4, 5 and 6 Free Films to be Shown Every Sunday Evening A series of free films will be shown on Sunday nights in five residence halls and in Woodruff Auditorium. McColum, Lewis, Hashinger, Templin and Joseph R. Pearson residence halls are sponsoring a series of free films, featuring one movie a month. The movies are based on residence halls social funds. The movies, which begin at 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. are shown in the lobby of a different residence hall each month. The next movie War of Harry Frigg, "Feb. 20, at Templin Hall." Oliver Hall also sponsors its own film series. Comedies, the musicals and movies will be shown, said Eleanor Paitam, Oliver Hall's social activist. Putnam said they had recently started showing the films on Sunday nights to provide a study break for residents. On the days of Halloween, Oliver would sponsor a monster weekend, with the showing of horror movies one night and a monster masquerade party the next. A third Sunday night film series is sponsored by the Student Senate and shown in Woodruff Auditorium. Outstanding, but rarely publicized international films are shown. Admission is free. Several University of Kansas faculty members attended the Sylvanian Leadership meeting January 26-30 in San Francisco. Among the papers presented were "The Stylistic Baroque, Rocco, Rococo," or Brocardetto," by Robert Enggesser, KU professor of art history, Budgets of State Supported Academic Art Libraries;" by Mrs. Martha Kehde, Watson Library, librarian, Association member Two KU Profs Present Papers At Art Meeting Marilyn Stokstad, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was named chairman of a committee to develop standards for the new art studio and art history faculty. YOU Need a Comfortable, Attractive and Reasonably Priced Apartment? WE Have just what you need LET'S GET TOGETHER Large sunny rooms Closets you must see to believe Pvt outside entrances Game room. Study room Kitchen. Bedroom pool Laundry, off-street parking Month-to-month leases Other faculty members attending the meeting were Chuinsong Li, professor of art history; Jiaxing Shi, professor of art; professor, painting and sculpture. All Utilities Paid 1 BR Unf 130 1 BR Furn 160 2 BR Unf 155 2 BR Furn 195 Free Pizza Buck Just for Looking RIDGLEA DISC: 9 a.m., Regionalist Room. PSYCHOLOGY 10: 4:30 a.m., Woodruff. SPEECH AND DRAMA (Abraham Kaplan) 9: 30 a.m., Forum Room. The People Place to Live Campus Bulletin 6th & Frontier UNIVERSAL UNIVERSAL ANA YOGA SOCIETY 1:30 ANA YOGA SOCIETY *STUDENT TEACHERS: 8:30 a.m.* *LANGUAGE: English, French, German,* *ESC: 2:45 a.m. / Personal Room* P.A.T.I.N.G. ROAD PAINTING AND SCULPTURE: 3 p.m. South Lounge LAW SCHOOL, LECTURE: 3:40 p.m. 11:30 a.m. Alcove B Cafeteria. FACULTY FORUM: noon, Westminster Center. COMPUTER SCIENCE 16: 8:30 a.m. Woodrud Auditorium. LATIN AMERICAN HISTORY: noon. Alcova A Cafeteria: noon. Forum Room. STEPHENS LECTURE (Law School) LAW SCHOOL LECTURE: 3:30 p.m. Woodrow Wilson ACADEMY LECTURE: 3:30 p.m. STEPHENS LECTURE (Law School): 3:30 p.m., Woodruff. SUA TRAVEL FORUM: 4 p.m., Council Room PRIVATE GROUP: 6:30 p.m., Watkins Room BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS: 6:30 p.m. Governors Room. STUDENT SERVICES COMMITTEE: SCHOOL OF HIGH SCHools 6.30 p.m., Regionalist Room. SIMS LECTURE: 7 p.m., Forum Room. FILMED SCIENCE FUNCTION LECTURE: STUDENT SERVICES COMMITTEE: 6:30 p.m. Regional Room SIMS LECTURE: 7 p.m., Forum Room. FILMED SCIENCE FUNCTION LECTURE: 7 p.m., Ballroom. FILMED SCIENCE FICTION LECTURE: 7 p.m. Ballroom. ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA: 7 p.m., Room 305. LAW SCHOOL: 7 p.m., English Room. LAW SCHOOL: 7 p.m., English Room. LDS INSTRUCTION: 7 p.m., Room 299. CAMPUS CRUSADE: 7 p.m., Parlors A, B and C. CAMPUS CRUSADE: 7 p.m. Pine Room. SUA BOARD: 7:30 p.m. Big Eight Room. SCIENCE FUCTION FILM: 7:30 p.m. BICYCLE CLUB: 7:30 p.m., International Room p.m., Experimental Theatre. FACULTY RECITAL: 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall. COMMUNICATIONS COMMITTEE: 9 pm. Regionalist Room. BBAH1: 5 p.m., Oread Room. ENGLISH DEPARTMENT: 9 p.m.. Is Your Environment Caught In A Stranglehold? NOISE AIR WATER POLLUTION WASTE OF NATURAL RESOURCES & OPEN SPACE Join in the ACTION & Help Yourself! National Environmental Law Society Needs You! Freshman Class PARTY 7:00 p.m. Room 305 Kansas Union Feb. 9,1972 ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK! Admission 1.50 or Freshman Class Card Bikales-Weinburg 9 till 12, Feb.4 NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY KANSAN WANT ADS One day 35 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University of Italy kanran are offered for foreign students to color, creed, or national origin. PARTY CATERING AT SHORTY BEEFHERE M4 MASS U MISCELLANEOUS TYPING Experienced in typing thews, documenter, paper items, other type rules. Will be proficient with a Type type. Acquire and prompt types. Resume at Phone 812-9544. Mrs Wright Typing experience in typing term, typed terms, typing. Proof reading, typing. Proof reading, quelling style. Have variable type. Type: man. Wright, V.W. 8544 Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt abrtention 843-1098 2-29 Experienced typist will type your term paper, thesis or dissertation. Electric typwriter, promote, accrue work. Call 712-3281; Ma Ruckman 516-3490. Accurate typing of your thesis distribution or miscellaneous work on IBM Sascript typewriter with pica printer. Contact: 842-349-1400 for information: 824-349-1400 for information: 2-226-753-6225 Term paper, thesis type, typically accorded with the selection of type for research paper. Your choice of writing editing at reasonable rates 842-0979 days; 845-0667 nights. Kendra Davis. PERSONAL PORTEY WANTED for anthology Please include stamped return en- velopment on back cover. Edition, IDLWILD PRESS, 1807 East Cary Avenue, Los Angeles CA Call me for excellent low cost hospital insurances with above average coverage and prepaid pregnancy; John Wells, American Life and Health Insurance 841-5220 Women's Allergy. 20 years experience. Call 843-7267. 9-50-3-20-12 NOTICE Michigan St. Bar-B-Que 515 Mich. Lincoln Street Bar-B-Que 515 Mich. $140 for $140 or $140 broker $265. $140 of junk card $140 Rb plate- board $265 AM to 8:30 PM Phone VI-2 AM to 8:30 PM Phone VI-2 UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright (816) 474-4076 11 For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center. 864-4411. II INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER. 842-7909. PROFESSIONAL child-care center for children 1 mo - 12 mn. Full or part-time. Fr. Specially designed occupancy. We buy used sports cars and imports. Competition Sports Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 812-2191 2-19 STOCK CLEARANCE, SALE - Reduces of 10-35% off our entire stock to make way for remodeling at THE WEAHOUSE, 8411th Mass 2 We repair all airways Volkswagen. We do maintenance operations, transplant, or just drive the car to well parts and buy those VWs with terminal licenses. Bug Inj. 724, A. Anyone who has left a book with the Emporium Bookstore please call 841-3710 to see if your money is ready to be picked up. 2-3 Professional ballet instruction for all levels, both sexes. Lawrence School of Ballet. 842 Mass. (rear entrance) Instruction call: 842-703-962 or 842-705-4955. Valentine Idea Portrait: $5.00 for one, $7.00 for two, 842-7500. 2-15 BHOKONON USED CLOTHES 11-9 Vermont Wetze Moved Lainale Maine Shifted Wetze Western and Western shirts, velvet dresses, wool mount. 11-6 2-7 mount. 11-6 USED STEREO REDUCED? 3 port- tablecs. 4 covers—all tried to clear. —Ray Stonehack's, 929 Mass (Magnavox) 2-7 GROUP Piano CLASSES FOR BEGINNERS. Learn to sight read, improve, create your own music Term 3-4 $85; Term 4-$297. 8:29pm - 6:29pm LOST See Marid. Gray,飞 10 New Orleans. Round trip hippo $60. Leave K. C. Sat. Feb. 12. Arove K. C. Wed. Feb. for more information. kc84 4273-8272 Least A. white envelope containing very important envelopes; paper; a three cheek. Least near Snow. Found please call 864-186-23-2 864-186-419 Lost—Jan. 27 in front of Dyche. Gold wire rim glasses. Reward. 842-2608 9.5 Elgin wrist watch, sledding on Potters Lake Hill, personal gift. Call Pat. 843-0723. 2-4 Lost: Gold ring with blue, oval stone. Two gold letters set in stone. If found call 864-1283. 2-4 Lost—small black male cocker spaniel named Darry. Family pet Reward. 842-8199 2-9 WANTED STUDENT EMPLOYMENT in Yel- lon Brook, MD. Send $250 for a Booklet kit with how to and how to send $250. Arnold Agency, 280 East Milton Rockford, I8490; Dahlia 8440; McKenna Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $8.83 Use KARAN SAM CLASSIFIED RATES Three days three weeks or fewer. 11:30 each address. 9:30 AM to 11:30 PM before publication at 1:30 AM. Kansan Classifieds OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS All positions required. All qualifications. All experiences. All overtime. sightseeing. Free interviews. Locations 10257, San Diego, California 93125. 19151. Women's alterations. 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30 2-14 ROOMMATE fourth girl needed for Jasmin Tower apartments on top floor. Will pay portion of monthly rent in place of student. Campus available now. 843-7324-3203 Helped wanted, male or female. Inrequiet partitions, 24 wpm. Infrared light, 120 wpm or shorten hair, plush at 80 wpm. Shorten hair, 120 wpm. UN 4-4442, 102 Weihley Building, 2-7 Mexican-American students from Kannapolis City to city or for an internship in Mexico, the United States and mortality or mortality rates. Under one call Robert, 864-3594 for appraisal of his suitability. Wanted-person to share country home, fireplace, roaming land-five miles from Lawrence 843-4250 2-7 Wanted. A-1, top quality, 'fed's and heads' competitions for two-man-team championship tournament. Call Rit at 842-321-231 Help Wanted Part-time 2nd semester teacher, packer and leaders of household goods permitted, only apply. Write, giving your name, phone number, Efhan A. Smith Moving and Storage. Female roommate for beautiful two bedroom completely furnished. Meadroom apartment. Private room. Bedroom apartment. per 8-28. Call 835-5248 Rainmatter wanted to sleep 5 bed- room house with four others. 2 blocks from camp; Move in immediately. Campground: 711-830-7125; Louis- ton Call: 842-761-606 1 or 2 female roommates. Will offer a discount on the contracts Call Diane Oldberg, 843-599-272 Wanted—third roommate to share two bedroom Jayhawk Towers apartment, $75/mo. 2-9 FOR RENT WEST HILLS APARTMENTS Available for second semester - 1-bedroom suite; 2-bedroom suite; 1'bath furnished or unfurnished; 1'bath furnished or unfurnished; we travel pallets, patios or bakery Apartments—The place to live in Lawrence. Call 24 hours a day 841-250-2300. For rent—one or two bedroom apts, are conditioned, garbage disc- penalty paid, facilities, color T V available. Call 641-8252 or Bhilwat at Hills Apts 4122. Ridge House Aphis-for the budget and the rent, which is $250,000 and the maximum price at best in town. ER, 1 and 2 bedrooms, and a kitchenette. $499,116 for details. 248 Woodard-1116 for details. 248 Carrwood-1116 for details. Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. From one black block of six, 143-116-116 2-21 Two apartments for rent three blocks from campus. Contact Paul Brungard: 842-5548. 2-3 MUST NORLEHSE 2 bedroom apart- ment, 1650 sq ft. - $129,000 carpet / a/c / garbage disposal, private parking, close campus quail- ness, on-site food service or manal or call N-2659 $125.00 per night. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, carpet- ing, dishwasher, and air-conditioning, 'b' block from KU stadium. Married couples 1025 Mississippi. 842-706-297 One room apartment. Cooking facilities. $75.00 per month Utilities paid. 1234 Term. Ground front—Mr. Hagage. 842-198-98. 2-7 roommate roommate wanted to share a 5-bed room house with two girls. Uphair bedroom, large yard, peaceful. Pet Cat Call Kathy. 843-372-2-7 To rent immediately; 2 bedrooms, unfurnished or furnished at Ridgeline. Take over early rate increase lease, $145 mo., all utilities: 820-784-2 Happiness is living in a new co-op. Private room at $29.00. Within walking distance of campus. Call 812-4921 and ask for "Ritch or" "Kat." Room for rent. Need girl to share house $55. Utilities included 842, 5768 2-7 University university and old milt apartments. A limited number of one and two-bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy Walking distance to manager's apartment: Furnished one bedroom apartment. Modern, half-tower to campus. Private phone number. Call Dae 843-1601 or 843-6924- 6924. Graduate student. graduate student ROOMS, HOUSES AND APART- MENTS Two bedroom home in E Lawnerville, semi-private bath and kitchen, $250.00 121 Louisiana, 843-601, or 841-322 121 Louisiana, 843-601, or 841-322 1 B.R. unfurnished apartment 3 rooms from stadium, A/C, and car- partment. Call 827-5770 or 824-8341 2-T HILLVIEW APARTMENTS — 173-45 J. W. 48th St. ($10 to $130) one and two apartments. Carpeted. Draperies of much more expensive apartment of much more expensive apartment. you're at a disadvantage Either, be it if, anyway. "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th FOR SALE 2 If you don't voting at a district meeting Shines Dyeing Refinishing Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's, Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Finest selection of sports cars in the entire area, CSC, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-219. if Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale There are two ways of looking at it 1. If you use them, 2. if you use the numbers Now you can buy stereo components at FACTORY COST plus 10. *Harris and Company* - 20th Street, Prairie Avenue. The only true stereo discount in the house. 2-29 Mamiya TLR 2 Lens 80mm F4-1 80mm F5.6 Taken 120x 120 and sheet film. Plus aluminium water- terran 80mm F3.5r plus aluminum 841.87. Shrimp 85mm slr plus lens 841.87. Northside Shop, 707 North 2nd, a borough north of River Bridge warehouse, oil wood cooking and heating items, old wood cooking and heating stoves, bicycles, fireplaces, wood- poles, carpets, other useful items of other useful items Open to 5 days! Harry Ahlertenberg, 3139 2 Lucas 32.4" diameter high intensity driving lights 80,000 candle power wires, fuses, and switches insulated with rubber $29.00 Call 824-9554 2-4 Poll-tare, shaggy, Hungarian sheepdogs, ARC mice at reduced price. Also poll-told English crossbred mice Mc Mullen et al., 2981. 2-4 10 speed bike (Honda): Like new -45. Porsche 912 motorcycle -45. Panasonic gold 2-second coat -84. Kia 8269 anytime after 9:00 p.m. 2-7 3-piece sectional sofa, $125. 4-chair dineet set, $60. Both in excellent condition 1025 Miss. Apt. 21. 842- 8067 2-7 Snow tires: 735-14 Tubeless w/w. barely used Call 843-0435. 2-7 69 VW-excellent condition, low mileage, snow tires, must sell to stay in school. Make offer 842-2944 2-7 STOCK CLEARANCE SALE - 10-50' on off on entire stack of stocks—teams tops and belts, where? a?) THE WEARHOUSE, OF course '841; Mass. 2-7 881 Equipment. Head, giant slash, 820 e.n. with look-Nevada step-in birthdays $75.00 Lange boots, plate- ture, slight腋痕, slight臀 $75.2- 842-3582 The Consignment sells used instruments and equipment. Give us a call and find out. 842-6023 2-7 1970 Road-Runner 440-6 pack-bluek hour four speed—eragoragrant—23,000 miles—excellent shape $2,000. 842- 4768. Tire Cleanance F1B-14 wide belt $25.00 pcs 5 E.C.T. £48.00 or 48 $25.00 pcs 5 E.C.T. £48.00 Fast free installation Rock Star Storage (Even) Entire stock 40-2- 50 off list New Magnavox component system with two extended speakers cut to $8.00 at Ray Stonebank's 929 Mass. Open Thurs.; 2-7 Jewel powered 20 watt Motorola portable stereo-sold new at $149.00 first $50.00 takes it. Ray Stoneback® 29 Mass. 2-7 68 Camaro, 327 cu. in. Excellent condition, $1,275.00 843-0634 2-4 1958 Rambler, clean body and interior. Runs good. Excellent theater and radio. $175 Please call after six, 844-263-1543. All Demirats. Auto Foreign Import. 63 Jugra XRK, hardhead coupe, 300 miles since engine and transmission rebuilt Park, Tucson. Phone 914-1250-7250. Park, Tucson. Phone 914-1250-7250. For sale: Baldeni externale amplifier and Baldeni compo organ Equipment is in excellent shape but may require Call : 635-4329 after calling New Kenwood KRH120 AMP Duel 1215 Turntable $10" speakers. Cash or over付款. 843-8615 2-7 NUTTY CITTLES at BOSONON 189 Vernonto - Moved? Yes! Flannel and oatmeal. - No, it's oats. nourishes, swabs - skins caps, quips, sweaters - tails skirts 189 Vernonto Ogilvy 17-16 Dietzen Mech. Drawing Set. 8 pieces-acces-20, $20; call 842-7434. 2-9 Must sell B-25 Gibson Ebos, originally sold for $225. Will accept best offer, case and new strings included. Call after 5:00, 843-3150 2-9 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 66014A Lawrence, Kansas 66044 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 CSO TOYOTA C THUMPH Competition Sports Cars Inc. 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-219 RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842 2323 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9. Sat. till noon. 8 Thursday, February 3, 1972 University Daily Kansan Robinson Ties KU Record But Loses Race, Mustache By DAN GEORGE Kansan Sports Writer Delario Robinson was as surprised as the next guy when he matched a University of Kansas indoor record for the 60-yard high hurdles Saturday. He ran a 7-1 in five laps. Jayce Invitational track meet. For Robinson, though, there was one big difference—be thought he should have done better. Coach Bob Timmons was anything but unhappy about a loss to him on time a on board track, his first in KU colors. But the young hurdler, who will run both the 68 hights and the 54 midway, will go Southern Saturday in Allen Field House, expressed disappointment with his second season. 'go out there with a positive attitude,' Robinson said. 'I feel that any time I enter an event, I get to see all of the bringing that trapgyk play.' Robinson, a junior, transferred to KU this semester from Los Angeles Southwest Junior College. There he was a teammate of Charles Rich. Holded on the floor of 13.5 in the 129-yard high hurdles. Robinson a personal best is 14.0 in the 120 hips. Robinson, who also was sought by Arizona State, Colorado and New York, would be aware of KU's track reputation. He said he wanted to be in the Big Eight. (1) Delario Robinson impressed by Timmons and his staff. "I liked the way the school treated me," he said. "And I knew they needed someone to fill certain positions on the squad." KUDraft Choices Welcome Chance Robinson's track experience was strong at Laurel High School in Los Angeles when, after two seasons on the varsity basketball team, he went to Washington. "I was out for only a few days when my mom told me to get off the court, she laughed." "She said I always been quick, even in grade always been quick, even in grade By JEFF HILL Kansan Sports Writer At least four of the five University of Kansas players selected in the National Football League college draft Tuesday and Wednesday are ready and can to break into professional football. Player reactions to being selected ranged from Kart Salsa's "I don't want you back." Page 5's "I'd go to any team that would have me." The four excerpts above are team teams that started them and to play professional football next week. "WE TALKED about what position I'll play." Childs said, "I'm going to stay at guard." Bobbie Childs, an offensive leader fitted in the fifth round of the playoffs, said: Wednesday that Tommy Wrothhead head coach, had head coaches to head coach. Childs was pleased at the prospect of playing with the Rams "Everybody wants to go" and "What more could I ask for?" Besides Salb and Page, Steve Conley, Steve Roach and Bobby Childs also were drafted. Conley, seventh round choice of Cincinnati, could not be reached for Tuesday or Wednesday. Childs, currently a student teacher at Pinkney School in Lawrence, said he had an off year last season because of injuries. "I messed up my knee in the Colorado game, but I'm strong now." Childs said. "I PLAN to make it in pro football." Childs said. school, so I thought I'd try track." Karl Salb, a defensive tackle drafted in the fourteenth round by the Buffalo Bills, was surpassed by J.J. Bills Wednesday. A three-year NCAA champion shot putter, Salb has not played football since high school and season in favor of concentrating on the shot put. Salb was a member of the 1968 KU football team that won the national Bowl. He graduated last May. Childs also suffered from asthma last season. He doesn't expect it to be a factor when he reports to camp this summer though. "I'd like to play, but it depends on how well I do shot putting this season. I've haven't had much time to think it up. I've made a new team that wasn't formed the Bills have to play. His career as a hurdler was almost an accident. **STEVE ROACH**, a linebacker in the fifteen round by the Detroit Tigers, didn't nothing about Detroit, but didn't care where he had to as long as "They started me in rebelys, he said. "But I was only the fifth spinner, and one day we needed a hurder. I was tall, so that was Roach said he planned to seek help on Ken Blue, assistant foot coach for the Lions, in a contract with the Lions. He said the Lions had not talked to him Robinson, who played football in junior college, is a member of the N.F.L. He has ever been. However, he likes the sense of distinctiveness that track gives Kenny Page, another linebacker, was drafted in the fifteenth round by the Los Angeles Rams. "Football is a team effort. It takes a combination of eleven men to win." Robinson said. "Everyone knows that you really just in points. When you get down to it, you are out there by yourself when the man fires the gun." In preparing for a meet, he said he was not the type who got sick or couldn't sleep the night before a meet. "I just try to stay calm. I eat a light breakfast, maybe a cake bar, and do some leg-stretching." "But the main thing is concentration," Setting or much if you finish second, mean much if you finish first. Though he also holds personal records of 48-8 in the triple jump and 23-9 in the long jump, Robinson also wins a favorite event, "That's the way it was last Saturday in Oklahoma City. I beat the man in the preiminarettes and he just got too quick a start and I couldn't catch him," Robinson said of J.B. Middling of Oklahoma State. "I fell bad about losing in front of a crowd, too," he said. "If I were to do it wrong, there it would be so bad. But a crowd makes a big difference. When a crowd is there, I fell like I'm going to win. That's what I need." "The first part of the day I was worried," he said. "But I really didn't expect to go any higher than the fifteenth." Robinson, who is tall and slim (6-2, 160) and sports a moderate Afro, flashed a grin when he tackled me easily eayinging talkative and an erous He had never lacked confidence,he said. "No, I've probably got enough for me and the rest of the team, too," he laughed. When he joined the Jayhawk track team, some of the other members of the squad treated him with respect. He knew he had to prove himself. "I couldn't let them bother me. I told them if I didn't take first at Oklahoma City, "I'd shave my mustache." Robinson said. He paused, then grinned sheepishly. "I so did. That the kind of harder, I guess. But I don't think I'm going to do it anymore," he said. "For a thing you don't think "From now on," he said, "I think I'm going to be with the best." Professional football teams completed the annual draft of college players Wednesday and Friday from the Big Eight Conference. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The teams completed seven rounds Tuesday and went on through the 12th Wednesday. In the eight round, Baltimore, drafting ninth on a trade from Washington, lost an Oklahoma linebacker. The Ohio "york" guard by Lynn Latimore found Kansas State. Steve Beyle, another Kansas State guard, was picked by New York. Detroit tabbed henry Stuckey Missouri defensive back; Baltimore selected Van Brownson nebraque naurock and Kansas cut Mahoney guard cott Mcahoney later in the round. The only conference player to go in the ninth round was Roy Bell. Oklahoma running back who was taken by Dallas. The 10th round saw Brian Foster, Colorado defensive back go to Cincinnati and Keith Brown, Georgia guard taken by Green Bay. NFL Taps 31 Players From Big 8 Schools John Robertson, Kansas State defensive back, went to the New York Giants, and Larry Brinson, who was also injured for Denver in the 11th round. The Big Eight was ignored in the 12th and 13th rounds. Buffalo conference in the 14th round was defeated by defensive tackle who didn't play. NCAA Rule On Academics Still in Force KANAS S CITY (AP)—The National Association's final rule remains full force. Walter Byers, the association executive director, A. U. S. District Court judge in San Francisco ordered the NCAA Tuesday to lift the probation it held against two California students last August, ruling that it had violated its own 1.8 academic rule for governing sports. In a statement issued in Kansas City, Byers said Judge Albert C. Byers directed the judicial portion of the NCAA's action in the University of California case "The 1.6 rule is not affected by the decision." Byers said. NCAA member institutions are obligated to apply all of the rule requirements in the resultant academic award financial aid to student athletes.* "The penalty against the University of California remains in effect," said Byers, "and the university must pay a fine for provisions as stated earlier." Hand Care THE SACKBUTS ARE Coming University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb. 9 welcome at TIVOL... think you're special. We love young people. (Our family is full of them.) We love your spirit, your values, your way of life. So... when you're in jeans and T-shirts and you're looking for the greatest engagement ring anywhere, remember that you'll find it at TIVOL's. We're not expensive, we are exclusive—but we think we have an "image" of being a store that caters to older people. Please help us change that image. TIVOL ...of course JEWELS 220 Nichols Rd. on the Country Club Plaza, Kansas City, Mo. • Certified Gemologist – American Gem Society his senior year in 1970 so he could concentrate on shotputting. The only players to be picked Wednesday were John Shelley, Oklahoma defensive back, who got the nod from Coach and Dick Graham, running, Oklahoma State, who was picked by New Orleans on the 17th and final round of the draft. In the 15th round, Kansas was tapped for linebackers Steve Roach and Kenny Page by Detroit and Los Angeles. Erik Hart, Carl Tabb, a defensive end for Colorado, went to Washington. Stopping daily internal feminine odor is easy: Just think of Norforms as a tiny tampon that dissolves. If you've ever used tampons, then you already know how to use *Normors* ... the internal "dormitor" to stop the daily cleaning of your vagina. Tiny as a fingertip Normors Suppository is as easy and safe to insert as a tiny tampon would be. It begins dissolving instantly to kill bacteria, stop feminine infections internally, in the vaginal tract. Norforma You feel clean, fresh, odor free for hours. No bath, no douche step aside the way Norwalk does. FREE NORFURMS MINIPACK plus booklet* Write to Norwich orNorwalk with N.Y. 18135. Enclose 254 mailing and handling Name. Street. City. State. Zip. Don't forget your zip code Norwich Products Division The Norwich Pharmaceutical Co. FEB.9 O 8:20 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE The Student Body of The University of Kansas Presents THE NEW YORK PRO MUSICA THEY'VE GOT KRUMHORNS, SACKBUTS, CONTRATENORS, AND A WORLD OF TALENT. It's FREE with I.D. Pick up your reserve seat ticket at the box office in Murphy. Non-Students 2.00 - 2.50 - 3.00 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Winter Sale ENDS SUNDAY COATS & JACKETS BY PETER'S Stay young "take years off" 40% OR MORE OFF Bootleger CENTER OF HIGH Hours 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. 7 Days A Week 523 W. 23rd THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 82nd Year, No. 78 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Friday, February 4, 1972 [Photo of three men sitting at a table, engaged in discussion. The man on the left is speaking and gesturing with his hand. The man in the middle is looking at the paper held by the person on the right. The man on the right is partially obscured. The background consists of a plain wall.] Kansan Photo by RICHARD GUSTIN Ed Bruns, Left, Represents Veterans Presents seven-point program Veterans Representative Presents Seven-Point Employment Aid Plan By RICHARD GUSTIN Kansan Staff Writer A seven-point program designed to aid veterans in finding part-time and full-time employment was presented by Ed Bruns, the president of the Lawrence Institute, in the first session of the Lawrence Jobs for Vets Committee Thursday. Although formed last June, the organization has not yet filed a complaint, president In an hour and a half presentation, we present the ms program which recommended that 1. the free ad placement service for Vietnam veterans in the Lawrence Journal-World be revived and offered as a continuous service, 2. local business and city government agencies hire veterans on a preferential basis and even create part-time jobs for them. v. veterans not attending school be given job preference over veterans and other students 4. regular and free public service announcements and advertisements be used on television and radio stations to inform local businesses to hire veterans. 5. the office of Campus Veterans, in cooperation with the employment service, 6. private employment agencies charge no fee for veteran job placement, 7. the idea of a job fair be eliminated. Mayor Robert Palliam, committee chairman, said the commission would consider it at its meeting next week. The Campus Veterans and the committee will soon start independent surveys to find out the number of veterans in the Lawrence area who are unable to find employment. Once these surveys were completed Pallium said the committee could determine courses of action. At the request of the committee, Bruns accepted a position to represent veterans Palliam said in an interview after the meeting that the problem now facing the committee was 'ascertaining the identity' and making employers aware of them." Enemy Braced for Loss In Major New Offensive SAIGON (AP)—North Vietnam is ready to lose one-fifth of $50,000 men posed to attack in the central highlands and many of its troops "have already resigned themselves to death," the region's top U. S. adviser said Thursday. "The enemy feels it necessary to show me is really still in this war," said John Paul Vann, senior American adviser in the South Vietnam, who covers 47 percent of Southeast Vietnam. United States will pull out of here without negotiating an agreement," Vann added. Vann told a news conference in the central highlands city of Pleuka, that one enemy body in live is found with a chest tattoo; "Born in the North to die in the Although the two South Vietnamese army divisions guarding the cities are repeated to be the country's worst, Vann said: "I don't expect to lose anything." Vann said the North Vietnamese would probably harass the highlands province capitals of Kontum and Pleiku, but he did not give serious attempt to capture those cities. Vann estimated that the North Vietnamese had committed 15,000 men to the troop camp. The main targets are expected to be the troops at Hdk-Tak Toa, area of reported buildups of troops and tanks. This is where the US forces Los, Cambodia and South Vietnam meet. "In this offensive the enemy will be killed by overwhelming artillery and air support. I'm enough of a realist that I'm not going to ask the ARVN—Army of the Republic of Vietnam—to do what they won't do." He said the offensive expected around the Tet new year celebration in mid-February would probably hit his region hardest in mountainous Kontum Province. Other heavy attacks have been predicted for the northern tin of South Vietnam. Vann's statement that he did not expect an attempt to seize a province capital differed somewhat from a radio interview six days ago. He said then that he believed his purpose would be an attack on Kontoh to "grab headlines around the world." At the Pleiku news conference Vann said: "I can't tell you what the emmy is going to do, only what he says he is going to do." Vann said the North Vietnamese were hampered by a malaria outbreak and one detector reported his whole battalion stricken. Other enemy problems are caused by the unanticipated attack schedule as a reaction to President Nixon's visit to mainland China beginning Feb. 21. Enemy troops were reported avoiding border rangers slipping into South Vietnam and heading toward Kontum and Pleiku. No significant fighting was seen on the ground, but midday, however, and action elsewhere in South Vietnam was light and scattered. U. S. and South Vietnamese plains kept raids on the Ro Chi Minh supply trail in southern Laos. BS2 bombers flew 30 to the cities in them in Laos and Cambodia. Reports from Laos said government troops had withdrawn from Muang Kassy, miles north of Vientiane, on the high ground to the royal capital of Luang Prabang. ★ ★ ★ Viet Cong Present U.S. With Revised Peace Plan PARIS (AP)—The Viet Cong placed before the Paris peace talks Thursday their revised peace plan calling for the immediate resignation of Nguyen Van Thieu as South Vietnam's president. But the United States suggested the president and a top official at President Nixon's eight-point plan as the basis for ending the Indochina war. The Communists told Porter they did not accept the plan, disclosed last week by Nixon on television and put to the North by Geraldine and aid to the North by Henry A. Kissinger last October 11. U. S. Ambassador William J. Porter made no detailed response to the Viet Cong plan, but in Washington, a State Department official seemed to be some hopeful elements in it. Porter replied, "This seems to indicate a basic misunderstanding of the negotiating process generally and of what our proposal is intended to do. Under the U. S. plan, he added the United States is prepared to begin troop withdrawals and prisoner exchanges while other points are negotiated. "Ours is a proposal which is fully consistent with the principle that the political future of South Vietnam will be left for the South Vietnamese people to decide for themselves, free from outside interference." Porter declared. Prof Fears Alienation of Japanese He said the plan was not submitted on a take-it-or-leave-it basis but is open for the public. Editor's Note: This is the first in a three-part series dealing with the opinions of KU faculty members and students on the mission of Nixon's trip to China Feb. 21 to 28. But the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong appeared to be abandoning any further consideration of the Nixon plan, which is backed by South Vietnam, and are going on to an elaborated version of the Viet Con's seven-point plan. By PAUL SWEARINGEN Kansan Staff Writer Chances include a demand for the immediate resignation of Thieu and insistence that the United States "set a terminal date" for the troop withdrawal. President Richard Nixon's announcement that he would visit the People's Republic of China Feb. 21-28 left Asian leaders shocked by what they wondered what consequences his trip "This specific terminal date will also be the terminal date for the release of all military and civilian prisoners," the Communists said. Richard A. Falk, Milbank professor of international law at Princeton University, spoke on the challenge for international law to address the grave opening of the Judge Timothy Stephen Kansan Photo by JIM KATON A. K. Mishra International Law Professor Speaks in Woodruff Nevertheless, there's a great deal of international importance in easing tensions between the two countries, as well as personal pressure. It is a symbolic Previously the Communists had demanded that the United States cease supporting Theu and had asked that the Americans get out of Vietnam by the end of 1971. Lectureship Thursday. He will speak on the prospect for response of international law and the global environment in the final session of the global environment, today in Wooldraft Auditorium. would have on the world. In this three-part series, KU faculty members and students will speculate on the possible effects of travel journey behind the Bamboo Curtain. and a leader of the oppressed, projecting a courageous diplomatic image all the Grant Goodman, chairman of the East Asian Studies Department whose main interest is Japan, sees the effects of the greatest danger arising from Nikon's trip. "Nixon shocked Japan twice in 1971, first by announcing his trip to China without warning the Japanese, and then by the ten per cent import charge," he "I'm concerned about the maintenance of the closest possible ties between the United States and Japan," Goodman said. "China today is not nearly as important to the United States as Japan, economically or militarily." Goodman was quick to point out that China's relative importance to the United States is far less than Japan's, and that the precipitous manner in which the trip was announced may result in the alienation of the United States by Japan. "The atomic bomb that China is supposed to have exploded and the satellite they launched are only minimal Japan's restrained military potential. Goodman is concerned also with the image that most Americans have of China and the Chinese. He points to the failures of Western missionaries to Christianize both China and Japan as one indicator that Americans just don't understand China. "Japan is restrained by an economic umbilical and by a military pact with the United States. If they embarked on a serious effort to build up their total military strength, there would be dangers to international peace would be greater than the danger posed by China. "We have, over the decades, created an image of China as a sprawling land of suffering peasants who call for love," Goodman said. "The Chinese at least created an image that our missionaries welcome as we witness where the Japanese were more hostile. "China took ten or twenty years to build bomb bribery, compete, produce an atomic bomb," said the United Nations. "For some reason, the mention of China has evoked a peculiar emotional response to this book. I do not have it. We seem to conjur up a mysterious eastern image of the Chinese. The wellspring of emotional response to China runs deep in the American psyche." as being about as close to a political genius as any previous president. Although Goodman does not necessarily concur with all of the stated molives for the attack, he agrees that the attack was not intended. "The trip no doubt will enhance his image in the U. S." Goodman said. "He has sensed the mood of the country and has shown great perspicacity in announcing his China trip. He'll return to the U. S. with acclaims of being a great world statesman See NIXON, Page 3 Latest Lottery Losers Express Disbelief, Indignation and Regret By CHRIS CARSTENSON Kansan Staff Writer It was only after Walter Crokite announced that March 6 had been chosen. No. 1 in the draft lottery took Jack Gilliam, who would really believe the number he had drawn. "Walter Cronkite doesn't lie," Gillam said regretfully. "I thought it would never happen to me," he said. "I had classes all day and didn't think about the lottery much. After my 4:30 English class, a friend picked me up. I asked him how the lottery had gone; he naused a bit and said he had got 168. "Then I asked what mine was. When he No. 1, I said, 'Oh come on, quit kidding Gilliam's first thought was the possibility of having to leave school. He said his biggest complaint was that all his friends would be gone when he returned to school. "It kind of robs you of the society you live in," Gillam protested. ED JACKSON'S first worry also was the thought of having to drop out of school. Jackson, a Naperville, Ill., freshman, drew No. 2. "It's strange," he said, "that the government can be against a lottery in private practice and yet use it to play with lives on a national scale." Jackson immediately contacted a draft counselor. Brian Martin, Wichita freshman, locked himself in seclusion with a bottle of champagne and some caviar when he discovered his number was three. Widespread apathy towards the war is something Martin cannot understand. "It really didn't make a lot of difference," he said. "I was planning to go along." I'm tired of the Army messing up The local Draft Help office reported a big increase in males seeking draft help. people's lives," he said. Bill Cutter of the office said some males reacted to low draft numbers with "fearful apathy", and "pull within themselves", "and pull out a new way to fight the lottery is at its source. "Gays should register to vote and begin actively supporting legislation opposing homosexuality." Cindy Parrish, Great Bend freshman, said she was really upset when she found out that the boy she was dating drew No. 16 "This really could change a lot of our plans." she said. A cake in the shape of a star and pot money of $4.25 were presented to Thad Campbell, Fairless Hill, Pa., freshman, who was the lowest in Grace Pearson Hall. When asked for a speech, Campbell began, "I regret I have but one life to give ... , and before he could finish, the hall's residents broke out laughing. fim, Brenner, Princeton, Kan. Jimman said he 'greatly welcomed' him in the program. "My first thought was that I could finish school, he said, "but no particular concern," he added. Kansan Photo by RON SCHLOERR AIRLINES ON TV Holders of Low Draft Numbers Begin to Ponder ... Uncertainty for some end does not with the lottery . . . 1 2 Friday, February 4, 1972 University Daily Kansan People . . . ... Places . . . ... Things People: A news study committee said PRESIDENT NIXON has come close to killing off the presidential press conference as a public institution during his term of office." The report, prepared by the Washington News Committee of the Associated Press Managing Editors Association, said Nixon held nine news conferences last year while recent presidents had averaged 24-36 yearly. AUTHOR CLIFFER RIVING has obtained another delay of his appearance before a federal grand jury. A Danish singer who accompanied Irving on a 1971 trip to Mexico said it seemed impossible that Irving could have met Howard Hughes during the trip. Places: ROME - Hundreds of thousands of Roman workers went on a 24-hour general strike. Thursday to press for reforms from a government yet to be formed. Despite Italy's political crisis and a sagging economy, they turned the day into a semiholiday. BELF AST-Britain ordered a battle of army reinforcements to Northern Ireland. Defiant civil right leaders refused to call off an illegal protest march set for Sunday near the border of southern Ireland WASHINGTON—A State Department official acknowledged that many Americans missing in Indochina are dilated. Wilson H. Sullivan, deputy assistant secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific affairs, said the U.S. government would not encourage or cause the collapse of the South Vietnamese government as the price for obtaining the release of prisoners. PARSONS—Some 400 production workers will be terminated at the Kansas Army Armament plant this month, by a force of 150 soldiers. THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE okayed an administration request to increase the ceiling on the national debt—up from $40 billion to $40 billion. That is less than half of the budget, so it will be a June 30 time limit, something the administration did not want. A Kansas legislative committee voted 20 to 1 to boost a SUPPLEMENTAL WELFARE APPROPRIATION so the level of aid can be restored April 1 for general assistance and aid to dependent children. Another attempt to pour life into LIQOR-BY-THE-DRINK proposals came on the floor of the Kansas Senate. A proposition to amend the state Constitution to permit the legislature to regulate public schools was enacted by nine Republicans and two Democrats in the Senate. Things: A bill to allow carry-out sales of 3.2 BEER on Sundays was approved by the Federal and State Affairs Committee of the Kansas House. The measure now goes to the House for consideration by its full membership. Merchant's Sale Receipts Short of IRS Demands By LARRY CHRIST Kansan Staff Writer A sale last week of the entire stock of merchandise of the National Hurons Sales Company, satisfy an excise tax of $108,906.97 levy against the seller's operator, David T. Millstein, 26, of Rochester, NY. The tax was filed by the internal Revenue Service against Millstein after he pleaded guilty in a drug case last October. Although the IRS would not disclose the amount of money he had in his hands, he chandise a spokesman indicated Milstein was still very much in Millstein and Ray M. DITero, 22, of Lenape, laged guilty in U.S. District Court in Kansas and required to a charge of unlawfully facilitating deportation and concealment of hashish without a tax being paid. Millstein was sentenced to five years in prison with parole for his role in the parole board DITero was given an indefinite sentence under the Federal Youth Corrections Act, unimpaired by the parole board DITero, and Millstein, DITero, and The three were arrested after DiTerro allegedly sold some hashish to an agent of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Goods in New York, wholesale price of the hashish at $60,000 with a retail value of over Millstein's 22-year-old wife Susan were arrested in April of last year and charge with conspiring to arrest and sell 66 pounds of hashish. $200,000. The charges were later dropped against Milstein's wife, Beverly M. (nee Duggan) to plead guilty to the reduced charges of failing to pay the tax. National Surplus Sales Store is owned by Larry Surplus, Inc., which bought most of the merchandise. The store opened again for business this week. Chancellor E. William L. Laurence Chalmers J. W. William R. O里ek, vice chancellor for health affairs; and Paul R. Wunsch, chairman of the Board of Regents, appeared before the committee Wednesday as part of a joint session of state fund for our state institutions. It's just a matter of waiting in the Senate-House Ways and Means Committee, which makes a decision on Governor Robert Decking's proposed budget. Decking's proposed budget Budget Hopes Linger Rieke was also pleased with the discussion of the budget. He said the approach to the hearings by the council is highly beneficial for the cause. Wunsch was optimistic about the hearings and said, "Things He said members of the committee asked good questions and seemed to be quite interested in solving the plight. Chalmers made the approach to the committee as an administrator of an institution rather than a candidate of the University of Kansas. were positive. We had a good receptive meeting." Rieke said he thought this lent more credibility to the plex tor more funds to the educational system. SUA Sponsors Forum On Travel Arrangements The SUA travel board and Maupintour work together in planning travel arrangements. SUA advises students on matters Docking's proposed budget would give faculty members of Kansas' six state schools a few per cent salary increase. A panel of representatives from the SAU, Maujountour Travel Services and the dean of foreign students' office provide information and support. Student Union Activities forum Thursday afternoon in Kansas Union for KU students and faculty interested in workshops. about which they could not ask about information about hosts and issue international student identification cards and hostel identification cards SUA has scheduled four flights this summer leaving before June 1. After this date the fare goes up $75. These services are available to all student, staff and faculty of the University of Kansas and their immediate families. Chalmers said KU ranked 26th in salaries of assistant professors on the university's academic faculty. KU ranked last for the average number of associate and full professors. Anyone interested in the program may ask at the SUA office in the Kansas Union. Delay Expected In 'City' Mail Jack Harris, Lawrence postmaster under a new post, under a new post office processing system, the use of "city to designate local mail recipients" On March 11, Lawrence will become part of an Area Mail Processing Program, with headquarters in Kansas City, Mo. Mail not deposited in mail boxes designated local delivery only, or mail not bearing the city name required. It is also likely to Kansas City for processing. Improperly marked local mail must then be returned before delivery. Researcher Says Indians Should Run Their Education Dumont, an Osage Indian, said education programs for Indians were being used 'to assimilate' him into the white man's culture. Katherine Dumont "The goal of educating Indian children today, she said, "is to make the children better Americans, not better Indians." Indians should be given control of the school where Katherine Redecore Dumarea a researcher at Haskell for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, said Dr. Ella Perry, an assistant professor at She said Indian students at vocational schools and junior colleges run by the government were told how well they worked Shaffer will talk with reporting and magazine classes and talk informally with students in the Kansan newsroom in Flint Hall. Shaffer joined Newsweek in May 1983 as a White House correspondent, and later attained his present position of chief Congressional reporter. Before coming to Newsweek, he served for three years as a U.S. Marine Corps combat correspondent. He fought in and reported the battles of the Battle of Iwo Jima and authored "Beat-Beachhead," the semi-official history of the Battle of Tarawa. Samuel Shaffer Schulman, president of Newsweek magazine, will visit the William Allen White School of Journalism Monday and Tuesday at Wheeling High. Shaffer was graduated cum laude from George Washington University and graduated from the University of Michigan and the University of Chicago In 1936, he joined the Army as a member with the Washington Times, and with their hands and were told "they really don't have the minds to go on to college." She briefed told the history of Indian education in America and said today the average college graduation rate in Indian was five years, the drop out rate for Indians was twice as high as the national average and only 18 per cent of the Indians went federal schools go on to college. The Editor-in-Residence program is designed to give students more contact with professional educators in three years ago by the Newspaper Fund to encourage editors to visit campuses. was the paper's murder trial and municiple affairs specialist. The meeting was called to introduce board members members who were elected last spring to the student body, said Paul Dewey, Garden City senior vice-president. Students attending were free to ask questions of any of the board members. She said there were children in New Mexico who walked two miles to catch a bus which drove them to mules to get to school everyday. The meeting "Meet the SUA Board" was attended by less than 20 students Thursday night in the Night Room of the Kansas Union. Meeting Called To Introduce SUA Board FREE-FREE Newsweek Correspondent To Visit, Talk to Students One order of french fries with the purchase of any two sandwiches on our menu. This offer is good: FRIDAY- SATURDAY-SUNDAY FEBRUARY 4,5 and When asked why the drop-out rate at Haskell was so high, Dumont said the rules at the school were very strict. "Students have to be in by 11:30 in the evening. They have detail work to do. The students say, 'If I leave home, I'll have joined.' " she said. Henrys SUNDAY GEM Theater Adm. $1.00 Baldwin City Feb. 4-5, F. Sa. Su. The Great White Hope Starring James Earl Jones, Jane Anastasia Feb. 8-9, 10, T.W. Th "friends" New Haven Cafe Live Entertainment from 6 p.m. to Midnight Featuring DAVID BAILEY KATHY BUEHLER AND OTHERS DITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND Friday Feb.18----8:00 p.m Hoch Aud. 2.50, 3.00, 3.50 10 ticket limit per person on Feb. 7 (one performance only) Ticket Sales Begin Mon., Feb. 7 8:30-5:00 SUA Office 1975 Rome. Before Christ. After Fellini. SHEPHERDSON AND BAYER An ALBERTO GRIMALDI Production "FELLINI SATYRICON" COLOR by Deluxe* PANAVISION* United Artists PIZZA HUT Fri. & Sat. Feb. 4-5 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. 60° Woodruff Auditorium "I WISH A FRESH-CRUSTED, THICK CHEESED, EXTRA SAUcy PIZZA WOULD APPEAR RIGHT BEFORE MY VERY EYES!" IN CASE OF SUCH EMERGENCY, CALL 843-3516 WE'LL RUSH YOUR WISH RIGHT OUT TO YOU. PIZZA HUT We deliver the Goods! A man riding a bicycle. Winter Sale ENDS SUNDAY ENDS SUNDAY COATS & JACKETS BY PETERS Stay young "take years off" 40% OR MORE OFF Bootleger CENTER OF HIGH FASHION Hours 10 a.m.- 10 p.m. 7 Days A Week 523 W. 23rd Friday, February 4, 1972 2 AUSTIN, TEXAS Kansan Photo by EDWARD L. LALLO Hill Behind Spencer Library Used for Traying Brenda Harris, right, of Lawrence, and Amy Hill, Overland Park senior, enjoy slack rides. Local Art Gallery Seeks Rebirth in Midwest Art By JOHN FISHER Kansan Staff Writer Murv Jacob, Lawrence artist and owner of the Seven East Seventh Gallery is faced with the challenge of dedicating to good art for good art's sake, or to suspend art is sometimes not very good. "this is more of a cultural thing than a money thing," Jacob said in an interview this week. He told me in there and there fight for awhile. Jacob opened the Seven East Seventh Gallery last November. 22. already to its credit are one-room baths (watercolors and oils), Collette tourists’ exhibit. **CURIOUS** are about 30 paintings by Raymond Eastwood, former head of the drawing and painting department at Cahokia canvases are regional works of the Midwest and the Southwest. In sand dunes or corrillands with basalt cliffs, they range from the stark to not-so-stark. The paintings from $21 to more than $500. "This has been our most recent client," he said. "Also our most expensive. Dr. Eastwood is respected here. It's his first exhibition in three years, with a new set of drawings." Bangert (computer art) and a "7 Kansas Printmakers" exhibit Nixon... Continued from Page 1 gesture of the real desire of the Western world to communicate and share, it indicates the viability of the "two." "The traditional economic image of China has been that of a bottomless pit into which the american goods would pour," he said. The American attitude toward trade with the Chinese could stand some overhaul also, Goodman said. According to Goodman, there seems to be a subconscious need by Americans to aid the Chinese in their efforts to win Christianity. He also thinks Americans have an unshakeable belief that China supports the Communist revolution as momentary aberration from what we feel the Chinese should see. University Daily Kansan "I hope that Nixon will have serious and meaningful talks with the Chinese rulers," said the Chinese shaker a single Chinese peasant's hand. Nevertheless, you can be sure that the television commentators will emphasize the number of people in the crowds. Goodman voiced concern for the American political practice of what he called "crowdmanship," a trend that figures prominently in the figure's popularity by the size of crowds he generates in his travels and for the curious democratic custom of calling by American politicians. Carl Leban, whose specialty is Chinese history, commented especially on U.S. foreign policy "The United States has adopted a policy which is at variance with both Nationalist and Communist government of Japan, where the island of Taiwan is a part of China, and both insisted on a government of China." in relation to the two Chinas "Nixon's visit to Peking could precipitate an ethical crisis." Pointing out that the United States has treaties, which it must honor, with the Nationalist alliance, he noted that the United States will have a problem in retaining diplomatic relations with Taiwan. Leban also affirmed the necessity of Americans to make changes in their image of China. To the Chinese, their country historically has been the center of the world and all other countries in the region, said "China was the country to which outsiders came to pay respects to the court of heaven. In return, the foreign western diplomats were shocked when they were forced to bow and scrap before the Emperor. They demanded that the customs of the Chinese." Leban thinks that a new era in both Chinese and world affairs is being opened by Nixon's visit, which symbolizes an end to the Israeli occupation, which has published twenty years ago after the Communist takeover. "There are hundreds of artists around here, but very few good galleries." Jacob said. "There are very many good galleries we see." Very often, Consequently, most of these artists aren't able to get their display. The only way they can display is through national shows. Around here, the artist is lost without support. This gallery is a necessary thing. Leban also warned that the Chinese probably intended to try to use the United States as a foil for their hegemony in Japan and the Soviet Union. What about culture in the Midwest? "IT'S ABOUT TIME for a raillance," said Jacob. "A reassurance." We're trying to help and nurse it along. People with talent aren't doing what they want with their art, would you rather be an artist, would you rather be sacking groceries at Kroger's or painting? The trouble is that most students around here—if the deserves it, by the square foot in Europe or import big East Coast names for the safe money and prestige. It is time artists who are on the Coast earn from the Midwest. But they have the Midwest can't hold its artist because the interest isn't here we're trying to createt, interest "I'm tired of borrowing my culture from New York," Jaceb Johnson wrote in a show that the art from people I know and live around. It makes it more interesting. Students Use Trays For Downhill Trip The Seven East Seventh Gallery is one-half block east of Massachusetts on 7th Street and 9th Street. It is 6 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Those who dropped their student deferments to be exposed to the draft for the first 90 days of their studies, priority group if their numbers have not been reached by the end of that period. They will not be placed in the first priority group, which are reported in Thursday's Kansan The sport of traying, using cafetiera trays to slide down ice bells, is not as popular with hikers as it is for personal use as it is with students. Correction On Draft Story Run Thursday In the same story Bill Cutter was identified as a counselor for Senate Finance. Cutter works with Draft Help, a Cutter Senate funded organization Bill Spears, production manager for Kansas University, said the union had problems with students "borrowing" trays and not using them. By MARSHA LIBEER Spears said a couple of years ago the Union purchased new trays and then allowed students to use the older ones for traying. "They went through those trays in about two seasons," Spears said. Spears said the new trays cost about $3.50 each and were too big to fit in a bag. However, he estimated that 100 of the newer trays had been lost Oliver Hall has adopted a policy which allows students to use residence hall trays for sledding purposes. Leonard Oliver, director of food service at Oliver Hall, said about 30 old trays were at the store on Friday. He checked to be checked out for student use. "There's no charge on it. We just like for them to take care of them as long as they can," Oliver said. ENGLISH 2 STAFF 10:30 a.m. Councillor Boston, Flr. Floor, Kansas City Campus Bulletin County Room, 1st Floor, Kansas Union SOCIAL WELFARE EQUIPMENT CONS. 10-30 DESIGN: 11:30 a.m., English Room. SCHOOL OF BUSINESS: noon, Curry Room. a.m. Oread Room LUSO-BRAZILIAN 11:30 a.m. Alcue B. ^afertia PHARMACETICAL CHEMISTRY: noun, Room. noon. Watkins Room: SOCIAL WELFARE: noon. Alcove A Cafeteria. Cafeteria HISTORY ADVISORY: noon, Alcove D WELF AREA: moon. Alcove A Calisteria PHYDIO ECOLOGISTS: noon. Alcove C Free Pizza Buck Just for Looking 2 BR Unf 155 2 BR Furn 195 Cafeteria: RUSSIAN TABLE; 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark, Cafeteria; ADVISORY HOUR: Alpine D. Cafeteria RUSSIAN TABLE: 12:30 p.m. RADIO-TV-FILM 1 p.m. Kansas Room HISTORY LECTURE 1 p.m. Pine Room LAW SCHOOL 3:30 p.m., Woodruff Room. MUSLIM STUDENTS: 12:45 p.m. Room: 299 842-4444 ION: 3:30 p.m. Jyahawk Room DESIGN: 6 p.m. Alove A. Cafeteria SUA POPULAR FILMS: 7 p.m., Woodruff ailorum Room. SOCIAL WORK STUDENT ORGANIZATION 1-300 seats. Work space Room. RIDGLEA SUA CHESS TOURNAMENT: 2 a.m. ayhawk Room. All Utilities Paid "I wish we could think of something else for them to slide in," she said. IVCE: 7 p.m., Parlors A and B SATURDAY Lenore Eckdahl, supervisor of residence hall food service, said various residence halls tried to provide old trays for traying. He said the residence hall, not all residence halls are able to provide old trays. The People Place to Live SLA CHESS TOURNAMENT: 10 a.m. Jayhawk Room. VARSITY SWIMMING KU-IOWA STATE: 7:30 p.m. Robinson Natatorium VARSITY BASKETBALL KU-IOWA STATE: 7:35 p.m. Ames, Iowa THOMPSON, TAMM RUSCHEEN ALLIOBS, 4 p.m. Allen Field House UNIVERSITY WOMENS CLUB SOCIAL HOUR: 5 p.m. Ramada Inc. YOU Need a Comfortable, Attractive and Reasonably Priced Apartment? LAWRENCE T. INTERNATIONAL FILM, "LOVE AT TWENTY" 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Audition. CAMILION REITAL Suggestions On Education To Be Heard Traying can also present a problem for the student who ends his adventure in Watkins Hospital. WE Have just what you need LET'S GET TOGETHER Large sunny rooms Closets you must see to believe Pvt outside entrances Game room, Study room Rooftop pool Laundry, offstreet parking Month-to-month leases The chairman and two other members of the House Education Committee of the Kansas Legislature will be at the Kansas Union Monkey to hear safety teachers, and teachers general public for improving higher education in Kansas. Dr. Mary Hatfield of Warkings Hospital said students who had been traying sometimes came to the hospital for lacerations and contusions. The most serious trarying victim she was a student with a fractured wrist. 130 160 "You would think they would have avoided it like poison," she said, "But they didn't." CARILLON RECITAL: 3 p.m. She said in the past many accidents were caused by students traying into a tree stump near Potter Lake. 1 BR Unf 1 BR Furn 6th & Frontier Chairman Raymond Vaughn, R-Burlington, and two colleagues are on the first floor of the Union from a.m. to 3 p.m. Interested persons may participate in the informal reservations and will have reservations are not necessary. Hatfield said the stump had been removed. A three-inch blanket of snow, dumped on Lawrence Wednesday morning, is said to have failed to produce any major problems for area police and emergency workers. KU Traffic and Security reported no traffic accidents had occurred on campus because of icy road conditions. Lawrence also reported no unusual amount of traffic problems in the city. Snow Poses Few Problems City and county road departments worked through Wednesday night into Thursday morning salting blackened 7-Day Special CARS PAINTED $27.50 NORTHTOWN BODY SHOP LAWRENCE, ARGENTINA 1790 N. 2nd 843-96731 LAWRENCE, KANSAS There is STILL TIME to enroll Each class meets once a week for 8 weeks Regular Course - Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m. - Noon, BEGINS NEXT TUESDAY Western Civil Course - Thursdays: 7-9 p.m. begins Mar. 2 *You may start with the Regular Course and add to transfer to* *the Modern Course. evelyn wood reading dynamics Harry M. Buchholz, director of halls and grounds, said the 2013 school year cleared most of the streets on campus by early Thursday. streets and grading gravel roads. Most streets were reported in good condition by Thursday evening. Buchholz said KU always worked well with officials in the region, and was involved in the interactions of 11th, 12th, 13th and 14th streets between Ovadia and Buchholz. Student Union Activities Officer and Board Interviews not major enough to have crews to work through Wednesday night. Feb.24-26 VICE-PRESIDENT FORUMS PRESIDENT FINE ARTS DIRECTOR FESTIVAL TREASURER PUBLIC RELATIONS SECRETARY RECREATION FILMS TRAVEL Applications Available in SUA Office (Main Floor, Union). SPECIAL EVENTS Application Due Feb. 23 at 5 p.m. Arensberg's = Shoes O 400 pr Arensberg's = Shoes 819 MASS. GET HEEL HAPPY... with a jolly good sport Fashion fun and games start with a very successful sportster. The English moc ties one on in soft going glove with a super-new heel happenin': the sled slant! In Blue or Earth. $15.95 connie* Seafarer Dungarees ALL SIZES Surplus BONANZA Reg. 6.98 4. 98 Over 75 pr Reg. 5.98 Lee Jeans ONLY 3.00 Reg. 10.00 NOW 5.00 Remaining Stock Pea Coats g. 24.95 NOW 17.95 Insulated Underwear Remaining Stock Dacron 88 Lady Lee Shirts Permaprest Reg. 10.00 NOW 6.50 Lady Lee overalls Retail 13.50 ONLY 10.00 S AV Sunflower Surplus, Inc. 815 Vermont E NEW GOV'T SURPLUS NOW 843-5000 4 Friday, February 4, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Guest Column The Dan Schorr Incident, Or More Nixon Folly Daniel Schorr, a familiar face to those who watch the CBS Evening News, offered his own testimony this week to Senator McCain on his subcommittee on Constitutional rights. Erwin is investigating the darker shadows of the foggy nimbus which surrounds the White House request for a recent investigation into the life and affairs of Scherr. In his testimony Schorr expressed some large doubts about the Nixon Administration's claim that everything was perfectly managed; he was merely being considered for a Federal job, that the FBI's investigation was just a routine preliminary to the offer. The White House declared—refused is the better word—to authorize matters; but just hours before Scherr appeared, the Washington Post printed the Administration's version via a well-timed leak, which is the way Richard Nixon would to communicate with the press. The leak makes it perfectly clear that the White House, somewhat surprised in sticking to its policy, insists that he must be mec because it confirms a deeply held conviction that Richard Nixon is stupid as it thinks he is in trust with his advisers, worse. One likes to have a little faith in the President Of The United States; one is difficult in this case; he is asking us to believe that he is either not lying or has a short memory. He does not have a short memory. To be less arcane: Richard尼克斯's memory is long enough to remember an incident which occurred during the GOP, and Senator Barry Goldsworthy and another incident included US Senator Schorr, and Barry Goldsworthy—again. Both incidents bear on the present Schorr Early in the week of the 1964 Republican National Convention, the same Daniel Schorr reported from West Germany that Goldwater had some contacts with a member in that country. At the time, it may be recalled, Americans were watching with morbid fascination what looked like a small but healthy resurgence of neo-Nazism, and, in that atmosphere, selections looked somewhat dubious. Predictably, Goldwater's aides at the convention were furious about Schorr's report; it was taken as an indication to out-sabote Goldwater's chances in November even before the convention, when the Clinton-Chaused, and for reasons of his own—which were not all that sound or honorable—CBS News director Fred Freed wrote that the extraordinary news that his report was being disclaimed. Schorr would not back down, and he would continue the CBS denied the story. But, as these things usually happen, the story wouldn't evaporate until the expedition, also based West Germany, reported that Goldwater had been in *frequent* and friendly correspondence with members of the leader of a group of German right-wing extremists. The story, written out of sight on the bottom of an inside page in the Times, did not seem to bother Goldwater or his companions; was said—until six years later With an indefinite memory of Olsen's story six years earlier, Goldwater scuttled the person by objection "personally obnoxious," a standard form of objection Senators use on which they must answer Senate approval. The Olsen promotion did not require Senate confirmation, but Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she a flaccid backbone in the face of Goldwater's arrogance, went along with the Senator and decided to let Olsen know the deal was definitely off. Less than a year later the FBI began its账查 on Schorr, who bought it from the White House for quite some time. And last November, when the Washington Post finally released the investigation, the administration moved quickly to cover the simeon and reputation by trying to link the FBI's investigation to Honest Uncle Sam's Employment Department. To accept that version is to believe the Administration would use the same screening procedures for a man who had no chance of surviving Senator Goldwater's demons-poison short, the Administration must have us believe it was inviting a messy confrontation on its right side. If we fail to do so, the Administration will Thus, the suspicion grows that the FBI, because it is what it is, was being used as a tool of blatant intimidation of a former enemy, and played the sake of Mr. Nikon's images of wisdom and purity. And with equal persistence, the conviction gets stronger that Mr. Nikon gets and more tricky as time passes. The intriguing question the whole sordid affair raises is why? What did the White House hope to do with Nixon's putative political mind that could have told him that this kind of evil fun could end up in one of those minor disasters that had been caused by his legitimacy? Bill Lawrence, an ABC political correspondent who has covered Nixon for years, wrote that he saw the same one by saying Nixon's political expertise was, as was Lyndon Johnson's, the vastly overrated. He also numerous critiques which hold that Mr. Nixon is morally bankrupt, perhaps we can now add with some certitude that the Nixon administration about half, the first five senses. Lawrence graduate student LORD MOUSE the Constituent northern IRELAND Rue Britannia Kansas Photo by DAN LAUING Garry Wills Press Restraint Needed HARRISBURG, PA—A man is driving home, here, and flips on his radio. The newscaster is saying that a prospective juror in the Harrisburg Conspiracy Case has been dismissed for cause. A lawyer who helped the man is a Catholic (in a case involving priests and nuns), and There was nothing simister about the process—no motive other than the general drive of the competition of reporter with reporter, and a lack of much information covered in the trial's early stages. PETER M. LARSON This small incident illustrates "Newsmen invade privacy at the slightest cause," says Gary Wills. But he doesn't recommend governmental control of this obsessive curiosity. Rather he restricts realm within the media. The report interests the car's driver very much, since he too is jumping to judgment juror who has not been questioned yet. He is bound to wonder whether he will be convicted of a crime in faith. The news report is a bit garbled, and could mislead anyone. For this reason, the judge should ask the juryman be asked of potential juries not be released until the jury could be chosen and sequestered. The judge ignored his sensible request. that he has shown "progovernment" bias. Newsmen invade privacy at the slightest excuse. A night or two after the juror incident, TV cameras were stationed on the building's skijerkshot by an FBI man. The man's poor children had to an unfortunate side-effect of our free speech and the free press; a coverage, of an indiscriminate sort. No great "need to know" was involved in withholding some information chosen. Nor was there any need to publish the names or answers of those closely processed out of the news media. run a guillotine of cameras to get in or out of their own house. Shortly before that, a teacher was shot in a DC classroom by her estranged husband, in no time, men were there with tape and cameras. The motion of children to see their teacher killed before their eyes. This is not a problem that can be cured by censorship, or by pressure from above, but only by pressure from below, as demand for certain decencies. As a matter of fact, the lack of press restraint leads to long-range conflicts and disputes, wonder the Kennedy family withheld autopsy photos of JFK—just look at the garrish use made of his body. Robert Kennedy's axiom Furthermore, a blank cover coverage policy allows the press to be used. Anything officials do is reported; so it is easy to distract the news from the staged or made minds's off other things. If the government stops talking about the war, and talks very rapidly about eight other things, the government's consciousness—which is just what happened during the 1970 elections. The press was made the victim of its own "freedom." And negative, and negative, it was actually dobie and subservient. Freedom is no guarantee of maturity or responsibility; and the press could use a heavy dose Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate Smokers Puff Along Despite Warnings WASHINGTON—The office of the U.S. Surgeon General last month published its sixth annual report on smoking and health, including a call to unsuit委会mittee, following up on the latest findings, will undertake further hearings on matters of smoking and non-smokers alike. James J. Kilpatrick The picture is hardly encouraging. In the view of the Surgeon General, cigarette smokers have higher death rates from coronary heart disease than non-smokers. They have higher mortality in pulmonary emphysema and chronic bronchitis. Cigarette smoking "is the major cause of lung cancer in women" because of lung cancer in women. This is not all. "There is increasing evidence to support the view that women who smoke during pregnancy have a higher risk of unsuccessful pregnancy than those who do not." Some studies have demonstrated a "significant association between cigarette use and nary bladder in both men and women." The Surgeon General's report is based on more than 1,500 published studies over the past 18 months. The evidence is massive and clearly convincing. Yet the habit persists and the questions remain. Last year saw an increase of 1.5 per cent in the number of Americans capita consumption dropped not at all. All 44 million Americans stubbornly continue to smoke cigarettes; on the average they buy 20 cigarettes a day Sen. Frank E. Moss, acknowledging these numbers, agrees that an outright prohibition on the annual production of the sale of cigarettes, as a practical matter, is impractical. Why do smokers keep puffing away? One answer may lie in the cause-and-effect relationship is by no means universal. The reason is that when a smoker will get a burned finger; every time. The man who cuts himself with a razor will find that the cut he makes can be heavier smokers get cancer. Thousands of non-smokers die of factors to risk of factors. It comes down to factors of risk. The studies cited by the Surgeon General make this clear. The very first paper he the reviews in a book published in 1970 born in Goteborg, Sweden, in 1913. Between 1863 and 1970, the group were carefully observed. Of these, 405 were smokers. In the seven-year period, 26 of them were smokers. This was a rate of six per cent; the rate among 35 non-smokers and former smokers was one per cent; and the rate among those if you want to look at it this way, that 94 per cent of the smokers are aged 75. Those aren't able through age 75. These are bad for health. Senator Moss contemptuously dismisses the Institute as "the Flat Earth Society" for its lack of attention to general's findings uncertaintly. Yet the Institute is performing an excellent and needed service in challenging the statistics, the objectivity of these annual reports. The institute contends, quite correctly, that the bulk of the case against cigarettes rests upon statistical correlations that have been found with certified causes of death. How good are the figures? The institute calls attention to a study published last September of 1,000 hospitalized patients at Hospital in New York. Sixty-one autopsies were undertaken on cases that had been diagnosed as lung cancer. In but nearly 58 per cent of the cases, the "diagnosis was confirmed," according to the validity of death certificates? Another study, undertaken in the Boston area, accidentally turned up a striking picture of a man who smoked and also drink coffee. Is coffee an overlooked villain? Curiously, the institute notes, neither of these studies is even within the Surgeon General's report. Both the work and the criticism have to go on. Moss's bill to limit tar and nicotine levels and the approach may have great impact on the day the scientist may isolate the waste-producing agent and find a way to suppress it. Meanwhile, few persons who would question the best methods to prevent the dirty habit. If you can, quit. It's tough advice to take. right 1972, The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. Letters Policy Readers Respond Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 100 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation. Letters should be typed in a formal font and include their name, year in school and home town; faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and position. Senate Folly Abortion and Drinking; Nixon To the Editor: Would anyone agree that the Kansas Senate is inconsistent? Monday, the Kansas Senate Permanently in office to conservative manner by defeating the bill to legalize the sale of mixed drinks in some cities. Yet, Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary voted against a revocation or amendment of the liberal Kansas abortion law. The panel voted to reject a panel of three doctors certifies that an abortion is necessary for the physical or mental health of the potential mother. This law allows any woman to be admitted an abortion upon request. We still cannot be served a mixed drink with our meals, but we females can be granted an abortion with little difficulty. If the Kansas legislators consider drinking a moral issue, what do they consider abortion or euthanasia as action of a potential human life? Marsha Sears. Lawrence graduate student Nixon Praise To the Editor: From your editorial (Mike Moffet, Kansan Kan, 28) it is important to the President's statement about Congressmen and members of the press allowing themselves to speak in this country of divisiveness in this country." He was talking about those individuals who have spread the word of war in Vietnam and sets a date for withdrawal of its troops from Vietnam as the American prisoners of war. This idea is pure wishful thinking on the part of individuals who should be intelligent enough to know better. Neither the North Vietnamese nor the National Liberation Front ever made a formal proposal to use nuclear weapons, and talks. This myth grew out of a statement by one of the North Vietnamese negotiators that if the United States did not for withdraw the North Vietnamese would discuss the release of American prisoners of war. But the United States release of French prisoners of war after the French withdrawal from Vietnam. The idea of a hypothetical American troop withdrawn for release of various individuals who were not representatives of the President of the United States. This myth was unofficially encouraged by the North Vietnamese since it did not allow military position they might later have to deliver on and because it would encourage confusion in the United States. Creating a military situation is tactically employed in time of war. Since the North Vietnamese made no official offer of prisoner release for troop transfers, he must accept to such a proposal when it was offered to them by Henry Kissinger in a secret meeting of our counselor for cease fire that is not an unreasonable request before agreeing to withdraw troops from a war zone. A cease fire was in effect when a missile was withdrawn from Vietnam. There was nothing in the President's statement that attacked everyone who was Griff and the Unicorn The Viet Cong do not have enough support to win an honest election but they will continue a military threat due to suicidal attacks on Allied positions during the Vietnam War. a useful updated positions during and after the 1968 Tet offensive. Discussion about American withdrawals should be undertaken at the actual facts and issues involved rather than myths and emotionalism. Is it too great a request to ask that you confine your logical discussion of reality rather than an emotional response to a statement you evidently do not even understand. By Sokoloff The North Vietnamese will probably not accept President Nixon's peace proposal since it would be difficult for him to sit. The North Vietnamese will have great difficulty in accepting any settlement that does not permit the regime which they are evidently unable to eliminate themselves. opposed to the war. He simply made a statement of fact in order to give Americans a more accurate picture of war, by using the Paris talks. His statement was not designed to eliminate anti-war sentiment but rather to return a war that had been ignored if the actual facts about the war. 55555 55555 55555 Roll —Kenneth B. Lucas, !! BLAAAA KSAT! 555555 Hutchinson graduate student "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." N !! BLAAAAA KSAT! America's Pacemaking college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom-UUN 4-4810 Business Office-UUN 4-4328 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Registration rates: 68 a semester, 100 a month. Attendance at law school is required at LawWay. Goods, services and employment advertised to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin are not permitted. The State Board of Regents NEWSSTAFF News Adviser ... Del Brinkman Editor Chip Crowns Associate Editor Michael Moore Campaign Editor Scott Spearler News Editors Rilee Hague, Jon King Eric Franer, Jawel Scott Copy Chief Joyce Cressman, Jon King Featured in Campus Editors Sally Carlson, Bob Simpson Sports Editors Bob Simpson Featured in Campus Editors Barbara Spencer Featured in Campus Editors Barbara Spencer Editorial Writer Barbara Spencer Writing Editor Joyce Duncan, Nanny Jones Manage Images Dirk Jacques, Jane Schmidt Hire Images Barbara Schmidt Photographers Ed Larder Gatherer Serpent, Tom Rushi Rank Young Office Manager Todd Rush Correspondent Dave Colado BUSINESSSTAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams Business Manager Marketing Manager Administrative Manager Advertising Manager Sales Manager Marketing Manager National Advertising Manager Industrial Marketing Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Carole Young Marketing Manager Norman Massey Lorraine Baskin Dale Pippenger David Murray Dave Murray University Daily Kansan Friday, February 4, 1972 5 Weekend Scene; Fellini 'Satyricon' Tonight By BARBARA SCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor SEVEN EAST SEVENTH BOWL BOWL paintings by Raymond Eastwood, professor emeritus of drawing and painting. Through CONCERTS UNIVERSITY THEATRE: KU Concert Course, New York Pro Musica, 8:20 p.m. Wednesday. The group will be making its first performance in four years. Its speciality: Renaissance music sung and played on authentic Renaissance instruments such as saxophone, sackbut and krumhmorn. Carol Young Robert Carter Stean Manley E barnhart pergerdes infida Lloyd save Murray delano Delano WOODRUFF AUDIORIUM: SUA POPULAR Film, "Satyrion" 7 and 9:30 p.m. tonight and then a masterminded this 1968 movie. An excursion through the decade of ancient Rome, "Satyrion" is WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: Film Society, "Three Lives." Heavy-Handed Violence Fills Empty 'Dirty Harry' WOODRUFF AUDIORIUM: International Film Series, "Love at Twenty," 7:30 p.m. Sunday. In 1962 five directors made five films that were influential and that love causes problems. The result was this unoriginal film made interesting only by the names of the directors: Frances Truffault, Renzo Rossellini, Robert Rudolph, Olivias Ophuis and Andrézeira Waida. actually Fellini's personal metaphor for the bourgeois decay in the 1960s. Kansan Reviewer By RON PARKER Kansas Reviewer It would be easy to dismiss "Dirty Harry" as a nasty, lazy little movie, because that's what it is. But it raises some important questions about the state of a particular genre of American film. Police-detective stories have been immensely popular ever since Edson Baehner Poe created the character, but in recent years been that of the private eye or police detective who is at odds with the department and solves the case in an investigative capacity. that, Sam Spade did that, half the characters on network television do that, and now "Dirty Harry" is doing it at the Varsity. "DIRTV HARRY" however represents a change in the trend. For one thing, he is a totally lifeless character. He's tough and mean, all right, but he's empty and uninteresting. Bogart was every bit as tough in the "Maleates Falcon", but he kept us with him all the way with lines like, "I don't hang you, precious, or that sweet neck." Clint Eastwood's wooden protrayal of "Dirty Harry" succeeds only in making the character even duller. He has one basic facial expression which occasionally transforms into a slight frown or mild grimace. His flat delivery does nothing to help like, 'Now you know why they call me Dirty Harry.' WHEN I SAW 'Straw Dogs' the audience cheered each death with increasing fervor. So many characters were violently dispatched in "The Organization" that the audience began to laugh. The crowd was Eastwood stuck a knife clear through the bad guy's hand, the audience reacted with spontaneous aplause. This brings me to my question. Have we become so conditioned to violence in our entertainment and in our lives that it takes a movie like "Dirty Harry" to the needs that Humphrey Bogart used to meet? All of this, however, is merely reflective of bad movie-making. The important considerations of a movie making project are the pleasurable suspense. It is argued that this post—"Bomie and Clyde" era is one of realism violence. (Remember our absolute horror when Warren Buffett gave us the title to "The Mayhem in such movies as "Dirty Harry", "The Organization" and "Straw Dogs" is pretty amusing even on an audience is something else again.) The old formula is there: Eastwood plays a light-jawed pincer to mined to capture the villain despite the department's efforts to restore it. But there are differences. The villain is a hippie-type homoideal maniac (which is also becoming something of a trend). Among other things, he raps a young girl, pulls out one of her teeth and mails it to someone else, then buries the girl alive. Some distance we live from her, in shadow-in the alley—followed by—a woman's scream. THE PLEASURABLE aspects of suspense are completely missing in Harry Harry. We are particularly grateful to the filmmakers and And the filmmakers to disarm our objections by laying a heavy-handed message on us. They would have us believe that the killer remains on the loose and will be able to find you, come now. A country that can round up criminals like the Berrigan and Daniel Ellis can erase the mass-murder with some charges against a freaky mass-murderer. A further disturbing fact is that Director Don Siegel is no fresh young punk out to make a statement. He's an old man who made his first 1970s car. He went to Lorry-Sydney Greenstreet vehicle called 'The Ventifact.' He has merely changed with the times, and so doing has helped cause the times to change. 7. 30 and 9.15 p.m. Author Kate Millett "Sexual Politics" explores the lives three of her women, who are involved in a documentary. Through a simple narrative approach, Millett shows her feelings to be a woman who is interested in sex. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM- SUA Classical Film, "Night Must Fall." 7:30 and 9:15 p.m. Wednesday. Robert Montgomery stars as a boyish psychopathic murderer who gets his kicks by playing an important role in an invalid and terrorizing an entire household. 1937 version. UNION BALLORM; SUA Science Fiction Film, "Woman in the Moon." 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Directed by Fritz Langer, 1829 **VARSITY THEATRE:** "Dirty Harry." Clint Ewart playds a simple-simulated, right-wing Sandra Deane. He treats the tries to hunt down the baddies in Frisco, but they always get off the hook because of his inability to escape. The script is a febble plea for less legal restrictions on police, but "Dirty Harry" is just another in a recent wave of violent movies. GRANADA THEATRE: "Two a Penny" A Billy Gray message movie "Remember to look back at you," which a young boy seeks power and glory in his own little world, steps on everybody's feet along the way, and is saved in the end. In "The Brave Brotherhood and Christianity HILGEST 3: "Straw Dogs" Dinah Hoover, wife of the town's wife, wife of the town's idiot murderer while the local rat catcher and his buddies wreck his dogs. Sam Peckinnam handles the primal victim with his usual strategy. "IHE THE FIRST MILLIANT POWERPLAYER" he was competently cast with George Garrett playing a burglar in the 1964 film by the breacher Dwight Thomas. THEATRE HILKREST 2: "On Any Sunday," Bruce Brown's first summer surfing epcap (the Summer! (THE surfing epcap) is a fast, bright, knowledgeable look at the ocean. ED BULLINS WROTE the following two one-acts which were carried off disappointingly. The first was *Electronic Nigger*, contained some rather force acting by Ivan Krasnyak, an instructor of an adult education class. His classroom was invaded by a Mr. Carpenter (the 'C is for cat)' who taught his chalice *Uncle Tom*. Wilbert Mathews gave a convincing performance as carpenter in the chaotic atmosphere explode from Carpenter, was absurdly funny, but it fell short in imaginative movement. Shallow Acting, Staging Make Four Black Plays Mediocre HILLCREST 1: "Guess What We Learned in School Today?" Thomas does a fine job as the vain, well-to-do black minister in the town of Leavenworth, his personal instruction from God, the elusive burglar, to become a militant servant of the devil. He is threatened by the wrath of God, shoulders up his gun, Bible, and sword; he tune of "an eye for an eye." EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE: THE KU Black Theatre presents four one-act plays, "The Boy," "The Mole Man," "Clara's Ole Man," "The Electronic Nigger" and "Happy Boy," p. 8 tomhrough Feb. 12. Four plays minus three playa from "Four by Three in Black" is equal to a mediocre Black Theatre production. "CLARA'S OLE MAN" retains some of the chaos from the preceding Bullins play. It was well cast with Barbara Gray By DENNIS LINGLE Kansan Reviewer This is not the "new math" but the "old math" with experimental Theatre this week. The four one-act productions, written by three black actors, were shortcomings in the categories of tempo and the ability of the actors to play the action of the plays seemed to have very little discipline and, for the most part, in polished, liquid movement. playing Big Girl with the proper dominating nest. Big Girl is a hard-nosed gal who holds the posture she wants and the attitude. The younger, attractive Clara plays her father effectively Viva Paula. Viva is an intelligent, middle-class college boy, Jack, over to her ghetto apartment while her 'ole man' THE FINAL PRODUCTION, "Happy Ending," by Douglass Turner Ward, was the best the maids, Ellie and VI, played excellently by Cheryl Beatty and Adela Acosta, were released from school in the housework for which they worked was separated by a divorce. Their tears over the fasco are interrupted by their nephew, a baker, who goes to Early Dossett. Juniue is a carefree, play-type boy who has little practicalities of life. Juniue tries to awaken his aunts to the fact that they are free from their bondage. The gals upperclass white man. The gals then proceed to inform Junie of the backpacks he would have to undergo. Director Horace Bond has pured together diverse compositions of black and composed of several views concerning both the black man and his role in America. But the story of Horace Bond definite lack of depth in casting With his "image", in jeopardy Junie and his brother Arther, Mrs. Brown helps her search for a way to get that aunts back to work. As the title implies, the women get their jobs from the teacher group to the good life group to teaching the good life. German Film To Be Shown and staging. At least the best was successfully saved for the last. The Black Theatre will play through Feb. 12. A German newsreel, "Deutsche 8:30 am monday in 101 Carruth- O'Leary. The newsreel is in English and all interested in German." Ancient Sloth Display Most Recent at Dyche A complete skeleton of a prehistoric giant sloth, a forerunner of today's armadillo, wardark and anteater, is the fossilized remains of a paleontology section of KU Museum of Natural History. Giant sloths lived during the end of the Pleistocene period, a time when four intermittent glaciers spread across the continent and retreated, causing extreme variances in weather conditions. Bonner attributed the sloths' extinction, which occurred about the same time as that of humans, to the severe weather changes. The sloth, from the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles, was obtained from the Los Angeles area several years ago. Several prehistoric shark skeletons found in the chalk beds of the San Diego River in southwestern Kansas. skeletons. Several good skeletons have been preserved in dry caves in the desert southwest, and in tar at La Brea. Ovillle Bonner, paleontologist at the Museum of Natural History in Chicago, about seven feet long, lived to 15 thousand years ago throughout the southwestern United States. While sloth bones have been found in the state for over a century, said, climatic conditions here have not preserved quality Bonner spent two and one-half months assembling the individually wrapped bones and arranging the display. The exhibit is in the basement of the University of Illinois Pleiteocene skeletons and a sample exhibit of the famous La Brea digging area. Tony's 40 Service Be Prepared! 1 hour service starting service Kansas, Kansas O-404 2434 low 1 law "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" Tony's 66 Service 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th SANDWICH SHOP Open until 2 a.m. Phone Order 843-7685 We Deliver - 10th & 111 Clearing House Turnout Low THE HIT in the WALL Call immediately for appointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE. Fivedays 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 "We had a list of names of about thirty people who were interested in the organization, and we had uped at the meeting," she said. DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP 摄影 CSC YOTA THUMPH PERSONAL Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the university Daily Karian are offered to students. Admission is by color, creed, or national origin NOTICE TYPING SENIORS!! Women's Alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 2-15 for counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center-864-4441. tf Oneday 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 POETRY WANTED for anthology Please provide the title and principal request. Send to Editor, DLEWILD PRESS, 1807 East Avenue, Los Angeles, Los Ameni- gios, California 90221 copyright 2013 Term papers, thesis typed accurately, and promptly, your choice of type will determine the length and editing at reasonable rates. 82-DT/GY days; 82-D6 nights. Kluwer Diana UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright 8184) 4764-4676 If Appearing Friday night at The Mad Hitter—SHINE-Free admission. 2-4 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electronic typewriter; prompt accurate call. Fax (912-3281). Mr. Blackstone* Expected in typing these themes, typing have electric tying. Have electric tying tips. Accurate and prompt presses. Press the Phone 8-9544, M: Nightfall. Press the Phone 8-9544, M: Nightfall. Typing experience in typing term papers. Basic investigations, miscellaneous types of spelling. Have electric typecoding俏配 type. Man Wright, VI 8544. Michigan St. Bar-B-Que 315 Mich. 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$2720.00; $2722.00; $2724.00; $2726.00; $2728.00; $2730.00; $2732.00; $2734.00; $2736.00; $2738.00; $2740.00; $2742.00; $2744.00; $2746.00; $2748.00; $2750.00; $2752.00; $2754.00; $2756.00; $2758.00; $2760.00; $2762.00; $2764.00; $2766.00; $2768.00; $2770.00; $2772.00; $2774.00; $2776.00; $2778.00; $2780.00; $2782.00; $2784.00; $2786.00; $2788.00; $2790.00; $2792.00; $2794.00; $2796.00; $2798.00; $2800.00; $2802.00; $2804.00; $2806.00; $2808.00; $2810.00; $2812.00; $2814.00; $2816.00; $2818.00; $2820.00; $2824.00; $2826.00; $2828.00; $2830.00; $2832.00; $2834.00; $2836.00; $2838.00; $2840.00; $2842.00; $2844.00; $2846.00; $2848.00; $2850.00; $2852.00; $2854.00; $2856.00 We repaint all Volkwagens. We do maintenance, transportation of general equipment, and general surgery. We will parts and buy VWs with our normal illnesses. Bag Inns. 2-10. 2-16 We buy sports cars and imports. Competition Sports Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-2191. 2-19 Call me for excellent low cost hospital insurance with above average coverage (gravnancy) John Wells, American Life and Health Insurance 842-3200 MISCELLANEOUS INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-7634. Professional child-care for children 1 to 12 mmo. Full or part-time. PSI. Specialized care. TEL-0855-793-3205. KANSAN WANT ADS Professional ballet instruction for all levels, both sexes. Lawrence School of Ballet 842. Muss. (rear entrance). Instructor: Caroline Guitz-02-845-499. or 842-859-365. 2300 W. 29th Tr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 STOCK CLEARANCE SALE - Reductions of 50% off our outfit to stock make way for remodeling at THE WEAHOUSE, 8411; Mass. 273-690-4000. Competition PARTY CATERING AT SHORTY'S BEEFKEEPER 544 MASS U One day Sports Cars Inc. See Marid-fly Gros to New Orleans. Round trip trip 60.00 | Leave K.C. SAT, Feb 12, Arivate K.C. WED, Feb 16 for more information, cage 84-28-82-95. USED STEREOS REDUCED! 3 pu- bables. 4 coins-all purchased to be- —Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass (Mag- navox). 2-7 Open 24hrs. per day DRIVE-IN MACHINE LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 94%& 35%. $43.00. GROUP PIANO CLASSES FOR BEGINNERS LEARN to sight read, improve, create your own music. Term 1: 8:45-10:30 a.m. 842-2597 (after 6:00 p.m.). Hixon Studio Ph. 843-0310 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Attendance at the first meeting of the Environmental Clearing House Tuesday was disappointing, said Rivian Bell, Shawnee Mission Junior and newly formed organization. days per week Independent There is more than one Love Story. Brotherhood and sisterhood, join Lawrence Gay Liberation Front of Texas. Feed in, T.O.P. Box 231, Ft. Worth, TX 76105. Laundry & Dry Cleaners COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES COIN KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days 25 words of every $1.50 each additional word. $0.2 Deadline: 5:00 p.m., 2 day before publication COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th 842-9450 842-9450 Valentine Idea Portrait: $5.00 for one, $7.00 for two, 842-7511 2-15 KU Students of Objectivism will meet to discuss the ideas of Ayman Khalil, a PhD in Physics in the Great Room, Kansas Union. Call 842-3116 or 644-844. AUTON-PAKE. COMP.VISTA RECRUITERS will be at the Law and Business schools on Mon, Feb 7 to participate in interviews, at parental offices. LOST TREE PER PRIVATE PARTY CLUB. Welcome, back students! Her party variations for second term form party club or party parity. Nine band stand, black dress and special monthly rates. We also have special monthly rates for nursing meetings. Phone or contact John Hardt at Tree Per Champion Service Inc. 216-845-2822 or way business phone 216-845-2822. Lost—Jan. 27 in front of Dyche. Gold wire rim glasses. Reward. 842-2038 2-7 cagn wrist watch, sliding on Potter's Lake Hill, personal gift. Call Pat. 843-0733 2-4 Lost: Gold ring with blue, oval stone. Two gold letters set in stone. If found call 864-1283 2-4 Least-small black male cooker spanned named Darby Family pet. Reward. 842-8199 2-5 Help waited, male or female In- tended to work in their employment. Questionnaire. Question 10 for shortterm, plus typing at 86 wpm. Questionnaire. Question 11 for long-term, UN 4-442, Wesley Building. 2-7 WANTED OVERSEAS JOBS, FOR STUDENTS, All professional positions. All professional positions. All professional positions. Sightseeing. Free in- crease overtime. 5715 West, San Diego, CA 90215 90215 STUDENT EMPLOYMENT in Yellowstone and all U.S. National Parks. Employees must be certified by Paycheck $2.00, Arnold Agency, 206 East Church Street, Dilworth Ida; 84304 Back cover guide books. Help Wanted: Part-time 2nd semester teacher. Demonstrate skills and hundreds of household goods per person, also apply. Write, giving directions. Eighth grade. Ethan A. Smith Moving and Storage, Inc. Mexican-American students from Kansas City to earn $30 for an in- version or a Bachelor's degree and mortality or relatives. Under one or more Robert, 804-369-4500 for punishment Women's alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767 7-50 to 3-10 2-14 Female roommate for beautiful two bedroom completely furnished. Meadowbrook apartment. Private room. Furnished bedrooms $ per room Call 843-5348 Wanted—person to share cottage, home, fireplace, roaming land-five miles from Lawrence 843-4250 2-7 Roommate wanted to share 5 bed room house with four others. 2 blocks from the office. Move in immediately. Call Dick. 822-7616 Call Rick. 822-7616 One girl needed to share Jayawkower Towers apartment. Formed, utilized, until a new home was built. Own bedroom. Can move in immediately. Rest only $65 per month. FOR RENT 1 or 2 female roommates. Will offer a discount on the contracts. Call Diane Oldberg, 843-5990. 2-7 Wanted—third roommate to share two bedroom Jayhawk Towers apart- ment. $75/ms. 2-9 WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester only. Two-bedroom apartments—2-bedroom furnished or unfurnished. 1-bath furnished or unfurnished. Central aisle, dishwasher, 9 car aisles. 3 bedrooms. Apartmentss—The place to live in. Apartments—Call 24 hours a day at 8pm. 800. Apartment — newly decorated — one bedroom furniture—furnished—wall to wall carpeting—11—blocks from Union. Phone 843-5767. tf Fur rent—or two bedroom apts, air condition—or garbage disposal; garbage disposal—or facilities; facilities, color T V. Available. Call 814-2623 or stop by Hilley Apts, at 814-2623. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, carpets, dishwashers, and air-conditioning $^2$ block from KU stadium. Married couples 1625 Mississippi 842-807-266 One room apartment. Cooking facilities. $75.00 per month. Utilities paid 1234 Team. Ground front—Mr. Haguenau. 842-1998. 2-7 Bridge House Apt.—for the budget house and the maximum features, and the maximum size of the house. 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms, and doubles. for details 240-872 Cedarwood- 1116 for details 240-872 Cedarwood- Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra room exceptionally clean. From $6500-brick south of 94th St. 843-1176 2-21 Caterpillar Logo Happiness is living in a new co-op. Private room from $29.90. Within walking distance of campus. Call 842-8421 and ask for "Rock or "Kale." MUST SCAREHE 2 bedroom apartments, 125 acres, carport, garage, dishwasher, carpet, carpet, areac, garbage disposal, block from unison, 123 Indiana, call or call 842-565-1230, $125 per week. To rent immediately, 2 bedrooms, unfurnished or furnished at Ridgeau. Take over private increase lease, $145 per month, all utilities 842-297-208 Private roommate wanted to share 5 room house with two girls. Upsets bedroom, large yard, peaceful Petit Calhay, 843-372-27-2-7 Call Kathy, 843-372-27-2-7 Room for rent: Need girl to share house $25. Utilities included. 842- 2-7 3768 University terrace and old mill apartments-A limited number of one-bedroom apartments for immediate occuqency Walking distance to manor house in 1832 or to manager's apartment. Lawrence, Kansas 66044 ROOMS, HOUSES AND APART- MENTS NEW YORK, NEW JERSEY & PALESTINE house in M. lairdman's apartment and bath and kitchen, $500 euro each; bedroom, bathroom, synagogue, church, $250 euro each; garage, $800 euro each; FOR YOUR Medical, Chemical Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! FOR SALE IT'S NEVER TOO LATE and it is a long time from Jan. to May to make summer programs attractive. One call to Mrs. Feryath at 2107-A Hardy Road and you can find apartments available in Lawrenceville located and most attractive commercial and Missouri. Away Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of unprofessional construction, paying rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, reasons you would enjoy living there, reasons you would enjoy living there, make this summer in Lawrence a destination locations for August occupancy and some summer rates for June even. HILLIVIEW APARTMENTS — 732-45 W. 24th W. Bldg. to $199 and one apartment. Carpeted, dressed, exceeds of much must have apartment and much must have apartment COLLEGE, HILL. MANOR now has available and 2 bed furniture room at A-C, cell dwibathers, w/ exteriors to campus Call College 842-820 or directions to campus Call College 842-820 1 B.R. uninfused apartment 3 houses from stadium, A/C, and carpeting Call 842-5770 or 842-8431 2-7 Highest price paid for used Cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8688. If GBI, ROOMMATE needed to share GBI, ROOMMATE needed to share with three friend sophomore girls Available now, 843-724-20 Available now, 843-724-20 2-10 Fineest selection of sports cars in the entire area, CSC, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-2191. If Either way it comes, the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 411 West 14th. If 2. If you don't. Western Civ. Notes→Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, 1. If you use them, you're at an advantage. 2. If you don't CABAY ARTS We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumpha. Competition Sports Car, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 862-219-1. 2-18 Now you can buy stereo components you can buy stereo components RCA Audio RADIO: 842-7471 Prarie Avenue. The only true stereo discount house in the 2-29 weeks. 913 843-9275 913 842-0025 THE 3 piece sectional sofa, $125, 4 chair dinette set, $60. Both in excellent condition. 1025 Miss. Apt. 21, 842- 8667 7-7 LAWRENCE KANSAS Power Eating Place sirloin If we were to will find an more affectionate host, the University of the Affordance of quality served indeed on one of the first headquarters. Only the best of the top choice visits are reserved at the Union. Our motto is and has always been Among Our Specials Steak and Beef + Combination (With Negas with Lettuce) It's just salad. Try it and we love it. Snow tires 755-14 Tubeless w/ w/ barely used. Call 843-0435. 2-7 1970- Road-Hunner 448-6 pack-blue-hurst speed-crater speed=23,000 miles-efficient shape $2,000 842- 27468 881 Equipment Head, giant salam, 20 cm. in. look-Nevada step-in step-in needles Large boots, plastic dried needles slight repair. 842-358 2.7-2.7 JYY 10 speed bike (Rox): Like New—a Porsche 911 extractor system—825, green deck and chair (wooden frame), 14-speed transmission 12-27 900 anytime after 9 o'p.m. STOCH COUNCIL CARNACHE SALE-19-50 tops and bells for the TIE WEA- ture, or counsel 90 mL VW—excellent condition, low mileage, snow trees must sell to stay in school Make offer 842-2944 2-7 Snow trees, 124th, Tulsa Lake measures and equipment. Give us a call and find out. 842-6623. 2-7 Used powerful 30 watt Motorola poten- tial stereo - new at $149.95 - First $20.00 takes it. Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 2-7 puppies, shaggy, Hungarian sheep- ed puppies, AKC males at reduced price. Also pulled English cross- ing dogs. McLouth, Kansas, 294 2981 New Magnavox component system with two extended speakers cut to $85.00 at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass Open Thursdays. 2-7 Tire Cleanance ¥F1D-14 wide batee $250 plus 5.0 E.T. $67.14 $10.40 $8.99 plus 3.0 E.T. Fast installation Fast free installation Ray Stone Mountains Main (Eustre stock 40,27° 50' off lift Mamiya TLR 2 lens, 800mm, 105mm F-4.5. Takes 120 and 220 warmlens. Includes: proof case, Sell $225 or trade for $319 plus slr plus $487, David Y. McKinsey '68 Camaro, 327 cu. in. Excellent condition. $1,275.00, 843-0634. 2-4 Northside Shop, 707 North 31st Street north of River Bridge farm, ordines wood cooking and heating forms, old wood cooking and heating stoves, bicycles, fireplaces, wood, books, furniture. Open to all of other useful item. Open to 5 days. Herb Merle Baldwin. 2:29 3159 Triumph, T6S-4-A, can be balanced computer, mag. Goodyard, wet/dry bhkrests. engine just reqlult, need bhkrests DSPBATEL2, DSPBATEL7. 2-10 5-16 Must sell B-25 Gibson Guitar, original for $225 Will accept best offer, case and new strings included. Cali after 5.00, 943-3150 2-8 For tale: Baldwin externimator amu- brator and Baldwin combo organ. Equipment is in excellent shape but has some minor cracks. 6 p.m. - 8:45-9:24 p.m. Auto Foreign Import, 83 Jaguar XKE,汉德豪 coupe, 260 miles since 1974. Automobile magazine $1475, Paul Wolch $500, W 22 S. W, Topeka, Tepoka 913,725-1250. Dietzgen Mech Drawing. Set. 8 pieces-acces $20, call 842-7434 2-9 1958 Rambler, clean body and body, Runs good. Excellent heater and radio. $175. Please call after 6: 844-253-183. Al Demirtares. 2-85 New. Kenwood, KR130 AMP. Duel. 125 Turbitate 10" speakers. Cash or take over payments. 843-865. **FIAT SNOW TIRES** 5.60 X 13" **81** 828.124, and 128 models, mounted on now wheels, and used one month. Phone: 864-2651 2-10 NUTTY CLOTHES at BOKONKON, 109 W. 58th St., brownsville, wbear of darkness, overall, sweats, ski quilts, guilt, t-shirts - Tealhats, VIII Verison - Open 11-6 Mobile home for sale. Tired of living in an unpleasant place and wasting time, consider a mobile home that depricates little. Here is a home on the market with ownership, privacy, and ownership of 51 0 Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-121 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! 电话机 Let PLANNING A TRIP?? Maupintour travel service INY CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Events RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842-2323 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free hour analysis. Swimming oriviles. DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE 843. 8500 UDIOTRONICS The Stereo Store 928 6 Friday, February 4, 1972 University Daily Kansan Javhawks Need Rebounding for Road Win at ISU By BOB SIMISON Kansan Sports Editor Almost any way you look at it, the University of Kansas basketball game at Iowa State Saturday night must be on a scale of 1 to 5. P.M. in the Cyclone's new Hilton Coliseum. Consider, for example, the teams' records: KU, although third in the Big Eight at 4.2, has yet to win a game in the National League in the Jayhawks. 7-10 record were in Allen Field House. - Iowa State must win a conference game. The Cyclones have dropped to 2-4, sixth in the Big Eight. - Iowa State has played seven games that were decided by a three-point margin. The Cyclones have won five including a 91-88 loss to RU in the Big Eight Tourney KU, on the other hand, has played six games decided by three playoffs or less. The hawks won one on KU and one of those was a 74-11 victory over Iowa State two weeks ago. KU HUs won four of its last five games. Jayhawk coach Ted Owens doesn't mean about how tough it is to win on the road. It's the same for everybody, he figures. But Owens is concerned about the Jayhawks' rebounding woes for our rebounding and our free throw shooting." KU gave up a 33-17 rebounding and dropped a 64-80 decision. Missouri won it on free throws. "Our big problem," he said in an interview Thursday, "is our rebucking. We did a good job against Missouri. Monday except "We just have to work like heck on it in practice," Owens said. "But it hard to break 10 or 12 and habitats some of these guys have." three defensive players two offensive players out of position under the basket. The offensive players of course, try not to be OWENS HAS his charges face off three-on-three for rebound drills. Somebody shoots, then the "We can rebound with anybody in the league if we get some contact position." Owens figured. "We don't have to be this bad." Indeed, KU stands second to last in rebounding in the Big Swimmers Taper, Host Iowa State Steve King Poises for Back Dive . Freshman has qualified for NCAA in one-meter . The Jayhaws host the Cyclones at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Robinson Gym pool. KU takes a 4-1 dual record into the meet. The University of Kansas' four-year defending Big Eight champion swimming team began tapering off its workschools this spring, but early in March. It could mean trouble for Iowa State Saturday. a 4-1 dual record into the meet. "We've been loosening up some of us, and I've been reporting. 'It should make us a little quicker, and it should help our times.'" Jayhawks are within one circle of three other spots. Phil Kidd's 21.8 in the 50-yard freestyle is a tenth of one second slow. His 100-yard freestyle time is within one second of qualifying. Working straight through competition, KU already has qualified for three spots in the NCAA meet March 23 to 25. Sophomore Tom Kempk has beths in the 500 and 1,650-yard freestyle events, and Steve King has qualified in one-meter diving. KU's 400-yard freestyle relay team is one second away from a spot with a 3:13 clocking. "We're shooting for the league championship again this year," said Danny Lowe, the head coach. That's one reason the Jayhawks began tapering off their workouts five weeks before March 2 to meet March 24 in Columbia, Mo. KU's only other meet before the Big Eight showdown will be a dual Feb. 19 with Oklahoma. The Jayhawt invitations, scheduled for March 18th, carrier this week when two teams of the six-take field cancelled. Iowa State will pose few problems for KU, although it was Tough Saluki Track Team Invades Allen Field House Sophomore Delvin Williams has *trun* in a track meet for two years, but he very likely will win the last competition Saturday. The 60 will be the second track event of a dual meet between the University of Kansas and Southern Illinois in Alcoa. Field events at 4:30 p.m.; track events at six. There will be no admission fee. Williams will be in a 60-yard dash field with Southern Illinois' Iowa Crockett, who shares the lead in the event. KU's Fran Johnson, Tom Scavuzzo, Emmet Edwards and Mark Lutz also to meet the speedster. it should be quite a baptism in baseball. Before Wednesday, the star football running back had only one 60 in practice. Williams had never played it. The 60 won't be the only closely contested event. KU coach Bob Timmons expects both teams to score more than 60 points. "I KNOW Crockett's a good runner," Williams said, "but I don't think I'll finish less than third. I'd like to win it." "This meet is going to be scored on a S-3-I basis," he said. "It is going to go down to those three point one-hands to win it." In other words, the team with the depth will win. The Jayhawks will enter Doug Smith (4:07.3) and Jon Callen (4:18.5) in the mile. KU WILL FIELD BARRY Schu- (6-10), Randy Smith (8-4), Larry Schu (5-12), Kyle Sanders (6) and Dan Seay (6-4) in the high jump. In the long jump, it will be Mike Stull (24-7) , Seley (23-2), Gary Johnson and Marc Harris. In the field events, Southern Illinois has 7-1 high jumper Mike Bernard and three 24-foot long jumper. tournament," Owens pointed out. "But we covered them the second time, and this was a big factor." In conjunction with the meet, there will be a clinic for several hundred high school track coaches and athletes Athletes can receive give tips to prep athletes after the conclude mile rate at 7:40. Bob Pelikan, a distance man, will miss the meet. He is out with a case of mononucleosis. Timmons is counting on a 1-2 inish by his freshman shot Suevara and Dana LeDuc. "I think they've both made the transition from the 12-pound to the 16-pound shot exceptionally well." Timmons said. Magnificent Roses reminiscent of a more romantic era, fitting the tempo of today. 3 Diamond Bridal Set $229 Available in 14 kt. white or yellow gold Ray Christian 2 Locations 809 Mass. Lawrence 836 Kansas Topeka Meet Schedule Meet Schedule FIELD EVENTS--4 30—long jump, triple jump, pole vault; 5— ИНДЕКТЫРНОЕ РОССИЙСКОЕ ГРАНИЦА an Iowa State team that handed the Jayhawks their last loss in a Big Eight dual four years ago. Mack pumped in 34 points in the first game but was held to five the second time. "Iowa State certainly has the ability to beat us if we aren't here," he said. "But we're going to change our order around a little to give some new energy." The Cyclones' strength is their diving corps, Reamon said. Iowa State is solid in the one-meter and three-meter events with Steve Spikes and Rick McAnally. Rick Ricketts is Iowa State's sprint athlet. TRACK EVENTS_6=mile, 6:10-6:40 dash; dash; 6:20-600 high; 6:30-440 dash; 6:40-600 hurdles; 6:50-two-mile; 1:00-1000 run; 7:15-800 run; 7:25-low low hurdles; 7:00-mile KU Swim Enfries 50 freestyle Racquetball, Allan McDonald, Randy Kaneel, 100 freestyle-Kidd, Roland Sabats, McDonald, 200 freestyle-Rick Heidingen, Steve Ingham, Tom Hodgson, 50 freestyle-Tom Kempf, Ingham, David Keegley, 50 freestyle-Marc Mare, Marge Wagner, Kageley high iump, shot put. 200 individual medley—Bob Wright, Randy Hartford, Paul Gerlach. 200 butterfly—Kempf, Keith Richie, Mike Tackett. 20 backstroke—Scott Scalp Tharp. 200 breaststroke—Wright, Bob Darrow, Bruce Leaverton, one-meter dive—Steve King, Scott Davies, Bill Ploemb, three-meter dive, Daniel Hutchison, relay—Skulletty 400 medley relay—Skullet, Wright, Richey, Sabates; 400 freestyle relay—Kidd, McDona- lish, Hodgson. START NOW TO GET IN SHAPE FOR SUMMER DOLLAR DAYS SPECIAL Every Lady that Signs Up for Three Months at $45 Can Sign Up a Friend for Only $1.00. CALL 842-4044 2323 RIDGE COURT LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB FOR WOMEN IN SHAPE FOR SUMMER DOLLAR DAYS SPECIAL LINCOLN, Neb. — Bob Devaney, head coach of the two-year national champion team, asked coach to agree to the 1922 College All Stars when they go against the Dallas Cowboys in Chicago Devaney to Coach Stars the annual All-Star game pits the elite of the nation's college football teams in a spectacular Football League champions. The Game is sponsored by Chicago. Eight. Iowa State, though, is last. The Jayhawks are seventh in free throw shooting. Special to The Kansan "We're about the same size, Owens pointed out. KU will start 6-15 Wilson Barrow to win at 7-0. Stallworth against 7-0 Tom O'Connor 6-6 In the backcourt, it will be Tom Kivisto and Aubrey Nash for KU; Martinez Denmon and Gene Mack for Iowa State. "We had trouble with their guards in the Big Eight Wayne Williams and 6-7 Clint Harris on the front line. KU Basketball Statistics | | f | g | h | i | j | k | l | m | n | o | p | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Malworth | 12 | 75 | 468 | 305 | 315 | 191 | 630 | 138 | 179 | 181 | 18.1 | | Kinsey | 12 | 60 | 190 | 436 | 416 | 181 | 630 | 123 | 171 | 18.1 | 18.1 | | Camfield | 12 | 53 | 190 | 485 | 415 | 181 | 630 | 102 | 133 | 7.8 | 4.8 | | Nahsh | 12 | 40 | 103 | 485 | 115 | 75 | 610 | 125 | 133 | 7.8 | 4.8 | | Nath | 12 | 40 | 103 | 485 | 125 | 75 | 610 | 125 | 133 | 7.8 | 4.8 | | Matthews | 12 | 21 | 41 | 537 | 104 | 135 | 610 | 50 | 42 | 3.1 | 2.0 | | Mathews | 12 | 21 | 41 | 537 | 104 | 135 | 610 | 45 | 42 | 3.1 | 2.0 | | Bedward | 12 | 18 | 36 | 527 | 104 | 135 | 610 | 45 | 42 | 3.1 | 2.0 | | Bedward | 12 | 18 | 36 | 527 | 104 | 135 | 610 | 45 | 42 | 3.1 | 2.0 | | Franklin | 12 | 2 | 1 | 439 | 2 | 1 | 1,000 | 64 | 125 | 0.0 | 0.0 | | Franklin | 2 | 1 | 1 | 439 | 2 | 1 | 1,000 | 64 | 125 | 0.0 | 0.0 | | Tullis | 12 | 681 | 141 | 429 | 2 | 1 | 1,000 | 64 | 125 | 0.0 | 0.0 | | Tullis | 12 | 681 | 141 | 429 | 2 | 1 | 1,000 | 64 | 125 | 0.0 | 0.0 | | Tullis | 14 | 454 | 141 | 429 | 2 | 1 | 1,000 | 64 | 125 | 0.0 | 0.0 | We Serve Delicious home style cooking. MARGARET'S CAFE W. 23rd 6:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. Mon. Sat. Women's Team Remains Alive In Miami Meet Special to The Kansan MIAMI. Fla. — The KU women's volleyball team stood second in its 17-team pool after winning Thursday in the National Intercollegiate Volleyball Tournament at Miami Dade Junior KU downgraded Michigan, Michigan, Tech, 19-7, 18-7, before losing its first match. San Feraone Valley, Calif., called the Jayhawks To make the semifinal round Saturday, KU will have to place a team in the first round. There are 12-team pools. KU will meet South Missouri State and New York State Friday; then they will play until Saturday. KU will return to Lawrence Monday. SUA Fine Arts PICTURE LENDING LIBRARY Monday, Feb. 7 Tuesday,Feb.8 SOUTH LOUNGE—KANSAS UNION The KLWN 1,000 $$ Treasure Hunt is here Good Luck! KLWN FM Stereo 105.9 O 8:20 p.m. Pick up your reserve seat ticket at the box office in Murphy. THEY'VE GOT KRUMHORNS, SACKBUTS, CONTRATENORS, AND A WORLD OF TALENT. The Student Body of The University of Kansas Presents It's FREE with I.D. UNIVERSITY THEATRE Non-Students FEB. 9 2. 00 - 2.50 - 3.00 THE NEW YORK PRO MUSICA Use Kansan Classifieds "If we win, this game could keep us in in the race," Owens pointed out. And if the Jayhawks lose? "We'll think about that if we lose," Owens said. KU will host Georgia Tech at 8:05 p.m. Monday in Allen Field House 200 Sedan D II You couldn't ask for more! The Datsun 1200s. 1200 Sport Coupe The Datsun 1200s, Sedan and Sport Coupe. Everything you'd expect in a big expensive car with a small, inexpensive package includes: • Whitewall tires • Bucket seats • 0-60 in 14.8 seconds 94 MPH top speed • Safety front disc brakes **Drive a Datsun...** DATSUN FROM NISSAN WITH PRIDE 1200 Sport Coupe TONY'S IMPORTS- DATSUN 500 East 23rd St. 842-0444 THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. C JUDITH CRIST. New York Magazine "WONDERFULLY LUNATIC" WILD AND WITTY! A series of brush situations, all of them crazily relevant. As funny and as piercing a bit of social satire as these crazy sexed-up movie days require! An irreverent and perceptive bit of sex education— about sex education!" NE Abou demo street avert switch A:LYBoy MAGAZINE What We Learned in School Today *of recent comedies drawn from the American sexual revolution* from the producer and the director of "JOE" "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" Dennis Finlayson & Christopher D. Devery & Cameron Frostington & Robert Catterall-Greenberg Liam Harey & Jimmy McNeil & Tom McNeil & Richard Huntley & Christopher Greenberg & Magnus Mag- rein Now Thru Tuesday Eve. 7:25 & 9:15 — Adult $1.50 R Matinee Sat. Sun. 2:30 & 4:15 Twilight Prices Good For 4:15 Show Only Hillcrest Varsity THEATRE • Telephone V13-1065 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:40 Adults $1.50 Children .75 COLIN QUIZAN Sat. & Sun. 3:00, 5:00, 7:05, 9:40 lr_Admission $1.00 & $0.50 — 4:30 for 5:15 only! "ON ANY SUNDAY" 入 Eve. 7:35 & 9:30 Adult $1.50 - Child. 75 Mat ...2:37 - Sun. 3:53 & 4:25 Hillcrest DUSTIN HOFFMAN SAM PLECOMANIS "STRAW DOGS" W rest othe plea bloo Eve, 7:20 8:30 Mat, 10:45 Mat.-Sat. 2:00 4:05 Hillcrest / BUTTONS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COLDER The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Dim Outlook On Ecology 82nd Year, No.79 Monday, February 7, 1972 See Page 2 Devlin Leads Illegal March For 20,000 NEWRY, Northern Ireland (AP)—About 20,000 pro-Roman Catholic demonstrators marched down Newry's streets in an illegal parade Sunday but averted a clash with British troops by switching their route at the last minute. With tiny, defiant Bernadette Devlin in the lead, the silent marchers headed down a hill toward Newry's city center. An armed camp bristling with Northern Irish police and 3,000 combat-ready British troops awaited them. They claimed they had tricked the troops into guarding the wrong part of the tense border city and got away with a parade the army was ordered to prevent. Hanging over the procession was the memory of 13 civilians killed in a street fight with British soldiers in Londonerry on last week's "Bloody Sunday." Shortly after falling in step, the marchers veered away from army barricades, made their way peacefully up at a mass railway near their starting point. About 300 green-jacketed parade marshals kept the marchers well away from the army barricades blocking off the route into the city center, avoiding the rock-throwing riot of last week in Londonerry. THERE was no violence. British troops stayed on their side of the barricades and claimed their massive show of force by the marchers from reaching the city center. Whoever was right, it was a victory for restraint by both sides. Pope Paul VI and other religious and political leaders had to ensure that for everyone in Newry to avoid bloodshed. The crowd, demonstrating against internment without trial of suspected Irish Republican Army outlaws, cheered as the American internment warnings against holding the march. Referring to Prime Minister Edward Heath of Britain and the Northern Ireland prime minister, Brian Faukeer, she said: "We want to stand up down on their knees to beg us to call off this march, because they knew this march and that we would be going to bark down that clue at Stormont. STORMONT IS the meeting place of Northern Ireland's parliament, dominated by the British-rulled province's two-to-one Protestant majority. "The civil resistance campaign will never be done. Devin continued. "We with the faith." Devlin, 24-year-old member of the British House of Commons, was joined in the march and afternoon rally by other and well known political militants. AMONG THEM they actress Vanessa Redgrave, Joan Plowert, the actress wife of Sir Laurence Olivier, and Kevin Boland, former Dublin defense minister. Army helicopters hovered high above the mass rally that filled Mooney's Meadow, an open space ringed by public housing projects. Across the border in the Irish republic, thousands of demonstrators paraded peacefully throughout the country in sympathy with the Newry marchers but beeded please by their own government and the IRA to stay away from Newry. Five thousand marched quietly in Dublin, where last week an angry mob took to the streets. = February Sister Attempts to Block Camera Downtown Bus Service OK'd StudEx Considers Sisters' Demands By HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writer . . . Group tries to expose film in scuffle After passing a motion at the beginning of its meeting to bar photographers, the Student Executive Committee agreed Sunday night to consider requests by the February Sisters for funds for a cooperative child care center. The motion to bar photographers while members of the February Sisters were present at the meeting was requested by the Sisters, Greg Sorber, University Daily Kansan photographer, remained outside the meeting. The committee then decided to have Bill O'Neill, Student Senate treasurer, meet with representatives and prepare estimates of expenses for the center. The budget requests will be reviewed by the Finance and Auditing Committee. The proposal will also be the first item on the agenda of the Feb. 16 Student Council meeting. The child care proposal originated Friday night as one of several demands presented by the February Sisters when theyupheld the East Asian Studies building. After StudEx finished discussing the child care proposal, the representatives from February Sisters left the Governor's office in Union where the meeting was held. SORBER BEGAN photographing the women as they left the meeting. The women attacked him and attempted to expose the film, but after a short scuffle Sorber escaped uninjured with his cameras and film intact. A spokesman for the group, whose members wished to remain unidentified, said it was "really the right of the University to fund child care centers." She said her group did not feel it was the Student Senate's responsibility to provide the funds, and funds were being sought only as a temporary stonaime measure." The spokesman said her group had "put in a lot of man hours since Friday night" and wondered what the chances were that the proposal would pass the Senate. The women said they did not want photographs taken because it was a group decision to keep individuals from receiving attention, although one of the Sisters said she simply did not want her father to see her picture in the paper. "I don't want him to think I'm a radical woman and cut off my funds." she said. StudEx decided at the meeting that if the Senate granted funds for the center they would have to go to the Women's Coalition and the Masters is not a recognized organization. Following the meeting Rivian Bell, who identified herself as a press contact for the February Sisters, called the Kansan organization and made a statement of apology. Bell said that she regretted the incident with Sorber had occurred, and that her group had only intended to expose Sorber's film. She said the decision against photographs was made by the February Sisters as a whole and not just by those present at the meeting. She said the Sisters were part of the establishment of services to which the women of this University are entitled." Sheik Mujibur Says U.S. Turned Its Back CALCUTTA (AP) - Prime Minister Sheik Muibah Jiram of Bangladesh told a huge public meeting here Sunday that the United States had turned its back on the sufferings of his people and failed the democracy in the Indian subcontinent. "Why was the U. S. government giving Sisters' Terms Include Day Care my GINNIE MICKE Kansan Staff Writer Eight representatives from the February Sisters, a group of about 100 women making such demands as a woman should attend a program and a department of women's studies, attended the StudEx meeting Sunday to discuss plans for a day The February Sisters, proposing a free day care center to be financed by the University and run exclusively by women, are committed and possible locations for the center. The women have scheduled a news conference for 10:30 a.m. today. their pictures. AFTER THE StudEx meeting Sunday several members of the February Sisters attempted to take a Kansan photographer's camera after he had taken The day care center is one of the major demands that led the group to occupy the Center for East Asian Studies building in New York. The women whom brought children, stayed in the building for about 13 hours. This action was described in a written statement issued by the women as "a means of meeting the needs to meet the pressing needs of women." StudEx, complying with the women's request that no pictures be taken, made a motion to close the meeting to photographers. The photographer was standing outside the conference room and pictures as the women left the meeting. A representative of the women said that the East Asian Studies building had been occupied for "dramatic effect," but the rest was a non-violent, non-destructive group. SENEX MET for three hours beginning at 10 p.m. Friday without any representatives from the women's group. At approximately 1 a.m., the February Sisters sent over five women. The women met with SenEx and the Chancellor both two and a half later. Six women returned at 6 a.m. for more discussion. Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics and the nominee for the affirmative action program, did much of the negotiating between the February 1970 Senate that improved important outcome of the night was "that direct lines of communication were opened Discussions ended before 8 a.m. The women and children who occupied the building were evacuated. Confusion Clouds Field House Plan Miller recently proposed that the entire floor be covered at an additional cost of almost $80,000. This would include three additional sets of basketball goals and court markings. His proposal was not disagreeable with the other two men, who were to Shinko, who has been concerned with the crowded conditions in Robinson Gymnasium. Kansan Staff Writer By RON WOMBLE Kanean Staff Writer The athletic department has long-range plans to surface all but the north end of the field house at a cost of $180,000. The staff at Stinson said, until the funds are available Wade Stinson, athletic department director, David Miller, student body president, and Henry Shenk, head of the department of physical education, all want to see the floor in Allen Field House on a more accessible surface. The crucial problem is money. Stinson said Miller had never contacted him about the program. He added that he had doubts about the feasibility of Miller's plans for financing the expanded program. "I appreciate his efforts and concern," Sinson said, "except I don't believe he has them." MILLER PROPOSED that the student The terms of the loan arranged for the yearly payments to increase each year over a 15-year period. Stinson said this was because he needed the season to subsequently and subsequent increases in season football ticket sales. He said football ticket sales had leveled off, however, and February 'prepayments' based on these sales had made the payments possible. The original loan of $535,000 was taken out by the athletic department in 1966 with a projected repayment date of 1981. The loan is repaid by collections of $5 and $4 for each student season football and basketball ticket. body "petition the Endowment Association and the Athletic Department to add the cost (not to exceed $80,000), to the current loan for the expansion of east stadium" SHENK IS NOT really concerned about where the money comes from. He just wants to see the fieldhouse surface topped of the pressure off Robinson Gymnasium. If the fieldhouse is surfaced it could be used by the physical education department for recreational activities on mornings, most evenings, Saturdays and Sundays. between the women in the University, that there was a beginning of understanding of concerns, which hopefully can deepen in importance or important work which needs to be done." Miller told the Student Senate that the loan, including the $80,000 addition, could be closed. If the floor is ever to be completely surfaced, Shenk said, it should be done when the company is surfacing the rest of the floor. A woman to be designated to fill the position of vice-chancellor of academic affairs, and women added to the staffs of the Office of Financial Aid and the Admissions Office to insure no sex discrimination. provided there was no conflict with scheduled basketball games. Shenk that Miller's plan would "almost double the recreational space and time" available in the field house under the athletic department's plan. He said the gymnasium was used for classes most of the day, which put a great deal of pressure on the facility during the late afternoon and evening hours. an end to what they called "unfair employment practices." A free day care center financed by the university and directed exclusively by women. The women's demands included: AN AFFIRMATIVE action program planned and directed by a group of women involved in the planning. "There are 262 men's intramural basketball teams being said, "and we only have 19." A department committee that had been investigating ways to alleviate the crowding in Robinson Gymnasium had contacted the athletic department about using the field house if the floor could be surfaced, Shenk said. THE ONLY ALTERNATIVE to Miller's plan is an expansion of the facilities at Robinson. Robinson is the first part of a two-phase program, but according to Shenk, phase two would cost well over $1 million. An autonomous department of women's studies to be controlled and chiefly taught Shenk said a large amount of money would be needed to start the expansion. A COMMITTEE of University men and women have investigated the processes Office of Financial Aid, the Chancellor Office of Finance, and the Office of inequities in scholarship distribution. A statement was issued by SenEx after the negotiations. It expressed SenEx's concern about the equal opportunity of women, but stated, "We can neither condone or ignore the type of action that has been taken tonight." Chalmers also said the University had already developed a proposal to a federal funding agency to establish a day care center. A search committee appointed by the chancellor is seeking qualified candidates for the position of vice-chancellor of a university. Twenty women had been suggested as candidates. A women's health program. IN DISCUSSIONS with SenEx and five representatives of the women who occupied the center, Dancellei E. Bender, a member of this action had already been taken on some of the demands of the women Chaimers said the University had been developing a comprehensive affirmative action program which could be filed with the federal government soon. Employment practices came within the scope of the affirmative action program, Chalmers pointed out, and any inequality based on race must be removed in terms as accepted by federal directives. Chalmers said the women's health program at KU had been expanded, and he pledged additional services and facilities when funds became available. Feminist writer Robin Morgan, guest speaker at the University of Kansas last week, sent a telegram this weekend to the group. She praised the action that had been taken by the February Sisters and struck a blow for the freedom of women." armis to Pakistan when the massacre of my innocent countrymen was going on in towns and villages?" he asked. "Did not the U. S. government know of it while it had machinery functioning there at the time? "1 request the U. S. government to see what they do, which they talk so effectively." CERTAINLY The visiting Bangladesh leader's speech coincided with publication by Indian diplomat Sushil Kumar, quoting a General Accounting Office report as saying the U. S. Air Force had arrrived more than half a million dollars on a priority basis to Pakistan on a priority basis in July 1975. Pakistan had always preached that India was the enemy and had to be crushed, he said, adding, "Why should we, our enemy?" Indians are our brothers. "AND BECAUSE India helped us," Mujib went on, "the United States cut off aid to India. While today I express my gratitude to the many countries who have recognized us, I cannot express gratitude to the United States." Then he thanked Prime Minister Indira Gandhi for sending Indian troops into his homeland in December to help achieve independence for Bangladesh. Twenty-nine nations have recognized Bangladesh to date. It will be difficult for Bangladesh to renow its debt to India, he said. Addressing close to half a million people, Mujib woved eternal friendship for India, which he said was guided by the same wisdom as Islam, secularism, democracy and socialism. He said three million Bengalis lost their lives last year in East Pakistan, during the Pakistani military rule, and 40 per cent of the homes had been destroyed by the "Because of the Pakistani atticries in my country, I am left a destitute and all that I can now offer you is my life," he said. 1970 Kansan Staff Photo by KIT NETZER Cost Poses Big Problem for Field House Proposal ... Other major questions remain unanswered ... 2 Monday, February 7, 1972 University Daily Kansan People . . . . . Places . . . . . Things People: North Vietnamese Minister of State XUAN THUY and U.S. Secretary of State WILLIAM P. ROOGERS each accused the other's government Sunday of blocking progress in efforts to end the Vietnam war. Thuy said President Nixon's revelation of secret negotiations with Hanoi created a serious obstacle to a peaceful settlement. But Rogers said Xuan Thuy's government had been "totally intrigued" in both secret and public negotiations. JOHN ANDERSON JR., who served as Kansas governor in 1961-65, is expected to attend at a 9:30 a.m. news conference Monday that he is a candidate for the Republican nomination for governor this year. Another mystery woman, this one a blonde scuba diver, surfaced Sunday in the CLIFTER DRIVING-HOWARD HUGHES saga. The woman, identified only as Ann Baxter, flew with Irving last December to St. Croix in the Virgin Islands and gave him scuba lessons while he was there in what he said was an attempt to contact Hughes. Life magazine said. Operating from a nazy office a few blocks from the courtroom, a committee of sympathizers is raising funds to finance the defense in the antiwar conspiracy trial of PHILIP BERRIGAN and six others. The group, known as the Harrisburg Defense Committee and comprised mostly of persons in their 20s with college degrees, already has raised $400,000. Places: SAIGON—American air cavaveryl borne by helicopters made "flame drops" of napalm Sunday on what appeared to be newly built North Vietnamese bunkers 25 miles northeast of Sangon. The attack was one of the most anticolonial attacks in the capital region during the Tet season. TOPEKA-House speaker Calvin Strowg, R-Abbelline, said Tuesday that the House Ways and Means Committee had scheduled hearings today on Gov. Robert Docking's recommended supplemental appropriations for the state education program. A statute appropriate an additional $18.3 million for social welfare in the current fiscal year ending June 30, including $9.9 million from the state general fund. WASHINGTON—Sen. Henry M. Jackson said Sunday he thinks it's bad policy and probably bad politics for presidential candidates to criticize President Nixon's latest Vietnam proposal while Nixon's negotiations continue. The Washington senator, himself a candidate for the Democratic nomination, reproved his primary rival, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Iowa. Things: Mindful of increasing pressure from the White House and Congress, negotiators went back to the bargaining table in the 121-st day WEST COAST DOCK STRIKE Sunday with a private mediator who had previously met the negotiating team to consider submitting unrestricted issues to binding arbitration. Sen. Edward M. Kenney, D-Mass, announced Sunday a Senate subcommittee will hold hearings on SELECTIVE SERVICE PROCEDURES and on the possibility of granting amnesty to draft evaders through administrative procedures. Kennedy, who heads the subcommittee on administrative practice and procedures, said the panel will hold three days of hearings beginning Feb. 28. Kansan Staff Writer By FRANK SLOVER He said that a recent study had predicted a rise in U.S. GNI from $1 trillion to $2.4 trillion by 1990 and explained that the only way this could about was by on the environment by 2-3 times. THE MAJOR OBSTACLE to the solution of world environmental problems, according to Falk, is the shared commitment of the world community to an intension of GNP (Gross National Product). The prospects for the world to overcome the ecological problems it now faces and will face are not good, Richard A. Falk. Milbank professor of natural law at Princeton University, told an audience of about 60 in Wooddraft Auditorium on Friday. Falk said he could not be too optimistic in his description of the problem, but because he believed that the problems were 'not susceptible to political change' and of societies and the shape of political power in the world "It is this interaction of the fineness of the planet with the dynamics of economics which defines the problem," he said. In the first lecture, delivered on Thursday, Falk explored the subject of "International Law of Global Competition" and the Challenge "and had ended on a pessimistic note because of the scope and number of the problems involved. John Maher, professor of law, said in his introduction. "Mass poverty and the population explosion add another dimension." "It means that the high-income population is necessary just to support it." Falk, in the second session of the Judge Timothy Stephens Lecture Series, said he would endeavor to be optimistic but added, "The subject matter itself is an optimistic account." Outstanding high school being honored as Kansas Students by the University of Kansas in Association in a grant. "There doesn't seem to me to be a responsible basis for looking optimistically at the world's ability to meet these problems. Seniors Honored by KU "THE BEST WAY is to become sufficiently sufficiensive and change priorities to avoid an eco-catastrophe." He continued by saying that international law could not solve "the problem" to provide extra time" and to give "some moderation of the problem." Although he was not optimistic Local high schools designate their honor students in accordion with the criteria published by the alumni Association, KU alumni in the county then hold a Kansas Honors Banquet where they recognize the achievements of their young people. Each student is assigned an student at the dinner by providing his dinner ticker and The program is designed to pay tribute to high school seniors in the student athletics classes in all curricula, majors, occupational plans and educational goals. Also also name a student from the top quarter of its senior class who has displayed unusual leadership in the school or college. transportation Princeton Prof Pessimistic on Ecology THE BOOK awards are made possible through a bequest from THE PROGRAM was established this year and it is outstanding students but also to increase the involvement of KU alumni, in their local communities, to promote research in high school groups and KU alumni, to create meaningful programs for KU alumni throughout Kansas and to promote goodwill between KI This year's programs are being held in Barton, Butler, Cowley, Cumberland, St. Paul, Leavenworth, Lyon, McPherson, Montgomery, Reeno, Riley. In addition to a certificate of achievement from the University, the student will be given a $25 gift certificate for the purchase of books in the Kansas store or the Oread Book Shop. Watkins Reports Cases Of Hong Kong Flu Virus Watkins Memorial Hospital has identified two cases of the A2 Hong Kong influenza virus, Dr. Shumiko Ito, a hospital director said Saturday. According to Schweigel, this definitely means the fus hius has been eaten from epidemic proportions. No estimates were obtained on the fus. Four patients' samples have been sent to Topeka, but results have been received on only two of them. Only the small number of patients who are treated in the labs because "it is expensive process and it does the patient no good once we find out," Schegwier said. The results usually don't arrive until after the patient has almost recovered. "No virus, with few exceptions, responds to, antibiotics," Schweng said. "But then these diseases reach where there are complications, like streptococcus infections, which are bacterial infections, womeset们可以给 antibiotics getting rid of the complications." Little droplets containing the flu virus can be transmitted through the air by coughing and sneezing. Schweigler said. "A good cough or sneeze can There is no antibiotic for the flu virus, he said, and the only treatment is to keep the patient comfortable and resting. He said the disease could also be transmitted by the sharing of drinking cups, or whenever one was ill. He advised saliva. But the best prevention, he said, was for people not to eat too much, but to cough into a hankerchest. distribute the virus 12 to 15 feet. If it could infect a dozen people. With two or three people coughing and sneezing, it can blanket the whole room. Vince Bello, field director for the Alumni Association commented on the program recently: Flu symptoms are aching, particularly aching of the eyeballs, fever, nausea, respiratory disease, vomiting diarrhea, and respiratory infection, he said. The best treatment is to stay in bed and get plenty of rest if disease may last three to five days, but there can be a rather long incapacity period with great difficulty in remaining remain for a month to six weeks. Frank Grant Crowell, an alumnus of KU. "I think it is important to note that all students who qualified were honored regardless of their interest in KU or if they intended to study at the college level. We hope this elevates the Kansas Honors Banque out of the 'recruiting' category and into the area of community concern for each student that is our primary goal," he said. "About three years ago, when the flu reached pandemic proportions, the University had to shut down. One gentleman told me that one day, he had filled 600 bottles of medicine with nothing but have nothing of that sort here. We have had no mortalities and certainly no near-misses. Interviews "We have 12 people here," Schweiger said. "Of these, four have respiratory infections, which is about par for winter conditions." The upsurge of national and global concern about environmental problems. Even three years ago, he said, there was virtually no awareness of a planetary capacity to sustain life. Commercial Lost Analysi Business Engineering, S. U. S. C. M. Engineering, S. U. S. C. M. Mechanical Engineering, S. N. S. or N. U. Mechanical Engineering, S. N. S. or N. U. Administration. Degree in Law, Summer Academy. about the future, he did identify what he saw as some sources of hope: National Bank of Detroit. M.B.A. only Commercial Loan Analyst and Management. Metropolitan Life Insurance (Torpeka) Any degree for sales and management training Frstm & Frnat. H.S. or M.S. Accounting and Management establishment of satellite communications and the general ease and rapidity of travel and communications. He cited Marshall McLuan, a commissioner who said these developments gave people the sense of the earth as a "global village" and that more people were "really seeing the independence and finiteness of the planet." or M.S. Petroleum Engineer Liverpool Lawrence Laboratory, M.S. or P.M. Engineering Mechanics, M.S. or D.P. Engineering Mechanics, M.S. Mechanical Engineering, M.S. or P.M. D.P. Math. Deborah) see Monkman's Schedule Vick Chemical Co.: B.A., B.S. or M.B.A. Marketing Summer employment for juniors or seniors. The Apollo program, the "Perhaps the most valuable piece of history the picture was the pictures of the island in space," Falk said. The nuclear stalemate which has made it evident that warfare has been a central theme "mutually suicidal" has endured dreams of world conquest and even of defeating one's major enemies. This realization has caused international contact and cooperation in phenomena like the SALT talks and President Bush's visit. Dow Corning Corp. Every level positions in Accounting, Auditing, Financing, Business Administration, Marketing, Sales, and General Administration. Falk said "Perhaps the most important" source of hope was the "declining allegiance. THURSDAY Arthur Andersonks Co., B.S., M.S., M.B.A. J.D. Staff Accountants for International Firm of C.P.A.s Dow Corning Corp. B.S. or M.S. Chemical Engineering, C.E. Business Administration; B.S. Electrical Engineering; B.S. Chemical Engineering; B.S. or M.S. Chemistry Standard Oil and Chevron Research: B.S. or M.S. Petroleum Engineer Vick Chemical Co.: see Tuesday's schedule Farmland Industries B.S. Business with emphasis in accounting Texas Instruments, B.S. or M.S. Elmwood Engineering, B.S. or M.S. Machinery Engineering John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. B.A. or B.S. Liberal Arts and Sciences, B.E. or B.S. Business, B.A. or B.S. Math; B.A. or B.S. Math. The increasing complexity and interdependence of organizations in a case for increased cooperation between large international governments. He expressed his hope that the international space agency, the space program and the recent momentum in mental health could mean no country could "go it alone" and that there would be a spillover effect into ecological systems. He specified that this analysis did not apply to Third World countries where the process of building a nation was still under way and where the population was growing, with attaining the necessities of life. He illustrated this contention with the examples of liberation movements such as those in Quebec and Ireland. This sort of argument has been called the first, "he said, but explained that he saw it as a part of a movement which will decrease the power of the state, and make people aware that governments of large states can play an economic property or peace. McDonald Deogan Corp. B.S. or M.S. Aerospace Engineering. B.S. or M.S. Electrical Engineering. B.S. or M.S. Mechanical Engineering PRODUCY Arthur Anderson & Co.; see Thursday's schedule 3 That have a bilateral or multi-lateral character—still more specific. 4 "On a unilateral basis"—for problems in one country which have international implications. 5 "In the development of awareness of environmental concerns," he said, and should be performed by nongovernmental associations of nonnational or transnational 2. That are regional or subregional in character—more specific. Falk said that any optimism he had for the capacity of international law in the environmental environment is not not but but for a period of "within a decade" and that the legal responses dependent on the engineering Texas Instruments, Inc. see Thursday's schedule. The People's Republic of China relies upon Japan for about 20 percent of its total international trade, including such items as photo lenses, machine tools, and even complete industrial plants. Trade with the Soviets amounts to only about five per cent of the total, and prospects for trade with such economic partners are very good. The Common Market is not very good at this time. Lee sees an extremely important aspect of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and the U.S. as being what he calls a symbolic factor. 1. That are truly global in character—all governments would participate. especially in developed countries, to the symbols and cult of nationalism." actions of national governments. He outlined 'five main levels of action' in his law could function to help overcome environmental dis- Student Sees Nixon Trip As Chinese Trade Lever Editor's Note: This is the second edition of KU faculty members and students on the possible effect of Nixon's trip to Vietnam. THE FIRST FOUR concern the "development of norms, institutions and procedures"; Lee does not think that South Korea's fear Nixon's Piket trip as potentially dangerous to their country's security, at least not in North Korea. Koreans have a traditional dislike of big power diplomacy and are concerned about the possibility of a certain significant political accord being reached between North and South Korea. Chae Jin Lee, a native Korean, has a natural interest in his studies of China and has spent many years studying Chinese and other diplomats. Falk said he thought that the realities of his observations on problems of the environment would result in nothing more than "a very idealistic statement that I do not find at all convincing." By PAUL SWEARINGEN Kansan Staff Writer "The CHINESE feel that Japanese trade items are inferior and underpaid. "Although there will be no upsurge in trade between China and the U.S., the Chinese want to increase trade with trade of the U.S. as a lever in trade negotiations with the Japanese to procure more high-quality goods." 7-Day Special CARS PAINTED $27 50 NORTHTOWN BODY SHOP Lawrence, Kansas What is required, he said, is a separate international agency to monitor and coordinate the global environment and would set standards, coordinate activities in the region. "There should be a convention on ecocide similar to that on genocide," he said. "They could "Lee also sees the extension of Ong range credit, which the Bank will consider a good goal in all forthcoming economic negotiations between the Bank and Ong." Contrary to some current beliefs held by some observers of past Chinese U.S. negotiations, and the United States, a tough negotiator and does not expect any concessions on our part. They are prepared to face challenges in an atmosphere and are not restrained by ideological dogmatism. Lee adds that it was hard to find someone who significant compromises at the 1952 Geneva conference. CHINA IS NOT losing anything by participating in negotiations with the U.S. Who is the chief enemy in the hierarchy of enemies? Immediately as in the long run Japanese competition. The Chinese are also attempting to relax tensions with the Indians, thus bringing their arms into India. It is my assumption that the Chinese will attempt to avoid the buildup of military presence near her borders. LEE HOPES for the exchange of scholars and even economists between China and the U.S. "There's people no danger, no type exchange. I believe that will see examples of people's between the two countries," beauld "I don't believe that China will be sending people trained in subversion to the U.S., although they have been heavily trained in Communist ideology." Lee said. "What I think that we will see is an attempt by the Chinese to change their understanding of the immediate objective will be to expedite change in U.S. policy along a more favorable line." "Both sides will be very clear in their discussions. They will need some information about each other very clearly at the highest level and through the various other diplomatic channels. The two sides must cooperate each other's interests and policies at the highest levels. "I THINK WE shall see a proclamation of countries reassuring each other's intentions, now that the ground work has been laid. And we will need more thing to come out of these discussions will be the relaxation of sanctions." As long as there are Job Hunters... We're in the right business. The Chinese will probably Year year thousands of new graduates compete for a dwelling number of jobs. They find that company recruiters ask them to work in a busy job and push them brings fewer job offers. Graduates also face stiff competition from returning veterans. Out of desperation many turn to hiring the right person. Getting the job you want is going to take work. You are going to have to work out jobs rather than waiting for news of employment. Challenge this changing job market. Have your resume published in the 1972 Graduate Register. Published annually, the Graduate register is sent to 200 top personnel managers and advisors of higher education institutions; they select seniors that fit their company manpower needs. Send your carefully typed, one-page (@x11) resume to the Graduate Register. Mail it today with your payee for $20 in cash or credit. Send your resume by mail to: The Graduate Register P.O. Box 56056 Chicago, Ill. 60656 P. O. Box 8118 Atlanta, Ga. 30306 enter the diplomatic talks with an intention of using the United States to restrain the growing industrial and potential military power of Iran. "There's also some fear of psychological shock in the event of a terrorist attack, as a result of the Nixon visit, and probably some danger to the economic stability of some small states," said Ms. Fahmi, whose effects will not be serious. Each country is aware that in the long run, we can make some records with China. "When President Nixon first announced his Peking trip, these countries protested a desire to establish diplomatic contacts with China. The argument that the United States will have a profound adverse impact upon pro-U.S. Asian countries is untenable in the face of "SOME IMMEDIATE adverse impact may be felt, but these countries can make some changes to adjust the reality; then the better," Credit Option Begins Today make it a war crime, for instance to destroy crop land. Students who wish to use the credit-no credit option may sign up beginning today in their school offices, or any time in before Feb. 18. Juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will have to request the office of the registrar. Credit-no credit is open to all undergraduates except those in the School of Education. "It could be extended to national decisions having high ecological risks. Governments have planned plans to an international panel." "Even just the necessity to report would be beneficial," Falk said. concerned with education, there should be an attempt to build pressure and public consciousness about environmental affairs. ON THE FIFTH level, which he described as being mainly Credit will be given for grades of A, B or C. No credit will be given for grades of D or F. Instructors will not be told which students have chosen the option. They will assign letter grades. "Through this sort of activity," he said, "underdeveloped nations are exposed to facts showing them why it is in their interests to engage with the environment challenge and what can be done to meet it. The registrar's office will convert letter grades into credit or no credit. THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. G. H. S. Hillcrest Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry from the producer and the director of "JOE" "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" Final 2 Days PLAYBOY MAGAZINE say: "Gees! What We Learned in School Today" it is tops in its class of 1970s, drawn from the hotbeds of sexual revolution" R 33 Varsity WEAKAIR --- TempurPedic WIP-065 Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30 Adults $1.50 Children .75 Eve. 7:25 & 9:15 Adult 1.50 Sat. & Sun; 3:00: 5:05, 7:30: . . . Twilight Hr. Admission $1.00; 4:30 to 5:15 only! "ON ANY SUNDAY" POLICE Eve. 7:35 & 9:30 Adult $1.50 - Child .75 Mat.-Sat.-Sun. 2:35 & 4:25 Hillcrest 20 Eve. 7:20 & 9:30 Adult 1.50 Mat.-Sat.-Sun. 2:00 & 4:05 DUSTIN HOFFMAN "STRAW DOGS" Hillcrest "I WISH A FRESH-CRUSTED, THICK CHEESED, ENTRA SAUCE PIZZA WOULD APPEAR RIGHT BEFORE MY VERY EYES!" IN CASE OF SUCH EMERGENCY, CALL 843-3516 WE'LL RUSH YOUR WISH RIGHT OUT TO YOU. PIZZA HUT We deliver the Goods! YOU Need a Comfortable, Attractive and Reasonably Priced Apartment? WE Have just what you need LET'S GET TOGETHER Large sunny rooms Closets you must see to believe Pvt outside entrances Game room, Stud room Laundry and indoor pool Laundry, offstreet parking Month-to-month leases 1 BR Unf 130 1 BR Furn 160 All Utilities Paid Free Pizza Buck Just for Looking 6th & Frontier 2 BR Unf 155 2 BR Furn 195 RIDGLEA The People Place to Live 842-4444 Monday, February 7, 1972 3 Ecology Cups Used Here Save electricity turn off lights, TV when not in use New Cups Dispensed in Strong Express concern for environment While a thirsty person sips a cold drink from the vending machines at Strong Hall, he is advised to protect the environment. There are six different types of cups, each with a scene of nature and a saying on them. The nature cups are used for pollution. Don't litter. Support your local recycling programs." Dispose of chemicals in the trash." Help fight water pollution. Conserve water. Use our water conservation programs. Avoid noise pollution. Keep the sound level down." Help fight air pollution." Save trees. Turn them "Save electricity. Tight off lights. T.V. when not in use. Cold drinks are being served in paper cups with the words "Ecology, You Can Help" printed on them. The ecology cups are Dixie Cups made by the American Can Co. in Easton, MA. Their purpose is to show the company's concern for the environment and to try to encourage other people to help protect the environment. Forrest Jolly, head of vending operations, said Wednesday. Jolly said the cups were bought because they proclaimed the importance of doing so to ensure for the environment people to dispose of the cups in the proper way and they were better prepared. For that kind of cup bought, The American Can Co is the only company that makes ecology cups The new cups were purchased at the same cost as the cups pre-packaged. They would like to put the ecology cups in all cold drink vending machines. Comp Group Seeks Support The Computer Assisted Instruction (CAI) Interest Group has requested recognition by the University Computing Center at E. Radley, assistant professor of music education, said Friday. Radley said computer assisted instruction was becoming a widespread application in diverse areas of knowledge. The computer can do for a student thing a professor often cannot do except in highly technical areas. Educators have utilized student-computer interaction for statistic courses, developing musical concepts, training medical personnel to identify and classify malarial parasites, and in-service training for teachers. Almost all my discipline applications for CAI, RADsay, sad The advantages of CAI, Rad哮 said, include immediate reinforcement, potential for diagnosis of learning difficulties and support of student responses and ability to generate relevant problems. pansion and more diverse applications of CAI on our campus." Radocy said. "Requesting official recognition for the interest group is the first step towards ex- Radacy said the group realized there were difficulties in utilizing CAI at the University of Kansas. The group also worked on a flexible language programming, varied technical response modes, space, computer time, a graphics capability, money and a broad range of skills to CAI in the University. The members of the group have decided to work for the greater use of CAI at KU by trying to interest and support for CAI Marlene Sanders To Speak Thursday Marlene Sanders, ABC news correspondent, will speak Thursday in the Kansas Union as part of the Commission on the Status of Women's 1972 Spring Olympiad in a week-long program designed to offer a wide range of designs on the women's movement. Sanders, whose visit is being sponsored by the Commission on Journalism, is a member of the School of Journalism, will speak about women's role in society at p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium A in September 1964, she has among her assignment credits a three-time Vietnam in April and May of 1966. The week's events will begin today at 7 p.m. with a KANU radio program, "A Feminist Perspective," during which Emily Tylman, dean of women, co-hosted on "Women in the Professions." at 7. 30 p. m. Tuesday the film, "Women's Liberation," written, produced and narrated by the authors in Forum Room of the Union. The film features interviews with Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., and representatives from women's groups in New York. On Valentine's Day On Valentine's Day TISSOT Members of various women's organizations on campus will discuss aspects of the movement at 7:30 Wednesday. In the Forum they will deal with their involvement on the group and personal level. TISSOT A heart full of love, a wrist full of white or yellow 14K solid gold, a superb Tissot watch $160 Ask for free Tisset style brochure 817 Mass Marks Jewelers Residency Decided Individually Applications of students eliminating Kauai area evidence are reviewed in the individual circumstances said the William L. Kelly, registra The Kansas Statute concerning determination of residency for fee purposes provides a minor to reside with his parents. A six-month residency period prior to a marriage of the term is also required. Aside from these, there are many other complex factors taken into account in deciding 61049606 START NOW TO GET IN SHAPE FOR SUMMER DOLLAR DAYS SPECIAL Every Lady that Signs Up for Three Months at $45 Can Sign Up a Friend for Only $1.00. CALL 842-4044 2323 RIDGE COURT LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB FOR WOMEN whether a student may claim residency. Many students go to Kelly to explain why they think they were wrong, but she reviewed the Kansas law with many of these, and if they still felt they were eligible, he filled out their application form. There were approximately 180 cases reviewed separately during fall semester, Kelly said About half were rejected for residency. Half were varied each semester, Kelly said depending on the kinds of cases. CALL 012-4044 2323 RIDGE COURT LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB FOR WOMEN Kelly said the committee met four to six times a semester, but that there was constant communication between committee members. Applications are reviewed by the Residence Committee composed of Kelly, James R. Henry, assistant registrar; Charles H. Oldfather, University President; Eugene Fox, Fox associate director;associate and Charles M. Burrows, associate comptroller. You'd like sales management, but you want to believe in the product being sold. You might be happier at AEtna. We think we might have what youre looking for. Something 25 million people are using. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer We'd like you to consider taking a sales management position with Ema Life and Casualty. We have hundreds of brisbane management positions, both in the field and in the home office, that pay sub par wages. We offer them all creativity and hard work. But the rewards can be very high. To yourself. To others. If the insurance business is still the Overlooked Profession to you, it's probably because you haven't heard the whole truth about it yet. How fast changing it has become. Or how sophisticated. Or how complex. 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AEtna OUR CONCERN IS PEOPLE LIFE & CASUALTY WELCOME BACK THE BEER BOOK © with MOTHER MARY'S THE STABLES THE BALLPARK THE NEW HAVEN and THE PIZZA HUTS $20.00 Worth of Beer (80 Draws) (Two for One Basis) $10.00 Worth of Pizzas $30.00 Value for $5.00 PER BOOK Make This Valentine Offer Phone 842-6102 or 842-8188 Pick Up Your Beer Book© at MOTHER MARY'S THE STABLES THE BALLPARK OR THE NEW HAVEN Unfortunately This Offer Is LIMITED! 4 Monday, February 7, 1972 University Daily Kansan Garry Wills KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. John Anderson Jr., former Kansas governor, is expected to announce today his candidacy for the republican nomination for governor. The entry of Anderson into the race should revitalize the hopes of those in the state who feared that his death was lost forever in Kansas politics. A Good Governor? Anderson likely will be running against Lt. Gov Reynolds Shultz of Lawrence and Rep. Morris Kay, Kansas House, also from Lawrence. Shultz is undoubtedly the least qualified of all to hold public office. The statement Shultz made during his campaign for lieutenant governor, that Lawrence had lost nothing with the death of Rick Dowdell, a black youth shot by police in 1970, still stands as good evidence that he is unfit to be governor. Shultz has done little to mitigate the insensitivity reflected by that statement. He has long been a foe of progress at the University, offering simple-minded law and order solutions to the complex problems that have occasionally caused flareups of violence on campus. His views are widely criticized because of his "permissiveness" are just further proof that he simply does not have the understanding or sensitivity to be governor. Kay, while certainly a better candidate than Shultz, still leaves much to be desired. Even though he represents a university community in the Kansas House, Kay has not been a leader in the fight for increased funding of higher education in the state. His statements regarding the budget problems at KU have been conciliatory and supportive of the university's displayed vigorous support for the University, and therefore seems to be poorly representing a large portion of his present constituency. On the other hand, Anderson has been a longtime friend of higher education in Kansas and also a liberal Republican across the state. Unfortunately it is not politically healthy to be a liberal Republican these days with staunch conservative Republicans in the White House and the National Chairmanship. The problems are compounded when the national chairman is a Kansan. Senator Dole opposed Anderson's appointment to a federal district court judgeship last year, but he said recently, "If John Anderson decides to run and is the party nominee for governor in August, I and every other Republican will work hard to elect him." Hopefully this is a sign of a new attitude on the part of old guard Republicians that, if Anderson is nominated and then elected, could be the return of a concerned and responsible citizen to the governorship. —Mike Moffet Associate Editor PETER J. KINGMAN climbed up and waved V-signs at San Jose last year, because that gets young people angry. The Ms. story ties in with that incident; but it is not the most revealing passage in Nixon's gloating remembrance of his South American "Crisis." That came when a man spat at him. The Secret Service dealt with Nick, who he was pinned. Nick tells us,"I was satisfied of planting a healthy kick on his shins. Nothing I did all day made me feel better." 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 provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address. Nixon likes to stress that he is just as tough as the next fellow—the whole point of his encounter with Khrushchev, a Soviet commander, how Can he be a more noun dely him after a meeting full of the normal amenities? Much of the nation's attention was puffing at Nixon as was mere Nixon little-latekicking at Mrs. Gandn. One of President Nixon's favorite gestures is a clenched right hand held up about shoulder-night, slightly turned in to ward him. At his point of emphasis he bends the fingers down toward four inches out and around—it is Lily Tomlin's tombby ederning half-punch at someone's shoulder when she reaches for her volex boxy-sorer from the Forties act. The "machismo factor" may be the best and most permanent contribution of Ms. to our political discourse. An understanding of it would have led to far earlier disillusionment with President Kennedy, a latter-day Teddy Roosevelt so far as bellicosis went. The machismo factor cuts across America, as Ms. points out, but can be just a hint: Right-Wingers. Arthur Schlesinger is as much a secret kicker as Richard Nixon. Nixon is proud of getting in such late little "licks." It was in this spirit that he But Schlesinger is not President—and that is the danger of mchaismo when it is blended with personal diplomacy at home. He has said that an awful lot of fellows to be tougher than, these next few months. All the advantage of his opening to China or Russia can be lost if he gets as piqued by their leaders as did with Mrs. Gandhi. Nixon Kicks And Tells That makes for very embarrassing reading. Nixon is a secret kicker. And not only that. Later, when it is perfectly safe, he will kick and tell. That explains the mean little personal touch he gave the Cambodia invasion - equipping it to attack him. That explains Patton savored in Nixon's repeated viewing of the General Patton movie. There have been other examples of the late little "punch"—the attack on the press after his 1962 defeat, the assassination of Nixon and stamping his court appointments. But the most recent example is more disturbing. Nixon's excessive moralizing over India's moralistic posture derived in past (even his are saying) are aaying from a desire to express his resentment against India Gandhi. In a grown man, the gesture conveys not only paguancy, but a pugnacity inhibited. The new women's magazine, Ms., rises Nixon high on its machismo and invites him to his pugnance gestures. Ms., quotes an example from Nixon's Caracas trip: "As we got into the car, the rocks were flying around us but I could not resist the temptation to get in one other good kick." He got up on the mob as the car pulled away. Copyright, 1972. Universal Press Syndicate James J. Kilpatrick WASHINGTON — If members of the Senate could be persuaded to devote one concentrated hour to a task, the press, the Congress might yet find its way out of this swamp. Members would spend that hour reading Freeman Greer's testimony in front of the Senate Finance Committee. A Hard Line on Welfare Freemen is the Vienna-born economist, formerly a staff assistant at the White House, who established a national reputation a decade ago as an authority on the financing of public schools. Since 1962 he has served as senior fellow of the famed Hover Institution on War, Revolution University, and the Harvard University. At 67 he has made himself an expert on public welfare. His statement to the Finance Committee runs to 88 pages; it amounts to a small book. To say that his critique is devastating is to put an overworked word to precise use. Freeman is a poet. He writes about him. But he is also a slant man with a gift for translating gauzy theory into plain speech. The current catch phrase in this dismal business is "workfare not welfare." As Freeman makes US THE COUNTER-REVOLUTION PAX "Listen! Some people wouldn't recognize a dove ... even if it exploded right in their faces." clear, there is nothing much current about it. This was Franklin Roosevelt's idea in 1937. It was Dwight Eisenhower's idea in 1956. It was Jack Kennedy's idea in 1961. It was Lyndon Johnson's a few years later. Now it is Richard Nixon's. The concept is rooted in our Puritan ethic. Historically, Americans have viewed the blind, the disabled, the orphaned, and the destitute aged as important obligations, to be cared for by public private charities and later through public assistance and Social Security. For everyone else, relief was expected to be only a temporary, sometimes thing: No work, no eat. It is only in this present age that these conditions demonstrate, that this healthy concept has been lost; and it has been lost, ironically, during the very period in which Presidents have been defending its validity through successive programs of welfare reform. Various "work reforms" simply have not worked. Why not? Part of the answer, says Freeman, lies with the professional welfare workers who have administrated welfare for the homeless; they have no urgent interest in seeing their clients get off the welfare rolls. Another explanation lies in our changing biological system; why does living in demand. But the principal blame, in Freeman's view, lies in laws and regulations, buttressed by court decrees, that have given the right to be by deliberate design to create the very mess we have today. The appalling increase in welfare rolls and welfare costs is due to the increased appalling increase in Aid to Families with dependent Children AFP that the system is inadequate it illegitimate and is positively encouraged to abandon both mother and child. Nikon's Assistance Program would do nothing to correct this situation. The system is rigged in other ways. Consider the typical welfare mother of 32, with three illegitimate children. In an annex to this chart, she has parked the children with grandmother, or with a neighbor, and found a job. Why should she go to work today? Why should she even try to track down the vanity mirror or fathers of her children? If you assume a regular monthly check, if she takes work, her earnings will be taxed at a rate of at least 67 per cent, possibly 82 per cent—and if fringe housing and medical benefits are lost, at a rate of more than 67 per cent. The Nixon bill does not correct this absurdity either. Freeman's recommendation, in effect, is to go back to the point of beginning under Roosevelt: Put the blind and disabled into control. No work, no eat. Emit a tough law, backed by the sharp teeth of garnishmant, to put the bite on wandering fathers. Give the mother voluntary sterilization of welfare mothers, or put a freeze on further benefits after so many children. He has other ideas, and they must sense Nixon's理由 by contrast, makes no sense at all. One school of reformers says day care centers are the answer. Nonsense, says Freeman; these have gone unused before. Much is known about Freeman's documents the discouraging record. Nixon's plan would effectively federalize all welfare programs; the dramatic effect, in Freeman's view, would be to compound the blunders. Copyright 1972, The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Griff and the Unicorn America's Pacemaking college newspaper I HATE GOING TO CLASS ON MONDAYS--HATE IT!! Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom-UUN 4-4810 Business Office-UUN 4-4358 I HATE GOING TO CLASS ON MONDAYS--HATE IT!! YOU'VE JUST GOT THE WRONG ATTITUDE, DENNY. EXCUSE ME. I LOVE GOING TO CLASS ON MONDAYS! I LOVE IT!!! Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail address: KU School of Nursing 60417 KU 60417 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Quotients expressed are not necessarily equal to those listed in the Offer. BONE BONE BONE BONE BONE BONE YOU'VE JUST GOT THE WRONG ATTITUDE, DENNY SKETCH OFF By Sokoloff “ EXCUSE ME I LOVE GOING TO CLASS ON MONDAYS! I LOVE IT!!! "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff. NEWS STAFF News Adviser...Del Brtnkman Editor Assistance Editor Campaign Editor News Editors Ciphys Suhr Matthew Meltzer Scott Spurrier Bila Haight, Dream Bay Erik Reamerman, Joe Rinka Joe Reamerman, Joe Rinka Sally Carlson, Bob Simmons Bob Simmons Bathara Sparckur Tahmin Singer Chef Chet Assistant Campus Editors Sports Editor Feature Sparkler Editors Feature Writer Willy Editors Makeup Editors Hector Readlin Photographers Joyne Dauhar, Nancy Jones Dick Hay, Goodrick Ed Lalillo, Katie Nitzer, Greg Sorber, Tom Hood Todd Rush Office Manager BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager Associate Business Manager Advertising Manager Marketing Manager National Advertising Manager National Marketing Manager Promotion Manager Advertising Manager Carol Young Associate Business Manager Norman Massey Marketing Manager Dale Pipergergard Promotion Manager Dave Murray Dave Murray A Monday, February 7, 1972 5 'Guess What': Dirty Dud By BARBARA SCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor There's something peculiar about a dirty movie like "Guess What We Learned in School Today?" No matter how hard it tries to be racy, it usually succeeds. In being a child, we are often attempts at humor, more often than it fails flat on its family. "The Love Machine," "Beyond the Valley of the Bulls," certainly not the scummitest of the lot, are prime examples of the dirty move duel. None was a threat to any of them, any of them could have aroused in a self-respecting viewer as a core of idle vengeance in the war. "GUESS WHAT WE LERNED IN SCHOOL WE LEARNED IN LAWRENCE's current offering of impotent voyeurism. It would be too cruel and too simple to call its makers garbage man. After all, it was easy for? The lonely, the bored and the sexually deprived for the most part. Filmmakers like David Gillman and John Waters and directed "Guess What." know better than to waste quality and 'art' on audiencees who are unsuccessful in the dirty movie business in merely titillating the libidos of undernourished mastersmen and tired masturbators. The trouble with "Guess What"? is that it is based on a workable idea that could have been invented by the filmmaker—motion-film—of a third of the trite jokes and half of the sleaziness would have been left on the cutting board. THE MOVIE STRIVES to be a put-on of both the usual skin flick and the hypocritical attitudes toward sex running rampant in the city, which also causes squad detective who tracks down prostitutes by luring them into bed with him; the 17-year-old mama's baby who is killed to sleep in her bed when she reads booko books out loud; the militant army officer who makes it with his secretary while driving to suburban mommies who turn on to grass and then to each other; and, of course, the old maid sex education teacher who hasn't seen you since she went through puberty. People like these could have provided a barrel of laughs, but they haven't got a plot to work with. All they have are tons of body striking and a tendency toward ludicrous mugging. American Civil Liberties letters, etc.) while eagerly reading the American Nazi Party's newspaper. THERE ARE A FEEW good scenes, such as a restrained satire on the suburbs of T commercials (Mommy offering flowers and treats for the fresh-perked flavor that you love). "Daddy," Freddy dried, I hope. "And Jan Saint is demeanful man who goes through everyone's mail to throw away all the 'subversive' stuff." But "Guess What!" is too disjointed and tasteless to either stimulate or intrigue. About all it seems to do is get people go see movies like this. As a matter of fact, if some quirk of fate plops you into a seat at the movie theater, the movie is showing, there is a way to recoup your financial losses. Look around at the audience. They are all dressed in common at dirty movies: Each of the audience members, with few exceptions, falls into three categories. THE FIRST, apparently afraid that someone might get the a belly laugh during each overt sex act. This Good Humor Man tries so hard to stay above the curve, succeeding guffaw earns him a merit badge for aloof superiority. The worst thing he isn't the least bit aroused by pre-packaged eroticism and it'll be he'll be one of the first in line at THE OTHER VIEWER is present by accident. He wandered in off the street thinking "Guess What We Learned in School Today?" was the latest Julie Andrews musical. He may blurb at every other song he listens to, stick around to see the whole thing. A sociologist could make a big deal out of these audiences. But a wrong impressions, sit rigly, avoiding the slightest outward reaction. As soon as the final bite is struck, his snapping quickly hits his desire is to get his kicks and leave him alone. He doesn't that this is how he gets his kicks. KANSAN reviews college reviewer is best by treating them as a pathetic curiosity, the kind that 'needs' you but never enjoyable to be. The second, usually college-age in years or spirit, spits it up. It hears the name of someone suggestive look, smirks at every aggressive gesture and lets loose Some may say that "Guesst what? it a dirty movie, that by jokes above their level. But "Guesst what?" doesn't quite make the grade and falls somewhere in the skin with similar cornball skin flacks. Lewis Essay Offers $500 First Prize The Lewis Essay contest, in which students will promote the study of the Judeo-Christian ethical tradition applicable to social and political The Office of Student Financial Aid announced that entries are being accepted for the Spring semester contest. The essay part of the entry should typewritten and be written between two doublespaced Entries may take the form of a research paper, a proposal or design for some purpose, either by a supporting essay and led by a supporting essay and then by an authoring a well grounded and thoughtful personal statement, or a creative work such as a painting or photograph with an appropriate essay The contest is open to all University of Kansas students. The deadline for entries is March 31. All entries should be turned off Weimberg at the Office of Student Financial Aid, 20 Strong Hall. A committee co-chaired by James Woeelfel, professor of philosophy, and Robert Shilton. He served as chairman of the final decisions on awards. 'Cenci' Canceled by Director By BARBARA SCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor The Experimental Theatre production of "The Cent" has been originally scheduled to open April 6, was called off recently by Robert Findley, associate director of drama director of the Cent." In an interview Friday, Dinai said he cancelled the play when he realized that the circumstances under which workers were attempting to work were "artistically inhibiting." "Originally we were going to two shows ("The Cenci" and "King Ubu"), rehearsal for the movie in both shows," Findlay explained. "This amounts to one enormous amount of work on behalf of the people after the two rehearsals." I came to the conclusion that the experiment was not really feasible." "The Cenci," by *Atonin Artaud*, takes a serious look at an evil, violent world. "King Ubu," by Alfred Jurry, is a parody of the character in the same actors were to be used for both KU productions, Findlay and Michael Nash, assistant instructor of speech and drama, were sharing the directorial Cenci", and Nash "King Ubu", Finday had he realized that a "division of the company" would occur if the cast continued to work with two directors at the same time. "If we were doing two essentially scripted plays, that would be great. But what we were going to do was essentially improvisatory, he said. It didn't take much time, that it would make to certain sarcifics and to make certain sacrifices and Michael would have to make certain sacrifices. But each director needs to be his own man, needs to make his own decisions." findlay stressed that no division had yet occurred among candidates, and it seemed seen a strong possibility of such a break happening later in the year. "I think the cast was disappointed, but I think they worked," he said. "I worked," Findlay said. "I couldn't have made the decision after several weeks of rehearsal." He added that point it could have been done. Although the play will not be given at KU this semester, Findlay said he was still interested in it. "I want to do an expository next year and I will apply to the Experimental Theatre Board to do it." The department of photojournalism of the William Allen White School of Journalism will sponsor the Fifth Annual University of Kansas Photography Context beginning this Photo Contest Opens The contest is open to all full-time students enrolled for the Spring 1972 semester. The class is open to all five pts. in March, May, June, March 10. Photographs may be submitted right categories for the com- pany's photography news, picture story or sequence, sports, human interest feature, entertainment, advertising or personality, abstract and an open category for non-photographic photography. First place winners in each category will receive awards of $10. A grand prize will be the overall winner for all categories. Each participant is limited to submitting eight prints and an entry fee of $3 will accompany the SUA Office in the Kansas City Office. Entry blanks and contest rules can be picked up at the photochromat lab, the SUA or the design office of the University. Dinner Planned The Association of University Residence Halls, in cooperation with the Students Concerned About Higher Education in will sponsor a Legislator's Dinner Feb. 17 in Tampa Hall. "The purpose of the dinner": states a letter mailed to "to" is to "ask for information" for informal discussion between markers and Kansas college students. TACO GRANDE With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free! Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.) Offer expires Feb. 28, 1972 1720 West 23rd Street Patronize Kansan Advertisers Is Your Environment Caught In A Stranglehold? NOISE AIR WATER POLLUTION WASTE OF NATURAL RESOURCES & OPEN SPACE National Environmental Law Society Needs You! Join in the ACTION & Help Yourself! Feb. 9, 1972 Room 305 7:00 p.m. Kansas Union Hand THE KRUMHORNS ARE COMING, TOO. University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb. 9 For Those Tender Moments . . . Nothing is more appreciated than a lovely floral arrangement. Owens FLOWER SHOP VICKERS LECTURE SERIES ADM. ELMO ZUMWALT Chief of Naval Operations WEDNESDAY, FEB.9 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium All University Faculty and Students are Invited to Attend THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 6 Monday, February 7, 1972 University Daily Kansan Jayhawks Surge Past SIU in Track Meet 1982 Kansas Staff Photo by GREG SORBER Randy Smith Strains to Clear High Bar, But Leg Makes Contact Freshman are finalized third with 6-12 on Southern Illinois Saturday Unscouted Georgia Tech Invades; Road Trip Readies Basketball Team The University of Kansas basketball team has been so busy trying to stay alive in the Big Ten that a chance to scout tonight's non-league opponent, Georgia Tech Coach Ted Owens isn't even ready. "We haven't seen them since we played them last year," he said Sunday, "but there shouldn't be any surprises." Tippoff is at 8:05 p.m in Allen Field House. UKE unbeaten freshman team will play Western its junior varsity at 3:45 p.m. Georgia Tech returns few of the players who dropped an 84-71 decision to KU last year in Atlanta. As a result, the Yellow Jackets are hardly likely to return to the National Tournament and loss to Air Force Saturday gave them a 52-12 record. Bob (Peanut) Murphy, a 13-1 point scorer, directs the Georgia tech. Attack St. Post, a 6-6 forward, is leading scorer with 15.6 point in a game Other starters were Sammy Lovelace and 6-John Hoggle. Owens will return to the line-up of the Jayhawk used before the game, and he will mean the Johnson Barry will join B贮 Stullworth at forward; Randy Canfield will start at center field. Jim Omni and Aubrey Nash will play guard. "We just try to prepare for any possible thing that might happen." Owens said. "We do a lot of things to be prepared." The Jayhaws should be ready for almost anything the Yellow Jackets can throw at them after last week's road trip. KU dropped money to Missouri (64) and Minnesota to Iowa (48) Saturday "I it's amazing you can play two good teams on the road and be out-rebounded by that much and still have a chance to win," said Dylan Hines, who things right, except for rebounding, to win both of those." As it was, KU stumbled to a 4-3 league record, 7-1 overall. The Jayhawks have lost all eight of their games away from Allen Field House. We're happy to be home again, "Owens admitted," but we have played well on the road. We're just a few rebounds short of winning the conference basketball赛 Reversals of the last two losses would have given KU a 6-1 conference record. The Jayhawks now stand fifth behind the Nebraska and Kansas State Missouri and Oklahoma is a tie for a tie. The Jayhawks, on the other "That's one area where we're strong enough right now," Owens said. Before the conference race began Owen said, the Jayhawks had to improve their shot selection to challenge. "We are taking a lot better shots now." Owens said. "The rebounding is still the big area where we are weak." Board strength allowed the Cyclones' fast break to grab a lead early in the game. Clint Harris, who scored 22 points, led the charge. Cornhuskers Rest Hold Big 8 Lead KANSAS CITY (AP) -- Big Eight Conference leader Nebraaska put some distance between two players and other members to the backbone throne by remaining idle over the weekend Missouri and Kansas lost close road games when the Bengals free throw attempts Saturday. Meanwhile, Oklahoma rode a 47-point rocket in the second half to hand Colorado a 78-65 heating iowa State's Tom O'Connon converted two Tom charity chances to put the game out of Kansas reach and give the Cyclones an edge. As a result the Corvushakers and stop the conference with a 5-4 victory. The State and Oklahoma are tied for second with 42 marks and only 12 marks. Monday night Nebraska can maintain or add to its lead when it plays at Oklahoma white. The 2015 ACC championship Colorado is at Oklahoma State, in Albuquerque. However, sophomore Dave Tayner cracked the Iowa State zone by hitting three straight long balls in a game of 24 on layups by Bud Stallworth. The score was tied 11 times before Iowa State snared a 44-42 halftime advantage on a Harris tip-in. nonconference action, Georgia Tech visits Kansas. The teams battled evenly during the second half. For the game, the lead changed hands 24 times; the score was tied 19 Big Eight teams are then late until Saturday when Iowa State is at Oklahoma State is at Colorado, Oklahoma State is at Missouri. The turning point came when Iowa State began pick up free throws with 7:55 to play. Martine Dumonn capped two to win by one from a free throw of 70-deadlock. Iowa State led the rest of the way. Big 8 Standings | League | W | L | Overall | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Washington | 5 | 1 | 14 | | Nebraska | 4 | 2 | 15 | | Missouri | 3 | 2 | 13 | | Kansas | | | | | Utah | 4 | 2 | 9 | | Alabama | 4 | 2 | 9 | | Kansas | 3 | 7 | 11 | | Iowa State | 3 | 4 | 10 | | Colorado | 3 | 4 | 13 | | Oklahoma State | 3 | 4 | 16 | Monday, Georgia Tech at Kansas; Missouri at Iowa State; Colorado at Oklahoma State; Oklahoma State at Saturdays; Oklahoma State; Kansas; Iowa State at Nebraska; Kansas State at Colorado; Oklahoma State at Missouri; Kansas State at Missouri Two free throws later, Demmon stole an inbounds pass from Caufeld and drive for a lay-up. The defense clawed their way back from there to withstand one point at 82-81 with Smith pulled out after scoring 31 points. Taylor made the score *84-83* with more than a minute to play. The other team scored four points. The State received three one-and-one free throw attempts Barrow was fouled rebounding a shot by Taylor with three points. A pit missed the one-and-one attempt that could have won it. He had missed the early part of the game because of a nose bleed. KANSA (31) | | Bass | Rb | rb | pf | pf | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Silvesterhoff | 8.4 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 3 | | Bearson | 6.2 | 6 | 5 | 3 | 2 | | Cambridge | 4 | 9 | 3 | 4 | 12 | | Cambridge | 4 | 9 | 3 | 4 | 12 | | Krivokis | 4 | 12 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Kravokis | 4 | 12 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Barron | 1 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 | | Barron | 1 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 | | Totals | 36.7 | 11.5 | 9 | 21 | 82 | Freestyle Relay Staves Off Cyclones | | **Ig** *g*1a | **Ig** *g*2a | **rb** | rp | tp | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Engel | 10 | 12 | 1 | 1 | 13 | | Williams | 11 | 13 | 1 | 1 | 14 | | Harris | 10 | 12 | 1 | 2 | 22 | | Martin | 10 | 13 | 16 | 12 | 23 | | Dumman | 7 | 16 | 1 | 0 | 24 | | Mark | 2 | 5 | 9 | 0 | 1 | | Murray | 2 | 5 | 9 | 0 | 1 | | Total | 31 | 18 | 23 | 10 | 84 | Iowa state took KU's Big Eight swimming champions down to the wire Saturday night, but with a strong performance in the 400-yard freestyle relay, the hawks emerged victorious, the KANSAS IOWA STATE Southern Illinois won four of the first six events and leading 35,19 deemed on the verge of ending a 10-meet losing streak. By DAN GEORGE Kansan Sports Writer The KU rally began when Mark Lutz squeezed out an unexpected win over SIU's Ivory Crockett in the 440 then, in the 60-yard high jump. (Simon Jenkins) teammate Bob Burkness finished a close first and second. By BRAD AVERY IOWA STATE (84) It took strong finishes by both the Jayhawk mile-relay team and vole pawlander Bill Hatcher to insure the KU victory. There were few smiles in Allen Field House Saturday night until an Iowa Kansas track squaw in the final two events to overcome them. The Hawks broke two pool records on the way to their triumph Sephorim Tom Kempk broke his own mark of 10.01 in the 1,000-yard freestyle with a 10.00 jump and shattered the old mark of 0.71 in the 200-yards individual medley with a 2.025 time. BY BRAD AVERY Kansas Sports Writer (3) But Iowa State gave KU just about all they could handle. After winning the 400-yard medley relay and the 200-yard freestyle, The Cyclones went on to capture the bronze and three-meter diving contests. That put them within one point of winning with only the 400-yard THE AFTER JAK ST. John of the Sakers took the two-mile Kansas canoe to the river and races events. With only the mile relay and pole vault remaining, Ku's team won. But the Jayhawks, showing惊喜 pose in only their third meet this season, came back to win eight of the last nine Then, in the first lap of the relay, Tom Scavuzo took a surprising lead over Crockett, and teammates Lutz, Borkessel and Phil Stepp hung on for the KU a four-point lead in the meet. On top for the first time since the initial event, the Jayhawks needed only second place in the pole vault to win. Hatcher more than filled the bill. In clearing 16, the team first, and set a meet record. FIVE OTHER meet records were set, two by Kansas. Mike Stuil reached 247 in the long run and Stepp ran the 600 in the Jayhawk Finishes First in Freestyle Race State Tate won other events to challenge in dual Saturday "I really am pleased with what we did tonight because we have several guys who aren't healthy, so we aren't up to our best performance," State was really a motivated team tonight." Reason said. However, the KU team of Phil Kidd, Roland莎兰斯, Rick Heidinger and Allan McDonald beat the Cyclone队 by a full three seconds, which gave the Rangers their fifth dual victory in six matches. freestyle relax remaining Reasonal said if KU were going to beat Oklahoma Feb. 19, it would take a better team effort and better preparation. "But," he said, "there are always surprises." "We had them squoted pretty well," he said, and "we figured that if both teams went full blast they would win," surprises, they would win, 66-63. Coach Bob Timmons expressed little surprise in the meet's overall closeness. The camarderie in swearing is the aspect of the suave now our squad is getting closer together and really helping each other to stay. After the meet KU Coach Dick Reamon was clearly pleased with his team's performance. Reasonal said he thought that going into next week's contest with Oklahoma, the 'Hawks were becoming a tight-knit unit. "They are very strong in the butterfly, the medley and the long distance freelace, and I am doing a lot of work to beat them," he said. BUT IT was hard for Timmons to contain his enthusiasm. 'Stepp did real well in the 600 "I was also pleased at (Rudy) Guaveira's showing in the shot put. He's had an injured finger and I sure how he would be affected." time. Lutz came back strong and finished well in the quarter." Timmons said. Lutz showed little surprise at his victory over Saluki ace Ivory Crockett in the 440. "I knew I could!" beat him out of the "Lutzs" suite, but "I figured I was in better shape than he was. I thought I had a pretty good chance if I had back and front teeth." The best quartet "will run all year." STEPP, WHO holds the national junior college mark in the 440, said he thought he ran a great race last week in Oklahoma City. "My time is better last week," he said, last track on Aaron House and the band a second slower than any other around her. I know I can ran better. Kansas 71, Southern Illinois 86. Lion name: I. Mike Stuff, KU. Avery name: J. Michael Hutchison, KU (66), L. Linnie Brown, SU (23), Roger Jones, KU (25), J. P. Peterman, KU (24). Mile-1. Ken Nalder, SIU, 4:19:5; 2. Jack St. John, SIU, 4:19:8; 3. John Callen, KU, 4:20:3; 4. Smith Smith, KU, 4:34:1. St. John, MI; U.M. 1,4.B,3; J. John Ouse, 20; K. Ouse, 20; D. Ouse, 20; Y. Oakland, yard lawn B; I. Crookwood, 20; M. Crookwood, 20; J. Crookwood, 20; N. Crookwood, 20; Crookwood, NY; N.I.T. 19; R.J. Crookwood, 20; D. Delbarton, 20; N.J. Crookwood, 20; N.J. Crookwood, NJ; N.J. Crookwood, NJ; M. Nelson, MT; M. L. B. Smith, E.W. Edwards, 20; H. Edwards, 20; J. Edwards, 20; 600 yard run - 1. Phil Steele, KU, 1:12 (breaks meet record of 1:122 by Dwight Peck, KU, 1903). 2. Terry Erickson, SU, 1:158. 3. Sue Shumikoshi, SU, 1:154. 4. Liam BRUCKEN, SU, 1:141. High jump: 1. Meyer Bernard, SU, 6; 2. Bill Nancow, SU, 6; 3. Randy Smith, SU, 6; 4. Barry Sbaru, RU, 6; 5. Gary Lionheart, RU, 6; 5. 104 wd card, 8x10, with Mark Lugo, KU, 3.2k, 9x10 wd card, 8x10, with Mark Lugo, KU, 3.2k, 9x10 wd card, 8x10, with Mark Lugo, KU, 3.2k, General Smith, SU, 7.2k, 8x10 wd card, 104 high jungle hats,1 Deloitte Rhinol, Louisville, SU, 7.2k, 8x10 wd card, Louisville, SU, 7.2k Two mile- 1, Jack St. John, SIU; 9.13.2, 2. Gerald Craig, SIU; 9.17.8, 3. David Hill, SIU; 9.18.5 100 yard field. Dave Anderson, K1, 17.9. Charles Dewaukee, K2, 17.9. Nathan Kalu, K3, 17.9. Aaron Hove, K4, 16.8. Joe Martinez, K5, 16.8. Joel Armand, K6, 16.8. Jord run. Jerry Jarouski, K1, 1.5. Randy Cunningham, K2, 1.5. Charles DeWaukee, K2, 1.0. Elijah Jones, K3, 1.0. 60 yard low hurdles 1. Born Harbouw, Ku 7-10, 2 def. Holderman, Ku 8-2, 3 def. Hollander, Ku 7-10, 2 def. Harbouw, Ku 7-10, 3 def. Hollander, Ku 7-10, 3 def. Hollander, Ku 7-10, 3 def. Hollander Mire relake. | Kansoo (Tom Szurzo) Mark Lutz, Borkowski, Paul 3.22 h. | Southern Illinois (twelve crook, Ken Saul), Eddison Eddon, Terry Erickson 2. 23-8 Pole vault - 1, Bill Hatcher, KU, 16:1; 2, Neil Chapman, KU, 15:0; 3, Gary Zajone, SLI, 15:0 U.S. Olympic Medal Possible in 2 Events SAPPORE, Japan (AP) — The United States makes a bid for medals in two blue ribbon events. His men's downhill ski race, as the 10th Winter Olympic Games in a week of competition Monday. The figure skating hopes best with Julie Holmes, a 20-year-old biond star, and Alex Calif, and Janet Lynn, the exciting 19-year-old blonde from New Jersey. In the men's downhill ski race, Mike Lafferty, a 23-year-old University of Colorado student from Eugene, Ore., and Bob Cochran, 21, are given outside European World Cup veterans. European World Cup veterans. European world cup victorious Ard Schenk, 27-year-old world champion, captured his second Olympic gold Sunday by winning the 1,500-meter speed skating race in the Olympic record time race was his feat overshadowed by a 1-2-3 Japanese sweep of the 70-meter jump hill. The first Japanese gold medal in the 1,500-meter speed skating Games was won by Yukio Kasaya. After three days of competition, the Soviet Union, West Germany and the Western Europe and the gold medals each. Norway leads in total with five, three silver and two bronze, followed by Russia. The United States' lone medal was the bronze won Saturday by Susan Correck of Kethum, the women's downhill ski race. Sandys announces HERE'S THE DEAL: THE TOOTH FAIRY SPECIAL ALL FOR ONLY 1 HI LO 1 FRY 1 SHAKE 80 $ ^{¢} $ YOUR OWN PERSONAL, GIGANTIC And You Get TOOTH FAIRY POSTER ABSOLUTELY FREE Stop in For Yours Today. You'll Like It! Sandy's HAMBURGERS come as you are...hungry HOLLYWOOD MUSIC FESTIVAL TONIGHT Light or Dark Beer $1.00 a Pitcher 9-Midnight SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & Ye Public house 544 W. 23rd 842-2266 Open Mon. thru Fri. 4 p.m. to 12 p.m. Sat. 11 a.m. to 1:00 a.m. Sun. 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. --the wild ones! men and Women's Sizes with Brown or Loden Green for Men and Brown, Navy and Grey for THE SACKBUTS ARE Coming Hand Care University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb.9 Student Union Activities Officer and Board Interviews Feb. 24-26 VICE-PRESIDENT FORUMS PRESIDENT FINE ARTS PUBLIC RELATIONS PUBLIC RELATIONS TREASURER RECREATION DIRECTOR FESTIVAL SPECIAL EVENTS TRAVEL FILMS Applications Available in SUA Office (Main Floor, Union). Application Due Feb. 23 at 5 p.m. the swing of things This boldly styled boot is a real kick to wear. And its striking contemporary look is only part of the story. SHOE Wildernass BOOTS by WOLVERINE Rough, reverse grain leather outside. Leather and padded for comfort. Browni Wravum lug sole. 813 Mass. St. mccoy shoes V1 3-2091 Use Kansan Classified Monday, February 7, 1972 University Daily Kansan 7 Official Says Phase II Differs from WWII Policy By FRANK SLOVER Kansan Staff Writer The economic controls of the program are not the same as those of World War II, according to Edward Nelson, professor of Nelson, who was regional director of the New York Office of Price Administration (OPA) in 1961, said comparison would be "to look at what the Council of Economic Advisors was doing from 1961 to 1966" when it was trying to regulate the economy to prevent The OPA, he said, had a "clear goal" and that was to shift capital and labor into certain sectors where there were necessary to the war effort. 'We knew what we were doing Ottowville, where everything is ottowville and the alphabet begins with i instead of A, is the setting for this season's second play of Children's Theater at the Children's *OPRS*, or *Bugs* by Mdler Magen. Children's Play To Be Feb. 12 A new and unpublished script, *DPQRIS*, extends to a range of languages, state becoming so powerful that human beings beings all come alive in the world. A public performance is scheduled for Feb. 12 at 2 p.m. in the University Theatre. Three children attend school and three children in grades one through three in the Lawrence and Douglas County schools at 1 p.m. The play, directed by Rebecca Dlay, Chicago's graduate student, will present Kansas and other parts of the Midwinter during the spring WASHINGTON (AP)—The six major cigarette companies are including a health warning in all of their advertising the Tuesday Trade announcement. each time we set a price," Nelson said. "There was no lack of buyers. People had money and would buy anything they could afford. The materials began before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. After the United States attacked, automobiles were manufactured. More no rubber was available for tires and the production of many other consumer goods was curtailed as the country shifted to an industrial economy." In the spring of 1942 the government froze all prices until a suitable system of distribution could be designed. Within two months the government published lists of most vulnerable members of those of Phase II, on an industry-wide basis to be displayed in all buildings. At the same time, books of favorite consumptions are consumed to prevent a few buyers from purchasing most of the scarce commodities at the price. NELSON SAID one of the most recognized and phase II is that representatives of industry met with government officials to set He said agricultural products were exempt from controls during the war, as they are under the current program, until 1945. Controls on fruits and vegetables are established at the retail level. A major difference between the two programs is that profits were regulated during the war but they are not under Phase II. "This was because there had been 20 years of low farm income," Nelson said. "The farmers wanted to help the farmers in the '30s." said, "came out of World War I." Because there is no war to oversee an overriding and all-in-one approach to inheritance with any sort of economic controls become more prominent in today’s economic environment. ANY CONTROLS, he said, violating the traditional and most of the principles of the them, distortions in the allocations of capital and labor within the country. PICKENS AUTO PARTS Weekdays 8-5:30 Sunday 10-3 He said it was helpful to make a distinction between economics and political economy when discussing today's economic maneuvering. distribution which may not be compatible with market conditions. Parts at a Discount "The latter is an administrative job," Nelson said of political economy, "where you must satisfy all members of the body politic sufficiently to power. It is not economics." VI3-1353 "The problem was with workers who were grossly underpaid to start with," he said. "In many cases, now the exceptional cases." The CEA was trying to do the same thing that Phase II is at present undergoing. The employment without an unemployment rate of inflation" Nelson illustrated one of the problems involved with controls by citing the Council of Economic Advisers' attempt between 1961 and 1986 to relate increases in costs to increases in productivity. Robert Bosch Ignition for Foreign Cars a.m. Governor's Room. Journal Club: 11:30 a.m. Alcove B. Cafeteria. Campus Bulletin Offers: and SERVICE For the day of days for Her $269 for all three rings for Him Brilliant diamond, a most luxurious texture of black with white or yellow gold in a dramatic setting. Ray Christian ? Locations 836 Kansas Topeka Education Administration 11:30 a.m. Alcove C. Cafeteria SUA Fine Arts GASH: 11:30 a.m., Cottonwood Room. Cafeteria. Audrey Cabletta Allergy and Drama 11:30 a.m. Alceve D. Capee and Drama ner's Room. Katsuya House Education Committee: 9 a.m., Governor's Room. Chrysler Service Manager: 2.30 a.m. Altope D, Cafeteria, Kansas Uniform: Chrysler Service Union: 8.30 26th and Iowa a.m. International Room Legislative Committee 9 a.m., Government Monday, Feb.7 Tuesday,Feb.8 Cafeteria, Education Administration 11:30 a.m. TUNE-UPS BRAKES WHEEL ALIGNMENT BALANCING EXHAUST SYSTEMS SOUTH LOUNGE—KANSAS UNION GASH 11:30 a.m. Cottonwood Room. Cafeteria Chrysler Seminar: 12 noon English Room. Chrysler Seminar: 12 noon, English Room. Stockton Executive Committee: 12 noon, Curry Room. PICTURE LENDING LIBRARY Cafeteria Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark Room, Cafeteria Physics Colloquium 4 p.m. 321 Maloff Freshman Basketball 5:30 p.m. Allen SIMS: 6:20 p.m. Counsel Room. KANU Radio: 7 p.m., "Women in the Museum." Alpha Kappa Alpha: 7 p.m. Big 8 Hoa, Rock Chalk Reharbal: 7 p.m. Ballroom Basketball: 6 p.m. Allen Field House EMKO... Right, because it's 'effective' Right, because it is gentle, so you can use it with confidence. And these are the big reasons why we should use contraceptive. Over ten years of testing and medical studies prove Emoko one of the most effective contraceptives available to women. And therefore cannot harm your general health and well being. the right contraceptive for you Advertisers Sponsor Aid Of course, Emko Faum has other important advantages, too. There are no complicated things to do when you need protection or fittings, and you use it only when you need protection. Besides, you hardly know it's there. With all of theseadvantages, we owe it to yourself to try Emko. 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House to Test Party Strength Students can discuss job opportunities with association officials after the seminar. SENIORS!! Chances of a successful victory were high in eleveneight Republican. House members voted against the plan in the 65-54 vote which sent it to the governor. The motion and vote to try to override the veto is expected Tuesday. 电话 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 FOR SUA Events Studio 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Shines Dyeing Refinishing "For Feets Sake, If The 施工 Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" Hixon THE EMKO CO., ST. LOUIS MO Ph. 843-0330 10 a.m. -5 p.m. 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th sirloin Forest and Woodland Music We are now busy with final audits when the time comes when the Treaty of quality hands over to the French Government. 11 emko 11 emko Among Our Specialists Siloane New Harbour Hotel New Harbour Beach Closed Monday Medical, Chemical, Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! Our motto is and has always been CA (The Magus will locate it) The next device — The 14th and 15th (15) FOR YOUR Lawrence, Kansas 66044 CABAY ARTS U5 40 913843-9275 913842-0025 Experienced in typing desks, disasters, gem paper, other type tapes, and calligraphy. Typing tape type. Acetate and printing tape. Record phone: 842-8544. Mr Writtle. TYPING Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered in the following locations: creed, or national origin, colored, or national origin. KANSAN WANT ADS Experienced typist with type, your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typing team, prompt, accurate work. Call 91-2381, M.Rainguard 570. Term papers, thesis types (academic, and journal), your year of college, or type of paper. Fill in the blanks below. writing at reasonable rates: 842-907-9797, 842-566-8605, Klimata Dhaya, 842-566-8605 Tiring done in my home on elite type electric typewriter Prompt attention. 841-6938 2-29 One dav Accurate typing of your thesis distribution, or miscellaneous work on HM Somatic typwriter with patent in Travel, Trust, 2019, Burge Court, 823-140-1800. 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 Last—small black male cocker spaniel named Darby Family pet. Retired, 842-8199 2-9 LOST Lost—Jan. 27 in front of Dyche. Gold wire rim glasses. Reward 842-2028. 2-7 Last Friday, Jan. 28 near 19th and 20th. Large, saucer-gray grazedter rests in "Mouse." Great sentimental touch to "Mouse." Great sentimental touch to "Mouse." AL-423A anytime. RF-WARD USE POETRY WANTED for anthology. Please include stamped return en- velope. Send to: Editor, IDLEWILD PRESS, 1807 East Broadway, Los Angeles PERSONAL KANSAN WANT NOTICE 5 Call me for excellent low cost home insurance with above average coverage and coverage of pregnancy*. John Wells, American Life and Health Insurance 845-2520 皇 Women's Alterations 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:20, 1-8 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 515 Mich. Bar-B-Que, 425 Mich. $40.00 for bar-b-Qued Brieft-826 of bar-b-Qued $40.00 Rib-plate- 60.00 of bar-b-Qued Phone VI 9260 Closed Sun-Tun UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright. (816) 474-4676 tt INFANT DAY-CARE BLD. 842-7694. Professional child care for children I - m. 12 mo. Half or part-time Ft. Plat. Designated en-suites 25-40 For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center tf-864-4441. We buy used sports cars and imports. Competition Sports Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-2191 2-19 Professional ballet instruction for all levels, both sexes. Lawrence School of Dance 842 Maa. (rear entrance). Jody Foley. instructor. Call 643-520 or 842-2055. We repair alling Volkswagen. We do small operations, transplants, or just general repairs. We buy soil parts and buy those WVs with allied laborities Bog Inc.. 2-10 2-10 STOCK CLEARANCE SALE-Reduc- tions of 19.50% off, our entire stock to make way for remodeling at THE WEARHOUSE, 8411; Mass. 27 USED STERoids REDUCED 3 pots/ used, 4 contours all painted to clear —Roy Stonehack's, 925 Mason. (Mag- use) 2-7 BOKONKO USED CLOTHES. 819 Vermont used $2 value dress. Riverfront uses $2 value and Western shirts, velvet dresses, and Western skirts. 819 Mount. open 11-6. 819 DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Leave anytime fresh food or chocolate. Fully stocked. Dislied. Flight Center; 227 North Washington; Wisconsin; Williamson 608-263-2828 See Marilyn. Fly to New Orleans. Round trip trip 60. Leave K.C. Sat. Fri 12. Arrive K.C. Wed. Fri Fri more information. call 842-872- **TREE PEE PHIVATE PARTY CLUB** free tree pee back history. It's party culture for second generation teenagers, with fun and casual party personry. New band stand, black dress. We also have special monthly rates for business meetings. Phone or contact John Hatfield at Tree Pee Champion Service Business. Way to business phone 812-482-2927. KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $0.2 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Open 24 hrs. per day Valentine Idea Portrait $5.00 for one, $7.00 for two, 842-7511 2-15 There is more than one Love Story. Rotherhood, and sisterhood. John Lawrence Gay Liberation Print. Aaron Foster Books. Info. P.O. Box 234 Washington, D.C. KU Students of Objectivism will need to discuss the ideas of Aynsar Gates, a philosopher in the Ovreden Room, Kansas Univ. information, #821238 or visit www.ku.edu/. GROUP: Piano CLASSES FOR BEENBERS. Learn to sight read, create your own music Term 8: 84-239 and 84-257. Jan Sunshine 84-257-4297, after 6 o'clock on Monday. WANTED STUDENT EMPLYMENT in Yellowstone and all U.N. National Parks. Visit us at www.nationalpark.com; send $100. Arrnud Agency, 268 East Garfield Drive 8440. MARSHBACK back guarages Women's alterations. 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30 2-14 Helip wanted, male or female Inrequilent part-time student employ- ment. Req. a Bachelor's degree in thorndish and plus at 80 wpm. UCN 4-4442, 1992 Wesley Building 2/7 Mexican-American students from Kansas City to earn $40 for an internship at a private institution or mortgages relatives. Under one loan, Robert, 864-340 for a political Wanted—person to share country home, fireplace, land—five miles from Lawrence. 843-4250 2-7 Help Wanted: Part-time 2nd assistant in the office, packer and hands of board of household performed only an audit. Write, giving your name, address, job and ethnicity to Ethan B.艾伦, a south moving and Storage Employee. Send resume to ethan.b.abraham@hotmail.com. Roommate wanted to share 5 bed- room house with four friends 2 blocks from me. Move immediately. Call Phone: 842-7616 Call Dock: 842-7616 Five roommate for beautiful two bedroom, completely furnished. Measured downroom apartment. Private room. Master suite. $8 per month. 2- 884. 613-5248 1 or 2 female roommates. Will offer a discount on the contracts Call Diane Oldberg, 843-399-2702 2-T Wanted - third roommate to share two bedroom Jayhawk Towers apartment. $75/mo. 2-9 One girl needed to share Jaywalker Tower's apartment. Furnished, unfinished, and outdated, the apartment cost $190. Own bedroom. Can move in immediately. Hire only $5 per room. Parking is free. FOR RENT WEST HILLS APARTMENTS Avail- ble for rent or not furnished - 2-bedroom or unfurnished - 1-bedroom per suite, w/ dishwasher, West Hill Lawn. Call 24 hours a day at 811-769- LAWN. Call 24 hours a day at 811-769- LAWN. Apartment — newly decorated — one bed room furnished—wall to wall carpeting—11 blocks from Union. Phone 843-7567. ff For rent—one or two bedroom aparta, are conditioned carpet, garbage dish, storage cabinet, facilities, color T V available. Call Apt. 24th and Batee New Apt. 24th and Batee 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, carpeting, dishwashers, and air-conditioning; 3 block from KU stadium. Married couples 1025 Mississippi. 842-706-9771 ROOMS. HOUSES AND APART- MENTS. Two bedroom house in E. Lawrence, $14,000 a month. Cover rent with gift card for gilts up to $25,000. Master suite at Macquarie Maury conservatory. Ridge House Aft--for the budget hudred! All the popular features included in this book are in town. ER, 1 and 2 bedrooms, and two baths. 116 for details 2043 Cedarwood-1 116 for details 2043 Cedarwood-1 dent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. From black block of walls 843-1136 2-21 One room apartment. Cooking facilities. $75.00 per month. Utilities paid. 1234 Team. Ground front—Mr. Hagge. 842-198-1 2-7 Female routine hostade to share s. 5 room house with two girls, Upsetians bedroom, ingear yard,敏威, Petra house, quiet library,挚挚, paltz-2 Call Kathy, M3.3722 Room for rent. Need girl to share house $25. Utilities included. 842- 3768 2-7 University terrace and old mill apartments. A limited number of one and two bedrooms for immediate occupancy. Walking distance to manor house (345) or 270 to manager's apartment. Furnished one bedroom apartment. Room to rent to cash deposit: $1500/mo plus play video calls. Call Dave: 843-1601 or 843-6242. Cash deposit required. Couple's graduate student Independent DRIVE IN AND COOP OIP LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 843-5304 Laundry & Dry Cleaners COIN COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th 842-9450 Spacenew facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointment requests. Free client analysis. Swimming privileges. Meet specifically for the busy coed's schedule: Daily 9 to 9, Sat. 11 noon. To rent immediately: 2 bedrooms un- funded or furnished at Ridgenee. Take over pre-rate increase lease, $145, all mills; 842-708-2-97. Happiness is living in a new co-op. Private room from $200. Within walking distance of campus. Call 842-4421 and ask for Bitch or "Kate." 1 B.R. unfamiliar, apartment, 3 bourses from stadium, A/C, and cap- ted. Call 842-5770 or 842-8341, 2-7 HILLIWELL APARTMENTS — 133-45 Z room bedroom furnished and unfurnished apartments. Carpeted, draps, elec- tric units with many more expensive apartments than those of the bedrooms. ITS NEVER TOO LATTE, and it is a long time from Jan. 19th to April 25th for comfortable or attractive. One call to Morseth for Foytath at 2017-A Harroad Road and you can arrange the apartments available in the apartments available and most attractive companies and Missouri; Availum Apartments; Awatuna Apartments; Iowa Har路边 Apartments; Iowa Har路边 apartments of construction, please rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, reason you would enjoy living there, reason you would enjoy living there, make this semester in Lawrence a destination locations for August occupancy and special summer rates for June occu GIRL ROOMMASTER to need shared room for floorJayak Towers apartment with three female sophomore girls and four junior high girls. Available now, 843-724-2001. Available now, 843-724-2001. One-fourth of independent volleyball team needs other three-fourths; male and female Call 841-2067 2-9 COLLEGE HILL MANOR now has 1 bed and 2 bed furnished rooms. A.C. new dishwashers, u. carpet bathrooms, in conference calls. Campus U. B452-820 or call 718-649-6220. Tutor for Italian I. Must have patience and knowledge of verbs formate. The whole bit. Phone 842-4593 evening 2-8 I B.H apartment furnished near KU Bachelor's duties. Leave and after- term appointments. April; Mature adults only. Graduate degree required. 841-258-7300, 841-258-9000, 500. or 841-773-6800. If you don't you're at a disadvantage Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, you can also adventure FOR SALE Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608 It was at a rivalship Either it was the analysis of "New Samples" or the Analysis of Western Civilization" Campus Madhouse, 41f West 14th Fivedays 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumph Competition Sports Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-2191. 2-18 Now you can buy sterilizer components at FACTORY COST plus 10% Haven. The best way to save on Prime Avenue. The only true treasure in the holiday inn. daylight. 2-29 3 piece sectional sofa, $125, 4 chair dinette set, $60. Both in excellent condition. 1625 Miss. Apt. #1, 812, 8067 Five days Northside Shop, 707 North 2nd block of furniture, collections of wood, old cooking and heating stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, stoves, shoes, etc. Open to other useful items. Open 3 to seven days. Herb Allerberd. 842- 16 speed bike (Rouss) Like new~$45. Purpleite 192 extractor tool~$25, green deck and chair (wooden) toilet pad. $30. 300 anytime after 9:00 p.m. ~7-2-7 69 VW-excellent condition, low mileage, snow tires, must well to stay in school Make offer. 842-294-27-7 Snow treads 735-14 Tubeless w/w/ barely used. Call 841-8343 2-7 STOCK CLEARANCE SALE-10-30% off on entire stock of stacks—jeans—tops and Where? at 73. THE WEAH-HOUSE, of course @ 841%. Mass. 2-75 THE HIF in the WALL DELICATESEN SANDWICH SHOP Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order 843.7665—We Deliver—9th & 11th 561 Equipment, Head, giant沙镜. 562 ccn. with look-News-adapted in-bindings $25.0 Large leaves, plastic shells, light repair night, repair 482-3582 32.5 2-7 1970 Road-Runner 440-6 pack-bleu- hurst four-speed framer-magazine 32,000 miles-excellent shape $2,000 842. 4768 2-7 The Consignment sells used instruments and equipment. Give us a call and find out. 842-6023 2-7 **- warranted** FF-14 wide bench $250 €60 plus EBT $350 €60 plus P.E.T. $350 €60 plus P.E.T. Fast free installation. Bank Store $50 Max. Main Extra stock 40- 20% off list Used powerful 30 watt Motorola portable stereo-sold new at $149.90 First $50.00 takes it. Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 2-7 1958. Rambler, clean body and body Runs, runs good. Excellent heater and radio. $175. Please call after 644-263-568. Al Demitrans. 2-80 Auto Foreign Import . 43. Jaguar XKE. hardtop comp. 200 miles each. KIA. hardtop comp. 180 miles $1,475. Paul's Wagon. 950 W. 25 Park. Tepcake. Phone 913-1250-1250. For sale. Baldwin externally amplifier and Baldwin combo organ. Equipment is in excellent shape but have Call 617-5432 after 8am. NUTTY CITY at BOKONON, 819 eight-seats, wedge shoes, ward dirt shoes, beware of overalls, overalls, swaters, ski cups, guilt. One-zip, ten-shirts, 7-shirts, Vernon. Open 11-6 Dietzen Mech Drawing Set 8 prices-access $20, call 914-7434 2-9 1215 Kenwood KRH130 Amp. Duel New I215 Turbatec 10* ,speakers, Cash or take over payments, 843-8615 Triumph 786-S-4 carm, balanced, competition suspension, overdrive support, lightweight brakes, blowouts engine just require, resistance DESPERATELY DESPERATELY 2:10 2-10 TAT SNOW TIRIES 5.60 X 13" fit 51.124, and 128 models, mounted on ew wheels, used one month. Phone: 64-2651 2-10 Mobile home for sale. Tired of living in an unimproved room and washing dishes in the shower, you deserve a depricable little. Here is a home that is designed to provide ownership, privacy, and residence of ownership, privacy, and residency in the atmosphere. Soft thick, carpeting throughout, large bright living room; desk with built-in cabinet; weather, refrigerator, weather, gas heater, gas heater, gas heater; only $7 million bill, and built-ins up to X 53 with 10 X extension, 600 X 480 X 290, 2,990 inch fireplaces, 841-810. 2-16 Must sell B-25 Gibson Gibson, originally sold for $225. Will accept best offer, case and new strings included. Call after 5:00, 843-3150 2-9 Two beautifully designed Persian lamb coats. Reasonably priced. Call Mo at 864-1077. 2-11 Mobile Home - furnished one bedroom 12" X 17" red, Spanish decor. country atmosphere and pool privately not per cat. Call 800-355-8000 at 2:30 p.m. after 3 o'clock. 2-11 1969 Hercunda mobile home, 15 X 60 Ft. Electric generator electric shower and dryer, electric garage harvest gold Holdpoint refrigerator good condition To see it call good condition To see it call Reliable ski equipment head skin 6'6", Nordica boots and boot tree size 10''; Scott poles 5'4". Call 842-6868 after 6:00. 2-11 Volkewagen, Karman Ghia, 1967. Look and runs like new. New job. Must sell this work. Contact Bob Cornelius: 8272-771 or 841-387-510. Attention slump pump lovers. Used Super Oils Trombone with fluted side Good condition Bought for Downey, 843-704 2-11 Downy, 843-704 Kneisel Blue Star skis, 290's with Marker Simplex tux and Marker Rototam beat, excellent condition. $100.842-6788 2-11 CSC Let TOYOTA Sports Cars Inc. Maupintour travel service JIT PLANNING A TRIP?? 2000 W. 24th Floor Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 824-2191 Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-121 843 8500 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS ... 928 Mass 8 Monday, February 7, 1972 University Daily Kansan THE CHESS CLUB OF NEW YORK 10 Kansan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG Betros Ponders Next Move Chess Club president wins SUA tourney . . . Chess Win Worth $100 Sunday was Charlie's day. After approximately twenty hours of chess playing, Charlie Betson, Overland Park junior, had just won $106, the first prize for a SLA open chess tour- nament. The five-round tournament trained 48 chess players from Russia and Eastern Europe who spent the weekend in Lawrence. The tournament was held at Riga, Latvia. prize was divided among six players. "I've known how to play chess ever since I can remember, but this was the first time I won a tournament." Betts said. When he met with the $100, Betts said he hadn't decided. "I'll put it in bank first, maybe I take a trip later on or just use it for school," he said. By PAUL SWEARINGEN Kansan Staff Writer New Cable TV 'Limitless' Sunflower Cablevision people have a habit of getting excited when they talk about their newly-formed company. They think that the possibility of cable TV and mobile uses can drive television are almost limitless. Sunflower production manager Minke Pandikii, who is working on his Masters degree at KU in Radio-TV-Film, spoke about the importance of having media as if all other forms of the mass media are already obsolescent. There are now twelve channels on the air, including local channel A and two additional local channel. With the proper signal converters cabelation could go further. "WE HOP TO program as much local talent as possible," Pandik said. "If we find that we have a team, then we can air on channel 6, then I suppose we'll have to spill over into some of the other channels. Our aim is to keep our production up until it is 24 hours a day, eventually." Although Sunflower Cablevision does not plan to use ultra high frequency channels immature devices, wireless always exists. D帕硅ik said. Pandik they could carry more commercial channels if needed. But there are other uses of the system that they think are "FOR EXAMPLE, the hardware for surveillance systems. Pandikas Cameras can be used for surveillance systems." He predicted that gas and electric meters would be read by customers within a few years, it could be possible to register and vote at "I don't want it to become like 1984," he said. "But I suppose there will be built-in safeguards, too." In spite of his enthusiasm for the possibilities of cable TV, Pandikw was cautious about the possible misuse of the cable TV service. In reference to present programming. Pandik was quick to point out the obvious features of independent television "We have a lot more freedom than the network affiliate, and certainly more leeway than a network because we're not bogged down in the corporate structure," he said. "RIGHT NOW we have a news. staff of two full-time men, as well as KU interns," Pandiz continued, "and I think that for only being on the air a month or so we have as good a presentation date, and probably better than many news programs in Kansas City." At present, Sunflower programs a full half-hour of news at 6 and 10 p.m. Pandik said the station was interested in Lawrence activities and in presenting Lawrence citizens on its shows. Sunflower students participated in programs, he said, than most network-affiliated stations do. "ONE THING that we'll be doing is taping rehearsals of KU faculty musicians the day before they give a concert," he said. "We're working on a man-on-the-street type of thing that we've been doing for a while. Ninth and Massachusetts Streets and replay in the evening. The suggestion for that came from someone outside our staff. We've had to think about it, and in fact wed like to get as much feedback as possible so we can improve our programming and present people would have said." CABLE TELEVISION has been using some filmed programs from television, and some of the local programs going. They will continue using these programs. "Another program in the works is a weekly criticism show of the movie *The Shining* at the theatres. Although we'll be aiming at first at the younger point of view, we would certainly not want to disappoint them, their comments, too. This program is more or less a *An Evening at the Cinema*. "An Evening at the Cinema." "We have a children's program and it will be hosted by Jo Anna March. He said the show would be three to five years old and would be aired at about the time most households are fixing dinner. "OF COURSE, like our other programs," he said, "if we find that our philosophy on this subject is good, we will try and something else. But we hope this program will give Mom a chance to get dinner on the table." A tentative weekly program is hosted at the Women's College, hosted by Jane Moleby from KU. Although it started as a women's program, Pankaj said, it's now a "very important part" of the program. Kansas Alumni Glee Clubs Thrive By LARRY CHRIST Kansan Staff Writer Many years have passed since glee clubs, once popular campus attractions, disappeared from life after World War II that the singing groups became obscure. The clubs of the 1920's fail to let the current lack of popularity from them online today and singing with the style and enthusiasm that brought KU in 1926 some of its earliest Glee clubs were entertainment organizations, one composed of male musicians who harmonized songs generally without accompaniment, but with music from other groups. Many members of KU's 1923 through 1928 men's club clubs return to Lawrence every couple years for a reunion of old songs and to the annual reunion nearly 150 members of those clubs gather at a local motel and sing, they say, for their own amusement. Occasionally, they perform in other clubs such as the commencement supper. The reunion group last appeared at commencement in 1971 and plans to return in May of 1973. AS THE MEMBERS reminisce, memories of KU's most famous glee club, the 1926 team, frequently return. That wasChaplain John W. Clayn's national glee club championship in New York. The 1926 team earned its way to the national competition by first winning the Missouri Valley Glee Club contest, defeating the other conference schools of Nebraska K.S.A.C., Missouri, Ames, Oklahoma Aggies, and one non-conference school, Washburn. The Graduate, the KU alumni magazine at that time, exclaimed "The university is in a queer possession." The glee club, an organization which has hitherto been considered as just a rather nice thing to wear and like a preteen or a fair means of contact with the state, has suddenly spring into prominence. It has stepped right up with the basketball team and has chosen someone a Valley championship." What is a Nitty Gritty Dirt Band? Most people know about Mr. Bo Jangles and the House at Pooh Car- ner—What most people don't know about the 'Dirt Dirt' is their com- pletely unique experience in sound. The core of the Band's character is excitement, and the ingredients of that excitement are many and precise—the rythmic drive and resiliency; the in- terrelationship between human and instrumental voices. The live per- formance is truly exciting and diverse ... and, today, that is rare. Friday, Feb. 18 Hoch Aud. 8 p.m. Ticket sales start today at SUA office $2.50 - $3.00 - $3.50 "You bet your boots, we exclaim, we'll send the Kansas boys," the graduate said in February of 1928. The club went to the National Intercollegiate Glee Club Competition at New York City June 6, 1928. The club was a surprise and, perhaps, a shock to the other 14 entries in the competition, mostly eastern Iowa League球队. It was hardly模範ed in Kansas even had a university, let alone a Lloyd L. Huppenwal, who is the executive behind, left his job in Kansas City. Kans., to lead an eight-man staff in raising the money in less than 20 percent. glee club. But the Jayawakers did well, placing third in the contest behind Wesleyan College of Middlebury, Stone and some sports, and retaining triumphantly home after several other concerts, radio shows and recording sessions. KU was the farsest west club ever to have sung in the national contest and much national publicity to the fact. They were Robert Fairchild, Lawrence; Don Lasley, Mission; Kelty, Neesbitt, Olatae; Jim Keith; James; and Kirk Underwood, Achison. One of the first programs included a local folk singer, Melanie Green, convening the named Lawrenz, Alternate High School. And a middle-aged weaver named Mary Snider showed samples of her music. Five University of Kansas seniors recently received Air Force ROTC distinguished cadet awards. Cadets Honored Senior Announcements PANDIZ SAID that at present over half of LAWRENCE was wired for the cable programs, although there was a large backlog of who had applied for the service and weren't hooked to the cable vet. A factory representative will be present in the Kansas Union Bookstore to assist you in ordering your graduation invitations. FEBRUARY 8 & 9 Samples of the announcements and accessories will be on display at the Book Store the 8th & 9th also. Please come prepared to place your order with full payment in order to be assured your invitations will arrive on time. "Eventually anyone in Lawrence should be able to get on the cable," Pandikz said. We have three men booking up here, and all those who have signed up should be able to have service within 60 to 90 days. Only the north and northwest parts of Lawrence are still being wired now in the rest of the city." kansas union BOOKSTORE Service to KU residence halls and other large buildings would be no problem if the building had a bathroom. Eldridge House already has some subscribers, and some of the KU Greek houses have been wired. Dwight Boring* says... "You'll find the best answer to your life insurance problems—both now and later—in College Life's famous college men's policy, The Bene-factor. Let me tell you about it." *Dwight Boring A. R. S. 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Greek houses have been wired. *PANZIR SAID* that the cost of in-house computer service would be half price at $5.00 until February 29. The monthly service charge for one week would be about $18. Other members of Sunflower Cablevision include General Manager Max Frenstein, principal WREN in Topeka, Bob McMullen, news director, who also a master degree candidate in Engineering at KHOL-TV in Kearney, Nebraska; Ching IWang, chief engineer, who was hired as a senior Center for Research in Engineering Science at KU; and Jan Jodge, office manager, who was hired as a Senior Center for Research in Engineering Science at KU; and Kuju Athletic Department. SUMMER JOBS Guys & Gals needed for summer employment at numerous locations throughout the nation including National Parks, Resort Areas, and Private Camps. For free information send self addressed, STAMPED envelope to Opportunity Research, Dept. SJO, Century Building, Polson, MT 59860. APPLICANTS MUST APPLY EARLY. Use Kansan Classifieds FEB.9 PRACTICE HANDS 8:20 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE The Student Body of The University of Kansas Presents THE NEW YORK PRO MUSICA THEY'VE GOT KRUMHORNS, SACKBUTS, CONTRATENORS, AND A WORLD OF TALENT. It's FREE with I.D. Pick up your reserve seat ticket at the box office in Murphy. Non-Students 2.00 - 2.50 - 3.00 Stock Clearance Sale to Make-way for our Remodeling . . . Yes, we must sell our entire stock of over two thousand pair of slacks and tops to prepare for our complete remodeling of the Wearhouse, and while we're getting ready to beautify our store, you can beautify your expenses on clothes with savings like these . . . Reductions from 10% to Slacks-Jeans corduroys denims twills cotton suede 50% Tops fancy stripes solids Belts Suspenders Male—Caribou—H.I.S.—Brentwood—Himalaya THE WEARHOUSE 841½ MA55. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Blood Drive Begins Today See Page 3 82nd Year, No. 80 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Tuesday, February 8, 1972 Kansan Photo by DAN LAUING Kansas Legislators Meet Students Fred L. Weaver of Beaver Springs and Harold P. Dyck of Heston 3 Legislators Listen To Students, Faculty By JIM KENDELL Kansan Staff Writer Three members of the House Education Committee of the Kansas Legislature met in Washington, D.C., on Monday in the Kansas Union to, in the words of one legislator, "establish a The dominant concern of those who attended was the financial future of higher education in Kansas. Students and faculty members discussed higher faculty education. The representatives, John Peterson, R-Topeka, Fred L. Weaver, D-Baxter Springs; and Hank B. P眶, R-Heston, cautionation and heard opinions on educational issues. Farrell explained that after five years of teaching, he makes only $300 more than teachers beginning at other universities with a doctor's degree or even less. SEVERAL FACULTY MEMBERS spoke of the difficulty of living and teaching on the salary faculty members presently receive. John Farrell, associate professor of English, spoke at length with the committee about faculty salaries. Farrell said, "The situation here is intolerable. My professional life is Education Funding Discussed Prof Cautions Viewers of China Trip Editor's Note: This is the final story in a three-part series dealing with the opinions of KU faculty members and students on the effects of Nixon's trip to China Feb. 21 to 28. By PAUL SWEARINGEN Kansan Staff Writer Felix Moso, professor of East Asian Studies, is cautiously optimistic about the outcome of President Nixon's journey to the People's Republic of China, but he offers this advice to errcmarcher who views proceeding via satellite on TV: "Watch the television . . . and think about what you are seeing!" "People should not expect any important, drastic changes in our relations with the People's Republic of China as a result of Nixon's trip," he said. "In general the trip serves at least to open some channels of communication at a glance and will be useful to both sides. But the trip will not be a panacea for all problems." THE TRIP would have some threats效应 upon the smaller Asian countries, Malaysia. "It may be that in a number of Asian countries, such as Korea, the trip may be intended to help States to weaken its commitment to Asian countries, to lessen its presence," he said. Korea has responded to the announcement of the measures declaring a state of national emergency. "The South Koreans naturally are much closer to the threat of North Korea than the U. S. and they naturally feel much more direct involvement and much more danger from the apparent reduction of the U. S. presence in Asia. And definitely the bargaining power of the Nationalist Chinese will be somewhat weakened." MOOS LIKENED the possible results of the Nixon trip to China to the ripples from the North Atlantic. Moos said, "We have to observe closely a whole spectrum of waves to judge what is going on." THE INTERNAL AFFAIRS of China would be affected by the U. S.-Peking thaw, but the basic objectives of the people's Republic would not change, Moos said. "The Chinese will start seeing that the U. S. is not a paper tiger," he said. "Chinese in positions of power will gain a new appreciation of the United States" ability to exist longer than they had expected." Moss was cautious about the objectives of the Chinese inviting Nixon to Peking. "The Chinese will open other lines of communication," he said. "if it furtherizes their cause. I don't think that the People's Republic has given up the ideas of revolution and wars of liberation. Their policies have changed but their strategy has not." "IN THE NEGOTIATIONS the Chinese will be most polite, correct, and efficient. They will be putting on their best show for the camera, and we will see exactly what they want us to see. I have fervent hope for a less naive American public but I am not reasonably convinced that the naivete will disappear." What advice would Dr. Moes give to American Maoists? 'u abuse them to proceed to the People's Republic by the most expedient and effective means available to them and see Communism in practice.' And what if they have problems in entering the country? "Surley since the Chinese believe in the brotherhood of the revolution they will all be ready to fight against the invaders." By CANDY HERBERT Kansan Staff Writer Sisters Explain Stance at Forum Fielding questions from an audience of more than 100 persons, the February Sisters of the University of Kansas explained their actions and goals in a public meeting. Monday night in the Javhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The major portion of the meeting was devoted to discussing concrete action that has occurred concerning February Sister Anne's visit and women's health center and the creation of Lon Nol Denounces Firing On Mythical Lunar Beast City-to-Campus Buses Resume, Charge $.25 PHOM PENN (AP) – Premier Lon Nor sailed Cambodia soldiers who shot up a mythical monster they believed was devouring the moon during a recent earthquake was so much ammunition the trump might have run short in case of attack. Gary Jacobs, Merriam sophomore and chairman of the Student Transportation Commission, said buses would run from the campus to the downtown area three times an hour and would have a 25-cent fare. Bus service from the University of Kansas campus to the downtown area began Monday in hopes of making a permanent and self-supporting system. The Student Executive Committee approved Sunday night a two-point plan to provide Dane Ogle, of the bus company that power to increase or decrease the bus Jacobs said the action was part of a plan to make the bus service self-sufficient past March 17 when the Student Senate bus subsidy ends. The Lawrence Bus Co. originally decided to end service on the last day of classes of the fall semester, but an appropriation of $18,148 by the Student Services Center is the system to be continued during finals last semester and from Jan. 17 to March 17. service offered students because of weather or other factors. Ogle can also regulate the hours of service offered by the system according to student use, but the number of hours for more than 55 or less than 34 hours a week. At the time the senate appropriated the money the fare was reduced from 20 cents to 10 cents, and a committee was set up to extend the fee of extending the service past March 17. The marshal, who doubles as commander in chief of the Cambodian army, navy and air force, described the hour-long shootout on Jan. 30 as an ill-timed attack and threatened to court-martial officers and men who go on such shooting sprees. In an angry radio speech to troops over the weekend, Lon Nol said the fusillade which lit up the night sky过 Phnom Penh to face cancer bullets, took 2 lives and wounded 8. The soldiers were trying to drive away Reahou, a legendary monster who is a malevolent brother to the sun and the moon. Tradition teaches that only by crossing the moonlight Reahou from gobbling up the moon during the eclipse, darkening their nights forever. It cost Cambodia millions of reels worth of ammunition, the marshal said, and was a "serious blot on the honor of the Khmer Republic." For the average Cambodian soldier, Reahub surpasses myth. Fabulous beasts and monsters from ancient Khmer folk legends are as real to him as the cattle wandering placidly through downtown Phnom Penh. Omens and oracles play an important part in decision making for many Cambodians. Lon Nol himself frequently uses the advice of seers and other natives. A spokesman for the child day care committee, who refused to be identified, revealed tentative plans for a facility to be located in the anthropology bone lab, the chancellor's guest house or the Sudlow house garage. an Affirmative Action Program for women. Lon Nol once used an oracle to incite Cambodians to overcome their ingrained Buddhist respect for sanctity of human life to fight the enemy from North Vietnam. SHE SAID the temporary center would be designed to care for children ranging from one month to five years old, but older children could also have a child they would create a hardship for the family involved. The plans call for the center to open weekdays from 7:30 a.m. to 5:45 p.m., and 7:00 to 10:15 p.m. weekly with children aged 2:30 to 6:00 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. The women also emphasized that the money demanded from the Student Senate for the enactment of the center was only an emergency measure and that the February Sisters hoped to place the faculty at the permanent University held in July. WHEN ASKED how the center would be staffed, she replied that the Sisters were asking $300 a month in their proposed budget to hire a coordinator for the temporary center but that she was the manager of the manager of the operation would be manned. distinguishing. I don't have an sense of responsibility to my students or supervisors She also said the center would be utilized by faculty wives, University civil servants. Susan Lominska, Sayville, N. Y., sophomore, discussed the February Sisters' second major demand, a women's health program. IN ADDITION to demands for free Pap smears, pelvic examinations and ready birth control information and devices given by a gynecologist, she said they advocated that student health centers provide maternity benefits for all women regardless of marital status. Lominska also said the February Sisters demanded a voice on the policy making board of Watkins Hospital, and coordinating care for all women who use the health center. "i and many others will leave if the University of Kansas doesn't recognize that I can stay on a 5 per cent raise. I will go and anywhere as long as I give what I think it will." Farrell was referring to a 5.1 per cent increase in faculty salaries recommended by Governor Docking in his recent budget message. Lornsaka said that while they hoped a sympathetic doctor would help, the women's health was not See SISTERS Page 5 Farrell said, "This university is insulting me every day I stay here. I'm thinking of how to meet my bills instead of how to teach my students. A faculty member of the School of Engineering expressed concern that the faculty was losing the unusual concern and dedication that characterized KU faculty. He said that more and more faculty members feel forced to take on consulting jobs to increase their income. This hurts the over-all quality of education, he said. Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, asked the committee members what they would like to hear when he spoke. The committee also asked the Education Committee Thursday in Toneka. SCANNELL WILL TESTIFY against the bill introduced recently by Rep. Bert Chaney, D-Hutchinson, which would establish a school of Education beginned in 1973. Weaver said that he thought the main purpose of the Chaney will was to get dialogue going between the legislature and the state's schools of higher education. Students Concerned about Higher Education in Kansas was also well represented at the meeting. The group of student concern about higher education. Rusty Leffel, Prairie Village law student and a member of the group, said, "We made no organized effort to appear, but many of our members are here." One of the students' primary concerns was the declining quality of KU's faculty, several students said. They said that this was a direct result of relatively low faculty salaries. The legislators acknowledged student and faculty concern, but at the same time they pointed out the problems which the legislature must confront. STUDENTS POINTED to the loss of the dean of the Law School, two law professors and a music theory professor as examples of faculty turnover caused by low salaries. One law student said that he was frustrated with the new 28th in the nation. It is now ranked 106th. Weaver said, "We're going to have to raise at least $30 million to stay even." Many times Dyck asked, "Where do we get the money?" "The taxpayer is saying, 'No more! We've got all we can carry.' Dyck said. He did not want to be accused, particularly the KU image made it difficult for legislators to advocate for him." See 3 LEGISLATORS Page 5 Naval Chief Cancels Talk Adm. Elmo Zumwalt, chief of naval operations who was schedled to speak West Africa at the Vatican Lecture Series has cancelled his appearance because of illness, John J. Conard, director of University relations said Conard said Zumwalt had notified Joseph O. Marzluff, professor of law, that he had the flu and wavé not be able to speak engagements this week. Conard said Rick Von Ende, assistant to the director of university life, had spoken a to Zuni's side and had rescheduled the appearance for April. ALEXANDRA ROWLEY Kamaan Staff Photo by TOM THRONE Sister's Daughter Lends Support .Sisters held public meeting to discuss their actions 2 Tuesday, February 8, 1972 University Daily Kansan Sales Tax Bill Approved TOPEAK (AP)—A bill to make permanent the authority for Kansas cities and counties to vote on special or presidential approval in the state Senate. Monday, but that provision of the property tax lid law may be the only thing he will do this session, debate revealed. Gov. Robert Docking has repeatedly urged the legislature this session to extend the 1970 property tax lid law—under which local taxing units could not increase the man's per cent without first gaining voter approval to exceed that limit. the taxid, originally a concept championed by Sen. Frank Hodge. R. Washington was a senator by Dolloron through the 1970 legislature, and the governor has plugged for more than a year to get the legislature to extend it past its scheduled expiration date of Dec. 31. Approved tentatively Monday by the full Senate was a bill which came through. The Hodge1 Committee. It would extend indefinitely that portion of the property tax lid law which would allow cities and counties to vote on new tax increases, one per cent sales taxes to help fund local operations of government. The special sales tax provision was designed as it could be adjusted to relieve the local property tax. HODGE, EXPLAINING THE BILL to the Senate Monday, said this special local sales tax authority would expire with the end of this year, at the end of this year, unless something was done to extend it. "As far as i know," Hodge told the Senate, "there is nothing at the moment in the works to extend the property tax lid law." Many Republicans and a few Democratic legislators have argued that the law didn't need to be acted upon in the 1972 session—because local units of government must prepare the 73 budget needed under this law, their underhanded tax law, and the 73 legislature could take up the matter of whether to continue the law or repeal it without anything more. Docking's position had been that the tax lid had worked, the people had wanted it and the legislature should accede to the wishes of the people and go ahead and extend the law now. The bill to extend the sales tax authority SB 475, wnw voice voice being heard Monday, and will come up for final Senate vote. THE HOUSE LEADERSHIP decided Monday to hold up action on a conference committee request to authorize $32 million in revenue bonds to be issued over the next eight years to speed up highway construction. Rep. Calvin Strowig, R- Abbleine, House speaker, said instead of taking final action on the plan today in both houses as previously agreed, copies of the conference committee report now are being made available to all legislators. Everyone could attend if they were willing with the bonding plan and there would be no misunderstanding. Strowg said a vote is possible at the end of the week, or early next week. The House Judiciary Committee approved Monday a bill that would place two major restrictions on the state abortion law and a resolution which would amend the state's enforcement amendment to legalize lotteries, games of chance similar to and parimutual wagering. Irish March Leaders Get Court Summons BELLAST (AP)--Northern, Belgium's unofficial rival parliament their unofficial rival parliament Monday night with the prospect that soon may find a deal. Pollice said they have taken out police summonses, against 26 leaders of Sunday's attack in Newry. The march, like all processions in Northern Ireland, was illegal under the government's Special Rules. BERNADETTE DEVLIN, the 24-year old civil rights activist and member of British Parliament, said she too had an interest in a Roman Catholic supports a Roman Catholic aspirations toward a united Francis McGuigan a 24-year-old Bollast man, made an anti-internment protest of his own and took to the streets where around 400 suspected members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) are held without Ireland. MeGuigan, according to IRA contacts, was a high officer of the Belfast Provisionalis, the IRA's militant wing. Police and troops were dispatched to Belfast but contacts said McGuigan was clear of the city. HE WAS THE FIRST to escape from Long Kesh, a former airfield near British army headquarters in Liauburn, south of the capital. Dock Strike Bargainers Work to Beat Injunction SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Negotiators in the West Coast dock strike worked Monday to agree agreement with the U.S. plan for a 60-day injunction to partially end the record 122-day walkout. The shipper and union bargainers appeared near a western dock after a day of talks directed by Sam Kagel, veterian私密 mediator. They resumed talks less than an hour after a House Labo Subcommittee in Washington approved the injunction plan drafted by Chairman Frank D. Jani. The vote was 5-1. THE NIXON administration quickly frowned upon the House subcommittee's move. At the White House, Secretary of Labor James D. Hodgson described the legislation as clearly unsatisfactory. He said the measure "leaves everything the air" for at least another 60 days. Thompson said Harry Bridges, president of the International Union of Sports Medicine's men's Union, told him the union would continue the San Francisco event. Bridges was quoted as saying the then could not suppose submitting a motion to Kagei for binding arbitration. The employer Pacific Marine association had no responsibility on the arbitration offer THOMPSON'S BILL would authorize the government to seek a 60-day injunction ordering the union and shippers to handle military and agricultural cargoes and shipments to and from other countries on other phases of the strike to run on while negotiations continue. Thompson estimated his proposal would get 80 per cent of the strikebound cargo moving. Thompson said in Washington he offered his proposal because the administration had failed to comply with a requirement of health and safety required a Nixon Approves Law to Control Campaign Costs Principal provisions of the law apply to both primary and general election. The law also requires broadcast stations selling air time to federal theaters that unit rate during 45 days before a primary and 60 days before a general election. The law goes into effect in 60 days, so it won't apply to immigrant families. It covers later primaries, and will limit to $4.4 million the amount a presidential candidate can spend on television advertising this year. WASHINGTON (AP) -Hitling it as "realistic and enforceable," President Nixon signed legislation Monday to limit the use of government expenses and seal campaign finance reporting loopholes. Further, the bill specifies that newspapers and magazines cannot charge political candidates more for campaign charges than for charge comparable use of the space by other advertisers. termination of the entire strike at this time. He said the measure would go to the full House. Labor Committee passed by the House Wednesday if it agreed to suspend its rules to allow workers to walk around. But he said he was not by Wednesday. He would be by Wednesday, however, so Sen- action before a week-long Lincoln starting Wednesday REP. JOHN DELLENBACK, the subcommittee's vote against Thompson's partial 60-day strike injunction, calling it "purely unfriendly." "We have no way of knowing if there will be a settlement before Congress acts," said Kagel, a Berkeley, Calif., attorney. He has served as chief arbitrator of the Pacific Coast longshore station in the last West Coast dock strike ended in 1894 after 95 days. Thompson told the House reported two major issues unsettled, pay increase retraactivity and optical care Though the Newyrm march passed peacefully, the weekend produced four more dead, the death of violence since August 1987 to 239. Two members of the outlawed IRA were blown to pieces while planting bombs in a sabotage base in Beirut, an island sea west of Belfast. Still unidentified was a man in his 20% faced hooded and shot through the back of the head on a road near the border with the republic, apparently he was the owner of an IRA execution squad. THE VICTIM'S LOWER RIGHT ARM was tattooed with the wings of a British parachute regiment but the army said he had been wounded in the sword to kill 13 soldiers in revenge for 13 people shot dead in Londonderry when paratroopers were killed after a civil rights march Jan. 30. The opposition politicians, meeting in their alternative headquarters they would prepare contingency plans against prospective jailing of prominent members. Illegal immigrants have penalty of six months jail, although the sentence can be suspended at the magistrate's discretion. THE REBEL ASSEMBLY was set up last year after members of the Northern Ireland parliament, called a boycott of the Northern Ireland parliament, which now is SUMMER JOBS Guys & Gals needed for summer employment at numerous locations throughout the nation including National Parks, Resort Areas, and Private Camps. For free information send self addressed, STAMPED envelope to Opportunity Research, Dept. SJO, Century Building, Polson, M95860. Papa John Creach APPLICANTS MUST APPLY EARLY. On Grunt Records PAPA JOHN CREACH PAPA JOHN CREACH reg. $5 98 $3.67 also available on 8 track stereo tapes at KIEF'S Open 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER THE ABORTION BILL would prohibit abortions after the 14th week of pregnancy and require a woman to be at least 90 days before they are eligible to get abortions. At least 60 days could be performed any time during the pregnancy and there is a residence requirement of any sort. The House Committee on Executive reorganization killed a bill which would have created a state Department of Recreation and Game Preservation, Fish and Game Commission, and the state Park Department. Is Your Environment Caught In A Stranglehold? NOISE AIR WATER POLLUTION WASTE OF NATURAL RESOURCES & OPEN SPACE National Environmental Law Society Needs You! Join in the ACTION & Help Yourself! Feb. 9, 1972 Room 305 Kansas Union 7:00 p.m. Patronize Kansan Advertisers It’s a Sweetheart of a Deal! LOVE TAKES MANY FORMS Send A Valentine In Print This Year THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN This Year Will Have A Special Valentine Classified Section on Monday February 14th Send A Message to Your Special Friend. IF SHE’S ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS or TOO FAT FOR CANDY a CLASSIFIED AD IS DANDY Let Someone Know How You Feel About Them. ONLY $1.00 for 25 Words Bring Your Special Message to 111 Flint by 5:00 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10 Your Message Will Appear Monday February 14. IF SHE'S ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS or TOO FAT FOR CANDY a CLASSIFIED AD IS DANDY Let Someone Know How You Feel About Them. ONLY $1.00 for 25 Words Bring Your Special Message to 111 Flint by 5:00 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10 Your Message Will Appear Monday February 14. University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 8, 1972 3 KU Closes Library Transmitter By GINNIE MICKE Kennan Staff Writer An experiment with instant inter library loans by facsimile transmission between Clerdening University of Kansas Medical Center and Malot science library has been rejected for use on a regular basis, David W. Heron, director of libraries, said The two libraries used a telefacsimile transmitter that can impulse over regular telephone wires. The machine, which can also receive information, could transmit one page in four Heron said the potential of the telefacsimile to get information from one place to another faster is a major reason for the experience. ERON SAID the use of the machine was discontinued because he was not sure what libraries required explained that books and journals could not be used on the machine so xerox copies had to be made of Another problem was the cost of one phone wirephone wires. Heraid said, an article could take up an hour to transmit, including the time it takes to connect. THE MAIN PROBLEM, Heron said, was that the use of the telefacsimile transmitter did not require interest at the University. The experiment began in October and was originally planned to include the Kansas State library and Linda Hall private library in Kansas City. K-State was unable to lease a technicality. Heron said. The Linda Hall library was unable to use waits lines available to KU students. more rush requests. MARNA YOUNG, science librarian, worked with the machine in Malott. She said the transmitter was put in Malott to allow the patient to see the medical Center more and because these two libraries had Problems she encountered using the machine included the staff time involved in looking up a request, transmitting and receiving it, and was a weak connection on the telephone, she said, she would have to re-dial and get a new line. The weak connection made the phone unreachable. traditional babies to read to. YOUNG SAID that because a mother wants her baby to wait for the libraries' regular means of sending information, the machine was used less and less toward the end of the three month experimental period. A child was being used on some other campuses. One problem that may be encountered in the future, he The SUA Poetry Hour will present readings by two contemporary poets this week. On Wednesday, we read from his own works at 4:30 m. Tuesday in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union. On Wednesday, poet Harvie Bilyl reads from his work Jiahawk Room, according to SUA. which can relay information over a machine so quickly, sales of books and journals could be discouraged. Transmission over data, he said, could further jeopardize the number of subscriptions. Heron said that with a device Two Modern Poets To Read in Union Kenneth Irby is a graduate of the University of Kansas and also a professor at Harvard. Most of Irby's poetry was written in Berkeley, Calif. where he has been living. Some of his poems were written while he was living in Lawrence. The sense of location is a vital part of Irby's poetry. Gunn said that the films were chosen because of their treatment with the author's conjunction with his course Science Fiction and the Popular Science Fiction and the Popular THE FILMS in the series were selected by James Gunn, lecturer in English and journalism, and writer of the film. The series is sponsored by SUA. The Science Fiction Film Series at the University of Kansas began last week with the showing of "From the Earth to the Moon." Eleven more films, including such diverse selections as "Barbarella" and "Dr. Marvelor," will complete the series. Eleven Films Scheduled In Science Fiction Series The remaining films will be on the Thursdays at 7.30 p.m. in the Theatre, and on Sundays in Union and, in most cases, will be preceded by film lectures at 7.pm. Rod Serling and Poul Annes will be among the lectors. The course was offered for the first time last year and more than a quarter of the students semester more than 150 students are enrolled and others have been enrolled. Gunn attributes this popularity of the course to science fiction's concern for contemporary problems. He said that science comes to grips with the conflict between men and machines. By STEVE RIEL Kansan Staff Writer Gunn said that sometimes the visual media diluted science fiction and eroded its literary value. "ITS ABILITY to communicate at an intellectual level makes it a different kind of literature, more easily appropriated to our times. "Many filmmakers have either not understood science fiction or have had little faith in the ability to make a result, some science fiction films deal almost exclusively with menace and ignore the literary Irby describes his poetry as written in a "pastoral mode" derived from the two themes. One is the amnesiac quietude of the whole being derived from attention and recollection of great closeness to vegetation and an ecological calm, which results in poetry that feeds people with its depth. Keith L. Nitcher, vice chancellor of business affairs, will emphasize the optimistic about the possibility of using credit cards to pay tuition fees for next term at college working on the option had "several procedural matters to work out" before definite could be decided Tuition Credit Card Studied Campus Bulletin value of the work." he said Education: 11 a.m., Alcove D Cafeteria. Italian Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark Cafeteria. Charles Serrier Manager; 8:30 a.m. Sarah E. Berman, Manager; 10:30 a.m. Bobkern Mills, Manager; 12:30 a.m. Kansas City, Kan. Interview; 12:30 a.m. Solid Waste Seminar; 9:30 a.m., Counsel Library Staff: noon. Alceve B Cafeteria. LDS Instruction: noon. Room 299. Senior Assistant: noon. English Room. Sealel School: 12:30 p.m. . Alceve A Cafeteria. Gunn said that the first movie in the film series, "From the Earth to the Moon," was adulterated science fiction in that romance and revenge obscured the original plot material. KU Blood Drive Begins in Union "GOOOD FILMS emphasize theme and literary merits," he said. "We were lucky to get 300 points," he said, "but things are changing. Last semester we had a lot of reponse. We were unprepared for the crowds. In the past, students were afraid. Last semester we were afraid." LAS-48 Staff 3:30 p.m. Council Room. SIMS: 6 p.m., Council Room. Gum characterized his writing as basically optimistic in terms of mankind's future. Calgaard said Saturday that Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. had expressed a desire for people on the KU staff. Jupe said giving blood was painless. SDIM # 8, p. 10. Council Room. SDIM # 9, p. 10. Council Room. C. Rock Chalk Rehab! P 7, p. 11. Ballroom. Digma Sigma Pt: 7, p. 12. Centenium Room. KU Synchronized Swim Club P 7, p. 13. In his own guinn, who is president of the Science Fiction Writers of America, said that he tried to preserve and build on the elements that made science fiction so interesting to drive, and its concern for ideas. Maceran Workshop: 7 p.m., Museum of Natural History. Axeaeutical Asaan: 7:30 p.m., Kanas Room. Hal: 7:30 p.m., Parlor A. Calgary said he hoped the committee would complete its work before time. The next committee meeting will be Sunday aftern 30 p.m. Porter A Christian Education Lecture: 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Bock Irbay has published five books of poems as well as contributing to many small-press publications. He will read selections from his most recent book, "Relations," as well as works like "In Doug's Hassle." These works are available in the Oread Bookstore. Spring Symposium: 7:30 p.m., Forum Room. He said that because science fiction anticipates and tries to deal with problems of the future he called it "the future to subject" to "future shock." Jayhawk Room. Film Society: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff, shelter #149. Film Society: 7:30 p.m. Woodruff. Spring Symposium: 9:30 p.m. Forum This low price saves you up to 50% over usual "drug store" prices, reshuffles high quality cost print stacks to your door in jokery few days. Try it now! SUA Poetry: 8 p.m., Big Eight Room. Baptist Student Union: 8:30 p.m., Pine Room. A search committee, headed by Calgaard, has been appointed to fill the vacant academic affairs and a vice chancellor for research and extension. The committee met for three hours Sunday afternoon and Calgaard said some Harvey Bialy, who will read Wednesday, has his BA degree from Bard College where he was under the personal direction of poet Robert Kelly. Last year he received his Ph.D. in molecular biology from the university he be reading from his works "Babylon 156" and Susanna Martin." The American Red Cross collected a record of 354 pints of blood from University of Kansas doctor Jerry Carlen Juppe, drive publicity chairman, said Monday. This semester they hope to release the record. Blood will be collected from 11 a.m.—4:30 p.m. today and Wednesday in the Kansas Union Ballroom and from 9 a.m.—2:30 p.m. Thursday in Elsworth Hall. Tissue takes from one to two hours. Abraham Kaplan's lecture, designed to highlight the will broadcast on KANI, radio at 6 p.m., Thursday. Gary Gary will present a program director's said program. KANU to Air Kaplan Lecture Donors and their immediate families are eligible to receive blood free for one year. Also, donors will be given a mug of "The worst part is when they pick your finger to take a sword out of the backpack in painless. The only bad part is waiting and that is not too bad." Kaplan gave the lecture last Wednesday as part of the Humanities Lecture Series. Normally the **Thursday** presides before it begins at 7 p.m. Shriver's is but because Kaplan's speech is long, it will begin an hour early. Jupe said previous blood drives were unsuccessful. beer SO EASY SO CONVENIENT Just use your own envelope and the coupon below. Fill in name and address, write name on roll or carton, enclose coupon and remittance. Or, use the coupon to get film mailers and disks from SAVING. Save time with better deal than "free" film Savings and savings quality guaranteed. YOUR ORDER MUST INCLUDE THIS COUPON Candidates for two vie- chancellor positions will probably be University of Kansas staff members, Ron Calgaard, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, said Saturday. Search Group Predicts Posts For KU Staff 1/2 PRICE COLOR PRINTS? SAVE ON SLIDES—MOVIES—B & W PRINTS, TOO CORNERSTONE Name Address City State Zip latest service highest quality lowest price * Send me five free mobile market and discount * Insgesamt 17 pay, Black & White 1.99 0.95 * Insgesamt ... rate of fee and payment gain 1.98 1.02 * Insgesamt ... rate of fee and payment gain 20 pay, Green & White 1.89 1.22 * Insgesamt ... rate of fee and payment gain 20 pay, Green & White 110 pay, Minutes 1.89 1.22 * I will reimburse with a fee of $25 per for the expenses * Shiping and handling with a fee of $65 per for the expenses * Pay Price Cowtown Ballroom presents MAIL TO: SPEED-PICS. Box 299. Cincinnati, Ohio 45214. Dept. UK With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free! TACO GRANDE BREWER & SHIPLEY DANNY COX WHITE EYES TUES, FEB.15, 8 P.M. $3.50 advance $4 at door Tickets Available at KIEF'S 309 Gilbarc Plaza Phone 931-0600 1 Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.) Offer expires Feb. 28, 1972 1720 West 23rd Street Liven Up those Bare Rooms With Living Green Plants PENCE GREENHOUSES 15th & N.Y. Phone VI3-2004 PICKENS AUTO PARTS and SERVICE Parts at a Discount Offers: TUNE-UPS BRAKES WHEEL ALIGNMENT BALANCING EXHAUST SYSTEMS Robert Bosch Ignition for Foreign Cars Weekdays 8-5:30 Sunday 10-3 26th and Iowa VI3-1353 at 1/2 Price For 3 Days Only Tues., Feb. 8, Wed. 9, Feb. 10 Call them Tropicals, Green Plants House Plants, or Whatever, the ENTIRE STOCK IS AGAIN ON SALE THREE LIVES A Film by Kate Millet (Author of Sexual Politics) KU Film Society MARLENE DAVIS AND JANINE MARCUS Tonight 7:30 9:15 75 $ ^{c}$ Woodruff VICK LECTURE SERIES VICKERS LECTURE SERIES ADM. ELMO ZUMWALT Chief of Naval Operations WEDNESDAY DEB.9 7:30 p.m. ruff Auditorium THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 4 Tuesday, February 8.1972 University Daily Kansan Garry Wills KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. 1974 Kansan Photo by JIM FORBES M. R. BALDWIN The New Yorker has published the second part of Seymour Hersh's report on the Army's coverup of the massacres at Mali and My Khe. It seems, in retrospect, that what set My Lai apart was not "American's savagery"—that was on routine display and in public, especially day of the My Lai murders, and has been reported (on a smaller scale) in hundreds of encounters. No, what made it stick in the memory and engage in realism was, a single man's act of dececy. Further My Lai Revelations 'A Chief Warrant Officer named Thompson saw civilians being killed as he and his helicopter were landed to interfere, a 'sawed-off runt of a lieutenant' tried to wave him off, and Thompson had the gunmen machines train their guns on the ground. Thompson had performed his act because civilians were being slaughtered, but what mattered most to the first investigators was not that slaughter, but the act itself. As General Coran K. Henderson told Orlan O. Coran K. Henderson to investigate the matter: "We don't want Americans shooters American." Stated in crude terms: G君sn't count. Col. Henderson "investigated" Thompson's report, and explained the incident (he says) by assuming that Thompson was inexperienced (he was not) and had been unstrung by him. Thompson also went down below" (which so unstrung him that he landed in its midst). The thoroughness of this "investigation" is revealed by the fact that it did not turn up the truth about its key assumption, the Chief Warrant Officer's inexperience--though that was a matter easily checked on. And the fierceness of the men and gone or found on the battlefield seemed apparent hundreds of dead were left behind in the village, yet only three enemy weapons could be found in the area. Thompson's act, his latter reporting of it, and the fact that Americans had leveled their guns at other Americans — including him, who shot at some stir at the time, led to reports and The half-conscious assumption on which this kind of investigation was basely, is simply, that a man had to be panicky to get upset at the mere killing an investigation, and so left, a trail of semi-suppressed awareness about this particular incident. of Vietnam civilians. When Thompson told his chaplain about the incident, the chaplain, too, passed a protest up through military channels. But he was not surprised when nothing immediate came of his protests. He said his experiences in Vietnam had made him fearful that as far as the United States Army was concerned, there was no such thing as murder of a Vietnamese civilian." But some men remembered with shame what they had done, and talk of it spread. When an ex-GI named Ronald Rendhour wrote to the Pentagon about My Lai, there were memories of the investigation of Thompson's act. As the actor, all his documents dealing with those first incidents all but one, saved by inadvertence—obligingly disappeared, but too many had seen them, helped make them, filed them, heard of them for men to deny Only a fraction of what went on that day was recoverable, against the systematic self-protection of the Army. But it is symbolic that the one person who had centered on the decent act that put My Lai into our history books—Chef Warrant Officer Hugh Thompson's altercation with "a sawed-off run" named William Calley. Radical to the Root James J. Kilpatrick Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate In view of the events of the past week involving the "February Sisters," I think we would do well to take another look at the first event of all, the one that provided the impetus for what was to follow. Bill of Rights Vital The thought that comes to mind is that Morgan would have a society in which female chauvinism replaced male chauvinism. A society in which credence would be given only to the philosopher of the philosopher's society in which sexual activity would be controlled entirely by women. Another example: "Most acts of sexual intercourse on this planet could be classified as rape." Rape she would define as sexual intercourse not initiated by a sincere desire on the part of the woman. WASHINGTON — Now and then, covering the U.S. Supreme Court, you rediscover one of the fundamental principles of our country—that the Bill of Rights is breathing, vital part of our law. A week ago today, radical feminist Robin Morgan came to KU promoting her goal of redefining sexual roles toward human sexuality so that in the future no distinction, sexual or otherwise, would be made between human beings. For instance, she says part of the movement she defines as women's liberation has been subverted because most of the women in this sector of the movement think in terms of Marx and Lenin. What's wrong with Marx and Lenin? They were men. However, I doubt that Morgan really wants to replace our male dominated society with one in which women pull all the strings. She has simply slipped up on that age old problem that is both the badge and the curse of the first rate radical: moderation is the biggest sin of all. This is a far cry from her stated goal of a society in which no sexual distinctions are to be made. The problem, of course, and it's a problem that marks fanaticism of any kind) is that many of her constituents contradict her avowed views. All of the evils of society stem from sexism, said Morgan, and every man, whether he admits it or not, is a sexist oppressor. At her speech in the Kansas umon, the first thing she did was to ask the "sisters" to move up front. And the "others"? Sorry fellas, back of the bus. That was the day they argued "the Amish case." The Court had before it the First Amendment, and on this particular Wednesday "The only way to end all that is bad," she said, "is to be radical, to go to the root." But then the only way to enlist the support needed to overcome the oppression, especially oppression as pervasive as male chauvinism is to muster all the help you can get. To appeal to the masses, you must moderate. If you moderate you lose your membership in the radical clique because you have to be satisfied with less than perfection. The really sad thing is, moderation and unification probably could solve some of the most blatant examples of male chauvinism, while radical feminism serves only to entrench them. the great amendment read: "Congress shall make no law prohibiting the free exercise of religion by Frieda Yoder, Barbara Miller and Vernon Yuzu. The question was, had Judy ruled that the Constitution upon their constitutional rights? To be sure, every case arising under the Constitution may be stated in such a fashion. The Mike Moffet Associate Editor Sixth Amendment says, if you read it closely, that "Danny Escobedo shall enjoy the right to be held against his defence." The Fourteenth says that "the City of Topeka shall not deny to Oliver Brown the equal protection of the laws." It knows that rights are personal. Yet most of the time, even in Welcome back, Mr. Kissinger! Zens is expecting you in his office." the landmark cases, the principal actors are vague figures, dimly perceived behind a screen of lawyers. It wasn't that way when he worked on it. There in the marble-columned courtroom, listening intently, they three amish fathers, dark-bearded, blue-dimened, blue-footed, blue-stumps. They had come to find out if the First Amendment means what it is meant to mean, that 15-year-old Frieda Yoder the New Giarus High School in Green County, Wisconsin. This is the raw stuff of which our law is fashioned; and there must be something wrong with a man—something inside him has died, or never been born—if he fails to experience a tingling sensation in his skin. The sovereign State array against three of its smallest snarrows The facts are not in dispute. Under Wisconsin law, all children are compelled to attend a State-accredited school, either public or private, through their fifteenth year. The three children had been graduated from the eighth grade in the New Glauco Public School in September, when classes resumed at the high school, their friends refused to enroll them. On inquiry, Truant Officer Kenneth J. Clewen was told that the Anishinagua religion forbids higher education, beyond the grammar school level. He thereupon complains charging the criminal complaints charging the did wellfully violated the law "against the peace and dignity" of the State. The three fathers were convicted in the trial court. Some months later the Wisconsin Supreme Court, by a divided vote, held the convictions void. The State there appealed; and on this particular Wednesday in Washington, 1,000 miles from Wichita, the land of Wisconsin, we came to another landmark in the law of our land. The State contends that the First Amendment applies merely to freedom of worship; that its citizens should interfere with the children's freedom of worship; that education according to State requirements is essential to good citizenry; that it should provide power and the duty to prevent ignorance; and that if the Amish should be held exempt, other states may also privilege the same privilege to the detriment of the system as a whole. There the case now rests, in the hands of our 'one Supreme Court'. My guess is that the Amish fathers will win, hands down, but it will not be their victory alone. It will be a victory over them, must believe unbelievers alike, who translate the vision of Tom Jefferson in terms of the faith of Frieda Yoder. To which the Amish respond that their rule as to worldly education is an essential aspect of their faith; that they and their children are demonstrably good citizens, never arrested for crimes, never a burden on public discourse; that 'education' and 'ignorance' should not be defined solely by the State; and that their numbers are too small to constitute a threat to public education. Copyright 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom-UN-4 4810 Business Office-UN-4 4358 Published at the University of Kansas during the academic year except when otherwise indicated. Senior student, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawn Park, Kan. 6044. Accommodation goods, services and advertisement offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily indicative of the university. WHAT DO YOU THINK OF WOMEN'S LIBERATION, DAISY? I DON'T UNDERSTAND IT... Griff and the Unicorn WHAT DO YOU THINK OF WOMEN'S LIBERATION, DAISY? I DON'T UNDERSTAND IT... THEY SAY THAT THEY WANT EQUALITY... MY QUESTION IS... WHY DO THEY WANT TO GIVE UP THEIR SUPERIORITY? THEY SAY THAT THEY WANT EQUALITY... By Sokoloff MY QUESTION IS... WHY DO THEY WANT TO GIVE UP THEIR SUPERIORITY? "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman Editor Chile Crews Michael Mullen Associate Editor Campus Editor Tony Spencer Editor Rita Hughan Haitong Ma Copy Chiefs Joyce Newman, Ron Killen Associate Campus Editors Sports Editor Sally Carlson Bob Simmon Feature Editor Barbara Spurlock Wire Editor Tomas Struik Wire Editor Joyne Dunbar, Nancy Jones Mature Team Editor Review Editor Hartmut Schauler Training Editor Greg Sorber, Todd Throver Office Manager Trends Rush BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser Mel Adams Business Manager Associate Business Manager Advertising Manager Marketing Manager Norman Manley National Advertising Manager Clinical Advertising Manager Dale Pipergergarten Promotional Advertising Manager Dave Murray) Donna Murray) H REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF HEADER'S LEARNING SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 8, 1972 5 20 Kansan Photo by RICHARD GWI Crews Moffet Haye E Hay, l scott Groom milson Begert ghighter Jones hmiltz Netzer. Rush okoff n thereme theands theirctory andslate oninrieda Baby Jay Finds Friend A walk around the court in Allen Field House is one way to pass the time during idle moments of a basketball game, and it's a lot more fun if one is accompanied by a feathered friend. 3 Legislators --him in modern times have failed to do: Win back the statehouse after at least one term on the ballot. A year ago, he gone from Torkea two terms. Continued from Page 1 "HIGHER EDUCATION is riding out the tail end of public schools," said newspapers only reported spectacular events such as drug raids, sit-ins and riots and didn't the good things that happen. Weaver said the image states, but he thought of the people throughout the state. He recommended that students do "whatever can be done." "I'm concerned that we're not going to say much about the University. We said, 'People will support a program that they're proud of.'" Dyck thought that increased funding would probably come from an increase in income taxes. Governor Docking has said that he will veto any incentive increases tax; there is no opposition throughout the state to an increase in property taxes. THESE THREE TAXES are collected from the state. Other taxes bring in minimal amounts of revenue. Property taxes provide most of the revenue to local governments. Weaver said he could'n venture a guess on how the girl was raised, but said, "I am sure someone will have to pick up the tab." President Richard Nixon recently proposed in his State of the Union Address that a value added tax, a form of national sales tax, be instituted to relieve the burden of a taxpayer from much of his burden. HE SAID that currently there was no program at KU designed to aid the estimated 40,000 to 100,000 Chicano in the state. Joe Ortiz, Topeka sophomore, represented the Association of Mexican-American Students at the meeting. He proposed that the School of Education institute a bible teacher and teacher training program at KU. Ortiz said that the program was eventually retarded at a community, provide the people with a greater identity and self-worth and give students greater opportunity in both Spanish and English. Chamber Recruiting KU Faculty Approximately 200 University of Kansas faculty members are being asked to join the Lawrence campus by a faculty membership contest between the Lawrence and Manhattan chambers. The Manhattan chamber is soliciting bids from Kansas University faculty. The contest, began Feb. 1, according to Kathy Stewart, Stewart, and ends Feb. 15, chamber, and ends Feb. 15. She said neither the names or number of new members obtained during the tournament or divulged until it is over, she said. Each of the 20 present chamber members on the KU faculty were given the names of 10 other faculty members to solicit for membership. A 50 per cent response is expected, Stewart said. Emily Taylor, dean of women, Ernest Angino, professor of civil engineering and William Hambleton, director of the state geological survey, are among the group seeking new members. Dyck said the students should be in the development department at KU because their committee was not really qualified to tell teachers After several questions, Weaver asked the group to do more research into such topics as the number of Chicanos in Kansas, the number of Ciancos at KU, how many students at KU participated in the program, and the effect of similar programs in other states. New members fill out a membership card and pay a $25 annual membership fee. Later, the new member joins the chamber's Ambassador Club members, who explain chamber operation. Dyck said that until now the major concerns of the legislature have been in primary and secondary education. "The legislature has not gotten very into higher education, so it probably unprecedented that legislators come on campus to talk about At the conclusion of the meeting, he said that the meeting was "very helpful." He said that he was looking forward to similar meetings. TOWERKA (AP) — John Anderson Jr., declaring state government in Kansas is stalemated and needless change to break the logjam, formally launched Monday his bid to become the first governor to return after being gone from public life. Prof Directs French Studv Anderson Opens Campaign Theodore Johnson, professor of Music at the University of Colorado as director of the Junior Year Program for 1972-73 at the University of Oklahoma. Anderson, Kansas governor in 1981-65, confirmed at a news conference that he wanted what he had told interviewers more than a week earlier. He is a candidate for the Republican nomination for governor this year. The University of Colorado is conducting the Junior Year Program at Bordeaux in cooperation with the Kansas and the University of New Orleans. He thus will attempt what three former Kansas governors before Clyde M. Reed Sr. in 1942, Harry Wooding in 1946 and 1956 and Fred Hall in 1958 all tried to establish the governor's chair in Kansas. While no Kansan has been able to do it, Anderson pointed out in his prepared statement that 37 governors in 27 states have returned to state power over the state after laying out a least one term. "The people have a way of protecting against one administration being in power too Sisters . . . Continued from Page 1 center, students at the KU Medical Center majoring in gynecology could be used as a staff until a professional gynecologist could be hired. THE HEALTH center's concern about the birth control issue, she said, stemmed from the fact that the Planned Parenthood Center in Lawrence was forced to take because of an overload of cases. The third major concern of the February Sisters, the enactment of an Affirmative Action Act, through which Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics, and Joan Handley, chairman of Committee Women of the American Association of University Professors (AUP). Banks said the administration had told women there would be a risk of discrimination against Plan design to discrimination against women working or studying in the region, knowledge no action has been taken. SHE SAID all universities receiving federal funds were required by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to file such a program. neglected by the University, but if HEW would say 'no more funds the seriousness of delaying a project' would soak in. "Banks said." The book is the first full-length investigation of the attempt to build a bridge along the thirty-fifth parallel during the 19th century. It explains the origins and ultimate organ of five different railway corporations in an attempt to establish a snow-free route to San Diego. A new book, "The St. Louis-Saint Francisco Transcontinental Railroad: The Thirty-fifth Parallel Project, 1853-1890," by H. Craig Mair, assistant professor of history at Wichita State University, will be published Feb. 16 by the University Press of Kansas. Handley said the administrative delay in filling his waiver was due to backlog of cases now before HEW. She said HEW was not only far behind in investigating cases related to the rulings, but also once a case was investigated. HEW rulings of legal loopholes in the orders Miner's account includes sketches of some notable figures in that era, such as "Pathfinder" John C. Fremont and Jay Gould. Illustrations and excerpts from space also are contained in the volume. long—either by legal prohibition or the ballot in a state where such prohibition is county attorney. "The reasoning behind this is to prohibit the building of a church." Handley said a letter had been sent Ant 17, 1971, urging that an appointee to fulfill HEW appointed to fulltime jobs now, no program has been filed. He had said before, Anderson told reporters he thinks the Senate's stalemate between Democrat Gov. Robert Docking and the Republican-controlled Kansas state has existed too long for the state's governor. "The University it will take a while to get around to them, so they know they have a file or to file any programs," she said. He said such feeding is "interesting for a while, but after a period of years the institutions department and the people suffer." He listed as Kansas' most pressing issues the matter of school financing—specifically the need to indicate the local property tax is going to have to be replaced—welfare and penal reform, government reorganization and state government. Anderson said he thought he could end the "rift" in the statehouse by recapturing the statehouse for the GOP. "... There is no more of a rift that ever has been, and it will never be, to desire to win and a willingness to work together," said Anderson, who beat the late George Ducking over the governor. Railroad Topic Of New Book By WSU Prof House majority leader, also said Anderson's entry wouldn't prompt him to speed up his response expected after the session is over. Lt. Gov. Reynolds Shultz, considered to be Anderson's prime challenger for the GOP nomination but who will wait until after the present legislative session formally announce his candidacy, will be the former governor's entry would have no effect on his plans. Henrys Anderson told reporters he expected intricate details from Decker or Duckett, or both. Gen Miller to his general election opponent—if Anderson was elected, he would be the governor. "I have said I am a candidate," he said. "I am not unannounced. It doesn't matter to me who the other candidates are. When this session is over, I'm going." Asked why he would seek the governorship once more, Anderson replied, "he must work in public life working in government. And, I think there is a need for a change in state governance." Office Funds Foreign Study For 8 Weeks Applications may be obtained from William C. Fletcher, Boyset Bovier area studies, for the boyset program, and from Joseph L. Courad, professor of Slavic languages, for the Yugoslav program. Each program will last eight weeks beginning in June and ending in August, and will include 20 students. The Polish program will involve 20 students while the Yugoslav program will involve 30 students O The United States Office of Education has granted partial funding for the Summer Intensive Intermediate Language and Area studies in Poland and Yugoslavia. Applications must be returned to the offices of these two departments by March 15. THE SACKBUTS ARE Coming SPECIAL HEAD FOR HENRY'S Rep. Morris Kay, R-Lawrence University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb.9 DITTY GRITTY SPIRT BAND FRIDAY FEB. 18 HOCH 8:00 2.50 3.00 3.50 tickets at: SUA office 2 Delicious Chili Dogs For Only 49¢ COTTY GRITTY SPIRT BAND ★ tickets at: SUA office Offer good Wed., Thurs., Fri.; Feb. 9, 10, 11 6th & Missouri • 843-2139 WHAT TO DO BEFORE LEAVING THE STATES AND BY WHEN SPONSORED BY: Student Union Ac- cademy Foreign Study Office SUA Travel Service Students' Office Students' Office Council Room - 4 p.m. TECHNICIAN Thursday, February 10 Coming Forums: Travel within Europe 1. travel within Canada; travel within the US; travel with a hitching, Mexico; Canada all student budget! Forum No. 2 of a Series 火柴室 MUSWELL HILLBILLIES On RCA Records KINKS ZIP DISCOUNT BROKER CENTER 2017 MASSACHUSETTS New Under New Management reg. $^{5*88}$ $3.67 also available on 8 track stereo tapes at KIEF'S Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Groom and Clean Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-4:00 Hairspray for Men 7 oz. size Reg.$1.50 Sale $1.17 You must present coupon with purchase DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Managemen Scope Mouthwash You must present coupon with purchase 18 oz. size Reg.$1.59 Sale $1.13 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 297 MASSACHUSETTS AVE. New Under New Management King's Deluxe Chocolates Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Valentine Assortment 50¢ off You must present coupon with purchase ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT ENGAGEMENT CENTER 747 MASON ST New Under New Management Anat 50 Tablets Reg. 99c Sale 77¢ You must present coupon with purchase Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 TONiTETHE HALLGROOVES ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management HALLMARK HALL OF FAME PRESENTS LOVE LOVE LOVE BREAD LOVE LOVE LOVE! ROB WAGNER STARRING BREAD HELEN REDDY AND MAC DANIS Hallmark Hall of Fame TONITE ON NBC-TV! BREAD MAC DANIS HELEN REDDY ROBERT WAGNER 6 Tuesday, February 8.1972 University Daily Kansan Family Ties Aid Studies 102 Kansas Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE Family Shares Study Efforts Lancaster are enrolled in the same journalism law class . . . Mrs. Lancaster received her B. A degree in journalism in 1944 from the University of Albany, Tex. She has been in the journalism profession for 40 years, during which time she has taught English and the Topeka Capital Journal, Fairchild Publications in Paris and as a White House foreign correspondent in Chimbu in Japan. Law of Communications is the last course she needs to complete a Bachelor's degree and she started in 1968 in journalism. Because her mother knows shorthand, Miss Lancaster said she was able to take faster notes. They often compare notes and the same text will allow sharing the same textbook sometimes causes problems. Although Miss Lancaster is a photojournalism major, she hopes she will be as versatile in journalism as her mother. Living Groups' United Efforts Produce Spring Week Plans By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer Two all-University spring events are being planned for the campus and will replace Greek and Spring Fling of past years. Mrs. Lancaster said it was "great fun" to have her daughter in class with her. Miss Lancaster said she never was uneasy with her mother was in the same class, but thought of her as a good friend. A mother and a daughter in the same class is quite rare. However, Barbara Lancaster, her daughter Kayna Lancaster, her daughter Rayna Lancaster, Lawrence junior, are in the same Law of Communication class and said Monday that they were proud to be able to sit next to each other. The Panhellenic Association, the Interfaternity Council and Residence Halls have combined to sponsor a week of activities. April 5-9, according to reports, are of the three organizations. The AURH, which includes all residence halls, Naisimhall and the scholarship halls, invited Panhellenic and the IPC in January to coordinate all the activities of University event, Larry Widom, Overland Park junior and chairman of Spring Fling, said. "HOPEFULLY THIS WILL involve the University. We wanted to get everyone together in a group, without competing against each other," Wisdom said. No name for the week of activities has been selected yet. The AURH and the IFC have scheduled several events which are submitted to representatives of all three groups for Sunday. The events tentatively take place from Wednesday to Sunday, April 5-9; a concert Wednesday night; a movie Friday night; a "Pot" screening Saturday morning at afternoon at Potter Lake; and Spring Sing Saturday night. The Student Senate will sponsor a spring dance at Jawhayk Boulevard in conjunction with charlot races. The student council sponsor, gymkhana Sunday afternoon in N-Zone Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM 1618 W.23rd THE BOARD of class officers has planned the second spring festival, a sport day to be held the third week. A guest be an all-University event separate from the spring week, according to Richard Bellman, dean of class president and member of the board of class officers. HAMBURGERS 15¢ 100% U.S.D.A. Insp. Beef The names of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson have been immortalized at the University of Kansas through the presence of buildings bearing their names: Gerritrude Searslars Pearson Hall, R. Pearson Hall, and Sellars and Pearson Scholarship Halls. Hastings previously received a travel grant from the Japan American Society of Kauai City and Kansas City during the summer of 1989. Presently Hastings, who holds a master of arts degree in history from KU, is also a candidite for a Grant Grant for study in Hastings plans to use the hashtags, which provide both their own links and a study at Tokyo University and Sophia University. His special emphasis is on political parties in Japan during the outbreak of War II. A rather obscure portion of this volume is the Pearson Trust Fund, donated to the University for the improvement and maintenance of the residence. The fund, which amounts to about $31,000 a year, is interest on the books of Mr. Pearson. University by the Pearsonors for the specific purpose of improving THE SACK LUNCH Grad Student Receives Grant From Japan Norman S. Hastings, a Ph.D. degree candidate in Japanese history at the University of Kansas, has been awarded a Japaneese commitment fellowship in Japan during the 1972-1973 academic year. GIANT HAMBURGER 96¢ FRENCH FRIES 96¢ ONION RINGS 20' DRINK James R. Brooks, assistant to the dean of men, said students from the different halls make up about 30% of the two committees, which Pearson Funds Improve Halls "LoveBundle" It Is a $1,14 Value 96c 96¢ FOR ONLY 96° 96¢ will be spent for a given project. A twelve-member group composed of six students and six staff members disburses the funds among the groups. The group is divided into two working committees and the library committee and the cultural enrichment committee. your Valentine the gift designed th love in mind. Finest, heshest flowers profes- nally arranged in a usable, satin-white ramic container... highlighted by en- anting kissing gels framed a red penile Brooks, chairman of the committee said, the team was set to be four years ago at the suggestion of J. J. Wilson, director of the dvm system. Trying to encourage creativity in the expenditure of the funds, the cultural enrichment committee has in the past purchased stereo sets for both schools. Stephenson Scholarship fails, as well as sponsoring various other activities. you love her with an FTD "LoveBundle". Available only from your FTD Florist. Just give us a call or stop in. We can send our "LoveBundle" to your Love-Bundle almost anywhere in the country. $12.50 then determine how much money will be spent, for a given project. FTD FESTIVAL DE TRABAJO Y FUTBOL DE MÉXICO The cultural enrichment committee chairmen are Joan Handley, microbiology professor, assistant to the dean of women. Owens FLOWER SHOP 19TH & INDIANA Brooks suggested residents of residence halls or scholarship buildings to extend the expending expenditure of funds in their schools should contact their hall officers rather than attempting to take the job directly to one of the committees. Reviewing student proposals for new facilities or for new books in the library responsibility of the library committee, he is Elizabeth Kramer professor. Continuing education programs for social workers will be the topic of discussion in a workshop sponsored by the Council on Social Work Education and Training, at Kansas State University, 23-25 at the University of Kansas More than 40 persons from across the nation are expected to work with students as directors and coordinators of continuing education programs in graduate schools of social work departments, and some faculty. Major workshop themes will be the organization and program aspects of continuing education programs in teaching objectives and teaching practices used. Victor I. Howey, professor of continuing education in mental health at the University of Wisconsin Extensional Breathing Rothman, associate dean of the Adelphi University School of Law, will lead the workshops. Senate Survey Changes Date Please disregard the deadline The surveys were not distributed as quickly as had been planned. Social Welfare Workshop Set; 40 Expected A survey form concerning proposed revisions in the University of Florida has recently been distributed in campus mail. Instructions on the form request the survey be returned by Monday, February 7. Hand THE KRUMHORNS ARE COMING, TOO Craftsmen of fine leather goods University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb. 9 Put her under your spell. Send her the FTD LoveBundle Send the love potion that never fails. 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We can send our "LoveBundle" to your Love- Bundle almost anywhere in the country. $12.50 ALLISON THOMAS FLOWERS Your Downtown Florist 941 Mass. 803-3255 FREE DELIVERY You're not only welcome at Tivol... we think you're special. young people. (Our family is full of love your spirit, your values, life. So...when you're in sports and you're looking at engagement ring, remember that you'll be it at TIVOL's. We're not expensive, we are exclusive—but we think we have an "image" of being a store that caters to older people. Please help us change that image. TIVOL ...of course JEWELS 220 Nichols Rd. on the Country Club Plaza, Kansas City, Mo. • Certified Gemologist • American Gem Society University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 8. 1972 44 ANSAS 25 Kansas Staff Photo by GREG SORRER Dave Taynor Guards Tech's Steve Post Moving into forward spot, Hatty hit 29 points By JEFF HILL By JEFF HILL Lansan Sports Write "BOTH GUARDS did an outstanding job. I thought they played well defensively even in the first half." Frederick said. The victory gave KU an 8-11 record, but it meant nothing in the Big Eight race. However, Oklahoma's upset of front-center Nebraska kept the Jayhawks alive in conference play. KU Bombs Georgia Tech Freshman Win, Remain Unbeater KU was sparked in the first half by Greenlee's deadly mid-range jump shots. Greenlee scored 15 points in that half. By BOB SIMISON Frederick was pleased with the performance of guards Marshall Rogers and Dale Greenlee. Frederick said the Jayhawks were searing without much effort in the first half, thus causing Nick Jackson off a bit defensively. Reynolds also was the game's leading rebound with 13. Suttle led Jawhayk rebounds with 10. Kansan Sports Editon KU HOSTS Oklahoma Saturday in Allen Field House Oklahoma is tied for first with 5 Georgia in the league. Georgia Tech is 5-13. Going into a game against Georgia Tech Monday night, the University of Kansas basketball team looked as though it might be in trouble at the forward spot. And had been unstable all season. Rick Suttle of KU led all scorers with 24 points as four of the five Jayhawk starters scored 16 points, and one contributed an impressive 10 assists in addition to his 23 points. Greene finished with 21 points. David Taynor, a little-used guide to the 635, however, and the 6-3 sophomore led the Jayhawks on a 93-65 rampage over the Yellow Dave Byers and Tim Reynolds scored 17 points each for Missouri Western. Missouri Western scored only 33 points in the second half. Taynor's 29-point performance kept the contest interesting. He scored long and short, but mostly long. "His response to the change as been exceptional," Owens continued. "But Dave's the kind of kid who can play to play he has excellent attitude." The outcome of Monday's game was never in doubt. KU scored on its first two trips downcourt, and Georgia Tech ball over without taking a shot on its first two possessions. "I was just lucky, I guess," Taylor said of his night. "Right now I'm pretty tired. He played me for half and half and 12 minutes of the first. "They scored 41 points on us in the first 20 minutes. But we really got out in front of them on defense in the second half," Frederick said. Despite what freshman coach Bob Frederick called a "defensive effort in the first half," the Kansas defensive defeated the Missouri Western junior varsity, 96-74, to maintain the frosh's "I'M GLAD I finally got to start." Taynor said. "I was it was Taylor's first varisty start. He drew the moid in place of Wheeler, and Barrow missed bed check Sunday night, so Owens held him out. Fired Boslievac, another bruised knee still with a outlawed bruised knee. "WE SHIFTED Dave to forward last week when Fred was against Missouri," Owens said. "He went to Kivisto and Aubrey Nash have done such a good job at guard who didn't have it get to play much." excited at first when coach Owens told me at the noon meal, But then I realized there was nothing to be nervous about." Taynor had a couple of opportunities to break the 30-point mark late in the game, but he missed "garbage" shots. "I guess I was pressing it on the last two."Taynor figured. It didn't matter that he missed KU led by 32 points, 93-61, at the tailgate. Taylor finished with 12 of 18 fouls, goals and five of five free throws. REMARKABLE team work by the Jayhawks was what defeated Georgia Tech. Of 39 field goals, 24 came on assists. The slick passer of Nash earned him credit for nine assists. It's real break with the team, and Nash came with an assist from Nash. First, Bird Stallworth with the layhaws on top, 28-19 with a ayup. On the ensuing trip down the floor, Taylor grabbed a broken bottle and Nash. Nash, Nash fed Stallworth under the basket for a 30-19 lead. SOON AFTER the second half began, Georgia Tech collapsed. The Yellow Jackets had whipped the ball around KU's defense with a fair amount of confidence to the first half, but they completely folded during a seven-minute stretch after intermission. Peanut Murphy's free throw was 18.04 to play was the last putt before Murphy was until Steve Post punched a field goal through the back door with a During that period, the Jayhawks, led by Randy Canfield, Sallworth and Taynor, moved to a 38-18驶. MU Moves Closer To Big Eight Title Canfield, in fact, scored 15 points before he fouled out with 7 hits. The team's eye from Frank Samoylo for the foul, but the eye seemed to be on fire. With help from Oklahoma, Missouri took a step toward claiming the national title. By downing Iowa State in 72 Monday night at Ames, Iowa. FOR THE MESSENGER-erratic 6-center, it was the second season hit seven of seven for 17 points against Iowa State at Saturday. He scored 24 points to tie Iowa. Oklahoma spiled the Cornhuskers' undisputed claim to first place, 72-70, in Norman. The Big Eight lead is now shared by Nobraska and Oklahoma with 5-2 league record. Kansas State, idle, Monday, Friday. KU remains in fifth at 4-3, Kansas defeated Georgia Tech, 8-6-5 in a non-league game in other conference play, Oklahoma State got its first conference win in the 72-64 third round, the 72-64 Stillwater. Neither team has won Missouri's victory was far from easy in the Cyclones' new Hilton Coliseum. Iowa State led, 60-57, with just over eight minutes to go and the Tiger surged to take command, 71-44, and coast to the victory. more than one league game, but the Cowboys have lost two more than Colorado. now, 'Canfield said. "But I think the whole team should be coming around now. It's time to get to work and really get serious. Since Oklahoma beat Nebraska, we we've good chance in the league race." Big 8 Standings League Overall W L W L Missouri 5 2 2 1 Nebraska 5 2 15 4 Oklaahoma 5 2 10 9 K-State 4 2 10 8 Kansas 4 3 8 11 Colorado 5 3 10 10 Colorado 1 5 4 14 Okla.State 1 5 14 Owens used Nash at the high post during the first half when Georgia Tech was in a zone defense. "We use him like that against 1-2 zone," Owen explained. "In the middle, we need a penetrator, not a shooter. His job is to block." tg/ga ft-fa rb pf tj Murphy 3·9 3·8 4 2 1 Post 3·6 3·4 5 6 3 Binns 2·6 3·9 10 1 1 Sammygoo 9,19 3,5 3 2 3 21 Hoggie 1,8 2 2 3 3 25 Bigger 1,2 2 2 3 3 24 Brown 1,1 0,1 0 2 0 2 Farrel 1,1 1,1 0,1 2 0 2 Farrell 1,3 0,0 0,5 2 4 Taylor 1,1 0,1 0,0 2 0 Taylor 1,1 0,1 4,4 1 0 Taylor 1,1 0,1 1,1 0 4 Total 22,55 13,71 39 19 65 Stainthwaite iga fgba rab rh gb pt tb Coffield 12/19 5/12 4/8 3/8 2/8 1/2 Coffield 12/19 5/12 4/8 3/8 2/8 Coffield 0-3 1-3 4-3 3-4 4-1 Kiritoh 0-3 1-3 4-3 3-4 4-1 Mask 5-6 6-1 11 11 11 Mask 5-6 6-1 11 11 Franklin 0-0 1-2 2-0 2-0 Franklin 0-0 1-2 2-0 2-0 Totals 19/25 18/25 47 47 23 Totals 19/25 18/25 47 47 23 In other Olympic events Marie-Therese Nadig, Switzerland's sister, had helped her second gold medal in the Winter Olympics Games Tuesday, becoming only the second women's double gold winner in a single event. The Americans got a second win in the Olympic basketball when the Swedish team came back from a loss to Russia and tied the Russians 3-3 Monday night. It left the Soviet Union and Sweden for first tie in the Class A semifinals, with the Czechoslovakia, Finland and the United States tied with one victory and one loss each, by Poland with two losses. Miss Nadig ignored a blinding snowstorm that had earlier postponed bithion competition, and was timed in 1 minute, 29.90 the victory in the treacherous women's giant slalom race. SAPORO, Japan (AP) — The United States' 5-1 upset victory over the powerful Czechoslovakian hockey team on Monday has brought an all-time high for Olympia bronze medal, but those thoughts are surrounded by "ifs." Bronze Medal Possible For U.S. Hockey Team lead to 37-32 on a pair of bases in the center of the play, returning back successive goals by Greenlee Fiddelke and Rogers to recapture the lead. The U.S. team plays Russia Wednesday and Finland Thursday. Coach Murray Williamson says he wishes the schedule was reversed so his American team would not have to play on top teams, in succession. Miss Nadig's victory made her the first woman Alpine skiing double champion since Andrea Mead Lawrence of the United States took the women's slalom and giant slalom in the 1982 games. GEORGIA TECH 34 31 - 63 SANAS 43 50 - 63 Australia's 18-year-old ace, Anne Marie Procell was second in 1:30:5. Miss Procell also took the lead on a women's downhill Saturday, in women's downhill Saturday. Wiltrud Drexel, another member of the Austrian team, took the bronze medal in 1:32.35 American girls were a disapointing disappointment. 13.24 h. by Barbara Cochran of Richmond, V.I. Karen Budge of Jackson Hole, Wy. U.S.A. dejectedly, "I don't want to talk. I couldn't see them." Sandy Pouleen of Olympic Valley, was a gate and was disqualified. Technical foul—Georgia Tech. Tur- novers—Georgia Tech 22, Kansas 10. A- 7,100. Missouri tied western at game 30 on 39 on a pair of free throws by Reynolds, but that was not the case; they were to be in contention. The giant slalom was the only medal competition early Tuesday after the białathon was postponed and snowfall that blinded competitors. Accurate outside shooting by Fiddelke in the closing minutes pulled the 'Hawks ahead S1-41 at haftime. "The snow was slow and the course was slow," she said. Marilyn Cochran, Barbara's sister, was timed in 1:35.27, far down the list. Officials said the snowfall was so heavy that skiers were unable to ski on the ice meters away from the shooting range. The event was halted after 32 of the 54 competitors from 14 countries lost their legs. It was rescheduled for Wednesday. THE SECOND half was all KU, then hustling to hustle to hustle repeatedly and Missouri Western turnovers and turned them into points with consistent efficiency. Western committed a costly 25 turnovers, as opposed to 12 by the other team. In the only other action game played for grabs in the pairs figure skating and competition began in the men's figure skating with the women's skaters. Although Missouri Westah had a 51.9 percentage percentage from the field, they managed to get a win over the Jawkaws with a total of 88 The KU freshmen team plays the Oklahoma freshmen Saturday night in Allen Field House Byers 1g-kg ffa-ha rb qp sl Dellis 6.11 1f-ha 4.10 5.12 Reynolds 4.6 6.3 13 5 12 Petty 6.8 6.3 13 5 11 Potty 6.8 6.3 13 5 11 Maryfield 2.8 0-0 3 2 1 Thomas 2.8 0-0 3 2 1 Thomas 2.8 0-0 3 2 1 Belinkov 0-2 0-0 2 1 Ground 0-2 0-0 2 1 Total 28.54 18-26 20 6 7 | | IgA gg-1 | IgA fa-1a | rb | pf | tf | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Fidelidade | 8 | 6 | 7 | 4 | 5 | | Hate | 1 | 6 | | | | | Hike | 8 | 6 | | | | | Rugen | 10 | 34 | 3 | 4 | 23 | | Rugen | 10 | 34 | 3 | 4 | 23 | | Rugen | 10 | 34 | 3 | 4 | 23 | | Smith | 0 | 5 | 2 | 4 | 9 | | Smith | 0 | 5 | 2 | 4 | 9 | | Roseat | 0 | 0 | 6 | 1 | 1 | | Roseat | 0 | 0 | 6 | 1 | 1 | | Total | 19.0 | 20.0 | 14 | 9 | 69 | | Total | 19.0 | 20.0 | 14 | 9 | 69 | Turnovers - Missouri Western 25, Kansas 12 MISSOURI WESTERN 41 33 -74 KANSAS 51 42 263 Teams To Compete In Intramurals An awesome number of more than 3,000 male students of all sizes and shapes have signed up for the rugged confusion dubbed the basketball at the University of Kansas, according to intramural officials. Bob Lockwood, intramural director, said he was busy over the weekend figuring out how to get 263 men's basketball teams. Play began Monday with eight games in the fraternity A class. Action will continue Wednesday at 1 p.m., then a final end and ending about 9:30 p.m. As many as 28 games a day will be played, the four courts of Robinson College. As Lockwood arranged it, there were three classes: E (emergency), I and C categories in the second class. The independent class included two teams in similarly designated teams. A typical intramural basketball game is played roughly at a rapid pace. Officiating is notoriously hapazhaped Teams sumdun run a few seconds and stopped during the seven minute quarters only for fouls, timeouts, jump balls and substitutions. But what is it that motivates the typical intramural jock? A good answer would seem to lie in some combination of exercise, recreation and glory. Sometimes, the typical jock seizes the opportunity of legalized assault to relieve the burden of a tiresome day of classes. can also euphorically relive his glory days of high school, his love for thrilling come-from-behind victory over his school's top Nikkei Shinjuku Station On RCA Records NILSSON SCHMILSSON NILSSON also available on 8 track stereo tapes reg. $5^98 $3.67 KIEF'S KANSAN WANT ADS at Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER One day > words or fewer. $1.00 each additional word. $ .61 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the university Daily Kanan are offered to color, cover, or national origin. TYPING Experienced in typing these, dissertation term paper form, and email correspondence. Typer type: Accurate and prompt reply. Phone: 842-9554. Mrs Wright Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses or dissertation. Electric typewriter, group, accurate work. Call V-13281, Mr. Mannkauk. Term papers, thesis types accurately and conveniently. Term papers are electric typewriter. Will you editing at reasonable rates? 842-7977 days; 842-5665 nights. Kinda David's day. Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention. 843-0558 2-28 Lost - small black male coucker spainl named Darby. Family pet Reward. 842-8199. 2-9 LOST Last Friday, Jan 28 near 19th and Friday Lucille Gray-mid-gray tuxedo with black hair to *Moon*. Great sentimental gift. 412-574-4911 anytime WARD POETRY WANTED for anthology Please include stamped return en- velopes, and proof of author, Editor. DOLLWILK PRESS, 1807 East Avenue. Dollar River, Los An- thologies 9027. Call me for excellent low cost hospital insurance with above average coverage. Call Me for pregnancy! John Wells, American Health and Life Insurance, 842-5200 Women's Alterations 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 2-15 PERSONAL KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES NOTICE Michigan St. Bar-B-Quiz $35 Mich. St. Paul Quiz $40 Mich. St. $160 irm $180 Bristol $275 $15 of pot of $240 $240 Rib-plate. AM $4 AM to 9:30 PM Phone VI- 2 AM to 9:30 PM Phone VI-2 UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright (816) 474-4676 INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-762- 904]. Professional child-care for children 1 m. to 12 m. Feat or part-time. Designs, designed by 2-25 We repair alliage Volkswagen. We do surgery operations, transplant, or use our own tools. We sell part and buy those VWs with the normal illnesses. Bag lint... 2-10 Meadi-mares. Dr. New Orleans. Round trip $100. Leave K.C. SAT. Feb. 12. Active K.C. Wed. For more information, call 842-872-9721. DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe. Leave airport from NY or AU. Travel to DAID. ID issued Flight Center, 237 North Windsor Airport, Wisconsin, 628-263-1317. TEE PEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB. Welcome, back students! Its party valors for second semester term are valors for second semester term and party党. Nice band stand, black clothing. We also have special monthly rates for private parties. Phone or contact John meeting photos. Phone or contact John Statton Tee Pee JJ # 29 & 59 Hourly phone: 842-2582 Afternoon: 9:14 p.m. 842-1853 Valentine Idea Portrait: $5.00 for one, $4.90 for two. 842-7511 2-15 There is more than one Love Story. Brotherhood and sisterhood, join 兄弟情谊 and liberation Front Motherhood and motherhood. Oroad. Info. P.O. Box 234 2-10 KU Students of Objectivism will have the opportunity to study at Randolph Spring. Funding 7,900 in the Orad Desert, Kansas Union University. Available at 842-6218-6581 6945 GROUP PIANO CLASSES FOR BEGINNERS Learn to sight read, improve. create your own music Team 842-3597 842-3597 6 p.m.-9 p.m. 842-3597 JURSIA-SCANDINAVIA 3 weeks. Small group camping travel (ages 18- up). Small group camping travel (ages 18-up). White. Whole Earth Exped. Travel Box 149. KC - M. Travel Box 149. KC - M. Girls. Have an address and phone number for your parents' peace of mind: When take phone calls and mail messages for $10 a month. 8937 2-14 6-214 Hud a fender bender, cracked auto windshield, and new tow/kill cab. Call Kawboy show 209-631-8000 for Dick Mills. Free estimates, reasonable rates, all work guaranteed. WANTED Women's alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:14 or 2:14 Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th "For Feets Sake, If The Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Female roommate for beautiful two bedroom completely furnished. Meadowbrack apartment. Private room. Free parking. Monthly rate: 28,940. Call 863-5548 Wanted--third roommate to the two bedroom Jayhawk Towers apartment. $75/mo. 2-9 One girl needed to share Jayhawne, Towers apartment. Furniture was $250 each. $500 could pay. Own bedroom. Can move in after lease. Monthly call: 864-203-1055. 2-10 BOOMMATE. Private bedroom, kitchen and bathroom. Utilities paid. next to campus $40.00 monthly 1245 Louisiana basement 1200 to 5,000 Wanted to buy: GRANT'S ATLAS OF ANATOMY by J. C. Baillean 6th edition Call Carney 843-2018 after 5:00 p.m. FOR RENT Apartment — newly decorated — one bed furniture—walled—to wall carpeting—11 blocks from Union. Phone 843-5767 tt For rent—one or two bedroom apts, a kitchen, an apartment, garbage room, all electric kitchen facilities, city fair, T V to V savings. Call 212-359-8057 for Apts 19, 24th and Ridge Court WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester — 1-bedroom apartment. Two bath furnished or unfurnished. Central a. 28; d. distather. w. new apartment. Three bedrooms. Apartments—The places to live in WEST HILLS. Call 24 hours a day at 3800. ROOMS, HOUSES AND APA-NT- TING. HOUSES IN APA-NT- TING. Two bedroom suite in a B. private bathroom and kitchen. $250.00 bathroom. $150.00 kitchen. $150.00 132 Louisiana. Bathroom or $81. or $321 Louisiana. Bathroom or $81. Furnished one bedroom apartment. Fully furnished. $150/month plus utilities. Call Dave, 843-1601 or 843-0924. Available now, married couple or adult couple. Please call 843-1601. Ridge House Apts—for the budget and the maximum space at best rates and the maximum space at best rates and duplexes. Price start of cedarwood black south of Wards. HILLIEVIEW APARTMENTS 1732-45 Bedroom, furnished with hardwood furniture and furnished apartments. Carpeted, draperies, elec. appliances. One of many expensive apartments. Free parking. COLLEGE HILL, MANDOR now has investment with a firm of well-respected paid liens. AFC now dishwasher, elevator, cabagel and laundry machines. Expand to carpets to cater to carpets. 3-5220 or 4-1796. April 8th. Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean From black block south of 94-1116 2-21 ITS NEVER TOO LATE and it is a great place that is not comfortable or attractive. One call to Mrs. Forryhill 2017-A Harvard Road and you can rent a house located in Lawrence just beached and most attractive compartment and Missouri. Avalon Apartments, Arbors, Iowa & Harvard Lodge of Apartment One-fourth of independent volleyball team needs other three-fourths, male and female. Call 841-2067. 2-9 1 B.R apartment furnished near KU academic and research referenced. Required N. April. Mature adults only; graduate student couple preferred. 843-258- afc or 843-260-afc. Tutor for Italian 1. Must have patience and knowledge of verb forms, etc The whole bit. Phone 842- 459 1059 2-9 Would like nice chik to move in with three others. Good-sized room in big house with fireplace. Close to the month plus suitities 21-434-3584 Entire 2nd floor at 1411 Maxx. 2 bed, 2 bath suite with shower and toilet. Partly furnished, utilities paid; except electric furnace. 1603 Maxx. 843-0050. After 1983 403 Maxx. 843-0050. After 1983 Room with cooking annex in exchange for work. Near campus. Call VI 3-7863 Room for girl. Furnished, share kitchen and bath. 1 block from Union. $40/mo. Call 842-6074 2-10 FOR SALE Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it. 1. If you use them. Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608. you're at an advantage. 2. If you don't, Sandhive, Virginia Either way it is the same. *New Analysis of Western Civilization.* "Campus Madhouse, 14th West. 14th" ff We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumph. Competition Sports Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-2191. 2-18 Five Days 25 words or fewer: $11.73$ each additional word: $1.03$ Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Up Pick Up Service 843-3333 BLEVINS HONDA 1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks. Now you can buy server components at FACTORY COST plus 10% Han-* *dong. You can choose the Prime Avenue. The only true tree* *discount house in the mid-29*. Northside Company. Shop, 707 North 3. 2nd blocks north of River Bridge room. Bakeware and oven items, cure wood cooking and heating tools, bicycles, fireplace, wood- shovels, other useful items. Of other useful items. Open 9 to 3 on weekdays. Herb Alberten- 2135 2-29 Dietzen Mech Drawing Set. 8- pieces-access. $20, call 842-7434. 2-9 1958 Hammber clean body and interior. Runs good. Excellent heat器和 radio. $175. Please call after six, 804-363-136. All DemiTatras. 2-8 Must sell B-25 Bison Guitar, originally sold for $225. Will accept both guitar and bass instruments. Incharge Call 5.000, 843-3150 FIAT, SNOW TREES 5-60 X 13" ft 805.124, and 128 models, mounted on new wheels, used one month. Phone 864-2851. 2-10 Triumph TR6-5-4 cam, balanced, comparison suspension, overdrive hysteresis, and adjustable bluishtews. engine just rebuilt, need repair DESPERATELY' BEST offer. $824- $1000 Mobile home for sale. Tired of living in an unremarkable house. Used mobile homes depreciate little. Here is a home in an amazing location. Opportunity of ownership, privacy, and resale value. Airtight atmosphere. Soft, thick, carpeting throughout, large bright living room, kitchen, bathroom, refrigerator. weather. washer. dryer. fridge. $270 only $7 million gas bill, and build-in only X 53 with 10 X 10 extension, 600 X 400, 84-6105. 2-10 84-6105. Two beautifully designed Persian lamb coats Reasonably priced. Call Mo at 864-1077. 2-11 Mobile Home - furnished one bed- room 12 X 4' White, red Spanish deco; décor atmosphere and pool privi- tory. Attached patio. pets: Cat. after 5.90 pm 2-11 169 Hendra mobile home, 12 X 60 169 Hendra general electric wather and dryer general electric wather and dryer harvest. gold Hotpoint refrigerator hotpoint refrigerator good condition To we it 5147 good condition To we it 5147 Volkswagen, Karman Ghia, 1964 Looms and looks like new. New paint job must sell this week. Contact Boh Cornetius, 842-777-1071, 842-780-311- Reliable ski equipment head skis 6' N. Nordica boot and boot tree size 10', Scott poles 5'4" Call 842-168' after 6.00. Call 842-1 King Size waterbed, liner, frame, and heater. Only $45. My new apartment is too small. 842-7404. 2-14 Brittany Spain Pup. Want to be a good home for a 6-month old A.C.C registered Brittany Pup Call Gary 843-3473 2-16 Ampeg BT-15 solid state, bass, amp, and B2S-B extension cable. 3:15 speakers total, $755 value, $445 842- 7643 1966 Yamaha 305 cc YM-1-2 two-room car, only 6,500 km, just tuned. All for $225.00; Harmony top tatop guitar. $0.00; Call 842-6291 6:00 p.m. Movie camera, Beauilion, R16 Auto, 12-120 mm lens, 20mm magazine, electrical arretr. 2-1000 mA batteries, electric arretr. 2-833 mA batteries. 28-827, K-637 CME 2:14 For reasonable prices on all glass or any kind of Plexiglas including cars projects for, see AW Body Shop, 742 N. 29m, st. call 841-280-8563. 4-piece Ludwig drum set Excellent condition and produces excellent sound. Call Paul at VI 2-0529 for information. 2-14 Tavern cafe for sale or lease w/2 Bdr. House and parking lot in back Contact Lynch Realty, 843-1601 or 841-3323 2-14 36 Buick, 318 chu, in. 4 barrel, low mileage, clean, air conditioning, 8 cydio, radio, heat器, white walls, $295.00; cam 841-1160. Ask for Bridg 88 Dodge Sportman V8 automatic tape, spacious 2-year seats. No hooks. Call 884-6282 or 842-0727 2-14 X X X X X X X X X X X X X Concord P-20 miniature reorder with remote control microphone $15.00. 421-3171 2-14 5 month old Morse 8 track tape deck and Skyline pre amp $8.00. Need to sell. Call 864-6037. 2-14 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! starting service starting service Kansas City, Kansas 4134 lawn 12-04-1988 CSC TOYOTA 150 MPH Competition Sports Cars Inc. 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842-2323 Sacquaon new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointment Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9, Sat, til noon. 8 Tuesday, February 8, 1972 University Daily Kansan M. B. C. A. R. S. W. E. T. H. D. E. R. J. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THRONE J. R.P. Men Seek Card-playing Endurance Record Twenty men, residents of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, are challenging a 123 hour record for continuous spades playing. The record was set by Alpha Chi Omega and Acacia last December to raise funds for the Emergency Service Council Unit and the Emergency Service Council. The men began playing at 6 p. thursday and plan to continue until Friday evening, which would be 192 hours. From left are Carl Granstom, Leewood junior; Jim Cameron, Prairie Village sophomore; Jim Wallace, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Gary Thompson, Coffeyelle junior; and Arnold Austin, Overland Park sophomore. Shaffer Extols Reporting By FOSS FARRAR Kansas Staff Writer News reporting has been an exciting career for Samuel congressional correspondent for the magazine, Shaffer, who has written about Harry Truman, John Kenneen and Lyndon Johnson, spoke with journalism students during five past periods Monday in Flint HIll. "Reporting is exciting because it gives me the opportunity to be at the very center of events. I can also do my research and make," Shafer, an editor-in-residence sponsored by the School of Journalism said in an interview. SHAFFER STRESSED the reporter's great impact on and responsibility to his audience. "Others see and hear their concept of the world from you," she said. "We are the million people all around the world I am interpreting events that are happening." The reporter, whose primary responsibility is to his readers, is aware of the emotional burden and prejudices to the larger aim of trying to tell it like it, she Shaffer said. He said he is responsible as a heavey one. Shaffer who joined Newsweek in May 1945 as a White House correspondent, prefers working in the White House or working at the White House. "THEE ARE so many more news sources on Capital Hill. In the wake of the wheelies the human beings, responsible to their constituencies. In the White House in Washington, the President," Shaffer said. Most Congressmen are good news sources because they want to get their names in the papers, Shaffer said. They want to let them do so, when you know when they do something so they will be re-elected, he said. The Congressman who has a lot of seniority, however, and comes from a very safe district so that he feels confident of re-election may not be a good news source for the reporter. Shaffer said. Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan, and Republican National Committee Chairman, was a good source on party matters, Shaffer said. Seen P. R. B. Samuel Shaffer James B. Pearson, R-Kan, was thoughtful, honest and deeply concerned on the main issues, he said. "The most dynamic person I've ever had to cover and interview was David, who said. He said he was referring to the years when Johnson was there." "I found Johnson to be an authentic legislative genius," Shaffer explained. "To watch him manipulate his colleagues, the levers in power in Congress are a fascinating exercise," he said. RICHARD NIXON not though the dynamic genius of a Johnson, is nevertheless less confident than Shannon. said Nick. Nixon is doing a good job under adverse circumstances because he is trying to get us out of the room. because he can change his opinion totally if he sees it best for the country, Shafer said. He would have decided to go to Peking, he said. Shaffer said that the most dramatic story he ever covered had been the Hiss-Chambers case, in which Mr. McCarthy era. Hiss, a high state department official, had been accused and finally convicted of the murder. THE MOST EXCITING and surprising event in Shafer's presidency is the election of Jared Pickens presidential election of 1988. Almost everyone thought Dewey would be elected and it was a jolt when he wasn't, Shafer said. The rewards of reporting are not found in money, but in secure and satisfying work. Shaffer said. By CHRIS MILLER Kansan Staff Writer Capitol Interns Evaluate Program Each summer, hundreds of college students invade congressman's offices, tourists, not as protesters, but as interns. Some of them work in Congressman's offices, some in the offices of government Several University of Kansas students have participated in these internship programs. Nixon is a good politician John Mize, Salina senior, spenr two and one half months during his internship at the Asian Bureau of the Agency for International Development in the Philippines. Mize said Sunday he considered his experiences working the State Department very worth mentioning. He had done as "pretty substantive." He is unable, he said, to discuss much of the research effort under his direction. ABOUT 75 PER CENT of the work he did, Mize said, was "hard to see," and "Only." "Confidential!" or "Secret." None of the material he handled was marked "Top" in the list of documents for the most secret documents. Mize said most of the unclassified work he did involved writing replys to inquiries by students from Asian countries. This research, he said, was generally of the type he did for Sen. John Tunney, D-Calif, which involved an inquiry about U.S. loans to South Korea. THE OVERSEAS Craftsman's Union, Mise, said, had contacted Tunneu, asserting that U. S. loans to South Korea for industrial development were contributing to unemployment among men in the country, and construction workers hired by contractors doork work overseas. Mize said he wrote a reply to the senator, explaining that the U. S. loan policy did not conflate with the union among the union's workers. Mize said he had also written unclassified reports concerning East Asian countries. One such report, he said, was a loan paper on the Philippine Islands. The loan paper involved a small amount of funding for the creation of a country which was New York Pro Musica To Perform in Murphy The New York Pro Musica, an ensemble performing musical masterpieces of the ages prior to J.S. Bach, will appear in the concert Course at 8:20 p.m. in the University Theatre. The group's repertoire includes sacred works first performed in the cathedrals of 13th century Cairo and later in ballads of the medieval French court and countryside; dramatic pieces of Renaissance Spain; music in the great Flemish composer Jacques Meyer; the 'Uzder reign in England. the director of the ten member group, Paul Maynard, joined the ensemble in 1964, remaining with the group until his performances of solo keyboard pieces became a standard of the Pro Musica Program. The program "Josquin and his Contemporaries" will focus on works by the prees Presz, who is considered by musicologists to be the greatest composer of the 19th century. He described the procedure he went through in order to get the information he was required to take Civil Service exams and was investigated by the Federal Bureau of investigation before he got the job. Mize said that one thing he discovered during his stay in Washington was that he did not want to work in the federal bureaucracy. MIZE SAID he had obtained the job with the help of Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., who is a personal friend. Tickets for the KU concert are available at the box office in Murphy Hall. Price are $2, $50 and $75 for students. KU students with student ID. L This spring the Pro Music will represent the United States in the first International Joosquin Festival Conference, an important musical event commemorative of the 45th anniversary of the history of the noted composer, at the Lincoln Center in New York City. "I didn't like the hassle of having everything I did cleared by four or five people," he said. "ONE OF the problems involved in an interview. Mize said, was being an intern and he had difficulty finding fitted housing and a place that did not require a long-term lease. applying for a U. S. loan for industrial development. Susie Cowden, Kansas City, Mo. junior, who spent five weeks during the summer of 1971 as an intern in Bole's office, said she housed her for two-months of Washington She said, however, the advantages of being an intern greatly outweighed the problems. Renaissance. Cowden said although most of the work she did as an intern was rather dull, her time in the library was much said much of the time she spent running errands for the secretaries, such as getting into trouble. SHE SAID she spent some time answering mail for the senator and once compiled a statement of the senator's views for release. Besides working in the senators' offices, she said, the interns attended speeches by several political figures, in particular Kendall D-Mass, and Sheila W-Rait, R-Air. The interns, Cowden said, were also allowed to attend various Congressional committee meetings and both houses of Congress. Cowden said she got the job by writing to Dole. Mike Moffet, Norton senior, spent five weeks during the summer of 1989 working as an inter, also in Dole's office. HE DEScribed his five weeks there as the "most educational experience not because of the work he did as an intern but because there were many opportunities for experience as an intern. Campus Briefs Objectivist Meeting *KU Students of Objectivism* will meet at 7 p.m. Feb. 13 in the Room to会议室 for discussions on the topics of the aid to the Arms of the Organium and the ideas of Amy Rumpu. The Jayhawk Sports Car Club will meet at 8 tonight in the basement of the Bierstube. Awards will be given to the winners of he last rally, and upcoming events will be discussed. Guests are welcome. Jayhawk Sports Car Club MOFFET SAID, "I got the job because Dole owed a favor to a good friend of mine." he did attend speeches by several political figures, including Goldwater and former Sen. Charles Goodwell, R-N-Y. Sigma Delta Chi Dinner He said he also met kennedy and Sen. Mark Hatfield, D-Ore, not as a result of working as an art man, but through his own efforts. Christian Science Lecture A free Christian Science lecture, "You're Some Worth bewaking," by Jesus Pickett, will be given at 7:30 p.m. today. halfprice The Sigma Delta Chi William Allen White Day dinner will be at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. Paul C. Hood, senior editor of the National Observer will be the speaker. Tickets for the dinner are $2 for students and $3.25 for all others. Reservations can be made in 105 Flint or by calling U4-4755 by 5 p.m. today. Although he described the jobs is "political plums," he said were some Democrats worker Jobs that Boulade office while he was there. Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior, also served as an intern in Dole's office. He spent five weeks in the summer of 1971. Dillon described his experiences in Washington as "just great." He said there were five people who were there and, they were generally left on their own to attend meetings and sessions of Congress. THE WOMEN interns at that time spent some time typing and writing letters to constituents who had written to the senator, Dillon said. He spent some time, he said, sorting news clippings, composing new releases about Kansas and being able to aid being given to Kansas groups He said he researched a bill for hard-surfaced rocks in the Perry Reservoir area and a Minority Report on Obscenity for Dole. Of some his time, he said, was spent giving tours of the Capitol Building to visiting constituents. Dillon said the interns were also allowed to do research on projects for themselves. He said he spent some time researching the Commission proposal for a new waste reactor at Loyals Dillon said he became interested in the program because some of his fraternity brothers open interns. He said he helped students and senators from Kansas and the representative from his congressional district. Several letters of recommendation from his old Deerwood with Dale were instrumental in his receiving the internship. Dillon said he would definitely recommend the internship program to anyone interested in working for the federal government works. Naismith Book To Be Released A book about the life of James Naismith, the inventor of basketball, and the instructor at KU, to be released at the end of this year or early next year, the University of Chicago Press announced Monday. The book entitled "The Batee Man" has been written by Henry L. Alumna of KU and a faculty member at the University of Southwestern Louisiana. Webb D. H. in English from KU in 1961. RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE Feb. 9th and 10th 11:30 - 4:30 Union Ballroom Feb. 11th 9:30 - 2:30 Ellsworth Hall Give a part of YOURSELF Steps Taken For Benefit Of Minorities Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. announced Monday that four major steps had been taken at the University of Kansas to further advance equality of women and ethnic minorities. The University's Office of Urban Affairs has been redesignated the Office of Minority Affairs and will address itself to the concerns of ethnic minorities in the University community. To provide a similar focal point for the concerns of women in the country has been established to report directly to the Chancellor. This is the first time a faculty member, and Chalmers indicated he hoped to announce his research. The three vice-chancellors in charge of Academic Affairs, Business Affairs and Affairs were directed several weeks ago to initiate detail plans with formal action. In keeping with formal requirements these plans are to form the nucleus of a comprehensive curriculum representing representation of women and ethnic minorities among the staff and staff of the University. To review these plans and advise the Chancellor, an advisory Committee on active Action is being established. The Senate Executive Committee has given the Chancellor a list of persons recommended for appointment to this advisory committee. The chairperson will be announced as soon as those selected have agreed to serve. Senior Announcements A factory representative will be present in the Kansas Union Bookstore to assist you in ordering your graduation invitations. FEBRUARY 8 & 9 Samples of the announcements and accessories will be on display at the Book Store the 8th & 9th also. Please come prepared to place your order with full payment in order to be assured your invitations will arrive on time. kansas union BOOKSTORE WOMEN'S BOOT CLEARANCE Maineaire Leather Boots were $30 $16.90 One Group Of $20 Stretch Boots in Brown or Black (Sizes 7/12-8/12-9 only) $10.90 Krinkle Patent Zippered or Stretch Boots, Brown, White, Black and Navy. were to $18 $12.90 McCoy shoes 813 Mass. St VI 3-2091 FEB. 9 Hand Symbol 8:20 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE The Student Body of The University of Kansas Presents THE NEW YORK PRO MUSICA THEY'VE GOT KRUMHORNS, SACKBUTS, CONTRATENORS, AND A WORLD OF TALENT. It's FREE with I.D. Pick up your reserve seat ticket at the box office in Murphy. Non-Students 2.00 - 2.50 - 3.00 n A LITTLE WARMER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Presidential Poll This Week at KU 82nd Year, No. 81 Wednesday, February 9, 1972 See Page 5 FURIOUS DOGS Kansan Photo by DAN LAUING Man's Best Friend Turns Foe on a Cold Winter Day Pamela Magatain, Arlington, Va. sophomore, had a difficult time yesterday trying to catch the bus. The ice conditions didn't seem to slow her down, but an admirer did. One of the many dogs that regularly survey the campus latched on to her scarf long enough to make her miss the bus. Perhaps man's best friend is trying to tell us that his bickle for coat isn't always as warm as our synthetic KU Required to Submit Program Showing Equal Opportunity Plans By ROBERT E. DUNCAN Kansan Staff Writer The University of Kansas will have to submit to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare an Affirmative Action Compliance Program outlining plans of equal opportunity for minorities in research. Karen Keesling, assistant dean of women. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. announced last week that the three vice chancellors in charge of major areas on the Lawrence campus-academic affairs, business affairs, and student affairs—have detailed plans for affirmative action. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said Monday that the chancellor would announce further changes to the university's programs returns from Washington D. C. this week The chancellor will appoint a committee to assist in the review of the University's audits. WILLIAM M. LUCAS, professor of architecture and urban design and chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx), said the meeting was sent a list of persons recommended for the committee in November. SenEx will also recommend to Chalmers several nominees for a newly created position that will deal with the concerns of women on campus. The new staff position and the creation of the Minority Affairs Office, formerly the Office of Urban Affairs, are part of affirmative action plans. LABOR REGULATIONS STATE, "An acceptable affirmative action program must include an analysis of areas within which the contractor is deficient in the skills needed to perform the work and further, goals and timetables to which the contractor's good faith efforts must be directed to correct the deficiencies and, thus, to increase materially the utilization of minorities and women, at all levels and in all work force where deficiencies exist." Keeling, a member of WEAL, said that complaints about discrimination have been sent to HEW, the department responsible for contracts to educational institutions, by The University in the next several weeks will be finalizing its total affirmative action program and then will submit it to HEW for review and approval. WEAL members at more than 200 institutions. Senate OK's Proposal To Stop Dock Strike Tentative Agreement Made By The Associated Press Despite a tentative voluntary agreement in negotiations by labor leaders, the Senate voted Tuesday to end the 122-day draft strike by compulsory arbitration. A 79 to 3 roll-call sent the bill to the House. The vote in favor of the emergency dock strike proposal requested by President Nixon came after the Senate rejected 42 to 39, an amendment to provide a permanent machinery for setting disputes in the transportation industries. Debate on the compulsory arbitration bill was under way when announcement of a tentative agreement to arbitrate a lawsuit voluntarily reached the Senate floor. The tentative agreement will be submitted to a committee representing locals of the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union (LWU) and to individual shippers, said private mediator Sam Kagel. Asked whether the agreement was the result of White House and congressional pressure, the 70-year-old Bridges gave an emphatic "No." THE COMMITTEE WOULD set the date of a membership ratification vote and decide whether there would be a return to San Francisco. The committee will meet in San Francisco Feb. 12. Asked by reporters whether he could recommend the agreement to his members, Bridges replied, "I don't want to discuss it now." A new contract would run until July 1, 1973. Kagel said. When he made the announcement, Kagel was flanked by ILWU President Harry Bridges and Edmund Flynn, president of the Institute of Fortune Association, the employer group. Flynn said the agreement was produced by "a desire on the part of both of us to Flynn said, "We are satisfied with the terms, or we wouldn't have agreed." Kansas Senate Approves Party-Legislation Liaison The measure, introduced by the Senate's Committee on Elections, later was given preliminary approval despite an attempt to delay the vote one day to allow amendments. "You are going to marry the political parties with the legislature by statute." Sen. Steadman Ball, R-Atchison, said the bill "provides a liaison between this legislature and the parties that is badly needed." Among provisions of the bill are sections to put the pro president ten or minority one in. Sen. Richard Rogers, R-Manhattan, who explained and then defended the bill to the Senate, said it was designed to create "at least some dialogue between legislators on our political agenda." minority leader of the House on the state executive committee of each major party. work out a settlement." Steiniger told the Senate the bill would result in legislators becoming more responsive to political parties than to people, and said the legislature was "embarking on a dangerous, unusual and undemocratic precedent." TOPEKA (AP)—A heated debate in the Kansas Senate was sparked Tuesday when Jack Steineger, D-Muncie, described a bill which would restructure political party organizations as a "statutory shotgun marriage." NEXONHAD asked Congress to order an end to the strike to dissolve what he said was a threat to the nation's over-all economy. In the House, a proposal for a 60-day injection to bring a partial end to the cancer. The Senate compulsory arbitration bill sent to the House provides, however, for an end to the arbitration procedure when voluntary settlement of all issues is certified by both sides to the secretary of labor. Details of the settlement were not immediately disclosed, but Bridges had said earlier that the retroactivity of a lawsuit against him was the last major issue to be worked out. THE STRIKE WAS the longest in the first six years and the first six years with a threepound. The strike, called by the ILWU last July 1, ran for 100 days before Nixon invoked the Taft-Hartley Act to interrupt the work stoppage for an 80-day cooling-off period. Nixon said the strike cost the United States $600 million in export losses. Some economists put the overall cost a nearly $2 billion. The walkout idied 24 West Coast ports and choked off shipments to Hawaii. The 80 days ran out last Dec. 25, and the union resumed the strike Jan. 17. Nixon Proposes Tax On Sulphur Pollution When the opposing sides returned to negotiations Jan. 31, Kagel, a veteran negotiator in port labor problems, was called in to assist. WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Nixon has proposed his first pollution tax, a levy on the sulfur emitted from the monsters of factories and power plants. Administration spokesman said the tax would encourage industry to meet regional targets. To the extent that they don't, however, the sulfur tax could be passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices for electricity and other products. The sulfur tax was one of six legislative proposals promised in a special message on the environment, sent to Congress Tuesday. Nixon said he would propose a measure encouraging states to take control of the location of highways and airports by 1975. Those which failed to obtain federal approval of their plans by then would start losing federal highway and airport land and land-acquisition money from the Land and Water Conservation Fund. EACH YEAR they delay, their federal and in these areas would be reduced an additional percentage and would be distributed to states with approved plans. Nixon also proposed to discourage the development of coastal wetlands by removing the eligibility of projects located in coastal areas. Such efforts benefits available to commercial construction. Two other proposals would seek to control the land disposal of toxic wastes and the soil runoff from construction sites. The federal state population under federal guidelines Still another proposal would for the first time, make the harming of an endangered species of animal a federal offense, subject to criminal penalties. It also would seek to protect species on the verge of becoming "endangered." IN ADDITION to the legislative proposals, the Nixon message announced a motion to amend the law. environmental field, including; A complete ban on the use of poisons to control predator animals on federal land, much of which is used, under permits, for the grazing of cattle and sheep. —An order for development of standards to protect farm workers from pesticide pollution —An order for preparation of energy- saving new insulation standards for masonry. —A request for the design of a coil. The sulfur tax would require payment of 13 cents per pound of sulfur oxides emitted from smokestacks when primary exhaust protection protect public health have not been met. Nixon proposed the designation of 18 federal parks, nomuments and recreation areas as wilderness areas to protect their natural condition. And, at the same time, he announced that 20 parcels of federal land have been declared surplus and will be transferred to state and local governments for park and recreational use as part of a continuing program. KU Employes Plan to Lobby Legislature A group of KU employees planned to meet at the state capitol building this morning in an effort to help raise salaries for University faculty and staff. The group expected to receive the support of faculty and students. According to a statement released Tuesday, the group is working to build "a better University for the students and the community of Lawrence." Six Faculty Members Copplaintiffs in Gay Lib Case By MARTI STEWART Kansan Staff Writer For the members of the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front, the fight for University recognition is a personal endeavor. Many students and faculty members, however, have expressed support of the front although they themselves are not members. six members of the University of Kansas faculty were coplan- nies in the front suit, which was heard in a United States District C Court. the front's action involved just one issue, freedom of expression. It is assumed, he said, that the only reason for abridgment of the right to dissent would be have a disruptive influence on the society. He thought that the front's disruptive and that their freedom of expression had been injured. "They weren't going to burn down buildings." he said, "or interfere with my classes or anyone else's classes." David Willer, associate professor of sociology, said his support of the front's action involved just one issue, freedom of expression. WILDER DID NOT think that recognition was symonymous with endorsement of homosexuality. He said his support of the front page of *The Washington Post* would be a surprise. John C. Wright, professor of psychology and human development, also thinks freedom of expression is the basic issue in the "My support stems from a commitment I have to freedom of speech," he said, "and to the basic civil rights of students, which I honestly believe are infringed upon, not necessarily by individuals, but by entities like the University, who may feel as if they are acting in loco parens or who feel that if a number of people in the general population agree to prohibit discussion it is their duty to prohibit it. "The principle of freedom of speech is not tempered by the content. It's absolutely independent of the content." **WRIGHT HAIRT** he was not taking the position that the University had acted out of malicious discrimination, but out of calumnies to him. He said that the aim of the group was not a matter of someone exploiting someone else, that the front was not soliciting. "There is no evidence," Wright said, "that homosexual behavior among consenting adults harms anyone. There is no evidence that talking about homosexuality, communism, neo-facism or anything else harms anyone." He said there was good evidence that the exchange of views was helpful to society "I'm sure that people in Gay Lib have some motivation to justify their life style and to gain acceptance by everyone else, besides wishing to have meetings," he said. "Whether it will have that same effect as I would, or whether that they will be given the same opportunities as everyone else." "in a free intellectual community people ought to be able to decide for themselves," he said. Wright said he thought one motive of the front in its request for recognition was to gain social approval of the community. MICHAEL J. MAHER, associate professor of physiology and cell biology, sees the issue as a very complex one that can be discussed "On the simplest level," he said, "students should be able to have any kind of organization they want without administration information." "I also feel strongly that there shouldn't be any restrictions on an individual's sex life, particularly when it 'bewind two consenting adults. Gay people have been heavily repressed, legally and socially." Maher said the most important and most radical aspect of recognition of the front was that it would force people to re-evaluate societal and female roles. In this respect, he said, gay liberation overlaps other groups such as women's liberation. "Males and females are socialized into roles and there are stereotypes of what males and females should be like," he said. "If you want to deviate from the roles you have to fight. Gay liberation raises serious questions about the structure of society. It also raises consideration of sexual roles and what they mean and what they do to people." MAHER, WHO was originally listed as the faculty adviser for the front, has been associated with the movement for quite a while. His association with members of the movement has made him reject the "societal view that homosexuals are sick." he said. "Having many friends who are homosexual makes me realize that they are not sick," he said. "The sickness comes from society. Homosexuality should be recognized as an accepted variance of sexuality, and the government could do away with oppressive laws dealing with sexual behavior." Arthur Skidmore, assistant professor of philosophy, said he had two reasons for signing the complaint. "They said my signing would help their cause and I thought it was a just cause," he said, "I also felt that I had been a victim, along with everyone else, of thought control. It is not up to the Chancellor's office to decide what ideas are acceptable and not acceptable. It injured everyone. I felt I had been personally injured." SKIDMORE SAID that he thought the Chancellor had acted out of Skidmore said thought control should never be an option the Chancellor considered. He said matters of free speech and due process should take precedence over any other considerations. He said he did not have a concrete opinion about boraxalexa. expediency and not out of principle and that he had taken the course that would cause the least unhappiness to the governor, legislators, Regents, faculty, students and groups of students. In doing this, Skidmore said, the Chancellor had not caused any of these people great happiness, but had minimized the unhappiness of most of them. HE SAID he thought the Chancellor's strategy was not only wrong but also fairly dangerous. If the court decision goes against the front, he said, this will set a dangerous precedent for nonrecommendation of otherrows and for thought control. "Is it an equally valid form of sensual love between people or a perverted form of love? I don't know how to look at it. It ought to be legalized, though. It doesn't do anybody any harm and I think all crimes without victims should be taken off the books," he said. "The problem has to do with the reasons why the University doesn't recognize gay liberation," said Donald Marquiz, assistant professor of law at the university. "If we have recognized groups," he said, "and they are organized around certain ideas, what reasons can there be for them?" Marguis said it was difficult to accept the reasons offered by the University as the real reasons for denial of recognition. The "sexual proclivity" argument did not seem a good argument in light of other groups recognized by the University, he said. See GAY LIB Page 2 2 Wednesday, February 9, 1972 University Daily Kansan People ... .. Places .. .. Things People: Attorneys for the CHICAGO 7 told a federal appeals court Tuesday that five riot convictions stemming from violence at the time of the 1986 Democratic National Convention should be overturned, arguing that the federal law was unconstitutional and the MANUEL FIERRO, chairman of the Kansas Institute for Minority Empowerment and a leader of the Mexican-American community, told a news conference Tuesday the Kansas Department of Education had returned to the federal government in 1971 about $4.1 million in funds which local school districts didn't want to spend on school food programs. Places: SAIGON—Enemy gunners early Wednesday slammed 25 giant rockets into the big U.S. air base at Da Nang and the surrounding city. The allied commands said three Vietnamese civilians were killed in a plane attack one Vietnamese soldier and 10 U.S. servicemen were wounded. Things: The Nikon administration Tuesday disavowed any intention of RAISING TAXES in the coming fiscal year while Congressional Democrats put pressure on the President to submit loopholes-closing tax reform proposals by March 15. Campus Briefs Marlene Sanders Tonight Marlene Sanders, ABC news correspondent, will speak at 8 the KU Commission on the Status of Women talk is sponsored by the KU Commission on the Status of Women. After her speech there will be a coffee sponsored by the Lawrence professional chapter of Theta Sigma Phi in the Cen- tral College. Rodeo and Riding Club The KU Rodeo and Riding Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. Assembly Meeting Cancelled The College Assembly meeting scheduled for 4 p.m. Feb. 15 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union has been cancelled. Gay Lib . . . Continued from Page 1 HE THEOUGHT the real reasons were that people in the state wouldJet up if recognition were granted or something would be given. Assume that the University will not recognize groups that will upset people, "be said." That is bad university policy. A university that will not recognize a student for any reason of recognition is a denial of the policy of allowing all to be heard." Recognition is more than just a free speech issue, according to MUH. "It isn't just that there ought to be freedom of speech," he said. The university, as institution of unbased inquiry, shouldn't do anything that would harm the university. He said he was disappointed that the whole question of recognition could not be decided by the University judiciary instead of by a federal court. He thought his downed decided to go to the Court of Chancellor's power to overrule University judiciary decisions. MARQUIS SAID there was also a pragmatic problem involved in the issue. He said there was no difference in principle between the University's action in the front's case and firing or not hiring a student whose views might reach the public and cause unfavorable reaction. "This is the type of thing faculty ought to take more seriously," he said. "Principles of this decision are as compatible with purging faculty as with purging student organizations, as compatible with maintaining a refusal of recognition. I don't see how the faculty can sit still." The front's case. Marquis should, be decided not only on legal merits but also on the idea of what the University community is about. He said part of a student's education had to do with discussion outside the classroom. "If you limit that aspect of the University," he said, "you're limiting something important." Kemp Houk, assistant professor of English, when questioned about his reasons for supporting the front's suit, submitted this answer. "You ask me to make a statement for a publication run almost exclusively by and for a white male minority. Until Black people and women are given full participation in the top levels of the UDK, this observation will have to be my only statement." As long as there are Job Hunters... We're in the right business. Each year thousands of new graduates compete for a dwindling number of jobs. They find that company recruiters are more interested in people who put up a hard fight and put him to sleeves few job offers. Graduates also face stiff competition from returning veterans. Out of desperation many graduates are left with no choice. Getting the job you want is going to take work. You are have to have out jobs rather than waiting for news of open positions. Challenge this changing job market. Have your resume published in the 1972 Graduate Register. Published annually, the Graduate Register is sent to 200 top personnel managers in North America; reference bible requires them select sensors that fit their company needs. Send your carefully typed, one-page ($8x11) resume to the Register. Mail it to you with your check for $20 to cover publication expenses. The Graduate Register Graduate Registrar P.O. Box 60566 Chicago, IL 60656 Atlanta, GA 30306 Ellsworth Hall Committee Reviews Proposed Social Policy Changes By GARY NEIL PETERSON Kansan Staff Weller Twenty-one elected residents of Ellsworth Hall met Tuesday evening at Ellsworth with representatives from the dean of office and members of the women's office in a closed meeting to discuss the proposed social policy changes by the administration for next year. Eighteen of the 21-member review committee were elected Jan. 31 by their fellow residents following the suggestion made in previous negotiation meetings with the administrative housing board. During the past week, the 21 members have individually been studying the new contract and the housing board the housing board last December TUESDAY'S MEETING was the first scheduled by the group to ask questions of an intimidative teacher, increasing interest in costs at the hall for next year, the reduction of open house hours to 17 a day, the counseling and reading study programs, the training of individual problems and complaints which led the housing board to eliminate coeducational floors and the contract for 1972-73 law students. Lawrence third-year law student acting as mediator at the request Those changes, as already printed in information pamphlets, indicate a cessation of the 24-hour open visitation rights and a change from room to male or female floors. Following the review by the committee of the changes, the 21 candidates were among them to enter serious negotiations with William Bafour face-to-face with his office for affairs; Donald Alderson, dean of men; Emily Taylor, dean of women; J. Wiley, dean of women; J. Mike Sundermer, Ray Tayman; Mike Sundermer, RayTayman; Mo., junior and president of Association University in HALE (AUR) of both sides, said Tuesday. The coming negotiations will determine whether the changes adopted will stand or if it will be accepted on the policy will be accepted. THE MEMBERS of the housing board hope there will be a quick settlement on differences to enable the University to resume mail residence hall information to persons indicating university housing and to allow beginning print of new contracts. The mailing of the information packets was stopped on Jan. 28 after initial meetings and early stipulations to the housing board. Police Now Investigating Painting of KU Woman The housing board first ran into difficulties from board members of their desire to get rental information out rather than in the past. Alderson said. The Lawrence Police Department investigated suspects involved in the detainment of a 20-year-old topeka sophomore At 1 a.m. Saturday the police said she had been forced to disobey and was then painted red by three men in a compact, The student told police officers that while she was walking to a Campus Bulletin TODAY 20.0m 29' Kaisas Union. Chrysler Seminar: 8:30 a.m., In- troduction. TODAY SUA Festival of Arts Committee: 8 a.m. Chrysler Seminar: 8:30 a.m., International Room. Room m. B. Blood Drive: 10 a.m. Ballroom. French Table: 11 a.m. Meadowlark Coffee Table: 12 a.m. Cafeteria Visual Arts: 11:30 a.m., Alcove B Speech Pathology: 11:30 a.m. Alcove C Cafeteria Cafeteria Speech Pathology: 11:30 a.m. Alcove C Irish Catholics Stage Day of Disruption' D Cafeteria Search Committee Placement: 11:40 a.m. Alcove D Cafeteria Search Committee Placement: 11:45 a.m. Suffolk Search Committee: 11: 45 a.m., Sunflower afterfera Faculty Forum: moon, Westminster Center Placement Officers; noon. Alcove A Cafeteria. Chrysler Seminar: noon. English Room Medicinal Chemistry: 12:30 p.m., Curr. Chrysler Seminar: noon, English Room. Medicinal Chemistry: 12:30 p.m., Curry Room. History; moon, Cottonwood Calderia, History Seminar; moon, English Room. **white:** 2:30 p.m., Oread Room. **Social Welfare HBSE:** 2:30 p.m., Room. Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark Cafeteria Caleteria. Social Welfare Undergraduate Com- Social Welfare Field Instruction: 2.30 p.m., Room 305B Social Welfare Undergraduate Committee: 2:30 p.m. Oread Room Philosophy: 4 p.m., Pine Room Committee on the Status of Women: BELFAST (AP) - Bombs and gunmen today ushered in a new era of the Roman Catholics who want Britishism in Northern Ireland Committee on the Status of Women: 6 p.m. Forum Boom. cade, she had been offered a ride by the men near 19th Street and Naismith Drive. Instead of taking her to the cafe, however, one man rode to the other two forced her to the back of the bus, pulled off her clothes and covered her with red paint. She was then allowed to put her clothes back on except for bra and panties, and leave the vehicle. ESC: 3 p. m. Regionalist Room. Student Transportation Committee: 3.30 p.6.h "Bordir" 10:50m p.6.l "Centaedra" 6 p.m., Centenial Room The victim claimed that she was not physically harmed by the men, but that she slipped getting hit. As a result, a result suffered a mid-concussion injury. Philosophy: 6:30 p.m. English Room Carlton Rectal: 7 p.m. Two other civilians were injured in a midnight bomb blast that smashed windows and flung shrapened over a wide area of the same district. A garage and a apartment were by two explosions near the border with the Irish Republic, but no casualties were reported. SUA Posty: 4 p.m., Jayhawk Room. Philosophy: 4 a.m., Pigeon Roost. Student Advisory Committee: 6.30 p.m. Oread Room. p.m. Governors Room. Student Social Work: 3:30 p.m. Council KU COMMISSION SPRING 72 WEEK ABOUT WOMEN SYMPOSIUM STATUS of Women Monday 10:30 AM. KLWN "World of Women" 7 p.m. KANU "Women in the Professions" Tuesday film "Women = Liberation" ABC Documentary 7:30 Forum rm Thursday 7 FEBRUARY Speaker: MARIENE SANDERS ABC NEWS CORRESPONDENT 8:00 Woodruff Friday Wednes. Panel: Leading Local forces in the "Sugar and Spice-Revisited" Women's Movement 7:30 BIG-EIGHT Rm 7:30 Forum rm East Asian Studies; 7:30 p.m., Regionalist Room. National Environmental Law: 7 p.m. Room 305 She was taken to Watkins Hospital where she was treated for the concussion and released about an hour later. Kappa Psi: 7 p.m. Council Room. Classical Film: 7; 30; 9, 303; 9, 303 Bailey Spring Symposium: 7:30 p.m., Forum Room. East Asian Studies: 7:30 p.m., Hertonals An unidentified civilian was killed by gunmen in Belfast's Catolic Ardone district. He was the 240th person to die since September. "What we have seen of the Irish Republic, we do not like," he said. Police declined comment on speculation that the bombing in Chair: 7:30 p.m. Patterson A. Chief: 7:30 p.m. Woolford AUDIENCE Committee: 8:00 p.m. Government Room: 8:00 p.m. University Room: 20:30 p.m. Student Finance: 10:30 p.m. International Prime Minister Brian Faulkner, in an unyielding night, railed out any idea of unity as a solution to the violence and bloodshed that have struck Protestant-unioned U.S. leaders of Protestant-ruled U.S. one of Belfast's most heavily populated Catholic districts could have been carried out by the church to tie in with the start of Distance Day. Williams Safety Equipment NILSSON SCHMILSSON On RCA Records NILSSON also available on 8 track stereo tapes reg. $5^{98} $3.67 KIEF'S Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER at Patronize Kansan Advertisers Hand gesture FURNITURE ESTATE GOODS ANTIQUES & COLLECTABLES QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET PICK-UP & DELIVERY DISHES & GLASSWARE BARGAINS 40 Stores Under One Roof! 811 New Hampshire 841-3082 ★ HEAD FOR HENRY'S ★ SPECIAL ★ 2 Delicious Chili Dogs For Only 49¢ Henrys 6th & Missouri • 843-2139 Offer good Wed., Thurs., Fri.; Feb. 9, 10, 11 Union Ballroom Feb.11th Ellsworth Hall Feb. 9th and 10th 11:30 - 4:30 RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE 9:30 - 2:30 Give a part of YOURSELF Inventory Liquidation This sale will last only as long as the inventory does. All Sales Final Storewide Liquidation Prices like . . . Bellbottom Jeans Stripes & Solids as low as $2.99 Every Item Reduced Tops-Bottoms-Belts-Suspenders EVERYTHING PRICED TO SELL FAST TO MAKE WAY FOR OUR "REMODELING" THE WEARHOUSE 841 1/2 MASS. Wednesday, February 9, 1972 2 JOE BAKERY Kansan Photo by STEVE HILT Joc's Bakery Lures Many Tired Students Joe M. Smith supplies ever-increasing pastry demand Late Night Joe's Bakery Work Is A Family Affair Kansan Staff Writer By MARSHA SEARS Late at night, the thought of Joe's Bakery, 616 W. 9th St., being open is enough to tempt any person to take a delicious study breakfast. Working from 6 p.m. to 8 a.m. every day except Saturday at Jockey's Joe M. Jones' Bakey, manages to supply the big demand for his habit-forming "I don't know why we're popular with KU students, but I'm glad we are," Smith said as shaping dough into shapes. As Smith talked, he constantly worked. "I don't even know now many doughnuts. I make a large group of people, if I had all the doughnuts back, I'd have been as big as the variety. Karyn SMITH SAID that he enjoyed his bakery business and that more than half his business was from KU students. Joe's Bakery has been at its present location for about 10 years. "I opened my bakery when I was about the same age as most men. I started out by getting older, my customers are always the same age. I like to do it in a small space." Smith's interest in baking began when he was a Navy cook. Smith had a discharge Smith discovered as a waitress that it was difficult to find employment. He thought the bakery business would offer After a two-year apprentice, Smith attended the American Institute of Baking. At Baker's bakery, he opened his bakery in Lawrence. At first, the bakery was open only during the day. Soon Smith and his college students, who were walking to movies, would come to the bakery in the late afternoon. He would keep the bakery open all night. WITH THE INCREASE OF students who have cars, the school bus driver Smith said that Wednesday and early nights are especially busy. HOMESTEAD, FlA. (Ap)— them themed, have been a field here. Conservationists believe they were poisoned by fire. "Usually the business is spread even out between night until about 2 o'clock, so we don't have to during finals, we're busy until S a m," he said. "After basketball games, I go to a bar." Work at the bakery is a family affair. Smith's wife does better in the kitchen than she does the bakery during the day. After School, Smith's daughter works with her. During June, July and August, bakery is closed. The Smiley co- llaboration helps the building. Then, after a winter of hard work, he relaxes in the kitchen. Summer school students are not given the opportunity to be doughnuts, but they can look forward to the baker's Clinton Project 5 Years Away By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer Recreational facilities for Lawrence area residents and KU students will be available when a new Lawrence library is completed. President Nixon has included the Clinton Lake Project in his 1973 A spokesman for the Corps of Engineers said Tuesday that Clinton Lake is a corps flood control project, but additional benefits would include facilities for boating, camping, swimming and pinching. Construction of the reservoir lake will take about five years. Douglas County Engineer Dean R. Sanderson said recreational facilities would probably resemble those at Perry Lake. The estimated cost of the construction of the lake, located on the Wakara River is $4.53 million. The figure is based on an 1971 construction cost. The federal project is funded yearly by the U.S. Army. late summer, but being included in the budget would allow the corps to continue working until then. The corps began studying the project in the late 1950's, and submitted it to Congress for approval in 1962. The Clinton administration water supply storage, downstream control, and recreational facilities was authorized in 1962. Further studies were required until the project began buying the land in 1969. Last week President Nixon included $9.5 million for the Clinton Lake project in his 1973 budget request to Congress. A spokesman for the corps said that he was not authorized to authorize the 1973 budget until About one-third of the about acquire the land the acquired. The remainder of the land for public use and access road will be bought in the next Clearing of the land began in September 1970, and the contract for the construction of informationation facilities was set in December 1971. YAMAHA TABLERO SALES 1918 Honda 90c $450 1919 Honda 92c $450 1920 Honda 106c $450 1921 Honda 116c $450 1922 Honda 136c $450 1923 Honda 156c $450 1924 Honda 176c $450 1925 Yamaha T126 $450 1926 Yamaha T146 $450 1927 Yamaha T166 $450 1928 Yamaha T186 $450 ERN'S CYCLE SALES 214 North 2nd Phone 853-3331 1. Foosball Match Here Sunday Plans now call for a single-game, double-elimination structure, said Paul Dewey. SAU board vice president. Final and semifinal winners will be determined on the basis of the first person or team to win two games. SUA FOOSBALL Tournament of CHAMPIONS Sunday, Feb. 13, 1:00 p.m. !NO ENTRY FEE! excitement of your love in a DIAMOND TRIO Made for each other . . . the groom's handsome wedding band, and the bride's beautiful bouquet. perfectly matched to symbolize the beauty of the match made on your wedding day All 3 rings $269 Available in 14k white or yellow gold Ray Christian 2 Locations 809 Mass. 836 Kansas Lawrence Topeka The excitement of your love in a DIAMOND TRIO Made for each other... the groom's handmade wedding band, and the bride's precious bridal set. The perfectly matched five symb- loices the beauty of the match made on your wedding day! All 3 rings $269 Available in 14kt white or yellow gold Ray Christian 2 Locations 809 Mass. Lawrence 836 Kansas Topeka Student Union Activities will sponsor a Fooseball tournament at 1 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas University Ballroom. All contestants wishing to participate in the tournament must sign up in the SUA office before noon Friday. singles and doubles UNION BALLROOM 8-10 Tables Available Contestants must be signed up in SUA Office by noon, Friday, Feb. 11 P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. CUSTOM JEWELRY WE WILL WORK FROM YOUR OWN DESIGN, OR CREATE A DESIGN FOR YOU WEDDING RINGS ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY Nitewear for your VALENTINE! ❤ Form-fit Rogers ❤ Maidenform ❤ Jennifer Dale Gowns and shorty PJ's from $6 to $15 (free gift wrapping) FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 B35 MASS. VI3-4833 Jay SHOPPE Downtown LOVE TAKES MANY FORMS Send A Valentine In Print This Year THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN It’s a Sweetheart of a Deal! LOVE TAKES MANY FORMS Send A Valentine In Print This Year THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN This Year Will Have A Special Valentine Classified Section on Monday February 14th Send A Message to Your Special Friend. IF SHE’S ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS or TOO FAT FOR CANDY a CLASSIFIED AD IS DANDY Let Someone Know How You Feel About Them. ONLY $1.00 for 25 Words Bring Your Special Message to 111 Flint by 5:00 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10 Your Message Will Appear Monday February 14. IF SHE'S ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS or TOO FAT FOR CANDY a CLASSIFIED AD IS DANDY Let Someone Know How You Feel About Them. ONLY $1.00 for 25 Words Bring Your Special Message to 111 Flint by 5:00 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10 Your Message Will Appear Monday February 14. 4 Wednesday, February 9, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THRONE A Few Sour Notes The troubles called to our attention by the February Sisters are real and the Sisters are, from all occasions, an extremely dedicated group. It's a sad thing when an organization with such conviction and such a good cause leaves such an awful taste in the mouth. Even as the group's anonymous representatives all weekend insisted to the contrary, it was evident that they wanted—and needed—publicity. They would not have troubled themselves for any other reason with such a flamboyant gesture as occupying the East Asian Center. Their seeking publicity is understandable. I do not criticize it. What I do criticize is their iron-fistedness. The February Sisters demanded a right to which no newsmaker is entitled: that of dictating what the public could know about them. They sought to inform others, but they demanded University funds, yet they refused even to identify themselves. They sought to manage the news and this is inexcusable. When several sisters attacked a Kansan photographer it was evidence of just how far they were willing to go in the interest of anonymity. The Sisters, like it or not, were news figures, and they were being photographed in a public attack, like it, and their attack throw in their jeopardy several hundred dollars' worth of photographic equipment This from an organization which claimed to stand for nonviolence and nondestructiveness. The apology that followed was sincere, but the damage had been done; it was evident that if anyone stood in their way the February Sisters were quite willing to employ the thug tactics they purportedly despised. We could set aside the tactical errors of the Sisters' game plan and look at the demands themselves, but here again there is a snag, for in the instance of day care they are asking the right thing of the wrong people. In addition to being expensive, day care is practically a necessity for many mothers who wish to function as students or in jobs. Lawrence needs better day care facilities. However, it is not this University's responsibility to provide them. Even assuming it were, the money simply isn't there. We all have seen too much cutting of the academic corners to try to make way for added expense of day care. Yet despite the flaws in their tactics and their argument, the Sisters have achieved something. They have focused attention upon a situation that too long has been ignored and which now can be acted upon. Publicizing the problem need not be a small achievement. There are ways to realize the goals of the February Sisters. Brash and theatrical as their methods sometimes were, they succeeded in using them about the pight of many other community. Resentment from either side should not preclude a united effort to reach a solution. -Chip Crews Editor Garry Wills PETER T. SMITH Hatred is always a dismaying thing—the anti-creative spirit, that which would undo things. That is why it was so very sad to hear Bernadette Devil say she would not weep for any British soldiers who fall in the aftermath of the bombings of massacre, and that she wished she had got Secretary Mundging by the throat. Three Angry Women Mawding was in the best tradition of Britain's treatment of the Irish question when the little spitfire was all over him, hitting and scratching—he simply ignored her. Better a slight scratch than a ruffled moment. One of the worst things about oppression is that it makes its victims adopt the oppressor's ways, becoming more like them and worse. This is not really excusable. And Miss Devin's fury was as understandable as such things can be. She was in the crowd that was fired on, and she was caught by a man she seemed convinced that the fusillade came without warning or provocation. Yet here, a day later, she must listen to the blair assurance of authority that the woman was all quite orderly and correct. even when it is understandable. I suppose a student from Kent State would have had a hard time restraining himself if he had been present at Mr. Nixon's or Mr. Agnew's smug first encounter. You've seen even better parallel might be the presence in our Congress of a villager of My Lai, forced to sit and listen to the Army's first vindications of that man; his Daskin's reaction was regrettable, she was overwrought, and with cause, wave complimentary things at the President–remember the girl with her “Bring Us Together” placard—get kind treatment, to show the President is listening to his people. But those who bring the death's head of what we are doing abroad into official party-time are booed, insulted, and elected. It is interesting to compare her anger with that of another woman opposed to killing. Her name is Carol Feraci and she felt the American opposition to American killing had not got through the President. She took a "Stop The Killing" flag with her when she went to sing at the White House. Little girls who Besides, they risk more female anger—in this case, Martha Mitchell's bellicose proclamation that Miss Feraci "ought to be torn limb from limb. Now there is a piece of petty understanding as excusable. When Miss Benjama grew that she would like to get Mauro up the throat, it is because she has seen death inflicted on her own. The anger at least proportioned to outsize human anguish. But Mrs. Mitchell, in party mood, would dismember a girl, not for inflicting death, but for opposing its infliction. That tells us a great deal about the etiquette indeed, of civilization. Communication with those of America's ruling class, Miss Devlin is not only a proper lady, but a model of restraint. Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate Have no fear, because that sister will change as soon as she Readers Respond Feminists; Wills; Review... Spiro Sisters To the Editor: I would like to comment briefly about the actions taken this past weekend by a certain group of volunteers. We assuredly rate attention in future history books, slightly below the national golf shooting. I'm speaking of that ambiguous horde of athleticists, the February Sisters. Somehow, I managed to stay calm through those few tense hours that they occupied the room. And it finally became inflamed upon overhearing some "girls" the next day who were well equipped with the latest slang by a bunch of bureaucrats "busters" as being "together." She was praising the fact that the group was well organized and that they had gathered out continual press releases. Don't worry though, girls, because I am fully prepared and qualified as a male chauvinist pig the human race is at fainting my half of a little hard, though, when one of yours in a tighter sweat and tight jeans walks by. She must be one of the uneducated sisters who is working under that antiquated system, headed by marriage. To the threat of sounding trite, I would like to say this about that. I was watching all of this with baited breath because if their ploy worked, I was going to rally. But no, I had been bad heating in my room. Naturally, I've come to the conclusion that all of my friends have that stuff to heat, therefore, I am fully prepared to barricade myself in the men's john of the Douglas House until the city warms up me. the confrontation's boiling point suddenly started to simmer when the whole matter turned out to be another 'lack of knowledge' in the dismay of these idealistic broads, their demands were already being worked on. But I have no fear that given time, a list of demands can be compiled. Long live the oppressed. I would like to say this about that. Those women of the female sex were possibly the most untogether group I have ever seen. Most of them were about 30 human beings have taken it upon themselves to educate their half of the human race to the fact that they are oppressed and it's all the other half's fault, and that the women Kikas had better do something about it. With considerable haste. gups down 30 minutes of hard sell from Robin Morgan. Look that cataclysmic catalyst used to make the Sisters, who were ready to castrate everybody starting with Chalmeris. I never open another bottle of wine. Don't give up hope girls, because I became educated by this whole debacle. For one, I learned that there is a South East country andided and that, two, it's at 1332 Louisiana. And that's where it's at. PS: Next week, I'm holding 117 press conferences just so that I can make two things perfectly clear: That I did accomplish something by writing this letter and that I am denouncing any Republican candidate seeking the Republican candidacy for governor of this state. John Overbrook Oskaloosa Special Student Hef's Majority I just wanted to publicly commend the February Sisters for repressing the cause of liberation for women and men on their behalf. In other way that would have been more successful in bringing the need for individual rights into the scope of public ridicule and scorn than their recent take over of the Asian House Studies Building. Of course, there is a great deal of logic in seizing a campus but then putting forth the force of six demands, all of which were being dealt with in a concrete way. You can be sure that the seizure even hit the news. Done that way, you can be sure to know very well able to say that you succeeded. There are many legitimate demands, being made by the females in their medical practice towards women, I know this from first-hand experience. The woman has been head of my family for 22 years. There are the legalistic problems to be sure, but the basic root of the problem is that of the woman's sexuality. I am tired of hearing the blame for the problems of women being placed on the "male chauvinist role" and the "female chauvinist pig"; call them Hefner's silent majority if you will, who are more than twice as capable of being a role handed down by cultural generations. Equal rights for women would indeed be a good thing. It would eliminate the risk of living up to the masculine stereotype and let each of us become all that he or she is capable of becoming. However, since men are in charge right now, they will hang on very tightly to their financially and authoritatively superior and until all the women, including all of them, are majors, majority are ready and willing to take on equal responsibilities along with their equal rights. Sisters, if you want to do something really worthwhile, help with teaching buildings and attacking Kansan photographers, why don't you go and work with the Commission on Human Rights to create a fantastic educational program? Why don't you join your Partners in Humanity! In information technology and there are some around; and work with them in solving the many problems concerning sexual abuse in schools; and make all males "chauvinists" use. Perhaps then, you can say you struck a real blow for the freedom of the individual—female and male. Darras L. Delamaide Pittsburg, Sophomore War To the Editor; The war is still winding down. Paul Lewis Topeka Sophomore Nixon's Owls To the Editor: Your story and picture about White House staff man Dolf Droge talking in Topeka alarmed me of three possibilities: the man is no White House guitarist giving talks on Vietnam; the guy is mythical, a possibility suggested by the photograph. The second possibility is of an impostor: Droge is really a declacate, or non-university representative of the White House, infiltrated into the United States, the White House, and Kansas in order to lead people down the hill. When he happens when guitar-playing begins. The third possibility is the most alarming of all: The man is indeed is giving us signals of what he has done before, before have mostly flown away, but the Nixon Administration is substituting predator birds for prey, before as owls and eagles are being loosed around the dovecote. Moreover, something worse: man can be able to wind up an man to be able to wind up an own guitar accompaniment. But think of Henry Kissinger a rendition in German of an aris from Gоттердамеринг, and o Richard Nixon concluding every press conference with a couple piano selections. Anyone want to buy a used T' cheap? Thomas B. Larson Wills To the Editor: I wish to express my deep appreciation to the *Kansan* for printing *Garry Wills*. My wife, Wills has a first name, he writes in an incursive, nonnonsense fashion, and above all manages to arrange for storage to express his convictions. The last column which I have had the privilege of reading, is now a declaration of War; it is an masterpiece. It reveals Nixon's so-called peace proposal to the United States in 1965, which is—a new declaration of war. —Leland J. Pritchard Professor of Economics To the Editor: War Rap From your letter to the editor, Kenneth Lucas, (Kansas Feb. 4) it is evident that you don't understand statement about Congressmen and members of the press allowing themselves to be "used by the enemy to stir up division in their own country on which you base your argument is that it is a "myth" that if the United States withdraws of its troops from Vietnam the Communists will release American prisoners of war. "Neither the North Vietnamese nor the National Liberation Front ever made a formal proposal to attack at the Paris peace talks." I refer you to point one of the seven point statement submitted by the Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Viet Nam before 1971, which states: "If the United States Government sets terminal date for the withdrawal from South Viet Nam . . . the agreement on . . . the release of the totality of militarymen of all parties . . . including American captured in North Viet Nam " I further refer you to the final sentence of your own letter: "Is it too great a request to ask that you confine your editors to a logical discussion of reality and emotion on emojis?" "response to a statement you viidently do not even understand?" Byron Edmondson Lawrence senior It is unfortunate that the Kansan reviewer of four plays wrote a shallow review of this collection from black theatre. In attempting to assess how an appreciation for戏画 has been presented as a genuine simulacrum of, rather than a travesty on the Afro-American. In attempt to assess Horace Kansan's work in "Three in Black," the Kansan reviewer failed to consider: 1. The subtle implication of reoccurring themes and the use of foreshadowing in run as fine threads throughout the four plays. 2. The uniqueness of Experimental Theatre in allowing the audience to become part of the contemporary views of blackness in America. 3. And the interrelationship of "jive" talk and "intellectual" conversation with "four" by Three in Black. To the Editor: Review In claiming the black KU production, mediocre, one wonders if the Kansan reviewer actually 'saw' the play. If indeed there is something bad in production, it is not the acting, staging or directing, but in the Kansan review. Michael L. Edwards Kansas City Graduate Student THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom-UN-4 4810 Business Office-UN-4 4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except when otherwise indicated. Subscription rates: $4 a semester. $10 a year. Second class position paid at Kansas goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without prior qualification or foreign origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas. Griff and the Unicorn I SEE YOU'RE WEARING GLASSES, NOW, LOVIE. YUMPH! I SEE YOU'RE WEARING GLASSES, NOW, LOUIE. I SEE YOU'RE WEARING GLASSES, NOW, LOUIE YUMPH! WHAT'S WRONG WITH YOUR EYES? NUTHIN'S WRONG WIT MUH EYES... I JUST CAN'T SEE WIT 'EM. SOKOLKEF YUMPH! WHAT'S WRONG WITH YOUR EYES? NUTHIN'S WRONG WIT MUH EYES... By Sokoloff I JUST CAN'T SEE WIT 'EM. "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman Editor Chip Crowns Associate Editor Mike Martinez Campus Editor Spencer Scotter Hike Rainer Beaneau Ray Eric Kramer, Ron Kita Copy Cliches Sally Carlson, Ron Kita Assistant Campus Editors Sally Carlson, Ron Kita Specialist Sports Editor Rob Simmons Feature Editor Barbara Spurck Editorial Manager Barbara Spurck Wire Editors Joyne Dunbar, Nancy Jones Makeup Editors Dick Hay, John Goodrick Reviewers Ed Lola, Kit Nether Photographers Gerald Scraper, Tom Brunsby Office Manager Tiana Rubb Correspondent BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams Business Manager Associate Marketing Manager Advertising Manager Associate Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Campaign Management Promotional Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Carol Young Associate Marketing Manager Norman Maseley Associate Marketing Manager Dale Piergeridge Dave Murray David Murray 泰 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READERS DISCUSS INGRESS SERVICES, INC. 380 Lauxing Ave. New York, N.Y. 10017 theays theays this this an anace nientine anace anace by asian of the necessity inme mine four thealkion k鲁 KU onewe onewe ingon, on, or asan Wednesday, February 9, 1972 5 University Daily Kansan By JIM KENDELL Knappon Staff Writer $e10 $c10 hout tartly coffee offee boat Bay Bairy room wagon trunk trickker trickker truck teaer teaer coffin coung cup ankey ankey lord alarm arama . . . . . Youth Vote to Be Polled A presidential preference poll and a series of speakers and forums are efforts of the Student Vote to try and create an awareness of the coming elections, Mark Beiber, Emporia chairman and chairman of the steering committee of Student Vote, said Tuesday. The organization, funded by the Student Senate, consists of six groups: one to Student Vote activities. It has a steering committee of five people, who plan the group's activities. The organization also work for the organization. The poll asks students to name the presidential candidate of their choice for the candidate and if they are registered to vote. Bedner said Student Vote was created on September 15, 2013, a political awareness on campus and to stimulate opportunities afforded to us by the 26th "The poll is as much to create an awareness of who is running as it is to conduct a poll." Bedner said. THE POLL lists all presi- Blood Drive Correction The American Red Cross blood drive begins today, not yesterday as was reported in Tuesday's Kansan. Blood will be collected from 11 midsummer and taken to the Thursday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Friday, blood will be collected from a 9.am to 20.pm bldn. The poll was taken Monday night in the residence halls on Daisy Hill and Tuesday night in the other residence halls. dental contenders. Bedner expects the poll to indicate trends in student preference among the students to provide no definite results. Last semester a student donating blood had a one to two hour wait. Due to poor turnouts in the classroom, prepared for the large crowd last semester. To eliminate this problem the Red Cross has acquired more nurses and has collected the number of collection tables. Throughout the rest of the week and early next week the poll will be held in addition to the awards and scholarship Hall. Bedner called Monday's poll on Daisy Goffin. Sen. Ardin Booth, R-Kan. Rep. Morris Kay, R-Kan. and Rep. John Vogel, R-Kan. will be the first speakers in a series of lectures on the role awareness of the election. They are scheduled to speak at p.m. Feb. 24 in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. Donors and their immediate families are eligible to receive blood for one year at processing the donor. Donations reported in Tuesday's Kansan. The processing cost for donors is $13 a pint. Persons not having a donor card donor would have to pay full price of $25 a pint or more. forum is for them to address themselves to the impact young people can have on the upcoming elections," Bedera said. Additional speeches to stimulate interest in the campaign are being planned by a delegation that schedule Sen. James Pearson, R-Kan, Rep Larry Winn, R-Kan, Rep William D. Roy, D-Kan, and Rep David Foster. The STUDENT VOTE will sponsor a forum on the delegate selection process of the Democratic party for Senate and House of the Union. The forum will inform students on how to become involved in the delegate selection process of the Democratic party for the state and national conventions. hoped a similar forum could be scheduled on the delegate selection process in the Republican party. A mock convention of a county commissioner's district caucus is also being planned. Conyers said that the selection could be arranged. Student Vote is planning to condense the rules on delegate selection, which are about six pages. Students will half-page list for distribution. "We'd like to see people read news magazines, decide on a candidate, and get out and work for them, regardless of who it is, not only on the national level but on the local level," conyers said. KU Planning Board Redefining Its Function The University of Kansas Planning Board is attempting to refine its function in relation to the university's reputation. University as a whole, Francis Holey, ice chancellor for the University, served on the group, said Tuesday. Heller said he hoped the board would be able not only to define the University's function, but "Such a statement is not something you will formulate overnight, so you will a while be ready to answer our decisions." Heller said. He told the board was meeting once in an attempt to compile the project. also to identify priorities which should be considered in long range planning. 7-Day Special CARS PAINTED *$2750* NORHTOWN BODY SHOP Lawrence, Kansas 90 N. 2nd 843-9673 SUMMER JOBS Guys & Gals needed for summer employment at numerous locations throughout the nation including National Parks, Resort Areas, and Private Camps. For free information send self addressed, STAMPED envelope to Opportunity Research, Dept. SJO, Century Building, Polson, MT 59860. APPLICANTS MUST APPLY EARLY. Use Kansan Classified MOTHER MARY'S "A BEER JOINT" 2406 10WA MOTHER MARY'S "A BEER JOINT" 2406 10WA McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" 829 Massachusetts THE FUNKY WEDGE... that’s a good sport! Rugged, tough and truly funky, that’s the big wedge sport! All stitched down in suede and perfect with jeans. In Beige or Bright Blue Suede Uppers. FANFARES T.M. THE FUNKY WEDGE... that's a good sport! Rugged, tough and truly funky, that's the big wedge port! All stitched down in suede and perfect with suede uppers. McCall's Put Yourself in our Shoes 1972 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION On March 15 and 16, new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected. To Become a candidate: Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 16. In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate. A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OFFICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary of elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. For Further Information: Call 864-3710 6 Wednesday, February 9.1972 University Daily Kansan Big John' Returns to KU Riggins Likes Job With Jets By BOB SIMISON Kansan Sports Editor John Riggins is perfectly happy with his job run, but he doesn't have the defensive lines of the National Football League every Sunday for the New England. John Riggins Discusses Season "We'll be back in the money next year" As Riggs sees it, "Where else can you find a job like this with six months of vacation every year?" Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THRONE ALFRED W. LONDON "Sometimes I wonder when 'I'm on the bottom of a pile-up whether it's worth it.' Riggins said, "It's not right. 'but now I think it's great." Riggins played his rookie season with the Jets last fall. He had been drafted in the first round by New York after he set single season and career rushing University of Kansas in 1970. In Kansas City for an exhibition game with the Chiefs last August, Riggins expressed a vague longing to be in Lawrence for the first day of classes that day. He spoke on Wednesday about everything, about that yearning. RIGGINS ENROLLED at KU for the spring semester. He is taking 16 hours toward an undergraduate degree in public relations, but it probably will require another semester to finish, he said. "I don't know how exciting a sports information or public affairs job is said." said. "But right now I wouldn't like an eight to five job. I want to play football six months of the year and just do what I want the teacher told me." The trend among professional football players is not necessarily college degrees. Riggs said, Some do though, including former KU football players Bell and Boll. Florida State, Atlanta, Brown, with Pittsburgh. "There are categories of football players, usually the younger football players who go back to school, and then it's usually just the older players." What was Riggins' biggest thrill about his rookie season? "JUST GETTING to go to New York," Riggs said. "I wanted to get out of the immediate area, so we could be happy to be drafted by New York." "I like the great potential of the city," Riggins continued. "everybody has the same chance, everybody there's always something going on." Riggins said he hasn't developed an image like that of "Broadway Joe" Namath, the Jets quarterback. "That kind of image doesn't really matter to me," he said. "I know what the score is, and I don't worry about the image." "I don't really go out that much," he said, lived on Long Island and it took me an hour to get home from Shea Stadium every day after I worked. THE MAN who directed those practices. Coach Weeb Ewbank, is quite similar to Pepper Riggins' coach at KU, Riggins said. "He's along the same lines as Pepper," Riggs said. "But he's not as effercent as Pepper, and he not as strict. But he gets everything wrong. Everybody knows what he needs to do much need for discipline. Riggins led the Jets this year in rushing with 769 yards and in touchdowns. He attributed much of his success to the N.Y. quarterbacks' lack of experience. The veteran Namath missed most of the season with a single Experience, in fact, was the ingredient the leets lacked in their training. We were in the absence of key personnel, such as Namath, I never experienced any of the above. explained, the quarterbacks would have thrown to deeper receivers. "I got a lot of those receptions because Ai Woodall and Bob Crawford gave me out of the backfield," Higgins said. With more experience he "WE WERE improving toward the end of the season." Riggins pointed out. "We'll be right back in the money next year. I didn't think I'd have any predictions like that because we was a little superstitions about it. "I didn't really believe that the Jets were that capable," Riggins noted. "If you put them on a bus and watch them play, they'd look like a bunch of tourists or businessmen. There are only a couple of players who can beat them." Jo Jo Remembers '66 Regional, Rates Stallworth a 1st-Round Pick By JEFF HILL Kansan Sports Writer It was March 12, 1966, in Lubbock, Tex. The NCAA championship was at stake as the University of Kansas battled Texas Western to a 71-71 tie in the waning moments of the first game. With seven seconds to play, KU gained possession of the ball and called time out. Coach Ted Owens and his assistant, Sam Miranda. He and the djahayhs to get the ball to sophomore guard Jc Je White. "I brought it up and was going to try to score up the middle. I ended up scoring a home run." White related Monday in a telephone interview from Boston. He now plays for the Boston Celtics and National Basketball Association. So White dribbed to the sideline and let loose a 35-foot jump. The shot went in, apparently giving KU a 73-71 win, when the checked an offside jibbon with another further jubilation on KU's part. "I ITHOUGHT he was calling agou." White said. "But then he called me out of bounds and the shot was no good." Texas Western eventually won the game, 81-80 in another overtime. Whether White was inbounds or not is academic new, but that controversial segment of KU basketball history is indicative of White's playing style in basketball. White exhibited during his KU career from 1965 to 1969. six years later, Jo Ko White still thinks he was inbounds when he took the game. Joe Hill of Texas Western bumped him out of bounds after a foul. "WHEN I was at KU, I was the one to deliberate state of offense and my job was to set up the offense, so my scoring went down. White A third-year pro with the Celtics, White has attained professional stardom with the Celtics. He also scored a sounding touch he displayed at KLU. "When I got to the pros they wanted me to shoot again." White said the biggest change for him in the transition from college to pro ball was playing defense. "In college you do a lot of switching. They don't want you to do that in the pros." White explained. "When you first start, the first thing they do is try your defensively. They see if you can slip through. Then you know your man." White explained THE CELTICS are in first place in the Eastern Conference with a 41-18 record. When White isn't flinging around, he wins. Gardens, be and another KU basketball great, Dave Robicha, is making his players a player in Lawrence. This contributes his time to Ted Owens' jayhawks. Basketball has been the main contender. It was White who discovered current KU shooting ace Bud Stallworth White was impressed with Stallworth and informed Owens. Owens took a look at Stallworth's judgment had been correct "Bud was up one summer when I was in summer school. A bunch of us played every day and one Bud played with us." White said. "HIS BIGGEST asset was that he could shoot the ball. He's not afraid to put the ball up." White said. The 6-5 forward is too short to compete with the towering forwards of the NBA. White figures. he's going to have to make it as a guard." White said. White predicted success for Stallworth in the pros. "He's going to be the number one draft pick of some team. But Fourteen Kansas and Kansas City area high school football players have signed Big Eight letterheads to play in the NCAA Tournament Coach Dam Fambourg announced Tuesday. Tuesday was the first day such letters could be given out. KU Signs 14, K-State 31 To Big 8 Football Letters Kansas Two Kansas all-staters from St. Joseph High School in Kansas City were among the first-day signers. They are Paul Bower, the quarterback who played at Larry Fitzgerald's state championship and Larry Fitzgerald, his center. Bower passed for 1,757 yards and rushed for 1,798 yards during his career at St. Joseph. Of the 14 who signed, eight were listed as linemen four as offensive backs and two as defensive backs. Here is the list of first-day signees, their heights, weights, positions and schools; Jim Baker, 6-1, 204, fulback, Pittsburgh; John Scanion, 6-1, 185, tackle, Lawrence; Mark Dorian, 6-1, 175, defensible, Wichita North; Dave Havenes, 6-4, 210, defensive end, St. Joseph, Mo. Kenny Rufick, 6-10, 46, quarterback Kansas City, Kan. St. Joseph; St. Joseph, Fitzsimmons, Kansas City, St. Joseph Yter Hansen, 6-10, 195, fulback, El Dorado; Tom Barley, 6-3, 200, fullback, Fort Ossage, Mo.; Mark Cochran, 6-4, 240, lineman, Ruskin, Mo.; Vince Gordon, 6-2, 202, lineman, North Kansas City, Mo.; Sean Birmingham, 5-11, 185, defensive back; Tracy Foster, 6-1, 202, lineman, 240, lineman, Lee's Summit, Mo.; Roger Hammond, 6-2, 210, lineman, Lee's Summit, and Eric Powell, 6-0, 225, lineman, Lee's Summit. MANHATTAN (AP)—Thirty-one high school football players signed Big Eight letters of intent to attend Kansas State University Tuesday, the first day possible under conference rules. "This is, by far, the best year we've ever had," Coach Vince Gibson said about the number of signings that far exceeded last year's record of 19. "We reason for our success today was "I feel the big reason for our success today was the great effort our current players have given in building our football program," he said. "We have some top-flight, blue-chip players." David Cooper, back, cottonwood Falls; Stan Ross, end, Attickon; Rijk Blue, back, Coffeilley; Mike Collier, end, Topeka; Denny Gragg, inebacker, Topeka; Olver Jones, inebacker, Manhattan, back, Empress; Lincoln, Mick Lawrence, back, Empress; Linnean, Lawrence; Louis Wegener, inebacker, Marion; Kim Wasmilier, tackle, leche; David Livingston, el. Abdor, Denton; Kent Brown, inemich, Southeast; Greg Whalen, back, Medicine Lodge, end, Denton; back, Shawnee Mission South. From Oklahoma. Bob Douglas, end, Tusa; Kane Flanken, back, Oklahoma City Grant; Jim Weeden, linebacker, Tusa Edison; Kenneth Langston, back, Fairland; Ren Few, back, Stingler; David Lawyer and Robert Hearn, back; Billy Daniels, back, and Randy Bass, end, both from Lawson, and Wes Nimmo, end, Ponca City. rams, and the Browns. In baseball back, and Rick Thompson, Imani both from Cameron, and Dave Corbin. (Andrew L. Mueller) As a three-year-old, Steve King fell into a motel swimming pool. Fifteen years later, he is still falling into pools, only now he calls it diving. King is a freshman in Kansas university of Kansas swimming team. King Earns NCAA Diving Berth During a typical two-hour practice session, each diver will practice eleven dives, five required and six optional. King said he does each dive about five aboard a total of about 110 dives each day. By BILL SCHEELE Kansan Sports Editor The 18-year-old Shawnee Mine The 19-year-old Shawnee last month for the NCAA meet in March with his performance at the Owner-Cowboy Invitational Conditioning, practice, consistency and confidence are the bases of good diving, King said. Running the concrete steps at Memorial Stadium is expected to enable King for rounding into shape. King credits his father, a former Wyndotte high diver, with getting him interested in the sport and learning boards in his inner tube at the age of five, diving in the city league at age eight and competing in AAU meets at fifteen. At Mission West, King received honorable mention for a dive. King does not consider his size ('5' 6', 140) a handicap. He said that divers come in all shapes and sizes. King stressed that consistency in a workout is necessary to perform well in a meet. Looking ahead to the Big Eight Call them Tropicals, Green Plants House Plants, or Whatever, the ENTIRE STOCK IS AGAIN ON SALE. at 1/2 Price Liven Up those Bare Rooms With Living Green Plants For 3 Days Only Tues., Feb. 8, Wed., Feb. 9, Thurs., Feb. 10 reminder you valentine Russell Stoves Coates 15th & N.Y. Phone VI3-2004 PENCE GREENHOUSES Big Eight diving crown in recent years. Spikes is the defending champion. King said the NCAA meet at West Point should introduce him to top flight competition. He will also participate in possible return trips to the national championship as long-range to become a top diver in the collegiate ranks Remember Your Valentine with Russell Stover Candies swimming and diving meet at Columbia, Mo., in early March. King said the competition would be intense. Okahama should give the Jahaways the most competition for the team title, King said, and Missouri and Iowa State provide the stiffest competition in diving. The two teams are defending Spikes of ISU have both won the 3 locations RANEY DRUGS BREWER & SHIPLEY DANNY COX illicrest 19th & Mass. Downtown WHITE EYES TUES,FEB,15,8 PM. $3.50 advance $4 at door Cowtown Ballroom presents Tickets Available at KIEF'S 3109 Gillham Plaza Phone 931-6600 PICKENS AUTO PARTS and SERVICE Parts at a Discount Offers: TUNE-UPS BRAKES WHEEL ALIGNMENT BALANCING EXHAUST SYSTEMS Robert Bosch Ignition for Foreign Cars Robert Bush Ignition for Foreign Cars Weekdays 8-5:30 Sunday 10-3 26th and Iowa VI3-1353 Papa John Geach PAPA JOHN CREACH PAPA JOHN CREACH reg. $599 $3.67 also available on 8 track stereo tapes KIEF'S Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER IS ti ENGINEERS, WE'RE HIRING!!! Consider these facts about Ti's Equipment group when looking for a career. DIVISIATION—We are industry leaders in many fields. Your career can take shape in Radar, Electro Optics, Guidance Design, and Architecture, design and other areas. The choice is yours. 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NOISE AIR WATER POLLUTION WASTE OF NATURAL RESOURCES & OPEN SPACE WASTE O National Environmental Law Society Needs You! Join in the ACTION & Help Yourself! Feb. 9,1972 Room 305 Kansas Union 7:00 p.m. Wednesday, February 9.1972 University Daily Kansan 7 Debaters Win 3rd Place; Squad Maintains Record By STEVE RIEL Kansan Staff Writer Six University of Kansas sixers will host a debate Baylor University debate tournament last weekend, adding to the impressive record of the team. Donn Parson, associate professor of speech and drama and debate coach, said so far a few awards have been won by the smuad. next weekend KU debaters will ravel to Northwestern Evansville, Ill., and Northeast. Oklahoma State College at Lillehammer. Debaters winning awards at Baylor were Sara Pease, Michael Meyer and Reigel Wichita freshman, who won third place; Ben King, Shreveport, La., sophomore, and Michael McCoy, sophomore, who tied for fourth place with Chris Rayl. Bethel Manhattan freshman Stewart, Manhattan freshman. King also received the award as second place speaker in the tournament and Goldman was the winner of more than 80 debaters involved. "This year more debaters have won awards than ever before," Parson said. This year the topic for the debates at tournaments is "Resolved that greater controls should be imposed on the beee, McPherson sophomore, and Dan Skanley. Lawrence and Dan also won a fourth piece award. MUSWELL HILLBILLIES 太陽茶 reg. $^5^{98}$ $3.67 also available on 8 track stereo tapes SENIORS!! KINKS gathering and utilization of information about U.S. citizens by government agencies." at KIEF'S Among awards accumulated this year, four first place trophies Call immediately for appointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE. 摄影 On RCA Records Hixon Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Studio Ph. 843-0330 10 a.m.-5 p.m 2324 Ohio Lawrence, Kansas 66044 CLASSICAL FILM SERIES CABAY ARTS 913 843.9275 913 843.0025 Medical, Chemical, Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! T. S. Eliot NIGHT MUST FALL Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Wednesday, Feb. 9th 7:30 & 9:15 WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM 75° FEB. 9 O UNIVERSITY THEATRE 8:20 p.m. The Student Body of The University of Kansc Presents THE NEW YORK THEY'VE GOT KRU CONTRATENC MUSICA SACKBUTS, A WORLD A T. D with I.D. Pick up at th SO reserve seat ticket office in Murphy. Non-Students 2. 00 - 2.50 - 3.00 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanaan are offered by the following organizations: color, creed, or national origin. One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN WANT ADS Tube incense on sale. Two for $1.00 Saturday at the Hodge Podge, 15 West 9th. 2-22 Experienced in typing theses, dissertations term papers, other citation types, and bibliographic references. Accts. Attendance and prompt response. Rejected. Phone 843-9554. Wm Wright. MISCELLANEOUS TYPING Lost—small black male cocker spaniel named Darby. Family pet. Reward, 842-8199. 2-9 Experienced typist will type your term paper, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call T3-32819. Mt. Hawkman. 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Communicate with her today, for tomorrow is near. 2-9 Wanted: Babysitter for friendly Groomer. Shepherd. Dorm resident needs a job providing a loving home until May. Will pay experience. 2055 after 60. *2-11* Valentine Purse Sale at Hodge Podge, 10% off Feb. 16—Feb. 17. 15 West 2-22 8-22 NOTICE Michigan St. Bar-B-Quise, 353 Mich. Hawaii St. Brick-Saint Brick, $40; 1. Ib Beer Brickset - $189; $40; 1. Ib Beer Brickset - $189; $75; 1. Beer Bracket Sand - $75; Open Vif; 1. Beer Bracket Sand - Vif; 815; Closed Sun-Tuves. We repair all Volkswagen. We do small operations, transplants, or just repairs. We can also sell parts and buy those VWs with special lined machines. Bag lined. 2-10 UWNANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Karans City Birthright. tt (816) 474-4676. INFANT DAY-CARE BASE, 842-7694. Professional child-care for children 1 to 12 months. Mm or part-time. Tm. For professional development. 25-29 Girls. Need an address and phone number for your parents of peace wall Take with kids calls and mail card for $10 a month. 8837 C-214 DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe. Leave anyline from N.Y. or Boston, connect by car or plane (ID insured). Flight Center 227 North Randall, Mandalay, Wisconsin ST064 3T064. Bus: 898.205.4111. See Matardi-Gray, Fly to New Orleans. Round trip R.O.P. 500. Leave K.C. SAT. Baby. 12 Arrive K.C. WED. Feb. 36. For more information, call 842-8732. Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD TREE PEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB - Welcome back, back to party! We are pleased to host valations for two semester term parties and a new semester part party. New band stand, black tie dress, special monthly rates we also have special monthly rates for ringing meetings. Phone or contact John Chumpkin Service Station Tee Pee 824-282-8871 Business phone: 824-282-8871 THE MERCANTILE There is more than one Love Story. Brotherhood and sisterhood, join Front Meeting Front Meetings Mondays, Grace Info. P.O. Box 240, Grace Info. P.O. Box 240, 2-16 THE CONCORD SHOP Valentine Idea Portrait: $5.00 for one, $7.00 for two. 842-7511. 2-15 - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz., pts. - qts. only 25% OFF MILK, EGGS, CHEESB FINE SAUSAGES McCONNELL LBR. CO - ARTIST CANVAS KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock —others on order 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Three days KU Students of Objectivism will visit the Ideas of Ayes Rudd and Sandra Rudd in the Grand Room, Kansas Uni- ter, information call 831-836 or 894-895. Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication RUSSIA-SCANDIANA 2 weeks. Small group camp travel ages 18+ Small group camp travel ages 18+ Included White, White Earth Expedition, Included White, White Earth Expedition. Lot ID. Lot 109. KC, M.C. M.C. Lot 109. KC, M.C. GROUP PIANO CLASSSES FOR BEGINNERS BELIEVE to sight read, improve, create your music. Teach them how to play. Repeat with MI-2297 after 6:00 p.m. **2**-4 Had a friend bender, cracked auto glass, cut both blood and need to town. Had a friend who was in for Dick Mills Free estimates, rearrange, 20 years, rate work, guaranteed. For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization--call the Women's Center - 801-4411. If Pro-owned elders BIGONON 819 Vermont, Vermont. Fachmade suitable for a poor man's pocket. 2. repeat address. 819 Vermont. 2-15 6. repeat address. 819 Vermont. 2-15 COMING NEXT MONTH THE MARCH BROTHERS 2-9 WANTED Women's alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9270 je-50, 8244 ROOMMATEM. Private bedroom, kitchen and bathroom. Utilities paid, next to campus. $40,000 rent. 1245 Leonisiana. basement 1200 to. 5,000 Wanted—third roommate to share two bedroom Jayhawk Towers apartment, $75 / mo. 2-9 One girl needed toジャッケer Tower squared apart. A deposit of $300 already paid. Own bedroom. Can move in. Monthly call 864-205-2930. 2-10 Wanted to buy: GRANTS ATLAS OF ANATOMY by J. C. Balken, 6th edition. Call Carney. 843-2018 after 5:00 p.m. 2:14 Male roommate needed. Two-bedroom furnished apartment for $700 plus utilities. Come by apartment. Mississippi Apartments. Mississippi and Indiana Wanted: desperately need one girl to share ap, with three others in Jayhawker tower. Conciliar contract discount Call 841-6231, or 842-6242 more. territory, than I can cover. Need part-time help to 8-asking order for Fulter Brush. Hours interested. Interested? 8-430-17-511 WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester — 1-bedroom apartment; 2-bedroom apartment; 1½ bath furnished or unfurnished; a.c. c. dishwasher; w. car payment; a.n. laundry. Apartments—The place to live in Lawrence. *C* 24 hour days a day 841-736-5900. Customers for valentine day gift ideas at Hodge Podge Open late Thursdays. 15 West 9th. 2-22 For rent—one or two bedroom apts, air conditioned, garbed, garbard, kitchen facilities, cellar, T.V.衣 V.衣。Call 841-262 stop by Hillview Apt. 613. FOR RENT Female roommate wanted for spacious duplex. Own room, modern kitchen. $50/mo. 1127 New York or phone: 842-6743; after 6:00 a.m. 9:11. ROOMS, HOUSES AND APARTMENTS. Several prices per room in K. Washington. $250 for room and kitchen, $400 for room and bathroom, $600 for room and kitchen, $800 for only the room, $1000 for each room, $1250 for each room, $1600 for each room. Apartment — newly decorated — one bedroom furnished—wall to wall carpeting—11'x blocks from Union. Phone 845-767-361. tt Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. From one black square of 843-1116. 2-21 HILLVIEW APARTMENTS — 733-45 Furnished bedrooms and furnished unfurnished apartments. Carpeted, dressed, executive rooms of much more expensive apartment. Broadway & Lexington. Ridge House Apart--for the budget and the space, Ridge House is the maximum space at best rates in town. It has 2 bedrooms and 2 baths. A total of 1164 (for detail) the beds for each bedroom. Cedarwood-1 is located in the backyard. BLEVINS HONDA 1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks. Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service Furnished one bedroom apartment Modern, half-bedroom to campus. Private room with ensuite bathroom. Call Dave: 843-1601 or 843-6024. Graduate couple. graduate student COLLAGE HILL MANOR now furnished apartments with bedroom furnished apartments with carpet and new bathwashers, w. carepet and laundry service in campus. Quail 842-820 or discuss in college. IT'S NEVER TOO LAST, and it is a long time from Jan. to May to live in the state's capital attractive. One call to visit at her offices at 2017A Hwy. 546 will obtain pertinent details on the apartment located and most attractive combo of home and Missouri; Avalon Apartments, Apartment, Iowa & Harvard Lawn space, paid utilities, dwifahouses rent rates furnished or unfurnished. Reasons you would enjoy living there include make this semester in Lawrenee a locations for August retreats, special summer rates for June occupancy. I RB apartment furnished near KU Manualier de lauree, Leave and referrer for admission to Bachelor of Education April. Mature adults only; graduate of college pre-graduate: 852-236 admission fee: $100. One-fourth of independent volleyball team needs other three-fourths, male and female. Call 841-2067. 2-9 Tutor for Italian I. Must have patience and knowledge of verbs form, etc. The whole bit. Phone 842-4953 evenings 2-9 Would like nice chick to move in with three others. Good-sized room with fireplace. Close to KU $30, plus utilities. KU 82-3548 842-3548 Enter 2nd chair at 1411 M. Bed 2. Enter 3rd chair at 1411 M. Bed 3. With shower and tub, Partly furry. With shower and tub, except electrical. $100 per room. Really 1400 M. Bed 83-005 After 1400 M. Bed 83-005 After Open 24 hrs. per day Room with cooking annex in exchange for work. Near campus. Call VI T-3783 Room for girl Furnished, share kitchen and bath. $1; block from Union. $40/mo. Call 842-6074 2-10 FL 2 bedroom unfurnished house, $125/ mo. utilities not paid. Edmonds Real Estate, 843-6011 or 842-7465 2-15 FOR SALE Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608. tf Western City, Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it. - If you use them. 2. you're at an advantage. If you don't. If you don’t, you’re at a disadvantage. Now you can buy stereo components at FACTORY COST plus 10*. Handling at RAY AUDIO #82-2049-1505 (822) 315-6674. The discount house in daycare 2024. Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 411 West 14th. Northside Country Shop, 707 North 2nd, 3 locks north of River Bridge items, old wood cooking and heating stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, of other useful items. Open 3 wks every day. Herb Allergen: Bardon 94. Dietzgen Mech Drawing Set pieces-acces. $20, call 842-7434. 2-9 Must sell B-25 Gibson Guitar, originally sold for $225. Will accept best offer, case and new strings included. Call after 5:00, 843-3150. 2-9 图示 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Events C CSC CS Competition TOYOTA 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 Sports Cars Inc. Maupintour travel service PLANNING A TRIP?? Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! Let Phone 843-1211 DRIVE-IN COIN Independent AND COIN OF LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 843.5304 Laundry & Dry Cleaners days per week COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th 842-9450 COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 Two beautifully designed Persian lace boats. Reasonably priced. Call Mo at 864-1077. 2-11 Triumph 7T86-S4 can, balanced, competition, suspension, overdive, dryland, hydraulic systems, brake breaks, engine just rebuilt, need 100% DSNFRA719-V heat offer **80** **80% DSNFRA719-V heat offer** Mobile home for sale. Tired of living in an unpleasant place, and wasting your time, find a mobile home that deprives little life. Here is a home on wheels, designed to provide ownership, privacy, and relaxation or studying in a warm, pierceable room throughout, large bright living room, kitchen, dining room, master, refrigerator, washer, gas stove, $1 only, monthly gas bill, and built-in entertainment with X 5 with 10 X to extension, 600 X to 2900, immediate occupancy 843-6155 F1AT. SNOW. TIRES - 5-60 X 12" ft. 850,124, and 128, machines used on new wheels, used one month. Phone: 864, 2651) 2-10 Reliable ski equipment head skin 6", Nordica boots and boot tree size 10", Scott poles 5" Call 842-6886 after 6:00, 2-11 Mobile Home—furnished one bedroom *12" X 4'* red, Spanish decor, country atmosphere, and pool privacy. Call 850-326-7000 at 2:11 after 5.00 p.m. **2-11** Vokwageken, Karman Gena, 1967. Look and runs like new. New paint. Job. Must will this contact. Web Cornellus. 842-7717 or 841-3870. 2-11 Kneisel Blue Star skts, 200's with Marker Simplex toe and Marker Rototat heel, excellent condition, 1001; 842-6788. 2-11 King Size waterbed, liner, frame, and heater: Only $45. My new apartment is too small. 842-7404. 2-14 160 Hastiera multiple home, 15 X 60. generic electric electric and dryer, generic electric water heater, gold Hartpole refrigerator very good condition. To see it call very good condition. To see it call Attention slump pumps lounge. Used Super Old Trombone with fluted slag. Good condition. Bought for a good price. 843-7601 C-211 Downey, 843-7604 Ampg BT-15 wild state, bass, amp, and B2S-B extension cabinet, 3- 15 speakers per $755 value, $445, 842, 7643. Brittany Spannel Pup. Want to find a good home for a 6-month old A.K.C. registered Brittany Pup. Call Gary. 843-3473. 2:14 For reasonable prices on all glass or any kind of Pixlestra glass including scrap for projects, see or at Kaw Body Shop, 724 N. 2n St, see or at 814-280-9000. movie camera, H16 Auto 12-120 mm lens, 200° magazine, electric hand grip, 2400mL mA batteries. Walt, 2400mL mA batteries. Walt, 287-6237 J 2-14 1966 Yamaha 305 cc YM-1 two-helf bike, only 6.500 kmiles, just tuned. For a $225 kit Harmony top fat tip glove. Call 842-6291 at 6.49 p.m. 4-piece Ludwig drum set. Excellent condition and produces excellent sound. Call Paul at VI 2-0529 for information. 2-14 "Hippe Diner," welt dresen, dresses jackets only for dilday. Appropriate for young girls. Dairy at Dairyland at BOKONON 89 Vermont, Monday-Saturday. 11-6 63 Buket, 318 cu. in, 4 barrel, low mileage clean, air conditioning, 8 cylids, radio, heater, white walls $295.00, call 864-1160 Ask for Brid DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP THE HID in the WALL Open until 2 a.m.—Phone Orde. 843.7685—We Deliver—9th & 11th. "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Tavern cafe for sale or lease w/2 bdr. House and parking lot in back. Contact Lynch Realty, 843-1601 or 841-3323 68 Dodge Sportman VR automobiles Cell Phone 864-2682 or 864-0727 - 124 Carolina Bell 864-2682 or 864-0727 Concord P-5 miniature record with Concord P-5 microphone 864-2682 864-3171 5 month old Morse 8 track tape deck and Skyline pro $85.00. Need to sell. Call 664-6057. 2-14 Ski boots for sale. Women's Caber Boot size 7½.8- Used one season. Dabby at VI 3-7166 2-11 Never used photo enlarger Durst M- 600 w/o lens. $25 also. Off 8 A8 movie viewer. Call 842-7984 evenings. Need money more than holiday. 2-15 59 VW Bus—rebuilt engine–excellent running condition–best offer–call Steve at 842-8265 2-15 New Mallory dual point distribution and high performance run. Cost $60 will sell for $45. Fits 285 or 327 Bautes, Roders, 147-596-4251 until 3.30 1991 Take a look at my mistakes. We have plenty of them from all over the world. Haas Imports. 1029 Mass. 2-23 Portable stove - GE. Trimline 506—good condition. Used two, tiger good. 700-13 4 ply. 3,000 miles. Missile 280 4 ply. 3,000 miles. Call. 212-1862 1862 For Sale: 1970 Volkswagen Squareback Inquire: 216 Bailey, phone 913-242-2282. Brand new slide rule with chemical treatment for chin or chem shaping. Use an aluminum chemical drawing set (compass and screwdriver), set barbell and dumbell). 842-10675. Everything must go. All items required. Tops - Bottoms - Belts - Suspenders. This sale will last only as long as you wear the Wearhouse 1411; Mass. 2-11 For all your apartment furnishings, check Quarantil's Flea Market first. Forty stores under our roof! $41-3982 2-11 843 8500 Corvari 65—140 Hp, 4 sp, 4-E70 X 14 Polygales & Mags, Camo seam, FM Multiplex, 8 track sterre, front a spoiler kits, best offer 82-148. iPad Two 1966 Ducati 250*—one run, one, two. Parts two. Complete money $175 and $50. buy either or both. Never call Raze 842-8266 after 5:00. 2-11 Must sell $100.00 suede coat never worn. Ladies belted, double breasted, size 7 knee length. Best offer. Call Harrier at 842-941-2. 2-15 Marlin 22 cal, semiautomatic rifle with 4X scope $30.00, 842-4625 after 7 p.m. 2-11 Blue Schwinn men's 3-speed bicycle. Practically new, perfect condition. $45.90, Call 842-4870 2-11 BIG DEAL! Gray 1950 Plymouth 4- door super deluxe, good engine & transmission. Best offer. Call Ann. 2-11 *1924 6124 Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service rose. Kraper 66 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 RCA portable black and white TV. All channel, brand new. Must sell to oay rent. 842-3758. 2-11 Tony's 66 Service sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Fineest Eating Place We are sure we will find as many offers here. The Savings offer of quality assured services is one of the few incentives. Only the best of the top of our shelves are served at the Savings. Attending Our Specials Sleep and Laugh / Ai Combination Friday, 9 p.m. - 1 p.m. Incoming -- I = my motivate is and has always been Our motto is and has always been "There is no substitute for quality RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842-2323 Sullivan 1015 W. 42nd St. New York, NY 10003 Phone: (866) 743-9121 Toll Free: (866) 743-9120 Travel Agent: Joe Sullivan Office: 600 West 42nd Street New York, NY 10003 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free late fee assistance. Swimming activities. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 10, Sat. till noon. DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS --- 928 8 Wednesday, February 9.1972 University Daily Kansan Books: Skinner, Laing Analytical By KIRK MCALEXANDER Kansas Reviewer R. D. Laiang and B.F. Skinner: To the reader how initially they see timely and compellingly they see the respectable concerned for humanity which is remarkable in receptivity, which involves his readers in the hollowness of a sort of disappointment at life; so trivial Lai's "Self and Others" (first published in 1961, revised in 1989 and issued in paperback only in 1995) explores capacities of persons to inhibit, control or liberate one another. With references to other forms of philosophy and literature, Lai discusses the particularly demanding task of knowing oneself and relating to others. The book also considers the regard the book as standing with those comparatively few efforts made in recent years to improve the relationship between persons in personal terms." BUT THE MORE you treat persons on your personal terms the more you realize your inability to understand such things, either because you need them or because need not cause despair). The processes of a relation may be broken down into its components, which are then named and assigned to their owners. oblivious, will continue on its course. The blurb on the book's SUA Lectures To Concern Presidency Student Union Activities is planning a series of three or four lectures on the fundamental elements of the presidency, said Tim Treacy, Wilmette, III., chairman of the series of meetings. The first lecture will be given late this month and Francis Heeler, vice-chancellor of the academic affairs, will be the speaker. The purpose of the series is to give voters a criteria for voting, Treacy said. Treacy said he hoped that by presenting students with a working knowledge of the day to day duties and responsibilities of the president, they would be more able to vote in a rational Treacy said any students interested in helping to plan the series should call or come to the SUA office. Austria Offers Scholarships Scholarships will be awarded to advanced students of German by the Austrian Government for the 1972-73 academic year. The grants are for advanced students of German who have a very good command of the language. Applications should be made to the Austrian Institute, 11 E. 52d St., New York, N.Y., 10022, not later than March 1. of this muck?'' back would have you believe that armed with this book (tucked next your heart) you can get out and there interact! Such things simply cannot be done—persons in relationship, when they happen to be a passable and sometimes interesting job of describing the relations between BUT THIS IS the case only if you accept Skinner's basis or preference. It is quite true that the difference of previous experience, I choose because, because, because I reject the difference because, because Various factors (to the KANSAN reviews persons. But his subject is beyond him. It will not be named; it will not be captured. What better time and place, then, than here and now for Mr. Skinner's His "Beyond Freedom and Dignity" book. By the pages, you find yourself in a behavioristic utopia with all your footprints brushed away and the pebbles you use so carefully dropped from your desk or back up. As one amused student cried: "How do I get out behaviorist 'contingencies') devariously influence and control my behavior. All of his work has contributed to the realtory tedious, howlous For it is easy to disagree with Skinner's value judgments, and given the improvable nature of human behavior and behavior, you might construct an alternative theory of man as an inherently creature person and is acted upon. The contingencies of reinforcement are myriad—limitless actually—and they will always alowstrip the effort to understand them and to manipulate them. Perhaps that alone is man's one claim to the mystery, to the memory, so long sung and laided. To the literatures of freedom and dignity—that the contingencies in our behavior are so limitless, whatever it is a pretty futile pursuit. Neither study nor control mysteries of life. Skinner maintains that today's world is in desperate need of extensive control though he cannot prove such a point. Yes, he can. But we portrayed by Causus in "The Myth of Sisyphus," is preferable to the unimaginably satisfied and mundane possibilities to which he has led us by the book's last chapter. And we rock, thank you, up you hill. But then I've never thought much of heaven either. Janis It's as close as we're ever gonna get Music was all we had left of Janis Joplin. But now there's something more. Her friend, David Dalton, has written a dynamite book about her life. With photographs of Janis —backstage, onstage, flying high, and doubled over in pain. With articles by the people who knew her best. And sheet music of her greatest songs. Tucked inside this book is something very special. A recording nobody ever heard before. Of Janis singing and rapping with her friends. When you read Janis, you'll know why you'll never forget her. Written and edited by David Dalton $4.95 paperback, now at your bookstore "A wild cascade of frankness, vulgarity and honest self analysis ... excruciating in its pain and reality." —Publishers' Weekly Bakem A great go anywhere shoe—ROBIN by FAMOLARE. It has a super tough crepe sole and comes in a variety of colors to fit any mood or wardrobe you have. Give a pair a try! In navy, brown, red, rust and white suede, or brown leather. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street ST. VALENTINE'S DAY MASSACRE knocked off SUITS . . . from 45.00 ambushed rubbed out WINTER COATS. from 20.00 [Image of a man in a suit and hat holding a rifle]. SHIRTS . . . 2.00 slaughtered slashed SPORT COATS . . . from 25 $ ^{00} $ SLACKS 1/2 off OTHER CRIMES COMMITTED ON TIES gunned down SWEATERS . . . from 9.95 SHOES . . . WASH PANTS . . . MISTER GUY WED., FEB. 9, THURS. FEB. 10, FRI. FEB. 11, SAT. FEB. 12 920 MASSACHUSETTS Patronize Kansan Advertisers Groom and Clean Hairspray for Men 7 oz. size Reg. $1.50 Sale $1.17 You must present coupon with purchase Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUGS CENTER 247 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Scope Mouthwash 18 oz. size Reg.$1.59 Sale $1.13 Open 9:00:7:00 Thurs. 9:00:9:00 Sun. 10:00:6:00 You must present coupon with purchase DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT ORGANIZER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Managemen King's Deluxe Chocolates Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Valentine Assortment 50¢ off ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS You must present coupon with purchase Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON Scope Mouthwash 18 oz. size Reg. $1.59 Sale $1.13 You must present coupon with purchase Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 DISCOUNT DRINK CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON Anacin 50 Tablets Reg. 99c Sale 77¢ You must present coupon with purchase Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 DISCOUNT DRINK CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management Anacin 50 Tablets Reg. 99c Sale 77c You must present coupon with purchase Anacin 50 Tablets Reg. 99c Sale 77° Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 You must present coupon with purchase DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ALI MCGRAW IN TWO GREAT FILMS! Ali MacGraw • Ryan D Neal LOVE SONS BY THE BOY The Year's #1 Best Seller John Marlew & Ray Milland John Marley & Ray Milland PRODUCTION OF CULTURE RECENTLY GOODNIEE. COLUMBIA PRODUCTIONS COORDINATOR COORDEE. COMMUNITY Love Story 7.15 & 10.55 Columbus 9.05 Only Matinee Sat. Sun. Columbus 9.15 & 10.55 Love Story 3.35 Hillcrest Varsity MEDIA STREET - Telephone 013-1665 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30 Adults $1.50 —ND WEEK — Sat. & Sun. 3:00, 5 (Twilight School) Varsity MUSIC ... Hephart NY 1065 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30 Adults $1.50 2ND WEEK - K Sat, & Sun: 1:00, 5:05, 7:30, 9:35 (Twilight HR, Admission $10.00, Shade: 20 to 5:15 only) 100 --- PAUL NEUMAN- HENRY FONDA LEE REMICK MICHAEL SARRAZIN Sometimes a Great Notion TECHNICAL & MEDICAL GRAPHICS GP <> THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAD TO REST. "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 The Hillcrest PAUL NEUMAN - HENRY FONDA LEE REMIX MICHAEL SARRAZIN Sometimes a Great Nobbon TECHNOLOGY & FINANCE A University of Warwick Finance GP Eve. 7:25 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:30 & 4:30 Hillcrest 12 HILLCREST STREET, KILDEER ROAD T RICHARD R. MACKENzie Paul Lee Marvin Newman IN A JUST ARTISTS PRODUCTION "Pocket Money" Lee Marvin Paul Newman IN A FIRST ARTISTS PRODUCTION "Pocket Money" A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE GP 20 17TH AUGUST 1981 NOW! 7:30, 9:30 Granada THEATRE ... Interpola PE 3-5184 A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURE RELEASE GP 09 NOW! 7:30, +30d 10AM-11PM | htps://www.gp.org/30d SNOW THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, February 10, 1972 Banks Rejects Administrative Job Offer 82nd Year, No. 82 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas See Page 7 15 Kansan Photo by JIM EATON Sisters Appeal to Finance Committee . Funding request for day care center was denied Nixon Talks of Successes, WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon told the nation Wednesday he scored "breakthroughs toward peace in a changing world" by arranging his Peking and Moscow summits and by rebuilding allied alliances. The chief executive also injected himself into the swirling debate over alternatives to his Vietnam policy by cautioning presidential candidates in a nationwide radio broadcast to avoid statements which he believed would prolong the war until after the election." He indicated in his 94,000-word foreign policy report to Congress that agreement with the Soviet Union is near on a pact to curb the superpower nuclear missile race. BUT IN THE REPORT Nixon said progress in search for "a stable structure of world peace" was tempered by several sharp disappointments—including continued Vietnam fighting, Mideast tensions and the India-Pakistan War. He solicited election-year public support for his policies, telling his radio audience that "this breakthrough year has made us realize the peace a reality in the general ahead." The double-barreled assessment of world affairs came less than two weeks before Nixon is to arrive in China and three months before his visit to Moscow. "We do not expect instant solutions to deep-seated differences, but the visit is a brief encounter." THE THIRD ANNUAL Foreign Policy Report to Congress stressed he is seeking a solution in Vietnam, but mad about not mentioning it. He also said, however, confront them in his radio address. Nixon said he was not complaining about the vigorous criticism and does not 'question the patriotism or the sincerity of his disagree with my policies to brush peace. But he said "Only the President can negotiate an end to the war." In a statement which appeared aimed at democratic presidential candidates Election officials said. Nixon added: "A candidate should make any criticism he believes would contribute to bringing an honorable peace. But I would hope that he can explain his statements carefully to be sure that nothing he says might give the enemy an incentive to prolong the war." NEXON BEGAN his radio address by citing a series of "breakthrough toward peace" which he said resulted from his reshaped foreign policies. "These are great changes," he said. "They have brought the world closer to a stable peace. They did not happen by accident." He made the same claim in his report to Congress, saying "We know where we are going. We are moving with history, and moving history ourselves." Although the report was largely optimistic in tone, it also cited "several sharp disappointments." Chief among them was failure to negotiate a settlement of the Vietnam war. Nixon also listed the Pakistan war, inability to score breakthrough in the Middle East, and the expulsion of Nationalist China from the KU Women to Talk With Health Officials Members of various women's groups at the University of Kansas will talk with the president of a meeting of the University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) in the office of the chancellor. Expanded health services on women on campus will be the major tonic. Friday's meeting is a result of sessions held Feb. 4 and 5, during which SenEx offered to help get women and health officials together for discussions. The group will demonstrate on Feb. 6 by the February Sisters, a 100 member women's group. Final arrangements for the talks were made at noon Wednesday during a regularly scheduled SenEx meeting. Backlog committee work, brought about the weekend demonstrations, was also handled by SenEx. Representing the University Friday will be Dr. Raymond Schweigel, director of the University Health Service, William M. Ballour, vice chancellor for student Scannell to Represent KU At House Hearing Today Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, is representing the University of Kansas at a 1.15 p.m. hearing today on topics including the Topeka. He will join officials from the 1 Dale P. Scannell other state universities and possibly the state colleges at the hearing for Rep. Bert Chaney's (D-Hutchinson) bill which, if passed, would permit state programs at the three state universities. Each educator appearing before the committee would be allowed five minutes to testify. Scannell said. The officials reported in brief information concerning different areas. Scannell said it was his understanding that the chief purpose of the bill was to generate useful discussion between the state schools and the legislature, and that the bill should not be viewed as a threat to university teacher education programs. affairs, and Emily Taylor, ear of women. The meeting will be a regular SenEx session, except that non-members will be present. Scannell he anticipated six issues. They included a need to describe the nature of the teacher education program, the importance of library resources in liberal arts programs relating to teacher education, the importance of teacher training centers, cooperative programs developed over the past two years and the functions and possible duplication of graduate programs in education. William M. Lucas, associate dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design and chairman of SenEx, said SenEx can periodically set up meetings between campus groups which are not officially recognized in order to get needed dialogue started. Friday's meeting is an example of SenEx performing this function, he said. John Knight, editorial chairman of Knight Newspapers, Inc., will be the 23rd recipient of the William Allen White Award. The award is given annually to an American journalist who exemplifies a dedicated in service to his profession and community. Editor Knight To Receive White Award Today marks the 23rd observance of William Allen White Day, in memory of the editor of the Emporia Gazette and nationally known journalist. Stuart Awbrey, publisher of the Hutchinson News and former staff member of White's Emporia Gazette, will become the 18th Kanau to receive the White state journalistic award. He will be awarded jointly Austin, publisher of the Salina Journal. In 1968, Knight won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished editorial writing. His newspapers include the Miami Herald and the Detroit Free Press. Committee Denies Child Care Funds Knight will not be present at the awards luncheon because of illness. Paul V. Miner, president of the Kansas City Star, will present Knight's award to Mark Ehridge, editor of the Detroit Free Press. An Editorial Colloquium in memory of Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, from the Room of the Kansas Union. Both the awards luncheon and the editorial colloquium are sponsored by the William H. Anderson Foundation. The public is invited to attend. Unanswered Questions Cited The colloquium members discuss issues in editorial writing of last year and consider some of the problems editorial writers will face in 1972. Chairman of the panel discussion will be John H. Colburn, editor of the Wichita Eagle-Beacon. By HAL RITTER Citing a lack of research and unanswered questions concerning a child center provider, Mrs. Sisters, Sisters' Finance and Auditing Committee of the Student Senate decided Wednesday night to recommend that the senate allocate no immediate funds for the center. Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior and chairman of the committee, said the Sisters were unable to care center, but the two representatives of the Sisters who appeared before the committee were unable to answer many important questions concerning the CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writers United Nations THE DOCUMENT recited an agenda of unfinished business, including broad U. S.-Soviet accommodation, a better relationship with China, and effective crisis management. Nixon gave an indication that a major break is near in curbing the arms race when, in discussing his Moscow summit, he mentioned "an accord on an initial deal between Russia and the United States." The report didn't elaborate, but presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger said a first-stage agreement—probably limiting arbulistic missiles and offensive missiles—could be completed either at or before the Moscow meeting. "WE ARE ENGAGED in the essential job of redefining our role in the world," the President added. That new role, he said, "must be based on a solid consensus of American public understanding and support." In the same vein, Kissinger told newsmen in a briefing he hoped the report would serve as a foundation for a serious debate about the national purposes. Nixon said the third annual report was intended to give an insight into the administration's philosophy of foreign policy and its approaches to peace. Of his Feb. 21-28 trip to Peking, Shanghai and Hangchow, Nixon said new U.S. strategy would "encourage the world to visit would wipe out 'a sterile and barren interlude ... between two great peoples" and would be a step toward the creation of a stable structure of world commerce. Nixon said it could lead to cooperative ventures between our countries in the future. The President reiterated, however, that the United States would maintain its diplomatic ties and defense commitment to Taiwan. "We just don't have enough details to merit our making a commitment," Dillon said. CROSBY CROSBY, Topkeen senior, said after talking to officials in Topeka he thought that the Sisters were moving too fast, and that the Sisters did not understand all the costs and problems related to the project. Crosby cited several difficulties which would result once the project was underway. He said regulations would be required by health officials and the city marshal and a certified cook and physician for children and workers would be needed. Crosby also said that while several possible sites for the center had been investigated, the Sisters had failed to find a definite location. 'I NEE a very honest desire to create a vulnerable environment with a very honest lack of information.' Croshy says. He said that the committee's recommendation was not meant to be testified against. Sisters' proposal might be agreeable to the committee. THE SISTERS decided last Friday night to seek money from the Student Senate because it was thought to be their only source of money on short notice. The Sisters were seeking about $6,000 to fund a center until July 1, when the new fiscal year begins. By then the group hoped to arouse enough support to have faculty for the center included in the University budget for the 1972-73 fiscal year. Dillon said that the committee was in favor of a center to serve a "permanent long-time need rather than the temporary need to pop-up measure" the sisters were seeking. The proposal for a "cooperative child care center to provide babysitting facilities and care for infants and children of women associated with the University" was among a list of demands presented by the February Sisters to University officials last Friday night when the group occupied the East Asian Studies Building. KU Workers' Protests Fail to Recoup Wages TOPEKA- Workers from the University of Kansas, protesting the lack of wage increases in the last 15 months, failed Wednesday to convince the chairman of the Senate Rules and Means Committee that the increases they get now should be retractive. Lloyd Rose, business manager of Local 1132, Laborers International Union of America, not with Halsey Stickle, Stickle, Ways and Means chairman, in an effort to persuade the senator to push in his committee for KU workers can be made retroactive. VANICKLE told Rose that money for 5 per cent merit increases for those workers who qualified was in the budget. The increases would be effective July 1 if the appropriations bill for colleges and universities is approved by the legislature as expected. "We've already passed the supplemental appropriation recommended by the government, and any additional government funds would require new taxes," Van Stickle said. However, Van Sickle also told Rose it was doubtful any money could be added to make the pay raise retractive because the Board of Regents and Gov. Robert Docking had not recommended making the increases retractive. THE WORKERS Rose represents many industry workers. Rose which many other industry workers. because the Board of Regents budget was reduced by the 1971 legislature. Rose also asked Van Sickle for assurances* that the workers would get training to ensure he could not guarantee they would get the increases, but said they were budgeted for, and he knew of no movement afoot to cut higher education budgets The KU workers, and those at some time not received pay gases since November 1984. About a dozen members of the union stationed themselves at the four ground-level entrances to the statehouse Wednesday morning and distributed a leaflet which said the union was urging the legislature "to appropriate funds for a research grant to increase classified employees at the University of Kansas campus at Lawrence." THE LEAFLET said the union also was "requesting that the entire pay structure for classified Civil Service employees be moved to a new state and that state are competitive in the labor market." The union members appeared at the statehouse in a much larger force and with placards on Jan. 14 and picketed for about 60 minutes, before moving second floor. It was 4 degrees below zero that morning, and the legislators had gone home for a long weekend to wind up the day's work. Rose said Wednesday the union might return again before the end of the session. 1972 Patient Student Awaits Turn Kansan Photo by MARC MAY Evalyn Holt, Leavenworth junior, holds her earlobe while waiting for the nurse to take a blood sample. The blood drive will be held at 10am on Wednesday and Thursday. and in Ewells Hall Friday. Donors and their immediate families are eligible to receive blood for one year at processing cost only. 12 Thursday, February 10, 1972 University Daily Kansan People . . . . . Places . . . . . Things People: SENIOR ENALISTIS who have traveled the world in careers with the Associated Press will be among 87 news representatives accompanying President Nixon on his trip to China. The AP contingent will be FRIK KORMAN, the senior news correspondent at the White House. Also included in the six is Pulitzer Prize winning photographer Horst Faas. Places: BELFAST, Northern Ireland—D-Day for Disruption fizzled. The fall of Islamism Catholic civil rights leaders to paralyze this blood-stained British province with 34 hours of civic chaos Wednesday collapsed in confusion and indifference. In Belfast the only outward evidence of protest was a march through the city center by 500 school children chanting "free the internees!" SAGON—The United States reinforced its aircraft carrier force in the Tank Gulf on Wednesday and moved to strengthen its B52 bomber fleet in the Western Pacific to protect U.S. troops in the event of a major enemy offensive. Meanwhile, a half dozen doses of B52 bombers blasted a North Vietnam base camp 26 miles northwest of DA NANG in the heaviest raids that close to the city in Things: Immerging Democratic plans for delay, the House passed and sent to President Nixon Wednesday night a standoff bill to end the 124 by WEST COAST DOCK STRIKE by compulsory arbitrations. The State Department says it will send the plans to watch developments on the West Coast where limestone seasons union leaders have set a Saturday caucus to consider ratification of a tentative agreement reached in October. JAPAN described today to extend diplomatic recognition TO RANDALGEH, the new nation carved from East Pakistan following the Indian-Pakistan war. A government announcement said Japan's recognition was conveyed to the government of Prime Minister Kazuo Mishiko. Bailout through the Japanese consulate general in Daejeon, Japan in the 38th nation to extend recognition to Randalgeh. House Adds Welfare Aid TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas Legislature gave preliminary approval Wednesday to bills which would appropriate $10.7 million to restore cut to social services and the office of obumshan in Kansas. In the House, the $10.7 million supplemental appropriation bill passed last year after prolonged debate. An amendment to the bill which would have lifted the ceiling on gas prices in the Department employees to allow the addition to 50 investigators requested by Gov. Robert Clinton. The measure would provide $1 million in state funds to finance the remainder of this fiscal year. It would also restore cuts that had been made in Aid to Children. The blind and disabled and in general assistance beginning according to the end of this fiscal year. IN THE SENATE, an omnibus bill sponsored by Ben Poster, R.Wichita, will probably receive a final vote Thursday and be sent to the Senate. The office of ombudsman created under the act would be empowered to investigate and address the growing acts of administrative agencies, but specifically exempted from provisions of the act are the courts, the police, the federal government and the governor. The act provides that an ombaldman be appointed by the legislature at a salary of $2,000 a year and be authorized to update his personnel as required. Personnel as may be necessary to carry out provisions of the act. Foster told the Senate that two states, Hawaii and Nebraska. presently had umbushmen who effectively represent citizens of the state, and officials, employees or agencies. SEN. JOHN SIMPSON, R-Salma, supported Foster, ter-*nere, as the act a 'very progressive step.' The act will give citizens frustrated with government a "day in court." Simpson said. The proposed obudman would be authorized to subpoena witnesses, hold private hearings, inspect agencies and make other inquiries he deems necessary. He would not be required to investigate all complaints, but could do so if his office will take no action. Foster said "public exposure" of wrongdoing would be the most powerful tool of the ambulance. bobhamam. In other Senate action bills received final passage and were sent to the House. The bills included one to outlaw hunting and one to enact the Midwest nuclear compact and to require drivers' WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon said Wednesday a U.S.-Soviet accord is developing on the outlines of a historic agreement that would curb the war-arms race for the first time. "I can report that a consensus in developing on certain essential elements which would provide a basis for moving toward an agreement that accommodates concerns expressed by each side," Nixon said. Administration sources said they expected the first phase of such an agreement to be announced when Nixon visits Moscow in May. Nixon Foresees Pact Curbing Arms Race NIXON' INDICATED he wanted a treaty placing firm American and antimissile defense systems, and an interim agreement freezing certain commitments in contemeter ballistic missiles, while U.S. and Soviet diplomats negotiate further on how far an offensive curb should be imposed. TOPEKA (AP)-Senate Republicans got their minds bogged Wednesday in a party caucus. GOP to Study School Funding Sen, Joseph Harder, R. Moundridge, chairman of the School Board presented to them materials relating to a new plan designed to put the state's school districts on the road to an order to support public education. The materials included an 18-page computer printout jammed into the case. A page showing the wealth of school districts, enrollments, budget per pupil, tax rates required, the need for aid, etc., in 13 columns a page. offensive and defensive strategic programs will be a major step in constraining the strategic-arms disarming the security of either side. license examinations for persons involved in accidents resulting in fatalities. Sen. Glees S. Smith, R-Lared, president pro tem, said the GOP senators were to study the issue because caucus would be held Thursday. Also given final approval by a 362 vote was a bill bishurructuring legislation that would add legislative leaders to state party executive com- In other floor action, a motion by Steinger to override an unfavorable committee report on a bill to create a drug abuse law in the Kansas Bureau of Investigation on a voice vote Wednesday. A two-thirds majority would have been necessary to place the bill on the Senate calendar for consideration. Steiniger said the bill was "a permanent commitment by the state of Kansas to the war against drug abuse." Over 7% Pay Increases To Need Board Approval Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Prairie Village, told Steineger the committee report should be given to all of the no provisions for funding the division after federal funds were withdrawn and the legislature should not enter into state laws that his affairs to create divisions WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Pay Board said Wednesday it would require advance clearance of oil presently scheduled future pay raises that exceeded 7 per cent of more than 1,000 employees. IN THE HOUSE, a major executive reorganization bill creating a new state Department of Health was passed and sent to the Senate. However, the board stopped banks with $1 million in back- up automatically at least 7 per cent, as had been urgently publicized by some business organizations. THE BILL was the subject of lengthy debate on the Senate floor Tuesday when Sen. Jack Steinerge, D-Muncie,叫ied me "married" between the legislature and the political parties. Bills introduced in the Senate included a school district equalization act designed to ensure the state school finance plan. THE RULING doesn't affect Category III wage units, which are those with fewer than 1,000 employees. In those units, wages may be reduced by 7 per per cent generally may continue to be paid without approval. The board adopted the new requirement 9 to 5 over the objection of labor members. George H. Bolt obtained. Also, unaffected are union construction, contracts, which still need advance clearance by the Construction Industry Committee, no matter how the unit or the pay raise involved. Some opposition to the proposal is believed likely from rural legislators. The board announcement came a new hour after it had disclosed that its inviting public comment session was this first time the board has sought such a citizen's participation in putting in a "winding room." Once fully effective, the new regulation will require that all employees receive a year for units of more than 1,000 employees be reported to the board 60 days in advance, along with reasons why they should not. The new ruling may increase the likelihood that some or most of those deferred raises will be redeemed. The board members of the board already have announced their desire to redeem raising one per year. FUTURE DEFERRED raises in contractive effects before last mention of the paid unless specifically revised to the unreasonable inconsistent" with the general 3.5 per cent ceding that applies to contracts THE BOARD issued an official announcement of the proposal weekend after approving it 11 to 1, with three abstentions, late Tuesday. It would scrap merit-pay rules, which grant an exception to general wage standards generally only for those merit paid in accordance with a union contract. Instead, it would allow an exception for both union and non-union cases. Unions are paid in accordance with an established plan that meets AFTER A TIME, the proposal would probit such merit raises from raising the average of all of a firm's pay increases to more A. VES, unless the raises are paid in accordance with a plan specified by the board, and which would effect before last November 14. Then, firms won't be able to pay more than 7 per cent in total for their plans. The present plans expire and are removed, or in any case after next November 13. Until they are disposed of, practices that meet standards Q. Will merit留 be counted when figuring whether a particular firm's pay increases or decreases limit of $5.8 per cent a year? Here, in a question-and-answer scenario, prepared the team. The questions are highlighted of the board's proposal, which may be revised somewhat before hearing them. Docking Urges OK for AFC Bill TOPEKA AP)—Gov. Robert backing urged the Kansas State University special message to speed through to final passage a resolution telling the Atomic Energy Commission to hire Baxter, chairman of the Kansas Sierra Club, a conservationist organization, said such an expression by the governor could get the AEC to look elsewhere. Henry A. Kissinger, Nixon's No. 1 foreign policy assistant, said the President's report should not be construed as abundance of the U.S. aim to get as much consent an agreement as possible. at 1/2 Price Call them Tropicals, Green Plants House Plants, or Whatever, the ENTIRE STOCK IS AGAIN ON SALE For 3 Days Only Tues., Feb. 8, Wed., Feb. 9, Thurs., Feb. 10 Liven Up those Bare Rooms With Living Green Plants Nixon said, "Achieving initial agreements to limit both YAMAHA TRADE & ENTERPRISE 174 Hanley Rd. $550 176 Honda Roc $550 184 Honda 35cc $550 187 Honda 250cc $550 189 Dksa Sinintec $550 191 BSA Victor Atlite $575 192 BSA Victor Altoce $575 194 Yamaha 17cc $575 ERVS & CHAIN SALES 274 North 3rd Phone 855-245-1234 PENCE GREENHOUSES 15th & N.Y. Phone VI3-200 may continue to function without regard to the 7 per cent ceiling, subject to possible specific issues. Pair Board or an interested party. Q. MUST THE PLAN be in writing? A. No. Unwritten plans may qualify, although it is expected most won't meet the Pay Board's strict criteria. Q. Can a firm with no acceptable merit plan still reward individual employees for their performance? A. Firms with no acceptable merit plans may still give merit awards, but only if their merit and nonmerit raises do not exceed 5.5 per cent a year, or up to 7 per cent a year if they are given an exception on other grounds. THE PAY BOARD already has said it will grant certain exceptions of up to 7 per cent a year, or even up to 20 per cent or hold new employees, that have historically pegged their pay to someone else's in a tandem relationship or that have paid more than a year in raises in recent years. WHAT TO DO BEFORE LEAVING THE STATES AND BY WHEN A girl carrying a suitcase. Forum No. 2 of a Series Student Union Activities Foreign Study Office SUA Travel Service Dean of Foreign Students' Office SPONSORED BY: Council Room - 4 p.m. --as low as Coming Forums: Travel within Europe 1, travel within the U.S.A., travel within Europe 11, U.S. camping and hitching, Mexico - Canada on a student budget. Thursday, February 10 This sale will last only as long as the inventory does. Inventory Liquidation All Sales Final Prices like . . . Storewide Liquidation Bellbottom Jeans Stripes & Solids Every.Item Reduced $2.99 Tops-Bottoms-Belts-Suspenders EVERYTHING PRICED TO SELL FAST TO MAKE WAY FOR OUR "REMODELING" Atchison Schools Closed THE WEARHOUSE 841½ MASS. ATCHISON (AP)—More than 1,000 persons attended a meeting on Monday at the School Wednesday night on what they reopen the racially tense school, and after two and a half hours of work, it is not to conduct classes Thursday. School officials, law enforcement officers, human relations experts, parents and teachers answered questions and exchanged views during the event. No classes were held Wednesday. No date was set for resumption if classes. At least six students were injured Tuesday in a fight between two groups of students. NILSSON SCHMILSSON NILSSON reg. $^1$598 $3.67 also available on 8 track stereo tapes Nikkoon THE SHOW 2014 On RCA Records at KIEF'S Open 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Bottle of 100 1.67 size SAM'S SUPER COUPON SAMS CORNER OF 9th & MASS HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS Coupons Good Feb. 10, 11, 12, 14 Bufferin 68¢ With Coupon SAM'S SUPER COUPON Ultra Ban ANTI-PERSPIRANT DEODORANT 5 oz. Ultra-Ban 1. 35 size 44¢ Limit1 With Coupon SAM'S SUPER COUPON Alka-Seltzer Bottle of 8 43' size 19¢ Limit1 With Coupon SAM'S SUPER COUPON Le Page Le Page Cellophane Tape 1500 inch roll 44' size With Coupon 10¢ Limit 1 SAM'S SUPER COUPON Contac Cold Capsules Pkg. of 10 1.59 size 53¢ With Coupon SAM'S SUPER CDUPON Leggs Panty Hose 1.39 value With Coupon 79¢ 1 Thursday, February 10, 1972 3 D Kansan Photo by R. A. HERRINGTON Singing Afghan Discoverers Bones Alexus, 7-month-old Afghan bond, retrieved the unusual discovery of a cow's skull and other animal bones while wandering through the wooded area outside of Lawrence. Mike, an assistant dog that his dog had started doing a number of strange things after finding the bones, including singing when music is played. Job Market to Tighten For Nontechnical Grads But for those in engineering, business and other technical fields will find the job market not as tight as last year. For students of liberal arts, education and journalism who will be graduating from the University of Kansas this spring, finding a job will be a serious challenge for our bureau directors and Wednesday. Herold Regier, associate professor and placement director of the School of Education at Baylor University would be two million extra teachers unless new federal education programs were installed. For more information visit KU recruiters visited KU to interview education graduates, and this year only 74 schools are expected to interview, Regier said. The situation at KU parallels a national survey conducted by the Placement Council Inc., which found graduates in technical will have better job prospects in non-technical disciplines. HE SAID THE areas of special education for the physically and mentally handicapped children was being quickly saturated. He told me that his librarians, vocational teachers and elementary school counselors were still in demand, and men willing to teach the fourth grade through sixth grades would have little problem in finding a job. Concert Recreates 1400s Renaissance music is not the real thing until performed by Renaissance instruments. The New York Pro Music presented a concert Wednesday night for the University of Kansas Concert Course. Kansan Reviewer A vocal quintet completed the ensemble, which presented a well-rounded program writtten in three parts, and a series of articles." The program was divided into five parts. Joosquin was featured in three and his con- Most modern concert-goers do not know the difference between a shawm and a krumhorn. Not only do the five instrumentals of the Pro Musica know the difference, they also know how to play them. JOUSIN DES PREZ (1440-1521) is considered by爱好者 to be the best most influential man in the Renaissance. He was born Josef van der Weyden in what is today Belgium. Josquin was a member of the Monastery of Brugge and Oekghem Josquin spent most of his life in Italy, where he at one time was a member of the papal choir. He was a major propponent of the Baroque. BY DAVID HEALY Composer first began to inject the mood of their subjects into his works. He also renascised. Joosin's mass, Mass of God, which he built the program on, example of this. Composed early in his career, the mass is highly mechanical and little more. Instrumental compositions by various contemporaries comprised the second segment. The Renaissance instrumentation produced a very soothing mood. Never exciting nor grandiose, but quick and always light, the music had an aura of restrained life. HERINCH ISAAC, Josquem's closest rival, was featured in an exhibition at the museum's first time in the evening, the infusion of subject mood into the exhibition. His German songs concerning traveling journeyman were packed with melancholy. In "innshruck, Ich muss dich lassen" one could especially feel the sadness of the young girl who was forced onto the road at the end of his apprenticehip at the end of his The carnival song, "Dona di Centro," was quite lively and adequately reflected the buoyant jubilation of carnival. three motifs by Josquin followed intermittently. Modern audiences appreciate Josquin's renaissance vocal works than the period's instrumental piece. THE PRO MUSICA singers achieved fantastic voice blend, giving a roundness to the vocal numbers. Joosin's "Ave Maria . . . Virgo Roza" seemed especially complete, with every The most difficult to place, Regier said, were those students desiring to teach foreign English, English and social studies. Gladys Pädaget, placement director of the Science of Liber Arts and Arts, said placement in her division followed the trend of that in THE DIRECTOR estimated that at least 80 per cent of the liberal arts majors continued in graduate school because the job market was so difficult. It is an exception among minority group members, who are still very much in demand, she said. "It's a difficult time for a student in liberal arts. His field is limitless, but he has to do the seeking and finding. No one is ready to show." part connecting and contrasting the others. The concert ended with secular works by Josquin. This was by far the best part of the whole program. Light and gay, the pieces were a marked contrast to one of a rather somber program. The songs "Una Musque de Busegaue" and "El Grillo" were the highlights of the evening. Though sung in Italian, the mood is more infused into the music that their meaning was evident to everyone. In the business placement office, Mrs. Mildred Young was also optimistic and said more jobs were available in business, especially in accounting. She said that the companies were active in hiring now. Padget noted that those employees had an added problem because employees did not want to pay the salary associated with advanced training. ELMO LINDQUIST, engineering placement director, had more encouraging news. He said national openings for teaching positions at the bachelor's degree were up 17 percent from last year. Lindquist, associate professor of mechanical engineering said jobs were available, but noted that he wanted to make the effort to find them. Dana Leibengood, assistant dean and placement director for the school of Journalism, said campus interviews were fewer than last year and interviewers were more willing. J-School placement bureau was notified of 132 vacancies in 1989 and 60 vacancies in 1990 were reported these days. All of the placement directors agreed that the burden of job seeking was on the shoulders of the students. "Initiative is more important," Lindquist said. KU Continues Study Of Nucleus Design Studies of nuclear structures and properties of several elements which have been conducted by KU investigators for 20 years are being continued as part of a cooperative effort of scientists at Argonne and Broome National Laboratories. The project is designed to make maximum use of equipment and facilities at all three research laboratories. He is principal investigator and KU professor of physics said recently. A $100,000 grant by the National Science Foundation will be Ku's portion of the program. Laboratory experiments will be performed at Argonne and Brookhaven, said Kron. Results will be returned to KU for Arab Exhibit Features Refugee Children's Art The Organization of Arab Students will sponsor an art exhibit Feb. 12-14 at Westminster house, featuring paintings created by the artists. The art exhibit by Kamal Boulasha, a Palestinian artist and poet. the time of war," Wuadayah said. He said Bolullata would display approximately 50 of his art works. "It's a children's testimony at Ubrahim Uwaydah, Palestinian graduate student and president of the organization, said children's paintings depict scenes from their exposure to the 1967 Arabization effects on their parents and friends. Boulaita's works typically consist of pictures depicting Arabic poems which are inscribed underneath, Uwaydad said. "Justice's hfm '100 computer." The major objective is to aid in the research of the forces which hold the nucleus together," Krone said. graphical analysis in the University's IBM 1800 computer. Boulatta has recently held exhibitions in Quebec, Montreal, and Paris. The children's paintings and Boulatta's works will be on display from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sat., March 14, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday. Now you can buy the finest in stereo at Factory cost +10% at ★ Selected lines ★ The best buys RAY AUDIO 842-2047 1205 Prairie Ave. Consulting—Free tea & coffee—Factory servicing CHILDREN'S TESTIMONY AT A TIME OF WAR The Middle-East war as told in color by Palistinian children (ages 5-14) who were made refugees by the 67 war. STEREO DISCOUNT and Illustrating Arabic Poems, written and unwritten by Kamal Boulata. A Graphic Exhibition Place: Date: Westminster Feb. 12 & 14 9-5 1204 Oread Feb. 13 10-3 "It may also prove useful to "iters working in nuclear astrophysics and the application of active isotopes in medicine. Sponsored by Organization of Arab Students at KU ALI McGRAW IN TWO GREAT FILMS! Ali MacGraw • Ryan O'Neal LOVE STORY The Year's 1 Best Seller John Marley & Ray Milland GOODRIDE, COUNTRY BUM Love Story 7:15 & 10:55 Columbus 05 Only Malteeo sat. sun. Columbus 10:15 & 11:55 Love Story 3:15 THE HILLCREST Varsity THEATRE ... Langham VE 1905 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:00, 3:00, 4:30 Adults $1.50 —2ND WEEK— Sat. & Sun: 3:00, 5:05, 7:30, 9:35 (Twilight Hr. Admission $1.00 & .50 —4:30 to 5:15 only!) PAUL NEWMAN - HENRY FONDA LEE REMICK MICHAEL SARRAZIN Sometimes a Great Noble (TECHNOLOGY & AMRICHANCE) A Limited/Marathon Promotion GP 40 Eve. 7:25 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:30 & 4:30 THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETTY LAID TO REST. "Gress What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 Hillcrest ALI McGRAW IN TWO GREAT FILMS! Ali MacGraw • Ryan O'Neal THE YEAR'S #1 BEST SELLER John Marley & Ray Milland VARSITY THE AIR ... Nightmare VI 5-1065 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30 Adults: $1.50 —2NDWEEK— Sat. & Sun. 3:00, 5:05, 7:30, 9:35 (Twilight HR. Admission $1.00 & .50 —4:30 to 5:15 only!) PAUL NEWMAN • HENRY FONDA LEE REMICK MICHAEL SARRAZIN Sometimes a Great Notion TECHNOLOGY - TRANSFORMATION GP THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 Lee Marvin Newman M.A.FIRST ARTISTS PRODUCTION "Pocket Money" A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE GP NOWI 7:30, 9:30 Granada THE AIR ... Nightmare VI 5-1065 Lee Marvin Paul Newman IN A FIRST ARTISTS PRODUCTION "Pocket Money" A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE GP NOW! 7:30, 9:30 Granada CREATIVENEWS...DIGIBYVIEW.COM Obtain FREE Passes to SUA Films By Selling Tickets at the SUA Office Contact: 864-3477 ROTC Student To Meet Laird David Davis, Leavenworth senior and NROTC Battalion Captain Katherine Pentagon Seminar in Washington, D.C. on Feb. 24 and 25 with 250 other ROTC students from campuses throughout the country. The ROTC students will meet with Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, Assistant Secretary of Dept of Defense and Deputy Commissioner of Defense officials. --ambushed WINTER COATS . from 20.00 Davis will attend a breakfast meeting with Sen. Strom Thurmond (R.S.C.) Feb. 25. --ambushed WINTER COATS . from 20.00 Four by Three in Black First Militant Preacher Clara's Ole Man Nigger Happy Ending Now Thru Feb. 12 8 p.m. KU EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE 844-3982 --ambushed WINTER COATS . from 20.00 While in Washington the cadets will participate in Reserve Officers Association meetings --ambushed WINTER COATS . from 20.00 Use Kansan Classifieds Griff's MAKE Griff EATS, AT PAIN RICES, YOUR AMERICAN TREAT! LOOK FOR THE DRIVE-IN WITH THE RAINBOW COLORS! Only 15¢ 100% U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED BEEF HAMBURGERS DELICIOUS! NUTRITIOUS! PIPING HOT! TRIPLE TREAT FAVORITE: HAMBURGER — FRENCH FRIES and 'SHAKE' — only 60¢ And Don't Forget— CRISPY, GOLDEN BROWN FRENCH FRIES only 20¢ TRIPLE-THICK, FLAVOR-RICH "SHAKES" only 25¢ FOUNTAIN DRINKS — COFFEE — MILK Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM RS 15¢ HOT! Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM 20¢ 5¢ MILK Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM Hours 10-2 a.m. Daily 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Sunday knocked off ST. VALENTINE'S DAY MASSACRE SUITS . . . from 45.00 rubbed out SHIRTS . . . 2.00 SPORT COATS from 25 $ ^{00} $ slaughtered OTHER CRIMES COMMITTED ON TIES MELISSA JAMES WASH PANTS . . . SHOES . . . slashed SLACKS . . 1/2 off gunned down SWEATERS . . . from 9.95 MISTER GUY 920 MASSACHUSETTS THURS., FEB. 10, FRI. Feb. 11, SAT., FEB. 12 4 Thursday, February 10. 1972 University Daily Kansan MARCH 2015 KANSAN comment Kansan Photo by DAN LAUING To an Anxious Friend In commemoration of William Allen White's Birthday, the Kansan is reprinting his Pulitzer Editor, the editorial, "To an Anxious Friend", which we had printed in the Emporia Gazette July 17, 1922. You tell me that law is above freedom of utterance. And I reply that you can have no wise laws unless there is free expression of the wisdom of the people—and, alas, their folly with it. But if there is freedom, folly will die of its own poison, and the wisdom will survive. That is the history of the race. It is proof of man's kinship with God. You say that freedom of utterance is not for time of stress, and I reply with the sad truth that only in time of stress is freedom of utterance in danger. No one questions it in calm days, because it is not needed. And the reverse is true also; only when free utterance is suppressed is it needed, and when it is needed, it is most vital to justice. Peace is good. But if you are interested in peace through force and without free discussion—that is to say, free utterance decently and in order—they interest in justice is slight. And peace without justice is tyranny, no matter how you may sugar-coat it with expedition. This state today is in more danger from suppression than from violence, because, in the end, suppression leads to violence. Violence, indeed, is the child of suppression. Whoever pleads for justice helps to keep the peace; and whoever tramples on the plea for justice temperately made in the name of peace only outrages peace and kills something fine in the heart of man which God put there when we got our manhood. When that is killed, brute meets brute on each side of the line. So, dear friend, put fear out of your heart. This nation will survive, this state will prosper, the orderly business of life will go forward if only men can speak in whatever way given them to utter what their hearts desire by spoken, by promoted, by letter, or by press. Reason has never failed men. Only force and repression have made the wrecks in the world. Editorial Page 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 provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address. Editorials, columns and letters on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. LAVIES AND GENTLEMEN, IT IS BOTH A PRIVILEGE AND A PLEASURE TO WELCOME BACK AT GREAT EXPENSE BY PENTAGON DEMAND THE WAR YOU LOVE TO HATE VIETNAM! THEY RE NOT APPLAUDING PLAY LOUDER. IT TAKES THEIR MINDS OFF THE ECONOMY Dirt. Publication Hall Syndicate 2-6 © 1972 JUS FEAR TO WELCOME BACK AT GREAT EXPEISE THE WAR YOU LOVE TO HATE HEYRE NOT APPLAUDING PLAY LOUDER IT TAKES THEIR MINDS OFF THE ECONOMY. James J. Kilpatrick Air Bags: Testing Before Trying WASHINGTON — Senator Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut sounded off the other day with a call to the state's governors worried about the administration's pending bill for drastic reform of the public welfare program. "Don't we have an obligation," and the Senator, "before we become billionaires by costing billions of dollars to test this program how we see it how Several weeks ago a divided House Committee on Government Operations warned against the use of bags in bag requirement. Agreeing that The question is a little too long, perhaps, to be chiselted in stone in office but it might usefully be worked on fashioned samplers to hang in each Senator's office. Of course he must have accepted the obligation! As Patrick Henry incessantly advised his fellow senators that "the value of a federal system: it encourages small-scale experiments as a safeguard against crime." Apprehension is growing that precisely such a large-scale blender is in prospect, not only in the car but also in automobile air bags. The Department of Transportation, unwilling to abide by Ribicofis's Rule, still is insisting that the department should automobiles offered for sale in the United States must be equipped with passive-restraint devices meeting certain standards. What this means, is air bags. the device has "an obvious potential" for saving lives, a committee majority nevertheless dozen thoughtful reservations. The air bag relies upon electric impact sensors. These sensors can measure the mechanism, which releases gas compressed air, which inflates a large nylon bag, which pops out of the ground. The vehicle thereby imposes a cushion between the passenger and the dashboard. All this happens in 40 seconds. It sounds like something Rube Goldberg might have invented. To say the least, the system is that stupid. The parts that malfunction. As the committee observed, the sensors and the gas container were not in sync with split-second activation "for a number of years, under varying temperature, atmospheric pressure or other environmental conditions." The bag cannot be too hard; the cannot be too soft. The blasting device must rupture the gas in the bag, and it should ruptur the passengers' ear drums. The triggers must be so sensitive that they will not fire in response to the minor bumps of the bag or of bumper-to-bumper traffic. It is further objected that the air bag offers no protection (as seat and lap belts do) against panic stops, severe skids, rollers and sidewishes. There are majorly viewers, whether air bags will protect a passenger who will be to "out of normal seat U.S. ASIAN POLICY BANGLADESTH "Recognize you? Goodness, I can't even SEE you!" position"—a not unlikely prospect—at the moment of impact. dismisses these objections as unwarranted. The minority is A. A. BURKE In fairness, it should be said that a six-member minority of the committee indignantly Kipatrick has come to the conclusion that the following advice of Senator Abraham Ahram would be crucial in stone the walls of Congress: "Don't we have an obligation, before we embark on a national program costing billions of dollars to report our program out to see how it works." confident that air bag systems would have an enduring reliability of 99.999 percent, that problems of bag design have been solved, and finally, that 13,000 lives could be saved each year by adoption of the requirement. It makes no difference, at the moment, which side is right. The responsible man strongly responsible men strongly on the merits of a compu- trol system. Patrick Henry was on the right track nearly 200 years ago, and Abe Ribcock is voicing the same view. He seats both seat belts (this is part of the deal), and to put reliance upon a complex system not yet fully developed conditions is, in a word, driving conditions, is in a word, driving first. First, let us see how it works. Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. McCloskey wants to be the center of attention. He will run with the pack, but he also wants a pair of gloves as an extra show. As he says, of his war experience, "You lose people when you herd together in combat." He brought smoke bombs back from Korea, to use in special circumstances—his sister-in-law's car as she left on her honeymonkey. Sometimes the pranks misfire—as when he suggests, "Nixon was present with the would like to dwell on, or that should have seized the Pueblo Truth and Righteousness Representative "Pete" McClelland father won his baseball letter four for the team ford. McCloskey himself, at Stanford out of family tradition, tried loyally as a backup outfield for the Padres in a terribly slow runner—a fact presumably connected with his stance and lumbering tread. But if he ran slow, he also ran very low, and those who played high-school football with him learned to keep their eye on him when the ball came into his own as a campus roughneck, especially in the enclosed games of frontroom "knee basketball" played by Phi Beta Kappa at Stanford. He was a mediocre student, but easygoing and gregarious, a practical joker, fond of physical contact. He is now known for being and being into New Frontier swimming pools. An excellent biography of McCloskey just has been prepared by Lou Cannon (a school teacher) to come up just before the New Hampshire primary election. McCloskey emerges from this treatment as just a big bit of an oddity, and his pranks into useful gestures. НМ_ НММ_ УЕАНHH УЕАН! I AGREE By Sokoloff "truth in government" is the main concern of our time. HM__HMM__YEAHHH YEAH! I AGREE THIS IS WHAT I'VE ALWAYS THOUGHT! OH MAN __ RIGHT! BEAUTIFULLY PUT_ THIS IS REALLY INSPIRING! NOW I JUST HOPE THERE'S SOMEONE ARDUND I CAN ARGUE WITH... He has claimed he would give up his seat in Congress to oppose the GOP's push for political backers that he remains a candidate in the congressional race. In his own words, he says he would impartially serve up a bit of both, McCloskey repeats this grandiose claim: "I would rather give up my seat in Congress than I would refuse to practice" (of governmental untruth). He doesn't mean it—he is running both for President and Senate. He isn't attention-getter, and he can't resist the loud remark that turns people's heads in his direction. He also has to be tired as they are tiresome after a while. THIS IS WHAT I'VE ALWAYS THOUGHT! OH MAN ___ RIGHT! BEAUTIFULLY PUT ___ Garry Wills Griff and the Unicorn THIS IS REALLY INSPIRING! NOW I JUST HOPE THERE'S SOMEONE ARDUND I CAN ARGUE WITH... "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff. back by force. But at least he gets attention. He can also rise to an occasion—as in his war bravery, the California bar exam or well-organized campaign against Shirley Temple Black. He is not a wholly inconsistent, and he is effortlessly summon up useful outrage over others' peechiness, and his impressive collection of political talents—a big kid in some ways the ideal campaign. But there an uglier side to his spontaneity when he is impulsive—quick to take a position, and a stubborn in tension when he has shifted ground. Thus his presidential campaign has hurled and carved from impressivity Nixon to opposing Republicans in embassy in Lao to claim that Copyright,1972 Universal Press Syndicate Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom--UN 4-4810 Business Office--UN 4-4358 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN america's Pacemaking college newspaper America's Pacemaking college newspaper Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except in certain examinations period. Mail subscription rates **$4 semester**, $10 a year, or $50 per month for all goods, services and employment offered to all students without charge, creed or national origin. Quotients expressed are not necessarily percentages. 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Mel Adams Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Associate Advertising Manager Advertising Manager Administrative Manager National Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Campaign Management Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Data Masters Data Masters 图 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DESK CARE SERVICES, INC. 360 Leasing Ave. New York, N. Y. 1,0017 University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 10, 1972 5 Handbook of Criminal Appeals Rules KU Coed Can Drink in Teahua Stephanie Myers, Overland Park freshman, enjoy a beer while studying in her room in Hashinger Hall and has been permitted in the organization during only this year. The organization linked the Association of University Residence Hills and fraternities through the Inter-Fraternity Council. No sorority has yet initiated a proposal to allow beer. KU Coed Can Drink in Hall Campus Briefs Passport Travel Forum There will be an SUA Travel Forum on what to do about passports, vaccination and insurance before leaving the United States. The meeting will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. 'Because' Meeting An organizational meeting of "Because" will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Canterbury House, 1114 Ghousa. All interested individuals are invited. Sailing Club Meeting The KU Sailing Club will meet at 7 o'clock in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. The program will be on capizing and sinking. Teenaged Skater Scores Second U.S. Gold Medal Parachutes to Aid Homeless By SCOTT EATON Kansan Staff Writer SAPPORO, Japan (AP)—Teenage Anne Henning gave the United States its second speed skating event in many days Thursday by winning the women's 500-meter speed skating event at the 11th Winter 03m- Borzelai Benjamin, assistant professor of architecture and urban design is developing a new system that will offer to refugees in disaster areas. Benjamin's method would use a parachute saturated with oxygen and the air people whose homes might have been destroyed by some storms. straightaway near the end of the race. Henning, the 16-year-old skating star from Northbrook, Ill., set an Olympic record of 43.33 seconds to win the event after a run of 50.89 seconds skater Syalia Burka when the two girls changed lanes on the The parachute would be dropped from an aircraft flying over the disaster scene. The parachute would be liquid when it left the plane, but would solidify in the one or two minutes it would take it to reach the ground. It would maintain the dome shape of the parachute following its landing. This form, when deployed, would provide sturdy, usable shelter. DESIGNING the parachute has caused some problems, but none that has created any hazard. It is important to develop methods of folding and packing the parachute had to be developed, along with a method to fill the parachute with the resin foam. You can form the plastic. Benjamin said. This problem necessitated encasing the cloth of the parachute between two sheets of thin polyethylene plastic. Because of the foul, Henning was given another chance to play. He scored 42.75 and he wired the sun-swell Makomanai rink a second "We could not just use a parachute filled with plastic, the other one." We would parachute come into contact with one another they would stick together and this would cause them to in the opening of the parachute. A scholarship hall task force (Buffalo, Bailour, vice chancellor for student affairs, to discuss the study of the scholarship hall Hening had been timed in 43.73 seconds on her first run and then was clocked in 43.33 the second time around the rink. The report included recommendations concerning the financing and maintenance of the halls. ANOTHER PROBLEM was that the hardening plastic in the parachute as it descends destroys the fabric. Benjamin said. A parachute must allow air to pass through it if it is function properly, but the fabric would break. Arthur H. Thomas, associate professor of education and administration, the original draft of the report was submitted to Balfour several years ago. "It was suggested that we simply punch holes in the leather of a jacket," Benjamin said. "However, certain openings can be built into a parachute, which will permit the wear of lack of porosity in the cloth." The victory came just 24 hours after Dianne Holum, another Northbrook resident, took the 1,500-meter speed-skating test. On College Friendships Experimental Play Based While this method increases the descent speed of the machine, the increase is only slight, and the resulting impact speed would have no effect on the supplies suspended beneath the machine. Hall Policies Talked Over Anderson said that structurally, his work was "somewhat different" than at times the audience was watching him, and at past year, and "at other times, Another problem involved was a way to saturate the cloth of the parachute with the resin and the hardener, Benjamin said. The resin and hardener, when combined are an extremely quick-setting combination and could harden the parachute in its folded form. WE WILL TAKE THE hem of the parachute and place it around on top of the balloon into the hem and into the top vent bulb into the parachute." An original play by Eric L. Anderson, McPherson graduate student. Just Good Friends presenting a spring production of the University of Kansas Experimental Theatre. It begins at 8 p.m. Feb. 24 through March 6. the characters comment on these events from their present viewpoints." "This parachute will have its greatest use in remote areas of underdeveloped countries," Benjamin said. "In piles it is easier to deal with a disaster than it is easier, more conventional means of aid can be." he said. This will create a saturation pattern which will most effectively force the resin into all parts of the parachute, he said. The airplane that would drop the parachute would be required to be rolled back onto the ground he said. This sprayer would be loaded with large amounts of the resin and connected to a nozzle on the back of the aircraft immediately before the parachute is dropped from the plane. The sprayer would be connected to the nozzle, and the high pressure sprayer would force the necessary quantity of resin into the nozzle. Bajamini's plans use a patient room with a bed about 18 feet. This gives a usable interior working area of about 200 squares, 100 feet of which is covered. The play deals with the friendship of three college students, she, thwift, Margaret and Robert, who said recently "deiced to recreate their story, which took them about a time span, before an audience." Benjamin said the parachute will probabit weigh about 150 pounds, but he says it can land, and can carry about 150 more pounds of medical supplies. He added that the parachute is the light weight of the parachute will make it easy for the natives to fly. THE PARACHUTE would then be dropped from the aircraft, and a hardened shelter would soon reach the ground. After the folding problem was solved, Benjamin began work on the method he would use to force resin into the parachute. "PEOPLE in these countries will be largely illiterate, so a lot of words must be developed to explain how to use the language." The leaflet would contain such information as how to anchor the leaflets of a parachute it would be safe to build fires and uses of different materials. First-year architecture students will also be involved in the project this semester. "What we are planning to do is have the first-year students in architecture do a two-week course and then communicate." Benjamin said. BENAMIN SAID he thought these structures could be used for more than just temporary shelter. "These shelters will be a luxury to many people in these areas." he said. "The WHERE YOU ALWAYS BUY THE BEST FOR LESS GIBSON'S GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER Open Daily 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.—Sun. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Kodabromide Copy Paper Package of 25 F-2, F-3, F-4 ... $2^{47}$ Package of 100 F-2, F-3, F-4 ... $9^{47}$ government could come through some weeks later and spray them with polyurethane foam and water, really permanent Structures. Tri-X Film 135-20 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67ᵃ 135-36 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97ᵃ Final Clearance—Fall Merchandise Valued at $10.00 NOW $4.00 Several parachute companies have expressed interest in Benjamin's company has sent Benjamin a full-sized parachute to use in a competition. 100 foot Tri-X Bulk Film . . 6 $^{99}$ Valued at $14.00-16.00 NOW $5.00 HOT PANTS Valued at $22.00-28.00 NOW $8.00 Benjamin said that at the outset of the program he expected the house would cost approximately $100. But because the parachute would be wasted and the actual net cost would be closer to $10 Suede Skirts: values to $18.00 now $6.00 Were $18.00 Reduced to $5.00 DRESSES Were $24.00 Reduced to $8.00 IF A COMPANY that produces result could also accredit to success the resin in a window, then a house which could be used by four or five people could be bought. Were $32.00 Reduced to $10.00 Benjamina has been working on the project since August and has been busy with the research department at the research institution, another request for additional funding. NO Refunds - Exchanges - Layaways The Alley Shop Benjamin said he was not concerned with securing any patents on his design but was only with whether it was used. the swing of things This boldly styled boot is a real kick to wear. And its striking contemporary look is only part of the story. Wilderness BOOTS by WOLVERINE the wild ones Sizes with Brown or Loden Green for Men and Brown, Navy and Grey for Women rough, reverse grain leather outside. Leather lined and padded for tactile Brawny Vibram lug sole. MCo shoes VI 3-2091 813 Mass. St Former KU Prof Joins Move to Aid Kunstler Lawrence Velvet, former Professor of law at the university of Maryland, has been held petitioned the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver for a case challenging the Kunster, co-counsel for the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front. writ of mandamus to force U.S. District Court Judge George Templar to admit Kuntler to practice before his court. Templar refused to let Kunster present arguments when the case came up Jan. 27 in federal court in Topeka. Ω OMEGA HEarts & Hours this Valentine's Day When you give an Omega watch, its not just for this hour... this day. You're giving the watch for a lifetime of proud possession. An Omega doesn't need explanation. And the Omega you give will be a constant and faithful reminder of your devotion, every minute, every hour. For Him: Self-winding Scamaster. Tells the day and the date automatically. 144 gold top, steel back. Case Matching stainless $210 In all stainless steel. $175 ega OMEGA SUPER LUXURY Automatic 50M 10AM TO 6PM For Her: 14K yellow or white solid gold case Matching bracelet $240 Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. Ask for free Omega style brochure 1972 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION On March 15 and 16,new Student Senators,Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected. To become a candidate: Candidates for PRESENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Thursday, February 17. In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate. A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OF FICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date. For Further Information: Call 864-3710 6 Thursday, February 10, 1972 University Daily Kansan KG Dana LeDuc, left, Rudy Guevara Promise to maintain shot put tradition Gymnasts Host OU Although Coach Bob Lockwood had been a very favorite, he hopes the university's gymnasts have matured enough in the last two weeks of practice. The Sooners will invade Robinson Gym for a 7:30 p.m Injury Hobbles Nash; Others Join Practices Wilson Barrow and Fred Bosiéliev probably will be available to play in KU's basketball game with Okahanna Saturday in Allen Field House. Neysh might be hobbled. Nash sprained an ankle when he tried to dribble between two players. He drilled Wednesday. The seriousness of the injury was not known. Barrow, who didn't suit up on the team, was back. Tech after he missed bed check Sunday night, apparently has been the good graces of coach Todd Night. "There wasn't any problem," Owens shrugged. "He was just a little late for bed check. He's back with the team now." So was Bosievic. The senior forward had brushed his right knee last week against Missouri Tech and Georgia Tech games. His right leg was bandaged in much the same way Worth's at practice Wednesday. Dave Tayne scored his career high against Georgia Tech, but a mistake in sports information led to him missing day had given him two more points than he scored. Taylor's total, originally reported as 29, was 27 points on 12 of 18 field goals and three of three free throws. The two extra free throws actually belonged to Neal Mask, who hit four of five from the field right from the field for 12 points. dual meet against KU. Admission is free with a student ID card. Oklahoma has one of the better teams in the conference, "Lockwood said. "They're predicted to finish second." Iowa State, the defending national champion is regarded the唯一 conference favorite "Our team is very young. A lot depends on how our all around runs." Lockwood said. "Oklahoma's advantage is their depth. We've got to hit our routines to beat them." Lockwood explained Oklaheim is led by Odes Lovin, the number one floor exercise man in the Big Eight. Open champion in floor exercise KU enters the meet with a 2-3 dual record. Friday's meet is the first for the Jayhawks since they lost to Nebraska and Illinois State in a double dual meet two weeks ago. "Our performances haven't looked as good as they should," Lockwood said. "We can be very strong on the side horse, led by Richard M. Beverly," Overton has done very well. Lockwood said. Overton 'Our weak event is the rings. We lost one kid on eligibility Lockwood added. "We know we have our hands full in keeping up with Oklahoma. But if we can hit our routes, we have a chance to win." Lockwood said. After Friday's meet, the KU gymnasts have four dual meets before the Big Eight championship meet March 24-25. SEC, Ole Miss Call; Travis Returns South During the last year, the call of Southeastern Conference became irresistible for Larry Travis. KU assistant for ballplay "This time when he made me the offer it was just too good to turn down," he said. "When Billy got the head job at Ole Miss last year," Travis said, "he offered me a job, but I turned it down then." The University of Mississippi announced Wednesday that Travis had accepted a position as the head of its football team, Kinard. Kinard and Travis were both assistant coaches at Florida State and before Travis came to KU in 1986. Travis was a starting guard for Florida from 1903 to 1902. He then joined the Rodgers, who had been an assistant coach at Florida when he played. "This was the hardest decision I've ever had to make," Travis said. "There is no one I admire ★ ★ ★ P KU Basketball Statistics | | k | lf | gs | pct | fl | flc | pt | rb | tp | ap | av | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Northwash | 19 | 65 | 87 | 439 | 62.84 | 62.84 | 112 | 142 | 62 | 10.4 | 27.3 | | Kinfolk | 16 | 59 | 104 | 419 | 62.84 | 62.84 | 112 | 142 | 62 | 10.4 | 27.3 | | Camden | 16 | 67 | 109 | 410 | 61.38 | 61.38 | 102 | 102 | 115 | 7.3 | 6.2 | | Nassau | 16 | 67 | 109 | 410 | 61.38 | 61.38 | 102 | 102 | 115 | 7.3 | 6.2 | | Nash | 16 | 67 | 109 | 410 | 61.38 | 61.38 | 102 | 102 | 115 | 7.3 | 6.2 | | Miskin | 16 | 48 | 114 | 411 | 28.55 | 28.55 | 109 | 109 | 124 | 6.2 | 5.6 | | Malke | 16 | 27 | 96 | 482 | 12.16 | 12.16 | 76 | 76 | 160 | 3.9 | 3.1 | | Matthews | 16 | 27 | 96 | 482 | 12.16 | 12.16 | 76 | 76 | 160 | 3.9 | 3.1 | | Matthews | 16 | 27 | 96 | 482 | 12.16 | 12.16 | 76 | 76 | 160 | 3.9 | 3.1 | | Franklin | 6 | 2 | 6 | 333 | 3 | 3 | 764 | 2 | 2 | 7 | 1.2 | | Franklin | 6 | 2 | 6 | 333 | 3 | 3 | 764 | 2 | 2 | 7 | 1.2 | | Total | 16 | 558 | 1044 | 419 | 272.41 | 272.41 | 616 | 616 | 172 | 7.3 | 6.2 | | Totals | 16 | 558 | 1044 | 419 | 272.41 | 272.41 | 616 | 616 | 172 | 7.3 | 6.2 | Larry Travis more than Don Fambrough, and it was a tough decision to leave Coach Fambrough and his program at the University." YOU WILL RECEIVE REDEMPTION INFORMATION IN THE MAIL BY SATURDAY. Redemptions begin Monday at 8:30 a.m. at the SUA Ticket Window in the Union. Redem- your packages early for the best individual night tickets. Kansas City State University Rusty Rule, a pair of freshmen shot putter at the University of Kansas up the University of Kansas tradition of dominating the In their first three collegiate meets, they have imitated their mentors, Karl Salb and Steve Wilhelm, to the extent they have mimicked them and a third, they know it won't always be easy, though. Friday and Saturday, Guevara and LeDuc will compete in the United States Track and Field Championships in Houston's Astrodome. Shot Putters Flex Muscles For Stern Test in Houston One factor in his decision to move. Travis noted, was that Mississippi has gone to bowl games the last 15 years. Nation's they will meet the nation's best shot put puffers, including champion Fred DeHerrand of Texas-Etis Pawe DeHerrand of Texas-Etis. By DANGEORGE Kansan Staff Writer "WE'VE SEEN the best of the Big Eight this season," LeDuce said this week, "and it been great. I've got to have met haven't anyone who'd thrown over 60 feet. But they'll have the big guns down there. It could be anything." Guevara and LeDuc claim top marks of 58-11⁵ and 56-11¹² respectively. "I think we'll do well, though. We may not place as high as we have, but I believe we will throw better." "He started me out lifting weights, Guevara said," "Then I began practicing and found out I could be pretty wood." Guevara, who is from Newark, N. J., didn't even know what a shotput was until his high school suggested that he try the exert In addition to track, LeDuc, a native of Tacoma, Wash., also played on his high school football and basketball teams. THE TWO said that Midwestern hospitality and the KU coaching system were the major reasons they had come to "Also, we knew before we came that we'd wedge have an agent there, said Steve (Salb) and Steve (Wilhelm), LeDue said. "In that respect, we're really lucky. Not too many people get a chance be coached." ATTENTION Festival of the Arts Ticket Package Purchasers In the week before a meet, they try to spend two days weightlifting before laying off the last day. "I like the people here," Giuliana said. "In the East, people superficial. But it's different here. People are simple and real." Charlie Masters, a 285-pound all-state football player from Burlingame. Kan, has become the first Kansas player to have a Big Eight letter of intent to attend the University of Kansas, thoughough an announced Wednesday Top Prospect Signs Letter To Attend KU "We look at films of ourselves See You at the Festival! Masters signed late Tuesday, the first day letters of intent could be signed under Big Eight rules. Considered by many the top college prospect in the state, the University of Oklahoma all-state choice by the Kansas City Star. The Weihla Eagle and the Washington Capitals. Masters played middle- linebacker and offensive tackle for Burlingame he also returned to the defensive line for 26 seconds in the 40-yard dash. KU COMMISSION SPRING 72 WEEK ABOUT WOMEN SYMPOSIUM STATUS OF WOMEN MONDAY 10:30 AM KLWN World of Women 7pm KANU Women in the Professions TUESDAY film "Women = Liberation" ABC Documentary 7:30 Forum pm THURSDAY 7 FEBRUARY Speaker: MARLENE SANDERS ABC NEWS Correspondent 8:00 WOODROFF FRIDAY Wednes. Panel: Leading Local forces in the "Sugar and Spice - Revisited" 7:30 BIG -RIGHT Rm 7:20 Forum and practice on our form." LeDuc说:“Working out is an individual thing. We're pretty much on our own schedule.” "Last Saturday. Doug Knop another former KU shot putter) and I talked with him about the shot. But I was still able to win." Both like the emphasis that the shot put places on individuality. "You don't have to worry about being made a mistake," he said. LeDrua also blame when you make one Good or bad, it's just you out Guevara, however, said he could socialize and still concentrate on winning. The bully athletes are both quick to point out that shot contests require a high content of strength. They emphasize quickness, agility, coordination, technique and ability to make a powerful release. NEITHER HAS been completely pleased with his performance here. "I really start thinking about meet the day it starts. I don't wrestle with my mind. I go off my myself and try to get up psyched on "AFER IT'S ON, whether I win or lose, I'll talk to the other guys in it. But during the meet we couldn't. I'm competing, he said "Right now," Le Duce said, "I'm kicking in the bucket. I'm placing my right foot too far back before I release. It is important to the position of the legs, they're屈曲, the strongest part of the body." "Right," Geuvara agreed. "I'm having the opposite position over my left leg positioned over my left leg correctly. I'll mentally the shot out too soon and it's trailing to the toe up higher, too, when I release." Both Geuvara and LeDuce begin that they are rapidly improving. "I threw a lot less before I came here than Rudy did." LeDuc said, "and I've learned a lot about the weights Right now. I know they're not as heavy then I'm wiped out. I want to be stronger in the chest and arms. I'll just go with the weights and I like that." RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE "I really feel strong now," Guiveara said, "but I need work on my technique. It's still early, and I don't have the strength—practice hopefully, this week." "But," he added, "win or lose, it will be a great experience for both of us." "Yeah." LeDue said, "I'd really like to make a good showing in Houston, so I have a team qualifying for the nationals. Feb. 9th & 10th 11:30 - 4:30 Union Ballroom Feb. 11th 9:30 - 2:30 Ellsworth Hall Give a part of YOURSELF AIRWAYS MUSWELL HILLBILLIES 7-Day Special CARS PAINTED $27.50 NORTHTOWN BODY SHOP Lawrence, Kansas 790 N. 2nd 843-9627 KINKS On RCA Records reg. $^5$98 $3.67 also available on 8 track stereo tapes KIEF'S Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Patronize Kansan Advertisers GO Male THE PACESETTER IN FASHION! Fashion Male LOW RISE JEANS & MANY OTHER "NOW FASHIONS" AVAILABLE AT YOUR Bootlegger Let Our Jeans "Tickle Your Genes" Buy Bootlegger CENTER OF NOW FASHION Hours 10-10 7 days a week 523 W. 23rd BEST CITY BUILT FOR COLLEGE CHARGE There's Always a Bargain Waiting For You at the Bargain Table! KU Now that you can fly to Europe for peanuts, here's how little you shell out to get around: $130 for Two Months of unlimited rail travel in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland. Our Student-Railpass gives you all that unlimited rail travel on the 100,000 mile railroad networks of those 13 countries. For two foot-lose speeds. So with low air fares and Student-Railpass you've got Europe made. You shell out $130, and get a Student-Railpass. All you need is the bread and something to show you're a bona fide student between 14 and 25. Our Student-Railpass gets you Second Class travel on our trains. You'll find that there's very little second class about Second Class. Besides being comfortable, clean, fast, and absurdly punctual, the European trains have some other advantages for you. They take you from city center to city center, so you don't have to hassle airports. And the stations are helpful homes away from home, with Pictograms that give you information in the universal language of signs, and dining rooms, bookstores and other helpful facilities. Now, here's the catch. You can't get your Student-Railpass or the regular First Class Eurailpass in Europe—you have to get them before you leave the country. To do this, go to www.eurail.com and enter the coupon for a free folder, complete with railroad map, STUDENT-RAILPASS MAIL AUS The way to see Europe without feeling like a tourist. Eurasia is soild in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland. Eurailpass, Box 90, Lindenhurst, New York 11757. Eurialpass, Box 50, Lindemann Street, New york 12979. Please send me your free Eurialpass pass with railroad map. □ Or your Student-Railpass folder order form. □ _Street. 192A Name Street City State Zip Thursday, February 10, 1972 University Daily Kansan 7 1965 Kansas Photo by STEVE HILT KU Operators Find More Than Numbers Operator's work is sometimes amusing Operator's work is sometimes amusing . . . KU Operators Serve Needs By S. ARTHUR COHEN Kenyan Staff Writer Being a University of Kansas telephone directory operator involves more than just giving on calls to customers' numbers. An operator could be asked the correct temperature for washing a sweater or the temperature for drying a garment. Martha Dohno, chief operator of the KU switchboard, said Wednesday that students need a dedicated directory service (8642-7200 for off-campus residents and 'o' for on-campus residents) with the help of the Information Center (8643-3500). Until the Information Center was started almost two years ago, the directory service Information Center had one number. "OUR JOB, Donhoa said, "to give the callers the numbers where they can find the information they need to know. We welcome you to our campus, our listing of all students, faculty, staff and organizations." However, the 15 KU operators, who work in shifts of five, have been given theconfirmed to giving University telephone numbers. Operators must be trained. Women's Groups Rap Inaction The enactment of an Affirmative Action Program (AAP) at the University of Houston expressed concerns expressed Wednesday night by a panel of registered for women's organizations. Iccerns expressed Wednesday that "women's representatives from four campus women's organizations. Sponsored by the KU Center for Women, the panel presentation was part of a week-long Spring Symposium to explain organization and availability of participants. Participated were Casey Elke, Kansas City, Mo. senior and a representative of the intercollegiate Association of Women (ISW) Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics and representation of the American Museum of History Professors Committee W (AUP); Karen Keesling, associate representative of the Women's Equity Action League (WEAL); and Greta Minsky, Tulsa, OKa. senior and representative of the Women's "It's been a matter of low priority. I keep thinking that year after year something will be done," she said. BY ANITA KNOPP Korean Staff Writer Affirmative action programs are designed to help minorities and women in employment with the Department of Labor implemented two years ago. Since then a revised order from the Department of Labor calls for the revision of original programs concerning minorities to include EXPLAINING THE PROGRESS of the AAP. Banks actual institution of a program has been continually delayed. "Early committee reports indicate that the situation for women in university positions has improved," she said. The committee has currently been working with the problem of anti-nepotism, at *man/ uni* universities who protest a bribery in working in the same department as her husband. Banks said that so far a program has not been instituted here, much less having a new website. “There is a program that there is a program on file.” THE OPERATORS have access to the dates of upcoming University events, including those of major sporting questions arise about the price or location of tickets, the operators refer the caller to the sponsor of SPE AKING ABOUT the role of AAUP Committee. In the past, the group had been conservative in the past. Committee W was rejuvenated after 42 years of service and program first ran from 1918 to 1928. contacted in emergency situations. When emergency calls are received, the operators contact the fire department, police department or hospital, on the future of the emergency, and they remain on the line while the caller explains the situation. "Locally," Banks said, "the Operators said they also gave general information to callers. "General information calls help to break the monotony, and we enjoy assisting the callers if we can." one operator said The student chapter of WEAL which is composed of women in technical and professional areas concerned with women's rights. THE DOMINATING GROUP for students is the IAWs. Created out of *Associated Women's* organizations, they incorporate all other student groups including the Commission on Women and Women SCIENCE. group is working quietly and not effectively. We're operating in a traditional way. Many letters have been written." Since January 1970 WEAL has filed 200 suits against colleges for violation of AAP provisions. Eike said that the group had ranged its philosophy with the AWs, and was organizing its organization was regulatory in nature. Currently it is aimed at developing a system. Operators are able to deter mine the season of the year by many of the calls they receive Keesing described the two methods of filing suits. A woman may file independently and jeopardize her job or a group of women may file a class action in which individuals remain within the 200 suits filed there has been only one prosecution. The women could see some favorable changes for women. The women were also Stockstad to the position of associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Success was encouraging they said. "One person called and wander to know how to make a Bloody Mary during the Christmas season," one operator said. BANKS ADDED that she rotten not being able to accept the research program which required she be away from the school. The Spring Symposium course was held by Mariene Sanders, ABC she corresponded, at 8 p.m. in woodruff Auditorium. It was Monday, March 12, Wednesday's the Kansas that Sanders was speaking last night. Friday, "Sugar and Spice" taught a feminist movement, will conclude the events. The play will be held at Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. ★ Chalmers announced that a four-point program has been initiated for taking affirmative action at the University; the administration has offered affairs office, the creation of a position for women's affairs, the initiation of studies in the three major administrative departments; and the point of appointment on an Advisory Committee on Affirmative AE Bob Hope appeared on the University of Kansas campus last week when he remembered being asked in a serious tone. "Do you know anyone who would take my advice to the Bob Hope Show?" "My academic commitments simply would not allow me to do it." Banks said. "It requires a great effort than I could cive now." Elizabeth Banks, assistant professor of classics, who was offered the position of chancellor at Wellesley, affairs, said Wednesday night she had declined the post. The Department of Kansas' Affirmative Action program, organized by the Department of Health, and Wellesley, has. Women's Affairs Post Declined, Remains Open Banks said she sent a letter of explanation to Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., the University Senate Executive Committee, and the February 19th Women's rights organization. The deadline for submitting an affirmative action program is early March. Failure to meet the requirements, as described by the Department of Labor's Revised Order Number Four, in consultation of some federal contracts to the University. tion THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas's progress toward creation of a total affirmative action program, requiring a federal contractor to end deficiencies in minority and female employment as well as in the administrative spokesman Wednesday as "behind schedule." To date, the spokesman said, the studies necessary to propose an encompassing affirmative program have not been completed. THE SPOKESMAN added that university as an tempting to women, the minorities and the requirements of the programs. Program. The present status of the affirmative action programs and details of these programs are to be announced by the chancellor. THE KU OPERATORS can't forget the sports seasons during the year, either. "We receive many long "standups" during the job, and some people from wanting to know the score. Donoho said: To give a positive information at the particular time the call is placed, we listen to the At the beginning of each semester, the operators are asked about bus schedules, the Watson library hours, or the computer lab hours. They are usually able to aid the caller with these questions. "WE'VE HAD PARENTS call the University operators and ask if their son or daughter had arrived safely at KU from his hometown," Dohono said. "One parent said, If I told you what he was wearing, do you think you remember, if you had seen him?" A typical question that operators hear at the end of the semester is, "Do you know where I might find cardboard boxes?" Most of the calls, however, don't have the season element that they do with a bering get a call from a person warning the number of the "Which library do you want, sir?" she asked. "The one with all the books," he answered. NOT UNCOMMON are people who call the University operator from a pay phone and demand the return of their dime, an Frank Sevigne, track coach at the University of Nebraska, has been named referent of the 47th Kansas Relays April 19-22. Sevigne will be the third Cornhusker coach to officiate the game in 2015. He will be his immediate predecessor, referenced the meet in 1952 and Henry Schulle, whose Nebraska teams dominated the big Six. also had experience with callers who have the first name of a friend, but only the first letter of the last name. One operator said they could only go through the list of names they had listed and hope to find the name. The University operators have Track Coach At Nebraska To Ref Relays Papa John Creach Bob Timmons, University of Kansas track coach and relays director, said Sue Wilson will university division events. PAPA JOHN CREACH KIEF'S PAPA JOHN CREACH reg. $^5^{98} $3.67 Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER also available on 8 track stereo tapes On Grunt Records "We get many calls from students who want to know the biology of bacteria, the spelling, we will tell the教师, we don't, we will give the person the number of the library department," another operator said. at SPECIAL Cold Ham Sandwiches 2 for 89¢ "Something New" "IREMEMBER a 7-year-old girl called one day and said she was asked to talk to her mother who管辖 the operator said. "After the child stopped crying I was able to talk to her and found her name. Then I found her mother's name in the directory, called the number and connected the number." $1.18 value Friday and Saturday Feb.11th & 12th Donoha said the operators had received letters, cards and cards from people who wish to show their appreciation. Because of business policies, operators are not allowed to identify themselves over the telephone. As one operator said, "I frustering to speak to an employer is not a good idea, I can be able to talk casually with him." "the staff, students and faculty are very friendly at the University and we enjoy serving them," Donoho said. 9th & Iowa Dwight Boring Dwight Boring* says... BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS "Stands to reason that a life insurance policy designed expressly for a college men—and sold only to college men—must be used for your money when you consider that college men are preferred insurance risks. Call me and I fill you on my THE BENE-FACTOR, College Life's famous exclusively for college men." 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 PETER RICKMAN representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Role Change For ROTC Changes are being made in the TROTC program at the University of Kansas to meet the demands of the military in the United States. Because of the new draft lottery system, enrollment in ROTC has been tapering down. The men in Riedel, Jr., said Wednesday. Rinkel想 that most of those presently enrolled in ROTC are interested in careers in either the regular Army or the reserves. Riedel said that 40 men from KU were commissioned into the Army in 1971 and that in 1972 the number was expected to drop to Enrollment in AFROTC has remained steady, according to Col. E. B. Eddy. Eddy said Wednesday that 24 men were commissioned in 1971 and that 23 are expected to be commissioned in 1972. 9 STREET MASSACHUSETTS Weaver's Inc. Serving Lawrence ... Since 1857 WeaverS Inc. Capt. J. O. Marzliuff said Wednesday that the Navy is beginning a new two-year life as the captain of his designered major for junior college transfer students, but will also include KU students not enrolled in the four-year program in the navy that designated the new program, he anticipates a larger enrollment in NROTC in the future. Eddy explained that he hopes to begin a program which will bring Haskell students into the AFROTC program at KU. The program, however, still being an early stage in problems which must be worked out SAY "YOU DEVIL, YOU!" Shop Tonight Til 8:30 p.m. I am not sure I can tell. SAY "YOU DEVIL, YOU!" with this gift from JOCKEY UNDERWEAR JOCKEY VALENTINE BRIEFS Smooth, comfortable 100% Acetate Tricot, in the colorful "You Devil, You!" 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Certified Gemologist—American Gem Society 8 Thursday, February 10, 1972 University Daily Kansan Favorite Times Sledding, Drinking Hot Chocolate Bloodthroat big brothers and their little兄弟 become closer at each encounter, as little brother, Darren Green, finds with his friend B Flechet, Prairie Village Academy. Getting to Know Brothers, Sisters Kansan Staff Photos by ED LALLO Lawrence elementary school students and University of Kansas students have gotten together to provide make-believe sisters and brothers for one another. Results of these "family" ties might include a "big sister"—little sister) cookie bake on a cold day, a KU student going with his "little brother" to Ccub Scars or a small girl talking with her "big sister" over a hot chocolate at Sambo's. "I would rather they not volunteer than to not carry through," she said. By MARSHA LIBEER Kansan Staff Writer Louise Cook, social worker for Lawrence public schools, heads the matching of Lawrence students with "big brothers" and "big sisters." Cook said applicants for "big sisters" and big brothers should be "generally more assertive." Many of the 'big brothers' and 'big sisters' have applied through projects of the KU-Y and Clearing House. Others have applied independently by contacting Cook. According to Cook, those chosen as "little brothers and" "little sisters" are children who are very young. "Big sister" Amy Hill, Overland Park park, and her "little sister" Brenda Harris have developed their relationship with the girls through downhills and a during Christmas lights. "Usually we just like to be together," Hill said. She said she felt their relationship was beneficial because it had helped her to see into the personality of another, and because it had provided Brenda with a variety of activities and another grownup with which to deal. Bob Fleetler, Prairie Village sophomore, Green Bear, "little bison," Darren Green, "a pretty cowboy." Darren said they often play football when Bob visits him each Thursday, CHILDREN BEST MOTHER GOOSE EVER Fletcher said, "I think of him as one great man. He is a good sport and I can see why other kids are surprised by his performance." Fletcher said besides playing football with Darren, he also went to Cub Scout meetings and tried to work with some of Darren's projects. "I talk to him and try to understand some things he thinks about, I just want to let him know." Betsy Robinson, Shawnee Mission junior, said the relationship between her and her teacher was a challenge. "We're both giving something to each other. It gives me a sense of fulfillment and satisfaction when I'm with her," Robinson said. Robinson meets with her "little sister" at least once a week. They have visited Santa Claus, walked around Potter Lake, explored a museum and a library, talked over donuts and coke, gone window-shopping and read to each other. Some of Mary's favorite memories were of sliding down an icy hill and drinking hot chocolate at Sambo's. She said she hoped to meet her sister, "bigger sister," when spring weather comes. Robinson said that Mary began expressing herself and meeting people more when she left the hospital. "I can see so much that she really wants to make me happy, and I want to make her happy too," Robinson said. "I'll always keep in contact with her, even if just in letters." J Good-friend good-fair. I will not answer if you can't read the image. Winter offers a snowy hill to help cultivate the friendship of Army Hill, Marianne J. Culver and her little sister, Brenda Harris. " 1976 Amy and Brenaida find that going hull isn't so bad with a friend along. University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 10.1972 'Intellectual Conflict' Cited [Image of a man gesturing with his hand extended.] Gus Di Zerega Speaks at Forum - Charges government monies limit quality education Valentine Fund Aids Child By JERRY M. VOKRACKA Knoxon Staff Writer Valentines Day is traditionally the exchange cards and candy with the person who has captured your heart. The class at Wakara Valley School Valentines Day means hard work to raise funds for support of a boy in need. Higher Education suffers from an interest in conflict of interest law, graduate lawrence, graduate student in a speech Wednesday for the The more competitors there were for political money, he said the less money there was for higher education. "Academicians have sided with political authority on most major issues in the country," he said. Direzera said political agencies control research grants and "this hinders adaptation and innovation." Speaking on a student's view of quality education, Dizegera, a former student rights movement leader, said a good deal of university money comes from government, and "where a student is paying his bears on what changes take place in the university." "Four years ago instead of guiding plantants, we decided that wanted to do something a little more worthwhile, so they decided to adopt a child in a foreign country. So we sent them to the Children Christian Association of Virginia and they all told me all the information about Pravin." Direzza cited the general disinterment of the government and administration (seeking social problems as further political dependency of universities). The result of this, Diergea said was that students felt appreciated for the efforts of higher education was determined by political authority. Each year the class of June Sach, a teacher at Wakaurua, for sale or lawrence Lawrence merchants and other interested members of the community may they support Pravin Chardurhy, a twelve-year-old boy, in Wakaurua. Every class of Smith's since then has taken the responsibility to raise funds to support the school. Mrs. Smith provides the boy with food, books, expenses and school books. At the end of year, the class receives a report of Pravin's progress which includes a recent photograph and a letter. Planning the sale is part of the education experienced by the class. They set up committees to investigate the items, and write the thank-younotes after the sale. The class then decides the best way to invest the money to collect donations from banks and savings and loan companies in Lawrence talk with the children and explain the necessary steps on where to deposit the money. This year the sale is being held Saturday from 8:30-11:30 a.m. at the Community Building. Smith said any University of Kansas student that has a water, and to participate in pool lessons which begin Feb. 27 and will continue for eight weeks. As a means of protection from power pressure, faculties press the students' minds said. Entrenched interests develop in students' academic interests. The University of Kansas Scuba Diving Club will dive into Potter Lake April 20 to remove rocks and boulder pond from future contamination. "Some departments have become insulated except from their own short-term needs," Derega said. "Interests other than education began to at least according to students." Although 40 persons enrolled in the National Scuba Diving Association will complete the course and are certified by the National Scuba Diving Association, they must be registered with the organization. saleable item they wish to donate can do so by bringing it to the Police Department, or they can have it delivered by calling the Wakara School. Students who signed up to take the extracurricular instructions will be required to attend 12 hours of class and six hours in open Tickets are available in the Kauai in the Kansas Union. All of the tickets at the Kansas Union at 7:30 p.m. either in the Ballroom or in Wooldruff The second segment of the series, to be shown February 21, includes works in visual biography of Goya featuring his paintings, etchings, war scenes, tapestries, cathedral sculptures. The other film is a comparative "We started the project to teach the children kindness and love for other people, which is an ability of experience in itself," Smith said. THE SERIES will be divided into two four-hour segments and will have a total of ten sessions of the entire series is $2.50 and single program admissions will Dierega had several proposals for improving the quality of education and providing more evidence for students and faculties. Scuba Divers to Clean Trash from Potter Lake The first film of the series, to be shown next Monday, is entitled, "Friendship in Love." Love it with Picasso's work from "Guernica" to the present and includes many pieces shown in the film was photographed in 22 museums, 7 galleries and 11 private He proposed that colleges within a university be given more independence and that faculty members allowed to choose colleges. By LEONARD GROTTA Kansan Staff Writer cultural history of the two great ancient Mediterranean civilizations of Crete and Meyenaea. SUA will provide a five-week film series beginning February 14 covering the works of major artists with various artistic movements of the important importance. The series, entitled "Museum Without Walls," is an unusual set of new films on art from a unique Universal Motion picture studios. 'Museum Without Walls' To Show Films on Art He favored long-term loans using students' long-term earnings potential as collateral. He also said that students should be permitted to choose among the colleges of a university. College students were to improve the quality of education in order to attract students. THE FOURTH program deals with the work of Le Corbusier, whose concern for the urbanized man revolutionized architectural design and architecture. This will be shown on March 6 in conjunction with a second film covering the architectural triumphs of Greek civilization, whose temples were built in the ancient art, religion and science. THE THIRD program on February 28 will consist of three films. The first will deal with the importance of preserving and restore damaged art objects, both paintings and sculpture. The second will be an exploration of movement. Kinetic art is a dissolution of traditional art in which painting, sculpture and architecture are combined in a single new creative form employing a wide and unusual range of mediums. The third film explores movements. Impressionism, born in the 1870's, put an emphasis on color and movement than on stiff academic design. Sims has won numerous awards in shows throughout the upper midwestern area. The final program of the series, on March 13, deals with both the Arab-Israeli conflict and the Dadism was a short-lived German movement launched in 1916 as a protest against the mass-killings of World War I. A two-man exhibition of paintings and constructions will be held on Monday from Feb. 18 through March 12. The exhibition will be composed of works by Norman Gee and Jeffrey Bauer, architects in painting and sculpture Two Instructors To Show Work The Lawrence Health Club is pleased to announce the addition of an experienced massurer. He received his training in Sweden and worked as a massurer in that country. SWEDISH MASSAGES The public is invited to the opening reception at the Museum on Feb. 18 from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Gee's paintings have been exhibited in over twenty shows throughout California and the Midwest. For an appointment call 842-4044 SUA FOOSBALL Tournament of CHAMPIONS !NO ENTRY FEE! Sunday, Feb. 13 at 1:00 p.m. UNION BALLROOM singles and doubles TROPHIES 8-10 Tables Sign Up by Noon, Fri., Feb. 11 TACO GRANDE With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free! A wheel or cylinder is a mechanical device that uses a rotating shaft to transfer motion. Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.) Offer expires Feb. 28, 1972 1720 West 23rd Street O WHITE EYES TUES,FEB.15, 8 PM. $3.50 advance $4 at door BREWER & SHIPLEY Cowtown Ballroom presents Tickets Available at KIEF'S Parts at a Discount DANNY COX 3109 Gillham Plaza Phone 931-6600 PICKENS AUTO PARTS Offers: and SERVICE Robert Bosch Ignition for Foreign Cars TUNE-UPS BRAKES WHEEL ALIGNMENT BALANCING EXHAUST SYSTEMS Weekdays 8-5:30 KANSAN WANT ADS Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. V1 2- 8068. One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 FOR SALE One day Western Civ. Notes-Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, 2. Sunday 10-3 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered at the following locations: creed, or national color. 2. If you don't, you're a disdavantage. Raleigh way it comes to the same thing. City of Westerly. Civilization "Campus Madhouse, West 14th, U 26th and Iowa Northside Company, Shop 707 North 2.3 blocks north of Market Street, collection, collection stores, wood cooking and heating items, wood furniture, bicycles, fireplace wood, bicycles, fireplace wood. Collection of other useful items, Open to 5 new days Helen Allenbury, 842-313- 6956. Now you can buy stereo components at FACTORY COST plus 10%. Man-made at HAY AUDIO 89-26470. New in the UK and sold at discount house in the mid-20th. 2-28 Triumph TR-8.5-4 can, balanced, competition suspension, overdive, compression, and high-brake blasttrakes, engine just rebuilt, need des DESPERATLY! Better be! 92+ DESPERATLY! Better be! 92+ We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumphs. Competition Sports Cars, Lawrence Puza, Plaza 621, 4-28 2-18 FIAT SNOW TIRES 5 60 X 13" ft 850,124, and 128 models, mounted on new wheels, used one month. Phone: 864-7651. 2-10 'wo beautifully designed Persian maid coats. Reasonably priced. Call do at 864-1077. 2-11 169 Hestia home mobile, 12 X 60, 139 general electric wet and dryer, general electric heat pump, harvest gold Hotpoint refrigerator harvest silver Ice cream very good condition. To see it well. Please call 1-800-456-7222. Mobile home for sale. Tired of living in an unimpressive apartment and paying the rent, you decide to deprive little life. Here is a home on your own, with ownership, privacy, and residence of Wokwagen, Karman Ghia. 1967. Looks and runs like new. New paint. Job must sell this week. Contact Cornellus. 842-7717 or 841-3870. 2-11 Attention sludge pump lovers. Used Super Old Titane Bromide with tumbled slide Good condition. Bought for Downy, 843-740-64. 2-11 Reliable ski equipment head skis 6" Nordica boots and boot tree size 101", Scott poles 5" Call 842-2168 after 6.00. "Hippe Dentin," velvet dresses, dres- jacks only for denim. Personal Appar- lations. 10am-4pm. Four Daddys at BOKONN 819 Vermont. Monday-Saturday, 11:4-6 Kneitel Blue Star skis, 200's with Marker Simplex tyle and Marker Rotatom heel, excelent condition, 100.$84-6788. 2-11 For reasonable prices on all glass or any kind of Pixlex胶袋 including scrap for projects, see KA Wool Body Shop, 724 N. 2nd St. call 817-234-0214 2-14 4-piece Ludwig drum set. Excellent condition and produces excellent sound. Call Paul at VI 2-0529 for information. 2-14 Ampeg, BT-15 solid state, bass, amp, and B2S-2 extension cabinet, 3:15 speakers total, $755 value, $445, 822- 7643) Brittany Spaniel Pop. Want to find a good home for a 6-month old AKC. registered Brittany Pop. Call Gary. 843-3475 2-14 63 Buick, 118 ciu in, 4 barrel, low mileage, clean, air conditioning, 8 cylinders, radio, heat器, white walls. $255.00; cell 661-1107. Ask for Brend. VI3-1353 1966 Yamaha 205 cc YM-1 two-hi-wheel, only 6,500 miles, just tuned. All for $2350 Harmony top fuit guitar. $999 Call A4-429) from 6:08 to 6:14 King Size waterbed, liner, frame, and heater. Only $45. My new apartment is too small. 842-7404. 2-14 86 Dodge Sportan V8 automatic. Catalyst 864826 or 86482-072-18 Call 864826 or 86482-072-18 Conport X-300 X-300 X-300 X-300 with Conport C-20 control unit $159. New Mallory dual point distribution and high performance coil $ Cost $60 for sell for $45 Fits 283 or 327 Chevy Dodge 345-312 or 345-11 until 3.30 Tavern cafe for sale or lease w/ 2/b House. House and parking lot in back. Contact Lynch Realty, 843-1601 or 841-3323 2-14 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Never used phone editor durst M600 / m/0 lens. $25 off. Also 8/8 SMC viewer. Call 842-7984 evenings. Need money more than holiday. 2-15 5 month old Morse 8 track tape deck and Skyline pre amp $850. Need to sell. Call 684-6557. 2-14 Ski boots for sale. Women's Caber Boot size $^{71}_{8}$-1. Used one season. Phone Debby at VI 3-7716. 2-11 '59 VW Bus-rebuilt engine—excellent running condition—best offer—call Steve at 842-8265. 2-15 - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock others on order Three days 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $0.20 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication THE CONCORD SHOP - ARTIST CANVAS Fivedays 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Portable stereo-GE. Trimline 500—good condition. Used twice. Two good-condition 7.90-13.4 4 plays, 3,000 miles. Three good-condition 10.80-13.4 4 plays, 3,000 miles. CDs. Matches. 1642 1642 2-11 - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz., pts. - qts. only 25% OFF *For Sale* 1970 Volkswagen Squareback, Inquire; 216 Bayley, phone 913-2142-2282. Take a look at my mistakes. We have plenty of them from all over the world Haax Imports, 1029 Mass. 2-22 brand new side rule (with chemical instructions) $^2$Biology Biology Kit MK Mechanical drawing set (comps, and laboratory supplies) set caramel and dambushbells $^3$ set caramel and dambushbells $^4$ for all your apartment furnishings cheek Quentin's Fiex Market first. Forty stores under our roof! 841-3082 9-11 Everything must go. All items剩 everything Tops - Bags - Belts - Sups- perders This sale will last only as much as possible. Wearhouse, 8147; Macy's, 2-11 Cavair-65 - 150 Hp, 4 p. 4-E78 *14 Polytas & Macao, Camara seas, FM Multiplex, 8 track stereo, front and rear pallet seats,货值 44, BAR 212 Martin 22 cal, semiautomatic rifle with 4X scope. $30.00, 842-4625 after 7 p.m. 2-11 Must sell $100.00 cake coat never worn. Lables bellied, double breasted, size 7 three length. Best offer. Call Harrier at 824-941-601. 2-15 Blue Schwinn men's 3-speed bicycle. Practically perfect, perfect condition, $45.00; Call 842-4870. 2-11 HIG DEAL: Gray 1950 Plywood 4- door super door, good engine & transmission. Best offer. Call Ann. 842-6124 2-11 RCA portable black and white TV. All channel, brand new Must sell to pay rent. #42-3758 2-11 McCONNELL LBR. CO 1966 Mobile Home, 12X48, 2 bedroom furnished. $2,975.00 Call 843-0625 anytime. 1965. Chevelle, Malibu SS., 227, 4 speed. Call 842-2238 or see at 1819 Miller Drive. 2-16 FOR RENT WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for unfurnished or unfitted 2-bedroom apartments, in spacious, bright, dining, patio, or balcony. West Hills Lawyers. Call 24 hours a day at 811-256-7300. Lawyer: C. 24 hours a day at 811-256-7300. 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 Apartment — newly decorated — one bed furnished—walled to wall carpeting—11; blocks from Union. Phone 843-5767. tt For rent—one or two bedroom apts, two or three bathrooms, all electric kitchen, laundry facilities, color T-W available. Call 800-253-4967 for apartment availi- tions 24th and Ridge Court Ridge House Apt.-for the budget minded! All the popular features are in town. ER, 1 and 2 bedrooms, and a kitchen with 116 for rent. 2403 Cedarwood-1 Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean, room-like, black south block of Wavz 843-1116 HILLVIEW APARTMENTS — 1373-45 W 24th St (Billet to $199) and one 10th St (Billet to $199) apartments. Carpeted, dreses, encasement of much more expensive apartment of much more expensive apartment COLLEGE HILL, MANOR now has new students with amounts not sufficient paid for A.C. new students and inadequate waiving金钱 to distance camp. At 342-829 or campus, at 610-756. IT'S NEVER TOO LATE and it is a long time from Jan. to May to give you the opportunity to attractive. One call to Mrs. Forrishy at 2017-A Harvard Road and you can get the accommodations available in Lawrence's best located and busiest Argo Apartments, 11th and Missouri; Availon Apartments, 11th and Missouri; Iowa Lavale Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lodge of Lawns; Kansas City Soundproof construction, pleasing and central a c are just some of the reasons you would enjoy living in Lawrence when make this semester in Lawrence a location for August occupancy and the 1. B apartment furnished near KU. Manage duties,LEASE and referrals, annual report to Mature April. Mature adults only; graduate 5,000 or higher; 847-7736 2-11 5,000 or higher; 847-7736 Would like nice chick to move in with three others. Good-sized room in big house with fireplace. Close to apartment, month plus utility. 842-3584. Entire 2nd floor at 1411 Mann. 2 bed. Master suite with shower and tub. Partly furnished, utilities paid, except electric heat. Local phone 843-9050. After office, local phone 843-9200. After room. THE MERCANTILE Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD HERBS AND SPICES MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SAUSAGES Room for girl. Furnished, share kitchen and bath. 1/2 block from Union $40/mo. Call 842-60744 2-10 CSC TOYOTA 135LHPH QUIET sunny 2 bedroom furnished suite with private outside space inside and out with year round recreation and laundries. All utilities paid. Ridgeau 843-4444 Mobile Home - furnished one bedroom 12 X 41" Red Spanish decor. country atmosphere and pool privy room. 5' x 7' patio. Petch 8:44-2:14 after 5.0 p.m. NOTICE Where do elephants keep their big pink sneaker? In Ridgeline's gigantic closet. One bedroom, all electric $130.00, all utilities paid: 842-644-444 UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright, 818) 474-4676 tt 2 bedroom unfurnished house, $125/ mo., utilities not paid. Edmons Real Estate, 843-6011 or 842-7462 2-15 Michigan St. Bar-B-Qu, 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, 410 Michigan St. $10.40 1.1b Ib Breast Basket-Brief, $8.85 1.1b Ib Breast Basket-Brief, $9.85 1.75. Berry Brindle Sand-Tile, $7.25 1.75. Berry Brindle Sand-Tile, $7.25 910. Closed Sun-Tunts, $940. Closed Sun-Tunts, $940. TRIUMPH Girls. Need an address and phone number for your parents peace of mind Will take phone calls and mail messages for $10 monthly 8937 2-14 INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER. 842-7049. Professional child-care for children 1 to 12 months. 12 月休 or part-time. Fl. Specialty designed, equipment-less. We repair alliing Volkwagens. We do small operations on our equipment, independently. We sell parts and we VWs with terminal illnesses Bug Inm. 2-10 2-10 DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe, leave New York for a variety of international. Student IDs issued. Flight Center 227 North Radial, Madison. Wisconsin 33046 Competition Sports Cars Inc. There is more than one Love Story, Brotherhood and sisterhood, join Lawrence for Liberation. Front Middle, Monday, 4:30 p.m. Info. Pore, 100 Pore, Box 224 1-800-756-9200 THE FEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB—part-time party again and take advantage for second semester term parties. Party nice stand, black band. We also have special monthly rates for business meetings. Phone or contact John meetings. Phone or contact John Station Trees Pee Jct 45 & 59 High Street Business phone: 642-2582 After Valentine Idea Portrait: $5.00 for one, $7.00 for two, 842-751-711 2-15 WANTED RUSSIA-6-SANDINAVIA 5 weeks A group of 10 young girls Small school camp travel (age 18- up) in the Russian countryside. White. Whole Earth Expedition. Luxury Land Tour. L497, KC, Mou Luxury Land Tour. L497, KC, Mou For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center. tf-864-4441. Had a fonder bender, cracked auto up. Used it on the 302 and Call Kaw Kaw body shop. M41-840-260, aick for DK Millage. Free estimates, rea- tions, free parts. 20 years same location. 2-14 Pre-owned clothes HOKONON, 819 suitable for a poor man's wardrobe suitable for a poor man's wardrobe 6. repeat address, 819 Vermont 2-15 Saturday night at the Mad Hat Museum, 819 Vermont Women's alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30, 2-14 One girl needed to share Jayhawk Tower Towers apartment. Purchased, furnished, furnished. Paid own bedroom. Can move in home. Mail resume to 864-203-5959, 2-10 months call. Mail 864-203-5959, 2-10 Tony's 66 Service 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 Tony's Service Be Prepared! starting service starting service Lawrence, Kansas 4044 Lawrence, Kansas 12-1008 Wanted to buy. GRANTS ATLAS OF ANATOMY by J. C. Bailleau, 5th edition. Call Carney. 843-2018 after 5:00 p.m. 2-14 BOOMMATE. Private bedroom, kitchen and bathroom. Utilities paid. next to campus $40.00每月 1245 Louisiana. basement 12:00 to 5:00 2-bed room furnished needed. Two-bed- room furnished apartment for $70/- plus utilities. Come by apartment Missouri and Indiana. Missio- n 2-15 More territory than I can cover. Need part-time help for evenings 4-8 taking orders for Fulner Brush. Hourly wage Interested? 843-1407 2-11 Customers for valentine day gift ideas at Hodge Podge Open late Thursdays. 15 West 9th. 2-22 PERSONAL Female roommate wanted for spacious duplex. Own room, modern kitchen. $50/mo. 1117 New York or call 842-6743 after 6:00 n.m. Women's Alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9-30-5-30, 2-15 Wanted: desperately need one girl to share apt. with three others in *Jayawker*衣橱. Conciliant contract discount. Call 843-6213 or 843-6544 Call me for excellent low cost hospital insurance with above average coverage and pregnancy; John Wells, American Health and Life Insurance 842-5320 perience. Call 843-26727, 9:30-10:30, 2-10 Wanted: Babyfair for a gentleman's house to provide you with paying home rent. 2:20 After 6:00, pay expenses 2-11 Valentine Purse Sale at Hodge Podge. 10% off Feb. 10—Feb. 17 15 West 9th 2-22 Don't have a Valentine? Neither do I. Big Tung is my name, chicks and drinking it my game—Call me at 842-7694 if you wanna in on the 21-4 TYPING Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call Work Cll 1-3:3811. Mackman Ruckman Experienced in typing tissues, disser- menting and managing phone calls. Have electric typewriter with piae type. Accelerate and prompt ser- vices. Req. Master's degree. Req. Phone 843-9544. Mr. Wright Term papers, thesis档 accurately and promptly, your choice of type size, electric typewriter, or KIDDY 84-9797 84-265-965, Kiana Dondra 84-265-965 Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention. 843-0958. 2-29 Accurate typing of your thesis, dissertation, or miscellaneous work on computer networks. Call Mrs. Troxell, 249idge Court, 842-1440 for information. 2:29 LOST Lost Friday, Jan. 28, near 10th and Emerald Large, solid-gray g凝厚 to "Mouse." Great sentimental recommendation. 842-337-anytime. RE- WARD MISCELLANEOUS Tube incense on sale. Two for $1.00 Saturday at the Hodge Podge, 15 ...at 9th. 2-22 Friday night at the Mad Hatter — THE CO-TWO— a new folk duo, free admission. 2-11 "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842 2323 - applicant new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9, Sat. fil moon. --- KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU 10 Thursday, February 10, 1972 University Daily Kansan Film Student Interns with Nichols By CANDY HERBERT To Hote Caston, Independence graduate student, Mike Nichols is more than just a big-name teacher, a friend and a teacher as well. rechnically an "assistant director," Caston served an internship with Nicholas observing the movie, "Killmasters of the movie," *Mickael*'s *Knowledge*. Nichols has gained fame for direction of films such as "The Graduate" and "Catch 22." This experience and Caston's studies of other Nichols' work have led him to develop his thesis for a master's degree in radio, V - film from the University. CASTON, WHO is currently directing and producing a series of commercials in Milwaukee. Wis., completed course work for his master's degree at K. U. in 1985. Before resuming work on the series, he taught three and one half years as a Navy nobile affairs officer. After an in-depth study of Nicholas directing techniques in his own films, plays and films, Caston took the initiative and set up an interview with Nichols. Caston was forced to take on a new role personally talking to the director. Steve Clark, assistant director of the University of Kansas Alumni Association and former Sigma Chi fraternity brother of Caston's, the said, "Nichols" directed coinciding quite closely with Caston's, possibly because of Caston's previous study of Nichols. During and after the meeting they seemed to hit it right off." The institute which, annually selects four young film-makers from a pool of outstanding directors, accepted Nichols' suggestion and placed them in the institute. Under the new plan the society will consist of three interacting groups—the secretariat, the whole, and project committees. By RICHARD COOLEY Kansas Staff Writer Environmental Society Revises Inner Structure IT WAS to this rapport, Clark said, that Nichols recommended Caston for an internship awarded by the American Film Institute, a non-profit institution in industry, to the advancement of film studies. A new organizational plan designed to eliminate the impact of pollution in the National Environmental Law Society was presented at the organization's first meeting of the Kansas Union on Tuesday in the Kansas Union. Bruce A. Linton, chairman of the department of radio-T-V film in the School of Journalism at Custon, said he thought the rapport established between Caston and Nichols was a brief interview very important. This year the society is funded by the Student Senate. Bob Ward, president of NELS and third-year law student from Lawrence, said the society hoped to help businesses adopt environmental action this year, instead of being primarily a discussion group as it was last year. NICHOLS DIDN'T want an observer," Linton said, "but after meeting Caston, he agreed to let him observe anyway. Hote had to overcome this reluctance, but soon the result was clear: Nichols had no more doubts. Nichols even invited Caston to his home to watch the THE SECRETARIAT will consist of the society's three officers and will serve as a committee submitted by individual members. The committee of the whole will consist of the entire membership of the organization and the committee of the work being done by the various committees. The project committees will consist of smaller groups of students in areas of environmental concern. Ward said he hoped the new organizational format would give members a chance to work in small groups on specific areas of environmental abuse in the boundaries of the area. He showed slides depicting examples of environmental problems in the Lawrence area. Pollution Study Uses Protozoa As Measure The society is a local affiliate of the national organization formed at Stanford University three years ago. The local group was formed in 1985, but was completely inactive during the first semester this year. Single-selled organisms may provide an inexpensive yet accurate model of water pollution levels. Eugene B. Bovee, professor of physiology at the University of Virginia. WARD SAID the society accomplished last year because of poor organization and lack of funds. He said the group met regularly and "did a lot of talking about environmental issues and did very little toward solving problems of environmental abuse. In a two-year-old study, recently extended through June 2015, scientists at the National Science Foundation Bovee is measuring the effect of various chemicals and pollutants in seawater, trying to analyze pollution levels by charting the movements of humans placed in water samples. Because protozoa are always present in both fresh and salt water, Bovee said, they might be used as "biological indicators" of pollution levels, thus eliminating the need for expensive chemical analysis. "We already have evidence that calcium, sodium, potassium, magnesium and organic compounds directly affect movements." He said. "Some insecticides and agricultural poisons, and many pharmacological agents slow movement even in very small amounts. Certain heavy metals and silver are also toxic and silver are also too toxic." Assisting Bovee are graduates students John Sims, Lawrence. Ringer E. Goddard, Des Moinos, Ronald E. Goddard, Des Moinos, and Roger E. Lindberg, Lageren. including junkyards, traffic congestion and air and water pollution. editing of the film." When talking about Caston's book, Linton said this respect showed in the quality of the work. SEVERAL PROJECTS are being considered. Ward said. One project would involve sending information to suggest ways in which their customers could combat pollution. Another would involve research into legal methods by which body shops could be forced to move away from federal highways. Ward said Douglas County Attorney Mike Elwell was cooperator with this program. "The book is of sufficient academic stature accepted as the author of the same sincere study of Nichols as a director and of his techniques." LINTON ALSO said that Caston's work reveals more depth than other books on film directors. "Most books now are written as a result of using secondary sources or from reading what the authors directing, directing it, said Condon. however, has done an in-depth study of Nichols' directing and his actual works, and is writing another source of Nichols himself." Ward emphasized that the society was not confined to law students, but that any student involved in instrumental problems was welcome. Caston's book, entitled "The Directing Techniques of Mike Nichols," is scheduled for release by Scribner's in August 1973. WHEN SPEAKING of Caston Campus Bulletin Chrysler Seminar: 8:30 a.m., International Room. Student Teachers 8:30 a.m., A. B. and C. Cheryl Science 16:30 a.m., Woodford Computer Science 16: 8:30 a.m., Woodruff Auditorium Ravium Ma... Interviews: 0 a.m., Roanin . djitortum . Mo., Interviews: 9 a.m., Room 305, Kansas Union William.. Allen White Day Registration: 9:30 a.m. ..Jayhawk Room. William.. Allen White Day Wives' Coffee: J5. Kansas Union. Media Center: 9 a.m., Regionalist Room. Psychology 40: 9:30 a.m., Woodruff Architecture. Waltham Alice White Gray Wives Coffee: 9:30 a.m. Centennial Room 10:30 a.m. Hale Hall Blood Drive: 10 a.m., Ballroom William Allen White Foundation Board: 10 a.m. Kansas Room *AAUP* 11 a.m. Alcove C. Cafeteria, 250 W. 3rd St. AAUP: 11 a.m. Alcove C, Cafeteria, Education Graduates: 11:30 a.m. Alcove C Education Graduates: 11:30 a.m. Alcevna Eductoria Educational History: noon, Alcove A Latin American History: noon. Alcove A. afeteria. Dean of Men, noon. Alcove C. Cafeteria. Chrysler Room: noon. English Room. Library Study Group: noon. Cottonwood Cafeteria William Allen White Day Luncheon: noon. Big 8 Room. Air Force ROTC, noon. Curry Room. William Allen Day White Dayen: noon. East Asian Studies: 12:30 p.m., Walkins Room. Alan Allen, White Day, Editor's Ses seminar: 3 p.m. Forum Room. SUA travel: 4 p.m. Council Room. SUA travel: 4 p.m., Council Room. Mathematics Department: 6 p.m., English doorm IFC Public Relations : 6:30 p.m. 1n- 234 Phattoni Hood. Signa a Delta Chi Dinner: 7 p.m., Kansas Sigma A Delta Cini Dinner 7 p.m. Kansas Room. 8 p.m. Crusade 7 p.m. Parliars A B C Campus Crusade: 7 p.m.; Parors A, B, C and Room 305 Kansas Union. as an undergraduate, Clark said, "He was a very talented individual with a tremendous sense of humor. "In fact, one of the best between-skit acts I've seen in the Rock Chalk Review was a performance he was master of ceremonies. He LDS Institute; 7 p.m., Room 299, Kansas Union. nohb Film, Lecture, "Stranger than Science 'brition" 7. n.p., Ballroom 'fiction': 7 p.m. Ballroom. Science Fiction Film: "Woman in the Moon: 7:30 p.m. Ballroom. Ballroom: 8:00 p.m. Esplanade: 7:30 p.m. Wooldruff Auditorium. IFC Interviews: 8 p.m., Oread Room. CSW: 8.43 p.m., Necromal Room. Draw your design idea in pencil or ink for a Bleniential Medal honoring your state's contributions to our national heritage. You will compete only against other artists from your own state . . . in one of 50 separate state contests. You may win a sizable cash prize and a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to become the artist from your state whose creativity will be represented on the face of an important commemorative medal that will receive world-wide attention. $500,000 Bicentennial Medal Design Competition had a routine very similar to Bob Hope's." Clark said. The Franklin Mint's Following the theory that the best way to become a director is to direct, Clark said that Caston hopes to make a feature-length film about lawyers around Lawrence possibly during the upcoming summer. CLOSES MARCH 31,1972. $500,000 IN PRIZES There will be a total of 200 award awards — four in each of the 50 states of the nation. If you have not yet entered and wish to obtain an Indicial Entity Form and the complete set of rules and instruc- tions, click on the following links. In these 50 simultaneous state competitions, each artist will be competing only against other artists from his own All entries must be submitted on an Official Entry Form not later than March 31, 1972 First prize in each state $ 5,000 Second prize in each state $ 2,500 Third prize in each state $ 1,500 Fourth prize in each state $ 1,000 Total of prizes for all 50 states ... $500,000 Bicentennial Medal Design Competition Box 1976 Please send me an Official Entry Form, contest rules and instructions. Franklin Center, Pennsylvania 19063 47 PLEASE TYPE OR PRINT Bicentennial Medal Design Competition FOR A VALENTINE TREAT BRING HER TO THE sirloin Make reservations now for the Valentine weekend Saturday & Sunday Feb. 12 & 13 Our suite is and four ablouches beaver. There is also a double sitting room quality or good food. 1½ Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge Phone 843-1431 for Reservations 起 FINAL CLEARANCE FALL MERCHANDISE Sirton BROWN'S BREWERY Dresses valued at $18.00 NOW $5.00 valued at $24.00 NOW $8.00 valued at $32.00 NOW $10.00 Hot Pants were $10.00 Reduced to $4.00 were $14.00 or 16.00 Reduced to $5.00 Were $22.00 - $28.00 Reduced to $8.00 Suede Skirts: were $18.00 NOW $6.00 No Refunds - Exchanges - Lay-a-ways 927 Massachusetts THE ATTIC Patronize Kansan Advertisers It's a Sweetheart of a Deal! LOVE TAKES MANY FORMS Send A Valentine In Print This Year THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN This Year Will Have A Special Valentine Classified Section on Monday February 14th Send A Message to Your Special Friend. IF SHE'S ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS or TOO FAT FOR CANDY a CLASSIFIED AD IS DANDY Let Someone Know How You Feel About Them. ONLY $1.00 for 25 Words Bring Your Special Message to 111 Flint by 5:00 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10 Your Message Will Appear Monday February 14. SNOW THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 82nd Year, No. 83 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Friday, February 11, 1972 KU Faculty, Staff Worried About Wages See Page 3 Sanders' Talk On Problems Women Face BY ANITA KNOPP Kansan Staff Writer Marlene Sanders, ABC news correspondent, said Thursday night that, in view of her women's movement events at the White House, she aren't in need of "consciousness raising." Referring to a speech made last week by feminist leader Robin Morgan, which called for consciousness raising among women so they could realize their oppression and reject it, Sanders said that attention-getting tactics work. This week the February Sisters, a women's rights group, has been meeting with student leaders and faculty members to discuss issues such as a day care center funded by KU. Kansan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG Sanders has known Morgan for some years and has interviewed her several times. She said that Morgan's ideas have radicalized with each interview. Sanders became the first woman to anchor a network news program when she took over anchor duties on ABC's Saturday Evening News last April. Thursday she served as the co-director of the news media and the women's liberation movement. She appeared as part of a Spring Symposium sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women. She has produced documentaries on Women's Education, women in religion, and child abuse. Sanders said she disagreed with Morgan on tactics and goals of the women's movement, and that she didn't bother with the difference between different aspects of the movement. "They are united on the goals of liberalizing abortion laws, equal pay, and day care centers," said Sanders. She said Morgan divided the movement into three areas—the conservatives, the women's liberation advocates, and the radicals. She said she was a correspondent, not a spokesman for the movement. "Journalists have to be objective and keep opinions out of reporting." Sanders In regard to the events of last week, Sanders said that the February Sisters were not justified in attacking the photographer. "You can't control what's being reported about you," she said. Even as an active supporter of women's movements, she sympathize with mistreatment of the press. "Man is not the enemy," Sanders said. "Female chauvinism is no better. I believe, as Betty Friedan said, 'man is a victim too.'" Sanders said she has experienced many frustrations in gaining her position in a predominately male field. She is one of the newsmen among a field of 200 men. She said she had been excluded from many good news stories because she was a woman. For example, she was kept from doing a Joe Namath story because "women just don't know anything about sports." Prior to working for ABC, Sanders said, she had been a writer for a sports broadcast. THE MONUMENT TO JOHN A. KENT Lincoln Day Reminder of An Era An austere view with a stormy background makes this state of Abraham Lincoln a poignant reminder of his simple life and his stormy years in the presidency. The statue is located on the lawn of the Kansas State Capitol in Topeka, Saturday is Ellsworth to Continue Policies on Visitation The Ellsworth Hall Contract Review Committee and the administrative housing board reached an agreement Thursday to review the installation policy and to keep the coeducational floor arrangement in the provisions for the 1972-73 Ellsworth Hall Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, said that a statement of understanding, which will serve as a guideline for residents and businesses, should be strengthening the hall's internal government, judicial board, communications and programming, would be put together within the next few days by the three representatives of Ellsworth. David Dysart, Lawrence third-year law student and mediator in the controversy, said that the negotiations opened up channels of communication which had been blocked by the plaintiffs in the future this would encourage students to be more candid with the administration. "We hope that this case will set a Susan Whitner, Lawrence freshman and secretary of the Eilworth Hall Review Committee said that the committee was pleased with the proposal. precedent of mediation rather than the conflict that has resulted in the past over policy issues. The Ellsworth Hall controversy stemmed from the earlier decision of the housing board to reduce the hall hours from 24 to 17 and to eliminate the教導性 floors. The board members said that they were convinced that freshman students, freshman women in particular, were not capable of handling employment with no controls and without a strict program for self-discipline. The board members also said that a resumption next year of the 24-hour open visitation policy and continuation of the current program will problems already experienced this year. The statement of understanding is intended to alleviate these problems. U.S. Stops Peace Talks; Anti-War Rally Planned President Refuses Further Concessions By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The United States indefinitely suspended the Paris peace talks Thursday in a storm of invective over an anti-war meeting scheduled this weekend at nearby communities accused the United States of honouring new military adventures in Vietnam. President Nixon told a news conference in Washington, meanwhile, that he will make no further concessions at the talks with Iran. He said he would negotiate in a manner he judges serious. The indefinite postponement infuriated the Communists, who charged the United States harbored the "intention of torpeding the conference" and displayed an "arrogant attitude" in putting off the next session. The Viet Cong delegate said U. S. Ambassador will William J. Porter's "arrogance was absolutely unpardonable" and accused the U. S. delegate of an attitude "unworthy of a representative from a country like the United States." NIXON TALKED about halting further concessions to Hanoi under present circumstances in discussing a New York news conference. Nguyen Van Thieu said there was a split between his government and the United States over the latest Nixon peace agreement. In an important news conference at the White House, Nixon said the Communists had not yet responded formally to his Jan. 25 eight-point peace proposal and there would be no further concessions on the part of the United States until, or unless, the other side joined in genuine negotiations. In that news conference Thien said that South Vietnam would make no further peace concessions despite Secretary of State Obama's assurances of flexibility in the allied position. Thue confirmed a rift between Saigon and President Nixon's administration over the latest allied peace plan. He sharply criticized Rogers, saying that if the secretary meant what he said, "It was a situation of Vietnamese sovereignty." "I will talk with Mr. Nixon about it," he said to television interview with Doc Wheeler. Nixon said all Paris peace proposals by the allies had joint Washington-Sanion approval and added that any future proposals that would be made would be joint proposals of the government of the states and the government of South Vietnam. He described as courageous Thieu's announcement, simultaneous with the unveiling of the eight-point Nixon plan, that the South Vietnamese chief would voluntarily resign a month before any elections resulting from a peace settlement. He discounted speculation concerning a Washington-Saigon rift, ORGANIZERS OF THE Versailles meeting say it will attract about 1,200 delegates from 80 countries. Formally, it is called the Paris World Assembly for Peace and Independence of the Indochinese Peoples. Stephen Ledogar, the U. S. spokesman, called the gathered "a North Vietnamese-organized show." Under questioning, he told reporters that he had no claim, but he could not divulge it. Ledogar said the United States called off the negotiating session because the antiwar conference would "befoul the atmosphere." "God knows how long it will take before the effusion dissipates," he added, when asked about his plan. Porter, addressing the Communists at the 14th session of the talks, declined to set a date for the next session as is the custom at the end of negotiating sessions. We will notify you when we have determined how soon a meeting will be desired. ★ ★ ★ Doubt on South Viets Suggested by Buildup By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The sudden buildup of U. S. airpower in the Western Pacific suggests the United States has less than full confidence that the South Vietnamese army can adequately protect the remaining American troops in the war, during any major new offensive. It also backs up President Nixon's warning to Hanoi that "I shall fully meet my responsibility . . . to protect our nation" and the event of a North Vietnamese offensive. U. S. and South Vietnamese warplanes to the air in large numbers Thursday in intense raids to counter increased attacks in the central and northern provinces. Military spokesman said U. S. Navy and Air Force jet fighter-bombers flew 85 strikes in South Vietnam, compared to a total of less than 10 in the past four months. For weeks, intelligence reports have indicated the enemy was moving troops into position and otherwise preparing to launch possibly widespread attacks in Vietnam starting about Tet, which falls on Feb. 15. Propeller-driven Skyraiders and subsonic jets of the South Vietnamese air force fweer another 85 strikes, many of them in the central highlands and coastal lowlands where an enemy offensive has been predicted. The targets were suspected enemy troop concentrations, bunkers and supply trails. Some strikes were in direct support of allied ground troops batting Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces around the districts of district towns and military camps. U. S. reconnaissance jets also ranged over North Vietnam to pinpoint supply buildings in the event President Nixon ordered another bombing campaign against the North. As the U. S. withdrawal has progressed at an accelerated pace, American troops and bases in Vietnam have become increasingly vulnerable. U. s. ground combat strength, once about 10 divisions, has been cut to 11 battalions for security duty. The bulk of the 133,000 U. s. troops left in Vietnam are trained chiefly for logistics and other support functions, not for infantry duty. Price Board Freezes Private Utility Rates WASHINGTON (AP)—The Price Commission Thursday froze all private utility rates across the nation and gave the government 10 to sharpen its utility price guidelines. The freeze means that virtually all electric, gas, telephone, telegraph, railroad, airline and intercity bus and trucking rates will be held for up to 30 days at whatever rates were legally in effect at midnight Wednesday. It temporarily blocks about 900 requests or increases totaling billions of dollars, but it's not a big problem. Publicly owned utilities, such as public mass transit systems and municipal water operations, are not frozen. Their rates may go up. Price Commission chairman C. Jackson Gracey Jr. said the temporary freeze was ordered because the panel's three-and-a-half-year regulations have turned out to be too tuggy. He said the commission will hold four days of public hearings, its first open session on any subject, beginning next Feb. 22. Residents and Industries Protest 'Tax Grab' Northwest Annexation THE KANSAS' POWER IN LIGHT COMPANY CITY LIMIT ANTI-LITTER DURANCE ENFORCED FINE 500 AND/or 30 DAYS IN JAIL HELP US KEEP LAWRENCE CLEAN By MARK BEDNER Kansan Staff Writer Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE KPL Clings to City Limit Annexation protested The conflict arose during a City Commission meeting on Feb. 1. At the bench steps toward unanimous agreement, the land despite protests from residents of the area and from officials from the Calgary Chemical Co. and Kansas Power and Light Officials from KPL warned that the annexation, although it would bring $633,660 additional revenue to the city, could result in a 13 per cent surcharge being assessed Lawrence residents on their monthly electrical bills. Controversy continues to surround a recent City Commission decision to annex the old courthouse. Austin Stedham, division manager of KPL, pointed out that it would be unfair to spread the cost of the new taxes to the 200,000 customers KPL serves outside the Lawrence area and that, as a result, the surcharge would be levied against customers regularly. The increase would affect all city customers, including the University. CITY MANAGER Buford Watson said that the city would initiate court action, if necessary, to prevent KPL from assessing the surcharge. Residents of the area then requested Douglas County Attorney Mike Elwell to review the complaint. state statute that empowers the county attorney to challenge the validity of city annexation, the residents sought Elwell's assistance in preventing the city from annexing the land. Elwell remained on the city council until she left from the state attorney general's office. Meanwhile, the city agreed to delay the second and final reading of the motion to annex the land at last Tuesday's Commission meeting. The delay was intended to provide opponents of the annexation time to prepare their case against the move. Opponents have insisted that the City Commission is making a "tax grab" by annexing the large tract of land. Many residents of the area complained that the city imposed $385 per cent if the city annexed the land, would force them to move from their homes. Few of the residents were willing to discuss the case and waited for a final decision. GEORGE ALLEN, attorney for a group of residents opposing the annexation, said he believed many of the residents were "unhappy" to "see this case through its finality." "I will recommend that the residents of the area in question who want to go on record as protesting this move by the city do so." Allen said. "The others will have to decide for themselves what they want to do." THE TITLE OF THE EXHIBITION IS "FROM LISTENING TO TRACE" AND IT WILL BE EXHIBITED AT THE MUSEUM OF ARTS & CULTURE FROM AUGUST 10TH TO SEPTEMBER 23RD. Kansan Photo by BECKY PIVONKA Serene Atmosphere of Spooner Encourages Student's Endeavor Cyd Millstein, Kansas City senior, seems to find Spooner Art Museum a conducive atmosphere for studying. Actually she serves as a guard for the museum and is taking advantage of the time that must be spent by getting in some work on classes. As the third week of classes ends more and more students are finding that midterms are not all that far away, and even if they can't do it in the art museum, they are beginning to hit the books. 2 Friday. February 11, 1972 University Daily Kansan People . . . . . Places . . . . . Things People: PRESIDENT NIXON declared Thursday that he would neither increase taxes this year nor "replace one regressive tax with another" to tuff his State of the Union promise to seek a way to reduce tax rates. He also said the government officials gave favorable assessments of the value added tax to the Commission on Intergovernmental Relations. But they said Nixon has no decided to propose this form of sales tax to him. **NINA VAN PALLAND** few in from London after having vowed "to tell the truth about Clifford Irving; even if it meant him going to prison" and having his case heard by Monday before a federal grand jury probing possible mail fraud in the mystery surrounding Irving's purported autobiography of his lawyer. Places: TEHRAN, Iran—Thousands of Iranian villagers were unacquainted with the refugees in outlying areas after four years of drought. Newspapers put the figure of missing persons at 6,000. A five-man mountain team that set out to search for them Tuesday has also vanished. Officials say there are more than 1,000 refugees in Tehran. TOPEKA—A bill designed to improve the ecology by providing economic incentive for return of beer and soft drink containers was approved by the Federal and State Affairs Committee of the Kansas House. The measure now moves on for consideration by the full membership of the lower branch of the legislature. The bill also requires that all establishments hold a refund value of five cents. The measure also outlawns any metal container which has a detachable part—in other words, it would rule out the pull-tab cans. Things: British authorities have requested a stepup in the IRISH REPUBLICAN ARMY'S GUERRILLA FIGHT to take over Northern Ireland, involving heightened firepower and greater expertise. This intensification, they said Thursday night, could be an important step in the implementation of the Irish struggle and perhaps an attempt to make it an issue between the Atlantic Alliance and the Communist bloc. After six years of frustration, advocates of an accelerated KANSAS HIGHWAY PROGRAM are nearing success. Only the signature of Gov. Robert Duckett is needed now to enact into law a new highway system that will be completed in an eight-year period to speed construction on the state's freeways. By SALLY MORGAN Kansan Staff Writer The February Sisters assembled Thursday evening to discuss strategy in their fight for a child care center for the University community, following a refusal Wednesday by the Finance and Auditing Committee to allocate funds for the center. Sisters Discuss Strategy For Child Center Fight Members of the group were informed that the senate would be called to discuss the Sisters to discuss hiring of experts with Senate funds to work out a more detailed plan for the center which would be acceptable to the senate. General consensus among the Sisters was that the Senate's refusal to allocate funds should not be considered a major challenge, there was still much enthusiasm for the project among the public. THE SISTERS said that a major problem in formulating a concrete plan for the center was that it would require how many people would be in need of the center's services. One Sister said the University would be overheated at the large number of people needing the center. The problem of who would be allowed to use this center after it was established was discussed. When the center is opened, the center would be primarily used for University students and personnel but that the center would not be used for Lawrence residents. At the very least, one Sister said, the center could be used by the town as a place for forming the town's own center. The major concern among the Sisters was that affirmative Scannell Presents Evidence Against Consolidation Bill Dale P. Scannell, dean of the University of Kansas School of Education for continuing the schools of education at all three state universities and the Wichita Education Committee, Representatives from Wichita State University and Kansas State University also spoke before the A bill introduced in the House in January by Bert Chaney, D-N.H., sponsored three schools. Chaney, an instructor at Hutchinson Junior High, is at Hutchinson Jr. high. introduced to stimulate discussion among educators and legislators of economy measures at the six state schools. Seannell, KSU's Samuel Keyes, and WSU's John Chaffee joined Chairman Jalsch, KSU's assistant academic dean and chairman of the department of academic de- fice Officers (COCAO), in presenti- ng testimony against the bill. Chaimers said that COCAO, programs at the state institutions to avoid duplication, was working on many of the same education initiatives. were currently concerned. "It would seem to me to be unwise to make major reorganizations higher education institutions legislative fat without benefit of the detailed study and analysis currently underway by COCAO," he said, evidence to suggest that significant savings could be realized by consolidation of all reorganizations or fewer campuses in the state." action be continued to show that the Sisters were not slackening their fight for the center. ONE SISTER announced that she had an appointment with Chancellor E. E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. for Wednesday and the all interested Sisters were invited to go with her to the meeting. more facts were gathered concerning the center. The Sisters hope to have the petitions out by Monday. The Sisters decided to draw up a petition to be circulated among the students and faculty while The Sisters also discussed the idea of a circular to be mailed to all women of the University community who would be in need of the center. The Sisters solved problems was women who were unformed as to the group's goals. Nominations To Honor 4 Teachers Nominations for four teaching awards are now being accepted by the National Affairs, Vice-Chancellor Dr. H. Heller announced Thursday. The awards of $1,000 each will be presented to four individuals. Nominations, which may be must be submitted by Feb. 28 and should include a brief description of the nominee's teaching methods. "All dogs and cats will have to follow the Lawrence leash law," he said. A meeting of Souffier residents will be held at 7.30 p.m. on Monday, November 18th, at the cafeteria to discuss the proposal and vote on it. A majority of the residents will be needed to constitute a quorum, Stoneman SUA Travel PASSPORT PHOTOS He said if the Souffer residents passed the proposal, he did not anticipate difficulty in getting approval of the measure. Must sign up at SUA office by noon Friday, Feb. 14. Parking Fees Net $6,144 at Games Basketball parking fees from Allen Field House lots netted the Land and Security Office $14,148 for 64 lots,嬉垫 every game and parked in one of the lots where a 30-cent fee was charged; your share of that cost is $12. If you are also a student who purchased a parking permit for N-zone or O-zone, you paid a total The proposal limits domestic animals in married housing to a minimum of three. It complains committee, whose "decision is final," to handle the case. Stouffer Place Residents Start Pet Petition Stoneman said he and Bird, both residents of Stouffler Place, discussed the idea with J. J Wilson, director of University housing, forming a committee of Stouffler residents to draft the proposal. A proposal to permit household pets in Stouffer Place has been made by Stoneman and Mike Bird, Lawrence junior. of $22.50 for parking privileges in those zones last year. That total was based on figures released by Traffic and Security Office Thursday. According to Charles W. Weinberg, the most money sent to the Parking Fees Fund which pays for the general maintenance of the park. Patronize Kansan Advertisers I. N. Davis, Traffic and traffic officer manager, said part of the money had been used to pay Phi Kappa Tau fraternity members who collected the fees entrances of N. and Ozones. Davis said a 1957 Kansas State university control campus parking and place restrictions on any University parking lot for students. The sale of parking spaces "is a measure to equalize the expense of parking in the lots," Davis said. He said the state would not meet the expense of the lot. GEM THEATER Adm. $1.00 Baldwin City Show T. 7:30 Feb. 12.12.11 Sa. Sa. Su Jane Fonda & Donald Sutherland 'klute' Feb. 15, 16 T.W. T. W. Richard Burton & Elizabeth Taylor In "Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf?" 1974 COULD FIND YOU JUST ANOTHER COLLEGE GRAD OR A JR. EXEC IN MANAGEMENT. If you're a young man or woman with 2 academic years remaining either at the undergraduate or graduate level, you can apply for entry in the Air Force's 2-year UMC program, offered on college campuses all across the country. If you qualify, you'll receive a scholarship. If you qualify, graduating you'll receive an officer's commission in the Air Force. Also, this year, for the first time, the Air Force is offering hundreds of scholarships in the Air Force ROTC, 2-year program paying full tuition; lab expenses; incidental fees; a textbook fee; tax-free. For more information, mail in the coupon today. Or, call 800-619-1972 to meet up with us. In "New Jersey入侵 980-262-1981," U.S. AIR FOE RECRUTING SERVICE DIRECTORATE OF ADVERTISING RANDOLPH OE FOE BASE, TEXAS 78148 Please send me more information on Air Force ROTC 2-year program Name___ Date of Birth___ Address___ City___ State___ Zip___ Dear Graduation ___ College ___ There is no obligation. Political commitments were also the cause of the cancellation "We're also in the process of trying to recode the Dole lecture this week, and this will be very difficult due to the public commitments he has made." Find yourself a scholarship in Air Force ROTC. Vickers Series Still Seeking Speakers Although plans are indefinite, Von Ende said Zumwalt might be rescheduled for April 13. Zumwalt, who was to have worked with his speech, was forced to cancel his 9 speech because of illness. Despite the cancellations of both Sen. Robert Dole and Adm. Zelum Zumwalt as speakers in the Vickers Lecture Series, the series committee is continuing its brief invitations to the University of Kansas. Rick Von Ende, assistant to the director of University Relations, which coordinates the series, said that he will preschedule Dole, chairman of the Republican National Committee, for a naval operation, this spring. 2-NR-22 m. Iranian Students Demand 150 Prisoners' Release On Von Ende said the committee's invitations to Anatoly Dobryzin, Soviet ambassador to the United States, and Abba Eban, foreign minister of Israel, to speak next night brought noncommittal replies. One member of the confederation, who refused to identify himself for fear of punishment by the family to the Iranian government, said the only function of the organization was to put as much pressure as possible on the facist regime of the Shia. The expenses for the series, which include publishing the speech, traveling expenses, education costs are paid for by the interest from a $100,000 endowment fund from the Vickers family of Wichita. He said the confederation of Iranian students was one of the largest student organizations in the country and about 95 per cent members. About 95 per cent of the prisoners are graduates or of Iranian universities, he said. Von Ende said Dobrynin expressed an interest in coming to the University if it could be made accessible, but probably not before fall. if Dole's speech twice in November. Von Ende said, "I don't know what to say." F. O'Brien has been able to appear out of the three schedule series on Friday. Von Ende said the series committee could afford to bring about five speakers to the University every two years. A petition demanding the immediate release of 150 "political prisoners" being held by the government of Iran is campaigned on the KU campus in Conference Center of Iranian Student Association Plans for bringing Eban to the university are being negotiated with the local council. Ende said they seemed hopeful that Eban would accept the offer. The organization hopes to obtain at least 1,000 signatures. So far, 500 students have signed. Sunday at NEW HAVEN Live Entertainment Featuring THE NEW GRAPE BAND with Billy Spears Pat Beardsly Gordon Cleveland Duke and Joyce Dane Eban's personal schedule and commitments would also determine whether Eban would to speak at the University According to a member of the confederation, the petition will be sent to the Iranian ambassador to Russia, Mr. Khodroi, prime minister of Iran. He said the purpose of the petition was to express consciousness of the people in the country. Literature being distributed by the organization states that the prisoners are being 'tortured in their prisons. They allegedly are civilians who were court-martialled by closed military courts. Six other persons were being considered by the Vickers Lecture Society committee. Von Tebel but their names could not be released. KU COMMISSION SPRING 72 WEEK ABOUT WOMEN SYMPOSIUM STATUS of WOMEN Monday 10:30 AM. KLWN "World of Women" 7 p.m. KANU "Women in the Professior" Thursday 7 FEBBRUARY film "Women & Liberation" ABC Documentary 7:30 Forum rm Speaker: MARIENE SANDERS ABC NEWS CORRESPONDENT 8:00 Woodruff Friday Panel: Leading Local force in women's Movement Feminist Drama "Sugar and Spice—Revisited" 7:30 BIG-FIGHT Rm. knocked off SUITS . . . from 45.00 ST. VALENTINE'S DAY MASSACRE rubbed out SHIRTS... 2.00 slaughtered SPORT COATS . from 25°0 OTHER CRIMES COMMITTED ON TIES WASH PANTS . . SHOES . . I ambushed WINTER COATS from 20.00 slashed SLACKS . . . 1/2 off gunned down SWEATERS . . . from 9.95 MISTER GUY 920 MASSACHUSETTS 920 MASSACHUSETTS TWO DAYS REMAINING! Friday, February 11, 1972 University Daily Kansan 3 AAUP Rates KU Salaries Low ers Two Legislators Answer Letter By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer Only two of five state legislators have responded to a letter from the University of Kansas chapter of the American Association of University Professors conducting funds for the university's salaries and academic operations. Those two replies were favorable. J. Bunker Blark, associate professor of music history and president of KU-AAUP, sent letters Jan. 8 to Rep. John Vogel, Rep. Richard L. Lawrence, R-Lawrence, and Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, which summarized the salary situation and possible results of a second nastere budget. He requested that he be in seeking necessary funds. Rep. Clyde Hill, R-Yates Center, chairman of the House Committee on Education Sen. Tom Van Sickle, R-Fort Scott, chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, to a request that time be made available for KU-AUP meeting to appear in committee meeting to answer questions concerning the consequences of low support for VOGEL AND BOOTH responded sympathetically. No replies were received from Kay, Hill and Van Sickle. In a letter dated Jan. 21, Wojel wrote: "I agree with your views on the issue of education and I assure you that I will make a strong plea to find ways for the state of Kansas to provide the public education in the state." "Certainly I am supportive in all of your arguments. I will certainly do everything I possibly can. Booth wrote in his letter of Dark minimized the effects of KU-AUAP's inability to appear before the Senate and House Ways and Means Committees. "They would probably guess what a professor would say, anyway," he said. The chancellor, who are students, should be more effective in giving arguments in favor of more support." CLARK SAID there were no alternative plans to seek support in the legislature. The KU-AUAP has been trying to distribute information on how KU teacher salaries compare with those of other institutions, he said. "I seems to me that the information speaks loudly, and I hope to disseminate it more widely during the last few months," prepared to give more details "we Committee on the Economic Status of the Profession, accounter to the chair, Rupert, a professor of education and chairman of the committee. The group also makes communications with the information gathered, he said. Compilation and distribution of information on teacher salaries is also the primary function of the "The faculty might like to see us be more aggressive in watchdogging the legislature," he said, "but that's not what Workers from the University of Kansas were not exempt, even protesting the leakage wage increase on the last 15 months expect something that could mistake the employer. Workers Want Wage Correction "Someone must correct that mistake." he said. The Senate Ways and Means Committee has approved a five per cent wage increase, but it will retroactively, as Rose had said. The union also asked that the pay structure for classified Civil Service employees be raised to make them more competitive in job market. Rose said the workers lived with the situation while they waited for the next session of the court. Rose corrected the "incorrect" that existed Lloyd Rose, business manager of Loyal Line 1132. Labors workers of America, a club, said Thursday his group "realized that a mistake had been made" in the workers' wages were not raised along with wages for other workers. we're all about." No action has been planned by the union, but "committees are meeting all the time," Rose said. In a meeting may be held here soon. There is no tabulation of there are about 1,800 Local 1132 but Rose estimates that there are about 1,800 where there are eligible to be members. Workers from KU picketed the statehouse Jan. 14 in below zero weather, and about a dozen of the workers outleaf trees on Wednesday. RUPPERT SAID the committee was now sending surveys to teachers no longer needed by them to determine their reasons for leaving. Statistics comparing salary levels in different departments were also available. The university were also available through the commission, he said. Chances are not good that the workers' demands for a retractive pay increase will be met. Sen. Tom R. Van Sickle, RFort South, Senate Ways and Reams Committee chairman, and Mr. James Lindsay supplemental funds would require new taxes. If the legislature approves the appropriations bill for colleges and universities as expected, the five per cent merit increases already agreed upon by the Ways will become effective July 1. The AAUP rates the salaries payable to institutions on a ten-time scale for a position of professor, associate professor, assistant Professor, and Researcher. Whether institutions can be meaningfully compared depends upon the number and type of degrees offered, Kuppert said. A doctoral grant is 15 or more doctoral degrees each year in at least three non-religious disciplines. The second category can be any doctoral degree or but doctoral degrees are of inadequate number or distribution in areas to be considered in the first category to comprise the third category. RUPERT SAID this classification invoked even more advanced made. Professors teaching at undergraduate graduates are more qualified and better paid than those at four-year schools, he said. STEREO DISCOUNT Now you can buy the finest in stereo at The AUPT rated KU salaries for the 1970-17 academic year in the college and the 10th (lowest) for associate and assistant professor positions. Factory cost+10% Clark included these statistics in his letter to the members of the legislature. ★ Selected lines ★ The best buys at RAY AUDIO 842-2047 1205 Prairie Ave Consulting—Free tea & coffee—Factory servicing "Even high salaries," said Clark, "will not compensate for a decrease in the library acquisition budget, nor inadequate buildings, nor larger class sizes and higher teaching levels. So over-average compensation for graduate student instructors." NEW CLASSIC SOUL LP Pushing Your Luck Steepy King James Patterson and Kevin **Pushing Your Luck** is a classic, in one or two time, a collection of stories. Our celebration of Sleepy King's one of America's greatest western town to South America Sleepy King has won friends and fortune in the cast. This is the dawning of the Sleepy King's classic hit LP Sleepy Sleepy King's classic quality is perfection. The message is supreme. "Pushing Your Luck" is the best of quality. $END$ SEND $6.95 MONEY ORDER TO: Awake Record "Pushing Your Luck" Sleepy King's box 572 New York, NY Name ___ Address ___ City ___ St ___ Zip ___ Dunham's make the original "Waffle-Stomper" A hiking boot that lasts. Split leather uppers and vibram soles. Built to last in any weather. In both men's and women's sizes. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Patronize Kansan Advertisers 1972 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION On March 15 and 16, new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973, 1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected. To Become a candidate: Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Thursday, February 17. In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate. A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OF FICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.- 5:00 p.m. All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date. For Further Information: Call 864-3710 4 Friday, February 11, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Sgt. Pepper's Past A friend of mine tells me that on this day in 1964 the Beatles made their first appearance in America. She has a lock of hair from Ringo's wrist, and she sits on the front row at that debut performance in Washington Coliseum. Hair styles have changed a lot since then. But so have the Beatles, and so has America. That group of four fellows that started clean-shaven in page boys and ended up as hip-hop stars doubt helped to pace those changes that have been sweeping our land for the last eight years. They came singing simple songs about dancing and holding hands. They moved on to consider in their music those things that their peers were becoming so aware of: the emptiness of a materialistic society, the immorality of war. And they finished up tired, confused and disgruntled, asking us to simply let it be. Let it be. The Beatles provided a voice for young people. A voice at times naive: You know what I mean "Well, she was just seventeen you know what I mean And the way she looked was way behind compare", at times. At times. You say you want a revolution?" Attitudes silly; "I'd like to be Under the sea In an octopus's garden In the rain.' And so it was that they reflected, at times anticipated, our loves, our hopes and our frivolities. They translated our feelings in an easy, carefree way. You just switched on the radio as you were dragging Main, and there it was, just the way we dragged it. You were dragging on other things, the music probably was coming through a stereo, but it was still just right. Well, they're gone now, and when we hear them on the golden oldie shows, or get out the old albums we're touched with nostalgia. That's the word my folks use when they listen to Guy Lombardo. But there are kids growing up now that don't know what the Beatles were, and probably won't have seen 80 or more of them now how their parents could stand them. Maybe not though. Maybe this time we latched on to something that will really stick. Maybe the Beatles' music won't be quickly rejected as trite and old-fashioned by our progeny. But if their music is to last, it must come true. Their best dreams must be realized. —Mike Moffet Associate Editor GOLE RIGHT WAY THE THOUGHTS OF MADO THE THINKING OF NIXON CHOCOLATE HAGGIE "My flight will be for peace and understanding . . ." Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 380 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation. Letters must include the name of the institution must provide their name; year in school and home faculty; student's first name and position; others must provide their name and address. --an closing, I find it interesting that the Kansan saw fit to send a male reporter to cover Morgan's appearance and that the two women concerned Morgan and the February Sisters were likewise written by males. Am I to assume that there are no qualified female reporters who can assist these tasks? Or perhaps it is time that the sexism Letters Policy Garry Wills POLICE DEPT. Alvin Toftner's best-selling book, *Future Shack*, tries to sell us doom on the installation plan. It inches pop sociology up into the realm of a new genre, pop eschatology. Life ahead will be awful; but we must learn to put up with it. We can be community by dutiful self-administered doses of the most recent awfulness. Future Schlock Talk The only trouble with "accepting the future" (that brave old liberal phrase) is that we do not know what the future is, so long as it is future. What the phrase comes down to in practice is accepting some professor's version of the future—which is often an outmoded idea by the time it gets stated, and has the power of becoming a present reality. Thus we can accept A, along—instead—comes B; and we are worse prepared than ever for the present. Or, in Toffler's case, we will have swallowed all those immunity-inducing After all, the only thing I'm sure I'll be doing in the future is—nothing. In long-range terms (which our work often does), our mission in fact, I might be dead tomorrow. doses of the future's arsenic, only to find that the real poison, when it its us, is strychnine. Better, then, to wait; and to happen, whatever it is, when it comes. Why waste time today getting ready for what I may not be able to do on some distant tomorrow? The real rule is the exact opposite of the puritan version: We should never do today what we can put off till tomorrow. Put off, for instance, reading Future Shock until you might want to read it, but hardly for shock. Only for laughs. When Toffer is not safe (i.e., non-predictive) in his "predictions," he is random; when not dull, he is silly. His book, like its companion best-seller, The Greening of America, is one of those fads that are so hard to imagine descends to the level of recommending the comic strip Barbarelle and a Kaiser Aluminum guessing game as ways of becoming "future-conscious." Future-consciousness is essentially passive. It asks us to accept the future, whatever it may hold. But the energies of life reject what is alien to life. Life judges. Only death accepts. But what of our "responsibility to the future?" Well, in the first place, that is a responsibility to have life now, and so we can be a genius in discriminate absorption, by not serving life, serves neither future nor present. Because we can do certain things, must we do them? That was the key for me to be a particularly passive and unhereto miracle of accumulating mechanisms. Should it also be the principle for human genetic experiment? Toffer seems to be a genetic experiment; makes us slaves to our own inventions. Those who worry about future population and ecological problems do their own cause a disservice when they ask men to act for a tomorrow that may never come. The earth is polluted and overpopulated, right now. Men have long opined that things may reach a toxic degree of clutter; and they did need to go back to that condition. We have famous's problems in our today, which is the only place to encounter them. Toffler's "future-consciousness" only diverts us from that task. Talk of future shock is a present soporific. Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate Readers Respond Objectivity To the editor: I was quite put off by Mike Moffet's editorial concerning Robin Morman who appeared in a magazine that helped but feel that Moffet approached his subject with a certain敏感性 unbecoming a journalist. Mofet then stated that Morgan, rejected Marx andLenin because "they were men." Out of context, they seemed to have received pure female chauvinism. It should, however, be noted that the remark accompanied an insistence upon the shortcomings of Marxist doctrine as it regards the condition of women. Women do not receive professional medical system, and therefore can find no satisfaction within traditional evolutionary Marxist thinking. Female nurses Lenin did not concern themselves more with the special circumstances of females. In addition, nurses not "they were" unsympathetic. i.e. unsympathetic and ignorant of the problems facing oppressed females. Her point has far less appeal than that of Mofet's superficial and simplistic account. would be more realistic. They have received better services from their paper had the transcript of Morgan's remarks in Moffet's edited memorandum and Moffet's editorial omitted. Sisters; Sisters; Sisters . . . Moffet stated that at the beginning of the lecture men were asked to move to the back of the chair, and then occupy their seats. He then drew an implicit comparison between this request and the old racist practice of "move to the back of the bus." This provides UDR readers with a grossly inaccurate impression that they are more important than Morgan asked that all males who were seriously struggling with their sexism give their seats to them. She felt that it was more important that women hear her remarks on male Compliance Put, because situation bore no resemblance whatever to the prescriptions white American to harass blacks. reflected in our paper receive critical examination. Tom Page Wichita senior Misconceptions ★★ To the Editor: We have just returned from Kate Millet's movie "Three Lives, and we are amazed. This film shows the experiences to be found these days when everyone is so involved with ego tripping and playing the games. As we walked through the front of us were discussing the movie—quote "This woman had all she could have wanted and she had gone to mansion in the Philippines, seven live-in servants, and an alcoholic husband for whom she waited at a bar. And crying over what she considered to be her lonely, sterile life). According to this person, "her only problem was herself. We could have sat there and listened to her explaining her feelings, her ideas about life and still feel that she is more than a woman. How did he miss the whole essence of her personality and the significance of her life and the she was learning about herself." Is he going to deprive himself of a whole experience of life with the kind of women who, like most men, can be so scared and some answers because he can't see beyond the traditional newspost of our narrow, sick ACKM woman's afraid of change that they discredit it even when it's put down to women for fear of change women's liberation really going to have something important to say to every one of us and not just a few isolated people who are fearful for it? It seems there are people right on this campus who feel that a woman wants to be taken care of upon women as having the same needs, as having anything unique and important to say about life, to be married to women, to wife and mother. This isn't to discredit marriage (necessarily) and parenthood—but only to say that we need to designate women designed to live together, to both "live and contribute to each other" lives in real ways, not to be scared or stereotypes. No one is satisfied with that kind of life" once they realize that something has happened all search deep into our creativity and imagination and try to realize the potential in each of us—and realize too that, to us, our own experiences matter more than men's liberation is all about Valerie Kelly Columbia, Mo. Senior Ann Jochems Bellevue, Nebraska Senior ★★ Ann Jochems Naivete To the editor: About the editorial of Feb. 9. I am glad to you agree that the Sisters need publicity. I am also confident our organization as having great conviction and "such a good cause." Your slightly patronizing tone but that alone would not have prompted me to write. What I find most displeasing and unpleasant is my approach to complex problems and a naivete that one hoped had been lost during previous years. We recognize the justification for individual anonymity in such an action as occupation of a law firm. This action has been used too often by authority as a means of destroying a liberation action against the demands and problems that provoked the action. We must realize by now that this is a step in the wrong direction and leads to destructive action, as well as an intensification of an problem. When the photographer Kansan threaten the anonymity of the Sisters occupying the body partly because part of the problem is part of the solution, and be dealt with as such. As well, it is dealt with a false representation of the news publication, specifically occupied the building, rather than reporting that a group of women were infiltrated into the organization such an action. Let's not constantly constate only the false issues of a movement; this has meant the mistake of the press in general. You say that it is not the University's responsibility to provide a day care center. This line of thought would fit better than the university instruction was seen as a privilege for the upper classes only. The responsibility that the university has to offer is to teach the students representation, to aide a junior newspaper to offer opportunity to By Sokoloff Bill Nelson Wichita junior Delusions A WIZARD HOLDING THE CROWN. journalism students; the university has this same responsibility to provide a day care center. By offering a day care center, the University is denying a tremendous right to too many people. The temptation to suggest a different way of asking could come from is strong, but will leave that to the people who are paid to make such decisions. But it seems more likely. To the Editor: $ Griff and the Unicorn ★★★ (left) A boy in a party hat stands in front of the moon, gazing at it. A girl in a dress stands next to him, also gazing at the moon. I wish to comment on the letters of John Overbrook and Darrae Delamadeia which I read in the New York Post February 9. The writers seem to be under a delusion which is very likely shared by many others. They believe that the demands of the brunettes Sisters were already being dealt with positive way by the Administration. What evidence do they have for this? Are they responsible for the administration as prima facie evidence that significant action had already been taken on some of the demands? If so, they who have been patiently attempting for months, by working within the system, to get the Affirmative Action Program by the University, can state that no such program has been initiated. The only work which is being done by the Affirmative Action Program is a detailed faculty salary study being made by Vice- Within the past 5 months there has been much correspondence and conversation with the people she initiated not only by my committee, but also by Dean Emily Taylor and by Professor James Morton and the committee chairman. We have had promises and no results. I applaud the courage of the women who, by their action last year, helped to ensure that others were not able to achieve by working within the system. They had evidently failed to keep pace with patience ceases to be a virtue ("Thos. Morton, 1798). In the words of Chip Cresser's editorial of attention upon a situation that long has been ignored and which now can be acted upon." It is important that such attention takes to action before the Administration really lists. Their action also accomplished another thing. It opened up lines of communication serving to invite women in many areas of the University community. It is no longer (if it happens to happen) which concerns a "poor opposing group of about 30." Chancellor Heller's office. This study is, however, but a small expansion of an action program; since it will only serve as part of an analysis of deficiencies in one area. Where are the goals and timetables for correcting these deficiencies? If so, what action" has been taken in these areas, why hasn't the committee shown us any evidence of it. Joan Handley, Chairman Committee on the Status of Women KU-AAPU THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-4810 Business Office—UN 4-4258 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year excerpted from examination periods. Mail subscription rates $6 a semester. $10 a year. Seen on courses offered by all U.S. public colleges, good goods, services and employment offered to all students without a college credit or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University. News Advisor ... Del Brinkman Editor ... Chip Crowns Muse Editor ... Mike Muffet Campus Editor ... Scott Spicer News Editors ... Rita Haugh, Dawn Bay, Epstein, Jennifer Wearn News Editors ... Joe Newman, Roy King Cog Chief ... Sally Carlson, Robin Music Editors ... Hibbins Sports Editors ... Hibbins Availability Editor ... Matt Mappett Feature Editor ... Barbara Burkeck Expert Writer ... Tom Slaughter Wire Editors ... Neil Browne Makeup Editor ... Joyce Duhamel Review Editor ... Dick Hay, John Goodiff Photographers ... Ed Lillo, Kylene Nutner, Office Manager ... Grag Sorber, Tom Pennell Cartoonist ... Todd Rush NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman BUSINESSSTAFF Business Adviser... Mel Adams Business Manager Associate Advertising Manager Associate Advertising Manager Norman Mauley Associate Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Data Pilfererages Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Dave Murray Done Django H REFERENCE FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READERS' DISTRICT SERVICES, INC. 360 LINNOCK AVENUE, NEW YORK, N.Y. 10027 Friday, February 11, 1972 五 this all ive only neer end ner end neer she nere are nere et nyan an novere nore tlyh iust ch stng to ng to tlyh je" to sed soo ich it ch its res ans nes nees res ans f it 希 sed Campus Briefs Legislators on 'Call-In' the leaders of the two branches of the Kansas Legislature can be questioned by the public Sunday from 10.30 p.m. to midnight on Thursday, and the chief investigators for KFKU-Angle Glee Smith, R-Learned, pro-ten pro-m of the Kansas Senate, and Calvin Strowig, R-Abilleme, speaker of the House of Representatives, will be questioned by their unseen investigators by a broadcast answer to his question by telephoning the station at 864-4530. Funkadelic Concert The Urban Affairs Benefit Program Committee will present the Funkadelic band in concert at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium, to raise money for Support of Educational Services. S.F.S. is an organization that provides counseling and tutoring programs. The band has recorded three albums, "Free Your Mind and Your Ass Will Follow," "Maggot Brain" and "Funkadelic," their first. KU Hillel Service Tonight KU Hillel will have an informal Sabbath service at 7 o'clock in the Curry Room of the Kansas Union. A discussion on marriage and fertility is planned for Sunday. Soccer Club to Organize Editor Attacks Credibility The Soccer Club will hold an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Westminster Center. By RICHARD COOLEY Kansan Staff Writer American newspapers have lost credibility among readers in recent years by concentration on 'making words' instead of 'writing.' Mark Ethridge, editor of the New York Free Press, said yesterday. Ethridge made the remark in accepting the William Allen University national journalistic merit on behalf of John Knight, chairman of Knight Newspapers, Inc. (NY) who was unable to attend the 23rd annual awards lunch, held in the Big Apple Union as Union yesterday afternoon. Ethridge said the primary responsibility of newspapers should be to "make sense of the information they have failed to meet that responsibility because of their "unthinkable arrogance" toward their readers. He said many editors, in addition to his colleagues, had unconsciously begun to apply 'singular labels to plural people', and ended up "writing about society while relying on their own individual selves." BECAUSE NEWSAPERS concentrated on reporting events instead of attitudes. Eidridge wrote that newspapers and were totally unprepared for some of the turbulent event of the last decade. Newspaper stories had been filled with such terms as "hackers," "virulent institutions" without really telling readers what the terms meant, he said. "We were lulled for years into talking about 'turning the corner' 10 Stuart Awbrey in Vietnam, without really knowing what the term meant," he said. Ethridge, whose career as a newsman covers more than 20 years and has made editions so official Free Press. He said the Pentagon papers controversy was an example of how news has given to American newspapers. been reported," he said, "and yet their publication became a great issue." Even the Supreme Court, he said, considered the national interest as one involving the national interest of the United States. "EVERYTHING IN the Pentagon Papers had already HE SAID editors must edit out of their own personal concerns and not be swayed by popular fads. "We can only conclude that the government's credibility is higher than ours. he said. "If we the teachers fail, the challenge facing newspaper today, he said, is to focus on focus with changing readers." At the same lunchon, Stuart Awbrey, publisher of the Hutchinson News, became the 10th Kansas to receive the White Hat award for introduction by Whitely Austin, publisher of the Salina Journal. Awbrey outlined two basic principles which had guided his work. "Editing," he said, "is a subjective, intuitively affair, as all real life is, and should not be beholdied to the account." Awbrey said editors should not power the power as optimism makes the case. The services more to reinforce opinions of the public than to change them. He said that the media should be. were examples of public opinion running counter to prevailing editorial opinion. Somewhat tongue-in-cheek, he observed that although 90 per cent of Kansas newspapers will support John Kane, the most Kansasans will "go out and vote for Vern Miller, if he runs." Awbrey started his career as a reporter for the Hutchinson News and was later associated with the Garden City Telegram and the Burlington, Iowa. Hawkeye wrote for the Hutchinson News in 1965. Awhey pointed out that although the power of newspapers to change opinions of the public has a responsibility to broaden the horizons of readers, to give them the options they need to make decisions on public issues, it is at the hard rock of prejudice." YAMANHA TREASURE SALE 1979 Honda 350cc $250 1980 Honda 150cc $250 1981 Honda 400cc $250 1982 Honda 600cc $250 1983 AJS 250cc $250 1984 Yamaha 115cc $250 1985 Yamaha 135cc $250 ERN'S CYCLE SALES 171 North 2nd Phone 861 3831 Speed, 'New Journalism' Cited As Press Problems By RON WOMBLE Kansan Staff Writer Roscoe C. Born, associate editor of the National Observer magazine, described Thursday night the two problems in journal coverage of the press: too great an importance placed on speed and the ability to cover it. Born said part of the trouble lay in 'the acquired instinct that makes us believe that speed is important.' Born said the importance. Born said the importance. Born was not able to attend, so his remarks were delivered at the White Day dinner by White Day dinner by Paul C. Hood, senior editor of the New York Times. Campus Bulletin Chrysler Service Managers Seminar: 8.20 a.m., International Room. Region H Restoration, Registration and B. Cafelefer Chrysler Seminar Luncheon noon great time! Computation Center: 8 a.m., Council Room, Kansas Union. Region II Recreation, Registration and Headquarters: 9 a.m., Pine Room. Luxo-Barrillan: 11:30 a.m., Alcove English Room. History: noon, Cottonwood Cafeteria. Russian Table. loun. Headwallark Calefcater. Region II Recreation Table Tennis Tournament; soon, Ballroom. Social Welfare Peace Studies moon Alcore A. Calderona Physio-Ecologixs: moon, Alcore C. Calderona Tournament: noon. Ballroom: Region II Recreation Chess Tournament: Muslim Students Prayer: 12:43 p.m. Room 299 Jayhawk Room Muslim Students Prayer 12:45 p.m. Region II Recreation Bridge Tournament noon, Jayhawk Room. COMMUNITY MPA Students: noon, Alcove D. Cafeteria, Russian Table: noon, Meadowlark Cafeteria. Room. SUA Popular Films: 7 p.m., Woodruff & Responsibilities: 3 p.m. Government Office German Staff: 3:30 p.m. Regionalist Students Rights and Responsibilities: 3 p.m. Governors Room. p.m. Big 8 Room. IVCF: 7 p.m. International Room. Auditorium Commission on the Status of Women: 7 resulted from too great an emphasis on speed were "inexusable" to the readers. IVCF: 7 p.m. International Room. Hilbert: 7 p.m. Curry Room. The second category, "the new KC PV School Club: p.m. 7/15 Robinson Kansas-Arizona Gymnastics: 7:30 p.m. Robinson Gymnastium, Kanahla Resorts Arena: HIS ADVICE WAS, "Slow down; time is not of the essence." The second category, "the new Hall SUA Popular Films: 9:30 p.m., Woodruff. Washington College Faculty Recital: 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall. SUN Popular 9 a.m. Woodward SATURDAY Macrane Workstation 3 a.m. Museum of SATURDAY MacArthur Way, 306 S. Broadway, museum of Children's Theater, 2 p.m., university Children's Theatre, 2 p.m., University Freshman Basketball, 5:45 p.m., Allen Freshman Basketball, 8:00 p.m., Allen Field House SIA Fossilisk Tournament, p.m. SIA Fossilisk Tournament, p.m. Carrish Corail Reception, p.m. Webb, 10 a.m. Guest Organist, Mariane Webb: 8 p.m. Swarthorst Recital Hall. Paul C. Hood history to prove "there is nothing new about new journalism." journalism" includes advocacy journalism, activist journalism and reform journalism, he said. Born cite events in journalism "It is a return to the worst of our past." he said. Born said the new journalist entered journalism because he wanted to "use the newspaper to espouse his cause." "We can't forgive the practice of turning newspapers into personal mouthpieces," he said. BORN DEScribed the new journalist as one who will distill facts to accomplish what he believes is the greater good. He suggested journalists "not only resist the inroads of new journalism, but also the new journalism", a "fiduciary journalism" one as a trustee of Born said the new journalist believed objectivity was impossible to obtain so there was no need to try to do so. "The core of the definition of a newspaperman," Born said, "is that he tries to be objective." Both Born and Hood have been with the National Observer throughout its ten-year existence. He characterized the reporter as "the readers' agent with no ulterior motives." Kansas Editors Discuss Current News Policies six editors discussed editorial writing Thursday afternoon at an Editorial Colloquium which was part of the 23rd annual observance of William Allen White Day. The colloquium was held in memory of Elmer F. Littler, KU professor of journalism. The discussion dealt with the place of personal journalism and advocacy journalism in today's keeping opinion out of news columns and the use of the page one editorial were also discussed. Other topics concerned ninority groups' access to a John H. Colburn, editor of the Wichita Eagle-Beacon, served as chairman of the panel. Other patrons of the gallery are the Detroit Free Press; Whitely Austin, publisher of the Salina Journal; W. W. Baker, editor of the Kansas City Star; Kenneth C. Bromson, editor of the Kansas City Times; Emerson E. Lynn Jr., publisher of the Iola Register. newspaper for expression of their opinions and policies of letter to the editor. "I WISH A FRESH-CRUSTED THICK CHEESED, EXTRA SALARY PIZZA WOULD APPEAR RIGHT BEFORE MY VERY EYES!" IN CASE OF SUCH EMERGENCY, CALL 843-3516 WE'LL RUSH YOUR WISH RIGHT OUT TO YOU. PIZZA HUT We deliver the Goods! KU Considers New Computer Use Kansan Classified James Rosen, associate vice-chancellor for academic affairs, said Thursday in contact distributions between University of Kansas and Honeywell Corporation for the improvement of computer service have not been completed. He knew the computer committee, said the possibility of replacing the Honeywell 635 with the Honeywell 800 could result in a cost increase and an expansion of services. Rosser said he expected to have further information and details of the agreement early next week. The contract between Honeywell and the University must be reviewed by university officials. The department of administration P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. WASHINGTON (AP) — The government is pressing presumptive evidence that the Soviet Union had touched off another underground attack. 7-Day Special CARS PAINTED $2750 NORTHTOWN BODY SHOP Lawrence, Kansas 790 N.2nd 843-9673 P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. CUSTOM JEWELRY WE WILL WORK FROM YOUR OWN DESIGN, OR CREATE A DESIGN FOR YOU WEDDING RINGS ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY Obtain FREE Passes to SUA Films By Selling Tickets at the SUA Office Contact: 864-3477 SPECIAL Saturday Bus Service Downtown — Campus Leave Oliver 5-25-45 min. past hour 9:25 a.m.- 5:45 p.m. Leave 9th & Mass. 10-30-50 min. past hour 9:10 a.m.- 5:30 p.m. Leave Union 00-20-40 min. past hour 9:40 a.m.-6:00 -p.m. Leave Ellsworth 10-30-50 min. past hour 9:30 a.m.- 5:50 p.m. Cold Ham Sandwiches 2 for 89¢ $1.18 value Friday and Saturday Feb. 11th & 12th BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS 9th & Iowa Fare Downtown 25' Campus 10c Information 842-0544 Lawrence Bus Co. Inc. TACO GRANDE With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free! Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.) Offer expires Feb. 28, 1972 图示为一种用于纺织的工具。 SPECIAL 1720 West 23rd Street "Something New" BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS Patronize Kansan Advertisers WE'VE CUT THE PRICE OF RECORDS Save up to $3.00! Major label LP's! Top artists! Many, many selections in this special purchase. Classics included! Hundreds of records! Come early for best selection! SALE STARTS MONDAY kansas union BOOKSTORE 8:30 - 5:00 p.m. Feb.14th-Feb.18th Get your favorites at Big Discounts! 6 Friday, February 11, 1972 University Daily Kansan Gymnasts Host Oklahoma Tonight Freshman Richard Greenlee's floor exercise routine captures spectators at KU's last home gymmies meet Greenlee, all in an around perimeter setting. Oklahoma is in a dual at 7:30 onRobin Gym. KU will shoot for an upset to even its dual coach, 33. Coach Bock Lockwood is looking for improved performances from the letdown of two weeks ago against Nebraska and Illinois State. Jayhawks Under Pressure To Beat OU Here Saturday A victory in Saturday's 8:05 contest would knock Oklaahoma for the Big Eight lead. KU is fifth at 4:3; Oklaahoma is tied with North Carolina. As the Jayhawks enter the toughest part of their Big Eight schedule, they already have lost nine games and cannot afford another loss, especially since Saturday's game only three remaining home game. Although the University of Kentucky has hosted meetings to welcome Oklahoma on favorable terms in Allen Field House Saturday, Jabwahs will be in conference with Jabwahs. KU's starting lineup Saturday will include Dave Taynor at forward. Taylor started against Georgia Tech in the absence of Shane Boslevac. He solidified his position by pumping in 27 points COACH TED EWens expects to start Wilton Barrow at center, Bud Stallworth at the other side of the court. Nash and Tom Kivisto at guard. "Aubrey was still hobbled a little bit today." Owen's said Thursday. Nash had sprained an ankle in practice Wednesday. The Jayhawks probably will need Nash's services against Oklahoma. The Titans the Soupers, the fast break and rebound better. Nash is adept at both. He's the team fourth leading "He'll be all right by Saturday," Owens figured. "He was a little sore today, but he's got two more days." "WE JUST didn't bounce back said me, and I didn't play a drama. I played awfully well. It was a big thing to beat Kansas, you know, since it's a college sport. In the pre-season tournament, Oklahoma handed KU the worst pounding it has received at the 2013 NFC Championship. The Sooners rallied to a 9-76 victory in the consolation bracket in Oklahoma State, 91-88, in the first round. After seven Big Eight games, Stallworth leads the conference in scoring with an average of 23.7 points. John Brown of Missouri are close behind at 22 and 20.4, and Bobby Kid of Oklahoma is fourth with 19.4. Nearly everyone who so 190 won lost to the Jawahars came in with a big surprise and an easy game against a conference opponent since the 85-84 defeat of Nebraska. Four Souons, in fact, average in double figures. Besides Jack, there are Andrew Pettes with 12.1 and Ted Evans with 10.1. and grabbing eight rebounds. KU will travel to Kansas State Tuesday and remain on the road Saturday with a game at Auburn. The team has been announced, a sailor Freshmen Play Thin OU Squad KU's unbeaten freshman team will host the Oklahoma freshmen game against Oklahoma on Saturday's showdown between KU and Oklahoma in Allen Field Unbeaten in eight games, KU will play a depleted Boomer squad Oklahoma's fresh number only eight. The Boomers are 6-2 John Powell, a 6-11 pitist averaging 22.5 points a game, was held under the boards Bob Pritchard leads the OU fosh with a 24.0 Fambrough Recruits Pro Coach Joe Spencer, the 48-year-old coach who guided the offensive teams of the Champion New York Jets, joined the University of Kansas football staff Thursday. He was the latest to graduate from Fambridge's recruiting efforts. "I was very fortunate to be able to talk him into coming to KU," Fambrough said. Indeed, Spencer brings impressive credentials to the position of offensive line coach vacated by Travis Wednesday. "When Larry Travis told me he was taking a job with Mississippi, 'I amumbre said I immediately thought of Joe." Spencer has coached 11 years in the pro ranks—five years with the United States and three with Canadian League, three with the Jets and most recently, a year with the Rangers. So Fambrough did the same thing with a prospective player, although necessarily on a larger scale. He telephoned Spencer and started a relationship. Spencer Joins Football Staff Joe Spencer Before he became a professional coach, Spencer coached nine years at Austin MARK TURNER College in Sherman, Tex. His playing career began in 1962 and lasted until an injury sidelined him in 1982. He was then playing for the Cincinnati Reds. "You only come by life once," Spencer said in a press conference Thursday. "So you want to work with the people you like to be with. That's why I came to Kansas." Spencer has known Fambrough more than 20 years. They coached against each other when Browns was at East Texas State. Spencer's specialty is coaching pass protection. During the season the Jets won the Super Bowl, Spencer's line allowed teams to dees quarterback Joe Naiman only 13 times in 16 games. With 14 schools from four states, Participating, the University of Rochester, New York, and the Association of College Unions International Region B Tour of Europe. "There'll be some problems 'there'll be some problems' 'a football again.' Spencer said. "Spearer is basic fundamentals of hitting and positioning don't change from before." Norm Moulder, a 6-3, 210-pound widow of David Moulder, signed a Big Flight letter of attendance to the University of Kansas, Coach Dou Dambrough and Coach Jerry Gaines. KU has the personnel to field a team with a powerful passing attack. Fambrough said, Spencer's experience for building the value in his team will help protect the line to protect drop-back quarterback David Jaynes. Kansas Union Hosts Recreation Regional Both men and women will compete in bowling, table tennis, bridge, billiards and chess. Moulder played backflow and defensive壁 at Blue Springs. He is the 16th high school senior to attend this intent week with KU. the Kansas Union KU Recruits 16th Prepster Vernon Bellcourt, movement director, said here the suit would be filed against the Chiefs shortly after the season's conclusion chapter of the Indian movement. In all events, men's and women's champions will advance to national meetings in Long Beach, Calif., and Kansas City, Mo. KU will field two teams in bridge. Gary Colton and Kurt Wheeler are one twosome, Bill Gilstrom and Mike Lynch and will be carried by KARD, Wichita; KBRA, Kansas City; KOAM, Pittsburg; KOMC, Oberline-McCook; KCTT, Great Bend; KGLD, Garden City; KGLS, Flays, and KLOE, and will be carried by KARD, Wichita; KBRA, Kansas City; KOAM, Pittsburg; KOMC, Oberline-McCook; KCTT, Great Bend; KGLD, Garden City; KGLS, Flaw A similar suit was filed against the Cleveland Indians baseball team by the Indian movement Jan. 18. That suit sought $8 million on grounds the Indian team demeaned and racist." KANSAS CITY (AP) —The American Indian movement announced Thursday it plans to file suit against the Kansas City Football Club enjoining it from using Indian reference in its symbol. The Kansas City symbol is an arrowhead on the side of the team's red helmets. The team also has a mascot, a spotted gilded name Warpaint, that is ridden around the field each time Bob Johnson, wears an Indian costume and is part Sioux. Indians Plan Chiefs Suit Ken Urhanski will be the *yahawk's* lone representative of the team, and he will have the advantage over his opponents on playing on a bench. The chase event will include four KU strategists. Lance Nelson and Charles Hettro form a team and Greg King will be another K-State-KU to Be on TV The telecast will be originated by WIBW, Topeka, at 7:30 p.m. ATTENTION Festival of the Arts Ticket Package Purchasers YOU WILL RECEIVE REDEMPTION INFORMATION IN THE MAIL BY SATURDAY. Redemptions begin Monday at 8:30 a.m. at the SUA Ticket Window in the Union. Redem your packages early for the best individual night tickets. See You at the Festival!! MANHATTAN (AP) — The Kansas State-Kansas basketball game at Ahearn Fieldhouse Feb. 15, a sellout, will be telecast on the network. Kansas State University announced Thursday. TWO GREAT FILMS! Ali MacGraw • Ryan O'Neal The Year's #1 Best Seller John Marley & Ray Milland PLUS PROMOTIONAL TELEVISION STUDIO'S GOOMBYTE. COLUMBIA. Ali MacGraw • Ryan O'Neal Columbia • 9:00 Only Maline Sat. Sun. Columbia • 9:55 Live Slayer 7:35 Varsity THEATRE • Telephone 91-265 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30 Adults $1.50 —2ND WEEK— Sat. & Sun. 3:00, 5:05, 7:30, 9:35 (Twilight HR. Admission $1.00 & $0.50 —4:30 to 5:15 only!) PAUL NEWMAN - HENRY FONDA LEE REMICK MICHAEL SARRAZIN Sometimes a Great Motion GP TELIING THOUGHTFULLY Eve. 7:25 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:30 & 4:30 THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 THE Hillcrest 2 THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 Lee Marvin Newman IN A FINE ARTS PRODUCTION "Pocket Money" A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE GP NOWI 7:30, 9:30 Granada THEATRE • Telephone 2-31-811 HEAD FOR HENRY'S with your VALENTINE SWEETHEART henrys TWO GREAT FILMS! Ali MacGraw • Ryan O'Neal LOVE STORY The Year's #1 Best Seller John Marley & Ray Milland - PLUS - MARCHING IN THE DANCE GOODBYE, COMMONMAN Love Story 7:15 & 10:55 Columbus 6:05 Only Marinee Sat. Sun. Columbus 10:55 & 11:55 Love Story 3:15 Hillcrest! You pay only 1/2 price MARTIN Varsity HOLA 1748 - Jersey City 93-265 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:00, 3:00, 4:00 Adults $1.50 —2ND WEEK— Sat. & Sun. 3:00, 5:05, 7:30, 9:35 (Twilight Hr. Admission $1.00 & $50—4:30 to S:15 only!) PAUL NEWMAN-HENRY FONDA LEE REMICK MICHAEL SARRAZIN Sometimes a Great Action GP Eve. 7:25 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:30 & 4:30 THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 Hillcrest PRESENTED BY THEATRE COORBEE, COLUMBIA you pay only 1/2 price for your sweetheart when you buy your meal at the regular price. THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 Hillcrest :05, 7:30, 9:35 & 5:00-4:30 to 5:15 only !) THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 The Hillcrest PAUL NEWMAN-HENRY FONDA LEE REEMICK MICHAEL SARRAZIN Sometimes a Great Motion (312) 645-0986 www.henryfonda.com (312) 645-0987 www.michael.sarrazin.com GP Eve. 7:25 & 9:30 Mal. Sat. Sun. 2:30 & 4:30 Hillcrest2 6th & Missouri • 843-2139 Offer Good Sun, Mon. Feb. 13, 14 warm up your friends with something everybody loves, come to BEN SMITH Lee Paul Marvin Newman IN A FIRST ARTISTS PRODUCTION "Pocket Money" A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES BLAZE GP NOW! 7:30, 9:30 Granada THEATRE...New York 121-5784 Offer Good Sun., Mon., Feb. 13, 14 Date: Feb. 12 & 14 9-5 Feb. 13 10-3 HAAS IMPORTS for the experience in your life HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass. Sponsored by Organization of Arab Students at KU THE TAROT CHAIR Use Kansan Classified Illustrating Arabic Poems, written and unwritten by Kamal Boulata. Westminster 1204 Oread Place: A Graphic Exhibition The Middle-East war as told in color by Palestinian children (ages 5-14) who were made refugees by the 67 war. and CHILDREN'S TESTIMONY AT A TIME OF WAR AVAILABLE AT YOUR Bootleger GO Male THE PACESETTER IN FASHION! LOW RISE JEANS & MANY OTHER "NOW FASHIONS" Ana R. Cervantes Male Let Our Jeans "Tickle your Genes" Buy Bootlegger CENTER OF NOW FASHION Hours 10-10 7 days 523 W. 23rd BANANA CARD welcome here master change the power of the There's Always a Bargain Waiting For You at the Bargain Table! 2c University Daily Kansan Friday, February 11, 1972 7 Trackmen Go Two Ways Shoot for Qualifying Marks By DAN GEORGE Kansan Sports Writer The University of Kansas track team will host Big Eight championship next month, will divide its forces this weekend to enter major meets in Michigan. Coach Bob Timmons said the Jaihayws would have seven teams to play. Michigan State Relays and three field-event men entered in the United States Track and Field championship in the Houston Arena. Leading the delegation to Michigan State will be the Jayhawk mile-mile team of Tom Savcuzu, Mark Lutz, Bob Borknessel and Phil Stebb. Timmons hopes they will meet 3 championship for the NCAA championship later this year. "We want our relay men to get a chance on the Michigan State basketball team by legal qualifying track in the nation and a fast one. We think it gives us a good chance to get our time down low enough to play." THE RELAY foursome clocked 3:17.8 in a third-place effort two weeks ago in Oklahoma City. At Michigan State, KU will also be the 1000-yard. David Anderson and the 1000-mile or mile and Delario the 70-yard high hurdles. Timmons emphasized the importance of entering Robinson in the meet. "He only ran in two or three big meets before he came here," Timmons said. "He really needsience, and we think he'll get it there." The mire-relay anchor man, Jim Stepp, will also run the 600-yard Stepp, who set a meet record of 1.12 against Southern Illinois last Saturday, is aiming for an NCAA-qualifying 1.11 this week. The KU delegation to Houston will consist of pole vaulter Bill Hatcher and freshman shot Guey Ruduea and Dana LiduDee. HATCHER, WHOSE indoor best is 16-4, kapped the KU comboat win over Southern Iowa last week with a meet record 16-1. Timmons deemed it important to pit the young shot putters against top opponents before the national meet. "So far, Guvera and LeDuce met any real tough contempt for a player, a few good shot putters in the conference, but no one hit." "In Houston, though, they'll see Henning Bid For 2nd Gold Falls Short SAPPROB, Japan (AP)—Monika Pflug of West Germany won the 1,000-meter women's speed skating race today as 18-year-old Anne Hening finished third, less than a quarter of a season, in a bid for her second gold medal in the 11th Olympic Games. Dianne Holum, also of Northbrook, who got the Americans' 1:500 meter Wednesday winning the 1:500 meter Wednesday sixth in at 1:32.51, also under the old Olympic record of 1:32.63 set by France at 1:32.86 in Netherlands at Grenoble in 1988 Pilton won an Olympic record pituit. 31:40 seconds, to 1.31 61 seconds, for the Norwegian 1:31 62 for Hening, the Nor- bork ill, girl who won the 500-mi- chle course. Although the failure of Henning and Holum was a disappointment in the United States, which is trying to gold medals for the first time since 1960, American hopes were boosted when Barbara Cochran of Richmond, VT., took the lead at the opening of the women's special slalom. THE MERCANTILE Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD HERBS AND SPICES HERBS AND SPICES NEW SAUAGES NEW SAUAGES STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Events 电话 some 65-footers and we want to see how they'll react to really rough competition." he said. "There's just too many schools. It would be impossible to try it," he said. "I can tell you this, we'll be facing quality fields." SENIORS!! Guevara, unbeaten in three collegiate meets, owns a best bop of 58-14. Le Duc, who has finished seventh at the College once, has a top blow of 56-11%. Sandys Call immediately for appointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE. Timmons said he had spent little time scouting the "However," he said, "we're going to both meets with only one intention—and that's to qualify for the NCAA championship." HERE'S THE DEAL: announces THE TOOTH FAIRY SPECIAL 摄影 80¢ You Buy Ph. 843-0330 10 a.m., - 5 p.m. ALL FOR ONLY 1 FRY TOOTH FAIRY POSTER ABSOLUTELY FREE Hixon And You Get YOUR OWN PERSONAL, GIGANTIC Stop in For Yours Today. You'll Like It! FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY Sandy's HAMBURGERS come as you are...hungry Studio RACING Cowtown Ballroom presents BREWER & SHIPLEY DANNY COX WHITE EYES TUES, FEB.15, 8 PM. $3.50 advance $4 at door Tickets Available at KIEF'S 3109 Gillham Plaza Phone 931-6600 PICKENS AUTO PARTS and SERVICE Parts at a Discount TUNE-UPS BRAKES WHEEL ALIGNMENT BALANCING EXHAUST SYSTEMS Robert Bosch Ignition for Foreign Cars Sunday 10-3 26th and Iowa VI3-1353 FUCHI 500 E.23rd - FRONT DISC BRAKES - RECLINING FRONT SEATS - UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN - OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE - MPH 104 - 0 TO 60 MPH—13.5 - FRONT DISC BRAKES Open 24 hrs. per day LOVE THAT Independent DATSUN COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th 842-9450 DRIVE-IN AND COOP OIP LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 843-5304 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered online. Attendance may be colored, creed, or national origin. 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 Laundry & Dry Cleaners COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843.9631 Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608 KANSAN WANT ADS FOR SALE COIN Northside Country Shop, 707 North Bridge Avenue, New Bridge Antiques. Used furniture. items, old wood cooking and heating stoves, wooden stoves, fireplace wood: stoves, bicycles, fireplaces. Wood- working items. Of other useful items Open to 5 daily. Helen Herbert-Baldwin, 3159 Now you can buy stereo components at FACTORY COST plus 10% Han-Sun. Visit www.hansun.com/Prarie Avenue. The only true stereo discount house in the mid-29th. - 28 Western Civ. Notes-Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them. Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 411 West 14th. tt We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumph. Competition Sears Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza. 822-219-1 2-18 Two beautifully designed Persian lamb coats. Reasonably priced. Call Mo at 864-1077 1609 Hestena mobile home 13 X 60. 1609 Hestena mobile home 13 X 60. general electric electric and dryer, general electric dryer, harvest gold Hotpoint refrigerator harvest gold Hotpoint refrigerator very good condition. To see it call very good condition. To see it call 2. If you don't, you're at a disadvantage Reliable ski equipment head ski size 6'', Nordica boards and boot tree size 10''. Scott poles 5''. Call 842-1216868 at 6:00. Attention slump pump lumps. Used Super Olds Trombone with fluted slide Good condition. Bought for clown cost. #84-700 Downey, #84-700 Chellen, #84-711 Volkswagen, Karman Kumar, 1967, Looks and looks like new. New paint. Job Must sell this contact. Contact Bob Cornelius, 842-7771 or 843-5810; 287-1. days per week Brittany Spaniel Pup. Want to find a good home for a 6-month old A.K.C. registered Brittany Pup. Call Gary. 843-3473. 2-14 Kneisel Blue Star skis, 200's with Marker Simplex tie and Marker Rotatom heel, excellent condition, 180 $142-6788 2-11 King Size waterbed, liner, frame, and heater. Only $45. My new apartment is too small. 842-7404. 2-1³ **966** Yamaha 305 cc YM-1 two-bit, only 6,500 miles, just tuned. All for $25.00. Harmony top guitar, for $89.49. BH-62 6391; @ 6:00 p.m. Motor vehicle cameras, Beautilieu, MH Auto-Utility,Movie cameras, Berufliche magazine, 1970s.愈发使女性使用相机, 2010年 mA batterie.愈发使女性使用相机, 2010年 mA batterie.Hand持式 For reasonable prices on all glass or any kind of Pixieglass including scrape for projects, see at Kaw Body Shop, 742 N. 2n. St. or call 841-2800. 4-piece Ludwig drum set. Excellent condition and produces excellent sound. Call Paul at VI 2-0529 for information. 2-14 "Hippe Denim," velvet dresses, dresse jackets only faded; Personal Appa- lors only white; Daddy's Four Daddys' at BOKON 80 Vermont. Monday-Saturday. 11-6 '68 Dodge Sportman U8 automatic, tape, spacious 2-year seats. No hassles. Call 844-8283 or 842-7027. 2:14 63 Bucki, 218 cu. in, 4 barrel, browl, mileage clean, air conditioning, 6cyls, radio, heaters, white walls, $250.00; phone 646-1160. Ask for Bird X X X X X X X X X X X X ~ Concord P-20 miniature recorder with remote control microphone $15.00, 842-3171 2-14 Tavern coffee or leave or lease 81-720 Bdr. House and parking lot in back Contact Lynch Realty. 843-1601 or 841-3233 2-14 New Mallory dual point distribution high performance coil. Cost $600. Sale ends 12/28. Chevy Jay, Endorser, 542-3175 Days until 3:30. 2-11 5 month old Morse 8 track tape deck and Skyline pre mount $85.00 Need to sell. Call 864-6057. 2-14 Never used photo enlarger Durst M-600 w/o lens $25, off also 8/8 slim viewer. Call 842-7984 events. Need money more than hobby. 2-15 Ski boots for sale. Women's Caber Boot size 71*2-8. Used one season. Phone Debby at VI 3-7716. 19 VW Bus--rebuilt engine—excell- int running condition—best offer- al Steve at 842-8265 2-15 - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock others on order - ARTIST CANVAS 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES THE CONCORD SHOP Portable stove.-G.E. Trunnel 300—good condition. Used two, good condition. 600 x 14 x 4. ply. 3,000 miles. MiLte- 1862 and 1862 Cooker 2-15 Deadline: 5:00 p.m.2 days before publication - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz., pts. - qts, only 25% OFF Brand new slide rule (with chemical reagent) and paper roller major jr $2.50; Biology Lab Kit, Merck $6.99; biology set (compass and divider sets), divider set, barrel set, dumbbells $4.99. Far Sale. 1970 Volkswagen Squar- reck Inquire. 216 Bailey, phone 913- 242-2283. 2-11 Two 1964 Ducati 250—one run, one two. Two complete machines. $1755 and $50. buy either or both. Never reward. B412-8288 for 5:00- 2:11 Everything must go. All items are. Topps - Tops, Belts, Boxes - Sportsenders. This sale will last only a month. Wearlodge, 841s; Mans. 2-11 Curvair- 10HP, Hp. 4, eP-47E0 14 - Polycubes & Mags, Camaro seats, FM Multiplex, 8 track stereo, front and rear spoiler seats,匠42,841R or all your apartment furnishings, he Quantillini's Flea Market first. orty stores under our roof! 841-3082 2:11 Must sell $40.00 sude coat cost newt, women Lbeds laille, double breasted, size 7 knee length. Best offer. Car hatrier #842-1941. 2-12 Three days BIG DEAL! Gray 1950 Plymouth 4- door super door, good engine & transmission. Best offer. Call, Ann. 842-6124 2-11 RCA portable black and white TV. All channel, brand new. Must sell to pay rent. 842-3758. 2-11 Blue Schwinn men's 3-speed bicycle Practically new, perfect condition. $45.00. Call 842-4876 2-11 1970 Corvette Coupe, 350 CID CD50 SD, SD position, A/C AM/FM radio, Bluetooth, black vinyl dark green, black infinity trim $3.50 Will help Finance $437-$766 Martin 22 cal semiautomatic rifle with 4X scope $30.00, M42-4625 after 7 p.m. 2-11 Bolex 16mm movie camera optical viewfinder, 25mm l i n c e viewing to the camera, 30mm f i n c e viewfinder, 50mm f i n c e auto, and 135mm f 2.8 set min telecamera Call M43-8585-2 172 1965 Chevette, Malibu SS, 327, 4 speed. Call 842-2238 or see at 1919 Miller Drive. 2:16 1960 Ford Fairlane 500, dependable transportation, good radio and heat- er, show tires $125.00 Call 864-494- 21:46 or 842-7026 Men's suits and sport jackets, size 38 $10-$30. Good looking, excellent condition. Dede, Dede, #42-5031. 2-17 1968 VW square back, beige with brown interior, air conditioned, 100%. VW warranty $128. Jawshak Volkswagen. $252 Iowa. 842-210-255 McCONNELL LBR. CO. 1966 Mobile Horse, 12X48, 2 bedroom, furnished $2,975.00 Call 843-0662 anytime. Fine cold cuts, grains, oils, etc. Beer and wine yeast. The Mercantile, 1237 Oread, 843-9746. 2-17 1986 WV 7 passenger wagon, blue, by 1988 WV 7 passenger wagon, blue, by 1988 WV 7 passenger wagon, blue, 1986 WV 1971 WV from $400.00 at $195.00 WV from $400.00 at $252.00 WV from $252.00 ARGYLE SOCKS — FOR FUN AND WORK — THINK AT EARTHSINE EAST 8th & MASS 2-17 SALE NEW GOING ON- UP TO 50% OFF ON MOST MERCHANDISE GOODS ON SALE OR CHANGES ON SALE MERCHANDISE -EARTHSHIPS 8th & MASS. 2-1 Fivedays 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.3 U FOR RENT WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Avail- ment for up to 2 beds, furnished or unfurnished or unfithed 1-2 bedrooms 1/2 bath furnished or unfurnished. Centric atel. dishwasher, w/car washer/dishwasher. All apartments—The place to live in 8800 South Carolina Ave. Call 24 hours a day 880-379-6000. CSC Apartment—newly decorated—one bed furniture–walled–to wall carpeting—1%; blocks from Union. Phone 843-7576. ff 2000 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 Sports Cars Inc. Competition 'ho rent—one or two bedroom splits, in condition cared, gathage dis- tributed. gattles, color T V. available. Call gattles, color T V. available. Call Apts at 4th and Bide Court. Ridge House Apts - for the budget inflated! All the popular features are on the building, in town. RR 1, RR 2 and bedrooms. 1166 for details. 2840 Cooderwood - 1116 for details. 3840 Cooderwood - rent efficiency, apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. From block south of 941-1136 2-21 HILLIEWALL APARTMENTS ... 1323-45 W. 21st St. #180 to $319 and one more apartment. Capeted, draperies, electronics, much more expensive apartments of much more expensive apartment complexes in the city. COLLEGE HILL MAYOR NOAH has available 1 bed and 2 bedroom furnished rooms. A C, new dwishawer, w e wartest room. To contact colllege hall at 843-822-6900 to call Colllege Hall at 843-822-6900 to contact College Hall at 843-822-6900 Would like nice chick to move in, with three others. Good-sized room in a kitchen, with fireplace. Close to K12, monthly payment used 2-11. K42-3584 1 B R apartment furnished near KU Lakeview. Lease and reserves, required. Necessary. April. Mature adults only: graduate from high school or 84-252 after 3,500; or 84-773. Entire 2 floor at 1411 Mass. 2 bedrooms, 16 room, large kitchen, big pantry with built-in utilities paid, except electricity. 400 units. 440 units. 843-0055 After 1400 units. 843-0055 After 1400 units. ITS NEVER TOO LATES and is now coming from Tan too. You will need to travel a comfortable or attractive one. Call me for Mornayforth at 207-A Hart Road and you can arrange the accommodations available in Lawrence' best located and most attractive cemeteries, and Missouri'. Availin Aparntions, Apartments, Iowa & Hart Road Labs of Lawrence, Madison, soundproof construction, pleasing acoustics, central acre are just some of the reasons you would enjoy living in Lawrence. We make this summer in Lawrence a location for August occupancy and Room with cooking anexx in exchange for work. Near campus. Call VI 3-7663 2-14 2 bedroom unfurnished house; $125/ mo.; utilities not paid. Edmonds Real Estate; 843-6011 or 842-7424. 2-15 Mobile Home—formatted one bedroom 12" X 47", Red Spanish decor; country atmosphere and pool privacy; pet cat peth. Call 8:340 at 5:09 p.m. 2:14 QUIET sunny 2.bedroom furnished walk-in dressing walk-in closet QUIET sunny 2.bedroom furnished tournament recreation and laundries all utilities pad Ridgeline 842-4444 Where do elephants keep their big pink snakees? In Ridgley's gigantic closet. One bedroom, all electric $130.00, all utilities paid. N2-4444 One bedroom, unfurnished apt. for rent, $110.00 month w/o utilities. 1419 Ohio, 842-6285 2-11 University Terrace Apartments - furnished apartments available for immediate入住 $110 and up. Apartment fees vary by room type, Apt. 18, Apt. or B, call 482-3453, 217 NOTICE Michigan St. Bar-B-Qite, 515 Mich. St. Olivet门外 bar-B-Qite 515 Mich. St. Olivet port of shor $40 Rb-plate port of shor $40 Rb-plate port of shor $40 P. Phone VI-2- 9310 P. Phone VI-2- 9310 CA UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright. (816) 474-4676 If Girls: Need an address and phone number for your parents peace of mind Will take phone calls and mail messages for 40 hours per month 8837 2-14 BLEVINS HONDA FOR YOUR Lawrence. Kansas 66044 2013. 04.08 Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service Medical, Chemical, Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! 1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks. CABAY ARTS INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-7694. Professional care for children in 1 mm - 12 mm. Or part-time. Designated equipment. 2-25 DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe Leave anytime from N.Y. or C.N.Y. to a destination IDA issued Flight Center, 227 North Florida, Wisconsin Wiscasset, Wisconsin 686-263-3131 Valentine Idea Portrait; $5.00 for one, $7.00 for two, 842-7511. 2-15 THE TEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB— Welcome, back students. We party variations for second semester term par- ties and third semester term par- ties party. Nice band stand, black shoes. We also have special monthly rates meetings. Phone or contact John meeting phones.会议电话 Stutton Tee Pee 24-40 & 39 HB Business Phone 24-526 & 2522 HB sirloin For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions and voluntary sterilization—call the Women's Center. tf 864-441-443 RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA 5 weeks. Small group, camping travelpages 18-26 Small group, camping travelpages 18-26 Enriched White, Whole Earth Expedition Enriched White, Whole Earth Expedition Lod, Box 109, KC 697 KC 697 Saturday night at the Mad Hatter- THE BAWY a great rock sound . 2-11 KU Students of Objectivism will meet to discuss the ideas of Amy Kulik and Michael McDonnell in the Orient Room, Kansas Union. For information, call 842-3516 or visit kus.edu/kulik. Had a friend bender, cracked an glass, or did both and tried a town candy. Was it worth the risk for Dick Milli Free estimates, reas- sonsable rates, all work guaranteed, or neither? WANTED more territory, than 1 can cover. Need part-time help for e-evenings & raking orders for Fulcher. Brush. Hourly wages. Interested? 843-467-201 - 211 THE BAY, a great rock sound 2-11 You have ever been to a Bahai discussion? BAHAI CLUB meeting Tuesday 7:30 A.M. in the Teddy's Room A, in the Bahai Convention Center Pre-owned clothes BOKGONN Vermont, Smyrna. fashionable suitable to a "poor man's peek- out" dress. 2-5x. 6. repeat address, BOKGONN Vermont, 2-15 ROOMMATEM. Private bedroom, kitchen and bathroom. Utilities paid, next to campus $60.00每月 1245 Louisiana, basement 12:00 to 5:00 Male roommate needed. Two-bedroom furnished apartment for $70/room plus utilities. Com by apartment in New York, Apartment, Indiana. 2-15 Customers for valentine day gift ideas at Hodge Podge. Open late Thursdays. 15 West 9th. 2-22 HUNSTEINE STUDS — SILVER KINGS — AND MANY OTHER FAR OUT ACCESSORIES, EARTHSHINE, East Eighth and Mass. 2-17 Attendance Call: 842-2767, 9:30 to 5:00 2-14 Wanted to buy Tiffany ATLAS OF NATOMY by J. C. Bailleau, 5:14 to 6:14 Call: Garry Caley, 5:14 to 6:14 SPRING KNITS ARE IN FUNKY 40% AND EARLY 30'% STYLES—EARTH- SUISE, EAST 8th & MASS 21 Among Our Specials Skilled and Licensed Team Combination (For Logistic Liaison Tut) It is not delicacy to fit it and see Wanted. desperate need one girl to share apt, with three others in Jayhawker Towers. Contract contract Call 845-6213 or 842-6544 One year old black Labrador—Ray- injured front left leg. Animal Mission Clinic tag. Call Pitts. 843-5000. 2-15 Our motto is and has always been Classical guitarist wants to organize unamplified combo to play popular music. Needs a string bass, flute, piano, and drummer. Call 842-3848, *514* We are sure you will find an even more tame. The Slim lines of the quantity field make up any of the large equipment. Only the small, heavy-duty airplane tires are used. LAWRENCE KANSAS Forest Education Place "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits. Repair It." 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th in good food Shines Dyeing Refinishing Syden 1. New address of the office Tampa Bay Biometrics 95. 88 Phone: 800-123-4567 Closed Monday Bringing in 5:30 pm 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Maupintour travel service Let PLANNING A TRIP?? e Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-121 IVK Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! PERSONAL POETRY WANTED for anthology Please inquire at [www.poetry.com] in press proof. Send IDLEWEY PRESS, 1867 East California 90231. Los Angeles California 90231 Call me for excellent low cost hospital insurance with above average coverage including dental benefits for pregnancy and health and Life Insurance. 845-520-7200 Women's Alterations. 20.years experience. Call 843-2767. 9:30-5:30. 2-15 Valentine Purse Sale at Hodge Pidge 10% off Feb. 10—Feb. 17, 15 West 9th 2-22 Wanted: Babysitter for friendly German Shepherd. Dom dorm residence someone to provide a living home for 250 after €690 weekly. 225 after €990 weekly. NOW WHEN THERE IS NOTHING EASE TO WEAR-TOATERS, ONLY AT EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS 2-17 TYPING Don't have a Valentine? Neither do- Big Tuna is my name; chicks and is my game=Call me at 842-763-1090 on in on the -Adhiddh. Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate. Call 512-3281. Mrs Muxkman. Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other types of writing. Familiarity with Type Accuracy and prompt sentry is required. Phone 843-8544, Mrs. Wright Term papers, these types accurately and promptly, give the choice of type for your assignment. Editing at reasonable rates: 842-7097 days; 842-5655 nights. Kinda Dora Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter Prompt attention 843-9058 2-29 Accurate typing of your thesis dissertation, or miscellaneous work on IBM Selectric typewriter with pica keyboard. 842-140 for information, 2826-842. 842-140 for information, 2826-842. MISCELLANEOUS Friday night at the Mad Hatter THE CO-TWO—a new folk duo, free admission. 2-1 LOST Tobe incense on sale Two for $1.00 Saturday at the Hodge Podge, 15 West 9th. 2-22 Lot Friday, Jan. 28, near 10th and Entrance Lane, Gray-green guttered tree to "Mouse." Great sentimental touch Two German books—Need ve² Ly—Reward-Call 842-5897 or 842 7648 HELP WANTED OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS Mrs. Cannoney, 689 W. 3rd St. All Profiles and occupations: teaching, instructional staff, scientist, slighting research, informative work. West Richmond, Wisconsin. 1047 Stern Way, Danielville, Calif. 92151 THE HIT in the WALL DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP UberTaxi 24 h m - Phone Order 843.765.765 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! hune-ups starting service Kansas 60044 2434 Lawrens 12-1008 Spacium new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. 843 8500 Honors security for the busy coid's schedule. Dairy 9 to 9. Sat; 11 noon Houzz serves the busy coid's schedule. Dairy 9 to 9. Sat; 11 noon DISCOUNT The Stereo Store PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE UDIOTRONICS ... 又 Friday, February 11, 1972 University Daily Kansan PATRICIA NORTE Weekend Scene Chez Haehl Outfits Anita Sorrels For her role of Gertrude in Hamlet . . . . ART Black Plays End Saturday By BARBARA SCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor UNION GALLERY: Faculty exhibit by the department of painting and sculpture featuring international work. Through Sunday. WESTMINSTER HOUSE: An exhibit of paintings by refugees in Egypt and Israel war and by Kamal Boulai, Palestinian artist and painter. CONCERTS WOODRUFF AUDIOTURIM: "Picasso: War, Peace and Love" 7:30 p.m. Monday. First of a five-part SUA film series, which includes studying the works of major artists and various artistic movements. This particular film deals with Picasso's art after "Guernica" and contains several scenes shown here for the first time. SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: Faculty recital by Richard Angelietti, associate professor of plumbing. $8 p.m. tonight. Cher Haachi, associate professor of speech and drama and University Theatre atriumum elaborate 87 elaborate Elizabethan for two plays, William Shakespeare's 'Hamlet' and Tom Stoppard's 'Nosecancer' and Guildenstier are dead) which open March 14 and 15 and alternate nights until April 2. "Under pressure I can finish a costume in one day, but I wouldn't want to keep it up for an indefinite amount of time." This is the first time in his 20-year career as a teacher and ... To describe the clothing of the Elizabeta hens. Haehl used two phrases, "a garden gone to seed" and "over rine." By MARSHA SEARS Kansan Staff Writer Haechl explained that Shakespearean plays can be set in any period. "It was际性 at the end of the Elizabethan period for people to wear whatever they wanted," he told them. "They tried to outdo each other." contemporary text Hailey was constructed as costumed for a Shakespearean play in the style contemporary to Shakespeare's KU Prof to Dress Casts In Elizabethan Costumes BE COMPARED THE Elizabethabats' dress to a flower garden of late summer that is about to go to seed. "It isn't my favorite period, but it is interesting and fascinating." Hachel said "the clothes are new" in her eyes. "I prefer the Gothic period." By selecting fabrics of distinct texture and weight, a costumer creates a silhouette for a play. An extra heavy fabric forces the actors to move in the way Elizabeth bathes the fillet of her garmet, restricts it. movements In this way, costumes prevent the play from appearing as a masquerade. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, minor characters in "Hamlet," are the major characters in "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead." Haehl said that he plans to accent they should they would be appropriate for both major and minor roles. None of the elegant materials came from exotic lands. All the woods, including those from the Lawrence area and are being handmade into costumes. CHARACTERS WHO appear in both plays are acted by the same performer. There is no trading of parts or costumes for the two roles, and this means no alterations, but it presents some difficulties. Last November, Haehl began composing palettes for each of his four pieces, including samples of material for one costume. This brings the colors together and shows the various fabrics on the various fabrics' colors and textures. A principal character's costume is more colorful and playful than his other pieces. Velure and brocade are the predominate fabrics. Jewels, beads and braids are the trim. With ruffs, panned sleeves and cut out costumes are to the most minute detail, authentic reproductions. FOUR STUDENTS, Linda Flatten, Lawrence senior; Melva Kirsten, Hays freshman; Steve Miller, Topeka senior and MOST OF THE PATTERNS, Haeil said, come from period costume books. By studying pictures, he studies costumes without using a pattern. universe in director Roger Vadim's comic strip look at a futuristic world full of sex and sadism. Made in 1968 By studying the movement of the period, actors formalize the movement which is already structured by careful costuming. GRANADA THEATRE: "Pocket Money." Starring Paul Newman and Lee Marvin. Kids Love 'OPQRS' The townpeople are areed through a litany several times every day by Oto "Otto is alwaysright. Right!" The one-time town gossip becomes Quilla the Quiet. Her radical child is Rozelle the Rebellious. Otto has officially removed last names. In their place, he has put terms which describe the person's proscribed behavior. **WONG!** When Rozelle is at the height of rebellion, Edward Johnson from the outside world happens into Ottoville. The village is colorful, strong willed and funny, individualist. Revolution enues! SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: Guest organ recital by Marianne Webb, university By DAVID HEALY Knapan Reviewer Kansan Reviewer When attention lags, young beetles become a stormy sea with waves thrusting and thrashing. I could not blame them; I felt the The play's one drawback is several scenes in which the dialogue dominates and action fades, especially delight in action. Their attention span, however, is too short for their ability to memorize and revolution rhetoric. The only public performance of 'O'IGRYS, etc.' will be presented at 2 p.m. Saturday in the University of Kansas Theatre for Young People play has been performed this week for Lawrence and Douglas county it will tour during the spring. Faculty recital by Howard Boyajian, professor of string instruments (violin), 8 p.m. Monday. OTTO THE OFFICIAL rules absolutely over Ottowville, an orange emblem of orange hair. He proclaims the time and day by whim. He is judge and jury, merchant, lawyer, banker, attorney. I have never seen such enthusiastic audience participation. Before entering Otiville, the hero, played by Warren Ellis, results the children. "It appears to be a nice tree. Is it? . . . NO!" Otherwise, the production has everything going for it. The scenery is simple, adequate and well designed. Maude Muller is known as the "dean" of American playwrights in children. Her new script, "Haley," which stars Cassandra Haysley's "1848" out of the high school and into the primary transition is thoroughly successful. Andrea Southard, Lawrence graduate student, were hired as costume assistants. In addition to work on costume construction class are required to work on costumes to week to fulfill their lab requirements. THE COSTUMES are fabulous. They not only identify the character with his role, but also indicate his temperament. Later during Otto's litanies, the townpeople's "rights" are drowned out by the children yelling "wrong." SAPPORO, Japan (AP)—Hot blueberry juice, flown from Norway was served to a local farmer in the kilometer cross country ski race. Stations to pass out hot drinks to the crowd are set up along the route. Paid Tialdium of Norway won the first place, also of Norway, was second. Haeil works from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and from 7 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. five days a week. He also works Saturdays. Rebecca Ditzler's production is great fare for children of all ages. KANSAN reviews Some of the costumes are completely finished; others are not even cut out. Although the costing is a little behind schedule, Haeli said that the costumes would be required for rehearsal rehearsal deadline, March. 7. "Under pressure I can finish a costume in one day, but I wouldn't want to keep it up for an infinite amount of time." he said. HILCREST 3: "Dirty Harry" Clint Eastwood plays a simple-minded, right-wing San Francsico man who hates to hunt down the baddies in Frisco, but they always off the hook because of his inability to follow instructions. The script is a feeble plea for less legal restrictions on police, but "Dirty Harry" is just another in a keen wave of violent movies When completed, these 87 Elizabethan costumes will represent the beginning of an extensive Shakespeare wardrobe of about 40,000 costumes, who represent do represent just a beginning. They also represent a lot of fine, talent and hard work. Southern Illinois University. A native of Topkea, Miss Webb will be performing at KU for the first time. SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL. Chamber Music Series Hall, 6 p.m., harpist, 8 p.m., Wednesday, in the first appearance in Lawrence, Zabalaite will play works by Bach, Beehoven, Hindemith and Mozart. running rampant in America today. THEATRE FILMS EXPERIMENTAL THEATER presents four one-action plays, "The First Militant Ole Man," "The Electronic Nigger" and "Happy Jack." The show is set on Saturday. An enjoyable, but often shallow and, bewildering, excursion into black American life, with the nerve-wracking at times, but the production does provide a rare opportunity to be artistically important theatrical genre. WOODRUFF AUDIORIUM: Film Society, "Who's Afraid of the Dark," 9:15 p.m. Tuesday. Elizabeth Elzabeth and Richard Burton claw at each other's throats in this faithful rendition of Edward Albee's novel *The Curious Case of the Burton play a middle-aged married couple wading their way through a night of drunken hatred in the city.* Sean Scalabrine Seal look on. Made in 1986 WOODRUFF AUDIORIUM: SUA Popular Film, "The Damned" 7 and 9:30 p.m. onright and Saturday. What Fellini did last week to the Roman Empire ("Satyrion") to the Third Reich to the Third Reich. Now, however, the lurid decadence and tragic corruption are centered in a family of German steel magnates headed by Dirk Bogarde and Irglid Thrush. Made HILCREST 1: "Goodbye, Columbus" and "Love Story." All McGraw plays flippant rich man. She doesn't gawky poor boy in the first, Phillip Roth's story of Jewish social climbing. The second finds Nina Strikenstein a stricken girl (but nonetheless flips her girl, opposite Ryan "Aappoile" O'Neal's social-cibling rich boy in Erich Seigl's formula tear- As a director, he is most successful in handling his actors. The performances are uniformly based on what appears to be the institution that he is, and he comes up with some rather startling gut-level acting. He does it twice, and although his characterization one we've seen him do many WOODRUFF AUDIORIUM: SCLA Classical Films, "Zero for 30 and 9 15 am" Wednesday. The first (1933) is director Jean Vigo's grotesque memory of his life. The second (1934) is Vigo's pale story of a river barge owner and his wife set within the dreary out- UNIVERSITY THEATRE: The KU Theatre for Young Actors presents at p.m. Saturday, Madge Miller's unpublished script portraits, at a child's level, a totalitarian state loss touch with individuality. HILCREST 3: "Guess what We learned in School Today?" A dirty exsploitation movie that features impotent voyeurism is still a major threat to the usual skin flick and the hypocritical attitudes toward sex UNION BALLROOM: Film Society "Accident," 7:30 p.m. Harold Winslow is selected Harold Winslow's screenplay the effect of chance (here an auto accident) on the superficial and young men and a girl. Media HILCREST 2: "Something a Great Notion." Paul Newman wrote this in time of a one more time in this story of a family independent family of loggers in the Northwest. Also rans are Help Fayola, Michael Sarrain and Kate. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: SUA Science Fiction Film, "Barbarela." 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Jane Fonda flits around the There is a prodigal son (Michael Sarrazin), a long-haired pseudo-sophistication who comes back to prove whatever it is he has done. He back to prove. I suspect he is meant to represent the audience's values. He adapts, of course, and eventually becomes a Man. (Fortunately, he is not permitted to cut his hair to achieve this.) The plot concerns an affluent logging family in Oregon, headed by patriarch Henry Fonda. The family is a masculine and conservative, and his sons (Paul Newman and John Stuart) are idolatry to a point approaching idolatry. THE MAIN CONFLICT in the film is this independent family's clash with striking union loggers. It is sort of a modern version of the story, which is part of the story. The family is determined to keep working despite the union's efforts to stop them. The family motto is "Never give an employee more time than it makes to make your teeth hurt. It's a shame that the ideas of the story are so disguised Paul Newman is a talented director and a sensitive director, but the movie boils him down. An average of 800 students a day since Feb. 7 have been collecting a 3 per cent refund on books from the Kansas Union Bookstore. Students Can Collect 5% From Blue Slip Return Students may claim refunds by returning back the book or returns desk on the lower level of the bookstore. The bookstore will only accept blue slips marked Refunds from blue slips marked period 51 which are received this semester may be claimed next semester. The percentage of rebate has increased this year, James Christman, Union Bookstore manager, said Thursday. Last month the company sent 680 cent refund on blue slips and in 2007 the refund was 2 per cent. Sales slip refunds are computed from the bookstore's net profit for each semester. The Newman's 'Notion' Reactionary THE STORY I crammed to the edges with reactionary values, and felt myself being consciously witsy-witsy-witsy dealing with them. Since audience feedback has made leaflets announcing that 'the film does not reflect the views of the filmmaker', it is not unreasonable to assume that it "Sometimes a Great Notion" (Hillcrest 2) is a super-bu- tter rendering of the Frontier Ethic. It tells the story of a modern-day woman who must remain individualistic against all odds. The producer-director-star- of the picture is Paul Newman, who understands his reasons for making it. In an interview in this month's "Show Magazine," Newman says that he disagrees with the values of his company, attraction, it seems, was to the characters, and he indicates the fear that the picture will be "misunderstood as reactionary." He asks if it is true that way to understand the picture. BY RON TARRER Kansan Reviewer By RON PARKER percentage of refund is decided by the executive operating Union. Profits are declared semiannually in June and December. Because an average of 20 to 25 per cent of redeemable receipts from bookstores computes the percentage refund on the basis of 75 to 80 per cent redemption, thus allowing the bookstore to收益 a larger share of the profits. NEWMAN ALSO succeeds in getting a performance out of Michael Sarrazin. Sarrazin has an extra edge in looking nice, but he also acts and he's quite effective. He never succeeds in crating a total character, but I think that's more important of the character than the actor. times before, it still works. Newman also manages to capture the awesomeness of the landscape and the rather arduous activities and activities. Although much of the film is slow and unexciting, one scene achieves unbearable simplicity in classic proportions. A log has framed Richard Jaeckel, leaving him trapped half-underwater. Newman tries various methods to free him, and as the tide begins to recede she is forced to quiet playfulness at a truly painful desperation. If you're not a master, it's enough to make me sad. In the "Show" interview, Newman admits that he bought the movie rights to the novel *The Man in the Mirror*; it is truly a remarkable moment of drama, and Newman brings it off wonderfully. Unfortunately, when you read it, things in his novel that Newman was unable or unwilling to deal with firmly. I hope that his man will let himself be his own man. For Complete Automobile Insurance --kansas union BOOKSTORE Gene Doane Agency V1 3-3012 824 Mass. St. Four by Three in Black First Miltier Preamble Clara's Ole Man The Electronic Nigger Now Thru Feb. 12 --kansas union BOOKSTORE 8 p.m. KU EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE 864.3982 The Bull & Boar FOR ONE NOT WANTED TO BE IN WEST MARYLAND AMNESY OR NO? SUNDAY FEB 13 10 AM UNIVERSITY LUTN BLOCHCH 12:45 & 10:00 50¢ OFF any two handed sandwich with the purchase of one at regular price. You MUST SHIP WITHIN 24 HOURS. Also: 11 a.m. "Love Outlasts Anything" Wed. 7 p.m. Lenten Series Begins Featuring—Roast Beef, BBQ Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef, Grill-seared Meat, Meat Loaf and the Reuben Sausage. Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon-Sat Sun 12 to 8 p.m. Offer Expires March 1 ★★★★★★★★★★★ REPRINT SALE MON., FEB. 14 - FRI., FEB. 18 UNDER LOOKING TO IS NOT ADMITTED THIS AID REQUEST MAY BE WEIGHT OF 10 Pounds CHECK THE SIZE OR ADVERTISING. SCI AMERICAN REPRINTS 40% BOBBS-MERRILL REPRINTS up to - Not Currently Assigned Fri. and Sat., Feb. 11th & 12th 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. THE DAMNED WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM 60° He was soon to become the second most powerful man in Nazi Germany. m N E FOR A VALENTINE TREAT BRING HER TO THE sirloin The which educ the d dissa being Educ Ray chain Chan We're sure you will find, as many others have, the Sirliin offers the finest of quality foods served in any of the finer restaurants. Only the best of the top choice steaks are served at The Sirliin. 2 Make reservations now for the Valentine weekend Saturday & Sunday Feb.12 & 13 Our motto is and has always been . . . "There is no substitute for quality in good food." HC Phone 843-1431 for reservations 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge The Sailor's Café & Coffee Shop PRESENTS DINING 85 Closed Mondays Except Basketball Nights Dining from 4:30 p.m. Education Bill Called Result of Taxpayers' Discontent By PAUL SWEARINGEN Kansan Staff Writer The Bill introduced in the Kansas House which would have abolished the schools of education at the three state universities is the direct result of taxation. The more taxes they dollar are being spent, according to two House Education Committee members, Raymond C. Vaughan, R-Burlington, chairman of the Committee, and Bert Hutchison, D-Hutchison. Both Chaney, the author of the bill, and Vaughan said they had received criticism from home regarding duplication in state institutions and radical movements at the colleges and universities. Vaughan said she felt that the colleges were "settling down" this year. "I'm fearful of the legislature's getting into the administration and curriculum of the colleges," Vaughan said. "It's a question of our committee's doing something now to bring out more information concerning course offerings, programs, and so forth at the state colleges. "The taxpayers are getting real misincentivized about what they hear about the drug trade." VAUGHAN CTED A bill that would freeze out-of-district tuition payments to junior colleges as an example of taxpayer pressure. "There's got to be some real holering from the taxpayers for that type of bill to get through." Vanghan said he was impressed with the presentations of the representatives from the three state universities at the hearing for Chaney's bill Thursday. "I thought that they sold their programs well, to the best of their abilities," he said. "I hope they call on us for some help in trying to get their message across to the people, too. We might be able to take some of the pressure off them." "I feel that the work done by the Council of Chief Academic Officers is worthwhile, and I want to do the best possible to give them. I'm aware that in order to do a more effective job they'll need funds, but I don't have much hope for any money to give them. We do need to give them all the THE COUNCIL OF Chief Academic Officer, and personnel from the state institutions offered review programs at the state schools and to offer recommendations for coordination Any bill to appropriate funds for state educational institutions this year must be referred to both the House Education and the Ways and Means committees first, thus presenting the bills for review by more legislators. Vaughan said. This action points out the growing concern of lawmakers about the money spent for education, he said. Chaney, who received his masters degree in education from Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia and who is now an instructor at Hutchinson Junior College, said that both his bills concerning higher education—one to abolish the university schools of education, the other aimed at diminishing duplication in higher education by the creation of a study commission would probably be acted upon early. House bills must be killed or out of committee by the end of the week he said. "I FEEL THAT my two bills have achieved much of what they were intended to do; that is, to bring to taxpayers' and legislators' attention facts concerning higher education," Chaney said. "I've talked to a number of people concerned about the amount of money spent in the job training program, are critical of the size of their tax bills." Chaney was somewhat concerned with the Council of Chief Academic Officers. "An agency like that becomes almost like a human," he said, "the tendency is of the hardest type to act and are often. And rarely times a committee will tend to 'committee things to death,' rather than to get anything done. Usually a large committee is more ineffective than a small one." BOTH DEANS of their colleges of education. Date: Scout's School at Louisa Lee College in Louisville, Coffee of Wichita State University, were united in their opposition to Chancellor Hill's decision. bill will show that it is unwise, that we need our schools of education at the universities," Chaffee said. "Our aim is to serve students in the most effective, economical way possible." "I believe that a careful analysis of the Chaffee did not feel that COCAO was "committee things to death." He said he thought COCAO had made definite progress during the two years of its existence, especially when the handcuffs and prisoner members were working had been considered. Scannell was even more outspoken in his opposition to Chuney's bill and indicated a high degree of concern with some of the comments offered by Chuney during the bearing. Nevertheless, Scannell said he was satisfied with the results. "With the exception of one person, the committee was truly interested in the information that we presented and reacted favorably to it." Scannell said. STILL WARMER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 82nd Year, No. 84 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Monday, February 14, 1972 Change Sought In Recognition Of Organizations Betting Bill Among Issues Record Number of Bills Considered by Legislature TOPEKA | AP> | Legislative action this week will probably come on issues ranging from climate change to gun control. Today marks the 35th day of this year's 10-day session which has witnessed a massive increase in participation. With the introduction Friday of $2 new bills in the House and seven in the Senate, this will be an important occasion. The legislature, with the addition of the new bills, is now considering 849 measures. Of that total, 288 are bills which were carried over from the 1971 session. The previous record for a 60-day session was in 1968 when 688 bbls were considered standard. The next record In the House, a proposed constitutional amendment which would legalize parental wagering aid other games of chance will probably be delayed early in Also in the House, jebate on a proposed reappointment plan is expected Monday. THE MEASURE, introduced by the House Judiciary Committee, could require a two-thirds vote of both houses before it could on the ballot in November. Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topkea, predicted Friday he had plenty of votes to pass the bill. The state has not passed it in the Senate. final voting was expected today on 18 measures tentatively passed last week. The measures include a plan for congressional and state offices that represents for congressional and state offices. The plan, similar to one of Colorado, would place the names of candidates receiving 20 per cent or more of the votes in the primary convention at the top of the primary ballot. THE PLAN, survived an attempt to kill it in Thursday by two votes, and the final victory was a surprise. Scheduled for debate in the Senate this week were an executive reorganization measure, a billboard law, a plan reap- rised laws, districts and prisons, protected jobs, products The proposed billboard law was designed to bring Kansas into compliance with the 1968 Federal Highway Banishment Act. The Department of Impairment of the Environment per cent—about $6.8 million—in federal funds it such legislation is not passed. Politics Seen As Reason For Welfare Restoration See Page 5 By RICHARD COOLEY Kansan Staff Writer JOOSBA! MERCEDES BENCH NY Less than a year ago, the Kansas Legislature voted overwhelmingly in favor of legislation which in effect reduced welfare budgets of individual recipients by 20 to 35 per cent. But last week, legislation designed to reverse that decision breezed through the House with only four negative votes. John Derrick, Douglas County welfare director, said Friday he felt legislators did not realize the implications when they passed his proposal. Because only about five per cent of the Concentration Needed for Tourney Victory Fast Reflexes and concentration were required to participate in the Foosball Tournament Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Westy Davis, Kansas City, Kan, senior, one of the 60 participant, cts in the x'sx hour tournament, demonstrates his skill. population of Kansas receives assistance at any given time, he said there was a tendency for legislators to think it would be safe and easy to secure the needs of that group. The Council was designed to coordinate community resources to alleviate the effects of the cuts on low-income families and to encourage public opinion on behalf of welfare, recruiters. "But when you cut welfare budgets, you also affect the grocery store, the marmalade shop, and the ice cream parlor." The ESC, through its "Add a Can" and "Bring a can to church" programs, collects food for distribution to low-income families who cannot find help elsewhere. It also cooperates with the Salvation Army in issuing packages for food and utilities. THE WELFARE CUTS also apparently angered many citizens who had no direct interest except compassion for those affected. In Lawrence, representatives of the Lutheran Church and the Ministerial Alliance, the Salvation Army the Red Cross and other service groups combined to create the Emergency Services Unit after the budget cuts took effect last year. THROUGH ITS Legislative Presence Program, it works to insure that legislators are aware of the effects of the budget cuts in hopes that the awareness will be translated into favorable votes in welfare legislation. Headed by Vincent W. DeCoursey, a Catholic layman of Prairie Village, Kan., the PAC has concentrated on publicizing the effects of the welfare cuts and on convincing legislators that they made a mistake when they slashed welfare appropriations. With headquarters in Topkapi, she steps a close water on the population, allowing those low-income people who can't afford to speak for themselves. The effectiveness of these groups was demonstrated in the House vote last week. Similar groups sprung up elsewhere in Kansas after the budget cuts took effect last September. There are now 149 such organizations in Kansas, all of which are affiliated with the Public Assistance Coalition (PAC). "When 98 per cent of the House votes for a piece of legislation, it's difficult for the Senate to overturn that type of mandate," he said. THE LEGISLATION would add $10.66 million to the state welfare budget for the current fiscal year and would allow applicants to be restored to previous levels. The bill is now being considered by the senate, where stronger opposition is expected. But Derrick said Friday he was op- sumistic about the bill's chances in the legislature. 720 HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY While many students endurely forget to display the proper spirit in honor of the sweetheart season, there are those stalwart with a "hawk's eye" on their faces. Boys Mastermind Timely 'Be Mine' Sign tradition. Shown erecting a sign of seasonal salutations at 720 Louisiana St. are Charlie Cressi Stull sophomore; George Wankue, Kansan Photo by DAVE BLISS Schwegler Views Sisters' Demands By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer Dr. Raymond Schweiger, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, outlined the institutional health facilities for women during a Student Services Committee meeting Sunday. The meeting ended with a resolution that a weekly health column Schwegler responded to the demands of the February Sisters who had suggested that the student health service dispense contraceptives, offer a full range of medical treatment for women and have sex covered under student health insurance. The same information was presented by Schweger at a SenEx meeting Friday in a discussion between health officials and the women'sresentatives. Insurance covering maternity, pap smears and routine pelvic examinations was possible. Schweiger said, but only if students were willing to pay for it. He said treatment of this kind was not covered under the present policy, but if students need such benefits we give policy that would offer such benefits, the health service could arrange it. The present policy covers disease processes, Schweger said, so a pelvic examination or pumar smear used in treating a particular disorder is covered. A routine examination or pan test is like a pre-examination physical, he said, and is not covered. THE HEALTH SERVICE does not formulate the insurance policy, he said, but gathers figures and acts as a partner in the insurance companies. The problem has been to find a policy offering as many benefits as possible still within the financial assets of students. A policy offering maternity benefits was voted down in the Student Senate several years ago, Schweller said. Since students cannot buy individually-tailored policies through the University, he said, all policyholders would have incurred the expenses of benefits used by just a few. He said that in the past years, many students benefited only by married students. SWCHWEGLER SAID that figures on the SCHEWGLER SAID that figures on the benefits and costs of the existing policy were not taken into account during the month. He suggested that the Student Services Committee form a subcommittee to work with the health service to evaluate the political climate for final decision with the Student Senate. In response to demands that free examinations test for women be allowed at Watkins, the state "There isn't free anything at Watkins. It depends on whether you want to pay for it." "IF I CAN personally try to train our registered nurses to run a clinic-type situation," Schwegler said, "then we could break into this area." He cited lack of space, funds and personnel as the major obstacles to such a program. When the new student hospital that is now in the planning stages is completed, space should no longer be a problem, he said. Schweigel compared the birth control clinic to the present methadone clinic in that students entering the clinic would not encounter adverse reactions from doctors because the clinic would draw doctors who were sympathetic. Kathy Allen, Topeka sophomore and co-chairman of the Student Services Committee, suggested that a weekly health column appear in the Kansan. She said the policies and services available at Watkins must become familiar to the students. Schweigher termed the resolution "an excellent idea" and offered the services of the Watkins staff to do the actual writing of the column. Hearing Scheduled for Bill On Dealer License Plates A bill establishing penalties for the misuse of auto dealer license plates is scheduled to go before the Kansas House and Utilities Committee this afternoon. Hearing on the bill, introduced by State Rep. Jep Hyun, R-Sidney, arecky, will The House Bill reads: "Private use of retail motor vehicle dealer number plates shall be restricted to the dealer and the retailer." The House Bill requires a member of the dealers' family to drive to Under Harper's bill, a car dealer's misuse of license plates would result in his suspension from using such plates for six months. and from school or other permanent occupancy, and use or not use connected with vehicle sales. For a second violation of the regulation, a dealer would be suspended from using the plates for 12 months. Any subsequent violations would result in the dealer's permanent suspension of the use of the license plates. On Dec. 1, the Kansas Motor Vehicle Department revoked seven dealers' license plates used on vehicles loaned to the athletic Corporation by area car dealers. The action came two weeks after a story printed in the Kansas revealed the use of dealers' license tags on cars lent to the athletic corporation. 2 Monday, February 14, 1972 University Daily Kansan People . . . . . Places . . . . . Things People: Mrs. PRESIDENT HARRY S. TRUMAN and his wife, BESS, former Mrs. Truman's 8th birthday Sunday in their home in Independence. Places: PHNOM PENHI—The Cambodian high command reported that fighting broke out on the edge of occupied Kngkor Wat and Angkor Thom temples amid rumors that Cambodian troops plan a pincer attack on the great art treasures. The temple area was reported calm Sunday. The command said the only significant fighting occurred 35 miles south of Phnom Penh. The temples, built between the 9th and 13th centuries, have been occupied by the Communists since June 1970. VERSALLES, France—An international antwar assembly, one of the largest ever held, unanimously backed Communist Vietnamese proposals for ending the Vietnam War and terminated the U.S. peace plan "hypothetical and fallacious." Then some of the 800 members of the organization braved a child chait in march near Paris behind Vinh Cong and North Vietnamese flags and French Communist parties banners. Things: THE NATURAL GAS INDUSTRY, limiting service to customers in various parts of the nation, says IT FACES A SHORTAGE that will probably get worse. The gas industry maintains the shortage developed because the Federal Power Commission held the price of gas at the wellhead at a lower level. As a result, industrial companies cut back on gas drilling and exploration because it wasn't profitable. Stanford University scientists soon will begin administering a LIQUID POLIO VACCINE prepared with LIVING HUMAN TISSUE CELLS. For Dr. Leonard Hayflick, a professor of medical microbiology at Stanford, the event will culminate a 10-year battle to change the vaccine are manufactured. It could open an era eventually affecting everyone receiving vaccines for diseases such as polio, mumps, measles and rubella. Hayflick said this meant that vaccines would be safer and cheaper. Campus Briefs Craftsman Exhibition The works of 78 craftsmans and artists have been selected for showing in the 8th annual Kansas Designer Craftman Exhibition opening at the Kansas Union Gallery Feb. 20. More than 85 works in ceramics, jewelry, metalwork, weaving and textile design, furniture, wood and leather crafts, glass and enamels will be on display through March 24. Violinist to Perform Howard Boyajian, violinist and chairman of the string department of the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts, will perform at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. His program will include a Bach concerto for violin and oboe, "Sonatina for Violin and Harpsichord" by Walter Piston and the "A Minor Violin Sonata" by Robert Schumann. 'A Feminist Perspective' "Women in the World of Work" will be the subject of a panel discussion on "A Feminist Perspective:" at 7 onight on KAUF MN. Moderated by Emily Taylor, dean of women, the panel members tonight are Dorothy Rooney of the University State Bank and fellow of KLW Audio Studio. The panel appears in questions or comments during the last fifteen minutes of the program. Gay Front Loses Suit; May Decide to Appeal The Gay Liberation Front lost in the recognition by the University of Kentucky decision handed down Friday by Judge George Templar in Chicago. "Now that the suit has failed in the district court, we must sit down and decide whether we can afford an appeal," Jack Burton Lawrence Gay Liberation front attorney said Sunday. The Front filed suit last year against Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmeri Jr. and William Ballour, vice-chancellor for student affairs, demanding a raise as a university organization. The Front, which has approximately 60 members, was appointed on Friday and Fridays' decision from Templar. Klinkett, too, was upset with the results, but he was quick to dismiss it as "not all together unexpected." "Despite the findings by the judge, I still have confidence that the legal issues are on the Front's side." Klimnett said. "I believe you can succeed with its suit if we push the claim long enough." William Kunstler co-counsel for the Front who was refused permission to attend the trial, case by Templar Jan. 27, was denied a writ of mandamus by the 108th Court of Appeals to dismiss his appeal to the federal court circuit to decide whether Kunstler was excluded from the trial. Klinknett said Kunstler was by no means "out of the picture." no means "out of the picture." "The denial of the writ for Kunstler will be one element of" the appeal, should we take the decision to the circuit court," Klinknett said. Chalmers, who has not seen Templar's report, said he considered the decision in the best interests of the University. Klinknet he said he would try to meet with the Gay Lib group on Tuesday to decide whether they should seek an appeal. NEW YORK (AJP)-Time magazine printed parts of his book, written of offender Hughes" Sunday and said they proved the book was a hoax, much of it pirated from an author's writer's unpublished userzip. Fund to Honor Former Dean With a goal of $250,000, the school of Business has begun a memorial fund drive in honor of Mr. Hutchins, who dean dean of the School of Business. The fund will be used for research and development, such as research foreign countries, Clifford D. School of Business, at Thursday. Time said, "The conclusion emerging from a study of both the author and the living book was lifted from Phelan's version, along with 150 pages of the transcript of tape-recorded interviews with a staff member." Clark said they had already received many contributions for the fund. Phelan, interviewed Sunday on NBC-TV, called the Irving manuscript "a very expensive book," and it was "unquestionably" ahab. The magazine also said写 iniling Richard Saskind, had admitted the "autobiography" was a hoax. The Irving excerpts were published in tandem with manuscripts by writer James Phelan, who once collaborated on a Hughes biography with longtime co-writer Daniels. 83 Dietrich later completed the book with another free-lance writer, Bob Thomas of the Associated Press, and it is to be The committee met Feb. 7 to divide into geography and biology departments, Alumni who attended KU with Stockton will ask to contribute to the fund, 'Time' Prints Irving Hoax Leslie L. Waters, professor of history, historian and Indian University, doctoral and Indiana UD professor, is chairman of a 29-member committee for the fund IRVING, THROUGH THIS attorney, called the Time's article "a gloating, prancing, hysterical attack on the irresponsible in the extreme." Stockton was dean of the School of Business at 1947. He made as a designee University Extension until he left in June 1971, at the age of 60. He said the Irving book contained three episodes that “are totally false, and this involves a Hughes meeting with Albert Schweitzer, it involves the same person in Hemingway and also, I think, a trip to Ethiopia ... these things are not just made up, apparently just made them up.” TIME'S PARENT FEMINITY Time, Inc., which also owns Lafee magazine, had purchased the rights to manipulate manuscript but canceled the arrangement after deciding the book was a fraud. Time then bought the rights to excerpts in the anox attempt to illustrate the noax, although it did so only after overcoming a court challenge Saturday. Time said Phelan, who lives in Long Beach, Calif., brought his manuscript about Hughes to New York. He then Hill and to editors of Time and Life, which had contracted for $200,000 to print excursions of the city. Irving's likeness, painted by Irving for elmer d'Hory the subject of Irving's previous book, "Fake," appears on the Time cover. Irving is dibued "Coo Man of the Year" on the cover. TIME'S PROPOSAL TO print the bill, Mr. Craven said, living and Phenian manuscripts was opposed in court by lawyers for living at McGraw-Hill and Dorsey. Rosemont, a Hughes company in Nevada, said it paid $10 for exclusive rights to Hughes' life story. It won a court agreement from Time and McGraw-Hill not until it was authenticated. State Supreme Court Justice Gerald Culkin rused against Time Warner. Theodore Kupferman upset the decision at a hastily called hearing. Time said that the writing in the Irving manuscript was better than in Phelan's. "It is ironic that Irving be more convincing as a forger than as an author in his own right," Time said. AMONG THE REMAINING mysteries, Time said, is the origin of the nine documents published which lvring submitted McGraw-Hill. One was said to be a nine-page letter from Hughes. Time said, are睹edat sinistra between the two manuscripts included; —How Hughes' scrapped plans for a steam-powered car in the 1920s. —How Hughes' huge experimental flying boat came to be known as the "Jesus Christ" airplane. data about an aircraft, that Hughes lost. —A New York banker was persuaded to loan Hughes $3 million after Hughes supplied him with a pornographic movie. —The billionaire's acquisition of a private wire to bring stock market quotations to his bedside. —A teacher, in a notebook, containing technical —Hughes' instructions of what to do if he were kidnapped CLIP -Hughes shooting seagulls from his yacht because they were dirtying the boat. A contribution by Huges to former President Harry S. Trumann 1948 election campaign. 50¢ OFF ANY two handed sandwich with the regular price. You MUST present this regular price. The Bull & Boar Featureting -Roast Beef, BBQ Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef, Grilled cheese, Meat Loaf and the Reuben Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon-Sat Sun 12 to 8 p.m. Easter Monday, March 11 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Patronize Kansan Advertisers CALL: 864-4441 864-4350 864-3552 DO YOU NEED CHILD CARE? WE NEED TO KNOW WHO YOU ARE, HOW MANY CHILDREN YOU HAVE, WHEN AND HOW YOUR NEEDS CAN BE MET. FEBRUARY SISTERS 4,000 Catholics Rally in Ulster ENNISKILLEEN. Northern Ireland (AP)—A rally of 4,000 Roman Catholics in Southern Sunday to prevent violence against guerrilla suspects in Northern Ireland and for abolition of the province's Protestant dominated Church. The demonstrators also demanded the withdrawal of British officials from the area and rejected a compromise solution that the British government is taking. The rally was assembled after a short march through this resort among County Fermanagh, Formerly called Ballymena, place in defiance of a government parade ban and security backups backed up by troops and police. An estimated 10,000 protesters rallied in Dublin. They were addressed by leaders of the Irish Republican Army, including Joe Cahill and Sean McSiofian. Both demonstrations passed without incidents. At the Enniskill gathering, speakers dismissed any suggestions that Catholics should present in the Northern cabinet. A Catholic role in the cabinet and a Catholic deputy prime minister are among proposals that will be made by Prime Minister Edward Heath of Britain in an attempt to bring Northern Ireland's 500,000 Catholic minority back into the country. The province's million Protestants. Kevin Agnew, vice-president of the Republican National Association, said it was unhappy that prominent Catholic politicians would enter the debate. --the panic in needle park ALI McGRAW IN TWOGREAT FILMS! Jayhawker Towers Apartments Ali MacGraw - Ryan O'Neal LOVE SION! The Year's 1 Best Seller TWO GREAT FILMS! Ali MacGraw • Ryan O'Neal LOVE SIGNO The Year's #1 Best Seller John Marley & Ray Milland PLUS MARRY GOODRYE. COLUMBIA Love Story 7.15 & 10.55 Columbus & Ohio Matinee Sat Sun Columbus & 15 Love Story 7.35 $49.00 WARNING: THIS IS NOT A PROGRAM BETWEEN GODBRYE AND COLMAURISON We are now leasing for the '72 summer session at special summer rates. We have an ideal location with all the conveniences to find in most apartment complexes. Examine what we have to offer: ★ Swimming Po POLICE DEPT. ★ Laundry ★ NO Utilities ★ 2 Bedrooms—Furnished or unfurnished Varsity TH1A1F2 ... Highland V13-1065 Varsity THEATRE --- Telephone N. 316-0555 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30 Adults $1.50 2ND WEEK K Sat. & Sun. 3:00, 5:05, 7:30, 9:35 (Twilight HR. Admission $1.00 & 50--3:30 to 5:15 on.) COLOR by DE LUXE ★ Free Parking Facilities Applications Available in SUA Office (Main Floor, Union). 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Ends Tues. 7:30 & 9:30 Adult 1.50 RECREATION TREASURER RECREATION DIRECTOR, FESTIVAL SPECIAL EVENTS THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAD TO REST. "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 There are NO hidden costs. Drop by or phone Drop by or phone Jayhawker Towers Apartments BARRY BOWMAN Application Due Feb. 23 at 5 p.m. Hillcrest Lee Paul Marvin Newman IN A FIRST ARTISTS PRODUCTION "Pocket Money" A NATIONAL CENTRAL PICTURES RELEASE GP 90 123456789 NOW! 7:30, 9:30 Granada THEATRE ... 1000 W. 57TH ST. A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES WILLERS GP 20 TELNO 1078065 NOW! 7:30, 9:30 Granada INFORMAÑO . . . FAGOEIAS V. 37454 Hillcrest --kansas union BOOKSTORE VICE-PRESIDENT FORUMS PRESIDENT FINE ARTS FILMS TRAVEL Student Union Activities Officer and Board Interviews Feb.24-26 DIRECTOR FESTIVAL SECRETARY PUBLIC RELATIONS WE'VE CUT THE PRICE OF RECORDS La Ir Save up to $3.00! Law the co award At le fr presse before just b Major label LP's! Top artists! M Many, many selections in this special purchase. Classics included! H "I doesn' t now," execl Lawr Comr in ch Unt know Conv Rainl Kan. depai Sprin medi The in Unive Center recent adjac camp occupar famil "I deve fami 'is med fami like depa educ and phys fami Hundreds of records! Come early for best selection! SALE STARTS TODAY 8:30 - 5:00 p.m. Feb. 14th - Feb. 18th Get your favorites at Big Discounts! Monday, February 14, 1972 University Daily Kansan 3 Lawrence's Chances 'Slim' In All-American City Contest Lawrence's chances of winning the coveted "All-America City" award are rapidly rising. He is the feeling Friday of the officials who presented to city's program the winner in Atlanta just before Christmas. "I would guess that it just doesn't look too bright for us now," said Bill Gaut, the executive vice president of Chamber of Commerce, and the man who was in charge of putting the program together. "I think we would have heard from them by now, if we had won." Although the competition was very tough, Gaut said he thought the Lawrence presentation was the best of the group. "Greenville, North Carolina, one of the cities competing for the president," he said. "I heard from the judges, Gaut said. "They thought we had been their first team." Med Center Purchases Hospital for Department He said that one of the reasons Lawrence may have lost was that The Endowment Association, in collaboration with the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. recently purchased a building adjacent to the Medical Center campus which soon will be occupied by the department of family practice. Until the structure, formerly known as the Josephus Wesleyan Chapel in Ranbow Blvd., Kansas City, Kan, can be remodeled, the department is at 30th and Springfield College's former litterary house. Dr. Jack D. Walker, chairman of the Regents practice, said Friday the Board of Regents created the department's family practice in 2012 at 837 W. 41st St. "The philosophy behind the development of a department of family practice," Walker said, referring to medical students in a career in family medicine. We will do this like all other clinical training by educationally involved with undergraduate medical students and the training of resident members of the specialty of family practice. "A shortage of medical school graduates going into this area of the country has resulted in programs across the country have been started to encourage medical school graduates to take professional of family medicine." Three-year programs specialized in training doctors have been created to fill the void in medical schools, Walker said. the judges placed a lot of emphasis on the building of new sewer lines, street planning and ball park construction. The Lawrence officials planned their development as a human relations theme. Walker, a 1953 KU medical school graduate practiced in southeast Kansas for eight years before returning to the school (1903) as administrative role as the associate dean of the School of Medicine. He has held his position as chairman of the family practice for seven months. "We emphasized the human relations aspect of our community," Gaut said. "We had a problem and attacked it. We showed the positive outcome of the efforts to solve the problem. In practice, we must that we should have prevented the problem in the first place. Applications for SUA Positions Now Available Students Union Activities is taking applications for officer training. Applications are available in the SUA Office and should be completed and returned to the SUA office 5 p.m., Friday, February 23. The SUA Board is the body in charge of the planning, execution and evaluation of the student positions and eight committee members with the Kansas Union. The board consists of four officer positions and eight committee members. The committee directors are in charge of the Fine Arts Festival, recreation, travel, films, publications, forums and special events. SUA Board members are selected by an interviewing committee composed of the retiring members of the present board and representatives of the board and representatives of the Union Operating Committee. Interviews will be held the morning of February 26. Buford Watson, city manager, agreed with Gaut that the city's downtown district was not good. Watson pointed out that the award was sponsored by the Saturday Evening Post and was coming out in March. "I would think we'd have found out by now if we had won," Watson said. The All-American team, who lost to the event, any city is eligible to enter the competition, with a preliminary group of 150 cities actually competing for the title. The top two teams and invited to present a short program before a board of judges. This year's finalists met Lawrence was one of 18 cities in order to compete for the final award. SPECIAL Saturday Bus Service Downtown — Campus Leave Ellsworth 10:30 min-50 past 9:30 am - 5:50 pm. Leave Olive Lincoln 5:35-45 min-50 past 9:25 am - 5:45 pm. Leave Union 00-20:40 min-50 past 9:40 am - 6:00 pm. Leave 9th & Mass 10:30-50 past hour 9:30 am - 5:30 pm. Foosball Tournament Attracts 60 Players About 60 people participated in the SUA-sponsored Fooseball Tournament Sunday afternoon in the Kansas Union Ballroom. For nearly six hours, the 23 teams in the doubles division and the 19 teams in the singles division tried to prove their Fooseball finesse. Information 842-0544 Lawrence Bus Co. Inc. Fare Downtown 25' Campus 10' Rick Carrier, Topeka senior, and third place trophy went to Rod Ross, Topeka senior. The first place trophy in the singles division was awarded to Dave Hallmark, Rosalia junior. Second place was awarded to The tournament was decided on a two out of three game, double-elimination structure. In the doubles division the following trophies were awarded first place to Mike Brown, senior; Brad Stoneback, Lawrence junior; second place to Tom Fedeborow, federally certified Hallmark, Rosalia junior; third place to John Grossnickle, Glen Ellyn, sophomore, and Bill Thump, Wayne, Penn, sophomore. NEW PENGUINS AT THE CAMPUS BKSTRE WILHELM REICH AND ORGONOMY. Oia Raknes. This authoritative introduction to Reich's science of life energy — or orgonomy — covers the liberation of sexual energy, the nature of functional thinking, and the implications of life formula, and the implications of life energy for religion, education, medicine, and psychology $1.45$ SELF AND OTHERS (*Rev. Ed*). R. D. Laing. The author of *The Divided Self* probes the relations between the self and other people — with the aim of establishing a non-fragmented vision of human relations. $1.25 THE NEW MAN, Maurice Nicoll. A unique interpretation of some parables and miracles of Christ. New York: HarperCollins. STRANGE LIFE OF IVAN OSKIN. P. D. Ouspensky. Time, infinity, and eternal recurrence are the themes of this novel about a young man who is allowed to relive twelve years of his life. $1.45$ EATING YOUR WAY TO HEALTH, Ruth Kunz-Bircher, Dagmar Liechti-von Brasch, Braich Bircher, and Alfred Kunz-Bircher. The celebrated Bircher-cook is to nutrition, with a complete cookbook. $1.95 REVOLUTIONS 1775-1830. Edited by Merryn Williams. Key documents and writings that form a history of Revolutions $3.25 LINGUISTICS. David Crystal. A lively introduction to a fascinating subject, $1.65 Visit your campus bookstore today . . . for these and other likely, informative Penguins. PENGUIN BOOKS INC Jayhawker Not on Time The second edition of the 1972 Jayhawker will not be available for distribution in early February as previously announced, Richard McKernan, Goodland junior and editor of the yearbook, said Friday. McKernan said the second edition had been delayed at the printers. He was uncertain of the exact day it would be ready. The second edition was to feature football, group living pictures and interviews with people of different segments from the University of Kansas community and their views on education, McKernan said. GO Male THE PACESETTER IN FASHION! A LOW RISE JEANS & MANY OTHER "NOW FASHIONS" Male AVAILABLE AT YOUR Bootlegger Let Our Jeans "Tickle Your Genes" Buy Bootleger CENTER OF NOW FASHION Hours 10-10 7 days a week 523 W. 23rd There's Always A Bargain Waiting For You a Fast business rate healthy day There's Always a Bargain Waiting For You at the Bargain Table! 1972 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION On March 15 and 16,new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected. To Become a candidate: Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Thursday, February 17. In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate. A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OF FICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date. For Further Information: Call 864-3710 4 Monday, February 14, 1972 University Daily Kansan Garry Wills KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Beautiful Kansas It seems Kansas is finally on its way toward compliance with the Highway Beautification Act, part of a plan to make America a bit more livable. The particular bill provides for the removal of billboards from interstate highways and some federal highways, and moving others back from roadways. It is interesting to note that Kansas was among a few states with pavements from the U.S. Department of Transportation. Here, the 10 per cent cut would have meant about $6.8 million. That apparently was too much for even this sluggish legislature to risk. The bill to bring Kansas into compliance with the federal guidelines is now of Senate committee and on the Senate floor in which it be passed. If the bill finally clears the legislature and is signed by the governor, Kansas will have taken a small step toward upgrading its environmental quality. The Kansas bill should give no hope, though, to serious environmentalists, as its passage was an eleventh-hour commitment. If indeed you can call it a commitment. A stranger might guess that land in Kansas is paved if no other use can be found for it. By and large the land takes a back seat to highway contractors and the banks that finance the construction. The legislature is too closely tied to economic pressure groups such as the Kansas Power and Light Company to initiate much important legal questioning. The governor, it seems, is just no busy worrying about whether he should run against Sen. James Pearson to care about such a trifle. Until those that make the laws are shaken from their environmental apathy and timidity, the state should be custodied to the heavy federal hand. —Thomas E. Slaughter Great Mid-American Rip-Off Center The new Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts is proving the most appropriate of Washington institutions. Blaeted and grandiose, trying to do everything, it is already having trouble doing anything. It opened with the Leonard Bernstein "Mass," which had everything but the kitchen sink thrown in—and that, it turns out, probably would have been added; but some one must have stolen it first. The place has you see, become the Great Middle-American Rip-Off Center. Snips of carpet, clipped-off facets from chandlers, faucets, electrical outlet covers—anything that can be pried off and stuffed in a handbag—all these things have been taken away. The Center has been closed during non-performance hours, its free Christmas events canceled. For the Center is not like a single theater, interesting in its architecture but geared to one purpose—it is a kind of Lincoln Memorial fitted out for multiple showbiz purposes. That combination expresses pretty well the emotion binge our nation went on in the Kennedy years—a jag that simply exaggerated our general treatment of politicians as movie stars, but who show bit. Even as "non-chairmanlike" President Nixon has his cuff-links torn off when he goes to shake hands with a crowd, and the Kennedys were mobbled in particularly violent spasms of pain because they should be no surprise, at the fact that Center has its cuff links torn away. Our politics is simply our highest form of conspicuous consumption. One woman, caught in the act of such minor piftering, coolly went ahead with it, commenting 'I'm a tax payer.' The woman's face was hidden; she use it to can be it defended, that it's her right. Middle America, moralistic in so many ways, has this weird code of marking up, putting a stamp on, or simply ripping off the things that belong to us all—as if general use were an affront to the individual ethic and non-social view of "private property." The children in the kids' eyes as the young people's own affair to their parent's moralism about things like sex. At any rate, the particular form of American "use" for this monument has caused a drastic reduction in its use—before it gets all used up. And that is the final sign that the thing truly belongs to Washington, and to us. This is a closed administration, clamped down, cut off, made unnecessary, going out, all right—in this Center and that other center for the performing arts called the White House. Copyright, 1971 Universal Press Syndicate James J. Kilpatrick The Burner Is Set at Simmer MOUNT PLEASANT, MICH— This is Thursday, so it must be where? Central Michigan University, somewhere north of Saginaw, the country sheeted in snow, flat as a queen sized bed. It was built in 1940. The lecture trail resumed the first of the year, and everywhere the story is about the same: things are quieter now. The peripatetic lecturer operates like a beetle on a grapevine of shared impressions. He talks with students and professors who have just talked to other speakers in the class, helps students and other professors. The word gets around. The word this year is sober. In those days you felt the ferment, the pot tops trembling. the hall full of steam. Campus bulletin boards were shingled with notices, nailed on with bang-marks: "Rally!" This means you," ad hoc committees were budding every month, for black burner now is set at simmer. Here at Central Michigan, primarily a teacher-training institution, the mood is anxious; teaching jobs are not easily found today. Faculty members share M. JOHN HUNTER That was not the word three years ago. Then the word was, maybe, crazy. It was as if master chef had marshalled the kitchen bedecked with instructional instructions: In a bowl of young people, mix together four parts Vietnam, two parts draft, two pieces Nixon, two teaspoons Swain, seasoned with sex, two grams of tung; and bring to a rolling boil. The word for this year's campus is "sober," says Kilpatrick, after traveling the lecture circuit. He notes that the campus comes from the university campus comes not from revolutionaries, but basketball fans. studies, for pass-or-fail grading, for anti-war demonstration, for open dormitories. A visiting activist—Jane Fonda, Dick Gregory, William Kunster, and James Gayle. You expect an audience churning with hot blood and bursting in wild acclaim. The heat has been turned down. Not off. Just down. The campus revolution has not ended, but the the disquietude; a young speech instructor active with the American Civil Liberties Union, wants a new post in the fall at a lively institution, but in what is known as the academic slave society, homily. The supply of hungry teachers far exceeds the demand. The economic outlook, a visitor is told, is only one among a dozen factors that have contributed to the new sobrietv. Vietnam has almost ceased to be an issue with the draft effectively ended, the risk of personal commitment has lost its cutting edge. There is some concern about amnesty, but the concern is not keen. A number of students are reluctant to campaise; few of them, it appears, have much interest in launching political combat. Faculty members, after a long period of permissiveness are recovering a sense of values, as their teaching and research recently have observed, in a report on academic freedom prepared for The American Enterprise Institute, order is being placed into the process. A year or so ago professors began to comprehend the threat to their freedom posed by the new barterants; and they stopped supporting the crazies. Leadership is a tidal force; it comes and goes. Now it ebbs. A part of this phenomenon is attributed to the media; student radicals have lost their role as romantic novelties; they no longer can summon the red-eyed genies of TV, they have run out of hot-blooded causes. The trouble is, says a frustrated rebel that many of the old campus wars have been won a few years ago, student leaders in favor of black studies; they wanted to sit on boards of trustees, they cried out for curriculum reform, for greater personal freedom, for an open classroom setting. They got most of what they sought, but it proved to be no millennium after all. Like the Shropshire Lad, they had thrown their binge at Ludlow Fair. They knew no, no, they found the old world yet. Here and there, the red fire flickers: Ed Muskie is shouted down at Wisconsin, otherwise the mood is quite different. Walking across the University of Missouri, he is standing in front of visiting newsman beard wild halloopes in the distance. A budding revolution, heraps? Were these students out to hang a dea? No. indeed. Their team came downed Kansas. It was something, at last, worth shouting about. Copyright, 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. Readers Respond Chauvinism; Child Care; Bible... Ignorance To the Editor: Your chauvinism runneth over! Is it that your editorial page requires that be the scent of roses? At any rate you miss the point. After quoting Robin's statement about the necessity of radicalism in the movement, you wear an emblem that enlist the support needed to overcome the oppression, especially oppression as a means to assemble as a charity to muster all the help you can get. To appeal to the masses, you must moderate. Why do we need to moderate the masses? The necessity is not to appeal to the masses, but, rather, to radically oneself in a more or less Marcusan sense (though I am not Marcusan fashion, is a male chauvinist too. Woman (or female, either epithet is "subconscionably in the American society is "programming, accepting the severe rationalism which man, i. e. male, has developed and impressed upon him the purpose of subjugating equals—if it isn't that women aren't in objective reality (cf. the "Natural Superiority of Women,") This magnificent rationalization Aristotle logic shows is the male of the species the illusion that, because he plays the game better and more readily, his position is the better. I must admit though, that you. Mr. Moffet can't even play those sexes most atrocious. The purpose of radicalization is to help women raise themselves above the rest, receive from cradle to grave (c) Germaine Greer, "The Female Eunimie.") The only possible washer from the fetters of succubious abjectivism is basically submerging herself in a water body then able to view the whole of th inequities of her sexist society from an unsecured consciousness and thus choose her lifestyle and course of action freely, for, as Nora Helmer says: "I believe that before all else I am a human being who can suffer and become one." (ibn Sibas. "A Doll's House.") Mr. Moffet, what do you mean by 'Another example (of the problem, of course):' Most acts a sexual intercourse on this plane require rape. Rape she would define as sexual intercourse not initiated by a sincere desire on the part of a problem or a problem problem? It seems to state simply a position, which is perfectly legitimate given the context. Perhaps she are perplexed. Perhaps you are ignorant, in which case we can excuse you, but, believe it or not, Mr. Moffet, as a sincere desire it is, a sincere desire it is, the hand man doesn't; whereas, if a man feels that 'sincere he may never know if his mate has been woken by women,' contrary to the "Viennese witchdoctor," do not have "penis-envy." I would suggest that you radically yourselves, Mr. Moftet and Co. for then perhaps you can learn to be careful with the inequities you perpetrate. Beth Greisen, 327 Maine, Lawrence By demanding that the proposed child-care center be staffed exclusively by women, it has reduced Sisters are bolstering, instead of abolishing, one of the norms in our society of inferior status of women in our society through rigid sexual definition of acceptable male roles perpetuate the stereotype of preschool educators as strictly female? Do we all (especially the women) desire diversity in gender diversity along with For the Kids To the Editor: varied racial, socio-economic, and ethnic representation in the staff. —Henry McCarthy, Boston grad student Holy Words To Robin Morgan and all other women who are called women's liberationists: - Ecclesiastes 7:26 2. While even he has man Christ for his head, man he... and woman man . . . and woman man was not created for woman's sake, but woman for woman of God's sake. To the Editor: Hear the words of our Lord: 1. The worries of our Lord. 2. The worries of women find mistiger than you, heart is a trap to catch you and her arms are fetters. —1 Corinthians 11:8-9 Bryce Kresie Topeka senior Tom Chester Topeka senior IF YOU CRITICIZE THE PRESIDENT'S WAR POLICY, YOU'RE AN UNAMERICAN COMMANDER OF WAR CHUCK HAYNES "Oh, say... can you see?" Letters Policy Letters to the editor should be typewritten, doubled and exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing to ensure that space limitations and special dents must provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty and parent; name and position; others' name and position; their own name and address. Griff and the Unicorn By Sokoloff THERE ARE A LOT OF PEOPLE WONDERING WHO THEY ARE SEARCHING FOR IDENTITY THERE ARE A LOT OF PEOPLE WONDERING WHO THEY ARE SEARCHING FOR IDENTITY NOT ME! I KNOW WHO I AM! MY IDENTITY IS ESTABLISHED, SECURE. SO YOU SAY WHO ARE YOU, THEN? AN AMNESIA VICTIM SO YOU SAY, WHO ARE YOU, THEN? NOT ME! I KNOW WHO I AM! MY IDENTITY IS ESTABLISHED, SECURE SO YOU SAY WHO ARE YOU, THEN? AN AMNESIA VICTIM "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." 1 America's Pacemaking college newspaper THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom-UUN 4-4810 Business Office-UUN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. MA subscriptions must be submitted by October 1, 2023. KC 46044 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Quotients expressed are not necessarily percentages. Admission fees apply. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman Editor Associate Editor Campaign Editor News Editors Copy Chiefs Assistant Campus Editors Sports Editor Artist and Designer Feature Editor Editorial Writer Writing Editor Makeup Editors Horsewriters Photographers Office Manager Commercial Director Chip Crews Associate Editor Campaign Editor News Editors Scott Spinner Bile Rancher Eric Naramur, Jewel Scout Joyce Nearmer, Ron King Sally Carlson, Jessica Hodder Bob Simpson Barbara Sporock TOM Sisguer Writing Editor Makeup Editors Dick Kay, Goodrich Edlло, Kit Netner, Greg Sorber, Tom Brown Tonda Rusk BUSINESS STAFF Business Advisor . . . Mel Adams Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Data Mgrs Data Mgrs Carole Young Brian Cruz Nathan MacLean Jonathan McLean Dale Pipergergis David Moore David Moore SUNSHINE University Daily Kansan Monday, February 14, 1972 5 Women Aim to Bridge Cultures By ROD HARDY Kansan Staff Writer Small World, Inc. is a program designed to help international students understand the English and become better acquainted with the Lawrence It began in 1968 with the wives of Andrew Torres, associate dean of the graduate school; Philip O'Reilly, associate dean of mathematics; Gordon Wiesman, professor of physics; and Jacob Enoch, associate dean of mathematics. They attended to the United States from a stay at the Universidad de Oriente in Cumana, Venezuela where they were participants in the KU Ford building. All four wives had experienced problems of communicating with the people, buying food, getting meals and fitting into the community. THE EXPERIENCE of living in a foreign culture made these women realize that there were problems with the difference with the same problems. Mrs. Gordon Wiseman The turnout was so good that an advertisement was run in the local newspapers asking for interested people to donate their money to the malaria women responded, and six more classrooms were added. contacted the First Presbyterian Church and asked if they would be willing to accommodate the students in writing their names in classrooms. The church administration agreed and Small requested for two meetings a week. 'THE PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE has a cooperative and has graciously accommodated the mushrooming growth of the organization', **** Small World's program is open to all international women, who begin the long program is designed to help all international women eager to practice and improve their ability to make special interest groups and who will share the responsibilities of a small World. Women also are for American women interested in assisting in the learning program; such as transportation, child care, nursery school, conversational English classes or THE ORGANIZATION is divided into two groups, a children's program and an adult program. The children's program offers a nursery for the children of both genders. Parents and women so that the mothers are free to attend the meetings. The nursery accommodating each age group from infants through pre-grade. The nursery school has creative games, story telling and show-telling. There are two sections of the adult program. American women interested in eliminating some of the communication barriers between the women and the women. Groups of 8 to 10 women attend regular meetings, called "Coffee and Questions" sessions, to practice their English. The women use topics range from Indian customs to current American welfare problems. The exchange of ideas is a two-way street, providing for the transmission of culture and discussion of current problems. and-tell. Today, approximately 140 women and 120 children participate in the group's activities. international women meet for sewing decorations, singing songs and dancing, music and drama, arts and crafts. The Red Cross provides Another aspect of Small World is the Lend-Lease Program. It was created for those women in need of a home equipment. The program accepts and distributes toys, cribs, strollers, playpens and small houseware equipment for families using the family homes for short terms. THE SECOND section of the adult program includes interest groups. Both American and Purcell was appointed to the chairmanship by Mayor Robert Pulliam, who previously held the chairmanship will act as titular chairman. John Purcel, 3507 W. 8th St, was named Thursday夜 at the new chairman of the Lawrence Jobs for Vets Committee. The organization also created a five-man steering committee to work with veterans and to inform employers of veterans who need 'Jobs for Vets' Names Head Purcell is stores supervisor at DuPont Co., Tecumseh, and is a member of the American Legion Human Relations Commission. 2000 Barker; Ervin Hodges, city government personnel director, City Chamber of Commerce manager. 92 Holiday Drive, Ed Bruns, Leawood freshman and president. 67 West Side Campus Veterans, and Purcell. Members of the steering committee are Ed Mills, local employment security director. According to Mills, the steering committee will try to decide what actions the total committee would take. The committee would suggest new programs and other committees to study new methods of legislation. Mills said about 500 veterans with active fire files at the Employment Security office. These questionnaires will be used to evaluate their employment. other placement needs of the veterans. Early returns suggest that the main needs of the veterans will be counselling, Mills said. But he also notes these returns were inconclusive. We Serve Delicious home style cooking. MARGARET'S CAFE W. 23rd 6:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. Mon.- Sat. Simon's Solo Album Dull 'Pocket Money' Worth Little By MIKE BICK Kansas Reviewer By STUART CLELAND "Pocket Money," (Granada Theatre) is an odd, shapeless movie in which the gears of plot work over time, and come close to meshing. Starring Paul Newman and Lee Marvin, it seems to exist in a sort of lolli-wink comedy films and other commitments, defying logic and convention. Lacking a definite purpose it seems like a comedy, semi-drama and character study before finally collapsing apolitically, like a Yet there are moments when we do get some idea of what the past has to say about our mind. The odyssey of two of life's losers as they trek through Arizona and Mexico is surely a lesson in courage for background analysis and conflict. The protagonists, too, are capable of taking on a boss and his older and more unscrupulous buddy, just trying to make some 'pocket money'. How somehow something seems to go right. ONE PRINCIPAL PROBLEM is the plot, or lack of it. Movies that simply show a segment of a person and do not address the people or their circumstances are sufficiently dramatic. Pocket Money" however, does not provide adequate information about Newman and Marvin travel from point 'A' to point 'B' with no particular dramatic or character development. When the film ends they may be introduced to the beginning. This may be how life actually is, but it makes for a different story. Furthermore, both the story and film technique have problems. Chris introduced for no good reason, and then dropped after doing their one or two actions. All but a few did not unpunctuation, seemingly starting and stopping for no good reason. You follow, and after awhile you start wondering whether a lot of people are round up on the cutting room floor. StudEx Proposal to End Difficulties of Recognition A proposal which woulu eliminate distinguishing between registered and recognized organizations of masaara organizations was proposed by Charles Oldfather, University attorney, and William Balfour, vice-chancellor for student night at the Stud-Ex meeting. The proposal, which would minimize difficulties encountered when considering an organization for recognition, would allow the registration of any student that applied to the University. ITS HARD to know exactly who to blame for all this. Director John Baldacci, shown his talent in the past; he has to his credit another Newman vehicle, "Cool手 Luke." Yet it is inconsistent, often following a tight comic scene with a ramblingly pointless one, centrally positioned. Koehler also widely known, draws attention to himself by constantly shootting into the sun and the ground, with a halo effect to almost anything white in the film. The sound is often very poor, leaving the soundtrack an inaudible dialogue. Only Carole King's title song is really enjoyed, the rest of the trackstack sounds like imitation Burt Bacharach. The proposal, however, would only those *monies* sponsored, sponsor-registered organizations and approved by the Senate be guideline already set by the Senate and would not defray the operating costs of these associations. Oldfather and Balfour agreed to the proposal to be presented for further discussion at the SenEx meeting next Sunday night. A bill that would establish a special joint subcommittee of representatives from the Housing and Students Rights committees to study the rights of students living in residence halls was presented by the University's junior. Student Treasurer A motion was passed that the bill be recommended to the Senate Wednesday night. A resolution urging the NHS to publish a weekly health column written by physicians at Watkins Memorial Hospital was made by the Student Services Office of the Student Services Committee. The column, which was suggested by Dr. Raymond Waltkins and the Watkins Memorial Hospital, would deal with a different medical problem each week that is relevant to University students. REPRINT SALE The acting, too, is inconsistent. Lee Marvin is funny as the conniving Leonard, a would-bear to think he really has a sharp operator. After awhile, however, he degenerates into doing cheap bits for laughs, and from then on he is better at being crooked boss who hires Marvin and Newman on commission; Strother Martin does his usual work, and Hector Elizondo has a few good moments as a shrewd Mexican rancher operator; unfortunately he comes off as poor streetwives. ONLY PAUL NEWMAN really lives up to his reputation. Playing Jim Kane, the straightforwardly charismatic dancer, he performs interestingly dif- MON., FEB. 14 - FRI., FEB. 18 BOBBS-MERRILL REPRINTS up to KANSAN reviews SOME OF SIMON'S songs carry on in the vein of "Bridge over Troubled Water" and "Bookends" to the extent that they form a bridge between the old songs and the new. They don't sound faintly familiar; they are familiar. For instance, a cut titled "Duncan," written by another provoking song, sounds very much like "El Condor Pasa," and another put cutitled "And You Fell False Apart" sounds strangely like "Overs" to the "Bookends" album. Paul Simon's new album "Paul Simon" (Columbia Records) is a disappointment. Simon's talents are quite well known on this record, or perhaps they're going through withdrawal pains after his recent break with Art Garfunkel. Whatever the reason, the record is rather mediocre. SCI AMERICAN REPRINTS 40% store for an exciting, fun-filled year. Some recent releases by Paul Simon, Keith Jarratt, Jackson Browne and Nisson to an interesting period coming in America's recording artists. **INSTRUMENTALIST KEITH** Jarrett was unfamiliar to me. After listening to his release of the song, *The Atlantic Records*), it is best that - Not Currently Assigned kansas sunior BOOKSTORE ferent from his usual laconic looner. For, as his wi-ex wipes out it in one poignant scene, Kane is "a baby," simply not "savvy enough" to be a director. He bewildered bump. And Newman is a joy to watch as he gets this across to us. Faced with a new idea, he'll stare blankly off into the distance inside his head like a billard ball. Attempting serious conversation, he comes up with pointless aphorisms that only illuminate the movie film he alone is bearable for more than 10 minutes or so. The kids standing in lines outside the theatre must have known that. What they didn't know is that they no longer are a movie that support him. Perhaps Simon is in the process of finding himself again after a failure, and is forced to Troubled Water" and this first solo album. Simon's talent is far greater than this record demonstrates and hopefully his work will win. Simon manages to break away from the past in a cut titled "Hobos Blues" featuring his guitar and Stepahane Grappelli's violin. The song is an interesting instrumental and a welcome addition to Simon is trying to accomplish on the rest of this album. I. Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.) Offer expires Feb. 28, 1972 1720 West 23rd Street TACO GRANDE With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get1 Free! Invitation to the Bride-to Be. Mark's Jewelers request the honor of your presence at your convenience to choose your paper trouseau for social correctness and distinction from our impressive selection of Invitations· Announcements· Informals Thank You Notes· Reception Napkins. This is an important phase of our complete service for Border-to-Be, their families and guests. Make an appointment today with our bridal consultant. Marks Jewelers Del Eisele, certified gemologist 817 Mass. V1 3-4266 both Jarrett and his record remain that way. Jarrett, along with Charlie Haden and Paul Motton, tried to put together a musical trio of jazz, but failed miserably. It的不fortunate because there are traces of fine musicianship now and then and hints of at least some interest. More mints don't quite help a record that sounds like a typical day walking past the Murphy Hall practice rooms. Jarrett's book entitled "The Mourning of Album-Buyer's Lament." Campus Bulletin 10:30 AM English 2 Staff: 10:30 a.m., Council Room, Kingsway, Union. Speech and Drama: 11:30 a.m., Cottonwood Cateria. Speaker and Braun... townwood Cafeteria. Journal Club: 11:30 a.m. Alcove B. Cafeteria. Alcove C. Cafeteria. Natural History Museum: noon, Watkins Room. Cafeteria Educational Administration: 11:30 a.m. Continuing Education: noon, Curry Room. Honors Scholarship Committee: noon, English Room. F. Pugh A. Room. Russian Tablet: 12:30 p.m., Watkins Room. Honors Scholarship: 1:30 p.m., Pine Room. Room: Housemothers: 2 p.m., Centennial Room. University Orientation Committee: 2:30 p.m., Congress Rooms. 6.2 Computer Science Colloquium: 3:30 p.m., Sacramento Auditorium Passport Photos: 7 p.m. Big Eight Room. Museum Without Walls Series: 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. Physics Colloquium: 4 p.m., 322 Mallet. Pep Club: 6:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room. McGovern Committee: 6:30 p.m., Parlor A Valentine Benefit Concert: 7:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium n in Auburn Menn. Recital Bc. 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Bc. WASHINGTON (AP)—Former Fraudal Mr. Aurre Andre Maufraux arrived in New Sunday, where he will brief President Nixon on Communist For That Special Someone . . . say it with flowers. Owens FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana 843-6111 UNIVERSITY STATE BANK YOUR UNIVERSITY STATE BANK, is here to serve you, the college student. It is located close enough to campus that your financial needs will only take a minute to take care of. We offer three convenient drive-in windows that are ready to give quick and efficient service. We are always ready to give reliable service in : - MONEY ORDERS - PERSONALIZED CHECKING ACCOUNTS - SAVING ACCOUNTS - TRAVELERS CHECKS - AND ALL OTHER FULL SERVICE BANKING FACILITIES UNIVERSITY STATE BANK WELCOMES YOU Come in and give us a try. You'll enjoy banking at University State Bank. 955 Iowa 843-4700 us 6 Monday. February 14, 1972 University Daily Kansan Road Trip Crucial Test for KU 5 Kansan Staff Photos by GREG SORBER Tom Kivisto, Tongue in Cheek, Controls Ball **PLEASE BY GREET SOHERE** John Gorman grabs uniform to keep up with guarding guard Jayhawk Records Fail OU Depth Defeats Gymnasts By JEFF HILL Strong individual performances by University of Kansas gymnasts weren't enough to talent-taken Oklahoma team from outcoring KU, 157.80. We meet Friday in Robinson Gymnast. KU's Terry Blanchard set a KU record in the parallel bars with a score of 9.25. The old mark was 9.25. Couch Bob Lockwood said it was OU's depth that beat KU rather than a poor showing on the part of the Jawhacks. "We didn't lose the meet. They beat us. We hit really well," Lockwood said. "I was pleased we won so many firsts." Lockwood added KU gymnasts took first in three of the six events and tied for third with the Jayhawks as a team averaged higher than OU in only the side one of those. Marc Joseph of KU won all around heisman with 10.45 around honors with a 49.45 score. "That's the best joseph has done in two years." Lockwood said. KU'S RICHARD Schubert, attained his best score in a home meet in the side horse with a 9.4 average. "I was supposed to do a different dismount, but I felt a little shaky and changed it," Schubert noted. "The whole set felt a little shaky. I didn't get a good grip on the pommel one. But I was really happier I hit." he said. "I was pleased we came through on a couple of events. Our whole side horse team hit." OU outscored KU, 26.10-20.20 in the rings. After that, KU was never close again. Mike Backe of KU achieved his first collegiate victory. The other KU winner was Brian Cooper, who tied for first with Cahill on the team. Odess Lovin, No. 1 man in the floor exercise in the Big Eight won that event with a 9.0 score. By BOB SIMISON Randy Canfield wasn't the least of heroes for the victory over Oklahoma at victory over Oklahoma Saturday night. It was probably Canfield's first victory. But Canfield's three free throws in the last six seconds of the crucial Big Eight game probably did more to redeem him than his 32 points in the two preceding games. Those three free throws saved the Jayhawks in another uncomfortably close home basketball victory the 77-74 team kept KU naive in a fiveteam leadership for the league leadership. KU will travel to Manhattan Tuesday for a game with Kansas State. Saturday, it's a trip to the Nebraska Cornhuskers. Nebraska. Both were narrow victims in Allen Field House last week; 5-75, KState -66, 62 "WE. KNOW we're going to have prove next week whether we're of championship caliber," said after the game Saturday. KU is 5-3 in Big Eight play, but all three losses came on the road. Nebraska is tied with Missouri in the last game and is even in the loss column at 42-41. While Bud Stallworth, who scored 29 points Saturday, has continued to pump in enough points each game to lead Big Ten coach AU's bench has produced the heftiest in the last four home games. First, Neal Mask imceed a victory over Iowa State in a onetime against Nebraska. Most recently, Dave Taylor pumped in 27 points. So Canfield was in line to come off the bench. Wilson Barrow, who had been suspended for the game, catch game, had started at center CANFIELD ENTERED the game with the players to play. Katarina Kubica will throw line, Neal Mask was on the bench after he ankle了. Kubica Kivisto missed his free throw, but Barrow and OU's Ted Evans both grabbed the rebound. on the ensuing jump ball, a KU inside the circle, so the Sooners at the ball with 28 seconds to play. OU controlled the ball for 20 seconds, then Bobby Jack launched a shot from the free throw. Stallworth blocked it and Candfield was fouled by John Yile in a scramble for the ball. Freshmen Travel to K-State So with six seconds to play, Canfield could convert the one and one or the game could go into overtime. He converted it, then intercepted an inbounds pass, another foul and hit the first shot. AS THE FINAL gun sounded, the fans were cheering, and they were cheering for of all people—center occasional inability to appear apparently easy lay-ins and his tendency to foul had earned him a chorus of bores during pre-game situations earlier in the season. "I've been working on my free website," he said. "I usually hit about 70 per cent, but I had gotten down to 60 per cent this year, so I started working on This time, Canfield's glum expression was absent from his face in the locker room. He was smiling. "I just flip them up there and relax. I believe in positive thinking on free throws." Canfield is the fourth best free throw shooter in the Big Eight with 24 of 29 in conference play. **AFTER I HISE THEN first take a look at watching his guy out in bounds. He looked right at my guy, and then he threw it, and could get it back. Big Eight Standings Canfield was in the game because KU needed his size for rebounding. Owens said. Mask was on the bench after scoring 12 League W L W L Missouri 7 2 17 Nebraska 6 2 13 K-State 6 2 17 Okahoma 5 3 10 Kansas 5 3 9 Iowa State 5 3 10 Colorado 1 6 4 Oklahoma 1 6 3 Oklah. State 1 8 18 Games This Week MONDAY: Iowa State at Colorado. TUESDAY: Kansas at Kansas State; Nebraska at Missouri. SATURDAY: Kansas at Nebraska; Kansas State at State; Oklahoma at State; Colorado at Missouri. KANSAS 55 Tommy Smith of KU led in rebounding with 16. points and grabbing eight rebounds. "WE LOOKED like a good basketball team for the first half," Owens said. "But we were just super cautious at the start of the game." We had a 10-point lead, and we didn't go out and attack them." Randy Canfield ... "Positive thinking" ... After that, the score was tied at 69, 71, 72 and 74 before Canfield broke the deadlock. A long shot by Taylor with 18 left, play was KU only score on the night and second half. OU routed to it at 62-55 advantage, then stretched it to 63-54 Taynor, usually a consistent shooter, hit only three of 12 from the field. OKLAHOMA (74) Jock ... fg-ffa ff-ffa rb pr pf tp Petit ... fg-ffa ff-ffa rb pr pf tp James ... fg-ffa ff-ffa rb pr pf tp Jones ... 0-2 0-0 0 5 1 Kyle ... 0-2 0-0 0 5 1 Vern ... 6-7 4-5 3 2 18 Gust ... 6-7 4-5 3 2 18 Holland ... 1-5 0-0 0 2 9 Norway ... 1-5 0-0 0 2 9 Taiwan ... 24-48 0-24 34 19 Northworth I-ga 12-6 F-n 12-6 rb pf lp tp Tainton 3-12 N-f 12-6 rb pf lp tp Taylor 1-12 N-f 12-6 rb pf lp tp Nash 1-3 O-1 3-4 4 2 4 Nash 1-3 O-1 3-4 4 2 4 Campfield 1-3 O-1 3-4 4 2 4 Campfield 1-3 O-1 3-4 4 2 4 Mask 5-7 F-1 4-8 1 12 17 Mask 5-7 F-1 4-8 1 12 17 Total 28.9 21.26 43 23 125 Total 28.9 21.26 43 23 125 Oklahoma 43 31 — 74 Kansas 33 24 — 74 The University of Kansas freshman basketball team beads for Manhattan and its first road game this season after defeating a depleted Oklahoma freshman team on Sunday night in Allen Field House. 7-Day Special CARS PAINTED $2750 NORTHTOWN BODY SHOP Lawrence, Kansas 790 N. 2nd 843-967-1 The Jayhawks take on the Kansas State freshmen at 7:42 p.m. and 8:42 p.m. when the two teams played earlier this season in Allen Field The GAY LIBERATION FRONT wishes the K.U. gay community a happy VALENTINE'S DAY MONDAYS 7 PM 1204 CREAD Kansas Sports Writer Rv JEFFH11 week about maintaining our composure in Manhattan. It'll be a real challenge for us," coach Bob Frederick said after the Jayhawks had made OU their consecutive victim this season. P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. CUSTOM JEWELRY WE WILL WORK FROM YOUR OWN DESIGN, OR CREATE A DESIGN FOR YOU WEDDING RINGS ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY The Sooners were hampered by a lack of personnel. Only eight soons attended the graduation Lawrence. OU did not make a substitution; 56 remained in TONIGHT Light or Dark Beer $1.00 a Pitcher 9 - Midnight SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & ye Public house 544 W. 23rd. 842-2266 "They didn't look tired because they stayed in a zone, whereas we were pressing in the time," Frederick said. Open Mon. thru Fri 4 p.m. to 12 p.m. Mon, Tue, Wed, Thurs, Satur, Sun, 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. The Jayhawk press helped force 17 OU turnovers in the first half. Miss Holum, 20, won a gold in the 1,500-meter event and a silver in the 3,000. Anne Henning took 'Unliberated Women Humiliate U.S. Men SAPPORO, Japan (AP)—The 11th Winter Games will go down in American history as the women's Olympics. "The girls have accepted the rigid routine more than the men" he said. "They're younger and more devoted." They have no distractions. The women, led by speed skater Dianne Holme, never had it so good. They liberated three dancers, one silver and three bronze. In speed skating, where Yankee man is the master in skating, Wilson said the men would have done at least 10 per cent better with more training. Barbara Cochran, 21, of Richmond, VT, took the slalom gold medal after Susan Corrigan, 20, of Wisconsin, off to a flying start two days after the games opened. She finished third in the downhill to bring her nation its first medal of the season and the first ever in that event. "We have a heavy bow," said Arthur Lentz, executive director of the foundation. "Our wives are using the situation to remind us of the importance of family." The men never had it so bad. Only an 11th-hour silver medal in hockey saved them from a shutout. Use Kansan Classified KU's Marshall Rogers led scorers with 26 points. OU was paced by 61-1 center John Powell. KU's Brandon Greenlee added 17 for KU. The best the men could manage was one place in the top 10. the gold in the 500-meter speed skating and the bronze in the 1,000. OKLAHOMA (42) It was in skiing and figure skating that America's other medals were won. YAMAHA THE WEST STREET BLDGE 1805 Hood Ave. $250 1804 Hood Ave. $250 1803 Hood Ave. $450 Honda A1600 $450 Honda A1600 $450 DJ 1535C1E $450 DJ 1535C1E $450 Yamaha 13CX $450 Yamaha 13CX $450 ERN'S CYCLE SALES 71 North St. Phone 800-694-2020 | | fcfa | faa | raf | rb | pt | tp | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Port Bank | 2 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 5 | 1 | | Position | 2 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 5 | 1 | | Position | 6 | 9 | 4 | 1 | 5 | 1 | | Tailer | 6 | 9 | 4 | 1 | 5 | 1 | | Tailer | 6 | 9 | 4 | 1 | 5 | 1 | | Total | 21 | 18 | 20 | 30 | 12 | 5 | | | tg|ga|ga | tg|ga | rb | pf | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Fildelake | 6.9 | 12 | 3 | 12 | | Smith | 3.10 | 1.2 | 16 | 8 | | Kimberly | 5.10 | 1.6 | 18 | 7 | | Rogers | 10.60 | 6.4 | 9 | 2 | | Hale | 10.37 | 6.2 | 4 | 12 | | Hale | 8.12 | 1.6 | 14 | 11 | | Ibishee | 1.1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Ibishee | 1.1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Turtle | 1.1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Turtle | 14.02 | 0.0 | 45 | 19 | | Turtle | 14.02 | 0.0 | 45 | 19 | Oklahoma 24 36 — 60 Kansas 38 40 — 78 OPEN HEARING on the Funding Proposal for the Field House Plan Tues. Night 7:30-9:30 p.m. Governors Room of the Kansas Union Sponsored by the Student Services Committee of the Student Senate 100 Cowtown Ballroom presents BREWER & SHIPLEY DANNY COX WHITE EYES TUES, FEB.15, 8 PM. $3.50 advance $4 at door Tickets Available at KIEF'S 309 Gilliam Plaza Phone 931-6600 THE METAL GUYS THE ABSOLUTE INSANITY OF THE NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND Friday, Feb. 18 Tickets at SUA Office 2$^{50}$ 3$^{50}$ 3$^{50}$ Hoch Auditorium 8:00 Now! Griff's 1618 W. 23rd BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM AMERICA'S FAVORITE for the ENTIRE FAMILY SERVING QUALITY FOOD at PAINLESS PRICES Now! Griff's 1618 W. 23rd BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM AMERICA'S FAVORITE for the ENTIRE FAMILY FULL SIZE, U.S. INSPECTED BEEF HAMBURGERS 15¢ From QUALITY GROUND BEEF! TASTEFULLY GARNISHED! COME HUNGRY - LEAVE HAPPY, WITH YOUR POCKET CHANGE SCARCELY TOUCHED; GRIFF'S FOODS ARE ONLY TO EXPIRE! LOTS OF PARKING SPACE! NO TIPPING! 15¢ From QUALITY GROUND BEEF! TASTEFULLY GARNISHED! LOTS OF PARKING SPACEI NO TIPPING! JIFYE SERVICE! QUALITY FOOD! University Daily Kansan Monday, February 14. 1972 7 KU Track Team Nets Two Firsts Coach Bob Timmons' hopes for the University of Kansas track team were more than fulfilled when a squad took two first in the Michigan State Relays and broke one KU record and tied another in Timmons sent seven men to the reals in East Lansing, Mich., and helped create the States "Track" and Field team, which compiles in Houston's Astrodome with the sole aim of qualifying for the NCAA championships later this year. The Jayhawk mile-relay team and spinner Rick Jacques achieved this aim with record performances. The foursome of Tom Scavuzzo, Mark Lutz, Bob Bornkessel and Phil Stepp set the pace in the mile relay with a run that was seconds lower than their previous best and well under the NCAA qualifying mark of 31.75. They broke the KU record of 31.55 by Mark Foster, Mike Larlimore, Julian Juliano and Jude Meade in 1980. JAQUES' FIRST place time of 2:10 a.m. the 1000-year run tied a Michigan State Relay record set by Roger Kathol of KU in 1969. In other events, Delario Riley ran at 70 feet low and with a stride of 7.8 and Dave Anderson ran a fifth place 4:12 in the mile. Timmons said he was pleased with the performance of the KU contingent. "I thought it was a good showing. We did well and even our problems benefited us," he said. "They would run faster, and Robinson has had some problem, but they're both learning and they'll learn." The competition was as tough as he expected, he said. "It was a great meet," he said. "When you have two world class players, be he." He is referring to Jake Washington, who ran the 80-yard dash in 5.8 and his teammate Marshall Dill, who recorded 29.5. THEY HAVE a splendid track there and we were really pleased with everything," he said. Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order 843.7685 - We Deliver - 9th & III Tony's New Service Be Prepared! Instructions starting service Kansas 60544 2434 lwa V2-1008 The efforts of the KU delegation at the U. S. Track and Field Federation meet were also encouraging. 摄影师 Guyue Gravara and Dana Ledyard, both in fourth and fifth in the shot put with marks of 57-11 and 56-0. First, they were then left behind, then the current collegiate team of Texas-Ela Paso. Bill Hatcher cleaved 16-6 in the vault, but Call immediately for appointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE. The results of the two meets brought to eight the number of rosters for the NCAA championships. In addition to the mile-mile team and Jacques, Mike Stull has two rosters for Rogers Jones in the triple jump, Everett Edwards and Tom Hines in the high hurdles, Bath Hatchett in the pole vault and Rudy Guevara in the high hurdles. Michigan State Relays, mile relay - 1 KU (Tom Scawzuo, Mark Lutz, Bob Bornkessel and Phil Steuco), 3:15.1 Ph. 843-0330 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 70-yard low hurdles-2. Delario Robinson KU, 7.9 Run- 5, Dave Anderson, KU- 4.12 USTF Shooters, Shotlons, KU- 4 Rody Guevara, KU- 57.11, 5 Dana LeDuce KU- 86.9 For instance, during the noviitate, novices work in such diverse areas as hospitals, vocational schools and universities. They serve as assistant chaplais, co-recreat masters, teachers and psychiatric aides. paulistfathers. Paulist Seminarians create recreational programs, direct "Days of Recollection" for CCD with students who have pierment with the use of media in the liturgy as a preaching tool, originate and edit the Paulist Free Press, coordinate Lenten Masses, to mention just a few. When you commit yourself to the Paulists, it isn't a someday thing. It's now. Today. For more information about the Paulists write to: Rev, Donald C. Campbell, C.S.P., Vocation Director, Room 300. The Golden Touch a most luxurious texture of white or yellow gold and white wood, flaming brilliance $229 196 197 Ray Christian Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service 843-3313 Kwai Motor, Inc. 2 Locations --sirloin BLEVINS HONDA 2324 Ohio Lawrence, Kansas 6604 Medical, Chemical, Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! CALENDAR CALL UN4:4444 For SUA Events CABAY ARTS CABAY ARTS 913 843-9275 913 842-0025 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eatina Place One day KANSAN WANT ADS in good food. To the late wife of our dear Tampa Bay owner, Mrs. Robert Planton, please contact Phone 842-1431 Email robertplanton@savannahfarm.org We're sure you will find many other things. The Sisters offer the ladies a variety of foods served in any of their sundaes. Only the heart of the top big cheese is included in the Sisters. 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $0.1 Among Our Specials Debbie and Alan | Aviation Dean and Steven | Aviation We get all donations to it and use it for our mission. ♥ ♠ I LOVE YOU Linda. Thanks for the meals! Let's keep walking and talking, okay? Happy Valentine's Day. Kim. 2-14 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Deadline : 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication This ad cost me a dollar to announce that the YMMOs are still YMWOing and the meat is now roast beef. Call 842-5872 for information. 2-14 Dear Burger Lady, Roses are red, juices are blue, if I need a hamburger, I'll come straight to 2-14 Love, Flash Five days Jock. I am ready in love with your body! I need you! Need you! Please be my Valentine for now and forever! Love always, Your Delta Man 2-14 each additional word: $.02 Goolah, Balzee, Patience, Tumtum, The Might, The Great, Might, The Small. Molly, Arm, Harry Nose, Cherry, Honey, Gendar, Geardar. You All Tuff! 2-14 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Dear Marie: Love is to be shared. Share your love with someone today, and everyday. M. Fletcher 2-14 25 words or fewer : $1.50 to the guy in Biology but in French I too. To my nirty gritty date for Friday. Happy Day Vallie. Lis I LOVE YOU Skulls: Champagne is pink, bourbon is brown, if for one minute you think it was an ice cream, then see clear for the truth is right here that the sisters of Pi Kappa Do were champagne. Kathy R., R-John, Carol W.; This note is just to say have a happy Valentine's Day. Doug 2-14 I LOVE YOU 25 words or fewer: $1.75 Margretta. The days of Life are sweet, and then they seem endless does not repeat. So on this day I do declare Be My Valentine 2-14 Violates are blue Please wear my valentine cause Ive a heart on for you. Xx Patchouli Ron—We knew YOU'd look here. You're the other man in OUR lives, honey! We're a-waitin'... Happy D.V. 2-14 ♠ D J P.—1 still get butterflies in my stomach and your hair still smells like rainns, so, once again, lets match happy hearts this year. Ter Gentle geometrical 607 days ago, you taught me how to smile. Every day is a lesson to be learned why. May we always share each day with you. Day from day. Day from day. 2-14 LE MONKEY? LITTLE MONKEY? wishes you to be his Valentine and he wishes you to be his Valentine and he Hurmel What beauty we share! passion, passion of wisdom, affection, fidelity, loyalty, courage, courage, southern remanding, and a future valentine. *Valentine* 2-16 **2-14** To a. Reqeipten Yellow Bird thought came by air, next Valentine's we be where a difference we can compare Jingle Jingle, Snoppy I LOVE YOU To Russ at state. Happy Valentine's day and especially, Happy anniversary! Here is to its three years of learning, baughing, and love!" forever-and-love ♠ Brittany Spaniel Pup. Want to find a good home for a 6-month old A.K.C. registered Brittany Pup. Call Gary, 843-3473. 2-14 King Size waterbed, liner, frame, and heater. Only $45. My new apartment is too small. 842-764-0. 2-14 I LOVE YOU Victoria. When we get together we'll have a ball. I love you, all of you Love, Little Anthony 2-14 Announcing Manny and Bernie as the two favorite Bowieces. Because they are friends, and that's important'[1] say Lynette and that Ballet etes... 2-14 **1966 Yamaha 305 cc YM-1-2** twi- 镍ets, only 6,500 miles, just tuned. All for $235.00 Harmony far top guitar, $29.00 Call 845-6294 at 6:00–8:16 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kunan are offered to color, creed, or national origin. Ampeg BT-15 solid state, bass amp, and B2S-B extension cabinet; 3-15 speakers total, $755 value, $445, 842- 7642; 2-14 Northside Country Shop, 707 North Street, Northside, Kentucky. Antiques. Used furniture, collection items, old wood cooking and heating equipment, fireplaces, stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, home-grown popcorn and thousand-season corn. Seven days. Herb Allenberg. 942-836-1755. www.northside.com. 4-piece Ludwig drum set. Excellent condition and produces excellent sound. Call Paul at VI 2-0529 for information. 2-14 "Hippe Denil," dimel dress, drenches jackets only faded. Personal "Messiah" of the family. Four Daddy's on BOKONX 109 Vermont. Monday-Saturday, 11-4 Annie M., Unexpressed love can en- numerate the possibilities. LITTLE MONEY? LITTLE MON- KRY? If you are there, King Rong has you LOVE. You're love, 2-14 5% Buck 318 cue, in. 4 barrel, low mileage, clean air, air conditioning, 8 cylids, radio, heat器, white walls, $295.00; call 861-1160 Ask for Brad Now you can buy store components at FACTORY COST plus 10% Hanson. Store components at Prairie Avenue. The only true store discount in the house, 2-28 Dear Harold, It too late, you lose, learns your turn to sing the blues, because the Marathon Man now fits your shoes. Nancy #1 If you never gave me a Porch or Saint Bernard, I still love you. Acapulco here and he is Valentine forever we have. I'm your Californian foreweave. The Colorado kid. Tavern cafe for sale or lease w/2 bdr. House and parking lot in back. Contact Lynch Realty, 843-1601 or 841-3323. Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them. FOR SALE We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumph. Competition Sports Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-219-1. 2-18 TO MY STINKY STEVEN, I LOVE YOUR MOST NEXT TO HORACE YOUR DECEMBER VALENTINE VICKI 2-14 Movie camera, Beautiful, R16 Auto, 12-130 mm lens 20mm magazine, electric hand grip 2-1400 mA batteries and more. Hairlight 2-2400 mA. Walt. 827-632. K.C. 1970 Corvette Coupe 350, CID/130 1970 Plymouth, CID/130 PM radio, linked lattice, luggage rack, dark grey, black interior, new tires $3,500 Will help finance. 843-776-86 Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8680. tf Sonny. Our hearts are "Bernie" for you. Hang in there, sister and stay picky! Les jeunes filles of Oie Miu 9.18 John, each day for the next 110, just remember that I love you more today than yesterday, but not as much as tomorrow. Genie 2-14 Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 411 W. 14th. tf you're at an advantage. 2. If you don't. Portable stereo-GE. Trimine 20, good condition. Used two, Wonder- 6.00-15.4 4 pts. 3,000 mils each. Good dining and dishes. Cars- 182-1862 Corvair> -65-140 Hp, 4 p. 4-76T 14 Polygas & Macro, Cameo seats, FM Multiplex, 8 track stereo, fm and rear aporter best offer, $49. 21-15 '59 VW Bus—rebuilt engine—excellent running condition—best offer—call Steve at 842-8265 2-15 Valentine, share with us with the spirit and love that is always present; Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. The Christian Science Organization Take a look at my mistakes. We have plenty of them from all over the world Haas Imports, 1029 Mass. 2-22 85 Dodge Sportman V8 automatic, 75 Dodge Durango V8 automatic. Call 864-6282 or 864-0722 - 174 91-3285 - 174 Concord P2 50 microphone record with concord microphones - 2 - 14 864-3171 - 2 - 14 5 month old Morse 8 track tape deck and Skyline pre amp. $85.00. Need to sell. Call 864-605-2-14 1966 Mobile Home, 12X48, 2 bedroom, furnished. $2,975.00 Call 843-0662 anytime. Never used photo enlarger Dust M600 w/0 lens jess 25. Also off 8/8 movie viewer. Call 842-7984 evenings. Need money more than hobbies 2-15 1965 Chevelle, Malibu SS, 327, 4 speed. Call 842-2358 or see at 1819 Miller Drive. 2-16 THE CONCORD SHOP I LOVE YOU May Valentine's Day be a happy day for Sandi, Sharon, Deb, Jennifer, Penny, Diane, Blaine, Alice, Anita, Karen. You'll have a wonderful day. As always. Swallow William. $25. I LOVE YOU 1960 Ford Fairlane 500, dependable transportation, good radio and heat- er, snow tires $125.00 Call 864-4194 or 842-7026 - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz. , pts. - qts. only 25% OFF Underwood 21 Typewriter Excelcent condition. Cail Wendle, 843-760-200-1 7-17 Bolex 16mm movie camera, optical viewing, 25mm 1.9 lite focus for optical viewing, 30mm 1.9 auto focus, 50mm 1.9 auto focus, 10mm 1.9 auto focus, and 135mm 2.8 to 3.2 set lenses. Call #M434-287-123 IBM Electric Typewriters 842- 8034 2-15 - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock —others on order Men's suits and sport jackets, size 38, $10-$30 Good look, excellent condition Dede, Bade, 424-5031. 2-17 1970 Plymouth Duster 2 dr. H.T. rd. white vinyl back vinyl, 80 small V8 auto, trans. 24,000 miles, $2,188. Jayhawk Volkswagen, 2522 lowa, 8420-215. 200-16. 1968 WV square back, beige with brown interior, air conditioned. 100% WW warranty. $1,388 Jayhawk Volks-wagen, 2522 Iowa, 843-230-200. Fine cold cuts, grains, oils, etc. Beer and wine yeast. The Mercantile. 1237 Oread. 843-9746. 2=17 - ARTIST CANVAS 1968 VW 7 passenger wagon, blue and white deluxe bus, $1,888, Jayhawk "olkswagen, 2522 line, 843-2200, 2-15 SALE NOW GOING ON - UP TO 10% SALE OFF THE MOST MERCHANDISE CHANGES ON SALE MERCHANDISE -EARTHISHTTIN, &m&. AWASS, 2-17 1961 VW to 1971 VW from $495.00 to $1,995.00 Jayhawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, 843-2200, 2-15 Tops, Tops, Tops. For the best selection in town, it's the Attic, 927 Mass. 2-14 Sony TC-630 tape recorder. Features 2 high efficiency speakers, 40 watt amplifier, 3 heads, 3 speeds, interchangeable batteries, music maker, 128-2473. 60 watt electro-voice receiver, 2 MHz, capacitor, 50 mF, mid-range and 35 mHz, wafer, 2-50 mm², range of 15-48, new $200 Will for $160. Also, portable + bt-stock耳机, never better. Buy now! Swinging coats and capes for spring. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 JUST ARRIVED—Swim wear and sandsweepers. The Alley Shop, 842 Mass. 128 Jeans, Jeans, Jeans. Latest styles, best selection, best prices. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 ARGYLE SOCKS — FOR FUN AND WORK — THINK! AT EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS. 2-17 SUPER SALE. DRESS. VALUES from $18-$32, now $5-$10. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 FOR RENT McCONNELL LBR. CO. EARRINGS — EARRINGS — and more EARRINGS. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 Crotch Tops—biggest selection, newest styles, $7.00. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester — 1-bedroom apartment, 11' bath furnished or unfurnished; 12' bath furnished, patio or basement. West Hills Apartments—The place to live in Lawrence² Cairn 24 hours a day 801-563-7950. For rest—one or two bedroom apts. Air conditioned, garbage-dispersed, facilities. color T-V available. Call 841-282 or拜里·Hillage apts at 841-282. Apartment — newly decorated — one bedroom furnished—wall to wall carpeting—11'x blocks from Union. Phone 843-5767. tt Ridge House Apts — for the budget the popular features and the maximum in town. BR, 1 and 2 bedrooms, and a loft with two baths. detail 640 Cedarwood-11 and 12 detail 638 Cedarwood-12 Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. From a block south of Seattle, 843-1136, 2-21 HILLWELL APARTMENTS — 1732-45 W. 24th St. (six) to $199 and one to $299 apartments. Carpeted, draperies, electronics of much more expensive apartment buildings on many of much more apartment buildings. COLLAGE HILL MANOR now has available 1 bed and 2 bedroom furnished apartments A/C, new dishwasher, y/o capartment, new campus of Campbell. Call 843-8220 or visit www.collagehill.com IT'S NEVER TOO LATE and it is a good place that someone else may be comfortable or attractive. One call to Mrs Forstath at 210-A Harvard Road and you can obtain pertinent information about the apartments located and most attractive communities and Missouri; Avalon Apartments, Arlington; Abbey Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of Apartments soundproof construction, please rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, and consider reasons you would enjoy living in these locations. Make this semester in Lawrence a special location for August occupancy and summer rates for June occupied locations. Entire 2nd floor at 1411 Mass. 2 bed, 2 bath suite with shower and tub. Partly furnished. Utilities paid, except electronic devices. Bedrooms: 843-8505. After 6pm, phone 843-2829. Room with cooking anxex in ex- change for work. Near campus. Call VI 3-7863 2-14 2 bedroom unfurnished house, $125/m., utilities not paid. Edmons Real Estate, 843-6011 or 842-7462: 2-15 Mobile Home—furnished one bedroom 12 X 14' Green, red Spanish decor, country attire and pool privacy. pets. Cats. petals. Calm after aforest 5 p.m. 2-14 QUIET SUMM 2 bedroom furnished Alum sunny walk in space walk-in closet and out with year round recreation and laundries All utilities paid 842-4444 2-16 where do elephants keep their big pink sneakers? In Ridgeline's gigantic closets. One bedroom, all electric. $100.00, all utilities paid. B2-444-444. University Terrace Apartments—tunished apartments available for immediate occupation $10 and up, and $15 and up. 9th Apt., 3rd Bpt., 4th Apt., 1st Bpt., or call 843-2432 - 17 NOTICE Apt. for rent, 1 bedroom, A/C; carpeted, big closets, parking closer than many KU lots. 1419 Ohio. Call 842-128-6385. CSC Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 515 Michigan Ave., St. Louis, MO. Beer挺Briquet; $1.60; $1.40; Beer挺Briquet; $2.80; $2.30; Beer挺Briquet; $7.15; Beer挺Briquet; $7.50; Open Sundays; VF 915, 810, 625, 810C, Sun-Tues. 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 Valentine Idea Portrait: $5.00 for one, $7.00 for two, 842-7511 2-15 Red Bargn Sports Cars Inc. Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD HERBS AND SPICES MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SAUSAGES UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright. (816) 474-4678. tf Girls. Need an address and phone number for your parents peace of mind Will take phone calls and mail messages for $40 monthly. Call 8937-6214-324 DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe Leave anywhere from NY or CAL for less than $200 ID issued. Flight Center 227 North Radial, Madison, Wisconsin $3106. THE FEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB a time again, and we are taking reservations for second semester term parties. We are a private party. Nee band stand, black uniform, gloves. We also have special monthly rates for meeting meetings. Phone or contact John Station. Tre Pee Jet 84-42 & 59 Hugh Business phone: 84-4268 - 2828 KU Students of Objectivism will meet to discuss the ideas of Ayni McGraw, Ph.D., at the Oread Room, Kansas Union. For information, call 842-5316 - 316. RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA 5 weeks Small group camping travel ages 18- 24. Small group camping travel ages 18-24. White. Whole Earth Exped. Travel Lid. Box 427. K.C. M. Travel Lid. Box 427. K.C. M. For consultancy and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization—call the Women's Center: 864-4441. tf Pre-owned clothes HOXONON, 198 Vermont. Psychoraclema fabrics suitable for children. pocket-clutch—special $20.00; dress-6, repeat address, Vermont. 2-15 A tender bender cracked auto calf. A tender bender cracked auto Call Kaw Bade shop. M41-840-280, ack for Dick Milla. Free estimates, re- asonable rates, all work guaranteed, expires May 31, 2015. Have you ever been to a Baha'i discussion? BAHA'I CLUB meetings have been moved from Thursday to Tuesday, 7:30, Factor A, in the II-12 RHINSTONE STUDS - SILVER RINGS - AND MANY OTHER FAIR OUT ACCESSORIES EARTHSHINE, East 8th, and Mass. 2-17 SPRING KNITS ARE IN FUNKY 40's AND EARLY 30'S STYLES—EARTH-SHINE, EAST 6TH & MASS. 27 WE HAVE TOPS FROM A TO Z. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 SWIM WEAR JUST ARRIVED. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 Low-Low Jeans with the flare look at Low-Low Prices. The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 Apparing at the Mad Hatter on Wed, Feb. 16, and Fri, Feb. 18, — SHINE— a folk trio. Free admission 2-18 "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" JK 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon PLANNING A TRIP?? Open 24 hrs. per day WANTED Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now! 0 Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-12 Maupintour travel service COIN LONG DRESSES FOR PARTIES THAT ARE SUPER The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 Independent Laundry & Dry Cleaners Women's alterations. 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30, 2-14 DRIVE-IN AND COOP IN LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 841.5304 COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 days per week COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th ROOMMATE. Private bedroom, kitchen and bathrooms. Utilities paid, next to campus $40.00 month, 1245 Lewisiana. basement 12:00 to 2:14 Customers for valentine day gift ideas at Hodge Podge. Open late Thursdays, 15 West 9th. 2-22 Wanted to buy. GRANTS ATLAS OF ANATOMY by J. C. Bailleau, 6th edition. Call Carney, 843-2018 after 5 o'p.m. 2-14 Male roommate needed. Two-bed- room furnished apartment for $70/ plus utilities. Come by apartment Apartments, Apartment, and Indiana. Miles 2-15 842-9450 One year old black Labrador-Ray= injured front left leg. Animal MISSION Clinic tag. Call Pitts, 843-2000- 215 Wanted: needly need one girl to share apt, with three others in Jaywalker Town. Conciliate contract discount. Call 843-4213 or 421-25 PERMANENT LEGAL SECRETARY. Shorthand, typing required. WIt训. 843-0811. 2-18 Classical guitarist wants to organize unamplified combo to play popular music. Needs a string bass, flute player, and drummer. Bass #82-3438. 2-15 Wanted: *Science Return* books to the University of Chicago, in a special at the Emporia. Expand your knowledge of science with different books. Come in and ask how you can help. Send us an email to United. North door of Union, next to Dyke Street, 1643 W. 20th St. Female roommate wanted to share duplex, 1137 New York. Private bedroom, modern kitchen, 500/mo. Call after 6:00 p.m., 842-9094. 2-17 Three girls need fourth to share an apartment, near campus. Own room, call 842-6178 after 4:00 p.m. 2-18 PERSONAL POETRY WANTED for anthology, Davis, K. T. (1952) cooke veipe for prompt reply. Send to Editor. IDLEWILD PRESS, 1987 East Austria. IDLEWILD Press, 1987 East Austria. 90021. 2-29 Women's Alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 2-15 Valentine Purse Sale at Houge x 100% 9% off Feb. 10—Feb. 17. 15 West 2-22 Call me for excellent low cost hospital insurance, with above average benefits (includes basic liberal benefits for health care) and Life Insurance 842-5200 NOW WHEN THERE IS NOTHING NELSE TO WEAR-TATOES, ONLY AT EARTHSHINE EAST 8th & MASS 2-17 TYPING Experienced in typing theses, dissemination of knowledge. Have electric typewriter with picra type. Accurate and prompt scriptwriting. Proficient in Adobe Illustrator 84 - 935-854. Mr. Wright Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work Vi 3-2818. Mruckman. HELP WANTED Accurate typing of your thesis, designation, or miscellaneous work on IBM Selectric typewriter with plec keyboard. Download for information: 2:59. LOST Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt at- 843-0958. 2-29 Taper, papers; these typed accurately and promptly, your choice of type is selected. You can edit at reasonable rates: 842-9759, days 842-5655, nights Kloenda Day. Lost brown neck scarf during KU- G-Tech game Mon. 7. 841-3158. 12M Miss. 2-18 Two German books—Need very bad —Reward—Call 842-5897 or 842. 7648. 2-15 TONY'S OVEREASES JOBS FOR STUDENTS all the professions and occupations, all the staff, all the overtime, sightseeing, information information, San Diego, Box 109, San Diego, CA, 624-587-3930 MISCELLANEOUS - OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE * 0 TO 60 MPH—13.5 500 E.23rd IMPORTS-DATSUN - FRONT DISC BRAKES RECELINING FRONT SEAT UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL 842-0444 LOVE THAT DATSUN Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. 843 8500 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS 8 Monday, February 14, 1972 University Daily Kansan AVAILABLE ON ALBUMS AND TAPES ON RCA RECORDS KILLS BREWING MACHINERY REG. $5.98 $367 Papa John Creach JACKY FONDA CONCERTS Little Richard Buck Owens Frank Sinatra John F. Kennedy Steve Johnson Melody Hall Willie Dixon Jimmy Hendry Gordon Brosnan Tito Castellano Jerry Lewis Bob Dylan Russell Scott Walter Reed Diana Ross Jazz Sessions 1964-2004 REG. $5.98 $367 BLACK LUST PETER The Best of The Guess Who 10/21 REG. $5.98 $367 THE HUE JOHN DENVER SINGING JOHN DENVER ROOTS REG. $5.98 $367 sunfighter the sunfighter series 123 REG. $5.98 $367 JA REG. $5.98 $367 DAVID BOWIE MARC BOWIE Reg. $5.98 $367 Nilsson Schmilsson Copyright © 1978 Nilsson Reg. $5.98 $367 RCA, Grunt and Wooden Nickle Records RCA RED SEAL CLASSICS Reg. $5.98 Now $3.86 RCA VICTROLA $2.27 KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Discount Diamond Needles Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays S Sisters Stress 'Necessity' of Women's Health Services By MONA DUNN Kansan Staff Writer Many of the health needs of women are currently being met in Watkins Hospital, although the Women's Health Center is still in its planning stages because of lack of funding. Dr. Raymond D. Baymond Schweigler, director of the University health service, said Monday. The Women's Health Center has been described by the February Sisters, a women's rights movement at KU, as the university part of the University's health services. Gynecological problems and their solutions, birth control pills or other contraceptives, pelvic diseases, pap smears, pelvic examinations and specific medical advice are normally a part of any health program designed for women, said a spokesman for the organization. THE SPIKESMAN said recently there were no systematic provisions at Watkins and McCallum hospitals, including problems of women. Because of lack of a well-defined policy on the distribution of contraceptives, a woman going to Watkins was considered to have medical attention, the spokesman said. their contraceptive needs. As a result of the procedure at Watkins, women are forced to go to a private physician or to the Public Health Service for contravictors, she said. The February Sisters have based their demands for a health care program on the premise that the student health service has the obligation to provide women with TWO AND A HALF years ago, the Inter-Residence Council drew up a proposal for birth control facilities on the University's campus. They presented their proposal to University officials, but no immediate action was taken. Dr. Raymond Schweiger, director of the University health service, said Monday that a lack of fertility for pregnancy and for venereal disease if the student paid the health fee included in tuition. However, he added that if any medication was needed the patient must be discharged. The doctors at Watkins will provide any woman with medical advice and will prescribe birth control pills if the pills would not be detrimental to the woman's health, Schwegler said. On Feb. 11 representatives from various women's groups presented to the University Senate Executive Committee the idea of having a Human Sexuality Clinic at Watkins from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday and from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. A hospital is not currently being used during those hours except for emergency cases. THE REPRESENTATIVES also proposed a full-time obstetrician-gynaecologist fulfill the supervisory position of the clinic by the fall semester. Schweiger said although Watkins did not hope to help set up a "clinic-type with trained nurses" who would be able to divide the work up more rapidly. He added that an extra room would be needed to accommodate the clinic. Responding to the charge that the University does not fulfill its obligation to provide for women's contraceptive needs, Schweiger said that although women made up only 40 per cent of the total population of Watkins, service goes to women patients. "LAST YEAR 711 pum smares were performed, while from June 1971 through Feb. 4, 1972, 638 pum smares have been performed," Schweger said. Presently, a woman must pay for a pap smear since a pap smear is not included in the health fee. Pap smears are taken at Watkins and then sent to the University of Kansas Medical Center, where they are analyzed, be said. Pap smears, which cost $7.50, can not be analyzed at Watkins, Schwegler said, because they have neither the necessary equipment nor the necessary personnel. SCHWEGLER SAID, "It is not appropriate to include charges for pap smears in the health fee, however, everyone would have to pay the extra charge whenever the Student Senate decides upon, we will abide by that decision." Members of the February Sisters have said that a woman going to Watkins often received adverse reactions and possible doctors if she asked for contraceptives. Dr. Schwegler said the Hospital treated anyone if they requested it. CHILLY KANSAN 82nd Year, No. 85 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Tuesday, February 15, 1972 Chinese New Year Starts Today Fines, Revocation Added See Page 3 Bill Limiting Dealer Tags Attributed to Kansan Story By MARCIA CLIFTON Kansan Staff Writer According to its author, Rep. Jerry Harper, R-Sedwick, the bill was "written as a direct result of the University Daily Kansan story in November about the misuse of dealer tags by the KU Athletic Corporation." Hearings continued Monday in Topeka on a bill which would restrict retail motor vehicle sales. The bill would dealer and the dealer's spouse, and to uses connected with vehicle sales. The bill would penalize the dealer who violated the law by suspending the dealers' license. REFERRING TO THE issue of dealer tag missuse in ti e till which appeared before the Kansas House Transportation and Logistics Commission as the perfect example of why you need an active press and a little muckracking once in a while in order to bring attention to problems which would otherwise go unchecked." Harper, who is also a law student at KU, said that there could be millions of dollars not accounted for as a result of this illegal purchase of firearms and automobile dealers in Kansas with 25,000 dealer tags, Harper said. He said that previously there was only a minal fine for violations and he hoped to place money on the buyer by forcing persons to comply with uphill. HARPER SAID he thought the "priests' chances of being passed were "pretty good." He said if the bill wasn't pass he could be involved in the purpose by bringing attention to the problem. The Kansas Motor Car Dealers' Association has been quick to alleviate the No Candidates File Forms For Student Officer Posts As of Monday afternoon no candidates had filed for president and vice-president of the student body, according to R. "Puff" Anderson, a retired U.S. Supreme Court temporary elections committee chairman, Thursday is the deadline for candidates for president and vice-president to file a complaint. Only one candidate has filed for Student Senate. The deadline for candidates to File for Student Senate and class office is in December 25. No one has filed for any class office. To be eligible to run for president and vice-president candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or have their declarations supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the student body. Bailey attributed part of the drop in interest to "the changed mood on campus." he said. Bailey pointed out another reason for the drop in interest. "As far as I can see there aren't any issues to run on. This is going to be a campaign of ego," he said. Last year a record 287 candidates filed for Student Senate. "I doubt there will be as many Student Senate candidates as last year," Bailey said. At least one student senator has picked up a declaration of intent to run for president, but has not decided whether he or she is Les Schwartz, Overland Park, junior. problem and has asked the Highway match for possible violations, Harrer said. The one candidate who has filed for Student Senate is Bennet Paken, Lawrence Kendrick. The elections for president, vice- president, student senators and class of presidents are due. "Consequently," Harper said, "the present law is now being enforced more. All you have to do is file a complaint with the Motor Vehicle Department and they will proceed with an investigation. In fact I called a few minutes ago after I saw a driver's education car with dealer tags on it. The officer told me that the front window stating the group inside was attending a Lion's convention here in Toopeka." DICK BREWSTER, a lobbyist representing the Kansas Motor Car Dealers' Association (KMCDA) appeared on "The Harper" to speak such as the one cited by Harper often were committed without the dealer's knowledge. Brewer said that the president of the KMCDA planned to attend a conference on Tuesday to look into these abuses. Brewster presented an addition to the bill during Monday's hearings, which Harper approved. According to Brewster the addition would "put some teeth into the bill." He said the KMCA approved the addition. With the addition of the KMCDA's proposal the bill now before the committee would impose a $25 fine against the violating dealer or suspend the tag for the duration of the current registration year or both. If a second violation occurred within two days of violation, a $60 fine would be assessed on two to ten tags could be suspended. THE THIRD PART of the addition calls for a third violation to carry suspension one week of all dealers tags except one on the dealer tags. The dealer seek an order in the district court of the county in which the dealer resides suspending all dealer tags issued to the dealer for a period not less than 30 days or more. The bill would take effect July 11, 1972. Harper said that he agreed with the KMCDA's proposal. CONSERVATIVE OF KANSAS PARTY UP FOR KANS Richard Kay Speaks on Election Issues American party candidate opposes forced school integration Kansan Photo by JIM EATON Independent Presidential Candidate To Focus on Calley Conviction BY CARLA DENNIS Kansan Staff Writer Richard B. Kay, Cleveland, Ohio, attorney and candidate for the American Independent Party nomination for president, said Monday that an issue of his campaign would center on the conviction of Lt. William Calley. Kay, who served as a volunteer attorney for Calley until his trial in November 1970, spoke at a conference at 9 a.m. in the Suburban Room of the University State Bank. Kay said he thought the Calley case was an important campaign issue because 80 per cent of the American people were violently opposed to his conviction. Calley was convicted of premeditated murder in the My Lai massacre in South Africa. Kay also said he wanted to make the American Party a major political party. This was hard to do, he said, because of the economic ties and Alabama Gov. George Wallace. Louis Armstrong The Funkeletals, a soul band, played for an audience estimated at 2,000 in Hoch Auditorium Monday night. The band, sponsored by the Urban Affairs Supportive Educational Services Committee has put out several albums including "Funkadelic," "Maggot Brain" and "Free Your Mind Trumpet Player Clayton Gunnels Adds Soul to the Funkadelic Sound Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER and Your Ass Will Follow." The profits from the program will go to help fund scholarships for needy black students. The Valentine concert put on by the college will be held this weekend. Wallace, currently running for the Democratic presidential nomination in the Florida primary, was the American Party nominee in 1968. "I think every child is entitled to quality education," he said. Kay said he wanted to restore government by people, not government by compromise. He said that was not referring to the legislative branch, which must compromise but to the president. Kay, like Wallace, is against the forced integration of schools. Kay said he was against the "so-called" fair housing law. He said the rights of individuals and property rights should be kept in balance. The rights of the individual were being protected but not the rights of private property, he said. Kay has not seriously considered anyone for his vice-residential running mate. Miners' Strike Adds to Strife Facing Britain LONDON (AP)—An avalanche of adversity has hit Prime Minister Edward Heath's government: Northern Ireland, unemployment, foreign policies in war with Iraq and miners' strikes that has brought Britain's gravest industrial crisis in 46 years. The strike has forced the nation's power plants into a gantish switch-off for want of fuel. Industry slid into part-time work, threatening to double the country's one million unemployed. People shivered in their homes and offices. A settlement favorable to the miners looks inevitable and this would leave Heath's attempts to control inflation in jeopardy. Despite all this, Heath presents an ice calm, yielding little to pressures he 2 Tuesday, February 15, 1972 University Daily Kansan Kansas Senate Rejects Plan for Reapportionment TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas Senate rejected Monday a plan offered by Democrats to reaport the upper channel of the Senate Apportionment Committee said a new plan endorsed by the GOB probably would be offered by the committee Wednesday. The Senate also rejected Monday a bill which would create a political convention endorsement system similar to one under the proposed law, but a reconsideration vote on that proposal is expected Tuesday. THE HOUSE gave tentative approval to placing on the ballot this year a constitutional amendment which would legalize the use of a computer in other forms of gambling. However, that amendment will face an uncertain fate Wednesday when the House takes a final vote, and a two-thirds majority of the House members, must approve it. These actions highlighted the opening of the fifth week of the 1972 session, which ends March 10. A Senate rapportoonment plan drafted by Sen. Harold Herd, D-California and Senate minority leader, passed the Republican-controlled Senate, with three senators not voting, and one amendment being offered. SIX DEMOCRATS voted for the party in the minority party, Joe Steinkeer of Muncie and Joe Warren of Maple City, passed. All 31 wins against it were cased by Republicans who voted against it motivated because it put seven GOP senators into the same room as all other senators face each other in the primary. Sen. Jack Robinson, R-Wichita, said the Senate Reapportionment Committee was almost finished with work on a new plan which would have committee, and endorsement, Republican, enforcement THE CONVENTION endorsement bill, which supporters say is a positive step toward making political parties more important, and opponents say will the effect of lessening the pressure on the parties, lost on a 21.9 vote. House approval of the pari- mutual amendment waiver on a future bill to accept certain proponents are to having the 84 votes needed Debate on the Democrats' reaportionment bill was much shorter than expected in the Senate. HERD EXPLAINED the hard very quickly, saying it broke only 11 county lines, provided for a 60 percent share of the per cent from the most populous to the least populous of the 40 districts and that it eliminated the state's four most populous counties, the basis of a veto by Gov. Robert Docking of an earlier Senate reapportionment Herd, who said he didn't plan any reelectionism effort and was surprised Republicans didn't raise a "racial" issue, because Herd had been divided among the seven districts. Herd said his plan had made no effort to protect minorities. ROBINSON SAID his repositionment committee would meet Wednesday morning and he agreed to the meeting. He said it would be a 60-district plan with no more than 150 people on each court. He said he thought the courts are more concerned with preserving county and township lines than the suburban areas. ALSO NARROWLY winning House approval was a bill to create regional health-planning groups. Most of those supporting the pari-mutual amendment said the final decision should be left to the voters. The house passed and sent to the Senate 23 bills, including one to impose a mandatory two-day jail sentence on people convicted of drunk driving. Vote on that bill, one more vote than needed. Two attempts to amend the proposed amendment to alter who would receive tax revenues derived from pari-mutuel failed. The amendment provides for the money to go to education. Ceasefire Switches Bombing to Laos SAGION (AP)—The thrust of U.S. bomb raids turned from South Vietnam to Laos as a 24 hours亡灵救罄 went into battle and made the night in observance of Tet, the Vietnamese lunar new year. agree to the longer tuece, saying the enemy command would use the cease-fire to infiltrate troops and supplies. The allied ceasefire took effect at 6 p.m., bringing to a temporary halt of the biggest insurgent attack in South Vietnam during the war. A unilaterally declared Viet Cong cease-fire took effect 17 before the onslaught and 24 before the onslaught and South Vietnam command refused to The always tenuous cease-fire was broken hours after it began, but the battle continued. Viet Cong assassinated a hamlet chief and a soldier in the northern countryside. The joint military command also charged the Viet Cong with three other ceasefire violations People... .Places... .Things Danish beauty NINA VAN PALLANDT's appearance before a federal grant jury probing Clifford Irving's purported biography of billionaire industrialist Howard Hughes was postponed Monday for lack of a quorum of jurors. Supreme Court Justice WILLIAM REHNQUHT returned to the Justice Department Monday and swore in four new assistant attorneys general. As ceremonies in the jury room were held on Tuesday, he head the Office of Legal Counsel, a job Rhenquht had held before being named to the Supreme Court; Kent Frenzil, Land and Natural Resources; Robert Berman, Division and, Myles Ambrose, Drug Use Law Enforcement. Places: **MOSCOW** - The Soviet Union launched another unmanned moon probe, Luna 20, and said its mission was "further exploration of the Moon." People: BELFANT, Northern Ireland—Guerilla bombers blasted more BELFANT. The British's chief judge opened an inquiry into the 13 deaths of British bombswrecked a Belfast bank, two downtown stores, a lumber yard and the Northern Ireland headquarters of Rank-Xerox, an American arms supplier. LIBERAL, Kan—Gov. Robert Docking said Monday night he was encouraged by the spirit of cooperation between the legislative and executive branches of government and hoped the Legislature would adopt major tax reforms before the hectic, final hours of the session. ATCHISON—Black and white youths slapped each other on the back and traded brotherhood handshakes Monday as Atchison High School reopened after being closed last Tuesday by racial disturbances. Liberal Kanasa's contestors for Tuesday's INTERNATIONAL SHROVE TUESDAY PANCAKE RACE against the women of some 150 women are prepared ready for the 415 yard course. Some 12 women were expected to be the 415 yard course flipping a pancake in a skillet three times. A similar race will run in Oliny. Digirmatories expected to be on hand for the race in Rep Keith Sebellus. R-Koaling, LG, Gov. Reynolds Shultz and LATER, ROY WILKINS, executive director of the NAACP, of the meeting: "He has no business calling together only the busing opponents and asking 'What shall we do now?' in order to back 22 million black people in children in schools." Things: White House press secretary linda L. Ziegler said Nixon told the team that we are not going to leave the situation as it is. We are looking A resolution calling for a study of COUNTY GOVERNMENT and a consideration of the METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT concept was recommended by the Local Government Committee of the Kansas House of Representatives. Eight congressional sponsors of antibussing legislation or constitutional amendments said after the House vote that Nixon that the President made clear he would take specific steps, perhaps as early as next U. S. air and ground units clashed twice with enemy troops Monday morning and afternoon, the command reported. One American was wounded in the tactical exchange with northwest of Cam Ran Bay. Officers aboard 7D Fleet ships off the coast of Vietnam disclosed that Navy strength has been reinforced from an average of 10 ships to 16, including the aircraft and naval mobilization and support ships. WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon assured a group ofongress members Monday hewould try to offset the trend ofdederal court decisions requiringpublic schools of public schoolchildren. The chief executive did not commit himself to a specific course on the explosive political issue, a White House spokesman In Saigon, the government announced it is granting amnesty to 1,357 prisoners on the occasion of Tet. "The question is not identifying the problem," Ziegler added, "the question is how to proceed." Nixon Assures Busing Foes Three approaches were discussed -intervention by the attorney general in more court cases, legislation to ban use of federal funds for busing, or a government commission to prohibit assigning a student to a particular school because of his race. WASHINGTON (AP) — A new communications satellite went into operation Monday, 22, 300 miles in space, just in time to carry television and newspaper President Nixon's visit to China. NewSatellite To Transmit Nixon's Visit There will be at least one ground station, and possibly two, to transmit live television and written stories of the visit. The satellite, known as Intelsat I can carry 3,000 telephone or 12, 800 mobile phones simultaneously, more than four times the number of Intelsat 3 A temporary earth station-two moving vans with a giant antenna on top—already is set up in Peking. It is possible a second station will be operating from Shanghai, another Nixon stop, by Feb. 24. The satellites relay telexprinter and television images as well as news pictures from one ground station to another via the satellite that will be used in the United States is in Jamesburg, Calif. Minority Leader Moves To Seek Recall of Dole TOPEKA (AP) — Manuel Fierro, chairman of the Kansas Institute for Minority Empowerment, told newsman Monday he was looking into the militia a movement to initiate the recruit U.S. Sen Bob Dole, Kansas' junior senator. "We're asking our attorneys to look into what are the procedures for recalling a U.S. senator." Fierce reporters at the statehouse. Fierro said the recall would be sought because Dole has "denied representation to his own constituents, and for his callous disregard for the needs and problems of minorities of this country." Because the U.S. Senate is the sole judge of the qualifications of members, and because kansas law requires legal for seeking the recall of a congressman, it appears Firero's "movement" may be more vocal than his own. "At the same time," Pierro said, "we are drafting a request to the Kansas congressional committee for us in investigation of all the expenditures of Dole, where he gets his money and how he spends it. We want to know if it's going where and where his income comes from." Fierro said he didn't know the procedure for trying to oust a U.S. senator. Fierro accused Dole of going back on his word about getting a copy of a General Accounting Office (GAO) report to the Mexican-american leader. Dole asked last summer for the GAO to review the report. Fierro said Monday he had never gotten a copy of the GAO report from Dole, as the senator had promised him. Any move to oust Dole would have to be initiated and carried out by the officials said. There is no provision Kansas gave to pennsylvania. If even there they said, it still would be up to the Senate to judge whether Dole would move. The report concluded that Fierro had not documented expenditures of about $1,375 in travel expenses. However, the federal government had not charged any charges against Fierro. ALI McGRAW IN TWO GREAT FILMS! Ali MacGraw + Ryan O'Neal LOVE STORY The Year's 1 Best Seller John Marley & Ray Milland PLUS MARKETING DESIGNERS PRESENTS COBBYB. COLUMBIA Love Story 7.15 & 10:55 Columbus 9.05 Only Ends Tonight THE HILLERSTO Ali MacGraw - Ryan O'Neal LOVE STORY The Year's #1 Best Seller Varsity THEATRE ... Troubles II F. 1965 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30 Adults $1.50 ~2ND WEEK~ Sat. & Sun. 3:00, 5:05, 7:30, 9:35 (Twilight HR. Admission $1.00 & .50 ~4:30 to 5:15 only!) 20th Century Fox presents the panic in needle park COLOR by DE LUXE Ends Tonight 7:30 & 9:30 Adult 1.50 THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSSESSION GETS LAID TO REST: "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 The Hillcrest THE HILLCREST ALEX ROBbINS ALI McGRAW IN TWO GREAT FILMS! Ali MacGraw - Ryan O'Neal JOE SION The Year's #1 Best Seller John Marley & Ray Milland - PLUS - GROWNY YEAR. COLUMBUS Love Story 7:15 & 9:10 Columbus 9:10 Only Ends Tonight Varsity THEATER ... Telegraph No. 21, 1966 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30 Adults $1.50 - 2ND WEEK - Sat. & Sun. 3:00, 5:05, 7:30, 9:35 (Twilight HR. Admission $1.00 & .50 - 4:30 to 5:15 only!) 20th Century Fox presents the panic in needle park COLOR by DE LUXE Ends Tonight 7:30 & 9:30 Adult 1.50 THE GREAT AMERICAN ORSESSION GETT'S LAID TO REST. "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 Lee Marvin Newman IN A FIRST ARTISTS PRODUCTION "Pocket Money" A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURE MUSEUM GP - 22 NOWI 7:30, 9:30 Granada GRAFICO ... Telephone No. 21, 1966 05, 7:30, 9:35 9 & 50 — 4:30 to 5:15 only! THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAID TO REST. Guess What We Learned In School Today? 7:45 & 9:35 Ends Tonight THE Hillcrest THE GREAT AMERICAN OBSESSION GETS LAB TO REST. "Guess What We Learned In School Today?" 7:45 & 9:35 Ends Tonight The Hillcrest E NIXON HAS long been a critic of busing and arranged the meetings for recess rulings that require busing to achieve racial balance. At the time, busing was one of the three courses he preferred, said Robert P. Griffin, THEERE ARE 28 different constitutional amendments passed in the Senate, aimed at curbing busing. Also pending in the Senate is a set of house-passed additions to an amendment to the use of federal funds for busing. Instead, Griffin said, the manager should have a Cabinet-level committee to make an extensive study and report to him when he becomes from China. Ziegler said the committee—consisting of Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, Secretary, Elliot McNally, Educator, Welfare and Director George Shultz of the Office of Management and Budget—has been in operation for a long time. A member of the union was not disclosed until Monday. Lee Marvin Paul Newman IN A FIRST ARTISTS PRODUCTION "Pocket Money" A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE GP. 20 NOW! 7:30, 9:30 Granada THEATRES • PHOENIX VS. STAMFORD 70,000 Enlarge Welfare Rolls Sen. Henry M. Jackson, Dat WASHINGTON (AP)—The government said Monday 70,000 persons joined welfare rolls in the United States after statistics were cited last month in a new pitch for the administration's welfare reform Wash, introduced a "constitutional amendment" Monday to schoolchildren who are enrolled in school children and to require equal educational opportunity for all. The latest Department of Health report, and Welfare report reflects the impact of state relief cutbacks, in the face of rising costs, with more agencies offering subsidies. The lone exception was the state and locally operated general-assistance program, which dropped 35,000 recipients in October and 15,000 in October, for a $1 million saving of almost $1 million ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 247 MASSACHUSETTS Alliance Vitamin C tablets 100 tablets 250 mg reg. $1.98 Sale 67¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 Open 9 Thurs Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON FDS Deodorant Bath Oil reg. $1.79 Sale $1.23 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT CENTER 217 MASSACHUSETTS New Under STEREO DISCOUNT RAY AUDIO 842-2047 1205 Prairie Ave. Now you can buy the finest in stereo at Factory cost +10% Consulting—Free tea & coffee—Factory servicing Use Kansan Classifieds Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 reg. 49c ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 797 MASSACHUSETTS Sale 29 $ ^\circ $ Blistex Now Under New Management Macleans Toothpaste Regular flavor only 5 oz. size reg. 89¢ Sale 59¢ Open 9:00:7:00 Thurs. 9:00:9:00 Sun. 10:00:4:00 ZIP DISCOUNT LICENSE CENTER You must present coupon with purchase 247 MASSACHUSETTS Good thru Feb. 19 Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 247 MASSACHUSETTS 1-800-222-5262 1972 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION On March 15 and 16, new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected. To become a candidate: Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Thursday, February 17. In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate. A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OF-ICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. A N All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date. For Further Information: Call 864-3710 By J The approx policy Febru The by th coordi Univer (AUR direc Houvi Re BEI social must Ror profesi chair they list of ViO Tuesday, February 15, 1972 University Daily Kansan 3 Rebirth of Feminism Kansan Photo by PRISCILLA BRANDSTED Wilmer Linkukel Checks Feminist Book Four white male professors teach black studies and women's studies All Dorms Employ Beer Rule; No Sorority Takes Advantage BY JOHN PATRICK MAHER Kongan Staff Writer Residents of organized housing are now permitted to have beer in their rooms. Action on the beer issue in residence halls began in November, and in December we will gain approval of our beer policy The beer policy was initiated by the halls' senates and coordinated by the Association of University Residence Halls John Hill Hopkins director of the University Housing Office, said last week. The last hall to be granted approval was Lewis Hall, whose policy was approved in early February. BEER IS PERMITTED at hall social functions, Hill said, but it must be bought outside the Vice Chancellor Search Group Reviews List Ronald Calgaard, associate professor of economics and chairman of the committee, said the group is going to narrow the list of nominees. The search committee appointed by Chancellor E. Laurence Schalmers Jr. to marshal the appointment of two new vice-chancellors met for three hours Sunday to consider prospective Dennis Embry, Lawrence senior, said: "We hope to be able sometime in March to make nominations to the chancellor." Caligard said the chancellor had indicated he preferred research and chancellor of academics, affairs, and chancellor of research and graduate studies be faculty members of the University of Kansas. He said the committee held an "in-depth meeting" and reviewed recommendations from students and faculty. Daale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said, "We are making progress, but there is no way of anticipating when we will graduate." The committee will meet again Thursday night residence halls, because beer vaping is prohibited on campus. Hall residents police themselves, he said. "The requirement is that the student governments create a policy which will deal with the control of the situation." Hill said. It has a question of the office controlling policy." Proposals for beer in the halls are reviewed by AURH before being forwarded to Vice President of Student Affairs, William M. Bafour, Hill said. Michael Sundermeyer, president of AURH, said guidelines for drafting beer policies were set down by the AURH. HE SAID each policy had to include: (1) where the beer could be consumed; (2) how the policy would be enforced; (3) how the proposal could be changed, and recognize University policy and state law regarding the consumption of alcoholic beverages. some campus fraternities and some similar proposals concerning the fraternity through the Inter-fraternity Council (IPC), said James R. King of the University. He said that those fraternities with approved proposals were less likely to take alcoholic beverages because they were situated in private rather than in a public setting. "The blanket policy from the THE FRATERNITES and the IFC, however, still have to get University approval because of a law that prohibits beverages on campus, he said. They were asked to contact their alumni corporation boards on the matter, he said. IFC would allow each fraternity to make its own policy," he said In reviewing the IFC proposals, Brooks said "the national fraternities were consulted by our office." to make its own policy," he said. Not all fraternities have made proposals to the IFC, Brooks said. R.A. Forms Due Feb.28 Although the alcoholic beverage policy extends to sororites, it has so far been deemed unnecessary. The Ward, assistant dean of women, Juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences interested in the credit no credit option should go to Office All, the Registrar's Office. All other students registered in their school offices Resident assistant applications are now available in the offices of the deans of women and men, Mary Ann Thomas, assistant Mary Ann Thomas, assistant Sunday. The applications should be returned by Feb. 28. To be qualified a student must have a 2.5 grade point average and must be available for the entire academic year. The student must be a graduate student. Women with outstanding qualifications who will be juniors could apply, said Thomas, but the dean of women's office will give seniors and graduate students. "None of them have policies allowing alcoholic beverages in the houses," she said. Many of the national sororites presently prohibit beer and liquor on their campus but do not sororites not having a prohibition against alcohol beverages have not initiated any alcohol on their campus bever and liquor on the premises. Friday is the last day for recording credit-no credit options and it is also the deadline for the free drop period. Sisters Begin Petitioning For Day Care Support Resident assistants provide academic aid to hail residents, work with the resident directors, and give personal problems of students. A petition supporting theea university funded day care center iscirculated by the FebruarySisters, women's rightsgroup. Credit Options, Drop Period Ends Friday The petition is in response to the Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee's recommendation that the Student Senate not allocate funds for the Student Senate. Hutchinson junior and chairman of the committee, said at the committee meeting Feb. 9 that An explanation with the petition says, "Child care is a service that should be provided to children whose parents employees, faculty and student mothers, and faculty wives" because this presupposes that it is some how the exclusive responsibility to raise and care for the children." Any class dropped after the Friday deadline will be recorded as a withdrawal passing or withdrawal failing. She said that the Sisters had started research to find the potential number of children who would attend the day care center and that the center would serve the University, not just the mothers. Ann Franke, Prairie Village sophomore and member of the February Sisters that after signatures have been gathered the Sisters would present their proposal and petition to SeEx. the Sisters did not present enough details to merit a commitment from the committee. Francie said Sunday that the petition was being circulated to "show solidarity between actions for the day care center." The petition calls for child care facilities to be included in the University budget for the fiscal year starting July 1, 1972. There is a table for obtaining signatures of the Sisters and members of the Sisters will also be on campus circulating petitions, Francke said. Profs Defend Non-Minority Role TOPEAK (AP) —The executive director of the Kansas Water Resources Board said Monday that agency has not taken a position on the proposed inclusion of Kendall Reservoir in the State Department. But because there are too many questions that haven't been answered. One objection to many black studies and women's studies programs has been that "only one of us can understand us." BY ANITA KNOPP Kansan Staff Writer Four white male educators at KKU teach classes about blacks and blacks who agree their ideas are irrelevant in understanding of minorities. Fox said he was not an expert on American feminism but had kept in touch with the contemporary movement and had read much of the literature of early feminism. He said since he was a history course it was possible to teach the course objectively. FOX SAD said in the 1980's he thought that a white male was unable to teach minority studies, but his attitude had changed. He said the problem was not that instructors were not well informed that they were not well informed. Stephen Fox, assistant professor of American studies, who is teach a course at the University of America. Minim, said ideally a woman should be teaching the course, but the fact that she teaches him his effectiveness as a teacher. Fox said the only problem was that he couldn't control the confidence or trust of his women to carry out their duties, and him not to understand, he said. "THEIR IS a range of experiences a man cannot go through, but how does this self-explain? He specifically explains history?" Fox said. He makes no pretext of woman entirely, he said. Wilmer Linkuel, professor of speech and drama, expressed similar sentiments about his mother's Rhetoric of Women's Rights." "I don't teach feminism, I teach about feminism," said Linkugal. "The word feminism implies a rhetorical struggle. The course attempts to analyze themes, ideas, and arguments behind women's speakers and their strategies in presenting them." said Linkugal. Linkaug said he qualified to become a doctor of rhetorical training and he wrote his doctoral thesis on Anna Howard Shaw, an early feminist LINEKUGAL SAID he couldn't tell someone how it felt to be a woman and didn't, but the course extended personal perspectives. Linkugal said he insisted on viewing the subject in historical perspective, and he has taught it for three semesters. Charles Adams, acting assistant professor of African studies and anthropology, who the Rat is inauspicious for marriage. The Chinese New Year was celebrated by Chinese students at KU in a banquet Sunday, said Suhong Hsiung, Rao Kao Hisung, Republic of China. Since its debut four years ago, the Black Theatre has never been busier. Bond said. In addition to presenting nightly performances in the Experimental Theatre, the actors have been practicing the Chinese Celebrate Year of Rat For more than 100 students at the University of Kansas, today marks the beginning of the new curriculum for 4670 on the Chinese calendar. Huang, president of the Chinese Students Association, the University of Missouri, a symbol of the traditional observance of the new year and that of the Chinese community. Today also inaugurates a new 12-year cycle in the Chinese calendar beginning with the Year of the Rat. This symbolic animal is viewed as representative of the year, and is used for cording to tradition, the Year of According to Dwight Thomas, Lawrence freshman, who plays Arthur in *Happy Birthday*, said he would use the USO from the four plays because it would have the greatest audience of servicemen and their dependents. The Black Theatre has 18 members. Under the direction of Horace J. Bond, visiting instructor of speech and drama, the troupe performs a 35-minute comedy, "Happy Ending," by Douglas Turner Ward "Happy Ending" is one of the four, one-act plays the Black Cat in the Experimental Theatre prepared collectively by the Chinese students who attended the celebration "Traditionally, Chinese New Year is a time for people to get married and live together living away from the family to return and for younger members of the family to show respect for their elders and ancestors," he said. "They are from every department imaginable—you name it," Bond said. "But Fifteen in Black Theatre Chosen for USO Tour The 33-day USO tour will begin Feb. 22 in Philadelphia where the actors will leave by plane for Canada. Fifteen members of the University of Kansas Black Theatre have been selected by the United Service Organization to perform for American soldiers in Afghanistan, Canada, Greenland and Iceland. He said that a larger enrollment of blacks at KU had created a need for the Black Theatre. several are declaring theater majors." teaches a course in peoples of Africa and is white, said he had experienced no real problem. "It's a way of physically and mentally expressing ourselves in a way the black community will understand us," he said. Thomas explained that the roles in the Black Theatre are relevant to blacks' lives today Adams said he felt qualified to teach the course he received. Adams receives an anthropology with a minor in African studies and has studied in ADAMS SAID he thought there was no particular problem in teaching a course in African studies. development and continuing education, is teaching a course on intercultural communications Afr-oAmerican. He is also white. Thomas said that he had enjoyed working in the Black Theatre. Bluebaugh said the course was designed to explore the problems in communication which are culturally based. TRAVEL IN EUROPE I SPONSORED BY: Student Union Ac- civities Foreign Study Office SUA Travel Service Dean of Foreign Students' Office Council Room — 4 p.m. Thursday, February 17 Coming Forums: Travel within the U.S.A., travel within Europe 11, U.S. camping and hitching, Mexico. Canada on a student budget. SPECIAL "The most important thing is the audience reaction," he said. "At first, it seemed like a cold reaction. After a while, the response was more casual. We meant—what life is really like in the black community." Fare Downtown 25' Campus 10' "There might be a communications problem," Adams said. "But I haven't negative feedback from my students." Saturday Bus Service He said the problem was similar to that of a Latin American, who spoke English but whose native language systems, coming to America. Leave Ellsworth 10:30 m.pst half mast 9:30 a.m. - 5:50 p.m. Leave Oliver 5:15 m.pst half mast mast 9:30 a.m. - 5:50 p.m. Leave Union 00:30 m.pst half mast 9:40 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Leave 9th & Max 10:30 m.pst mast 9:40 a.m. - 5:50 p.m. TRAVEL IN EUROPE I SPONSORED BY: Student Union Activities Foreign Study Office SUA Travel Service Dean of Foreign Students' Office Forum No. 3 of a Series Council Room — 4 p.m. Information 842-0544 Lawrence Bus Co. Inc. Jon A. Bluebaugh, assistant director of community Bluehawk said when a course relied on the background and ethnic background was important, this said was not important. Downtown — Campus MON., FEB. 14 - FRI., FEB. 18 BOBBS-MERRILL REPRINTS up to SCI AMERICAN REPRINTS 40% kansas union BOOKSTORE - Not Currently Assigned M REPRINT SALE Merrill Lynch cordially invites you to a film presentation on Personal Investment Planning featuring The Putnam Growth Fund a mutual fund designed for possible long-term growth of capital. There's no charge, but space is limited. So reserve your seats now. Call. Or send in the coupon. But come. Thursday, February 24th, 7:30 p.m. at the Ramada Inn The Haskell Room Lawrence, Kansas Name_ Address. Please reserve seats for film presentation on the Patrimoine trust and being held on Thursday, the 14th in Lavergne. City & State___Zip___ Telephone. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. Commerz Power, Kane Capital 64199 Nasdaq: AH1-5700 Allen Field House Recreation Proposal Open Hearings Tonight 7:30-9:30 p.m. Governor's Room Student Union Student Service Committee Student Senate 4 Tuesday, February 15. 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Go or No? As Campaign '72" shapes up in Kansas, the race most shrouded with intrigue centers around James B. Pearson's bid for re-election to the United States Senate. Who will be his opponent? Many political pundits believe Governor Robert Docking will oppose Pearson this fall, and if he does, a close race is expected. The fact that Docking hasn't made his intentions public is causing some consternation among state Republican leaders who are eager to single out a target. In a Lincoln Day dinner for Republicans in Independence, Kan., Sunday, McDill (Huck) Boyd, Phillips publisher and G.O.P. national committeeman and G.O.P. leader, the "Fairness Committee" owes it to the people of Kansas, and in particular to the members of his own political party to end this charade and tell the people what just be is running for." Adding credence to the suspicion that Docking will run for the Senate is the existence of a "Docking for Senate Committee," that has been accepting contributions to finance a Docking Senate bid. The committee has not been disavowed by the governor. A Docking Senate candidacy would make an interesting race, as traditional roles would be reversed. Pearson, who is known as a moderate—liberal Republican would be facing a conservative candidate that is a member of a nationally liberal party. However interesting the race might be, a Docking success would Kansans would then lose the only active senator they have in Washington. Pearson's reputation among U.S. senators is a prestigious one. His name as a co-sponsor on a bill means that he has experience in passage and therefore he himself can also garner important cosponsors for legislation that he deems important to the people of Kansas. Kansas' junior senator, Republican National Chairman Bob Dole, has unfortunately become just that: Republican national chairman. His reputation as a Nixon hatchet man has negated much of his effectiveness in the Senate. His is not a voice of moderation, and therefore his sponsorship of a bill often serves to alienate many Democrats who are frequently Consequently a bill with a Dole co-sponsorship may not be able to gain the broad support necessary for passage. Docking, who has been described by members of his own party "slightly to the right of Louis XIV," would, if elected, hardly enhance the Kansas congressional delegation. As governor he has proved time and again that he's anything but a demagogue. He lack of experience as compared to Pearson, certainly make him an unacceptable candidate. Moreover, his record as governor is nothing to shout about. If he decides to run for the Senate, he probably will leave the state on the verge of bankruptcy, with visible deterioration in all state services, most notably higher education. Such a move hardly harmed governorship or praiseworthy springboard to the United States Senate. Hopefully then, if Docking does decide to make the race, his candidacy will serve both as the death knell for his not-too-illusious team. The second confidence for James Pearson, an able and dedicated Kansas senator. -Mike Moffet Associate Editor THIU VIET NAM "Me? Impossible. Mr. Nixon! But, perhaps, if YOU stepped down..." Game Day Report Editor's Note: Every year, it seems the rumor between KU fans and those of the institution up the Kaw becomes more and more pronounced. In the interest of a fanbase, Kansan presents this fan profile from that university's student paper, the Kansas State College. It is hoped this piece will help students to dialogue between residents of "Sobb Hill and the 'Cats'"—as they are affectionately called. Ask yourself what kind of K-State sports fan you always wanted to be, and then listen to George Maness, senior in accounting, probably the most fanatic basketball K-State ever has seen. "Part of being a loud fan," Maness said, "to is satisfy your drive to be a crowd pleaser. And I love to please the crow." Maness is known to his friends as "Big Guy." He stands 64'', and he once played basketball for the Golden Tornadoes of Coffeville. But Big Guy never made it a basketball star. By Brian Berlin Collegian Reporter "It was shaky at best," Big Guy said with his roundback career. "I always thought I had the ability. Silo Tech Fan Profile "I always looked forward to "i, he continued." My old man told me college would be the huge life and I took him at his word. "I came up here because I loved it," he said at a school. At Academyville most kids went to the University of Kansas, so I went to K.State. I've never got a chance. BIG GUY tried freshman basketball here, but didn't make it. "I was smart enough to realize I wasn't good enough to walk onto the same floor with Big Eight guys," he laughed. So Mannecided to be a fan than a player," Big Guy explained. "I let my emotions take over." But supporting the team wasn't enough. "I just got tired of sitting at home listening to the game on the radio. I had to be there. I can't explain it! I just had to be there!" "I try to make every road game that I can," he said. "I missed two football games. One (Oklahoma State vs. K-State) because I had a guard meeting. Another time, when was broken down and I couldn't get anyone to go. I couldn't understand it." road game at Tulisa my roommate and I went down in a '59 Pontiac with a busted fuel line. we tapped it up and struggled into Tulisa and made it before kickoff. "Some old K-State alum was sitting behind me telling me to sit down," he recalled. "But that happens at every game." "Their liquor laws were very lenient," Big Guy added. "They just smiled at us and told us to have a good time. "I had a field day that night yelling obscenities about Missouri Valley football (Tulsa conference)—how it was a second-rate football conference. They have no support." BIGGUY relished the road trips he made this year. "The first BUT THE best trip, Big Guy claims, was to the Missouri vs. K-State game in Columbia. There Big Guy and some friends serenaded the football team with eight song the night before the game. "There were a lot of comments about my antics after that game, he laughed. We couldn't even get away with it upon myself to lead a few chants, especially since one of the guys passed out and I didn't have anyone to talk to. After awhile, they gave me a bit and got behind them." "Columbia is always a good time. People there still like to party. Kinda like K-State people." "Walking away from the game we got on the Holton alumnus bus and started leading them in an ordination of the K-State fight song. "At the risk of sounding a more hedonistic, has a damn good time," George said. "The Cats won. Everybody was happy. I think we supported the team. The team needed the win. Any time K-State wins, it's good for the school." AND BEING such a fanatic K. State fan, Big Guy hesitantly described what he called his father at the University of Kansas. "I attended KU for one semester. Everybody there KSU backed the team if the team was winning. But if it was obvious they had a real good team, they didn't have care. They didn't go to the games. "The people there try to be fashionably intellectual. They try to put football as an artificial endeavor, when actually you can back your team and go about college seriously if you wish." Kansan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG His philosophy about being a fan is simple. He likes sports and he likes the emotion. "I think the main value of sport is for fun. But it really provided emotional ups and downs, especially in life to do—well, life's fun to me but there's not the emotional ups and downs that sports provide. It's kinda like they say on television—the bestest of victory, the argoment of defeat." "1 THINK K-State fans are big," Big Guy said. "Any more, the rah-rah thing is going not fashionable to openly be played for your team. But here at K-State, most of the fans really care. "I was talking to my old friend Kirk Grady, an Oklahoma University coach. TheOU-KState game. He said it was really amazing that a team could be 40 points down and I had to learn the learning. Nobody left the stadium." "K-State is where I want to be—everyone is sports conscious. They're behind the team. They get down on the coaches sometimes, but it's only because they care. "The sport itself, to me," he went on, "is exciting. The action! K-State sports are exciting because there's more at stake than the game. I think that's the secret to college athletics. Without sports, what would a person have to live for?" ABOUT HIMSEL as a fan, Big Guy said: "I like to think that I'm the best Cat supporter among students. I can take the good with the bad. I never boo the Cats. A guy out there on that field is not playing for money—he's doing the best he can." "It's been readily apparent on the road games that I am the number one Cat fan, but it still always wanted to be." We always wanted to do. And then Big Guy grew serious. "I think having a good time and being a Cat fan and being a great Cat support are part of a good life and are all part of my philosophy. "Maybe I represent something that's in the past," Big Guy said solemnly. "Maybe I'm just an anachronism." James J. Kilpatrick What About Busing? WASHINGTON—This miserable business of “busing” with all its implications and consequences, may yet tear this country apart than the issue of Vietnam. From California to Michigan to Pennsylvania to Florida, wherever a wandering newspaper the bitter question constant comes up: What about busing? Resentment is greatest in the South, which ironically has tried the hardest and shown the most effort to achieve desegregation of the schools, but Southern anger is merely the tip of the iceberg. The presidential aspirant who fails to recognize this hazard is likely to be a screech. Opposition to busing is massive, passionate, and widespread. No other issue touches so many American families so close to the heart, Vietnam, Mideast, the. future of Formosa—these are problems far from home. Welfare reform, deficit finance, revenue sharing—these are specialized concerns. Even unemployment had promised to be the universal springs of discontent, have come to be affections a man learns to live with. But when a child is shipped off to a distant school, solely because of his race, he has been black spokenen, no less white, resent the process. William Raspberry, brilliant young columnist for the Washington Post, commented the other day that "virtually no one wants bussing on the level it would take to integrate the schools inropolitan areas." He continued. "I, for one, will be willing to take one step backward, to honest desegregation. That is, let us move forthrightly against any attempt at official discrimination. But at the same time, let us the humiliation of chasing after rich white children. "And it is humiliating. For one thing, it says to black children that there is something decent when we hear something that can be curiously by the presence of white children. Some of us don't believe that. Some of us believe that given adequate resources, financial and educational opportunities, they cannot beat our children on matters what they call their happens to be." My own impression, for whatever it may be worth, is that the American people, both North and South, have come to accept the constitutional principle that was fashioned nearly 18 years ago in the Bureau of Education. It will go to the Court still convinced that Brown was band law—a willful perversion of the clear meaning and intention of the Fourteenth Amendment—but the principle no longer is challenged. That principle, quite evidently, engages in discrimination by race, The vice in these busing orders is that they triample upon the very principle that Brown sought to establish. White children are required to wear uniforms and are shipped there, and on out the West Coast yellow children are shipped somewhere else, and these brutal orders are imposed not for "a quality education"—that is, they are imposed so solely as they are impeded to achieve "racial balance," which is to say, they are imposed so solely because of the color of the children's skin. School board schools thus are compelled to impose the Supreme Court in Brown said they could not do: They are compelled to assign children to schools by reason of their race. humiliation that Raspberry so clearly defines. In place of "honest desegregation," we impose a dishonee integration, hateful or disloyal communities, of schools of parent-tacher communication, of human relationships themselves. Instead of quieting racial antagonism, this cruel and can only make tensions worse. Thus we return full circle to the The Supreme Court can, if it chooses, take appropriate action to stop this folly in its tracks. It would be quite in character for the Court to say here, as it has said in other areas of the law, that its opinions have been misapplied—that "equal prosecution" means that demand "racial balance." If the Court fails to act, outright constitutional amendment will have to be pursued. Copyright 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. Griff and the Unicorn HEY! WHAT ARE YOU READING? MARSHALL MCLUHAN HEY! WHAT ARE YOU READING? MARSHALL MCLUHAN YICKK! AN INTELLECTUAL! FIRST TIME I'VE EVER HEARD THE WORD USED AS AN OBSCENITY... SEKDLOFF By Sokoloff YICKK! AN INTELLECTUAL! L FIRST TIME I'VE EVER HEARD THE WORD USED AS AN OBSCENITY... "Copyright 1972. David Sokoloff. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-4810 Business Office—UN 4-4258 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rate $4.65 per semester, 10 days prior to publication. All good goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Ounions expressed are not necessarily intended as medical advice. NEWSSTAT News Adviser .. Del Brinkman NEWS STAFF Business Manager Carol Young BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF Business Advisor Mel Adams Tuesday, February 15. 1972 5 إسرائيل. النيل الشريف. Pablo Picasso Kamal Boullata Exhibits Arab Children's Art The refugee children have seen death yet talk of life. Arab Artist Aims Work at Young Kamal Boullait, Palestinian artist whose works have been on display on campuses throughout the world, he met the last three years, said Monday he hoped to be able to work with people through his drawings. Boulatt's exhibition, which included his own works, and a series of exhibitions depicting their experience with art from around the world on display in the Westminster House over the weekend. The Organization of Arab Students sponsored the exhibition. Boulata said his drawings typically depicted an Arabic poem, which was in him on the back of his book, abstract draw to the concrete with the use of concrete images. His drawings typically represented his homeland. Boulata said the challenge of his work lay in the fact that he was a visual artist painting for basically an oral Arabic culture, words intricately and beautifully inscribed on its walls, as a prime example of the Arabs' stress on The refugee children's paintings depicted both death and life, Boulaut said. He pointed to a young boy's schooling of a baby rabbit while a bombing raid was taking place as an example of Museum to Hold Workshops Two educational workshops will begin this week at the University of Kansas Museum of Natural History. The workshops, one for ki- dergarteners and one for those 13 and older, are sponsored by the Museum Associates. The first session of the natural history art workshop will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 15, in Dyne Hall. Tom Sweatinengre, a special guest for sessions for persons 13 and older. Participants are asked to bring a sketch book and several soft lead pencils to the first session. In the remaining sessions, all experiments with natural history topics in pen-and-ink, watercolors and paints were conducted last fall by Swearingen is currently on display on the 5th floor of the Museum of Natural History. "What Is it" is the title of the second program which begins at 10 a.m. 30, a.m. - Saturday. Feb. 19. Designed for kindergartners, A bill requiring all motorcyclists to wear helmets and to keep their lights on at all times should be ruled upon by the Kansas House Wednesday. The Senate passed a bill, then passed by the Kansas Senate. House Moves Toward Vote On Cycle Helmets, Lights Les Blevins, Sr., a member of the motorcycle council and the owner of Blevins Honda, said, "I believe that this legislation is discriminatory. It is aimed at a different group, and this is wrong." The bill, introduced by the Senate Committee on Transportation and Uliities, is being opposed by the Kansas People opposing the bill think that the legislature is restricting the motorcycle industry. K. A.T. Suzuki, said, "I think this is a preliminary probe to see how the legislature will react to this situation." The professor restates something like this, they can restrict the whole trade." Feinberg and Blevins said that they thought wearing a helmet was a good safety precaution but that the decision to wear a helmet should be left up on the individual. The conflict. Blevins said, wasn't simply one group's battle, but it was also society's battle. He said that the legislature is constantly over Legislating and passing laws, penalties against all taxpayers to resolve the cases caused by a few. the program focuses on basic natural history concepts and describes just "what is a reptile. A reptile will be Feb. 26 and March 4 and 11 George Pisani, biology leading assistant will lead the work Feinberg said that his helmet sales have never been affected by the actions of the legislature. He said that he was the only all motorcyclists were - cuired to wear helmets, and they didn't require it was partially lifted. Michele Edwards, organizer of the workshops, said the current "What I$ s$ class has reached its maximum enrollment of 12. It$ s$ encourages that the Museum associates are planning more workshops for five- and six-year-olds. If scheduling can be a similar class will be offered this spring or early summer. He said he thought the legislature was restricting the motorcycle industry. If it wasn't, he said, laws would be passed requiring people to wear their helmets a safety precaution which he takes just as important as wearing a motorcycle helmet. Feinberg said he opposed this bill because it was an infringement upon his rights. "These kids have seen death and yet talk of life," Boullata said. "This is how I see the future of the land." Boulaille was a native of Toulouse, France, who refugee as a result of the 1967 war. He later came to the United States under the auspices of the United Nations. this theme. International Celebration Organized Boulault said he deliberately chose college campuses to stage his exhibitions rather than metropolitan centers of art. He said he preferred not relating to people rather to relating to the people of this country. "If there is any hope for me it's the youth of this country which can change what is going on and especially the youth which aligns itself with the people of the third world, Asia, Asia and Latin America." The annual International Club Banquet of Nations and the Nineteenth International Association April 4 in the Kansas Union. The Steering Committee for the event met and established four committees: publicity, program, exhibition, and banquet. The Steering Committee meeting is to meet at 7 p.m. tonight in the Wesley Foundation building, according to Twila Johnson Jouss, Finland junior and chairman of the committee. WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) -- ICI America, Inc., said Monday that it has agreed to comply with a Federal Trade Commission action in the explosives and aerospace divisions within three years. Bouillata's next exhibition will take place in Norman, Okla. Angel Flight Induction Set For Feb.26 Formal initiation of Angel flight pilots will be Feb. 26 at Forbes Air Force Base in Topeka, Ctii Baker, Kanass cain, sophomore and compilator for Angel flight Thursday. Baker said that the objectives of Angel Flight, the honorary women's auxiliary to Arnold Air Force, should be to promote the interest of the college man in the Air Force ROTC program, to aid the progress of the Arnold Air Force and to serve the University. Angel Flight members have performed many services for the University and community this week by attending kickoff tickets at various athletic and social events at the University and participated in the canned food drive, visited nursing homes worked with children's groups. The Angel Flight members circulated a petition requesting the release of American missionaries who were paid to international project, Baker said. "Angel Flight is a great way to meet people in the University and community and have fun at the same time. saa saa saa Aimee Kanssa Kanssa City, Amee Kanssa Kanssa city, sophomore and Angel Flight information officer. will be a service. They should use it right along." Campus Bulletin Last week, 17,230 people paid the ten-cent fare to ride the campus express and over 800 were fared to town. Oge estimated GOAL Lee Summit, Mo. Interviews: 9 a.m. (Donald J. Smith) Gread Room, Kansas Union. Tooka Interviews 9 a.m., 305 Kansas Uni- versity. Union. Italian Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark Calgary. Oread Room, Kansas Union Toukea Interviews: 9 a.m., 305 Kauai Last week the number of fares collected on Monday was 240. About 85 fares were collected on Monday and by Friday 240 fares were collected on Saturday. Pearson College Lecture: 7:30 p.m. Forum Room. noon. Alceve D. Caterla. Computer Science Colloquim: 3:30 p.m. Susan Audition WASHINGTON (AP)—President Trump opened the door a bit wider for communist China, putting it on an equal footing with the Soviet Union. Natural History Art Workshop: 7:30 p.m. Dyche Hall. Young Demos: 7:30 p.m. Regionalis Room Guests: 12:30 p.m. Counselor The Student Senate subsidized bus service at KU appears to be operating successfully, according to Diana Brewer of the Lawrence Bus Company and David G. Miller, Eudora and student body president. Old Barriers Eased In New China Policy Student Services Committee: 7:30 p.m. Governors Room. "I hope this is one thing the Student Senate can do from approach to activity. Activity Fund that would provide a needed service for the student." Iranian Students, 7 p.m., Oread Room. KU Synchronized Swim Club, 7 p.m. "It is very satisfying," Ogle said, Monday. "It shows a lot of promise, that there is a great need for a using service. The question is how do you support us? It is important and a way to finance these needs." The White House announced a rough schedule of open-end talks with Chinese leaders in Peking. SIMS Lecture: 8 p.m. Jiawk Room. Baptist Student Union: 8:30 p.m. Inroom. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico A relaxed schedule of sightseeing and decision to permit President Obama's aircraft for the first time during his China visit by the White House. Computer Science Colloquium: 3.30 p.m. Spencer Auditiorum The re-lazing of trade burearies and the special squaring to the burearies by the University days before Niue's department bureary for the Niue Society departement K.U. Music Society: 7:30 & 9:15 p.m. Woodford Auditorium. SUA Board: 6 p.m., English Room. International Club Steering Committee: 7 p.m., Big Eight Room. Students Support Buses The Guadalajara Summer University of Arizona program, will offer, July 3 to folklore, geography, history, government, language and board room, board and room. $190. Office of the Summer Session, the University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721. FILM SOCIETY Ogle said, "The Senate has been proven right about the need for a bus service, but it is the wrong bus. We have to determine whether or not there "We're hoping that the ten cen fare will provide enough in THE DANCE OF THE NIGHTINGALE The Senate has found a way to POLICE Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the "arcs-the-board parity" in trade regulations for communist China, and the Soviet Union and other Eastern European countries will grow of a larger number of non strategic products into China. IT IS a continuation of a relaxing of trade barriers begun last June just before Nixon's national security advice, Henry Kissinger made his bid to Peking to door to Nixon for summit talks with Chinese P FILM SOCIETY A B C PAGE 190 Miller reported that $1,000 a week had been set aside by the agency for necessary over the period of Jan 17 to March 17. He said the service was successful at this point and he expected that the subsidy would be continued partially finance the needs in the form of a weekly subsidy of about $30,000 per employee. Senate contract with the company expires March 17, but Ogle may continue to seek additional funding. Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton Directed by Mike Nichols Woodruff , Feb. 15, Tonight, 7:30, 9:15 $ 75^{\circ} $ Ziegler gave a wider view of Nixon's activities for seven days in three cities of China. leaders after over 20 years of isolation. There was no estimate from the White House as to how much the China trade would mean to the US. It is unclear if its balance of trade difficulties He said it was still "a very rough itinerary." Under the new regulations China will be able to import a long list of items previously banned in other countries locomotives, construction equipment, a variety of industrial chemicals, internal combustion engines and machinery. "We would hope that the People's Republic of China will be ready to open up communication with us," Ziegler said. He added "The door to trade has opened wider. We are one step closer to this additional steps forward." IN GENERAL there are companies that produce products China can send into the United States as a result of an initial casing of trade rules by the U.S. Ziegler estimate the United States has imported about $3 million worth of goods from China in indirect trade since then. SWEDISH MASSAGES The Lawrence Health Club is pleased to announce the addition of an experienced masseur. He received his training in Sweden and worked as a masseur in that country. For an appointment call 842-4044 CITIES Good 8 - Midnight TONIGHT STUDY BREAK SPECIAL 25° Off any Small Pizza 25° Off any Drink with Pizza Purchase Open Mon. thru Fri. 4 p.m. to 12 p.m. Sat. 11 a.m. to 1:00 a.m. Sun. 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. 544 W. 23rd 842-2266 SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & ye Public house A --values to $45.00 At the Country House . . we're closing out our fall and winter SALE of young women's fashions ... with most fantastic prices ever . . . Sweaters . . . . . 1/2 price Coats ... 1/2 price Skirts & Hot Pants $3.00 values to $16.00 Panty Hose . . . . . $2.00 Dresses values to $34.00 . . . $12.00 values to $28.00 . . . $9.00 Slack Sets ... $15.00 values to $45.00 Dresses Blouses and Tops u05 to $24.00 . . . $10.00 Slacks values to $14.00 $6.00 values to $24.00 . . . $10.00 values to $12.00 . . . $3.00 Stop in Today! All Sales Final Please WILLOW HOUSE Dunlry House At the back of the Town Shop 839 Massachusetts Street TheTrains of Europe How students can take advantage of them. TICKETS It's really very simple. And very inexpensive. Our trains are clean and modern. Fast, frequent and punctual. And they are comfortable. Overnight, a Couchette is yours for only $4.50 for a good night's sleep. And here's the best bargain of the lot. Our new Student-Railpass. It gives you two months of unlimited Second Class rail travel for $130. Likewise in Britain, the Youth Pass gives you 15 days of unlimited rail travel for $40.00 or 1-month for $70.00. See your Travel Agent first, for these money-savers are not available in Europe. Get them before you go. Meanwhile, take advantage of the coupon and send for our new, free brochure, "The Trains of Europe". --- Name_ European Railroads Dresden, Germany Lindenhurst, New York 11757 Gentlemen, please send me your free brochure "The Trains of Europe." Address ___ City ___ State ___ Zip___ My Travel Agent is. 1 6 Tuesday, February 15. 1972 University Daily Kansan BasketballCrowd An Integral Part Of Road Contests By BRAD AVERY Kansan Sports Writer Imagine hopping triumphantly onto a basketball floor ready to proceed enthusiastically with a few warm-up shots before a basketball game. Without warning, thousands of people begin to boo. So what did you do wrong? Well, probably you're on the wrong team. Instead of a Jayhawk you're a Cormhuser or a Tiger, or the wrong team. In an otherwise gay atmosphere of whirling frisbees and high-kicking pom-pom girls, that low, droning echo has condemned you, part of the opposing team, to the pitiful state of being totally and utterly disdained. "When you catch it for the first time as a freshman or sophomore, senior contact Neal Mask said, it can really get to you." Mask was one of the Jahawk players who dared to tread the shack floor of Brewer Field House during a recent road game. "WHAT'S REALLY BAD about playing on the road is the totally foreign environment you play in. That's especially true of a place like Brewer where the lighting is so bad you can just barely see." Mask said. Most of the gyms around the Big Eight compare unfavorably to the basketball facilities of many high schools in that the fans are practically sitting in the middle of the game. Mask said this condition did nothing for the opposing team. "Since most of the facilities in the Big Eight are really old, the fans are extremely close to the game. That makes an already foreign environment even stranger. However, many of the new players are coming the league should take away much of that advantage." Mask said. The jeers and boos of fans around the league hold a special resentment for KU, Mask said. "Since we've been the dominant basketball power for the last several years, the other schools really hate us," he said. ever a year, our other schools really hate us. . . Sophomore guard Tom Kivisto agreed. "It's always a little special for the other schools to play KU. Even the other team is fired up. I think that is evidenced by the fact that every team we've played on the road has shot above its regular shoot percentage," he said. "In the beginning, if they bounce you when you're introduced, it can really pump you up. The time when it really affects you in a bad way." KINSTO TOUCHT the adverse reaction of a crowd on the road could have an advantageous affect. Officials are stoic individuals who systematically go about their business even if they're despised more than the opposing team. "I think very definitely that officials are affected by the fans. I've been quite pessimistic about the officiating in this league, and it does seem that if a call could go either way the officials go with the crowd." Kvisto said. Junior forward Dale Haase thought the same way. "If you're a human being and 17,000 people are booing you, it's going to affect your calls." Haase said. crowd when they weren't playing than when they were. "When you aren't out there," Haase said. "you just try to concentrate on what you're doing and you really don't hear the fuss. "ON THE BENCH YOU're obviously more aware, especially when you come in." Both Hase and Mask thought they were more aware of the crowd when they weren't playing than when they were. From a player's viewpoint, the fans can be very "fickle" according to Mask. "I remember one game when they introduced the starting lineups and the fans booed everyone except Bud Stallworth. A minute later they were cheering for the same people they had booed." Mask said. "Thefans really had a thing for Mark Wattles last year," Mask said, "probably because he was relatively small. It seemed as if he wanted to be like that." Sports fans are known for their affection for the underdog. He is the little man who moves between the legs and arms of giants and on the road. Most people at KU probably can't remember a time when the opposing teams weren't harassed the minute they stepped onto the field. Owens said that fans had a special relevance to basketball. Several years ago I thought we were one of the easier teams to play on the road. But in the last few weeks we've had tremendous spirit. "In an enclosed arena the fans can really influence a game. Although most players try not to pay attention while they're playing, they can still raise a praise or criticism by the fans. And naturally players will respond to a greater extent to a positive reaction from the fans," he said. Former Pro's Son Forsakes Football in Favor of Soccer SEWANEE, Tenn. (AP)—Mention the name Kyle Rote and most people think of American hockey player Jerry Jr.—his mind is on soccer. Kyle Jr., a 21-year-old senior at Sewardine University, has been drafted by the Dallas Tornados of North American Soccer League. What does his father, a former surpass receiver, have to prove in his 13 years in the National Football League. He's also becoming a soccer player. "My dad has been just great," says Kyle Jr. "He never tried to push me into football, although he was in high school and college." It was while playing football a Highland Park High School in Dallas that Kyle Jr. became interested in football. "A bunch of us on the team were looking for a way to stay in shape during the summer, so we formed a soccer team and Fort Hays WSU Lose To Women Friday night the Jayhawks fair Fort Hays State College, 56 horseback rides. They throw throws and field goals for 83 per Kelly, and Cindy Currie both Wichita State University was the victim Saturday morning as Kajai kissed the team with 12 points. He and Norris also had 12 points. The University of Kansas women's basketball team was led by Cindy Kellogg to victories in two G League games in Allen Field House. KU's next game will be at Washburn Thursday. The team's record is 6-4. challenged church teams and private schools," he said. Since then, the kid who grew up with a football in his hands has been a dedicated soccer player. For the past three years, he has been president of the Dallas Athletics organization of 28 teams supported by high schools in the Dallas Fort-Worth Area. He taught 18 to 30 games each summer. "I SLEPT with football all my life," Kyle Jr. said. "That's been my teddy bear. "They tried to sell it like a product on television, without regard to the future. In order to get support for soccer you've got to get involved in the junior high schools and the kids involved as well as the girls involved." Although professional soccer failed in several cities when it was tried in the 1900s, Kyle Jr. wins it eventually will catch on. Kyle's coach at Sawenne, Mac Petty, says young Rote will have no trouble making the Dallas team "When it was first tried on the professional level, it was handled very poorly." he said. "He kept up the esprit de corps on the team," Petty says. Petty credits Kyle with much of his own success. Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER KANSAS 15 KANSAS 22 "He was a big help to me. He was just like having another coach on the field. He has been in addition to talent and ability." Kyle, who played forward for Sewanee, set a school record with 17 goals in a 12-game season. Bud Stallworth Looks for Reinforcements Against OU Neal Mask, right, earned starting spot with performance Saturday. YAMAHA TRADE IN SALE 1964 Honda 300cc $550 1965 Honda 300cc $550 1967 Honda 300cc $550 AJS 350c $450 1968 AJS 350c $450 1974 Yamaha 125c $550 1975 Yamaha 125c $550 ERN'S CYCLE SALES 21 North 2nd Phone 561-5151 Coaches Wary of Basketball Violence NEW YORK (AP)—Blood on college basketball courts this season is giving chills to coaches. Minnesota's Bill Musselman is "afraid to sneeze." Tennessee's *Ray Mears* is wary of heating the ceiling's emotions. And Jim Padgett of California teaches his kids to be doves, not hawks. 'My life has been disjointed and severely interfered with by vicious insults, but I want to use Musselman, referring to his team's brawn with Ohio State.' It had been traditional for Mears to appear at the late stages of the preliminary game, wearing his blazer and walking from one end of the court to the other. His appearance usually comes from the Vanderbilt partisan sacks from to boil their emotions. MEARS ALSO is walking on egg shells. Musselman, afraid of a Musselman, afraid of a sent two Buckeye players to the hospital, has gone so far as to discard the gold blazer he wore. He's eliminated the tradition of wearing an orange blazer to keep his team warm. The transition was especially pointed toward the Tennessee, Vanderbilt and Ohio teams. "Vanderbilt fans have always been my ally," he said to Means. "But in the last couple of years there have been too many obscene signs and too many grievances." "All coaches, and I think most fans, are concerned with the K-State trails Missouri and Nebraska by a half-game in the Big Eight. The Wildcats have 5 and 2-10, the leaders are 5-2. The game will be played before a full house in the 12,500-seat LAST SEASON, KU swept the series on the way to the Big Eight game. The season ended in Mark Matthews ied and double overtime victory by converting two free throws in the first half, who had been injured on the foul. The Jayhawks played well in all three defeats. On the last foray, KU lost to Missouri, 64-80, and Iowa State 84-83. NEW YORK (AG)—Grier Jones, a Wichita pro who won a huge more than $30,000 in 1970 for his golf's golf money-winning list with EKM in the PGA Tournament Division announced Monday. K-State has been frustrated in of its last four games against the Jayhawks. The 1970 Big Eight championship team won both the league and House when Fred Bodieve put KU ahead in the last minute. Grier Jones Leads PGA In Winnings For KU, an inability to win been frustrating all season. All three losses in the Jahawks' 5-3 league record have been on the horn. things that have happened in basketball across the country and we want to stop those who are burling basketball." Jones, winner of the Hawaiian Open Feb. 6, earned $428 for a teammate in the Bob Hope Desert Classie league, replaced George Archer as the top money winner. Archer, who won the Hope, has earned $93,877. PADGETT SAYS his players are allowed to defend themselves from attack, but not to retaliate. Bob Murphy is third with $46 million and the Hope winner with his first victory in 11 years, jumped from 18th to 23rd. The Hope first prize was $29,900. "There is no place for fights in college basketball, or any other sport. The positive aspects of competition far outweigh the negative trouble like that can serve to unpackize the whole program." Neither team can afford a loss in the race, because they are more team. Moreover, both teams are at 7.30 p.m. cont. attempting to cope with a frustrating challenge. Jones also led the exemption point standings with 51.826. He was followed by Archer, 49.157.5 and Murphy, 43.027.5. "If somebody loses his temper and throws a punch, it’s automatic—he comes out and sits on the bench, says Padgett A more crucial road game than the one tonight against Kansas State could hardly be arranged because of the absence of Kansas basketball team. The Ohio State-Minnesota brawl was the wildest during a basketball game this season. But there have been other fights. Southern Cal has been involved in two dramatic outbursts, one with Seattle and another with Providence UCLA and Santa Clara at it, and Marquette that Calda did it on national television. By BOB SIMISON Kansas Sports Editor GREG WILLIAMS, Seattle's leading scorer, was felled by a Teams Fight Frustrations Bill Taylor haymaker in the game with southern Cal Jan. 29. Seattle's Steve Bravard and Taylor then squared off in another individual battle while a spectators moved onto the floor. Marquette's Bob Lackey and South Carolina's Tom Risser tom each other reeling in their heated debates out of it with a damaged hand. AND OF COURSE, there was the big one at Minneapolis when Ohio State's Witte Witte and Mark Wager suffered concussions. Even the fans got into battle, a battle royal sparked repercussions, many of them complaints voiced by outraged citizens. A few days before, the battling Trojans and Providence's fighting Friars staged a shorter, but just as deadly, outburst. A game-long showing match between UCLA and Santa Clara University, where the backup库 Swen Nater exchanged punches with the op-possessed. "It might just be a sign of the times, but the spectator feels he K-State Hosts KU award was accepted by his coach, Don Shula. Roger Staubach. Dallas Houston quarterback is the league's offensive player in the National Football Conference and of the Super Jerry Mays Enters Chiefs'Hall of Fame KANSAS CITY (AP)—Jerry Mankins, Football League defensive end, became the third member of the Kansas City Chiefs Hall of Fame. pays his money and has this tremendous freedom," says Southern Cal coach Bob Boyd. "I've never seen coaches and much personal abuse from the crowd as they save this year." "They use every kind of word you would never be able to print. You can't do that with fairs. You didn't find fans pouring onto the court. You didn't find them going after players. You couldn't find them with crowd control. You go to an arena where there were 10,000 people and no ushers. What do they do?" Bob Grisee, quarterback for the Miami Dolphins, was honored as the American Football Conference player but could not attend. His Announcement of the selection was made at the 101 Dinner. The team will be organized by organization of sportswriters and organizers who annually compete in the sport. Hank Stram, who coached Mays all of his 10 years in radio broadcasting, announced at the funnel Television announcer Howard Cossell, scheduled feature speaker was unable to attend "Nobody turns around and punches someone out of the clear blue sky," said Boyd. "If you astute and watch for things that develop early in the game that might cause trouble." BOYD BELIEVES there should be stronger officiating "to stop trouble at the very inception." Alan Page of the Minnesota Vikings repeated as NFC defensive player of the year. Already in the team's hall of fame are Lamar Hunt, the Chiefs' owner and founder of Lee Lee Hill, who led the Lee Hill star fullback of 1964-85. Willie Lanier, Kansas City middle linebacker, was presented the award as AFC defensive player of the year. Mays came to Kansas City from his home in Dallas to accept the award. Shula was named AFC coach of the year and George Allen of the Washington Redskins was named as NFC coach of the team. John Wooden, the UCLA coach, thinks the basketball warfare this season has been "a chain reaction." "You get one, and soon after, there'll be a another," said Willem. "When I say before: players get to thinking about fighting. Then, too, players are getting bigger and there is more body contact nowadays." Wooden says the brawls are a spillover from the tense, modern world. "The students are quick to rebel at anything now," said the coach of the nation's top-ranked team. "Little things they used to take in stride now cause them to violate it, just a rebellious age--that's the thing that stands out more than anything else." Ahearn Field House. A regional television broadcast will originate with WIBW, Topeka, KBMa, and will also broadcast the game. KU's unbeaten freshman team will play the K-State fist at 5:15 p.m. The KU team won an earlier victory in Allen Field House, 84-23. "We'll start a bigере linee in the hoop we have on them and a sid. after practice Monday. "We'll go with Wilson Barrow Neal and Bud. But they'll get their boots on." IT WILL be Mask's first varsity start. The 8-foot-7 senior has scored 12 points in each of KU's last two games. Stallworth. Barrow and Nash and Kim Kiviste provide the quickness in the backcourt. They engineered a devastating attack on the defense Saturday with the rebounding of but K-State will be a tougher team to rebound against than the Cincinnati are second in the Big East. Missouri is in rebounding; the N.C. State are third. "We just have to rebound better to win this game," Owens said. "And we have to move well. KState's no quicker than, if you want to move fast, We'll want to take advantage of that by really moving ourselves." In the first meeting of the teams, K-State forged a 40-28 David Hall, a 6-foot-7 advantage, "Their inside game is very strong," Owens said. "Their board game is quite impressive." ON THE BENCH, KState has 6 NEYMORHAM. KState will Venkey Veym and 6 foot3 9 Larry Williams. KU's tallest player, 6 foot4 Randy Canfield, will be on the bench. Stallworth, who scored 28 points against K-State last time despite a bruised knee, is within 14 points of catching Walt Wesley for career scoring list. Wesley scored 1,301. Stallworth has scored 1,301. Todd Morgan, a high school All-American and the only player to play on both sides of the state champions, signed with his cousin, John Morgan. KU Enlists Four Players From Preps for Football Four high school football players have signed Big Eight University of Kansas, coach Don Fambrough announced Monday. They include relatives of a former coach and the son of a former coach. Todd Mordger set career, single season and single game rushing records at Shawnee Mission University while games with Mordger was there. Todd's cousin, John, is the brother of Dave Morgan. a Judit Mitchell, son of former KU football coach Jack Mitchell, also retired. 3. 195- pound offensive and 3. backward back player his pre career. Scott McMichael, an all-state quarterback from Shawnee Mission West, became the 20th player to sign a letter of intent with KU. defensive back with the 1968 KU Orange Bowl team. John, a 6-foot-2, 230-pound offensive player at career at Wausatoga (Wise, a 6-foot-4). Jack Mitchell, who now publishes the Wellington Daily News, was an All-American quarterback at Oklahoma. He coached KU teams from 1958 to 1966. WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN $100 Yes, Now You Can Win $100 just for designing a 3-Color POSTER! It's for the Concert Course DEADLINE Series April 15 for Call Fine 1972- Arts Office 1973 for Information 4-3421 WE NEED TO KNOW WHO YOU ARE, HOW MANY CHILDREN YOU HAVE, WHEN AND HOW YOUR NEEDS CAN BE MET. CALL: Scores Range From 6 to 109 In Intramurals The first week of intramural basketball action in the fraternity league produced team scores ranging from six to 10. Beta Pta PI scored the nets for 109 and Phi Pla No. 1 scored a mere six. John McNeil of Beta Theta Tau with 40 points and with 40 points. The Betas served notice that they will be strong again this year by the end of October. Other ridiculous scores last week include Sigma Epsilon No. 2 on the Phi Psi No. 1, 1-04; AKL No. 1 on the Phi Psi No. 3; CHI No. 3 on the Valerium Chi. 38; PH Kappa Theta over FEBRUARY SISTERS DO YOU NEED CHILD CARE? 864-4441 864-4350 864-3552 (Advertisement) TAKE NOTICE live on stage, no gimmicks friday, Feb. 18th 8:00 in Hoch. 1 performance! Nitty Gritty Dirt Band > come as you are! Not necessary to bring your dirty socks Friday night cuz the Dirt Bard uses their washboard and tub for music only—like their new release Jambalaya—whose name speaks for itself. The Dirt Bard speaks for itself too—their show starts with a slice of a banjo-pickin' boy, with good humor and great fun. This show is highly recommended by Uncle Charlie and Teddy as wholesome entertainment for all in the family. Tickets at SUA office—2.50 - 3.00 - 3.50 also at Ball Park Bonus: Bikales-Wineberg Band as prelude --- (Advertisement) University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 15. 1972 7 ENJOY LINE SUA Ticket Redemption Under Way Students began picking up their Festival of Arts tickets Monday at the SUA ticket window in the Lansing Union. Ticket package admittions will be available on Wednesday as lines were lengthy, Diane Beecher, Bennington, Interviews Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co.: A degree for Sales and sales management. Pox and Company. See Monday's schedule. Arthur Young and Co.: BS or MS Ac counting, MBA or JD with accounting major WEENDAY Vt. graduate student became a signpost, warning students that were just coming in that she was the "end of the line," that no more redemptions would be given until the next day. Tennessee Valley Authority; MS or PDI engineering, BS or MS; electrical engineering, BS or MS; mechanical engineering. U. citizenship required. No commission. The Northern Trust Company; MBA, BS, or BA management, financing, business, accounting, commercial banking. Hallibarton Services: BS chemical engineering HS in mechanical engineering HS petroleum engineering U. C. citizenship No. summer jobs. Students in need. Colgate Palmolive Co. or BS or MS chemical engineering in BS mechanical engineering BS or MS industrial engineering U.S. citizenship required. No summer jobs. S. K. Sruge Company (K-Mart) BS business. BA liberal arts. On job management trainee program leading to MBA degree. Must be willing to relocate periodically. Yought Aeronautics, BS or MS in Engineering or related field. Must be a chiectural engineering, BS or MS in engineering, BS or MS in engineering, BS or Engineering physics BS or mechanical engineering, U.S. citizenship, mechanical engineering, U.S. citizenship, Atlantic Richfield (Harvey Technical Center): BS or MS chemical engineering. U.S. citizenship or permanent VISA. No summer jobs. J. N.C. Nichols Co. ISB will benefit for a Kansas-based Water and Soil Consultant, Pier Water & Soil Co.; BS and MS in Undergraduate Studies; Staff account positions (Assistant Manager, Researcher, Research marketing in BA economics research, Marketing in BA economics research) Lester Write and Co.: BS with a major in accounting. MBA with an in accounting. Staff accounts for management office work. Graduate work for work for seniors and graduate students. Atlantic Richfield North American Engineering, BS or MS mechanical engineering. BS in petroleum engineering. U.S. civil engineering. VSAM summer work for juniors, seniors. VSAM summer work for juniors, seniors. State Highway Commission of Kansas: BS civil engineering. U. S. Citizenship required. No summer work. Peace Corps: All disciplines of Prayer Vigil To Be Held An Ecumenical Prayer Vigil of Reparation, sponsored by the University Christian Movement (UCM), will start Ash Wednesday, Feb 16, and continue through April as the anniver of the vigil. said Monday Vigils will take place from 12:30 to 1:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday at Danforth Chapel. There are two purposes for the angel, Olsen said. The first is for the audience to be guided in the Indochina War. The second is for people to reflect on the teachings of Jesus Christ as a state to war, peace and justice. Phone Calls to Aid McGovern Campaign Students for McGovern will weeklong telephone campaign support for their candidate, Lynn Kow. St. Louis, O., freshman Knox, coordinator of the group said all students and faculty members in the county's first and second districts would be contacted. "Our strongest potential support is from students and faculty." Knox said. Engineering Changes Site The group has commitments from at least 175 people to work for McGovern. "That means about 60 will," Knox said. KANSAN WANT ADS Democratic voters in Douglas County will select an estimated 21 delegates from the county's three county commissioner's districts to them at the congressional convention, Knox said. The school of Engineering is moving its interviewing facilities from Hall to Hall. Interviews will be held in Hall Beginning Hall beginning PERIGEUX. France (AP)—The historical and architectural school in Paris turned 180 to anyone who could turn up the name of the architect who built them. three local conventions will be held April 8. The McGovern candidates to run from their local districts in a mock convention will be announced. Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service BLEVINS HONDA Last week the group set up a literature table in the Kansas City area to help more student volunteers. Most of the active workers are students, 1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks. The group is also seeking support from people involved in the campaign, from local leaders and from campaign workers in John Spearman's school board campaign and Tom Moore's campaign for state representation. One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Right next to Campus 127? OREAD HERBS AND SPICES FINE ENGLISH E FINE SWAMIES Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Karan are offered daily. The university is free to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8008. tf Three days Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale There are two ways of looking at it 1. If you use them, you're a disadvantage Eric Hickman to come in the same way. "We need a Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 14th. West 14th. 11f We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyotas and Triumphs. Competition Sports Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-2191. 2-18 three days 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication You're at an advantage. If you don't. Now you can buy stereo components at FACTORY COST plus 10%. Handling at RA IADC (1952) 1063, used by only the midday discount house in the midday. 2-8% Northside Country Shop, 707 North 2nd block of north River Bridge street, items of wood cooking and heating equipment, stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, chairs, etc. Open to other useful items. Open to 10 or more days. Herb Albertenberg, 3159 3159 3159 2-29 "Hippe Denim," velvet dresses, dinenjacks only jacketts for personal Appalachian wear. 11-6 Four Daddy's of BOKONO 819 Vermont. Monday-Saturday. 11-6 Never used photo enlarger Durst M-600 w/o lens. $25 also. Off 8$ movie viewer. Call 842-7984 evenings. Need more money than aba. 2-15 59 VW Bus-busbelt engine -excellent running condition -best offer-call Steve at 842-8265 2-15 Take a look at my mistakes. We have plenty of them from all over the world Haas Imports, 1029 Mass. 2-22 Portable stove.-G.E. Trimline 560- good condition. Used tire, two good. 7.00-15.3 4. play, 100 miles. Msls. kitchen pans and dishes, 1862 1862 2-12 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES Corvair-10 4Hp, Jp. 4, s-47HT 14-Polycarb & Mags, Caram Xe, FM Multiplex, 8 track stereo, front and rear spooler best prices 4,215-12 CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Events 1966 Mobile Horse, 12X48, 2 bedroom, furnished. $2,975.00. Call 843-0662 anwime. 1965 Chevelle, Malibu SS, 327. . . call Speed 842-2238 or see at 1919 Miller Drive. . . . . Open 24 hrs. per day DRIVE-IN AND COOIP O LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 843-5304 1970 Corvette. Coupe, 350 CDJ (325). 40 AD. postpontion; A/C/AM 80 dark grey, black interior, dark grey black interior, new tires $3,500 will help finance, M4-776-76 B 1960 Ford Fairlane 500, dependable transportation, good radio and heater, snow tires. $125.00. Call 864-4394 or 842-7026. Must suit $100.00 suede coat never worn. Ladies belted, double breasted, size 7 knee length. Best offer Call Harriet at 842-4941. 2-15 Underwood 21 Typewriter. Excellent condition. Call Wendle, 843-7600. 2-17 IBM Electric Typewriters. 843-7600 Bolex 16mm movie camera, optical viewfinder, 25mm f1.9 lens focusing to 18 inches, 45mm SLR Miranda P6, 75mm SLR Miranda P5, 28 pre set lenses for Mamiya C-248, 2-32 pre set lenses for Mamiya C-248, 2-32 IBM Electric Typewriters 842- 8634 2-15 Men's suits and sport jackets, size 38. $10-$30. Good looking, excellent condition. Dede, 842-5031. 2-17 THE CONCORD SHOP - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock —others on order Fine cold cuts, grains, oils, etc. Beer and wine yeast The Mercantile 1237 Oread, 843-9746 2-17 1970 Plymouth Duster, 2 ref. H.T., red with black vinyl roof, small VR. suite, 24, 000 miles, $28, 1289. Jayhawk Volkwagen, 2522 low 8, 430-210-21-08 1968 WV square back, beige with brown interior, air conditioned, 100% WV warranty $1,388 Jayhawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, 843-220-1900 1968 VW 7 passenger wagon, blue and white wagen, $1,888, Jayhawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, #432-200, 2:15 SALE NOW GOING ON- UP TO 50 ON MOSH MERCHANTISE CHANGES ON SALE MERCHANTISE = EARTHSHIP 6th. & MASS. 2:17 - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz., pts. - qts. only 25% OFF COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 - ARTIST CANVAS COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th 842-9450 Laundry & Dry Cleaners McCONNELL LBR. CO. days per week 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 ARGLEY SOCKS — FOR FUN AND WORK — WINCH? AT EARTHSHISE EAST 8th & MASS. 2-17 SUPER SALE, DRESS VALUES from $18-$32, now $5-$10. The Alley Shop, 843 Max. 2-18 Swinging coats and capes for spring. The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 1963 VW to 1971 VW from $485.00 to $1,995.00. Jayhawk Volkswagen, 2522 house, 843-230-2150, 2-15 Independent COIN JUST ARRIVED~Swim wear and sandsweepers The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 69 wall electro-voice receiver, 2 Mt- charger, two wires, 10-midrange wi- bover, 2-5-midrange wi-bover, new $308 Will sell your charger Brind now $308 Will sell your charger Brind ne Tony's 66 Service 66 Corvette Conv.—177 cu. in, snow, time, AM-FM radio, hearer, 4-speed, excellent engine Call after 6. 82-12 2205 Sony TC60 tape recorder. Features include 2 high efficiency speakers, 4 wat amphetizer, 3 head 3 speeds im- printer, music机, mike maker, aries 842-2473. EARRINGS — EARRINGS — and more EARRINGS. The Attic, 927 1445 Two gas stoves one apartment size, one full size. Both are clean and work well. $25.00 each. Call 842-8221. 2:17 Crotche Tops—biggest selection, newest styles, $7.00. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 Cinderella Naishtm Hall Contract for sale. Call 843-2661. Must Sell. One women's bike in good condition for $30, and one older men's bike for $15. Call 842-6897 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Basses, guitarists, saxes, clarinet, auto- amplifiers, amps, tape recorders, digital audio players (digital liver). Also, we'll buy or sell your instruments or equipment. The price is negotiable. Guitar—Guild 12 string Acoustic— 11', years old—Good condition—Call 843-5113 after 6:30 p.m. 2-21 Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 8 track stereo tapes $349 with this coupon. Gregg Tire Co. 814 W 23rd. FOR RENT Engineering student has no use for his new Royal Safari Portable Typewriter. Will sell for $45, Jim, 841-21309. WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second room only. Two bedrooms - 2-bedroom, 1/1 bath furnished or unfurnished. Central a. kitchen, dishwasher, w. car mirror, laundry room. Apartments—The place to live in. Calls 24 hours a day at 887-3600. Apartment — newly decorated — one bedroom furnished — wall to wall carping — $1_{12}$ block: from Union. Phone 845-767-7. ff for rent—one or two bedroom apts, all carpeted, all carpeted, garbage dishwasher facilities, all facilities, color T-W available. Collapsible desk. All view apartments. 24th and Ride Court. Ridge House Hunt —for the budget Ridge House includes the popular features and the maximums in lown. ER, t. and 2 bedrooms, and a master suite with Carwood—and block one on Westside. Lawrence Kansas 66044 Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartmentals. All the extra features, exceptionally clear. From one block south of 843-116-116. 2-21 HILLIELY APARTMENTS — 1733-45 room furnished, bedroom furnished and unfurnished kitchen equipped with refrigerator, kitchens, refrigerators, A/C, all the four bedrooms, new expensive apartment Bed which is very close to store. COLLEGE HILL MANOR now has apartment apartments with most utilities paid for. pool and laundry, walkaway room, kitchen, bathrooms. walk away at 1741 W. 19th St., 4B, thirteen, 2-28 Medical, Chemical Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! Apt. for rent, 1 bedroom, A/C, carpeted, big closets, parking closer than many KU lots. 1419 Ohio. Call 842-12-6385 913 843-9275 913 842-0025 2324 Ohio CABAY ARTS FOR YOUR Call immediately for appointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE 摄制 SENIORS!! Studio IT'S NEVER TOO LATE and no long time from Jan to May to visit our attractive, one Call to Mrs Forresta a 2017 A Harvard Road and you can explore the many opportunities available in Lawrence's best located and most attractive campus, Missouri. Avalon Anpaintments, Missouri. Avalon Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of soundproof construction, please rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, reasons you would enjoy living there, make this semester in Lawrence a special location for August occupation and special summer rates for June october. Ph.843-0330 10 a.m.-5 p.m 2 bedroom unfurnished house, $125, mo., utilities not paid. Edwards Real Estate; 843-601 or 842-7462. 2-15 QUIET sunny 2 bedroom furnished one room apartment in our first dining space inside with round recreation, and laundries. All utilities paid. Ridge, 842-4444 University Terrace Apartments-furnished apartments available for im- occupancy to $110 and up. Apt. 25, B or call 843-6123 - 179, Apt. 19, B or call 843-6123 - 179 WHERE do elephants keep their big pink sneakers? In Ridgway's gigantic closet. One bedroom, all electric. $130.00 all utilities paid. 824-4444 NOTICE Unfurnished room for rent—utilities paid, share bath and kitchen. Some rent off for light housekeeping. Pre- pay 25% of rent. Miss noon any day. 2-28 Michigan St. B-Bar-Quiz 1 M15 Mich. Houston St. Bar-B-Q Quiz 1 M15 $e.40; 1.1 b Beer-Barb挺饮 8-75; $e.40; 1.1 b Beer-Barb挺饮 8-75; $1.75 Bier-Brink捷饮 7-52; $1.75 Bier-Brink捷饮 7-52; $1.75 91.50 Closed Sun-Tuna 91.50 Closed Sun-Tuna Red Baron Valentine Idea Portrait. $5.00 for one. $7.00 for two. 842-7511. 2-15 INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842.7694.3054 Professional child-care for children 1 to 12月 12mil or part/child care Fri, Specially designed 2-22 UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright. (816) 474-4676 TEE FEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB— time again, and we are taking reservations for second semester term party. The party will be a party for the party. Nee band stand, black tie, formal attire. We also have special monthly rates for the bus departures, meeting notes, Phone or contact John Staten Station. Tee Pee Jct 43 & 59 Hugh Station. Business phone: 842-2582 After leaving, please call: DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe. Leave anytime from N.Y., or a similar airport to Europe. IDs issued. Flight Center. 227 North Randall, Mandalin, Wisconsin 53706 North Dakota. KU Students of Objectivism will visit the University of Kansas Rand on Sunday, Feb. 13 at 7:00 in the Oread Room, Kansas Union. For information, call 843-561-364 or visit www.ku.edu. For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center: 864-4441. tf Pr-owned clothes BOKONON Vermont. Psychotherapy, fashions suitable to at a "poor man's peek- in" wardrobe. 6, repeat address. 2, 15, 6, repeat address. 2, 15 Have you ever been to a Baha? DHAHUA? CLUB meetings have been moved from Thursdays toidays 7:30, FARA; A. in 2:15 RHINESTONE STUDUS — SILVER RINGS — AND MANY OTHER FAR ACCESSORIES EARTHISHINE, East 8th and Mass. 2-17 DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP DELICATESEN 6 Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order 842.7685 - We Deliver-9th & III. CSC TOYOTA THUMP TRIUMPH Competition JW Sports Cars Inc. 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 PLANNING A TRIP?? Maupintour travel service Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! 90 Mass—The Malls- Ils—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-121 TONY'S WE HAVE TOPS FROM A TO Z. The Alley, Shop, 841 Mass. 2-18 SPRING KIDS ARE IN FUNKY 40, AND EARLY 30'S STYLES—EARTH- SHINE, EAST 8th & MASS. 2-17 500 E.23rd LOVE THAT IMPORTS-DATSUN Low-Low Jeans with the flare look at Low-Low Prices. The Alley Shop. * Mass. SANDSWEEPERS JUST ARRIVED The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 CHEVROLET CAMARO DATSUN 842-0444 SWIM WEAR JUST ARRIVED The Atic, 927 Mass. 2-18 Counselors position open for Juniors, and board members in the first 8 weeks during summer, plus a stipend $50. CGU UN-4 HOMEWORKS. A personal interview. Midwinter Matee OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE 0 TO 60 MPH -13.5 RECLINING FRONT SEATS UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL LONG DRESSES FOR PARTIES THAT ARF SUPER. The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 Circle your calendar now for the Last Saturday Night of February. Rosalea's Hotel, Hotel, Kansas 67058 (316) - 869-9121 2-21 Professional seamless with design experience, will work with you for the look you want. Alterations, too. Call 843-3763. 2-21 Spend this summer working in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to Colorado Sports Bureau 342-343; Boulder, Colo. M0022 WANTED Customers for valentine day glift ideas at Hodge Podge Open late thursdays, 15 West 9th. 2-22 Wanted: desperate need one girl to share apart, with three others in Jaywalker house. Conciliary contract *Call* 843-6213; or 843-6254. Made roommate needed. Two-bed- room furnished apartment for $70/ plus roommates. Come by apartment, Arizona, Mintajor, Indiana and Indiana. 2-23 One year old black Labrador-Ruy= injured front left leg. Animal Clinic tag. call, Pitts, 843-5000 2-15 Classical guitarist wants to organize unamplified combo to play popular music. Needs a string bass, flute player, and drummer. Call 842-334-200. 2-15 PERMANENT LEGAL SECRETARY Shorthail, typing required Wil训 train. 843-0811 2-18 Three girls need fourth to share an apartment, near campus. Own room. call 812-6178 after 4:00 p.m. 2-18 Wanted- Science fiction books, to be read at the Emporium. Expand your interest at the Emporium. Expand your different books. Come in and ask how you can help us. South door of Union, next to Dyslea Need girl to share house. $55 Utility included. 842-5768. 2-21 PERSONAL Female roommate must take to bedroom, duplex. 1137 New York. Private kitchen, modern kitchen. $50. mo./Call after 6:00 p.m. p.m. 842-9094. 2-17 POETRY WANTED for artheology. REQUIRES prior enrollment for prompt repub. Send to: IDLEWILD PRESS, 1857 E. 2nd St. Los Angeles, CA 90021 E-239 University of California 90211 Women's Alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 2-15 Valentine Purse Sale at Hodge Podge. 10% off Feb. 10—Feb. 17. 15 West 9th. 2-22 "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Call me for excellent low cost hos- pital insurance with above average coverage and pregnancy; John Wells Ameri- can Health and Life Insurance 845-8220. Anne M. Unexpressed love can en- ture a long time Love, Timothy 2-16 DID THAT, WITH THE DRY SKIN, WAS A BLAST. PRETTY BIG, RAP, BUT NOT A ever seen a campus organization die? If you don't come tonight BECAUSE will cloak up. We need at least 30 people to help us. Love House, 7:00 p.m. 2-15 -TYPING Sweetheart, "Anne of a Thousand Ways" is playing in New York. Ask any Latin American doctor—he will tell an "egal salad" Honey. 2-17 Experienced typist will type your term paper, theses or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate. Call VT 3-3281, Mauckman. Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other里型 rpt. assignments. Proofreads term papers. Accelerate and prompt提交 PhD thesis. Resume to the Receiving Phone: 843-9554. Mr. Wright. Typing done in my name ... type electric typewriter. Prompt attention: 843-0958. 2-29 Accurate typing of your thesis, dissertation, or miscellaneous work in IBM Selective typewriter with pica 2150. (Available at Court, 842-1440 for information, 2:29) LOST Two German books—Need very bad- battery—Reward-Call 842-5897 or 842- 7648. 2-15 HELP WANTED Lost brown neck scarf during KU- G-Tech game Mon. 7 841-3158, 1230 Miss. 2-18 One black, padded skirt-lope with red, white, blue ribs on knuckles. Monday. Feb. 7 in Flint Hall. money value. Heward Dec. 2 4563 4564 2-21 IVESEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS All Professors, and occupations. All Information, and information informational Ware. OVERSEAS Ware 1507, San Diego, CA. 715 1507 1 MISCELLANEOUS Tube incense on sale. Two for $1.00 Saturday at the Hodge Podge, 15 West 9th, 2-22 THE sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Complete Menu. Steaks Sandwiches Steaks, Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks 11. Mitzvah Records of the Kane River Bridge Safety www.safety.com 800-264-7535 Safety Resources www.safety.com Our motto is and has always been "There is no substitute for quality RAMADA INN 842-2323 Spacition new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free future image, Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9, Sat, tat noon. 843 8500 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS 928 Mass 8 Tuesday, February 15. 1972 University Daily Kansan Campus Briefs KU ID Cards Ready Britannica Scholarships Students of families who have recently purchased sets of Encyclopaedia Britannica or Great Books of the Western World may be eligible for scholarships arranged through Encyclopaedia Britannica. The representative for Encyclopaedia, at 843-600 for more information. Dorm, Legislators Dinner The Association of University Residence Halls will sponsor a legislator's dinner Thursday, February 17 at 7 p.m. in Templin Hall. Reservations must be made at the desk of any residence hall. All residents of University residence halls are invited to attend. Coulter Recital Tonight Edward M. Coulter, senior in the School of Fine Arts, will present a voice recital at 8tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. Women's Job Seminar The Commission on the Status of Women is sponsoring a summer job opportunities seminar from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Dean of Women's Office. They have available job descriptions and employment possibilities in Federal areas and in camps or resorts. Some job information is also available for the Lawrence and state area. Representatives of the Commission will be on hand Wednesday to answer questions. Christian Science Meeting The Christian Science Organization will meet at 7:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. Rugby Club Practice The KU Rugby Club will begin practice at 4 p.m. today in the field behind Oliver Hall. Haskell Seeks Ranking As Full Junior College Haskell Indian Junior College is applying for membership in the North Central Accreditation Association. Haskell President Wallace Galluizt said Thursday, in the association would mark the school a fully-accredited junior college. This accreditation would make it possible for Haskell students to transfer to other member colleges with a minimum loss of $25,000. The accredited only by the KYAA Accreditation Association "To meet the requirements and the standards set up by the association and become an agent of success for our six years." Galuzzi said. He said a team of examiners completed preliminary examination of Haskell last week. Gallucci said he asked the association to consider Haskell for correspondent status last week, the first step in gaining accreditation. Gallucci, who will attend the annual meeting of the association of Chicago, said he hoped to be informed about acceptance for correspondent status by the end of March. If he was at the end of March, Haskell would begin a self-study. A committee of staff members would review Haskell's at FRED RAYMOND Let the Man from Equitable tendance records, library facilities, staff, curriculum, and training changes in operation, Gallucci et al. in this review, which is a one- to two-year course at the school concerned as official candidate for membership tell you about THE YOUNG PROFESSIONALS PROGRAM offering life insurance with premium financing for full-time graduate students. Buddy Bowles The University of Kansas took first place overall in indoor sports in the annual Association of College Unions International Conference, which was hosted Friday and Saturday in the Kansas Union. Warren Boozer, Jaybowl manager and tournament director, said this was the most successful regional tournament The tournament competition consisted of five events: bowling, billards, chess, bridge and table tennis. BUDDY BOWLES 2602 Belle Crest Lawrence, Kansas Phone 843-2616 KU Wins in Chess, Other Indoor Sports A total of 228 students from 14 Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma participated in the two-day tournament, which was concluded with an awards ceremony. In single events, Steave Heffey, Bonner Springs junior, and Steve Zimmerman, to Tapke senior, took the ball down in bowling competition. BIL McTaggart, Sunflower junior, teamed with an extra man from Central Missouri State to win place in the men's doubles division. Snowy Days Drive Dogs To Animal 'Country Club' As ice and snow descended on their habitat, the increasing number of animals found their way to the Lawrence Humane Society's animal shelter Mrs. Victor Moltion, who has worked at the shelter for 12 months, said that country's country club for them," noting that many dogs were left in the shelter. In the men's singles bowling competition, Steve Heffley, Bonner Springs junior, took first in the women's final, under Russell senior, placed second. Charles Betros, Overland Park junior, and Kule Thompson, Shawnee Mission sophomore, animals the shelter receives are injured or ill. The shelter houses from 40 to 60 dogs at a time in clean kennels with fresh water and plenty of food. The animal shelter was built in 1958 by John Ise, professor of economics at the University of Chicago, who memory Charles, who was killed in a plane Helping people build a better life THE EQUITABLE The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States 7-Day Special CARS PAINTED $2750 NORHTOWN BODY SHOP Lawrence, Kansas 10 N. 2nd 843-967 formed the KU team which was awarded first place in the chess competition. This is the seventh war that KU has won first place. for scaling Kilimanjaro, dodging rhinoceri, or your next big thing. This one's un-styled and tough two ways: To tough for putting down the un-hip and Necktie People. And tough for real. You can hit the brick all day and feel no pain. Get into them. Arensberg's = Shoes Womens Blue Suede or Brown Wax 22$00 Mens Brown Wax 23$00 DEXTER crash in 1955 Animals are picked up from streets by the Lawnerview shelter. Two full-time and two part-time workers staff the yard for 5 weeks a year. In addition, a veterinarian in once a to give animals a check-in. "We're very proud of our shelter," Melton said. "We have been told that it's one of the finest little shelters in the country." Melton said about 200 dogs were brought to the shelter in December alone. Most of those dogs are owned by owners or put up for adoption. Still, she stressed, about 20 dogs are hit by cars in the Lawrence area each day. Legally, pet owners must be in control of their pets at all times. This does not mean the dog must be with his owner, but he should be with his owner. "People have people a pet, they should treat it as a pet," Melton said. "After all, it's a small life in their hands." Dr. Bernard E. Vodny, a nationally known authority on the development of will present a workshop on "Victoria's Weapons and Their Effects on Learning" at the University of Kansas Feb. 24, 2016, where students sponsored jointly by the KU department of physical education and the Kansas Optometric Association. Visual Handicaps Topic Of Weekend Workshop The purpose of the workshop is to help participants understand the three visual anomalies have on learning, working, living and health. TACO GRANDE With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get1 Free! Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.) Offer expires Feb. 28, 1972 FOR CONDUCT Wed. Feb. 16 7:30 & 9:15 Woodruff Aud. 75c 1720 West 23rd Street Classical Films ZERO Patronize Kansan Advertisers A Challenge: You only go around one time in life. And you've got to reach for all the gusto you can. You can't settle for less. Because you don't get a second chance. This is the philosophy at the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. Easy enough to say. Not quite so easy to do. And perhaps not so easy to find. That's the challenge. Find an expression of the gusto life. And put it on film for all the world to see. (Or at least anybody who reads the Daily Kansan.) If your picture is judged to be of exceptional photographic content, your entry and credit will be printed in this paper and others like it. And you will be awarded $100. (If you are a professional photographer this offer is not for you, since you already have $100.) A panel, including students at the University of Kansas, will judge your photograph based on its subject matter, rather than your photographic technique. If your roommate is a judge, he won't help you. Please get the name and address from every principal person you use in your photograph. This is important. Otherwise, your picture will be disqualified. You'll have until March 12, 1972 to get this assignment completed, should you accept. All photos submitted will become property of the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. Send pictures with your name and address to: Cooke Sales, Inc., c/o Schlitz Photo Competition, 715 New Jersey, Lawrence, Kansas 66044. Schlitz Someone would like to see what you have to say. WHAT DOES HAVE TO LAST? ©1972 Jos, Schitz Brewing Co., Milwaukee and the world. A LITTLE WARMER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN K-State Drops KU78-66 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas 82nd Year. No. 86 Wednesday, February 16, 1972 See Page 6 StudEx Plan Could End Gays' Battle By RON WOMBLE Kansan Staff Writer The proposal of the Student Executive Committee (StudEx) to change Student Senate policies for recognition of student groups could end the Gay Liberation Front's recognition but the recognition would have to be assured "what Gay Lab seeks is attainable." Klunnett expressed the fear that the fact of a "matter of semantics rather than reality." "We'd have to be awfully sure that that that, the attorney knott, attorney for the group, said Tuesday. He said as an attorney he would like to see the district court's decision against Gay Lair overturned to "remove the precedent." Kansam Photo by RICK KERSEY The group is fighting for "real issues" and not to prove a point, he said, so if those issues are solved there would be little reason to continue the fight. EN HAT A spokeswoman for Gay Lab said the issue status with other student organizations equals that with other student organizations. Candidate for Student 'Body' President He said the StudEx proposal could be something to stop them from taking their case against the University into a higher court. Charles H. Oldfather, University attorney, said the StedEx proposal would have no effect upon the Gay Lab case. He added that "the tentative" and had not yet been written up. Election Deadline Nears BY JIM KENDELL Kansas Staff Writer As of 5 p.m. Tuesday no candidates had filed for president and vice-president of the student body, according to Bill O'Neill, Ballinw, Mo., junior and treasurer of the student body. However, at least three teams are expected to file. Thursday at 5 p.m. is the deadline for candidates to file a declaration of intent to run for student body president or vice-president. Two candidates, both from Pearson College, have filed for student senate. No one has filed for any class office. The deadline for candidates to file for Student Senate and class offices is Wednesday, Feb. 23. One team which is expected to file for president and vice-president Wednesday is David Dillon, Hutchinson junior, and Kate DeWitt, Hutchinson junior, made the announcement Tuesday evening. ANOTHER TEAM composed of Joel Green, Rapid City S, D. sophomore, and Joel Payne, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, file day Wednesday. Green and Payne are now collecting signatures on petitions which will allow them to be late Tuesday afternoon and the deadline about half of the required 500 signatures. A third team composed of Joe Landolt, Kirkwood, Mo., junior, and Mike Schoenle伯, Wichita, sophomore is expected to test Thursday. Early Tuesday evening Landolt said the team had collected several hundred signatures. Landolt and Schoenleber are running on the Birthday Party ticket. LANDLOT SAID. "We're trying to make a flap of the election. We want to show that student government is ineffective, that the school is run by the chancellor, the Board of Regents and the legislature, which holds the purse strings." Another student senator has picked up a declaration of intent, but has not definitely decided to file. He is Les Schwartz, Overland Park junior. There are currently 91 student senators. Each senator represents 200 students. Though only two candidates have filed for Student Senate, Benedict Palen, Lawrence freshman, and Donald Cromn, Sioux Falls, S. D., sophomore, O'Neill expects a good number of candidates to file for Student Senate. R. L. "Puff" Bailey, Atchison graduate student and temporary elections committee chairman, said Tuesday he was interested that there would be in the new Student Senate. "THERE'S NO REAL rush on Student and day 4 due in a week. a week 4, QNell will The number of student senators is based on an estimate of Future enrollment prepared by the Office of the Registrar. The office expects to have the estimate February 22. The elections for president, vice- president, and class of officials will be held in March 13 and 14. Successor Named Mitchell Quits Post To Lead Campaign WASHINGTON (AP) - John N. Mitchell resigned as attorney general Tuesday to take command of President Nixon's reelection campaign. Nixon quickly named his deputy, Indemnist, deputy attorney general and Mitchell's personal choice, for the cabinet post. Senate liberals promised close questioning of Kleinian, an Arizona conservative, but early indications were that his nomination as the President's top legal adviser would gain Senate confirmation. Mitchell, one of Nixon's closest personal and political advisers, managed his 1968 campaign. His resignation to direct the 1972 effort had been expected for months, apparently was delayed by debate within the administration about his successor. THE PIPE-SMOKING, taciturn Mitchell was reported to have insisted that Kleindienst get the job, while other administration officials feared that his nomination would touch off a Senate donnybrook. Ryun to Return to KU For Olympic Training Jim Ryun is moving his Olympic training camp to Lawrence next week. Ryun told the University Daily Kansas this morning that he was not satisfied with his progress and that he wanted to be moved to Bob Timmons, KU head track coach. "Trimmy has been coaching me by mail and by phone," Ryun said, "but I need to go in." Timmons was enthusiastic about the move. Timmons was Ryun's coach in high school at Wichita East when Ryun went to the Olympics in Tokyo in 1964. He also coached him during his entire career at KU. Between 1964 and 1968, when he went to the Olympics in Mexico City, Ryun set world records that still stand in the mile, 1500 meters and half-mile. "I think it's a great idea," he said. "It will be good for Jim and good for KU." Ryun is expected to arrive in Lawrence on Sunday. He has obtained leave of absence from his employer, Raytheon Industries in Golsta, Calif., until after the graduation in August, if necessary. The Olympic trials are in early July in Eugene, Ore. A year after the Mexico City Olympics, in which he finished second to Kip Keino in the 1500 meters in high attitude, Ryun hung up his spikes for a year to complete his degree program in journalism at KU. He then started training for the Munich Olympics, first in Topeka, then in Eugene, where he encountered allergy problems with Willamette Valley pollen. He moved to California last, August, but his arteries have been spotted. He beat Keno over a mile in slow time but finished sixth in a seven-man mile three weeks later in even slower time. "That's why I'm moving to Lawrence and to Coach Timmons." "I'm not happy with the performance indoors," he said. "I didn't run as well as I thought I would and I need a change in my training program. But the Senate liberals who planned close questioning of Kliendienst at his confirmation hearings, scheduled to begin Feb. 22, said Senate approval was likely The indoor season is over for Ryun. His next race will be March 4 in the Los Angeles Coliseum against Marty Loriqi, America's N. 2. miler. Liquori, Keino and Ryun are expected to meet in the mile at the KU Relays April 22. Sen. James O. Eastland, D-Miss., a conservative who heads the Judiciary Committee which will examine the nomination, said Kleiendt had been a great deputy attorney general and will be a worthy successor to Mitchell. HOWEVER, Sen. Charles Mathias of Maryland, rated among the more liberal Republican senators, told a reporter that he believed he would make a strong fight against the nomination. Perhaps more significantly, Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., one of the more liberal members of the committee, said "If the President says he needs him, the Senate should go ahead without it unless the nominee is made public and there are no moral defects in Richard Kleinstadt." He said he had been told two weeks ago, when the nomination was being predicted, that it would be delayed. As he announced his plans to promote Kleindienst, Nixon also disclosed that he intended to nominate Louis Patrick Gray III, now an assistant attorney general, to the No. 2 Justice Department post being vacated by Kleindienst. Gray, 55, was on Nixon's staff when he was vice-president and later served as executive assistant to Robert Finch, then secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, before joining the Justice Department in December 1970. Kleindienst expressed gratification at his appointment and described Mitchell as "a very wonderful colleague." Mitchell gave Nixon a hand-written letter of resignation Monday, and the President responded Tuesday with a four-paragraph letter saying he accepted his position. He also called the utmost regret—but a regret compensated by a sense of personal and heartfelt gratitude on behalf of myself and all Americans." Controversial City Annex Approved Kansan Staff Writer Rv MARK REDNER Over the heated protests of residents of the area, the Lawrence City Commission voted unanimously Tuesday to annex 1,780 acres of land northwest of the city. In a statement released at the commission meeting the city commissioners said they believed the area should be for the future development of Lawrence. The commissioners said the area was developing rapidly as an industrial park, and the area would be a new Russian Translator at UN Held for Espionage Plot NEW YORK (AP)—A Russian translator at the United Nations was arranged Tuesday on charges of trying to insult the lans of the Navy's new F14 Fighter plane. Valery Ivanovich Markelov, 32, a translator of scientific and technical documents for almost five years, was held in the United States by a bearing for bond reduction Wednesday. Markelov, chunky and of medium height, was arrested by the FBI Monday night at a restaurant where he allegedly received classified documents from an unidentified Grumman Aerospace engineer as an undercover agent for the FBI. The arrangement proceeding was adjourned until Wednesday to a lawyer in Brooklyn. Grumman is building prototypes of the plane. U.N. Secretary-General Kurt suspended without pay pending the outcough of the country. Mar'elov's wife, and 11-year-old daughter were at home in the family's kitchen. They lived in Manhattan's Upper west side, where neighbors described the three as quiet people who minded their own business. About 25 Russian families lived in the hotel. The Soviet citizen, appearing before U. A. Magistrate Max Schifflman in Brooklyn, was arrested on charges of questions until advised by Soviet Consul Leonid V. Scharbakov to cooperate. The FBI announcement said Markelov "presidently requested confidential information" about the FHA and supplied the engineer with a portable copying machine and a 35mm camera to copy documents. Markelov, whose five-year contract with the United Nations was to expire Nov. 13, was said to earn between $10,000 and $24,000 a year. "piecemel." To insure the future development of the area the commission said it was desirable that the land be platted and that other planning for roads, sewer lines and transportation systems come under the control of the city. "We recognize there are many differences of opinion on this subject, but we hope that any decision made by the City Commission will prove to be one of great benefit to the city in the long-range future," the commission said. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said in Washington Markelov had 11 meetings starting in 1970 with the engineer, whom he had to identify, at restaurants in this area. GEORGE ALLEN, attorney for the residents, said the annexation was an unannounced move. He said the commission took the action to annex not properly forewarning the residents. Allen said that as a result many of the residents "would be deprived of their livelihood." "It will be a long time before these people receive any benefit from the city," Allen said. The FBI said that on many occasions, the Russian gave the engineer money which the American then turned over to the FBI. "You annex land for industrial planning now, and you'll have to annex more later to get the land." She said. "Pretty soon this whole area will be one huge urban mess. There will be no place for people to get away from it all. I need that we need to attract more industry." Following Allen's statement many of the residents voiced their protests to the assembly. BOB WOOTEN, another of the area residents, said a decrease in taxes would adjust family income. Johnson Shockley, one of the residents, said the annexation was "one vicious cath- lism." Officials from the Kansas Power ane Light generating plant, which is in the area to be annexed, spoke of the extra power needed by the plant to Lawrence area if the land would be annexed. Purdue read an editorial from the Salina Journal that said the annexation should be paid for by the residents of Lawrence and customers of KPL serves the throughout the state. W. L. Purdue, a vice-president for KPL, said the additional taxes which the company would incur from the annexation would have to be recovered. customers outside the Lawrence area would assess them for the generation of the generation. "The only way we can recover the cost of the additional taxes is through a surcharge on gasoline." AFTER PURDUE finished, Commissioner Nancy Hambleton moved that the motion to annex be approved, with the stipulation that it not be published until December 1973. By delaying the date of publication, and the subsequent first tax payment date, the commissioners were residents and the companies prior to plan. "It constitutes an effort on the part of the commission to make a compromise to the people affected by the annexation." Commissioner Jack Rose said. "It is an attempt to make the move a little more palatable." WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's largest manufacturer of diesel engines, Cummins Engine Co. of Columbus, Ind., already meets proposed federal antipollution standards the effective date of which has been delayed for a year. U.S. Diesel Manufacturer Meets Antipollution Rules When the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) first proposed the standards last fall, Dr. Curranius was asked what he meant by "died," said Dan McConnell of the Indiana firm. "All the known standards for 1973 we've already met," McConnell said. The EPA's deputy administrator, Robert Friit, made no mention of them when he announced last weekend that the agency had made a false start and had become convinced that it should alter the proposed standards. He said it would later announce revised standards for 1974 model heavy duty vehicles. General Motors, the second-largest maker of diesels, "told the government that all of our engines would meet the standards on the day they were implemented," said George Hanley, an engineer on GM's environmental action staff. Hanley said that GM objected, however. to the target date for the regulations to take effect because of coat, manufacturing Cummins makes about 43 per cent of the diesel engines used in over-the-road semitrailer trucks in the United States. General Motors claims about 35 per cent of the markets. When and EPA spokesman was told that Cummins had already met the proposed standards 10 months ahead of schedule he relied, "That's right." But he said there was a "lack of time for some manufacturers to meet the standards" originally proposed to go into diesel fuel for diesel engines beginning about Jan. 1, 1973. The EPA spokesman also said the regulations were only proposed standards. "Until a regulation is promulgated, it doesn't mean anything," he said. EPA proposed nationwide air pollution standards for heavy-duty vehicles for the first time last October to curb emissions of carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides in diesel engines. They will require that new engines, although the standards would be somewhat different because of the differences in the two types of engines. Kansan Photo by RON SCHLOERB City Commission Meets with Opposition to KPL Annexation . . . George Allen, attorney, speaks for residents of disputed area . . . 2 Wednesday, February 16, 1972 University Daily Kansan People . . . . . Places . . . . . Things People: A U.S. magistrate issued a warrant Tuesday on behalf of the Swiss government for the arrest of MRS. CLIFFORD IRVING, whose husband's purported autobiography of Howard Hughes is under investigation. The Swiss have asked for extradition of Mrs. Irving, 36, a German-born Swiss citizen, on charges of bank fraud and passport forgery. U.S. Magistrate Martin Jacobs issued the warrants for Mrs. Irving after a 40-minute session with U.S. and Swiss authorities. Places: SAIGON--U.S. B5 bombers, including some from Guam, resumed the pounding of South Vietnam Tuesday shortly after the end of a 24-hour allied cease-fire for the Tet lunar new year. The United States also launched a bombing mission to smash enemy buildings and prevent ground offensives that could endanger withdrawing American troops, the U.S. Command said. The aerial strikes also appeared to designe the task of the South Vietnamese army. It has neither the resources nor the manpower needed to land jungled areas of the nation's borders with Laos and Cambodia. LONDON- Prime Minister Edward Heath urged Britain's trade union movement Tuesday to end the coal miners' strike that could hurt British industry within two weeks. The powerful Trade Union Council said it had been called because of electric power cuts passed one million. Heath held urgent discussions with TUC General Secretary Victor Feather in an attempt to end the walkout, now in its sixth week. Later, however, the TUC rejected Heath's appeal for the miners to go home, work, and accuse the government of manslaughter the Things: The Senate reversed itself Tuesday and权劝 for enforcement through the courts of the 1964 CIVIL RIGHTS ACT's ban on racial and other discrimination in employment. By a 45-39 vote it adopted an amendment by Sen. Peter H. Dominick, R-Cole, erasing from a body-tested bill authority for the Equal Employment Opportunity Act that requires to issue cease-and-desist orders for the amendment, the EEOC said the measure suits in the federal courts rather than have the power to order employers or labor unions to halt alleged discrimination. Republican members of the KANSAS SENATE endorsed a plan for a major change in financing of public schools. The plan has been under development by a joint legislative committee for several years, with $25 million additional state money into the support of local schools. Welfare Blamed In Fiscal Crisis By BARBARA SPURLOCK Kansan Feature Editor Rising costs of welfare are taking state funds away from other important areas such as higher education, Rep. Morris Kay of Lawrence, majority house of Representatives, said Todd night at a dinner at Gamma Phi Beta sorority. he said state's budget heliated that the budget increased 134 per cent in the last five years, as compared to a 50 per cent increase for higher budget. "I think we'll appropriate more morn- ing time to higher education than the Governor requests," Kay said. He said he would favor a move to redirect priorities of the Kansas budget, welfare and toward administration costs and higher education. KAY SAID some of the money presently used for welfare was not distributed to many administrative He said that many cases money was unfairly distributed He said he was aware of the take control of welfare because welfare recipients needed someone to the local level who would solve problems The 1971 legislature reduced Docking's request for welfare appropriations by $5.5 million. The increase was a $2 million increase over 1970. "Today, financially we're better off at work than we were with Robert Docking has recommended a budget increase of 17% to a $99 million budget. The legislature must approve it." Women's Post Not Yet Filled The position of chancellor's assistant for women's affairs has not yet been filled. Chancellor E. Chalmers Jr. said Tuesday. Although a number of women have been recommended to the chatham schools groups, Chalmers said no active consideration had been given to them and a decision would only be made with the consent of an affirmative action board. Chairmenls the board, which would be part of the affirmative action program, would assist him in preparing a woman for the position. The board would be formed, Chalmerists, as soon as the prospective members could give definite replies according to their personal commitments. Because most of the prospective members would also accept, the board, Chalmerists thought the accept, could be formed very soon. Elizabeth Bates, associate and art history, had been offered a position, but declined because of heavy academic responsibilities. its amendments and approve the budget in March. KAY SAIK Kansas had always contributed proportionately the most money to higher education than any other state legislature in 1971. By 20 years, the 1971 legislature did not raise University faculty salaries by four per cent, Kay said. He said that 1971 was an important year for resume strong support for higher education in 1972. Unemployment in Kansas exceeds the national average, and it must be created every year in the state to keep up with the construction industry. The construction act that would create new jobs is now under consideration, and the act would also improve safety and industry in Kansas. Honeycutt To Stand Trial For Slaying Drury Honeycutt, 25, has been declared competent to stand trial for murder by Frank Gray. County District Court judge. The announcement came Tuesday from the Douglas County attorney's office after Honeycutt was returned Monday he landed in Hospital where he underwent a psychiatric examination. Honeycott is charged with the rape slaying of his 11-year-old niece, Ivy Marie Honeycott, of rural Lawrence, last Oct. 30. No date has been set for the preliminary hearing. Campus Bulletin Robin Morgan, radical feminist editor, will be the keynote speaker at the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Symposium to be held today through Saturday at the University of Missouri at Kansas City. EBSC: 10 a.m. Regional Room. EBSC 2 staff: 10 a.m. 30 a.m. Council Room. Visual Arts: 10:30 a.m. Alcove B. Cafeteria. Morgan, editor of "Sisterhood is Powerful," will join Robert Bennett, Ken Kesey, Russell Sherman and Mark Lipset, Albert Murray, Susan Sohring and Adir Sanders in perspectives on American Culture. Basketball Luncheon: 11:45 a.m., Trophy Room, Allen Field House. Cly Chers: 9:30 a.m. Big Eight Room EBSC: 10 a.m. Regionist Room TODAY Kansas City, Mo. Interviews: 9 a.m. Room 305. Kansas Union. Biological Sciences: noon, English Room. Design: noon, Curry Room. Boon Bloor Canyon Canyon City Clerks: noon. Kansas Ballroom. Russian Table: 12:30 p.m.. Meadowlark Room Caleforte Hallmark Lecture Series: 2:30 p.m. Forum Room. City Clerks: 3 p.m., Parlors A and C and Intensive Room. The symposium is sponsored by the All Students Association at UMKC. CSW Summer Jobs Open House: 1 p.m. dean of women's office. SIMS Lectures: 3:30 p.m. Council Room. Catholic Students: 4 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. International Room. EICC: 3 p.m., Regionalist Room. Morgan will open the symposium tonight. She is to be followed Thursday afternoon by a guest of honor, Kesey, Rirk and Murray. Catholic Students: 4 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. Candlin Award Dinner: 6 p.m., Watkins Inn. Room. Hilmi Delta Kappa: 6:30 p.m., Centennial Hall dean of women's office Hallmark Lecture Series: 2:30 p.m. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate Tuesday ratified the Seabed Arms Control Treaty which is intended to ban the placing of nuclear weapons on the ocean floor. SIMS Lecture: 6:30 p.m., Room 10. Theta Sigma Phi: 7 p.m., Pine Room. National Environmental Law: 7 p.m. Governers Room. Republicans: 7 p.m. Oread Room. Student Senate: 7 p.m. Big Eight Room. Carlillen Recallt: 7 p.m. A new feature: SIMS starware : 8 p.m. Forum Room. Cham band Music series : 9 p.m., Swanky闹房. Robin Morgan to Speak at UMKC The vote was 83 to 0. SUA Classical Films: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. Nuclear Weapons Treaty For Ocean Floor Ratified Classical Film: 9:15 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. Friday afternoon Bennett, former director of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Lipset, former secretary of state, will speak, followed by Lerner the colonist and professor of American civilization at Brandeis University, will summarize his observations of American history. Sontag, literary critic and novelist, will present "the conversation" and "Styles of Radical Will," will discuss the history of literary circles sunday night. An open forum with Kesey, Sanders and the general public is tentatively scheduled for Saturday morning. Sanders, organizer of "The Fugs" rock group, will perform Saturday evening with recording One in a decade-long series of arms control documents, the seabed treaty exempts nuclear missile-firing submarines and other vessels which may propel them to highly resting places on the seabed. Nations signing the treaty have free emplacement zones in coastal waters out to 12 miles from coasts with uncontested emplacement of nuclear mines, for example Red China and France have not signed the treaty. A Pentagon representative said in hearings on the treaty that "we have no plans for doing what the treaty would forbid." The Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman, Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ak, said his support for the treaty is based on his belief that a will do no harm, rather than a feeling that it accomplishes much." The truly significant arms- agreement at the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks between the United States and the Soviet Union. President Nixon urged approval of the treaty saying that it should be applied in earth, and that frontier should be the source of promise. This treaty represents a practical and important step in protecting this new environment. Coup Reported In Ecuador QUITO, Ecuador (AP)—President Juan Maria Vanilla Ibarra was overthrown in a military attack on the university, unofficial sources reported. They said the coup was led by Gen. Guelmoro Rigordo Laza, the army commander, with the aid of other military leaders. It would be the fourth time Velasco Ibarra, 79, has been overthrown. He has been elected president five times. MEN'S BOOT CLEARANCE Acme Dingo and Pedwin Harness, Western and Fashion Boots. Were $27 to $35. $18.90 K One Group of Acme Ranch Wellington Boots. Blacks, Browns, and Tan. Were to $27. $12.90 stars from New York. vivities will be held in Pierson Hall in the UMKC Student Center. Series tickets cost $8 and series discount —labors for students. McCoy shoes B13 Mass. St. VI 3-2091 D The symposium format was developed four years ago by the All Student Association and is now an annual event. All ac- DEMONSTRATE REAL LOVE AND CONCIER FOR GOD AND MAIN, JOIN US IN OUR STRUGGE AND AGAINST HUNGER, DISEASE, POVERTY AND IGNORANCE, AS WE SEEK TO BRIENG THE JUSTICE, FREEDOM AND PEACE OF CHRIST TO WORK WITH THE TASK OF THE DIVINE WORD MISSIONARY PRIEST AND BROTHER. TO KNOW MORE ABOUT US, WRITE: P.R.VOLDENG **FATHER TOM STREVILLEY, SVD** WITH THE HOME OF IWAMI YOSHINO *EPWORTH, IOWA* 52045 *ZUCKER, IOWA* 52045 Include pts., address, ptc. P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. CUSTOM JEWELRY WE WILL WORK FROM YOUR OWN DESIGN, OR CREATE A DESIGN FOR YOU WEDDING ★ ALL TYPES OF RINGS JEWELRY WILL FOXX Wednesday & Thursday Nights Wednesday Only Pitchers ... 75ᵃ Girls . . . . . . . . 75c Guys . . . . . . . . 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THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS $ ^{*} $ TIRES master charge the international tech 3 WAYS TO CHARGE master charge the maximum load ABOVE BANK CREDIT CARDS HONORED AT GOODYear SERVICE STORES AND MOST GOODYEAR DEALERS Use Our Burial Check sheet to demand for Goodwill time, we need to help you get your burial date happy to order your size at life. you a railway check for future die- seds. 814 W 23rd GREGG TIRE CO. 842-5451 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 16, 1972 3 Campus Briefs Harvard Prof Thursday Seymour M. Lipset, professor of government and sociology at Harvard University, will speak Thursday at 8 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium on the "Intellectual as Critic and Rebel." Lipset, a specialist in the study of politics and political systems, was the 1902 recipient of the McLiver Award from the American Sociological Association for his book "Politics in Politics." In 1971 he received the Gunnar Mydal Award for his book "The Politics of Unreason," and is currently working on a Guggenheim Fellowship to study the political role of intellectuals. German Institute Tonight There will be a meeting for applicants for the 1972 German Summer Language Institute at Euting and Holdkirk with the 1973 German University Language Institute. Sigma Delta Chi, professiona! journalism society, will meet informally at 8 p.m. Thursday in 409 D Jayhawter Towers to elect a new vice-president and discuss plans for the regional convention. Sigma Delta Chi Nicanor Zabaleet, harpist, will perform at 8 toon in Swarthout Recital Hall. Rosetti's "Sonta for Harp," Bacarise's "Partita in C Major" and "Concerto in C Major" by Vivald and Bach are among the selections Zabaleet will play. Harp Concert Tonight Transcendental Meditation There will be a meeting of the Students International Meditation Society at 8 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kauaian Union. David Katz, a visiting lecturer and teacher of transcendental mediation, its Practical Meditation, its Practical Value in the University Community." To Honor Students Wh Have Served The University Or The Community, The 1972 Community Service SCHOLARSHIP AWARD will be presented by STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES For information on your eligibility, and applications come to the SUA Office Main Floor, Union APPLICATIONS DUE MARCH 3,1972 INTERESTED IN LIVING IN A CREATIVE ARTS CENTER? If so you are invited to attend a meeting on Wednesday, February 16 at 7 p.m. in the Hashinger Hall Lounge. The meeting is to discuss your input and suggestions for the programs and facilities that could be available at next year's Creative Arts Center - Hashinger Hall. Sponsored By ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY RESIDENCE HALLS The Children's Hour Headstart program is looking for used clothing for the children who attend the Headstart pre-school. Play clothes in sizes to fit children three to five years old are needed, according to Bobbie J. Nickels, director of the pre-school. Headstart Program Wants Clothing for Youngsters SALLY MORGAN Kansan Staff Writer Nicolais said anyone with clothing to give should bring the pre-school in Jeolla Hall, 153 Oht. clothes have been collected yet. The Headstart pre-school, funded by the United Fund, has been in operation six years but is now in a new location since 1989. Before 1969 the school was in the Ballard University Center in north Lawrence. The play clothes the pre-school now has were obtained when the Headstart program began six years old and wilted, Nickels said. The pre-school holds classes from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. for 62 children. The morning classes, 9 Results Expected Today In KU Presidential Poll The counting is about half done in the presidential preference election last week by Student Vote, Ma. Max Jia, Emporiaemia, said Tuesday. Bedner, chairman of Student Decision Center, declines to release any vote tallies until the count is complete. Bedner expects to release the votes. Bedner also said Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., was committed for an afternoon speech April 7 at KU. Allard Lowenstein, leader of the 1867-68 Dump Johnson and former New York congressman, has made a tentative commitment to speak April 5 at KU. The poll asked students which of 13 candidates they supported and where they were registered and where they were planning to register and whether they were in working for their candidate. The poll was taken Feb. 7-9 in all University residence halls and Naismith Hall. CHICAGO (AP)—The noise and potentials more damaging to hearing that from most rock'n'roll groups, two Michigan MAUDE LOVES LIFE . . She's 81. HAROLD LOVES MAUDE ... He's 18. Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort are HAROLD and MAUDE Eve. Shows 7:30 & 9:30 Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. MGM RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN YVETTE CHAMBERLAIN MIMIELUX JOY IN THE MORNING Granada THEATRE ... El Paso 813-5742 Sal & Sun. Show Times 3:00, 5:00, 7:30, 9:30 Twilight hr. Admin. $1.00 & $0.50 from Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V3-1065 AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL... Now Thru Tues. The Hillcrest A campsite for sore eyes CARRY ON CAMPING R In COLOR MIDLAND Eve. 7:35 8:15 Adult 1.50 Ma1. Sat. Sun. 7:30 & 4:10 Ma2. Sun. 8:15 & 4:10 Ensure 1.50 Shoes Paul Lee Newman Marvin "Pocket Money" GP Hillcrest Now Thru Tues EVE. 7:20 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. 5:20; 2:10 & 4:00 Twilight Prices Good For 4:00 Show Only MAN SHOULD MEET A FREE-FLYING STEWARDESS once in his lifetime. Fly girls who know what to do for or to a man. "Unfettered Sexual Utopia." Stewardess whose job makes it easy for her to try out men of many nations FRENCH Swedeish Fly Girls actor BIRTE TOVE • SUSAN HURLEY • INGER STENDER • DANIEL GELIN and the AIR HOSTEBES FROM COPENHAGEN a. m. to 12:30 p.m. are open only to children three to five years old in the second-term class meets from 1 a.m. 3 p.m. and is open to pre-age education. NOW THRU TUES. The Hillcrest EVE, 7:30 & 8:20 ADULT $1.50 TWILIGHT Prices Good For 4:05 Show Only In addition to children's clothing, Nichols said the preschool needed volunteers to work during the noon hour—to give the children a break. She invited all interested persons to contact the pre-school. The Headstart pre-school was begun because studies showed children of low income families tend to be less active time in school, according to Nickels. She said the purpose of the school was to help prepare the children for kindergarten, then them to do better in school. Nickols said the Headstart program in Lawrence worked with parents to help them get employment for parents and to encourage interested family members. Honors Won By Debaters Third place in the tournament was won by the team of Tom Darby, Leawood sophomore and Ron Reigel, Wichita freshman. The fourth place was taken by Bill Webster, Leawood freshman, and Todd Hunter, Oklahoma City, Okla. freshman. Four University of Kansas debaters won awards last weekend at the Northeast Oklahoma State College debate About 50 teams competed in the event. CALL: 864-4441 864-4350 864-3552 DO YOU NEED CHILD CARE? WE NEED TO KNOW WHO YOU ARE, HOW MANY CHILDREN YOU HAVE, WHEN AND HOW YOUR NEEDS CAN BE MET. FEBRUARY SISTERS Bibb A great go anywhere shoe—ROBIN BY FAMOLARE. It has a super tough crepe sole and comes in a variety of colors to fit any mood or wardrobe you have. Give a pair a try! In navy, brown, red, rust and white suede, or brown leather. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street EUROPE BY TRAIN? An unbelievable new product: STUDENT-RAILPASS Two whole months of unlimited rail travel throughout thirteen European countries for $130.00!! Our brand-new Student-Railpass gives you all that Second Class rail travel on the over 100,000 mile railroad systems of Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, and also Switzerland.+ You'll discover that there's really very little second class about it. You can sleep in a Couchette for only $4.50 a night, if you prefer, and eat in the inexpensive cafeteria-type Dining Cars. STUDENT-RAILPASS THE way to see Europe Attend SUA Travel Forum for Complete Details Thursday, February 17 Council Room, Kansas Union. Available at no extra cost to you! Maupintour travel service TELEPHONE 843-1211 190 Massachusetts The Malls shopping Center Mall of America Hilton Street shopping Center Kansas City Uni Building 4 Wednesday, February 16, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Trampling the Law I see gangsters and hoodlums loose in America. They take the body of the law, twisting and manipulating the particular cause or political philosophy. Their crimes are not committed at gun point in dark alleys but in the cold neon light of conference rooms and offices. A car far from hovering police helicopters. The recent attack on a Kansan photographer by a group of February Sisters was such gangsterism—the work of hoodlums—and puts them in league with others ostensibly but hypocritically committed to human rights. Such an incident reveals the philosophical bankruptcy of such groups—who profess individual freedom as long as it does not conflict with their vested interests. Americans in particular seem to suffer from this malady - selective gangsterism. Mayor Richard Daley loosed his police force on innocent bystanders - often in blatant disregard of law - defended the law. John Mitchell, sworn to protect this nation's laws, illegally arrested and detained thousands of protesters in Washington last spring. Richard Nixon, a strong proponent of law and order, fights an illegal war in Southeast Asia. Vern Miller used the law—yours and mine—as a personal tool attempting to close the Gaslight Tavern. The residents of Ellsworth Hall saw their rights bypassed by a group of administrators—who claimed "special circumstances" allowed them to deny what they could not deny. The University administration oversaw how brake the University's laws—and refrain to recognize the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front—deciding it seems, that the Constitution does not apply to homosexuals. 2 Sadly, the list could go on and on. The February Sisters et al. demand, by right of cause, a franchise on the law. Richard Nixon tells me Americans no longer respect the law. He is right. It is the demagogues—Nixon, Mitchell, the February Sisters, though, that have eroded faith in the law. Criminals of this sort have made the law a dirty word, hated and despised by many who need its protection most. The law is part of our national heritage—designed to protect human rights—and now tragically rubbed in the filth of hypocrisy. And Richard Nixon and the February Sisters demand their right —Thomas E. Slaughter Readers Respond CAMPAIGN SPENDING "REFORM" CONGRESS ADMINISTRATION "Although the monster is still at large, we have fearlessly belled the fateat" Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 508 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation. Students must provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty members must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address. Letters Policy War, Wills, Women, Woes... Vietnam Myth To the Editor: Byron Edmondson, your response to my letter to the editor provides a good illustration of how the myth about a trade of an army was turned into a release of prisoners of war developed. You have chosen a few phrases out of context from the first point of the Provisional Army's operation July 1, 1971, seven-point peace proposal in an attempt to support your point of view. In order to understand the sentence from which it is first necessary to read the two sentences which precede it. The first of these two sentences requires that the United States surrender unconditionally. "The United States will end its war of aggression in Viet Nam, stop the policy of 'Vietnamization' of the war, withdraw from South Vietnam and dismantle all U.S. weapons, weapons, and war materials of the United States and of the other foreign countries in the U. S. camp, and dismantle all U.S. weapons." WITHOUT POSING ANY CONDITIONS WHATSOEVER (emphasis added). "Not only would acceptance of this position be a defeat for the President but it might also cause the South Vietnamese army to use military action to waken from the S. forces whatever was material need or want. The South Vietnamese army is in a far better position to inflict heavy casualties on U. S. forces than on Gurkha forces or the North Vietnamese Army." The second sentence reinforces the tone set by the first, framing it as a more persuasive MUST (emphasis added) set a terminal date for with- Now we come to the sentence from which you quote. This sentence tells what the PEG will accept, and it accepts their demands. It appears to be an attempt to conciliate so that the tone set in the preceding sentences will be appropriate. The document sets a terminal date for the withdrawal. the parties will at the same time agree, on "not simply a release of American goods" instead on "the modalities." "B. Of the release of the teo parties and the civilis captured in the war (including American pilots captured in North Viet In other words after the withdrawal date has been announced agreement on how it to be done and on how military and civilian prisoners are to be released. In "discuss" actually once the United States sets a deadline for troop withdrawal there will be no unconditionally unsettled issues anything, especially since the United States will seemly have already unconditionally captured in the because might be problems in securing the release of the "civilians captured in the because might be held in South Vietnamese government and not by the United States. American plots of mention of "American plots of mention of North Viet Nam" introduces an ambiguity about the release of all prisoner in Southeast Asia. "A. Of the withdrawal in safety from South Vietnam of the totality of U. S. forces . . . Columnist —Kenneth B. Lucas, Hutchinson Graduate Student To the Editor: We had chosen not to write a criticism of Garry Wills' column *War in the somewhat optimistic hope that those old enough to read the February Kansas would be able to attempt at humor or simply ignore it. Now, however, the author has printed a letter that, of all things, praises the column for exactly those qualities that it is most Since the Wills column considers a number of points separately, we shall examine it in the same format. Despite an occasional worthwhile column, Wills' work is generally of low quality, full of misinformation, analyses and obviously not the work of a first rate mind. He reacts to issues emotionally and an adequate attempt to analyze the situation he is discussing. from United States withdraws from South Vietnam by six months after agreement. Wills that have been made to troops will be withdrawn only from South Vietnam. Since the United States had no troops in the war, it immediately difficult to withdraw them. It is a moot point as to whether the United States has had any U.S. forces there certainly it does not have many. In any case, how could the presence of U.S. troops in those countries maintain goal withdrawal? Villain mastery within their own house "unless Wills believes that these two unhappy houses" includes those two unhappy 2. Return of captured soldiers and civilians. Willis objects to this giving up its bargaining point. Since the United States and the South will be taking the same bargaining point, we should bargain points as well, and the balance will remain the same. 3. New and free elections: Here We attempt to confuse the reader with the idea that his discussion of this point say anything about the elections. His only point against free elections is that they are not rigged it. He believes this despite the fact that Thieu would resign before the election, the election would be independent, and the dependent group representing all political forces in South Vietnam N.L.F., and the election would be international supervision 4. Retreat is a most point whether it was the Geneva accords or the non-compliance with their provisions 5. No foreign interference—hence withdrawal of Hani's troops; Wills says Hani claims South Vietnam is not a foreign nation. However, Hani holds that the government and revolutionary government and thus implicitly acknowledges the South's independence. 7. International supervision of the withdrawal: Wills has two objections to this point. First, he suggests that no nation may if there are no nations neutral in respect to Vietnam, then what is wrong with the withdrawal? Second, Indochina, which consists of Poland, India, and Canada* Only 6. General cease fire: Wills makes the same objection as he did to point five. the most dogmatic anti- American would accuse even Canada of being a U. uppet politically. The second objection is that the terms Nixon used are subjunctive interpretations. Mr. Wills does not seem to realize that Nixon's peace plan is a proposal for negotiations and that definitions were outed during those negotiations. 8. International supervision of Indochina's future. Again Mr. Williams wrote to Leigh "leave the Vietnamese masters of their own house." Here Wills is at his worst, distorting the U.S. view of Vietnam and thus this nature can not be mere misunderstanding of the situation but must be malice aforethought. He made a "a major reconstruction program throughout Indochina, including North Vietnam." In the next section he writes, "a means, $7.5 billion to Indochina with $2.5 billion of that to North Vietnam. That's an attack on them," the mastery of their own house? Wills concludes his columb by saying that the speech sounded even better than it did in Washington. Rather, it was the Wills column and the Pritchard letter in praise of George Johnston, Alexandria. Minn. senior -Kent Wilson, Prairie Village, Kans. senior swing back: "the criticism of Hoover is merely a matter of his age—no case has been made that Hoover should not do some people their best work at advanced ages—justice Holmes opinions then, and I was able to bring Admiral Hyman Rickover seemed to be over." Fuller on Sex So Jackson has come full circle—from mandatory retiree to public producer in public life—and, along the way, his casually said that no other charge has been incurred by him. Age, actually, of course, he is Garry Wills To the Editor: Thinking Man's Wallace ORLANDO, FLA. — It is hard to be the thinking man's Wallace. Senator Henry "Scoop9" Jackson is proving that as he was raising his daughter, Wallace issues when sanitizing them of the Wallace personality. This involves, one need not say, considerable waffling. Take the issue of law and order. Jackson "No," he answered, "I don't think that's a goal (of the election). One cannot go for the Wallace people and criticize one of them on the other hand, one cannot be thinking man's anything and side with Hoover; so he had to waffle. "I think it should be a policy in future — in fact, not only a policy that would be mandatory at a certain age." Does that sound like an implicit criticism of Howe for hanging someone with usefulness? Then it is time to use Considering ecology, overpopulation, women's liberation and the February Sisters, one of the minimaides of kuckmaster Fulcher who has undergone an order of change. Comparing the average size of the early American family of pioneer days, the same effect of a pliotation of women, with today and our improved life expectancy. Fuller's sees mixed clothing trends, the amount of new shirts she wears, the increasing female nakedness all as "nature supplying a negative urge that diminishes our capacity to make babies." Fuller says, "We're not surprised to see women getting naked, because the more naked they are, the more they tend to discourage the sex urge. But man's insultable curiosity "Few people," says Wills, "like Periba who is well-wisdomed. Perhaps it's just as well, judging from some of the other things Wills has to say about Senator Periba." 1954-02-06 spouts his little bits of personal things this topic on busing, and wails at the crowds. crowds Wallace is attracting to cheer both crime and buses off But then he was asked if he would join teammates in replace J. Edgar Hoover, or whether that should be a goal of the Party running quietly criticized, even on the guardian's image rather than on a country for failure to cooperate with the local law enforcement official. So Jackson was asked what he thought of Hoover's publicly charging Daniel Berrigan of a crime for which, as it turned out, he had been an official. "Well, 'I' am a prosecutor, and anyone who is would be in trouble if, every time a case is dropped, . . . men, impute the crime," he said to the wild Hoover charge (which named an organization not involved at all in the acts alleged) was perfectly justified? Not quite. "The Berrigan case was handled," that's an understatement." Not only an understatement, but a wishy-wishy statement perfectly attuned to Jackson's dewrapped and droopy-ided skirts taken over 500 billboard vacations by a sun-tan lotion to proclaim "Scoop For President." The only trouble is that few people know what or who a Scoop is. (The sounds like an ice cream cake.) When he was asked, here, for the difference between himself and Wallace, Jackson answered: "I'm a Democrat. I never put my foot in the door to keep people off my side." His foot in the bus door, Only it is a pussyfoot, not Wallace's firmer tread. Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate By Sokoloff Griff and the Unicorn POOR LITTLE BIRD HAS TO STAY IN CAGE POOR LITTLE BIRD HAS TO STAY IN CAGE I OPEN YOUR DOOR, BIRD, FLY! FLY TO FREEDOM! I HAD A NICE SECURE HOME, BIRDSEED TWICE A DAY NOW I'VE GOTTA GO LOOK FOR WORMS THANKS FOR NOTHING!! I therefore must call upon the University to initiate a most logical and most desperately important step in the births, the complete integration of the sexes. I must ask for compulsory, integration in the abolition of separate restrooms, the abolition of separate physical classrooms, the abolition of separate locker rooms and facilities, the opening of integrated nude swimming classes, theClasses during summer session, the institution of a program to take nudity out of the classroom and women's liberation will be achieved through wiping out all differences of the sexes. —Charles Kenneth Novo-Gradac, Bonner Springs senior "Copyright 1972. David Sokoloff." Language To the Editor: It has come to our attention that the University is questioning the validity of the foreign language requirements toward a new program, which appears to be incongruous that such a controversy over this requirement occurs at this same point in history in which students have been crying for the need to educate the whole person. We personally feel that a lowering of the language requirement would add another stumbling block in the process of admitting students to the individual and his acculturation into society—a process which, for many of us, takes a new direction as a result of the opportunities it provides in the requirements at the university. We have long known that it is imminently desirable that any person who represents the United States of America in any official or commercial capacity should work with whom he or she is living and working. Still, every day in the past one thousand or so days of our living in Germany, we have been continual witness to arrogant Americans who refuse to help their German hosts. We have watched countless misunderstandings take place because we do not understand a basic German vocabulary—Americans who have lived as a guest in this country, who are high-ranking officers in the U.S. military, and some supervise German citizens. Perishers years ago we "go by" with such arrogance, but we are definitely aware of the economic tables are turned, and the American living in Europe today is discovering with swift enthusiasm their makes a few rules of his own. It is an enigma to our European friends that Americans have a desire to visit and experience any part of Europe without a country in their own country which they hope to discover. Small wonder! It is not unusual for a German family to study Italian twice weekly for themselves, so themselves the pleasure of vacation at an Italian beach only a day's drive away. This self-imposed language study is, of course, in addition to the already requirements set by the schools. However, our main purpose of writing is not to ask that our College Assembly keep the American image abroad. We save the American image abroad. We ask that this requirement remain because required exposure to another country will help us to look at our own domestic possibilities and problems with new perspective. Some of the most meaningful experiences in foreign languages are understanding of one's culture come through this language study. A foreign language conference covering the entire person. Here it seems it's not casual dropped! Dr. and Mrs. Howard G. Johnson. III (Patricia Edmonds, BME '62, KU) Jayhawker To the Editor: I wish to clarify the article concerning the Jayhawker which appeared in Monday's edition of the UDK. The winter edition of the Jayhawker is in fact late, but the Jayhawker was in approximately four and a half weeks. I was quoted incorrectly as saying the delay was caused by the printers. This is not true—the fault is mine, and I apologize for the number of things which occurred that I did not anticipate. A second important factor occurs when the material contained within the yearbook. If there are areas which occluded the material, I would be a tool sacrifice quality to meet a schedule set down in September. Finally, I want to encourage students to offer any suggestions or ideas for what they would like to have in their yearbook. Our office is in the Union Building, and daily from 11.30 a.m. to 5 p.m. —Rick McKernan, Goodland Junior, Jayhawker Editor Dean Taylor To the Editor: Certain instances have occurred throughout the process of hiring and assigning new Hall Students and the Housing Board of the Administration that have given the impression to the management that the buddman Office holds some sort of hard feelings or has a personal vendetta against her. Nothing can be said. We wish to officially set aside all conjecture, tumor or false evidence, and source, and reiterate that the Ombudsman Office feels that Dean Taylor has been very diligent throughout this dilemma. It would be unfortunate if the effectiveness of our office in dealing with the Dean of Women is now been jeopardized in any way. David Dysart, Lawrence 3rd year Law Student THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper Published at the University of Kansas during the academic year except for the Spring 2015 semester, a second class course paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60444. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily indicative of the University's policies. Editor NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . Mel Adams Chip Crews Business Adviser . Mel Adams Business Manager Carol Young University Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 16. 1972 5 n, we eyed, we eyed to refuse have unin-sun-ism who who who opean leave a see any but a out a cope toope to is not only to only foritting of both only selfs is,of readyy y the cause of ooze of the pond to the pond and this is cause this ornamental domestic ooze with of the pond with cakes in cakes in vrence tent By LINDA SCHILD New York, Class Writer Conference Examines College Transition BY LINDSCHIES Kansan Staff Writer Freshmen will have the opportunity to discuss the strong points and deficiencies of their high school training with their former principals and guidance counselors during a Counselor-Freshman Conference at the University of Kansas on February 21st. The traditional meetings between KU freshmen and their former high school faculty will be supplemented this year with a new teacher in the classroom between high school instructors in English, speech and drama, foreign languages and sports, with their KU counterparts. JOHN MYERS, director of school relations, is organizing the new facet of the conference involving high school and KU faculty discussions "The fact that the conference will be on Washington's birthday this year prompted us to invite classroom teachers to come," he said. Because of the national holiday they will have the time to come. "This conference serves as the one point of the year when all three constituents, students, high school faculty and KU professors. can get together to talk about the issues involved in transition from high school to college. "An amazing amount of communicating goes on at this conference, and it has been very stressful in the past," Myers said. CO-CHAIRMAN OF THE conference marshal accused and charged with assault and directors of administrations, estimated Tuesday that 1200 The KU Reclamation Center has its second year of funding from the state to support spring arrivals the center will have difficulties keeping up with traffic and staff. Kris Chetzel, operator of the center, said it had been too cold recently to work below untreated Memorial Stadium. Ketzel said it was warm before afternoon because of warm weather and that it would be open at irregular times to take advantage of good weather. Regular hours for the center are noon until 6 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays. Can Reclamation Slows The center lost $1,450.73 during the last six months of 1971. It had expenses that totaled $2,942.58 and $6,598.83 of which was sale of crushed glass and metal. KETZEL SAID the center's pickup service had suffered during semester break because many students along the route were out of town and because it cold to work part of the time. By HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writer He said the route included mostly dorms and apartment complexes although the center was one of the few. He Lawrence elementary school. The day-long conference will open with an address by Chancellor L. Laurence Jr. at 8:45 a.m. in the Kansas Union. "Real good," was Ketzel's opinion of the community's association during a massacration during the past year. "That's where we get most of our cans and bottles, from people who go out to the stadium on their own." DURING THE MORNING, the high school teachers in the four fiefs corresponding departments will discuss student needs and problems at Kansas secondary schools and at KU knos of improving college education. Ketzel said the center had given up trying to pick up bottles because the bars would not remove paper from bottles and that containers often had crested backs on them. The center sorts bottles and cans brought to it, but Ketzel said paper must be removed before the caps are removed. Ketzel said many Lawrence residents enthusiastically supported the center, and he mentioned one man who decided not to walk when his neighbors refused to trash to the reclamation center. Faculty members will join the principals and counselors in information sessions concerning KU academic and minority financial aid, occupational counseling and housing. Previously held in late December, the conference has been changed to the spring semester so that freshmen can take courses in the same semester's work at KU. Griffin said that the change should enable freshmen to give their former teachers a more accurate curriculum well their high school courses open for KU curriculum. Afterternoon sessions from 2 to 5 p.m. are reserved for meetings and information regarding specific assignments for the meetings will be available on Monday in the Room of the Union, Merris said. Griffin expects 285 high school counselors, principals and administrators to attend the conference. He said that about 30 of his faculty would work with students. Ketzel said the man, with the kettle in his hand, his own pickup service that goes to every house on his block and the trash for the reclamation house. Freshmen who wish to participate will be excused from their classes at that time, Myers The KU Reclamation Center was started Jan. 13, 1971, and is now a permanent operation of the University Union and the Student Senate. said. No registration is necessary. KETZEL, FOUR other part-time workers and a pickup man work at the center and draw money. The pickup man has lost money since it began but could break even with greater support. STUDENTS MAY contact office of Admissions, 128 Strong Hall, to find out if their former high school plans to participate. The Office of School Relations is currently planning other activities of interest to freshmen Working with class officers and members of the freshman class, Myers is organizing three weekends in April during which high school students will have a visit KU and talk to students here. The Office of School Relations The Summer orientation programs for prospective KU students, a practice that was discontinued "These weekends should be informal and informational," Myrs said. WIN WIN WIN. WIN WIN WIN WIN. $100 Yes, Now You Can Win $100 --just for designing a 3-Color POSTER! just turn your friend's onto your first equipment, they'll thank you for it. You can quote outrageously low prices on every major brand. I will want the Finest equipment, you need our warehouse buying volume has made our prices the country's lowest. We pass the savings on to you. 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It's for the Concert Course April 15 Call Fine Arts Office or Information 4-3421 Just turn your friends ANY STUDENT CAN ENTER for 1972- 1973 KILLER On Warner Brothers Records ALICE COOPER reg. $5.98 $3.67 at KIEF'S also available on 8 frack stereo tapes Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Discount Diamond Needles QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET FURNITURE ESTATE GOODS ANTIQUES & COLLECTABLES BARGAINS PICK-UP & DELIVERY DISHES & GLASSWARE 40 Stores Under One Roof! 811 New Hampshire 841-3082 1972 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION On March 15 and 16, new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973, 1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected. To Become a candidate: Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Thursday, February 17. In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate. A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OFFICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date. For Further Information: Call 864-3710 6 Wednesday, February 16, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAS 25 LEAGUES 12 15 Kansas Staff Photo by GREG SOBREE Aubrey Nash Looks for Help Against Lon Krug Aubrey Nash Looks for Help Against Lon Kruger ETFJ was most unusual hackup in Abarn Tuesday 'Hawk Freshmen Squeeze by KSU By BRAD AVERY Kansan Sports Writer MANHATTAN—The University of Kansas freshman team squeezed by the K-State Wildkittens, 65-64, to win their 10th straight game of the season Tues. at K-State. The team won K-State's Ahegan Field House KL never could break away in the first half K-State matched the Hawks bucket for bucket, mostly because the Wiltkens had to keep a 60-80 KC center Rick Suttle away from the back. That enabled K-State to hold the 'Hawks to a 34-34 tie at the half and Suttle was able to grab only two rebounds. "K-State did a really excellent job of screening Rick off in the first hall," said freshman coach Bob Frederick. "They went to a defense, and consequently, we were standing around too much." WHILE SUTTLE and his mates remained cold, K-State forward Duger Snider popped in 20 points, on 14-foot jump shots over Suttle. But Kansas regained the lead. 62,46 and with 3:01 left, the Hawks went to the stall. It drained a minute and a half of the clock, but KU forward Smith lost the ball with 1:32 left. However, the second-half was another story. KU forged a 10-point lead on a turn-around jump shot by Sutlie. but K-State would quit and managed to tie all nine minutes to play. 54-14 KState proceeded to lose the ball on a turnover and KU guard Marshall Rogers was fouled with 30 seconds left. HE SANK one free throw in a one-and-one situation, but Snider came back with a 10-footer to bring K-State within one. 63-62. However, Rogers made both ends of a one-and-one on the ensuing trip down the floor. K-State's Andy Kussery sank a last dive to Wildcats and brought to a close the hard fought freshman victory. "We were really pleased to win this one, of course, and I was especially pleased with the way they handed themselves under pressure from the K-State crowd. This experience should help them when they play as sophomores on the road," said Frederick. | | | | | | pf | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Fideldee | 6-12 | 3-6 | 1-4 | 3 | 15 | | Smith | 6-12 | 3-6 | 1-4 | 3 | 15 | | Reagan | 5-15 | 9-13 | 4 | 1 | 19 | | Rosen | 5-15 | 9-13 | 4 | 1 | 19 | | Roy | 5-15 | 9-13 | 4 | 1 | 19 | | Total | 25-52 | 32-35 | 32 | 15 | 90 | | | 7f-ga | 7f-fa | rb | pb | tp | 2 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Wensel | kg-na | f-ta | fa | bf | tp | 2 | | Kunstner | kx-ay | f-ta | fa | bf | tp | 2 | | Meyer | ky-ar | f-ta | fa | bf | tp | 3 | | Rodhmann | ks-ag | f-ta | fa | bf | tp | 15 | | Snider | 11-15 | 5-6 | 6 | 1 | 13 | 8 | | Snider | 11-25 | 5-6 | 6 | 1 | 13 | 8 | | Joy | 11-25 | 9-10 | 6 | 1 | 12 | 4 | | Joy | 1-1 | 9-2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | | Joy | 1-5 | 9-2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | | Total | 23-56 | 1-2 | 84 | 32 | 12 | 64 | Kansas 34 31 - 65 K-State 34 30 - 64 A----12.500. Another Prep Files for KU Terry McCray, a 5-11, 160-pound high school senior from Excelsior Springs. Mo., has signed a Big Eight letter of intent with the University of Kansas, and Don Bamphour said Tuesday. McCrary, an offensive and defensive back, is the 21st high school senior to sign with KU. 42 Big 8 Standings Bud Stallworth Attempts Shot Kevin Kunny (4) kept Bud's percentage low . . . Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBEI League Overall W L W L Missouri 7 2 2 1 KState 6 2 12 8 Nebraska 6 12 8 Oklahoma 5 3 10 10 Kansas 5 4 10 12 State 4 7 10 12 Colorado 2 6 12 10 Okla. St. 1 8 3 18 Games Saturday MANHATTAN—All is not lost for the University of Kansas basketball team, even though the 78-66 loss to Kansas State Tuesday night put the Jayhawks in a spoiler's role in the Big Eight. COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP)—John Hancock and his team Missouri to an 86-45 victory over Nebraska to give the Tigers sole possession of first place in Big Game in a rematch. By BOB SIMISON Korean Sports Writer Mizzou Rips NU, 80-65, Grabs Lead KU Loses to Cats Brown scored 32 points and pulled down 15 rebounds as the Tigers ran their conference mark to 7-2 and 18-3 over. The 18 was the most ever recorded by a Missouri basketball team. The defeat was KU's fourth in conference play. Missouri's victory over Nebraska Tuesday put the Titans in control with a 7-4 league record. KU is fifth at 5-4 (6-3) and sixth at 6-3 (6-3) and Oklahoma (5-3). "As far as what we can do, race," sophomore guard Todd Manning says game, "we're out of it. But as far as possibilities, we are not out of Missouri quickly jumped out to a 7-0 lead while its air-tight defense held Nebraska scoreless the first three minutes. "If the Big Eight continues to be as tough to win on the road, I can tell you. It will not. I can tell what will happen. I don't think it will make a difference out of it." "We figure that we’re bound to win one on the road sometime," Kivisto said. "All our games on the road have been close, and we’re capable of winning away." We could imagine this thing around sometime. With the score 50-40 Missouri, Brown scored five of six points to give the Tigers their largest margin with i) 35 left. 56-40. Missouri was successful on 24 of 25 free throw attempts and out rebounded the "Huskers 42-29 who led the Huskers with 21 points. IF THE JAYHAWKS are to make a run at the Big Eight title, there will be a final remaining conference games. Three of those on the road, where KU has yet to win a game. The Jayhawks now are 9-12. KU was called for 32 fouls while K-State drew 15. That gave the Wake Forest team more than the Jayhawks received. KC State could have won by a larger margin by converting more of its one-and-one free throw By The Associated Press UCLA lost a first-place vote in the Associated Press poll announced Friday, retaining the position as the top major college basketball team in the nation by a wide margin. Nebraska dropped to third in the Big Eight with a 6-3 mark. The Cornhuskers are 13-8 on the season. The Top Twenty, with first-place votes in parentheses and total points on the basis of 20 for first, for second, 14, 12, 10, 1.8 e.c. Bruins Drop a Vote VIENNA (AP) -Skidling idol Karl Schranz retreated Tuesday, when he celebrated him as a national hero out of sympathy for his father from the Olympic Games on charges of professionalism. As it was, the free throws defeated KU. The Jayhawks outscored K-State from the field, 28-24, but lost at the line, 30-14. Schranz Retires U.CLA (40) Marquee (1) North Carolina Pennsylvania Virginia South Carolina Ohio Lake Beach St. Marshall Brigham Young SW Louisiana Providence Fifth St. Missouri Hawaii Kentucky Memphis Miami Tennessee In a letter to Karl-Heinz Kniez, president of the Austrian Ski Federation, he noted that the oldest and most successful skiers ever in the history of the sport, said he retired because of his age. He also mentioned a broken by sports officials "THERE WERE two or three factors why we lost," Coach Ted Owens said. "The main one was the fours. We cut to within three points with three minutes to go, but we got frantic." Those three pivot men were starting center Neal Mask, Randy Canfield and Wilson Barrow. The Jayhawks were in game two and Vikito and Kisail well-founded with four fouls. "We had a great chance to win, but instead, we started reaching and grabbing for the ball on defense. "Rebounding was the other big factor," Owens said. KU started slowly, allowing the Wildcats to claim a 12-3 advantage after seven minutes. Led by Mask and Stallworth, through the 14-11 jumps jumped within 14-11 four minutes later. STALLWORTH, WHO scored 25 points, tied the score at 20-20 and at 22-22, then gave the Jayhawks their first lead of the game at 28-27 with 1 leaf in the last inning on lead from 30-30 halftime on free throws. 818 720 710 491 491 492 406 396 394 226 196 196 159 154 154 114 104 34 34 30 26 26 23 "Our slow start put us in a bad position," Owens said. "But I was very pleased to be only one point away from the way we started out plaving." Stallworth gave KU its last lead with a field goal 22 seconds into the second half. The score then came within one point four times. K-State appeared to break the game open with 13:38 to play when Steve Mitchell hit a free throw to make the score 47-43. SESSING A turning point, the crowd of 12,500 raised a sustained cry and most of the second two minutes. During that period, Barrow drew his fifth foul, and Lon Kruger and James Thomas posted S-State to a goal. KU sturm back to within 53-50, and Owens called time out with 7:35 to play. "The stretch that really hurt us Kansas Union Bookstore Profits Distribution OPEN HEARINGS Regionalist Room Union Thursday, February 17 4 p.m. HEAT & STAR ADVENTURE KEEP THE FATH KEEP THE FAITH On ATCO Records BLACK OAK ARKANSAS reg. $5.98 $3.67 also available on 8 track stereo tapes at KIEF'S Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Discount Diamond Needles That stretch came after the opening of the door and Boslevac once while K-State dumped in the lays by Ernie Kusner, Larry Williams and his wife. was when we had three straight good shots and missed them, and K-State hit theirs." Owens said. Even so, KU drew within three points with three minutes to play. 64-61 Hall fired the Wildcats to a 74-62 advantage with a minute to play, and the game was decided. KU will travel to Nebraska Field House returning to Allen Field House Monday against Colorado. | | fg-ga | fga-ga | rb | pb | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Staunfield | 16 | 18 | 9 | 15 | | Mank | 0.8 | 1.7 | 1 | 11 | | Mark | 6 | 1.4 | 1 | 12 | | Nahch | 3.7 | 0.2 | 2 | 6 | | Nash | 3.7 | 0.2 | 2 | 6 | | Canfield | 1.7 | 0.4 | 1 | 3 | | Canfield | 1.7 | 0.4 | 1 | 3 | | Botthevac | 9.3 | 2.2 | 1 | 10 | | Botthevac | 9.3 | 2.2 | 1 | 10 | | Hineyeva | 3.9 | 2.2 | 1 | 10 | | Hineyeva | 3.9 | 2.2 | 1 | 10 | | Total | 26.64 | 14.23 | 36 | 32 | Totals 26-64 14-23 Per cent 41.0 37.0 Kansas 30 36 — 66 Kansas State 31 47 — 78 | | fg-kg | fe-kg | rb | pf | lt | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kunyu | 7.9 | 2.4 | 15 | 17 | 1 | | Zander | 7.8 | 2.4 | 15 | 17 | 1 | | Zander | 7.8 | 2.4 | 15 | 17 | 1 | | Nuger | 6.12 | 5.4 | 6 | 4 | 13 | | Nuger | 6.12 | 5.4 | 6 | 4 | 13 | | Hall | 7.11 | 6.7 | 6 | 0 | 20 | | Hall | 7.11 | 6.7 | 6 | 0 | 20 | | Beard | 0 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | | Beard | 0 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | | Beard | 0 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | | Total | 26.62 | 20.45 | 49 | 17 | 78 | Turnover—Kansas 19. Kansas State 19. A-12,500. Dwight Boring* says... PETER L. BURGESS College Life created the BENEFACET especially for college men. It has behind it the planning and research of our industry and only life insurance company serving college men only. You should know all about the BENEFACTOR policy. I can tell you its short story with a faint glimmer of hope that you'll be glad you heard through the years ahead. Check into it, Call me. - Dwight Boring 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men A. R. INC. known the world over for precision sound reproduction. Who buys A. R. equipment? Such Professionals as . . . Herbert Von Karajan Museum of Modern Art (N.Y.) WABC-fm (N.Y.) Singer Judy Collins Angel Records Miles Davis We Sell at Factory Cost + ...and many others who have found A.R. to be the best stereo buy for their money. Now Audio we do market research—Selected equipment equipment to buy and the lowest possible price. 842-2047 10 per cent handling you pay shipping. We have the lowest prices in the country. RAY AUDIO 1205 Prairie Free Coffee, Tea, Consulting Service No Obligation AR 3a Orange Blossom Symbol of a Dream Holly. An engagement ring with a Continental heritage: Light bursting from a band of lace ... eight diamonds clustered in starlight ... and each leaf in the band individually handpolished. Holly. As unique as it is beautiful. Just in time for happiness. Just in time for love. Marks Jewelers Member American Gem Society NBS Member National Bridal Service 817 Mass. 843-4266 Holly. Patronize Kansan Advertisers 点 (Advertisement) TAKE NOTICE live on stage, no gimmicks friday, Feb. 18th 8:00 in Hoch. 1 performance! The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band come as you are! N 1 Not necessary to bring your dirty socks Friday night cuz the Dirt Bard uses their washboard and tub for music only—like their new release Jambalaya—whose name speaks for itself. The Dirt Bard speaks for itself too—their show starts with a slice of a banjo pitch served with good humor and great fun. This show is highly recommended by Uncle Charlie and Teddy as wholesome entertainment for all in the family. Tickets at SUA office—2.50 - 3.00 - 3.50 also at Ball Park Bonus: Bikales-Wineberg Band as prelude 1 (Advertisement) University Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 16, 1972 7 Making Swimmer of Kidd Backfires for Sooner Coach By BILL SCHEELE Kansan Sports Writer When Oklahoma swimming Phil Kidnall how to swim, he had no idea that it would backfire on the star of the university on the University of Kansas swim team, is now giving Marsh and his Sooners Kidd, a high school All-American at Norman, Oka. high school, is close to qualifying for the NCAA championships in the 50 and 100-yard events. To qualify, he must score 21.7 in the 47 and 46 on the 100. His best times so far are 218 and 83. Kidd expects to qualify for the playoffs in a month. Sooners Saturday or in the Big Eight championships March 2-4 the 19-year-old are chose KU over Oklahoma because he caused the loss. Although recruited heavily by SMU, New Mexico and all the Big Eight schools, Kidd selected KU after a visit to the KU Relays in Miami. Head Says Bowling Is Popular "I VISITED a lot of schools, but I liked the guys on KU's team. While many KU students spend their leisure time at a favorite pub, more and more are taking up bowling as a source of spare time entertainment and are the league in the Kansas Union. Jay Bowl Manager Warren Boozer said recently the two teams spread throughout six leagues are the most he has ever The Jay Bowl has leagues for both men and women, and has both beginners and would be professionals. On Monday evenings the Naismith League shoots. It is a mixed handicap league of students who live at Naismith Tuesday night the scratch league shoots. Men's teams bow in head to head competition. The top average bowlers in this league are usually selected to represent KU at varsity bowling Wednesday night leagues include both the fraternity league and independent league. The two teams begin at 6:30 p.m. and the independent league, consisting of students from all over the campus, bowls at 9 p.m. It is a capstone league and for men only. Women get their chance on Thursday's in the guys and dolls league. It is also a handicap league and includes some good bowlers as well as some not-so-good bowlers who come to have a fun. Faculty members can also bowl. The faculty mixed league shares the prize with other The Jay Bowl has daily specials for those who do not wish to bowl in a league-3 games for a dollar from noon to 6:00 p.m. for example. Friday night is date to bowl in the game and bowl three games for a dollar. KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP)—"National statistics reveal that all children will be poisoned with a drug more proximally of 500 of them will report issued by the University of Kansas Medical Center says. For those who do not know how to bowl and would like to learn how, an activity course titled beginning bowling is taught each day. It is the necessary and the class meets three hours a week for one credit. THE MERCANTILE Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Right Next to Campus 128 ONABD HERITAGE MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SAUCEES KU's academic standing and its friendly atmosphere. I think that when an athlete is visiting a school he should look at the quality of the school itself as well as the quality of the athletic programs. "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" Kidd said that he especially looked forward to swimming against the Sooners. 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon "Yeah, I like to beat 'em. "They're the team to beat for us. Most of my high school friends go to OU. I wouldn't like to lose to UC. I wouldn't have conceive of losing to them. I try not to let it enter my mind." Kidd has some interesting thoughts on the practice aspect of swimming. "SWIMMING IS not a hobby. It is more like a job, like work. Doing the same thing in the same place every day becomes much more does a good job of varying the works, but it still gets old. "However, the meets a lot of fung. I never want to lose. It is not so much that I always want to win, it is just that I don't want to "Swimming is both a team and a personal effort. The team's goal is to win the meet. The meet has been a great record, best his old records. His highest goal is to qualify for the NCAA meet. I would like to finish high in the NCAA meet and be an All-American, but he is one of the top six he said. Kidd said he realized that the Bidk had meet the first. To become champions for the fifth Big Eight meet came the team's main goal, Kidd said. "There is a sense of pride on this team. We are a fairly close- Red Baron Members of the United States Military Pentathlon team from Fort Sam Houston, Texas, attended the two-day meet. knit group. Coach Reamon inspires desire to reach our goals. We work with a team to push for each other. The main thing is the success of the team, which includes coaching. Fencers Place "We realize that we must give our best efforts to beat OU for the championship. Last year we could coast in and still win a championship, but not out of talent. This year we could lose it and we swim badly," he said. K.C. Royals Will Not Open In New Stadium KANSAS CITY (AP)—An official of a construction management firm declared Tuesday it is certain the Kansas City Royals will not be able to play in baseball stadium before June. The new stadium at the $43 million Complex, in which the Royals had planned to open their 1972 season under certain conditions." Henry Xlmp, project manager of Langston Kitch and another team under certain conditions." Two University of Kansas fencing team members placed in two events in the second annual Kansas City Open fencing event on Tuesday at the University and Sunday at the University of Missouri at Kansas City. Kielth Rambil, Houston, Texas and Paul Cairn, Christina Whistler,狄塞尔 fifth and sixth in the foal event. He fourth and fourth in the eps connect link Other entrants from KU were Dave Buescher, Midland, Michigan junior, and Mark Riordan. Other entrants are Bob Nicol, Newton senior, Gary Zink, Turon freshman, and Dick Mosher, Hiawatha senior, in men's foil; and Carol McCloud, Dick Parker, junior, in women's foil. Charles Truitt, Royals vice president and treasurer, was awarded the title of still an outside chance the stadium would be ready for the Super Bowl. Kiemp told a meeting of the Jackson County Sports Authority the projected full-completion date of the baseball stadium is in 2017. Royals may begin using the stadium before it is fully completed. SPECIAL Saturday Bus Service Downtown — Campus Leave Ellsworth 10-30-50 min. past hour 9:30 a.m.- 5:15 p.m. 9:25 a.m. - 5:45 p.m. Leave Union 00-20-40 min. past hour, 9:40 p.m., 6:00 p.m. Leave 9th & Mass. 10-30:50 min. past hour 9:10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Information 842-0544 Lawrence Bus Co. Inc. Fare Downtown 25' Campus 10' TRAVEL IN EUROPE I SPONSORED BY: Forum No. 3 of a Series Student Union Activity Book Study Office SUA Travel Service Dean of Foreign Thursday, February 17 Coming Forums: Travel within the U.S.A., travel within Europe, camping and hitching, Mexico, United States; student包 SKELLY "Give Tom A Call" TOM'S SKELLY SERVICE 602 W. 9th HAS MOVED TO FOM'S SKELLY SERVICE AFLOAT Sails each September & February Combine accredited study with educational stops in Africa, Australasia and the Orient. Over 5000 students from 450 campuses have already experienced this international range of financial aid is available. Write for free for catalog: 1733 Mass. WCA, Chapman College, Box CC12. Orange, Cal. 92666 Discover the World on Your SEMESTER AT SEA Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointment necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule Daily 9 to 9. Sat, till noon. 842-2323 KANSAN WANT ADS One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanza are offered to students. These include color, creed, or national origin. each additional word: $.01 FOR SALE Highest price paid for used cars G1 Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608. tf Western Civ. Notes-Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it. 1. If you use them. 2. If you don't, Either way, a floodhike in Eilberway way. "—New Analysis of Western Civilization" *Campus Madhouse, 14th* W14. 10th lf We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumphs. Competition Sports Cars, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-2191. 2-18 Northside Country Shop, 707 North Street, Boulder, CO. Antiques, Used Furniture, collectors items, old wood cooking and heating stoves, stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, fireplaces, oil furnaces, other useful items. Open 9 to 5 seven days. Herb Allemann; B260-138. Now you can buy stereo components at FACTORY COST plus 10% Han-li. The new home theater includes Prunie Avenue. The only true stereo discount house in the mid-29th. 1966 Mobile Home, 12X48, 2 bedroom, furnished. $2,975.00. Call 843-0662 anytime. 2-16 Bolex 16mm movie camera, viewing. 25mm f 1.9 lens focusing to 18 inch lens. 51mm MFM MFB FG 2.8 pre set camera. 2.8 pre set camera Call: M43-9285 2-17 1965 Chevelle, Malibu SS, 327, 4 speed. Call 842-2238 or see at 1919 Miller Drive. 2-16 1960 Ford Fairlane 500, dependable transportation, good radio and heater, snow tires. $125.00 Call 864-4194 or 842-7026. 2-16 Underwood 21 Typewriter. Excellent condition. Call Wendie, 843-7600. 2-17 Men's suits and sport jackets, size 38. $10-$30. Good looking, excellent condition. Dede, 842-5031. 2-17 Fine cold cuts, grains, oils, etc. Beer and wine yeast The Mercantile 1237 Oread, 843-9746 2-17 ARGYLE SOCKS — FOR FUN AND WORK — THINK? AT EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS. 2-17 SALE NOW GOING ON-UP TO 50% OFF ON MOST MERCHANDISE WHILE IT LASTS SORRY, NO EXCHANGES ON SALE MERCHANDISE Swinging cows and capes for spring. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 SUPER SALE. DRESS VALUES from 18-$12, now $5-$10. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 JUST ARRIVED—Swim wear and sandsweepers. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 60 watt electro-voice receiver, 2 M-elec, wheeler, 3 microphone, woofers, 2 mid-range, and 3 tweets. All resulticked brand Changer portable, Stretch stereo, never been partially used. Jeans, Jeans, Jeans Latest styles, best selection, best prices. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES 66 Corvette Conv.—427 cu in., snow, timing, AM-FM radio, heater, 4-speed, excellent engine. Call after 8:42- 7505. Sony TC-650 tape recorder. Features include 2 high efficiency speakers, 4 watt amplifier, 3 head, 5 speedi- inverter, and 3 head, mute. artes. 842-2473. EARRINGS — EARRINGS — and more EARRINGS. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 Three days Crotch Tops--biggest selection, new- west styles, $7.00. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 Naismith Hall Contract for sale. Call 843-2661. 2-21 Call immediately for appo- nishment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE 摄像师 THE HITE in the WALL SENIORS!! Studio 843-7685—We Deliver - 9th & III Two gas stoves, one apartment size, one full size. Both are clean and work well $25.00 each. Call 842-8221. 2:17 Guitar—Guild 12 string Acoustic—11 years old—Good condition—Call 843-5113 after 6:30 p.m. 2-21 Must Sell! One woman's bike in good condition for $20, and one older men's bike for $15. Call 842-6897 2-327 Powerful Watt E1LA | E1A | Magnavox tuned amp-AFM-FM unit cut to speaker frequency speaker to $80.00 | Rocky Sound to (Basement Room Room) 2-22 Deadline : 5:00 p.m.2 days before publication Engineering student has no use for his new Royal Safari Portable Typewriter. Will sell for $45 Jim 841-21309 3509 coupon Gregg Tire Co., 814 W. 23rd. 2-23 Do you use 7.35-15 tire size? We keep out closed 5 pairs of our best snow tires at $1.60 each plus 2.50 FEB 2017. Day Stone, Rocky Mountain Mass. 2-22 33 RPM Award Winner Alison Rockefeller, won award for Troubled Water. Peter New's parents Juliet, Mrs. Robinson, etc. only $1.00. Same recordings only $2.00. Same recordings only $2.00. Tire Clearance! New FT10-14 wide Tire Clearance! Fast Free installation at Ray Stoneback's new GTI-10s $2 more money! Letters or letters & $0.00 extra! 2-22 DARK ROOM EQUIPMENT bogen enlarger with accessor, print dryer, power paper, vacuum trays, trays ALSO electric typewriter, powerawr. aquarium 1947 Studebaker pick up. Anxious to sell. 864-2894. 2-18 Complete line of men's and women's swim suits at Penny's. 830 Mass. 2-22 VOX Hollow Body Electric Guitar VOUGH sunburst finish! Immaculate condition with hard-shell case. $190 Call Randy at 842-6950 2-22 1984 Black Special 4-dae, V-9. auto, white interior. White interior. Excellent look to sell Call 845-3453 evenings. -225 to call 845-3453. super white, superior clean, supe 191 Camaro, 350, loaded. turbo-hybrid. Camaro, 350, loaded. turbo-hybrid. disc brakes, rally wheels, motor fire. Also Camaro 100 Twin motor fire. Camaro 84-120 2-22 pastin America 1969, AM-FM radio, automatic, 4 new tires. Call Mark at 842-2534 or come by Phi Kappa Tau. 1120. W 11th. St. 2-22 "HOROKON NONOKON New Designs, jeans and dresses this week. Fat舞 specials. Experience the deals at 819 Vermont. Open 11-4 2-22 FOR RENT WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Avail- ing furnished or unfurnished, 1/8 bath furnished or unfurnished. 1/8 bath furnished or data- wired. View patio gating. Apartment. “The place to live in 3000.” Call 24 hours a day at 897-3000. for rent—one or two bedroom apart, and four room garage garbage and all-electric kitchen, dry facilities. color T V-available. Call Apts. for details. Residence Apts. at 24th and Court Lane. Apartment—newly decorated—one bedroom furnished—wall to wall carpeting—1½' blocks from Union. Phone 843-5767. ff HILLWAVE APARTMENTS — 1373-45 W. 24th St., W. 18th St., and two 100-foot apartments. Carpeted, draperies, glazed, and expensive of much more expensive apartment. - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz., pts. - qts. only 25% OFF Ridge House Apts - for the budget Ridge House Apts - for the budget and the maximum rates at best rates in town. EF, 1 and 2 bedrooms, and 3 bathrooms. 1604 details for Odearwood - 1700 details for Eldridge - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock —others on order THE CONCORD SHOP - ARTIST CANVAS ARTIST CANVAS 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 McCONNELL LBR. CO. Tony's 66 Service CA Lawrence Kansas 66044 starting service rence, Kansas 66044 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service (2) Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. From the black south of St. Louis: 843-116-116. 2-21 Medical, Chemical Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! COLLEGE HILL, MANOR RUN available 1 and 2 bedroom furnished with laundry, bathroom, A/C, new washers, wc art supplies distance to campus Call 843-8220 or direct distance to campus Call 843-8220 Apt for rent. 1 bedroom. A/C, car- peted. big closets, parking closer to many KU lots. 1419 Ohio Call 842- 6385 QUIET sunny 2 bedroom furnished mach room make-in closets, OQTF stores, laundry room, round round room, ventilation and laundries, all utilities and Ridgeline 842-4444 FOR YOUR IT'S NEVER TOO LATE and it is a long time from time you can comfortably attractive. One call to Mrs. Forsyth at 2019-A Harvard Road and you can arrange apartments available in Lawrence's located and most attractive commercial and Missouri. Avalon Apartments, Apartments Iowa & Harvard Lots of Apartments Iowa & Harvard Lots of soundproof construction, pleasing curated or unfurished, and central reasons you would enjoy living in this semester in Lawrence make this semester in Lawrence make these locations for August occupancy and patency can be arranged too! 2 18 University Torrance Apartments—furnished apartments available for rent in the 106th Street to come to manager's office. 129th West 8th Apt, 14th B - or 843-443-3200 WHERE do elephants keep their big pink sneakers? In Ridgway's gigantic closet, one bedroom, all electric $120.00, all utilities paid 842-4444 Unfurnished room for rent -cellular paid, share bathroom and kitchen. Some rent off for light housekeeping. Pre- ference. Before noon, may 2-21. Before noon, may 2-21. NOTICE Would you like something a little off the ordinateur in an apartment to unite with your family to unite until school is out? Fireplace, furnished $90.00; Call 617-258-3342. CABAY ARTS UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Greater Kansas City Birthright (816) 474-4676 t DISCOUNT TRAVEL. To and within Europe leave any airfare with an eligible Student ID issued. Flight Center, 272 North Washington, Wisconsin, Wisconsin (686)-263-3131 TEE PEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB- Welcome back students. We'll party vations for second semester term par- ties and/or third semester par- tion party. Nice band stand, black suit. We also have special monthly rates at phone in or contact John Service meeting. Phone or contact John meeting. Phone or contact John Service Station Tee Pee 105-842-2828. How to business. Phone 842-2828. After KU Students of Objectivism will meet to discuss the ideas of Ayman Khaled, a professor in the Gread Room, Kansas Union. Fax information, 823-814-361 or mail: 823-814-361. for counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization—call the Women's Center, tf 864-4441. HRISTONE STUDS - SHIVER RINGS - AND MANY OTHER FAR OUT OCCASIONES EARTHSHINE, East Eighth and Mass. 2-17 913 843-9275 913 842-0025 CS U Sports Cars Inc. 2300 W. 29th Terr. 2300 W. 29th Terf. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone Telephone: (913) 842-2191 SPRING KNITS ARE IN FUNKY 40% AND EARLY 30% STYLES = EARTH- SHINE, EAST ETHN & MASS 2-17 Low-Low Jeans with the nautic at Low-Low Prices. The 'Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 SANDSWEEPERS JUST ARRIVED. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 SWIM WEAR JUST ARRIVED The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 LONG DRESSES FOR PARTIES THAT ARE SUPER The Alley Shop. 843 Mass 2:18 WE HAVE TOPS FROM A TO Z. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass 2-18 Professional seamastess, with design experience will work with you for the look you want Alterations, too. Call 843-3763. 2-21 WANTED Circle your calendar now for the Last Saturday Night of February. Rosael's Hotel, Harper, Kansas 67058 (316) - 869-1921 2-21 Counselors positions open for Juniors, Counselors, and Board for 8 weeks during summer school, plus a supervised $5 Call to Visit. Applications to Middle Music School in Milwaukee sirloin Customers for valentine day gift ideas at Hodge Podge. Open late Thursdays. 15 West 9th. 2-22 Steaks, sandwiches Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks Our micros is and has always been "There is no substitute for quality TONY'S Waterson—Scientific fiction books to the point of actuality at the Empirium Expand your view of the universe with different book sets in and ask how Waterson can be the door of Union, next to Dyche's dormitory. PERMANENT LEGAL SECRETARY Shorthead, typing required Will train 843-0811 2-18 PERSONAL 500 E.23rd Male roommate to share apartment at 1323 Ohio. One bedroom, wall to wall carpetting, decorated. Come by Apt No. 10. 2-18 DENO Three girls need fourth to share an apartment, near campus. Own room, call 842-6178 after 4:00 p.m. 2-18 Need girl to share house. $55 Utilities included. 842-5768 2-21 Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. IMPORTSDATSUN POETRY WANTED for anthology Please include stamped return en- velopes. IDLEWILD PRESS, 1807 East Street, IDLEWILD, Los Alamitos, California 90211 October 2021 Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 845-7367, 9:30-5:30. FRONT DISC BRAKES Valentine Purse Sale at Hodge Podge. 10% off Feb. 10—Feb. 17. 15 West 9th. 2-22 Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service BLEVINS HONDA 1: Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge NOW WHEN THERE IS NOTHING ELSE TO WEAR-TATTOOS, ONLY AT EARTHSHINE EAST 8th & MASS 2-17 - OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE * TGT-30MH 14.5 1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks. - RECLINING FRONT SEATS * UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL 842-0444 LOVE THAT DATSUN Open 24hrs. per day Call me for excellent low cost hospital insurance with above average coverage and/or pregnancy; John Wells, American Life and Life Insurance $82-5220. Annie M. Unexpressed law can now be made available in the office of Sweetheart, Annie of a Thousand years paying any oak note she would be able to answer in dictator form. You are an oak signed land houses Dad loves. I greet you once again, after he leaves. I love how to campgrounds of love. I love how Campgrounds of love have blonde hair Tuna Tuna Drink and TYPING Independent Term papers, these types accurately represent the data. You'll also be electric typewriter. Will you edit at reasonable rates. 845-7097 842-5650. Kinda Diana. DRIVE.IN Experienced typist will type your tepher paper, letters or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Vol C91 S-3281. Miu Bacmaku. DRIVE-IN AND COUP OIF LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANSING 9th&MISS. LOST Experienced in typing these, demonstrations term papers, other mite types, and specialized type. Accurate and prompt suite of applications. Phone 845-9544, Mrs. Wright Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention: 843-0958. Accurate typing of your thesis dissertation, or miscellaneous work on IBM TPC-C typewriter with pica card. Mail Mr. Carl Meyers, 842-1440 for information, 225-759-6300. Lost brown neck scarf during KU- G-Tech game Mon. 7. 841-3158. 1230 Miss. 2-18 COIN One year old black Labrador -Ray=injured front left leg Animal Mission Clinic tag. Call Pitts, 843-5000-211 HELP WANTED On black, pink, padded skt-type glue on knuckles. Monday, Feb. 7 in Fitch Bank's 45361 accessory. Howard, Caldwell 28-21 Male Brittany, white with liver spots. Please call 842-6710. Reward. 2-18 MISCELLANEOUS Wrist watch from band, former graduation present, sizeable reward. Identification on back. Call 842-5331 or 2-18 Black checkbook with name Claudia Laird. Hutchinson address on checks. Please return to Ellsworth Hall at front desk. 2-18 OVEREASE JOBS FOR STUDENTS All training and occupational alliance. All training and occupational overtime training information. OVEREASE INFORMATION How 1957, San Diego, CA, Oregon, USA. OVEREASE JOBS 电话 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Events 7 days per week JK COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th 842-9450 Let PLANNING A TRIP?? Maupintour travel service Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! Aass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-121 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS --- 8 Wednesday, February 16. 1972 University Daily Kansan Records: Iron Butterfly 'Evolves?' By RON DANHAUS Kansan Reviewer Myth has it that an iron ironyhist is pretty to behold, but when it tries to fly to earth to catch a falling ball (or dollars, as the case may be). However, I can remember and I am about to blow up a ball on impaling on the down way. That is exactly what ATCO Records is trying to accomplish in "Evolution: The Best of the Iron Butterfly." The Iron Butterfly are once the artists in sales on the Atlantic label, but the album form sold in excess of five million copies, not to mention several million singles, making it one of the best-selling records of all time. Here it is again, along with 10 other singles, for one last go-around sings, for one last go-around. This is an embarrassing challenge. They were was probably the golden age of rock. At the same time most of jimi Hendrix, Jamaica, Joplin, Airplane and Cream were reaching the peak of their careers. 'Dear Friends' Explores Early Firesign Theater By RON SANDHAUS Kansan Reviewer An insight into the inner-workings of the Firesign Theater in schizophrenic sound, sound effects and colourful records. It is a special two-record documentary (at a special price for the economy minded) of real recorded music. In 1966, a group of four young men sold their shares in corporate sanity and invested heavily in the improvisational comedy troupe, which they called the FireSight (Sagittarius, Leo and Aries) theater. The group owns its own interiors and mimicking every conceivable radio format, they have the most potent forces in American entertainment. An annual occurrence since 1968 has the release of a new FireSight Theater album. Before that, only these albums, they also produced a series of radio shows that were syndicated in the San Francisco area. *Dear Friends* is an anthology of these albums taken from these shows. However, there are no “Bozos” on this album. Don’t expect an elaborate production in 18- to 26-sound soundffects. In fact, sound quality varies greatly from cut to cut because the segments were compiled from so many different sources; however, are enough “wipe-out punice hamburgers,” “radioactive chorus girls,” “antivirus designers” and “synthetic chinillas” to fill four sides of an L.P. Not to mention the cast of thousands with Rev W. Bill D. Bonen, who played the role of Time and of course J. Edgar Beaver, sponsored by Balliol Bros. Drug Store, Giant Toad Supermasters and the T.B. Many of the segments fall flat Seats Available For Festival, Friday Concert Student Union Activities student union, approximately 2,000 jects have reserved sold for the Nitty Gritty Dirt Festival at 8 p.m. Friday in Hotel Orange. Well over 50 per cent of the auditorium's 3,700 seats are already filled. There are still a few seats open on the main floor back, and both balconies are only sparsely fitted at this point. if a refund on a ticket package is desired, it must be requested in the SUA office before February 18th. Attendees will receive refunds will be granted. During spring enrollment, about 4,100 ticket packages for the Fine Arts Festival were sold. According to the deadline set forth by the claimed by Tuesday afternoon. but the album is Firesign Theater in the purest form. These radio shows were all live, with much of the material ad-libbed. We can at as an introduction to the FireSign Theater, but for those already indoctrinated it will be a welcome addition. Now the KANSAN reviews last hear the Fireign Theater as they really are and gain an insight into how these people function. I don't recommend this album Firesign Theater has after all these years, bequeathed us with "a salt-filled panecake to lay upon an apolitic of this great nation." A New Look of Elegance If you were or still are a fan of the "Heavy" Iron Butterfly you might want to add this to your collection. You should have their previous albums. Doug Ingle, leader and composer of the group, is a master of the soft, melodic songs; timey sounding vox-organ. 2-beat complete with single stroke rolls and countless fuzz notes that sound psychedelic noises that when played at the proper volume, will produce a bitter, spicy metal bottle. The album offers a sample of Butterfly hits in chronological order, from the "Butterfly Theme" and ends with "Slower Than Guns." But within the half-hour aural journey, your eyes are drawn to the shameful titles as "Unconscious Power," "'Soul Experience' and 'Flowers and Beads' (had 14K A New Look of Elegance Brilliant diamond, a most luxurious texture of black with white or yellow gold in a dramatic setting. Sales offices $249 Ray Christian 809 Mass. 836 Kansas Topeka Lawrence "Evolution" shows how a group with a mass following and this group can become a lasting musical influence. Instead, as you can easily witness by listening to this group's music, your opportunity only to evolve into thousands of other groups before they shattered and were forgotten. March 11—Gordon Lightfoot (reserved seat) $3.50 Each March 8—Herbie Mann (reserved seat) $2.50 Each March 10—Tom Wolfe $1.50 Each March 6—The National Players $1.00 Each March 9—Portable Circus $1.00 Each OUR TOP LINE MEN'S HIKING BOOT, MADE BY DUNHAMS. FEATURING PADDED LINING AND EXTRA DUTY VIBRAM SOLE $36. HIKING BOOTS LIMITED Sale of Individual Night tickets will begin Monday. February 21 at the SUA Ticket Window Tickets are available for: ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 247 MASQUASTHIS Now Unger COUPON Alliance Vitamin C Tablets 100 tablets 250 mg Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 reg. $1.98 Sale 67¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON FDS Deodorant Bath Oil Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 reg. $1.79 Sale $1.23 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management Alliance Vitamin C Tablets 100 tablets 250 mg reg. $1.98 Sale 67¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-4:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 767 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management All Performances in Hoch----8:00 p.m. PRIMARILY LEATHER Festival of the Arts COUPON Alliance Vitamin C Tablets 250 mg 100 tablets 250 mg reg. $1.98 Sale 67¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON Blistex reg. 49¢ Sale 29¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON FDS Deodorant Bath Oil reg. $1.79 Sale $1.23 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON Macleans Toothpaste Regular flavor only 5 oz. size reg. 89¢ Sale 59¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management Craftsmen of fine leather goods COUPON Blistex reg. 49¢ Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Sale 29¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 Now Under New Management COUPON Macleans Toothpaste Regular flavor only 5 oz. size reg. 89¢ Sale 59¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS New Under New Management COUPON FDS Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Deodorant Bath Oil reg. $1.79 Sale $1.23 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 DISCOUNT GROUP CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ZTP DISCOUNT DRUO CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management 812 Massachusetts Macleans Toothpaste Regular flavor only 5 oz. size reg. 89¢ Sale 59¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 19 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management Patronize Kansan Advertisers MAGNAVAX FACTORY-SPONSORED ANNUAL SALE SUNYA TECHNOLOGY CORP. $ $ AT RAY STONEBACK'S 929 Mass. 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Whichever you choose, you'll enjoy the built-in performance and reliability that have made Magnavox a leader in the field of finest quality electronics for over 40 years! Compact Stereo FM/AM Radio-Phono System—model 9292, buys superb Magnavox sound reproduction in space-saving styling. 30-Watts EIA music power, two High-Compliance $6" and two $3%" speakers in an Air-Suspension System, plus deluxe Micromatic player with Cue Control and Stylus Pressure Adjustment. Jacks for optionals (tape, headphones). Dust cover is included. As with the system above, speakers may be placed vertically or horizontally for greater flexibility. SAVE $40 NOW $258.00 SAVE $12 SAVE $12 on Stereo Cassette Tape Player model 8867, with push-butt power on/off, cassette eject button and function lever. Connecting cables included. Easily connects to your console or component music system. A real value! Now $48.00 Adapter connection SAVE $12. On 8-Track Stereo Cartridge Player model 8869, with frontloading. Auto Program Changer, Continuous Play, Track Selector button and track indicator. Cables, too. Easy connects to your console or music system. RAY STONEBACK'S Open Thurs. Nite 'til 8:30 Open Every Day 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Now $48.00 929 Massachusetts St. 843-4170 Factory Direct Magnavox Dealer "Where You Pay No Middleman Costs' A raven is walking in the grass. It's wearing a scarf and boots. The sky is sunny with clouds. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CLOUDY 82nd Year, No. 87 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Thursday, February 17, 1972 Some Coaches Don't Like Synthetic Floors See Page 6 Funds Favored Chalmers Says The attitude of the state legislature has significantly changed toward the funding of higher education, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Wednesday. "There is no longer any question in my mind that most members of the House and Senate would like to fund higher education, as is the recommendations by the Governor." The prospect was "grim" for increased funding. Chalmers said, unless there was evidence that some agreement on the optimum source of revenue could be obtained. Chalmers said the Student Senate He said that although the attitude was favorable toward higher education, there was still no agreement on how the funds were to be raised. 3,299 Live In KU Halls Occupancy in the nine University of Kansas residence halls has increased from the fall to the spring semester for the first time since 1970, and an increase of 38 this semester. This total is up 114 over last spring and 142 over the spring of 1970. J. Wilson, director of housing at the university. Wilson said the principal reason for the increase in occupancy might be economic. The residence halls have 3,998 tenants, but 379 men and 305 women have taken single occupancy of rooms built for two. The building is furnished, and thus financially filled two spaces. Wilson said residence in a hall costs $200 a year a person, but an extra charge of $250 a year is levied for students wanting single occurrence of double rooms. "The cost of room and board in a residence hall is fixed by contract," he said. "The student and his parents know exactly how much is needed. In an apartment, the room cost may be relatively predictable, but eating can be another thing." The theoretical economies of an apartment are never realized, Wilson said. He also doubted the question of time needed for food and food preparation was considered. "People thought that two, three, or four people can get together and live cheaper." Residence hall living is the "best value," according to Wilson, because the lower cost allows hall residents to owe less money when they get out of school. "There's no question that we can provide more for students at less cost than we did last year." The increase in room occupancy was also influenced by the greater availability of single rooms, the advent of co-functional halls and changes in visitors' rest. "We've been trying harder to make our facilities and operations more attractive," she said. Executive Committee (StudEx) recommendation for the recognition and registering of student organizations was a key factor in the dilemma of which groups to recognize. Recognition means a group is eligible for funding, whereas becoming registered did not allow a group access to funds, he said. The difference, he said, was significant. Chalmer said he expected students would make the same sober choice at the polls this year as they had in the last spring. "I don't think our students are going to play games at the polls." he said. after the Student Senate adjourns this year, Chalmers said, in the final analysis the University could have benefited from its actions. Chalmers said he was encouraged by the increase in applications to the University of Oklahoma. He said the increased number of applications indicated the University had not been able to meet the needs. According to a spokesman for the office of admissions, freshman applications were up 20 per cent and transfer student applications were up 5 per cent as of Feb. 1. Rules Tighten Food Stamps For Students Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER New food stamp regulations will require students to produce an affidavit verifying that they are not being claimed as dependents by their parents, John Derrick, Douglas county welfare director, said Tuesday. The regulations, formulated by the Department of Agriculture, also require part-time students to register with the State Employment Service to be eligible, Derrick said. The Douglas county welfare department which administers the registration process of employment in implementing the regulations which must be in effect by May 1. Derrick said he thought the purpose of the new regulations was to exclude as many students as possible from the food supply and that actually they would have little effect. The affidavit will be required only of single students, he said, and many students now receiving food stamps are married and have families. He about 50 KU students receive food stamps and only two or three receive cash assistance. The new regulations also provide for a new application form and new procedures to be completed by an applicant for which an applicant is eligible. Derrick said the new application form contains about four pages of detailed information, but the requirements remain essentially unchanged. "It mainly involves a lot of extra paper he said, "but when you get it done it looks good." I Fireman Attempts to Contain Farmhouse Fire Wakara Township fireman hoses down trees and rubble of an unoccupied farmhouse which burned to the ground last night on Lone Star Road. The cause of the fire was not determined. The property on the house was located is owned by Judge Willis. One Team Declares For Student Election Only one team had filed for president and vice-president of the student body by 5 p.m. Wednesday according to Bill O'Neill, Ballwin, Mo., junior and treasurer of the student body. At least three teams are expected to file Thursday. David Dillon, Hutchinson junior filed for president Wednesday and Kathy Allen, Topka sophomore, filed as his running mate the deadline for filing is 5 p.m. Thursday. Two more candidates filed for Student Senate Wednesday bringing the total to four. The deadline for candidates to file for senate is November 23. No one has filed for any class office. A second is composed of Joe Landolt, Kirkwood, Mo. junior and Mike Schoenleber, Wichita sophomore. The third is composed of Charles Ortlob, Clay Center graduate student and Leanard Grotta, Wichita junior. One team expected to file Thursday is composed of Joel Green, Rapid City, S.D. sophomore and Joel Payne, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore. O'Neill said, "I expect there be quite a number of people filing tomorrow." and Gretta had nearly 400 of the required 500 signatures. came in several students had picked up papers Wednesday and that the Student Senate office had received a number if student presidents to for student body president during the day. Ortleb said Wednesday evening that he Le Schwartz, Overland Park junior and student senator, said Wednesday he would decide on his candidacy for student body preside late Wednesday evening. Mohammed Amin, Ralsenjan, Iran senior and a student senator, said Wednesday that although he has not yet picked a candidate, he is also considering running for president. The two candidates who filed for Student Senate Wednesday are Burt Kreutzer, Leavenworth sophomore in the School of Education and Chris Mission sophomore in Centennial College. The elections for president, vice-president, student senators and class president will be held on December 31. Student Senate Limits Spending For Campaigns By CATHY SHERMAN AND HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writers Borrowing a solution to campaign expenditures from the federal government, the Student Senate agree Tuesday night to vote on a bill that candidates to seven cents per candidate. The move was part of a three-point amendment to one clause in a five-page article passed by the Senate which concludes with regulations concerning student elections. The amendment also requires candidates to present campaign expenditure figures to the election committee upon its request. FINALLY, THE SENATE decided that coalition advertising was the responsibility of presidential and vice-presidential candidates. If an advertisement for all candidates of a party would count only as expenses of the coalition's candidates for president and vice-president. After lengthy debate the senate also followed a recommendation by the Finance and Auditing Committee and defeated a bill that would have given the Women's Coalition $6,195 for a temporary day care center. Debate on the proposal centered on whether there was an immediate need for a center and whether a center that would serve as a central hub of communications could be established immediately. BOB WARD, Lawrence third year law student, said he thought any center must be "well-established and well-thought out" to be successful. He contendtionally to those requirements. "It's almost astronomical the number of laws you have to comply with in establishing a day care center," Ward said. "It would that would arise in a temporary center." David Dillon, Hutchinson junior and chairman of the Finance and Auditing committee of the proposed案 on such short notice that too many questions had been left unanswered. "WE UGHT to set a goal for a permanent long-term child care center and provide a safe, warm, secure learning environment." After the bill was defeated, the Senate followed Dillon's advice and established an ad hoc committee of the Student Rights, Sisters, and experts committee to study the temporary proposal as well as the idea of a permanent child care center. The committee will consist of student senators, representatives of the Sisters and experts in the child care field. Besides approving the article on student elections, the senate also approved the legislature, committees and membership articles. The four articles comprise the revised Rules and Regulations of the Student Senate. TUCK DUNCAN, Wilmette, Ill., junior and adviser to the elections committee, said the new guidelines "consolidate all regulations and regulations of the Student Senate." "they give the senate in brief form some proper operating procedures." Duncan sane. The Senate also passed a bill that will establish a special joint sub-committee of students and representatives from the colleges and representatives from the University Residence Hills to study the clauses of the Code of Student Rights, and conduct a Conduct that refer to University housing. BILL "O'NEILI, Baldwin, Mo., junior and Student Senate treasurer, wrote the bill and said the code had failed in many ways failed the administration. The code, which was passed during 1969-70 school year by the Senate and by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. as binding to University administrators, entails all disciplinary matters, confidential student records, residence hall rules, institutional rights such as privacy, free speech, and protection from illegal searches. THE SUBCOMMITTEE proposed by the bill would attempt to define the students' rights in determining contractual policy. The subcommittee would also define the administrative responsibilities of administrative routes of appeal concerning contractual and other policy violations. An amendment to the Student Code was also proposed by O'Neill that would give each residence hall governing council the sole authority to allocate University funds for residence hall activity fees without the approval of the offices of the dean of men or women. Fate Nears On Billboards TOPEKA (AP) - The Kansas Senate tentatively approved Wednesday a high school ban. The billboard law, which is designed to bring Kansas into compliance with the Federal Highway Beautification Act, requires that new highways and will come up for a final vote today. Opposition to the bill was voiced by Sens. Jack Robinson, R-Wichita, and Frank Hodge, R-Hutchinson. Both called the bill a "vicious piece of legislation." Robinson suggested Kansas ingore the Department of Transportation's threat to cut 10 per cent—or about $6.8 million—in funding funds if Kansas didn't pass such a law. February Sisters' History Related, Demands Probed Editor's Note: This story summarizes the demands made by the February Sisters and gives a brief history of their organization and the progress of their nonglobals. By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer The February Sisters, who entered University life by occupying the East Asian Studies building, held their first meeting Feb. 2 following a speech given by Robin Morgan, radical feminist, at the SUA Minority Oinions Forum. Rivian Bell, Overland Park junior and a member of the February Sisters press committee, said a woman in the audience broke into Morgan's question-and-answer period and asked to talk about matters women at the University of Kansas. Bell said the interested women went to a reception following Morgan's talk and discussion. The group of 100 women talked about the need for a day care center and the lack of progress on the Affirmative Action Program. A team led by Dr. Ellen Treeter to check University facilities for possible day care center use, she said, but there were only a few suggestions of occupying a building. A meeting for further discussion was announced for the following night. Bell said. BEV PRYCE, Lawrence sophomore and a member of the group's press committee, said the Thursday meeting was devoted to building schools. She said the women also voted on the demands they presented that Friday night. A spokeswoman for the group said she and another woman named it the "February Sisters" because February was the month the women first organized. Robin Morgan, speaking at UMKC Wednesday night, said, "While I flatly abused what I had to absorb. What happens is that the women in a community are oppressed and know they are oppressed. All I have done is connect with them, with the knowledge that they already have." The Morgan lecture did not incite the group in either its formation or its actions, Price said. She said the only connection with Morgan's speech was that it assembled the women who wanted to discuss women's problems at KU. Bell said three volunteers checked several buildings Friday and they chose one with the easiest access, the East Asian Studies building. The three informed the 20-woman occupation group of the site late Friday, she said. "LEARNED from them—not the other way around," she said. The Sisters occupied the East Asian Studies building and presented seven demands to Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. on Friday, Feb. 4. The Sisters demanded the naming of a woman to be vice-chancellor of academic care for all establishment of a free day care center to attend to students on board chosen by the Sisters, and the appointment of a woman to head the Affirmative Action Program (AAP). The Sisters also demanded more women be employed in the Office of Student Financial Aid and the Office of Admissions. They asked for an end to unfair employment practices, an autonomous department of women's studies to be controlled within women and expanded health services to provide counseling and other services to women. "I EXPECTED to be arrested," Bell commented. "I didn't expect suspension. The University wouldn't have had us arrested, but the State might have." Fear of reprisal for the group's action was the reason for the secrecy at first, Pryce said. She said there had been arrests and suspensions following a ROTC demonstration two and a half years ago, with four women being detected themselves. Many women were afraid of arrest, expulsion, loss of jobs and loss of parental support, Pryce said. Several of the women said the February Sisters were a group of individuals and the organization was not a part of any other group, although many of the members were also members of other women's groups at KU. Mariyn Stokstad, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, praised the group, "I'm proud of them. They didn't want to damage anything and they wanted to be involved in an illegal action, but we've been working within the system and have gotten no results. You can't help admiring people who are as long as the don't damage anythi- ng. THE SISTERS have nominated Stokstad for the position of vice-chancellor for academic affairs and for the chairmanship of the AAP committee. William M. Lucas, professor of architecture and urban design and chairman of the SENEx program for the occupation at Chalmers' request. He said although SenEx met as an advisory board to the chancellor, it reviewed the requests of the women and passed motions Lucas emphasized SenEx made no commitment, except to hold a meeting for representatives of al women's groups with members of the Student Health Service. "SOME OF THE THINGS that cause problems should be changed, but the services they are asking for are costly things. It has to be done in for some form," Lacas commented. SenEx recognized the need for child care services and would support the efforts of others to attain a center, Lucas said. SenEx also passed a motion in favor of extended health care services for all segments of the University population, he Progress on the Affirmative Action Program is one of the Sisters' demands. The AAP is the result of an executive order issued in 1968 affirming equal employment practices and prohibiting discrimination by sex. The order applies to all federal contractors, including institutions of high achievement, if they wish to receive funding. In order to receive federal money, KU must comply with the regulations stipulating that a study of the present con- tent is necessary of goals to correct inequality are made. William M. Balfour, vice-chancellor for student affairs, said the Department of Health, Education and Welfare administered the order for the Department of Labor, and HEW had not published any guidelines yet. DISCUSSING THE AAP, Balfour said, "I feel that we haven't been as aggressive as we might have been, but it hasn't been deliberate." Sokstad was the prerequisite study by the University had not yet been completed. She said she thought the Affirmative Action Program would provide an equal opportunity for minorities and women. She said a study had been conducted last year to determine the salary of Professors at KU to determine the salary and rank of teachers at the University. "From looking at the figures from last year," she said, "it strongly suggests that women as a group are lower in the ranks and pay scale." The February Sisters have requested that the University provide a day care center for the children of faculty members, civil service employees and students. See FEBRUARY, Page 3 2 Thursday, February 17. 1972 University Daily Kansan DAILY ADVERTISING ROOM Local 1034 Kansan Photo by RICK KERSEY Civil Service Workers Hope to Punchout with Higher Pay There were few salary increases since 1970, said personnel director Philip Rankin . . . KU, Local 1132 Share Budget Woes By ROBERT E DUNCAN Kansan Staff Writer Cancellor E. L. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Wednesday that the primary concern of the classified civil service workers in Iraq is the international Union of North America, coined with a primary concern of the military Kansas—the tiger money situation. Localized 1132, led by Chief Steward Blanche Nitz, consists of voluntary members from nonprofit organizations in the Kansas Union, the University, and grounds, the University house office and University secretariat A priority item of the union is the present wage deficiency for personnel members. Members of Local Lloyd Roof, business manager, distributed leaflets and talked to legislators last week about wage. THE STATE of Kansas has not officially recognized a union as a collective bargaining agent for the KU chapter in agencies, therefore, the KU chapter is attempting to act as an unofficial voice of the University. He said that since November 1970, most classified personnel had received no salary increases. Phil Rankin, director of personnel, said that to gain a wage increase the problem must be made before the state legislators. The union, Nitz said, wasn't given any encouragement in Topека last week for wage increases. Martin Jones, University budget officer, said it was substantially true that classified civil service employees of the university are of what some other state agencies were paying their classified personnel. Jones said this fact was due to the lack of response by the legislature to the University for salaries. OTHER COMPLAINTS of the The University has listened to these complaints and allows the use of bulletin boards to notify students of Local 1132 meetings, she said. Plans for a seniority system for University workers. Nitz said, were "under discussion." KU chapter of Local 1132 are the understaffed conditions in the University housing cafeterias, the need for better on-the-job training and the need for better supervisor-employee relationships. Nitz said. People... . . Places... . . Things Rankin said he had several meetings with representatives of the union. "The union is helping us to think of some things we haven't been thinking of," he said. People: PRESIDENT NIXON, after doing 11th-hour homework at his secluded mountaintop retreat, departs today on the first leg of his described "JOUREY FOR PEACE" to China. As Nixon prepared to fly back by helicopter an overnight stay at Camp Chinook, he boarded a train to an army of aides wrapped up final details for his historic 12-day trip—including plans for a star-staped departure ceremony. MRS. CLIFFORD IRVING was ARRESTED as a fugitive from Swiss justice Wednesday and released on $250,000 personal recognition bond in the case of her husband's disputed Howard Hughes autobiography. Places: LONDON - The toll of JOBLESS approached three million Wednesday because of the power crisis and Britons were told to expect even more hours without lights and heat. But a bright spot appeared. An independent inquiry into the coal miners' strike that has forced electricity cuts came to an end and its members promised to recommend a pay settlement by Friday. THE BOMBING OF POLICE AND FIRE HEADQUARTERS in Manchester, N.H., Wednesday has been linked by the state attorney general to plans to blow up the New Hampshire primary headquarters of President Nixon. A man and a woman were arrested and charged in the bombings shortly after the three blasts occurred. SAIGON-Waves of American fighter-bombers are conducting extensive AIR STRIKES against new offensive long-range artillery inside North Vietnamese territory and have destroyed five guns so far, the U.S. Command announced today. TOPEKA- The Kansas House gave its endorsement to two of the more controversial issues it will face in this session. The House passed 87-38 and sent to the senate a resolution which would place on the election ballot in November a constitutional amendment to remove the ban on LOTTERIES. If the voters approved the ban, no voter could vote if all the proceeds were earmarked for education. The House also gave preliminary voice approval to a House REAPPORTIONMENT plan, which will come up for a final vote this morning. Things: APOLLO 17, the last planned manned mission to the moon, will be launched DEC. 6 and it's scheduled to land in a moon mountain valley thought to be filled with volcanic ash, the space agency announced. Employing a NEW METHOD TO BREATHING, researchers report dramatically promising results in treating hyaline membranes by a leading killer of newborn infants. Often called glass-layed disease, the caused death of the infant son of President John F. Kennedy. AURH Meeting Helps Improve Communication administration. Rankin said. ONE MEMBER of the union said some employees feared that they joined the union they would lose their jobs. Twenty-seven delegates from the University of Kansas attended the Association of University Residence Halls (URH) conference Feb. 11 at Kansas State Teachers College in Emporia. Students meeting in small groups discussed ideas on hall regulations. Several sessions discussed the current financial conditions. THE KUE DELEGATION led by Mike Sundermeyer, Raytown, Mo., junior and president of KU'S AURH, sponsored a seminar on influencing legislators to grant more funds to higher education. The legislators planning to attend are Sen Joseph Harder, Bailman, Steadman Ball, Bail, R-Achison, Robinson, R-Wichita. Rep James Cain, R-Garnett. Rep James Cain, R-Garnett. Rep John Vogel, R-Lawrence. As a result, KU living groups invited state legislators to dinner and informal discussions. One such gathering took place p.m. Thursday in Templin Hall. Nitz said there was no reason for the existence of that fear. "POSSIBLY THERE IS some confusion in the legislators' minds as to what students think," Beiser said. Sundermeyer said Monday that he thought the financial problems at UCLA were not universities, and welfare would be the major topics discussed at his talk. Beinser said he hoped the dinner would increase communication among students and legislators. HE SAID that four other legislators might attend the dinner in addition to the six already committed. John Beisner, Salina freshman and coordinator of the dinner, said Wednesday that he expected at least six legislators to attend. Students living in University residence halls were also used to discuss their concerns informally with the legislators over the He said he hoped students could feel they were being heard, and legislators would become aware of what the students thought. "I was hoping for a few more," Beisner said, "but we were happy with the number we did get." Commencement information will be mailed to students indicated on their Student Registration Data Sheet they expected to graduate in May or June. The associate director of the University of Kansas Alumni Association, said Spring Grads to Get Information Packets Clark said the commencement information would also be mailed to those people whom the prospective graduate indicated as nearest legal relation on the campus during Spring enrollment. GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE FOR *Student information* will include cap and gown foster, parent, teacher, and Reminder," which contains all information needed concerning graduation. Packets sent to relatives will also contain a housing reservation form for parents who wish to stay in McColumb Hall Maternity Program. After graduation, Parents will receive information concerning the May 22 Senior-Parent Luncheon in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. There will also be a charaneller's luncheon and parents 10 a.m. to noon. May 22, at the Chalermers' residence. Commencement ceremonies will be May 21-22, with post-baccalaureate awards on Monday night. Click here. 2. 50 - 3.00 - 3.50 The commencement ceremonies will be held in Memorial Stadium. Clark said, but will be addressed to Alen Field House if it is rained. TOM'S SKELLY SERVICE SKELLY 2.50 - 3.00 - 3.50 Tickets at SUA Office and Ball Park 8:00 Hoch This Friday 602 W. 9th Also appearing: Bikales-Wineburg Band HAS MOVED TO OM'S SKELLY SERVICE 1733 Mass. "Give Tom A Call" WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN $100 Yes, Now You Can Win $100 just for designing a 3-Color POSTER! It's for the Concert Course DEADLINE Series April 15 Call Fine 1972 Arts Office 1976 for Information 4-3421 ANY STUDENT CAN ENTER A Patronize Kansan Advertisers At the Country House . . . we're closing out our fall and winter SALE of young women's fashions ... with most fantastic prices ever ... 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Separate Component Price . $239.90 F Proj Action ters' c result issued emplo hibiting The oe contractions o wish t Will cellor Depar and In money regular study and a reet in SAVE $20.40 The meet Blake leave repre: Co Includes $24.95 Value Walnut Wood Receiver Case Ray secret Tuesday three counts and tl academe presse Senat O Mon profe: chair: Resot comm for ap Four said, exeee meth- deter recee? THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 W. 23rd Street 842-7660 Acc profé chair Admi com surve cone repre The Police resol instr Rich. educe chair RADIO SHACK University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 17, 1972 3 February Continued from Page 1 Progress on the Affirmative Action Program is one of the Siers' demands. The AAP is the authority to issue in 1968 affirmation equal employment practices and protections. The order applies to all federal contractors, including institutions of higher education, if they meet certain requirements. In order to receive federal instruments that must comply with the regulations, the State study of the present conditions and a timetable of goals to co- ordinate them. William M. Balfour, vice-chancellor for student affairs, said the Department of Health, Education and Welfare administered the order for the Department of Labor, and HEW had not published any guidelines yet. DISCUSSING THE AAP, Bap- fair said, "I feel that we haven't been as aggressive as we might be, but it hasn't been de- deliberate." Stokstad said the prerequisite study by the University had not yet been completed. She said she thought the Affirmative Action opportunity for minorities and women. She said a study had been conducted last year by the American Association of University Professors at KU to determine the rank of teachers at the University. "From looking at the figures from last year," she said, "it Council to Hear Reports On Leaves, Membership The University Council will meet at 3:30 p.m. today in 108 Blake Hall to discuss sabbatical issues and representation on the council. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said three standing committees of the council would make their reports available to students in the academic year would be presented by the University. Morris Faiman, associate professor of pharmacy and administrative Resources Committee, said his committee would submit criteria for approval of sacramental leaves. Four per cent of each year's may be received each year said, and when applications exceed this figure, no precise method is presently used to determine which teachers will receive leaves. According to Roy Laird, professor of political science and chairman of the Organization and Committee on Women's Rights, committee will reveal results of a survey taken in the Senate during changes in council representation. The Academic Procedures and Policies Committee will make a resolution creating an office for instructional resources, said chairwoman of the planning committee education and committee chairman. This would entail a strongly suggests that women as a group are lower in the ranks and pay scale." The February Sisters have received that the university center for the children of faculty members, civil service employees and students. University staff position for the creation and coordination of instructional materials, he said. Christine Leonard, a KU staff member, said the day care center proposed by the School of Education of the department of human development would only care for about 50 children, which, although not so bufficious, "YOU CAN'T see the students who need it because they are at home taking care of their children," Leonard said. The council consists of 39 members, including the members of the Senate and the chancellor and student body president who acts ex- "The University's not paying enough to pay for a babysitter or to free women for an equal opportunity. It's the University's place to be." Leonard said the February Sister-School program could be used to fund an emergency day care center until a permanent center could be set up through the Uni- Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior and chairman of the Student Committee and the Board of Committee, said the Sisters had nursery services for a cooperative baby-sitting service. avoid state and federal day care regulations by assigning one adult to care for four children "IF THE SENATE is going to fund something," Dillon said, "it should be something permanent. It right should be a true benefit." He said the Sisters did not realize how long it would take to establish a temporary center. He said he rejected the Sisters' request because they could not answer the organization of the day care center. Another demand of the February Sisters is the expansion of their reach. SenEk met with Student Health representatives and representatives of our health who are also February Sisters to discuss expanding the health program. MARY MAHER, Lawrence senior, said the February Sisters had proposed a clinic for counseling women, distributing information on contraceptives andwerenewedwomen, distributing women health examinations. Sarah Scott, Prairie Village junior, said the Sisters had also asked for a fulltime obstetrician-gynecologist. Scott added that the Inter- Residence Council had tried to open communication channels TRAVEL IN EUROPE I SPONSORED BY: Student Union Activities Foreign Study Office SUA Travel Service Dean of Foreign BALKAN Forum No. 3 of a Series Dean of Foreign Students' Office Council Room - 4 p.m. Thursday, February 17 Coming Forums: travel within the U.S.A., travel within Europe 11, U.S. camping and hitching, Mexico - Canada on a student budget. SOME DOCTORS at Watkins Hospital would not prescribe contraceptives to women. Scott said. She said that sometimes women received a morality lecture and were sent to contraceptives and information. "I have been counseling about one unwanted pregnancy case a day since Thanksgiving." Janet with Watkins Hospital two and a half years ago for information on the outcome, she said, was the Human Sexuality Seminar, which focused on the results. Sears, assistant to the dean of women, said, "It's too much. It's counseling which Watkins should be doing." AS A RESULT of the meeting Friday, one doctor's office was being relocated and the space would be used for a women's clinic. Another nurse the clinic would open after the nurses had been trained to operate it. Dr. Raymond Schweger, diet- ician at Watkins, said he had been try- ing to expand the services offered at Watkins病房 but it was diffi- cult to keep up with new needs. He said Watkins Hospital could not afford to hire an obstetrician-ginecologist because the University could not pay $40,000 in medical expenses when doctors on the staff have often training in the area. Mather said of the meeting Friday, "We felt that the SenEx was sympathetic to what we were asked to do at the hospital was funded by students, and if it should cost more, the students would have to vote on it." Sears said, "Male orientation is the norm. That we need a department of women's studies is an indication of the sexism in our society and that we need to status of our women faculty. We already have the women here." In a position paper issued Mon day by the February Sisters committee on women's studies, the Sisters advocated an autonomous department of women's opportunities in various areas. IN THE POSITION paper the group proposed a number of courses which could be offered in a department of women's studies. You're not only welcome at Tivol... we think you're special. We love young people. (Our family is full of them.) We love your spirit, your values, your way of life. So... when you're in jeans and T-shirts and you're looking for the greatest engagement ring anywhere, remember that you'll find it at TIVOL's. We're not expensive, we are exclusive—but we think we have an "image" of being a store that caters to older people. Please help us change that image. TIVOL ...of course JEWELLS 220 Nichols Rd. on the Country Club Plaza, Kansas City, Mo. • Certified Gemologist—American Gem Society full ues, ng 1972 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION On March 15 and 16, new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected. To Become a candidate: Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Thursday, February 17. In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate. A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OFFICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office,105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.- 5:00 p.m. All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date. For Further Information: Call 864-3710 4 Thursday, February 17, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANS AN comment KANS AN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. The National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abus has decided unanimously to recon mend the repeal of all criminal penalties for the private use and posses ion of marijuana. Pass the Grass The commission report w as to have gone to the printers Wednesday and will be released soon o the public. After a year-long study of 50 reports and testimony in 10 he rings and four private sessions the commission reached its decis on. It was based on three point : — Marijuana has not been prove to be addictive and cannot be shown to be physically or psycholoically harmful, after long use. It does not appear to lead to the use of hard drugs. Use of marijuana apparently does no t lead to crime. Although the panel's recorder mentions do represent a step toward a rational approach to marijuana, the report is not without a weakness: It still favors criminal penalties or the rule of the drug, even mong friends. Even so, the report mu st be considered a milestone ir the modernization of archaic drug-abuse laws. In two states, an offender can still receive a 20-year prison sentence on a first conviction for the use of marijuana. In Houston, a young man is serving a 30-year sentence for giving marijuana cigarettes to an undercover agent. In Virginia, an 18-year-old high school boy was given a 20-year sentence for smoking marijuana. What happens now will largely up to President Nixon. If he accepts report and recommends its implementation, we will be well on the way to updating our drug-abuse statutes. This is the logical action for Nixon, of the thirteenth commission members. However, if Nixon decides that the politically prudent thing to do is to reject the commission report, we know what will happen: the death of another conscientious reform effort. The time and effort of the commissioners as well as the taxpayer's money will have been wasted. And everybody will have lost. Garry Wills Mike Moffet Associate Editor STAT DEP KISSINGER While some hat overshadowed, rest assured that I t think that I am still here!" Letters to the editor *s*ould be typewritten, double-spaced and should be in a formal tone. In case of condemnation, according to spa limitations and the editor's judgment, students must provide the r name, year in school and home town; faculty and staff must provide the their name and position; others must provide their name. Letter Policy Nixon's Secret Negotiations "The Vietnamese war will be settled at secret high-level negotiations." That is what Richard Nixon said when he was running for President. He was commenting on his own admiration for Woodrow Wilson. He said his greatest inspiration with Wilson was on the principle "open covenants, openly arrived at." Nikon prides himself on knowing what the score is in a term game, but he knew how the Vietnam war could be settled—by a secret bargain, preferably including the United States. "The Johnson administration has boxed itself in where it can't undertake these," he insisted. "But a new one could and would." Well, his recent telecast proves that the new administration couldn't, and didn't, settle the war in private sessions. When one understands that the principle of secret diplomacy is a critical element of the important items on which he has regularly differed from his hero—then the real gravity of Nikon's publishing He had to say, of course, that he published the history of his cover, as a manifestation of things off dead center. But that is boo-boo (as Menken used to say). For a Nixon to give up on secret negotiations matters, to give up on negotiations themselves. He does not "blow his cover" to advance the discussion, but to expose the facts. our past efforts at negotiation becomes manifest. Yet this does not mean that Nixon is only answering domestic critics, at the cost of future diplomatic possibilities with Hanoi. It is a sign of the weak democratic leadership. Democratic critics are simultaneously easy on him (granting that the secret terms are at least reasonable, if not generous), and too harsh (saying he has nothing in mind but his electoral campaign, come what may on the war front). The truth, as usual, is more subtle. If Nixon confessed the failure of direct negotiation with Hanoi, it was—I am sure he did not apparently apparent to him, and because he believed the American public should not be a victim to any illusions about this hard fact. People have consistently denied that knowing he is an蜀, capable of any evil. His critics are wrong when they say he has bargained in bad faith or compounded an insincere process by betraying the trust of secrecy. Unless the secrecy is to national advantage, unless hears as our leader in maintaining it. And when he truly thinks it has served (or, rather failed) its purpose, he is required to give an account of that fact. No, Nikon's fault has not been in revealing the secret. Nor has it been in trying the secret path of negotiation. revealing the secret. Nor has it been in trying the secret path of negotiation. His fault is a much deeper one, that few of his political rivals can illuminate because they, too, have indulged in it one way or other. Nixon has failed by being in a position to bargain atall, whether publicly or privately. We aren't. Talks, secret or open, are useless to those who cannot see the obvious. And the obvious has been, for a long time, that we have nothing to gain in Vietnam because we have stayed there, the worse off we have become; that, consequently, there is no credible quid we can offer for a face-saving quo. The negotiations have not failed because they are open or correct; so we have nothing commensurate to pounce against Vietnamese intrangeness about their own land and about all the dead who have fought to make it their own. To strike a favorable bargain, you need a position of vantage. And we have to work did. And we are tools to think we did. Copyright,1972 Universal Press Syndicate James J. Kilpatrick Senate Debate Lingers WASHINGTON - The U.S. Senate has been locked in debate for almost a month on an issue as to whether the obstacle pending bill having to do with the Employment Commission (EEO), may be disposed of this week. The Issue may remain. It merits your thought. The debate centers on an effort led by Sens. Harrison Williams of New Jersey and Jacob Javits of Pennsylvania to commission with power to enforce its findings by issuance of cease-and-desist orders. A conservative coalition, led by Bob Duck of Colorado, is opposing the move. Here, we touch the bedrock of our philosophy. If the founding father's had a chief motivation, it was their hostility to the federal centralized government. King George had refused to assent to "laws for establishing judiciary powers." Instead, he had "erected a multitude of new offices and sent his twarows of officers to harass our people." Once the Revolution was won, a Constitution sought to prevent or prevent a recurrence of the evils. Two principles emerged. The first was federalism, by which political powers would be dispersed to the state or the one hand and among the separate States on the other. The second was separation of powers—the concept that, by separating the executive, the legislative, and the political powers of the central government, the old abuses might be avoided. Both principles have eroded with time. The Senate's current debate goes directly to the question, Shall the doctrine of separation of powers be further eroded? Senate liberals are cheerfully. agreeable: the Javids-Watkins bill would make of the EEOC a combined executive and judicial agency. conservative are stoutly resisting judges' judgments alone to do the judging. Liberals make this case: more than a dozen executive agencies, notably the National Labor Council, call for the power to issue binding cease-and-desist orders. Such orders result from the findings of professional hearing examiners. The Senate's Procedures Act provides abundant safeguards of due process of law. In any event, final orders are subject to judicial review and the courts are sorely burdened, with heavy backlogs and long delays, judges should not be further burdened by the trial of cases burrowing discrimination in employment. Conservatives respond that the EECO, with a backlog of 32,000 cases, is more burdened than the courts. Even if an independent agency could function as prosecutor, judge and jury. The very nature of the EECO makes impartial judicial review the commission and its staff have a built-in bias toward minorities. Judicial review is severely limited by the practice of routinely affirming cease-and-desist evidence" supports them. At the heart of this disagreement is the difference that eternally divides liberal and conservative beliefs to trust government and to urge that its powers be expanded, the conservative looks for government with a wary eye and asks its power be restrained. This is what the fight is all about. If the liberals prevail, the EEOC will become one of the most powerful agencies in informing laborers more than the National Labor Relations Board, which is confined to areas of organized labor. Its coercive authority includes discrimination (by reason of race, sex or religion) in both public and private employment, in small business as well as large. Proponents agree that a vast new law that will have to be created. Fortunately, the House already has voted, though narrowly, against this expansion of power. Nixon opposes the Williams-Javits bill, but he opposes it only on a few occasions exceedingly close. Philosophically, the two sides are at least 200 years apart. Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. Readers Respond Bible To the Editor Sisters; Song; Bible Quotes ... With carefully selected quotations from any book one can "prove" almost anything. The Bible is been quoted, and misquoted, and misinterpreted to prove or support all kinds of theories and systems, including that "punctual" slavery in the United States. be hoped that they can find such sources. With regard to women's liberation and the Bible, we find, for instance, that in the Book of Proverbs characterized as being female. Corinthians states that man is not independent of man, nor man is independent of woman. For as woman was born in the same way man is born of woman. **Quotation** can be found to refute quote, ad infinitum. One would think that opposition to quotes is another other issue, could be found in sources which are not as self-contradictory as the Bible. If Messrs. Kreins and Chester were wrong, we could say (let us hope they were not) it is to Margaret Todd Smena sophomore Nusan Yowell Dean King Deann King Stockton sophomore Anita Gram St. Joseph, Mo., son camp Smena junior have consistently distorted occurrences and obscured the aims and needs of women at the University of Kansas. I believe the Sisters should be given guest editorial space in the organization, tell their audience organization, as generously provided with student money as they have Kansan-could surely press the issue of constituency more accurately. Protest To the Editor: Ric Hollerar Lawrence The attacks on the Sisters are doubly unfair since none of them can make individual replies to the sniper by the Kansan. I would like to register my protest against the slanted and prejudiced coverage of the sisters in the columns of the Kansan Coverage has ranged from misunderstanding appearing sympathetic (Mike Hoefer) editorial Feb. 8 to cowardly lip reading to women liberation (Chip Cressi editorial Feb. 9, 1972). Accounts in the news columns Lyrics To the Editor: As you know, one of the most closely guarded secrets of the 20th century concerns the lyrics and their skill. Hereof these lyrics were jealously guarded by the nine people who had sole knowledge of the words; James McCain, Billy Corbat, Matthew Barrett, athletic director; Erie Barrett, Jr., captain and bench warmer of the freshman baskettle teams; two members of the team western Kansas manure shoveler; Lucifer (no last name); Fred White; and Richard M. Nixon. The last-named being the most easily accessible source from which I can access guarded secret. I successfully acquired the services of Henry Kissinger's young son with a hatchback. He was Hersher's bar, a red hunting hat, and three dollars in unmarked nickel coins for information in my possession. Not wishing to waste time and space by divulging other less important facts surrounding my teammates, I am that with many K.U. fans preparing to follow the Jayahwk basketball team to Manhattan on Friday night subjected to the strains of K-State's fight song countless times, I feel that it is only fitting that this be the time to release my findings so than more K. U. can sing along if they so desire. Knowing full well that I may be subject to prosecution for leaking the information, I feel that it is my moral obligation to do so, present them here in "Every 'Cat a Dog' K-State might be missouri. The Cowboy of O'Sate and put the Buffs in check; And put the Buffs in check; The Cyclones and the Huskers, Some one Big-Eight foo too, They get stomped by Blue Sea. Mark W. Robinett Kansas City Senior Griff and the Unicorn THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN By Sokoloff America's Pacemaking college newspaper ISN'T THAT THE UNICORN? I'M NOT SURE WELL! YOU SEEM PRETTY CHEERFUL TODAY. DARN RIGHT! I'M FULL OF ENERGY AND ENTHUSIASTM! READY TO TAKE ON THE WORLD!! LOOKS RIDICULOUS DOESN'T HE? "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman Editor Associate Editor Campus Editor Copy Editors Copy Chiefs Sports Editor Feature Editor Writer Editors Wife Editors Wife Writers Photographers Office Manager Carbonite Chile Crews Michael Monroe Hila Hauser Shaughn Rita Hauser Shaughn Jovece Newman, Rob Klina Sally Carlo Newman Rob Slimson Barbara Quackenbock Joyce Dawkins Dick Hey, Goodfellow Ed Lel弓, Kit Netter Greg Sorber, Tom Thucas Touki Nezhad BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams Business Manager Associate Marketing Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Carol Young Assistant Marketing Manager Norman Melees Marketing Manager Date Fingerprinter Date Fingerprinter Date Fingerprinter Dave Murray Dave Murray MONTREAL HOME OFFICE REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIRECTOR'S SERVICES, INC. 380 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 Thursday, February 17, 1972 I secrecy. Unless al- lusive advantage, he mainteni- ing it. ks it has served purpose, he is count of that as not been in or has it been in of negotiation. of can illuminate of can illuminate re inligated in it on has failed by sition to bargain or privately. We n, are useless to the obvious. And gain a long time, in Vietnam gain in Vietnam the worse off we sequester, there can offer for a negotiations haveey are open or but because but because these intrisingle and about all to make it bargain they are able bargain, you are. And we have to think adults look. 1972 s Syndicate what the fight is all the liberals prevail, and the will become one of the powerful agencies in the nation's labor National Labor Board, which is to areas of organized scoctive authority (by reason of objection) by reason of or religion) in both private employment, business as well as large. as agree that a vast new acrylic will have to be ultimately, the House already died, though narrowly, is expansion of power. opposes the Williams- bay, but he opposes it only when he cannot close. Philosophi- two sides are at least unant. wright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. . . . el that it is only fitting to the time to release gs so that more K. U. can sing ye so desires. Ye so desire. full well that I may be prosecution for leakage to the public is my moral obligation that present them here in Every 'Cat a Dog" beat my Missouri, best beat the Sooners he buffs in checkmate; right footers, right footers, right foot no. of every ten times ostromed by Big Blue —Mark W. Robinett Kansas City Senior AN image newspaper By JERRY M. VOKRACKA Kansas State Writers Chip Crow Alan Reeves Scott Spencer Brian Haake Eric Kramer Steve Knifel Joyce Neeley, non King Sally Cattell, non King Bob Simpson Barbara Spurck Joyce Duncan, Nancy Jones Darbar Schmidt Barbara Schmidt Edil Kul, Nelson Tom Tornan, Tom Tornan Touch Rush Standing side by side with their handle bars overlapping, in a variety of shapes, sizes and colors, 48 bicycles are stored in the basement of the Lawrence Police station to be claimed or not turned. Lost Bikes Await Owners Carol Young Jerry Kane Norman Mackay David Lippert Dale Pipegerphon Dave Murray Dave Murray VENTURE BY Bringing Services VICES, INC. N. Y., 10017 Miguel Garcia, a sergeant in the traffic division whose majority of the bikes were found abandoned in ditches along streets or were picked up by the police after a citizen reported one "THE PUBLIC should be aware we do pick up abandoned bikes," said Garcia. Bicycles that are not claimed in six months are authorized for public auction, said Garcia. The last auction was held in April and were sold to the highest bidder at prices ranging from $3 to $45. "The profit from the auction goes to the city, which gives half of it to the police pension and half of it to the fire pension," said Gareis the next sale would be in July, but that he would rather see the bicycles claimed by their proper owner. "PEOPLE THAT think we might have their bike claim in by proper identification. This includes its number serial, city registration number or a rafters description," said Garela. He said the biggest problem in claiming them is that people don't have this information. "If a person owns a bike, they should record all the information they possibly can and they are required when they register it. If the bike isn't registered, it should be since it is a city ordinance." Garcia Bikes can be registered at the A fund to provide tuition aid for minority group students in hournialism has been established at the University of Kansas. Founded on a $1,000 gift to the William Allen White School of Journalism by John S. Knight, the school is known as Newspapers, Inc., the fund will provide a "modest" sum to aid a minority group student in the fall semester. Edward P. Bassett, director of Journalism, said Tuesday. White Funds Minority Aid In Journalism Bassett said he hoped the award would attract disadvantaged students to the School of Journalism. Garcia said the majority of the abandoned bikes were probably stolen by a person who was in need of quick transportation. He helped there with an array of large type of ring stealing the bikes. Traffic and Security Office in Hoch Auditorium or at the police station for a 25 cent fee. A program designed to teach kindergartners about basic natural history concepts began Feb. 12 and will continue through March 11. George Paniag, biologist, assistant, teaches the workshop. Pisani said Wednesday the emphasis would be on discovering some surface features of different vertebrae grouped including fish, mammals, birds, and amphibians, which are of interest to five- and six-year-olds. There should be a light and rear reflector on all bicycles, but no front reflectors. Bicyclists are expected to obey all traffic ordinances and follow local traffic regulations. AS WARMER DAYS approach and students begin dusting off their bikes, Garcia offered a few tips concerning bicycles. Garcia said in the downtown area bikes could be parked in newly provided racks in the public parking lot behind Pend Workshop Features Study Of Vertebrates "SOME PEOPLE want to talk to friends," he said, "if they can't find any, the next best thing is taking to sympathetic people." Phone Service for Problems Needs Workers to Continue Waiting by a phone at 1116 Louisiana St. is someone willing to listen to people's problems, but by next month he may be gone. Next to the phone is a referral sheet listing people or problems ranging from the draft to drugs or birth control. A calendar that serves as a sign-up sheet for phone shifts is also used. "Right now we have only 10 active members. We need a minimum of 20 if we're going to go out on a bike. Weekdays, volunteers operate phone shifts from 8 p.m. until midnight. Miller said. Friday and Saturday the shifts are extended 8 a.m. The Because number is 843-952-6. "We are there to accept people for whatever foot they want to put forward." Miller said. "By all means, put a lock on your bike. I'm running out of room to store the things," said Garcia. The Because office is upstairs at the Canterbury House, but the group is not officially sponsored by the Episcopal Church. public sidewalks. Because, a listening service for anyone who has a problem or need to talk to, needs volunteer help, or may have to discontinue its services, Tom Miller, Lawrence of Because, said Wednesday. According to Pisani, who taught in public schools before coming to the University of Chicago do graffiti workshops will include photographs, movies, preserved and live materials, and craft PEOPLE DON'T have to phone in. Miller said. Those who prefer can come to Canterbury House to talk to the person on duty. Lebesky will speak at the initiation dinner Tuesday night. The fraternity offers the business student or the The KU chapter of Delta Sigma Pi, a professional business fraternity, will hold its formal initiation dinner for new members next Tuesday night in the University Union of the Kansas Union. Miller has started a telephone log to find out how many calls because receives. The workshop will meet three more Saturdays, February 28, and March 4 and 11. It meets for two days a week, with capacity enrollment of 12 "First we have to find out if this service is really needed," he said. "If so, knowing how many workers are needed, and feedback that the workers need." Dean Lebeshty, assistant pro- sessor to the dean, advisor to the fraternity, and H.K. L'Ecuery, associate of music, who took informal informally to talk Another meeting is planned for 7:30 p.m. February 29th, at the Canterbury House. The major business of the meeting will be KU Business Fraternity To Hold Initiation Dinner TUESDAY EVENING Miller held a meeting in an attempt to recruit more help, but only four new people attended. Frank Pinet, associate professor of business, spoke to the students at the university of the business fraternity in its relations with the University and the Business Association. "We are presenting a potourpou of different biological information on the members of these groups" said Pikani Greg Lashley, Wichita junior and president of the fraternity, said the organization held an informal smoker for 12 hours Tuesday afternoon "to familyize them with what we do." "Something Beautiful for God," a film depicting the work of Mother Teresa among the poor and dying in India, will be shown on Friday and 7.30 p.m. Sunday in the Palace Room of the Kansas Union. Admission to the film is 50 cents and the proceeds will be given to UNICFE for relief of refugees in Bangladesh. The film is co-sponsored by the Bread Friends and Newman Club, the University of Kansas at the University of Kansas. prospective business student personal contacts with different businesses. Lashley said to help students identify which field in which he wants to go. Delta Sigma Pi plans to have different business opportunities in the city (specify its members, Lashley said). It also plans tours of various locations. "It's mostly the personal outlook we get out of it," Lashley said. "We get to know what to expect in the business world." deciding whether to continue to stop because services. Miller hopes to get someone from the department of psychology or social welfare to come and explain about how to handle calls. the amount of help Because can find. The future of the program Miller said,depends largely on Film About Poor to Aid Bangladesh Refugees Miller said Because originated in the fall of 1970 at the request of a group of Psychology I students who wanted to "get involved." He has gone through several changes in leadership since then. The statement of understanding came after the administration's agreement with the Elsworth Hall Contract Review Board, agreed to reduce the hall's visitation hours from 24 to 17 and to eliminate the use of exercise baskets. New Contract Rules Read at Ellsworth The statement also said the students of Elsworth must strengthen the hall internal security, judicial communications in and out of the hall, and programming for the students of the students living in the hall. A statement of understanding during the hearth contract will include provisions for 24-hour visitation privileges the place of the hearth was on the wall wings and women on the hall's south wings was real in all hall meeting spaces. To Honor Students Who Have Served The University Or The Community, The 1972 Community Service SCHOLARSHIP AWARD It was proposed and agreed upon at the meeting that the 19-member Ellsworth Hall Contract board appointed a temporary representative government of Ellsworth Hall. As the temporary government, the review board will attempt to review the report before the statement of understanding. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES For information on your eligibility, and applications come to the SUA Office Main Floor, Union PICK UP ENTRY FORMS SUA OFFICE or 9 FLINT HALL APPLICATIONS DUE MARCH 3,1972 Fifth Annual KU PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST DEADLINE: FRIDAY MARCH 10th 5 p.m. Closing Out Women's Boots --- Maineaire Leather Boots were $30 $14.90 Other Leather Boots Reduced 30% Krinkle Patent Zippered and Stretch Styles, Several Colors, patent ered and Stretch s. Several Colors, to $18 2.90 were to $18 $12.90 MCOX shoes 813 Moss St. VI 3-2091 Griff's BURGER BARS A BURRINGHOUSE SYSTEM 1618 W. 23rd HAMBURGERS 15¢ 100% U.S.D.A. Insp. Beef THE SACK LUNCH GIANT HAMBURGER 96¢ FRENCH FRIES 96¢ ONION RINGS 20' DRINK It Is a $1.14 Value 16¢ FOR ONLY 96¢ 96¢ 96 Kansas Union Bookstore Profits Distribution OPEN HEARINGS Regionalist Room Union Thursday, February 17 4 p.m. MAUDE HAROLD LOVES MAUDE ... He's 18. Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort are HAROLD and MAUDE LOVES LIFE . She's 81. Eve. Shows 7:30 & 9:30 Granada INCL INM - Inpatient 3-15 DAYS Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. M. M. RICHARD YVETTE CHAMBERLAIN MINIFIT JOY IN THE MORNING Sal & Sun. Show Times 10:30 AM - 4:30 PM 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM (Twilight Hr. adm. 10:30 AM - 4:30 PM) (4:30 PM - 15:30 only) Virginity TOLL FREE 212-796-7900 AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL Now Thru Tues. The Hillcrest CARRY ON CAMPING IN COLOR 1.1 Eve. 7:35 & 9:15 Adult 1.50 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:30 & 4:10 Tight Fit Playroom For 10 Show Only A campsite for sore eyes. CARRY ON CAMPING Paul Newman "Pocket Money" TECHNICOLOR - A NATIONAL GENERAL EDITION EVE. 7/20 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:10 & 4:00 Twilight in Good Good Show On Hillcrest EVERY MAN SHOULD MEET A FREE-FLYING STEWARDESS once in his lifetime. Fly girls who know what to do for or to a man. Fly Girls Swedish Fly Girls R COLOR from the AIR HOSTSEES FROM COPENHAGEN Produced and Directed by JACK O'CONNELL Rock Score Produced by MANFRED MANN Hillcrest NOW THRU TUES. Patronize Kansan Advertisers 6 Thursday, February 17, 1972 University Daily Kansan Tartan Floor Dream Might Be a Nightmare By BOB SIMISON Kansas Sports Edito In line with what appears to be a national trend, an increasing number of Big Eight schools are beginning to feature surfaces in their basketball arenas. The coaches accept substitutions and uphold wooden floors. "The jury's still out on the synthetic floors," Kansas State coach Jack Hartman said in a recent telephone interview. I opened the conclusions of three other Big Eight coaches, including the University of Kansas' Ted Owens, whose arenas have, or are about to play surfaces. Colorado is the only Big Eight state, but it also Missouri, but kState and Missouri will have Tartan floors for next season. We plan to install one in Colorado this summer, and necessary $160,000 are available, necessary $160,000 are available, director of logistics he has. everyone I've talked to likes it. Stinson said. Other universities that have synthetic basketball surfaces include Washington, Dayton, Alabama, Houston, Indiana and Drake. IOWA STATE Coach Maury Coughlin doesn't like the Tartan surface for basketball. John's teams at Drake played on a Tartan floor (Husker) and a Tartan court. he moved to Iowa State this season. "ou t'will like it," John said. "I don't want to knock their product on anything like that. For instance, the dirt down," he grits great. "But basketball was meant to be played on a wood surface." John encountered injury problems after the Tartan floor was installed at Drake. "We noticed more knee and kid injuries," John said. "When you stop on it, you stop." Ccoach Sox Walseth at Colorado had the same problem this season. The Buffaloes have a synthetic door for three years. "WE HAD A rash of knee injuries in my last season, but say it's the floor's fail but we lost three regulars before the season started, and this has been an issue." "It's pretty good stuff, but we have some problems getting it to be the right stickiness on the surface. The main problem is that there's too much traction. But when it's dirty, it gets too tickle." The Colorado field house is used for physical education and for recreation as Allen Field House would be after a Tartan dress. The other floor makes maintenance a problem, Walshe said. "Personally, I think that when you combine recreation and intramurais on a varity courts." Walseth said, "it's not an ideal situation. It's hard to keep." much! A rash to keep it up "You can do great things on it but I'm not certain about using it for athletic facilities." MANTENANCE considerations constitute a majority of the reasons for KUs play to surface walls and floor with Tartan, Sinson said. "The No. 1 advantage of putting it in would be that we wouldn't have to take it down and it up all the time." Stinson said. "it's a combination of things in the field house. Now, the morning is the day when we wet the dirt down so it won't be too dusty to play basketball too" The expense of frequent room cleaning and good floor would be eliminated, said. The present floor, purpureous, is nearing the end of cleanliness. Installation of the Tartan floor in K-State's Ahearn Field House is part of a renovation project, and the work will be used for physical education. "We're putting the floor in to make it more functional," Hartman explained. "This way, we have three floors instead of one." David Miller, KU student entered dirt area in Allen Field House be surfaced and three courts set up for recreation use at the site. goal is to relieve overcrowding in Robinson Gym. MOURSISU' NEW field house has been surfaced with a Tartan floor. The Tigers will move into the new facility this spring. "I think that after examining everything we found a synthetic surface best suited to our coaches," Coach Norm Stewart said. Advantages of the synthetic glue-side consistency, Stewart, said. The basketball bounces the same way everywhere on the court; there is no mess. "Also," Stewart said, "the lacertions are supposedly completely removed. There are only small splints or abrasions." Missouri's new basketball arena will not be used for physical education or recreation. Stewartsaid. "THEY CAN'T really prove that the floor is what caused those injuries," Owens said about Walseth's objections. "The floor is not through. You need good traction, but you also need some slippage. If "Tartan can guarantee us a product that will not be too sticky and can be maintained, then you have to give it the same field house. We've got to get the dirt out. We'll never have an attractive place in her until we get it." Tartan floor apparently has been interviewed him a year and a half ago. He accepts the idea of a Tartan floor in the absence of a fire. "What would be ideal," Owens said, "would be if we can have the Tartan floor wall to wall and use a raised wooden floor. This is what I'd prefer, something like an 8-foot high raised wooden floor on the Tartan surface. IF 'THAT' NOT's a workable solution to the problem in here, then we'll have to go all Tartan, and that would be all right with John agreed. Although Iowa State decided on a concrete floor with a raised wooden playing court, the playersColliseum, John said the best use of Tartan would require a wooden basketball court for varsity "We've got a Cincinnati wooden floor, and it's the best basketball floor made," John said. Such a new wooden floor would cost about $35,000, Stinson said. cost about $35,000, Stinson said. "That would eliminate the use of the floor for activities," Stinson pointed out. "You cannot be taking it down every day and making it up every day for practice." "It might be the ideal thing to do, but it wouldn't be very feasible." '52 NCAA Champs to Return to KU 'Good Old Days' Recalled By BRAD AVERY Kansas Sports Writer What ever happened to the good old days? That question has been pressed more than any other by the frustrated parents of the world. If they attended the University of Iowa, they were on "perhaps one day," perhaps one of the years they have missed most was 1952, the year Kanehaus won national championship. KU will resume a bit of that past next weekend when the only team from the Big Eight ever to win an ACC title is KU-Missouri basketball game Feb. 26. The setting was radically different when men played in a single game. His optimism seemed justifie when Kansas opened with a 57-4 WITH LOVELYLEE, a gambit player at 6-foot-9 and leading the his sweeping hookshots and easy jumpers, Allen was confident. Amid the trades of Joe Clemente, the son of DeWight Dewitt, Ennoyer to the presidency; Clyde Lovelatte and the president; its first and only pionnain crown. Phog Allen was entering his 35th season as coach that year. He will be leading the conference championship after finishing second the year before. Schneider Goes To ABA Meet Fred Schneider, Russell seniell, expert exp in triangling the American West with tournament in Long Beach, Long Beach, weekend in the all-events division of Association of College Unions International Region 11 Schneider won in a field of 70 with a total pinfall of 1,799. He was followed closely by Steve Hefley. Bonner Springs junior, with 1,794. Hefley is an alternate national tournament April 22-24. In the doubles division Hefley teamed with Steve Zimmerman, Toperka辛娘, to place first with 1.216 points. Bill Mug杰格t, David Peele, Dan Patton, Central Missouri State, placed second in doubles victory over Baylin in the first half, and both Auditorium. The Jayhawks set a single-game school scoring record the following game with a win over Baylin. Perhaps, thoughts of intense determination lay on Alen's head when his team of Dean Kelley, Bill Lienhard, and Jon Lovelove their next five games in a row and on Jan. 3 were named the top team in the league. Ah, but how the hopes and dreams of men can be dashed, nimble, sinner their ability to recruit untutured agrarians from down the river (sometimes known as K-State) crushed the mighty Jayhawks, AND, ALAS, life must have seemed a cruel riddle when Okhakionn took (then Okhakionn is second hiss in four nights, 49-45. But it is often said that the test KU Recruits 22nd Senior Marc Craven, a 6-foot-2, 215-pound offensive and defensive tackle for the West, has signed a Big Eight letter of intent to attend the University of Kansas, coach Dan Sloan, had announced Wednesday. Also a heavyweight wrestler, Craven was selected by the Kansas City Star to its all-state team. Craven is the 22nd high school in Oklahoma and with KU since the official signage period began last week. He is the 16th recruit from the Kansas City. The University of Kansas women's basketball team will conclude regular season play against Washington at washburn in Topeka Women Cagers Close Season A ACCIDENT Dir. by Joseph Losey Script by Harold Penter Starring Dirk Bogarde 7:30 Feb. 17th UNION BALLROOM 759 The KU women enter the game with a 6-4 record. KU won an earlier meeting with Washburn here, 49-26. of a great team is its ability to overcome adversity. The severity of the damage from the ashes of defeat and went on to crush ofe after foe. Nine consecutive times did they triumph, but the biggest test yet was Still greater foes lurked in the NCAA regional, waiting to snuff out the dream. It almost outnumbered the band, but TXU finally fitted, 88-64. The second round saw the second round with the Lovettee pour in 44 points in a crush defeat of St. Louis, 74-55. But the last test still未完。 THE FIRST round of the NCAA final a report of the score for each team over Santa Clara. Now only St. John's remained between Kansas and Arizona. The game began with a Lovelle free throw, and KU never relinquished the lead. St. Louis won 10-9, the Hawks and badly lost 8-3. "Victory," cried the 10,000 Lawrence citizens who turned out to honor the national champions who had lost in a fire drove the fire truck down Massachusetts wearing a white fire chief's hat. Clyde Lovelette is still the Jahayws all-time, leading scorer with 1.888 points. Charlie Hosse was one of KU's last three games and has knowns when Kansas will win another national championship. Ah, those were the days. Ah, those are the days that era are still with us, so are the achievements of the 28-3 (including later Olympic trial). New President For Houston NEW YORK (AP)—Ray Patterson, who in three years turned the Milwaukee Bucks into one of the league's best basketball Association by winning a coin flip for Kareem Abdul Jabbar and trading for Oscar Robertson, was named the Houston Rockets Wednesday. Patterson, who held the same position with the Bucks, tendered his resignation, effective May 1. The Bull & Boar 50¢ Featureting—Roast Beef, BBQ Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef, Grilled Cheese, Meat Loaf and the Reuben OFF any two handed sandwich with the price. You must present this as a MUST present this as a Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon Sat S12 to 8 p.m. Off Offer: Fermina March 1 SPECIAL ★★★★★★★★★★★ M M JUSTICE There's no charge, but space is limited. So reserve your seats now. Call. Or send in the coupon. But come. Merrill Lynch cordially invites you to a film presentation on Personal Investment Planning featuring Saturday Bus Service Thursday, February 24th, 7:30 p.m. at the Ramada Inn The Haskell Room Lawrence, Kansas a mutual fund designed for possible long-term growth of capital. The Putnam Growth Fund (see prospectuses will be distributed at the meeting) Please reserve ___ seats for film presentation on The Putnam Growth Fund being held on Thursday, February 24th in Lawrence, Kansas. --of the Arts GOOD SIR Name___ Downtown — Campus Name Address Address Leave Ellsworth 10:30-10:50 past 9:30 am 8:50 pm Leave Olive Mirror 5:35-45 past 9:25 am 7:45 pm Leave Union 00:30-04:00 past 9:40 am 6:00 pm Leave 9th & Meadow 10:30-10:50 past hour 9:10 am 8:50 pm City & State ___ Zap___ Telephone. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. Commerce Tower, Kansas City, Missouri 64199 Telephone: HA1-5700 Fare Downtown 25* Campus 10* Information 842-0344 Lawrence Bus Co. Inc. BUT, STINSON added, "we're no closer to getting a synthetic surface than we were 16 years ago, using a lot of talking beforehand. So perhaps Owens can regard a possibility of getting back to his resignation than that with which Hartman and Stewart look forward to using them. "We'll go aband and use it for the games," Hartman said. "We're anxious to see how it works." Dev Nelson, K-State sports information director, said Hartman had considered keeping wooden floor for use during games. TACO GRANDE With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free! Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.) Offer expires Feb. 28, 1972 CENTER "We think it's going to be very attractive," was the most Stewart could say. 1720 West 23rd Street Patronize Kansan Advertisers Festival LIMITED Sale of Individual Night tickets will begin Monday, February 21 at the SUA Ticket Window Tickets are available for: March 11—Gordon Lightfoot ($3.50 Each) (reserved seat) March 8—Herbie Mann ($2.50 Each) (reserved seat) March 10—Tom Wolfe $1.50 Each March 6—The National Players $1.00 Each March 9—Portable Circus $1.00 Each 1 All Performances in Hoch----8:00 p.m. WEVE CUT THE PRICE OF RECORDS Save up to $3.00! Many, many selections in this special purchase. Classics included! Hundreds of records! Come early for best selection! Major label LP's! Top artists! HURRY! Sale Ends Tomorrow! kansas union BOOKSTORE 8:30 - 5:00 p.m. Feb.14th-Feb.18th Get your favorites at Big Discounts! University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 17, 1972 7 Full House Enjoys Harpist By PAT MOORE And LARRY HUFFMAN Kansan Reviewers The harp is not generally a solo instrument, so a concert featuring the harp is a rare event. Wednesday night's night at Zambia Zambia, the first such concerts occurred at least 20 years at the University of Kansas, was unique an excellent success. Zabalaite, acclaimed by many as the premiere harpist of the 1980s, be a solo instrument of great beauty and variation, instead of an accompanying instrument set. The compositions he selected, predominately from Spanish and French music, are excellent as a vehicle for his style operated by an extra pedal at the base, giving his custom-designed harp eight pedals instead of the usual seven. He admitted this was "the most difficult" and said he was the only harpist to use a damper. There are reasons besides this which warrant his reputation for being, according to the London school he attended, a company of artists who, in the course of history, have lifted the instrument of their choice to new forms. The program attested, Zabala was adept at finding rare pieces written especially for harp. Other instruments such as harpichord or piano, could be performed without transcription. THE CONCERT opened with a dance. KANSAN reviews id ability. His interpretations are largely classical in nature, with a certain emphasis written. Only the last two pieces on the program were done immersionally, rather than flatly (fabricating heavy harmonics, he emphasized neatness and intricacy, with crisp passages and the technical skill). MUCH OF THE precise quality this work was attributed to a painter, is due to the strong air sings of the harp. He used a green felt damper to eliminate sympathetic vibrations in the room. This allowed for more clarity. The damper was Fivedays 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.3 Vivaldi-Bach. It was well done, with the playing very clear and the notes clean. The second number was "Sonata, Op. 5, No. 7" by Cor贝利, a Baroque composer. Zahabtea played the solos in this piece. He missed a chord entirely in the Corentine. The Sarabanda was executed well; but in the Glüu he had trouble finding the bars and bars and the playing was rough. numbers were Granados "Two Spanish Dances," "Two Pieces" by Tournier, and "Three pieces by balzac. Not only they are excellent danced, but they expressed a broad scope of musical expression. The last piece on his program was "Three Preludes" by Carlos Salzedo, a 20th-Century French composer, who expanded the versatility of the harp. In this piece, he introduced innovations such as "bottlenecked drums," using key, using the hand to drum on the sounding board and Four curtain calls and an encore closed the evening's performance of barrique, Spanish opera. At the performance, Zabela tailed he was pleased with the concert and the warm reception of the audience. The third piece was "Sonata for Harp" by Rossetti. Zabalaete missed one note in the opening and then on the concert was flawless. whisking the hand up the bass strings to produce a wind-like sound. Zabalaite achieved a staccato effect by plucking some of the strings at the point which they join the sounding board and can play in a fresh quality by drawing his knuckles across the strings. THE MOST OUTSTANDING The University of Kansas Summichol Band has been selected by the College Band Directors National Association to play at a am. Saturday at the convention at Kansas State University. KU Ensemble to Play At Directors' Convention are Aaron Ciopland's "EI Salem Mexico," with Russell L. Wiley conducting, the intermezzo from the album "A New Overture" by J. Cliffon Williams and marches by Claudia T. Smith and John Philip Sousa. They are performed by a phonic Band, five other bands will perform at the convention. They are: the United States Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, the Central Missouri State College Band from Warrenensburg, Missouri, the central Missouri State College Band from Fayette, Missouri, the Henderson State College Band from Arkadelphia, Arkansas and Kansas State University Band. Under the direction of Robert Foster, the KU Symphony Band will accompany Knud Hovaldt, one of the world's leading conductors, to perform Arutunjanja's "Concerto for Trumpet." The "Finale to the Humble Trumpet Concerto" and the "Carnival of Venice" will be performed by Royal Danish Philharmonic Orchestra and the Royal Opera. Other works to be performed John Thorne, a visitor to Iran during the recent political trials, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in Room of the Kansas Union. Thorne's Talk on Iran To Treat Political Trials Parachute Club Plans Exhibit denied entrance to the trials, however. Thorne was a lawyer for Soledad Brother George Jackson. --all winter apparel 50% to 75% off The KU Parachute Club will have its annual parachuting jump at 12:20 p.m. for Oliver Hall. The club is offering a variety of equipment in an effort to meet their interest in the group. For more information call Jin Baker, 842-795-6230. The purpose of the conference, according to members of the association, is to inform students and community residents of what issues are in Iran and to muster support against the government's actions. Thore's speech will be given in conjunction with a conference sponsored by the Iranian Association through the International Club. Petitions have been circulating on campus. Mahmoud Farad, Kerman, Iran, junior, said these submitted to the Iranian submitted to the Iranian added in changing the death sentence four men to life imprisonment. Galice Bridal Further information may be obtained from the Iranian Students Association following Thorne's speech. We are now leasing for the '72 summer session at special summer rates. We have an ideal location with all the conveniences to find in most apartment complexes. Theore will discuss the treatment of political prisoners in Iran. He went to Iran as an aide to a terrorist group and political trials which determined his prison arrest after the 2006 celebration for the Shah. He was DRESSES, LONG AND SHORT COSTUMES AND PANT SUITS, BRIDAL SAMPLES. SIZES 6-16 Jayhawker Towers Apartments Examine what we have to offer; 910 KENTUCKY ★ Swimming Pool 5th ★ Laundry 843-0826 Anniversary Sale ★ 2 Bedrooms—Furnished or unfurnished DRESSES PANTSUITS PANTS - TOPS LEATHER SEPARATES SIZES 3-13 ★ NO Utilities PETITE GALERIE LEVEL LOWER ★ Free Parking Facilities LA PETITE There are NO hidden costs. Drop by or phone --either a multiview, Either way the same; New Analysis of, Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 411 West 14th. 41f Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 SAM'S CORNER OF 9th & MASS. HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS* Good thru Mon., Feb. 21st Box of 10 31c BRUT LOTION 3.2 oz. $6.00 size Limit 1 with coupon 8 oz. Anti-Perspirant $1.69 size SAM'S SUPER COUPON RIGHT GUARD SAM'S SUPER COUPON Pkg. of 12 $2.25 size Limit 1 with coupon G.E. Flashcubes Pkg. of 12 $2.25 size 24 oz. Hand Lotion $2.49 size SAM'S SUPER COUPON SAM'S SUPER COUPON Chromium Double Edge $1.00 size $1.09 Limit 1 with coupon 33c KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Daily Kalman are offered to all students. Students are required to color, creed, or national origin 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 One day Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608. If Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them. 2. You're at an advantage. If you don't. 190 Corvette Coupe, C50 325 CD/AM 4 1/4 D. posture; A/C/ AM 4D. saturation; dark grey black dark grey black interior, new tires $85.00 will help finance. 84-736-750 Now you can buy stereo components in the showroom. Hon- dling at RAY AUDIO 850-267-2388, Prairie Avenue. The only true stereo discount house in the midwest. 2-29 Bollex 18mm movie camera, optical viewfinder, 25mm × 10mm focusable to 3mm, 45° aperture, 50mm meter, 50mm × 1.8 auto, and 15mm × 2 pre set lenses at M43-892-2887. We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumphs. Competition Sports Car, Lawrence Auto Plaza, 842-219-1 2-18 FOR SALE Northside Shop, 707 North Aldridge, a blocks north of River Bridge Barnet, a wood kitchen, old wood cooking and heating items, old wood stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, and other useful items. Open 14 sun days. Herb Alterman, 842- 326 W. 10th St., New York. Underwood 21 Typewriter Excellent condition. Call Wendle, 843-7600, 2-17 Men's suits and sport jackets; MES $10-$30. Good looking, excellent condition. Dede, 842-5031. 2-17 ARGYLE SOCKS — FOR FUN AND WORK — THINK · AT EARTHSHINE, EAST 8TH · & MASS 2-17 Swinging coats and capes for spring. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 Take a look at my mistakes. We have plenty of them from all over the world Haas Imports, 1029 Mass. 2-22 Fine cold cuts, grains, oils, etc. Beer and wine yeast The Mercantill, 1227 Oread, 843-9746 2-17 SALE NOW GOING ON- UP TO 10% OFF ON MOST MERCHANDISER SOLD ON MOST MERCHANDISER CHANGES ON SALE MERCHANDISER *"THISINE" h. & MASS. 2-17 SUPER SALE. DRESS VALUES from $18-$32, now $5-$10. The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 Jeans, Jeans, Jeans, Latest styles, best selection, best prices. The Attic. 927 Mass. 2-18 60 watt electro-voice receiver, 2 M+c speaker, 2 watt radio, woofers 2, 50° mid-range and 3, 1° tweep sound of the record changer. Brian Brown's Wii with a 60-watt speaker. @ portable # stock speaker, never been used in a car. JUST ARRIVED -Swim wear and sandsweepers The Alley Shop. 833 Mass. 2-18 96 Corvette Conv.—427 cu. in., snow- ing, AM-FM radio, heat器, 4-speed, excellent engine. Call after 6, 842- 7505 7-18 EARRINGS — EARRINGS — and more EARRINGS. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 Basses, gauges, saxes, clarinet, airhorp, harp, amplifiers, stresser, tape recorders. A range of instruments for liver. Also, well buy or sell your instruments. 842-6623. Consignment. 842-6623. 2-21 Crotch Tops—biggest selection, new- est styles, $7.00 The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 Two gas stoves, one apartment size, one full size. Both are clean and work well. $25.00 each. Call 842-8221. 2-17 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Engineering student has no use for his new Royal Safari Portable Typewriter. Will sell for $45. Jim. $81-3509. 2-21 Must Sell: One women's bike in good condition for $30, and one older men's bike for $15. Call 842-6897. 2-17 Naimsith Hall Contract for sale. Call 843-2661. 2-21 Powerful 50W (E1.4) A Magnavox tuner 50m-AFM-UM unit cut to $10,000. Excellent pair speaker cut to $600. Benchmarked (Basement Stereo Room). 2-22 8 track stereo tapes $3.49 with this coupon. Gregg Tire Co., 814 W. 23rd. 2-25 Guitar-Guild 12 string Acoustic= 11½ years old-Good condition-Call 843-5113 after 6:30 p.m. 2-21 Do you use 7.35-11 tire size? We're clearing out 5 parts of our best snow pack at $15.00 each plus 2.50 FJ. (3.50 Ply) Rock Stone Mass: 2.22 Deadline : 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Powerful Zenith stereo portable sold new $139, now only $25.00. come with ten Zenith stereo ports. $89.00. Massive handset. Open Thurs nights. 2-22 Fire Cleaner! New GF14-10 wide Fire Cleaner! New GF14-10 wide Fast free installation at Bay Stoneback's (new GF14-10 $2 more) warehouse or with whiteboard $6 extra eggs) 69 VW bug, custom interior, 68 VW bus, A/C, radial tires, super clean. Call 843-7248. 2-22 For Cape Cod and the islands. Complete list of businesses requiring summer employees. Send $2.00 to: STUDENT JOB OPPORTUNITY 25 words of lower : $1.90 each additional word : $0.90 1972 STUDENT JOB OPPORTUNITY BOOKLE R.R. 1, Box 11-C, Orleans Mass. 62653 Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service Tony's 66 Service 33 RPM Special Award Winners-Al伯森, Peter Neilson, Michael Troubled, Water, Peter Neilson, John McCarthy, Julia, Mrs. Robinson, etc. only $1000 each; same recordings only $2.00 Complete line of men's and women's swim suits at Penny's. 830 Mass. 2-22 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 1964 Buick Special, 4-dr. V-8, auto charged. Air conditioning. Air craft and running condition. Price reduced to call Bell 343-3435. Schedules: 3-22 1947 Studebaker pick up. Anxious to sell. 884-2894. 2-18 1971 Canam, 350, loaded, turbidity-dynamic, air, power band, 8-track stereo, disc-laser, rache wheels, 6000 rpm cycle, power band, 2-meter cycle, CALL 84-1202 anytime. DARK ROOM EQUIPMENT bopen enthrallment with printer, printers, printer, scanners, handheld radar, laser, etc. also ALCO electricity, powerwax, aquarium. 841-239 www.bopen.com VOX Hollow Body Electric Guitar sunburst beauty sandal Immaculate condition with hard-shell case. $190 Candi Randy 82-659 3-22 BOKONOK NONOKOK New shipment of shirts, jackets, dresses, and jeans this week. Put Pat dance specials on your list. Vermont Open 11-6. 2-22 Austin America 1989 AM-FM FM- automatic, a new tires. Call Mark at 842-3534 or by Phi Kappa Tau. 1150 W. 11th St. 5-22 1964 Futura 2-door hardtop, 3-speed, V-8, good condition, white with red interior. Call 864-2386. 2-21 Clean, 1963 Chevrolet for sale. $100.00. Call 841-2890 after 5:00 p.m. 1341 Rhode Island Liquidation auction to remodel store. New used and new furniture and appliances, warehouse and antique. Everything must go. Free equipment. Kauai, Feb. 20, 11:00 a.m. to noon. 1967 Yanahara 250 Twint Scribmanter Yanahara back tire, back tire, and good grip. Back tire, back tire, and good grip. Back tire, back tire, and good grip. Color organs $40.00 and. Need deck $0.00. Greip, Giuppe, 84-4262 84-4263 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Sharg Avent, Lentra latte, Att all- Minolta SILTA 1.28 * 35mm and 1.28 * 15mm; Prin Strobe; Rechargeable. matching couch chairs 414-988-2236 matching couch chairs 414-988-2236 1983 Morris Minor convertible. Low mileage, excellent condition Call evenings, 842-4136 or 842-1240 2-23 FOR RENT WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for furnished or unfitted two-bedroom apartments, patio, kitchen, dining room, patio or onkayon. West Hill Lawns. Call 24 hours a day 811-365-9070. Lawn care Apartment—newly decorated—one bed furniture—walled—wall to wall carpeting—11; blocks from Union. Phone 843-5767. ff Ridge House Apartment—for the budget number! At the populous best hotels in town, Eighty-two and 2 bedrooms—and 1116 for details 420. Cedarwood-1116 for details 420. Cedarwood-1116 for details 420. for rent—or or two bedroom apts, air conditioned, garbado carpeted, kitchenettes, refrigerators, facilities, color TV v.5 available. Call 814-262 or stop by Hillview Apts. 814-262 HLIVIEW APARTMENTS — 1733-45 W 24th St. w/ 11st to $199 and one 18th floor apartment. apartments. Carpeted, draperies, elec- tric furnishings of much most expen- sive apartment on the west side. Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. From the block south of WASHINGTON 843-1116 2-21 COLLAGE HILL MANOR now has apartments with many usable paid rooms, apartments with multiple paid rooms, pool and laundry. Easy walking way to the lake at 1741 W. Wbth. Jr. 3-28 at 1741 W. Wbth. Jr. 3-28 Would you like something a little outfitted in an apartment or beautiful Beautiful furniture until now校 is not Fireplace, parceling, furnishing $90.m. Car $125.00. IT'S NEVER TOO LATE and it is a great time to visit a place that comfortably can appreciate. One call to Mrs. Forryth at 2017-A Harward Road and you can obtain pertinent information on the apartments housed and most attractive communities andmosis) Avalon Apartments, Apartments, Iowa & Harward Lots of Apartments, Iowa & Harward Lots of soundproof construction, pleasing rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, reasons you would enjoy living in this location, make this semester in Lawrence a memorable location for August occupancy and special summer rates for June each year. THE CONCORD SHOP - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock others on order - ARTIST CANVAS - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz. pts. - qts. only 25% OFF McCONNELL LBR. CO. 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 University Terrace Apartments-furnished apartments available for occupancy in the building to manage a staff i529 West 9th Apt. I-B or call 643-1023. 8:17 Unfurnished room for rent—utilities paid, share bath and kitchen. Some rent off for light housekeeping. Pre-paid parking. Miss noon on any day 2-21 NOTICE Apt for rent. 1 bedroom, A/C cor- peted, big closets, parking closer many KU lots. 1419 Ohio. Call 842- 6385 UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright (816) 474-4076 tt TEE PEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB— Welcome back, students! H'i's party variations for second semester term are available. Nine band members and a party person. Nine band member, black band member. We also have special monthly rates for private in-person meetings. Phone or contact John Holdt at Tee Pee Champion Service Office, 818-642-2828. Way business phone, 818-642-2828. DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe. Leave airlines from N.Y., or S.F. to Washington, D.C. IDs unused. Flight Center. 227 North Rmadison. Madison, Wisconsin $3566 INFANIT DAY-CARE CENTRE for 8423610 TAFE-AIR CENTRE 8423610 TAFE-AIR CENTRE chilren y 12 mtr. Fuel or par-patent y 12 mtr. Fuel or par-patent t-2.25x t-2.25x HUNSTEENST STUDS — SILVER RINGS — AND MANY OTHER FAR OUT ACCESSORIES EARTHSHINE. East 8th and Mass. 2-17 KU Students of Objectivism will study at the School of Objectivism on Rand Day on Sunday. 7:20 p.m. in the Oread Room, Kansas Union. contact: call 842-316-3894 6945 CSC For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization—call the Women's Center. 864-444. ff SPRING KIDS ARE IN FUNKY 40° AND EARLY 30° *STYLES*—EARTH- SHINE, EAST 8th & MASS 2-17 SANDSWEEPERS JUST ARRIVED. The Attic. 927 Mass. 2-18 Low-Low Jeans with the flare look at Low-Low Prices. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 WE HAVE TOPS FROM A TO Z. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 SWIM WEAR JUST ARRIVED. The Attic, 292 Mass. 2-18 Appearing at the Mad Hatter on Wed, Feb 16, and Fri, Feb 18, — SHINE — a folk trio. Free admission. 3:48 Professional seamlessness with design experience will work with you for the look you want. Alterations, too Call 843-3763. 2-21 LONG DRESSES FOR PARTIES THAT ARE SUPER The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 Journees positions open for juniors, and board members. Call Todd Gunn at board for 8 weeks during summer. Send resume to Career Services, Inc. GU 4-1725 or shire@career-services.com for a interview. Malawi Music Academy 100 brand new used western and Hawaiian shirts coming in this week at BOKONK $2.90 jeans from BOKONK $5.99 bikini at BOKONK 819 Vermont 2-22 WANTED Circle your calendar now for the Last Saturday Night of February. Rosalea's Hotel, Harper, Kansas 70588 (316) - 869-1921 2-21 Wanted—Science fiction books to, cover a range of topics, incl the atlas at the Emporia Expand your different books. Come in and ask how you can help. Came from South door of Union, next to Dyke Spend this summer working in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to Colorado Opener, Office 3-626, Boulder, CO. 80302 Sports Cars Inc. PERMANENT LEGAL SECRETARY. Shorthand, typing required Will train 843-0811 2-18 Female roommate will to share duplex, 1137 New York. Private bedroom, modern kitchen, $50 / mo. at 6:00 p.m., 842-3604 2-17 Customers for valentine day gift, ideas at Hodge Podge. Open late Thursday's. 15 West 9th. 2-22 Competition Three girls need fourth to share an apartment, near campus. Own room, call 842-6178 after 4:00 p.m. 2-18 Male roommate to share apartment at 1323 Ohio. One bedroom, wall to wall carpeting, redecorated. Come by Apt. No. 10. 2-18 (913) 842-2191 THE MERCANTILE 230 W. 2919 terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2919 Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD HERBS AND SPICES MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SAUAGES Need girl to share house. $5 Utilities included. B42-5788 Women's alterations. 20 years experience. Call. 841-2767. 9:30-5:30. ATTENTION TWINS, 18 years and older. study to answer health questionnaire questions, and to study health information for $100 or $150 remuneration per twin, both boys or girls, or 478 Twin-flow, only 8.00-4.30-3.40- or 478 Twin-flow, only 8.00-4.30-3.40- Individual to share house with four others. Own room. fantastic location. shared dinner menu. Rent $40.60 per night. 1-2 bathrooms. Price: $2,000. area: 823-4970. 2015-22 PERSONAL Valentine Purse Sale at Hodge Podge. 10% off Feb. 10—Feb. 17. 15 West 9th. 2-22 POETRY WANTED for anthology and book review for premiere press. Send to Editor, DLEWILD PRESS, 1807 East East, Los Angeles, Los Angeles Coolbox 90211. NOW WHEN THERE IS NOTHING ELSE TO WEAR-FATORS ONLY AT EARTHSHINE EAST 8th & MASS 2-17 Call me for excellent low cost hospital insurance with above average benefits including dheral benefits for cancer and life insurance. 842-5200. Life and Health Insurance. 842-5200. To the girl who found our little white dog with the thorny tail—"Thank you." Cannot express our gratitude. TYPING Sweetheart, "Anne of a Trounso- ny" is playing in NYA ask and echo American detainer — who eats an egg salad and honey. 2-17 experienced typist will type your rpm papers, theses or dissertation. electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call IV 3-3281. Mrs. Mauckman. Experienced in typing theses, dissertation texts and electronic typesetting. Typing typeface. Accuracy and prompt screening. Vehicle service. Vehicle service. Phone 843-8544, Mr. Wright term papers, these types cited promptly, your choice of type will be determined at the time dating at reasonable rates. 842-979- 842-565 months. Kinda Diana Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention 843-0958. 2-29 Accurate typing of your thesis, dissertation, or miscellaneous work on IBM Selectic typewriter with picxel card. Typewriter, large page size. LOST Lost brown neck scarf during KU- G-Tech game Mon. 7. 841-3158, 1230 Miss. 2-18 One-year old black Labrador—Ray- injured front left leg. Animal Mission Clinic tag. Call Pitts. 843-5000. 2-18 Wrist watch from band, former graduation present; sizeable reward. Identification on back. Call 842-5331 or 2-18 Male Brittany, white with liver spots Please call 842-6710. Reward. 2-18 MISCELLANEOUS Tube incubate on sale Two for $1.00 Saturday at the Hodge Podge, 15 West 9th. 2-23 BRIDAL GOWN GROW Store Sale-Size: 8-10 to 12, up to 75 Fall, Fall and spring *abrils* Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky 4.26 HELP WANTED OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS All professions. All occupations. The profession significantly affects job opportunities. Significant information includes 1971, San Diego, CA; 2015, Wilmington, DE; and 2015, San Diego, CA. "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU 8 Thursday, February 17, 1972 University Daily Kansan Veterans' Group Moves To Publicize Job Needs Creating an awareness in the public mind that there are many young men and women returning from the Vietnam war who need to learn about paramount problem facing the Lawrence Jobs for Vets Committee, John Puehrn, 3037 W. Lawrence chairman, said Wednesday night. The Jobs for Vets steering committee met to discuss internal organization of the committee Ed Mills, 2200 Barker and local employment security director, reported on the returns of the job offered. The local veterans with active files at the Employment Security office. Purcell presented a proposal that would set up about six committee members in a committee was considered the most urgently needed to acquaint veterans and employers with the needs of the veterans' committees considered were a veterans' benefit committee, which would inform veterans of their needs and help these committees could go to get help locally; an employees' contact Phone Fraud Investigations To Continue Investigations are continuing in cases of misuse of telephone lines at the University of Kansas Jim F.T. Garner, security manager of Southwestern Bell Telephone's Kansas operations, said Mr. Two students were convicted early this month for using false calling or credit card numbers to long distance telephone calls. "I'm sorry to say that we're still investigating this misuse," Garner said, "but student misuse is a major minority of our local investigations." "Of maybe a total of 40 cases a month of this type, perhaps only five involve students and not just KU students," Garner said. "We're not in the business of prosecuting people," Garner said. That's not our attitude at all." He explained that once his office confirmed misuse of facilities by students, they tried to contact the students involved in the abuse, and recognized their responsibility and making restitution. and cultivation committee, and a statistical information committee, which would determine the needs and qualifications of the Mills said that out of 270 questionnaires made out, 82 had been completed and returned. Of these, 75 indicated the veterans full-time employment and only one sought part-time employment. Affirmative Action Board Named to Begin Planning Chancellor E. Laurence Chancellor appointments to the Affirmative Action Board Wednesday at a meeting of the University Senate Juliet Shaffer, associate professor of psychology, is chairman. Other members are Campus Briefs Exceptional Child Council The Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) will hold a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Jaywalk房 of the Kansas Union. European Travel Forum There will be a SUA travel forum to discuss student travel in Europe at 4:00 p.m. Thursday in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. British rail, student rail and Eurail passes will be discussed. Audubon Society Meeting The Jaiyahk Audubon Society will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the South Park Restoration Center, 1141 Mass. James Parker, teacher assistant at Dyce Museum of the University of Georgia, will present a talk on the biology of the Mississippi Kite. "The public is invited to attend." Barbarella Rescheduled The science fiction series film, Bararelli, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Woodbury Auditorium, has been re-scheduled for Feb. 28. The TV pilot movie, The Immortals, will be shown in its place. It will be preceded by a film and lecture by Paul Anderson and chapter three of the Buck Rogers serial. The lecture will start at 7:00 p.m. Occupational Therapy The occupational therapy all-student lab will meet at 4:30 p.m., Thursday in 411 Summerfield. There will be a discussion of next semester's curriculum. Each occupational therapy student should attend and know exactly which courses he will need next semester. Teaching is to find out how many students to expect in each study area so that plans can be made to accommodate that number. James Rosser, associate vice chancellor of academic affairs, the University of Philadelphia, Philip Rankin, director of personnel service, Murray Wax, professor of sociology, Sarah Thorne, Ph.D., The Thomas Cox, Lawrence graduate student, Edith Black, School of Art and Design, School of Social Welfare, and Tony Bernudz, steamfit foreman for the Building and Ground Densities. Phil Gary, director of urban affairs and the chancellor's to be-appointed assistant for urban affairs, are to serve ex officio. According to Chalimers, one purpose of the board will be to advise the chancellor concerning the appropriate affirmative action programs. It will also make recommendations to the chancellor about the proposed administrative office and the affirmative action programs for women. In a more general sense, Chalers said, the board would establish an affirmative action plan to ensure that the staff employment and admissions policy is not discriminatory Chalmers said the board would also be concerned with the development of a plan for Stouffer Place residents met Wilson, University of Kansas director of housing to discuss a proposal that would allow them Stouffer Seeks To Keep Pets Under a proposal by a small committee of Stouffer residents, tenants could keep small offices in their apartments or on a leash. Pets of any sort are presently prohibited in the apartments for married students. "Souffler Place was not designed for pets," said Wilson, but he stressed the fact that the animals could vote to change the rules. Wilson said the housing office was not opposed to the change in rules because the present rules are so hard to enforce. A vote on the proposal by Stouffier residents will be taken after a committee meeting Monday. correcting the under-utilization of minorities and women in all areas of employment and admissions at the University. William A. Lucas, associate dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design and SenEx chairman, said other SenEx business consisted of correcting areas discussed as vacancies on University committees, although no appointments were made. Campus Bulletin TODAY TODAY Rockwood Dist., Mo. Interviews: 8:30 a.m., 300 Kansas Union City Clerks: a.m., Big Eight Room and City Churks' 9 a.m., Big Eight Room and Jayhawk Room. 801-524-6800, citychurks.com, City Room. 1. travel: 9 a.m., Governors Room. 2. Student Teachers: 9 a.m., Oread Room, Regionall Room, Curry Room and Council Room. Engineering Department: 9:30 a.m. Alcove C. Catfeiter. City Clerks: 10 a.m., International Room AAUP: 11 a.m., Meadowlark Cafeteria, Education Grads.: 11:30 a.m., Alcove B, Cafeteria. Natural History Museum; 11:30 a.m. Alcove D. Cafeteria; Downtown Alcove; 11:30 a.m. Latin American History: noon, Alcove A, Cafeteria City Clerks: noon, Kansas Room. Counselry Department: noon, English Room. Room. Faculty Forum: noon, Westminster Faculty Forum: moon, Westminster College American Studies Grade: 12.30 pm American Studies Grads.: 12:30 p.m. Cottonwood Cafeteria. Cottonwood Caldera. Incident Body President: 1 p.m. Oread Road ROOM: Room. on Instruction: 2:30 p.m. Regional Room. Comm. on Instruction: Regional Room. City Clerks: 2 p.m., International Room Costa Rica Program; 3 p.m. Oread Room University Council; 3:30 p.m. 108 Blake Senate Booksstore Comm.; 4 p.m. Regional Listen. City Clerks: 3 p.m., International Room and Parlor. SIMS: 4 p.m. Fine Room. Ria Program: 5 p.m. Alcove B. Cafeteria Roof Room ROOMS 1, 2, 3, p.m., Council Room. SUA Traw Room SIMS 4; Pine Room. MAMBA, J.P., 1907-1984. Room 2. AURH Legislators' Dinner: 7 p.m. Templein Hall Dining Room. Council for Exercised Children: 7:30 Birmingham BM - m? p l a n t, English Room Société BIM 6 - 30 m², Room. Société BIM 7 - p 10 m², Lounge. BSC: p. 7pm, 300 Kansas Union. Science Fiction Film: 7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. Carrus Cruade: 5 p.m., Parlors A. B. C. Auditorium. Campus Crusade: 7 p.m., Parlors A, B, C and Pine Room. [Name] [Email] [Phone] [Job Title] SIMS: 7 p.m., Forum Room. AURH Legislators' Dinner: 7 p.m. Council for Excepcional Children: 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room. nd Pine Room: LDS Inst: 7 p.m. - 299 Kansas Union. 404-558-3000. Mexican-American Students: 7:30 p.m. Rural/Suburban Breem Mexican-American Students: 7:30 p.m. Regional1st Room 204 East 8th Street Oxford, MA 02645 Open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Bicycle Club: 7:30 p.m. Oread Room. Film Society: 7:30 p.m. Ballroom. McGovann Canvassers: 7:30 p.m. Curry Cavan Tankersisters; 7:30 p.m. Curtry Room. PEO: 7:30 p.m. Centenial Room. AM 7:30 p.m. Centennial Room. PM 10:30 a.m. Social Work 7:30 p.m. Counsel Room Science Fiction Film: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. Auditorium University Women's Newcomers: 7:30 p.m. 222 Ablone St. Pi Delta Phi: 7:45 p.m. International Room. English Department; 9 p.m., Oread Room. KANSAS CITY (AP)—Tests in three large U.S. cities indicate more than half of some kinds of meat and poultry contain chemicals that poisoning, a U.S. Food and Drug Administration official says. 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"One of pop music's last, best hopes... — BOSTON AFTER DARK "...greatest British rock and roll band since the Stones." -- SOUNDS faces Ronnie Wood Kenny Jones Ian McLagan Fod Stewart BELL MUSIC Phone 843-2644 PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION MAY1 WELCOME TO THE PATTERN GALLERY AUG 27 MARCH 4 JAN 15 FEB 18 DEC 19 825 Massachusetts Emerson, Lake & Palmer PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION ON COTILLION RECORDS "Pictures at an Exhibition" by EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER $449 bread Baby I'm Wendy FREE THE ROW ON ELEKTRA RECORDS "Baby, I'm a Want You" by BREAD $449 POSTER with any purchase of two records HURRY While Quantity Lasts SPECIAL GROUP Stereo Long Play Albums JAZZ — RHYTHM & BLUES and ROCK Thousands of Titles only $194 Burrowing Beak THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COLDER The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Council Proposes Resource Office 82nd Year, No. 88 Friday, February 18, 1972 See Page 2 Kesey Advocates New Third Party For Malcontents By RIVIAN BELL Kansan Writer In a surprising move, Ken Kesey, counter culture leader and author of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" announced Thursday the formation of a third political party "for everybody who doesn't want the other two." More than 1,000 people attended a Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Symposium at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, where Kesey snoke. “The only way to change the structure (of American society) is to do what we’ve never done yet.” Keevyn said, “and that is why we have chosen an executive office that we have a say in.” The 37-year-old author was the organizer of the 1980s acid tests and the original book *Wetland Plants*. In California, a group noted for its wide-scale promotion of LSD and what they consider to be its creative powers. Keesy is the author of his wife's book "Electric Boat Aid Test." IN A SOFT but serious voice, Kesey said on the new party would be founded on democratic principles and would work with the people to order to beat what he dubbed the present "fried ice cream" American system, Kesey suggested actions "of energetic progress and goodness," and not bombing and goodness," "which only feeds the enemy." "To fight the evil in these ways is only to lend evil power," Kesey said. "We can't indulge ourselves anymore—they're ready and defensive we haven't even thought of yet." According to Kesey, the new party's platform would consist of one or two issues on which most people could agree. He said that the party could free of religion could be potential bases. He suggested that this party be formed by all those present at the symposium, including "the cop who's guarding the door" and "he sweeps up—just whoever is amongst us." HE SAID members of the party could be Republicans, Democrats, young or old. Kesey seemed particularly concerned with his former colleague the elderly people in American society. "Old people gotta stand up and bitch," the young people are doing all right," he said. Keesy suggested that interested persons assemble at UMKC Saturday morning to nominate a state party chairman. This committee will review the organization and for a convention to nominate candidates for the election ballot. Kesey said that if party organization were successful in Missouri, he would carry the idea to other states, specifically to college campuses. The author admitted he knows little of what he called "the political milu," but it is clear that he has Kesey has recently returned from a five-week stay in Mexico, where he visited Allen Medlin, former professor of political science at San Jose State College in northern California. Medlin is said to have greatly influenced Kesey's switch in location and concentrated drug involvement to concern for a broad-based political organization. "WE CAN'T get it on just by doing dope or breathing exercises," he emphasized, "and we want to be the country and to this community before we can find maturity. When we can get down to resolving the differences in our own hearts, we have a chance for such Kesey said that the basic problem lies in man's relations to the earth, not merely in relations between men and women. He said he thought man tried to possess things instead of placing himself in relation to things. PASSPORTS This possession results in the destruction of the divinity of earthly objects, whether animate or inanimate. According to Kesey, the danger is not to be found in an external enemy, but rather within man's heart. When questioned if he were happy with his present existence, Kesey replied, "This is the way I want it." (1) Kansan Photo by RIVIAN BELL . . advocates "third party" . . . Nixon to China Sunday Hawaiian Stop Is Start Of 'Journey for Peace' HONOLULU (AP)—President Nixon set Thursday—a historic mission he said he was undertaking for all mankind in search of a cure. He also hosted a hostile and isolated Chinese Communists. There be boarded his blue, silver and white presidential jet, "The Spirit of '76," for the 18-hour nonstop flight to Kaneohe on the Air Station on the northern shore of Oahu. His departure, which came as light snow fell from slate-gray skies, was televised live nation wide, a prelude to the extensive live television coverage planned for his From the White House, where school children, Cabinet officers, congressional leaders, government employees and tourists bade him farewell from the South Lawn, Nixon flew by helicopter to nearby Andrews Air Force Base, Md. The President arrived here on a clear sun-drenched day for a two-day stopover before continuing to Guam and to China. The President's jet touched down at 7:30 p.m. Lawrence time at Kaneohe after a ten-hour flight from Washington. As he embarked for the first face-to-face summit meeting between U. S. and Chinese Communist leaders, he tempered his words of hope with words of caution. "We are . . . under no illusion that 20 years of hostility . . . will be sweep away by one week of talks," Nixon told 8,000 people attending farewell ceremonies at the U.S. embassy in Mexico, and Mrs. Nixon wined westward to Hawaii's first leg of his 20,395-trail, 13-day journey. "WE WILL HAVE great differences in the future," he said. "What we must do is find a way to see that we can have our differences without being enemies at war." eight days in China WITH HIS WIFE and an official party of 13 White House and State Department advisers, Nixon will arrive in Peking on Monday—Sunday night U. S. time—and become the first American president to set foot on Chinese soil. Before returning to the United States Feb. 28, he will have an open-ended series of talks with Chinese leaders Mao Tse-tung and Chou En-lai, attend a round of four banquets in three cities and visit the Great Wall and other Chinese shrines and Seven Teams of Candidates File; Distortion, Voter Confusion Feared Seven teams of candidates filed for student body president and vice-president before the 9 p.m. deadline Thursday, Oct. 13, in the Statehouse. Mo., junior and student body treasurer. After a 48-hour stay in Hawaii, recommended by his physician to readjust to time zone changes, the President flies to Guam on Saturday for an overnight stort. KU workmen lay the groundwork for Wescoe Hall, across from Strong Hall. Lawrence's unreasonable weather has cooperated in speeding its construction. The workman, smoothing the cement By JIM KENDELL Kansan Staff Writer The candidates, in the order of filing, are David Dillon, Hutchinson junior and Kathy Allen, Topeka sophomore; Joe Landolt, Kirkwood, Mo., junior and Mike into a two-dimensional art form, is left kneeling in the middle of his efforts. If footprints later appear on the floor of Wecoe Hall, we'll know who to blame it on. Fair Weather Speeds Wescoe Hall Construction 'We came in peace for all mankind.' Cemented concrete is used to form a smooth surface. It can be applied in a variety of ways, including as an exterior wall, floor, or roof covering. Cemented concrete also provides durability and strength to buildings. Reapportionment Plan Gains House Approval historic sites. Nixon met for 45 minutes Thursday with Democratic and Republican congressional leaders, giving them what House GOP Leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan described as "a realistic appraisal of the situation," which promised to brief them upon his启交. BEFORE TURNING to walk across a red carpet between a military honor guard and the astronaut, "If there was a postscript I might be written in regard to this trip, it would be the words on the plaque on the moon by first astronauts when they landed there: Schoenleer, Wichita, sophomore; Mohammd Amin, Ralsenjan, irian senior and Mike McGowan, Western Springs, Ill.; sophomore; Joe Green, Rapid City, S.D., sophomore; Robert Hook, Kan, sophomore; Richard Dwyer, Joplin, men, and William Jacoby, Lawrence senior; Charles Ortleb, Clay Center graduate student and Leonard Grotta, Wichita junior; Chris Boyle, Lawrence junior and Tracey Egbert, Dighton junior. TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas House gave stronger than expected endorsement to its resaploitment plan Thursday, then waded through a third of the bills which had been awaiting debate before calling it nuits for the day in early evening. In the senate, a move to consider a 2 per cent severance tax on natural gas, killed Wednesday in the Assessment and Committee, failed on 27-11 vote Thursday. TWO CANDIDATES filed for class offices Thursday. As a team, Warner Lewis, Topeka freshman, filed for sophomore president and Jon Neff, Topeka freshman, filed for sophomore vice-president, The amendment, proposed by Peter George, Lawrence, special student; Rinkeorge, second student; and John House, Raytown, Mo., senior, would require a runoff election a week after the general election if no candidate received a majority of the votes Bailey thought that the limits placed on campaign spending by the Student Senate would have little effect on the election, but O'Neill expressed concern. At the Senate meeting Wednesday night three senators proposed an amendment to the Senate Code which could remedy the problem. Neither O'Neill or R. L. "Puf" Bailey, Atchison graduate student and temporary elections committee chairman, were surprised at the number of candidates. Four candidates have filed for Student Senate. The deadline for candidates to file for class offices and Student Senate is 5 p.m. Feb. 23. The Senate will vote on the amendment at its March 1 meeting. *I think that the limitation could prevent an effective debate among the candidates.* "It's a similar situation to last year. The campus is not divided in terms of two or three major groups anymore," Bailey said. surrounding student government and the University, "O'Neill said. Both thought that the large field of candidates would have a detrimental effect on the election. In 1971 there were two teams of presidential candidates. BAILEY SAID he expected fewer candidates to file for Student Senate this year than last. He also expects fewer students to cast votes in the main election. *'1 think this is going to be a very confusing campaign, unless the number of applicants is high.* "The better organized you are, the more people you're going to reach and the more people are going to learn about you," he said. O'NEILL SAID, "The number of candidates could distort the issues and confuse the voters. It's unfortunate that we don't have a procedure to take care of this." The elections for president, vice- president and class officers will be March 12-16. Bailey said he expected organization to be a definite factor in this year's election. A record 287 candidates filed for Student Senate last year. Only 26 per cent of the student body, 4,074 students, voted last year. The Senate had earlier passed a highway ballboard control act and a Revenue Duty Act. The vote on the severance tax came on a motion by Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Prairie Village, to debate the vote on the tax which was passed by the House last session. The tax would have raised between $2.1 and $2.6 million. AMONG 23 bills given tentative approval by the House was one designed to prevent slum landlords from evicting tenants who complain about conditions of living quarters and another one to create a Sports Authority in Johnson County. The House passed its reapportionment bill 75 to 39, with Democrats, who general opposed the plan, admitting that it was necessary in the overwhelming vote of approval. the Senate to the Senate was a bill dividing the state into 125 House districts, just as the House Apportionment Committee had drawn them. Errors failed in floor debate Wednesday to amend the bill despite Democrats and some Republicans. Twelve Democrats and 63 Republicans voted for the reapportionment bill, while 25 Democrats and 14 Republicans opposed it. Given preliminary approval was a bill offered by P. Jerry Harper, R-Wichita, which deals with conditions under which landlords can evict tenants. The bill sets forth the conditions under which landlords can reclaim their dwellings from tenants, banning specifically evictions based on complaints about conditions of dwellings which are substandard. REP. Richard C. "Pete" Loux, D-Wichita, House minority leader, said following the vote he is unceded whether he was a Republican or bucking veto the House apportionment plan. However, Loux said, Democrats would see what happens to the bill in the Senate and study it some more before making a recommendation to the governor. Loux said the fact the bill provides for a 12 per cent population deviation from the most populous district to the least populous and the fact it spits numerous county, ward and precinct lines "makes it seem a little wilt." THE 23 approved will be up for a final vote Friday. The House had 78 bills and resolutions on its debate calendar when Thursday's session began, and marched through debate on 25 of them—tentatively approving 23, killing one and sending one back to committee. Among other bills given tenative House approval was one to increase the size of the Kansas Highway Patrol from its present 280 members to 320 in fiscal year 1973. In the final senate voting on the highway billboards control law, Sen. Jack W. Robinson, R-Wichita, explained his negative vote and said that the bill "marks a new low in our judicial oligarchy that benefits for a democracy in the United States." Legislator-Student Rapport Sought; Relations Improving, Vogel Says By HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writer Improving communications between the University community and state legislators was the purpose of a dinner held Tuesday night in Templin Hall. Following the dinner six members of the Kansas Legislature, several University officials and about 50 students divided into small discussion groups which met more than an hour, talking about financial and social issues involving state colleges and universities. John Beisner, Salina freshman, coordinated the meeting, which was attended by Emily Taylor, dean of women; Donald Alderson, dean of men; J. Wilson, director of University housing; Richard Wintermorte, director of the Alumni Association; Mike Sandermeyer, president of the Art Students Union; David Miller, student body president; and Molly Lafflin, student body vice-president. LEGISLATORS ATTENDING the meeting were Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge; Sen. Steadman Ball, R-Atchison; Sen. Jack Robinson, R-Wichita; Rep. James Cultt, R-Garnett; Rep. Ernest Jones; and Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence. Perhaps the most encouraging statement he might bring is by Vogel he should be regular. A 1 per cent increase in the state sales relations were improving. "I do believe the low ebb was reached that I should be able to support mass support education. Wog said UNRUK SAID a sales tax increase was impossible because "Docking has already said he is going to veto any sales tax increase." "The attitude in the legislature is changing and I can sense that they (the legislators) realize we've just got to support education," he said. He said the two houses had had "more give and take this year" concerning tax increases and that the increases "now ride on the governor." "In years like this when money is hard to come by there are very few things that will get more money than the governor is asking for," Vojel said. Unruh agreed with Vogel and said that the only way any additional money would be obtained would be through a compromise solution. Vogel said that traditionally the Kansas Senate had favored increased sales taxes while the House favored more income taxes. THE OTHER LEGISLATORS at the meeting agreed with Vogel, but none was too optimistic about any funds being appropriated for higher education above that asked by Gov. Robert Docking in his proposed budget. tax would raise about $63 million in additional revenue. Robinson said. He said the rural element was strongly opposed to an increase because farmers spent large sums of money on equipment and worked harder than other groups by the sales tax. VOGEL SAID there were three big sources of revenue—property, sales and income taxes. However, Robinson said a similar case that would include pari-mutuel betting. Deadline Today To Register Credit/No Credit Today is the last day for recording credit-no credit options and it is also the deadline for the free dren trip. Juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences interested in the credit-no credit option should go to Window 1 of the Registrar's Office. All other students should register in their school offices. Any class dropped after today will be recorded as a withdrawal passing or withdrawal failing. 2 Friday, February 18, 1972 University Daily Kansan Resource Office Proposal Sent to Chalmers' Office By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer A resolution calling for the creation of a University Resources was passed by the University Council Thursday through the clampier. Richard Rundquist, professor of education and chairman of the Academic Procedures and Policies Committee, presented recommendations concerning the Office of Instructional Resources. Rundquist said the Office of Instructional Resources must provide information gathering departments within the University to evaluate current methods and outcomes in long-term effects of instruction. The office should be within the Academic Affairs unit of the University. Rundquist said, and contend that instruction quality of instruction, educational innovation, educational research and evaluation of He said that the person chosen for this office must be able to devise a plan to work at time to it. If the position was manned on a part-time basis and supported by existing funds, it could not accomplish its task. RUNDQUET ADVOCATED an advisory board, appointed by SenEx. to assist in the establishment of the office. Lengthy discussion concerning the adoption of a mail ballot in the University Senate, by which voting could be done without attending Senate meetings, also took place. The debate was prompted by the results of a procedure in the Senate and structural changes in the Senate and Council. Roy Laird, professor of political science and chairman of the organization Administration Committee, presented the results of the questionnaire concerning process of nomination for the Senate and council. Of those responding, 245 favored adoption of a bill to override the handling by the Senate. There were 107 who favored a mail vote. Only six gave negative responses. The interpretations of these events were varied. Some faculty members were advised to a mandate to adopt a mail ballot. Student *Student*, members, however, did not receive the survey and that student consensus was to reject a mail ballot. Of 97 eligible student senators, only 12 were selected. STUDENTS COMPRISE about their college. Senate. Senate. Student representatives said that since a greater number of students are faculty attended, University Senate meetings, a mail balloon would reduce their power in the A faculty member brought out that sparse faculty attendance did not interfere with conflicting commitments. He had busy professors to participate. Some members saw the issue as a question not of student versus faculty power, but of the institution's role in discussion. Opponents of the mail ballot said that if the measure were adopted all sides of a question could not be brought to agreement by Senate members before voting. ONE FACULTY MEMBER cited a disadvantage of the open forum. Professors are a timid sort in a public meeting, he said, and they must vote according to his actual feelings to vote the ballots were secret. One student said that the adoption of the mail ballot would not have worked in a working relationship between the faculty and students which had been brought about in part by the inclusion in the University Senate. Another faculty member mentioned that perhaps the crux of the issue was the necessity of a mail ballot to require the requirement. If the ostensible purpose of the mail ballot was to facilitate decision-making in the absence of a quorum, that end would have been abolishing the quem, he said. A motion was made that the Organization and Administration Committee prepare a resolution to elect the University Senate ballot which would be referred to the University Senate for a final decision. The motion was People . . . . . Places . . . . . Things JACQUELINE LONNIS testified Thursday that she was not aware that she was a public figure nor that the people of the world wanted to read and see pictures of her comings and goings. She seeks an injunction against free-fance photographer Ronald E. Calleya for harassing two women, two奥森 Galileia is seeking $1.3 million damages, charging that Oussis has interfered with his method of earning a living. HOWARD HUGHES abandoned his hotel hideaway in the Bahamas and fleed to Nicaragua on a trip officially described as a business visit with President Anastasia Somozia. In his usual manner, Hughess slipped secretly away from the suite in Nassau during the trip for 15 months. But in the background of the sudden pulloot was a reported squabble with authorities over the work permits of his staff. People: Places: LONDON-Britain's power crisis spread to Northern Ireland for the first time, adding an order for four daily electricity cuts to the province's troubles. At the same time, the government warned that the threat of a blackout could last up to 12 hours a day would be increased next Wednesday unless the crisis was settled. The blackouts in Northern Ireland begin at 7 am and have been ordered to conserve dangerously low supply levels. SAIGON — The U.S. Command said today that three Air Force pilots were shot down Wednesday and Thursday at 10:30 a.m. near Bermuda. The six crew members were listed as missing. The downing of the three were the heaviest since last December 26-30 when three planes were reported lost. Things: Members agreed that the difference training a question warty part she would attend 80 Senate members from the University of Illinois to attend the meetings. THE STATE DEPARTMENT said "agreement in principle" had been reached with the Soviets for reopening the long-dormant shipment on Russia's debt for massive War II land lease shipments to Greece and Russia. The shipment $500 million apart, with the Russians offering to pay $200 million. The lend-lease dispute has been a major obstacle for years in the improving economic relations between Washington and Moscow. STATEMENTS MADE BY PRESIDENT NIXON AND GOV. RONALD REAGAN of California about Angela Davis make it virtually impossible for her to receive a fair trial. Mrs. Fama Jornada Miss Davis sister, charged Thursday She quoted Nixon as saying that she "had been under with 'other terrorists in the country'" and said Reagan had made numerous statements about Miss Davis that clearly presumed guilt. ON THE SAME survey, there was an overwhelmingly favorable response to a question calling for separate Senates and House of Representatives in Med. Center. The proposal elicited 251; yes votes; 97 responded negatively. Under the proposal, an All-University Council would be available for matters of concern to the whole University. A three-member subcommittee was formed to study the proposed reforms and to do the initial drafting of changes in the Senate Code. Its findings will be published by the Council and the Council. Rock McKimney, professor of civil engineering, is subcommittee chairman. Morris Faiman, associate professor of philomath and the Planning and Designing Resources Committee, presented a report containing criteria for the design of a new resource to receive sabbatical leaves. The criteria were drawn up in response to a request by SenXe. We consider the report in detail. THE TENTATIVE CALENDAR for the 1973-74 academic year was submitted by Henry Shenk, professor of physical education and chairman of the Senate Calendar Committee COCAO is a board containing one member from each of the six colleges, and two members recommended uniform dates throughout the state for the beginning and end of classes and semester. Students enrolled at KU, some council members said COCAO's guidelines were impossible to implement. A question was raised as to how closely the guidelines for the calendar drawn up by the Council should be applied to officers (COCA) must be followed. The Council deferred any concrete action on the calendar until its next meeting on March 16. LONDON (AP)—Prime Minister Edward Heath's crisis-breed government won a narrow unofficial vote of confidence from his party. Common barely approved a bill clearing the way for Britain's entry into the Common Market. It was in the 630-member Abstentions or absentees numbered about 20. The vote in the 630-member house was 309 in favor; 301 against. Commons Supports Heath The size of the majority represented a political backdrop for his government, British link with Europe the center-piece of his government's program. His Conservative party normally commands a majority BUT IT WAS a close and qualified victory that seemed to notify him that he will have tread carefully if he is going to Coming in the middle of the crisis, the vote in the Commons became a demonstration of confidence in Heath's ad- retain the backing of the country. The vote came after intensive backstage efforts had been made by Conservative party managers and followers who oppose British entry into the Common Market. "YOUR THEME in this debate and in your weekend talks with President Georges Pompidou of France have been transmitted into dreams of great power status in candle power Britain." Wilson Heath involved himself personally in the campaign by warning some anti-marketers that he would have to resign and then be convicted II to dissolve Parliament and call a national election if he lost. Wilson slammed Heath for seeking powers, through the European Communities Bill and Mr. Hammond rob the ancient British Heath sat impassive as ex Prime Minister Harold Wilson leader of the opposition Labor party, with the content of the bill. Such an agreement probably would limit numbers of missiles, including submarine-launched, improvements or modernization. retain the backing of the country. The defense secretary said he had believed the new undersea-launched missile system (ULMS) would proceed but that its dimension and scope might be a result of a SALT agreement. Lard denied in an interview he had changed his position earlier in the day when he first said, "I will work as a submarine-missile speedup with the arms negotiation and later told newsmen any negotiated deal." This way, Laird said, the ULMS submarine could be added as older Polaris submarines are phased out. President Nixon's position has been that he would not hesitate to order a new round of U. S. strategy, the weapon of stratification if talks were protracted while the Soviets continued to expand their land- WASHINGTON (AP)—Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said Thursday the decision to speed up a new submarine missile program 'is not a bargaining chip' in the U.S.Soviet arms conflict, dictated by a need to counter growing Russian nuclear power. "If Congress approves it ULMS, we're going ahead with it," he said. Laird Defends Decision For New Sub Missiles China Seminar Here Saturday A group of interdisciplinary scholars who study topics on China will meet in Lawrence Saturday. The group, called the Midwest China Seminar, was started by George Yu, a professor at the University of Illinois. The seminar meets monthly at various universities and universities papers present members on the politics, history and literature of China. The group operates through a grant from the Social Science Research Foundation organization which funds several academic research groups like Daniel Bays, acting assistant professor of history, is handling the research for a seminar. Bays said several KU participants will be involved in KU participation in the seminar this week. and sea-based missile forces. The Russians reportedly are resisting including submarine-missiles in a nuclear arms pact, at least until they have caught up with the United States. The retreat, Miller said, would include three administrators, two faculty officers of the universities, three faculty members including the faculty presidents, and five other faculty members, as well as out-going student body and sea-based missile forces. The committee also suggested a change in the Regents' policy on staffing for the office, stands now. Miller said, if a faculty member runs for public office, she has to give up his job. The proposal came from the Board of Regents would not require the faculty member to work as an office to run for office. Miller said. Miller said most of the non- tenuitional fees collected at KU were administered by the Student Senate, but this was not the case in all colleges where some funds were allocated by administrations. Miller said that generally the legislators favored increased allocations. Miller said the council, composed of the student body presidents from Iowa state and university, wrote letters Feb. 2 to all state legislators urging more state colleges and universities. Miller said he thought the consensus of the student body presidents was that the student governments should have the power to fund funds without being subject to administrative control. EGUMENICAL VIGIL OF PARAITION DAILY DURING LENT DANFORTH CHAPEL 12:30 AM to 1:00 PM RE-LENT REFLECTION ON SELF RE-REMEMBER OF LIFE WHO MAKES THE GAME BE ORDERING VALUES The committee also discussed the collection and administration of fees. The committee presented Presently the collection of fees is under the jurisdiction of the Hospice Association and the administration of the fees is determined on each individual patient. Students Discuss '73 School Funds RELENT V The fiscal 1973 state budget to state colleges and universities was discussed Thursday at the State Council of Student Body meeting, David Miller, Editor-in-Chief and student body president, said. Red Baron Presents THUMP THEATRE Red Baron Presents THUMP THEATRE FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer presidents from each of the state schools. ★★★★★★★★★ legislature of the right to make or repeal its own laws. The issue before the House of Commons nominally was whether to give a crucial second reading to a measure that would make Britain a satire entry into Common Market by 1973, and empower the government to adapt British laws and policies to a common Market without seekin' special parliamentary per mission on each. The Bull & Boar 50¢ OFF any two handed sandwich with the hand. Prices are at regular price. You MUST present a receipt. 11 W. 9th -featuring—Roast Beef, BBQ Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef, Grizzled Cheese, Meat Loaf and the Reuben Coors on Tap Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon. Sat 5un 12 to 8 p.m. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Use Kansan Classified 'CONFERENCE FascismInIran As the anti-imperialist 4 democratic movement of the people of IRAN grows, the Shah's U.S., supported regime intensifies political repression. BIGEIGHT SAT FEB 19TH 7:30 PM. رناماداتدروریختان JOHN THORNE Reports on his trip to IRAN investigating the situation of hundreds being tortured and now facing DEATH. Sponsored by the Iranian StudentsAssociation at K.U. Late brother George Jackson's lawyer. DEADLINE FOR FILING For the Student Senate and Class Offices Wednesday, Feb. 23 A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intent to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary of elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OF FICERS must file a delaration of intent to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Petitions may be picked up between 1:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m.at the Student Senate Office, B-105 Union. All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on deadline date. There Will Be A Meeting for All Candidates on Thursday, Feb. 24 at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. For Further Info: Call 864-3710 2016.06.17 ★★★★☆ ★★★★☆ Friday, February 18, 1972 March Brothers Protest Demonstration Against Sisters Halted By RICHARD COOLEY Kansan Staff Writer Kansas Staff Write A demonstration by the March brothers, an organization formed at a time when women were questioned on February Sisters, was halted by campus security officers during halftime of the KU - Oklahoma State University football game. The Brothers are now charging that they were treated unfairly, and that they siphonomore and a member of March Brothers, said in a letter to the Kansas this week that the force had no justification in response to University regulations," and that the questioned students of the 'officers' actions, of the 'intendants' manner in which they responded to the seizure of the East Asian Studies Building by the February THE BROTHERS had promised in leaflets distributed before the game that they would stage a demonstration. They were supposed to read "The March Brothers" around the balcony of Allen Field House. But soon after the march began they were stopped by a security officer, escorted to the headquarters, and their sign confiscated. According to security officers, the demonstration was halted The February Sisters expect to press 1,720 signatures Monday to the Council of Chalmers Jr., in support of their demand to establish a child day care center for the Sisters Prairie Village sophomore and press committee member, said Katie Larson. The Sisters had collected 1,250 letters from children and afternoon on a petition urging the University to provide funds for a child care center for the KU program. "The Chancellor will be asked for a written commitment stating the need to build maintenance, janitorial help, rent and utilities as well as laundry service for a child care center in our community. We will demand that it be put into effect no later than the beginning of the fall semester," she said. Sisters Say 1,750 Will Sign Petition because it was "it not approved" by Athletic Director Wade Haden of halftime activities. But Godexh said his letter that a later discussion with Stinson revealed no prior approval of halftime activities. "The rationale for the demand is made other progress can be made in the care of a child care center until these commitments are made," he said. Francie said the response to her request was that 50 per cent female and 55 per cent male. Fifteen per cent of the total response was from faculty and 45 per cent from management. At a meeting Thursday night, the Sisters met with a representative from the State Maternal and Child Health Center who discussed the techniques of establishing a day care center. Sinnison confirmed Wednesday that there was no "official, formal approval of activities," but he said that it had been the practice of his hospital notification. He said he did not object to sigs and banners in the game, but instead played "game," but that political demonstrations and expressions which might offend a particular person were possible. the evaluation of instruction were interrelated and "one without the other is dysfunction." McKnight said the improvement of instruction and He said it was important to diagnose instruction, allowing instructors to get feedback for the information not the information was published. "Student Evaluation of instruction" at the University of Kansas was the topic of the work of her faculty, Faculty Forum. Phil McKnight, assistant professor of education, and Dennis Embry, Lawrence senior, discussed the value of the course for students as tests at the end of each semester. Embry talk about the booklet "Feedback," a survey of student evaluation of courses, which aids students in selecting courses. Stinson said there was a working agreement about the campus security force, and that security men "use their own good judgment" about what they are expected to do as banner or demonstration might create a problem of crowd confusion. Student Class Evaluation Topic at Faculty Forum "THEE is always the danger of such things getting out of hand," he said. "You never know when some group may become incensed in some manner. There are so many activities developing from such activities." "People come to see the game," he said, "not to see signs. I think as long as we stick to the same rules, the contest contrasts Worst to Job better." games, he said, "not to see signs. And the other is a central theme of the athletic contest, we're a lot better off." DEM OF MEN DONALD K. Mackenzie (the former security headquarters when the incident occurred and attempted to mediate the dispute. He said yesterday he did not consider the situation in the problem." But he said if the students wished, he would have asked him to himself, the three students involved, Capt. Bobby Ellison of Traffic and Security and a team of about what we can learn from the matter. Goldman, however, rejected Alderson's offer Thursday. "We don't consider it that big a problem." he said. He said he realized the campus security officers had acted in good faith, but he objected to the confiscation, and they had confiscated the banfiger. Goldman said the March Brothers consisted of only three members and no further activity was being planned. The March Brothers, he said, sympathized with the Sisters, but were opposed to the methods the women had used in pressing their demands. P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. P.R P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. CUSTOM JEWELRY WE WILL WORK FROM YOUR OWN DESIGN, OR CREATE A DESIGN FOR YOU WEDDING RINGS ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY Ridiculous Close-Out PRICES!! HATCHET DAYS SALE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY "Every sport coat and suit we list is a * JEWELL. But we're tired of looking at them. Give us cash and take them away." VALUES $60 to $105 NOW! $19.95 - $24.95 - $29.95 - $39.95 - $49.95 "The shoes won't pinch,neither will the $PRICE SHOES one Price $9.95 "Where was that cold weather when we needed it?" OUTERWEAR at least 1/2 price many as low as $19.95 "We fleeced the lambs—Now you "FLEECE" us at these prices" VALUES to $16.00 Sweaters $3.99 & $6.99 Many other Savings—Dress Shirts - Slacks - Ties SATURDAY, February 19 MONDAY, February 21 EXTRA Bonus Days NOW!! 10% Discount on all new Spring & Summer Fashions SALE On EVERY ITEM All Sales Final THE University Shop On the Hill 1420 Crescent Patronize Kansan Advertisers John's Novelty Tournament BALL $1,200.00 CASH AND TROPHIES 8 Tournament Has Started-To Participate, List Your Name With a Sanctioned Location WHAT IS IT? A Tournament and Awards Program intended to foster and encourage competition of coin operated pool table play on an amateur basis at sanctioned 8-Ball locations. WHO IS ELIGIBLE? Any patron male or female, 18 years or older who would like to be a participant, and a resident of Douglas or Leavenworth County. HOW MUCH DOES IT COST? No entry fee for players to participate in the weekly tournaments. WHEN IS IT TO BE HELD? Tournament pairings will be played weekly at sanctioned locations for 8 consecutive weeks. Each person becomes a participant by having his, or her, own name listed by the person in charge at the sanctioned location. HOW DO I ENTER? 1st $300⁰⁰ 2nd 200⁰⁰ 3rd 150⁰⁰ 4th 100⁰⁰ 5th 75⁰⁰ 6th 50⁰⁰ 7th 50⁰⁰ 8th 50⁰⁰ 9th 25⁰⁰ 10th 25⁰⁰ 11th 25⁰⁰ 12th 25⁰⁰ WHEN DO I PLAY? Play on sanctioned location's night of 8-Ball Tournament. WHEN DO I PLAY? Eagles Lodge Flamingo Supper Club The Harbour Geo's WHEN DO WINNERS QUALIFY FOR CHAMPIONSHIP PLAYOFF? Winners will play an Elimination contest on the 9th week at sanctioned locations. Losers can compete every week of the eight week Tournament Pairings and try to become a winner to qualify for Elimination Pairings. Note: Winners can only win for one week and then must wait to play in Elimination contest. WHO WILL BE IN CHARGE? The owner of sanctioned 8-Ball location or the person designated by the location owner. His decision will be final. CHAMPIONSHIP PLAYOFF—SUNDAY 2 P.M. 10th WEEK—LOCATION TO BE ANNOUNCED LATER SANCTIONED LOCATIONS Brook's Lunch Flame Club Southern Pit The Inn WHAT IS THE COST TO PLAY IN CHAMPIONSHIP? There is no cost. Voo Doo Hut White House Club (Reno) Willie's Zodiac Club 4 Friday, February 18, 1972 University Daily Kansan Readers Respond KANSAN comment commentats, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. comment Here We Go Again Elections for student body president and vice-president are fast approaching and no obvious candidates or issues have come to the front. The election promises to be a matter of personality rather than platform. It will be, moreover, a digression from high minded issues and ideals to a frivolous exercise in nurie club politics. Undoubtedly, there will be one serious candidate who will dutifully make the rounds of fraternities, sororites and dormitories stalking the elusive student vote. For his role in a presidential election, he will then become a member of a rather exclusive club of student body presidents—that has no real constituency and no real power. The reality will stagger him—he is ineffectual—a palace eunuch. A characteristically low voter participation will deny him any claim to representing the will of the student body. Real decisions are made in the Chancellor's office—and once in a Senate. Student Senate, he will find. He may become a cynic, but his cyniscism will be softened by the dream of a vital student participation. And when it is all over he may ask himself if he would do it again. Judging by student interest and what can be accomplished from his position—the answer will probably be no. —Thomas E. Slaughter Violence, 'Great Notion,' Wills Photo Incident To the Editor: With reference to your editorial (Tom Slaughter, Feb. 16), and preparing remarks, I would like to emphasize that I do not condone violence, especially violence against children, and I am not writing this as a justification for violence, a protection for a journalist or any newspaper must be aware that there is in his chosen article of being subjected to violence. In regard to the recent incident between the February Sisters and a Kansan photographer, it should be understood that the accident occurred when the photographers be present (Such a request should not seem unreasonable in view of the circumstances). Presumably all persons suffering from lack of sleep and the tensions and pressures of the preceding events. When a photographer caught them by surprise they reacted without any delay, and he could not be said for the photo that was taken during the circumcision. He had time to consider that he was a potential threat to the women. He had tried to console the woman before he acted. The women did not. the result was a sad and unhappy incident for all of us, even on the February Sisters' a lesson for the photographer. To but make more of the event than just that is to fail pre to the same unreasonable demands of the women's reaction to being photographed. To write an editorial associating the Stetson sisters with criminals, Mr Richard Daley, John Mitchell and Richard Nixon is a knife known as 'president murder'. Appropriate you woulw know the organization of the February Sisters killed in its infancy. Have a lead editorial puts you in the position of being both prosecutor and judge, and you may be you also be even more effective, you may become the executioner. MORGINUS I HATE ©1972 JULIE WARNER I would like, however, if you will allow me to enter a plea in defense of the February Sisters. I have a problem for all participants in the 'attack' of the photographer have pleaded guilty (they did issue an apology because they could be off on suspicion, for example, view of this having been their first offense and in view of the mitigating circumstances. But no matter what your verdict may be, we have to consider moral injustice and a travesty of journalistic decycency to condemn the other members of the group merely because they happen to bear the same name. For the sake of those who do not want violence, who do not want your actions to peacefully but steadily and effectively toward the goal of betterment of the position of the University community, please show a little mercy and demonstrate that goodwill can indeed emanate from those in a position of confidence in themselves, their consciences and their judgments, know that they can extend a welcome hand of assistance to in a position of lesser power. MORNINGS I HATE GOING ON THE BUS TO WORK I HATE. WORK I HATE. COMING HOME FROM WORK I HATE. SOMETIMES I THINK... WHAT A RELIEF TO ESCAPE ALL THIS AND GET MARRIED. AND THEN I REMEMBER... I AM MARRIED. GOING ON THE BUS TO WORK I HATE WORK I HATE. COMING HOME FROM WORK I HATE. Inst. Publishers Hall Syndicate AND GET MARRIED. -Karen J. Lupardus Lawrence graduate student Ditto To the Editor Regarding Tom Slaughter's editorial of Feb. 16. I suppose the editorial seeks to complain, in a roundabout way, of an assault on a camera. The authorities serve only to incite rage against the actions or persons mentioned, perhaps in the hope that this rage would be transferred to the main but unrelated target. All in all, it is important that the mission than of reasoned grievance. The point of the matter is this. Guest Comment By Peggy Scott, Beverly Perry and Ann Franke Press commissioner to library February Sisters Sisters Criticize Kansan Kansan coverage of the February Sisters has been consistently biased, culminating in the editorial attacking the February Slaughter's editorial attacking the February "gangsters, and hoodlums," "criminals" and accusing us of "philosophical bankruptcy," "superficially committed to human rights." Editorialists on Robin Morgan outside agitator stirring up our women) and the other issues raised by their real issues and gains made by the bureauary Sisters. The Kansan has yet to address itself to day care, the women's health center, after other other substantial issues raised by the Sisters. We would like to correct the consistent inaccuracies in the Kansan reporting. 1. Prior to our action, there was no comprehensive child care plan under consideration. The only proposal even being considered was an experimental project through the School of Education which would handle only 50 children. We were told by a faculty member that at an AUAP meeting last fall, the chancellor, when asked about the number of children who was no plan under consideration, and that every money day care would not be a too frequent event. 2. Two years ago, a proposal for a women's health center was drown up. Assurancees were given at that time that the proposal would be extended until the action of the February Sisters. The Kanan article "Sisters Stress Services of Women Hotel Services," Feb. 15, 1972 (www.kanan.org) hospital treated anyone if they requested it was certainly news to the numerous women who have been lectured humiliated, and just not allowed to continue their gynecological and contraceptive services at Watkins. Coverage of the development of the women's health services has primarily focused on women in urban areas. In the same article, when a spokeswoman for the February Sisters was interviewed, she was badly misquoted: “...a woman going to Watkins has an assurance of getting medical attention and have read ‘a woman going to Watkins has no assurance of getting medical attention.’” 3. As of Thursday, the day prior to our action, there was no affirmative action program. As late as Sunday, Feb. 6, Joan Handley, released this statement “As chairwoman of Committee W of the AAPU I was very dissatisfied with the progress of affirmative action. To my knowledge there is no affirmative action program to date. I was on a retreat that lasted the special post on women's affairs four hours before our action said that she felt her appointment was a result of pressure of the AAPU Committee W and the rumored threat of our action. In other words, the chancellor did not begin to move on affirmative action until he was under direct threat of action by the February Sisters. It was only this week that the chancellor got together a committee to begin to put together an affirmative action program. In general, the action taken by the February Sisters has served to bring attention to the fact of discrimination against women and girls. The Sisters notice that we will no longer quietly submit to oppression. And, as Elizabeth Banks said, our act has served to open channels of communication. Contriary to popular misconception, the action of the February Sisters was warranted by the continual frustration by the team that they are now women on this campus. We have finally begun to see some action; it is our intent to continue to work for women's liberation until we win. Garry Wills The Administration closed down the building to the three bombs in a suicide opened 1972 with its own quiet orchestration of stealing bombs, in a series of attacks. Bombing: At Home and Abroad The outrage at terrorist bomb JOHN C. MURRAY tactically self-defeating. Among other things, they were helping Nixon—which means helping to make the bobs in Vietnam more likely to succeed, much the government can regret such stupidity in its opposition. plantings was almost universal, and certainly justifiably property destroyed. The bombers were trying to understand the political point of view of the enemy. There are differences, of course. Nixon is an elected Commander in Chief, and that difference is furthermore, the Furthermore, he was only killing non-Americans. Our standards of decency are a good deal laxer in those circumstances than his deputy's safe-deposit box is threatened. None of this is said to excuse those who planted bombs in the banks. Their act was not only morally objective, but Nixon was trying to do the same thing, with his bombing raids to the North; and many lives, and much property were destroyed. We play down the war later by more of the endless, senseless raids. Willy says that our government has been indifferent to the violence; condemning the far-left bombings at home while condoning the ravages of war in Iraq. The calmer voices on the Left, that have for years opposed violence out of principle, are the ones who are under administration. Men who might persuade the wild Leflists to moderate their tactics are too busy defending themselves from being dragged by their Justice department. I mean men like Fr. Philip Berrigan, who said of violence: "It doesn't attack the fundamental problem, which is what we call sin, men's tendency to dominate man. The students use a phrase: "A revolution is always dangerous," and the combatants. I find that fatalistic, vague and very dangerous, because it suggests that revolution is no more than with the thickest skull willing." Then there is Berrigan's brother, Daniel, who calls the use of violence against the enemy a "game," and commends the example of Jesus, who "refused the sword with his own sword." William Stringellow, the Protestant theologian at whose house Daniel Berkley was arrested in 1973, "Authorities, in any particular time or place, can accommodate, where they cannot destroy the, but we can overthrow them because those revolutionary forces have essentially acted as if so do the established powers." Both are bombers. The government fears and pursues the men who preach non- traditional beliefs, like bombers escape them, and the bombing goes on—both in broad Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate **Letters Policy** Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must provide their name and position, faculty and location, provide their name and position, others must provide their name and address. that a photographer on your staff, after being requested to refrain from the exercise of his craft, decided to risk his equipment on the chance of a useful picture. He came near to coming off badly. One would assume that your staffman was aware of the Sisters' activities over the acquiescence the aversion to be identified by photograph. Acting with this knowledge, it is clear who the man in the camera is in jeopardy. Your staffman knew well both the risk and the stake (his camera). The staffman reckoned upon reckoning on his lost ship. To conclude, stop crying over almost-spill milk, and when you do find something worthy of verbal assault, attack it squared and not at slants like this. Also, to whom the user would be well advised to use a discretion in risking state equipment for needless pus poses. By Sokoloff —Robert L. Wilderson Lee's Summit, Mo., sophomore Editor's note: The equipment was the photographer's own. No Thank You To the Editor: To be sure the Stampers' faults are numerous. They disagree with long hair, are generally prefers affection and tenderness, and are male chauvinist to the hill. But in this vein they do not differ from others, and are most matter, from others most anywhere in the real world. What makes the Stampers important is their surrounding culture, from their surrounding culture. ideological presuppositions often obscure far more than they clarify in so far as reality is known, with Ron Parker's petulant review of "Sometimes a Great Notion" as being 'reactionary' or "emotional," and found the movie to be a breath of fresh air amid a movie land filled with the debris of inadequate social relations, and opulent gangsters, and an increasingly general obsession with the batched and hopeless. Notions of "notion" are found in their infinite varieties and "Notion" presents us with a picture of man sadly missing his mother in the media and moralists today. Either Parker misses these real issues or, fearing them, he attempts to wrap them up with his own philosophy blanket pseudo-sophistication denunciation. The Stampers believe and practice the notion of being in control with his neighbors, minding his own business, and be accorded the same right to live life as he sees fit. Thus, the Stamper's approach profound respect for the integrity of individual human beings. Their views are far less inhuman than their own doctrine that peaceful people are then sacrificed willy nily for the attainment of the wishes of the majority, "society," reformists, or other supposed higher interest. It is this respect for human integrity, typified, even with all their faults, by the Stampers that attack them, the musc and the "resectionary" and he apparently prefers the values of those townpeople who did not hesitate to sabotage their neighbors to stabilize their goals. They would sabotage the saboteurs had to rely on the family to save one of their conspirators who came near to drowning as a result of his efforts to protect the fortunes. Gratitude by these "socially inclined" persons is a shallow thaw, however, since they strike again setting a chain of events in motion which leads to the death of two members of the family. In short, Parker's ethics · ad, as they did in the movie or with us, are the "social goals" our leaders for the "social goals" of victory in Vietnam, to empower all Vietnamese. sometimes even death. Mr. Parker must be one of those "progressive" men who will kill you if he has to kill you in the process. It takes what appears to be a thick skin to live an authentic life today, choosing and taking actions. The pressures that confront us avoiding responsibility, are great. Those with seemingly skins are sometimes abrasive when we fight, friction never, then have to develop any "thickness of skin" of their own. When brushed by someone, even if on a movie screen, they have to formulate the protagonist being "reactionary," without a social conscience, uncaring, and so forth. They must have asked their neighbors for permission to live as they did, and equally apparently, we ask, as Mr. Parker's mother, other progressives like him, as to how we shall live. No thank you. MADONNA EFFE Parker's cult of the group and barker. Consciousness in backward fashion more sorrowd beginnings than does the integrity and individualism of the people. FEE ? Pop! Psss ssss... Griff and the Unicorn Sincerely. Gus dierzae Richard Mackenzie Gene Roberts James Ussery Fran Naylor Kennedy Center To the Editor: F There is little enough to praise in the contemporary federal government. Kansas will pick up another syndicated article to balance against this one—one which is often misunderstood, understanding and does not merely repeat the fashionable condemnation of this potentially horrific story, there been there and seen productions. Many at KU have been involved with the Center's programs that have helped students know the article to contain serious distortions and drivel. But I worry about passing along the stories, who might never seek out the chance to prove the story false. I am seldom impelled to write editors, but I must admit that Gary Wills' bandage, myopic John Kendry's function of the Kennedy Center of Music in the American Rip-Off Center," Kansan, Kafka 14) really calls for active repudiation. It is true the Center has had to close its doors because of a staffing shortfall in December because of tourn vandalism, and that aspect of human behavior clearly deserves condemnation. But to imply that the Center is only a monument is the point by more than half. Far from "having trouble doing anything" (a glib phrase) that many contemporary "critics" are all too apt to indulge in), the Kennedy Center has the oldest asset in winner in being able to create and perform capacity houses so far in performance runs. Washington has never known such a rich talent, an operatic, oratorio or concert season as this one. Great mobs of are based in for selected events. The halls are nearly perfect acoustically. The thrill of sitting in them, of being able to hear the music, of having an infinitely more performing artists and performing arts professionals, of phrased criticism of the architecture and decor. The Bernstein *Mass*, so well made by music fans, will easily open in New York. It is a magnificent work of untoward beauty, both in dimensions by a consumate artist of both music and theatre. The work will live long past Mr. Bernstein's illuminating comments about it. "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." —Jed H. Davis, Director, University Theatre THE UNIVERSITY DAILY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman Editor News Advisor ... Delibrarian Associate Editor MacArthur Campaign Editor Scott Speeter News Editors Blair Hanau, Jason Welsh Joe Kramer, Jewel Schwartz Joyce Neeman, Non King Sally Cartoonist Bob Simmons Sports Editor Bob Simmons Assistant Sports Editor Bob Simmons Feature Editor Barbara Bartlett Feature Writer Barbara Bartlett Wire Editor Joyce Duahar, Nana Jones Manage Auction Manager Joyce Duahar, Nana Jones Historian Barbara Schmidt Photographers Greg Serber, Tom Thorne, Keisha Young Office Manager Carlo Munson Dave Sokoffki BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . Mel Adams Business Manager Associate Business Manager Associate Advertising Manager Associate Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Campaign Manager Dave Murray David Murray Friday, February 18, 1972 5 be a life baking onions. sunlightingly many times imaging during even seven we to hei for the north, north, would for our creer's creer's how Crews Moffet one Hay, el Scot Groom himison pairlock ughencer ooddrick chidmidi Young a Rush soksoff Ol Young in Carter Manley arrchart argerdes da Lloyd Murray Delano Police Focus on City Relations By JERRY VOKRACKA Kansan Staff Writer Practice training involves more than just learning to use guns and mace, John Shepard, police-community officer, said. Shepard said through training programs, the police officer needed to have a license and people in the community he served. To establish better relations with the community, Shepard was appointed by the governor in November when the position was created by the Lawrence Police Shepard, who previously was supervisor of patrol officers, said that before last November there wasn't any authority relations in the police department. "Community relations were handled through the human relations office of the city, which dealt only in city problems." said Shepard. SHEPARD SAID the position was created by the police department to establish communication specifically in terms of the community and the police. "Certain segments of the community are against the police because of what they represent. There is no set pattern for establishing relations with different segments, we just have to work in a way that they can trust us," said Shepard Shepard said the biggest problem that confronted him was gaining the trust of people who normally didn't trust police. "By establishing better relations between these segments and the police department, I hope to learn what these people are thinking so we can possibly make changes within that will benefit the community." said Shenard COMMUNITY RELATIONS has even been included in the training of new recruits where emphasis is placed upon human relations, Shepard said. "In order for a man to deal with another person, he must be aware of the other person's feelings," she said. Shepard "we have found law officers in the past who have treated people equally and so, which only benefited the white or high society of the city." HE SAID he didn't handle all the complaints. Some are directly handed to the police, while others are handled by police. Sheard said he thought the general mood of the community was to seek a more truthful and flexible type of approach, which the police officer was associated as a member of the local government authority. He was also official that the citizen came into contact with more often, he usually bore the trunt of local citizen discon- Another aspect of Shepard's job is to handle complaints from citizens. He said the major complaint recently had to be addressed by a parking ordinance. Shepard said, however, in the last month the city had an increase in vehicle fines and a vehicle, unless a complaint had been filed, in which case the police department tried to contact the owner of the vehicle. Shepard said a misconception students had was that they were treated differently than other members of the community. "Students have the impression that for them from traffic are the area they want to visit. They would neglect it a little further, they would see all members of the community are treated CALL: 864-4441 864-4350 864-3552 DO YOU NEED CHILD CARE? FEBRUARY SISTERS WE NEED TO KNOW WHO YOU ARE, HOW MANY CHILDREN YOU HAVE, WHEN AND HOW YOUR NEEDS CAN BE MET. Patronize Kansan Advertisers KU Crime Rate Increases By ROGER FULK Kansas Staff Writer The University of Kansas is now faced with a growing crime rate. Crime reports are up from previous years. During the 1969-70 school year, there were 16 reported assaults. Since January 2013, 22 assaults reported. Traffic and Security sources said Thursday. Most of the crime on campus occurs at night in the central campus area due to poor lighting or offices located there. The theft is the most common crime. Already, since July 1971, there have been 325 reported crimes. Traffic and Security sources reported that while a percentage of students live in the campus to students, almost all of the violent crimes and most of the student students, people who live in the area surrounding the cam most often reported missing were TV's and stereos. DURING THE Christmas-New Year break, there were over 30 reports of theft, inspector V. Wong reported the Department said Thursday. Most of these reports were filed by students who were out of town for school. All their apartments to find some of their belongings missing. Items WASHINGTON (AP) -Employing a new method to aid breathing, researchers report dramatically promising results in treating hyaline membrane leaking in killing of newborn infants. Harrell said there had been a long time before the previous years, and even though the reports would probably turn out to be unfounded, the situation was not going to change. Hardest hit were fraternities, sororites and apartment complexes where most of the residents were students. HARRELL SAID a lot of students in these areas had items stolen when they left their rooms. Short time and trouble to lock the door. He also said he thought it was a small group of non-students who were responsible for most of the burglaries. He cautioned students who planned to leave Lawrence for breaks to avoid putting their minds on things he had received reports in previous years from students who had been dropped, or when they planned to leave. The next morning, they found the car had been broken into and their parents were there. There will probably be increased patrolling during spring break in areas where the number of injuries is high, according to Harrell. He said he thought members of student living groups could greatly help decrease the crime patrolling the areas they live in. TACO GRANDE With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free! Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.) Offer expires Feb. 28, 1972 McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" 1720 West 23rd Street McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" 829 Massachusetts THE CLASSY KID ...fashion's perfect blazer- mate! The two-toned tie updates today's fashion classics with super style! On a hunky slice of heel in Blue, Tan or Black smooth kid with White. 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Former KU Star Sets Another Record Chamberlain Plans Another Season PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - Wil- Chamberlain, first player in pro basketball to reach the 30,000- place game on Sunday she will play one more season. "But beyond that, I don't know," he said. The 7-1 Los Angeles Laker star scored 19 points and pushed his career total to 30,003 Wednesday night. A goaltending call against second-half closing shots against the Phoenix at 110-109 National Basketball Association victory over the Boston Celtics. Despite the play that cost the Lakers the game, team mattle Jerry West said Chamberlain is now against defense than on a high scorer. "When a player becomes older and more mature. he finds other ways to help the team besides shooting the ball," West said. Chamnertain has tried to do what coach Bill Sharman wants him to do and that's play defense and he's doing the job. A sellout crowd of 12,534 gave Chamberlin a standing ovation after the team won against they had booed the officials for the goaltending call against Neal Walker which gave the big Laker points to reach the milestone. Chamberlin called it "memorable," but said he remembered best his NBA goal made against the New York "I hit the first shot I took and I've just been going on from here," he said. He also was playing against the Knicks when he scored 100 points Nun's Team 'Out for Blood After First Hockey Defeat She is a volunteer recreation director at the housing project where she works in an apartment with three other women herself, she works as a part-time physical education teacher and coach at St. Mary's High School. She moved into her apartment this summer, organized a boy's baseball team, "The Un touchables," and a girl's basketball team. The boys were undefeated in 11 games. The girls won eight and lost one. None of Sister Judy's teams play in a league. SOMERVILLE, Mass. (AP) — A street, street hooey team coached by an athlete game in six starts, the nun said, gave a rematch and we're out for a win. "My order was perfectly willing to let me live in the housing project. Mother Judy taught me how to earn that I earn my own living." "We pick up with anybody we can," she said. Sister Judy Simonson, 30, whose current working garb as a carver is dungarees and a sweat shirt, organized the team, "The Brick School," which offers summer tour as a baseball and softball coach at the Mystic Her major competition comes from three other housing projects, the part of teams of Boston and other cities in the area and church sponsored "I hope to keep going and if everything goes like it's going now, I'll be back next year," he said. against Northwestern in 1957. His two-year total of 1,433 is third on the KU list. The Brick Jungle's only defeat came at the hands of a team from East Boston sponsored by the Catholic Salesian Fathers "We've got a rematch, and we're out for blood." Sister Judy said before that game, and six of her and six others for a 12-1 record. Chamberlain set a single game record of 52 points at the University of Kansas playing KU to Grapple Road Jinx By BOB SIMISON Kansan Sports Editor Once again, the University of Kansas has made a move away from Allen Field House Saturday. This time, it will be a trip to Lincoln to play Nebraska And once again, the question that has been asked before each road trip recently is asked. Can the jayhawks win in a hostile environment? "I'm very optimistic," sophomore Korniv Koistago agreed. "We're a young team, and whatever we do now will help us next year. For the seniors, this is last chance to show they can fly." "We've got to break this jinx we have by beating Nebraska." KU hasn't been able to all season. The Jayhawks are 9-12 outside. They were outside Alien Field House. KU is 34 in Big Eight play-all - 8. "I HAVEN'T lost confidence that we can win on the road," senior Brad Swainthill said after a loss in the State of Kansas in Manhattan Tuesday. "It's pretty tough to play at Nebraska, just like it is at K-State," Stallworth noted. "But The team hasn't lost confidence that it can win on the road. The only question is when it will happen. KU knocked Nebraska out of the Big Eight leadership with a 57-55 overtime victory Jan. 29. The Cornhuskers are now a game behind Missouri with a 6-1 record from Iowa and K-State is with a 6-2 record with a 8-2 record. Fred Boslevac saved the Jayhawks in the first Nebraska game by intercepting an inbounds pass with three seconds of time. He took a dribble and banked in a layup as the gun sounded. Since conference play began, the Jayhaws have done enough right things away from home to win games and rally munites. The 12-point setback at Manhattan was KU's worst defeat, the losses at Colorado, Missouri and Iowa State were by one point, and one point, respectively. AT HOME, KU has won its last five conference games by a total of 10 points. An earlier meeting with the team was one of those narrow victories. NASH was injured on a foul in the closing seconds of a second overtime against K-State Jan. 17. Mark Matthew substituted in Matt Stallworth has entered the land of giants at basketball history. 25 basket played Kansas State Tuesday moved him into fourth place on the KU roster. The 6-foot-7 Jura hit his awake after the 14 rebounds in the earlier RU meeting. Al Nissen was the other Cornhusher in double figure So K-State's purple-clad croud exhorter stored a white box labeled "Aubrey Nash First Aid kit" before t夕晚's game. "WE'LL HAVE to play aggressive defenses for us," he said. "We'll have to help out on Chuck Jura, and we will have to play." If Cornhusker fans remember Bioslievac as vividly as K-State fans remembered Aubrey Nash, the former for some personalized heckling. Coach Ted Owens has yet to decide on a starting lineup for Saturday's game. Neal Mask, Wilson Barrow and Randy Canfield have alternated at center. Taynor, Dale Haase, Mark Matthews Bosilev have shared a forward spot. "It all depends on what they do against us," Owens said. "If they zone us, Taylor and Matthews will play a great deal." shoot Nash's free throws, and KU won, 66-63. Stallworth has scored 1,328 points in three years. Last week, he passed Walt Wesley (1,315) and Jo Do White (1,286). NOW THE 6-5 forward, who scores most of his points from outside, trails only Clyde Lovelette, Dave Robsch and Chamberlin, all towering pitvoter who scored from inside. Lovellette's mark of 1,888 and Robisch's total of 1,754 are out of reach. If Stallworth maintains his current average, he will pass Chamberlain's total of 1,433. To do so, he must average 21.6 in the remaining games. Stallworth has a 79.6 in the remaining games, including 24 in 4. Big Eight play. KU will return to Allen Field House to play Colorado Monday, then Missouri Saturday afternoon it's just a matter of going out and doing the right things." Three Guards Lead Nation In Point Race 10.4 Ray Christians Jewelers See the latest styles at NEW YORK (AP) —Dwight Lamar, Richard Fouke and Doug Collins, a trio of junior guards, hold the top three spots in the major college basketball individual scoring race, according to the sports release Thursday by the National Collegiate Sports Service. Pepperdine's Bill Averitt holds the fourth spot at 28.9, with Wil Robinson of West Virginia fifth at 28.2. Lamar, a 6-foot-1 back-courtman from Southwestern Louisiana who was the college All-Star during the season, continued to hold the top spot with a 34.9 average through Saturday's games. What's more, he hit a season-high 51 points to boost his average to 35.8. Abilene Christian's Kent Martens took over the lead in field goal percentage at 67%, but Washington remains on top in free throw percentage at 340 and Kermit Washington of American U. continues to lead in rebounding average of 20.2 grabs per game. Collins, tallest of the trio at 6-6, third with a 3-2 average for playing in the third involving two of the three this season, Collins outscored Fujii. * Fuque, 6-3, of Oral Roberts, is averaging 8.3 points per game. General Jeans Is Having A GIANT WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY CLEAN-UP CELEBRATION: SAT., Feb. 19 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. MON., Feb. 21 12 p.m. to 9 p.m. TUES., Feb. 22 12 p.m. to 9 p.m. general jeans 1000 Mass All Bellbottom pants will be on sale for $1.00 when purchased with a pair at regular price! (If the 2nd pair is more than the 1st you pay $1.00 plus difference). P FANTASTIC SAVINGS on brushed denim corduroy, cotton suede and all your favorite styles & fabrics. 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Now $48.00 Factory Direct Magnavox Dealer "Where You Pay No Middleman Costs" 1 University Daily Kansan Friday, February 18, 1972 7 Strong Oklahoma to Invade For Dual With Swimmers A powerful Oklahoma swimming team will invade the Golden Gate Bridge on Saturday to challenge the perennial Big Eight champion. Coach Dick Reamon TOMMY FILIPSON "I have great respect for them," she said. "They have not only quality, but also depth. They are the No. 1 challengers for our conference." Although dual meets are not championship affairs, Reamon said, there is still a strong pride factor involved. KU has defeated the Sooners twice this season—at the Big Eight Relays and at the Sooner-Cowboy Invitational. "A dual meet gives us an opportunity to gauge our progress from one given point to another. Our given point is progress on schedule," he said. "The they are strongest in the individual medley, butterfly, middle-distance freestyle and dive." Diving is their main weak spot. " Because a dual meet is scored on a 3-1-1 basis, it is most important to place first in a given event, Reason said. only two more meetings in which to qualify individuals and relay information. March. Reason hopes to qualify and Boyd and relay teams. Phil Kidman. The meet is especially important since the Jayhawks have Losing Skid Reaches 116; Coach Fink Hopes for End FRIENDSVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Time has about run out on the Friendsville Academy basketball team. Friendsville, which has lost 116 players in the last season, February 1977, closes its regular season against Glencliff Academy in Nashville Saturday Coach Joe Fink says he wants to win in the worst way, but he admits the long winless streak benefits some fringe benefits. "The academy board of directors most last month, just after the overtime game to Glenflict." Fink's team was beaten, his whisperers to me. was awfully close, coach. What are you trying to do, cut off all our public," Fink said he has received letters 'from well-wisher as far west as New York' and Associated Press carried a story last month when the Quaker board asked the Quaker "One man on the West Coast we $10 and a note of encouragement," he became assistant principal and head basketball coach two years "We don't have any seniors, so I think we'll have a pretty good team next season. Fink said. "One thing that motivates me to think next year is the possibility here when the skid ends." Baseball Players Charge That Teams Dodge Raises "There have been scattered attempts by some owners and general managers to allege that government regulations prevent them from giving increases," she said. "We are using it as a wedge to avoid paying otherwise merited increases." NEW YORK (AP) — The executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association charged Thursday that several clubs, including the St. Louis Cardinals and Atlanta Braves, are using Phase II of the settlement program, paying murtidal salary increases. "It's dirty pool, and highly unsafe. What's that game is done. It needs a agreement we reached with the owners before contracts even begin." Miller then cited public records of a man named Gusche Bu塞, the owner of the Cardinals, pointed to the Braves as another offender and said, "He also had several other cases, although most clubs have lived up to the stereotypes we heard." The issue, of course, has taken on increasing importance this spring, when a few students are to spring training camps in Florida, Arizona and California. Miller would not hazard a guess that he would become a major problem. The Cardinals and Braves, however, have two unsigned superstars who, following good news from the league, heyraises—Joe Torre of St. Louis, the national League's leader, and Atlanta's Hank Aaron. Miller said the agreement reached with the owners on how For Complete Automobile Insurance Gene Doane Agency V1 3-3012 824 Mass. St. "Now we've had a few cases in which someone asks for a sizeable increase and the owner says I can't付 that much--if I say that, I won't be able to give raises to all of the other players." to handle salary discussions under Phase II of wage prize controls was "that negotiations were normal until we had specifics." "That's nonsense." the 50- and 100-yard freestyle events. Miller said the key to the problem was whether the established 5.5 per cent average salary increase limit placed on units of more than 1,000 employees applied to baseball. He also noted that higher hour allows for length of service increases and merit increases. There is no admission charge for home duals. 50 freestyle—Phil Kidan, Allan McDonald, Randy Kaneel; 100 freestyle—Kidd, McDonald, Tom Hodgson; 200 freestyle—Hodgson, Rick Heidinger, Steve Ingham, 500 freestyle—freestyle, David Kogley, 1,000 freestyle—Kemple Ingham, Marc Wagoner. 200 individual medley—Bob Wright, Randy Hartford, Paul Gerlich 200 butterfly—Kempf, Joe Wright, Scott Skullet, backstroke—Scott Skullet, Mike Miffes, Greg Thart or Hartford, 200 breaststroke—Bob Wright One meter diving—Sivek King, Scott Davill, Bill Phloen; Three meters diving—Sivek Davill, Phloen. Skutelyt, Wright, Richie, Roland Sabates; 400 freestyle relay, Hodgson, Kidd, McDonald. The University of Kansas women's basketball team survived a rugged game with Wash. State and earned the tenth to earn a 47-26 victory. Washburn Falls To KU Women; K-State Next KU is 7-4 going into a crucial Kansas State at Manhattan KU State has lost once in the loop; KU has lost twice in the victory; KU has lost twice in the victory and guarantee KU a place in the state women basketball tour- If KU loses, on the other hand, a playoff with Wichita State will be likely. The first and second round will be fairly for post-season competition. KU won an earlier meeting with K-State here, 32-31. The team will complete its schedule on the road against Aitchison Tuesday and Fort Hays State Friday. The University of Kansas track team will warm up for the Big Eight indoor meet by taking on KSC at Pittsburgh, KSTC at San Antonio and Port Hays State at 1:30 p.m. Saturday in Allen Field house. Track Team to Host Meet KSC, KSTC, Fort Hays Here There will be no team scores kept in Saturday's quadrangular. The teams will take to take a good look at personnel before the conference meet. The KU mile relay team, which set a KU record in the Michigan golf championship, 8 p.m. Bob Scavucci, Mark Lark, Bob Benkessel and Phil Stepp ran the event in 3:15.1 in East Lansing to shatter the old mark "THE MEET WILL give some of our guys a chance to do what they want. All of our people will be in competition," Coach Bob "We need to know how we'll stack up in the conference. This meet will help show us," Timmons said. "We have some individuals who are doing well but we don't have any backup behind them. Timmons said. "Our strongest performances have been in the triple jump, hurdles, long jump and shot put. Hipknee has been a good event for it." "Our spirit is excellent. There a lot of enthusiasm." Timmons said "The underlying thinking is that we should the conference championship." Timmons is optimistic about KU's chances for a seventh straight Big Eight indoor track title. The long jump, high jump, triple jump and preliminary sprints and hurdles are included Evening events will begin at 6 p.m. with the pole vault. Ten running events starting with the mile will begin at 7 p.m. KU Entries in the afternoon program. RC Entries 60—Frank Johnson, Tom Sevazuze, Delvin Willisme 440-F. Johnson, Mark Lutz. Scavuzzo, Zerk White. 1,000—Jon Callen, Hove. Mile—Doug Smith, Jacques - Tippy Martin, Phil Steep. 880 - Rick Jaeques, Craig McNulty, Dave Coy, Aaron Howe. Dave Anderson, Chip Martin Terry McKeon "Then, just three days before registration," he said, "they were so aggressive that youre a credit short. Three days! Luckily, Coach Timmons (KU track coach) was still on duty a half-mail, so I came here. After attending junior college in Pensacola, Fla., where he was a freshman, Mr. Benson sought by KU. However, he had already signed a letter of intent to play football at KU. Two-mile—Terry McKeon, Rich Elliott, Kent McDonald, Callen. "THIS YEAR, though, I got positive and started winning again. That really helped. You start caring when you win a few." Mile relay—Seavuzzo, Lutz; Bob Borkenkega, Stegen ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ 60 low hurdles—Bornkessel, Delario Robinson, Gregg Vandaver. "ID WANTED to go to Kansas anyway, what with their track reputation and Jim Ryun and all. I wanted to be a judge," Jacques was not hesitant when he said that only swimming time and practice than running. "I had a very bad season last year," he said. "I had the talent but not the attitude. I got off to a start, very early. I got to where I didn't care." this season, however, Jacques has proven himself one of the leading distance runners in the Big Eight by winning four first round contests, qualifying for the NCAA final in both the 100- and 880-yard events. Last year at this time the fleet University of Kansas runner was trudging through a season of injuries, which his major achievement was a first place in the 880-yard championship with national champion UCLA Everyone loves a winner, and as far as Rick Jacques is concerned, that's the big difference between his performances this week. Jacques Shakes Off Slump For Strong Start This Year Every morning he runs five to seven miles on the back roads around Lawrence, then 10 to 15 more in the evening. It isn't too bad, he said, except that "every time you go out we will try to see how close they can come to you or they'll throw beer cans at you." By DAN GEORGE Jacques described himself as nervous on the day of a meet, but not superstitious. Kansas Sports Writer "I'M NOT one of those guys who hang herbs around their bedside," he said, "without in high school. I did know this girl who read the book." "One exception, though, is the Big Eight indoor meet in Kansas City." he said. "You feel different there. Most meets, he said, affect him in about the same manner; he usually gets no more nervous for one than for another. Berkshire, Walthamveer High jump—Barry Schur. "For one thing, there are so many people there, and they don't believe if you last in a race and you move up one place, they cheer. It's really good." "You also have to look for our position," said. "Sometimes it's a place where you're boxed in by three guys and you can't get out." Pole vault—Bill Hatcher, Neil Chapman, Wayne Kosman, Pat Murphy, Mike Whitrigh 60 high hurdles—Robinson Bornkessel, Vandaveer. ALTHOUGH MANY of them "One time I was running a cross country race in high school. I had to go back to the place there was this huge ditch. You had to run in this little cave." are unprintable, he said, all sorts of unusual things can happen to a distance runner. "This other guy, who was supposed to be pretty good, and I went to her house and then somehow he must have tripped or something, because he saw me." "I feel I'm a lot better at a 'lice distance,' he said, because you run better against a top field and with better results than I can in a Triple jump—Jones, Stull. Shot put—Rudy Guevar, Dana LeDuce, Gery Palmer, Sam Colson. Long jump—Mile Stull, Dan Seay, Rogers Jones, Stepp, Robinson, Gary Johnson. "After I crossed I looked over my shoulder and there he was in front of me, laughing and laughed so hard that I could hardly run for the next half-mile. Jacques said that although he had run both the mile and the two-mile, his best event was the half-mile. Jacques, who has moderately long hair and a mustache, called Coach Bib Timmons one of the best and most honest men he knows. We Serve Delicious home style cooking MARGARET'S CAFE W. 23rd 6:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. Mon. - Sat. Or call 864-3710 or 843-8985 Complaints should concern only services provided by the University Patronize Kansan Advertisers Provided by Student Services If so, just look for one of the yellow COMPLAINT CENTER posters, fill out one of the complaint forms, put it in the envelope provided, and your complaint will be registered and investigated. Have you been bothered by too much hassle & not enough result? The Student Complaint Service can help YOU! Are you dissatisfied with any University service? Women's — in brown, navy, red, green, and grey. PRIMARILY LEATHER Craftsmen of fine leather goods Men's — in brown, grey, and navy. For the finest in lightweight trail boots, see the genuine Fabiano Italian Hiking Boots, with Vibram soles and padded lining, available only at Primarily Leather. HIKING BOOTS --kansas union BOOKSTORE 812 Massachusetts LIBERTY WEVE CUT THE PRICE OF RECORDS Save up to $3.00! Major label LP's! Top artists! Many, many selections in this special purchase. Classics included! Hundreds of records! Come early for best selection! SALE ENDS TODAY! 8:30 - 5:00 p.m. Feb. 14th - Feb. 18th Get your favorites at Big Discounts! 8 Friday, February 18, 1972 University Daily Kansan Campus Briefs Mortar Board Forms Due Mortar Board questionnaires sent to junior women and women in accelerated programs who will graduate in 1973, are due today. The questionnaires are used for Mortar Board selection criteria. They are available at the Dean's office for references. Extra forms are available in the Dean of Women's Office. Winn on 'Call-In' Sunday The University of Kansas radio stations KANU-FM and KFKU-AM will manage the R.W. Raisen, W.-R. Leawood, at 10:30 p.m. The call-In Thru-Hua During the program Winn will answer questions from the public. A listener can get a broadcast answer to his question by calling the station's toll-free number. 'Woman in the Wall' The Film "Woman in the Wall" will be shown by the Korean University of Seoul and Saturday night in Daejeon, Daejeon University. Admission is 30 cents. Headstart Correction It was incorrectly reported in Wednesday's Kansas that the Heartland Hospital was funded by the United Fand. The prepaid is federally funded. Southeast Asian Students The Association of Southeast Asians will meet at 2:30 Saturday at the International Student House in Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Plans for the organization's participation in International Night will be discussed. All Southeast Asians are invited to attend. Sports Car Rallye A sports car rally sponsored by the Kansas Region Sports Car Club of America will be held Sunday. Registration is at noon and the first car will leave at 1 p.m. For the location of the rallye call Larry King at 842-707. Many psychology experts who had their minds on extrensory perception (ESP) a few years ago learned that they out brain waves about it today. ESP Possibilities Probed By DANGEORGE Although, according to M. Baskin's professor psychology, they have no conclusive evidence that ESP exists, experts are gradually becoming convinced. "Twenty years ago, no popehologist would add, its position was the truth this week. "But people are more and more saying that ESP is Gays' Legal Committee Discusses Appeal Tactics "MANY OTHER THINGS in the scientific evidence," he said. "In fact, the president of the american medical college Donald Hebb, said that he rejected ESP in part because he was prejudiced "We look at man now as being primarily influenced by the five senses of sight. If we admit the possibility of ESP, we have to admit that there may be influences that have previously been ruled out. Shelyl said that because ESP repudiated the material senses as sole areas of stimulation and response, many psychologists rejected them. They didn't understand the concepts and theories they knew to be changed. SHELLY, WHO prefers the "paraphylogy" to ESP, described it as "being able to respond systematically, at least on occasion, to information which are derived from the five senses. "At present, there is no way to incorporate it into psychology," he said. "If we were to accept it, we would consent to our whole concept of man." By ROD HARDY Kanean Staff Writer "It's nothing unique in science; man once rejected the idea of rocks falling from the sky." Shelly said one reason that ESP The chairman of the committee, Rep. Wallace Buck, Teppee Township Mayor, the dealers realize there has been a problem, but our decision was based on the idea that the Highway Commission would approve it. "When Templar wrote that there was no discrimination involved, he failed to recognize the distinctions between a The Gay Liberation Front Legal Committee met Wednesday night with their Lawrence attorney, Jack Klinkett, to discuss the costs, timing and technical points of their appeal to George Temmerdor in the decision of Judge George Temmerdor in the Topkas District Court. "We decided to handle it on an administrative basis with rules now in effect, rather than on a contract dealers will adhere to this, and if they don't then there will be lawsuits against the laws in the future." Buck said. Dealer Tag Bill Killed A bill restricting dealer tag usage and establishing strict penalties for misuse was killed in the Kansas House Transportation and Utilities Committee following hearings earlier this week. Wade. Simpson. KU athletic aid department had a coach. The Athletic department still had the dealer cars earlier in question, and they were placed regular parking of the cars. "The dealers receive no more special privileges than an Alumni Association member or anyone else would receive," he said. Concerning the bill, Stinson said, "I'm tired of discussing the issue. I don't think it was a particularly big expose." SPECIAL Saturday Bus Service recognized and a nonrecognized organization," Klinknett said. Leave Illinois 10:30-50 min past 9:30 am - 5:30 pm. Leave Olive 5:25-43 min past 9:33 am - 5:48 pm. Leave Union 00:30-40 min past 9:40 am - 6:00 pm. Leave 9… Mass 10:30-50 min past hour 9:40 am - 3:30 pm. Fare Downtown 25' Campus 10' Downtown — Campus SPECIAL Information 842-0544 Lawrence Bus Co. Inc. Klinknet said a recognized group was eligible for funds but a nonrecognized group was not. He discussed the difference with him had the right to reserve Kansas Union space more than a week in advance but the nonrecognized group had to reserve space during the week preceding the kickoff. "Within my knowledge, the explanation by the University for refusing recognition was an example of criteria used for the first and only time in the case of application of the front," he said. "When the Commission on the Status of Women can hold a seminar dealing expressly with the sexual proclivity of individuals, among other topics, in proportions of 600 from Student Senate, it again becomes difficult to resolve that activity in light the policy statement of the University administration explaining the grounds for a refusal to grant recognition to the front." Klinken told the front it had until March 11 to file a notice of appeal with the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver. If "Templar's decision is not appealed, it automatically sets a precedent, and this precedent will affect any student in its efforts to seek evidence of status." Klinkett said. "Kunslier's advice is an important factor in the appeal and we must contact him soon," Klinknct said. In reference to persons known in their claim to superior personal merit, see Edgar Caye, Shelly said that much of the present evidence Klinkett will meet with the front during its regular meeting Monday to discuss the appeal procedure and its consequences. had not been systematically studied and, therefore, not proven to exist, was that most psychologists were unwilling to accept it. "But after a while," he admitted, "the anecdotal evidence begins to build up." HE SAID THAT if ESP did exist, it might occur in one or many forms. The ability to recall another's thoughts, to influence objects or other persons or to recall things with which one could not have had previous experiences were a few of the possibilities. Shelly also said it was possible that everyone might possess ESP to some degree. "We all have a lot of abilities that we don't realize. For SHELLY SAID that some things happen which can only or, at least, can most easily be perceived by a careful minor personal experiences. instance, we all are able to control our brain waves to some extent, but few of us know it," he said. "There have been times when someone knee what I was going to do, and then "Or when I was thinking about something and someone else He said that such incidents usually occurred only among close friends or people who knew each other well. Other persons have also reported experiences which may merit closer study. "Sometimes I'll be riding around in my car, listening to the radio," said Joe Zanatta, Kansas City, Kan. Junior, "and I'll be playing a song as we switch the station and suddenly that song will come on. It's Marianne Cramer, Lawrence senior, said she had had several ESP experiences. Her huestrag experience came when she and a friend tried a car ride, but the car broke three miles apart, they both lay down and tried to concentrate on Five committee members and 35 black students, interested in scholarship program, attended the meeting. The committee will make its recommendations to the Student Senate March 1. The Committee will be on Thursday's hearing and talks with representatives of the Union Operating Board and the Urban Scholarship Program, a J. D. CRESTHAM, manager of the Kansas Union Bookstore, and the need to replace certain operational equipment might mean possible eutabics in funds from the KU Program, rebates, or both, according to John Mize, Salina University. About 60 to 75 per cent of happened several times." The committee's purpose was to make recommendations for future distribution of the bookstore in areas: expansion funds for the bookstore, rebates for students and funds for the Urban Scholarship Program, Natalie Grosse, director of the committee member, said. "SUDENLY, THOUGH,..." other girl had this terrible revelation, and I thought it, too. It scared us both so bad that we stopped and tried to call each up at the same time," she said. The Kansas Union Bookstore's profits were examined by the U.S. Department of Justice in open hearing Thursday afternoon in the Reginalist Room of the By FOSS FARRAR Zelema Bond, director of Supportive Educational Services (SES), said the only supportive funds for the urban program were from bookstore profits and Student Senate in the summer. students presently get 5 per cent rebates for past purchases, a committee members of part of the bookstore's profits that a student receives when he presents blue receipts from purchases of past Hearing Scrutinizes Bookstore's Profits BOND ASKED that the committee consider three possibilities when it made its recommendations; TOM'S SKELLY SERVICE 602 W. 9th HAS MOVED TO TOM'S SKELLY SERVICE 1733 Mass. "Give Tom A Call" A decrease in the rebate percentage could mean a decrease in the total volume of bookstore sales, a committee would be willing to do business with the bookstore, he said. -That a subsidy for SES be obtained from the University budget. —That the bookstore decrease the rebate percentage Molly Laflin, St. Louis senior and member of the Union Operating Board, said many schools didn't have rebates. "Either rebates have to suffer or be eliminated or the scholarship program has to suffer," she said. —That the Student Senate subsidize SES "LONNY SAME AND THE BELL TONES ARE COMING BACK!" The UNION BALLROOM Sat., Feb. 26 ★ FREE BEER ★ The Cooking School RIDICULOUS PRICES ON YOUNG WOMEN'S WEAR TO CLOSE OUT SEASON Saturday & Monday—Feb. 19 & 21 HATCHET DAYS WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SELL-A-BRATION Sweaters . . . . . 1/2 price Coats . . . . . . 1/2 price Skirts & Hot Pants $3.00 values to $16.00 Slacks values to $14.00 $6.00 Panty Hose . . . . . $2.00 Dresses values to $28.00 . . . . $9.00 values to $45.00 Use Kansan Classifieds values to $24.00 . . . $10.00 Blouses and Tops values to $34.00 . . . $12.00 values to $28.00 . . . $9.00 values to $12.00 . . . . $3.00 Slack Sets . . . $15.00 values to $45.00 Co Extra Bonus Days Now!! 10% Discount on All Spring & Summer Fashions Save on Every Item All Sales Final PLEASE STOP IN TODAY House At the back of the Town Shop 839 Massachusetts St. Festival of the Arts LIMITED Sale of Individual Night tickets will begin Monday. February 21 at the SUA Ticket Window Tickets are available for: March 11—Gordon Lightfoot $3.50 Each March 8—Herbie Mann (respond soon) $2.50 Each March 6—The National Players $1.00 Each March 10—Tom Wolfe $1.50 Each March 9—Portable Circus $1.00 Each All Performances in Hoch—8:00 p.m. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE Saturday, February 19 Only at LAWRENCE SURPLUS 276 Pairs! Reg. to $12.00 Bell Bottoms & Flares $3.00 Waist Sizes 18-36 Waist Sizes 28 to 38 About 50 Pairs! Men's Reg. to $31.95 Harness Boots, Cowboy Boots & Wellingtons $10.00 Lightweight Jackets 99 of These! Reg. to $16.00 Men's 44 of These! Reg. $35.00 Men's Corduroy Sport Coats Jackets 22 Here! Reg. to $15.00 Leather Vests $11.00 $1.00 One Large Group Reg. to $8.98 Men's Shirts & Tops —Mostly Knits— $1.00 We Have 29! Reg. to $15.00 Oxfords & Slip-Ons About 45 Pairs! Req. to $16.95 Men's Sleeveless Jump Suits $4.00 $2.00 About 20 Pairs! Reg. to $9.98 Rubber Boot Pacs $1.00 See Our $2.00 Pants and Jeans Table—Real Great Values! LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 Massachusetts University Daily Kansan Friday, February 18, 1972 9 Weekend Scene 'Cowboy' Rides Tonight By BARBARA SCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor SPOONER ART GALLERY: A spooner art gallery and construction by Gnee and Michael Sims, in- strument in painting and design. SEVEN EAST SEVENTH paintings and drawings by John Gary Brown, Lawrence resident, former KU student. Opens UNION GALLERY: The 18th Annual Kansas Designer Craftsman Show. Onens Sunday. CONCERTS HOCH AUDITORIUM: SUA concert by the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. 8 p.m. tonight. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: "Giotto and the Pre- renaissance" and "Crete and Mycenae." 7:30 p.m. Monday. SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: Faculty Recital by Jane Abbott, assistant professor of piano. 8 p.m. Wednesday. FILMS WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: SUA Popular Film, "Midnight Cowboy" 7 and 9:30 p.m. tonight and Saturday, 1969's X-rated movie "A knitting of a dog"ooking "midnight cowboy" (Jon Vougot) and a sickly New York punk (Dustin Hoffman) who team up to fight their common foes: frien-dancing villains. FORUM ROOM: Oread UNIVERSITY THEATRE: KU Sumphonic Band concert. 3:30 p.m. Sunday. Friends and Newman Club film, "Something Beautiful for God," 2 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Bradenton where Teresa among the poor and dying in India. Admission is $50 cents and free for refuences in Bradenton WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM international Film, "The Hap- pens," by Michael K. Sullivan, Sunday. A very British comedy about a boy's school that, y buesureracetic accident, is dargaret Rutherford is the pinstemmaster, admissress妈 the oureadmaster, and dolees of the oureadmaster, who doles of girls spread all the riotous and girls spread across his screen. Made in 1950. UNION BALLROOM: Film Society "Le Petit Soldat," 1962; Jean Lue Goddard, director; 7.30 p.m. "The Great War" in Leau, 1942; Jean Renoir, director) and "A Day in the Country," (1938; Renoir), 7.30 p.m. Thursday, "French Canvas" (1954; Renoir), 9 p.m. Thursday. KANSAN reviews WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: SUA Classical Film, "Van the Terrible, 1 p.m. 7:30 and 9:15 p.m. Sergei Antonin's classic as the beginning of a trilogy, but Eisenstein died before the third Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 part could be finished. Part. follows Russia's first c战 from his coronation in 1547 into middle age as he fuses a group of independent leaders. Made in Part II will be shown Feb. 27. DYCHE AUDITORIUM: SUA Science Film Fiction, "Island of Lost Souls" 7: 30 p.m. Thursday. Starring Carles Laughon. GRANADA THEATRE: "Harold and Maude." HILLCREST 1: "Swedish Fly Girls." THEATRE HILLCREST 2: "Pocket Money" Paul Newman and Lee Marvin play two losers trying to deal in Arizona and Mexico. Newman is worth watching as the dumb boss battle, but the movie doesn't end with a deal or a plea, lifeless melange of scenes that would look just as good on the cutting room floor. HILLCREST 3: "Carry on Camping." VARSITY THEATRE: "Joy in the Morning." Richard Chamberlain slept out of Blair Hospital in 1965 but long enough to get a reputation for popularity by making this sudsy tale of young marrieds on a college campus. Yvette Mimeinex and Arthur Kennedy also star. Repugnant Romance Dampens Comedy in Harold and Maude' EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE * 'Just Good Friends' 8 Eric Anderson, an original play by Eric Anderson. McPherson graduate student. 'Friends' deals with the students during a year's period. By BARBARASCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor Love can demolish friendship, and in the case of "Harold and Maude" Granada Theatre) it not only wrecks a beautiful but also plays with an otherwise delightful movie. A total of 277 tickets have been sold for the "Museum Without Walls" film series which began on Sunday. It will also be available for the remainder of the series and single admission tickets are also being sold. Not too long ago the "generation gap" was the hottest thing in American small talk. People who don't still exist will to watch even the fictional characters of Harold and Maude bridge it is an encouraging sight. But when they go so far as to close the gap entirely by turning friendship into friendship, they have to make sore eyes, even sore. BUD CORT, the bird boy of Five days Student Union Activity has about 1,000 tickets left for the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band concert at 8tonight in Hoch Auditorium. Festival of the Arts ticket holders who have not yet picked up their tickets at the SUA office will be sold as soon as possible. Monday, SUA will begin selling single-performance tickets for Festival events. About 2,700 Festival tickets have already been picked up. 1,000 Tickets To Nitty Gritty Remain Unsold THE MERCANTILE Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD Tony's *8* Service Be Prepared! I'll help you starting service serviceNow 0644 2434 Love, WA 1-2100 LoveNow "Brewster McCloud," plays Harold, a baby-faced teenager obsessed with the game. He commits suicide like Becker. Harold is caught up in his own world. But whereas the teenagers wings and飞,Harold's is to spill blood and die. He drives a heartsease and uses his spare time at attention. THE PLATONIC relationship that develops between Harold and Maude is based on that Maude had been the victim of humor they ignore the age barrier to become comrades in absurdity. Maude "borrowed" her phone, but police tagging right behind. Harold sets himself on fire, choops off a fake head and commits suicide, but computer dates. And together they a freaky plan to keep Harold out of the military by convincing his uncle, a Patton-like general, that blood thirsty even for the army. The humor is straight out of Charles Addams, and Colin Higgins who wrote the script, that made it even more funny the funny gags deadly without being gruesome. But about two thirds the way through, Higgins seems to have lost touch with the Harold and Naude enjoyable. SUDDENLY, out of nowhere, Higgins has his characters stop playing it for laughs. Harold and Michael are caught in the movie begins a fatal plunge downhill. Whether the remainder is a "message" that there's something beautiful about a love story like this, or a woman old enough to be his great-grandmother is something only Higgins knows. But it's obvious that what results is at the heart of repressing and at worst pressuring. Harold and Maude make simply wonderful pals. Maude's hang-up with life complements Harold with death and illness, the two they form together wacky dug. Higgins should have left them as that. When their friendship becomes love, not the love of comrades but of lovers, Harold and Maude lose the playfulness that was so appealing. It doesn't take an age bigot to feel that the sight of a child playing with a pale kid fresh out of diapers is a trifle repugnant. MISS GORDON puts forth a mighty effort to make it all work. She is wearing gloves as the high-spired Maude that only a grump could keep from being infected by her love of life. The girl will be running for the Pepto-Bismol after they see Bud Curtis sharing her be and blowing soap in her mouth. BLEVINS HONDA Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service 843-3333 Some May-December romances may be as stimulating as vintage wine, but Harold and Maude is more like a sour milk—youngest cow owes to see youngest calf right before the dies. 30 Varieties of Donuts Hot and Cold Drinks Sandwiches 5 a.m. 12 p.m. Tues.-Sat. 5-5 Sun. 5-10 W. 1730 W. St. 842-3644 1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks. Red Baron CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Events STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES Carol Lee 1053 - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz., pts. - qts. only 25% OFF - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock —others on order THE CONCORD SHOP McCONNELL LBR. CO. 844 E. 13th St. 843-387' - OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE * 5 TO 14 MPH 136 - ARTIST CANVAS Highest price paid for used cars. G.L Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608. If TONY'S IMPORTS- DATESUN Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dylan Kansan are offered for training. Training may be color, creed, or national origin. - 0 TO 60 MPH—13.5 - FRONT DISC BRAKES FOR SALE Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, "a civic institution." Elderiera the "something- thing." New Analysis of Western Civilization" Campus Madhouse, 412 Worth 14th. 2. If you don't - RECLINING FRONT SEATS - UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL. One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 - FRONT DISC BRAKES One day 500 E.23rd We have an excellent selection of new and used Toyota and Triumph. Competition Sports Cars, Lawnery Auto Plaza, 842-219-1. 2-18 Northside Country Shop, 707 North Alley. Located in a quiet area. Antiques. Used furniture, collector items, old wood cooking and heating ware, kitchen appliances, stoves, bicycles, fireplaces, floor wood, fireplaces, fireplaces, other useful items. Open to 8 to 5 seven days. Herbert Allerben III. SUPER SALE. DRESS VALUES FROM $18.$32, now $-$10. The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 Take a look at my mistakes. We have plenty of them from all over the world Haas Imports, 1029 Mass. 2-22 JUST ARRIVED—Swim wear and sandsweepers. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 Now you can buy stereo components at FACTORY COST plus 10% Han-voo. The only steel discount店 in the midweek. The only true steel discount house in the midweek. 2-29 Open 24 hrs. per day Swinging coats and capes for spring Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 @ watt electro-voice receiver. 2 MMe- wires, 5 watt speaker, 2 woofer, 2 $W-ranges, and 1 $W-wire that change register. Brond twice. $W-wire. Will connect portable portals bridge cables, never been connected. $W-wire. Never connected. Jeans, Jeans, Jeans. Latest styles, best selection, best prices. The Attic, 927 Mass, 2-18 COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th 842-9450 DRIVE-IN AND COOP OP LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 843-5304 KANSAN WANT ADS Sony TC-630 tape recorder. Features include 2 high efficiency speakers, 4 tape amplifier, 3 heads, 3 speed headphones, make-up mirror, makes 182. 842-2473. Engineering student has no use for his new Royal Safari Portable Typewriter. Will sell for $45. Jim. 841-3099. 2-21 8 track stereo tapes $3.49 with this coupon. Gregg Tire Co., 814 W. 23rd 2-23 66 Corvette Conv.—427 cu. in, snow- ties, AM-FM radio, heater, 4-speed, excellent engine. Call after 8:42- 7505. Guitar—Guild 12 string Acoustic—1!2 years old—Good condition—Call 943-513 after 6:30 p.m. 2-21 £ARRINGS — EARRINGS — and more ARRINGS The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 Bassets, guitar, saxes, clarinet, auto bassists, bass players, organs, organs (includes a transplanted liver). Also, we'll buy or sell your consignment. B42-6623G 2-21 Consignment: B42-6623G 2-21 Crotch Topss-biggest selection, new- est styles; $7.00 The Attic, 927 Mass. 2.18 **owerful WET** (E.I.A.) Magnaxon arm ump-AM-FM unit cut to 40 watt. 360V DC to $40.90- $40.90-Ray Stoneback, 292 Mass Basse Room (2ere); LOVE THAT DATSUN Powerful Zenith stereo portable sold new $129, now only $35.00, com- pens to $49.99. Stoneheath's Magnavox bass system $99. Mass. Open Thurs. nights. 2-22 842-0444 Tire Clearance! New 7014-15 wide Tire Clearance! New 7014-15 wide Fast free installation at Ray Stoneback's (new 7014-15 $2.00 more) nets, letters or phone numbers: 2-22 $3.00 extra Independent COIN guildry & Dux Clu 69 VW bug, custom interior, 68 VW bus, A/C, A/radial tires, super clean. Call 843-7248. 2-22 Do you use 7.35-11 tire size? We're closing out 5 pairs of our best snow tires at $15.00 each plus 25% off the price. JAY Stoneback, 292 Mass. 33 RPM Special Award Winner Almira-Waldrop Bridge Over Troubled Water, Juliet, Mrs. Robinson, etc. only $1.00 at Rock Bay Stone track with tape use. KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES days per week 1964 Buck Special. ddr- v. 8-Auto- transmission, factory aircraft 49-900 actual male. White Excellent books to call Call 843-3453. 2:22 to Call 843-3453. 2:22 DARK ROOM EQUIPMENT bogen CORE ENGINEERING, polycarbonat filter, bulk load erase, enail, etsy, etc. ALSO electric powwraww, powerwraww, 2-22 845 -239. 1947 Studebaker pick up. Anxious to seek. 864-2894. 2-18 Complete line of men's and women's swim suits at Penny's, 830 Mass. 2-22 Three days For Cape Cod and the islands. Complete list of businesses requiring employees. Send $2.00 to: Clean. 1982 Chevrolet for sale. $100.00. Honda 841-2890 after 5:00 p.m. 1341 Rhode Island. 2-21 25 words or fewer : $1.50 each additional word : $ . 02 STUDENT JOB OPPORTUNITY BOOKLET 1972 STUDENT JOB OPPORTUNITY BOOKLET 1971 Camara, 350, loaded, turbidity- dromatic, air, power band, 8-track stereo, daucer cables, wheel goods easy, easy to use, cycle cycle, B64-1204 anytime - 2:22 Austin America 1969, AM-FM radio, automatic, 4 new tires. Call Mark at 842-2534 or come by Phi Kappa Tau, 1120 W. 11th St. 2-22 VOX Holloe Body Electric Guitar Hollow body submini finish. Immaculate condition with hard-shell case. $190 Call Randy at 82-6850 2-22 BOKONOON NOKONOK New shipment of shirts, jackets, dresses, and outerwear from the United States. Experience the good deals at $199 for an American 18-mm AMF t-shirt from America 18-mm AMF t-shirt from America. 1967 Yanahara 250 Twint Scrambleer, full size backpack, backlight, and good clutch back, backlit, and good Gig 3 audio clean organs $40.00 And new 2 audio clean organs $40.00 And new $50.00 Greg. Kupper. 844-2625 www.gregkupper.com Liquidation auction to remodel storefronts. Earn $200-$300 per room, 25 rooms of hotel furniture and equipment. Everything must go for free. Ransom. $200. Bake sal 1964 Futura 2-door hardtop, 3-speed, V-8, good condition, white with red interior. Call 841-2386. 2-21 Sharp, Acura Lentor, fit all, titan MILUX SLA; 1.28; Slimm and 1.28; Slimm chargeable, chargeable, tennis chair; match lounger chairs 843-308; 2.238 matching lounger chairs 843-308; 2.238 1961 VW to 1971 VW from $495 to $1,995 Bank financing available. Jay- hawk Volkswagen. 2522 Iowa. 843- 2200. Toyota, 71. automatic, tape deck, real fine car. $1.395. Call Bill, 842- 3473. 2-24 One group of shirts and sweaters up to 50% off. Earthshine, 12 E. 8th St. 9.94 1963 Morris Minor convertible. Low mileage, excellent condition Call evenings, 842-136 or 843-1240 Neat old flags to cover that ugly spot. Earthshine, East 8th and Mass. 2-24 FOR RENT 1986 Dodge Darf. 4-door sedan 6.3 volt, speed transmission, new tires. 985.000, or will finance entire buying. 843.200, 843-200, 843-200. 2-22 New spring knit shirts in prints from the nostalgic to the elegant. Earth- shine, Mass. and 8th St. 2-24 Going trucking? Do it right. 46 VW bus, FM radio, mobile, excellent tires. Engine recently overhaulable. Mike. 842-7125 to 6:00 p.m. 2-24 Yamaha-30, 71 in shape. Runn great; must sell now! Also, Butcher 408 tenor saxophone, like new-tune saxophone too. Call 800-265-8900 for Lee. 2-24 HELP! For sale, 1968 Falb 850. Excellent running condition. Inspection required. 8427 6211 7811, 8427 6211 7811, 8:30-9:30 a.m. John Gaines 2-24 Wiltan, 1156 4207, gift-day 2-100 Wilton, 1156 4207, gift-day 1965 Buck Wildcat, gold, 2-door 'H' P/S, P/B, air cond, $850.00. Cash will finance entire balance Jayhaw Volkswagen, 2522 lowe, 843-2200. 2- Orleans, Mass., 02653 WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester — bedroom 1; bathroom 2; 1/2 bath furnished or unfurnished. w/c dishwasher, w/c car wash. Apartments—The place to live in. Call 24 hours a day at 897-3800. Ridge House Apts—for the budget of a 20-story building, and the maximum space at best rates in towns. EH, IA, and 2 wards, and, 6 bedrooms. In two other areas black word of woods SENIORS!! For rent—one or two bedroom apts. For rent—two bedrooms, all electric kitchen, laundry facilities, color T.V. available. Call 800-325-6147 or shop at Hillary Apts. 820 in Des Moines. Apartment — newly decorated — one bedroom furnished — wall to wall carpeting—1½ blocks from Union. Phone 843-7577. tt Call immediately for appointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE HILLWIEW APARTMENTS — T33-45 bedroom furnished and unfurnished apartments. Carpeted, draperies, electrical fixtures of much more expensive apartment than that of many others. 摄影师 Rent efficiency apartments, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. From one block south of 845-113-116. 2-21 Studio Students to rest to two quiet male students. $2 and $3 monthly. Share bath and kitchen. No pets. Ask for Greg at 842-8865. 2-24 WANT PEACE. AND QUIT! Need 1 or 2 roommates. Large house in country. Call 842-7771, 8:30-9:30 m-Fri. John Gaines. 2-24 Ph. 843-0330 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. COLLEGE HILL MADOR now has adult apartments with most utilities paid. A.C. new dwiftments w/v acpt measurements to campus. Call 817-342-9200 or visit college.com. Kailu 842-3220 or visit college.com. IT'S NEVER TOO LATE and it is a long time from Jan. to be able to attend a summer school or attractive. One call to Mrs. Forsyth at 2107 A Harvard Road and you can learn about our facilities available in Lawrence's best located and most attractive campuses and Missouri. Availor Apartments, the McKinley Apartments Iowa & Harvard Lodge of Lawyers and soundproof construction, pleasing rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, reason why you would enjoy living in the city. Make this semester in Lawrence a special location for August occupancy and special summer rates for June occupancy. NOTICE Unfurnished room for rent—utilities paid, share bath and kitchen. Some rent off for light housekeeping. Pre- viously paid. Monthly deposit. Miss. before noon any day. 2-21 Ap.t for, rent 1, bedroom A,C, carpeted, big closets, parking closer than many KU lots. 1419 Ohio Call 842-6285 2-18 C Chicago City Copyright © UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Greater Kansas City Birthright (816) 474-4676 t DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within leave overnight. Acceptance of Student: IDs issued. Flight Center 227 North Wisconsin, Wisconsin 608-263-3131 608-263-3131 3-31 INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER. 842-769-3042. Professional child-care for children in 1 m - 12 m. Min or part-time. Specially designed,适合婴儿。 WE HAVE TOPS FROM A TO Z. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-18 For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization—call the Women's Center: 864-444-1441. tf TEE FEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB- time again, and we are taking resor- vations for second semester term par- ty party. Nine band stand, black party person. Nine band stand, black party person. We also have special monthly rates for meeting phone or contact John meeting phones. Phone or contact John Satellite Tee Pee 25-49 & 59 High Business phone. Business phone 25-828. After the event. Low-Low Jeans with the bare look at Low-Low Prices. The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 SANDSWEEPERS JUST ARRIVED The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 SWIM WEAR JUST ARRIVED The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-18 Appering at the Mad Hatter on Wed. Feb. 16, and Fri. Feb. 18. — SHINE — a folk trio. Free admission 7/18 LONG DRESSES FOR PARTIES THAT ARE SUPER. The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-18 Professional seamstress with design experience will work with you for the look you want. Alterations, too. Call 843-3763. 2-21 STUDENTS: FOR YOUR Lawrence Kansas 44044 Counselors position join for Juniors, 6 to 8 yrs. attend summer board and board for 8 weeks during summers. Apply at www.girlguide.com UN 4-173 or by 214 Murphy for a personal interview. Midwest Girl Guides Circle your calendar now for the Last Saturday Night of February. Rosalie's Hotel. Harper, Kansas 67588, (316) - 869-1921. 2-21 Spend this summer work in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to Colorado 342-655-Boulder, Boulder 80026 Medical, Chemical, Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! 100 brand new used western and Hawaiian shirt coming in this week and will be on the juvenile juni- al styles list in used clothing by BOKON 8.19 Vermont 2-22 CABAY ARTS 913843-9275 913842-0025 THE HLE in the WALL DELICATESSEN SANDWICH SHOP For that extra accessory, we've got some old silk scarves for a dollar apiece at Earthshine East 8th and Mass. 2-24 843 7685—We Deliver -9TH & III. Those doe-dues you've been lookin' for—that? Make your, your wormtons sparkle! Weel, we have a few for ya at Earthburn on 6 at Mast. 2-24 WANTED Customers for valentine day gift ideas at Hodge Pode. Open late Thursdays. 15 West 9th. 2-22 Wanted—Science fiction books to be marketed at the Empirium. Expand your range of different books. Come in and ask how you can help. Send your South door of Union, next to Dyneye McCullough. Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30. 3-7 Need girl to share house $55. Utilities included. 842-5768. 2-21 Three girls need fourth to share an apartment, near campus. Own room, call 842-6178 after 4:00 p.m. 2-18 Male roommate to share apartment at 1323 Ohio. One bedroom, wall to carpeting, redecorated. Come by Apt. No. 10. 2-18 FOUND NEAR UNION 1989 man's KU class ring. Red石塔, KU embosed. Identify initials. Call after 543-4106. Pay for aid. ATTENTION TWIRWS 18 years and under, study in question health questionnaire to study answer health questionnaire $10.00 remuneration per twin, both twins needed. Call 259-6252 eye care. Call 259-6253 optometry. PERSONAL Individual to share house with 8 others. Own room, fantastic location, shared dinner meals. Rent $40 per month deposit.提300-$700 annually. aa2_4970 2-23 Female roommate wanted. Jayhawk Towers, $55/mo, utilities paid Call Carolyn at 842-6503 2:24 Valentine Purse Sale at Hodge Podge 10% off Feb. 10—Feb. 17. 15 West 9th. 2-22 POETRY WANTED for anthology. BREWERY, M.D. Provide velvet for prompt reply. Send to Editor. IDLEWILL PRESS, 1867 East Avenue Boulevard, Los Angeles Call me for excellent low cost hos- pices and average bregime (breeding includes late pre- bemergence) John Wells, American Health and Life Insurance 842-3250 Your old cowboy shirts, Hawaiian prints, and letter sweaters and jackets are here. Earthshine, 12 E. 8th. To the girl who found our little white dog with the thorny tail—"Thank you." Cannot express our gratitude. . . . . . . . We've got a cap to fit your head. Funky styles from the engineer to the 'Big Apple' on down. Earthshine at 8th on Mass. 2-24 MCAT: Preparation for the Math Certification exam view and exam-training designed academic program for PAYU information @ PAYU Center For Information GENERATOR CENTER PO Box 266, New York, NY 10017 "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" sirloin 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing LAWRENCE KANSAS Front Elevation Place Our motto is and has always been ... There is no substitute for quality. Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steaks, Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K. C. Steals, *matter is* and has always been 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon 1. Mike Knorr of the Kaw River Bridge Salt Lake Tribune www.saltlake.com PLANNING A TRIP?? 0 Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union FT Let Phone 843-1211 Maupintour travel service Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! If you're down on those tight fits— just wait. Earthshine in the Lower East Side. 2-24 TYPING Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, and reports. Have electric wipers with pixie type. Accurate and prompt response to queries. Phone 842-9544. Mrs Wright Experienced typist will type- paper, tapes or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work Call V 3-2818. Mozakman Mozakman Term papers, these types accurately and promptly, your choice of type will vary. Please see editing at reasonable rates. 842-7097, 842-7655, Kimda Ronda, DkDa 842-7655 LOST Lost brown neck searf during KU- G-Tech game Mon. 7. 841-3158, 1230 Miss. 2-18 Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter Prompt attention . 553-0958 2-29 Accurate typing of your thesis; dissertation, or miscellaneous work from IBM System V typewriter; piece of paper for research report 249-258; Card 342-140 for information 249-258. One year old black Labrador—Ray injured front left leg Animal Mission Clinic tag, Call Pitts, 843-5000, 2:18 One black, padded skype-type with red, white, blue ribs on knuckles. Monday, Feb. 7 in Fint Hall. Value in reward W. Value 248 4563 4563 2-21 Wrist watch from band, former gradu- ation present, sizeable reward. Idi- fication on back. Call 842-5321 or 43-7404. 2-18 Male Brittany, with liver with spots Please call 842-6170. Recharge 2-18 If anyone has has found prescription for alcohol, call 842-7422 Please call 842-7422 MISCELLANEOUS BRIDAL GOWN SAIL Sale-Size 8-10-12, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal. 910 Kentucky. 4:26 Socks that'll make you roll your pantsl up. Earthshine, East 8th and Mass. 2-24 Tube incense on sale. Two for $1.00 Saturday at the Hodge Podge, 15 West 9th. 2-23 Large assortment of antique mufflers or 25c each. Earthshine, 12 E. 8th St. 9-24 HELP WANTED OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS All professions. All occupations. All majors. All minors. Jobs - JOBS OVERSEAS San Diego, Wilis 1097, San Diego, CA- 24-25 OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS Good people everywhere—HELP! ruary is a must if Roselea's Hotel is to survive in Harper, Kansas. Bring food, feed, friends, music, friends, sleeping bag . . . any legal tool to make a heavy all night gathering. $2.50 per Patient. Competition things legal to make a heavy all night gathering. $2.50 per bed. Private room extra/reservation (116.600.487) 3.10 CSC TOYOTA THUMMIE 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842 2323 843 8500 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure interview. Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9, Sat. til noon. DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE UDIOTRONICS The Stereo Store 928 Mass 10 Friday, February 18, 1972 University Daily Kansan PETER HAYS D. J. Hallowell, Lawrence graduate student, explains "smoking meter" Impulses Counted on Golf Counter Leftist Tendencies Among Intellectuals, Lipset Says By SCOTT EATON Kansan Staff Writer Lipset defined intellects as those individuals who in their occupational roles are interested in creating new things in the material line. His definition writers, writers, artists and sociologists. Smoking Charted by Prof Lipset, spoke Thursday night in Dyche Auditorium on "The Intellectual as the Critic and Rebel." By RICHARD GUSTIN Kansan Staff Writer Lipset said the political role of the intellectual had been debated for many years. He said, "We had no doubt that intellectual traditionally played "In this experiment," Halloween said, "we are using this technique to chart the number of urges a subject has to smoke." They are using a new behavior measurement technique developed by Odgen Lindsey, professor of education, as part of the Six students at KU are using psychology to stop smoking D.J. Hallowell, Lawrence graduate student and leader of the exp. group. The system of rewarding creativity in modern society has tended to produce a leftist personality, and to community today, according to Seymour M. Lipset, professor of government and sociology at the University. Lindsey, a former student of the noted Harvard psychologist B. F. Skinner, said Tuesday his behavior measuring system was popular because it made the subject aware of the frequency, or the number of times, a behavior occurred in a specified time period. This is counted by subject himself, often on a golf counter attached to his wrist. A daily total is then plotted on a standardized graph, he Hallowell said the group would meet this weekend to determine way to modify their urge to smoke. This could be done in one of two The first is to substitute one behavior for another. Every time the The second method is to change the environment where the subject does most of his smoking. For example, if a subject smokes a greater number of cigarettes while playing cards, he should attempt to decrease his card playing. subject felt the urge to smoke he would take a drink of water, read ten pages of a book, or run up and down stairs instead. Hallowell said this if behavior changing method were properly and consistently used it would help a person decrease the number of children in the school. According to Lindsey, his counting technique has gained recognition for two reasons. Since the behavior is measured by the subject himself, there is no limit to the kind of behavior that can be quantified. For example, if a person counts, can be quantified and charted to determine trends, he said. LIPSET SAID the life-style of members of the creative intellectual community also need to push them forward on the road. Lindley said this technique had been used to measure as many points in the track, but the measurement was measuring the rate of acceleration from a stop sign to measuring the speed at the end of the ramp. the role of the adversary in the areas of politics and religion. In the world of the intellectual, innovation and artistic creativity were the things that received the greatest monetary reward. Lipset said. He said that new ideas were what made inventions possible, but old ideas, no matter how much the older ideas were improved. Another reason for the method's recognition is that behavior activities can be compared since they are plotted on a standardized graph. Those most successful in areas of intellectual work, Lipset said, were the most likely to refute the claims and support the left. Lipset attributed this to the fact that those intellectuals most likely to succeed were those who knew all of their ideas and plans they presented. He said they would tend to differ most with already established ideas of government and religion, not just to espouse and support new ones LIPSEP CITED a 1960 Carnegie Study in which 60,000 professors were questioned on their political views. He said that among this group, the tendency of young people from the left was much greater than that which generally existed in the rest of the population. Lipset said no other group had ever come near the intellectuals as far as support of the left wing or radical element was concerned. Lipset attributed this to the role of the intellectual as a rebel and a creator. "Those who apply knowledge work within the system; those who create it do not." Iset said. LIPSET SAID the role of un intellectual as a critic and erole had entered a golden age from the 1950s, but it was a result of the de Stalinization of the Soviet Union, which had created the feeling that the communists and militants at the U. S. S. had broken up. Lipset said, however, the monetary changes which had taken place in the funding of universities and intellectual colleges added weight to his saw no recovery of any kind of "golden age" in the future. Campus Bulletin d. Robbins 2017 Bookstore Program: 9 a.m., Great Room Bookstore Staff Meeting: 9 a.m., Cover Costa Rica Program: 9 a.m., Oread Room Bookstore Staff Meeting: 9 a.m., Governors Room. Physical Education Meeting: 9 a.m., Pine Room. Social Welfare Curriculum Committee Meeting in a Negotiated Room. Brazil, Brasília. City Clerks: 8 a.m. Kansas Union, Stockton, California, interviews 8:30 Stockton, California, interviews 8:30 a.m. Room 305. History Meeting: moon, Cottonwood Room. Social Welfare Peace Studies: Moon. Alceve A Physio-Ecologists Meeting: noon, Alceve Museum of Natural History Meeting: noon. English Room. C Museum of Natural History Meeting: noon English Room University Theatre, located at Curry Room City Clerks: 12:15 p.m., Kansas Room. Costa Rica Program: 12:30 p.m., Alcove J. Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark Room. Muslim Students Prayer Meeting: 12:45 p.m. Room 299. Social Welfare Faculty Development: 2 p.m. International Room. P. Master Planning Commission: 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. Master Planning Room and Auditorium 107 p.m. Governors Room and Alceve B. Costa Rica Program 5 p.m. Alceve D. p.m. Governors Room and AWBLee. Costa Rica Program: 5 p.m. Alcev D. SUA Popular Film: 7 and 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. **Friends of Library:** Watkins Room **Rock Chalk** Rebhearsal: 7:30 p.m. **Rock Chalk** Rebhearsal: 8:30 p.m. Ballroom Dance Club-Instruction: 7 p.m., 173 Robinson Gymnastics Museum: Associates Kindergarten Workshop: 10:30 a.m. Dye Hall, Nurtly Gritty Dirt Band Concert: 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium. w24629p 70:30:30 Dybbell tath Imagikub Quadrangular 1:30 p.m. Allett 110823. Wilmington: 7:30 p.m., Robhnsor N. Volunteer Varsity Basketball: 7:35 p.m. Lincoln Nebraska. SUA Bridge: 1:30 p.m., Pine Room. Carillon Recital: 3 p.m., Albert Gorken Symphonic Band Concert: 3:30 p.m. Harmony Orchestra: 1:30 p.m. International Film; 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. International Film; 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Carlson Reclai: 1, Albert Gerrick Carlson Reclai: 1, Albert Gerrick SUA Chess 2 p.m. Room 305. International Film: 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Student Finally Breaks the Habit Editor's Note: Although they are aware of the hazards of smoking cigarettes, many KU students continue to smoke cigarette after cigarette with intentions of quitting sooner or later. The following is a summary of one of these habits which we are overcome the smoking habit. It has been one week since I last smoked a cigarette after smoking a pack a day for nearly five years. Physically, I believe somewhat healthier. Psychologically, I feel proud and happy. People say that the third time's the charm. People also say that charm is not one of my assets. I'm proving that they're wrong. When I smoke, we quit smoking for the third and last time and it's a charm. By KENNETH HARWOOD Kansan Staff Writer I don't recommend going "cold turkey" as an enjoyable sport. However, I am convinced it's the best way to stop smoking. Those who don't down their smoking usually find it is very easy to tap back up. so I'd have the time to carry out he next, and most important step. Like most smokers, I've never been afraid of cigarettes. I've announced my intentions to "eventually stop" on several occasions and "stop" on other occasions, and fear for my own health that prompted me to crush out my last cigarette seven days About two weeks ago I set a "definite deadline" for the time I'd begin my last cigarette. I set the deadline several days away I told all my friends of my plan to quit. In nearly every letter I wrote and conversation I shared I told of my deadline. I set my deadline for midnight so I would be able to go the first six or seven hours without graving a cigarette. Next I supplied myself with large quantities of hard candy and gummies, then candied candy and gum that helped keep me swimming while the walls first two days. The first full day without a cigarette proved to be a gradual torture. Less than an hour after it got out of bed the first strong desire for nicotine spread over me. There was a piece of candy into my mouth. There are two occasions when smokers will claim they "need a drink" to help them relax, drinking coffee or alcohol and the second is after eating a meal. I found I could defeat the "need" by keeping my smoking out of the room and by keeping my occupied. Throughout the day I had a constant gnaw, a physical pleading for a cigarette. The day before I left myself while waiting for my "deadline" carried me through the night with just slightly raw nerves. The worst waited until the day and it almost defeated me. candy continuously—so much that I felt it all along as she achieved it and on that second day that I became acutely aware of witting resisted to smoking candy. After I bought a large pack of gum at the concession counter in town, I went back behind me requested two packs of my (former) brand of cigarettes. I didn't know whether to laugh or stalk, but the gum viciously and stalked away. With some moral support from friends, I resisted the urges during the rest of the day and did a dreading another day of torment. But it was on the fourth day that I really felt a surge of courage as I made a long smoking habit. I realized that most of the torture was behind me and I felt a sense of pride in my actions. When I smoke quit offering me free cigarettes and showed some respect by being cautious about smoking. With each successive day my confidence has grown and my desire for cigarettes has shrunk. I still get occasional pings for a candy gum, my gum and candy bandy and they help to overcome the desire. In the one week of quitting, I have had about 120 pieces of hard cheese and a few cookies and gum. For my dental health, my consumption of gum and candy is low. Great gift idea. FILET-O-FISH Give something different. Tasty, Hot, Tender. A special sauce. Cheese. McDonald's Fiat O' Fish Sandwich. Wrapped free. McDonald's I also intend to remind myself of the problems I had when I was running out of cigarettes or matches and who can't state the habit, smoking with a sore throat and inability to flight of stars. I realize now, however, that I could easily begin smoking again if I don't take certain measures. I plan to brag about my accomplishment to all those friends whom I informed earlier that I'd be willing to swallow a lot of pride if I didn't continue to live up to my brag. McDonald's To those who smoke, I recommend trying to quit in order to discover the charms of fresher air, tastier food and saving foods of dollars every day, prefer being charmed to be charred. PHU BAI, Vietnam (AP)—Buildrers are busy making junk out of equipment the U.S. Army and army troops too expensive to give away. Before the buldozer strikes, much of the equipment is battered but usable. IF YOU DIDN'T SEE "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" BECAUSE OF ITS PREVIOUS RATING IT IS NOW RATED R THE COWBOY DUSTIN HOFFMAN JON VoIGHT R COLOR by DeLuxe $ ^{4} $ United Artists "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" FEBRUARY 18 & 19 WOODRUFF AUD. 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. 60c Researchships Offered FREDERICK BRASILLI Downtown SATURDAY Prices aren't cut They are CHOPPED! HATCHET DAY - bras - dresses Jay SHOPPE Downtown - slacks FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 ● B35 MASS. ● VI3-4833 - hot pants the federally-funded program offers lecturers in American literature, biological sciences, economics and business administration, English, foreign language, medicine and theater arts. University lecturing and postdoctoral research opportunities are available to full-time faculty members through senior Fulbright-Hays program for 1973-74 and also for 1974-75. GEM THEATER, Baldwin Feb. 18-24 7-20, pm. $10.99 B BILLY JACK TECHNICOLOR® From Walter Bros. A Rinke Leisure Service GP --once in his lifetime. W of the literary site and these capsule an athletic feel. We are particularly pleased to present a guest quiz which W has shown our admiration with in this book. Our submission will be returned to this website. Our greetings come from the $5 disk, the barge, and the grave tomb. We wish you peace and comfort to save and to save We wish you luck in your Siblings quest We wish you luck in your Siblings quest We, the following, feel lucky from royalty to the Royals, to the Benson to the Bard and to the Bard. DEAR MISS CHUCKIE BILLY PRESTON HOLLOW HOWARD O'HARWAN BOBBY BLUME MICHAEL HUNT MENNY ALDRICH JOHNNY BENCH TERRY DANIELS TERRY DANIELS JOHN CARDIO BENCHMAN BENSON LAWRENCE DUREE LAWRENCE DUREE AUBREY BEADLESDE HARPOP AND CHICO LEO TOLSTY LEO TOLSTY MISS DOSOR DOSSOR KUSHAH Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort are HAROLD and MAUDE --once in his lifetime. MAUDE LOVES LIFE... She's 81. ... He's 18. Eve. Shows 7:30 & 9:30 HAROLD LOVES MAUDE Granada THEATRE ...Telefax (312) 957-3800 Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. CHAMBERLAIN MIMIEIDX JOY IN THE MORNING MGM RICHARD YVETT Sat. & Sun, Show Times 3:00; 5:00; 7:00; 9:30 Adm. $1.50 & 7.5c Crew! $1.00 & 5.0c 4:30 to 5:15 only! Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone 136-1865 Now Thru Tues. Hillcrest AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL CARRY ON CAMPING B In COLOR St R A campsite for sore eyes. Eve. 7/35 & S/19 Adult 1:50 Mat, Sat, Sun; 2/2, 4& 4/10 Twilight Prices Good Entr. 1& 10 Show Only. Paul Lee Newman Marvin "Pocket Money" GP Hillcrest Now Mat. Sat. Sun 2.10 8/4 10:00 Twilight Song Good Friday Thru Tues. Stu Kans regis Sunda Comi Senat EVERY MAN SHOULD MEET A FREE-FLYING STEWARDESS once in his lifetime in his lifetime. s who hat to do man. "Unfettered Sexual Utopia." New York Times and Philadelphia Press "Stewardess whose job makes it easy for her to try out man of many nations" Arne Duck Norman Willem Schmidt GRENFHAGEN FRENCH Swedish Fly Girls color BRIE TOVE • SUSAN HURLEY • INGER STENDER • DANIEL GEUN and the AIR HOBTESTERS FROM COPENHAGEN Hillcrest NOW THRU TUES. Eye: 7:30-12:20 Adult 1.50 ] PLEASANT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 82nd Year, No. 89 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Nitty Gritty Pleases Crowd Monday, February 21, 1972 See Page 5 StudEx OK's Register Plan Student groups at the University of Kansas will no longer be recognized, only registered, after a proposal was approved Sunday night by the Student Executive Committee (StudEx) of the Student Senate. The proposal that was passed unanimously by committee members present was a revised version of a statement proposed by Charles Oldbier, University attorney; and William Bafour, student at study affairs, at the F.13 StudiumX meeting. Previously it was necessary for a group to be recognized before it could request support from the finance fundees. Now a group needs only register in the office of the vice-chancellor for student affairs and it may apply to the Finance and Auditing Committee of the college. The main difference between the two statements is that the first proposal contained two clauses, one to define registered and one to define recognized student organizations, while the new clause instead reflects most of the second clause on recognition. Senate approval of funds for a group will still depend on whether the senate believes the organization is asking for money for an animal, recreational or cultural program. "What we are doing is turning down the rests. We're still letting them apply," said Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior, in response to requests not suitable for use of activity fees. The statement approved by StudEx is as follows: W. J. SMITH 1. Registered Student Organizations: Any group of students may organize for any legal purpose and register the organization in the office of the vice-chancellor for student affairs. A registered student organization may apply for funding for those programs which are educational, recreational, or cultural. Organization is automatically funded by the office of the vice-chancellor for student affairs. Kansas Staff Photo by ED LALLO 2. In no event will funding be granted to programs that do not fall within the program's budget. 'Scoop' Jackson Attacks Administration Policies Says Phase III will be to phase out Nixon Nixon's 'Mismanagement Top Issue, Jackson Says By ROBIN JEAN GROOM Kansan Staff Writer TOPEKA-Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., candidate for the Democratic nomination for President, attacked the Nixon administration's stand on the economy, education, school busing and food safety. 28-a-plate Democratic fund-raising dinner "The overriding issue of this campaign," Jackson said to a crowd of over 1,100 Democrats at the Washington Day Dinner, "is 'the gross mismanagement of the economy by the Nixon administration. Make no mistake about that." He said he could sympatize with the Kansas wheat farmers because his state of Washington was second only to Kansas in growing, and he knew the farmer's problems. "It's time for a decent program of parity for the farmer in America," he said. "This nation would be money ahead" if the unemployed were directed into research and developmental projects, other projects and others and other such projects, Jackson said. HE SAID that unemployment in America had reached 10 million and that the government should provide direct employment for those out of work. "The American people won't buy and they won't invest because they lack confidence in this administration," Jackson said. "They've had Phase I and Phase II, but they've never been in which is phasing out the Nixx administration come November." He said the American people had the highest level of savings since 1946. He said that the United States had a deficit of over $40 billion, the largest ever and that all the Nixon administration had taken steps to make it more unemployment and more inflation. HE SAID he was personally opposing basing put into effect solely to achieve a result. "Congress must deal with the bitter and divisive busing controversy that is diverting us from the goal of providing for all our children," Jackson said. He said that the Democratic Party could stand and wiliing buses issue an address roughly in a case-by-case basis. case basis and that his proposed Constitutional amendment would affirm the right of parents to decide that their children would attend their neighborhood school. "The amendment would also establish the right of every child to equal educational opportunity. It's high time to end a system that gives a rich child a better public education than a poor child. Why should a workingman have to leave his family in a rich neighborhood to get a decent education? That's just not right," he said. 'IT'S HIGH time we get on with the business of education,' said Jackson. He said that during the last presidential campaign President Nixon had blamed Democratic administrations for rising crime rates. he said that he introduced a bill in the Senate last week that would increase federal spending on education from 7 per cent to 33 per cent of the costs of elementary and secondary education over a 5 year period. "In 1968, Mr. Nikson's first full year in office, violent crimes, which are murder, rage, robbery and assault, jumped 11 per cent. In 1970, his second year, violent crime increased by 12 per cent. In the first half of 1971, violent crime increased by 100 per cent according to FBI statistics released by the attorney general." On the issue of crime Jackson said, "I have to up it to just the way Verma Hill has done." JACKSON said that courts were clogged with untricted criminal cases and that months, often years, elapsed between the day of arrest and time of trial. "the Constitution guarantees the right to a speedy trial," Jackson said. "Any person accused of a felony should be brought to trial within 60 days of his arrest." Defendants were either put back on the streets or sent to jail because they could not afford bail. He also said that it was in the national interest to impose conditions in penal punishment. EIGHTY-FIVE OF the large penal institutions in American were built during the Civil War. On the issues of defense, Jackson said he had to 'maintain a credible defense post' when he came in," Jackson said. "When a man comes out of a penal institution he should be a better man than He said he hoped the Strategic Arms Limitations Talks would succeed but said the United States could not negotiate a weak bargaining position at the talks. 'Basic Issue Is Time' New Step Approved For KUMC Project By ROBERT E. DUNCAN Kansan Staff Writer The Kansas Board of Regents, upon recommendation of Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., approved Friday a request that the building committee and the medical center committee be prepared to process the planning of construction for the basic nursing building and hospital addition at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Dr. William O. Rieke, vice-chancellor for medical affairs, said the basic issue is time. It costs an additional $6.5 million every year the project is detained. In the event it is determined feasible to issue revenue bonds for construction of the facility, the resolution passed by the Regents allows the chairman of the board to determine how to present the proposal to the legislature. RIKEK SAID it was vital the legislature be approached this session to either approve the issuing of revenue bonds for the project or to allocate money to help Winn Says Education Should Be 'Practical' By RON WOMBLE Kansan Writer The nation's colleges and universities are not giving students a broad enough education, marijuana should not be allowed in schools, the campaign will depend upon the Democrats. These were a few of the observations made by U. S. Rep. Larry Hogan. Winn appeared on a question and answer show on KANU radio. Winn said college education should not be used to judge a student, not just philosophy, not just book reviews. He cited KANU as an example of practical experience. Winn said professors and instructors who go into business for business before they leave. "The Law School is an example," he said, "How many of those professors have taught us the rules?" Winn pointed out that federal and state money already financed research grants and sabbaticals and a "part of the taxpayer's dollar could be used" to help pay for the experience the instructors would be required to get. THE ISSUE will be controversial, Winn predicted, because professors and instructors are involved, but "i am more convinced now than ever before that professors should be required to go into business." Winn's trip to Kansas was not to begin his campaign for re-election, he said. He does not expect to announce whether he is running until June. The reason for the delay is the equal time law. Wim has both a weekly radio channel and a weekly telex channel. explained that if he announced his candidacy earlier than June, opponents might be able to demand equal time on the radio and equal time in the newsmen's. Winn does not expect the issues of the 1972 campaign to change much from recent years. The 'issues will be basically the same issues' concerning the presidential administration. WNN SAID the issues were "subject to change as we get closer to November," or to a large extent they would depend on the opponents. "They're going to go to have after me," he said, "they'll have to challenge me on me." Winn said he believed there had been a misunderstanding of the results of a presidential committee on drug abuse. He said that the committee had not advocated legalization of marijuana but had called for a ban, and less "sellers" and less severe penalties for users. Winn said that he personally didn't approve of legalization of marijuana and that he did not believe that legalized it "approved" in Congress or by the people. He said it was possible that a patient affected by positions held within the party, affected by positions held within the party. He was referring to Sen. Robert Dole, Kan. He did think that Dole's performance as a Kansas senator had not seriously been questioned in the position of chairman of the Republican party. "No doubt Dole can be re-elected in 1974." Winn said. He added Dole had a tough job but he had a good staff and he was doing a good job. Mike Fraternity Pledges Pirate Members' Cars into TKE Dining Room Bill Cohrs, Prairie Village freshman and Tau Kappa epsilon, surveys, prepares his fraternity's late night nack. The two cars, owned by TKE actives George Treu, St. Louis junior, and David Bessler, are parked in the room in registration for the members' failure to attend a rush conference out of town. The two stayed in town, preferring to be with their girlfriends. To get the cars into the room, the members removed a window and sliding door frame from the rear of the building. keep the planning effort alive In other action the Regents approved a program suggested by the Council of Presidents for the granting of academic credit for foreign study. This policy limits commercial companies who sponsor tours or students in their programs. The new policy states that credit will only be given to programs which fall within the authorized courses of the institution and which are led by qualified teachers. It said the activity cannot be designed to produce a profit for any individual. THE REGENTS also agreed to request from the legislature a supplemental appropriation to repair steam lines appropriate to Hatfield Hall Explosion earlier this month. The board also heard discussion on the present status of retirement benefits provided by the state for the faculty at its institutions of higher education. The request of $75,000 is an advance on a recommendation made by the Governor for the next fiscal year. If the appropriation is not granted work on the steam lines could not begin until midsummer. The Regents approved a motion that faculty be permitted to withdraw up to 10 per cent of their accumulated retirement payments at the time they begin to receive their retirement annuity. The Regents heard President James McCain of Kansas uniformly describe how Kansas is behind other states in providing retirement benefits. IN MANY STATES, McCain said, the common arrangement is for the state to assume two-thirds of the retirement payment and the individual one-third. In Kansas the state and the faculty member assume equal responsibility. In other action the Regents approved the installation of air conditioning in the Law Library in Green Hall and the repair of the air conditioning unit in Sooner Library. The Regents also approved the unused storm drain near the KU Printing Service. 2 Candidates Disqualified Richard Dwyer, Jopin, Mio., senior and William Jacoby, Lawrence senior, have been disqualified as candidates for student body president and vice-president. R. L. Moore, associate electors graduate student and temporary elections committee chairman, said Sunday. Dwyer and Jacoby were disqualified because they did not have the required 500 signatures to support their candidacy, Bailey said. Bailey discovered the error Friday afternoon when he was checking the candidates' filing papers. Dwyer and Jacoby had filed with the impression they didn't need the signatures to support their declaration, he said. Bailey assumed Bill O'Neill, Ballwin, Mo., junior and student body treasurer, had told Dwyer and Jacob they didn't have to collect 500 signatures. He said O'Neil officially accepted the filing papers and fees. Bailye gave Dwyer and Jacoby until 5 p.m. Tuesday to collect the required 500 signatures, because he thought O'Neill had made the mistake, he said. Saturday Bailey learned that O'Neill hadn't told Dwyer and Jacoby that they wouldn't need 500 signatures to file their papers, he said. Apparently some unauthorized person in the Student Senate office had told Dwyer he and Jacoby wouldn't need the 500 signatures. As a result, Bailey decided Sunday that he would Dyer and Jacoby as candidates. he said Dwyer said Sunday night he and Jacoby intended to get back on the ballot. Since they were informed of Bailey's Friday afternoon decision, the pair has collected 500 signatures in support of their candidacy. Dwyer has seculded a meeting Monday with Dave Dysart, Lawrence law student and KU Ombudsman, to discuss the situation. Dyer said he intended to take the case to the University audiology, if necessary to have a hearing exam. "I'm kind of disappointed that I have to get back on the balloon," Dwayne Brown back on the ballot. "Dwayne 2 Monday, February 21, 1972 University Daily Kansan Road Bill Viewed as Employment Boon By MARK BEDNER Kansan Staff Writer Three Lawrence area legislators discussed pending state legislation before a crowd of 125 people at the Lawrence County Eagles and issues' breakfast Saturday morning at the Holiday Inn. The legislators, representatives Morris Kay and John Vogel and Sen. Arden Booth, outlined spec bills that have passed the legislature or are now pending in the 1972 session. Kay spoke of the Accelerated Road Construction program designed to help the sagging employment level in Kansas. Kay also described a bill that is intended to "encourage the construction industry out of state industry to take a closer look at Kansas." The bill would provide for a state tax credit on costly pollution control equipment. "ALTHOUGH political conflicts and tensions do remain this has been a relatively successful legislative session," Kay said. Booth discussed a number of controversial bills. He said that the bill to reapportion the state's By RICHARD COOLEY Kansan Staff Writer The Student Senate's action last week limiting the campaign activities of student offices has produced mixed reactions among members of the Senate. Students Question Limits To Campaign Spending Approved as part of a five-page set of election rules, the provision allows each person to be issued to seven cents per constituent. It was designed to prevent six persons from having the same right. the financial aspects of the electoral process. But some students question whether the limitations will enhance or impede the presentation of campaign issues. Bill O'Neill, Ballwin, Mo. Junior, and student body will be able to rule would necessarily create a fairer campaign. He admits that there have been cases of excessive campaign spending in the "BUT I DON'T think it has 2 Arrested in Raid Two persons were arrested at about 1:50 a.m. Saturday as a result of a drug raid conducted by the Lawrence Police Department be a detritum to the election process," he said. "It has publicized the issues and created students concerning the issues." O'Neill said he thought the decision might 'hamstring' some candidates in running their campaigns. to leave. He refused and was arrested. Robin Elizabeth Dibazim, 18, of 822 Crawford St. was arrested and charged with possession of the firearm she was released on $1,500 bond. The names of several juveniles, who will be cited into juvenile court, were also taken. Peter George, Lawrence special student and president of the Unorganized Housing Association, opposed to any limitation on campaign spending and that he attempted to have the whole section relating to spending collected from the electoral rules. Phillip D. Garet, 19, of S12 Illinois St., was charged with disobeying a police officer. He was also charged with stationing and was asked by officers Dunkum is scheduled to appear in County Court at 10 a.m. Tuesday. "It leads to deception," he said. "It it's just a trick the泪塑ohews the guy with the trickiest accountant gets all the ad GEORGE ADMITTED that a lack of limitations might give wealthier candidates an advantage. legislative districts had not fared as well in the Senate as it had in the House. "But by the same token," he said, "the limitations will work to the disadvantage of the candidate who is less well-known and who needs more money to bring himself to the attention of the voters." handle other programs. Kesey's Third Party Elects 4 Leaders at UMKC Meeting Four Kansas Citians were elected Saturday to the collective post of state party chairman of a new political party at the University of Missouri-Kansas City under the direction of Ken Hunt. The university's culture leader, Kesey began the Missouri third party organization By RIVIAN BELL Kansan Writer Principal-Commissioner-Freshman Regi- son 11 a.m. Jyväskylä Room: Keskus Uni- ton. Admirin. 13:10 a.m. Above C. Califera. Soprano D. Archaea 13:10 a.m. Above D. Carpus Christianus. 12:30 a.m. Above A. Russian Table. 12:30 a.m. Maidowkul Russian Table. 12:30 a.m. Student Year Conference: 4 p.m. Senate Day Care Committee: 4 p.m. Senate Day Care Committee: 4 p.m. Workplace Without Walfa Film: 7:30 a.m. Walfa Div. "om" Campus Bulletin "Senators are reluctant to draw up a plan that would put their colleagues out of a job." Booth said. SMS: 8 p.m. Council Room. German Medical Studies: 7:30 p.m. Governor's Room. with over 1,200 students, professors and Kansas City area residents attending the meeting. Among those nominated wag- ing, Elizabeth Schultz, assistant professor of English at the University of Kansas and Pleaser, Kansas City city businessman and owner of the house and Cowtown Ballroom. Schultz, who declined the nomination, said that she was an 'interpreter from Kansas' and a 'qualifier for a Missouri party post.' PLENER ALSO declined the nomination, but offered the use of the Cowtown Ballroom facilities under new party's direction. to check on welfe fund misuse. One the bill very very the publication of recipients' names nationality of cash received they receive The electoral process began with several deep-breathing exercises led by Kesey, nominations for chairmen were then taken from the floor with Kesey's only requirement that all nominees be registered. According to Kesey, this would give the party chairman the edge over Nixon in at least one area Approximately fifteen people were nominated, several of whom announced that they were either unconcerned with politics or interested in third party would serve little purpose. By the conclusion of the meeting, however, a general consensus had been "teached that assistance would be given to the party regardless of personal opinion." NO DECISION has yet been made regarding the title for the new party, although one UMKC professor suggested that he should not be part of the Party Against Conspiracy2. Kesey said that not establishing a party platform was a good start. "If we can keep from having a platform, no one can criticize us," he said. In response to a question concerning whether Senators living in the small income that many welfare families must live on, Booth said that the Senators living in the cost of living increases in the cost of living and that the information was taken into consideration when determining when welfare programs should be implemented. "People do care about people who care," but "they are afraid to talk about they feel it is old-fashioned. We have a chance now to change the way we talk." Vogel emphasized the need for stronger laws to punish the drunken driver. He outlined the provisions of a bill in the now-empty Senate, and mandated jail sentence on any person arrested while driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Vogel said that the bill had been presented in the legislature many times in the last 10 years but was only beginning to show signs of passage during this session. KESEY SUGGESTED that the party hold a three-day primary sometime this summer. During that time, presidential candidatesying for the party's endorsement could address party adherents. The Senator said that the legislators were in a very difficult situation when he made a statement about the need in was need of more revenue to The audience enthusiastically applauded Vogel in response to his statements on the need for the enforcement of traffic laws. "IT'S TIME we become vocal on issues like these. It's a shame for the people of this country and the state of Kansas to permit this catastrophe to go on." Vogel告诫了 rising highway death rate. "BUT WHEN you ask us to go to Toptown, we hand people on hand. give people's pace, take money out, and put it in other places in a lot, making taking in it do work." Booth said. He spoke briefly on the highly controversial welfare situation in the state, and said the institution recently passed the Senate without a dissenting vote. Booth said the general feeling in the state was that there was need for more definite guidelines in the administration of welfare funds but that he was reluctant to do so. He also spoke of the needed changes. BOOTH THEN outlined the provisions of Senate bill 818, which, among other things, would open to investigation on the state level a provision that contains a provision to fund investigators on the county level Musicians representing all forms of American popular music could perform in between candidates' speeches, Kesay said. CAIRO—Over the last five days President Anwar Sadat had moved to broaden support on the home front, stifle public criticism and warm Israel of massive retaliation in any war. The president appeared on television last week before an extraordinary session of the National Congress of the ruling Arab Socialist Union. He enlisted the security men, who have grumbled about the nearly five-year state of not being able to stand and silent, saying too much talk didn't do any good and offering to if felt there were those who lacked confidence in him. People . . . . . Places . . . . . Things The drug abuse committee created recently by the Lawrence City Commission is now in action. The city seeks prevention and rehabilitation. Group Views City Drug Abuse PRESIDENT NIXON came to Communitus-rulesd China Sunday with the expressed hope that his discussions would help bring a new day to the world. The President's visit began with a brief stop at Shanghai to take on a Chinese advisor to guide the Nixon plane to Peking and talks with PREMIER CHOU ENLAI. Nixon visited Shanghai to meet Cou and other Chinese leaders at a banquet tonight in Peking. Jack Rose, the city commission's representative on the committee, said the committee had been organizing so far, but they hoped to begin research on the problems of drug abuse by May. Rose said the commission's decision to form the drug abuse committee stemmed from a desire of the city government to find out the extent and ways to tackle the drug problem in Lawrence. The Nixon administration has begun laying the groundwork for a NATIONAL SERVICES CORPUS to utilize some 41 million Americans as potential volunteers. Joseph Blatchford, head of most of the administration's volunteer service agencies, said the law could be amended to combine service in such a corps with some form of amnesty for those who left the country rather than go into the military. Ten years ago Sunday much of the world stood still for nearly five hours to follow the progress of JOHN LEE GINN, a member of the U.S. Army who returned to Cape Kennett on Tuesday for the 10th anniversary celebration of his flight. It has been delayed until then because of the Washington's Birthday Weekend. "We need to first ascertain the scope of the problem." Pullman said. "We formed the committee and then we solved the problem as to deal with it." SAIGON—Enemy troops made 65 attacks in South Vietnam over the weekend and rocketed the big U.S. air base at BIENHOA early today. The U.S Command said two Americans were wounded in three-rocket attack on BieNho, fifteen miles northeast of Saigon. ROBERT PULLIAM, abuse problem was of great community concern, but it was hard to determine what the total cost would be. drug abuse rehabilitation, in "trying to find out what facilities currently exist, the availability of facilities best be utilized." Rose said. School officials at Lawrence High School said the problem had become difficult to handle because the bureaucracy increasingly deterred to detect. Jeanne Dicker, the school counselor who had drug problem there had changed. "The kids aren't coming to me, but I know the problem is still important." By MARK BEDNER Kansan Staff Writer One of the subcommittees, which will look into the area of Britons had a cheerless Sunday of cold meals by candlelight as the country $80,000 coal miners prepared for a NATIONAL BAILING FORCE forecast will end its six week strike. Prime Minister Edward Collyer also awarded Saturday the miners increasing averaging 21 per cent. "The City Commission hasn't taken action on the problem in the past when the forcement, because quite frankly we didn't know what to do," Rose Dicker said Lawrence High was trying to act on the problem on a personal level. "Individual Places: Things: C AW AL M D teachers are dealing with it in their classes. We don't feel that the school assembly approach is effective," she said. CONFRONTING ALTERNATIVES IN SEXUALITY A WEEK OF FORUMS ON SEXUALITY FEBRIARY 21-24 ALTERNATIVES TO MARRIAGE McCollum TV LOUNGE 7:30 FEB 21 GAY LIBERATION FRONT 7:30 FORUM ROOM - UNION FEB 21 SEX AND THE LAW GSP DORM 7:30 FEB 21 BRAVE NET BRAVE NEW WORLD: REVISITED DEAN DELBERT SHANKEL 7:30 KANSAS ROOM-UNION FEB 24 ROB LOWE, a psychologist for the Lawrence schools, agreed that the problem had become more acute. He said it was hard to determine whether drug abuse was in increase in the public schools. SUFFERING FROM MONDAY NIGHT BLAHS? Drown out these blahs during the STABLES happy hour. Cheer yourself up at the happy price of 50 $ a pitcher. Every Monday, between the happy hour of 8-9 p.m., you can enjoy your favorite beverage at this thirst quenching price. Have fun, feel free and be happy at... TOM'S SKELLY SERVICE 602 W. 9th HAS MOVED TO TOM'S SKELLY SERVICE 1733 Mass. "Give Tom A Call" THE STABLES SKELLY The Balfour Rep of Will Be Displaying The Complete Line FRATERNITY and SORORITY JEWELRY at the KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE Wed., Feb. 23 and Thurs., Feb. 24 9:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Patronize Kansan Advertisers FLY NAVY Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith will never be like this. --are "So about Nanc reset libra is rid Clip and Mail To; U. S. Navy Recruiting Station 2420 Broadway Kansas City, Mo. 64108 (COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY) CLASS OF NAME STREET . CITY STATE ZIP CODE MON. & TUES. Frosted Cherry Pie ONLY 10¢ henrys FEB. 21-22 6th & Missouri 843-2139 Join HENRY'S For A Washington Birthday Celebration! "I stud have they E too high lo libra some ques some libra study libra give to as For Those Tender Moments ... flowers say it best. Owens FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana 843-6111 University Daily Kansan Monday, February 21, 1972 3 Bashful Students Lack Library Skills By JAMES COOK Kansan Staaff Writer There is a general feeling among the staff of Watson Library that many students don't need to be on their own for help and are restless to ask for help. Kingman, said the library was too big, too complex and not like a high school library. "Some students feel guilty at assailing an easy assessor. Kingman, associate research librarian, 'but librarians don't feel any question about it." Louis Griffin, circulation librarian, agreed that students sometimes hesitated to ask questions. "But you didn't know how to use the library and used it as a 'gigantic study hall.'" Part of the librarian's job, he said, was to give information to students and work with them. "IT IS a pity that more students don't know what we have to offer and how to find what they want," said Griffin. "A book is a book and our lives are a book." In "a way I'm a teacher," I find that my business is to get information to the people who need it. Griffin said the layout of the building itself caused problems. building itself caused problems. "The building itself is an artificial landscape, not a try to make the services easily identifiable, Gerald said. Watson Library is a *A*-shaped building. The first addition was to the southeast corner and then to the west corner. In 1964 another addition was made at the west corner and major changes were made at the east corner. Because of these changes, the staff has difficulty in maintaining a constant temperature throughout the THE BUILDING also has lighting and electrical problems. John Glinka, associate director of the Watson Library (ULS), said Watson Library "went one step further" than most libraries. Watson maintains a reference desk, he said, and the library does all he can to help a student. "Our job is to bring a book and a patron together," Griffin said, "if we have a thesis that's checked out once every 50 years we still will fulfill our purpose. We make the materials available and bring the books and the patrons together. Time is not a factor." Grifin said research was easy as a student learned how to use the computer and frustrations in trying to find a book then you've learned the AS VOLUMES WERE added Interviews Hurble Oil and Refining Co. BS, MS, PhD chemical engineering; BS, MS, Chemical engineering; BS, MS mechanical engineering; BS, MS petroleum engineering Hurble Oil and Refining Co.: Same as above. General Food Corporation (Openings in September 2015) Tampa, Battle Creek, Meth. & Evansville, Tuscaloosa, N.Y. & many others. Tarryton, N.Y. and many others. Electrical engineering. HS mechanical engineering. HS mechanical Phillips Petroleum Co. and Subakilabier Mining Co. offer BMS, BS, MS petroleum mechanical engineering, BS, MPS petroleum hullark card, Inc. BS, electrical BS, MS mechanical engineering, BS, MS机械工程engineering, BS, MS Philippe Petroleum Same as above. city of New Orleans; BS architectural engineering; electrical engineering; BS industrial engineering; BS mechanical engineering. If you use tampons, you already know how to use the internal deodorant... Norforms. over the years, a larger staff was necessary. Five years ago a computer took three separate steps for each book he check out. Soon it became physically impossible to increase the number of computers the only answer Norforms French language Stopping feminine odor is easier than you think. Each tiny-tasy—a-fingertip Norforma*s safe to use as a tiny timpon. Just insert—it begins dissolving instantly to kill bacteria, stop feminine odor where it occurs, certainly, in the vaginal tract. You feel clean, fresh, odor-free for hours. No shower, no douche stops odor the way Nourforms do. "We were the first library in the nation to use a computer as we do," Glindaka said. "We had a lot of problems at first. For one thing, we neglected to program a computer that would compute fines for 31 days, on the 32nd day, record the books as being one day overdue." Today the computer is used to teach students different schools read and what freshmen and seniors read. Griffin said the library did work with computers. THE STAFF DONES't tell who has a book, he said. They practice borrow anonymity. FREE NORFORM MINACK-P plus booklet! Write to: Norwich Pharmacal Co. Dept GN.C, Norwich, N.Y., 18138. Enclose 25c to cover selling handwriting. Name Street City State Don't forget your Zip. Norwich Products Division Norwich Pharmacal Co. Griffin said he thought many students assumed that a book was not in the library if it was not on his desk. He had a printout, search cards, hold cards, recall cards and other procedures for locating a book. Mr. Griffin would go to the ULS at Lawrence. Watson Library has about 50,000 books in circulation at any one time and approximately 1,000 transactions a day. Watson Library has a minor problem with stolen books. "Any system has its weaknesses," Griffin said, and there is always a group of people who feel a need to try to beat the system. The person who steals a book is depriving others of it. Most of the books are stolen illegitimately. That is to say, most are stolen. Of course the student has to nay for them." on the printout, a search is made. If the book isn't located, it assumed the book has been stolen. "I have no idea how many books go out of the library in raincoats, under hats or in brains," George Shapiro, control assistant, said. "It's probably a lot more ways to walk steal books, if you know those ways are. But we also have our defenses." WHEN A BOOK is called for a number of times and isn't listed Shapiro said that most students were too honest and too lazy to steal books. Most students size up books to take a lot of energy to steal a book. Shapiro said he did not like to feel like a "police-type person" and that he considered himself a public relations man, not an investigator. Some students, he believed, must understand the purpose of the control. "PEOPLE SOMETIMES get hostile, especially people without books, especially women without books," Shapiro said. Some members of the staff think the library's services are too technical, but a very rough estimate of the cost of running Watson Library would be $150,000. "We like to have a useful service," Gikla said, "but we don't hate all the money we need from our university. We semester we were working on the basis of past records which were not relevant for the present situation. We would like to have a larger budget." the reference librarians extend their hours and those of "school" librarians. Hours are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday and 2 p. to 10 p.m. on Sunday. Librarians who work on weekends do not work on Monday. "PEOPLE DON'T realize what we are up against," Kingman said. "may have five patrons at our store on Friday." All phone. This is on all at命. once. We don't serve only the KU students, we serve little old ladies. Lawrence citizens and students from other universities." Watson Library conducts tours on Thursday at 9:30 a.m. and at 2:30 p.m. A guide for readers is available at the reference desk and book drops have been installed in several resident halls. There is also a one hour course, Introduction to the Bibliography and Library Method, which students to use the library. Cafeteria Computer Slow, Patrons Say The new money computer looters have Hawk's Nest has been blamed by many of the cafeteria's patrons as responsible for the long waits "The computer slows down the line. The old procedure of dealing with only one person and a cash register would be inefficient." Paulette Jackson, Goodman senior. Dwayne L. Hall, Kansas Union Director, said some of the employees were slower with the new equipment and more conventional cash registers," he said, "but our newer staff is attaining maximum efficiency from the supplier, so things balance out." "Inventory is taken automatically every time the cashier pushes a button on the computer," Hall said. "There is a button on the device for every item sold in the cafeteria. It also allows you to check which item has been checked on the number of units of each item consumed. It provides a guideline for production as an easy way to keep tracing what supplies must be ordered." "It also cuts down work," Hall said. "It also cuts down stress." A less mental process involved—that of affixing the letters on a phone, what you see on somebody's tray. Hall also said there had been an increase in food prices. "This is the result of the expansion of prices have been adjusted," he said. "The total price increase amounts to about one per cent. The increase was much smaller while many cost what they did three years ago. After all, we don't want a reflection of the economy." Campus Briefs Student Music Educators Emily Taylor, dean of women, will moderate a discussion on child care on "Feminine Perspective" at 7 onight on KANU Radio. The Student Music Educators' National Conference will meet at 8 a.m. on Thursday, March 27, in the George Washington University professor of economics, on "Keeping Out of Financial Tangles" which will include a discussion of the values of stocks, bonds and life insurance policies. Membership cards will be distributed and a guest speaker will be present. Tunnel Art Show Child Care Discussion SUA will sponsor a tunnel art show in the Kansas Union tunnel Feb. 22:26 The 23rd annual Principal-Counselor-Freshman conference began at a 8:48 m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. High school counselors and principals from Kansas will meet with former students to discuss deficiencies in their high school training. Any principal planning to attend should check in 126 HR 4843-3094 or representatives from his high school plan to attend the conference. Freshman Conference No candidates filed for Student Senate or any class office Friday. The deadline for both filings is 5 p.m. Wednesday. No Candidates File Friday For Senate Four candidates have filed for the Senate—two in Pearson College, and one in School of Fine Arts. There are currently 91 Three local photographers will judge the fifth annual KU Photography Contest sponsored by the Student Union Activities. They are Brian Lanker, of the Topkea Daily Capital; James Emeary, photo curator of Spooner Art Gallery; and owner of Heri Williams' house of Williams. Union to Host Photo Contest A candidate for class office manager must be able to run, supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class, and pay a $5 fee. Two candidates have filed for ass officers as a team. Warner Lester, who has served for sophomore president and Jon Neff, Topeka freshman, filed for governor. Judging will begin at 10:30 a.m. March 12 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas University and is open to the public. first photographic portrait ever taken, and Williams has won honors in the field of portrait and commercial photography. The winning prints will hang in the Kansas Union Gallery from March 13 to March 30. Lanker, awarded for his work in photojournalism, photographer of the Year. Photographer of the Year. National acclaim for restoring the national acclaim for restoring the The deadline for the contest entries is 5 p.m. March 10. Entry forms can be picked up in the office or in room 8, Flint Hall. A New Look of Elegance 10 A New Book of Jewels Brilliant diamond, a most luxurious texture of black with white or yellow gold in a dramatic setting. $249 Ray Christius TOMB MASTER CRAFTSMAN TACO GRANDE With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get1 Free! Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.) Offer expires Feb. 28, 1972 1720 West 23rd Street WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN $100 Yes, Now You Can Win $100 3-Color POSTER! WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT It's for the Concert Course DEADLINE Series April 15 for Call Fine 1972- Arts Office 1973 for Information 4-3421 ANY STUDENT CAN ENTER To Honor Students Who Have Served The University Or The Community, The 1972 Community Service SCHOLARSHIP AWARD will be presented by STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES For information on your eligibility, and applications come to the SUA Office Main Floor, Union APPLICATIONS DUE MARCH 3, 1972 Academic Credit Financial aid available. Patronize Kansan Advertisers SEND TODAY FOR FREE CATALOG ON YOUR SEMESTER AT SEA WCA, Chapman College, Box CC11, Orange, Cal. 92666 You're not only welcome at Tivol... we think you're special. young people. (Our family is full We love your spirit, your values, of life. So...when you're in T-shirts and you're looking tight engagement ring that you'll ring it at TIVOL's. We're not expensive, we are exclusive—but we think we have an "image" of being a store that caters to older people. Please help us change that image. TIVOL ...of course JEWELS 220 Nichols Rd. on the Country Club Plaza, Kansas City, Mo. • Certifind Gemologist — American Gem Society THE MIDDLE FALLS COUNTY HISTORY GROUP A CASTLE IN LAWRENCE? Probably few know the legend of the enchanting Castle Tea Room that reigns conspicuously on Massachusetts Street. The Castle was built in 1894 as a home for J. N. Roberts, a retired Civil War general. He was a man of great wealth with an income from patents on wooden containers carved in the Each of the fifteen rooms of the Castle is finished in a different type of wood. The dining rooms currently in use are elegantly finished in birch, cherry, oak, walnut, sycamore and pine. The wood carving was all done by bouchy by Sidney Endacott of England, a brother of Frank Wheeler, who was a sculptor, sculptor and artist, and some of his work is in the drawing room of the Lord Halltax home. There are five beautiful fireplaces in the house, each a unique design with various colored marble and brick. The original dining room is very, ornate with an unusual built-in sideboard and cloak closet. A recess cluster of mirrors and stained glass window above the fireplace gives the effect of an altar in a chapel. The tower, which gives the old castle appearance, has a stairway leading to the third floor. Above the tower room is a roof garden which, in bygone days, was shaded with wavings and used during the summer months. The ballroom with spacious window seats on the third floor is available for private parties. If you have never been inside the Castle Tea Room, come and dine in the only restaurant in Lawrence with such a beautiful historical and cultural background. The only way to really enjoy it is through dining here. The Castle Tea Room The Most Unique Restaurant in Lawrence rested. Reservations Suggested 1307 Mass. 843-1151 4 Monday, February 21, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Garry Wills Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Plaudits for the Traveler Many have accused Nixon of making the China trip for purely political reasons, saying he seeks to blot out his conservative image by sending him to relations with China, an action that seems uncharacteristically liberal. When the President left for China, us countrymen were confused about what they were supposed to do. Others have commended the President for what they see as a bold and courageous effort to seek world peace. But whatever his motives, the president should be commended for his work. He was a leader for whether the trip will yield any specific accomplishments, which is doubtful it is representative of a field. It is more toward the rest of the world. The President's trip to China indicates to the rest of the world that America has learned something: that we've decided we want to talk rather than fight, and that we have all the answers. So, as the President winds his way around the globe, those of us who share hope for a more peaceful world should wish him well. -Mike Moffet, Associate Editor Editor's Speech Truth and Understanding Editor's Note: This is a speech made by Stuart Amybrey, the author of *After He Warned* after he was named the recipient of the William Allen White Foundation award for state university. The award honors William Allen White Day ceremonies. Amybrey, known as area readers and editors. The only virtue I can find in an award such as this is that it does force a man to re-examine what he has been up to all these finger-peeking years. It is more humbling than pleasurable to back over so many years, about the information told us about the examined life. Let me begin parenthetically, with a long-ago introduction by Jack Harris, who was presenting the book *Press Many of us*, Mr. Harris had it, worked hard as reporters that we might become editors, journalists, and even vice-president of the vanement. The more knowing ones, such as Mr. Reston, remained reporters and thus served both their profession and the public. But the fact that Scotty eventually succumbed to the heady title of 'editor' tried it a la wheel, and then he became once again a reporter. I envy Scotty, not so much for his eminence as for his common sense. He has envy the long-time editor of Scriber's. Maxwell Perkins, who said that that the destiny an editor should aspire to is obeyed. in looking over those three decades, I discovered that I had operated under two convictions, one instinctive, the other learned. ... one other learned. The first conviction I share with Norman Cousins, who in 2013 wrote a book called *Review recently* said "the one thing I have learned about catering over the years is that you have to edit and publish out of your own tastes, enthusiasm, interests and passions, notations or guesswork about what other people might like to read." Jack Harris operated that way. William Allen White operated that way. So does our distinguished honoree, John Kaiser, who tries to limit my self to such fast company, so do most Kansas editors. This is one reason The Hutchinson News does not carry Jeane Dixon, as we do our cousin, the Salina Journal. It's not that I am convinced that such a book read and quoted and even admired, nor that her witches' brew would add readership. It's simply that I am convinced that such a book read and quoted and even admired, nor that her witches' brew would add readership. It doesn't revolt Whitley Austin, who loves mountainbooks. So folks who want to read Jeane Dixon must buy the book, like Jeane Dixon and, some actually do just that. This attitude undoubtedly would distress George Gallup, the former chairman of the other feelers of the public pulse. It runs counter to the marketing advice of the University of Pennsylvania on the occasion, it distresses our stockholders. I'm sorry. But we are still reasonably solvent, and I am at peace with myself. In sum, Conviction No. 1 of these 30 years is that this business of editing is a subjective, intuitive affair, as all real love is, and is not subjective; it covers the rules of the accountants. I believe most of the editors and would-be editors here would share that belief. Conviction No. 2 is more debatable, and it is one that I have come to late. It is that our research is vastly-overrated as is that of the preacher. Regardless of the research, and detail, and wisdom we offer our readers, their minds are not fully informed of the press" and the "influence of the media" are largely bogeymen created by self-serving politicians and deinsteiners intellectuals for their own purpriety. William Allen White's famed editorial "What the Matter Was," in which he grand, glorious reading. But it had little effect on the state of Kansas. We were already pointed. The net effect of that editorial, and of other editorials, was to confirm what we already knew. What we already believe Joseph Klapper, a respected researcher in our field, years ago noted, "Communication research strongly indicates that persuasive mass communication is the force that will force the existing opinions of its audience than it is to change public opinions." Consider Kent State. Officialdalm, headed by Attorney General John Mitchell, even when the students of the students was both unwarranted and unnecessary. But he did what he could, either that those kids got what was coming to him, or that it was another episode in our history of violence. The facts, and editorial comment on the facts, had little effect on those opposite views. The same sort of knee-jerk reaction came after Attica. The evidence subsequently demonstrably indicated that guards were shots by officials and not assassinated by prisoners, but the evidence, and the editorials about the evidence, pointed to those who were either convinced in advance that our prisons are hell-holes breeding crime, or were equally convinced that the guards were ready for the burns failed there. cans are still being tossed on Nick Rice's grave at Mt. Moriah cemetery. In July of 1970, here in Lawrence, police fire opened on a group of youths in the wake of the massacre of innocent as an innocent bystander as any bystander can be these days, was killed. When the facts of his death were laid before the people, their attitudes changed little. In a book published recently published by the Los Angeles Times, Nick's mother, Mrs. Esther Rice, said "My friends told me that my son had been kidnapped and those things that kids had done at Berkeley and Kent State." Beer But, the editorial may argue, these opinions were formed some place, some how. Of course they were formulated in a birth of born of personal experience. I had one feeling about the Germs the Bulge. I had a totally different feeling about the Germs when our daughter went to live a year before us. Unless one lives or works in slum, one can have only a shady notion of what must be done to eliminate slums, and why. I would venture a Jeane Dixon prophecy. Ninety per cent of voters should send their readers to vote for John Anderson for governor, should he win the primary. (I leave it up to you to decide because no one can safely predict what the Salina Journal might do in politics and because there is not a lot of data available.) Despite this massive endorsement from these powerful Kansas editors, the majority of our voters are out and vote for Miller. I will follow. I think not. Not if we keep subscribing to that text from Tennyson, who prayed that "somehow good will be the final answer" to the question that most under-rated of the virtues, steadfastness of purpose. Are we, are, panning fool's food? Are? We are Mimiver Cheevys, "uicking for what is not" and incessant occasion, to forget what is? In his eloquent talk to the American Society of Newspaper Editors last year, Malcolm Muggeridge used that Empire was a great source of fantasyss of the day, with his games and spectacles, much as television producers and political demagogues have today. Yet, "it is the kind of proposition I apostle Paul took the great moral propositions of the New Testament to the pagan world, in the process founding Christendom and the civilization whose perhaps liquidators, we are." So I think my two convictions really are one. To edit and publish out of my own tastes and concerns, without too much illusion about the immediate circumstances, and to keep at it steadily. It was during the Dark Ages, time of our total unenlightenedness by our dards, that in Hippo, a St. Augustine showed disaffairdure for the calamities of the Middle Ages and proposed his Christian faith with charm and elegance which survives to this day. Drop by them. We are not Pauls, nor Augustines. But we can do as the Paulides did, and try to keep little things in mind of principles of truth and understanding. That, to me, is what newspapering is all about. P. B. HOLLAND Tired Americans President Americans are very tired, and feel they deserve a rest—a rest from civil rights agitation, from Vietnam, from the Cold War, from self-examination and doubt. And Nixon means to give us what we want. Time's choice of Nixon as "Man of the Year" puts the seal on what is coming to be the Nixon Eru. He looks unheatable in next year's election. He has, as he claims, changed the mood of that patent that him in power back in 1968. More properly, he has presided over a change—for he would be the first to admit that he fits himself to the time, riding with its mood. He still has a mystical reverence for the formula his image-builders gave him in the last campaign—the right man in exact conjunction with the right time. He told Time's interviewer about his Man of the hour, a gifted and unusual opportunity, the greatest opportunity of any President in history. . . . Big opportunity: because we are a tired nation, even a Nixon can put us to sleep before he bores us to death Tired of Vietnam. We do not have the tie to do much with the war, even to end it -- only to forget it. Certainly not to learn from it, far less to repent, it undoes our own ability to embrace hushed the sounds of the killing, and changed the color of those killed. The best image he can find for this literally "absentminded" policy is one of clockwise leaves it alone, and it will wind down, leaving no thoughts behind it. The war is not a reality of blood and guilt, but an issue to be pre-empted as Nixon says "In Vietnam we will not be an issue in the campaign, as far as this administration is concerned, because we will have brought the American involvement to an end." Carefully chosen, hilling or our crudely made it a time to sleep. Tired of civil rights and youth unrest: What we have to realize is that race relations between the races or relations among the generations, this country is, in my view, doing very well. So — stop. We've learned. But now. No one can ask more. Good night. Tired of the Cold War. So put out peace feelings to China. But, as with Vietnam, too tired to question ourselves about our own past and change those assumptions, radically, or repeat. As with Vietnam, then, we do not really do anything to the Cold War (even if it) except—forget. So Nixon went on to say that his defeat of thought, which lay behind the Cold War: "I believe in a world in which the United States is powerful" (to achieve what he did). Tired of defending the Market myths of American competition and apolitical vitality and yet too tired to replace it, Mr. Bennett has the more obvious economic needs, temporizing, but not basically challenge our illusions in this area: "A great number of Americans might say, 'Why should we want that, because if our people and this economy get used to that crutch, we will never throw it away.' We prefer, for our crutch, believing in the valuable—or pretending we believe." The trouble with such trances of a belief suspended is that someday we must wake, and find reality harder than before. A belief suspended is viously not yet. It is the year (and perhaps the decade of Nixon, when we get the leadership we deserve—and if that fact cannot shock us out of our mind, it can't know what, for a long time, will Copyright,1972 Universal Press Syndicate James J. Kilpatrick 'Scoop' as Wallace Killer FT. LAUDERDALE-IF. "we were aIT world, nicely ordered, ruled by reason, Washington's Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson would be out in front of the nine horse field in Florida's Alas for Scoop. The politics of Florida offer a rather different world. On the face of things, the 59-year-old senator should have it made. Florida is strong on defense industries and space exploration; these are Scops's suits. Florida has a disproportionately large population in the state, and Jackson is making a solid pitch to them. The big issue down here is busing. The senator recently proposed a constitutional amendment to it. Florida is getting more money getting more recent elections. No candidate has better liberal credentials than Jackson. that twice have remained before the March 14 primary Jackson only now is beginning to pick up speed. This contest, by his own candid admission, is "crucial" to his candidacy. He never has an election, and he may not be able to win, but he has to overtake George Wallace, and he has to win recognition. he! Prosperity...I mean...'economic upturn' is just around the...uh...corner...'" By Sokoloff "ST. AGNES' EVE— AH, BITTER CHILL IT WAS!" Griff and the Unicorn "ST. AGNES'EVE—AH, BITTER CHILL IT WAS!" "The Owl, FOR ALL HIS FEATHERS, WAS A-COLD." Keats DON'T COUNT ON IT, KIDDIES! Keats DON'T COUNT ON IT, KIDDIES! These are formidable tasks. Wallace claimed 29 per cent of Florida's vote in 1968, only two points behind Humphrey; if the Alabamans polls only half the vote he polled then, he will sweep the race. If he wins, that a million votes will be cast in the democratic primary. With nine candidates competing, 250,000 may be enough to win the 20 "at large" delegates. Another 61 delegates will be chosen in the district's districts. Wallace, it is said, will run 1-3-3 in all of them. "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." Jackson is meeting the Wallace threat head on. He has said that "Americans are fed up with him and want to deal with demonstrators is to run them down with their automobile." He has charged Wallace with seeking to "mislead students" in his discredited, inflammatory approach to serious problems." In every speech—and he is averaging six speeches a day—Wallace has driven on his anti-busing position. The recognition factor is im proving, but it is still not good. This is a noisy state. Getting the voters' attention is like catching the eye of a rush hour waitress. Jackson is not, by nature, a pusty person, but she's "sense" down among the palms. Who can put a headline on that? Yet he visibly is doing better. He has won endorsements from four congressmen including Jackson exudes confidence. He is drawing good crowds, and if they rarely evidence wild acclaim, he "has him nodding in." In an interview with Broward County's democratic executive committee, he served up the tough虎理政治 of an old pro who knew the political ropes. Before other audiences this week, he has come down to support his defense, pollution control, and ever and always, basing. May it be will pay off on March 14. If it does—or if he can emerge with a solid second place—Jackson will claim the mantle of Wallace killer and he will be on his knees to face him. He recognition he sorely needs. This track-happy state has a good race going. Keep an eye on Scoop. I popular Bob Sikes of the pandahandle First District. Jackson also has the support of three of the seven members of Florida's cabinet, including the state treasurer, the comproller, and the commissioner of educator. His campaign staff, some 300 people, fall, is smoother now. Money is not a critical problem. An Oliver Quayle poll, taken three weeks ago, found that Jackson had 17 per cent of vote along the East coast. This is more than double his strength of support behind Muske with 32 lags behind Muske with 24 per cent. It's an uphill climb. 0 Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate America's Pacemaking college newspaper THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom--UN 4-4610 Business Office--UN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: 46 a semester, 100 a quarter. Applicants must have paid all required goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Options expressed are not necessarily intended to substitute for any other course content. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman News Advisor ... Del Brinkman Editor Chip Creeks Associate Editor Mike Moffet Campus Editor Scott Spoelfield News Editorial Rita Hugh, Dena Hay. Editorial Director Eric Hawkins, Joe Joyce Copy Chiefs Joyce Norman, Ron King Assistant Campus Editors Sally Carlson, Rob Simmon Sports Editor Rob Simmon Assistant Sports Editor Matt Bessner Editorial Writer Simon Singh Writing Editor Joyce Duhanah Manage Editors Dick Kay, Goodfellow Heritage Editors El Lolo, Kit Netter Photographers Greg Sorber, Tom Thavesn Office Manager Tonda Bush Office Manager Cartoonist BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser ... Mel Adams Business Manager Associate Business Manager Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Dave Murray Dave Murray H REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DEPT. OF SERVICES, INC. 380 Los Angeles Ave., New York, NY 1,0017 Monday, February 21. 1972 University Daily Kansan 5 Nittv Grittv: Versatile Fun Symphonic Band Concert Uninspired By JOE ZANATTA Kongee Raviswan The Nity Gritty Dirt Band defies classification. The product of their performance does not. During two hours of talking, playing and acting in Hoeh, they were brought laughter, memories of good times and their own style of music to 2,700 people. Nitty Gritty began their show with a jug band version of "Fogy Mountain Breakdown," one of the many sides of their music. Their banjo-guitar-washboard-mandolin music was sung in midnight between rock 'n' roll, country and Cajun music. A lot of groups rely on their hits to be concert savers. Nitty Gritty didn't need to. By the time they began what they called a "list of golden hits" the audience was in their control, "Some of Sheily's Blues," "Mr. Bo Jangles," "House at Po Bob Coomber" and their new single, "Jambalaya." They just added that control. Mary Ann Thomas, assistant to the dean of women, said over forty applications had been given out. The Dean of Women's office reported 12 applications returned for Corbin, Gertrude Sellars and Robert Hashinger, Hashinger and Lewis Halls. Only 9 Men,12 Women Apply For Resident Assistant Jobs David Parker, assistant to the dean of men's office, said they have applications by Friday for McCollin Court, Temin, Illinois, K. Pearson Halls. Only 21 applications for resident halls are processed. Halls for 1972-73 have been turned in, officials in the dean of staffs and dean of offices are notified. Parker he expected many more applications before the deadline. In the two years in which he has helped with the RSA TACs, Parker said between 100 and 125 people had applied. BY ANITA KNOPP Kansas Staff Writer THE DEADLINE for applying for a position is 5 p.m. Feb. 28. Applications are available in the Women's office or at women’s office in Strong Hall. Parker said anyone applying, must have senior or graduate student standing for 1972-73 must have a GPA of average overall, must be available for the entire 1972-73 year and must have had residential living experience, but he is not eligible for the hall for which he is applying. Parker said approximately 20 positions were available. He emphasized they might not hire people to work on a number of resident assistants was decided on a hall-to-hall basis. Projected occupancy and budget outlays considerations, Parkers said. In the co-ed residence halls, Thomas said there was not a fixed ratio of women or men in the residence hall, made on the evaluation of the person and the needs of the hall. THOMAS SAID if fewer people could do an excellent job then the salary for each assistant could be reduced. They should commensurate with responsibilities and experience. with the music. He seemed to feel what he was playing rather than to simply operate his instrument person and the needs of the hall. “impressions,” six sketches by H. Robert H. Pearson, was vibrant enough to let the audience know that humans were performing instead of music machines. This one break in the sterility of the program indicated that perhaps part of the trouble lay in the program. Parker said the applicants could go through a two-stage selection process including group meetings and interviews. A five or six member panel, the dean's office, the dean's offices, resident directors and students from the hall and a representative from the admissions department will finalize the final decision for each hall. Students may apply for a position in three different halls. Parker said. Orchestra and the Royal Opera gave an outstanding performance, but one that was too hard to handle. Four numbers in the program featuring Hoydait stood out from the rest and, unfortunately, served to painfully discomplicate the security of the band's performance. The 16-member searc- mittee charged with filling two vice-chancellor positions is the College of Liberal Arts, Calgary, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and chairman of the "We are narrowing the list," he said. Search Committee Remains Secretive His musical humanity set standard which the band never sues, sings and missed notes that bands are prone to hit, their players addendum secures but lacking in inspiration. The band did not cath your attention; you had to give your attention to the music. No one knew what it was. have to hate good fun and humor Even the way they dressed—from sweatpants to hats—added to the atmosphere. Two of the best songs performed were Hank Williams's Honky Tonk, Tony Bennett's western music is usually not popular with a college audience, but Nitty Gritty could have played country and not received a complaint. The committee, which includes 13 faculty members and three students, met Saturday morning, and is scheduled tuesday evening. Many of the pieces were written as, and orchestral arrangements, and much of the could have been lost in lust. Calgaard said he did not wish to reveal at this time how many names were being considered and would not predict what committee would be ready to make its final recommendations. Parker and Thomas both said people who had known the process would be one of the principal people in the selection process and would be working closely with them. The committee was formed in late January to make recommendations for the selection of a professor of economics, affairs and a vice-chancellor for research and graduate studies. The latter is a new position necessitated by the recent deregistration of the graduate school. The band showed many styles of pop music to be under their wings. The album, "Holly rock rink to Delta Cajun music," *Aligator Man*" featured a great electric violin solo and vocals by Dou Kershaw's performances. His style was one of great control, intricate tonguing and crisp notes, which carried with it a sense of personal involvement The other position is now held by Francis Heller, who will resign this summer to become the Rov A. Roberts distinguished professor of medical science, a post that has been vaceen since the spring of 1970. THOMAS SAID during the selection process special emphasis was placed on the RA's work in a group. She said this cooperation was the result of an effort to make the RA's work in a group. "The RA has to decide when to be fish and find considerate her own needs. It is often the case to know is when to send a person to someone else with a problem," the researcher said. Parker said people who had held resident assistantships must re-apply for the position. He said the process was somewhat different in evaluating the former because he needed recommendation from people the RA had worked with would provide the basis of selection. The funniest part of their act began with a monologue on two average teenagers in the '50s. This developed into a sock hop performance of a love ballet. The performance was followed by a Woodstock set in excellence. The KU Symphonic Band gave its winter concert Sunday afternoon under the direction of Robert E. Foster. It was sugenp by Russell L. Wiley, Jr., and Knud Havlund, great solos! Thomas, said human understanding was one of the most important assets of an RA. He said he would just an eight or 15-hour a week job. Laced around every song were jokes and talks with the audience that added to the general car experience of the atmosphere that the band worked in. Announcements of the selection of the new RA's will be made in the first week of April, Parker said. "When you've got a good audience you might as well play for it," a member of Nitty Gritty explained. The sock-hop act was to have ended the show, but the band played two encores. Hovaldt, solo trumpeter with he Royal Danish Philharmonic $680 Awarded In Art Contest Prizes totaling $680 were presented Sunday to the 10 winners of the 18th annual Designer-Craftman Exhibition. The winners were selected by Toshiko Takaezu, internationally known ceramist and weaver from the University of Chicago, for articles of various media. The winning works and 68 other pieces will be on display at the Kakamegawa Museum in Tokyo. Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, presented the awards, which were contributed individuals and companies. The exhibition, sponsored jointly by the department of defense in Chicago and the Kansas Union, was open to any current or former Kansas Homosexuality, Genetics Explored in Sex Series The Commission on the Status of Women has planned a series of forums to discuss "Confronting Gender Inequality" today through Thursday. Coordinated by Jnet Sears, assisted to the dead of women, and assisted to married marriage, homosexuality, the law and sexual deviance and the law of rape. "Alternatives to 'Marriage', the first in the series, is interested in a TV lounge in McColum Hall. The program will be an open forum on communal life styles and other alternatives to two-partner relationships." At 7.30 p.m. Tuesday, representatives from the Gay Liberation Front will discuss the issue with the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will conclude his lecture on the discussion of genetic futurism, cloning and extra-uerine birth in the Kansas room in the Loom. "Sex and the Law" will be the program at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday for students in the law school. Sellars Pearson Hall. A Kansas lawyer will explain the laws concerning pornography, rape, domestic violence, marriages and sexual conduct. Santiago Grisola, professor and chairman of the department of Nursing at the University of Kansas Medical Center, will receive an honorary Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of Barcelona, Spain, March 16. Admission to the forum is free. The Commission is planning a seminar on birth control for students and an oncology on pornography for April 20. The degree will be the first of its kind ever given by that university, Grisolia said. Grisola is a native of Spain and a graduate of the University of Barcelona Faculty of Medicine. General Jeans Is Having A GIANT WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY CLEAN-UP CELEBRATION: MON., Feb. 21 12 p.m. to 9 p.m. TUES., Feb. 22 12 p.m. to 9 p.m. All Bellbottom pants will be on sale for $1.00 when purchased with a pair at regular price! (If the 2nd pair is more than the 1st you pay $1.00 plus difference). FANTASTIC SAVINGS on brushed denim corduroy, cotton suede and all your favorite styles & fabrics. We will be closed Friday night to prepare. PACIFIC MIDDLE EASTERN PACIFIC MIDDLE EASTERN general jeans 1000 Mass Taxicab Company Says Local Demand Is Down The vice-president of Lawrence's two taxicab companies said last week that the cab business was "lousy." Ward A. Thompson Jr., vice-president of the Yellow Cab and General Motors, merged five years ago but retain separate names, said the demand for taxis in Lawrence had increased for the last ten years. The cab company is presently breaking even, though business is down 25 per cent from last year, although the number of averages 2,500 calls per week when KU is in session, he said "About 10 to 15 per cent of our business is with KU students, and 70 to 75 per cent with the town," he said. "In order to maintain a profitable business, the taxi company began a diversification effort that includes the communications field, Thompson said. The headquarter of Lawrence Communications, Executive Answering Service, Lawrence Paging and Lawrence Mobile offices of the KU company. JUST GOOD FRIENDS February 24 thru March 4 8 p.m. Heavy bench-made Sandals by BARETRAPS. Tough riveted straps that don't pull out. Get your BARETRAPS early while there is still a big selection. AUGUSTINE C. PERRY K. U. Experimental Theatre 864-3982 Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street DEADLINE FOR FILING For the Student Senate and Class Offices— Wednesday, Feb. 23 A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intent to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary of elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OF EICERS must file a declaration of intent to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on deadline date. Petitions may be picked up between 1:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. at the Student Senate Office, B-105 Union. There Will Be A Meeting for All Candidates on Thursday, Feb. 24 at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. For Further Info: Call 864-3710 6 Monday. February 21, 1972 University Daily Kansan The University of Kansas track team took a final practice run before the conference meet by meet KSC from KSTC at Emporia, KSC at Pittsburgh and Fort Hays State Saturday in Allen Field House. Athletes and track officials nearly outnumbered spectators at Saturday's meet. But the sparse crowd was entertained by KU's dominance and some favorables for performances by KU track men. Sophomore Delvin Williams bettered his career mark in the 60-yard dash with a winning time of 8.2 seconds. "I THOUGHT there were a lot of people who didn't attend," Beach Timmons said Saturday after the Jayhawks last week. "The Big Sight meet March 3-4." "Hatcher vaulted really well. As a matter of fact the whole vaulting group did well." Timmons said. Smith won the mile run with a time of 4:09.6. 1 mmons was pleased with high jumpers Gary Johnson and Barry Schum, who finished one two with lumps of 6-8 and 6-6. "I was pleased to see Doug Smith do well. He had a whole fall of injuries," Timmons said. Track Team Happy About Rvun's Return Timmons said he expected his high jumpers to do better when KU matched the four best pole vaults with Neil Chapman, Wayne Kosman and Mike Finishing behind Hatcher. ★ ★ ★ D. 11FFFHHI BY JEFF HILL Kansan Sports Writer Jim Ryun, world record holder in the mile and former University of Kansas track standout, returned to KU Sunday night to combine his talents with the team to kick the KU track coach Bob Timmons. The combination has worked well in the past. Ryan is working toward qualifying for the Olympics. The trials take place in "There's a bit of excitement said the said Craig McMullen 800-789-3245 summarizing the Jayhawks summarizing the track men to Roya's arrival. Until then, Ryun will work with Timmons and the Tawacky track team to complete an anticipated by KU distance runners, more af- fahren by Ryun's prede Doug Smith, KU mileer who ran with Rau during Sunnily's freshman year, figured Rau and KU track men can help each other. "I HOPE this is what he needs. He's been having some problems and maybe Coach Timmons can help." The team will indoor track meet here Saturday. "When you have a world record holder running with you it should help." Smith added. Phil Stepp, a relay runner, said Rvun's presence will be a "pickup" for KU distance men. pickup for KU distance then. "It should bring up their morale. They haven't been doing that well likely." Siann said. "If he runs a whole lot better than us it might bother us," McDonald said. However, McDonald admitted that Ryun might make Jayhawk runners out in more effort. "We're looking forward to having him here. I think he'll be able to help our runners." Timmons said of Ryan. "I've been coaching him all along by letter and telephone. But this is the first time he'll stay in town, and I know he graduated." Timmons said. "WE'LL WORK on all phases of his training, both physical and psychological." Timmons said. "If he practices well, it'll help his self confidence. Training and confidence go together. You can't be two different to the other," Timmons explained Borken baskett, another division leader, rides with Ryan as a triumphant man, combination of Ryan and Timmons will insure success for "I don't think you'll be able to beat that great a combination of athlete and coach," Bornkessel said. hey jump from a wooden surface. Allen Field House has a firt track. "There's a lot of difference between this track and boards," Timmons said. The Jayhaws will now concentrate on winning their seventh consecutive Big Eight title. "We have no doubt that Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas State and Oklahoma State will be the teams to beat," Timmons said. "We have two weeks off to practice before our next meet. should be in good shape for the Eight meet." Timmons said. Track Results Long JD-MI, 1-Pl. Stuil KU, 19-2; 5-Cary Walker, KSC; 1-Reg. Jones KU, 4-Danny Seau, KY; 3-Jerry Franch. Fort Horn. High sums. 1, Gary Johnson, KU; 4, J. Barry Schur, KU; 3, Hardy Smith, KU; 4, Brandy Reinke, KU; 4, Arnold Sams, KSTC; 6, Carly Walker, KW$^2$. Triple jump J. Mike, KU, 9(8)/20. Rogers Jones J. Mike, LTykater Taskmaster, KSTC Amherst J. Mike, HK, University of Amherst, KU, HK, League City, UF, Fort Hawks, SHEEK J. Jim Birnbaum, UF, Fort Hawks 600 yard run - 1. Dennis Kuhn, Fort Hays, 11.3.0) 2. Cook, KSTC, 3. Dawn Schneider, Fort Hays, 4. Tippy Marlin, XI. 5. Mike McKee, KSC, 6. Chuck Zudna K. Albert Hartenberg, KSC, 1 Emmett Edwards, KU; 2 Frank Johnson, KU; 3 Mark Kutz, KU; 4 Carlos Walker, KSC; 600 yard run - Dennis Korta, Fort Hays, 14. hard dash, 1 Phil Stepn, KU, 30. 1 Jim Oliver, KSC, 3 Mark Lustk, KU, 7 Tom Scavarev, KU, 1 Ronald Wynn, KSTC, 4 Yaskel White, KU dog yard high back. 3 - Greg Vanderwalle, 4 - Chris Decker, 5 - Jimmy Lester (USTC) (ustc 7-12) Dekalb Johnson, 6 - Kremmer Tweavee, 7 - Terry McKenney, 8 - KU 9-0 (1) 9 - John Wynn, 10 - Timothy Nielsen, 11 - Harry Binchmann, 12 - Matt Hayes, 13 - Jake Schultz 1,000 yard run--1, Run L. Lawrence, Fort Worth tape 2, 24.4, 2. J. Jon Nelson, Fort Hays tape 3, 32. J. Don Nelson, Fort Hays tape 4, 2. R. Skeener, Fort Hays, 3. Ben STCU, 4. John Beaton, 5. Aaron StCU, 4. John Beaton, 5. Aaron Shot-put: 1 Dana DeLue, KU-3; 7 Tom Weber, Fort Hays; 2 Gery Palmer, K; 4 Maurice Lerovold, Fort Hays; 5. Kendall Wood, KSC 60 yard low hurdles—1. Borktussenk KU, 9.2. Art. PEAKS, 3.7. Mike Mahews, KSC, 1. Dennis James, KSTC, 5. Grea Sheermail, Fort Hays. Pole Vaulte: 1. Bill Hatcher, KU (64.5%), 2. Jeff Benson, N.Y.C. (39.6%), 4. Mike Wuthinckel, KU (37.0%), 5. Mike Wuthinckel, KU (37.0%), 6. Bill Finkenberger KSU (72.8%) 7. Bill Finkenberger KSU (72.8%) 8. Allen Field House Record. Overtime mats. (65-65). Mire relay - KR No. 12 (Swaruz Lata, 86) Mire relay - KR No. 13 (Swaruz Lata, 86) (Schmerer, Leishman, Nelson, Koeh) * (KWer, Snowler, KMiner, Gloryer) * 1 KWer, Wook, Cook, Jennings, James) * 1 KWer, Wook, Cook, Jennings, James) * TORONTO (AP)—Rod Laver, hitting thundering backcount ground-strokes off Ken Griffey Jr. and hitting his countryman 6-1 and 5-4 to win the singles championship of the $50,000 Toronto International Tennis Auction in an all-Australian final Sunday. MINUTES 10 04 94 76 HOME VISITOR 45 Rah Kiviste Firms Last Free T] Bob Kivisto Fires Last Free Throw Intentional miss beld Nebraska to 99 . . . Cowboys' Duane Thomas Charged with Possession GREENVILLE, Tex. (AP - 12) Cowboys' silent, but super running back, is scheduled for arrangement Monday on charges of assault in Dallas. Thomas and his 21-year-old brother, Bertrand, are to appear before Judge Hollis Garmon. Normally, the arrangement, a routine legal proceeding, offers the defendant an opportunity to seek counsel. The judge then sets a trial date. KANSAS HELAYS KANSAS HELAYS KANSAS HELAYS Bruised 'Hawks Host Battered CU Greg Vandaveer Third from Left Leads Preliminary in 60 Years . Vandaveer later won; Bob Bornkessel, right, placed second but won the 60 low hurdles Swimmers Overcome Sooner Lead Beat OU for Third Time The University of Kansas swim won the olympic sack to defeat Benelon, beating behind K狄hamla. 68-45, in a dual meet Saturday afternoon in Robinson KU was led by double winners Tom Kempf, Bob Wright, and diver Steve King. The eastern Kansas women's basketball league race tightened Saturday night as the University of Kansas women's basketball team lost to Kansas State 69-47 in Manhattan. KU dropped into a tie for second place with Wichita State. Kempf set a Robinson pool record in the 1,000-yard freestyle event. His time was 9:57.98. KU took first place in nine of the 13 events and placed second in six events. This was the third meeting between the two teams this year, and the third time KU has beaten the Sooners. Women Lose to K-State which broke by nearly four seconds his own record set earlier this year. Even though the victory over OU was apparently an easy one. Stephanie Norris led scoring The Thomas brothers were one of the officers who said they thought they tracked down a stolen car similar to one driven by the driver. for the Jayhawks with 19 points. They will have to beat both Benedict College and Wichita State University to play in the state tournament March 2 and 3. The WSU game will be a tuesday at Benedict College. "I am not happy with the way we swam, and I am sure the OU coach was not happy with the way his team swam either," she said. "We did not improve our skills in any of the events." Highway Patrolman Wendel Jeary and Deputy Sheriff Norman Gray marijuana smoke while checking Thomas the vehicle's identification card. KU swimming coach Dick Reamon, was not pleased with his team's performance. Reason said KU won because of such veteran swimmers as Kempf, Rick Heidinger, and Roland Sabates. According to Reason, the BIG Eight that could challenge KU in the Big Eight Championships, which will be held March 24- at "Oklahoma has a lot of ability and depth has like us," the coach said. "The other teams in the Big Ten are not as strong, but are lacking in depth." With three victories over the Sooners, KU would have to be considered the favorite for the upcoming Big Eight Championships. Thomas, a sullen, enigmatic figure during the Cowboy's drive to the Super Bowl, appeared at a party where he 8 nearly dressed and groomed. Kansas City, Oklahama Kansas City, Oklahama 400-yard relay - Oklahoma Harry Peters, David Lynn, Graham McMinnock, Tim McAleeney, 3:21; 1 KU 3:11.33 The brothers were jailed briefly and released after posting $1,000 bond each. They left the Greenville attorney Larry Greenville attorneys判Larry Greenville The arresting officers said they subsequently found two small packets of marijuana in the car and naoers in rolling cigarettes. The grand jury indicted the pair on Feb. 8 when green described Duae Thomas as "most cooperative with his observations." Our observation is that he is in a good frame of mind and has been a perfect gentleman to everybody concerned." 20-vard freewheel-1. Tom Morrow, OU, 1.4851; 2. Rick Holdinger, KU; 3. Tom Hodgson, KU During the season his appearance leaned toward afromod. The incident clouded the issue of the former West Texas State Bank in an effort to find a bailout. The arrest came amid much speculation about whether would be traded off the offseason. Hodgson, KU. 50-year trestle=1. Larry Peters, OU. 21,280, 2 Phil Rudd, KU; 3. Allen McDonald. 1.000 yard freefreestyle - 1 Tom Kemp, KUF, 9.57:58 (Swan Gul, UOI) 2. Mike Burt, UOI (Brakes pool record of 0.0182 by Kempf, 1972) One meter dying-1, Steve King, KU 24390; 2 Scott Davies, KU; 1 Bill Ploehn 202 yard butterfly - M. McLintock, OU, 1:54:31; 7:09: G. Yews, OU, 1: Kempf, KU, 100 yard freestyle - B. Redinger, KU, 7:21; 2: Roulund Sahales, KU, J. McIreland, 200-yard backstroke-1. Scott Shuletty U. 2:01:56. Mike Ulfers, KU. 3. Chris orkorf, UF. 21,260, 2. PPhil Kui, KU 3, AIlen MeDoan, 260 yard individual medley -1. Bok 60-100 yard freefall. - 1 Kenaf, KT, U. 24-50 John Bickel, U. 30-100 Mowrer, U. 40-100 Luke Bickel, U. 40-100 Mowrer, U. 40-100 2, D David L.ima, U. 4, W Jebas, Three rater drill - 1 King, KU, 290. 1, David L.ima, U. 4, W Jebas, 400 yard freestyle relay - 1 Kansas (Phil lidd. Sabates, Heldinger, Hodgson) 1146; 2. CU; 3.156 It's difficult to imagine, but the University of Kansas basketball team will play a team tonight that is more battered than the Jayhawks. Colorado will invade House for an 8-03 p.m. game. KU is now fifth in the conference with a 5-16 record, well behind Missouri (82), KState (74) and Oklahoma (69). KU is 91.31, Overeast, KU is 91.3 The Jayshaws were knocked of the Big Eight title race Tuesday and were rolled over Saturday Nebraska, 99-78. Both games Colorado, however, has been near the bottom of the Big Eight all season. Saturday's 59-52 defeat by Missouri left the Bears just one game over overall Only Oklahoma State (10) has a worse league record. One of Colorado's two league victories was a 74-48 decision victory over the Buffaloes used a "bush and one" defense to stifle Bud Stallworth. Colorado's Lee Haven was assigned the exclusive job of covering Stallworth. The four other players played a four-man zone. Haven held Stallworth to 11 and won the worst total against a league team. "I imagine they'll try it again," coach Ted Owens said after practice Sunday. "We've been working to prepare for it." "We have one of two choices. We can screen a lot for Bud and try to get him open shots, or we Big 8 Standings Marquette Wins Without Jim Chones League Overall W W L W L Missouri 8 7 10 KState 7 2 13 Nebraska 7 3 14 Oklahoma 6 3 11 Kansas 6 5 10 Iowa State 6 2 13 Colorado 2 7 15 Oklah. St 1 9 16 Monday—Colorado at Kansas; Oklahoma State at Kansas State Foyt Becomes 3-Time Winner Of Daytona 500 DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Millennium Texan A. J. Foyt turned the Daytona 500 into a one-car party, Sunday. The group was topped by a high-speed heroes toddie like automotive dominates. The three-time Indianapolis 500 was uncontested for the final time in 1984. At the international Speedway, averaging a record 161.50 miles per hour, it was one of the fastest. Foyt's machine finished four miles ahead of Charlie Glotzbach II Bodgett it was 14 miles short. 3 Benny Parsons in a Mercy. 8 can try to beat them with our other people." Happiness for the Marquette Warriors is winning a game without Jim Chones. And the team had lost 12 games even had a little happiness left for Ones, the 6-foot-11 star who signed a pro contract Thursday night with the New York Giants of the American Basketball Association. Stallworth is ready for whatever Colorado throws at him, he said. "I played in the middle last time." Stallworth pointed out. "This time, I'll play the baseline and shoot from the corners." In the earlier meeting, he played in the middle to pull in the defense and open the corners. "Colorado certainly indicated they're not dead yet." Owens said. "They played Missouri real well." Owens will start Dave Taylor with Stallworth on the front line and then make him hasn't decided who will fill the two other positions. It will be Andrew Burrow at center and either Aubrey Ash or Mark Mathworks. "Maybe it's 'shocking, but I'm happiest of all for Jim Chosens," he said. "We had Saturday night's 70-61 victory on nightright of Marquess, the greenery mine in its big man. If we were to play hard, we have打 Jimmy in a bad light." Foyt earned about $55,000 to earn earnings of $7.2 million. A company entry. Foyt has nonetheless earned $30,000 in his last one attempt. The Buffaloes used a sagging defense designed to limit the attack by the Browns. They held Brown to his lowest total of the season—11 Nebraska came the closest any Big Eight team has come to see in a championship. The previous high by a conference opponent, Oklahoma scored in the Big Eight tournament this year. The highest in a conference game was 27-14. Chones wasn't seen in the game and didn't stand up to the threat he was on hand to 22-0 Marquette win its 72nd consecutive game at the No. 1 seed. "I never worry about the other team rolling up the score on us," Owens said. "He's responsible for his team, and I’m responsible Larry McNeill, a 6-60 surfer from Topeka, to center torer换 Chones and scored 24 points and grabbed 15 rebounds in his first game since playing in the stands during a game Wednesday night. McNeill sank "I wanted Jimmy to come," McGuire said, "to a touchy thing for him. I'd like this to be a statement on Jimmy this year." Nebraska Coach Joe Cipriano turned his hatricious up to the task of leading the Cornhuskers long before had guaranteed themselves the Owens returned his benched starters to the game, and the last the Warriors trailed by 10 points late in the first half but击82.4 per cent- of 14—in a second半短 rally. two minutes were a wild struggle by Nebraska to reach 100 and a desperate effort by KU to keep them from it. "We didn't want them to score 100 on us." Owens said. "It was a matter of pride." Kentucky scored 115 on the 1970 team. That's the only time any team has scored more than 100 against KU. KU went into a stall, and Kivisto drew three foils from Chuck Jura. He hit the first two players with 14 seconds to play. Randy Watts seceded Nebraska's 90th point with less than a minute to play. After that, the Rams fled free, how- from Tom Krivyak in overtime. Kivisto made it 99-78 with the next free throw, but intentionally missed the second shot. It was too by then for Nebraska to score. "We were just a half-step behind them, but Owens said in plan was to them, but a half-step is all a good-shooting team like Nebraska Bryan fg/ga 19-10 bt/r rb p t14 Peterson 16-9 10-3 2 7 14 Peterson 16-9 10-3 2 7 14 Nisens 9-11 2.5 8 1 20 Nisens 9-11 2.5 8 1 20 Riehl 1.4 5.6 1 2 17 Riehl 1.4 5.6 1 2 17 Low 1.1 3.4 2 0 9 Low 1.1 3.4 2 0 9 Tempe 10-1 2.4 3 0 9 Tempe 10-1 2.4 3 0 9 Total 36.72 30.41 54 25 95 Kansas 27 51 - 78 Nebraska 46 53 - 99 A. B 500 Tarmor 14 gw 92 18 rb pb 17 Mask 15 gw 10 12 18 q 18 Mask 16 gw 10 12 18 q 18 Nash 1.4 2.3 2 4 Nash 1.4 2.3 2 4 Cantwell 5.7 6 6 10 Cantwell 5.7 6 6 10 Brenneric 1.4 4 4 24 Brenneric 1.4 4 4 24 Total 26.62 26.38 32 71 Missouri maintained its lead with a hard-houghed 59-52 verdict in the first round, while Kansas State easily mastered Iowa State. 68-54 in the final. Mizuno, ranked 15th nationally, 8-2 in the Big Eight. Kansas State is 7-2 and can move into a tie for the lead with a victory over Oklahoma. Oklahoma State Monday night on the Wildcats' home court. K-State Rips on Road; Tigers Struggle at Home KANAS CITY (AP)—The paradox of the Big Eight basket game on the weekend. The favorites won but the method and margin of victory sowed seeds of concern to a relative team superstar. Missouri had a case of poor marksmanship—it had only a 35 mph kills. It was the lowest of the season, but Colorado was worse — 34 per cent, hitting 71 percent. In other play, Saturday, Nebraska solidified its hold on the South with a triumph over defending Big Eight champion Kansas, and Oklahoma stayed in the picture by downing Oklahoma State 80-23. Kansas State, sparked by Lon Knoppers 30 points, continued on Sunday with a victory over basketball, the Wildcats came into the cyles into mistaken mistakes. Nebraska seared the most points ever by a Big Eight team against Kansas. The previous high was 97 by Oklahoma in the Big Eight tournament. Bud Weaver scored 86 for Kansas with his 28 points. Oklahoma made nine of their ast 10 free throw chances to turn up the crowd. The back had 20 points. Scott Martin 9 and Andrew Pettes 18 to present a balanced Sooner at the two-way with 18 markers. On Monday night, in addition to the Oklahoma State-Kansas State dual, Kansas plays host to Colorado. Saturday Kansas State is at Kahoma and Missouri plays at Aansas in televised day games in levels to Colorado in a right contest. THE CONCORD SHOP - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock —others on order * ARTIST CANVAS * LQUITEN ACRYLIC only 25% OFF 25% OFF McCONNELL LBR. CO. 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 2. The Student Complaint Service can help YOU! Are you dissatisfied with any University service? Have you been bothered by too much hassle & not enough result? If so, just look for one of the yellow COMPLAINT CENTER posters fill out one of the complaint forms, put it in the envelope provided, and your complaint will be registered and investigated. Or call 864-3710 or 843-8985 Complaints should concern only services provided by the University Provided by Student Services University Daily Kansan Monday, February 21.1972 y, February 21, 1973 . P.R.VOLDENG CUSTOM JEWELRY WE WILL WORK FROM YOUR OWN DESIGN, OR CREATE A DESIGN FOR YOU Light or Dark Beer $1.00 a Pitcher 9-Midnight Open Mon. thru Fri. 11:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. Sat. 11 a.m. to 1:00 a.m. 544 W.23rd 842-2266 SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & ye Public house 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 MAUDE ... He's 18. LOVES LIFE .. She's 81. HAROLD LOVES MAUDE Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort are Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. HAROLD and MAUDE Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. WOMAN RICHARD YVETTE CHAMBERLAIN MIMIEDUX MOM RICHARD WETTE JOY IN THE MORNING A campsite for sore eyes. AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL Sat & Sun. Show Times 8:30 a.m. @ 7:30 a.m. 4:30 a.m. @ 5:30 a.m. Twightlily Mr. adm. 12 noon to 6 p.m. 10:00 to 5:15 only! Hillcrest Now Thru Tues. In COLOR CARRY ON CAMPING Eve. 7:35 & 9:15 Adult 1.50 Twilight Prices Good For 4:10 Show Only Paul Lee Newman Marvin "Pocket Money" BP Hillcrest Now Thru Tues EVE, 7:20 & 9:15 Twilight Prices Good For 4:00 Show Only EVERY MAN SHOULD MEET A FREE-FLYING STEWARDESS once in his lifetime Fly Girls Swedish Fly Girls COLOR Not only the AIR HOSTESSES FROM COPENHAGEN Prod. By JACK O'CONNEL BLEVINS HONDA Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service 843-3333 NOW THRU TUES. 1811 W.6 Lawrence, Ks. Eve - 7:30-9:20 Adult 1.50 Pickens Auto Parts KANSAN WANT ADS and Service 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $0.1 One day Parts at a discount 26th & Iowa Ph.V13:1353 A accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the brochure of your employer to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Highest price paid for used cars G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI-2- 8688. 1f FOR SALE Three days 2. If you don't, you're at a disadvantage 1. if you use them, you're at an advantage KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them. 12. you're at an advantage. If you don't. Keith is at a disadvantage. Erik has it in the middle for them—"New York University, Western Civilization," Campus Madhouse, 410, West 14th, 411. Now you can buy stem components you need for your plant care at dining at RAY AUDIO, 824-2957, 1300 Prairie Avenue. The only true stereo discount店 in the midwest. 2-29 Northbeach Country Shop, 707 North Beach Blvd., New York, NY. Antiques, Used furniture, collectibles, stoves, gas cooking and heating stoves, bicycles, fireplaces, wood and other useful items. Open to 9 to 15 days. Herb Attendance: 3159 Take a look at my mistakes. We have plenty of them from all over the world. Haas Imports, 1029 Mass: 2-22 Guitar-Guild 12 string Acoustic— 1½ years old—Good condition-Call 843-5113 at 6:30 p.m. 2-21 Basses, guitars, saxes, clarinet, auto- bass, amplifiers, tape recorders, tape recorders. Also, will buy or sell your liver. Also, will buy or sell your Consignor. 842-6623. 2-21 8 track stereo tapes $3.49 with this coupon. Gregg Tire Co., 814 W. 23rd. 2-23 Engineering student, has no use for his new royal Safari Portable Type- writer. Will sell for $45. Jim, 841- 3509. Naisimh Hall Contract for sale. Call 843-2661. 2-21 Powerful 50W (E.I.A.) Mantrax tunner amp-AM-FM unit cut to $14.99. Tune up for $29.99 or $30.99. Keystone Rocket 928 Mass. (Basement Stereo Room). 2-22 Powerful Zenith stereo portable sold new $129, now only $30.00, component set demo cut $80.00 $149.00 Mass Open Thurs. nights 2-22 Mass Open Thurs. nights 2-22 Do you use 7-35-15 tire size? We close out your 5-inch of our best snow at $10.00 each plus 2.52 FEB. 2015 Mass. Rock Rain Scanboard 2-222 Tire Cleaner! New F10-14 wide Fire Alarm! New F10-14 wide Fast free installation at Ray Stone- back's (new G10-F4) $2.00 more the letters or letters + $2.22 $3.00 extra 33 RPM Special Award Winner Alma-Handrains - Baldrige Over Trout River, NJ. Juliet, Mrs. Robinson, etc. only $10 at Ray Stone Park (18 track tape with 200 rows) '69 VW bug, custom interior,' 68 VW bus, A/C, radial tires, super clean. Call 843-7248. 2-22 Complete line of men's and women's bedding. Duvet cover, pillowcase, 1946 Buck Special, 4-dur. V-8, automatic transmission, factory air. $2,000 hot & cold storage and rating condition. Price reduced. DARK ROOM EQUIPMENT bogen TABLES, polycarbonate kit, bulk locker, easel, trays, etc. ALSO electric powderer, waterwheel, aquarium. GARDENING, faucets. Clean, 1963 Chevrolet for sale $100.00. Call 841-2890 after 5:00 p.m. 1341 Rhode Island. 2-21 VOX Hollow Body Electric Guitar. Beautiful sunburst finish. Immaculate condition with hard-shell case. $190. Call Randy at 842-6595. 2-23 1971 Camaro, 350, loaded, turbohydromatic, air, power, band-8, track stereo, disc-starre, wheels, good cycle, bicycle, race car, good cycle, Bike 864-1202 anytime. 2-22 1963 Morris Minor convertible. Low mileage, excellent condition. Call evenings. 842-4136 or 843-1240. 2-23 For Cape Cod and the Islands. Complete list of businesses requiring summer employees. Send $2.00 to: Toyota, 71, automatic, tape deck, real fine car. $1.395. Call Bill, 842- 3473. 2-24 BOKONOGN NONOKONO New shipment of shirts, jackets, dresses, and jeans this week. Fat dancer spectacles. Spring festival. Vermont Open 11-6. 2-22 three days 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication 1972 STUDENT JOB OPPORTUNITY BOOKLE Austin America 1989, AM-FM radio, automatic, 4 new tires. Call Mark at 842-2534 or come by Phi Kappa Tau 1120 W, 11th St. 2-22 STUDENT JOB OPPORTUNITY 1964 Futura 2-door hardtop, 3-speed, V-8, good condition, white with red interior. Call 864-2386 2-21 Carro Auto Lentar lenses, fit all minolta SILRs: 1.28 mm and 1.38 mm, Ptnn Strobe, Hectochargeable, 1.85mm loupes 19V, VK to 17V VK from $195 to $1.995, Bank financing available. Jay- hawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, 843-2 2-22 Neat old flags to cover that ugly spot. Earthshine. East 8th and Mass. 2-24 New spring knit shirts in prints from the nostalgic to the elegant. Earthshine, Mass. and 8th St. 2-24 1968 Dodge Darl White, 4-door sedan, 6.3 volt, 3-speed transmission, new tires, 988.00 Cash or will finance entire vehicle, 843.200 843-2200 2-22 Going trucking? Do it right. 46 VW bus, FM radio, heater, excellent tires. Engine recently overhaulable. Mike. 842-7125 at 6:00 p.m. Call 2-24 Yamaha-360. 71, in good shape. Runs great, must sell now! Also, Butler 600 error saxophone, like-new case, for Lee. You can call: 888-243-2443 for Lee. 2-24 HELP For sale, 1686 Fait 850. Excellent running condition. Good body. Must sell now. Call 872-771-7918. 8:30-9:30 am. John Gaines: 2-24 One group of shirts and sweaters up to 50% off. Earthshine, 12 E. 8th St. 2-24 1965 Buck Wildcat, gold, 2-door HT. P/S, P/B, air cond, $808. Cash or will finance entire balance. Jayhawk Volkswagen 2522 lime, 843-2000-2 222 IBM ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS 842-8634 2-23 Going campover on spring break? Stop by SunPower Surplus, 815 Vermont for all your needs 2-23 Peugeot XPOE. FIXe racing bicycles, 21, 23, 24, 25 inch frame sizes now in stock. $219.00. No waitlist. List on Bike Shop. 1140. Mass: 8484 8484 Low-Low Jeans with the flare look at Low-Low Prices The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-25 Super Sale Dresses: Values from $18- $32, now $5-$10. The Alley Shop, 943. Mass. 2-25 Jeans, Jeans, Jeans. Latest styles, best selection, best prices. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-25 Orleans, Mass., 62653 Crop Tops—biggest selection, newest styles, $7.00 The Attic. 927 Mass. 2-25 Jen's Big Mac franchise, small style, $7.00 The Attie, 937 Man 2-25 *Men's Big Marge flannel shirts, medium large, and extra-large in J C Penny's clothing department.* Carol Lee WV 1970, beetle, automatic stickshifter vamiation, 2800 miles, sliding roof, radio, push-out window, radial gal ship, 6027 or best offer, car 6027 6027 C-2-25 MOTORCYCLES Best offer takes: 1970 Husqvarna 360 291 Yamanahua 2033 PT-1; 1970 MG midget conv. 1123 New York St. NJ. 843-7607 30 Varieties of Donuts Hot and Cold Drinks Sat 12 p.m. 5 a.m. - 12 p.m. tues.-Sat. 5-5 Sun. Sat 12 p.m. 1730 W. 23rd St. 842-3664 MCAT: Preparation for the Medi- cal Assessment and exam-training designed for students in the student information school. GHJAIDATE HGJAIDATE NY N Y 0 Box 385, New York N Y 107-294-8747 SUEDE PURSES—assorted selection only $6.00 at The Attic. 927 Mass. 2-25 FOR RENT 10482067534910143741014374 SENIORS!! WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester. bedroom furnished. two 1/2 bath furnished or unfurnished. Central a. dishwasher, w. earworm sink. Kitchen equipped. Apartments—The place to live in 3800. Catch 24 hours a day at 8:00. a 摄像师 Apartment — newly decorated — one bed furniture—walled—to wall carpeting—11; blocks from Union. Phone 843-5767. tf For rent—one or two bedroom apts, air conditioned, garbage discharge facilities, color TV V.5 available. Calf room at 24th and Ridge Court View Apts 24th and Ridge Court Ridge House Apts—for the budget of 1,400 square feet and the maximum space at a best rates in town, HI. I and J bedrooms, and K, D, E and F baths; Cedarwood—block of Walls JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE Rent efficiency, apartments, 1 and 2 rent apartment apartments. All the extra features, exceptionally clean. Pre- sent one black block of rooms 843-1116 2-21 Hixon Unfurnished room for rent—utilities paid, share room and kitchen. Some rent off for light housekeeping. Pre- paid rate. Please call 861-224-7039. Miss. before noon any day. 2-21 HILLVIEW APARTMENTS — 1733-45 bedrooms, furnished and unfurnished apartments. Carpeted, drapes, electronics of much more expensive apartment of much more expensive apartment. COLLEGE, HILL, MANOR now has available 1 bed and 4 bedroom houses at A'C, A'C dishwashers, w/warptrap appliances, A'C distance to campus. Call 832-920 or visit www.college.hill.edu Call immediately for ap- pointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR JAYHAWKER WANT PEACE AND QUIT? Need 1 or 2 roommates. Large house in country. Call 842-7771, 8:30-9 a.m. Mon-Fri. John Gaines. 2-24 Two rooms to rent to two quiet male rooms $30 and $3 monthly. Share bath and kitchen. No pets. Ask for Greg at 842-8865 2:24 TONY'S ITS NEVER TOO LATE and it is a long time from when you can not comfortably attractive. One call to Mornforth at 2017-A Harvard Road and you can obtain pertinent details on the attached location and most attractive accommodations in Missouri, Avalon Apartments, and Missouri; Avalon Apartments, Apartments, Iowa & Harvard, Lots of space, paid utilities, dishwashers, rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, reasons you would enjoy living there, make this semester in Lawrence a special make this semester in Lawrence a special locations for August occupancy and summer rates for June each year. A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS Too Too Weather. Weather too this spring. Climate. Weather too this spring. Watch free cable TV All at this place. 1125 Indiana. Indiana 84126 - 2106 1125 Indiana. Indiana 84126 - 2106 Would you like something a little out of the ordinary in an apartment? If so, book with us now until school is out. Fireplace, or kitchen? Huge room? 9/month; 2-3/year. Borger, 864-4158. Studio Red Baron 842-0444 THE MERCANTILE - OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE - FRONT DISC BRAKES 0 TO 60 MPH—13.5 LOVE THAT DATSUN Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD HERBS AND SPICES MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SAUAGES - RECLINING FRONT SEATS * UP TO 25 MILES PER GALL Apartment for rent. One bedroom, $85.00 19 W 14th. Call 842-8263 after 6:00 p.m. 2-25 DATSUN Vacancy in contemporary home with swimming pool for young man. Private entrance and bath. $95 /mo. utilities paid V1 2-8995 NOTICE UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright (816) 474-4876 tf INFANET DAY-CARE CENTER for 84232 NAFI TAXA CENTER care for chlrm men 1 m - 12 m Men Fail or par- treatment 12 DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe. Leave airport from N.Y. or Boston to Philadelphia, N.J. ISA issued. Flight Center, 227 North Randall, Midland, Wisconsin. $350K. Pricing subject to availability. TEE PEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB— time again, and we are taking re- servations for second semester term par- tion for the business party. Nee stand band, black clothes. We also have special monthly rates naming meetings. Phone or contact John meeting phones. Station Tee Jec 41 & 59 HUCH Business phone: 842-2582. After school hours: For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization--call the Women's Center--861-4441. tf Professional seamless design with experience will work with you for the look you want. Alterations, too. Call 843-3763. 2-21 Circly your calendar now for the Last Saturday Night of February. Rosacea's Hotel, Harper, Kansas 67058, (869)-869-1211 2-21 Spend this summer working in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to CATORES.COM/O-F-O BOX 34-62 Boulder, CO 80922 For that extra accessory we've got some old silk scarves for a dollar apiece at Earthshine. East 8th and Mass. 2-24 Those do-dads you've been looking for?-That make your wormous sparkle? Well, we have a few for ya at Earthshine on the 6th at Mass 2-24 Now taking applications for waitstaff positions must be attractive and enjoy work. Employers want workers to work under pressure. Prefer experience in customer service, food preparation, or please must be available during summer and following school year. Applicants should have good transportation are excellent. Phone number is 512-345-6789. KITTYCATS is coming and he loves pineapple pushee drinks 2-25 KITTYCATS is coming and he's got a tie on some catnip 9.25 "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Events 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Appearing at the Mad Hater on Wed. Feb. 25, and Fri. Feb. 25 BUZYZ AND CHIP, a jazz rock duo Free admission 2-25 SANDSWEEEPERS JUST ARRIVED THE ATTIC, 897 Mass 7-25 JUST ARRIVED=Swim wear and sandsweepers. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-25 SWIM WEAR JUST ARRIVED THE ATTIC. 927 MASS. 2-25 WANTED Customers for valentine day gift ideas at Hodge Podge. Open late Thursdays. 15 West 9th. 2-22 Need girl to share house $55 included. 842-5768. 2-21 Women's alterations, 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9-30-5-30. 3-7 Wanted—Satellite fiction books to attend a book talk at the Eisenstein Expand your knowledge of the Eisenstein Expand your different books. Can you in and out how their stories unfold? North door of Union, next to Dyke south door of Union, next to Dyke Female coomate wanted. Jayhawk Towers, $55/mo., utilities paid. Call Carolyn at 812-6303 2-24 FOUND NEAR UNION. 1989 man's KU class ring, red Stone, KU embosed. Identify initials Call after 843-4106 Pay for aid 2-24 Individual to share house with four others. Owner room. fantastic location, shared dinner menu. Rent $40.00 per hour. Availability 11:30-6:30, 10:30-4:30, 1-2:35, avail. nails, n42-6970. ATTENTION TWINS: 18 years and older knowledge health issues to study answer questionnaires have blood and brain wave test twins needed Calf 25-562 ext 322 twins needed Leg 25-562 ext 322 A person to co-operative living group (4 women, 3 men, age 21-30) and a two-year-old (with private or information call) 842-8496 3-225 842-8496 Rock band needs place to practice by March 1st. Willing to pay if necessary. Call 843-8068 or 843-2504: 2-244 Wife of graduate student will do woiling, peasant dresses, long skirts, etc. Will also be meeting, hens, new friends. Call 842-5794. Reaction: Roommate to share two bedroom (own room) apartment. Completely farmed to $72.50 with bills paid ideal for music major (piano) 843-903-878 PERSONAL Valentine Purse Sale at Hodge Podge 10% off Feb. 10—Feb. 17. 15 West 2-22 POETRY WANTED for anthology, for performance. welcome for prompt reply. Send to Eton, IDLEWILD PRESS, 1867 East Oratory, Boulevard, Los Angeles @eaton.edu To the gray who found our little white dog with the thorny tail—"Thank you." Cannot express our gratitude. 2-23 Your old cowboy sweaters, Hawaiian prints, and letter sweaters and jackets are here. Earthshine, 12 E. 8th. 9:24 If you're down on those tight fits—just wait. Earthshine in the Lower East Side. 2-24 Tony's 66 Service TRIUMPH TOYOTA starting service Lawrence, Kansas 66042 Luwence, Kansas 60044 2434 Iowa V12-1008 CAMPING WORLD Competition Sports Cars Inc. Medical, Chemical, Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 CABAY ARTS 913 843.9275 913 842.0025 1. 25 LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place Open 24 hrs. per day Eating At Home Food and Drink Deliciate Food and Sweet Food with Complete Menu. Stake Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Sweets, Our menu is also always fresh. sirloin 11. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge Sellman Phone 863-143 Open 4:30 Closed Monday COIN Independent Laundry & Dry Cleaners COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 days per week COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th 842-9450 We've got a cap to fit your head. Funky styles from the engineer to the 'Big Apple' on down. Earthharmonie at 8th on Mass. 2-24 Two-speed bicycles. Peugeot, Gimlet, Olmi, Chorda. Kalffhoff. No waiting in stock in 21, 23, 24, 25 inch bicycles. On Bike Shop. On Onike Bike. 1401 Mane. 2-25 WE HAVE TOPS FROM A TO Z THE ALLEY SHOP, 842 Mass 2-25 TYPING DRIVE-IN AND COOP OI LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 841.5104 EARRINGS - EARRINGS - and more EARRINGS. The Attic, 927 Mass, 2-25 Term papers, these typed accurately and promptly, your choice of type size, electric typewriter, 812-697-812, 842-565-night, Klondike Dawns, 842-565-night. Experienced typist will type your term paper, theses or dissertation Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate Call VxI 3-3281 Mr. Raukman Experienced in typing theses, diner- ing software, and home automation. Have electric typewriter with picta type. Accurate and prompt answer. Use word processor. Mail 844-7554. Mr. Wright Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention. 843-0958. 2-29 Accurate typing of your thesis, dissertation or miscellaneous work on IBM Selecter typewriter with plex 800 and IBM Model 824-1400 for information. 2:29 MISCELLANEOUS LOST Tube incense on sale. Two for $1.00 Saturday at the Hodge Podge, 15 West 9th. 2-22 BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale=Sizes 18-10, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal. 910 Kentucky. 4690 Socks that'll make you roll your pantlegs up. Earthshine, East 8th and Mass. 2-24 Large assortment of antique mufflers for 25c each. Earthshine, 12 E. 8th St. 9.34 If anyone has found prescription glasses in case marked Dr Aplin, please call 842-7422. 2-24 HELP WANTED RAMADA INN Figure 842 2391 One black, padded skirt-type glove with red, white, blue ribs on knuckles. Monday. Feb. 7 in Fliint Hall. Value in Wear. Reward 4653 4563 Wire hair terrier, 1 year old. White with black and some brown markings. Please call 843-4877. Reward. 7:23 OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS m. Arts & Sciences; t. All Professions and occupations; o. Military; slighting; o. Overtime, slighting. free information. 10675 Honolulu, Hawaii 20175 Honolulu, San Diego, CA 34115 Honolulu, Hawaii THE HILE in the WALL DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order 843.7685 — We Deliver — 9th & III. apacious new facilities. Group participation welcome No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. UN PLANNING A TRIP?? 043 0500 Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! Maupintour travel service 00 Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-121 DISCOUNT The Stereo Store PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE UDIOTRONICS Marti 8 Monday, February 21, 1972 University Daily Kansan 77 Nominated for Citation By CANDY HERBERT Kansan Staff Writer A total of 77 persons have been nominated to receive the University of Kansas Aulani Distinguished Service. Citation, Dick Wintormer; executive director of Alumni Association, said recently. The citations, which are the highest awards given by the University, are presented at commencement exercises to KU students. There is recognition of our outstanding achievements, Wintermorte said. The Alumni Association also grants Honorary Alumnus standing to each nonalumni citee. A secret committee made up of nine alumni and two KU faculty members, based on the life career of the ninners rather than upon single incidents or deaths, provided posthumous citations are given. WINTERMOTE SAID OTHER criteria for selection included good citizenship, significant contributions to the community, and humanitarian services to outside a chosen career. Nominations may be made by any interested person. From the nomination committee, a alumni and two nasilumni may be chosen as citation recipients by the committee, which begins with the following winter, Wintermate explained. Biographical material on each nominee, compiled by the Alumni Association, is available to the committee members at their first meeting," he said. WINTERMOTE SAID many persons had been nominated for several years before receiving a citation. "The committee then supplements this material with individual research and information organizations and voluntary organizations with which the nominee is associated (cities." Wintermorte said. Wintermote also said 15 of the 77 candidates were nonalumni. "Of the 77 nominees proposed this year, 47 have been confirmed and are completely new nominees," he said. "They are newly new nominees." he said. Wintermute also said 15 of the 72 students who registered for the most *national* nominees usually are associated or have been selected. In other words, University in some way, although the selection rules do not specify such an association as a mere preference. The recognition program, started in 1941 by the Alumni Association, began recognizing nonalumini in 1969. Wintermote said it did so because people realized there were individuals with disabilities who had made outstanding contributions to society but were not KU alums. "individuals, whether alumni or nonalumni," he said, "should be recognized if they have made a meaningful contribution to the University—I am—the University, the state of Kansas or the Midwest." THE TRUE STRENGTH of the program, Winnertime said, is in getting as many people as possible interested so that they will make nominations. In that way, the committee has a wide pool of candidates can award citations to only the best candidates available. Honorary Alumni Cites for 1971 were Harry Darby, former U.S. Senator, Founder and and Leavenworth Steel, Inc. Leavenworth Steel, Inc., and Darby Railway Cars, inc. and Fleming Company, Topeka Kansas Highway Commission; Raymond D. Pruitt, director of the Mayo Graduate School of Education, Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minn., and Edward H. Brown, professor of zoology at KU. The distinguished Service Citation recipients for 1971 were KU alums Howard E. Crawford, Stephen L. Carroll, and of marketing, General Motors Corporation; Kenneth J. Hodson, Chief Judge, United State Army Military Department, Washington D. Johnson, D. Montgomery, director of the Recipients of the Distinguished Service Citations for 1972 will be publicly announced by mid-April. OSWALD P. BACKUS Will Speak Tomorrow Can There Be A University? Lecture Series To Feature KU Professor Oswald P. Backus, professor of history, slavic and soci studies at KU, is scheduled to lecture on Can There Be a University? Potential for the future," at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Woodraft Auditorium. Portents for the Future 8 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium Sponsored by Humanities Lecture Series Backus will be this season's fifth speaker in the 25th annual Humanities Lecture Series. Backus, who began teaching at KU in 1900, said a university had several responsibilities. He said students must transmit knowledge, must transmit capacities of students and provide possible solutions to problems. IT'S HERE PEUGEOT AT GRAN SPORT AT GRAN SPORT The Peoples' UO-8 --- $107 REA Double Butt 531-PX-10 --- $210 1015 W. 9th available in many sizes Two six week sessions at Quantico- or one ten week session—will tell them and you if you've got all it takes to lead some of the world's best fighting men. If you do, you'll bring a bursary after college graduation, and carry new weight on your shoulders from that moment on. W. S. MARINE CORPS The Marine Corps is Looking for a few good men . . . Ask the Marine Officer Selection Officer about the officer programs. He'll be on campus at the Student Health Center during dates, 21 and 22 February 1972. Take your bar exam next summer GRAN SPORT it's the Marine Corps' test for the man who wants responsibility and leadership from the start, not at some obscure point in his life future. The Navy doesn't could take-for the Marines don't choose their new officers lightly. FUELLED CollegeMaster M. R. GRIFFITT No.1 in College Sales Fidelity Union Life Insurance Company MARCUS BURGESS A. B. C. D. FIDELITY UNION LIFE INSURANCE 915 Louisiana 842-4650 MARK SHEPHERD M. J. B. Patronize Kansan Advertisers BELL MUSIC FEATURES A New album: A nod is as good as a wink...to a blind horse. FACES Anot is as good as a wink... ...to a blind horse. Individually $7.00 WITH ME / ZEROS MISS BENNY LANDON PRESENTED Just $ 3^{33} $ On Warner Brothers Records "...Just about the finest performing rock band around these days." --CIRCUS "Yea, the Faces are at it again..." — ROCK "Yeah, the Faces are at it again ..." "a major talent and a stunning sound." "...a major talent and a stunning sound." FUSION "One of pop music's last, best hopes..." BOSTON-AFTER DARK "...greatest British rock and roll band since the Stones." — SOUNDS faces Ronnie Wood Kenny Jones Ian McLagan Rod Stewart BELL MUSIC Emerson, Lake & Palmer PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION Phone 843-2644 825 Massachusetts ON COTILLION RECORDS bread "Pictures at an Exhibition" by EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER $449 FREE M ON ELEKTRA RECORDS "Baby, I'm a Want You" by BREAD $449 POSTER with any purchase of two records HURRY While Quantity Lasts FREE POSTER with any purchase of two records HURRY While Quantity Lasts SPECIAL GROUP Stereo Long Play Albums JAZZ — RHYTHM & BLUES and ROCK Thousands of Titles only $194 CHILLY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Noise Pollution Probed 82nd Year, No.90 See Page 3 Talk with Mao Hints at Dispute PEKING (AP)—President Nixon talked with Mao Tse-tung in an unexpected meeting at the chairman's home Monday, only a few hours after beginning his historic visit to China. There was a hint of disagreement, but later Nixon suggested the United States and China could be friendly. The hour-long discussion by the President and Chinese Communist Chairman was described by the Chinese and the Americans as "frank and serious" indicating in Communist terminology that he ended in fundamental disagreement. But at a banquet afterward, a warm atmosphere prevailed in contrast to the subdued welcome given Nixon in late morning, and there the President proposed that China and the United States begin a long march toward peace without compromising their principles of communism and capitalism. PREMIER CHOU En-lai suggested a normalizing of relations despite the great turmoil in Asia and the world's most populous nation, and the United States, the world's richest nation. "There is no need for us to be enemies, Nixon told the banquet given in his honor. Chou told Nixon, "The gates to friendly contacts have finally opened." The phrase "frank and serious" was used by White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler as well as the official statement by Senator Robert Bentley, both sides had agreed on that description. The meeting, which came as a surprise so early in the visit, had not been on Nixon's schedule and it delayed a later formal meeting with Chou. Although Nixon had been expected to see Mao during his week long visit, no time had been set. There was speculation that meeting would come at the end of the visit. AT THE BANQUET, it became clear that no matter how far apart Nixon and Mao seemed to be, the United States and Communist China would try in the coming days to end more than 20 years of empathy that began with the Communist takeover of the mainland and carried through the War and the present war in Indochina. The President had been greeted by Chou at the airport on his arrival in late morning and they met formally in the afternoon after Nixon's talk with Mao. The premier toasted the Nixons in the Great Hall of the People just off Tien An Men Square—the Square of Heavenly Peace. The toast came after the diners off Chinese fare ranging from tamboo粥 to steamed chicken in coconuts. CHOU SAID the visit afforded an opportunity to normalize relations broken off a generation ago, after the Nationalists defeated the reck were routed to the island of Taiwan. "This is a positive move in conformity with the desire of the American and Chinese people and is an event unprecedented in the relations between the United States and China," the premier said. "The American people are a great people. The Chinese people are a great people. The people of our two countries have always been friendly to each other. We have always been all to all, the contacts between the two peoples were suspended for over 20 years. "Now through the common efforts of China and the United States the gates to China have been opened." Chou acknowledged that fundamental differences existed, between Washington and Peking. He suggested normalizing contacts on the basis of five points he proposed at a conference of naligned nationats at Bandung, Indonesia, in 1955. THESE POINTS, reiterated by Chou to Nixon, are: -Mutual respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of nations. Mutual nonaggression. —Noninterference in internal affairs. —Mutual equality. —Peaceful coexistence. "We hope to gain a clearer insight into the American way of thinking," Chou concluded, "and with this a new start can help relations between our two countries." Nixon made no specific proposals at the banquet for new relations but he has said this subject would be one purpose of his visit to China. The President emphasized a belief that a Chinese U. S. friendship, in spite of fundamental differences, is necessary for the future of world peace. "AS WE discuss our differences, neither of us will compromise principles," Nixon said. "But while we cannot close the gulf between us, we must do so that we may be able to talk across it." L 1132 OUT PUBLIC 1132 WALK-OUT WE WERE PAYS MORE-WH WAGES ALLIANCE AFL-CIO Kansas Staff Photo by ED LALLO Union Strikes for Improved Conditions . Workers want better wages and working environment . . Workers Strike; Protest Wages, Work Conditions By ROBERT E. DUNCAN Kansan Staff Writer Members of the Classified Civil Service Employees Union, local 1132, which includes buildings and grounds employees and food services personnel at the University of Kansas, walked off their jobs to protesting inadequate wages and salaries. The striking workers set up picket lines around campus and distributed leaflets. The leaflets ask for retroactive merit wage要求 for all civil service workers the latter asks for. John Conard, director of University relations, said that 69 buildings and grounds workers were missing from work Monday morning. A survey was being at the end of the day to determine if other employees had also their jobs. LLOYD ROSE, business manager of local 1132, who led two demonstrations in Topeka this past month said, "The lack of response by the legislature led us to this Rose indicated that members of other unions would honor the picket lines. Conard said construction at Wescoe Hall was "routine," and workers were on the ground. J. J. Wilson, director of University advisory effecting training operations. According to Lawrence Freight Line dispatcher Merle Crook, some of their drivers were not making deliveries on campus. "We're hoping the problems will be solved quickly," Rose said. He met with representatives of the Kansas Personnel Office, the city officials Monday afternoon in Toekoa. KU Poll Reflects Student Uncertainty Bv JIM KENDELL Kansan Staff Writer A sizable minority of students at the University of Kansas is undecided about which candidate to support for president in a poll taken last week by KU Student Vote. The poll showed that 39 per cent of KU's students are undecided about who they will vote for in 1972. This figure and the numbers of students supporting each candidate roughly parallel national trends for college students. Of those polled 19 per cent supported president Richard J. Clinton, 25 per cent supported Re-election candidates. Minorities Charge Bias In State Hiring Policies TOPEKA (AP)—Charges that racial minorities are being discriminated against by the State of Kansas in its hiring policies were made Monday in allegations filed with the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights by representatives of three minority organizations, Gov. Robert Docking, the State of Kansas and 112 state agencies are named. The complaints were filed by the Coordi- nating Committee for the Black Community, the Kansas American GI Forum and the Institute for Minor Employment. Kansan Error On StudEx Corrected Similar complaints are to be filed with the U.S. Department of Justice and the Federal Civil Rights Commission, the representatives of the three organizations said. It was incorrectly reported in Monday's Kansan that student groups at KU will no longer be recognized, only registered, after a proposal was approved Sunday night and rejected by StudXi but must now go to William Ballour, vice chancellor for student affairs, for final approval. At a news conference, Charles Scott, Topeka attorney and chairman of the CBC; Jesse Campos, Civil Rights director of the Kansas American GI Forum, and Manuel Fierro, Institute for Minority Employment chairman, discussed the charges. The complaint alleges that the state, through its agencies has "conspired to engage in patterns and practices of discrimination against the minorities of this state and in violation of the Kansas act against discrimination." George McGovern, D-S.D; 12 per cent supported Sen. Edmund Maskie, D-Maine; 4 per cent supported Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N.Y.; 4 per cent supported Democrat John Lindsay, mayor of New York City, and 4 per cent supported Democrat Eugene McCarthy, former Minnesota senator. They said that the 37,000 state employees, only 5 per cent are black and less than 1 per cent is Mexican-American or American Indian. Forty-eight state agencies have 100 per cent white work forces, they reported. IN ADDITION, 2 per cent supported Sen. Hubert Humphrey, D-Dinni, and 1 per cent supported Democratic Governor George Wallace of Alabama. Seven other candidates received more than one vote. They were Rep. John Ashbrook, R-Ohio; Sen. Harold Hughes, D-Dakla; Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash; Linda Jinnery, candidate of the Socialist Party in New York; Rep. "Pete McCloskey, R-Galif, and Democratic Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles. Between 1967 and 1971, the number of blacks employed by the state decreased from 6.2 per cent to 5.2 per cent of the work force, they said. The rights groups' statement blamed the selection system, especially the tests, which they said discriminate against minorities. The minority persons who are employed by the state are concentrated in a few agencies and usually hold more mental abilities than the average salaries are lower, the complaints allege. The statement took Docking to task, saying he could have issued an executive order requiring agencies to engage in fair enforcement practices, but none have been issued. LANE BAILEY, Lawrence sophomore and member of Student Vote's steering committee, was cautious in interpreting the instructions given to students in residence halls were polled. The poll was taken in the nine University residence halls and Nauruth Hall, a hospital on campus. "It's very likely there's a difference between those who live in the dorms and those who live in the cafeteria." Out of a total residence hall population of 3,642, 1,879 students filled the poll. The result was that "I would say the vast majority of people who receive the poll answered it. We were very happy with the response," he said LARRY COOK, Meriden freshman and chairman of the KU Collegiate Young Republicans, was pleased with the results of the poll. "I really am surprised that Nixon came out with 19 per cent. It is a well known fact that college students are rather antagonistic to Nixon." Lynn Knox, St. Louis freshman and chairwoman of the Douglas County McGovern for President Committee, was not as surprised about the outcome. She said that she was happy McGovern bested Muskie in the poll, and she gave her a high rating. "I helped to make people more familiar with McGovern and his candidacy," she said. The poll also showed that 49 per cent of those who replied are registered to vote and that 95 per cent have or intend to register. Only 3 per cent do not intend to register and two per cent are undecided whether to register. Those students who are registered or intend to register in Kansas comprised 66 per cent of the sample. Twenty-two per cent were registered or intend to register out of state Gay Lib Front to Appeal For University Recognition The poll also showed that 33 per cent of those polled intend to register or have registered in the third Kansas district for a new penn cant have or intend to register in Lawrence. The Lawrence Gay Liberation Front decided unanimously Monday night to appeal the decision handed down by the district Judge George Templar on Feb. 10. The Gay Lab Front lost their lawsuit to gain recognition from the University of Kansas in the decision. The suit was filed last year against Chancellor E. Laurence and the university vice-chancellor of student affairs after the front's failure to gain recognition. The Front also agreed that the recent proposal by the Student Executive Committee of the Student Senate to register student groups is ineffective, because the Chancellor and the Board of Regents still have the final word. Jack Klinknett, Lawrence Gay Libron attorney, was asked by the Front's legal committee to attend the Monday session to discuss the cost, timing and technical points involved in appealing the decision to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in William Kunstler, the co-counsel for the Front, talked last Friday with Klinkett. Klinkett said Kunstler encouraged the group not to worry about the money involved in an appeal, but rather to place all their emphasis on the appeal itself. Kunstler agreed with Klintnett that the appeal has "a good chance of winning" in One question on the poll asked if students would work for their candidate. Bailey said that he will give out the names of those students interested in working for a candidate to an organization supporting that candidate as soon as it requests them. The Front has until March 11 to submit their appeal to the Colorado court. BILL FLOWERS, Winnetka, Ill., junior and a member of Student Vole's steering committee, said that there were about 50 voters under 21 registered in Douglas County. At present the only registered organization supporting a presidential candidate is the Students for McGovern organization. Student Vote also announced Monday that mobile registration units would be on campus during the week of April 3 to register students. Philip Rankin, director of University personnel, who attended the meeting said it was a "down to earth discussion of the issues." ROSE DESCRIBED the meeting as a "starting point." He said nothing concrete was resolved at the meeting, and he would probably say that service employees problems would occur. Rankin told the issues were the same as those he had discussed with members of the team. "The team was very active." Ivan Reutter, buildings and grounds employee, said he walked off the job because he hadn't received a pay increase since November 1970. REUTTER SAID other issues that led to the walkout were poor supervisor-employee relations, the need for better on-the-job training and understaffed conditions of university staff. Another member of the picket line said there was a morale problem in University services because of these conditions. He also said that, because he saw "no sign of improvement", Conard said the University would not know if construction workers at Wescote Hall would leave their jobs in sympathy with local 1132 until today. Harry Buchholz, director of buildings and grounds, said that the walk-out could effect the work of his department in the next several days. KEITH NITCHER, vice-chancellor of business affairs, said no formal list of demands had been presented to the council. It has been informed of the walk-out Sunday night. According to Conard, the University had prepared a letter to be sent special delivery to employees who were absent Monday. The letter will notify workers that they are on leave without pay unless arrangements for vacation or sick leave. James Scheurch, Lawrence graduate student, said a student-faculty support committee had been formed to assist in the development of faculty community of the strikers' griefs. Scheirich said a rally had been planned to demonstrate support for local 1123 for mcn Wednesday in front of the Karsasian if the grievances were not settled by then. ANOTHER MEMBER of the committee said a flier had been prepared for release today. The flier, titled "What Price Assists, asks for student support for the strikers." The union also planned to release a leaflet today that described the difficulties of the project. The union would not predict how long the walkout would last. A new legislative act which takes effect March 1, does not allow strikes or walk outs by state employees. The new act does, however, allow for a collective bargaining agent for civil service employees. Rose hopes that local 1132 will act in that capacity. Disqualified Team to Take Candidacy Case to Court Bv CATHY SHERMAN BY CATHLEEN Kansan Staff Writer Richard Dwyer, Joplin, Mino, senior, and William Jacoby, Lawrence senior, disqualified as candidates for student body president and vice-president, have decided to take their case to the Student Court to ask the judge to vote in the ballot this week. Dwyer said Monday. Dwyer said he talked to Dave Dysart, Lawrence third-year law student and University of Kansas ambushman, about the situation Monday. Dysart said the ambushman office would represent the case to court as soon as possible this week. DWYER AND Jacoby were disqualified because they did not have the required 500 signatures to support their candidacy. They must be eligible for the office of president and vice-president, either the candidates must have served on the Student Senate or the declaration must be supported by the at least 500 members of the student body. Dwyer, who was the only one of the team who had served on the Senate, said that he misunderstood the regulation and thought that only one member of the team was required to have served on the Senate to eliminate the 50-signature requirement. DWYER SAID that he and Jacoby went to the Senateate at 2 p.m. on the day of the deadline and explained the situation to Debra Rutenberg, Des Plaines, Ill., sophomore and assistant to the senate treasurer, and Bob Dickson, Kansas City, Kan, senior and senate office secretary. Dwyer said they told him that they thought only one member of the team needed to complete the 300 signatures would not be necessary. Dwyer also said that no one else was available in the office at the time. "We JUST assumed that the senate office secretary would be able to tell us the regulations," Dywer said. "We would have been glad to comply with the regulations. It would have been easier than going to the Student Court." Dwyer said that R. L. (Puf) Bailey, Atchison graduate student and temporary elections committee chairman, called him Friday and informed him of the mistake and gave him until 5 p.m. Tuesday to collect 500 signatures. Dwyer said that he met with Barley, but that Barley called him on Sunday and told him that the team was disqualified. Bailey had said Friday that he thought the senate code regulation that student candidates have adhered to candidates either have served on the senate or collect 500 signatures was passed in the belief that candidates should have either some experience or some Bailey also said that the regulation might reduce the number of those candidates who would be running without any serious intent. 2 Tuesday, February 22, 1972 University Daily Kansan People... ..Places.. ..Things People: Three Arabs seized a Luhansha jungle jet carrying JOSEPH P. KENNEDY III, 19-year-old son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, early Tuesday and ordered it to Amman, Jordan; however, a spokesman for the airline later announced that the airliner had landed safely at Aden at the southern end of the Arabian peninsula. The plane, bound for an al-Abqaira plane about an hour after it took off from New Delhi for Athens. ALABAMA GOV. GEORGE C. WALLACE said Monday he intended to run in Maryland's Democratic presidential primary May 16 and expected to win. He also said the Democrats 'might make him the next president of the United States' and propel him again into a third-party bid for the White House. The government claimed Monday that a plot to KIDNAP presidential aide HENY KISSINGER was thwarted because a fellow prisoner, recruited as a courier by the REV. PHILIPH BIRRAN, turned FBI informer. The defense at the Hamburg russell trial responded by labeling the infirmer a lie. The defense also said federal antiwar conspiracy chargers and defendants were false and were kidged to "stop a movement, to silence people, and to support something J. Edgar Hoover had done." Places: SAIGON—Enemy forces launched intensified SMALL ATTACKS against the U.S. installations and South Vietnamese forces across the country Monday. Some observers saw the stepped-up enemy ground activity as an attempt to describef the Nixon's administration Vietnamization and pacification programs while the President met with Chinese leaders. Most of the thrusts were aimed at South Vietnamese militia and home guard units, which security for towns, hamlets, and government offices in rural areas. BELFAST—Four suspected guerrillas accidentally blew themselves up Monday during an apparent attempt to sneak a bomb into Belfast. They died when the car exploded into fire on a main highway about two miles southeast of the provincial capital. In the tangleled wreckage were two revolvers of a type favored by the illegal IRISH REPUBLICAN ARMY, police said. Things: West Coast LONGSHOREMEN went back to work in force at premium holiday pay Monday to mark the end of a 134-day dock strike, the LONGEST TIE-UP EVER in American mainland ports. The 24 closed Pacific ports busheled with action at the same hour as ships arrived in New York and the already-ended strike. At the strike's end, 218 vessels were waiting in port from Bellingsham, Wash., to San Diego in Southern California. Cost of the strike was estimated at $2.5 million daily in last business, which would place the total $12.6 billion pay over $11.9 billion for the next two months to $5 an hour. The first day back also brought premium time-and-a-half wages because of the Washington's Birthday holiday. Watkins Staffs Clinic for Women By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer Women's health services at Watkins Hospital have been expanded in the last week. Susan Lominska, Sayville, N.Y., and Mary Hassett, February, Sisters women's movement said that Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of the student health services, had trained four nurses to staff the women's clinic which will open next week. The February Sisters, a clinic. The February Sisters, has demanded a women's health clinic, a woman vice chancellor and a University funded day care One of the new policies put into practice Monday at the hospital was the stamping of the word SARAH SCOTT, Prairie Village senior and a member of February Sisters, said, "The main thing that needs to be done now is to establish channels of information about the fact that we can now get help at Watkins. We need a sign to tell people." Schwegler also said the policy at Watkins Hospital was that doctors treat the students as they would private patients, and a child to birth control information would depend on his personal beliefs. "contraceptives" on the clinic "contactives" this practice allow women to see a doctor who would give examinations and prescribe birth control. She said the biggest problem now was the administration's reluctance to tell people they were sick. She also information at Watkins Hospital. ACCORDING TO Schweigler, the student was negative and many women had said the word stumped on the registration slip was none of their own. hospital. The progress made this week dealt primarily with the women's health clinic. a women's clinic in the new hospital. Balfour said, "I would be happy to assist the team with a written statement, that there will be room for a women's clinic in the city." Lemiska said that as a result of a meeting Friday, William M. Lemka, the senior vice president and student affairs, had promised to sign a statement stating that the company will continue. HE SAID the new hospital would be as flexible as possible to allow for necessary changes in the future. Scott said that a counseling program, another demand of the sisters, had not yet been worked out. The sisters would like to have counselor at the hospital, she said, in addition to the present hospital staff. Kathy Allen. Topeka sophomore and co-chairman of Allen said a revision of the insurance coverage was being discussed with the Student Services Committee and several other committee members, said the committee would appointe subcommittee to research the details and report the findings to the committee. Allen said she hoped many students would apply because the committee would be involved in the quality of the subcommittee to be from the University at large. the student Services Committee, said that although the nurses for the women's clinic had been trained, they had only received lacked the experience of working with the patients in that area. Freight Replaces Riders On Lawrence Rail Lines By KEN HARWOOD Kansan Staff Writer Passenger trains have nearly become a memory in Lawrence. According to Ted M. Lane, agent for the Santa Fe Railroad, only two passenger trains a day make stops at the Lawrence depot. Passengers must fasten bread baskness was by far the main concern of the railroad. "The freight business is brisk and good and it appears it will continue that way," he said last Thursday. Before the government-controlled Amtrak assumed the passenger trade last May, six trains a day pulled to a stop at the Santa Fe department at 413 E. 7th St. Lane said that the passenger line was open in the early '90s, about five years after World War II. SHORTLY AFTER the industrial boom which followed the war, the mode of transportation shifted from passenger trains to the automobile for short hops and for the longer trips, Lane said. Arthur S. Fleming, chairman of the White House Conference on Living and former secretary of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, will be the keynote speaker for the 22nd Annual Conference on Aging, today and Wednesday in the Kansas Union. The Conference will begin at 1 p.m. today in the Forum Room with a welcome by Chancellor E. Roberts, followed by Flemming's speech. Based on financial figures for William Roy. Kansas Ex-HEW Secretary to Speak To Kansas Council on Aging in Aging at North Texas State University in Denton, will be the speakers Wednesday. congressman from the second district, will speak and present Distinguished Older Citizen of Kansas, at the annual dinner at the City Hall. Discussion of the White House conference and the annual meeting on the Kansas Citizens' Alliance will conclude today's program. Robert Harder, director of the Kansas Department of Social Welfare, and H.J. Friedsam, director of the Center for Studies Discussion groups will consider the further Kanan citizen as he is being educated in communications and activities, highway safety, and insurance. The Rev. Arthur J. Tonne of St. John's Church, where he is Lawrence, chairman of the Kansas Citizens' Council on Aging will preside at the event. Austria Honors KU Prof By MARSHA SEARS Kansan Staff Writer "This is a great encouragement for me to continue working," she said. Angelica Morales von Sauer University of Kansas professor of piano, has been awarded the Keyboard of America for decoration for artists. The Cross of Honor for Arts and Sciences. Von Sauer was notified of this work by the University of Kansai. Von Sauer said her life had been dedicated to music. She said that during her childhood, she lived at school day as well as attending school. Although the presentation date had not been set, von Sauer promised to probably be made this summer by a diplomat in New York or AT THE AGE of nine, Von Sauer said she was awarded a scholarship by the Mexican Government to study in Europe. When she was 10, she studied piano under the late Emil von Meyer and graduated eventually married. Her marriage automatically made her an Austrian citizen in adulthood. She gained public acclaim when she was 13 and made her debut as a soloist with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. Since then, she said she had played in all the major music festivals and concerts States, and had toured extensively in her home country, where she performed concert appearances and her piano teaching qualified von Sauer for The Cross of Honor for her role. husband there and my children were born there. In Vienna, the man was a student at times and some very sad times, she said. "During the war, I suffered with the people of the country, and this brought me closer to them." In 1955, after receiving many teaching offers, von Sauer chose to teach at Kansas. Here, she said, but could have an American education and the stability of a permanent home while she worked. AFTER WORLD WAR II, Von Laer left her room in Vienna. She still feels a strong affinity for Austria, she said. "When you're a touring concert pianist, your managers send you all over the world," she said. Interviews for Student Union Activities officer applicants for the position. The purpose of the interviews is to allow applicants a chance to briefly present their ideas, and to allow SUA during the coming year "I'm very greatful to this country. American people are the most important world," she said. "They are not jalousies of foreigners who come to make their living. They touch me, the most beautiful the American people are." "I was educated there, met my SUA Officers' Interviews Set Interviews for applicants for the interview with the Saturday morning. Interview times are assigned applicants when their applications are opened. The interviewing committee includes members of the present Congress and members of the Union Operating Committee. After the officers for the 1972-73 session, the committee will join the interviewing committee in selecting the members of the committee. --the major items which Lawrence exports by way of freight trains, he said. The major imported goods are clothing and goods board, newsprint and paper吹 25c Off any Small Pizza 25c Off any Drink with Pizza Purchase Good8-Midnight TONIGHT STUDY BREAK SPECIAL SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & ye Public house The deadline for SUA officer and board applications is 5 p.m. Friday. Lane attributes the rise to the growth of large name industries in the Lawrence area over recent decades. Paper products and paper products are among 1971, Lane estimated that the Lawrence branch of the Santa Fe Railroad collected about one hundred dollars for every $18 collected from the freight business. The freight industry has almost doubled here since 1950. A SPOKESMAN for the Union Railroad reported that a lawrence reported was also good. He said fertilizer, lumber, grain and cement were the major shipments by the railroad in Railroad in the Lawrence area. NEW HOURS Open Mon. thru Fri. 11:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. Sat. 11 a.m. to 1:00 a.m. Sun. 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. 544 W. 23rd 842-2266 NEW HOURS Will Be Displaying The Complete Line The Balfour Rep of FRATERNITY and SORORITY JEWELRY at the KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE Wed., Feb. 23 and Thurs., Feb. 24 9:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. KU FILM SOCIETY Jean Luc Godard's "LE PETIT SOLDAT" Union Ballroom 75° Tonight Tuesday, Feb. 22 7:30 & 9:15 WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN $100 Yes, Now You Can Win $100 just for designing a 3-Color POSTER! April 15 It's for the Concert Course DEARLINE Series April 15 for Call Fine 1972- Arts Office 1973 Salary list DEADLINE Series ANY STUDENT CAN ENTER for Information 4-3421 CHINA Decoupage Demonstration Wednesday, February 23 10:30 a.m., 1:00 p.m. 2:30 p.m. Cine Musea features the financing set at CineMuseum. America's finest-growing holiday thrift store with special gift sets and can easily fulfill holiday booths, gifts and presents. The entire collection is documented and repaired in detail by an expert Desconto, who will have many cut-free materials folded in the back. And for your convenience, we offer a free shipping set. BEN FRANKLIN 805 MASS. MAUDE LOVES LIFE . . She's 81. HAROLD LOVES MAUDE ... He's 18. Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort are HAROLD and MAUDE Eve. Shows 7:30 & 9:30 Granada INNAPAC-Alabama 3-7800 Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. M.C.M. RICHARD WYETTE CHAMBERLAIN MIMIED JOY IN THE RICHARD WYETTE SHAMMERLAIN MINUTO 2:30, 7:30, 9:30 Sat. 7:30, 9:30, 7:30 Sat. 7:30, 9:30, 7:30 Adm. $1.50 & 7.5c (Twilight HR. adm. $1.00 & 5.0c from 4:30 to 15:30 only) Varsity [THEATRE ... TELEPHONE 316-5855] AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL Ends Tonight Hillcrest A campsite for sore eyes. CARRY ON CAMPING R In COLOR Eve. 7:35 & 9:15 Ad. It 1.50 Twilight Prices Good For 4:10 Show Only Paul Lee Newman Marvin Paul Newman Lee Marvin IN A FIRST ARTIST PRODUCTION "Pocket Money" TECHNICOLOR - A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURE RELEASE The Hillcrest Ends EVE. 7:20 & 9:15 Tw. $4 Prices Good Tonight Hillcrest Ends Tonight EVERY MAN SHOULD MEET A FREE-FLYING STEWARDESS once in his lifetime. Fly girls who know what to do for or to a man. s Swedish Fly Girls SweDISH R COLOR Ends Tonight Eve - 7:30-9:20 Adult 1.50 the AIR HOSTESSES FROM CORPENHAGEN Produced and directed by ARCIO CORMAN Firestone Hillcrest ONE STOP CAR SERVICE Coupon Specials 1 Ev pollu breat the heart temp effect Haa mus Ha resi WITH THIS COUPON WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY ONLY FO FRONT End Alignment Precision alignment by skilled mechanics. $688 Most American Care Parts extra. Cars can have bars or air cond. extra. A and Gar; the Bro exhi com Mid Nels Mo. Mid (196 the Was. $ 688 Most American Foods WITH THIS COUPON Lube & Oil Change $388 Call for appointment to avoid delay. Call for appointment to avoid delay. Up to 5 quarts of premium oil and expert lubrication. WITH THIS COUPON Brake Adjustment 1 By experienced brake mechanics. 88c Drum-type brakes. No extra charge for fluid, if needed. WITH THIS COUPON Front Wheel Bearing Repack We'll repack outer front wheel bearings. 88¢ This service should be performed every 10,000 miles. Firestone DLC-100 RETREADS Any Size Listed 2 for $28⁰⁰ 6.50 13 6.95 14 7.35 15 Larger Sizes $2 More Per Tire 3 WAYS TO CHARGE Student Discount Cards Available 3 WAYS TO CHARGE Student Discount Cards Available Firestone UNI-CHARGE BANKAMERICARD master charge THE BANK OF AMERICA master charge the warehouse store Firestone 1008 W. 23rd 841-2411 Open 8:00 - 5:00 Daily Thurs. till 9:00 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. February 22. 1972 2 Prof Links Physical Ills to Noise By MARTYLYONS Evidence of the effects of noise pollution point to emotional breakdown, physical ailments of the heart, violent actions, hearing loss both permanent and temporary and undetermined pre-existing conditions Haack, associate professor of music education, said Thursday. Haack spoke to Ellsworth residents on sound pollution Hack said the effects of noise pollution were rooted in the physiological changes that noise caused. The blood pressure attributed increased heart beat and rise in blood pressure to which affected camelatory action. "Music does have quite a bit of influence on our neurological and physiological behavior," Haack said. Music was effective as a learning tool, according to Haack, because music stays in the mind longer than words. used as a learning tool in other cultures. during the first in a series of Thursday evening programs in Ellsworth. According to Haack, researchers have found that music was Haack distinguished between music and noise pollution with the terms "wanted" and "unwanted" sound. He said that music, even the noise element, is basically "wanted" sound; "wanted" pollution is "unwanted" sound. "Noise pollution is not a new problem." Haack said By JOHN FISHER Kansas Staff Writer Former Student Artist Opens One-man Show in Lawrence A one-man show of abstracts and figure drawings by John Gary Brown opened Sunday at the Seven East Eighth Gallery. Brown, 30, has won major competitions—first prize in the Mid-America Contest at the Nelson Art Gallery, Kansas City, Mt. Purcake Award at the Midwest Biennial, Omaha, Neb. (1987); Exhibition, Burien, Wash. (1969). Brown received his Master's Degree from the University of Washington in Seattle, and did graduate work at the University Admitting to a checkered career at KU, Brown reminisced earlier this week that the day he was born, he said, the third floor of Strong Hall and posed a nude girl with an American flag, he was asked to BROWN'S ABSTRACT oils are large. Five by six feet is the average size. They are romantic, rich, dense. Greys and dusty rose, cream and lavender rule more easily. They effeminate, spectaculary way. "the pretitness of the paintings is almost self-satirical, almost overworked," she means that I don't like them—the colors are nice and, though a little old-fashioned, I was very much amazed by the teacher who did a critique on some of these for my master's at Washington. He said, "All this work." "These aren't dehumanized images," Brown said. "They're When an artist is aware enough of his work to analyze a roomful of it with one such disarmingly frank remark, no other criticism is necessary. Besides, it would be useful to find anything more to criticize. He said that only recently has, noise pollution been recognized as a cause for this, according to Haack, and the concept that nose means ALL OF BROWN'S paintings here are them somewhere their concern There are high horizontal lines which could be gritter or whis "Saline County No. 1," painted in 1969, is an important transition work in the show, but the girls painted two others which are also in the exhibit, "Plain of Shafts" and "The T谋乳 of Milk." From the show, "Milk," partly "milk" in the show, one can see the soft, rice colors begin to emerge, framed by sharp contours. Brown began applying釉面 County, "and this technique seems to have given him the freedom needed to let colors form the hair." The omerge as subject, as personality, BROWN'S LATEST work on display is "Puget Sound." Still slightly wet, it's an example of where he plans to go. hypothetical, virginized, untouched by human. In a reverie, primeval." "I whittled this picture down to essentials," he said. "And now I knew how to play the guitar. I've loved this color work. I've been with it for three years." Women to Seek Influence By State Political Caucus Sponsored by the Wichita Women's Foundation, the conference is an outgift of National Women's Political Organization last July in Wichita Falls. Thirty states have organized groups affiliated with the national organization, and the state organizations in Kansas, are now organizing similar groups Women of all political persuasions will meet to help in the formation of a Kansas Women's Political Caucus March 4, in the ballroom of the Campus Acute Center at Wichita State University. Keynote speaker at the conference of wife of Sen. Fred Harris, D-OkM Mrs. Harris is a member of the organizing group of the National College. Others taking part in the day- ly meeting of the House of Philip Kasselbaum, daughter of former governor and 1936 presidential candidate A.H. M. Landon, Mrs. Don Voters legislative observer; Cora Robbie, chairman of the Kansas Legislature; and Status of Women, and Georgia treasurer of the United States. Conference activities will include workshops and selection of specific goals. A special training session will be conducted by two instructors and representatives of the national caucus. Neese Clark Gray, former treasurer of the United States "One of the primary goals is to make women aware of, and effect change in, government making on all levels of government," Karen Keeling, assistant director. Small Profits Endanger Bookstore Scholarships A decreasing profit margin, leveling off in enrollment, and normal expansion expenses were cited as causes of possible cuts in students' rebates or in the Urban Scholarship Program, J.D. Christman, manager of the Union Bookstore said Friday. Keesling said it was especially important to encourage women to run for political office. Because of the current in- terest in the management's opinion that in the future 'we can't pay both funds to rehab and treatment', he said. By FOSS FARRAR Kansan Staff Writer Chrestman was referring to the Urban Scholarship Program which the bookstore funds under Educational Services (SIS) in Wakefield. CHRESTMAN SAID he expected 80 per cent of the bookstore's patrons to claim rebates this semester. "We're in a leveing off of increased enrollment," Christman said nearly. Enrollment is not taking nearly as large an increase annually, as it has in the last five years. The institution must be prepared to take a big drop." The percentage of increase in annual net decrease, annual Christmas and that your profit is not going up as rapely while operating expenses Crestham salt that it is necessary to赔 that it was phone, labor, delivery and post messages, delivery and card payment tain bookstore counters or fixtures might have to be replaced in the near future. WHEN ASKED I of the 3 per cent difference in rebates was due to the Urban Scholarship Program, many of whom had resulted in some, but not all of the decrease in percentages. He said that other conditions, such as the profit margin's decrease, accounted for some of the lower Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Kansas Union, said $22,003 of the bookstore's net sales from the last financial period during the last financial period of July 1 to Dec. 1, 1971. It paid $42,500 was paid out in student rebates and $1,500 was waived from a team, from a total of $783,903 net profit. Ferguson said the rebate system had already been in existence when he had come to KU ten years ago. He said the rebate percentage had been as high as 8 per cent several years and are currently receiving a $3 per cent return on past purchases. THE FIXTURES upstairs are extremely old. They are from six to eight years old an; we don't know of them will collapse," he said. Ferguson said funds for the SES program would not necessarily have to be cut in order to keep rebate percentages low. Mr. Ferguson tended to use a sizeable profit and there was enough left to meet THE BOOKSTORE profit issue was a long-range one, Ferguson said. He said the Union Executive Committee asked the Student Senate to examine the issue so that funds could be established the students' refunds and operational expenses, scholarship funds would not have to be cut. "There's no guarantee of any profit." Ferguson said. "There may be nothing to distribute or it may continue to be normal. But how can you feel the students as to how these funds should be used?" OSWALD P. BACKUS Will Speak Today Can There Be A University? The Bookstore Committee will make its recommendations to the Student Senate March 1. A. J. Portents for the Future Let the Man from Equitable Buddy Bowles Haack posed the problem of distortion addicts in our society. He hypothesized that music does not sound right to the younger generation unless it is distorted. He attributes this fact to the transistor radio. Transistors, accordion, Haack, distort at high voltage. 8 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium Sponsored by Humanities Lecture Series Hack said psychologists have given a reason for the addiction. He said that the narcotic effect of music, defined by psychologists as a numbing effect, caused them to sleep more stereos or rock bands for hours. than they think when they talk loudly, slam a door or play a stereo Haack urged people to be more aware of regulatory regulations on sound levels. We can do something about noise pollution by being more quiet ourselves, Haack said. He said people make more noise tell you about The YOUNG PROFESSIONALS PROGRAM of life insurance with premium financing for full-time graduate students. KU Librarian Leads Survey George Jerkovich, head of the St George department of Watson Laboratories in Kansas, has been selected to prepare surveys of the collections on Yugoslavia at the New York Library and the Library of Congress. This honor has been bestowed on K.U. staff only twice, both times having been awarded to director of libraries. --- BUDDY BOWLES 2602 Belle Crest Lawrence, Kansas Phone 843-2616 843-2139 THE EQUITABLE The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States You Should Trust Us The project involves visits to both libraries, and will be completed by the end of this year. Jerkovich's surveys, outlining the kinds of material available on Vugelosia, will be distributed to students from schools and organizations to encourage wider use of the libraries' collections. Frosted Cherry Pie ONLY 10¢ Join HENRY'S For A Washington Birthday Celebration! FEB.21-22 MON. & TUES. Henrys 6th & Missouri --- Use Kansan Classified A Challenge: You only go around one time in life. And you've got to reach for You only go around one time in life. And you've got to reach for all the gusto you can. You can't settle for less. Because you don't get a second chance. This is the philosophy at the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. Easy enough to say. Not quite so easy to do. And perhaps not so easy to find. That's the challenge. Find an expression of the gusto life. And put it on film for all the world to see. (Or at least anybody who reads the Daily Kansan.) If your picture is judged to be of exceptional photographic content, your entry and credit will be printed in this paper and others like it. And you will be awarded $100. (If you are a professional photographer this offer is not for you, since you already have $100.) A panel, including students at the University of Kansas, will judge your photograph based on its subject matter, rather than your photographic technique. If your roommate is a judge, he won't help you. Please get the name and address from every principal person you use in your photograph This is important. Otherwise, your picture will be disqualified. You'll have until March 12, 1972 to get this assignment completed, should you accept. All photos submitted will become property of the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. Send pictures with your name and address to: Cooke Sales, Inc., c/o Schlitz Photo Competition, 715 New Jersey, Lawrence, Kansas 66044. Schlitz Someone would like to see what you have to say. EYE ©1972 Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co., Milwaukee and the world. 4 Tuesday, February 22, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. PETER NELSON Putting on the Dole When Senator Bob Dole became Republican National Chairman it looked as if Kansas had lost one of her congressional representatives. Dole's role as an administration hatchet man overshadowed his role as the junior senator from Kansas. His effectiveness in the Senate has been his back on administration critics more and more vitiligent. Recently, however, Dole has made some statements that may indicate a change in attitude. In a recent Washington interview Dole was surprisingly easy on two House Republicans that are challenging Nixon for the presidential nomination. Garry Wills "We assume Nixon will be the nominee," said Dole, "But John Ashbrook and Pete McCloskey have worked to ensure we are not the party of the purge." This is definitely a change from the 1970 GOP attitude toward party malcontents. At that time Republicans vigorously campaigned against the election of liberal Republican Charles Goodell in New York, saying he was no longer considered a party member because of his outspoken criticism of the administration's Vietnam policy. if Kansas Republicans nominated his long-time political foe John Anderson for governor, he "and" Mr. Obama "would work hard to elect him." A further hint of moderation on Dole's part came when he said that Despite these indications of moderation, Dole is still on shaky ground when he claims, as he did in another suggestion, that he is not a name caller. He has called Edmund Muskie and George McGovern "turncoats" on the war issue and he has said Muskie should withdraw from the presidential race because the North Pacific proposal. Last spring he called Ramsey Clark a "left-learning marshmallow," etc. Consequently, it would seem a good time for Kansans to compliment Dole on his recent more moderate statements. Perhaps if enough of Dole's constituency tell him they would rather have an effective senator to govern the manman. Dole will continue to moderate. And if Dole does assume a more rational and dignified attitude then perhaps Kansans could once again call representation in Congress. —Mike Moffet Associate Editor One Student's Letter To the Editor: Although originally submitting the results of my research concerning the lyrics of the Kansas State fight song five days before the game, I had no intention of being useful to the approximately 250 K.U. fans in Manhattan. I now realize how important it is for them to have to hand it to you. You think big. Why. I would have never thought of waiting until after the basketball games, attended by a team of lively lyrics—not when the football game is less than eight months away. Your timely publishing of the lyrics will allow perhaps 3,000 K.U. football fans to sing along with the K-State band. Ingenious. If I ever utter another less than complimentary word about the game, may my nose turn purple. But possibly more important than well-deserved words of praise for your fine journalistic efforts is the fact that following our guidelines to the K-State fight song, I received many queries from K.U. fans asking me to investigate the words of Missouri's fight song. I learned that these lyrics were common knowledge to Missourians and no challenge for a self-respecting ambitious lyric-researcher to the lyrics were too ridiculously offbeat; report in their conventional form Not guaranteeing that the lyrics will engross the reader in utter fascination in their slightly altered form, they are certainly not immune to the game than are the regular words, although they will have no relevance by Nov. 25 when the band is scheduled for rivalry with Mizzou in Missouri. Toss in the ball to Bosilevac. Lose, Tiger, lose to the Big Blue. Now you don't have Brewer to protect you. Lose. Tigers, lose to the Big Blue, You're in the big time when you play K U.. We will stomp you 'til you moan and groan Throw the ball away behind your back. Mark W. Robinett Kansas City senior and greet And you'll wish you'd stayed at home. 1960 Some time ago, a Nixon aide boasted to Allen Drury that "The (White House) staff itself is beginning to open up — we don't have any control on the Today Show, which is practically unheard of "Drury, when he reported this, said it was still unheard of as of July, 1971. But after six months he more kept the date, and predictably, he blew Nixon's "Creeps" Believe Still, it was good that he surfaced to give his blast on the Today Show—we should get a look, now and then, of the menials among whom Nixon lives and moves. The apparent exception to this rule is the most傲慢-of-Henry Kissinger is the most傲慢-of "experts" to those above him (as the most overbearing of bosses to those below). One cannot understand Nixon at all unless one rememberes that he worked in continual washings of sympathy from his favorite medications. talk to people The best thing about Mr. Halderman's previous unavailability was that no one had to take him seriously except the President (who is the only one very good at doing that). Before he became the inaccessible keeper of an inaccessible Oracle, he had a terrible business all alone, but even worse at small talk than his boss, and must take movies everywhere he goes as a way of avoiding having to It is so hard to respect Richard Nixon, to chug up that long effortful mountain of human obstacle, that those who make it, who actually reach the top, have built up such a head of steamy obsequiousness they tend to careen wildly down the other side, out of all control. Loyalty to the boss drives out other virtues and defines political vice. Thus, when Haledman called the Thus, when Haldeman called the President's critics, all but traitors, his words, very truly, did not reflect his views. He was not aware were administration whitewaggers speaking plain truth when they busyly scrubbed along behind him with lye and political detergents. No, if he had spoken his mind, he would have called him "out." His words were not deceptively insisting, but understating his mind. Haldeman, like his fellows, is the know of man who used to be hired to serve politicians out on the P-R front. It is a sign of our redirection of politics to ad campaigns that such men now sell the candidate day by day, not to the nation at large, but to the candidate. Nixon ran with the living billboards to paper himself up and talk about saying "Nixon's The One." What slogans as a wild occasional squawk on the Today Show, he hears as perpetual *rock* in the corridors. So the main thing to learn and remember from Haldeman's outburst is not that he made a slip and said something he did not mean, but that he creeps like him all over the White House who really believe what they say. Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate James J. Kilpatrick And in This Corner... JACKSONVILLE — George Corley Wallace, governor of Alabama, arrived a few minutes early for a TV interview here the morning before a stage, awaiting the stroke of 10:30, for all the world like a boxer waiting on the bell. Like him or loathe him, the guy is a His handlers were all around him, fetching water, pressing advice. His beautiful wife was at his side: "Is your color button buttoned, honey?" Out in the studio, 40 or 50 rooters had assembled; it marked the first time, in a series of such interviews at WIXT that an audience had turned up. At 10:25, the studio monitor shifted to a Hubert camera, and the crowd softly groaned, Wallace, playing along, made a face at the TV screen and winked at a straw-wattled blonde in the second row. The high of pure delight came forth. It was the old electricity flowing. Wallace has it. Few candidates do. In other years we saw flash-point ignition with Estes Kefauver and Adal Stevenson, with John Kennedy and later with his brother Robert. Barry Goldwater could kindle a Griff and the Unicorn crowd. Eugene McCarthy had the touch in 1968. It is an indefinable something that sets a current of high excitement in motion, and it is more priceless to a politician than high powered position papers. The red lights of the cameras flame into action, and Wallace, a one time semi-pro boxer, is instantly in the ring. He leans forward to meet his questioners, left shoulder high, hands failing, feet moving. Tonight the heist begins. He is hit only once, when an antagonist surprises him with a left book on President Allende of new lasting I have a secret plan for peace. which I will make perfectly clear following the elections here in 1968 and Chile. Wallace clinches, then turns the attack with a general response on foreign aid. At 11 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ By Sokoloff THE FANATIC "The got greatest skill lies in his sheer aggressiveness. He always carries the attack. All of them . . . have publicly failed to oppose busing of children for purposes of racial balance; Wallace never lets the crowds forget it." "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." By every indication, Wallace is going to win this democratic primary down here on March 14. John Lindsay is gaining, so they say, and Hubert Humphrey is coming on strong. Henry Jackson is coming on strong in the field. The state is awash in order to play. The papers are struggling to keep up with the news. When Humphrey on Monday promised to nominate o'clock he is done, and once again the crowd is all around him. It is like sitting close to an open fire. a woman justice to the supreme court, a story that would ordinarily have won top headlines got three paragraphs instead. The name of the game is Wallace. He is turning out the biggest crowds —3,000 on a rainy night in St. Petersburg—and not just to get fans to turn them on. The question of amnesty comes up. Wallace grimaces with distaste for draft dugouts, "No, mma' am," he says, rapping a hard answer in his soft flannel accent, "I wouldn't grant flannel attention in the audience, clenched fists of approval Fly up like arrows. He is still the same old Wallace, still jabbing at "intellectual snobs," still strowing punches at men and opponents, but he is older and mellower now. The Miami Herald asked him to define the major issue of 1972. His answer, surgerically, was "national defense." The governor's greatest skill lies in his sheer aggressiveness. He always carries the attack. When he goes, he hourlies a sheet of concrete that records of Humphrey, Jackson, McGovenn and Muskie. All of them, at one time or another, have publicly failed to oppose the busing of children for purposes of school funding. They never let the crowds forget it. The Alabaman hasn't a prayer of winning the nomination in July. After the Florida primary, he faces much less friendly country in Pennsylvania. West Virginia, but in a brown-out field, it is on with full voltage. The certified luminaries may be irked by his neon flame, but they will ignore him at their peril. Copyright 1972, The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. America's Pacemaking college newspaper THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom-UN-4 4810 Business Office-UN-4 4358 Published at the University of Kansas during the academic year except when required by semester periods. Mail subscription rates $4 a semester. $10 a second year. Send any additional goods, services and employment offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily intended as an endorsement of the publisher. BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser... Mel Adams Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Carol Young Associate Clerk Norman Massey Jay Barratt Dale Pintereggner David Murray Dave Murray NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman News Advisor .. Del Brinkman Editor Associate Editor Campus Editor New Frontier Copy Chiefs Assistant Campus Editors Special Editor Assistant Sport Editor Editorial Writer Editorial Manager Writing Manage Editors Bartender Editors Photographers Office Manager Greg Sorber, Tom Dwyer Tonda Sanders Dustin Johnson IT REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READERS DESK SERVICES, INC. 290 SCHNEIDER AVE., NEW YORK, NY 10027 1 Tuesday, February 22, 1972 University Daily Kansan 10 Lerner Explains New Revolution Kansan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG [Image of a man with curly hair, wearing a suit and bow tie.] Max Lerner Addresses Symposium Speaker calls for radical humanism . . . Students' Aid Rewarded The Student Union Activities Board is accepting applications for the University-Community Service Scholarship. The new KU scholarship is a result of the efforts of many students to save lives during the April firefighters during the Kansas Union fire of April 1970. Because of assistance given by students during the fire, some insurance carriers decided to give a gift. This gift was used by the SUA board in establishing the scholarship. The amount of the award is the interest on the original gift each year. University or Lawrence community. Scholastic ability and financial need are minimal considerations for the award. Applications are available in the Sua office in the Kansas Union and must be returned by 5 p.m. March 3 to the SUA office. There are two qualifications for the scholarship. Applicants should show their academic background or graduate student at the University of New Orleans. BY RIVIAN BELL Kansan Staff Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., and Minority Leader Steve Scalia met with President Nixon's meetings with Communist Chinese leaders seems to have gotten off to a good start. "I'm neither an optimist nor a pessimist, but a possible-ist. Nothing is guaranteed, but everything is possible." Mansfield said that while he did not have to come out of the meetings, the first step has been taken" toward improved relations between the two parties. These words may seem like the worst poison to a cynic, but the Max Lerger they speak for seven years reflect a reflection on life as an American Born in Russia, Lerner has spent 65 of his 70 years in the United States. A columnist for the New York Post since 1949, he also serves as professor of American history at Brandeis University. Lerner appeared last week in the North Carolina CFA as a participant in the Symposium held at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. LERNER REPRESENTS a rarity in this country, for he is a man who has made a profession of writing. He thinks I could be doing anything else." Though he bears the appearance of an absent-minded professor, he speaks like a sage and is adept at the incessant process of change. Lerner believes that America is not a reactionary society, but in instead "the most revolutionary society in the world today." He explained that the term "revolution" in this sense indicated an accelerated pace of society while left no part untouched. Lerner said that regardless of the repressions that existed in America, "our society is still tolerably open." "OUR REVOLUTION takes its own shape and course as any true revolution does," he continued. "We cannot compare it to anything else because it does not happen on any previous pattern." Lerner said none of the past three presidents had understood the changes which have been occurring for the past 15 years. He cited former President Lyndon Johnson's case as one of the reasons he understood the revolution, he would have identified with it." Richard Nixon, on the other hand, "understands it but does not identify with it." Lerner said the President's new China policy was a belated announcement on in this country. He described the excursion as "one of the most important parts of our life." LERNER'S SCHEME of the American revolution involves four parts. These include the rise of nationalism in humanization of both the social and natural environment, a rethinking of American institutions with the illumination of the role of the intellectual as innovator and a values revolution in societal consciousness, information of existing life styles. While focusing on the new revolution, Lerner has refused to lose sight of the "American Dream." He considers that the future is a dream of possibility, how life can be lived on this continent. " He admitted, however, that the credibility of the "American Dream" had eroded and needed to be restored. TO ACHIEVE this aim, Lerner recommended a framework of 'radical humanism' Radical humanism would view human rights as the cornerstone of programs or projects would be tested by how well they uphold them. Lerner said the beginning to humanism could be found in increasing communication between humans and both an outer and an inner universe existed, and the real communication among different cultures "To start this communication, we need a creative leap." Lerner explains how through the window of the other. Without this creative leap, the window would be shut. Ecology Law Group Sets Speakers, Plans Projects George Coggins, president of the local Sierra Club, and Ron Baxter, president of the Kansas State University, scheduled to speak at the meeting. The National Environmental Law Society (NELS) will hold its second meeting of the semester at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the international Room of the job Writer president of the organization and Lawrence third-year law student said Monday. Members may submit project proposals which are screened by the organization's three officers, then placed in projects file. From this file members choose projects to work on individually or in teams. At least half the amount of time spent on each project is up to the individual. "This area is so large in terms of storage that I will Ward said, "that is easy to go together and blemom the problem either without doing the work or not." "That happened a lot last year, but with our new organizational structure we should be able to accomplish a good deal this 4 More File In Senate Race The candidates who filed for the Senate Monday are Eric Hardman, Salina junior, in the Senate. Joshua White, Shawna Mission freshman, in Centennial College; Cathy Reinhardt, Great Bend freshman, in Pearson College; John Rowe, a freshman, in North College spring," he said. DEADLINE FOR FILING For the Student Senate and Class Offices Wednesday, Feb. 23 A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intent to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary of elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OF FICERS must file a delaration of intent to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Petitions may be picked up between 1:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m.at the Student Senate Office, B-105 Union. For Further info: Call 864-3710 There Will Be A Meeting for All Candidates on Thursday, Feb.24 at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room Kansas Union. All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on deadline date. Ward said planned projects include making suggestions to local businessmen of ways they can improve the environment, and a lawsuit against Attorney Mike Elwell with research aimed at eliminating eyesores from the highways, an investigation of the State Board of Health and writing a pamphlet on the public's environmental rights. MINDBENDING BEER BARGAINS! MONDAY----50° Pitchers from 8-9 p.m. FRIDAY—50° Pitchers from 3-4 p.m. TUESDAY—All the beer you can drink for only $2.50 at . . . THE STABLES Patronize Kansan Advertisers NAPOLI CITY Overwhelmed? Slow, unorganized reading is boring! You lose concentration and perspective! You seem to spend all your time studying! or Alison Confident Fast, intelligent reading holds your attention! You grasp the ideas sooner & more accurately! You have time for leisure enjoyment! READ THE ENTIRE YEAR'S WESTERN CIVILIZATION ASSIGNMENTS IN ONLY 8 WEEKS Reading Dynamics teaches you how to find the meaning in all those thousands of words. Our instructor is also a Western Civ. Instructor. Our unique note-taking technique simplifies, organizes. and relates ideas in graphic form. New Class Begins Next Week Begins March 2 and meets for 8 Thursdays 7-9:30 p.m. Finishes just before the W.C. Comprehensive Exam of April 29. P. S. If you want to take Reading Dynamics but do not need the Western Civ readings, you may join the class and read in your own materials. FREE Mini-Lesson Wed., Thurs., Fri., Feb. 23, 24 and 25 7:30 & 8:30 p.m.at the Reading Dynamics Institute I EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Downstairs at the Sound—Hillcrest Shopping Center 925 Iowa Phone 843-6424 6 Tuesday, February 22, 1972 University Daily Kansan MONT BLEU SKI 3 MI. RUSSIA - SKIING ON THE MOUNTAINS THE FIRST PROBLEM in learning to ski is getting the proper fit in the bindings. John Burgland, Galsburg, Illinois. sophomore, gets fitted by Paul Samaras, Hoopston, ill. senior, to make sure that the bindings will not break an ankle in case of a fall. After fitting, the skier must master the lift rope. To accomplish this balance the first time he attempted the lift, but made it on the top in second try. The trip up seems long, but the trip down often seems longer. 41 100 Ski Kansas By TUULA TOSSAVAINEN Kansan Staff Writer John Burgland, Galesburg, IL, sophomore, stood at the top of Mont Blue, trying to be more courageous. He and his classmates had first time John had worn skis boots and skies. Covered with snow next to him was Steve Burgens of Kanas "This is the first time for me too." Steve comforted John, "but not the last. The sk bug bit me today, man. A moment later Steve fell down again. Dr. William Tripplet, executive director of Mont Blanc and founder of the area, watched John coming down. "We have had some skiers that can't get their skiis stopped until they reach the parking lot." Trippie Mont Bleu, previously the Blue Mountain, is open for seventh season. On snowy weeks about 300 feet above ground, it is not a room at all, area, said there were 200 boots and skis available for renting, but that they were usually rented out by noon. The mountain is 46 miles north of Mont-Blanc. Czechoslovakia, are available on weekends "People who come here are mainly from Kansas City, Topeka and Lawrence," Wisler said. "Some of them come all the way from Oklahoma. They come here to practice before they go to Colorado." "The season has been so short this winter, only a few weeks, so that when we are open, people come all at the same time, and the slopes have been rather flat. We have also likely only four minor injuries have occurred so far. In addition to the main slope, Mont Blue has a movie hill for the beginners. The movie hill is designed to end with a large waterfall. Sitting at the fire lounge, Tom Seshif of Topka said that for someone who had skied for many years it was "very difficult to find a spot" "It takes about two seconds to come down, and then you have to go up again," he said. "Still, this is the closest place you can ski, and I come here quite often." he said. After three hours of skiing, with a red nose and almost frozen feet, Bergland said he wanted to try the trick. "But I would probably take it kind of low and slow," he said. THE SKIERS WILL BE CENTERED IN THE MIDDLE OF THIS PLAIN. THE Skiers WILL BE CENTERED IN THE MIDDLE OF THIS PLAIN. LOTS OF AMBITION coupled with inexperience often cause the law of gravity to bring the novice skier to a standstill and a willingness to back up and try it again can lead to aces and a successful afternoon. TOM HARRISON 1 AS PROFICIENCY IS GAINED, the skier often has a chance to see himself mirrored in those who are just beginning to learn, to train, or to learn more about skiing. In addition, with fewer falls than the previous one, after more than a dozen runs at the hill, the warmth of the ski lodge and conversation with friends about the problems of the day provide a welcome change of pace. Kansan Photos by Ron Schloerb NICOLE BROTHERS University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 22.1972 From Ragtime to Classical 7 Career Spans 50 Years By MARSHA SEARS Kansan Staff Writer Austin Ledwitt, associate professor of music, began his music career by playing the piano in silent movies. "As soon as I learned I could make money with music, my general education was ruined. The wise man is one who chooses what he can do with the least cost. Everyone is a solid brick at heart." In spite of his "ruined education," Ledwid has played the bassoon professionally in operas, musical shows and symphonies, under the direction of many famous conductors. He played under famous conductors, Ledwid rarely knew them personally. "They used to treat players like recalcitrant children, but now they smile and fire you," Ledwith said. of music. In Russia, we play in the cold wearing our coats and hats." "me. Sevikty, d-do you w-want me to o-o-open you w-window?" asked the symphony's stuttering personnel manage Now that money has become a problem with symphonies, there s no time to waste and no time or fun. Ledwith said. "Don't make waves. Do what you have to and shut up," said Ledwitt. "That's the way to make it." "CONDUCTORS NEVER come to the tuning room. There is an unwritten law that they don't associate with their musicians," Ledwid said. "Conductors have to be universally hated to be discovered." Durocur Lecher says, "Nice guys finish in last place." OCCCIONALLY, though, the musicians have an opportunity to get even. Ledwitt said. One winter day in Boston, when the practice room temperature was set at 85°F, a conductor, Fabian Svetskiy, said to his complaining musicians, "In America, you are not lovers TO MAKE a recording without mistakes sometimes takes a symphony as long as two weeks. This requires a great amount of from the musicians and a great amount of money to pay them. "When you work in music, you find yourself demanding perfection," he said. "A recording is like a T.V. program and an unreasonable facsimile of the real thing results. Listening to a recording is not like bearing live music." Musicians, he said, listen to how music is played, not to what is being played. For physical reasons, Ledwith has had to give up playing. The conductor sometimes becomes defensive because some songs don't appeal to musicians than he, Ledwish said. In the old days, the conductors often played in solos. lose their stretch. Luckily, this disease, unlike emphysema, can be arrested if the musician stops playing. "DO I MISS it? No." he said, "very years all at last is long enough. I'd like to play instruments and instrument players often developed an occupational disease similar to emphysema with a heart attack instrument, a musician's lungs "The best things that happen to you are the things you aren't planning for. KU is the best thing that ever happened to me," she says. "You are students and students are here. The people you are with make life." Eighteen years ago, Ledwid came to the University of Kansas to teach bassoon, music history and orchestra. He directed small woodwind groups. When people are 18 to 21 years old, they are willing to learn. When people are 18 to 21 years old, they are willing to learn. When people are 18 to 21 years old, they are willing to learn. "Develop a curiosity about life. If you don't, you might as well." Program to Involve Aged In Recreational Activities "Living Environments for the Aged" will be studied by the KU Center for Applied Behavioral Neuroscience. Dr. Todd Tishler, director of the Center and associate professor of human development and family sciences. The Office of Economic Opportunity and the Institute of Mental Health provided the funds, he said. "We are concerned with Risley said the Center was conducting its research at Wakaraus Monor Retirement Home a nursing home for aged in Lawrence. The research project, he said, was the first of its kind and the problem of inactivity. Riley said he planned to combat this problem with various examples of training. building a better environment for the aged, Risley said. "AU staff members, our waking hours, most nursing home residents are found sitting in their own rooms, no engaging with each other, participating in any activity." Although relatives and friends bring the aged presents, Risley said, they seldom have a voice in the selection of those presents. "To allow them to have a better involvement in the project, we plan a mobile commissary so that the residents can make their own selections," she said. The mobile commissary will carry food, clothing and other necessities. Risley said the Center for Applied Behavioral Analysis has applied to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare for a 3-year grant of $50,000 which will enable the center to offer intensive and intensive program at the Wakaraus Nursing Home. Student to Teach Shotokan Karate Kansan Staff Writer There will be a $15 monthly charge and all students will become members of Shokolan which charges a yearly fee of $5. By JUDY HENRY Karate classes taught by a University of Kansas student will begin the first part of March. Dave Mills, Lake Lotawana, Mo. Massachussetts School in a Shokolan Karate School at 1800 Massachusetts St. Classes including a jude course and a women's course in self-development, week nights and Saturdays, any time, advance dependence on individual development and not on completion of a particular course. Mills, who holds a first degree black belt, will teach the courses. Jon Beltran of Kansas City, Mo., midwest director of Shotokan Kodama, will be an instructor. Beltran holds a third degree black belt. Mills said the many styles of karate originated from the idea of self-defense, but some forms took it further than other styles. According to Mills, Shotokan was developed by Funakoshi Gichin in Okinawa from exiting a nuclear plant in 1957 and introduced it in Japan in 1916. MILLS SAID karate is a method of self-defense without equipment. The student that placed emphasis on dynamic attacking and counterattacking techniques using the entire body, often with the goal of coordinating his mental and physical capabilities to produce the physical power characteristic of martial arts. Mills separated karate into three groups: Kihon, the basic technique; Kumite, the prearranged forms that simulate combat; and Kumite, the sparring. He emphasized the importance of coordination in karate. He said perfection of the art was the mental and physical abilities. KU Student Picked For African Tour According to Mills, karate requires mental control and an understanding of one's self. Although Von Ende said two Rotarians approached him and asked him to apply, anyone filling in for the tour. All applicants had to be between 25 and 35 years old, non-identical and working at their profession. Rick Von End, Abilene, Tex. Rick Reid, Calif., the director of University Relations, will go to South Africa Rotary International exchange to Karate has been commercialized in the United States and people do not understand its value. Mills said. "I'm teaching karate as an art form, not as a sport. It's a physical discipline to improve the body and the mind," he said. Van Ende is one of seven people from the Kansas district who will wili serve as their Rotarian spouse and their Rotarian sponser. March 11 for Rio de Janeiro and Johannesburg. The group will travel to Nairobi, Cario, Alteng and Romo. The group will travel through South Africa and Swaziland to counterparts, including business partners, mining, menhiring officials, educa MILLS BEGAN studying karate three years ago with Beltran He spent several months in the United States, where he Oshima, the first person to teach Shookou karate in the United States, and he has returned there periodically to work with students in the Japanese teacher. tors and government officials, required to keep daily journals, make reports, and speak to Rota- the United States be said. The men will be hosted by Rotarian families in Africa, Von Ende, and they will speak to Rotarian groups about life in the United States. He said the Rotary would pay all the expenses. According to Von Ende, two countries exchange with each other for two years. Last year, he said the South Africans came Von Ende, a political science student, said, "I don't think me understand why people understand what they institute a system like apartheid. Maybe my background will help me understand the reasons which cause this. Health Care Information Proposed by KU Group Members of the February Sisters and the Student Services Committee meet Monday night to discuss recent advances and proposals for improved health care at Watkins Hospital. Plans for making a student board for establishing boards connected with Watkins Hospital were also considered. Dr. Schwegler, director of the hospital, expressed his interest in setting up such a board, Alain said. The committee would be not limited to senators, but would hopefully consist of a cross-section of informed and interested "I WANT TO teach people how not to fight," he said. "You know you have the ability to kill enemies." He said control not to fight. Using the Kathy Allen, Topeka sophomore and co-chairman of the Student Services Committee, will be conducting a constructive action to be taken on the matter of over-all student health care. Allen suggested a form for preparing an informational handout sheet, to be made available to all students. clarify the differences in health care at Watkins Hospital. The handout would also list specific health services available to students. Allen said she believed Senate would sponsor this action. Alien also discussed the proposal by doctors at Watkins Hospital who have volunteered to write a weekly health column for the newspaper would deal with articles would deal with policies and procedures at Watkins Hospital, and then the columns in issue 21 specific health issues. Allen said ability and having it are two different things." Although he agreed with the importance of self-defense, he said that his training was control of the mind and body through discipline in all areas. Mills said there had been Shotokan karate exhibitions to show the techniques of the martial arts, and actually mental confrontations. UNITED STATES INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA UNIVERSITY UNITED STATES INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY Dwight Boring* says... GRADUATE SCHOOLS An Admissions Representative will be on campus SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION - HUMAN BEHAVIOR For an appointment See your placement office. [Image of a man in a suit] JUST GOOD FRIENDS "If You'd Like to Know How to get the most for your life insurance dollars, contact me and I'll tell you about College Life's BENEFACET, a famous policy designed expressly for college men and told exclusively to call. The benefits are preferred life insurance risks. No obligation. Give me a ring now." February 24 thru March 4 8 p.m. K. U. Experimental Theatre 844, 1982 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansas are offered about regard to color, coded or natural color. Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608 REPRESENTING THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA A *Dwight Boring One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free! 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 Now you can buy stereo components from Koch Audio or visit the dining at BAY AUDIO; 842-294-2911, Prairie Ave. The only true stereo discount house in the midwest. 2-29 Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.) Offer expires Feb. 28, 1972 KANSAN WANT ADS Take a look at my mistakes. We have plenty of them from all over the world Haas Imports, 1029 Mass. 2-22 Western Cv. Notes=Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: I. If you use them, you can use them. One day Northside Country Shop, 707 North Street, Northside, IL 60918. Aided, Used furniture, collection items, old wood cooking and heating stoves, electric stoves, bicycle, fireplace, wood beds, chairs, bedding, other of other useful items Open to 5 daily. Herb Allergen B3-345. day 319 FOR SALE you're at a disadvantage Either way it comes to the same thing. New Analysis of Western Civilization Campus Mountain, 1f West 14th, 1f Phone 842-0767 ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Do you use 7.25-15 tire size? We're closing out 5 parts of our best snow cover at $10.90 each plus 2.25 BF (cY39 PM) FR. Stoneback -$222 Tire Clearance! New FD14-10 wide Tire Clearance! New FD14-10 wide Free installation at Ray Stoneback's (new FD14-15) $20 more) tires white side or whitlows 2. If you don't, you're at a disadvantage. Powerful Zenith stereo portable sold new $199.00, now only $50.00. component set demo cut to $89.00 Ravon Max Open Thursdays, Max Open Thursdays, 2-22 8 track stereo tapes $3.49 with this coupon Gregg Tire Co., 814 W 23rd 2-23 69 VW bug, custom interior, 68 VW bus, A/C, radial tires, super clean Call: 843-7248. 2-22 Powerful 80W ELAA (E) Magnavox inner amp-AM-FM unit cut to $250.00 - Rock Star Stereo to $100.00 - Ray Stoneback to $92.95 Stereo Room Stereo) 2-22 TACO GRANDE 33 RPM Special Award Winner, Elaine Bentley, Trombled Water, Trombled Water, Peter Newerman, Julia Mrs. Robinson, etc. only $1.00 each. No other same recordings only $2.00 $2.22 1720 West 23rd Street VOX Hollow Body Electric Guitar VX Hollow Body Electric Guitar condition with hard-shell case $190 Call Hand at 824-6099 2-22 1715 Cameray, 350 loaded, turbo-hydromatic airy power radio, M-strack electric guitar, Tremolo Also Tunein 1900 Trainer Also Tunein 1900 Trainer Complete line of men's and women's dress shoes. Size 10-12. $49. 1984 Buck Special 4-del. V-8, automatic transmission, factory air 49,000 rpm, automatic pump, rain condition and running condition. Price is per pair. 1963 Morris Minor convertible. Low mileage, excellent condition. Call evenings. 842-4136 or 843-1240 2-23 BOKONOON NONKOBN New shipment of shirts, jackets, dresses, and jeans this week. Bat dance specials, carnival shows. Vermont Open 11-6. 2-22 Toyota, '71, automatic, tape deck, real fine car. $1,935. Call Bill. 842- 3473 2-24 Austin America 1986, AM-FM radio, automatic, 4 new tires. Call Mark at 482-2534 or by Phi Kappa Tau. 1120 w/ W 11th. St. 2:22 Sharp Auto Lens lens fit all mini SLIMA R7s 1.28 mm / 30mm 1.28 mm / 15mm Prin Strobe. Rechargeable. Mounting kit for matching lounges chairs. BM48-800 - 2.23 1961 VW to 1971 VW from $495 to $1,995. Bank financing available. Jay- hawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 843-2 2200. Neat old flags to cover that ugly spot Earthshine, East 8th and Mass. 2-24 Yamaha-360. 71, in good shape. Runs great, must sell now! Also. Buho 400 tenor saxophone, like-new case with keys to call. Go 843-525-4944 for Lee. 2:24 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES One group of shirts and sweaters up to 50% off. Earthshine, 12 E. 8th St. 2-24 **HELP:** For sale. 1968 Fiat 850. Excellent running condition. Good body paint. Nice interior. Fri. 8-3:00 to 9:30. Fr. John Gaines 2-24 1851 Buck Wilder. gold door-20 HT. P/S. P. air, cord. $880.00 cash or money. Mint condition. Volkwagen. 222a Iowa. 843-220 2-22 Going trucking Do it right. 46 VU bus, FM radio, f麦筒, excellent tires Engine recently overhauled. Call Mike. 842-7125 at 6:09 p.m. #3 www.vu.com 1968 Dodge Dart, white, 4-door sedan (6.3) speed transmission, new tires, 6-speed manual, will finance entire balance, balance loan, 2-2-22, mileage 832-2000. 2-22 Deadline : 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Going camping over spring break? Stop by Sunflower Surplus. 815 Vermont for all your needs. 2-23 IBM ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS. 842-8634. 2-23 Three days 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $0.2 padding : 4 days after publication Men's big Mac flannel shirt small, medium, big, large and extra-large in J C Penney's work clothes department 2-25 Pickens Auto Parts and Service 24th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353 Midland & Iowa Sunday 10:15 Parts at a discount Low-Low Jeans with the flare look at Low-Low Prices The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-25 Super Sale Dresses. Values from $18- $25, now $5-$10. The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 2-25 Jeans, Jeans, Jeans Latest styles, best collection, best prices. The Attic, 927 Mass 2-25 Crop Tops-biggest selection, newest styles; $7.00 The Attic; 927 Mass. 2-25 MOTORCYCLES Best offer takes 107 Huaranqua Mach4 1971 Yamaha PT-3) 1971 MG midget conv 1123 New York St. Newark 745-708-725 1233 New York St. 1970 hwte, burtte, automatic stickleback transmission, 2800 miles, sliding roof, radio, pushout windows, radial gal 6027 or best offer at Carson 6027 © 2025 Carrson SUEDE PURSES--assorted selection only $6.00 at The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-25 Marniya C 23, TLR 80 mm f2.8 120/220, and sheet film 843-8473 Jay 9.28 cheap 60 min cassette? Buy them, need 40 min tapes reg. $250, our $150, 90 min tapes reg. $250, our $180, 30 min tapes reg. $250, 8621-981 or 8621-0296 Schwinn 10 speed, like new. Only used for 3 months.Call 842-2061 MUHRAY PHOENIX (10-speed) *4150 Good Shape Bill 842-908-3087 1965 Mustang 289 engine, 4 speed transmission. Call 842-2374 between 4 and 6 p.m. For Steve: 2-28 FOR RENT able for two separate bedrooms; a bedroom with a walk-in wardrobe; bath furnished or unfurnished bedroom with a walk-in wardrobe; jetting room or balcony; West Hill kitchen; en suite bath; Call 24 hours a day 811- 675-6300. for rent—one or two bedroom apart, two-bedroom apartment, forall, all electric kitchen laundry facilities, color T V-available. Call Apts. at 24th and Ride Court. Ridge House Apts -- for the budget muffled! All the popular features include 2 bedrooms in town屋 EF1 and 2 bedrooms in town屋 EF2 and 1116 for home. 2043 Cedarwood-1116 for home. 2043 Cedarwood-1116 for home. 2043 Cedarwood-1116 for home. HILLVIEW APARTMENTS — 1733-45 with $1, $18 million one and two apartments, two bedrooms, and appartments. Carpeted, elegant, decorated with much expensive apartment space of much more. Two rooms to rent to two quiet male students $30 and $15 monthly. Share bath and kitchen. No pets. Ask for Greg at 842-8865. 2:24 WANT PEACE AND QUETT? Need 1 or 2 roommates. Large house in country. Call 842-7771, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Fin. John-Friday. 2-24 COLLEGE HILL MAYOR now has apartments with many must-have paintings and utility facilities, pool and laundry and walking pathways. Visitors were 1741 at 1741 W.pk, April 19, 2016 - 2:28 ITS NEVER TOO LATE, and it is a nice program that is not comfortable or attractive. One call to Mrs. Forgarty of 2017-A Harvard Road and you can obtain portent details on the apartment located and most attractive condominium and Missouri. Avalon Apartment, Mount Vernon, Iowa; Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Labs of Louisville, Kentucky; soundproof construction, please rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, please move in or lease reasons you would enjoy living there. Make this semester in Lawrence a location for August occupancy and make your own parking policy can be arranged too! 2-3 A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS. Ton a season when the weather is not this weather. Tear off this spring card in your bag! Watch free cable TV All at Discount! Watch free cable TV All at Discount! Watch free cable TV All at Discount! 122nd Indiana 8-216-255 122nd Indiana 8-216-255 Would you like something a little out of the ordinary in an apartment? Let me explain. We will now until school is out Fireplace, furnished!灌满了 $99.00 for Cab Apartment for rent. One bedroom, $85.00 19 W. 14th Call: 842-8263 after 6:00 p.m. 2-25 Vacancy in contemporary home with swimming pool for young man Private entrance and bath. $55/mo. utilities paid VI 2-895. /2-25 University Terrace Apartments — furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $10 and up. Apartment is located at 93rd Ave., NW, Apt. 18, B or call 143-843-53 senior or graduate woman to share 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus, utilities paid, also large sleeping room on second floor VI 3-18 2-25 NOTICE UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright. (816) 474-4676. tf KITTYCATS is coming and he loves pineapple mussie drinks. 2-25 **MCAF:** Preparation for the Medical Assistant and exam-training designed to prepare students for academic load. For information call: 518-620-3759. **CENTRAL F·O·BOX 366, New York** THE CONCORD SHOP - ARTIST CANVAS - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz. - pts. - qts. only 25% OFF - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock —others on order INFANT DAY-CARE, CENTER. 842-762- 904. Professional care for child-care in a room no longer than 12 mo. Full or part-time men. Specially designed education. 2-25 DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe. Leave anytime from N.Y. or Eastern US to any of the 15 IDs issued. Flight Center 227 North Wisconsin. Wisconsin 3306 606-263-3133. For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center-804-4441. ff TEE PEEP PRIVATE PARTY CLUB — Welcome. back students. It'll pay various for second seminary or term party. We'll have a party for the party par- meter. Nice band stand, black suit. We also have special monthly rates meetings. Phone or contact John meeting phones. Meeting or contact John National Tee Peep 24-40 & 39 HU- brush Business phone 2452-2822 www.businessphone.com For that extra accessory we've got some old silk scarves for a dollar apiece at Earthshine. East 8th and Mass. 2-24 Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 100 brand new used, western and Hawaiian shirt coming in this week at HOKONO $20.00 denim jeans at HOKONO 819 Vermont 2-22 Spend this summer working in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information and $1 to Colorado, call 3-4-6-Boulder. Cox #8002 3-6-4-Boulder. Cox #8002 McCONNELL LBR. CO. 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 Those do-dads you've been looking for?-That make your wormous sparkle? Well, we have a few for ya at Earthshine on 8th at Mass. 2-24 Now taking applications for waitress at a quality Lawrence Restaurant, we are looking to work with people and be able to accept but will train if necessary. A summer student and following school year student are required for excellent Phone compensation. SANDSWEEEPERS JUST ARRIVED THE ATTIC. 927 Mass. 2-25 JUST ARRIVED-Swim wear and sand sweepers. The Alley Shop. #43 Mass. 2-25 KITTYCATS is coming and he's got a hot tip on some catnip. 2-25 SWIM WEAR JUST ARRIVED THE ATTIC. 927 MASS 2-25 Appering at the Mad Hater on Wed, Feb. 23, and Fri, Feb. 25. BUZYZ AND CHIP, a jazz rock duo Free admission. 2-25 Women's alterations, 20 years exp. experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30. 3-13 Michigan St. Ibar, B-Quen 315 Mich. Boston St. Barrett 248 Mich. chicken-fillet-steak 80 Beef Broiler- chicken-fillet 80 Beef Broiler- chicken-fillet 80 Beef Broiler- chicken-fillet 9 SWINGING COATS AND CAPES FOR SPRING THE ALLEY SHOP 43 MASS 2-28 Customers for valentine day gift ideas at Hodge Podge. Open late Thursdays: 15 West 9th. 2-22 WANTED Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30. 3-7 ATTENTION TWINS 18 years and older. Must have medical stint to attend clinical trial and have blood and brain wave test, Individual to share house with two owners. Owner room, fantastic location, share dinner meal. Rent $400 plus departure deposit 1095-842-497 842-497-2 2-23 Five days FOUND NEAR UNION 1989 'man's KU class ring, Red stone, KU embosed. Identify initials. Call after 5. 843-4106. Pay for aid. Female roommate wanted. Jayhawk Towers. $55/mo., utilities paid. Call Carolyn at 812-6303 2-24 A person to co-operative living group (14 women, 3 men, age 21-36) and a two-year-old, with private or information call woman 842-8469 2-25 Wife of graduate student will do neww- ing; peasant dresses, long skirts, etc. Will also do mendring, hems, row pieces. Call 842-5794. Call Rock hand needs place to practice by March 1st. Willing to pay if necessary. Call 843-8086 or 841-2504 2-24 Roommate to share two bedroom own room, apartment. Completely furnished $72.50 with bills paid major major (piano) 842-9037 PERSONAL POETRY WANTED for anthology. BOOKING AVAILABLE velope for prompt reply. Send to Editor, DILEWLFEN PRESS, 1887 East Austin Drive, Los Angeles, CA- 80021 90021 Valentine Purse Sale at Hodge Podge. 10' off. Feb. 10—Feb. 17. 15 West. 9th. 2-22 TOW SERVIC Be Prepared for hups-ups starting service London 6044 Tony's 66 Service starting service Lawrence, Kansas 66044 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Competition CSC TOYOTA THRUMPH 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 To the guy who found our little white dog, with the thorny tail "Thank you." Cannot express our gratitude. 9.28 If you're down on those tight fits— just wait. Earthshine in the Lower East Side. 2-24 Your old cowboy shirts, Hawaiian prints, and letter sweaters and jackets are here. Earthshine, 12 E. Nth. 9-14 We've got a cap to fit your head Funky styles from the engineer to the Big Apple on Mass. 2-24 Earthshine at 8th on Mass. EARRINGS - EARRINGS + more EARRINGS The Attic, 927 MASS 3-25 LONG DRESSES FOR PARTIES SHOP 843 MASS 2-28 TYPING Trip-issued bicycle. Pugster, Glent Horse. In stock in 21, 23, 24, 25 inches. In stock in 21, 23, 24, 25 inches. On Bike Shop, 1601 Mass. WE HAVE TAPES FROM A TO Z. We have tapes from A to Z. Experienced typist will type your term paper, thesis or dissertation Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call VI 32-381. Rustkman M. Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention. 843-0958 2-29 Term papers, these typed accurately and promptly, your choice of type is a good option. You can edit at reasonable rates: 842-0797 night: 842-5665 night, Ronda Day: 842-8300 Experienced in typing tissues, disser- tation, and typing devices. Have electric typewriter with ptye taster. Accentuate and prompt serve. Receives telephone re-ception. Phone 842-5044. Mrs Wright Accurate typing of your thesis, dissertation or miscellaneous work on IBM Selectric typewriter with pica keyboard. Hire an IBM expert. 820-744-1400 for information. 2.29 MISCELLANEOUS BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale-Size 8-10, 12- up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal. 910 Kentucky. 4.46 Tube incense on sale. Two for $1.00 Saturday at the Hodge Podge, 15 West 9th. 2-22 Socks that'll make you roll your pantslup up. Earthshine, East 8th and Mass. 2-24 Large assortment of antique mufflers 35c each. Earthshine, 12 E. 8th St. LOST Wire hair terrier, 1 year old. White with black and some brown markings. Please call 843-4877 Reward 2-23 If anyone has found prescription glasses in case marked Dr. Aplin, please call 842-7422 2-24 Lost in ladies room of Union gold filled ring, cloudy blue stone, tape wrapped. Mon. Feb 14 Call 864 1331 after 5:00 Siamse eat lost in viety of 12th and Kentiex Thursday night. Answers to Mary Ann. Call 842-6863 HELP WANTED OVERSEAS-JOBS FOR STUDENTS c. all Professions, and occupations, c. all Professions, and occupations. Information W. Howls OVERSEAS-JOBS for Students- THE MERCANTILE Right Next 1 to Campus 1291 ORAEW EASL EGGS MILK, EGGS, CHEESE NE SAUAGES "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon USE KANSAN WANT ADS 8 Tuesday, February 22, 1972 University Daily Kansan KU Cruises Past CU; Nash Smiles OFFS 12 OFFS 12 Pat Kelly Drives on Tom Kiivisto Kiivisto-2 press forced 20 turnovers . . . By BOB SIMISON Kansan Sports Editor Kuu will conclude its home season Saturday in a 3:10 p.m. television game against Missouri. The victory kept KU unbeaten in the last 20 games in Allen Field and helped them win a championship competition. The Jayhawks are 6 in conference play, 10-11 overall. Colorado is 8-4 and 5-11 Colorado in the 5th round. + - S= Sunday to a 3:10 p.m. Kansan Sports Edito KU LED, 82,55, when Nash made his four trip of the night to the free throw line. He had already converted two of three. This time, Nash appeared to fire his high, arching shot a bit harder than usual. It banked off the glass and through the hoop. By BOB SIMISON Fanson Sports Editor Compared to the way they arrived in Lawrence 20 years ago after winning the NCAA championship, the University of Kansas 18-batch team will bench coach Duggitts for a reunion Saturday. Nash was so happy he grinned, turned around and slapped hands with Tom Kivisto just behind him. Nesmith Remembers Parade At 2 a.m. for 1952 Champs The KU flight was delayed three hours. The Jayhawks finally took off for Minnesota, Minn., then to Kansas City. "THAT PARADE was the most amazing thing I remember about the season," Neesmith said in a speech. "It 'all happened about 2.4 km." The whole affair will be reasonably sane, unlike the team's trumpet return in late秋 624, when he had 34th year as KU trainer, still talks about the parade through the dance floor in the middle of the night. "We were supposed to leaves that way back in the days when prop planes are the only thing. They have engine trouble and had to be driven. Members of the team will return unheralded by car or plane, and take them to Saturday. They will meet with friends and the public before the team meets at Saturday afternoon. Later, they will visit their coach. 86-year-old Jerry That team included, besides Laverne Houghton and Bill Laverne, Bob Bohl, Dave Kelley, Charlie Hogg and B.H. Burn, Laverne received the hat-trick. "We got to Lawrence about 2 in the morning," Nesmith said, "and Massachusetts street was where we met." The Kaw River bridge on aunt At 6-foot 9- and 244 pounds, Lovelette was milled sometimes as "the great white whale of the Kaw," sometimes as "Mt. Lovelette," but always as a "bull" because she scored a standing KILK, at 888 points during three 26 years here. He averaged 26.6 in 1952. Aubrey Nash doesn't smile very often when he's playing on the field, the University of Kansas. Usually, it's concentrating on the game, but sometimes it's because he is frustrated about a free fall. So it was a wide moment when Nash cracked a wide grin during Kyle's game. She walked on Monday night in Allen Field House. Nash banked in a free throw he thought he would have missed, and the crowd of 10,100 THAT HOMECOMING celebration had been elaborately planned. The team was expected to arrive about 10 m. "When I let it go I realized that "it slipped off my hand." Nash said after the game. "It bought it and I was surprised that it was pretty much when it did. That was one of the few times the crowd made much noise. After jumping to a 9-2 advantage, the Jayhawks were in command all the way, although Colorado sat within five to 10 points. "That was a real fine group of guys," Nesmith said. "They had great spirit and great morale. They were all fine athletes." As it worked out, KU students attended a dance in Hochschule Frankfurt and team arrived at 1:40 a.m. The University Daily Kansan reported that 10,000 persons attended the rally which ended about 2:45 p.m. "CLYDE WAS a great hook shot artist," Nesmith said. "You THE TEAM debarred from its bus north of the Kaw River bridge. Clyde Lovellette, the team presented the keys to the fire truck; members of the team were made honorary firemen, and Lovellette, wearing a white coat, guided the truck down Massachusetts street. Plans were for the police escort to radio ahead of the team bus from Lawrence and away from Lawrence. The firewall bell was to have rung upon the reception of the radio from Lawrence Paper Co., the city water works and the KU campus were to summon celebrities to don't really see that too many any more. He was hard to defend against, because if they played inside him, he'd hit that hook shot, and if they played outside him, they'd turn around and hit a jumper." Lovellie didn't look like a basketball player, though, and he was remarkably slow. "The game I remember most was the Olympic final against the Peoria Caterpillars," Nesmith said. "He really had a gut on him," Nesmith said. "But he had that touch. He could really hit that hook shot." WATER THE NCAA Springfield Teachers, 92-65, and LaSalle, 70-65, to win the college division of the Olympic playoffs. Houston, Lennard, Kenney, Lienhard, Loveville, Kobe, Hagg and Houglin for the NCAA. To decide who would coach the Olympic to knit KU play for AAU and win the 62-60, and Warren Womble the head coach working on his job. "Toward the end of that game, Clyde had a dead set-up." Nesimh related. "The score was 4-2 and we had to blew the set-up. They rebounded it and threw it all the way down court. A kid named Williams was hurt or something, and he just stayed down there." YES,LOVELLETTE,who had Irish Lose In Basketball Intramurals A key rebound by Doug Underwood and a fast-break hit on the defense, five seconds later the Ph Delta thrilling 65-63 victory over Beta in Fraternity in Fraternity篮球比赛 last week. The Phi Deltis held Beta ace John McNeil to only two points in the contest. Underwood scored 20 and McNeil scored 33 for the Phi Deltis scored 33 for the Phi Deltis After the first two weeks of action, Alpha Phi and Phi Psi No. 1 have perfect records of 2-0. There were two key games in independent A action. It was a bait-and-chain game, Charter downed the Celts, 56-33, and the Hogs nudged the Celts, 38-36 in a disputed game. The Celts had won the match, the 38 points also, but the decision was made to abide by the running score which showed 36, and the point differential was 12. Last week's heavy schedule produced a number of heart-stopping decisions. IJm Beam Dream Team over Elm, 26-25; McDonalds over Mesa, 34-33; Lobsters over Mensa, 34-33; Historians over No. Kroes 4, 27-26; Prons over Los Avogados, 40-28; Bowie over Minneapolis on the Bouncing Houses, 39-38. led a KU comback with 44 points against LaSalle, missed a wide-open layup. He had stolen the ball from Marcus Friederich with eight seconds to play. Howie Hines won the winning haskets for Peoria. "One thing that stood out in my mind was the amount of训练 she had under Nesmith said. "It seemed like every time we turned around we went to a very old building." Several games have had rather wide scoring margins: Pearson B, 62. Battetone B, 8; Brass B, 14. Barrister B, 6; Cowshaw B, 30. Unlimited, Templin Pe, 14, CJ's 13, and Greeks, 33, MPA Students, 7. Nash's performance at the free throw line was not what won the game for KU. Bud Stallworth broke loose to score 30 points. Colorado had held him to 11 in a defeat of KU earlier this season. Then the team played Springfield Teachers in Kansas City before hitting the road to Helsinki. There were in Helsinki that summer, "We had to have him, otherwise we would have let him lay out two or three weeks. it was too much, so we couldn't go without him." "THAT WAS a pretty sturdy group that I knew from Sawman's saffron. The one thing that troubled me was that Charlie Houghland had a bad horse race." After winning the Big Seven by defeating Colorado on the road, the team travelled to Kansas City for the newest Regional Team. The Lakers Wash. Nesmith kept Hougland playing by using cold treatments, therapeutic exercises and a thigh problem; bibody else had many problems. but KU gave its opponents plenty of problems. After the Oklahoma State best record in KU history, K-State and Oklahoma State upset the Jayhawks on the road during the conference season, but nobody did it better. "THEY DIDN'T play the diamond-and-one defense as much this time," Stallworth said. I played on the low post this time. "That can really get you down—it shouldn't—but I was a little worried that the kids would be sick and not able this wasn't our night after all." KU won the NCAA finals rather loss to St. John's in 59-89, in the first round. KU roared over Santa Clara and then clobbered on 80-93. "I was concerned because we were getting good shots in the short range," he said. "Owens said. 'And then we missed a layup at the start of the game.'" "I wouldn't say they were the best team we ever had," said Terry. "They got some good breaks, but they were a great team anyway." Stallworth was fouled on the top by protector Wright. On the ensuing trip downhill, though the guard triumphed to call and scored with 18 51 to 1ay minute later. Nah scored on a fast break, and the score was 31:10. JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)—A new wildlife preserve has been proposed for Zuluid along the coast of the Indian Ocean just below the frontier with Protuguese islands. Nash gave KU the biggest lead it was to have by converting a three-point play with 17.08 to 16.42. Nash scored to score it for 33-24, Nash stole the bail under the KU basket, made the layup and drew back. THE BUFFALOES were able to bring the ball for relatively long periods by Jim Crighton's rebounding. The 6-foot 7 center grabs 18 of the game. After that, Nash hit three free throws and a layup after making a steal, and Neal Mask scored the final 12-point margin KU to the final 12-point margin. robinson and 140 other 9-points. Thus, Colorado drew w/with six, 52-46, with 8 to play and within seven. 62-55, with 2:36 to play. Early in the game, Randy Cunningham has an outstanding night. He controlled the opening tipoff and pinch run. However, Creighton drew three quick fouls, and the 6-foot-9 Canfield spent most of the game against him. "I felt like he was off to a real good game." Owens said OWENS WAS troubled about the apparently close calls receivers Dick Sanders and infielder David Gordon made on Canfield K-State Ties MU for Lead In Big Eight MANHATTAN. Kan. (AP) Kansas State moved into the for- eign conference night and held eight conference Monday night by blasting ceramic-dweller Oklahoma K-State a man-to-man defense 5% better than Iowa 5% better in the first half. During that span, the Wildcats dropped from a 17-10 lead to a 14-8 lead. The Wildcats, who are now even with Missouri at 82, jumped out to an early lead and coasted the rest of the way. Forward Zender, a 6-7 senior who didn't start, scored 10 of the 12 Wilde points during the blitz and led all scorers with 16. Jerry Clack added two, added 12 each. Jerry Clack was high for the Cowboys with 10. Kansas State was out- rebounded 47-44, but made up the difference with 42 per cent field score and 32 per cent for Oklahoma State. The closest the Cowboys came was 12 points. League W L Overall W 1 2 7 L 2 8 14 K-State 8 2 14 Nebraka 8 2 14 Oklahoma 6 3 11 Kansas 6 3 10 Iowa State 8 2 13 Colorado 8 2 10 Oklah. St 1 8 12 Oklah. St 1 8 12 Big 8 Standings The Bull & Boar Kansas State at Oklahoma; Nebraska at Colorado; Missouri at Kansas. 50¢ OFF any two handed sandwich with the purchase of one at regular price. You MUST present this ad. 11 W. 9th -featuring—Roadest BBQ, BHAM, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef, Griilled Cheese, Meat Loaf and the Reuben Open 11 a.m. to b.p. Mon Sat 12 to 8 p.m. Offer Expires March 1 SKELLY ★★★★★★★★★★★ "The foul's just came from somewhere," Canfield said, "They see it their way. I guess." After he was told that Missouri coach Norm Stewart stole the game, Owens said, "I know how he feels. TOM'S SKELLY SERVICE 602 W. 9th HAS MOVED TO TOM'S SKELLY SERVICE 1733 Mass. "Give Tom A Call" "If he wins here at Saturday, he thinks he will win the conference. I don't care who wins it, but we can learn from whatever we can from this season." After its game with KU, the Bengals lost in the road before hosting Kansas State and Oklahoma. Missouri is tied for the league lead with K Toronto 60 62 64 Percentages 50 63 Colorado 23 36 - 59 Kansas 27 44 - 71 KU must win all three emaining games if Owens is to avoid his first losing record. KU hasn't had a loser since the 12-13 game. | | Igfga-fi-fa-fa | rb | pt | sp | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Stallweather | 10 | 8 | 7 | 12 | | Taymer | 9 | 8 | 6 | 11 | | Taylor | 8 | 8 | 5 | 11 | | Nash | 8 | 7 | 5 | 12 | | Nirkuso | 8 | 7 | 3 | 11 | | Matthews | 8 | 4 | 2 | 11 | | Mathews | 8 | 4 | 0 | 12 | | Mask | 8 | 4 | 0 | 12 | | Mask | 25.48 | 16 | 34 | 17 | Igfga-fi-fa-fa | rb | pt | sp Stallweather | 10 | 8 | 7 | 12 Taymer | 9 | 8 | 6 | 11 Taylor | 8 | 8 | 5 | 11 Nash | 8 | 7 | 5 | 12 Nirkoso | 8 | 7 | 3 | 11 Matthews | 8 | 4 | 2 | 11 Mask | 8 | 4 | 0 | 12 Mask | 25.48 | 16 | 34 | 17 Totals 22-53 (1-2) Percentages 40 81 Saleman for 8-track stereo tapes. Large selection, current quality, guaranteed royalty. Receive a quote, your profit is your com-munity and phone. Box 9131 Abuquerque, N.M. B7119, AMF. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS The International Club is making plans for the annual International Night to be held on Sunday, April 8, in the Kansas Union. Committees are being formed to plan the exhibits, banquet menu, and program. If you are interested in helping please contact Charles Freidrichs, 226 Strong or Phone 864-3617. National groups are requested to submit plans for exhibits, program numbers, or recipes for the banquet before March 1 to Charles Friedrichs. Antique Show NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY 2nd and Iowa Streets (Near Tumpine, West Exit) LAWRENCE, KANSAS FEBRUARY 25, 26, 27, 1972 Show Hours: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. — Sunday 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. All Exhibits for Sale - DOOR PRIZE - Admission 75c Sponsored by the Pilot Club of Lawrence VICTORIA B KRUMSIC, manager Patronize Kansan Advertisers COUPON Contac 10 capsules Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Manufacturers suggested Price $1.69 Sale $1.15 Limit 1 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 20 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Fiber Tip Pen COUPON Sale 13° Lemma 2 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 20 Manufacturers Suggested Sale 29° Now Under New Management Scripto Squibb Aspirin 200 tablets Manufacturers suggested Price 98c Open 9:00:7:00 Thurs. 9:00:9:00 Sun. 10:00:6:00 Lemma 2 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 20 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Clairol Long, silky Conditioning lotion Manufacturers Suggested Price $2.29 Sale $1.67 Limit 1 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 20 Open 9:00 7:00 Thurs. 9:00 9:00 Sun. 10:00 6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS OUR LOWEST PRICED 4-PLY NYLON CORD TIRE MICHAEL KLEIN RACING TIRE 50R14 225/65R14 99V "ALL-WEATHER IV" Blackwall BIG VALUE $1095 Size 6.50x13 blackwall tubeless plus $7.75 fed to Tax. No trade needed. Add $4.00 for shipping. - Clean sidewall design, radial darts on shoulder - Triple-tempered nylon cord construction POPULAR SIZES ONE LOW PRICE USE OUR RAIN CHECK PROGRAM $1800 Size 7 Px55 7 Px44 P x24.9 BLACKWALL plus $2.12 to $2.29 Ex. Tax, depending on TUBELESS and old, size and旧. Add $3.00 for whitewalls. USE DUR RAIN CHEESE PROGRAM FOR YOUR OWN CHRISTMAS AND FOR GLOBE DIFFERENCE USE DUR RAIN CHEESE PROGRAM for your own Christmas and for Globe difference. Use the Dur Rain Cheese Program at the advertised price, and purchase one size at the discounted price. Star Dine Capital Grille Place 1234 Main Street, Boston, MA 02118 master charge THE INTERBAND CARD GOODYEAR THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS* TIRES BANKAMERICARD MONEY CREDIT CARDS HONORED 47 GOODFORMAIR DEALS GOODFORMAIR DEALS 814 W 23rd GREGG TIRE CO. Th p.m. 842-5451 R. studo mitto ficial Sena until B The Liber Over Topo Happy sunny day! CLOUDY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas 82nd Year. No.91 Aid for Aged 'Falls Short' Wednesday, February 23, 1972 See Page 5 Cast Acrylics on Display in Spooner Art Museum Few File for Student Senate Seats Or Class Offices; Deadline 5 P.M. Only 32 candidates for the Student Senate and two for class offices had filed by 4 p.m. Tuesday, according to Bill Nay, Mo., Minor and student body treasurer. The transparent cross is a work done by Bruce Bealey in 1986, and is entitled "Tijibun". The round shape to the right is the reflection of the square. Everyday, done in 1970. Its title is "Pale Leans." The two pieces combine here with shadows to form a surrealistic image in light and shadow. By JAMES KENDELL Kansan Staff Writer The deadline for candidates to file is 5 p.m. today. There are approximately 91 vacancies in the Student Senate and 12 class officer positions to be filed. Last year 75 candidates had filed for student Senate seats on the day before the election. R. I., "Puf" Bailey, Atchison graduate student and temporary elections committee chairman, said Tuesday that official estimates of the number of Student Senate positions would not be available until today. Twenty-four candidates filed Tuesday to the Student Senate, and no candidates filed. Bailey said he was extremely concerned with the low number of candidates. The following persons filed: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. John Grayson, Overland Park junior and Barbie Downer, Troeka junior. Centennial College: Kevin O'Grady, Derby freshman. North College. Linda Doherty, Hut- cinson sophomore and Edwin A. Siblett and John J. Young. Nunemaker College: Cynthia Button, Alton, Ill.; freshman; Paul Rankin, Lawrence sophomore; Mike Forsyth, Steven K. Shmidt; Steven K. Abmuls, Wichita sophomore. Oliver College; Dan Altman, Almina sophomore; Jennifer Dishop, Tupena sophomore British Base Bombed; 7 Found Dead ALDERSHOT, England (AP)—Seven persons including five women and a chaplain died at Britain's biggest army base Tuesday in a bombing aimed at averaging Londonderry's "Bloody Sunday." The chaplain killed was a Roman Catholic who had been decorated for risking his life working for peace in Northern Ireland. Nineteen persons, including 12 officers, were injured in the attack on the headquarters of Britain's elite 16th Air Force's leaders' kit, the home of the British army." In Dublin the leftist official wing of the Irish Republican Army said the blow was to avenge the deaths of 13 Londerry civilians in a Jan. 30 clash with paratroopers from this brigade. It claimed a triumph for its "successful retaliatory action" against the civilian casualties. One male civilian was killed in addition to the five women. The priest was Capt. Gerrry Weston, 38. He recently received the MBE - Member of the Order. Police surrounded the base, 40 miles southwest of London. A stunned House of Commons heard Home Secretary Reginald Maudling condemn "this outrage" and vow a massive search for the bombers. man; Ellen Reimers, St. Louis sophomore, and Scott McPadden, bachelor. Pearson College: Mike McBride. Court to Hear 2 Candidates On Thursday The Student Court has granted an immediate hearing to Richard Dwyer, Joplin Mo., senior, and William Jacoby, Lawrence senior for Thursday afternoon. Lawrence sophomore, and Eileen Mc Cullough. Goodland freshman. Dwyer said he was misinformed by the Senate office on requirement procedures. Dwyer and Jacobey took court action after their names were disqualified from the ballot for student body president and vice-president for lacking the 500 School of Architecture: Warren Taylor, Lawrence sophomore. School of Business: Gary Lasche, Overland Park park sommore School of Education: Patricia Green, Temple University School of Engineering: Kirk Vann, Coffeville junior, School of Fine Arts; Claudia Mosur; Leewood freshman. School of Pharmacy: Casey Cochran, Hutchinson sophomore. No candidates have filed from the graduate School, the School of Social Welfare. School of Journalism; Krista Postal, Pittsburgh bishops and Ruth Hewitz, Hurley; Krista Postal A workshop for all candidates will be held 7 p.m. Thursday in the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. The workshop will familiarize the candidates with the election rules. Rally Boosting Strikers Planned for Noon Today By ROBERT E. DUNCAN Kansan Staff Writer A rally scheduled for noon today in support of striking University of Kansas civil service employees was discussed at a meeting of a faculty-student support committee Tuesday night at Westminster and attended by the north side of the Kansas Union. About 60 faculty, students and members of all 1132 reviewed plans for circulating books. "I sense we are at the point of doing an educational job. I sense we have morality on our side but not power," said Edward associates professor in social welfare. THE WALK OUT, now in its third day, was taken to illustrate the needs of University workers and an "indication of the need for a second campus in a fiver being distributed by the union." Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Tuesday afternoon that he had not anticipated the walkout and that he had not received any written demands from him. A group of about 12 faculty members and eight Chairmen the workers alleviation of. Faculty, Students, Workers Chalmers said after meeting that he would pursue the questions they had raised about civil service employee problems and the nature of procedure within the university. "Our intention is to take each item and a solution for 'U', said Lloyd Rose. The solution is to A SECOND MEETING of University administrators and representatives of the union is planned for 3 p.m. today at the Kansas Personnel Office in Topeka. Blanche Nitz, chief steward of local 1132, said. "I think they set the meeting for tomorrow (Wednesday) to see what comes of the rally." Both Rose and Nitz agreed that wages were a top priority item. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary for the University, said Tuesday afternoon that the University had recommended a two-step civil service wage increase this year, but that the governor's budget called for only a one-step increase. MEMBERS OF buildings and grounds Charge Filed on Sisters By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer The complaint states that the women who occupied the building violated three articles of the Code of Students' Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct, and that they acted against the Code of Conduct adopted by the Kansas Board of Revents. A complaint was filed Monday with the University judiciary against the women who occupied the East Asian Studies building Feb. 4. Peter George, Lawrence special student, and the KU Ombudsaan Office filed the complaint. Dave Dysart, Lawrence third-year law student and one of George's attorneys, said George had filed the complaint because he thought the律师's actions might have set an untimely precedent for other groups at KU. GEORGE AND the Ombudsman Office, the plaintiffs, complained that the The plaintiffs said the defendants intentionally disrupted and obstructed protected University activities as well asStudent Rights. The plaintiffs also stated that the defendants used profane language in a threatening manner, acting in a rude and challenging manner on University property, as prohibited by the Code of Conduct. defendants occupied the East Asian Studies building in violation of University regulations and wilfully disrupted the orderly process of the University in the expression of their views, violating Article 8 of the Code of Students' Rights. The complaint also stated that the defendants' conduct was disorderly and that they interfered with the free passage through University areas and failed to confine their activities to public areas and published Article 7 of the Code of Students'. Hurts. DYSART SAID the plaintiffs were not StudEx Register Proposal Criticized by Both Sides ministrative staff would discuss the proposal as soon as his office received a "All we're seeking is that they're publicly reprimanded for violating the rules and regulations of the University. We want them to set a precedent," he said. The original statement written by Charles Oldfather, University attorney, contained two clauses. One defined registered organizations and the other defined recognized organizations. The StudEx proposal would eliminate the clause pertaining to recognition and require organizations simply to register. Oldfather criticized Thursday the inclusive language of the StudEx proposal. He said the provision that any organization designed for "cultural, educational, or recreational" purposes could receive funding was too broad. The complaint was filed against the women in the name of Jane Doe, Dysart said. A subpoena would be filed to obtain the names of the women, he said. asking for the suspension or the expulsion of the women. The proposal passed by the Student Executive Committee (StUDEx) to the university's groups receive administrative recognition before being eligible for University funding has drawn criticism from both the Gay Liberation Front and the ad- "It is hard to define cultural," "that one," he said. "That could include about anything." William M. Balfour, vice-chancellor for student affairs, said Thursday the school would have to be approved by the administration. Balfour hinted that the proposal, as described in Monday's Kansan, would not be approved without a vote. department who are on the picket lines say the University's inability to grant a wage Some of the buildings and grounds workers have not walked off the job because the union is not recognized by the employer, little can be obtained by the walk out. Balfour said he had received nothing in writing from StudEx. He said his only knowledge of the proposal was gained from the story in Monday's Kansas. Balfour said members of the ad- "As of today" Tuesday we plan to picket Thursday. "Rose said." The number of buildings and grounds workers who have not reported to work for the group was 55 Tuesday. However, only four members of other unions have honored the picket "THEY MAY all be back tomorrow for all we know," he said. Deane Casebeer, construction superintendent for the Wescoe Hall project, said two iron workers and two plumbers did not show for work Tuesday. The walkout, according to officials in charge of University services, has not had an impact. William Balfour, vice-chancellor for student affairs, said housing operations were normal. All deliveries to residence halls had been made, and only three housing employees had not reported to work. Rose said at the support committee meeting that he was concerned about a "serious lack of response" from the University. The support committee plans to meet in Westminster Center Thursday night to hear a report of the results from the Topokea meeting. Chinese May Permit Newsmen to Remain PEKING (AP) - President Nixon and Chinese Premier Chou En-lai met this afternoon for their third round of talks, and Chou dropped what many considered a broad hint that some American newsmen had heard in China after the President leaves. "You don't have much time here," he quickly added. "If the press wants to see any more places, they can apply to the Department of Information," Chou remarked to reporters and photographers, as he sat down with Nixon at a beige-covered conference table. Chou's reference to the seven-day limit on the President's visit and the inability of the newsmen with him to see much of the news, in turn, could many who heard him as a hint that his government might be prepared to let some of the newsmen remain for a more extended period. Such a development would be widely regarded as evidence of a further thaw in migration. Chou, displaying the courtesy of his Mandarin ancestors, may be making a concession to the Chinese quality of face and hairstyle than having the President call on him. The talks so far have been longer than anticipated. Nixon said before he arrived that he expected his meetings with the president to be at least four hours a day. Tuesday's session went on for nearly four; THE TALKS today shifted to the guest house Nixon is occupying after two days of meeting at the Great Hall of the People in the center of Peking. The Chinese left little doubt that they attach great importance to Nikon's efforts in the war. Monday Nixon and Chou held a largely ceremonial meeting in the Great Hall of the People. Tuesday the meeting room was small. with the usually remote Mao Tse-tung. Then the Chinese press broke its silence on Nixon's visit and splashed the story with pictures of Nixon with Mao and Chen. NIXON WAS accompanied only by a translator and Henry A. Kissinger, presidential adviser on national security. Secretary of State William P. Rogers held a separate conference with China's foreign minister, Chi Pen-fei. No statement came out of the meeting except the expected announcement that Nixon and Chou would be continuing their discussions today. Tuesday evening, Chiang Cking, wife of Mao, with Chou and his wife, took the Nixons to a ballet with a revolutionary theme. Chiang Cking, firebrand of the cultural revolution in the late 1960s, sat at Nixon's left. On his right was Chou, who has expressed hope that the presidential transition of relations between their nations. The ballet was held in the third-floor and auditorium of the Great Hall of the People. MRS. NIXON will pay a visit this morning to the giant Evergreen People's commune in Peking's northwestern city. There are 40,000 persons live in 9,000 homesholds. Shell rejoil President Nixon for an evening gymnastic presentation at Peking University. In the afternoon she tours a Peking glass factory employing 350 workers. On Tuesday, the First Lady made a tasting tour of the kitchens of the famed Pizza Hut. Pollution is not a real problem. YES Trash Near Boardwalk Refutes Message Kansan Photo by GARY L. MILBURN The flyer next to the Wescote Hall boardwalk screams its reassurance to those who are concerned about the problem of pollution. Paper and tin cans are common sights around the KU campus, often near trash receptacles. Despite all the talk and action to change the situation, polluters across the nation appear to be holding their own with Nader's Raiders and all other concerned 2 Wednesday, February 23, 1972 University Daily Kansan People . . . ... Places . . . ... Things People: HOWARD R. HUGhes, the secretive billionaire, won a Supreme Court hearing Tuesday in his bid to wipe out a record default judgment against his Greater Honestly firm over any other judgment in an American court and gathering $900,000 in monthly interest each month, was awarded to Trans World Bank in 1988. The appeal to two federal courts in New York City had approved the judgment. House-Senate conferences agreed to a $3.2 BILLION APPROPRIATION FOR FOREIGN AID and related agencies. The bill would appropriate $2.6 billion for military and economic assistance itself, and $72 million for the Peace Corps, a split between the Senate's $7.2 million and the House's $68 million. It would provide foreign aid in the foreign foreign aid program from which the House had cut all 1972 money. ADEN, SOUTH YEMEN—Arab hijackers freed all passengers aboard a commanderied Grommjet jumbo jet, including the oldest of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. "It was just too much." Joseph P. Kennedy III said of the ordeal as tired and ruffled, he writes. "The people who worked with Walters and children and one elderly man had been released earlier and Luthanna airlines said most had left by plane for Beirut. THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY proposed to require the sale of unleaded oat gasoline at most of the nation's gas stations by 1974. At the same time it proposed a phased reduction in the lead content of regular and premium grades of gasoline. The agency provided 90 days for comment on the pending amendment, and said it would hold public hearings before making them effective. 2016WN—Enemy troops harassed South Vietnamese forces in the central highlands. In the Northern provinces Saigon forces conducted a counter-attack using communist command troops stepped up their actions Saturday, most engagements have involved these paramilitary forces in the fight. Places: OSCAR MEYER & CO., Madison, Wis., announced in Topak that it is planning to build a multi-million dollar hog slaughter plant between Topeka and Manhattan which eventually would employ 500 to 700 workers. On a preliminary voice vote Tuesday, it appeared the proposed judicial article was in trouble. TOPEKA (AP) — a proposed new judicial article for the Kansas Constitution was one of 37 bills and resolutions given preliminary approval Tuesday at the Kansas House of Representatives. Things: She said the group did not want to force the administration into a commitment unless some action was taken. If it gets by the House, a two-thirds vote by the Senate would put the proposed article on the ballot in election ballot in November. The measures are scheduled to be up for a final vote today providing repairs to the House machine are completed in time. Judicial Bill Passes Initial House Vote The House voted to put in a provision allowing individual judicial districts to determine whether they would use a partisan political process for electing district court judges or house some non-partisan process by appointing someone to be prescribed by the legislature. The House agreed to go along with the committee decision to keep the terms of district judges at four years. "Our next action hangs on this meeting. Step will be taken if a commitment is made by March 31." The February Sisters have decided to delay their presentation of a petition to Chancellor E. Laurence Macdonald, in order to determine the formation of a child care center, Ann. Franke, a professor and spokesman for the group, said Tuesday. The proposed article would create a unified court with overall administrative authority vested in the Supreme Court. "The bureaucracy needs time to work. We don't want to use grandstanding tactics. Action has been deferred on our part until after the first meeting of the board, and it was scheduled the first week in March," she said. The Sisters had planned to present the petition last Monday to Chalmers, Franke said, but the group decided to wait for spontaneous action from Chalmers. The proposed article would do away with the present maximum limitation on supreme court justices, now at seven. Sisters Wait To Petition French,' Fiddler,' Show Share Most Oscar Bids Those nominated for best director were: Stanley Kubrick, A Clockwork Orange , Norman Jawison, 'Fiddler on the Roof' HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP) — A sentimental musical "Fidder on the Roof": a slick crime caper, "The French Connection," and a stark drama, "The Last Picture Show." It shared the most international Academy Awards for the 46th annual University Awards. Each had eight. SHOULD SCOTT or Miss Jackson win, they would achieve the rare honor of back-to-back Oscars. The only actor so honored in the past was the late Spencer Tracy in 1937 and 1938, and the last actress to score such success withatherine Hepburn in 1967 and 1968. It's the fourth Oscar nominee for Scott who won last year's Basketball category with him in the best-actor category were Peter Finch, Sunday Bloody; Sunday, Koch and Hackman; "The French Connection," and Topol, "Fiddler On The Roof" "Topus uses no Actor George C. Scott, who should shoulder last year by refusing his Oscar award, was nominated for a sports player as a cynical doctor in "Hospital." **BESIDES** "FEDDLER" and **MARCEL** nominees for best picture of the year were "Nicholas and Alexandra" and "A Clockwork She is in competition with four British actresses—Julie Christie, the tough-talking madam of *The Devil's Daughter*, Vanessa Redgrave, Mary of Ireland, Susan Alexander of "Nicholas and Alexandra," and last year's best-actress winner, Glenda Jackson, the woman in love of *Charlotte Craig*. Actress Jane Fonda, who stunned a foreign press awards ceremony earlier this month by sending a Vietnam veteran to the White House, was nominated for the best-actress Oscar for her portrayal of a prostitute in "Klute." It's the second Oscar nomination for the political actress who was awarded the Oscars. They Shoot Horses, Don't They? William Friedkin, "The French Connection"; Peter Bogdanovich and John Selkirk; "Sunday Bodies Sunday." Best screenplay, original: Paddy Chayefsky, "The Hospital"; Ello Petri and Ugo Pirro, "Investigation Of A Citizen Above Suspicion"; Andy and Alison Hoggard; Raucher, "Summer of 42", and Penelope Gillatt, "Sunday Bloody Sunday." With veterans taking most top acting nominations, new-comers scored heavily in supporting categories. All 10 supporting actors and actresses are first-nominees, an Academy first. SUPPORTING ACTresses nominated were. Ellen Burstyn and Cloris Leachman, both for The Last Picture Show, for Jennifer Kellerman, and Why Is He Saying Those Terror Things About Me? Margaret Leighton, Margaret Margaret, Marcel the Carnal Knowledge." Supporting actor nominees were Jeff Bridges and Ben Bentley, with the Picture Show; Leonard Frey, "Diddler On The Roof"; Richard Jacek, "Sometimes A Great Man"; Sophie Schleser, the French Chancellor. **BEST SONG:** "The Age of Not Believing," from *Bedknobs and Bells*; **Children**, from *Sometimes A Great Nouns*, the title song; **Children**, from *Life Is What You Ink*, the title song; **Theme From Shaft* screenplay, adaptation: Stanley Kubrick, A Clockwork Ocean, "The Conformist"; Ernest Tidman, "The French Connection"; Michelle Gonzalez, "Unicorn"; The Garden of the Finch Contini", and Peter McMurtry and Peter Bostow, "The Last Picture Show" the nominees for best foreign language film of 1971 were: "Dodes Ka-Den, Japan; "The Turtle Garden of the Flocked Garden of the Flocked Finalit Italy; "The Policeman; Israel; and "Tchaikovsky, U. S. S. R." Other nominations: Classical Film Series Wed. Feb. 23 7:30 & 9:15 IVAN the TERRIBLE pt. 1 WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM 75¢ Will Be Displaying The Complete Line The Balfour Rep FRATERNITY and SORORITY JEWELRY at the KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE of 9:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Wed., Feb. 23 and Thurs., Feb. 24 Open 8:30 - 5:30 p.m. WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN WIN $100 Yes, Now You Can Win $100 just for designing a 3-Color POSTER! It's for the Concert Course DEADLINE Series April 15 for Call Fine 1972- Arts Office 1973 for Information 4-3421 ANY STUDENT CAN ENTER RAY STONEBACK'S 929 Mass. St. Open 'til 8:30 p.m. Thurs. Nite STEREO DISCOUNT Now you can buy the finest in stereo at Factory cost+10% Model 9297 will satisfy even the most demanding audiophile with its great sound reproduction. 75-Watts IHF power music an Air-Suspension System with two High-Compliance $10^{\circ}$ Bass Woofers and two $1,000 \mathrm{~Hz}$. Exponential Horns plus a deluxe Micromatic player with Magnetic Cartridge, Cue Control and Stylus Pressure Adjustment. A protective dust cover included. Also save on Magnavox Color Stereo Theaters, Color TV, Stereo Consoles, Tape Recorders, Radios and Monochrome TV . . . come in now! Now At RAY STONEBACK'S MAGNAVAX FACTORY-SPONSORED ANNUAL SALE Consulting—Free tea & coffee—Factory servicing NOW $448.00 842-2047 1205 Prairie Ave. RAY AUDIO SAVE ...on this HIGH PERFORMANCE 75-Watt Stereo FM/AM Radio- Phono Component System at ★ Selected lines ★ The best buys RCA Patronize kansan Advertisers TRACT Overwhelmed? Slow, unorganized reading is boring! You lose concentration and perspective! You seem to spend all your time studying! or Mary Sullivan Confident Fast, intelligent reading holds your attention! You grasp the ideas sooner & more accurately! You have time for leisure enjoyment! 9 Reading Dynamics teaches you how to find the meaning in all those thousands of words. Our instructor is also a Western Civ. Instructor. READ THE ENTIRE YEAR'S WESTERN CIVILIZATION ASSIGNMENTS IN ONLY 8 WEEKS Our unique note-taking technique simplifies, organizes. and relates ideas in graphic form. New Class Begins Next Week P. S. If you want to take Reading Dynamics but do not need the Western Civ readings, you may join the class and read in your own materials. Begins March 2 and meets for 8 Thursdays 7-9:30 p.m. Finishes just before the W.C. Comprehensive Exam of April 29. FREE Mini-Lesson Wed., Thurs., Fri., Feb. 23, 24 and 25 7:30 & 8:30 p.m. at the Reading Dynamics Institute 1 书 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Downstairs at the Sound—Hillcrest Shopping Center 925 Iowa Phone 843-6424 Wednesday, February 25. 1972 3 rs Senate Polled on Changes By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN In response to suggestions by some University Senators and the Senate's difficulty in obtaining a quorum, a University Council subcommittee has sought Senate approval for a procedural and structural changes in the Senate and Council, including a proposal to establish separate Councils and the Senate Center and the Lawrence Campus. A subcommittee of the Organization and Administration Committee of the University Council distributed a summary of the Senate and presented the results at a Council meeting Feb. 17. Items included a provision for a mail ballot, an increase in the number of proportional representation in the Council and separation of the governing bodies of the Medical Center and the Lawrence THE CHANCELLOR, vice-chancellors, members of the Faculty Senate and members of the School Senate make up the University Senate. Lee F. Young, associate dean of the School of Journalism and Public Communication that during the past three years a quorum has not been reached a The University Council consists of 39 members from the Faculty Senate, 10 student senators and the Chancellor and President of the University. The Council is an advisory body to the Senate. The difficulty in obtaining the 20 per cent quorum stems from the lack of representatives to attend and lack of faculty participation. Young said, "There are 265 eligible students from the Center, often only 15 to 20 attend, he said, even with the availability of a full-time KuCU campus. He added that the consistent failure to obtain a quorum discourages the faculty from attending." YOUNG ATTRIBUTED the lack of faculty interest to the routine nature of the majority of Senate business. When the senate provision calling for 20 per cent student representation on all KU Book Collectors Plan for Competition Entries for the 16th annual student book collections contest must be submitted no later than May 28. The co-chairwoman of this year’s contest, at the reference desk in Watson Library, or to Georgen Engkiengi, co-chairwoman of the library, Engkiengi said recently. The competition is open to all students enrolled at the university. All previous winners, said Englinski, The books entered must be bound by the student and have been checked by him, said Englinski. "We are interested in a book collection built around the Students Get Relavs Jobs Steve Wamers, Emporia senior, and George Chase, Waunut Creek, Alaska, William Reals, the Kansa Reals, disclosed last week that the selections of freshman members of the Kansas Relays were: Dale Boger, Hutchinson freshman; Charles Doyle, Bartvilleros, Okla., freshman; Brandon Olsen, freshman; Larry Hobbs, Lake Oswego, Oreshek, freshman; Thane Hodson, Ottawa freshman; Rick Nielsen, Chris Merriewire, Smith Center, sophomore; Mark Sinnin, Holton freshman, and Hozer freshman, Overland Park hazer. contestant, another person or an idea. The books don't have to be read. You can read them as a coherence of thought related to the personal interest of the reader. THE IS a graduate and undergraduate division in the college. It will be eliminated to four from each division from which a winner and runner-up shall be determined. The first prize winner will receive $100 and the second prize winner $50 in books of their choice from the Oread Book Store. Contestants are not to submit their books, but on the basis of bibliographies and statements of opinion, will be chosen, said Engliiks. JUDGES for this year's contest are Joseph Shipman, director of Linda Hall Library in Kansas and the former chairman of the English department at Lawrence High School; Barbara Backus, associate special collections director; Larry Laird, Oberlin graduate student and last year's winner in the graduate division; and Dan Schleske. Lawrence special education undergraduate division last year. Engliniak said they had also asked Thorpe Menn, book review of the Kansas City Star, to be a judge who received a commitment from him. policy-making committees came before the Senate in October 1970, he said, the quorum was met. The contest is sponsored jointly by Elizabeth M. Sawyer, Karen L. Schmidt and the University donated her collection of the Spencer Library, and the Oread Library. "Big issues just don't come along, that often." Young said. along that often," Young said. Student attendance has not been a problem, he said, since at least last year. "Students attend Senate meetings. Of those responding to the survey, 251 favored the separation of the Kansas City and Lawrence Senate and Councils; 97 opposed it. There were 35 senators from the Medical Center preferred decentralization of government and only two who did not. Young said that each Senate and Council would deal with matters german to its own campus. There would be an all-University Senate and Council available for matters of concern. THE JURISDICTION of each governing body would in most cases be self-evident, Young said, but the final decision on jurisdiction would rest with the Executive Committee (SenEx). Because of the limited Medical Center response to the original survey, the subcommittee has reissued the questionnaire on the Kansas City campus in order to capture picture of sentiment there. Adoption of a mail ballot has also been suggested as a remedy for the quorum problem. Young users were given a survey, 245 favored a mail ballot on all issues and 107 were not of the issues. Six respondents negated it. Many student senators claimed that they did not receive the questionnaire and that student senators were polluted in the ballot. Young said his subcommittee had not heard of any survey had reached the students. YOUNG SAID he had mixed feelings concerning the mail ballot. He said he would hate to have to vote in a party favored having a provision for a mail ballot written into the Senate code, but, with a new law adopted on a given issue after debate and a vote on the Senate floor. Voting could then be done to further participation, he said. want the legislative power to rest in the University Senate. Only 73 of the legislators have power to review Council decisions and 295 wanted the president. Three of the questions on the survey involved transferring policy-making power from the University Senate to the Council. The items would abolish the Senate's power to review or decisions, enlarge the Council and elect it on a proportional basis. He was against the blanket mail bail, saying that "the separation of the Med Center was a better move." The senators favored proportional representation in the Council, 221 to 178, but a vote was not required for the enlargement of the Council. Young said that the adoption of these changes would constitute the abandonment of the Senate as the law-making body and reform the Council from an advisory body into a legislative one. Council members are currently elected at large, Young said, but since each school within the University is guaranteed a one-time representative, representation is proportional to 'by sheer happenness.' ACCORDING TO the survey, a majority of the senators still Young said that transferral of the legislative power to the Council was indirectly related to the economic problem in the Senate. "With a smaller body, I feel confident that we'd have no problem getting a quorum," he said, "but it would abolish the necessity of college campuses—the one man, on one vote of thing." INVESTIGATION OF THE quorum problem began in Spring 1971 when SenEx assigned the Committee. The Committee. The Subcommittee was appointed, Young said, and, among other things in the summer and fall. JUST GOOD FRIENDS February 24 thru March 4 8 p.m. K.U. Experimental Theatre 864-39B2 It's FREE with I.D. NO RESERVED SEATS COME EARLY FOR A GOOD SEAT. Feb. 28 8:20 Hoch Non-Students 4.00 - 3.50 - 3.00 Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The Student Body of The University of Kansas Presents Hand It's the last program of the season and probably the best! BALLET FOLKLORICO OF MEXICO The Guadalajara Summer University of Arizona program, will offer. July 3 to August, an anthropology course. German language, government, language and business; board and room; $190. Write Office of the Summer Session. Arizona University, Tucson, Arizona 85271. AURH Extends Funding of Magazine The executive committee of the Association of University Residence Halls has recently agreed to continue sponsoring the College and University Residence Hall's publication, the NACUH Review AUMH magazine, the magazine last year. graduate student, who was recently chosen editor of the NACUHR Review, last week the forthcoming issues of the journal were dealt with both the aesthetic and practical side of residence hall living. Joe Speelman, Dodge City. The review has a circulation of approximately 2,000 AURH officers, housing directors, and schools throughout the country. Speelman said the NACURi Review, first published two years ago, was representative of student trends across the nation. issue will be the third of six issues. Speelman said this edition of the NACURH Review would be the most influential institutional text on the subject. Publication of the magazine at kc begins last year and will be a bid at the annual NACUH conference to publish the review. KU's bid is for an article on this issue. There needs to be more attention to the management of University archives, and the magazine will have features dealing with this concept. Eight Thirty-Seventh Massachusetts Street Biltmore Biltmore A great go anywhere shoe—ROBIN by FAMOLARE. It has a super tough crepe sole and comes in a variety of colors to fit any mood or wardrobe you have. Give a pair a try! In navy, brown, red, rust and white suede, or brown leather. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Final Reduction Sale • No White Elephants on the Premises! • A Trunk-Full of Values! • Pachydermic Price-Cuts! Large Groups of... - Men's Suits and Sport Coats - Men's Slacks and Sweaters - Men's Shirts and Ties - Men's Winter Coats Mister All Sales Final Guy 1/2 PRICE Clothing Consultant 920 Mass. Alterations not included 4 Wednesday, February 23, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. I'll do it. Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO Tweedle Dum . . . Senator Henry "Seoop" Jackson brought his presidential campaign to Kansas last Saturday night when he fundraiser for Democratic fund-raiser in Topeka. Jackson came to friendly territory when he set foot on Kansas soil. State Democratic leaders are notoriously conservative, having much in common with Jackson. In fact, as early as last fall, Governor Docking indicated that he might support Jackson for the nomination. In his Topeka speech Jackson outlined those issues that he considers to be of top priority, spicing his comments with the hackneyed partisan attacks that we'll be hearing and more of this election year. Jackson is counting on broad conservative support, and consequently presents a tough-guy image, probably in the hope that his wife, Elizabeth of Richard Nixon's conservatism, will decide to fight fire with fire in 72. Saturday night jackson asserted that "The Democratic party must show that it can provide responsible leadership on the (busing) issue." He also said Democrats must be prepared to make crime a major campaign issue and talk more about law and order. The U.S. defense department has strengthened Jackson, so we will have a stronger position from which to negotiate. He says, for instance, that while busing isn't the answer, we can't have segregated schools. And he asks why a factor in the law and order question At the same time, Jackson seeks to mitigate his conservatism a bit, probably in an effort not to alienate the opposing of the Democratic party. In view of this conservatietainted-liberal tactic, it would seem that if the Democrats did nominate Jackson, and if Nixon is nominated, Americans would have another nochoice election come November. That we do not need. Mike Moffet Associate Editor Garru Wills Readers Respond Maude; Stables; Bible Harold and . . . To the Editor I am rather dismayed, not to be told that Barbara Barb was malted by labelling her by the title characters in "Harold and Maudie" as "depressing," but in "Dickens." The love scene which so repellished Schmidt did not involve, I might add, rape, seduction, A MacGraw-citee-peek-a-boo-sex, exploit you are there-detail, or the usual other leering Hooyood muscle, in the ground, the scene is certainly unique, but hardly "reputative." From this point, the film moves not in "a fatal plunge down hill," but in "a full climb upward. Harold is ultimately saved by Maude, and the redemptive power of love has portrayed more convincingly." Beer Sexism? To the Editor: Frank Kelly Carbondale, Pa., Graduate Student -Bill Arnold, Lawrence Junior -Paul Johnson McPherson Junior The Stables recent advertisement (Feb 17) in the Kanana was, at the very least, poorly placed—directly under an advertisement by the February magazine and their ideas haven't come across. Our point is not that the Kansas wizard would advertisements, but blatantly dehumanizing. Our question now to the women of the KU community—you do consider it a good thing to offer customers to the Stables if you don't go there because you are being used. You tell them that they use pool tables and frolicking female wonder if they can differentiate between the ownership of the pool tables; bars and frolicking Bible Again BREWER (1926 - 1983) However, the objections raised by Miss Todd, etc., do not in the least contradict the other quotes. Women are not portrayed as women, but they do indeed fulfill a very useful purpose (i.e., they give birth to men—"man is born of woman") that one idea is independent of the other is of woman. The idea of an idea of a divine order is not. Above all, remember, when God in his merciful way decided to save the human race, he came as a man! There is no question of misinterpretation and certainly no question of misquotation in the Bible. We read the Bible. They were textually correct, and we supplied no evidence to prove their meaning was quite evident. To the Editor: Tom Chester, Topeka Senior Bryce Kresie, Topeka Senior demeaning of the poor, and the forcible "interposition" of those fearsome "white-coated bureaucrats" between some children and their parents. Remember the olden days, when the Right Wing used to attack big government? Now it thinks our government is not big and intrusive enough—Washington should be handing out more defense contracts and smooping on more mans. The threatens rarely get a hold of the citizens in a refrain against crisms. Nixon's Child Care Stance So it came as a relief, last December when they called sing the half-forgotten songs against creeping communalism again. The occasion was Nixon's veto of a bill that had been introduced by Nixon gave the Right its cue in his vetting document, which said the bill approved by Congress would foster "communal approaches to child-rearing over against the family—with criticism Strom Thurmond had made of the bill—and Right-Wing publicists were soon in full cry. Nixon had saved us from 'the white-coated Sergeant Buckley' phrase who would perform Mad Scientist social experiments on the unprotected young. Who knows—they might even infect their minds with Liberalism. As National Review put it: "The child's values and attitudes would be shaped by the kind of psychoactivists and so on who would be interposed at the earliest possible moment—even during the first 18 months." The parent's parents. "That 'interposed' is good—almost as good as Lytton Strachey's 'interpose my body.' The word fulgens the fact that the child development is available if parents want to use them. This optional factor is what distinguishes the bill Nixon vetoed from one he gleefully signed during Christmas week. This latter bill made money for teachers and mothers with school-age children—and therefore made day-care for those children mandatory. The President, who did not want to split up the family by offering it optional learning adds, was willing to jeopardize his own larger budget for schools, through ahead of time its next inefficient feature, the punitive measure aimed at largely mythical "welfare moochers." This measure adds new tests, training programs, and day-care schemes to force only those in financial need to only marginally existent jobs. It will involve the loss of federal money, the Where, then, is the Right Wing caterpillar against this law's statism? If the government can foster their free cooperation with child-care programs, surely it is more endangered when the government can force a child in government day-care centers. Oh no, it doesn't work that way. Freedom can only be denied to those with a right to be free. The generous American spirit thinks that those who want freedom should that right. If they can ask for a dole, it only because they are slavish in soul. They must be forced out to the employment line there to "redem" them. If they want to protect their children, and re-enter the status of full citizenship. Then they will be among those whose freedoms the President is anxious to protect from being taken so remote as the furnishing of early learning aids to parents who want it. In short, our President will vigilantly guard those who need no protection. And as for those who do need help—well, it's all their own fault. Taking away their kids from them might make them shape up. Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate James J. Kilpatrick "Wasteland" News Bias WASHINGTON - Edith Efron's book, "The News Twisters," came forth from the Nash Publishing Co. on October 11. Since then, the shells have been used to broadcast television networks were guilty of gross bias during the presidential campaign of 1968. The thesis, of course, is valid. Any English-speaking adult, possessed of eyes, ears and access to a television set, must know the thesis is valid. To a considerable extent—though not as blatantly as before—the situation documented by Miss Efron continues to this day. The value of Miss Erfron's book lies not so much in its elaborate documentation, though this was indispensable to her work. Her book, "In the pathological dissection of the body of 'news' as such," she compels us to think upon these things, and these things are important for the whole process of opinion formation in our country. What is "news"? God alone knows. At some point in his life, every editor, reporter and professor of journalism struggles to compose a satisfactory message. That success, David Brinkley came closest, perhaps, in his laconic remark that "news is what I say it is." But the trouble with epigrams is that they yield insights of truth to the virtue of brevity. It is not quite so brutally simple. Even so, Brinkley has it just WALLACE DEMOCRATIC PRIMARIES OH! WA --about right. The essence of news lies in the process of selection. A happening, in itself, is not news; it is not news until it is reported. And who decides whether a happening should be reported? Who selects this happening in preference to some other happenings? An editor's honest answer, just as Brinkley says, is "I do." By Sokoloff Griff and the Unicorn OKAY! STICK 'EM UP!! ?!? AND IN BROAD DAYLIGHT, TOO... "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." Her documentation provides a thousand telling examples. One issue in the fall of 1968 was U.S. military casualties among men named during the seven-week None of this, in turn, was news at NBC. Oddly, NBC reported no news whatever—not a single comment about the war policy; but it was news at NBC, to the tune of 1,017 words that the war was opposed by, among others, Tom Hayden of NBC and Jack Yale and a Connecticut matron. When it comes to putting together a prime-time network news program, this process of selection is what the game is all about—and the process is unbelievably complex. There are dailies and big days. A happening that might be used but not used on Tuesday. Some happenings lend themselves to visual presentation; others don't. TV is partly show biz; There has to be something light. Producers, writers and anchor men are prisoners of the clock. But when someone shows up at the studio, someone has to have made the decisions. This is news tonight; and this is not. This is not a pattern of news; it is a pattern of bias—and for this pattern the network news executives have to be held accountable. As we move into the new era, network evening news will want to keep the pattern of 1968 in mind, and be wary. Such decisions have to be personal; no computer can make them. They are the products of a culture that has merely another way of saying that they are personal opinions. Mia Effron's point is that in 1968, the judgments—or opinions—that constitute liberal bias in the network news. This was not news at ABC. At ABC, which carried 413 words in support of the war, it was news—1,478 words of news—that Senator Fulbright, Paul O'Dwyer, Senator Jock Dick Gregory, Senator Jude Dick Gregory and Vanessa Redgrave opposed the war. period of her study, CBRS carried one item only in support of that policy. This was a 267-word excerpt from a speech by Lyndon Johnson on October 9. But CBRS carried 20 items in this period, and 13 words on 13 different evenings, when the policy was opposed. Look at the record more closely. It was "news" in the judgment of CBS that the war was opposed by John Gilligan of Ohio, George Ball, Senator Morse and Eldridge Cleaver. Copyright 1972, The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. America's Pacemaking college newspaper THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-4810 Business Office—UN 4-4538 Published at the University of Kansas during the academic year except in 2014 and 2015. A second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan 86044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily indicative of the university's policies. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman NEW NEWSLETTER DELIVERY Editor New Media Editor Makeup Artist Makeup Artist Campus Editor Neesler News Editors Bita Haugeman, Neesler News Editors Eric Kranmer, Jewell Scott Copy Chiefs Jeeyneer Norman, King Kling Assistant Sports Editors Sully Catton, King Kling Sports Editor Simpson Assistant Sports Editor Barbara Spurrock Feature Editor Barbara Spurrock Editorial Writer Barbara Spurrock Wire Editors Joydeun Nancy Jones Makeup Editors Dick Hay, John Goodrick Photographers Ed Lalio, Rit Netner, Greg Sorber, Tom Thurnau, Young Office Manager Toona Rush Software Developer Greg Sorber, Tom Thurnau, Young BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams Business Manager Associate Business Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager Associate Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Creative Director PENGUIN REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READERS' MEDIA SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave. New York, N.Y. 1,0017 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 23, 1972 5 Campus Briefs Sexuality Seminar "Sex and the Law" will be the topic of the Sexuality Seminar at 8:30 ontion in the dining room of Gertrude Tellars Pearson Hall. A Kansas lawyer will explain the law concerning pornography, rape, common law marriage and sexual conduct. gton French Lecturer Tonight © Crews Moffet the one Hay the one Kling Groom on Kling Begert aughter y Jones Schmidt X Young d Rush Sokoloff Faculty Recitau The French Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Dyche Audiotium, Nicole Dupré, visiting lecturer in the French department from Grenoble, France, will give a presentation of poetry written by her and her students. Psvchology Colloquium The psychology department will sponsor a colloquium from 12:30 to 2 p.m. today in the Forum Room in the Kansas University. Elmer and Alyce Green of the Menninger Foundation will present a program titled *Healfeed Brain Training*: Healing 'and Creativity.* Jane Abbott, assistant professor of piano, will present a recital at 8 p.m. tonight in Swartooth Recital Hall. Black Music Lecture A lecture on "The Music of Black Americans in the Nineteenth Century" will be presented at 2:30 p.m. Thursday in Swarthout Reental Hall by Eileen Southern, professor of music at York College. The lecture is being sponsored by the department of music history. Roy Addresses Conference Aid to Aged 'Inadequate' By JUDY SIEBERT Kansan Staff Writer A society will, in final analysis, be able to how it cares for its less fortunate and less able. Our society doesn't measure the 22nd annual meeting of Rep. William Roy, D-Kan, in a speech at the dinner meeting of the 22nd annual Conference on Aging Tuesday night. Roy said the Nixon aides wanted in *the* concern aid for the aged and aging "haven't quite hit them until recently, resisted, opposed and blocked programs which would have helped the age, he He said some of the programs that had been realized had been less successful than was hoped. He said 40 percent of the medical expenses of older people. The Older Americans Act, passed in 1985, had not been provided with enough funds to meet the needs of the elderly. At least 25 per cent of the older people in this country are victims of poverty. More are on welfare. SEVERAL PROBLEMS must be dealt with immediately, according to Roy. They are: —Most aged people are constantly faced with the inability to pay for and find health care. The diets of 8,000,000 American older people are insufficient. --Many older people are frustrated because they are forced to retire at the age of 65, even though they are still able to work well. But, Roy said, he is optimistic about the future. He said allocations for the American Act had been raised from $39 million to $100 million. A Senior Citizens Corps and a Seminarian institute to provide financial aid to older citizens and the Foster Grandparents Program and the Newborns Institute were passed to give older people an opportunity to serve in the Army. Nixon is urging passage "without delay" of a new bill that would secure security benefits to widows and widowers, set the retirement age at 62 for everyone and provide a lifelong reduction for the elderly. ROY SAID he also expected future actions to relieve the poverty of city citizens in the near future. He called it an "onerous tax for people over 65." He said it was not enough to unconstitutional; to ask senior citizens to pay property taxes, most of which are used for housing. Roy predicted many advancements in the area of health care for the elderly. He yawned foresaw in the new next few years as people with prepaid health care, and they would not have to University Role Explored By MARTY LYONS Kansan Staff Writer Universities should cease striving to be universities, Oswald P. Backus, professor of history and Slavic and Soviet languages, gave the fifth of the 1971-72 Humanities series lectures at the University of Kansas. The term "university" implies that the instruction universally transmits information to conducts research, Backus said. The rapid proliferation of knowledge and rate of research, Backus said, are the reasons a university should not call itself a university. The university is not its job, according to Backus. Backus stated four goals that he thought should be pursued by a university. solutions or resolutions of all types of problems. They are transmission of knowledge, discoveries of new information and develop their capacity and goals and application. THEER HAVE BEEN challenges to these four goals, according to Backus. Transmission of knowledge has been challenged on the basis that there is no such thing as knowledge. Backus said that the transmission of knowledge was difficult because university's efforts to help students gain insight into their own goals. Among the challenges of acquiring new knowledge, Backus listed a lack of need for seeking new knowledge when the school was closed and the academic community pretended to seek new knowledge when it was actually warming over the drought. Backus said that many people believe students should know their goals before entering college. Researchers regard time they spend talking to students as research time, according to Backus. The challenges to the application of knowledge center or disturbing the social hierarchy inending them He said that people want to keep their interests intact and that they have a knowledge interface with this. "WE CAN SAVE money and reduce failure if students have their goals already," Backus said. Topekans Take Top 3 Awards In Sports Rallye "Knowledge won't be sought for knowledge's sake but for the sake of application." he said. Twenty-one cars participated in a sports car rally Sunday sponsored by the Kansas Regional Sports Car Club of Topeka and White Lakes Shopping Center in Topeka and taken in Lawrence He proposed a solution to the problem of the future university. He said that a more generalized curriculum and curriculum would be better. Each car was judged on time, speed, and distance to the final point. A navigator in each car would be required to reach each checkpoint given a specific speed and distance. Penalty points were given when cars arrived at the checkpoints exceeded or of a minute early or late. Bascom, a retired physician from Manhattan, with the 1972 Distinguished Older Citizens Award, given annually at the annual gala to an older person who has had a markind well during his lifetime. depend on Medicare or burden their families with medical bills He also said a bill had been passed encouraging health professionals such as doctors, nurses, dentists and pharmacists to get together to help people in need of health care for older people on a "one-stop shopping" basis. Senior citizens would have to go to only one location for their needs and also provide for health professionals to be more available in rural areas and in communities than they are presently The club sponsors a rally each month. The next event will be March 26 in Mahattan. The route was from Topka to Kiev, then to Pleasant Grove and Lawrence. Trophies were awarded to the top three drivers. They were all from Ukraine. The Conference will conclude today with an address by Dr. Kurt Harder, state director of the Kansas University Welfare, in the morning and a speech by Dr. H.J. Friedam, director of the Center for Studies in Aging at North Texas State University, at the closing luncheon. QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET ANTIQUES & COLLECTABLES FURNITURE BARGAINS PICK-UP & DELIVERY ESTATE GOODS DISHES & GLASSWARE ROY ENDED by saying that order people were "too often ill-treated" in the shattered, frightened and despondent," and that it was up to the society to see them. 40 Stores Under One Roof! 811 New Hampshire 841-3082 At the conclusion of his speech, Roy presented Dr. Kellogg F. Contac Open 9:00-7:00 10 capsules Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Manufacturers suggested Price $1.69 Sale $1.15 Limit 1 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON Contac 10 capsules Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Manufacturers suggested Price $1.69 Sale $1.15 Limit 1 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON Squibb Aspirin 200 tablets Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Manufacturers suggested Price 98c Sale 29¢ Limit 2 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON Scripto Fiber Tip Pen Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Manufacturers Suggested Price 49c Sale 13¢ Limit 2 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management COUPON Clairol Long, silky Conditioning lotion Manufacturers Suggested Price $2.29 Sale $1.67 Limit 1 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management Squibb Aspirin 200 tablets Manufacturers suggested Price 98c Sale 29¢ Limit 2 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT GROUP CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management LOS ANGELES (AP) — An official biography of Howard Hughes to be prepared by the billionaire's most trusted lieutenants, a spokesman for the company, Co. disclosed Tuesday night. Scripto Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Fiber Tip Pen Manufacturers Suggested Price 49c Sale 13¢ Limit 2 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUO CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management Clairol Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Long, silky Conditioning lotion Manufacturers Suggested Price $2.29 Sale $1.67 Limit 1 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 DISCOUNT DRIVE CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management CONFRONTING ALTERNATIVES IN SEXUALITY A WEEK OF FORUMS ON SEXUALITY FEBUARY 21-24 ALTERNATIVES TO MARRIAGE McCullum TV LOUNGE 7:30 FEB 2 GAY LIBERATION FRONT 7:30 FORUM ROOM UNION FEB 2 SEX AND THE LAW GSP DORM 7:30 FEB 2 BRAVE NEW WORLD: REVISITED DEAN DELBERT SHANKEL 7:30 KANSAS ROOM UNION FEB 24 PRESENTED BY Commission on the Statutory of Women "LONNY FAME AND THE BELL TONES ARE COMING BACK!" The UNION BALLROOM Sat., Feb. 26 ★ FREE BEER ★ BELTS SANDALS HANDBAGS WATCHBANDS LEATHER GARMENTS LEATHER ACCESSORIES ALSO: MOCCASINS FRYE BOOTS HIKING BOOTS PRIMARILY LEATHER craftsmen of fine leather goods Lawrence Patronize Kansan Advertisers DEADLINE FOR FILING For the Student Senate and Class Offices— Wednesday, Feb. 23 A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intent to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary of elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Candidates for CLASS OF FICERS must file a declaration of intent to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 23. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee. Petitions may be picked up between 1:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m.at the Student Senate Office, B-105 Union. All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on deadline date. There Will Be A Meeting for All Candidates on Thursday, Feb. 24 at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room Kansas Union. For Further Info: Call 864-3710 6 Wednesday, February 23, 1972 University Daily Kansan Aerial Football Experts Join KU Staff for Spring John Haddl, quarterback of the San Diego Chargers, and Ted Humman, receiver of the University defense will join the University of Kansas football staff for spring practice. Coach Dona Fambucci announced Hadi, former KU All-American quarterback, will assist Fambridge during spring practice, which begins March 27. The drills will continue until the weekend of April 21 and 29. Plumb, received coach at Tulsa last year, will join the full-time staff. He is the second addition Fambrough has made to the KU staff for next season. Joe Spence, head football coach at Louis and the New York Jets the last four years, joined the staff earlier this month. "It's pretty obvious we're going to work on our passing game this year," Fambrough says. "I'm where we think our talent is." KU's hopes presently center on sophomore quarterback David Jaynes Hadi a 184th win. Football Conference with 233 pass compliments for 3.075 yards and 21 touchdowns last season, is expected to help Jaynes. Spencer's specialty is coaching linemen in pass protection blocking. "John Bridgers is one of the great passing coaches," Fambrough said. To the receiver plums, Clubm brings three years' college playing experience under John Bridges at Baylor. After playing on Baylor's 1960 Gator Bowl and 1961 Gotham Bowl teams, Plumb joined the Buffalo Bulls for the 1962 season. An injury ended his playing though, and he became a coach. Plumb's coaching experience includes three seasons at Texas high schools and two season at colleges in his native California. In 1968, Plumb joined Cope Fred Taylor's staff at Texas A&M where he received receivers as Bubba Thornton and Linn Cole, who later moved into the pros, and Jerry Miller, who season receiving record at TCU. Plumb, 32, will move to Lawrence with his wife and three children after he concludes affairs in Tolka. Plumb's top two receivers at Tuita last year, Jim Butler and Jim Shaw, were drafted by Houston and San Diego, respectively. Hadi will come to Lawrence for the final three weeks of spring practice. Former KU Miler Trains Here Ryun Finds Solitude in Kansas By DAN GEORGE The solitude of Kansas and a need for a more personal training program are the primary reasons why the team tracked Kansas track star, recently moved his Olympic training camp to Lawrence, he said in an interview. Ryun, the world record holder in the mile, half-mile and 1500 Court Orders Hearing On Basketball Brawl MINNESOLAPIS (AP) — A federal judge ordered Tuesday a hearing for two University of Minnesota basketball players suspended for their part in an abuse case Jan. 25 game with Ohio State. The ruling directed that unless the Big Ten Conference's athletic director was unavailable to uphold the suspensions by 6 p.m., Corky Taylor and Ion R. Fisk will be free. the team. In addition, the players were immediately allowed to return to practice sessions. In his opinion, U.S. District In his opinion, U.S. District Court Judge Earl Larson stated: Swimmer Hopes to Shake Slump Wright Seeks Champion Form "In these days when junis in college are able to suspend their formal educational training in the college, you have contracts to turn professional, this court takes judicial notice of the fact that, to many, the chance of getting a job in college stadiums and arenas throughout the country is worth more in economic terms than the chance to get a college education. This year Wright wants to break the records he set as a freshman, and, in the process, wins the All-Conference. At West Point, N.Y. in late March. The 6-foot, 165 lb. coaptain hopes to regain his record form after two disappointing seasons. He will have a strong performance his sophomore year, and last year he did not win. The show he presented as a freshman. Bob Wright, who set three big Eight records as a freshman swimmer, is hoping for a comeback at the University of Kansas. WRIGHT SAID the relatively powerful AID in the Oklahoma and Kansas in that region on Saturday was not a good indication of the strength of the force. Kevin Keaton Despite an "off" year, Wright and Bowers won the 800-yard individual medley and the 200-yard breaststroke and was a member of the winning 800-yard race. Bob Wright important," he said. "You don't get as nervous before one as you do before the conference meet. You really get nervous the day of the Big Eight meet. You know what the season is on the line then." By BILL SCHEELE Kansan Sports Writer Wright said Coach Dick Reasonam had shortened practices for the last two weeks before the Big Eight meet to "give our team a tougher test of all the strains they have undergone throughout the year." "Right now we are concentrating on sprint work to increase our speed. We are in top physical shape," he said. "THE PAST two years depth has won the conference for you Wristbands Oklahoma has nearly as much support as to swim our best to beat them "We've worked hard since the second week in September," he said. "Sometimes we swim 9,000 yards a day in practice and I am rewarded to the Big Eight meet, and I am sure we will be ready." Wright's strongest competition in his specialty, the breaststroke, came from Alabama, Iowa State and Denny Bush of Missouri. Wright would like to settle the score with Bush, who had been earlier this year in a dual meet. A meeting of the conference athletic directors already had been called for Thursday in Chicago by big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke for "follow-up" procedures in the case. Later Tuesday, Duke's office announced the meeting had been moved to Minneapolis. Taylor and Behagen, both 6-foot-9 juniors, had been suspended for the remainder of the season following the Jan. 25 game that hospitalized three Ohio State players overnight in Minneapolis. Film clips show Taylor kneeing Ohio State's Luke Witte in the groin and Behagen coming off to stomp on the foot 7-toe Burke head in the closing seconds of a game, won by Ohio State 50-44. attorneys for the players, Frank Briux and Ronald Simen, said they had been notified of the accident and that a pair probably would not attend. In his opinion, Larson also set down guidelines for the athletic director to ensure a stipulation that the hearing record be made available to the players in the event they wish to appeal the decision to the faculty judge. meter runs, had been training in Califa, Califf, in preparation for the July Olympic trials in Eugene, Ore. "A dual meet is not too After being plagued with incoercency, men may be decided, made to answer, and his former coach, Bob Timmons. White try in Coach Cameron to get a job by mail and telephone, but neither was satisfied with the arrangement. "We lacked a necessary immediacy in the mail and on the telephone, so I had to harden to write what him what he had done wrong when I hadn't." "Some coaches work you hard one day, then easy the next," he said. "Timmons works you hard every day. He works to a peak. He is often in other programs which are easier, but this one has your work for me." RYUN, WHO was coached by chefs at the East and at KU, said there was no reason he should depart from a program which has been so ILOVERY He also emphasized the importance of training in familiar surroundings. "I like California and plan to return to my home here after the Olympics," he said. "But there are risks, but I have to have to be made in living there." "Right now, there just isn't enough room for adjustments. There's more solitude in Kansas than in California, and I want to work under familiar circumstances." Jim Ryun "He's always been under pres TIMMONS SAID the pressure of publicity was another aspect of Ryan's move. Marquette Stays No. 2 Minus Star BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Marquette's No. 2-ranking liners on in the Associated Press basketball poll released Monday. sure from all sources," he said. "That's one reason he quit for a year in 49. "You can't let it get you down," he said. "你 have to keep a perspective of yourself. You have to realize what you are capable of." Whether the Warriors can continue unbeaten through their last four regular-season games and stay No. 2 behind top-ranked UCLA without Chones, the star center who signed with the pro team last week, in one of the sport's most intriguing questions. Ryun said he didn't worry about the expectations of others, because they didn't always happen and the situation a runner was in. "A runner of his stature is always in the spotlight. He's amazing, he can run fast. It isn't enough for him to win the mile; he has to break four Marquette, which built a 22-0 record with three victories last week, the final one without Chomos, received one first-place victory by a nationwide plate of sports writers and sportscasters. AT PRESENT, he plans to enter only the 1500-meter race at the Olympic trials. That he has Ryun, who was working out by himself, will now train with the KU track squad. Other than Timmon's personal adjustments, he said, he planned no major changes in his Olympic preparations. Ryun is sometimes slated to run in three meets before the July match. After meeting Mary Liqueur, Liang is expected to compete in an American milfer, March 4 in the Los Angeles Coliseum, he will compet in the Florida Relays March 23. He is also expected to run in the Kansas Relays April 19. "I have to keep a steady pace; I don't want to reach a peak too soon." not yet qualified does not worr$_2$ him. "I haven't run any outdoor races this season," he said. "I's still early in the year and there's no real need to run real fast yet." m concentrating on gradually working toward faster times, try to run a 3:32 mile right now. It will try to keep me in constant keep up that pace. Ryun, whose recent practice times have been better than his meet times, said his main concern was consistency. BULLFIGHTERS WANTED Everyone at one time or another has admired the brave matador of the bullfight arena. Watch this space to see how you too can be a card carrying bullfighter. WHAT IS A SHOE RACK? FABULOUS FASHIONS! FANTA Neal Mask Earns Scholastic Honors By STEVE STRAS By STEVE STRAS Kanean Snorte Writer "People accept you first as an athlete." Mask said. "I want to be considered and accepted first as a student." High School in Tulsa, Mask was valedictorian of his class. One athlete at the University of Kansas who does not conform to the stetopter image or a basketball player, Ola Kila. senior basketball player. Masks say he is not happy to be considered just a basketball player. With his scholastic achievements, Mask has more right to be recognized first as a student than do many non-student at KU. He earned a 4.00 grade point average last semester. As a senior at Nathan Hale BEING A HIGH school basketball star, Mask wanted to accept a basketball scholarship, and was told to accept the offer from KU. "I decided to come to KU because of the basketball tradition here, and also because I would be good academic situation," he said. As a senior in high school, Mask received a number of basketball scholarships offered by several academic scholarship offers from such notable schools as Columbia, Princeton and Columbia. When he first came to KU. Mask, like many students, had no idea what he wanted to study. He took a number of liberal arts courses. IT WOULD seem to many a Later, Mask took a couple of courses he taught by Clark Brennan in chemistry. After that, Mask decided to want to make masks. "Of anybody here, Professor Bricker has been the one person to influence me the most," Mask said. Packers Trade Donny Anderson GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — The Green Bay Packers, who expense half of their heresy "Gold Dust Twins," traded Donny Anderson to the St. Louis Cardinals for power runner Kyle Schwarzer. While considered one of the most versatile running backs in the National Football League, Anderson's blocking position Bay Coach and General Manager Devine last season. Four teams qualified for the semifinal round of the KU women's intramural basketball tournament by winning Tuesday night. Devine had no comment on losing Anderson, who was signed for reported charges but out of state to 1666, but the 6-foot-12, 120 pound Lane as "a Women's Cage Tourney Moves Into Semifinals Lewis No. 1 and the Lewis No. 2 game on p. thursday in Robinson Gymn one bracket. The Ebonies and Hashinger A will meet at the Ebonies on p. Thursday. ROOKIE JOHN Brockington rushed for 1,105 yards, and strong blocking from the second man in the first half, became increasingly important. strong blocker, an excellent pass receiver and a fine runner." Devine turned to rushing as the cornerstone of the offense last season, when the club lacked consistent passing. Lewis Nil. I owned Alpha Phi 14-6 in quarter-final action tuesday. It was the independents over Kappa Alpha Theta, 25-7; the Epsilon Delta, 23-6; Delta No. 1, 16-7, and Hassinger A over Alpha Delta Pi, 18-5. The championship match will be played Feb. 29. Devine considers reserve running back Dave Hampton a stronger blocker than Anderson, as well as a canable ball carrier. Recently, when speculation mounted that Anderson would be traded, Devine said, "I have an idea that if Dave Hampton carried the ball as much as Anderson and Brockington, with blocking they had last year, he might gain 2,000 yards." Both Anderson, 28, and Lane, 26, had their best seasons in 1970. Anderson and gained 414 more as a receiver than affaced off 507 and 306, respectfully. LANE CARRIED the ball for 977 yards, second in the National Conference, and scored 15 touchdowns in the rushed for last year. The team suspended for the Cardinals' final game after publicly criticizing team vice-president William V. Hussey of a salary hassle. They were hailed as successors to Paul Hornung and Jim Taylor, ball-carrying stars of Green Bay's championship years in the early and mid-1960s. Anderson came closest to fulfilling his goals in all nine yards rushing in six seasons ranks fifth in Packer history. 59 GRABOWSKI WAS never the same after咬拳 a knee in his hand, as claimed by the Chicago Bears on waivers for the 1971 season. Anderson and Jim Grabowski arrived at Green Bay as rookies and were the only team to estimated total of $1 million by the late Vince Lombardi at the height of his building war between the old and American Football League. difficult task for anybody to carry such a high GPA. With both basketball and his studies in chemistry, he would be swamped trying to get everything done. This is not the way it has been, though, he can play. "Occasionally, basketball interferes with my work in classes, like when we go away for a road game and I miss some games but overall I am able to keep up with my studies," Mask said. Earlier in the school year, Mask took some time off from basketball to return to Oklahoma. He was competing for a Rhodes Scholarship. That was experience of bad memories for him. To earn a Rhodes Scholarship, a person must first have a high scholastic average. Then he must pass an examination committee of former Rhodes scholars. MASK SAID he thought the interview he had was biased. They asked him why he went to a college where there had been campus violence. With graduation coming soon, Mask said he had not given any thought to trying professional basketball. He admitted he did not believe he would be good enough. Besides, he said he would rather become a doctor. "It seemed that they could not understand why a person would want to go to KU." Mask said P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. CUSTOM JEWELRY WE WILL WORK FROM YOUR OWN DESIGN, OR CREATE A DESIGN FOR YOU WEDDING RINGS ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY Q—Does the STABLES serve beer? EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT THE STABLES, BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK? Q—Is the STABLES a place where horses are raised? A—Not Necessarily. Q—Does the STABLES serve beer? A—Only on occasion! (Mon. thru Sat.) I I Q—Are women allowed at the STABLES? A—Only the liberated, daring, sensuous type. Q—is it true, that Ace Johnson the owner, is a famous gambler? A—Yes! Q—Is Tom Sheely, the manager, as handsome as we've heard? A—Yes, according to Tom. A—Yes, according to Tom. Q—What's a female bartender? A—The counterpart of a male bartender. Q—When do these female dollies tend bar? A—Every Tuesday Night!! Q—What's a happy hour? A—The happy hour is a time for fun, beer, and action. It's every Monday night between 8-9 p.m. when pitchers are on tap for 50'11l Q—What's foosball? A—Foosball is a crazy, ridiculous game played by the insane! And we have both foosball and the insane at the STABLES. Q—Are these answers for real? A—Find out for yourself at . . . . THE STABLES University Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 23.1972 7 Report Describes Learning Problems A report on the problems of children with learning disabilities was presented to the Unified School District 497 Board of Trustees. Dr. Floyd Hudson, of the University of Kansas Medical Center and assistant professor of learning disabled child and the methods most often used to help him. A learning disabled child is any child performing a skill when the grade level in one or more fields. Hudson said this definition applied to nearly 15 per cent of school-age children in some districts. The emphasized the importance that teachers do not separate them entirely from the regular classroom. Bob Lowe, Lawrence school psychologist, reported on programs already in existence in the system. He said the main problem now was that there was no way to control it and research on the subject. Cai, K. Sirkson, superintendent of schools, said that the school had to develop problems that existed for learning disabled children. However, until legislation makes it possible for other special education programs from the present tax lid, further programs cannot be started, he said. In other action, the school board approved the application for a $75,000 Title IV federal project grant. Private Club, New Code OK'd by City Commission The Lawrence City Commission approved Tuesday the site plan for The Sanctuary, a building on the property that the Nabes at 1401 W. 7th St. The plan involved two conditions: on parking space for the club, and on entertainment space and proper screening of the club by trees and grass. In other business, the commission unanimously adopted the first reading of the 4388,印刷ing for the adoption of the 1974 edition of the National Electrical Code. The contractors are not allowed to work from their homes but have to repair work from their homes as under the old code. BLEVINS HONDA Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service 843-333-3331 111 W. Church Ave. The commission also deferred for three weeks a decision on the sanitation study. THE MERCANTILE Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD HERBS AND SPICES MINTS FINE SAUces FINE SAUces The excitement of your love in a DIAMOND TRIO THE HOLIDAYS Made for each other... the groom's handsome wedding band and the bride's small skirt. This perfectly matched the symbols to the beauty of the match made on your 2 Locations Ray Christians All 3 rings $269 809 Mass. 836 Kansas Lawrence Topeka אחרי כלומר Red Baron WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHTS WEDNESDAY ONLY Pitchers . . . . . . 75' Girls . . . . . . FREE Guys . . . . . . . 755 SENIORS!! Call immediately for appointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE. 艺 1234567890 Ph. 843-0330 10 a.m.-5 p.m Hixon Studio JESUS CHRIST 30 Varieties of Donuts Hot and Cold Drinks a.m. 12.p.m. Tues.-Sat. 5-5.Sun. 5-5.Mon. 1730 W. 23rd St. 842-3664 VANESSA REDGRAVI KEN RUSSELL'S FILM THE DEVILS x OLIVER REED EVE. 7:20 & 8:00 Matinees Sat. Sun. 2:05 & 4:00 Twilight Prices Good For 4:00 Show Only. Hillcrest --- 100 Fly girls who know what to do for or to a man. Open 24 hrs. per day Swedish Fly Girls Carol Lee Matinee Sat.-Sun. 2:15 & 4:05 Twilight Prices Good Friday, 6:30-8:30 Eve. 7:40 & 9:35 Matinee Sat..Sun. 2:20 & 4:10 Twilight prices at 4:10 Only Hillcrest ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S KIDNAPPED THE AIR HOSTESSES FROM COPENHAGEN Hillcrest Parts at a discount 7 Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort are METROCOLOR MONDAY GP ENDS THURS. 2:30 7:30 9:25 Ends Thursday Eve. Shows 7:30 & 9:30 COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th 842-9450 Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. JOY IN THE MORNING MICHAUD IVETTE CHAMBERIAIN MIMIEIDIX Pickens Auto Parts and Service Varsity THEATRE --- Telephone V3-1065 26th & 10wa Ph. V13-1353 DRIVE IN AND COOP OF LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 843.5304 days per week Independent COIN Laundry & Dry Cleaners COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE O TO 60 MPH -13.5 O RECLINING FRONT SEATS O UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL. LOVE THAT DATSUN TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN 500 E.23rd One day each additional word: $.01 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered online or by telephone. For color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Highest price paid for used cars. G.J. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608. tf Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them. You're at an advantage. If you don't. It is a middledive in the Kiowa River and the analysis of "New America," of Western Civilization "Campan Madhouse," 14f West 14th. Now you can buy Steven components at FACTORY COST $10 plus 10-Year Warranty. Buy the Pride Avenue in the midday. 2-39 stewardship house. 1967 Yamaha 250 Twot Scrambleer 200cc street bike, hardback tires, cleat back tire, and good grip. 100cc road bike with 2 audio cords or organ tags. $400. And new deck $0.00. Grip Keeper. $84.425 deck $0.00. Greg Keeper. $84.425 deck $0.00. Northside Shop, 707 North 2nd, blocks north of River Bridge item, old wood cooking and heating items, oil wood stoves, stoves, bicycles, repaired wood, of other useful items. Open to 8 seven days. Halkter Albertend, 82 Sharp, Acura Lentera hatch, fit all 10minita SLIPA 5.1/28 3mm and 12.5mm Pinn Strobe, Herculeshpable, match learning chairs 643-988-223, match learning chairs 643-988-223 1963 Morris Minor convertible Low mileage, excellent condition Calle evenings. 842-4136 or 843-1240 2-24 8 track stereo tapes $39.99 e coupon Gregg Tire Co., 814 W. 22rd 2-23 Toyota, 71, automatic, tape deck, real fine car $1.395 Call Bill. 843- 3473. 2-24 New spring knit shirts in prints from the nostalgic to the elegant Earthshine, Mass. and 8th St. 2-24 Neat old flags to cover that ugly spot. Earthshine, East 8th and Mass. 2-24 One group of shirts and sweaters up to 50' off Earthshine, 12 E, 8th S. Going trucking? Do it right. 46 VW bus, FM radio, beater, excellent tires. Engine recently overhaulable. Mike. 842-7125 at 6:00 p.m. 2-244 KANSAN WANT ADS Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.3 Yauahma-363. 71 in good shape. Runs great. must sell it now! Also. Butcher 400 tenn smartphone, little-live case. You can call too. Call 800-244-2042 for Lee. HELP! For sale, 1968 Flat 850. Excellent running condition. Good body. Must sell soon. Call 842-777-601, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Mail Gunery, 2-24 IBM ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS 842-8634 2-23 Going camping over spring break? Stop by Sunflower Surplus, 815 Vermont for all your needs 2-23 Peugeot XPIE0 Fire racing bicycle, 21, 23, 24 of frame width now insets. No rear tires. No waiting. Ride-On Bike Shop, 100 Mass. 843- 425 On-Bike Shop, 100 Mass. 843- 425 Low-Low Beans with the flare look at Low-Low Prices. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-25 Super Sale Dresses: Values from $18- $32, now $5-$10. The Alley Shop: $43 Mass. 2-25 Crop Tops—bigger selection, newest styles, $7.99 The Attle, 292 Mass 2-25 Jeans, Jeans, Jeans: Latest styles, best selection, best prices. The Affric, 922 Mass. 8-23 VW 1970, beetle, automatic stocktender, transportation, 260 miles, sidling roof, radio, portable speaker, radial gyros, $41.75 or best offer, calendar 6027 2-25 MOTORCYCLES. Best offer taken: 1970 Huasquarie 9-P, 1719 Yamaha PT-1, 170 MG midget conv. 1133 New York Stock. W-14 3-25 1233 New York Stock. W-14 Men's Big Mac flannel shirts, small, big, large, and extra-large in J. C. Penney's work clothes department. 2:25 FENDER SPKR. CAB w/2 JBL D140's. Unused, will sell less, than half price 842-9238 9:00-12:00 a.m. 2-24 SUEDE PURSES—assorted selection only $6.00 at The Attic, 927 Mass 2-25 Need blank cassette? Buy them cheap. 60 min. tapes; reg $25, 250 per mute. price $15. 90 min. tapes; reg $25, 826-818 or Drew, Dior, 826-018. 2:28 Mamiya C. 33, TLR 80 mm f2.8, 120/220, and sheet film: 843-8473. Jay 2-28 1968 Firebird 400 convertible, 8-track player, hood-touch, air shocks. Call 843-456-500 after 5:00. 2-29 1965 Mustang 289 engine, 4 speed transmission. Call 842-2374 between 4 and 6 p.m. Ask for Steve. 2-28 Schwinn 10 speed, like new. Only used for 3 months. Call 842-2601. - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock — others on order THE CONCORD SHOP - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES McCONNELL LBR. CO. E LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz., pts. - qts. only 25% OFF - ARTIST CANVAS 1970. Nova SS. 396-375 H. 4-padded, Clutch. Special Interior II. Special Interior II. A Machine. Above, extra long couch room. $60. $84-141. Call Paid Chrystal Chandler, Rose Medallion Vase, Walnut Table, Castor Set Four Matching Charms and Rackers, Lamp, Glass Mirrors, Micail Call, Candle in Baffura. 1971 Volkswagen Super Beetle Con- tinue Perfect condition AM Radio Bright orange and black Must sell. Phone 842-7122 3-25 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication 1968 Plym, Road Runner, 2 door hardship. 283 4 speed Excellent condition Call 845-7800 at 8 p.m. Three days ATTENTION SPORT BOAT BURTIE Perform a dugout drag and ski boots. His percussionist skills are available in various states of now. Is now the time to call Call John. Schwinn Continental — 10, speed. Black Light, 22"², fixture, wooden frame. Magnavox Component Stereo. Call 843-2812 after 12 noon. EMERALD CITY LEATHER FEA- ture: $10.95-$14.95 $10.95-$14.95 $10.95-$14.95 $10.95-$14.95 $10.95-$14.95 $10.95-$14.95 $10.95-$14.95 $10.95-$14.95 $10.95-$14.95 $10.95-$14.95 WARRIT, BAY 223, 2-29 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 EAGLE $^3$ Cercle String Bass, made 1900 Excellent orchestral sound. Includes cause and buy $500 or best offer at K.C.C. or UDK news room. 2-29 Leather jackets are, cowboy Hawaiian fannel and wool and insanity dial all under $21.31. Fashion fea- ture is $25.90 for a pair and you have $2.00 jean IWY 9.19 Vermont. FOR RENT Ridge House Apt.4—for the budget home of the Ridges. It has the maximum and the maximum at boats in low, ER, 1 room, 2 bedrooms, and 3 baths. 116 for details. 240 Cedarwood- 116 for details. 263 WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 306 W 47th St, West Hillsborough or internited - 2-bedroom apartments or interlined - 2-bedroom apartments, petting, carport or balcony. West Hill Lawyers. Call 24 hours a day 811- lawyer. Call 24 hours a day 811- HILLIEWILL APARTMENTS — 732-45 W 24th St (i) to $199 and one 10th St (i) to $399 apartments. Apartments. Carpeted, drips, electric and much more expensive apartment sites with many more apartments. COLLEGE HILL. MANOR now available 1 and 2 bedroom furnished flat in A, C new dwellings; we own a flat to campan. Call 642-8220 or visit www.collegehill.com WANT PEACE, AND QUETT! Need 1 or 2 rooms. Large house in country. Call 842-7771. 8:30-9:30 a.m. Mon-Fri. John Gaines. 2-24 For rent—one or two bedroom apts, air conditioned, garbage, car park facilities, facial care, TV V's available. Call 814-262-6523 step by Hillsview Apts, 814-262-6523 ITS NEVER TOO LATE and it is a long time from Jan. to May to live in attractive, one call to Mrs. Forrest at 2017-A Harvard Road and you can learn more about the amenities available in Lawrence's best located and most attractive campuses in Arkansas and Missouri; Avalon Apartments, Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of apartments; construction, please rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, reasons you would enjoy living in Lawrence make this semester in Lawrence a location for August occupancy and special summer rates for June each year. A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS Too sunny. Go to the beach or class. Weather too hot this spring! Swim in our pool Like indoor ivy. Hold your breath. Stay on the beach you can ride Saturdays. Safari airports are nearby. University Terrace Apartments furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $110 and up, beginning September 9th. Apt. 1, B or call, 843-142-5 9 M&AT Preparation for the Medi- cal Care Program and exam-training designed with a team of experienced academic students. For information CENTREL P O Box 256, New York Red. Buron Vacancy in contemporary home, with swimming pool for young man. Private entrance and bath. $50 /mo. utilities paid. VI 2-8995. 2-25 Apartment for rent. One bedroom, $85.00 19 W 14th Call 842-8523 after 6:00 p.m. 2-25 Senior or graduate student to share 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus, utilities paid, also large sleeping room on second floor. VI 3-185 2-25 Apartment—2 bedroom, large field in back, sort of modern. $98 Call 843- 8512 after 12 noon moon 2-25 NOTICE UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright: (816) 474-4076. INFANT DAY-CARE BASE. 842-7690. Professional child care for children 1 mo to 12 mo. Full or part-time. Fi. Specially designed event. 31-35. DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe Leave anytime from N.Y., or go to airport. Get IDs issued. Flight Center, 221 North Randall, Madison Wisconsin 50756 Discount $499 TEE FEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB— Welcome, back homemakers! party club offering various options for second set of parties term party, party welcome, party dancing, party party. Nee stand hand, black dress. We also have special rates for club or civic group, day or even night at the Fee Pee Challenge Hallstatt at Fee Pee Challenge Service center. Business hours: 8:42-2:82 After the event. Phone: 842-2822. For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center: 861-4441. tf Spend this summer working in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to Colorado Information Box 30 Oklahombo, Colorado, BCO 8032 Those doodles you've been looking for? That makes your worries sparkle? Well, we have a few for ya at Earthshine on the 6th at Mass: 2-24 Now taking application for wati- tion must be aggressive and enjoy working with people and be able to confront the challenges once but will train it more. Apply summer and following school year for employment. Phone compensation are excellent. Phone KITTYCATS is coming and he loves pineapple pussie drinks 2-25 KITTYCATS is coming and he's got a hot tin on some catnip . . . 9,5 Appearing at the Mad Hatter on Wed, Feb. 23, and Fri, Feb. 25 BUZY2 AND CHIP, a jazz rock duo Free admission. 2-25 JUST ARRIVED~Swim wear and sandswepers. The Alley Shop, 848 Mass. 2-25 SANDSWEEPERS JUST ARRIVED THE AFTERNOON 977 AM 9:45 SWIM WEAR JUST ABRIVED THE ATTIC 927 MASS 9-25 Women's alterations: 20 years exp. experience. Call 845-2767, 9:30 to 5:30. 3-13 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Q. When is a home a good investment in Town House Twins, TW? Who can buy a town house? A. Either the young family or a couple rating and a small downpayment can move into a Town House Twin. TW Town House Twin offers unique tax benefits. You can also program for further questions. For further questions a tenant can help you buy. TW Town House Twins. After hours call Don SWINGING COATS AND CAPES FOR SPUING THE ALLEY SHOP 843 MASS 2-28 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES CALENDAR CALL UN4.4444 For SUA Events 电话 C. B. HUTCHER BECAUSE needs volunteers, workers, Orientation will be this Sat, 8:00 a.m. p.m. CatererRoom, room 1112 ticket info: www.catererspace.com feedback, etc. March 29, 7:30 p.m. 2:45 Tutoring in organic and biochem. Grad with tutoring experience. Call Rich at 843-1342 or 864-3549 2:29 WANTED Used BOKONK is where to buy new jersey, new waverly walters, new york, new Hawaiian shirts around, velvetweed, "banana," so it吹, N.Y. Vermont, "bamboo." CABAY ARTS Fly to Wichita Sat, Feb 26. Return Sun, Feb 27. Cost only $280 roundtrip. Call 842-8373 for reservations 2-25 Women's alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767. 9:30-5:30. 5-7 913 843-9275 913 842-0025 2324 Ohio Washington-Stevenson fiction books to be released this fall. Visit the Empirium Expand your understanding of its different styles. Come in and ask how we can help you with the development of Union to Dearborn Authenticism. STUDENTS: FOR YOUR Female roommate wanted Jayhawk Towers. $35/mo., utilities paid. Call Carolyn at 812-600. 2-24 | OUND NEAR UNION | 1989 man's KU class ring. Red stone, KU embosed. Identify initials. Call after 5:43-106. Pay for aid. | | :--- | :--- | | | 2-24 individual to share house with four owners. On own room, fantastic share dinner meals. Rent $400 plus department. Deposit $499. 824-4707 ; 824-4708; 2-235 ATTENTION TWINS 18 years and older - pediatric needs for medical care and have blood and brain wave test needed. TWIN 26-36 years needed. TWIN 26-36 years needed. TWIN 26-36 years needed. Medical, Chemical, Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! Brock band needs place to practice by March 17. Willing to pay if necessary. Call 843-8086 or 841-2504. 2-24 A person to cooperate a living group (4 women, 3 men, age 21-50) and a two-year-old with a prince information call 842-9696 W-25 842-9696 PERSONAL Roommate to share two bedrooms (own room) apartment. Completely furnished $72.50 with bills paid for music major (piano) $842-9037. Your old cowboy shirts, Hawaiian prints, and letter swaters and jackets are here. Earthshine 1 E. 8th. B. Wife of graduate student will do sewing, peasant dresses, long skirts, etc. Will also do mending, horn, new clothing. Call 842-5794. Contact: Call 842-5794. 2:24 To the gray boy who found our little white dog with the thorny tail—"Thank you!" "Cannot express our gratitude." We've got a cap to fit your head. Funky styles from the engineer to the 'Big Apple' on down. Earthshake at 8th on Mass. 2-24 BECAUSE is a listening service. It is open every night, 8-12 p.m. Sun. Through thurs., Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. 843-9623 9.99 If you're down on those tight fits—just wait. Earthshine in the Lower East Side. 2-24 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared tuned and starting service 2434 Iowa VI 1-1008 TRIUMPH CSC TOYOTA THUNDER sirloin Competition Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp. to K.C. Steaks Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Sports Cars Inc. LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place Our motto is and has always been There is no substitute for quality 11: Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge 2300 W. 29th Tr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 Let PLANNING A TRIP?? Phone 843-121 $ ^{10} $ Mass—The Mailis—Hillcrest—KU Union Maupintour travel service Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! Twin-speed bicycles Gouget, Genei. Ohio. Chinooria. Kalkoff. No waiting. I in stock in 21, 25, 24, 25 inch bicycles. For more information on Onike Bike. 1401 Mansfield. 2-25 WE HAVE TOPS FROM A TO Z. THE ALLEY SHOP, 841 Mass. 2-25 EARRINGS - EARRINGS - and more EARRINGS The Attic; 927 Mass. 2-25 LONG DRESSES FOR PARTIES THAT ARE SUPER THE ALLEY SHOP 843 MASS. 2-28 1950 style concert and sock hop starring Lonnie Fame and the Bell Tones. 8:11 p.m. Union Ballroom. Feb. 26. See you there. Free Beer! TYPING Experienced, typist will type your term papers, theses or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Vol C13-3-3281. Roxmack Man. * Experienced in typing theses, diagrams, term papers, other mine types, map projections, typographic type. Accurate and prompt scripting skills. Phone: 843-555-6555, Mrs. Wright Term papers, these types accurately and promptly, your choice of type; electric typewriter, WILLIAM 842-7077; 842-7065, nightlila 842-7077. Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter Prompt attention 843-6958 2-29 Accurate typing of your thesis, work on dissertation, or miscellaneous work on IBM Selector typewriter with plea font and large-letter keyboard. Court. 842-140 for information. 2:58. LOST Wash hair tie hair, 1 year old. White with black and some brown markings. Please call: 843-4578. Reward: 2-23 If anyone has found prescription glasses in case marked Dr Aglin, please call 842-7422. 2-24 Lost in ladies lounge of Union gold filled ring, cloudy blue stone, tape wrapped. Mon, Feb 14 Call 864-231 after 5:06FF Siamse cat lost in vicinity of 13th and Kentucky Thursday night. An- nex to Mary Ann. Call 842-6862. 9:34 MISCELLANEOUS BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sail—Sizes 8-10-12, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal. 910 Kentucky. 4-20 Socks that'll make you roll your pantlegs up Earthshine; East 8th and Mass. 2-24 UFA Large assortment of antique mufflers for 25c each Earthshine, 12 E. 8th St. HELP WANTED OVERSEA-JOBS FOR STUDENTS The AI, professional and occupational careers of the AI professionals. Wi-Fi OVERSEA: Wi-Fi OVERSEA Wi-Fi 1067, San Diego, CA 92115 OVERSEA-JOBS FOR STUDENTS The AI, professional and occupational careers of the AI professionals. Wi-Fi OVERSEA: Wi-Fi OVERSEA Wi-Fi 1067, San Diego, CA 92115 THE HLE in the WALL DELICATESESSEN SANDWICH SHOP Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order 843.7685—We Deliver—9th & III Shoe Fits . . . Repair It' "For Feets Sake. If The 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Spacion new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. RAMADA INN 843. 8500 DISCOUNT - The Stereo Store PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE UDIOTRONICS --- Wednesday, February 23,1972 University Daily Kansan Gays Talk of Guilt, Fears By RODHARDY Kansas Stuff Writer Kansan Staff Writer Member of the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front discussed their experiences Tuesday night at a forum sponsored by the LGBT community. Women. Four members of the front fielded questions from the floor concerning the problems that most gay people experience. "One of the greatest difficulties to be resolved in the gay world is guilt feelings," one member of the front said. "There is the feeling of insecurity in a world overly hostile to gays and then there is the great fear of how your sexual preferences react to your sexual preference. Another member of the front, said "First, I had to ask myself if I was happy?" Did I know who I Speakers Talk Favorably Of Ideas of Group Marriage By MARSHA CLIFTON Advantages and disadvantages group marriages and commitments discussed Monday night in an alternatives to marriage seminaries the seminar was the first in a series entitled "Confronting Alarmism" sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Alternatives introduced involved marriages on a contract renewal basis, or a more binding rule if children were involved. Economic reasons as well as the challenge of living with many people were named as possible reasons for group marriages. Otto Zingg, campus minister for United Ministries in Higher Education and Candidacy Bureau, spoke at the seminar. Both spoke in favor of group marriages in terms of their personal opinions about marriage. ZINGG SAID his wife and he sought an equalization of roles within their marriage. "We're trying to fight the stereotypes of traditional marriages," Zingg said. Black Officials, KU Endowment Meet Today The University of Kansas Essential to host 13 black representatives of educational institutions in Kansas and southeastern United States, they argue. The participants are coming to KU to attend a development consortium sponsored by the Boston Foundation of New York City. Members of the Endowment Association staff will be programmed to be explored in topics to be explored by the group are public relations and publications, elements of fund raising, deferred funding and fundraising. Holly Thomson, publications editor; Todd Seymour, fund director; Larry Hearn, director of programs; John Scalia, assistant treasurer, will present the program. Opening the seminar will be Irvin E. Youngbun, executive secretary KU Endowment Association. The Moton Foundation was formed in 1982 to group of friends and associates of the late Robert R. Moton, former president of Tusks ee institute. The ideal situation they sought was one in which both partners worked half time to share in the effort of rescuing the structure of their marriage Zingz told of their plans to join another couple in an extended family living situation. Zingz said they felt a "sense of mutual affection" and that advantages they had anticipated included being able to do away with one car, saving on electricity and utility bills. They also provided children of both couples a multiplicity of models. ZINGG SAID the couples had not anticipated shared sex but "were open to what might be possible." A problem in this situation, Zinga said, might be the fact that for the most part society is not interested in defining the defended on the basis that Christianity could be used in other forms, and this was one form. "This is one way we can truly love thy neighbor' or celebrate creation," Zingg said. Howard said she had become a member of the group management or communal system after being involved with a group relation situation. "I felt a closeness to this group although my husband didn't share my experiences that time. Howard has lived for two years in communes in Lawrence and Chicago. She can communicate with the communities "can be bad situations." "The primary concern should OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The 1971-72 Miss Nude Universe was arrested at the end of her act Tuesday night at an Oklahoma City nightclub in what was billed as a murder. Oklahoma's obscenity laws. be common interests; then sexual tensions will resolve themselves to become a shared sexuality or as heterosexuality will be important considerations in an urban family situation. Howard said. Howard said she believed that a more serious attitude was prevalent in a community if the women's movement was women's movement. She said that though there could be emotional security among women, they could feel closer if by the women's movement. Society's negative attitude, guilt feelings stemming from religious backgrounds or pressures from parents were visible problems or disadvantages to these situations. Prof to Help Review Grants Charles Kiesler, professor and chair of developmental psychology, will leave today for Washington D.C. to participate in a National Science Foundation Grant. The five-man panel will review all the recent social psychology grant proposals made to the foundation. The panel meets four times a year for about two days each week. Kiesler said. He said the meeting will have 80 proposals at each meeting. was and what I wanted to be? After a great deal of introspection, I decided to confront the problem. I met other gay people and established relationships which were very Kiesler said one grant proposal from KU would be reviewed by the board at this meeting. Because of his position at KU, he would not be able to participate in discussion of that proposal. Kiesler is now serving the second year of his two year term on the panel. "However, there is still the gay-hate scene. When you admit to yourself that you are gay, you must also recognize the fact that most straight people will fear you and need to avoid and fear One member suggested bisexuality as an alternative to being either gay or straight. The other member said it was "absurd, because it is an either-or situation," but bisexuality is the "sex of the opposite sex." This contended that there was a difference between being bisexual and trying to be just for the sake of convenience. The forum agreed that homosexuals are tired of being "corralled into a stereotype relationship with other people." The gays have had to "create their own culture apart from straight society," one member said. The Gay Lib forum was the second in a series of forums arranged to discuss "Confronting Alternatives in Sexuality." Aging Conference: 9 a.m., Forum Room Kansas Union. Campus Bulletin Aging Conference; both, img 8 room. Aging Conference; 10:30 a.m. Pine Room, Council Room, Cottonwood Calefaction 10:30 a.m. International Room, Dublin Library Center | 9 a.m. - 5 a.m. Jayawha Room Aging Conference: 10:30 a.m. Ptown Room Room, Parlor Visual Arts: 11:30 a.m., Alcove B, Café teria Social Anthropology: 11:30 a.m., Alcove C Cafeteria. Sociology Committee: 11:45 a.m. Alcove D, Cafeteria Alum ni Association: noon, Alcove A, Cafeteria teria MAPPC Committee: moon, Sunflower Cafeteria Cafeteria. Sociology Committee; 11:45 a.m. Alcove D, Cafeteria. County Clerk: 12:15 p.m. Kansas Room: Social Welfare Seminar: 12:15 p.m. Centennial Room: Russian Tablet: 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark, Cafeteria 12:30 p.m. Grass Room Design: 12:30 p.m. Oread Room. Psychology Colloquium: 12:30 p.m. Forum Room. Social Welfare Seminar: 1 p.m., Room 305 Pine Room Social Welfare School Council: 2:30 p.m. Fairview Middle School Council: 2:30 p.m. Council Room City Clerks: 2:50 p.m., International EISC: 3 p.m. Regionalist Room. JFC Executive Council: 3:30 p.m. Governors Room. M180s - Harlem Arena IT'S FUN IT'S NATURAL IT'S EARTHY IT'S LAYERED IT'S SPRING! and The Village Set Brings You the Best of IT! SIMS: 6 p.m., Parlor A. NELS (Environmental Law): 7 p.m., In- forestation MID WEEKLY? 7 p.m. Urban Road, 50 West 16th Street: 7:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium Student Finance: 8:30 p.m., Regionalist Room International Law) 7 p.m. International Room. Russian Majors: 7 p.m. Oread Room. Student Finance: 8:30 p.m. Regionallis Room. Club: Club 15; 9:15 p., Pine Room. Council Room Office of the Clerk: 2:30 p.m., International Room, Parlor IT'S FUN IT'S NATURAL IT'S EARTHY IT'S LAYERED IT'S SPRING! New! 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If you are interested in helping please contact Charles Freidrichs, 226 Strong or Phone 864-3617. National groups are requested to submit plans for exhibits, program numbers, or recipes for the banquet before March 1 to Charles Friedrichs. FINAL WEEK All Sales Final Inventory Liquidation (closing for Re-modeling) Storewide Liquidation Prices like... Bellbottom Jeans Stripes & Solids as low as $2.99 Every Item Reduced Tops - Bottoms - Belts - Suspenders Everything Priced To Sell Fast Patronize Kansan Advertisers THE WEARHOUSE 841½ MASS. APPLICATION FORMS NOW AVAILABLE for Student Staff Positions at NAISMITH HALL 1972-1973 Academic Year Resident Director and Assistant Resident Director Resident Assistant Qualifications ★ Graduate status required for 1972-1973 ★ above average academic achievement, 2.5 minimum GPA required ★ residential living experience preferred ★single students preferred ★ full-time position for RD, part-time for ARD ★ Junior-Senior status preferred for 1972-1973 ★ above average academic achievement, 2.5 minimum GPA required residential living experience preferred ★ academic and non-academic commitments will be considered in RA selections Preference will be given to students who have been active in a resident hall or who have had experience in resident hall activities (social, judicial, governmental, educational) Opportunities Staff positions at Naismith Hall offer qualified students the opportunity to work with others to sustain an environment conducive to maximum student growth and self-government. Applications and more information are available now at the Naismith Hall business office. Applications must be received by Monday, March 6. CHILLY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas 82nd Year, No.92 100 Residents Join Protest Of Annexation See Page 2 Friendly Talks Presage Course For U.S., China PEKING (AP)—President Nixon and Premier Chou En-lai held another long session Wednesday, and more friendly Chinese overtures lent hope that the leaders were charting ways for improving relations between their nations. Before the opening of the second four-hour meeting in as many days, Chou indicated some American correspondents could stay in China after Nixon leaves next month. After the meeting. Chou escorted the Retailers Cite China Interest Ping pong players, Henry Kissinger, President Nixon, and KU students all have something in common—a growing interest in China. Enrollment in History 151, Modern China, and History 152, China since 1949, has almost doubled since last year. He is a Bayes, acting assistant professor of history. Bays attributed part of this growing interest to the events of last spring and the "culminating anticipation of what will come of Nixon's visit to China." "Students interest may also be to gain an understanding of the establishment and growth of the Communist movement," Bays said. Re-evaluation of the American values, he said may be another factor "Students are taking Chinese values and their way of looking at the world and finding that it is a point of view that may have some validity," Bays said. The managers of the Oread Book Store and the Took Crier are also aware of this. Stuart Nowlin, manager of the Oread Book Store, said there were two completely distinct interest groups in East Asia. Studies philosophy and political theory. David Baird, manager of the Town Crier, thought this current interest in China was part of a continuously changing trend. President and Mrs. Nixon to a sports show at Capital Stadium and about 18,000 waiting Chinese applauded as the team announced the largest live audience to see Nixon since he arrived Monday. This added to his public exposure, already underscored by the sell out of the People's Daily when it gave lavisch display to the first accounts of his Another gesture regarded as friendly was the fact that the day's meeting between Nixon and Chou was held at the guest house where the Nixons are staying. The two previous sessions had been held in the Great Hall of the People. No word of what was under discussion had come from behind the closed doors. But it seemed certain they had covered ideas for cultural and scientific exchanges, a Nixon goal, and perhaps had discussed Vietnam. No one expected the Chinese to give on Nixon's peace plan for Indochina. Chou made clear before the President arrived in China that the plan was unacceptable. Possibly reflecting Hanoi's certainty on this, George Wald, a Harvard antwar professor, said in Hong Kong on his arrival Wednesday from North Vietnam: "I think the Chinese are going to hold the line on Vietnam." But Wald added that the North Vietnamese "have had the same feeling of uneasiness as the American peace process about which way China might go." P. R. M. Mike Blitch Speaks at Rally KU workers will continue strike and picking Pickets Remain; Faculty Reviews Labor Problems By ROBERT E. DUNCAN Kansan Staff Writer Employees of the University of Kansas will continue to picket until agreements have been reached between Local 1122 and the University for solving the worker's issue, Lloyd Rose, union business agent, now no longer. Wednesday north of the Kansas Union. "Basically we feel the purpose of this rally is to explain our problems to you, the students and faculty of the University." A crowd of approximately 175 persons. Kenneth Brohard, a University steamfitter, talked of the six miles of tunnels beneath the KU campus. He said steam filters were expected to work an eight hour day in 95 to 100 degrees temperature. Brohard said two years ago he complained of the bad physical conditions "The after I got burnt (by hot steam) them, they started to fix them," Richard said. WHILE THE RALLY was going on, approximately 14 faculty members were discussing the laberor's problems with Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. The faculty members discussed 13 issues with Chalmers which included policies on promotion, tardiness, docking of pay, lay offs and specific needs such as day care requirements. The faculty also maintained an equitable ratio between job load and the number of employees. Committee Refuses Hike for Kansan Kansan Staff Writer Bv HAL RITTER The recommendation came after Chip Grews, Lawrence senior and Kansan Repeating a decision made at its Feb. 3, meeting, the Finance and Auditing Committee of the Student Senate recommended Wednesday night that $1200 be allocated for a proposed expansion of the Summer Session Kansas. Penal Reform Debate Goes to House Floor IRELAND By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer Rehabilitating convicted criminals and reducing the crime rate are the purposes of a bill on penal reform to be debated soon in the Kansas House of Representatives Norman Forer, assistant professor of social welfare, speaking for the faculty committee said. "We feel that we are not alone in the administration the importance of the strike." Rose said "viewpoints were closer together" but still no resolution of the difference. Rich Porter, Topeka graduate student, has been helping Madden write the bill. Porter, a former assistant chief probation official of Shawnee County and a student in social welfare, was assigned to add Madden as part of his graduate field work. PORTER SAID he been working about two hours a week since January in an advisory capacity to Madden. He said that he would work a social work prospective to the bill. CHALMERS SAID Wednesday afternoon the University had been cognizant of these issues. Chalmers said that members of the University administration had met with union representatives since last summer. Rankin said he was hopeful of better legislative appropriations which would be made. Rep. Robert Madden, D-Wichita, replaced House Bill 2030 earlier this month, and the bill was reported out of the House on Tuesday. The bill would revise the existing system, incorporating part of the present law into the proposed statute. The faculty group reported to the crowd that in his effort the chancellor was in front of the prince. Chalmeri said he was concerned with acting now to solve the procedural problems. The hope for better salaries and conditions with this legislative session, he said. Madden has been researching the bill for REPRESENTATIVES OF THE Union and University administration met in Topeka Wednesday to discuss items of common concern. Philip Rankin, University personnel director, said, "We're making definite progress on the employment conditions. We will continue a good faith effort." adviser, for a for $200 allocation to help defray expenses in increasing the number of issues published each week from two to eight pages of number of pages each issue from four to eight. RANKIN ALSO cited the state civil service five day absent-without-leave-rule. He said the rules stated that if an individual did not communicate with an agent, they would be dropped from the payroll. The prolonged absence indicated resignation. Chalmers said the University has established a grievance procedure, a safety committee and has not laid workers off. MADDEN'S BILL would reorganize the present system, creating a Kansas Adult Authority, an advisory board and a legal authority. The Advisory Authority and the secretary would be appointed by the governor, and the nominations would be confirmed by the Kansas Senate. The advisory board, to consist of two citizens, two professionals (lawyers, psychiatrists or psychologists) and one attorney, would be appointed by the governor. the last two years. He said that after being elected representative for the first time in 1966, he took a tour of the Kansas penal institutions. "I was surprised at some of the things I saw in the penal institutions," he said. "I thought it was very real." See PENAL, Page 6 Most of the union's requests involve money. The University and the State Board of Regents have recommended that the commissioners educate from the legislature, he said. He said he thought about 90 per cent of the legislators would vote in favor of the bill. Madden said the present system included a director of penal institutions and a board of probation and parole, and qualified personnel trained in penology. The bill proposes that all people working in the penal system be under the jurisdiction of the civil service. Madden said the people would be nonpartisan rather than bipartisan and not subject to political changes in Kansas. "I feel quite confident that the bill will be passed this year," he said. UNDER THE PRESENT system, Madden said, a man was sentenced to the penitentiary and could be released on parole after a two-year period, or he was The present penal system, Madden said, is a patchwork process. He said there was no organization, and most of the officials who changed with each new governor, with each new governor, Madden said the present penal system was too expensive and in need of revision. He said the cost of maintaining a prisoner cost $400,000 a year, the cost now had risen to $4,111 a year. recommend an allocation of 860 to the Ombudman Office for its work in the area. THE COMMITTEE also decided to The committee denied the request of $2400 for the same reason it gave when the issue was discussed two weeks ago. Dave Krantz, the chair of the committee, said the committee believed that $1200 had been budgeted for summer operations in the $40,000 allocated to the Kanman by the Senate for the 1971-72 budget and that $2400 would satisfy the $2400 request. Dave Dysart, Lawrence third-year law student, said the office would soon have 14 trained ombudsaim, and the office was now involved in a mediatory role in the court's policy problems in Elsworth Hall besides offering legal aid to students. "I can't say there is any indication it will be used at this time," he said. Brinkman also said an expanded summer Kansan was needed if certain journalism classes were to be offered in the summer for the first time. A request for $900 by the Kansas Youth Caucus for funds to be used until elections in November was reduced to $200 by the committee. The funds allocated are for the remainder of the fiscal year, which ends June 30. The money sought from the Student Senate would not cover all additional expenses involved in summer expansion, since the Kansan anticipated a loss of $11,015 this summer compared to a deficit of $2 169 last summer. BRIKMAN SAID the $40,000 had been budgeted for the Kansan for the fall and spring semesters and no funds had been earmarked for the summer. Brinkman said the present summer paper was "not good for the reader or the people working on it," and it would be unfair to improve the summer paper with funds paid by students in the fall and spring. Allocate $2,234 to the KAM Aurateur Radio Club to buy additional radio equipment. The group is a service organization which has not received funds from the Senate. "OUR MAIN GOAL is to insure that the young people of the state are not disfranchised through the democratic process," he said. The committee also decided to recommend that the Senate; Allocate $200 to the Handball Club for transportation to the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Lane Bailey, Lawrence sophomore and state president of the caucus, said the organization was trying to educate young voters about what they involved in the political process in Kansas. Allocate #75 to the Sailing Club for transportation to an intersectional regatta Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., will speak at the University of Kansas March 14, in the Class of 1974 Lecture Series, Jim Harrell, who will present and class president, said Wednesday. Bayh to Speak on Future Of U.S. Political System Tickets will be sold March 10, 13 and 14 at the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard, with members of the sophomore class receiving first priority. Bayh will speak on "The Future of the Civil War" at 8 p.m. in the U.S.A. Ballroom, Ballroom Allow the Rugby Club to use $150 that was allocated for entry fees and transportation to repair bleachers for the rugby field. Sophomores who have paid class dues will receive complimentary tickets, Doug Boehm, Hutchinson sophomore and Speaker committee chairman, said. Allow the Soccer Club to use $80 allocated for transportation for Heart of America Soccer Association fees and to pay referees. Union representatives and University administration members will meet later this week. The union plans to report the results of the walk-out at 8 tonight at the Westminster Center to those who attended the rally. Bahy is the second speaker in the class lecture series, which was established last fall. John Forbes Kerry, national leader of the anti-War Alliance Against the War, was the first speaker. In 1962, Bayh was elected to the U. S. Senate by defeating 18-year incumbent Sen. Homer Capehart. In 1968, Bayh was re-elected to the Senate. Bayh began his political career at 25, when he was elected to the Indiana House of Representatives. He served eight years in office and was Democratic leader and two as Speaker. Bayh, considered one of the U. S. Senate's constitutional authorities, was a leader in the passage of the 26th Amendment, which lowered the votar age He was also active in insuring passage of the 25th Amendment, which dealt with presidential disability and vice presidential succession. to 18. Concerned about the nation's domestic needs, Bayh has called for a mobilization of national resources to deal with such issues as inadequate health care, poor schools and inadequate health care. Bahy is currently seeking constitutional amendments to provide equal rights for men and women, to provide for the direct election of the president and vice president and to lower the qualifying ages for the House of Representatives and Senate. By RICHARD COOLEY Kansan Staff Writer Chalmers Disclaims Two Strike Charges Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr, said Wednesday that much of the controversy surrounding the walkout of University of Kansas civil service employees stemmed from a "confusion between fact and rhetoric." Speaking to reporters at his weekly press conference, Chalmers referred specifically to charges by some striking employees that $500,000 which allegedly could have been used to increase salaries in university employment and be used for other administrative expenses. He said such appropriations for salaries this year were exactly the same as last year. "in that situation," Chalmers said, "the only way you can raise salaries is to fire the manager." He said that due to the shortage of money the administration had not filled some vacancies in the housing department. "We have received criticism for that, too." Chalmers said. Chalmers said he had met again Wednesday morning with a group of faculty members to discuss the strike issues. "We clarified a great many points," he said. "Confusion seems to be more common among our readers." Chambers said it was difficult to use regional guidelines because they were Chalmers said he had not been contacted by Lloyd Rose, business manager of local 1132 of the striking Classified Civil Service Employees Union. But he pointed out he had never refused to meet with union representatives in the past. "We will just have to proceed as best we can on a good faith basis," he said. Chalmers also said his office had received no correspondence from the Department of Housing, Education and Finance. He says these finances for the Affirmative Action Program. confusing and some had been challenged in the courts. The University would have to proceed with its own program to eliminate any "perceived under-utilization" of women and to "hope we hear from HEW in the meantime." Chalers said. In reference to the proposal that a mall ballot be established to allow faculty to vote, the University Senate, Chalmers said he sympathized with students who feared such a plan would lead to under-representation of those that the proposal had not yet been adopted. Commenting on the recent proposal by the Student Executive Committee (StudEx) of the Student Senate relating to recognition of student organizations, Chalmers voiced agreement with Charles Oldfather, University attorney. Oldfather termed the language of the StudEx proposal too inclusive. Chalmers said the StudEx proposal did not conform to his forth by Oldfather in his original proposal. M. A. SMITH E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. Thursday, February 24, 1972 University Daily Kansan People . . . ... Places . . . ... Things People: President NIXON'S TRIP to China is costing TAXPAYERS at least $300,000 for transportation alone. Total costs could be several times that amount. But the cost to the taxpayers is dwarfed by the multimillion-dollar outings being made by the television networks and other news organizations to provide coverage of the President's trip. Places: PARIS—The Vietnam PEACE TALKS, suspended for a week by the United States, resume today under the shadow of the U.S. Chinese summit meeting in Peking. Despite disclaimers by both U.S. and Chinese officials that the Vietnam war can be moved toward settlement in Peking, observers in Paris assumed that the subject would come up in some form and the discussions between Nixon and Premier Chou En-lai might have a major influence on the conflict. SAIGON — Enemy troops his military positions and villages in South Vietnam again Wednesday while in the central highlands RANGERS BATTLED a North Vietnamse company in the Chu-Pa Mountains. Things: INFLATION SHOVED THE COST OF LIVING UPWARD in January for the second month following the price-wage freeze, but the price push was less painful than December's. The Labor Department reported that consumer prices increased. 1 per cent in January, a month when they usually decline. This encouraged White House economists who, a月 ago, had forecast a repeat of December's. 4 per cent increase, or worse. They have long predicted a Phase 2 bulge lasting several months. Lawrence Awarded Honorable Mention BY TOM THRONE Kansan Staff Writer Members of the Lawrence Lawrence University Clinical award jury in expressed disappointment wednesday that Lawrence did not pass. Although not selected as one of the winners, Lawrence received an honorable mention in the competition. Lawrence was one of the 18 finalists in the competition for the award. The final winners will not be announced until early March William P. Gant, executive vice-president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said he was not one of the winning team. 'THE LAWRENCE HYPERCHANGE human relationships than nuts and bolts such as new buildings, sewer lines, and industry, he The award is based on "significant improvements in community living brought about by 'citizen action'." "I'm disappointed," said Steven Hill, who presented the Lawrence program before the 12-0 victory. It was the National League Cup. Hill said it was more difficult to get across the value of a human relations effort than that of municipal projects. The Lawrence reports concerned community action following the disturbances of the spring and summer of 1970. The community workshops were designed to involve groups of people to air grievances and to learn about issues facing Lawrence residents participated. THE LACK of effective communications during these times led to the formation of a committee of citizens who have concerns in the community. These areas included improved communications, employment opportunities, drug abuse, university-to-work relations, school, and international training and race relations. THE "EGGS and Issues" project set up by the Chamber of Commerce will present their ideas to the public. Such groups as the Concerned Black Parents, the chancellor K-12 students spoke at their breakfasts. From these areas, three major projects resulted. The first was the community workshop. The second was the "Eggs and Breakfast." Third, was the Police-Community Relations project. Residents Form Group To Oppose Annexation The Police-Community Relations project carried out by Law Enforcement Foundation of Topeka allowed groups to meet in constructive fashion to identify problems of community tensions caused by misunderstandings. Recommendations help relieve community tension By JERRY VOKRACKA Kansan Staff Writer Many residents expressed concern over the constitutionality of the law on taxation. They without was taxation because they would be asked by law to have had no representatives on the city commission to express their commission to express their In an effort to fight the Lawrence City Commission from annexing the 1,780 acre tract northeast of Lawrence, about 100 residents against the annexation Wednesday evening at Riverwood School and formed the Riverside Committee Against Annexation. Allen said they could fight the annexation by submitting a petition of 2,500 signatures to the city commission which would give the city to submit the proposal to Lawrence voters for approval. The other alternative offered was to fight the annexation through the federal courts. HE CAUTIONED that this action would take time and only citizens of Lawrence who voted in the 2016 election were eligible to sign the petition. George Allen, attorney for the couple concerned residents it would take work and money to fight the case. '15 decision to move the law.' "We would need about 4,000 signatures to give 2,500 valid ones, since they will go over them with our hands and throw out half of them. albeit Allen said that because the Kansas Legislature gave the power of annexation to the city by law, it would have to be taken to a state court to test the validity of this law. But if the annexation statute without representation, it will be in violation of the U.S. Con- The office of the student body training center has candidates Wednesday afternoon as the last of 161 Student Senate and 25 class office candidates situation and this would have to be decided by a federal court A GROUP of resident took the problem to Vern Miller, state attorney, and asked him to elk Elwell, Douglas County attorney, to question the legal right of the homeowner. Although slightly over half as many candidates filed this year as last year, Bill O'Neill, Ballwin, Mo. junior and student body members, said he was quite pleased with the number of candidates. By JIM KENDELL Kansan Staff Writer One man, who refused to be identified, from Western Hills, Missouri, was asked by Lawrence, said the city commission was now considering a plan to allow the city commission had a five-year plan to annex all surroundings of the city. Chris Boyle, Lawrence sophomore, announced Wednesday night that he and Tracey Egbert, Dighton junior, having as candidates for student vice president and vice-president. Last year, 304 candidates filed for Student Senate and 49 filled for class offices. Residents from other areas outside Lawrence also attended the meeting. Allen said Miller told the group the city was within its legal rights under the present state statute. "THROUGH SCRUPULOUS soul searching, we have found that in the present state of affairs we have to deal with the detrimental to the interest of the entire body student," Boyle said. "We feel that our name on the ballot would create such a split between the best man would not be elected." "UNDER THE PRESENT state statute, they won't have to stop until they reach the Oklahoma border," he said. Those elected to the Riverside Committee were Don Kufah, Ben W. Ferguson, chairman; Carl Reuter, treasurer; and Harvey Springs. Elwell said he would make a statement today on the problem Those elected to the Riveride Church are Christopher, Christian RFD 1; June McMille RFD 2; Dr. Corbin Robison, RFD 1, and Mr. Herman Mast, RFD 1, and Dr. Carl Mast, RFD 1. A workshop for all candidates will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Friday in Kansas Union. The workshop will familiarize the candidates with 186 Declare for Senate, Class Offices The purpose of the advisory board is to formulate a plan of action that can defeat the city from annexing the land. The citizens plan to finance their fight by contributions from residents who live in that area. Residents, who might possibly face a similar problem in areas surrounding Lawrence, aware of Candidates for Student Senate and class officers can change their party or coalition affiliation until 5 p.m. Thursday. "The basis of a win must be on the constitutionality of the annexation." Allen said. Students will elect 83 senators in the spring election. Next fall, each of the colleges-within-the college will elect at least one Bailey released the official estimates of the number of Student Senate positions available in the spring election. senator. Oliver College will elect two THE NUMBER of student motors is based on current enrollment projection prepared by the registrar's office. Each motor will be assigned a number. The official list of candidates for Student Senate and class offices will be released Thursday by the Student Senate office. Only three candidates filed for the seventeen seats in the Graduate School, and no candidates filed for junior class secretary. Bailey said these positions will be filled in candidates. Twenty-seven candidates filed for the fifteen seats available in KANU Schedule Stereo 91.5 FM TUESDAY 7:30 The Monday Meetings 8:15 NewsWeather Sports 9:40 Campus and Community Calendar 10:20 Campus and Community Calendar College from Haskell Indian Java Institute College 10:45 Morning with the Masters 11:25 Noon Hour Concert 12:45 Listen to Their Voices 13:45 Visit Canada 14:45 NewsWeather Sports 15:45 America's Funk Music Heritage 16:45 All Things Considered 17:45 Jayhawk Locker Room 18:45 by Colleen Kessler 19:45 NewsWeather Sports 20:45 Boston Symphony Orchestra Concerts 21:45 NewsWeather Sports the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. SAM'S CORNER OF 9th & MASS. HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS SAM'S CORNER OF 9th & MASS. HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS Coupon good thru Feb. 28 SAM'S SUPER COUPON RIGHT GUARD DEODORANT 4 oz. Spray $1.09 size Limit 1 $43¢ with coupon SAM'S SUPER COUPON VO5 CREME RINSE 16 oz. Bottle $1.98 size Limit 1 $97¢ with coupon SAM'S SUPER COUPON CREST TOOTHPASTE 5 oz. Tube 89c size Limit 1 $37¢ with coupon SAM'S SUPER COUPON JOHNSON'S COSMETIC SOFF PUFFS Bag of 260 79c size Limit 1 $19¢ with coupon SAM'S SUPER COUPON SUDDEN BEAUTY HAIR SPRAY 16 oz. can $1.15 size Limit 1 $48¢ with coupon SAM'S SUPER COUPON LEGGS PANTY HOSE Reg. $1.39 Limit 1 $79¢ with coupon Fourteen candidates filed for the four Centennial College seats, and thirteen candidates filed for candidate filed for president. Gay Lib Files Appeals Notice Jack Kinknell, attorney for the Front, said Wednesday that records and documents would be filed with the appeal court within six months of her decision, so that Templar's decision was an error which should be reversed. In an effort to reverse the recent decision of U.S. District Court Judge George Templar, the court ordered the University of Kansas to grant recognition to the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front, the group filed a notice of appeal with the 16th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver Tuesday. WASHINGTON (AP) — The tobacco industry is manufacturing fewer cigarettes while sharply increasing production of cigars. The Internal Revenue Service shows. In one month alone, last December, production of small cigars more than doubled over the course of the year, a number of cigarettes manufactured declined, the report said. the three North College seats. THE CANDIDATES filed for the three Nunmaker College seats and Oliver College seats and seventeen filed for the four Five candidates filed for the two seats in the School of Architecture and ten candidates for the two seats in the School of Business. School of Fine Arts and seven filed for the two seats in the School of Journalism. Two candidates filed for the two school of Law seats, five filed for the two School of Pharmacy and Medicine; three filed for the School of Social Welfare seats. Salesman for 8-track stereo tapes. Large selection, current quality, guaranteed warranty, low price, your profit is your commission. Send name, address, querver, M. N. 87119, AMF The election for president, vice-president, Student Senate and class offices will be March 15 and 16. Two coaities filled full states for senior class offices. Two independents are also running for president. "HIVE CITY ALLIANCE" and "Unified Siphonome Class" offices. "We Three Coalition" filed for sophomore president. "First Class Coalition" filed for junior president, vice-president and treasurer. One independent INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS The International Club is making plans for the annual International Night to be held on Sunday, April 8, in the Kansas Union. Committees are being formed to plan the exhibits, banquet menu, and program. If you are interested in helping please contact Charles Freidrichs, 226 Strong or Phone 864-3617. National groups are requested to submit plans for exhibits, program numbers, or recipes for the banquet before March 1 to Charles Friedrichs. REACT Overwhelmed? Slow, unorganized reading is boring! You lose concentration and perspective! You seem to spend all your time studying! or I'll just stick with the plain text. It looks like a photo of a woman looking at a watch, possibly checking her time or reading a book. The background is a wooden panel. Let me re-read the image. It's a black and white photo of a woman looking at a watch. She's wearing a dark polka-dot shirt. The watch has a silver face and a brown strap. There are no other objects or details visible in the image. Confident Fast, intelligent reading holds your attention! You grasp the ideas sooner & more accurately! You have time for leisure enjoyment! READ THE ENTIRE YEAR'S WESTERN CIVILIZATION ASSIGNMENTS IN ONLY 8 WEEKS Reading Dynamics teaches you how to find the meaning in all those thousands of words. Our instructor is also a Western Civ. Instructor. Our unique note-taking technique simplifies, organizes. and relates ideas in graphic form. New Class Begins Next Week Begins March 2 and meets for 8 Thursdays 7-9:30 p.m. Finishes just before the W.C. Comprehensive Exam of April 29. P. S. If you want to take Reading Dynamics but do not need the Western Civ readings,you may join the class and read in your own materials. FREE Mini-Lesson Wed., Thurs., Fri., Feb. 23, 24 and 25 7:30 & 8:30 p.m. at the Reading Dynamics Institute 书 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Downstairs at the Sound—Hillcrest Shopping Center 925 Iowa Phone 843-6424 C H "It to rid be y Offill A j helm moto and attač voted Repr Thursday, February 24, 1972 lates Two long for device- and s and reo our- oy- ow m- ss, bu- MF. 3 University Daily Kansan Kansan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG REVERSE Helmets May Be Required By Law Law student BJ Brown rides with safety in mind Controversial Helmet, Light Bill Held by Transportation Committee By DAVE BLISS Kansan Staff Writer A proposal to amend the 1970 helmet law requiring motorcyclists to wear helmets and to keep their bike lights attached while riding is yet to be approved in Kansas House of Representatives. The controversial bill has remained in the Senate Committee on Transportation issues for further evaluation. Many local motorcyclists adamantly oppose legislation that would bar helmets compulsory. The case of controversy is whether the proposed law endangers the personal freedom of the rider. "It's your life, and if you want to ride without a helmet, it should be your decision," said Doug Offill, Overland Park senior. Offill thought that much of the bill's support was because of intrathegovernmental power and the concern of public safety Other cyclists cited the need for adequate protection while bike riding, but they also noted the inherent dangers of the helmet. "Your peripheral vision is cut off, and you're barely a harder to hear." said Bird Bird. Great Bend senior. "Just riding in city streets, I think you're fine." Mark Garrison of Abilene said that in his hometown there was a police officer, the riders of all ages to wear motorcycle helmets and other motorcyclists in an attempt to repeal the ordinance, but the group lacked enough money for the equipment. Vigorous opposing the bill are representatives of the Kansas Motorcycle Industry Council, inc., who contend that the constitutional rights of individual are being infringed upon. According to Sen. Bob Storey, R-Topeka and Senate committee chairman, the federal Department, of transportation can make a 10 per cent cut in state highway funds if the bill failed to pass. Current state law requires that all persons under the age of 21 must wear helmets while riding motorcycles. A federal law was passed in 1966 requiring all cyclists to wear helmets while riding motorcycles. The helmets law of Kansas is in violation of the Federal Highway Safety Standards Act. The proposed bill is expected to be voted on later this week by the state House of Representatives. It was passed by the Senate last week. Haskell Club Preserves Indian Tradition, Dances The purpose of the Indian Club at Haskell Indian Junior College is to keep Indian traditions alive, promote the club, club sponsors, said recently. "It's social. We need to keep close together." Dawes said. The group has traveled throughout the state and danced for various clubs and church organizations. After each club members explain the importance of Indian Culture in their importance in Indian Culture. There were 27 members of the club who have costs. Dawes said, and 30-40 other members who helped in other projects. Pat Nimsey, club President, said the Indian Club did not get paid for dancing, but they had died making projects during the year. The Campus Activities Board gave the group movies to show to raise money, Nimsey said. Members of the club had also invited the marketers to sell. Last year they set up a carnival on the Haskell campus. The dances are performed for basically white audiences. "It promotes good community relations, as far as the school is concerned. Whitehall, a national prize-winner dancer in the club "117" like this is something we can do in the next season. Whitecloed he thought of the Indian Club as a personal as well as a group effort. He talked to his students to speak to groups about Indian culture. The club recently went to the State Penitentiary to dance with the students. "I go because it is a requirement—I have to," he said. "The trips are a part of a course in Indian singing and dancing." "I'd rather do that than anything else." Whitecloud said. "They're my people." Campus Briefs Dalbert Shankle, associate dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will speak at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Room in the Union on the topic "Brave New World: Revisited." Shankle will discuss the origins of the book, and extra-uterine birth in the final Human Education Seminar. State Sen. Ardnoth Booth and Rep. Morris Kay and Rep. John Vogel will speak on the importance of the 1972 elections at the Eighth Room of the Kansas State House. Sailing Club Meeting Sexuality Seminar A film, "Basic Sailing," will be shown at the meeting of the KU Sailing Club at 7 tonight in the Pine Room of the Union. A basic sailing class and tactics session for advanced sailors will be held after the meeting. This forum, sponsored by the Student Vote Committee, is the first in a series featuring speakers on the elections. Legislators to Speak Walter O'Brien, associate professor of civil engineering, will speak at the Undergraduate Chemistry Seminar 7:30 tonight in Room 128 Mallot. The topic of his speech will be "Air Quality Criteria for Sulfur Dioxide and Nitrogen Oxides." Anthropology Lecture The Cokia Mounds in southern Illinois, the largest aboriginal site in North America, will be the topic of a public lecture by Melvin Fowler, professor of anthropology at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, at it tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The talk, "Cakahai: A Precolumbian City in Illinois," is sponsored by the Kansas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America. By VIANN KANZIG Kansan Staff Writer Haskell Seeks Political Studies Chemistry Seminar A proposal for a $500,000 Indian political science program at Haskell Junior College to be funded by outside sources, was made recently by Clara Sue Murphy and the Indian science department chairman. The program would study current Indian forms of government and give citizens civil rights struggle and the hardships Indian and governmental regulation Students completing the two year program would receive an associate of arts degree. Outside funding, was sought after budget cuts last year made to the Haskell curriculum, Kidwell said recently. She has been one of the private foundations but has been unsuccessful. PRESENTLY SHE is exploring the new opportunities through the Office of Economic Opportunity. Kiswell thought her progress was satisfactory. any Indian school wishing to teach a similar program in governmental affairs could use it. The program is designed to enable students to return to their environments and take active part in the course of affairs. The course's core is built around visiting consultants who work and an active part in the subject. AN EXTENSION course has Campus Bulletin An internship is also includes an section. This field study would enable the student to put his theoretical knowledge to work in a reservation or tribal office and provide for education for up to one semester. The curriculum for the program is also designed so that Senior Location Committee: 7 p.m. Jahawk Room. Science Fiction Film: 7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. Union Operating Committee: 6 p.m. Curry Room. Big Breather, Big Sister: 7 p.m. Regional Room Room. Campus Crandon : p.m., Room 305, 416-729-7850. Sailing Club 7 p.m., Pine Room. Conversation on the Status of Women 7:30 Commission on the Status of Women: 7:30 m. Kansas Room. p.m. Kansas Room. BSU: 7:30 p.m. International Room. Governors Room. Student Vote: 8 p.m. Big II Room: Archaeological Institute of America: 8 Governers Room. Student Vote: 8 p.m., Big 8 Room. p.m. Forum Room: English Department: 9 p.m., Regional lounge BUCCANEER — a dashing buckle and a dash of colors: navy. camel, brown-cognac, wine-brown. $24 ROMP - a tie of the bow and you're ready to go in navy, red, expresso brown, camel, purple suede, red-blue. **g22** Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass, 843.3470 Where Styles Happen Iva Iva The Spring Duet by Nina of Regents has not yet given its official approval. When this is done, its name will be added as a sponsor. been included in the proposal to allow Indians outside the campus learn about their governmental policies. the extension courses should encourage Indians to take a knowledgeable, and active part in their education. THE PROPOSED PROGRAM the set up stages over three week periods in the funding will be found in time for the program first stage to begin At present she is the proposal's only sponsor; the Haskell Board P > MEET THE FACTORY EXPERT AT THE SHOW "LIVE INSTANT- PHOTO SHOW!" KONICA He'll show you how easy it is for you to take professional quality photos. It's a rare opportunity you can't afford to miss! SHOOT the latest fully automated cameras SEE your pictures developed on-the-spot, and enlarged in minutes LEARN about the latest, the easiest-to-use photo equipment in the world Give something different. Tasty, Hot. Tender. A special sauce Cheese. McDonald's Deli O' Fish Sandwich THUR., FRI., SAT. 9:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Special Show Prices KONICA KONICA AUTO REFLEX A with 11.8 Lens Reg. 270.00 189.95 McDonald's KONICA AUTO REFLEX T with 11.8 Lens Reg. 320.00 $234.9^{t}$ KONICA AUTO REFLEX T WOLF KONICA AUTO REFLEX T with f1.4 Lens Reg. 365.00 269.95 Wolfe's camera shop, inc. 116 West Eighth · Phone 235-1386 WHAT IS A SHOE RACK? Coming Soon for Ladies Only! 711 West 23rd Street Coming Soon for Ladies Only! 711 West 23rd Street Great gift idea. FILET-O-FISH Feb. 28 8:20 Hoch ALWAYS HANDS UP The Student Body of The University of Kansas Presents BALLET FOLKLORICO OF MEXICO It's the last program of the season and probably the best! It's FREE with I.D. NO RESERVED SEATS COME EARLY FOR A GOOD SEAT. Non-Students 4.00 - 3.50 - 3.00 1 Thursday, February 24, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. The Students' Choice A recent presidential poll taken by KU Student Vote is probably as accurate a sample of student presidential preference as is possible at this early stage in the campaign. What the poll did not show was a candidate, Republican or Democrat, with a clear majority of the 1,879 votes cast. Richard Nixon received 19 per cent of the total vote. Senators George McGovern and Edmund Muskie received 12 per cent respectively. From there, 12 other candidates received at least one vote. 39 per cent of those samples were undecided. The poll did show that 95 per cent of those sampled did intend to register to vote before the next election. If their peers follow through and, in fact, register and vote—in proportion to the sample taken—their strength could make a winner of the marginal candidates, which is to say any of the candidates. The Democratic primaries, just about to begin, should single out the Democratic contenders with a serious chance of getting the nomination. It is assumed that support for those marginal candidate groups behind the Democrat with the best chance of beating Nixon. That man appears to be Edmund Muskie. Sen. Harold Hughes, at one time a candidate himself, has said he will support Muskie over Senator McGovern. This was a bit of a surprise because Hughes is closer philosophically to McGovern than Muskie. Hughes explains that what the country needs at this point is a Democratic president, and Muskie is the Democrat that can win. Pragmatically, Hughes' reasoning seems sound. Like 70 per cent of those sampled, though, I support neither Nixon nor Muskie. My candidate doesn't have a chance of winning, either. —Thomas E. Slaughter James J. Kilpatrick Minority Enterprises Progress WASHINGTON—One of the favorite all-year sports around this town is to rate the bristle factor at the highest levels of a gold medal winner. The former Speaker John McCormack could reach full bristle in 0.05 seconds; Frances Knight, the dragon lady of Passport Office, has reigned women over the women's division. The story merits a few minutes of your thought. If the desperate problems of our urban minorities are the result of poor housing, they must be relieved primarily through economic opportunity in the private sector. The task of reducing housing or public welfare or makework jobs on the public a promising contender for the men's title emerged the other afternoon, when some of us went to a departmental office Department for a farewell press conference with outgoing Secretary Maurice Stans. He asked a minority assistance programs had failed so badly, and Stans said they needed more bristle of majestic proportions. The program hasn't failed, said the indignant secretary, and he continued flowering with evidence on the point. payroll. The answer lies in generating new income sources down in the cities where the people live. As Paul R. Porter recently has demonstrated, in a perceptive essay on the plight of our inner customers, that black employment opportunities will be created by what might be termed, in this case, the hiring of manufacturers plants aren't moving in; they're moving out. Between 1954 and 1963, Boston plant owners hired 226,434 L. St. Louis lost 268; its subsidiaries gained 349. Milwaukee, 146 plants closed down; 602 set up shop in the suburbs. It is a fair analogy that the trend continues. These dramatic shifts might be countered, of course, by a massive program to move blue-collar jobs are. It is easier said than done. Everything that is harder for the human problem is easier said than done. Another approach, offering psychological benefits, is the economic benefits, lies in a bootstrap operation for developing an honest business. Over time this approach has great IN THE OLD DAYS YOU WENT TO THE MOVIES TO SEE THE BAD GUYS BRUTALIZE, TERRORIZE AND MURDER. IN THE OLD DAYS YOU WENT TO THE MOVIES TO SEE THE BAD GUYS BRUTALIZE, TERRORIZE AND MURDER. AND THE GOOD GUYS CATCH THEM AND KILL THEM. THAT WAS ENTERTAINMENT. TODAY YOU GO TO THE MOVIES TO SEE THE GOOD GUYS BRUTALIZE, TERRORIZE, AND MURDER. AND THE BAD POWER STRUCTURE BRUTALIZE, TERRORIZE AND MURDER THE GOOD GUYS. THAT'S ART. SO THE CHOICE IS NO LONGER BETWEEN GOOD GUYS AND BAD GUYS. ITS BETWEEN BRUTALIZING ENTERTAINMENT AND BRUTALIZING ART. 2-20 AND THE GOOD GUY CATCH THEM AND KILL THEM. AND THE BAD POWER STRUCTURE BRUTALIZE TERRORIZE AND MURDER THE - GOOD GUYS. ENTERTAINMENT Dist. Publications Hall Syndicate TODAY YOU GO TO THE MOVIES TO SEE THE GOOD GUYS BRUTALIZE, TERRORIZE, AND MURDER. I Sitting X X X X X X See, Winter comes to rule the varied year, Sullen and sad. James Thomson.1700-1748 AP Backgrounder By C.R. RAGAN Associated Press Writer Campaign '72 Roundup Associated Press Writer Presidential aspirants concentrated much of their campaign firepower on each other, with the Florida primary three weeks away, the issue took on increasing importance in that In Tallahassee, New York's Mayor John V. Lindsay announces that I am for it, because it is often easy way to integrate our schools. In recent days the Florida Legislature passed measures by wide margins to put a question on the March 14 ballot askin Plaintiffs whether they would support an antibusing amendment. "On the one extreme is Gov. George Wallace" of Alabama, said Jackson. "His answer to the busing problem is simple: take Lindsay made separate speeches to the houses of the Florida Legislature. Another Democratic aspirant, Sen. Harry M. Jackson of Washington, campaigned in Jacksonville, and criticized Michael Jackson. Ms. Jackson said Muskie, considered the Democratic frontrunner, had been "riding high in the saddle, but now he has come off the saddle to let us know he stands" in favor of busing. the batteries out of the buses. On the other extreme we have SeN, Muskie and others who don't see the problem at all." In Charlotteville, Va., Seo- George S. McGovern, D-S.D, said but was one of the few women who play for living in a segregated society. He said he was more concerned about the Vietnam war and about whether American kids have a few extra miles" to school. McGovern also said this particular him to advocate lowering the social security age to 62 for men. Women now receive benefits at age 37. In Denver Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N.Y., also spoke about busing. She said she didn't favor mandatory busing but that the city would "be because of man inhumanity to man." "Black parents don't want to send their children out of their neighborhood," she said, "but they feel it's necessary if they are to get them the kind of education and care for coping in our society." "Reducing the Social Security retirement age is an act of humanity and justice," he said in Boston. Elsewhere along the campaign trail: formally entered the June 6 New Mexico primary. Secretary of State John Brennan received a personal letter from Nixon along with his $500 filing fee. MUNK—Rep. Patsy Mink, D-Hawaii, said in normal Ill., that she would enter Oregon's presidential primary. NIXON-The President KENNEDY—In Madison, Wis., officials announced they had received a disclaimer from Sen. Edmund M. Kennedy; D-Mass. Edmund M. Kennedy; of removing his name from the April 14 Democratic primary. YORTY—Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty lost a court battle to remove his name from the Florida primary ballot. Florida election officials placed Yorty's name on the ballot, the basis of which is presumably recognized as a candidate in the state or national news media. And in Lincoln, Neb., Kennedy asked that his name be taken off the ballot for the May 9 primary. WALLACE—The governor continued his longest campaign stint so far this year attending the White House and serving in Washington Tuesday and Wednesday. Wallace was to head for Georgia today and Florida Friday before returning to Florida on Saturday. His state's capital last Friday. Letters Policy Letters to the editor are limited by space-billed and should not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing, including space limitations and editor's judgment. Students name, year in school and department of study, staff must provide their name and position; others name and address. promise. Lyndon Johnson *said* this. So Michael Nixon *was the answer to Stans made evident, that nothing much is moving.* YOU'VE GOT THIS THING ALL WRONG! Wallace, too, has what he needs, the receptive kind of crowd before whom he "lets loose" and becomes himself. He is talking, before them, to TV, where he works as the smartest man in Oregon, but he the smartest man on this television show." He is taking to OCALA, FLA — This town (accent on the second syllable, "cala") is the city crawled here from Texas; it has disconsole similar "prefah" houses roofed over them like tunnels. The City Auditorium is done in the --blank tropic-white style, and most of its windows have been poked out. PETER T. HARRIS YOU'VE GOT THIS THING ALL WRONG! YOU'RE THE BAD GUY! YOU SHOULD BE HOLDING UP HIM! GO TRY AND STRAIGHTEN THINGS OUT FOR PEOPLE AND LOOK WHAT IT GETS YOU... Garry Wills has been in Florida watching the Wallace fans, and seems fearful of what he has seen. "The theme song is all these displaced persons... have a moment, a homeland. Griff and the Unicorn YOU'RE THE BAD GUY! YOU SHOULD BE HOLDING UP HIM! But even in a harsh night rain enough people turned out to fill the Auditorium and leave only standing room at all points of view. We are always present, and this is a Wallace crowd, out to hear him. He arrives trailed by his cove of obsequious hoods and hacks, and appears in a haze of music and Condefederate sulphur—the theme song is "Dixie," and there are dazzling impressions in a wandered Texas have, for a moment, a homeland. Kilpatrick believes that if the "desperate problems of our urban minorities are to be solved," he will believe primarily through economic opportunity in the private sector." He notes some progress that has been made in Illinois by the Nixon administration. Wallace on Stage: Crude Deception He even gets a hand when he By Sokoloff guarantees to minority entrepreneurs reached $434 million, more than double the figure for 1969. Over this same period, government purchases from minority-owned enterprises All the same, the departing secretary makes a good case. Bishni hamay may be impressed—but rather impressed by the Nixon administration—but the record of badness is not bad—at all. Stans is a realist. The dimensions of the inequity, by the term 'reimended', *M minority groups* 17 per cent of the population, "but they control less than one per cent of the sales, representing four per cent of the country's total number of big gains are yet to be made.* judges: "You quit makin' law. You go to interpretin' the law." To the judge who made the Richmond busing decision: "You sit on the bench, and a father at home, you a pluperfect hapicerit." So Stans bristled. The Office of Minority Business Enterprise, which started this fiscal year with a $4 million appropriation, will fund its work during the last fiscal year, government grants, loans and PETER M. WALKER Copyright, 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. Under the government's prodding, says Stans, the private sector is showing significant growth and Chicanos increasingly are franchised businesses, retail sales, and automobile service workers ago there were only 14 bakeries and dealership; now there are 80. Iooo... "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff Garry Wills tries to be judicious, giving arguments pro and con till the pendulum-motion of his talk sinks to a halt. The point this way: "Foreign aid — there's another thing I am for and against." And damned if they didn't have an idea, he remarks that last year saw the death of more police than any other year in our history. People are just as shocked when they applaud cops at the door who are very much on duty, bulging with their guns and gras in Wallace shouts "Thank God for the police." He is telling off the world for these people whom the world has passed by: "They've always distrusted our viewpoint. And sometimes they stultified you, so you said. Let's just give up. But we are going to distrust them. They're going after me, because they go after you." "If I was talking to 25 people but it's your speaking here, I just give you a voice—and there's nothing the people can't do if they are there." And the odd thing is, half of the people in the country have a pretty high average for a political candidate. The bureaucrats are parasites and bambooizers of the government and use them into Vietnam and all our troubles. We are deceived and faced with success. But never faced so crippled as a Wallace crowd is by Wallace. "We going against the grain. We hitting the foundations. We hitting the big boys. The children belong to me and the people, and we gotta take our children back, and some of our money back, and some of our gonna take our country back, and some of you can go where you want." Copyright, 1972. Universal Press Syndicate Readers Respond The article said that $240,000 was going to be spent on a Tartan Surface for the field house. To the .Editor: Jake Parnell came in yelling the other day with a copy of the Kansan. He made me read an article in the bottom corner. 'Sandwich Spread' "Sounds like a sandwich spread," yelled Jake. He broke the desk lamp in two. "Somebody's got their priorities mixed up. Think how far that money could go if it were used to buy furniture that they already had a floor. This makes me very nihilistic." "Well, the athletic department still controls KU. Makes me nostalgic." I said. Jake went out and looked for a riot. —Richard Louv '71 San Diego, California America's Pacemaking college newspaper THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom--UN-4 4810 Business Office--UN-4 4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examinations period. Mail subscriptions to University of Kansas, Kokomo, 60444, Accommodations goods, services and employment offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Options expressed are not necessarily intended to meet individual needs. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman Editor News Advisor .. Del Brinkman Associate Editor Chip Crews Campaign Editor Scott Pierce News Editor Scott Pierce Copy Chiefs Joyne Merrick, Donnie Hay Everett Krause, Jennifer Sewall Companion Group Editors Sally Carlson, Rob Killin Sports Editor Bob Simmon Assistant Sports Editor Barbara Snifford Fashion Editor Barbara Snifford Editorial Writer Barbara Snifford Writing Editor Barbara Snifford Makeup Editors Dick Bay, Joey Goodrick Photographers Ed Lallo, Kit Netter Office Manager Greg Sorber, Tom Prennard Office Manager Tonda Sander University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 24, 1972 5 arting case. not be rarely Nixon word of bad Indian's Life Spans Two Worlds BY DAVID HEALY Kansan Reviewer with allace the The Battle of the Little Big Horn and the landing of men on the moon would appear to be of different worlds, one far removed from the other. At least one man would have been both. He is Chief Ked Fox. Ip crews Nine Hay. Speeler Konling In Groom Kilon Kling It Heger Psurlock Psurlock Cynes Jones Cynes Jones Schmidt M Netzer, Rush Rush Sokolek except ter, $10 dations, without essarily "The Memoirs of Chief Red Fox," edited by Cash Aher, has recently been published in paperback by Fawcett and Fawcett The Bookhouse. It was like to be an Indian before the white man came and after he conquered. Moreover, it gives fresh insights into the white Transition Marked In Album by Bread By JEROME ESSLINGER Kansan Reviewer Bread's new album, "BABY I-M-A' WANT YOU," is a curious melange which is as strange as it is cathartic and adventuresome album than their earlier "Manna" and "On the Waters" releases, it marks a transition for the group. In what may be one of its best performances, however, is anyone's guess. Most of the album's cuts are palatable, but a few are simply downright hard to swallow. One of the best cuts on the album is "Mother Freedom," a song by Marilyn Monroe's "heavy" by Bread standards and a bit reminiscent of their "Blue Two other notable cuts are Everything "Own and Needed" a dirge-like ballad eliqed by the group's tonal tenor, David Gates. The latter quickly revives it with the most intricate and lamenting, for it is a rocking tune which features the group's latest ingredient, Larry Knechtel, pounding the piano a la Leon Russell. Another well-seasoned slice is This Isn't What the Government Needs. It sounds like the cajun sound of Doug Kesher and Brwew and Shapiel and Browne. "Baby I'm—A Want You" is from the classic Bread repertoire of complementary lyrics and melody. The album's biggest turnoff is "Down on My Knees," which has been the band's its album. It has not only the tune, but also the lyrics of the early Beatles-"Down on My Knees" and "begin though please, yeh, veh." the rest of the album contains little for the musical appetite. The melody of the "Daughter" are less noteworthy types of Bread ballads, Lyrics that use long moog-guitar SYNTENSE, and take them listenable, however man's culture SenEx, Chalmers Review New Calendar Problems The University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) talked informally with Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. daylight concerning the calendar for the 1973-74 academic year. throughout Kansas for the beginning and end of school and holidays. Chief Red Fox was born in 1870 near the Birk High Mountains. His uncle was Crazy Horse, a leader of the Indians who defeated them. He was also a teacher of the Little Big Horn. His childhood was like that of his ancestors. But when his people, the Ogilala Sioux, were forced on reservations, Red Fox was on boarding school for four years. At that meeting, Henry Shenk, professor of physical education and chairman of the University of Michigan, presented the tentative 1973-74 calendar. The calendar conformed to the guidelines set by Council of Chief Referees and officers sought to establish uniform dates Several council members said the settlement could not be completed especially with the absence of a formal advising period prior to the settlement. William M. Lucs, associate vice president and SeEx chairman, said that problems encountered at a University Council meeting Feb. 15. to meet COCAO's guidelines, enrollment at Allen Field House and visit our campus in a two-day period on Monday and Tuesday, Jan 14, and 15, with COCAO recommended that two additional holidays be granted to students. Easter Monday, Complaints arise because all holidays would fall on Monday and disrupteory laboratories that met on that day. The University Housing Office will host a workshop to Stouffer Place residents next week, concerning the recent proposals for allowing residents to stay at Stouffer Place. KU Proposes Pet Controls For Stouffer But that was the last time he would sleep in a teepet. At the summer's end, Red Fox went to the Carlisle Indian School. Some students on the council objected to scheduling the last day of classes for both semesters on a Tuesday and having finals on Friday. The committee does not allow students enough time to prepare for exams, they said. Some council members said that COCAO's suggestions could be implemented at the smaller state schools, but because of its size and the massive anss should be free to adjust the calendar to its own needs. He returned to his parents home where he quickly reverted to the more natural Indian ways. He said, "It was a real joy to have my parents keep me, my mothers keep me, my moccasins keep and let my hair grow." Joyce Ziegelmeier, housing office spokesman, said the information would help how the situation would be controlled if the residents approve the proposals. Residents in the town of Ziegelmeier said if the proposals Ziegelmeier said if the proposals would go into effect they would no go procedures are decided upon. The second topic SenEX and Chalmers dealt with, according to the University committee among the University committees involved with the allocation of resources. The committee of the second committee and how they involved faculty inputs were the main focus of attention, he said. From Carlisle, Red Fox embarked on a life that took him all over the world. He traveled with Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show and with Uncle Sam's American War, the first American War. He worked for the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the prominent figures of his times. Lucas said that no decisions were reached on this matter. But his fantastic life is KANSAN reviews overshadowed by his learned commentary on the history he lived. He talks of the Wounded Knee Battle, a mission to revenge for Custer's defeat. Red Fox relates the rape and murder of Duncan which started the 'savage on' North Dakota. JUST GOOD FRIENDS Much of the book is devoted to the Great Spirit, who lived in the Black Hills as the Greek gods lived in Olympus. He tells of Indians finding cures in the mountains and Christian priests do at Lourdes. Dr. Kenneth M. Brinkhouse, international authority on hemorrhage and thrombosis, will deliver the second in a series of biological sciences lectures at Kansas Medical Center. the warpath against white settlers. KUMC to Broadcast Hemorrhage Lecture Red Fox refuted the white man's attempts to establish the nature of American society may have settled America, it is equally possible that Americans are very selfish. In a blow to racism, he spoke o "the inborn arrogance of the White man, who believes that he is the first symphonic art of God and that if other races were created, it was after "Two Sides of a Coin: Thrombosis and Henorrhage" Baritone Grad Receives Grant FRIENDS February 24 thru March 4 8 p.m. K.U. Experimental Theatre 864-3982 David N. Holloway, a graduate of the University of Kansas and a member of the Company, was one of 28 singers to receive a $10,000 career advance from the National Opera Institute will be presented at 4 p.m. today in Wahli Hall East Auditorium at the Medical Center. The lecture will begin at 10 a.m. the time on the KU campus in 203 Balthus Brinkhouse is president of the International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis. Paper in the fields of thrombosis papers in the hemorrhage, particularly on clinical and laboratory diagnostic procedures, have been significantly more important in medicine. Chalmers Names Group For KU Safety Action The University has had several independent groups working on specific safety needs, such as the Safety of Radioactive Sources and the Health Physics Group. The job of the new committee will be to develop a comprehensive survey and to conduct a comprehensive survey of campus safety conditions and recommend the necessary members to the Safety members to the Safety Chancellor E. Laurence University of Florida University Safety Committee to coordinate the actions of various groups responsible for safety at the University Committee where needed. Eimo Lindoquist, placement school Engineering and chair- ing of a new committee, said the exact job he was to do yet be determined. He said that he had not contacted all the committee members and the planning team. other members of the other faculty assistant or assistant professor in the School of Pharmacy; Jack Rose, Mary Hall; and Gay Oldfield, instructor of radiation biophysics and biochemistry, Guy Oldfield, instructor of biophysics. Patronize Kansan Advertisers THEY DON'T STOP AT WOMEN'S LIB NIGHT OWLS . . . Double Feature This Fri. & Sat. Night at 12:05!! THEY DON'T STOP AT WOMEN'S LIB! They Dare To Do What Other Women Only Dream About . . . Infidelity . . . A New Kind of Ball Game . . PLU MOON LIGHTS THE FEMALE BUNCH MOONLIGHTING MISTRESS SEE BOTH FOR THE PRICE OF ONE! Adults 1.50 Hillcrest Bunch* 12:05 a.m. Mistress' 1:35 a.m. We love young people. (Our family is full of them.) We love your spirit, your values, your way of life. So... when you're in jeans and T-shirts and you're looking for the greatest engagement ring anywhere, remember that you'll find it at TIVOL's. 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It's for the Concert Course DEADLINE Series April 15 for Call Fine 1972- Arts Office 1973 or Information 4-3421 It's for the Concert Course A ANY STUDENT CAN ENTER Manufacturers suggested Contac 10 capsules Sale $1.15 Now Under New Management You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 --- Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Sale 13c Squibb Aspirin ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Fiber Tip Pen Sale 29 $ ^ {\circ} $ Limit 2 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 Manufacturers Suggested 200 tablets Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 Scripto Manufacturers suggested You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 Now Under New Management Open 9:00:7:00 Thurs. 9:00:9:00 Sun. 10:00:6:00 --- ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Long, silky Long, silky Conditioning lotion Manufacturers Suggested Sale $1.67 Clairol Limit 1 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru Feb. 27 Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS FINAL WEEK Inventory Liquidation (closing for Re-modeling) All Sales Final Storewide Liquidation Prices like... Bellbottom Jeans Stripes & Solids as low as $2.99 Every Item Reduced Tops - Bottoms - Belts - Suspenders Everything Priced To Sell Fast THE WEARHOUSE 841½ MASS. 6 Thursday, February 24, 1972 University Daily Kansan Gym Team Goes West for 2 Duals The University of Kansas weekend to the University of Colorado and the University of Northern Colorado for back-to- back games. The Jayhawks, now 2-4 in dual action, will attempt to break a losing streak that started four dual meets ago when they take on the Lakers. The team should move Saturday to Greeley for a meet against Northern Colorado. KU Coach Bob Lockwood was happy last week despite the Jayhawks' 157.50-146.50 loss to Oklahoma. The KU gymnasts recorded five winning efforts, and dual this season, against, UM KU was led by senior cocaptains Terry Blanchard and Richard Schubert. Blanchard bettered the school record he shared in the parallel ★ ★ bars with a 9.25, and Schubert scored 9.40 in the side horse, barely missing his record 9.45 set earlier in the year. "I think we should be able to beat Colorado, because we have been doing this for years," Lockwood said. "We will have to have a very good day to beat the other米里克 efforts for KU came from Mike Backus. 9:15 in the long horse; Brian Cooper, Joseph John; Marc Joseph. 8:48 in all-around. Lockwood said the KU squad had improved, for the team to win this weekend, every member of the offense. Several routines were missed against OU. After their weekend meets in Colorado, KU will return to Lawrence on Sunday. The team will play against Western Illinois March 4. Women Gymnasts Increase Popularity Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER Women's gymnastics has received little attention in the past, but the University of Kansas women's gymnastics team may increase the sport's success when the season is over this year. The women's team has won its two meets this week and will visit Saturday in Robinson Gym against State and Winston College. Sue Tagg Practices on Balance Beam KU women unbeaten after two meets this season . . . Saturday's meet will be the first at home for the Jayhaws. Their first home meet scheduled for Peb. 12 was canceled because KU's 13-member team is led by Bruce Smith, a senior specialist who specializes in dog exercise. Smith took firsts in both the meet and Warrigansville. 1953 SENIOR CINDY PRICE has provided much-needed strength in the uneven parallel bars. Price tied for first in that event in last Floor exercise, uneven parallel balance between even women and women's meet Of these, only floor exercises are part of men's gymnastics. Women's floor exercise calls for more lightness of foot than men's floor exercise. In addition, the aeration is performed to music. Ruhl anticipates the day when women's and men's gymnastics merge. "I THINK it would be interesting to see a duet in floor exercise," Ruhl said. "We have strength in floor exercise and we are much stronger in uneven parallel bars." The beam is very popular too. the "Women's League" in Midwet Leafs. After this Saturday's meet, the women have meets with Washburn University March 1 in "We are supposed to be strong without looking strong. It's supposed to bring out poise, grace and beauty." the women's team belongs to the eight-team Midwest League The regional gymnastic championships are scheduled for March 17-18 at South Dakota State in Bookings. S.D. Topska, Southwest Missouri State March 4 in springfield, Mo. ,and Wichita State March 11 in Lawrence. Owens Recalls Teamwork Of KU's '52 Champions By MATT BEGERT Assistant Sports Editor The man who was the graduate coaching assistant at the University of Oklahoma in the University of Kentucky in Kansas's NCAA championship basketball team as good ball player and aggressive man-for-man defense. That graduate assistant, now KU coach Ted Owens, played the UChamps the year before they won the title. The guard for the Sooners in 1951. But the following season, when Owens saw the Jayhawks topple his OU squad, 71-48 and 74-55, things were different. Owens said when he played the KK team in team with the Soonaga players of KU's AL team center. Clyde Lovelette, to left, and Lovette lovele in 1952 averaged 28 points a game and compiled a total of 1,888 in three seasons. I WASLY really impressed with the way Loyola college started feeding the ball so well. And he was starting to become a real scoring threat," Owens recalled. "The university is still growing as a team." The KU team began feeding effectively to the open man. Owens said, and the team had a good inside and outside attack Owens remembers coaching and playing in Hoch Auditorium when he came to Lawrence with his Oklahoma teams. He said the team had made him the Auditorium gave him the impression he was on a lopsided "It didn't seat very many," Owens said, and as I remember, people used to line up early in the afternoon on same days." court. KU FANS have always been enthusiastic, Owens said. "It it seems that a trademark was standing up on the bench," he said. Owens said that the full-court press was not used by any of the players. The bench was used today. The full-court press was used mainly as a desperation tool. But Owens remembered other things about basketball that were different from today's version of the sport. "There is a lot more full-court pressing today, but Kansas (in 1952) played a special basketball adaptable to today's game. They are aggressive men-for-men defense at the half court." Owens said. "BUT THE BIG change is that there are more jump shooters now than outside set shots or shooters who don't use it, the jump shot wasn't the weapon it is today." Owens said. Owens diagrammed the old-style throw circle and lane, but the larger narrower by 3 feet on each side. "It really makes a difference," he said. "You could tighten in on the basket." He said that the top scorer for KU's 52 team, Lovellette, didn't have any problems with the players afforded by the narrow lane. shooter wasn't affected that much," he said. "CLYDE'S ABILITY as a Owens played three years for Oklahoma before becoming an assistant there, then he a player-coach for the post basketball team at Fort St. Louis during his hinc in the Army Owens became head coach for KU in 1964 after serving as assistant to former coach Dick Harp. He played one year with the National Industrial Basketball League before he became coach at Cameron College of Lawon, Mississippi. A two-hand chest shot artist, Owens was deadly from the 25 to 30-foot range. Coed Volleyball Registration Soon The deadline for registration of coed volleyball teams with the Women's intramural Office is $5.00 per person. The five-dollar registration fee for independent entries that have not registered this year for registration will be charged. Each team will include six players, three women and three men, plus alternates. The women must be from the same living group. There is no limit on the number of teams a living group may field. The Gamma Phi Beta-Beta Beta Phi team is defending champion. "Daddy pick," sentenced to imprisonment. "No trouble. One major problem, he said, was that the men went from a maximum-medium - security prison to a maximum-medium - security prison." Continued from page Penal . . . With the passage of Madden's bill, a judge would sentence a man to an evaluation at the Kansas African Center. The Kansas State would evaluate the man and the case to decide where to plague him. A convicted man could be sent to the Kansas State Penitentiary, or there is maximum-medium security, or to the Kansas State Industrial Reformatory at which it is medium-minimum security. The bill states that ten years after a man has gained his freedom, he may petition the authorities to expunge his record. He is also the Kansas Judicial Council rectifies the measure to the state in 1970. A PERSON requiring only minimum security would be sent to an honor camp or a halfway house. A person providing the halfway houses would provide counseling and help in adjusting to new circumstances, places would be expected to work, and they would contribute 25 per cent of their salary for the work. One of the advantages to his system, Madden said, was that a man could advance through the ranks because he could trust freedom. The Adult Authority would give each man certain normally of an educational or legal responsibility. MADDEN SAID that within a few years most inmates should Independent of the other divisions but directly responsible to the secretary of corrections and the magistrate, Madden said that now most of the grievances of the prisoners were disregarded. The ombudsman would be responsible for all the complaints and any actions taken. have worked themselves into the minimum security and halfway house category. Not only would it be less expensive for the state, he said, but also the men would be held accountable by face the world outside the prison. The secretary of corrections would head a large professional staff. One of the divisions would have to certify city jails for use. Madison said many jails could not be certified now because their poor conditions would not meet state health standards. Madden said the governor recommended $10.5 million be spent on energy and budget for the existing penal system. Madden said his system would cost $1 million more the next year but would decrease. He said he thought the excess money was being used considering the results he expected. OTHER DIVISIONS under the secretary of corrections include professional services, planning services and public information. institution to refresher courses in penal reform for two weeks every year. He emphasized the difference between police work and comparing the difference to ambalance driver and a doctor Madden said, "Several states have插座ed their ports, the good, successful parts of the other states" systems and good, successful parts of our firms. AFTER MOST MEN were in the military camps in the eastern states he said, there would be fewer administrative expenses and fewer guards to protect them. "The ambulance driver drives you to a hospital," he said, "but you don't want him to operate on you." Madden said he thought his revision of the system would reduce 90 per cent the anxiety and hostility in the neural system. THE SUCCESS of the proposed team designed for those adultu- es who have been safeguarded by making it a state statute. Another safeguard would be to ensure that all adults measures to predict the system's success, but there were several strong indicators. He estimated that the crime rate would increase if the rate of men returned to prison would drop 50 to 70 per cent. Madden said there were no real Richard Dwyer, Joplin, Mn. senior and William Jacoby, Lawrence senior, will appear at the contest their disqualification as candidates for student body president and vice-president at 4:30 p.m. today in the Green Hall meetings will be open to the public KANSAS CITY (AP)—The National Collegiate Athletic Association sued the professional basketball and Howard Porter, a former player with more than $200,000 Wednesday. The action was taken to stop concealment of signings of college players with remaining affiliations. NCAA Sues ABA, Porter Dwyer and Jacoby were disqualified because they failed to obtain a petition of 500 signatures. Court to Hear Petition Dispute At 4:30 Today The legal action was described by NCAA officials as unprecedented and was filed in Common Pleas Court of Chester where the state where skyprocketed to All-American recognition. players prematurely. The NCAA asked the court to order the notifies the NCAA and any of its involved within 24 hours of the names of players with college remaining signing contracts. Porter is now with the Chicago Bulls of the National Basketball Association. The suit seeks an injunction requiring the ABA to refrain from secretly signing college Porter led Villanova to second place in the national tournament and was named a finalist to UCLA in the finals. He was named the tourney's most successful player. Specifically, Porter was charged with signing a contract with the ABA Basketball Condors on Dec. 16, 1970, making him the first player in college basketball season and all postseason tournament play contract and that Jack Dolph, ABA commissioner, assured both the NCAA and Villanova that no player had been signed by Porter. Porter said in Chicago he had no comment regarding the suit. So did a spokesman for Dolph in New York. finish in the 1971 national tournament and forfeit its share of the tournament receipts amounts amounted to $2,642, because of Porter's inelegibility. Earl M. Ramer, president of the NCAA and professor of education at the University of Texas at Austin in a final action at a news conference. Nobody's Pro Makes It in ABA Pierre Likes Kentucky Walter Bersys, NCAA executive director, said the NCAA seeks a total of $218,663. Bersys said the money asked in the suit is "for damage of our tournament itself" and "the association's reputation." By DAN GEORGE Russell, who averaged 10 points per game during his KU career, has seen only limited duty with the Colonels. And that, he said, was the most difficult event he had to make this season. BY DAN GEORGE Kansan Sports Writer Ramer asserted that a professional team has "a strong record" when the player is signed. For it to further conspire to keep such a signing secret can be interpreted only as an attempt to damage college basketball. "FOR TWO years at KU, I played almost all of every game," he said. "I was used to activity. Now I play less than ten minutes per game and average 10 minutes per game used to sitting on the bench "Last year was the happiest year in NCAA history," she said, "having a winning record, undefeated in the Big Eight and going to the NCAA finals—" (AP) RUSSELL SAID that at times he still missed college life and the KU atmosphere. Several months ago, Villanova had to vacate its second place To some people, the number 13 means only one thing—bad luck. But you'll never hear that from Pierre Russell. When the former University of Maryland chose by a large margin to be chosen by the Kuckucky Colonies in the 13th round of the American Basketball Association's college draft last spring, he saw it only as an opportunity. He also only chance for the '6'4' forward to prove what he already knew—that he could make it in the pro ranks. One thing he likes about one person is the greater opportunity for travel. He said he liked going to places and meeting different people. "I was really happy to be drafted," he said in an interview Tuesday night. "I wasn't picked for the NBA Association), so I knew this was it. But the Colonels are a fine organization and I'm happy to be there." "We practice differently," he said. "In college the emphasis is on fundamentals and plays. But we also teach scrimmaging. The coaches figure if you don't know the fundamentals now, it too late to learn." "Really, though, my life hasn't 'except that now basketball is my job. I go to practice every day else someone else goes to "But this is my first year in the pros and I can understand the situation. And I'm learning." Despite his lack of playing time, Russell thinks he has disproved the critics who said he was a great basketball player and professional basketball. At the Colonels' summer rookie camp he tried out for that position, and to the surprise of more than a dozen coaches when the regular season began. The NCAA also said it had an availvist signed by Jim McMahon, the former Kentucky All-American, that he had not signed a pro contract before his college eligibility dispute was revealed recently that McDaniels allegedly signed with the ABA Cuba Congars on Nov. 30, 1970. KM82 has carried the Royals play here in 1969. The station will broadcast the entire 16-game regular season schedule and playoffs. Russell said that there were several basic differences between professional and college basketball. "There's a difference in the officiating, too. They let more go greatest asset is the ability to get out on the breast I've been wearing since I was in school "I'VE LEARNED a lot from the veterans, too. And my bail KANSAS CITY (AP)-Radio station KMBZ will broadcast Kansas City Royal baseball games again this year. BULLFIGHTERS WANTED Everyone at one time or another has admired the brave matador of the bullfight arena. Watch this space to see how you too can be a card carrying bullfighter. on in the pros. You can push and shove more, and they don't worry about hand-checking. But in real life, they call a lounge for it." "THEIR'S NO STALL or zone in the pros," he said. "You can't hold onto the ball. You have to get off in the 30 seconds or twice." He said that although the overall calibre of competition in professional basketball was certainly higher than in the NBA, thanks to the principal reason for his success sores was the 30-second clock. Russell said that there were no major differences in the ABXs of the two teams. He said that he definitely thought the two leagues were equal in skill. One tingt that hasn't changed for Russell is that he's still on a winning team. And he couldn't be happier. "Some people say the NBA plays better defense than we do," he said, "but there's some good offensive teams in the ABA too." "Winning—that's the biggest thrill," he said. "This is a really good team. We've broken all kinds of records this year." "We've won 50 games already. It's something we've never done before," she said, waving in 12 on a row. That's a record. I think we have a chance to win the game. "I'm really glad to be with the Colonels," he said. "I knew it would be a hard job to make it. But I'm not sorry at all." Sen. Arden Booth MEET YOUR LEGISLATORS Rep. Morris Kay Rep. John Vogel g Eight Room, Kansas Union Sponsored by K.U. Student Vote 8 p.m. Thursday K.U. Film Society JEAN RENOIR 7:30 Day in the Country (Partie de Campagne, 1936) 9:00 French Can-Can (LeChahut, 1954) Tonight, Thurs., Feb. 24 UNION BALLROOM 75' FOR 1 '100 for Both Service Tradition Atmosphere Beer asses xcellence Specials ALL THIS AT . . . THE STABLES If this is substantiated, McDaniels would have been selected. Western Kentucky finished first in the last national tournament. The National Association of Basketball Coaches said it was unanimous in support of the NCAA's court action. Byers said if the NCAA's investigation finds McDaniels did sign a contract in 1970, similar action will be brought in the case. C VANESSA REDGRAVE KEN RUSSELL'S FILM THE DEVILS X Eve. 7:20 & 9:20 Matines Sat. Sun. 2:05 & 4:00 Twilight Prices Good For 4:00 Show Only OLIVER REED Hillcrest --- Fly girls who know what to do for or to a man. Swedish Fly Girls COLOR R Survey the AIR WATERBREES FOR COPENHAGEN AIR HOSTESSES FROM COPENHAGEN Eve. 7:30 9:25 Matinee Sat. Sun. 2:15 & 4:05 Twilight Prices Good For 4:05 Only THE Hillcrest ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S KIDNAPPED Eve. 7:40 & 9:35 Matinee Sat.-Sun. 2:20 & 4:10 Twilight Prices at 4:10 Only Hillcrest Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort are HAROLD and MAUDE ENDS TONIGHT Eve, Shows 7:30 & 9:30 Grounda G Granada THEATRE - Telephone V1-STAR Many think this LOVE STORY is better than that other one. MRS. RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN YVETTE MIMIEDX JOY IN THE MORNING METROCOLOUR GP ENDS TONIGHT 2:30, 7:30, 9:25 Varsity THEATRE ... telephone #13-1665 Thursday, February 24, 1972 University Daily Kansan 7 Interns Aid Judge, Convict Three graduate students in the university are currently involved in a forcement projects to reduce crime by attacking its social network. Ken Peters, first year graduate student, Teaneck, N.J., and second-year graduate student, Lawrence, spend two days a week in the Douglas County courthouse working with persons convicted of murder. Charlie Hughes, first year graduate student, Kansas City, Mo. is involved in a similar project in Leavenworth County. All three students are under internships funded by the Law Enforcement Assistance Association (LEAA). The internships provide practical experience in the corrections field and help harried judges deal more effectively with crowded court dockets IN THEIR WORK, the students conduct pre-sentence investigations, supervise persons on probation, and counsel people in an effort to keep them from becoming chronic offenders. "The judge usually follows our recommendations if we can present a realistic alternative to necarceration," he said. Once a person is convicted of a misdemeanor, according to Hughes, the court has essentially three alternatives: it can have the person confined, release him if he has committed an offense or place him on probation. The students assist the court in deciding which alternative to follow. KU Council Funding Tied to Academics University of Kansas students who serve on academic policy-making committees within their schools. The School Council are being urged this week to consider student needs and academic priorities when preparing budget requests and implementing programs within their schools. In a letter to the representatives informing them of 1973 fiscal measures, Mr. McGraw asked David Mellor, Eudora senior and student body president, asked representatives to constantly report on budget issues in their schools to make sure the program was meeting the needs of students. These representatives to make certain the budgeting priorities of the school corresponded with the budget decisions. These two matters, Miller said, were important in order to justify requests for increased state appropriations. The funding of programs within the schools and the creation of a School Council is part of a Student Senate enactment passed Dec. 1, 1971. The School Council, in addition to the request, includes student senate representatives, student representatives on policy-making committees of the school and student representatives in school and department groups. This enactment initiated a form of revenue-sharing designed to senate fund available for projects restricted to a particular area. Miller also said the funds were intended for use by student representatives to further academic projects and improve communication, such as sending newsletters, within the school. Miller said that in the past, the particular school's project for ear programs would not be aware to the needs of most of his students. Under the enactment, income estimates for the funds for each semester will be based on the treasurer in December, based on that year's enrollment. Only those students enrolled in the program who have considered officially enrolled. The School Council will receive 75 cents from each semester's grant. Budget requests for funding of programs within the schools must be submitted to the senate treasurer in early March. THE STUDENTS investigate the convicted person's background to uncover social and family problems which may have been involved in reviewing his school record to determine his educational potential, and interview his friends and former employers to understand his motivation and his ability to adjust socially. They then present this information to the judge in a written report with a recommendation to what rehabilitative course would be most beneficial. IF JOB TRAINING or formal schooling is indicated, they try to fit the convict into existing programs and programs. If psychological counseling is needed, they refer him to community agencies. Once the judge passes sentence, the students attempt to ensure that the sentence benefits the student by making sure the sentence be the end of the court's involvement, the students attempt to make it the beginning of a court order. "We work from the standpoint in the most cases, anything is better than not doing it." Meeks said "Prisons don't really prevent crime. About 85 per cent of crimes are committed by them." there before. The fact that most of them go back indicates that prison doesn't really teach them how to get along in society." In addition to their work with the courts, the students attempt to educate the public about the importance of federal financial expires, it is hoped that the programs will get support from local governments. HUGHES SAW community involvement as one of the most important issues he had said there had been a tendency for the general public to view crime as something for the wealthy. He said he thought the solution to crime must be found at the local police and local programs run by local people. "Alcoholism may be the outward problem for a particular person. If alcoholism may simply be the response a person has to control, he may have family problems or employment problems which he cannot overcome." "The court system can put him in jail for drunkenness, but that doesn't help him solve the problems which cause him to fail." The judge's problems must be available at the local level," Hughes said. Bicycle Club Members Keep Enthusiasm Up Enhasision of KU Students for bicycling after Bike Week last fall lead to the formation of the Mount Oucd Bicycle Club. Gene Criqui, last semester a graduate of the university, hoped to have an annual Bike Week in the fall. This spring the club will organize a Bike Week on campus for children. with the Jayhawk Jubilee. The next meeting of the Mount Oread Bicycle Club will be 7:30 p.m. March 2, in the Kansas Union. Every Sunday, providing the weather is nice, the bicycle club meets at 10 a.m. in front of Strong country to be a tour through the country. Pickens Auto Parts and Service Parts at a discount 26th & Iowa Ph. VI3-1353 Wkdays 8, 5, 10 Sunday 10, 12 Be Prepared! tune-ups Tony's 66 Service THE CONCORD SHOP - STRETCHER FRAMES mony in stock —others on order - ARTIST CANVAS Harrison service Lawrence, Kansas 66044 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 McCONNELL LBR. CO. McCONNELL LBR. CO. 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 Fashions on parade $200 OFF ON ALL JEANS & SLACI Now thru March 5. Buy Bootlegger CENTER OF NOW FAS 2.00 HOURS 10-10 7 DAYS/WEEK Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 Address 523 W.23rd There's Always a Bargain Waiting For You at the Bargain Table! BANKAMERICANS well done mass charge One day SUDEE PURSES-assorted selection only 160 at the Auction. M92 2:58-2:20 FENDER SPKR CAB BIL BBL HARVEY HARVEY 9:00 9:12-12:00 hair价 842.95 9:00 12:00-12:00 MOTORCYCLES. Best offer take. 1970 Huarqueno 34, 1971 Yamaha PT-1; 1971 MG midget cover 1133 New York St. 834-7657. 2-25 KANSAN WANT ADS Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608. 1907 Yamaha 250 Twin Srammer. 260cc, back tire, and more. Good grip, back tire, and good shock. 2 audio organ organs $40.00 and two guitar organs $50.00. deck $0.00, Greg Kupker, 84-282-6300. deck $0.00, Greg Kupker, 84-282-6300. FOR SALE WV 1970, beetle, automatic stickshield transmission, 2800 miles, sliding roof, pout-out windows, radial galaxy $1,472 or best offer CAL 6027 6027 Accommodations. goods, services and employment advertised in the advertisement are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 Low-Low Jeans with the flare look at Low-Low Press. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-25 Northside Country Shop, 707 North Street. Also includes Antiques, Uad equipment, collections items, old wood cooking and heating stoves, bicycles, biplaces, wood. buildings, stoves, biplaces, wood. collections of other useful items. Open to 5 of other useful Herb Lemaen. 8228 3159 3159 1965 Mustang 289 engine, 4 speed transmission. Call 842-2374 between 4 and 6 p.m. Ask for 2:28 New spring knit shirts in prints from the nostalgic to the elegant Earthshine. Mass. and 8th St. 2-24 Super Sale Dresses: Values from $18- $32, now $5-$10. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-25 Now you can buy stereo components that you need. Plus 16% hands-on training by RAUO Audios. Fraternite Avenue. The only true stereo house in the midst. 2-29 www.fraterniteaudios.com Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, 1970 Nova SS 36-385 HP 4, speedp- restruction Clutch, Cuplet, Bucket Machine, or room or room. A Machine, more, also extra long couch or room, or room. 843-1411 Call Jeans, Jeans, Jeans. Latest styles, best selection, best prices. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-25 GUTARS — 1950 Les Paul. 1968 Fender Mustang, also 1971 Kustom 100 Watt Lead Amp. Cheap! Call Mike. 864-2342. 3-1 Yamahra-360-721 in good shape. Runt great, must sell now! Also, Buncher 400 tennor saxophone, like new-set tenor to go. Call 803-6456. Ask for Leo. **ATTENTION SPORT BOAT BUFFS** drag, drag and aid boats. His per- sonal equipment is available in various states of ownership. Call to buy Call to Buy A Webb 164886 Leather jackets are, here, cowboy Hawaiian flannel wool and insanity shirts all under $25.1. Feburary feature a pair of flannel jacket with $2.00 jeans. 819 Vermont. 2-876-645-3600. EMERALD CITY LEATHER FEA- $10.00/$15.00-$19.00.$19.00-$24 One group of shirts and sweaters up to 50% off Earthshine. 12 E 8th St. Crop Tops-big selection net to select the crop types. 927 Mast-2-25 Big Mast Big Mast medium, large, and extra-large ij C Penney's work clothes department 1968 Plym, Road Runner, 2 doom hardpit, 383, 4 speed. Excellent condition. Call 843-7800 after 8 p.m. 2-29 Neat old flags to cover that ugly spot. Earthshark, East 8th and Mass. 2-24 Going trucking Do it right. 64 VW bus, FM radio, heater, excellent tires. Engine recently overheated. Call Mike. 842-7125 at 6:00 p.m. 2:44. Sebiwim Continental — 10 speed, Black Light, "22", fixture, wooden frame; Magnavox Component Stereo Call 843-282 after 12 noon. 2-25 Peugeot X1. Fine racing bicycle 21, 23, 42, 25. inch frame size now in stock. £219.00 No waiting list on Bike Shop, Lake Manor 1401, Mass 8484 8484 P.2 Czech String Bass, made 1900. Elegant orchestral sound. Includes case and bow $50 or best offer for bass and strings. (K.C.) or UDK news room. 2-29 1968 Firebird 400 convertible, 8-track player, hood-tach, air shocks. Call 843-4556 after 5:00. 2-29 1957 VW, original European body, excellent shape, new; tires, interior, engine, engine, vinyl sunroof, orange paint, #805. Joseph. #842-9008. 2-24 Either way to come to the something—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse. 411 West 14th. 2. If you don't. Schwinn 10 speed, like new. Only used for 3 months. Call 842-266-102. 2e HELP! For sale, 1668 Fait 850. Excellent running condition. Good body. Must sell now. Call 872-7717-Manh. 8:30-9:30 m. John Gaines: 2-24 Chrystal Chandelier, Rose Medal Vase, Waukul Text, Tablec Set. Four Watching Chairs and Rocker Lamps, Lamp Mirror, Mirror. Light in In Endora. M计. K-28 1971 Volkswagen Super Beetle Convertible. Perfect condition. AM Radio. Bright orange and black. Must sell, call 842-712-2. 2-25 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES MCAT: Preparation for the Medi- cation and exam-training designed view and exam-training designed academic CDU. For information about CDU, contact Box 386, N.Y. 10011. O Box 386, N.Y. N.Y. 10011 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES 35 days or fewer $1.50 each additional word $0.2 Deadline: 5:00 p.m, 2 days before publication '71 Toyota Mark II automatic, factory air, 8-track stereo 13,300 miles 842-7896 2-28 T1 Triumph TR 6, AM-FM radio, Micr X tires. Make offer. 818 Matte *42-7724 2-28 SCHOOL BUS! "G" Chevy, 6 eyes, 2 rear axel rear, good for camper or band, $700.00 One University motorized mini车, $849.00 2-3 184.68-6488 Yamaha FG-200 Guitar, hard shell case. 5 months old. $175.00 C Richardson's Music Unit. 842-0021. 3-1 King-size waterbeds. Guaranteed for five years. Full price. $17.50. 841-2530. 308 W. 16th. 3-1 GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD, 64 volumes - 50% STOY- H OF CIVILIZATION by Will and Ariel Davis; 21 volumes - 50% DUE- B at 827.6161 MONOCULAR MICROSCOPE, octavers, 4 objectives, medical medical exam. $150 Inquire - C- believe Center Kansas City, Kansaa 6013, or 912-348-6032. Auto Foreign Import, 60 *Jaguar* NXF hardtop coupe, 200 miles since 1974. $175 Paul Wold 2002 W 20 *W* Parka. Topeka, phone 913-272-1250 1980 Buck, excellent condition. Only used once. active condition. power slee- vering. car charger. can oil changed every 3,000 miles since new. Call 842-9055 evening. sales. Toyota, 70, automatic, tape deck, real fine car, $1,395 Call Bill. 843- 3473. 3-1 Epiphone Rivera guitar double cutaway, two humbucking pickups, sunburst. like new condition. Call 842-8057 171 Canaan 350, loaded. turbidity- dromatic, alt. power, radio. a-BT disc, stereo discs, two-speed, good equipment. Battery life, week. cycle. Phone 844-1202 anytime 3-1 WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester rooms—bedroom 1, bathroom 2, 1# bath furnished or unfurnished 3# bath furnished or unfurnished 4# petting, picnic or bakery. West Hills Apartments—The place to live in Lawrence. C24 hours a day 841-765-8900. For rent—one or two bedroom apts, air conditioning, garbled ceiling fans, facilities, color TV. Available. Call 317-296-8024 or visit Awkita at 24th and Ridge Court. FOR RENT Ridge House Ant- for the budget nudge. At the popular features market, the new store is in town. ER, 1 and 2 bedrooms, and 3 baths. Details at www.cedarwood- black book.com. HILLVIEW APARTMENTS — 1733-458 bedroom furnished and unfurnished apartments. Carpeted, drapes, elevators of many nice rooms of much expensive apartments in this building. WANT PEACE AND QUIET? Need 1 or 2 roommates. Large house in country. Call 842-7771, 8:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Mon-Fri. John Gaines. 2-24 COLLEGE HILL MAYOR NANOR work in apartments with most stillsites paid by the college. Use pool and gym, Kew walking route, and library. $825 or see at 147 W. 134th, Apt. B1, 822-2200. ITS NEVER TOO LATE and it is a somewhat that you can not comfortably or somewhere that you can visit or at her offices at 2017 Harvard Fund and you can also place your available in Lawrence's best places. Argo Academy, 11th and 14th Availon, or Harvard Square space paid out diligently, dishwashers, rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, reasons you would enjoy living in this make this semester in Lawrence a location for August occupancy andancy can be arranged too! ... 3-3 A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS ... 3-3 class. Weather too hot this spring? Your class. Weather too cold this summer? Watch free cable TV. All this at lakes you can afford Apartments furnished occupancy $ 1,500 to come up to manager $ 899 to University Terrace Apartments $ 2,500 to Senior or graduate woman to share 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus, utilities paid, also large sleeping room on second floor. V I 3-1585. 2-25 Apartment for rent One bedroom, $85.00. 19 W. 14th. Call 842-8263 after 6:00 p.m. 2-25 Vacancy in contemporary home with swimming pool for young man. Private entrance and bath. $55/mo. utilities paid. VI $2-895. One bedroom studio apt. utilities paid, air-conditioned, close to campus, furnished. Available March 1st. cozy. Own entrance. Call 842-2565. Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited students can have two bedroom fitted up, with all utilities paid. Students can each call 721-368, m. 843-721-368. 3-16 Apartment—2 bedroom, large field in back, sort of modern. $98. Call 843-2812 after 12 noon. 2-25 Attractive, large room 2 blocks west of campus. Quiet. A/C, carpeted. Cooking. Entrance, light cooking. For neat. Kitchen, light cooking. classman. 843-7827. 2-28 2 bedroom home with basement, fenced back _ yard, unfurnished. $125.00 month. Edmonds Real Estate. 841-804 or 842-7462. 3-1 NOTICE UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright. (816) 474-6678. tf Good people everywhere, please, come. We are here on Friday Feb. (26b) is ahmid if Rostafa's Hotel will survive in Harper, which is where we stay. music, sleep bag c, any way. music, sleep bag c, any way. night gathering $2.50 per head. (316) 98-311l. Private room (316) 98-311l. Private room INFANT DAY-CARE BASE, 842-7694. Professional child-care for children 12 mo. Fulled or part-time. Mon-Fri.. Specialized designed care. 3-31 DISCOUNT TRAVEL. To and within Europe. Leave without N.Y., or go to New York. NIH Disa- lled Issued. Flight Center, 227 North Washington Street. Wisconsin $398. 608-263-1313 TEE PEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB Welcome back, kids! We are we are taking invations for second semester term par- ty club. Nee band stand, black party dress. Nee band stand, black We also have special monthly rates for parties. Phone or contact John meetings. Phone or contact John meetings. Station Tee Jee P3 & 59 Hugh Station. Tee Jee P3 & 59 Hugh 9 p.m., 843-1058 422-8523 KITTYCATS is coming and he's got a hot tip on some catnip. 2-25 For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center tf -864-4411. KITTYCATS is coming and he loves pineapple pussie drinks 2-25 Spend this summer working in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to Clover Information Box 3-6 Boulder, CO 80302 For that extra accessory we've got some old silk scarves for a dollar apiece at Earthshine East 8th and Mass. 2-24 Apparating at the Mad Hatter on Wed. Feb. 23 and Fri. Feb. 25. BUZYZ AND CHIP, a jazz rock duo. Free admission. 2-25 Those do-dads you've been lookin' To that, make your wormous sparkle? Well, we have a few for a Earthball on 8 at Mast. 2-24 JUST ARRIVED—Swim wear and sandsweepers. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-25 SANDSWEEPERS JUST ARRIVED THE ATTIC, 927 Mass. 2-25 SCUM HEAR BACK ARRIVED Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30 3-13 Michigan St. B-Bar,Q-155, M1s, St. Outdoor pit. B-Bar,Q-152, St. Outdoor pit. B-Bar,Q-152, $30.00. Shail or pork bibs-$30.40. Small bibs/$40.10. $18.00. $18.10. Beef Brisket Sand-$8.00. Beef Brisket Plate-$1.80. Open 11 am to 9 p.m. Phone 842-8514. Closed from 9 p.m. to 6 p.m. SWIM WEAR JUST ARRIVED. THE ATTIC. 927 MASS. 2-25 SWINGING COATS AND CAPES FOR SIRING THE ALLEY SHOP 843 MASS. 2-28 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Q. What is a house with a good investment? A. Town House Twins. Q. Who can live in a townhouse? A. Either the young family or the senior citizen with a good credit. B. Move into a Town House Twine. Q. How can you move into a Town House Twine. Q. Town House Twin offers unique tax benefits, come program. For further questions visit www.townhousetwine.com. The tenant can help you buy the Town House Twine. D. 84-239-6229 E. 84-239-6229 Used BIKONO is where to buy clothes — new shipment leather shoes, hiking boots, Hawaiian shirts around, velvet dresses no bananas. So it goes. I bought two pairs. Tutoring in organic and biochem. Grad with tutoring experience. Call 'Yich at 843-1342 or 864-3549 - 2:29 FOUND: New akist boys on Jahawkh Bvld. Feb 21, 8:00 p.m. To claim, identify make, size, color, price, and other information. Christian 7322 - 4:00 p.m. STUDY ESPEKARTO the interagency credit this 12-38th year after stated July 9 to 5 August at beautiful University of Portland, Portland, University of Portland, Portland BIBCAUSE needs volunteer workers, Canterbury House, 1116 La. Organiza- tion meeting feedback, etc. March 29, 7:30 p.m. 2-25 WANTED Wanted-Science fiction books to book the Atemporalium at the Empirium. Expand your knowledge of science and different different books. Come in and ask how you can help. Next to Dyeth, near South door of Union, next to Dyeth Women's alterations. 20 years exp. experienced in golf. FOUND NEAK UNION 180 mm' KU class ring. Red stone. KU emu. Black jacket. $4,995-4,436. Pay - 409. Fee - 2.24 A person to join a cooperative living group (4 women, 3 men, age 21-30) and a two-year-old (with private or information call number) 842-649-609. 842-649-609. 2-28 Female roommate wanted. Jayhawk Towers, $55/mo., utilities paid. Call Carolyn at 842-6303. 2-24 Rock band needs place to practice by March 1st. Willing to pay if necessary. Call 843-8086 or 841-2504. 2-24 Wife of graduate student will do new- wing; peasant dresses, long skirts, etc. also and mending, hems, new- wear prices. Call 842-3794. Re- 2-24 Roommate to share two bedroom (own room) apartment. Completely furnished. $72.50 with bills paid for music major (piano) #842-9037. CSC TOYOTA TRUMPH WANTED = EARLY MODEL JEFFER CJ22 SERIES IF POSIBLE. Any condition considered. Call after 6 p.m. p84-4026 Call after 6-1 Your old cowboy shirts, Hawaiian prints, and letter sweaters and jackets are here. Earthshine, 12 E. 8th, 2:24 If you're down on those tight fits— just wait. Earthshine in the Lower East Side. 2-24 REWARDING SUMMER for sophomore and college students, the Children's Backpacking camp, offers children backpacking, ecology, many outdoor activities and a biomedical born Western Camp. Flirtation, close-up, photo. PERSONAL Competition BECAUSE is a listening service. It is open every night, 8-12 p.m. SUN through Thursday, Frl. and Sat, 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. 943-8525 2-29 POETRY WANTED for anthology by John R. Kowalczyk velores for prompt reply. Send to Diana LUILDWELL PRESS, 1807 East Castle St, Los Angeles, Los Alamitos Catalina 90212 Sports Cars Inc. Ten-speed bicycles: Peugeot, Gillette, Oliom, Chlora, Kalkhoff. No waiting frame; Width in 21, 32, or 25 inch frames; Width in 40, 50, or 60 On Bike Shop, 11Mop, 10Mop, 2-25 We've got a cap to fit your head. Funky styles from the engineer to the 'Big Apple' on down Earthship at 8th On Mass. 2-24 EARRINGS - EARRINGS - and mo- EARRINGS The Attic, 927. Mast. 2-25 WE HAVE TOPS FROM A TO Z. THE ALLEY SHOP, 843 Mass. 2-25 230 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 LONG DRESSES FOR PARTIES THAT ARE SUPER. THE ALLEY SHOP. 843 MASS. 2-28 1950. style concert and sock bop 1960. Lonny Fanny and the Bell Towers. 8-11 p.m. Uni Ballroom, Feb 26. See you there. Free Bee! * TYPING Experienced typist will type your term paper, theses or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Vol: S-3281. Mt. Rauckman. Term papers, these types accurately and promptly, your choice of type, size, electric typewriter or keyboard. 84-0797 days, 843-5805 nights, Klunda Diana, DCU. Experienced in typing tissues, dissection, and dermal mapping. Have electric typewriter with ptype type. Accurate and prompt serum analysis. Received Phone 843-9544, Mrs. Wright. Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention. 843-0958. 2-29 Accurate typing of your thesis, dissertation, or miscellaneous work on IBM Selectric typewriter with pice of logic and a mouse. Court, 821-490, for information, 2-289 LOST Lost in ladies union of Union: gold filled ring, cloudy blue stone, tape wrapped. Mon. Feb. 14 Call 864-2431 after 5.00. If anyone has found prescription glasses in case marked Dr. Aplin, please call 842-7422 2-24 Siamese cat lost in vicinity of 13th and Kentucky Thursday night. Answers to Mary Ann. Call 842-6863 2-24 Benny is missing! 8 week old German Puppy Dog Puppy, long haired, Midnight New Haven, Home, 1345 LA Apt. 24. Wearent A. Friend Collie puppy lost vicinity 14th and Tenn. Brown and white female. Call 442-9421. 3-1 MISCELLANEOUS BRIDAL GOWN *GOWN* Sample Size=Sizes 8-10, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky, 420 Socks that'll make you roll your pantlegs up. Earthshine, East 8th and Mass. 2-24 Large assortment of antique mufflers for 25c each. Earthshine, 12 E. 8th St. 2:24 HELP WANTED OVERSEAS-JOBS FOR STUDENTS the arts, professional and occupational work, and information. information. -Wait 1971, OVERSEAS 92115 Wait 1971, San Diego, California OVERSEAS-JOBS FOR STUDENTS Now taking applications for watt- her. Must be attractive and enjoy the job. Please submit resume work under pressure Prefer experience but will wish to train if necessary. Applicants must have summer and following school year experience. Compensation is excellent Phone number is (800) 254-7676 THE MERCANTILE Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD HERBS AND SPICES MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SNAILAGES "For Feets Sake, If The "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon 8 Thursday, February 24,1972 University Daily Kansan ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Grand Grand Opening STARTS FRIDAY FEBRUARY 25th 10 a.m. O Opening SALE M7 AMERICA'S LARGEST COAST NOW IN LAWRENCE TO COAST RECORD STORES RCA Records and Tapes 40% OFF LIST Complete Catalog RCA AERIE VICTOR John Denver RCA VECTOR Nlisson Schmilsson AEC VOLUME 4 THE ART OF JULIAN BREAM '598 List $359 RCA RED SEAL MOONLIGHT SONATA Three Favorite Northwestern Sonatas Moonlight • Pathétique • Appassionata ARTUR RUBINSTEIN '698 List $419 ANIMALS A Specially Designed Set BOB DYLAN GREATEST HITS VOL.1 Including Washington Post David Tate's New Jazz Album Larry Lee's The Male Voice The Man Who Loved Most of You At Most For You $4.19 Records $5.25 Tapes AG 3120 A specially priced record set BOB DYLAN'S GREATEST HITS VOL II Wellington Theater Davis Theatre Downtown Theater Saint Mary's Church The Manhattan Theater Fun for No More $4.19 Records $5.25 Tapes Superior Press & Distributor Chicago At Carnegie Hall Includes 7 Programs and 8 Tape Program Charles J. 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Carole King Music 5 JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR $599 and Tapes $7.97 2 Record Set L.P. 1/2 PRICE 40% off list TOP 10 BEST SELLING L.P.s. d 1) Don McLean LIST SALTE American Pie 5.98 3.59 2) Led Zeppelin 5.98 3.59 3) Traffic Low Spark of High Hurley Jacket 5.98 3.59 4) Alice Cooper 'Killer' 5.98 3.59 5) Emerson, Lake & Palmer Pictures at an Exhibition 5.98 3.59 LISTSALE LIST SALE 6) Mothers of Invention ... 6.98 4.19 7) Elton John Madman Across the Water ... 5.98 3.59 8) Isaac Hayes Black Moses ... 9.96 5.98 9) Judy Collins Living ... 5.98 3.59 10) Captain Beetheart The Spotlight Kio ... 5.98 3.59 iscount records 1420 Crescent Road 842-4626 Customer Parking in Rear 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturdays COLLEGE PLAYING RECORDS AT A SAVING! --- --- A LITTLE WARMER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 82nd Year, No. 93 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Jayhawker Drops Section Friday, February 25, 1972 See Page 2 CARLTON PAPER Formal Diplomatic Relations Reported Aim of China Visit Dwyer and Jacoby Plan After Court decision to requalify candidacy Student Court Approves Dwyer-Jacoby Candidacy Thousands of Chinese—perhaps as many as one million—were out early in the morning cleaning Peking's streets and the site of the ancient imperial palace. Hatess and glovestee, Nixon entered the Senate, through the Gates of Sorsure Harper. PEKING (AP) -- President Nixon toured Peking's Forbidden City in a snowstorm Friday, starting the fifth day of his visit, which has been described as aming at eventual full diplomatic relations between the United States and China. Once reserved for emperors and their By RICHARD COOLEY Kaneon Staff Writer The Student Court voted 4-1 Thursday night to allow the names of Richard Dwyer, Joplin, Mo., senator, and William Walker to be entered on the student election ballot. Dwyer then set about obtaining the signatures, only to be informed Sunday that he had been disqualified whether he obtained the signatures or not. The two students had been disqualified by the Student Election Committee for their failure to pay fines by the Feb. 18 filing deadline, Dwyer and Jacoby appealed the committee's decision on the basis that they had been convicted of failing the filing rules by the election committee. ON FEB. 18, however, Dwyer was contacted by Bailey and told that he would be running the Senate while the running mate had not served in the Senate deadline for filing had already passed, but Bailey told Dwyer he would give him until the following Tuesday to obtain the sigma- Dwyer testified that he took his filing papers to the Student Senate office on Feb. 16. He said he gave the papers to Debra Ruttenberg, assistant to Bill O'Neill, Ballwin, Mo., junior and senior student treasurer. O'Neill had been authorized to accept filing papers on behalf of R. L. Bailley, chairman of the Election Committee. Accused of stealing documents that since he had previously served in the Student Senate he would not need to obtain the 500 signatures required by article 3, section 6 of the student code. It was incorrectly reported in Thursday's Kansas that an expanded summer Kansas was needed if certain journalism courses were to be offered this summer. This error appeared in a story on the FI nance and Auditing Committee of the State Department. Correction On Kansan These courses, Retail Advertising and Reporting II, are already scheduled to be offered this summer, said Del Brinkman, Kansan news adviser, and their being offered is in no way dependent upon the expansion of the summer Kansan. Bailey testified that he gave Dwyer until Tuesday to get the signatures because he thought O'Neill had interpreted the election code to Dwyer. When he discovered that Dwyer had talked only to Ruttenberg, he decided to disquall Dwyer and Jacoby. He said he thought Dwyer should have known better than to enrolberg's ruling, since she was only an employee of the Student Senate treasurer. RALPHHICKS, second year law student from Kansas City and attorney for the Election Committee, claimed that Dwyer should have realized that he had read the code, since he had been involved in student government and had read the code himself. He claimed that Dwyer should have realized that Ruttenberg had no answer to rule on the validity of election nouns. Dave Dysart, second year law student from Lawrence and attorney for Dwyer and Jebcoy, contended that it was reasonableness of the State to have authority to interpret the election code, because she was the only person at the Student Senate office to accept election DVSART Said the Election Committee had ratified DWYer's candidacy by accepting his filing papers, and that it had far outlasted the committee to get the signatures by Tuesday. By reversing that ruling after Dwyer had obtained the signatures, he said, the committee had 'forever stopped' Dwyer and Jacoby from taking his position to comply with the election rules. In delivering the court's opinion, Rich Gordon, second year law student from Lawrence, said that Bailey's phone call to Thomas was inadvertent and signatures by Tuesday were the "crusis of truth." Gordon said that Bailey's action, by implication, validated Dwyer and Jacoby's candidacy, since it specified certain conditions they had to meet in order to have their names entered on the ballot. Gordon said members of the court did not want to see "the election turn into a faire" because of the court's ruling. ★ ★ Changes in Parties Delay Release of Candidate List By JIM KENDELL Kansan Staff Writer The official list of candidates for Student sate and class offices will be released this week. Bill O'Neill, Ballwin, Mo., junior and student body treasurer, release of the numes to give candidates a chance to apply. Students are asked to check the filing papers more closely. Candidates could change party affiliation until 5 p.m. Thursday. The list of candidates was originally scheduled for release Thursday. Two DWI Bills to Go Before Kansas Senate O'Neill said there might be one more candidate for Student Senate in Pearson College. The candidate filed Wednesday and turned in his papers but not his $5. The election committee must decide Friday if they will allow this candidate to file. If the candidate is allowed to file, the total number of candidates in Pearson The Kansas Senate will consider action next week on two bills aimed at curbing O'Neill said students in each class had ID numbers within a certain range of numbers. The committee will make sure correspondents with his class. The election committee plans to check the petitions of presidential and vice-presidential teams and class officer signatures, and scrutinize the authentacy of the signatures on the petitions. By JOE ZANATTA Kansan Staff Writer The House passed and sent to the Senate last week a new driving-with-intoxicated bill which contains a mandatory two-day jail sentence upon conviction. The bill is presently in the Senate Judiciary Committee. College would be 18. O'Neill said Under the present law, a person convicted of drunken driving faces a minimum $100 fine with a maximum $500 penalty and 90 day jail sentence. Suspension of the person's driver's license is left to the judge's discretion. "In all cases the judge has the discretion of suspending the sentence," Jerry Donnelly, astst. county attorney, said. "I would plan to take away this discretion or not." Administration Seeks Removal Of 'Bug' Checks The bill was amended before passage in the House in a motion by Rep. Gee Jones, R-Hamlin, to include a two-day minimum sentence. The election will be March 15-16. The bill is likely to see Senate action after the Senate's own bill on public inquiries. Under Van Sickle's bill, public inoculation is defined as "being on a highway or street or in a public place or public building" under the influence of "liquor, narcotics, hypnotic, somnifacient or stimulating drugs" to the degree that one Conviction of a person for public in- textion carries a maximum fine of $200 and imprisonment. In a bill proposed by Rep. Torn R. Van sickle, R-Fort Scott, the definition of a child under 18 was amended. WASHINGTON (AP) - Attempts by the Nixon administration to remove judicial checks from electronic eavesdropping of domestic groups could lead to the political incarceration of anyone who disagreed with the President, the Supreme Court was told Thursday. "The power which the attorney general seeks here would legitimize a wide-spread dragnet of political opposition," attorney Arthur Kiney told the high court. "That's what they're asking for here—the power to suspend constitutional guarantees." families and servants, the enclave in the heart of Peking has more than 9,000 rooms. The tour is the second high point of the sightseeing part of the 'Nixons' visit to Both sides agree the government may use whatever surveillance it finds necessary against foreign enemies, but they split over whether this surveillance violates the constitutional ban against unreasonable searches and seizures. Both Kiney and Justice Department attorney Robert C. Mardian appeared before the high court Thursday to debate whether federal agents may "bug" law enforcement by suspected of subversion without first getting approval from a neutral judge. WITH ABOUT 20 talks with the top Chinese leaders behind him, Nixon was reported aiming at eventual restoration of his rule in Taiwan, whatever the repercussions in Taiwan. The U.S. circuit court in Cincinnati has ruled that the Fourth Amendment prohibits governmental surveillance of American citizens without prior court approval. The Justice Department is appealing. He will go to the Great Hall of the People on Friday afternoon for what is expected to be his final Peking conference with Premier Chen En-lai. In the evening the entertainer Chen and other prominent Chinese in the banquet room of the Great Hall. An informed American source said Nixon and Henry A Kissinger, the President's national security affairs adviser, are talking with Chob about big picture issues involved in establishing what he has termed "normal state relations." While the top American and Chinese leaders formulated broad policy, Secretary of State William P. Rogers, his counterpart Chi Peng-fei and their associates were working out nuts-and-ring questions of how to effect summit policies. WHILE NO U.S. officials involved in the talks would discuss matters of substance, the committee has said it is not likely. and Chou had embarked on setting up cultural exchanges, limited tourism between the two countries, a system for handling Chinese-American trade and means for establishing regular contacts short of full diplomatic ties, involving an exchange of ambassadors. While no one would talk about the means likely to be employed in continuing the dialogue between the two nations on a diplomatic level, Mr. Huang has established consular relations without setting up embassies. Britain, for example, has recognized mainland China for 22 years—but it continues to have a consultative role with the Nationalist Chinese island of Taiwan. One American in a position to know said Nixon ultimately seeks full and formal diplomatic ties with China's Communist government. However, he emphasized the path in that direction would have to be navigated a step at a time. ROGERS and his Chinese counterpart were conducting significant talks aimed at carrying the process forward in practical ways, this informant reported. In the matter of diplomatic relations, the question of the Nationalists is not easy to resolve, since Nixon has said he has no intention of abandoning Taiwan. Nixon spent three hours Thursday in private conversations with Chau. In the same interview, he said he 12 hours, but much of this time was taken up with the translations of interpreters. They meet again Friday. In all, Nixon and Chou have spent 24 hours together. FRIDAY IS THE Nixon's last day in Peking before going on to Hangchow and Shunghai. The Chinese arranged for them to visit Peking's *forbidden city*, a 65-year old royal enclave now known as the former imperial palaces. Presumably, somewhere along the line the vexing subject of Indochina has come up. Unless one skims little, give it can be expected. Chou made plain before Nixon came to China that the U.S. peace plan was in danger and that the defeat of the Vietnam war were on the agenda. A sour view of this week's proceedings came from William F. Buckley Jr., editor of the conservative National Review. He is in the press party in Peking despite his support for Nixon, but he was suspending support of Nixon because of the President's China Policy. Strikers Ask Student Help Asked what he thought the trip had accomplished, he replied, "Well, I think it is much easier to talk about what hasn't happened in the past than which we and others have been subjected has been a rhetoric that stresses friendship between the American and Chinese people. Now, in the first place, there was an important difference that I know of between the people." Kansan Staff Writer By ROBERT E. DUNCAN Kensan Staff Writer Rose said the walk-out would continue until the University administration discussed all their grievances. "They will pass any item item connected with money." Determined to gain wage increases and better working conditions, Lloyd Rose, business manager local 1123, asked at a student-faculty support meeting Thursday night for student picket lines in front of Strong Hall. "We got the distinct feeling that the University really didn't see why the University should take their time with us," he started to a meeting in Topeka Wednesday. Members of the support committee were concerned that the message of the workers was not being delivered to the University community. It was decided to form a committee, called for information, collecting petitions, and for forming a Strong Hall picket line. Rise said that if an employee worked 48 hours one week, he was told only to work 32 hours the next so that no overtime would have to be paid. Rose said the University administration broke off talks Thursday with the union, but that a meeting has been scheduled for today in Topeka. The concerns of the union are not solely financial. Workers complain that they are docked a full hour's pay if they are only two minutes late to work. The University has not expressed its good faith, Rose said. "We aren't hard to deal with. If you don't have anything, you can't lose anything." A supervisor for buildings and grounds, who said he "was not high enough to be an administrator, but too high to join the armed union members to police themselves. He said that there were "rumors of trouble" between union and non-union labor groups, and he said. written on several building and grounds vehicles. Losing his voice from talking to groups and at rallies, Rose said. "We don't intend to take the pickets down until we know where we are." A flyer to be issued today was distributed which accuses the University of "violating the law" and the Fair Labor Standards Act. The flyer says, "Last August we were forced to file a charge for non-payment of wages for clean-up time. Last December the Wage and Hour Bureau found the University guilty and forced it to correct this practice." The statement refers to University housing cafeteria employees who had to be housed in the dormitories. for work, according to Rose. Rep. Morris Kay, R-Lawrence, told the Kansan Thursday that he saw the resolution of most of the grievances as an internal matter. Kay said he was trying to get better financial support for the University. According to University officials the walk-out has not affected operations. Some buildings, however, are showing neglect of custodial care. One member of the support committee said she was working on getting Common Cause to investigate the workers' conditions. The future of the walk-out is unsure. "If meaningful discussions go on we can manage a way to take them (the pickets) down," Rose said. ★ ★ ★ Lloyd Rose, business agent for Local 1132, told strikers Thursday afternoon not to worry if they were fired for not returning to work. Rose Urges Workers Not To Fear Strike Job Loss Addressing about 60 University of Kansas buildings and ground employees that gathered in X Zone, Rose said: "Wouldn't it be beautiful to read in the paper that Docking fired employees who are working for a safety committee?" Today is the fifth day of the strike. Workers have been told they would be fired if they did not return to work by the fifth day of the strike. Buildings and grounds employee Mike Bitch说 "Everybody is a little ner- Bitch did not feel that they would be fired. huff" he said "I think it is a bluff," he said. Roe said the administration had not功失, and that the administration had not功失. "The institution has an obligation to talk about these problems. I can't tell what will come out of tomorrow's meeting, but for the first time they will have to sit down and talk about our primary consideration—money." Rose said. Several members of Communications Workers of America were present at the meeting. There has been some controversy as to whether workers from C.W.A. should cross Rose said C.W.A. members would discuss the legality of crossing the picket line and would reach a decision by this week. The other members would support Local 1132. [Image shows three men in formal attire seated at a table, engaged in conversation. The man on the left is wearing a suit and glasses, while the man in the center is dressed in a suit with a tie. The man on the right is also in a suit and has a bald head.] 25 Hear Booth, Kav, Vogel Speak in Union Kansan Photo by BECKY PIVONKA The financial difficulties of Kansas higher education were among the topics discussed in the Student Vote forum in the Big Eight states. answered questions from about 25 persons. From left, 2nd District Sen. Arden Wood, 40th District Morris Kay and 39th District Robert Roe, 41st District applicable residents. 2 Friday, February 25,1972 University Daily Kansan Jayhawker to Combine Sections By FOSS FARRAR Kansan Staff Writer This year's Jayahawker will contain three sections, instead of the four of previous years, but its content won't be much to forget. Rick McKernan, Goodland junior at Auburn and expected to combine the spring and graduation sections into a single case because it is an integral part of his program. He said the American Yearbook Co. of Topeka reserved time for the printing of each Jahewkha section and it would cost less to set up one time, instead of two, this spring. There is also a table of contentation of a table of contents pages, he said. "Spring is their peak production time," McKernan said, referring to the yearbook company. "They're busy with the staff working seven days a week. By just having to schedule one leaves them a lot of pressure and us a lot of pressure." Yearbook sales were down during the fall semester, and they weren't until thought it might be like last year's, which didn't contain the traditional four sections and had a few cards to represent the high street. McKernan said he planned to follow the traditional format this year, using three issues instead of five. The last issue, which had already been distributed, had included an extended Christmas campaign. The winter issue, which is being By ANITA KNOPP Kansan Staff Writer Manipulation of Genetics Possible, Shankel Says Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, discussed the possibilities and probabilities of genetic engineering Thursday. He gave a seminar on human sexuality. Shankel said that genetic engineering is the manipulating of genes to alter, reproduce, or create new genetic structures. Much of what Adidas Huxley described in the book *The Nature of Scientific Writing*, has been factually written, Shankel said, has been a key to scientific development. Shankel said many different types of gender manipulation are being explored. He said because an estimated 65 per cent of all diseases are hereditary, the elimination of many of them has become an area of concern. SHANKEL SAID three possibilities exist for decreasing genetic defects, incorporating new genes to replace defective gene and limiting formation of defective gene carriers. Hanksel said selective breeding of human population had been conducted on several genetic manipulation. Issues which must be resolved before selective breeding would be undertaken are whether selective breeding should be voluntary and who should decide which traits are selected. Shankel said that artificial insemination, a method of fertilization practiced in practice. In the last five years, Shankel said, 10,000 babies have been born as a result of artificial insemination and it had been little selectivity of donors in the past and that this could be a problem. SHANKEL ALSO described pre-nalation whereby an egg is fertilized and implanted in the mother. The real problem presents a real problem in naming the parents on the birth certificate. There is a possibility of having as many as five eggs at birth. The father, the proxy mother and printed, would have people, sports and feature sections, he said. The final issue will emphasize what has been happening in organizations and gain more sports and features. Student prices were the same this year as they were last year. McKennaan said. Students paid $150. The second semester for the yearbook. He said the Jahayawk he helped by any other organization. many necessary tasks. Shankel said Huxley's "test baby tubes" may soon be a reality. He said British scientist had claimed he was ready to create test tube baby if he could volunteer to act as a proxy mother. One of the potential realities of genetic engineering is cloning, the reproduction of a perfect genetic duplicate of a single parent. Shankel cloned cloning had been accomplished in frogs. Delbert Shankel father and the scientist who caused fertilization, Shankel said. 1 Sex determination before birth is also a possibility in the near future, Shankel said. Delbert Shankel the creation of chimeraes, part human and part animal is also known. The researchers said those researchers who had investigated the possibilities said they were "happy" with the results. "Geneetic engineering has a positive role in society if liberally educated humans have the wisdom to use it," Shankel said. McKernan said about 30 staff members contributed work to the Jayhawker. He he said he and the business manager received $125 monthly salaries but feature encouraging talent for token rewards. In planning this year's budget, McKernan said he was striving for a happy medium between the two teams, but wouldn't know the exact figures until the end of the year, but he believed they would be section Jashawker for next year. "We get the money from sales, advertisement and the sale of space in the yearbook," he said. "We can buy space in the Jawhaker." "Later on this year I'd like to come over and see the students we react to a cover yearbook and to the different number of sections," he Kay said that funding for higher education was contingent on the availability of revenues. He added that the legislature would probably support at least what the governor had recommanded in his budget for education as it had done in the past. Booth attributed the reluctance of the legislature to act on the funding bills to it being an issue, and it would not one cent sales tax would probably not come out of committee until it was assured of passage in the legislature. The people in the western part of the state, he said, opposed the measure and those who supported it, unless passage was assured. Kansas Billboards Debated in House THE STRIKE now in progress at the University was also discussed by the legislators. The problem of funding Kay said, was related to the manner in which the university had been state. He said that KU received a lump sum appropriation from the legislature and that the Far more colleges had a single issue yearbook than schools that had several issues, he said. Some By STEVE CRAIG Kansan Staff Writer Kay said that stabilization is needed in which funds had been removed from higher education and welfare, two of the largest sectors. According to Kay some 25 bills were before the legislature to find alternate means of supporting him, and he was considered by the legislature. Three state legislators spoke last night on issues concerning the student body of the University of Kansas, before an audience of 25 students. The legislators were sponsored by the Committee of the student vote and spoke in the Night Room of the Kansas Union. Legislators Say Funding Crucial The fate of billboards along Kansas highways will soon be covered by new regulations on billboards passed the Kansas Senate this week and is presently under consideration in the House of representatives. The bill is designed to bring Kansas into compliance with the federal Highway Beautification Act. Kansas is faced with a 10 per mile fee of $8.8 million, in federal highway funds if the bill does not pass. By STEVE RIEL Kansan Staff Writer The speakers were State Sen. Arden Booth, Rep. Morris Kay and Rep. John Vogel, all of Douglas County. Topics of discussion ranged from the strike now in progress by University students to continued funding of the higher education in Kansas. All three legislators said that funding was a crucial issue now before the legislature. Booth said that the major bills before the legislature now convene before the legislature. He ranked funding of higher education among the top priorities. The provisions of the bill do not prohibit, but do discourage, the use of billboards. Current Douglas County regulations perma- ture that 50 square feet and located at least 25 feet from the highway. The new bill would allow billboards 1,200 square feet, but the minimum distance from the high- way would be increased to 660 legislature should not interfere in the use of these funds by the University. BOOTH SAID that student movements at KU had attracted the attention of the legislature. Because the legislature was in session, he said that they received a distorted picture of their actions. He added that some of the demands of the February Sisters had been met by sex legislation and discrimination in hiring practices. Vogel said that legislation banning sex discrimination was in force and if it is not followed it will be punished for enactment at administrative levels. Vogel and Booth agreed that the University was more or less unrestricted in the use of state funds. They said that legislators were not in a position to monitor the management of the universities. When asked if he would be a candidate for governor, Kay said that he would make no announcement until the legislative session ended. He said that this was his most important task at present. The legislators expressed sympathy for the strikers. They said that they were unaware of the protest and were protested by the strike. Action should be taken through the courts or other agencies if working conditions were not up to federal requirements, they said. THE STUDENT VOTE was also considered by the legislators. All three descaled that registration of new voters had been impeded by the legislature. They said that their concern and that of the legislature was in facilitating registration. Kay said that the student vote would have impact in all three districts, including West Vogel and Booth agreed that one would be important in the constituency and that students would vote for legislators who would represent the interests of their constituents. James Adair, manager of Barnard Sign Co., a local billboard company, agreed to legislative. Adair said in order to see a billboard 660 feet from a highway it must be much larger. He asked the cost of erecting a billboard. Vogel said that in his contact with student legislators and students he felt that they were not after radical change. "All this legislation will do is make all small billboard companies go under and all the big billboards go under," Wager Roger counts. zoning Student voters, according to the three, were solid thinkers and would not be much different from the general public. schools experiment in different methodologies, and published a yearbook with different sized sections inserted into pockets which folded administrator, supports the legislation. He said he would like to be able to remove from the highway one or two counties of one or two, all billboards in Dougss County curtailed by county regulations, he said. McKernan said sales were slightly down this year primarily because of a reaction to last season, but he said, Nebraska and K-State had sold somewhere under him last year while KU had sold nearly all year. Kellum foreases great difficulty in either the removal or relocation of existing billboards. The bill does not permit removal or prosecution until federal and state laws are appropriated for compensation. MANILA (AP)—A suburban town council has proposed an ordinance that would authorize jailing long-haired male bites because the fashion ‘is associated with drug addiction.’ Wayne Kellum, county zoning He said some signs and billboards had been abandoned and owners must be located before any action could be taken. Student Union Activities has received nine applications for the SUA Board. The nine applicants will be interviewed tonight by an interviewing committee composed of the retiring board of the省院 Board and representatives of the Kansas Union operating committee. The interviewing committee meets to select the officers for the new board. SUA Board To Interview The SUA Office has also received 17 applications for specific board member positions. The deadline for board member applications is 5 p.m. Friday, and seven weeks before that time. The distribution date for the winter section of the yearbook has not yet been announced. The university also their copies of the fall section can do so. The Jayhawer Office, in the Kansas Union basement. Interviews for SUA Board meetings are scheduled Saturday. Interview times are assigned applicants when their applications are approved. Repertory Dance Theatre Distinctive Sandwiches at the BULL AND BOAR REPERTORY DANCE THEATRE Sunday, Feb. 27, 1972 2:00 p.m. UNIVERSITY OF UTAH University Theatre—Murphy Hall Tickets: $2.00, $1.50 with I.D. Call: 864-3982 JUST GOOD FRIENDS February 24 thru March 4 8 p.m. K.U. Experimental Theatre 864-3982 For Complete Automobile Insurance Gene Doane Agency V1 3-3012 824 Mass. St. Kansan Is All-American For the seventh semester in a row, the University Daily Kansan has been awarded an All-American rating by the College Prep Journal. The award is for the fall semester of the 1971-1972 school year and was announced Thursday by the All-American Critics In gaining the All-American recognition, the Kansan was cited for marks of distinction in all five categories of the 1964 National Film Awards rated the paper high in coverage and content, writing and editing, an official leadership, physical appearance and photography. ... Feb. 28 8:20 Hoch The Student Body of The University of Kansas Presents HANDS BALLET FOLKLORICO OF MEXICO It's the last program of the season and probably the best! It's FREE with I.D. NO RESERVED SEATS COME EARLY FOR A GOOD SEAT. Non-Students 4.00 - 3.50 - 3.00 ROCK CHALK REVUE Ticket Sales Start MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28 Ticket Prices $2.50 $2.25 $1.75 SALES LOCATIONS SUA Office, Union Bells Kief's PERFORMANCES ON MARCH 3 AND 4 HOCH Auditorium 8:00 p.m. of Ce da sən toi fie iec fooc fooc int int ab ab tra met ret we tai Friday, February 25, 1972 University Daily Kansan 2 Campus Briefs No 'Because' Meeting Sculpture Lecture "Because" a volunteer latening organization, will not have an orientation meeting Saturday. Anyone interested can call the office at 516-345-8792 or visit www.latening.org. A lecture, Aspects of Heian Sculpture, will be given by Donald F. McFalliam, professor of art, University of California, Los Angeles. Angel Flight Formal initiation of Angel Flight pledges will be Saturday at Forbes Air Force Base in Topeka. Officers Plan 'Skip Day' By KENNETH B. HARWOOD Kansan Staff Writer Kansan Staff Writer Emporia Choir Sunday The Board of Class Officers divides the activities and representatives from each class revealed plans for other spring activities in a meeting John Mite, Salina senior and senior class president, said "Skip Day" would be a day of festivities for the entire campus set for May 5. The featured activities include "Bachelor's of Science," and a concert near the lake. The bike-athon race will be conducted in two or three heats, leaving from the intersection of Iowa St. and Peterson Rd. and traveling a 17.7 mile course to the lake. Contestants will enter the river for a short distance by each team member covering a leg of the country road course. The board is considering donating the money to either the KU Burn Center Drive or a camp run near Wightis. cam camp run near Wightis. "All proceeds from the entry fee and beer sales will be put in a basket for distribution from the students of the University of Kansas," Mize said. Following the bike-athlon will be free roon circuit activity. The Jerry would include volleyball and baseball games and a beer drinking Doug Rose, Olathe junior and junior class president, said the junior class would sponsor a concert April 8 in conjunction with a program planned by AURH, the Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic. Rose speculated he would contract Rock Revival for a group of older rock artists including Danny and the Juniors. The Chiffons, Ben E. King, Angles, Joy Dee and the The 33-voice choralie of the College of Emporia will sing at the 11 a.m. service Sunday at the First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 2rd St. A free bus will run from the campus, leaving the Union at 10:30 a.m. and Daisy Hill at 10:40 a.m. Rose said he was still considering the possibility of signifying his Brewer not in front of it or at Lil Wayne's concert instead of the Rock The junior class also is planning a beer party with the chance of a concert near the examination period. Rose sad. Revial groups. Dennis Cherry Kirkwood, Mo. senior and senior class social clasician, said plans are being made for a party in a nightclub style. It will be H.Y.O.L. and entertainment for the Bikales-Weinberg band, he said. Rick McLaughlin, Dallas freshman and freshman class president setting up a series of visitations for high school juniors and seniors for Saturday classes at our campus and receive information about KU. The freshman class will have lunch later in the spring, McLaughlin said. Sophomore class president Jim Harwell of Emporia said his classmates had been invited to the march. March 14. Harwell and are joined by party was being planned for next week. Black Music Talk Emphasizes Identity By SUSAN HAYES Kaucan Staff Writer A leech that was in the music of Black Americans in the 19th century has been able to day by Eileen Southern, professor of music at York College of Art in New York. During slavery, talented blacks were often allowed to study music, so that they could enter concert halls. They pointed out. From that, grew a Southern is an authority in the field of music by black Americans, and has written two books on the subject. Her presentation of her work in the 19th century, but also included a short survey of black American music beginning with the first slaves into the new world. Southern said to an audience of about 200 that because blacks transported to America could bring nothing of their native land, they retained their dance and cultural effort in an effort to retain an identity. more sophisticated type of music. more sophisticated type of music. Family bands became popular in the 19th century, and in 1850 the first integrated music show a crowd a black family and a white one, which was given in New England. This was followed by mindstrut acceptance by both races. In 1888, the first Broadway musical comedy sketch written by and by Carrie Fisher. Southern ended her presentation by asking the audience to sing with her piano accompaniment, the most American songs. The first, "If Sleeping Now Fair Maid of Orleans," followed Johnson, a celebrated composer-performer who was "jazzing it up" in a hundred years before the rocker Cake Walk's Done." is a cheerful number explaining that famous craze of the 19th century. She sang for the New York City Symphony, "The National Hymn Gymnastics." City Drug Abuse Group Reviews Three Reports By DAVE BLISS Kansan Staff Writer The Mayor's Committee on Drug Abuse met Thursday evening to review and discuss reports submitted by the Education, Law Enforcement and Corrections Department. Rehabilitation, subcommittees Greater attention must be given to educating the public about drugs said Ralph King, a professor of law at University. Although drug education through the school systems comprises an integral part of the public's knowledge and awareness of education must be implemented. Civic organizations and other public institutions from drug instruction, he said. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UNITED NATIONS) in an continuing education maze, has decreased the number of daily guided tours of its headquarters. The rehabilitative program must be used to recruit addicts as well as patients with disabilities to the program for those who have received treatment, it was found that the program was effective. Local versus state and federal enforcement of drug laws was discussed in the Law Enforcement Brief. Elwell stressed that priorities Elwell said that many law numbers game, which the success of drug control was the number of arrests by than killers. To change the numbers game philosophy of drug arrests the law would need to change and attorney general officials must reorient their drug control program to emphasize the hard drug traffic. Elwell said. considered the local methadone program to time the time the program can accommodate all addicts who want to take advantage of the methadone program. must be established, concerning which drugs should receive the greatest law enforcement attention. By such criterion, Kansas enforcement officials were considered successful. Most arrests, however, were for drugs, including methadone, and not for hard drugs such as heroin or methedrine, he said. Knowledge of barbiturate and amphetamine substitutes is required. We also recommend for those addicted to the drug is a barbiturate, be published, the committee agrees. The third lecture will deal with "moral literature of the People's Republic of China," presented March 7 by C.C. using, KU associate professor of ethics. The Treatment and Rehabilitation subcommittee the future of United States-China relations. All lectures in the series will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union except on weekdays. All lectures in the room in the Jayawk室 will be held Come and get 'em! Griff's 15¢ 100% U.S. INSPECTED GROUND BEEF HAMBURGERS ONE OR A BASKETFUL! Griff's BURGER & BARS And Don't Forget CRISPY, GOLDEN BROWN FRENCH FRIES until 20¢ TRIPLE-THICK, FLAVOR-RICH MILKSHAKES only 25¢ Griff's BURGER BARS SATURDAYS 10AM-6PM The second course of the series will be given March 2 by Jones K. Malone and Michael P. Pennsylvania. His topic will be "People's War - An Application Student Union Activities will present a four-part lecture series entitled "Focus on China." The course is open to all, and the Mandate—the Chinese Communist Party since 1949" will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Forum Room of the University Library, Bays, KU professor of history. SUA to Sponsor Red China Series The series deals with the interactions that take place between a person and is attempt to promote mutual understanding and friendship between the two people. OPEN 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Mon thru Sat. 10 a.m. - 11 p.m. Sun 1618 West 23rd St. William O. Rieke, vice chancellor for health affairs, said Kimmel would continue as professor of medicine and pharmacology at the McLennan Research Laboratories for cardiovascular research. "This appointment will assure integration during the time when we are phasing into the new medical curriculum." Rlekke Kimmel received his medical Kimmel Appointed Dean Of Med Center Academics Dr. Joe R. Kimmel has been appointed associate dean for faculties and academic affairs at Kansas Medical Center of University. A Fly your own jet! FLY NAVY Kansas City, Mo. 64108 SENIORS Clip and Mail To; U. S. Navy Recruiting Station 2420 Broadway Kansas City, Mo. 61108 The Deadline for Making Senior Picture Appointments is March 1. (COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY) CLASS OF NAME STREET CITY STATE ZIP CODE Make Appointments With HIXON STUDIOS 843-0330 degree from the John Hopkins University. He was awarded a Ph.D. from the University of Utah in biochemistry. He was a member there for ten years and is now at Medical center. He has been on the School of Medicine faculty since 1964. WHAT IS A SHOE RACK? Find Out on March 1st! CENTER V BRAVO PLATFORMS for fashion drama that's sandalized! bright beauty in crinkle up, or Black. B. Suede sophi. Cherry Red, Blue or Golden T. FANFAIR McCall's PART YOURself in our Shoes McCall's "Best Vet Friend in our Shoes" GEM THEATER 7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00 F-S Feb. 25-26-27 MAN IN THE A WILDERHEES T..W. Th.-F. 29 & M. I & 2 DRIVE. HE SAID LOSE 20 POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS! Famous U. S. Women's SKI Team Diet During the non-mow off season of the U.S. Women's Alpine SKI Team (www.uswomenskis.com) you lose 20 pounds in two weeks. That's eight 20 pounds in 14 days. You diet to chemical food action and wake up. Colorado physician especially for the U.S. SKI Team. Normal energy is important (while reducing). You keep a starvation. because the diet is designed that way. It's a diet that you work, travel or stay at home. This is, honestly, a fantastically successful diet. If it weren't the U.S., wouldn't you have beertmished to use it against yourself the same break the U.S. T team gets. Low weight the scientific, proven way. Even if you've tried all of our recipes, you'll still self-try the U.S. Women's T team Diet. That is, if you really do want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks, today you should Tear out as a reminder. Send only $1.00 (1$.50 for Rush Service) cash is O.K. to: SK Team Diet, P.O. Box 15493, Dept. San Diego, D.C. Griffith, 92115 Send 20 pounds in two weeks! Beause that what the SK Team Diet will do A VANESSA REDGRAVE OLIVER REED KEN RUSSELL'S FILM THE DEVILS & Eve. 7:20 & 9:20 Matinees Sat. Sun. 2:05 & 4:00 Twilight Prices Good For 1:00 Show Only Hillcrest Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort are HAROLD and MAUDE Eve Shows 7:15 & 9:20 The Hillcrest E ROBERT LOUS STEVENSON'S KIDNAPPED Eve. 7:40 9:35 Matinee Sat.-Sun. 2:20 & 4:10 Twilight Prices at 1:00 Only Hillcrest Walt Disney's Song of the South G TECHNICOLOR Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Granada HELATLA - Magazine 3,1578 NOMINATED FOR 3 ACADEMY AWARDS!! — Best Actress — Cleo Jackson — Best Actor — Peter Finch — Best Director — John Winnetou "Sunday Bloody Sunday" R=Rated An Amus Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone 91-1065 Weekdays 2:30, 7:30, 9:40 Sat & Sun: 3:00, 5:05, 7:30 :40 Varsity TITANIA - Iphone 13-16S 4 Friday, February 25, 1972 University Daily Kansan Garry Wills KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Hashinger Arts For years people involved with organized University housing have tried to provide students who live in residence halls with something more than just big buildings where a few hundred people sleep and eat. Students who want to attend and as promising as the Residence Center for the Creative Arts which will be housed in Margaret Hashinger Hall next September. The programing for this hall will be aimed at people who are interested in the creative arts but not necessarily majoring in any of the subjects. The programing for the artist will have access to art studies, practice rooms for dancing, music rooms and whatever else the planning committee is willing to work with, including students and listening administrators, can come up with. The University has become so large that it cannot offer any more than a few introductory courses to the student who is just interested in the arts. These might titlate his interest but usually do not add much to his ability in that field. Certainly there is need to save professors' time for students who are going to graduate with degrees which are supposed to indicate a certain level of expertise in certain areas but it is unfortunate that the result has had no impact on the talent of nonmajor students with talent The center will provide a place and some equipment which will aid the creative student in developing his talent. Students will be with others who are enthusiastic enough about the arts and their own potential talents to pay the extra money to live in a hall dedicated to providing a place where creative people can do creative things. Some may try to discredit the idea for such a hall by saying it is just an administrative plot inspired by finances. If it were merely a bad financial situation that forced such a university then we all should pray that buddha had financial situations since this one fostered such a good idea. This hall will be an experiment and it may not work, so perhaps those who wonder what will happen if you want to implement agent starts to organize it have legitimate concern. Nevertheless, it is such an exciting idea that it is worth the risk. It is about time that when someone mentions "the arts" in their conversation does not immediately think of Spooner, Murphy or third floor Strong. -Mary Ward Staff Column Big Brother Waits By John Edward Goodrick THE DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION of states' rights by the federal government should now become a matter of some concern. Nothing alarming has happened; no single event stands out to warn states of an increasing central power, yet several events have taken place to act as contributing evidence to the fact of a growing federal strength. Sanctions are the most effective tool for containing federal government. The state that dances to the tune of the fiddler gets to keep funds already promised. The Federal Highway Beautifications Act is a good act, and like almost everyone else in the nation, I agree with its sense of ecology. But also remember how Kansas came to comply with the federal act. The federal government threatened to withhold $6.8 million in federal sanctions if the state did not pass an anti-billboards law. The University of Kansas must comply with the Department of Health, Education and Welfare in implementing an affirmative action program to eliminate discrimination in hiring practices. Because more than $50,000 is granted to the University of Kansas in the form of federal assistance, the University has received no losses in losing support. I agree with the majority, again, in support of minorities and the phasing out of discriminatory hiring practices by the University. My question is, what was the lever used to push KU in the right direction—federal sanctions? The defense department recently came out saying that NROTC is being phased out of several universities which were earlier trying to expel the military organization from their campuses. Without NROTC came the possible threat of a decrease in allotted funds from the Defense Department. This slapping of the hands of the universities could be interpreted as an attempt to stifle dissent. The good programs that the federal government offers seem to have lulled us into believing that the government will always try to benefit the majority. My concern is that we should also force programs but with the manner in which the federal government enforces such programs. Kansas, now in poor economic condition, is rendered even more susceptible to the federal government's states. The federal government has many strings in Kansas and many strings in Douglas County, including the recently planned Clinton Reservoir. As of now, Kansas is no puppet state, but so many ties exist that it is difficult to imagine what the federal government would do if the threat to stop the flow of currency There is no cause for alarm, there is no 1984, but at this time recognition of such activities of the federal government is imperative. They financially forced the Highway Beautification Act passed in the Kansas Legislature; let us only hope the next legislation the federal government bestows upon our state is as beautiful as the last. Readers Respond Help for Iran Are we going to stand by and let ourselves remain insulated from the rest of the world? Are we going to stand by and let the U.S. government support atrocities in other countries for pure greed? To the Editor: better life for their country, and their government is using American weapons to suppress a terrorist group that has been returned to the people where it belongs so that these atrocities can be stopped. One positive step is an agreement to a telegram to the Prime Minister of Iran (Mr. Moorhead, Tehran, Iran), registering our complaint against him and demanding his regime and demanding that the death sentences be suspended and that legal and medical teams are sent to the prisoners. If he receives enough of these telegrams perhaps he What about the fascist government of Iran that the U. S. is supporting because it conspires to attack the thousands of political prisoners arrested and jailed under the law. They are tortured mercilessly. will see that he is not fooling anyone by disgusing what is important to change, at least in some small way. It will happen slowly, but must be happened happily it takes for us to prevail if we enough men to do nothing." Down with him and up with internationalism." These people are fighting for a Ann Jochems Bellvue, Neb., senior Kendall, Kyle, Columbia, Mo., senior Costas Orlandos Saint Joseph, Seni- rior COLUMBIA The Wandering Right Wing Much of the Right Wing, unhappy with Nixon over his China visit, recently found themselves rejoicing over one of its consequences. They liked his criticism of India's part in the Pakistan affair. Some even talk in the righteous tones of men seeing grand providences of history vindicated. Columnist Russell Kirk, for instance, said that India's retribution goddess, Nenessa, upon its country," he rejoiced that "the American State Department declares forthrightly that the Indian government was the aggressor," and warned us not to make India's chelseas out of the fire." But what of the East Pakistani who were being slaughtered, or were fleeing to India? We not we to succor them? Kirk was adamant: 'The Bengali refugees in India will be helped by a Storm!' Strange that such arguments were not used earlier by the Right—to say, for instance, that a devastating war is hardy the way to help the South Vietnam? The war's apologists have used possible future slaughterers in the war from North Vietnam, to justify our massively destructive intervention all the way across the Pacific. Yet a present, very real massacre of Pakistanis should not have been dealt with by India or that evil country would become an aggressor. What can explain this gloating over Indian mistrust—assuming (as Kirk did) that Nesnesis is catching up with the country at last? Ideological racism has long nurtured a grudge against India, on general grounds. First, India tried to be the conscience of the world, when everybody knows that we are that. Second, it dared to say that the United States has brought us, whereas we know that peace can come from war. (True, India has not perfectly lived up to its pacific ideals; but neither have we lived up to our bellows-like atimes, according to Mr. Kirk's former employer Burry McCarthy, we have lapsed into a "nown' policy". was a certain bond between Communist and anti-Communist, as between crooks and cops. Both agreed on the rules of the game, on the show-down nature of reality. There was either-or conflict-break-concord on the fact that we faced an either-or choice. We agreed that we had to disagree. Most important of all, the Indian policy of neutrality challenged the most fundamental tenet of our whole postwar policy—which, simply put, is that "those who are not with us are against them" and so toward Communism meant that where "the Reds" did not predominate, we must. By challenging that assumption, by raising the possibility that there could be a third course, not the simple all-inclusive either-or of our cold war, India drove superpatriots up the wall. Then a funny thing happened. By not joining us against The Enemy, neutrals became even more our enemies than the Enemy itself. Enormity was better than lukewariness to the Enemy. There Then along came "neutralists"—symbolized by India-with the ultimate blasphemy, a challenging of the duty to disagree. And, for that damned individual, and for that individual, cannot ever forgive them. So deep is the shock and hatred run that they will embrace an opportunity to humiliate India, even if the motive for that is Nixon's entente with China. An immediate spiteful gale at getting the country into a war (Evil) overcomes the longer-term opposition to a greater foe (Evil itself). Those whose crime is neutrality toward Communism must be "given the opportunity to fight Communists (i.e., China) profit by the "getting." Do you think I exaggerate? Listen to Mr. Kirk's piette gale at the meeting (even China) humiliating India. "India is the most ardent advocate of admitting Red China to the comity of nations, as represented by the United States, the Chinese act, in the United Nations by force of arms, we see how New York like a dose of this medicine." The poor fellow, glloating on a nonexistent victory, on self-contraindictory of obsolete hostilities, is a perfect victim. The wing Wing's loss of contact with reality. Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate James J. Kilpatrick Conservative's Defection Fizzles WASHINGTON - The great conservative rebellion against Richard Nixon, launched last summer on a rolling wave of press releases, seems to be stuck on the beach. It is going nowhere and might as well be abandoned. I venture that forlorn judgment with some regret. The leaders of this rebellion, identified mostly with Human Events and National Review, possess some of the best minds on the conservative right. Their bill of particulars is soundly based. In announcing that they had suspended their support of the President, they were fired up on 我是 CHESH MAGNIE The Courrier-Journal "It's nice to see you again, too. after so long a time." Griff and the Unicorn By Sokoloff STOP ? STOP STOP STOP STOP STOP In the case at hand, no politicians of the first rank have railed to the rebel flag. Barry Goldwater, for example, has pushed his movement with characteristic violence Ronald Reagan wants no part of it. John Tower of Texas remains aloof. Even Sen. James L. Buckley, whose younger brother Bill is admiral of the battleship, has pointedly and publicly released his own support of Mr. Nixon. in extremis, my colleagues have turned to John M. Ashbrook of Ohio. He is one of the nicest guys in the House, a principled conservative and a thoroughly decent man. His credentials are impeccable, but his name is unknown. STOP The conservative rebellion suffers from this defect also, that Mr. Nikon will not stay bad. It is good to speak of good working rebellion, to stay alive, to feed on the raw meat of new resentments. Old complaints, like last Saturday's ham, tend to get chewy and run in the teeth. There is an agreeable villain, had the kindness to stay a villain. And has A political rebellion, if it expects to get anywhere, needs the motive power of professional politicians; it cannot be fueled by money. It must gasees of intellectual indignation in general proposition, politicians are not intellectuals, nor intellectualists politicians. There are exceptions—Woodrow Anderson, Henry Wallace, Adal Stevenson—but their number is few and their batting average is low. philosophy only, without the slightest motive of personal political gain. The movement is up in an otherwise dull campaign. Yet it has fizzled, and it may be instructive to examine the reasons why. "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." The certain prospect is that Mr. Nixon will win renomination at San Diego. No one will lay a lodge on him. What, then, in November? Bill Buckley writes with a free-flowing pen, but one cannot remain to see him scratching an X-ray beside of Edmund Muskie. Conservatives can stick with Nixon, or they can stay home and sulk. These are their options; everything else is hot air. But better a poor rebellion than no rebellion at all. In a close race, Nixon will need every vote he can get; and if he is moved to feed our war机器, then some good may come of our growing. Conservatives learn in their cradles—it is the mother's milk of their philosophy—that when you are awfully hungry, you want the bowl of a lot better than none. A third consideration comes to mind. An incipientrebellion has certain aspects of melodrama, and melodrama offers a kind of money or the money or your life. Belinda's virtue must be surrendered or the mortgage gets foreclosed. My colleagues have no such credible threat (because they leave Nixon, but they keep Alabama? Who would believe it?) to Bowsworth Field. Richard Nixon is not so cooperative. The President in October made two smashing nominations to the U. S. Supreme Court. He not only nominated Lewis F. Powell Jr. Powell acquist, he got them confirmed and over the oppression of Freed Harris, Birch Bayh, Ted Kennedy and others of their ilk—and in the process he greatly gladden conservative hearts. Not content, the President then vetoed the infamous child development bill, that ripped and rang with the American flag. So who shoots Santa Claus? Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and weekends. **B** @ a semester; $10 per class; **C** @ a class payment帖 paid at Lawyers' Inn; 66444. **D** @ all goods, services and employment advertised to all students without those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman Editor Associate Editor Campus Editor News Editors Copy Chairs Assistant Sports Editors Sports Editors Associate Sports Editors Feature Editor Wire Editors Margie Editors Reviewers Office Managers New News Manager, New Mailer, New Inkmaster Chip Crews Scott Spencer Rilee Haughey Erick Kramer, Jawan Seok Joyce Nerman, Ron King Sally Cannon, Bob Simpson Bob Simpson Barb Simpson Barb Simpson Barb Simpson Tom Sanjay Pandey Tom Sanjay Pandey Joyce Dunbar, Nancy Jones Dale Dunbar, Nancy Jones Barbara Schmidt Thomas Thrower Greg Sorber, Tom Thatcher, Hank Young Tonda Rush Steve Saufuf BUSINESS STAFF Business Advisor Mal Adams Business Manager Assistant Marketing Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Career Managers Carol Young Ambassador Manager Norman Meley Jacob McGivney Date Pilegrimage Dave Murray David Murray University Daily Kansan Friday, February 25, 1972 5 KU Folklore Includes a Whale, Ghosts s Nixon The Nixon the u. the U. all jr. Jr. he got the he get in the content, content, tell ttl, tell sd and sd and By JOYCE NEERMAN Kansan Staff Writer lip Crews Moseff Moseff Moseff Nine hay Nine hay On King On King In Grison In Grison Ward Ward Ward Jone Jone Jone Schmidt Schmidt Natter Natter Natter Rush Rush Sokoloff One of the unsolved mysteries at the University of Kansas is that of a whale in Potter Lake. During the dedication regatta in August, whineyewitnesses said they saw a whale in Potter. A Kansan story was told by one of the men made his debut shortly after a band concert and a swimming contest, and that the ensuing rash of deaths through the program to a standstill. A boatload of volunteers shoved off to investigate, but then the whale was frightened and the whale was wounded. There was no explanation then, and the question of what it was the spectators saw still remains. KU is 160 years old, and over the years, much folklore has surrounded the University. Many students have passed down from class to class and from generation to generation. Often there are perfect rational explanations for the problems, but still the stories persist. rol Young on Carter Barnhart børgerdres dina Lloyd e Murray del Ganlo SEVERAL BUILDINGS at KU are said by some to be haunted. Among them are Spencer Campus Bulletin Social Welfare Seminar: 9 a.m., Pine Pointe, Kyiv, Ukraine Wolfram Mathematica > v' a. room, 10m. RSPA Writing Context: 9:30 - 10:00 m. Blight, Jayhawk, International, Regionallogin Staff, Staff' m. Council Room English 2 Staff: 9:30 a.m., Council Room. Anthropology: 10:30 a.m., Cottonwood Cafeteria. CARIBEA Luso-Brazilian: 11:30 a.m. Alcove B. Social Welfare Peace Studies: noon Alcove A. NYU Educational Inst. Alcve C. MPA Students; noon. Alcve D. MPA Students; noon. Muslim Students: 12:45 p.m., Room 209. English Department: 1:30 p.m., English Room. Russian Table: 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark Caledera. Muslim Students: 12:45 p.m. Room 209 *Oh Department: 13:00 m.fm. English ROOM: Student Teachers: 2 p.m., Oread Room. KSPA Contest Awards: 3 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. & 9.30 p.m., Woods Auditorium. IVCET: 7 n.m. International Room. English: 4 p.m., Council Room. K.U. Folk Dance Club-Instruction: 7 p.m. SATURDAY SUA Board Interviews: 9 a.m., Governor' 17 Robinson Gym SUA Popular Film, "Killing of Sister George," 7 & 9:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium Research Library, the Delta Chi fraternity house and Corbin Hall. Museum Associates Kindergarten Workshop: 10:30 a.m., Dyche Hall. Skovman A. Musterer A. Huegertersen Workshop: 10:30 a.m., dye.Hall. Co. Freshman Basketball K.U. Johannson Co. Jr. College: 12:45 p.m. Field House The first story stems from the ill-workings of the elevator in Spencer. Employees of the library laughingly talked about the history of the elevator how it stopped between floors or stopped and started by itself at an elevator, and of Kenneth Spencer, returning to be around his papers and other belongings, who lived in the elevator and played tricks with it. It was a very strange place. K.C. Sullivan, K.c. Jr. College (12:45 p.m. Mcln. Field House Basketball, Kansas-Missouri) 3:10 p.m. Alfred Field House Sladder for McCraven Dance. A p.m. Students for McGovena Dance: 8 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom. SUNDAY Carlton Medical 7pm, Camellia SUNDAY Carillon Recital: 3 p.m., Campanile SUA Bridge: 120 m., Pine Room SUA Bugear; 1:30 p.m., Pine Room. SUA Cheaer; 2:p.m., Proom 305. International Film, "Ivan the Terrorist" (part II); 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium At different times when people have been alone in the Delta Chi house strange things have happened. One member went into the house with his girlfriend, put his keys down on a table and left for a second. When he turned around again the keys were gone. ANOTHER TIME one of the members checked on the house during the summer. He heard something in the kitchen and went there. Then he went back into another part of the house. He heard laughing in the kitchen and went again to check, and this time the stove was on fire. The gas been turned off for the summer. According to women who have lived in Corbin Hall, it is haunted. Residents have complained of strange sounds and strange happenings all the night. The differen't night reportedly it is the ghost of a former resident who was stabbed by a janitor in the old laundry room. She is supposed to have dragged herself up to her room, where she had been, and died outside because her roommate was afraid to answer. THE TIME of the murder and the details differ from person to person. There was a jianter in the room where he was killed by the murder of a girl in Lawrence, but he was not a jianter from the victim and did not live in Corbia. been heard from behind the bolt door in back of Garcia Hall boiled door in back of Green Hall EVERY UNIVERSITY has its mythic wings. The pioneer staircase of Granary Hill is supposed to throw a window. It is also its right shoulder when a virgin falls. Also, the metal Jayhawk by the Union is supposed to flap his wings and fly away when a virgin climbs the staircase. The shiny nose on the statue outside the geology office in Lindley Hall comes from the long nose of the nose for good luck before exams. There was an organ in Old Fraser Hall that was supposed to have been haunted. The pipes and the music played at strange times. A system of steam tunnels honeycombs the ground under the University. It was begun in 1906 by students and pipes for heating from the central heating plant to the buildings and telephone wires for the campus. These have often been the source of fire itself and strange happenings. Monsters, gnomes and bad students are rumored to be kept behind the mysterious-looking green house in the near where the old greenhouse used to be, Robert J. Smith, assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Windsor, teaches a course in folklore, also said that roars have supposedly Harry M. Buchholz, director of the physical plant, said there was a problem about five or six years ago with grade school children getting into the tunnels. He said sometimes one would get in, the other someone would have to go into the tunnel and get the child out. BUCHHOLZ SAID the tunnels were hot and were dangerous because they carried high pressure steam lines and high voltage wires. He said there was no longer much of a problem with people getting in the tunnels or the entrances were padlocked. Some rumors about wrongly constructed buildings at KU seem to have basis only in the experiences that some find in them. The classrooms in Summerfield Hall can be very uncomfortable in hot weather. Some explain this by saying the windows are designed to face north, that the windows are on the wrong side. Anyone who has tried to find his way through Murphy Hall might be willing to believe the story that Murphy was designed by three architects and a architect became angry and sabotaged the plans. The supposed result is that rooms with no windows or doors, rooms with no numbers and rooms that numbered backwards were built. THEY IS some basis for the story that Strong Hall was built backwards. The building was designed to face a grand mall and Memorial Stadium, the Memorial, Campanile and Memorial Stadium. The two side sections were built first. When the center section was started there was some question about which way the campus was growing, so it was built with main doors on both the east and west sides. completed, it was appeared the campus was not growing north and the administration building was undergoing renovations Boulevard. There was no need for a grand portico on the side of the campus to house Research Library was built. When the center section was Jayhawker Towers Apartments We are now leasing for the '72 summer session at special summer rates. We have an ideal location with all the conveniences to find in most apartment complexes. Examine what we have to offer: ★ Swimming Pool ★ Laundry ★ 2 Bedrooms—Furnished or unfurnished ★ NO Utilities ★ Free Parking Facilities There are NO hidden costs. Dron by or phone P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. CUSTOM JEWELRY WE WILL WORK FROM YOUR OWN DESIGN, OR CREATE A DESIGN FOR YOU WEDDING RINGS ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY Jewelry BANKMERZABO Hospital change BANGLADESH Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 MINI-DINNER SPECIAL 2 Pieces of Crisp Chicken with a Large Order of French Fries Only 49¢ Regular Price 63¢ Offer Good: Sun., Mon., Tues., Feb. 27, 28, 29 Henrys h & Missouri 843-2139 henrys Fashions on parade 2.00 OFF ON ALL JEANS & SLA Fashions on parade $200 OFF ON ALL JEANS & SLACKS Now thru March 5. Buy Bootlegger CENTER OF NOW FASHION HOURS 10-10 7 DAYS/WEEK Address 523 W. 23rd There's Always a Bargain Waiting For You at the Bargain Table! Use Kansan Classifieds RACE LOVE Overwhelmed? Slow, unorganized reading is boring! You lose concentration and perspective! You seem to spend all your time studying! or 1970 Fast, intelligent reading holds your attention! You grasp the ideas sooner & more accurately! You have time for leisure enjoyment! Confident READ THE ENTIRE YEAR'S WESTERN CIVILIZATION ASSIGNMENTS IN ONLY 8 WEEKS Reading Dynamics teaches you how to find the meaning in all those thousands of words. Our instructor is also a Western Civ. Instructor. Our unique note-taking technique simplifies, organizes. and relates ideas in graphic form. New Class Begins Next Week Begins March 2 and meets for 8 Thursdays 7-9:30 p.m. Finishes just before the W.C. Comprehensive Exam of April 29. P. S. If you want to take Reading Dynamics but do not need the Western Civ readings, you may join the class and read in your own materials. FREE Mini-Lesson Wed., Thurs., Fri., Feb. 23, 24 and 25 7:30 & 8:30 p.m. at the Reading Dynamics Institute I EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Downstairs at the Sound—Hillcrest Shopping Center 925 Iowa Phone 843-6424 6 Friday, February 25, 1972 University Daily Kansan Five Seniors Play Home Finale Home Season Ends Against MU 10 Mark Mathews Neal Mask Littler Goes 7 Under Par In Ist Round FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. (AP)-Veteran Gamer Gillen Littler the green, and forged a strokelead with a stunning seventen-under par 65 Thursday in the first round of the season's $280,000 Invary Classical. The 14-year-old winner, winner of the slider, strokes on the slick, lightning-fast greens in his early round to the 1,128 yard Inverary Golf Australian veteran Bruce Crampon was in second place with 46 at his 12-tale pursuit of a $2,000 first prize. Rookie Forrest Fezler, Mac Mlenden and Bob Smith followed at 68 with a large group in a tie at 69. By BOB SIMISON Kanyon Sports Editors They included *Masters* children on the team of England's Tony Jacklin and streaking rookie Lanny Wadkins, who now has 10 consecutive wins. Tipoff for the regionally televised contest will be at 3:10 p.m. Also at that figure were Tom Weiskopf, Bobby Mitchell and Doug Sanders. The University of Kansas basketball team has so many incentives for its game against Missouri Saturday in Allen Field House that each of the five seniors could choose one of his Bud Stallworth, Aubrey Nash, Mark Mathews, Fred Boslevac and Neal Mask, all seniors, will be in their last game in Allen Hawks' first season on the road against Oklahoma State and Oklahoma. J Thirteen members of KU's 1952 NCAA championship basketball team will occupy the seats in front of the KU bench during the game. "For a lot of us, it will be our last college game." Mathews said. "You know, like but will be better for you. I am sad but for the rest of us, this is it." "So we'll want to play our best." "I DON'T know whether that guy was right, Owen said," but I know if I were a player, having those great players there would be just added money. Throw in the traditional KU-Missouri rivalry. Missouri's No. 9 pick was Cory Schneider, a game home-court winning streak against Big Eight competition. Aubrey Nash Perhaps most of all, the Jayhawks will remember their earlier game against Missouri. The Tigers came from behind for a 64-60 victory in Brewer Field House. Missouri brings an 8-2 league record and a 19-3 overall mark to Lawrence. KU is 6-5 in the Big Eight, 10-3 overall. That was the road trip that could have put us in the middle of the championship race. 'Owens had the earlier loss to Missouri. KU FOUGHT Iowa State down to the wire four days later but, late 84.8 On the Jayhawks' latest road trip, they stumbled to 78-66 and 99-78 losses at Kansas State and Nebraska. "We had an eight point lead, then we lost lust with three fours and one six, but we recalled. "We were still ahead by two points with three minutes or Three other Tigers post double- score figuring averages. AI Eberhard averages 14.8; Greg Jefries, 12.1, and Mike Jeffries, 12.5. "But Missouri isn't a team that to go all the time," Owens pointed out. "They're more of a complete ball team than that." if Missouri wins in Lawrence, something no other Big Eight team can match. Tigers will be in a commanding position in the Big Eight race. Stallworth missed 10 minutes of that game but still scored 28 points. "The main thing is that all want to do is salvage all we can from the championship. I don't care who wins the championship. We just want to win." Such a game would be played on a neutral court. John Brown, Missouri's 8-foot-7- center, punished KU with 19 in the second half. He was out during the second half. His 20-point scoring average is the third best in the Big Eight Only competition. Curt Jurga Kuzar's 30 are better. "We're not far enough along right now to say where a playoff would be played," Neinas said. KILLE Field, 520-743-6800. THE CONFERENCE probably would decide on a playoff if the race ended in a two-way tie. The Missouri Valley Conference held three-way playoff between Drury, Availville and Bradley last season. "You just have to play hard, solid ball against Missouri and execute well," Owens said. "And maybe any magical solution to it." Big Eight faculty representatives and athletic directors will meet March 1-4 in Kansas City. They will consider the players they will adopt from human eligibility rule in football and basketball. Big 8 Will Make Playoff Plans Next Week for Basketball Tie Missouri and Kansas State lead the league with 8-2 records going into this weekend, but Nebraska falls behind with 7-3 and 8-3 records. With the Big Eight basketball championship still very much up for grabs, the possibility of a two-week-tie increase each week. KU's Allen Field House, with the largest seating capacity in If the race does end in a tie, the league will have to decide on the representative to the NCAA for the national tournament in Ames, Iowa. "We're aware that a tie is big. Big Eight commissioner, said Thursday. "There are so many we're going to try to hash it our own." MUNICIPAL CITY Big 8 Standing League Overall W L W L Missouri 8 2 14 K-State 8 2 14 Nebraska 8 2 14 Oklahoma 6 3 11 Kansas 6 3 10 Iowa State 5 3 13 Colorado 2 8 5 Oka. St. 1 10 17 Bud Stallworth Missions Saturday Missouri at Kansas (TV); Kansas State at Oklahoma (TV); Nebraska at Colorado. the conference (17,000) would be a candidate by Jay Simon. KU sports team thinks he thinks Iowa State's Hilton Collison would be a better candidate. The Midwest Regional will be played in the 14,000-seat Iowa State arena March 16 and 18. The game will conclude with games March 11. THAT MEANS a playoff probably would be scheduled for March 14, Simon reasons. That would leave only one day before the game, but that is playing at Iowa State would make it easier on the winner. KU will play an important role in deciding whether the Big Eight can win its first game against host Missouri Saturday in Allen. The team has lost to a co-affair KU has not faced. A victory over KU here would give Missouri the edge it needs to win, Coach Ted Owens indicated Thursday. Road performances will determine the outcome of the race, and no other team has won K-State and Missouri have both won on the road against second division teams. Colorado. Missouri and K-State above that reason. Owens rates Missouri and K-State above Nebraska has yet to play Colorado and Iowa State on the road must face Florida in Boulder. Meanwhile, Missouri will close its season at home against KState and Oklahoma after a road victory. The defeat ketu, they can lose at Nebraska and win at home and guarantee themselves at least one win. K-State must play Oklahoma and Missouri on the road, Colorado and Nebraska at home, Minnesota and time against Missouri in Brewer Field House, so they must defeat Oklahoma on the road to earn a THE BASEBALL REPORTER Nebraska and Oklahoma will have the most difficult jobs. The two games each last four games on the road; Oklahoma must face Colorado and Missouri on the road, and K-12 KU and Iowa State at home. Pins Fly In Bowling Intramurals The University of Kansas freshman basketball squad will attempt to keep its unbeaten record intact against Johnson and Junior College at 12:45 p.m. Saturday in Allen Fice House. Fred Bosilevac Intramural bowling action was in full swing at the Jay Bowl last week. Tuesday night the AM VETS moved into first place in the All-Terra Statch Lease by defeating the Turkeys, 23%-4%. High series game was posted by David Payne of Cincinnati with Circus with a 232-244 sequence. The afternoon game is the last weekend of the season. Marshall Rogers, Rick Suttle and Co in action in Allen Field House this season as the freshmen In Fraternity League Handicap action Wednesday night, phi Kappa Thea No.1 won three games to take over first place from the AKL's, who are a half-team behind him. The Kappa Psi roiled a 223-153-66 series. The highest handicap game was 725 by Greg Moore. Freshmen Test Perfect Record Against Johnson The Jayhawks will seek their eleventh consecutive victory against Johnson County. In the All-Campus League in Wednesday, the Alibedans or ORY by one game Neilson Holly and Jordan Hearn bowled a 151 handicap score. The 'Hawks travel to Norman or their final game of the 1971-72 season against Oklahoma on August 25. The Hawks outlasted test of the season for KU. Thursday night Guys and Dolls League action produced a 208 game by Les Muldénhaer of the game 198 to Mary Bowie of CC & Co. The Story Of Three Consenting Adults In The Privacy Of Their Own Home Palomar Pictures International presents an Associates and Aldrich Production "The Killing of Sister George" "The Starring Beryl Reid Susannah York Coral Browne Metrorolor* Feb. 25 & 26 Hashinger A, Independents Win in Women's Tourney 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Hashinger A and the independent championship game of the women's intramural basketball tournament with victories 60c The final and consolation games will be played at 6:30 The Independents downed Lewis No. 1, 16-5; and Hashinger A edged the Ebonies, 16-13, in seminal play Thursday. Hashinger A and the Independents will meet for the title. Tuesday in Robinson Gym MAGNAVAX FACTORY-SPONSORED ANNUAL SALE SAVE ...on this HIGH PERFORMANCE 75-Watt Stereo FM/AM Radio- Phono Component System NOW $448.00 Model 9297 will satisfy even the most demanding audiophile with its great sound reproduction, 75-Watts IHF power, an Air-Suspension System with two high-Compliance $10^{\circ}$ Bass Woofers and two 1,000 Hz. Exponential Horns plus a deluxe Micromatic player with Magnetic Cartridge, Cue Control and Stylus Pressure Adjustment. A protective dust cover included. Also save on Magnavox Color Stereo Theaters, Color TV, Stereo Consoles, Tape Recorders, Radios and Monochrome TV ... Come in now! RAY STONEBACK'S 929 Mass. St. Open 8:30 - 5:30 p.m. Open 'til 8:30 p.m. Thurs. Nite Thirteen of the 16 men who lived basketball together 20 years ago on the way to the only NCAA championship the University of Kansas has won will ever win playoff field House for a basketball game This time they will sit in the bleachers immediately behind the Kansas bench during the 3:10 p.m. KU-Missouri basketball game. In 1952, they won 11 games and Auditorium during a 28-3 season. Since 1932, those 16 men have scattered throughout the Midwest one. Dean, Smith, went basketball coach at North Carolina. Smith is one of the three who will not attend the reunion. Larry Davenport, a Colorado Springs commercial artist, sent word he had a business engagement, and Everett Dye, an Air Force major in San Antonio, did not respond to the invitation. Smith's Tar Heels (7-2) are involved in a race for the Atlantic Coast championship. They will host Virginia (8-2) Saturday. Big 10 Athletic Directors Reconsider Suspensions They are Charlie Hoag, Toplea insurance executive. Bill Brennan, John Keller, Great Bend junior high school teacher, Dean Keiley, Pooria, Ilma, employee of the Keller Company in Kansas City, Kan., real estate MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AIP)—Big Ten Conference athletic directors met behind closed doors Thursday to consider the fate of two Minnesota basketball players, but only seven of the 10 will cast a vote. All seven KU members of the 1952 Olympic basketball team will attend the reunion. Athletic directors from Ohio State, Michigan and Minnesota sat with the suspensions of Corky Taylor and Ron Behagen should be continual, but the team was pleased to have the Jan. 25 brawl between Minnesota and Ohio State that led to the rest of the season were for the rest of the season. Weaver of Ohio State, Paul Gael of Minnesota and Don Cannah of Michigan agreed they would abstain from voting. Attorneys representing the candidates in Weaver and Cannah be prohibited from voting because of THE ONLY other team member who is still involved in basketball is Bill Heithold, a high school coach in St. Louis, Mo. The morning meeting lasted two hours and the only information about the meeting was the decision of athletic directors, and that Pat Mueller, University of Minnesota physical education director, had talked for about 20 minutes. He said no word on what Mueller said. statements they had made about the case. The five others are Jerry Alberts, Lincoln, Ill., high school teacher; B.H. Born, Peoria College; W.J. Johnson, department; Wes Johnson, Kansas City, Kan. high school principal; Al Kelley, Peoria Interp. employe, and Larkin Squares, Kansas City, kan. banker Gov. Robert Docking, who was official timekeeper at KU home games during 1952, also will attend the reunion. Others officially connected to the 1925 team who will be on hand during the reunion, now managing director of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes; and former co-chairman Wayne Laudberck, student manager, now in insurance in Wayne. Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Dakle told newsmen there would be scores of players in the game to vote until after details on the decision are given to U.S. District Court Judge Earl Larson, who will preside over the vote. p.m. Friday to reaffirm the suspensions or he would dismantle reinitiate the players. salesman; Bill Lienhard, Lawrence attorney, and Clyde Lovellette, Charleston, Ill. automobile dealer. Three athletic directors were not at the meeting, but were represented. The squad will assemble at 1:30 p.m. Saturday in Allen Field House Annex for a reception by奖. After the game, the team Liquori Drops But Mile Field Tough for AAU NEW YORK | AP—Marty Larkin, a Los Angeles night fixture made Friday night, the field is still formidable for the National AAU Championships at Candlestick Park. Byron Dyce, formerly of New York University, rasas as the favorite, and he'll probably get a seat in the House of Bowling Green, Great Britain's Chris Mason and Ireland's Frank Murphy. Even without Liquori, who withdrew from the event after event and foot in a workout, the sub-for-medium clocking is a likelihood. will visit their coach, F.C. "Phog" Allen. Allen, now 86, seldum leaves his home because of arthritic knees. A. I'm proud of where he bought my diamond! Will she be proud or embarrassed when friends ask where you bought her diamond? And, will you be embarrassed about the price you paid for the quality received? Today, there are no "bargains" in diamonds. You save no more than ten cents when you try to cut corners. I ledeagleable American Gem Society member jeweler—one with a local reputation to safeguard and standards to maintain—a is your wisest choice. Moreover, she will be proud to know her diamond came from us. Don't disappoint her. **A(S)** Marks Jewelers Del Elisee 817 Moss. VI 3-4266 A Real 1950's Sock Up. Featuring LONNY FAME AND THE BELLTONES All Us Hipsters Will Be There In Our 50's Gear. BE THERE OR BE SQUARE Saturday Night at 8 p.m. Union Ballroom Sponsored by McGovern for President University Daily Kansan Friday, February 25,1972 7 People... People: DANEL BERRIGAN the pacifist priest released from prison Thursday after serving 18 months for destroying draft records, said he would press his crusade against the Vietnam war. "The war is still the first fact of life for the living," he said. But the 51-year-old Jesuit said he would shuin the methods of protest that put him in jail. Without a dissenting vote the Senate Judiciary Committee approved President Nixon's nomination of RICHARD G. KLEIN-DIENST to be attorney general. The 13-0 vote, with three committee members absent, opened the way for Senate confirmation next week of the conservative 48-year-old Arizoun, now the deputy attorney general. A beaming ANGELA DAVIS said she felt better than she'd felt in the last 16 months and called her freedom on a bed Wednesday "a victory for the people." The 28-year-old Communist and former UCLA philosophy instructor told a crowded news conference that her victory in my own case has to be attained. She referred to her beginning Monday on murder, kidnap and conspiracy charges. PARIS- North Vietnam, with a wary eye on the Peking summit meeting, led a Communist walkout from the Vietnam peace talks and the future of the conference remained in doubt. The action was called back by France and other "extremely serious acts of war" against North Vietnam. WASHINGTON - The United States is waiting quietly for U.N. peace negotiator Gunnar Jarrige to complete his current tour of the Middle East before considering discussions with Egypt on reopening the Suez Canal. Officials said the U.S. was not in the mood to be more enthusiastic about reopening the canal than Egypt and Israel, the two directly interested parties, are. RAWALPINDI, Pakistan—The United States has told President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto it plans to recognize Bangladesh, informed Pakistani and American sources said. The sources said Bhuto was assured Washington would not announce its recognition before the end of February. Given this promise, they added, Bhuto raised no objection. Things: There will be no progress toward a total ban on NUCLEAR TESTING when negotiations resume next week because of American insistence on a point that is not longaged. Major advancements in technology, including Athletics conceding that on-site inspection of the Soviet Union is of no more than marginal importance in detecting violations of a test ban treaty, these officials say there will be no compromise of this U.S. treaty. A medical scientist reports evidence suggesting that a genetic or accidental excess of certain SEX-RELATED HORMONES IN PRE-NATAL LIFE may increase significantly the intelligence of the child. Sports Car Club to Hold Hare and Hounds Rally By BOB EVANS Kansan Staff Write By BOB EVANS "Bugs Bunny and Elmer Pugs' title is of a Hare and Hounds Races in the southeast the Jayhawk Sports Car Club or the southeast corner of Oceana. An entry fee of $3 for non-members and $2 for members will be charged for the rally, will be followed by a BYOB party. Bill Francis, Rose Hill junior and president of the club, said registration would begin at 1 p.m. the first car would leave at 2 p.m. The Hare and Hounds Rally is the first of five events scheduled for March and April. Other events include Gibson's Discount Gymkhana, April 9; Brulee午班, April 23; KU-KState THE MERCANTILE Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD HERBS AND SPICES MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SAUAGES Rally, tentatively scheduled for April 30. "By sports car, we mean any driver wheel, so propelled by a motor vehicle," said Sports cars in this case range from Volkswagen to Buick. We don't expect them to succeed since they don't have a Porsche or something similar that they can drive. CARS ARE separated into motor mageses for that no type of car they are meant to compete against another. Volkswagens compete against similar cars, and bigger trucks. 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" This year the two day event will start with a rally in Manhattan on Feb. 16, followed by a gymkhana in Lawrence on Sunday. Francis said there was no limit to the number of entries and limited to club members only. Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Pickens Auto Parts and Service - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock others on order THE CONCORD SHOP McCONNELL LBR. CO. 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353 Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.3 Parts at a discount - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz., pts. - qts. only 25% OFF - ARTIST CANVAS TRUMP CSC TOYOTA HEAVY DUTY 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 Competition SENIORS!! Call immediately for appointment for 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURE. 建筑施工 Hixon Studio WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH— THE TOUGH GET GOING Ph. 843-0330 10 a.m.-5 p.m 842-0444 SILVERADO WANT ADS WORK WONDERS LOVE THAT DATSUN I Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered in the building facilities color, or creed, on origin. Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. Vl 2- 8608. vi One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $0.11 TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN FOR SALE you're at a disadvantage. Either way it comes to the same things. "Campus of Western Civilization," *Analogy* Madhouse, 14 West. 14th. 11f 2. If you don't you're at a disadvantage Now you can buy stereo components at FACTORY COST plus 10%: Han-cho at RAI ADIOJ, 842-494, 1205 Branson discount house in the midwest, 2-29 Western Civ. Notes=Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, Northside Country Shop, 707 North 32nd block of River Avenue, Northside items, old wood cooking and heating stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, bicycle tires, fireplace wood, other useful items to open to 5 or other useful items. Help Alben Herbert 3159 3159 2-29 1967 Yamaha 250 Twintime Srammerbird, hardback, back tire, and more. Good value. Back tire, back tire, and more. 2 audio organs $40.00 and one deck $40.00. Greg Kupfer. 844-265-8000. deeck $40.00. Greg Kupfer. 844-265-8000. deeck $40.00. Greg Kupfer. 844-265-8000. deeck $40.00. Greg Kupfer. 844-265-8000. deeck $40.00. Low-Low Jeans with the flare look at Low-Low Prices. The Alley Shop, 838 Mass. 2-25 Super Sale Dresser: Values from $18- $22, now $5-$10. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-25 Peugeot XPIEO Five race bicycle, 21, 23, 24, 25 inch frame sizes now in stock. **819$30.** No waiting. @8464. Bike. 140, 141Mm. 2-25 500 E.23rd Crop Tops—biggest selection, newest styles. $7.00. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-25 Jeans, Jeans, Jeans. Latest styles, best selection, best prices. The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-25 MOTORCYCLES. Best offer takes: 1970 Husqaro 360; 1971 Yanahama 2053 PT-1; 1970 MG midget conv. 1133 New York St, 843-7607. conv. Men's Big Mac fannel shirts, small, medium, large, and extra-large in J. C. Penney's work clothes department. 2:25 VW 1870, beetle, automatic stickshift transmission, 2800 miles, sliding roof, radio, push-out windows, radial raily motor or best offer, catches 2-35 6027 CAT 2-25 SUEDE PURSES—assorted selection only $6.00 at The Attic, 927 Mass. 2-25 Mamiya C 33. TLR 80 mm f2.8 120/220, and sheet film. 843-8473. Jay. 2-28 Schwinn 10 speed, like new. Only used for 3 months. Call 842-2061. 1965 Mustang 289 engine, 4 speed transmission, Call. 842-2374 between 4 and 6 p.m. Ask for Phone: 2-28 1968 Firebird 400 convertible, 8-track player, hood-tach, air shocks. Call 843-6556 after 5:00. 2-29 1970 Nova SS 386-375 H4 4-paced, Sacred Special, Interior Set. A Match, Special Interior Set. A Match. Machine. Also, extra long couch room, or room, $40. 8-249. Call Paul 1971 Volkswagen Super Beetle Con- verture. Perfect condition. AM Radio. Bright orange and black. Must sell. 842-712-325. 2-25 Chrystal Chandler, Rose Medal Vase, Wahut Table, Cast Set. Four Matching Catchers and Rocker, Lamp, Mirror, Mirror, Call KI, 21-29 in Eudora. ATTENTION SPORT BOAT BUFFS! drag and sail boats. Hi-per- shipability. Available in various states of ownership. Now is the time to buy Call John 1068 Plym, Road Runner, 2 door hardtop, 383, 4 speed. Excellent condition. Call 843-7800 after 8 p.m. 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Schwinn Continental — 10 speed; Black Light, "22", fixture, wooden frame; Magnavox Component Stereo. Call 843-2812 after 12 o'clock. 2-25 GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD, 64 volumes=$200.00. STORY CONVENIENCE BY WILL and ARIEL Durant. DATE 82-1768. HIERC. Datit 82-1768. S-1 EMERALD CITY LEATHER FEATURING HAND-CRAFTED PURSES FEAUTURE $0.00. Fresh homemade bread. Tray $0.00. Fresh homemade bread. Tray MARKEB, Bottle 222. 2-29 MARKEB, Bottle 222. 2-29 Leather jackets are, here, cowboy Hawaiian flannel wool and insanity shirts under $25.12. February jackets are under $39.99. Rentals are $2.00 loans. Birmingham 8:199, Vermont 8:299. 3ª Czech String Bass, made 1900. Excellent orchestral sound. Includes case and bow. Worth a best offer at any store or concert. (K.C.) or UDK news room. 2-28 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES GUTTARS — 1950 Lee Paul, 1968 Friend Mustering, also 1971. Kustun Watt Lelat Amp Chewl. Callt Mike. 864-2542 3-1 71 Toyota Mark II automatic, factory air, 4-track stereo. 13,300 miles 842-7896. 2-28 71. Triumph TR, 6. AM-FM radio, Mich X tires. Make offer. 816 Maine. 842-7724 2-28 Yamaha FG-300 Guitar, hard shell case 5 months old. old $175.00. Call Richardson's Music Co. 842-001-321 **SCHOOL BUS** 82 Chevys, 6 g-yl- 2-speed rear axle good for camper or band $70.00 One University dry mixer, mixer $79.00 - $1 Johnson, 84-6896 King-size waterbeds. Guaranteed for five years. Full price, $17.50. 841- 2530. 30 W. 16th. 3-1 MONOCULAR MICROSCOPE -- 3 20 x 15 cm. Lighted stage, case; light. Perfect for medieval theater. Box 210 KUMC, 210 and Rainbow Box 210 KUMC, 210 and Rainbow Box 210 KUMC, 210 or 315 W.C. City, Kansas 65043, 1960 Buick, excellent condition. Only a mild accident男司机. Power steering. Heated seats. Oil changed every 3,200 miles since new Call 812-9050 evenings. ARC Old English Sheep Pupi — d Lawrence w. $75.00 - can deliver or K.C. Feb. 12, Cell 45-8558 or L.P. Feb. 12, Stock 314- 6769 61669 Epiphone Rivera guitar double cut- away, two humbucking pickups, pin- surbent. Like new condition. Call 842-8057. 191 Canaan, 350, loaded, turbom- hydro- air, air, power, radio, 8-track stereo, die-cable, rail, goods, wheeled cycle, hydraulic lift, motor cycle, cycle. B46-1240 120-minute 1—31 Toyota, 70, automatic, tape deck, real fine car, $1.395, Call Bill, 843- 3473. 3-1 TRY IT YOULK LIKE IT — Rent TRY IT YOULK more home for unfetter- edge care. Free 1-year warranty. Free. Alta-Skeerz. Leeward Leeward. 1-494-2055. 1-381-177 1-362-6440. ARGYLE SOCKS FOR THOSE TIMES WHEN YOUR FEET SHOW FUR EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS. 1961 VW to 1971 VW from $485 to $1,995 Bank financing available Jayhawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa 2-29 12-200 RHINESTONES - RHINESTONES - RHINESTONES - FRUIT FRUIT - FRUIT - NEW PINS! EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & Mass. NAISMITH CONTRACT — Sing room contract 842-6835. Reasonable Must sell. 1935 Titulum Beventryville tank, 8-inch stainless steel tank, 8-inch extended tanks, 8-inch floor battery eliminated Many floors available. Offer Phone Mark. 316-232-4500 after. Offer Phone Mark. 316-232-4500 Stereo radio console - AM-FM stereo radio record; change唱; Strip tape. Looks and sounds good 8275 R4-9626. 3-2 Clip-on VHF bow tie antennas, $1.00 each at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-2 CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Event Tire Clearance — New F78 x 14 wide helix cut to $25, plus $25 F.E.T. Free installation at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 3-2 MUST SELL 18 MONTH GLD IRISH SETTER Male, have had shots. New dog house, very gentle. Call 842-963-3-2 电话 Tropical Fish Equipment Aquarium computer, compass, computer, heater, planer, paint, reflector lights, and under gravel filters. Call 843-3212 for 5:00 - 6:00. 1971 Kawaii kakiwid. Great condition. Must sell. $400. Also, tender Mustache, and a good condition. Must sell. $125. 842-4720 between 4-8 p.m. 3-2 1968 Chevette SS, power brakes, power steering, air conditioning, animate transmission, excellent cooling p. m., 840-6425 for call. 3-17 For SUA Events FOR RENT HILLWELL APARTMENTS — 1733-48 One bedroom and one two bedroom furnished apartments. Carpeted, draperies, electronic appliances of much more expensive apartments in the northwest corner. Open 24 hrs. per day For rent—one or two bedroom apts, air conditioned, carpeted, garbage-discharge facilities, color TV V. Available. Cell phone and facsimile by Hillview Apt. 24th and 25th floors. Hodge House Apt. for the budget nudged! All the popular features are here, and we are in town. ER, 1 and 2 bedrooms, and 4 baths. #111 for details. #208 Cedarwood-111 for details. COLLEGE HILL MANOR now has available, and free, bedrooms in a 2-bedroom apartment at A'C, new dwellhabens, w/ no carpets to clean in dampness. Compete in campus. Address A'C-8020 or 620-8200. For more information, call (800) 741-5920. WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second room: 1-bedroom furnished with double bath; 1-bath furnished or unfurnished. Central a/c, dishwasher, w/w car cupboard. Facilities in Apartments—The place to live in 2306-2410 St. Louis. Contact 24 hours a day. MIDWEST SERVICE. A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS Toor class. Weather too hot this spring, wear a jacket and take index cards. Watch the cars, cabins. You can afford Saint-Auret you can afford Saint-Auret IT'S NEVER TOO LATE and it is a long time from Jan. to May to live in Lawrence. We are attractive. One call to Mrs. Forresty at 2017-A Hardwood House and you can arrange the accommodations available in Lawrence's best located and most attractive campus, the Lawrence University and Mission). Availon Apartments, Apartments Iowa & Hardwood Lake, Apartments Iowa & Hardwood Lake, soundproof construction, pleasing outdoor facilities, unfurnished, and central a/c. reasons you would enjoy living in Lawrence include the make this semester in Lawrence a fun place for locations for August occupancy and summer vacations can be arranged too! 3-9 Tony's 66 Service University Terrace Apartments furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $110 and up. Tuition free. 9th, 10th, Apt. 1, or call 843-1432-593 Vacancy in contemporary home with swimming pool for young man. Private entrance and bath, bath. $55/no. utilities paid. VI 2-825 2-225 Senior or graduate woman to share 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus, utilities paid, also large sleeping room on second floor. V1-3/1585 - 2:25 Apartment—2 bedroom, large field in back, sort of modern, $98. Call 843-2812 after 12 noon. 2:25 Ravenskill Villa Apartments, Limited offer of ten month rent free. Four months free on non-credit. Named apt, equipped with all utilities paid for. Call after. Call after. p.m., 843-7721. $3-16 One bedroom; study apt. utilizes paid, air-conditioned, close to campus, furnished. Available March 1st. Own entrance. Call 842-253-7900. Attractive, large room 2 blocks west of campus. Quit. A/C, carpeted private. Bath refr. entrance, lighted closet. Computer lab. classman. 843-787-2. 2-28 2 bedroom home with basement. fenced back yard, unfurnished $125.00 month Edmons Real Estate 8431-041 or 842-7462 3-19 Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service Would you like something a little out of the ordinary in an apartment? If so, enroll now until school is out. Fireplace, parceling, furnished. $90; Call me NOTICE EWENTE, Kansas 60644 2434 Iowa V12-1008 House for rent; 2 bedroom, refrigerator and stove included, carpeted, unfurnished. Call 843-4242 or 842- 1300. 2-29 Cycle Pick Up Service UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright. (816) 474-4676. tt INFANT DAY-CARE 842-7692. Professional child-care for children 1 to 12 mo. or part-time. Fort. ment. Designated crew. Resort. $3,300-$5,000 per month. Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service 1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks. DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe. Leave anywhere N.Y., or S.F. for free. All IDs issued. Flight Center, 227 North Mallard, Madison, Wisconsin 53706. Mail to Discount Travel, 1480 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10021. 843-3333 For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization—call the Women's Center. tf-8644-4441. Independent Laundry & Dry Cleaners DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP days per week COIN COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th THE FEE PRIVATE CLUB PARTY Welcome back students. Its party variations for second semester term par- ticipant party are all the same. We participate party Nine stand, band We also have special monthly rates for student inductees and parent- ingess meetings. Phone or contact Joni Starr Tee Per Jcl 45 & 59 Hip Hop Business School, phone: 842-2822. After school: phone: 842-2823. 842-9450 AND COOP IN LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 9th & MISS. 843-5304 Spend this summer learning in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to Colorado Mountain Box 5, Box Boulder, Code 80922 KITTYCATS is coming and he's got a hot tip on some catnip. 2-25 KITTYCATS is coming and he loves pineapple pustie drinks 2-25 Appearing at the Mad Hatter on Wed, Feb. 23, and Fri, Feb. 25. BUZYZE AND CHIP, a jazz rock duo Free admission. D-22 JUST ARRIVED~Swim wear and sandsweeper. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 2-25 SANDSWEEPERS JUST ARRIVED THE ATTIC, 927 Mass: 2-25 SWIM WEAR JUST ARRIVED THE ATTIC. 927 MASS. 2-25 Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30. 3-15 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q Que, 315 Michigan St. Outdoor st. Bar-B-Q Que, 415 Michigan St. $300. Sash or porch ribs, $30. Small Rib plate-$30. Large Rib Plate-$30. Briefplate-$18. Open 12 am to 9 pm. Phone 842-5140. Closed SWINGING COATS AND CAPES FOR SPRING THE ALLEY SHOP 843 MASS 2-28 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Q. When is a house a good investment? Town House Twins Q. Who can invest in a Town House Twins? A. Either the young family or a senior citizen with a good credit history. B. Move into a Town House Twin. C. Turn down a course program. D. For further questions, contact the tenant can help you buy the town house that will be paid after hours call DoeKen, 841-3255. BUD IOKONO is where to buy packets | jackets | cheapest cowboy and Hawaiian shirts around, velvet dresses no banana. So it goes. It is cheap! Tutoring in organic and biochem With tutoring experience. Call Rich at 843-1342 or 864-3549 - 2-29 Fly to Wichita Sat, Feb 26. Return Sun, Feb 27. Cost only $28.00 roundtrip. Call 842-8373 for reservations. 2-25 Ball at 843让达 864-5649 2-29 FOUND. Near 139 skibs on Jayhawk of the North Park Golf Club. identify make, measure, price, and create Christmas cards. 7372 - 80 m.p.m. 2-28 STUDY ESPERANDO the information provided by the credit this (2028) Jasper, then attend a study program with the University of Portland, opportunity to learn this beautiful language. University of Portland, Portsmouth, NH. BCAUSE needs volunteer workers. Canterbury House, 1161 La. Organization meeting feedback, etc. March 29, 7.30 p.m. 2-25 SALE GOES ON ... 50% OFF ON BELTS .. SWEATERS .. SHIRTS AND OTHER REDUCTIONS EARTH- SHINE, EAST 8th & Mass 32 Used Motorola portable, sold new for $149.90, now only $50 at Ray Stonehack's, 929 Mass. 3-2 sirloin Trade-in special—50-Watt Magnavox FM receiver, one-year-old, $10 at Ray Stone BayCA / 929 Mass. 328 2. two experienced nursery school teachers offer complete day care for children 3-6. All pre-school skills, knowledge, yard, residence, rates. $145-$190 WANTED Warner—Science fiction books, tomes, and screenplays; co-chair at the magazine, Expand your reach at the magazine, Expand your reach at the magazine, Expand your reach at the magazine, Expand your reach at the magazine, Expand your reach at the magazine, Expand your reach at the magazine, Expand your reach at the magazine, Expand your reach at the magazine, Expand your reach at the magazine, Expe LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place Women's alterations, 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 3-1 Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches Steak sandwiches. Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks WANTED - EASY MODEL JEEP CJZI SERIES IF. POSSIBLE Avt condition considered. Call after 6:00 p.m. 842-462 A person to a cooperative living group (4 women, 3 men, age 21-50) and a (two-year-old), with private or information call 82-6498 82-6498 2-25 Roommate to share two bedroom (own room) apartment. Completely furnished. $22.50 with bills paid (give for music major ( piano ) $45. 3-25 Girl roommate or couple to: Girls 2 bedroom house: Unfurnished or furnished at no extra cost. 200 Barker. Call Patricia at 842-0453. Delicious Food and Superb Service with REWARDING SUMMER for sophomore and older college more than Gosnell, but still maintaining backpacking, economy many of its own. In 2013, he borne western camps, Fiorantone, Florida. EARRINGS - EARRINGS - and more EARRINGS. The Attic, 227 Mass. 2-25 LONG PERSONAL ATTENTION TWINS 18 years and older study to answer health questionnaire study to answer health questionnaire $10.00 remuneration per twin, both female or male $25 Name Institution Data WE HAVE TOPS FROM A TO Z. THE ALLEY SHOP. 843 Mass. 2-25 Our motto is and has always been . "There is no substitute for quality Want to buy. Old piano, banjo, string bass, Marshall amp, musical vibes. Fender jazz or percussion bass. Saxophone. 822-642-3021. stereo- 3-2 perience necessary. For Photos LONG DRESSES FOR PARTIES THAT ARE SUPER THE ALLEY SHOP. 843 MASS. 2-28 BECAUSE is a listening service. It is open every night, 8-12 p.m. Sun through Thurs., Fri, and Sat, 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. 843-9562 2-29 Tent-speed bicycles: Perugine, Giulietto, Omira, Kalihoff. No waiting list. In店 in 21, 24, 25 JUNE. In店 in 26, 27 JUNE. On Bike Shop, 1401 Mans. 2-25 No age limitations Rate 1950 style concert and hop star hireright Lonnie Fame and the Bell Tunes 8-11 p.m. Union Ballroom, Feb. 26. See you there. Free Beer! POETRY WANTED for anthology. Please inquire stained return form to **WHERE**; IDLEWILD PRESS, 1887 East St., IDLEWILD Press, Los Angeles, CA 90021. California Museum 90211. When you don't know where else to turn, call 864-3506, The University Information Center, 24 hours a day, everyday. 2-29 WANTED; FIGURE MODELS. Paid, $7.50 to $10.00 per hour. Amateurs welcomed. No ex- 1. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge Write Box 275, Leavenworth, Kansas. 2-25 Good people everywhere, please, try to be a host. Feb. 20th is austin if you're a Rousseau. will survive in Harper, Kansas. music, sleeping bag any, music, sleeping bag any, night gathering $2.50 per head, night gathering $2.50 per head, extra-reservation. Room extra-reservation. Open 4:30 Closed Mondays HELP WANTED Experienced in typing theses, dissertation reports, and electronic typewriter withpierce type. Accurate and prompt response to enquiries. Phone 843-8554. Mrs Wright Experienced typist will type your term paper, types of dissertation or Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call VT 3-5281. Mr. Mackrumk Now taking applications for wait- ing positions. Must be attractive and enjoy work with students. Must work under pressure. Prefer experi- ence in school administration. Applicant must be available during school year. Work as part-time, completing a school year. Work as part-time, completing a school year. Competition is excellent. Phone compartment is convenient. NOSTALGIA — NEW OLD CLOTHES EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS. TYPING Accurate typing of your thesis, memorization, or miscellaneous work on IMB Sychotic typwriter with a BACB. Send resume to Court, 842-1440 for information. 2-25 Term papers, theses typed accurately and promptly, your choice of type will be typed by your teacher. Wkst 842-7973 editing at wkst 842-7963, Nklaoda Wkst 842-7963 Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention: 843-0958. 2-29 Wanted -- Figure models -- Amateurs need images -- for photos. No age restrictions. Rate paid. $75-$100 per month. Box 275, Leavenwood 26. Kansas. Need 2. R.N.'s for 11-7 shift. Contact Director of Nursing, Ransom Memorial Hospital, Ottawa, Kansas 3-2 What do you do between 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m? If you have a car and would like to earn $3.00 an hour, call 42-7980 for details. 3-2 Carol Lea LOST 30 Varieties of Donuts Hot and Cold Drinks Sandwichers 5 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Sat. 5-5 Sun. 5-5 Su. 1730 W. 23rd St. 842-3664 Dear Gayle, The woods are full of terrified bears and happy raccoons. Love a bear. 2-25 PINK, BUNKY RABBITS AND BLUE SNAILS ARE EVERYWHERE THINK! EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th * MASS. 3-2 C 1 pr. Achilles ski boots in white box. Black with silver buckles, 9 lost On jayhawk Blvd. Monday 2-8 8-00 pm. If I miss 843-256-295 out in ladies lounge of Union, gold tied ring, cloudy blue stone, tape rapped. Mon, Feb 14. Call 864- 331 after 5.00. Lawrence. Kansas 66044 MISCELLANEOUS THE HILE in the WALL DELICATESESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Lawrence, Kansas 66044 STUDENTS: FOR YOUR BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale-12s 8-10, up to 75% Fall and spring Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky Medical, Chemical Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! Let 0 Mass—The Mallis—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-1211 Open Call Y/y A/m - Phone Order 843 7685 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th CABAY ARTS 913 843-9275 913 842-0025 Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! PLANNING A TRIP?? Maupintour travel service TM Red Diva Red Baron RAMADA INN 842. 2323 843 8500 Spacition new facilities, Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis, Swimming privileges. DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS --- 8 Friday, February 25, 1972 University Daily Kansan MARC TAVARIUS Student Lets Sleeping Dog Lie Kansas Photo by PETE SANG Dave Melfert, St. Louis senior, proves to be at least dog's best friend as he follows the adage, "let sleeping dogs lie." Both appear to be enjoying the warm sunshine thursday, a rarity in Lawrence in February. The weather is predicted to follow a warm spell, and the heat could damage the dog. Russia seems well content to gaggle. Anachronistic Travesty 'Devils' Crazily Bizarre By RON PARKER Yansan Reviewer "The Devil's (Hillcrest 2) is an absolutely sicko movie, but it can be quite a lot of fun if you don't take it seriously. Many people have been offended by the picture—in fact, when I saw it, it seemed that more people walked out than had source materials: John Whiting's play "The Devils" and Aldous Huxley's book "The Devils of Loudon." These works recounted a true story of religious and political violence in the Middle Ages, and their story dealt with an influential priest whose control of a French church was the basis for his career. KANSAN come in. Indeed, there are a lot of things in the film that are potentially offensive: hideous tortures, horrific body sores and scars, much screaming and writing about on the floor. But I'm inclined to believe that the whole thing is meant as a put-on; and taken that way, all the ghastly things become perversely amusing. IN "THE DEVILS," Russell has let his imagination go berserk. He began with two basic Ken Russell, who is responsible for the picture, is something of a controversial figure in the film industry. He plays the genius and the madman. I don't think he's either one. I think he's the most interesting with an unpleasant imagination. hierarchy. When a deranged, maniacous person possesses the devil, the political heads grabsbed the opportunity to persecute and kill them. burlesque that sets the tone for the rest of the film. The king, in heavy make-up and a bejeweled G-string, rises out of a giant shell in a pardon of the birth of Venus. Berkley number G. Busy Berkley number From this story, Russell has fashioned a screenplay that bears only a passing resemblance to the novels of his older sisters, some curious, non-period sets, and has popped them with a truly original script. The script abounds with anachronisms (the king shoots a peasant in a bird suit and says, "You're not a character") characters and settings are flagrantly inconsistent with the characters seem to be from a period we haven't yet reached.) THE VERY opening scene is a It is this brazen disregard for legitimacy that leads me to the question: Should we use us for us to take his work seriously. This belief is given further credence by the performances of the director, the shameless zeal, fluttering and going into hysteria at the drop of a hat. Nearly everyone seems to be making up reasons. 'Nation' Stereotyped With Heavy Sound VANESSA REDGRAVE, however, has a way of seeming earnest in the midst of nonsense. In "Camelot" she performed with such passion and credibility tune with the rest of the picture. The same thing happens here. the hunchbacked mother- superior, Miss Redgrave seems to believe much of what she is doing. In the context of the rest of little embarrassing to watch her. By JOE ZANATTA Kansan Reviewer The band, currently playing at the Red Baron, has intentionally stereotyped itself with this sound Nation is a band with a case of the "heavies." All the symptoms are here: loud distorted guitars, screaming vocals and material courtesy of the big-name heavies, Sabbath, Mountain and the like. The Kansas City group has been playing the Lawrence club fraternity circuit for about two years. Nation is saved from the ranks of mediocrity by its final set of performances. He wore band shines and makes up for some of its previous poor performances on the performances of Johnny Winter's "Rock and Rocky Hoo Kooie" and Mountain's "The Let Sun be an easily forgotten evening." Many good lead leads by the band, especially their guitarist, are lost because of the volume at which the music is played. Most of Nation's material choreography is progressions progresses. This gives them a sound identical to every other group that chooses this type of music. Russell hasn't thrown out Huxley and Whiting's message, but he might as well have. He瞅 sight at a scene by scene book of Oliver Lever (a martyrned priest) expound for a while about the hypocrisy of the Church. But with the crowd mugging and making funny noses jiggle doors like kikers in Dragon's Lair like Kuxel, the message is kissed. Kuxl, the message is kissed. This type of rock music provides an excellent dance beat, as shown by their popularity, but is also the group's musical talents. Nation is a good dance band that much credit is due them. If you want a little more from a band than a good beat, try to catch only their last set. I am unable and unwilling to recommend "The Devil's" it's a crazy book. I can't accept on any level. But if you look at it as a travesty, it offers some demented pleasures. If you want it to be the best not to look at it at all. By BARBARASCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor ART WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: International Film, "Ivan the Terrible, Part II." 7:30 p.m. Sun. Part II of an uncompleted trilogy on the life of Russia's first Tsar Ivan Eisenstein, be known for showing Ivan as a tyrant. Received six years after Stalin's death and called it "worthless and the film has since been regarded in a cinema classic. Made in 1946. SPOONER ART GALLERY: A twisted gallery of construction by Norman Geis and Michael Sims, instructors in painting and sculpture. Through SEVEN EAST SEVENTH GALLEY: An exhibit of oil paintings and drawings by John Gary Brown, Lawrence resident and former KU student. Through March 6. UNION GALLERY: The 18th Annual Kansas Designer Craftsman show. Through March 12. Handmade art, jewelery, metalwork, weaving and exile design. furniture, wood furnishings, kansas casas, and ammals are on display. WOODRUFF AUDIOTURM: "The Impressionsist," "Kinetic Art in Paris," and "The Art Conservation." 7:30 p.m. Monday. Third of a fivepart USA film "Museum Withoutalls." WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: SUA Popular Film, "The Killing of Sister George" and 9 p.30 m.p. of it has been exploitation in the main approach taken by what was advertised as a rejected TV actress and her friend, a triangle involving three women." Originally a biting comedy about a rejected TV actress and her friend, a triangle involving three women which it was based because this 1969 film memorable mainly for its field, seriousness. Beryl Field, Sanhailah York and Carol Prowse star. SWARTHOUT RECITAL Boyd, bassoonist and instructor n double reeds at Washburn University, and Sylvia Boyd, flutist. HOC AUDRITORIUM: Concert Course, Ballet Fokloreto of Mexico. 8:20 p.m. Monday. A dance lesson for singers and instrumentalists spreading the vibrant sound and vibrancy of native Mexican entertainment. UNION BALLROOM: "A 1950's Concert & Sock Hop '8 to 11 p.m. Saturday, Lanny Fenne music for KU's latest greater revival, this one sponsored by the Governor for President Committee." FILMS Weekend Scene Offers Sock Hop Play Shows College Life By MARILYN K. KING Who played opposite Joan Crawford in "Humoresque?" Doesn't matter. It's just a tool well used by Eric Anderson, McPherson graduate student, to play with the audience on original script, "Just Good Friends," the play, now showing at the Experimental Theatre, employs the eternal triangle with two twists—the two men are lovers. Margaret, Matthew and Steven are college students who re-hash the meaninglessness of text finding meanings. The audience might miss some of this because it is usually convoluted with laughter at very funny lines. It is hard to get it right together and keeps it moving. The three actors provide creditable performances, blending in and out of scenes that jump from past to present. Margaret (Sally Smith, Lawrence) and Chris (Claire White, Marvysilie sophomore), discover they have a love of old movies in their teenage years. pounce, and Miss Smith is delightfully fluff-minded. Prizinger, who plays the straight man, delivers his lines heavily, but is most typical of a college student and afraid of his own emotions. (Neel Piringer) have their homosexuality in common, though, as Steven comments, it is easy to explain the solution to the problem than the usual one of having one of the gays die or just go away. And we can also have Matthew in common. They try to become the best of friends, but find closeness can be frightening because it destroys delusions. The play is smooth and flowing, thanks to able direction by the students. Ms. Grady graduate student. White executives has business with the controlled financial markets. If you don't like dirty words, you should provide a light-hearted lesson in the pros and cons of wordiness that is really good, too. Drummer Buddy Rich and his big band will perform at 2 p.m. Concert Hall at Washburn University in Topeka. Blood & Sand,Death in the afternoon,Bullfighting Romance. Be a card carrying Bullfighter. BULLFIGHTERS WANTED WOODRUFF AUDIORIUM: SUA Science Fiction Film, "Barbarie" 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Barbara Kovacs 10:30 p.m. Fonda fitts around the universe in director Roger Vadim's comic universe. Made in 1968 and sex sadism. Made in 1968 Watch this space. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: SUA Classical Film, "Titicac Polles." 7.30 and 9.15 p.m. "Titicac Polles," thesman, director; made in 1963. Red Baron Presents NATION UNION BALLROOM: SUA Science Fiction Film, "Village of the Damned." 7.30 p.m. Thursday. Simister children menace a peaceful town in this English movie. George Sanders. Made in 1980. HILCREST 2: "The Devil's" Ken Russell's film about witch hunting and sexual hysteria in a 17th-century French convent Redrieve as a hunch-backed love love with a priest, Oliver Ed HILCREST I: "Kdnapped." The new film version of Robert Levi StevenSON's "Kdnapped!" he no rip-roaring swackbuckle but it is a midly entertaining adventure. Caine as the swaggering Alan Breck and Lawrence Douglas as the boy-turned-man David Bal- FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: Film Society "Tricia's Wedding, 1987" 30 p.m. Thursday; "Portrait of Jason" (1986), 9:30 p.m. Thursday "Tricia's Wedding, 1987" 30 p.m. Saturday and satiate and scutile by some third rate actors and actresses. "The Queen" is a semi-documentary film set in drag. "Portrait of Jaxon" monologue by a black male prosector who gives a frightening picnic performance in a private society can do to a mama. GRANDA THEATRE: "Song of the South" a 1954 Walt Disney movie combining animation and live action. HILCRESCT 3: "Harold and Maude." Lively Ruth Gordon, an 80-year-old swinger, and necrophilic Bud Cort, barely dry behind the ears, turn a funny, warm cup into a nausea-affecting love affair. VARSITY THEATRE: "Sunday Bloody Sunday." John Schlesinger ("Midnight Cow- ween") Penelope Holt's complex series a disintegrating love triangle. Homesexual Peter Loves murray معاونات المؤسسة العامة للتربية في الدول العربية The Bull & Boar 11 W 9k 11 W. 9th 50¢ OFF any two handed sandwich with the regular price. You MUST present this card. Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon-Sat 12 to 8 p.m. Offer Expires March 1 Featuring—Roast Beef, BQB Ham, BQB Beef, Corn Beef, Grilled Cheese, Meat Loaf and the Reuben ★★★★★★★★★★★★ NIGHT OWLS ... Double Feature Tonight & Saturday at 12:05!! THEY DON'T STOP AT WOMEN'S LIB! They Dare To Do What Other Women Only Dream About... Infidelity... A New Kind of Ball Game... THE FEMALE BUNCH PLUS MOONLIGHTING MISTRESS U S MOONLIGHTING MISTRESS SEE BOTH FOR THE PRICE OF ONE! Hillcrest 'Bunch' 12:05 a.m. 'Mistress' 1:35 a.m. Head, a swinger who intermittently responds to Finch, but who is really after heterosexa' Glenda Jackson. THEATRE EXPERIMENTAL THEA- TRE: "Just Good Friends." p.m. tonight through March 4. An original play by Eric Anderson, and son graduate student. "Friendship" is a friendship of three college students during a year's period. JIM'S STEAK HOUSE "Dine Out At Eating Out Prices" The perfect place to take your date this weekend or to have your next party. Open 4-11 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 12-8 p.m. Sunday Closed Tuesdays CHEF 1101 E.23 Call 843-9753 1618 W. 23rd Griff's BURGER BARS A MAYORHOUSE SYSTEM HAMBURGERS 15¢ 100% U.S.D.A. Insp. Beef GIANT HAMBURGER 96¢ FRENCH FRIES 96¢ ONION RINGS 20' DRINK THE SACK LUNCH It Is a $1.14 Value 96¢ FOR ONLY 96c 96¢ SINNEN Clogs! Those funny wooden shoes from Sweden by Olof Daughters. Great for almost everything—even rain. In blue, brown or gold suede and red or blue leather. Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop President's Budget Will Do Little for Education Woes by DAVID BARTEL Kansan Writer WASHINGTON (Special)—Kansas universities and colleges seeking relief from the financial squeeze of the past three years will find little comfort in the President's proposed 1973 budget for higher education. The 1923 budget, presented to Congress late last month, includes $7.4 billion for higher education, a slight increase from the previous year. This year by the federal government. The primary beneficiaries of the increase would be student assistance programs—with a new stress on aid to the disadvantaged—and academic research. Other major programs would be cut back or still cost budget for the coming fiscal year. The President recommends $701.8 million for a combined program of educational opportunity grants and work-study funds "to help insure that no qualified student who wants to go to college will be barred by the lack of Part of this program includes reform of the Office of Education to give clear preference for the neediest students in the institution. The President also proposes to expand the government-insured loan program to shift student financial assistance to private institutions. THE ADMINISTRATION is seeking $215 million for the guaranteed loan program, an increase of $30 million, and $263 million in the Department. Although spokesman said it is expected that this program will be phased out of the budget by increases in private loans to student. In another increase in aid to students, the President recommends increasing Veterans' Benefits from $175 a month to $190 a month. Aid to students represents 25 per cent of the proposed budget. Institutional aid is about 20 per cent and research and training receive the remaining 28 per cent. The Administration estimates that the federal government will contribute about 20 per cent of the total expenditures of U.S. colleges and universities in 1973. Last year the figure was estimated at about 25 per cent. Within the higher education budget there is a shift in funding for various types of institutions. Two-year colleges would receive 40 per cent increase of 5 per cent, while four-year institutions would receive 40 per cent compared to 42 per cent this year. The other 44 per cent would go to graduate and undergraduate schools and academic research. FUNDS FOR research programs generally would be increased. The National Science Foundation would receive an increase from $622 million to $735 million and the foundation's research project support rising from $44.6 million to $275.3 million. The President's budget repeats earlier recommendations to create a National Institute of Education to coordinate educational research and development projects and a National Foundation of Higher Education "to help colleges and universities meet educational needs of the next decade through renewal, reform and innovation." The President proposes $125 million for the institute and $100 million for the foundation. A bill creating the two new offices is now stalled in the Senate. The proposed budget contains significant disappointments for higher prices in some areas. The construction would be increased from $5 million to $47 million, but the President recommends no funds for direct restoration grants from the Office of Education. In the past, Congress has refused to drop the direct grant program. It also has rejected another of the President's proposals—that support for land-grant collegees by phased out. The President asks only $2.6 million for this in 1973, instead of $500,000 per year. CONSTRUCTION OF teaching facilities at medical, dental, nursing and other health schools would be given only $2 million in 1973. Undoubtedly, Congress will ignore some on the President's cuts and additional demands as in the past. Washington, like Ikea, is no stranger to political hacking. An example of this is the present battle over the omnibus higher education bill that is stalled in the Senate. The bill would create the institute and foundation the President is recommending and would also create general-purpose grants for The Administration promised last year that a limited form of these no-strings-attached grants would be implemented under the plan, and recommends no funds for such grants. The New York Times has reported that funds for the grant program are absent from the budget "in an effort to put pressure on Congress to accept the type of legislation that President Nixon wants." General purpose grant programs have been approved by the House, and the Senate is now considering a bill with a different base for distributing the money. THE SENATE BILL allocates funds on the basis of the number of students at each school receiving federal scholarships and loans. The House bill distributes the money on the basis of the total enrollment at each school. Most higher education organizations support the House across-the-board formula, but the President supports the Senate bill. President Nixon, therefore, will not recommend funds for the program until the legislation is approved by a conference committee. If the Senate bill is approved, it will recommend funds to President Nixon, will recommend $100 million in supplemental appropriations for the program. STILL WARMER 82nd Year, No. 94 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Senate Slate Announced 75 Stallworth Sets Record See Page 8 Chalmer's said that his statement was based upon the talks between University administration and union representatives Friday in Topeka. The clarification of policies from the KU's Bud Stallow is carried off the court after he scored 50 points against 14th ranked Missouri Saturday afternoon in a televised game in Allen Field House. Stallow's 50 points set a new Big Eight record and the Jahawkvictory knocked the Tigers Lloyd Rose, Local 1132 business agent, said that the talks with the University had be productive, but that the statement released by Chalmers "while we were still meeting" had cancelled any progress that had been made. Key Issue in 2nd Week of Strike To Be Civil Service '5 Day Rule' out of a tie with K-State for first place in the Big Eight conference. The victory was the 21st straight home competition for KU. It was Stallworth's and four other seniors' last home game. See story, page 6. CHALMER'S STATEMENT said that as subcommittee consisting of representatives from physical plant, housing and other University civil service employees would be established as part of the University's safety committee By ROBERT E. DUNCAN Kansan Staff Writer The statement answered questions raised by civil service employees who walked off their jobs last week. Included in the statement were overtime policies, promotion and transfer policies, work policies, public policies, week end schedules, eating facilities, the University grievance procedure and the University safety committee. Civil service employees of the university of Kansas are continuing their walk out into its second week today. A key issue this week will be the interpretation of a five day civil service "absent without leave" rule. Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, said Sunday that "a lot of what happens this week will depend on the day(s) with respect to the five day rule." This civil service rule says that a state agency may process resignation papers for an individual who has been absent without leave from his job. Members of the department were not concerned about the rule because they believed the walk out was justified. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. issued a four-page statement Friday outlining KU's policies for civil service employees. chancellor's office was released with a second statement from Nitcher which labeled as "untrue" charges made by the union in a friday Friday. THE NITCHER STATEMENT said that meetings between the University and union had not been "all together" cancelled as charged. The University met with Local 1132 Friday and Saturday in the Kansas Personnel Office in Topeka. A new legislative act that allows employees to vote for an official representative takes effect Wednesday. The legislation does not allow walk outs, said he was not sure how legislation would affect the present situation. Philip Rankin, KU director of personnel service, said one difficulty with the meetings was that the union was not represented by a representative for civil service employees. A "strategy meeting" held by members of the student-faculty committee supported by the school union on Sunday was closed to the press. Because the meeting was to prepare plans for this week, the Kansas was asked to interbury House, the site of the meeting. ROSE SAID SUNDAY that he had no knowledge of violence between union and non-union employees. "We have stressed all we ing we shouldn't have any violence," he said. Rankin said that whatever happened would depend greatly how the civil service rules for termination of employment and the new legislative act were interpretated. Several University non-union employees have complained of threats because they continued to work. One employee's car reported to have been broken by a brick. Coal Mining Towns Hit Sixty Die in Flood, 4,000 Left Homeless MAN, W. Va.-Flash flooding in southern West Virginia killed at least 60 persons and left an estimated 4,000 persons injured. Dr. said Sunday after touring the region. Moore said 80 per cent of the homes in a dozen coal mining communities along Buffalo Creek in Logan County were destroyed when a rupture in an earthen dam sent a wall of water cascading toward the narrow valley Saturday morning. Moore said he would ask the West Virginia Legislature for $1 million Monday "to start relief work" for flood victims. The flash flooding, according to local officials, could damage about 90 minutes after authorities had been called that everything was all right at the dam. State police said the list of missing persons had grown to more than 400, but authorities could not tell how many of them were still being and become separated from their families. AS WATERS receded under clear skies Sunday, State Police Cpl. Walter Garrett, working his third day without sleep, said, "I believe we've got the majority of the violence in the morning, we'll start bringing in the equipment to start working on the wrecks." Garrett, working at a temporary morgue set up at the South Man Elementary School, said 60 bodies had been recovered. A positive identification had been made. THE FLOOD came after almost three days of heavy rain when an earthen dam drainage water broke of coal mine drainage water broke at about 10 p.m. water, black with accumulated coal dust, poured into Buffalo Creek and gathered momentum as it surged down the narrow At the state capitol in Charleston, Moore met with officials of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. He said mobile homes from throughout the nation would be trucked into Logan County to undate the thousands of people left homeless. Another 250 National Guard troops have been assigned to joining the 200 troops already waking up. Inhabitants had little warning. Many who survived did so by fleeing to high ground. streamed into this town of 1,600 looking for friends or relatives to give them shelter. "It it was complete and utter devastation until you got down to Accoville," and coal mining began. Acocvillie is near the lower end of the valley, 12 miles downstream from the dam. Myers worked at a mine near Three Forks, in the vicinity of the dam, and walked to Man after the flood water receded. The dam was built about 15 years ago by a coal company no longer in business, Otto Mutters, a Logan County deputy sheriff, said the dam was now owned by the Buffalo Mining Co., a division of the Pittston Co. ONLY THE lower half of the valley was accessible to rescue workers by midday Sunday. They found low-dying, houses ripped apart, their remains wedged under the few bridges still intact across Buffalo Creek. After the flood reached Acaccville, the channel widened and the water lost much of its force. By the time it reached Man, its power was confined to the depositing debris and a thick layer of slippery muck, more coal dust than mud. State Police said at least two bodies had been found downstream in the Guyandotte River. Trailer homes were knocked from their foundations, torn from their steel frames ★ ★ ★ MAN, W. Vs. (AP)-David Gunnels' world shattered Saturday. Victims Are Hit Hard Water swirled over the Logan County community of Robinette Saturday morning, plowing down everything in its path, using the mobile home owned by Gunnelis. Gunnels, his wife and two young daughters, after being swept downstream about a quarter of a mile, jumped out of the trailer onto a patch of dry land. Just when they thought they might be safe, a massive wave rushed over them. Mrs. Gumels and the two children were swept off the ground and severely burned his chest and hand. Gunnels and the bodies of the rest of his family were recovered by rescue teams Saturday night. He was treated at the Appalachian Regional Hospital here and sheltered in the refugee center at Man High School. Gumrells, uncle, James Gumrells, came to man from Kentucky to see his nephew and nephew. "I don't know what I will do," Gumnels said Sunday. "I didn't know if I wanted to." Gunnels worked for Iceland Creek Coal Co.'s 5.9 mile near Blair and had lived in Robinhood for three years. He said he a laughed at his beach, Beach, Va., and might go live with her. living in the hollow where the flood disaster struck. Gunnels' mother and father were reported safe in the mining community of Lundale, but other relatives had not been located. "Where are they going to put all these people?" James Gumels said, surveying the scene in the refugee center at the high school. "They can't stay in this gymnasium forever, but all their possessions are gone." Red Cross volunteers and high schoolers wearing "Man Hillbillies" emblems on their jackets passed out hot food, sandwiches and drinks to the homeless people, who sat wearly on the bleachers. The gym was the scene of joyous reunions whenever loved ones who had been feared dead were located. Two young women ran to each other from opposite sides of the room and embraced. One said, "Everything is gone, just flattened out. It doesn't seem like it has really happened yet. The shock hasn't set in. "But I'm thankful everyone in my family go out safely we stayed on high ground." The second young woman agreed, * given that it least my family is all okay.* got off. Nixon Accepts Chou's 'One China' Assertion SHANGHAI (AP)—His visit over, President Nixon flew homeward Monday with the vision of a new era in relations for China and who populate China and the United States. The President spoke of his eight days on the earth soil as "the week that changed the world." Before embarking on his 8½-hour flight to Anchorage, Alaska, the President said: "We are confident that we will be here." The two leaders joined in a 1,750 commune highlighting their countries' differences but agreeing on an overall pledge to work toward peace and to foresaw any attempted domination of Asia by either Washington or Peking. Both sides affirmed there could be only One China, and Nixon promised the United States not to back down. all its forces from Taiwan. There was no agreement on Indochina, but the President foreseaw the withdrawal of all American forces "in the absence of a negotiated settlement." The communique, more detailed than many people had expected, had in effect three sections. Part of it told *c* that both sides could agree upon, such as more aid to the poor side. Separately, the United States gave assistance to issues, and China gave its viewpoints. NIXON AND CHOU met all last week in PIXING and the communique summer up their way. The text gave no indication that Chou was planning a visit to the United States to let Nixon return "the gracious hospitality" he said Peking had provided. With both sides saying they wished to reduce the danger of war, they added: "Neither should seek hegemony in the Asia-Pacific region and each is opposed to such aggression." It also countries to establish such hegemony." "Hegemony" means the assertion of a predominating authority. Thirty years ago Japan was seeking that in much of Asia. Critics of the Communist regime in Peking have accused it of aiming at similar power, while for years U S actions in Iraq and Syria were aimed at a "containment" of China and other Communist-rules nations. BRIEFLY, this was the way the communique spoke of some of the main issues. *Taiwan: The United States did not challenge the premise that the mainland China is under its control.* Japan: The United States reaffirmed a close friendship with the Japanese, who have shown concern over the possible outcome of Nikon's visit to China. The —Indochina: Neither side seemed to give essential ground. The United States supported its proposals for elections preceded by the resignation of President Slayyer, an Theun, and a withdrawal of U. S. forces in naïf reaffirmed support for the V Cong. there was one China and that the island of Taiwan was part of China. The U. S. government wants a peaceful settlement by Chinese themselves, and as tensions lessen in the area, it will progressively withdraw its military forces. The Chinese government has issued a sole legal government of Taiwan and the issue was an internal affair for China. Chinese reiterated opposition to "the expansion of Japanese multilateralism" *Korea:* The United States expressed continued support for the South Koreans. The Chinese said they favored North Korea's proposals for peaceful unification and its stand for the removal of the U.N. Command. - India-Pakistan: Both sides agreed India and Pakistan should withdraw military forces from cease-fire lines and engage in the war over Bansladesh in December. The two powers announced no move toward establishment of diplomatic relations, but the United States announced its readiness to assign a "senior U. S. representative to Peking" on a part-time basis. 2 Monday, February 28, 1972 University Daily Kansan People . . . . . Places . . . . . Things People: The government's chief witness at the Harrisburg 7 conspiracy trial, BOWD DOUGLAS JR., comes out of hiding this week to testify how he kept the FBI informed about an alleged antiwar plot to kidnap presidential adviser Henry Kissinger. Government lawyers said of Douglas: "He's the key, no question about that. He knows what happened and how." On her last day in China, PAT NIXON saw Chinese moppeys dancing, playing ping pong and performing dramatics at the Children's Palace. The first lady heard a beginner's orchestra of choreography on the Straw, and "Can You Bake a Cherry Pie Charming Billy?" Places: SAIGON. For the second day, American troops were bloody in South Vietnam by enemy forces, the U.S. command announced Sunday. Troops hiding in caves opened fire on a U.S. patrol 15 miles north of Saigon, killing four and wounding seven. On Friday, a company of 100 U.S. air calvarymen, pursuing two North Vietnamese soldiers along a rail stumbled to their base, where three others died. Saigon One, an Army mortal was killed and 23 were injured in that attack. LEBANON—Israeli guns, warplanes, tanks and commanders were reported hammering Palestinian guerrilla positions in southeast Lebanon Sunday for the third straight day. Lebanon said its own army troops and tanks had joined the fight. Syria announced its antiaircraft guns fired on Israeli jets sweeping over the Golan Heights. Things: The Senate Labor subcommittee issued Sunday a wide-ranging critique of the nation's private PENSION PLANS calling for major legislation to protect some $135 billion invested in them. The subcommittee findings demonstrate beyond and reasonable doubt that the administration has failed to materialize, and they are left with financial insecurity at that twilight stage of their lives." Sen. Harrison Williams, D-N.J., and Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., said in releasing the study. They said the report signals the start of a drive to enact more stringent labor protections on the chairman of the subcommittee and the parent Labor and Public Welfare Committee, and Javits is the ranking Republican. By MARSHA SEARS Kansan Staff Writer Elwell Supports Drug Law Although the President's National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse Report recommends that all states adopt a policy of use and possession of marijuana be eliminated, Mike Elwell, Douglas County attorney, does not think marijuana lawsuits are worth filing. Decriminalization means abolishing criminal penalties for private use or possession of marijuana and holding marijuana would be retained. "Decriminalization, in a way, puts you in no man's land." Elwell said. "You'd be caught in a dilemma." IF MARJIUANA were mindful that it was harmless, we would think that it was harmless. The public would probably say, "It must be harmless, or else it would be harmless." If marjuanis is harmless and legal to smoke, Elwell said, the public would probably ask why they should not be legalized. It would have the effect, he said, of increasing the demand for marijuana, and this would use the drug dealers to get richer. "I can't reconnie that," Elwil said. "How would you penalize a pusher and not the person who uses it?" Sufficient information about marijuana's effects are not yet available. Elwell said. It does not make sense that he may cause eruptions, he may cause eruptions. Elwell thinks the statement that marjuania was not harmful, not addictive, nor crime-inducing or hard-drug use was too general. MANY COMPARATIVE tests between marijuana and alcohol have been poorly conducted, he said. "The results of the tests has been low strength and the tests were sometimes conducted after the greatest effects of marijuana had been taken, and alcohol had taken even better effect." twenty per cent of Elwell's tour time is spent on marijuana cannabis, and more than be better spent on more involving cases. involving Elwell said, but most people who are fined for the use of hard drugs have used marijuana. Although Elwil does not think Kalusa marijana laws need to be changed at this time, he does believe that the laws are in force. In Kansas, Elwil said, the penalty for the sale of marijana and heroin are the same. The penalty for heroin, he said, is a fine of $250,000 than the penalty for marijuana. "Everyone wants to generalize the issue. There are so many drugs that they don't want you put marijuana on the market with other drugs, you must prove that you're not into it." Perhaps no empirical formula could be used to prove that marijuana leads to hard drugs. Residents to Petition Against Annexation person's health." Tickets for the Festival's held March 12, all have been sold. Only 50 tickets still remain for Herb Mann's performance on The Riverside Committee Against Annexation complete their plans this week for circulation of petitions opposing annexation of its concession's annexation of 1,780 acres of land northeast of Lawrence. There are still about 300 tickets available for the other Festival of the Arts events: The National Players, March 6; Boris Gorskiy, March 7; The Portable Circus, March 9; Tom Wolfe, March 10. This year's Festival of the Arts in New York offers any previous year's festival Steve Warren, Hastings, Neb. sophomore and director of the program. George Allen, attorney for the committee, said last week the committee could fight the annexation by submitting a petition of 2500 signatures to the city commission which would require the city to submit the Lawrence voters for approval. After the publication of the manuscript in Esquire, Ole was given the script to E. P. Dutton. Dutton six months later the copy was returned to him with the note that there was not enough to go on for it. Doan Kufahl, committee chairman, said Sunday the final plans for the petitions and some comments will be presented to the Riverside Committee Advisory Leap Year Frees Women No plans have been made to take the case to court but representatives of the committee will attend the attorney general and the county attorney last week to question the legality of the action by the city commission. Vern Miller, an attorney, said the city was within its legal rights. Tickets for these events may be purchased in the SUA office in the Kansas Union. BY CARLA DENNIS Kansan Staff Writer The Riverside Committee, which was formed last week, is funding its efforts from what the city has donated "donations" from local residents. Kufah was unsure of city commission plans for future development and the thought other annexations were definitely planned. Leap years began in 46 B.C. when the astronomers of Julius Caesar determined that the solar Board would be made sometime this week. It's here again. Leap year, that is. Everyone knows it's leap year, especially those whose birthday falls on time-warped F29, but not everyone knows the story of the bisskey, or "leap," year. would like to publish the novel "The book will be given all the Not giving up after the first rejection,Ohie sent the script to Alfred A. Knopf of Random House Publishers in New York.Knopf promptly replied that he would like to publish the novel. Ticket Sales Up David Ohle, New Orleans graduate student, has taken an unusual approach to teaching English. The 30-year-old Ohio has written a novel entitled "Moterman for his publication by Handloom House for publication by Random House year is about 365 days and 6 hours. In order to compensate for the extra six hours, they added a month, but the calendar every four years. Student Does Novel For Graduate Work This system proved to be inaccurate, and by the 18th century the 18th-century accumulated. When Pope Gregory XIII corrected the calendar, he omitted 10 days in 1823 and decreed the present system. Ohlere writing the book two years ago after he graduated from Kansas. The first part of his novel was published in the journal magazine. With the aid of Edgar Wolfe, professor of English, Ohlre revised the manuscript from its 500 pages to the 117 published. The main character in the book is named *Moleene* Moleene. Moleene is a mock warc's mind that are fought in his subconscious mind. Moleene makes imaginary trips through a forest and searches for the search of Dr. Burnheart. Burnheart has implanted four wounds into the aling Moleene. "It's kind of hard to say what happened," she said. "but the publisher describes it as a curious glimpse into the upside down Utopia only a few steps. opportunities of any other book," Ohle said. "It is out now and should be in the Kansas Union Bookstore sometime this week." Ohie said that writing the book was an interesting experience, but he was not sure how the book was conceived, however, about how concerned he was about her dissertation on his book for the degree. In any event, Ohie has already started on a new novel tentatively, entitled "Alabama." According to the Gregorian calendar, an extra day is added to any year exactly divides by 4, except some century years, which are bisextile years only if divisible by 400. In other words, 1800 and 1900 are not leap years, 2000 and 2400 will include Feb. 29. There is no explanation for the custom of women assuming the masculine role of proposal during the leap year. There are even old cases in the past, when I in 1288, a law was passed in Scotland stating that a woman could propose to the man of her choice during leap year. If he were he would be financed unless he prowess was betrothed to another woman. Similar laws were passed in France *Geneva* and in England the 18th century. Today, the custom is almost forgotten and maybe that's the reason women are becoming more liberated, the traditions behind leap year could apply to any new country. A woman lobbying for a leap year favoring the return to the so-called traditional masculine-feminine But while it lasts, spring is almost here and there are still 307 fair-game days left in the year. Group to Give Final Report On Positions The search committee charged with filling two vice-chancellor positions should be ready to make the final decision. Calgaird, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Chancellor chairman, will accompany a number of members on Friday. "We have made substantial contributions to Calgaard said. "I am confident that we will be ready to make a report to the Chancellor rather than us." The committee, which met Sunday afternoon, was appointed in January by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. It was appointed to the institutions for the selection of a vice-chancellor for academic affairs and a vice-chancellor for research and graduate studies, a new position created as a result of the graduating alienation of the Graduate School. The other position is now held by Francis Heller, who will resign this summer to become the Roy A. Roberts distinguished professor of science, a post that has been vacant since the spring of 1970. The House passed and sent to the Senate this month a bill which would enable needy persons 65 or older to receive free or low cost meals. In order to receive free meals, people would be required to show need. Otherwise, they would have to pay a minimal cost. Meal Bill Sent to Senate The program may be handled by local welfare agencies or private non-profit organizations. The organization which handles the program will be able to deliver meals to persons unable to leave their homes. John Derrick, director of the Douglas County Police Department, Wednesday the Welfare Department probably would not handle the passport. A police officer passed instead, he said, an organization known as Meals on Wheels would have helped him. Nossman said Meals on Wheels, which originated in March of 1970, was funded entirely by the church groups and local organizations and businesses. They had received no federal aid. Meals on Wheels is a volunteer organization which delivers booze and alcohol to the Lawrence. San Deree Nossman 936 Aneral Road, chairman or Meals on Wheels, said Wednesday it will provide five days a week to 25 people. Lawrence Memorial Hospital now prepares all of the meals, she said, but next month a kitchen in Immunael Lutheran Hospital is being built as the Vermont branch of Meals on Wheels, will begin operation. Nossaman said the volunteer drivers for Meals on Wheels drove to the hospital to pick up the kids, and then they them directly to the people's Nossman said with federal assistance he helped. But, she said, "If we as a community can take care of these people, that's what we do." She said there was a waiting list for Meals on Wheels. At present, she said, they simply did not need her and who are in need of their services. JAYHAWKER TOWERS KU APARTMENTS 1603 West 15th JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS Not more than 5 minute walking anywhere. MARQUES DE MADRID Surrounded by the K.U. 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Ea- ching on size and old tire BANK CREDIT TAROBS HONORED AT GOOSEY HONOR SERVICE STORIES AND MOST GOOSEY DEALERS Use Gut Rinse Check Program (Because of excellent research on gut microbiota, you can choose any of the adventure trails in the park.) H - THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS' TIRES GREGG TIRE CO. 814 W 23rd 8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Daily Closed Saturdays at 4:00 p.m. K 842-5451 Monday. February 28.1972 University Daily Kansan 2 Ombudsman Seeks Action To Get Sisters' Names By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer Further action against the women who occupied the East Asian Studies building will start by early next week, Dave Dysart, Lawrence third-year law student Oli umbudiam, said Sunday. The problem, Dysart said, is that no action can be filed on the complaint, filed Feb 21, by Peter George. Lawrence specializes in the University Judiciary names the women only as Jane Doe. Dysart, attorney for George and the Ombudsman Office, said he would start legal proceedings to obtain the names of the women. "We have the names of six women," he said. "We are operating on the assumption they were who was in the building." DYSART SAID the women would be sent an interrogatory, a legal paper with questions for the women to answer. It is issued by and filed with the court. The interrogatory commands the women to answer the questions unless the answers would be incriminating. The women would have 20 days to answer the interrogatory, which must be sent by registered mail. Dysart said. If they refuse to return the interrogatory, Dysart said the women would be served with a subpoena, also sent by registered mail. The subpoena requires that an appear in court within 10 days. Dysart said if the women refused to appear in court in answer to the subpoena, they would be cited for contempt of court. They would then be sent the subpoena to appear, he said. Dysart estimated that it could take 40 days to go through the entire process, and by then, the women could be sussed. He said once the names of the women were obtained, the original complaint would be made. He could begin. He said he could ask for an immediate hearing if it were near final week, or it would probably take two weeks between the hearing and extended complaint and the hearing. Dysart said either party could appeal the decision, which would take about 30 days, and would end with proceedings into the summer. "UNFORTUNATELY, it's not q quick process if people don't cooperate. If they would cooperate, it would be different." Several of the February Sisters said they were not worried by the complaint. Rivian Bell, Overland Parkomphore, son of the late Paul, prove the women were there, as well as that a bomb was found in the complaint had been fired by the justice done. If they're innocent, they've nothing to lose. If they're guilty, they may try to delay. "The court might be influenced by a delay." he said. University of Kansas, it would have been a different situation. International and out-of-state need of housing during spring have until March 4 to sign up for to people's Homestay m m. at M. KU. Thomson said, "I am the University contacts" alumni through mailers and by phone to them know what their gifts are then give them." "To have it come out now seems a little strange," she said. Dysart said, "We want to see Program to Provide Vacation Housing Representatives were also urged to establish a "tradition of giving" for their schools. Thomson said the program also stressed such aspects of fund raising workers, having volunteer workers, having a school establishing good personal relations with donors and sponsors, a school's case to the public. KU Group to Collect Tadpoles And Fish in Southern States By LINDA CHAPUT Kansan Staff Writer THE KU ENDOWMENT Association hosted two similar programs last spring sponsored Ray Ashon, tadermist and director of public education for the Museum of Natural History in Dyche Hall, will lead an event in United States in April to collect freshwater taddies and fish. The specimens will be used for research and teaching aids, for public education programs, and for the museum's collections. THE THIRD LECTURE, which emphasized deferred giving and giving by will, was given by Will Manning of the Association's director of deferred giving. The final lecture is given by Carl Lauery, assistant Endowment Association, on account of keeping and fund management. The trip will extend from Kansas through Arkansas, New Mexico, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina and North Carolina. C J. McCoy of the Carnegie Museum of Art will assist in collecting toads. The expedition is funded by a National Science Foundation grant to Sheildon Guttman of the University of Utah. Guttman is making a study of the American toad and the Fowler's study their own relationship. The first lecture was given by Thomson on public relations and publications in fund raising. Todd Sewell and Joan Endowment Association, spoke about different types of giving: gifts given annually, small gifts from many donors and drives to raise money for a specific project. Saline or glucose solutions are normally used in the sixth month of pregnancy to terminate the Teaching and techniques of fund raising was the goal of the Management Consortium hosted by the University Association. Feb. 23-25. Holly Johnson, editor of the Newman, Digest said Saturday. The representatives attended a series of four lectures on Thursday which emphasized the various areas of fund raising. The members of the expedition will collect and preserve various American freshwater fish, such as bass and nongame鱼. They will also collect tadpoles and eggs for use in museum exhibits to fulfill the museum's need for tadpole collections of frogs in the United States, Ashton said. He said saline injections were very dangerous and the women who went to Weihua for abortions with him, with some strange substance." Guttman will also explore their evolution by studying the blood and organs of his live specimens. However, Schweiger said he had "indirect knowledge" of several girls who recently came to Watkins for medical treatment in preventing ill-effects from salmonella and then during abortions in Wieghta. "Although they are of different species, these toads often breed together to produce hybrid offspring." Ashton said. KU Officials Teach Fund Raising Skills "the infections, when injected unwisely, as was the case in a case of a woman who produces a chronic infection which can permanently seal the tubes, thus making the woman manifestly sterile." Schwegler valid. Joseph Collins, vertebrate preparator of reptiles, amphibian and fish, Lawrence graduate student in systematics and ecology, will accompany Asbion. He'll study the evolution of the earth snake to learn about its evolution so that he can better study its history and study of its life history and evolution. Several years ago, he said, there was an average of one or two months who would some to Walker and a treatment following an illegal abortion. Now it is less frequent with fewer abortions. Baby care. Schwerter said. By MONA DUNN Kansan Staff Writer "A friend is monitoring the sounds of the toads, and, as soon The number of women who have come to Watkins Hospital for treatment of serious abortion after-effects after having undergone criminal abortions has decreased over recent years, Raymond Schweiger, director of diversity health services recently. The consortium, attended by 13 black American black educational leaders was sponsored by the Robert R. Motor Foundation, Inc. of New York. as they emerge from hibernation, we will leave," said Ashton. Watkins Treating Fewer Illegal Abortion Cases by the Cooperative College Development Program (CCDP), Thomson said. "For the last ten years" Thomson said, "KU has ranked in the top ten for private support to a state school." "We were contacted to host the Motson consortium because the CCDP groups were so impressed the first two programs," she said. The Moton Foundation is an organization designed to aid predominately black educational institutions in all areas of operation. pregnancy The solution is injected into the fluid area explained by the baby. Schweigler explains how the solution then induces labor. One girl, who goes to Wichita to have the bye injection method, the doctor has contemplated using such a device herself to get rid of the PICTURE YOURSELF AS A PAULIST First picture are A PAULIST. First, picture a religious Community A Community founded by an American convert in, and for, the benefit of North America. Picture a founder who was a century ahead of his same man with a vision that canamtrue. A man with vision. P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS. CUSTOM JEWELRY WE WILL WORK FROM YOUR OWN DESIGN, OR CREATE A DESIGN FOR YOU WEDDING RINGS ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY h o e r r ry h i n a Community could be modern and flexible enough to meet the needs of its members as they arise. A Community that wouldn't lag behind the times on leaden feet. A Community that would be hampered by spoken and printed word and one that wouldn't be hampered by activities when new needs arise. NEXT, picture him in that mini-community they would be flexible to accept individual talents in his own way and would be given the free These are the Paulists. The modern religious Community. Keeping pace with the times, Concerned Involved. If you can picture you a Paulist, why not write for more information to Rev. Donald C. Washington, Director, Room No. 408 415 West 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019 paulistfathers. baby. However, she said she was "too scared to actually do it" and resorted to the saline method. A. H. B. C. Lynn Lieberman, Chicago senior and a member of the People Steering Committee. Program placed students in homes of families who had ap- Lieberman said that in the past there had been more families wanting to host students than students in need of housing. VANESSA REDGRAVE OLIVER REED IN KEN RUSSELL'S FILM THE DEVILS Eve. 7:20 6:20 Matthieu Sat. Sun. 2:05 & 4:00 Twilight Price Good For 4:00 Show Only Hillcrest Students wanting to sign up for the program or who are interested in hosting a student can obtain further information at the main office in the basement of the Wesley Foundation building. Eve. Shows 7:35 & 9:20 Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort are HAROLD and MAUDE THE Hillcrest HILLCREST GROUP LIMITED Eve, 7:4 & 8:9 & 3:5 Matinee Sat.- Sun. 2:20 & 4:10 Twilight Prices at 4:10 Onv ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S KIDNAPPED Walt Disney's Song of the South NOMINATED FOR 3 ACADEMY AWARDS! —Best Actress Glenda Jackson —Best Actor Peter Finch —Best Prizes John Schleinger Hillcrest Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Granada ...the city where the sun sets ... Waste Processing Studied "Sunday Bloody Sunday" Baute Artists By STUART BOYCE Kansan Staff Writer Varsity THEATRE ...Telephone 912-7455 ON YOUR NEW M/CYCLE AND TOUR EUROPE! Weekdays: 2:30; 7:30; 9:40 Sat. & Sun: 3:00; 5:05; 7:30; 9:40 Varsity ZATELR ... Telegraph No. 1965 The Kansas Geological Survey and the department of chemical engineering at the University of Kansas are studying the acidity of water treating plants that would turn oil waste into gas and oil fuels. SAVE UP TO s400 Ronald Hardy, chief of the mineral resources section of the Geological Survey, is concerned about the current fuel supply. The production of natural fuels and the demand for them are now being discussed, said. To meet the fuel needs of the future he said alternate sources Hardy said the current study involved processing manure from Kansas feedlots. production of 1,875,000 barrels of fuel oil could be produced from existing fires in Kansas. This would be achieved through existing pipeline He estimated an annual net were successfully turned into oil. Hardy was optimistic about the process and said that if the fight proved successful, the next step would be to contact a feedlot and a power station and to set up an actual plant. Hardy said this would not only help solve the future fuel needs of Kansas but would also help prevent a major problem of manure disposal. The process first treats the organic material with water and carbon dioxide, he said. Then, the material is heated to high pressure and in the presence of a catalyst, the material is converted into a liquid. This end product forms of water or either fuel oil or gas. There are no by-products. Hardy said a small laboratory-size machine had already been made, and organic substances Buynew BSA TRIUMPH NORTON TAX FREE from one of England's oldest dealers. Est 50 years. Huge stock of guaranteed used models at England's lowest prices. Full Insurance for Europe & Shipment back to Ireland. Guaranteed replacement/re purchase. 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Crime on Campus During the 1969-70 school year 16 assaults were reported to campus Traffic and Security. There have been 21 assaults reported to Traffic security since July 1971, again, since July 325, 325 thefts have been reported. The largest share of these crimes occurred in the central campus "Traffic and Security sources reported that while a percentage of the crimes could be attributed to students, almost all of the violent crimes and most of the other offenses could be related to people who live in the area surrounding the campus." -Kansan. Feb. 18 The bogey-man is back. He generally appears with open arms just as the buck is being passed. Way back when, as a street person, he was responsible for bumings, bombings and student arrests. Today it's assaults and thefts. In both instances, responsibility was abrogated. The campus police, faced with a crime wave of sorts, lays the blame on non-students—nicely dodging their accountability and responsibility to keep the campus free from muggers, rapists, toughs and thieves. Instead, the campus police pursue an almost mystical pogrom against the students. Many women refuse to walk on campus at night fearing rapists—who seem to operate with near immunity on campus. A year ago the cry was for more campus police. "Put down the rebellion, protect the taxpayer's investment," they said. We now have more campus police, more parking tickets—and more assaults. If the campus police could put down their ticket books for a time, get off their rears and on to the campus—perhaps those women who afford self-defense lessons could again walk the campus in safety. —Thomas E. Slaughter Among the sights taken for granted around the University of Kansas campus are the various statues and monuments. There is a long line of horizons concerning the origin and tradition of these statues. Probably the most famous is that of "Ucle" Jimmy Green, which stands in front of Green Hall on Jawahar Boulevarde, and the New York School of Law from 1879 to 1919. Funds for the statue were collected during the Million Dollar Drive in 1920 which also funded the Million Stadium. It was awarded at the commencement of 1924. The sculptor was Daniel Chester French. Charles Eldridge, director of Spooner Art Museum, said, "It is questionable why such a famous sculptor would consent to do a work for what was then a provincial university." It is the only full length statue in memory of a teacher in the United States. Statues: An Interesting Part of KU History "The Pioneer," by F.C. Hibbard, is dedicated in memory of the first people to settle Kansas. It was donated by Dr. Simeon B. Bell, who also donated the first piece of land for the Kansas Medical Center. The base was a gift from the Class of 1920. It was moved to its present position between Fraser and Blake Halls after a new Fraser Hall was built. According to male students on campus, the pioneer is said to throw a shovel full of dirt over his shoulder when a virgin walks by. A recent addition to the sculptures on campus is 'Icarus,' in front of the Space Technology Center. Elden Tefft, professor of painting and sculpture, showed his conception of the Kansas Jayhawk in the sculpture behind the Kansas Union on management foot high bronze Jayhawk is a gift of the Class of 1966. It formerly stood in the lobby of the Union. A recent addition to the sculptures on campus. iicarus, in Greek mythology, tried to fly but fell into the sea when he flew too close to the sun and the wax that held his wings together melted. The sculpture represents the willingness of mankind to experiment and to venture beyond known, even impossible. KU's ICars is made of natural bronze and stands 11 feet high on a granite base. The statue was a gift from the Phillips Petroleum Co. The University has owned it for some time. It was placed in front of the building in the summer of 1970. Inside Lindle Hall is a bust which could possibly be the cause of many a passing test grade for KU students. The bust is of Ernest Hiram Lindley, chancelor from 1920 to 1939. It is BEAUTIFUL WHAT'S BEAUTIFUL? THAT FLOWER WHAT FLOWER? THAT FLOWER YOU MEAN THAT WEED? WHAT WEED? THAT! ITS NOT A FLOWER, ITS A WEED! AND IT'S UGLY! I DIDN'T WANT TO DO THAT. BUT I HAVE A COMMITMENT TO FLOWERS. Date: Publishers Hall Syndicate 2/21 Readers Respond Lecture,Women... —Oswald P. Backus To the Editor: I must protest the grotesque distortion of my Humanities textbook, and pages on February 23. Any resemblance to the text or purport of my lecture lies only in the fact that some of some the same terminology To the Editor: We women of the KU community would like to answer Bill Arnoldi and Paul Johnson in regard to their letter of February 23. They do not censor advertisements before they appear in the Kansan, so we are also directing them to the Stables. No, we do not consider ourselves bait for drawing customers to the Stables. In our opinion, the ad of extremely distasteful and demeaning was extremely clientele of the establishment. It connotes an image that we find extremely distasteful and demeaning. Our woman's motive is to place herself in the position of a product packaged and produced by an agency with no derogatory, to say the least. We feel this misrepresents the motivations of the greater portion of our friends who relax and enjoy their friends at the Stables or at any tavern in town. This misconception supports the culturally-imposed male and female roles with which we are all familiar. We believe that part of college learning experience can be nature, which necessarily includes the close examination of double standards. If a man feels pain he is thought of as a typical, well-rounded, fun-loving collegiate. If a woman does the same thing, often resulting in embarrassing situations where she is labelled a "frolicking chick." We think that men who create and believe such women do patronize bars or not food for chauvinistic eats. —Pam Troup. Fairborn, Ohio Sophomore –Genie Godfrey, Torika Junior Mary Mitchell, Baxter Springs Junior Mar Boyd, Manhattan Senior Joan Calder, Laurence Junior Anne Horton, Shawnee Mission Sophomore -Lynn von Unwerth, Overland Park Sophomore Kristin Brunson, Canahaleo, N.Y. Soob Playing With Prejudice Sen. Henry "Scoop" Jackson, campaigning in Florida, seems almost to apologize for the fact that his daughter attends an art show where she would send Anna Marie elsewhere not a quality school she goes to." Quality--that is the weaker word this year. It allows one to oppose busing while pretending to favor integration. Busing is not issue; say Jackson and it issues, but 'quality education.' The assumption behind this distinction is that "racial balance" for which Thou Shall Not Bus) is separable from the other (which means you may in extremis, bus sparring). But the poor schools are ghetto schools, and reflect the total social setting and learning situation. The two issues are inextricably mixed, though me another aversion tactic. The nice thing about a four-square stand for such an amendment is that it puts off any decision far over the long amending process, allowing for inbuilt debate and legal rigidity. In many cases make the motion without fear of any very immediate results. A good example of this is **Josh**, a student busing from bad schools to good ones, but not vice versa. George Wallace quite rightly snorts "What does that non-position: 'what does that position: against busing.' period." Logically she must some trouble from bad schools, can't be in students from better schools, you must leave the school worse off than it was before. Jackson's proposed anti-busing amendment to the Constitution is But all those are flirting with ways to oppose the court and just voters take out their anti-bus- pidesjices on the referendum, and not have to go so far as casting a vote for Wallace. But why not, while you are in the booth, make your vote more emphatic? And besides, the referendum could well draw a majority. But a heavy vote was supposed to favor Wallace even before the chance said that he gives good luck if his nose is rubbed before a test. Judging by his shiny appearance he may be in the Class of 1928 this gift of the Class of 1928 was 1925-1967 made by Bernard "Poco" Frazier. other statues and monuments include "Kneeling Pan with Bagpipe" by Ivan Mestrovic, in insisting fires for Wallace. The college would be a well-publicized anti-bussing strategy session at the White House, and for some of bussing are The Florida legislature wants to put the issue to a referendum in the March 14 primary, and Gov. Reuben Askew appends an "equal rights" proviso that just two candidates look more respectful. Askew, say his defenders, is also playing an evasive game; he will let Garry Wills declares some, the doublistele politicians use to justify their anti-bus-support stands. It has been a long segregation at the same time. All "the attempts to" *sanitize* the opposition to busing, to make it less painful, to force the evaders into more untenable positions. You cannot simultaneously arouse the beast with an exorcism or roar of something very dark in the current hysteria and bad faith that it feeds you to new strength. of explicit opposition to busing was offered. front of the Art Museum, and the Oregon Trail Memorial near Lindsey which marks the site where the trail crossed Mount Oread. Copyright, 1972. Universal Press Syndicate Capital Punishment: An Old Question James J. Kilpatrick By Sokoloff WASHINGTON--Last week's decision of the California Supreme Court in death mining that State officials some new questions of law and public policy. In my own view, the decision was clearly The California court construed California's own State Constitution. The decision is therefore final, not subject to final appeal. It also ruled to California, and serves to nullify only those death sentences that had been imposed by the state legislature with 100 prisoners awaiting execution. Yet the action of the California court cannot be viewed so narrowly. On January 17 the U.S. Court ruled in four cases (the most heinous of them, ironically, from a different school) to challenge the concept of capital punishment as a violation of the Eighth Amendment. The amendment says that "cruel and insane punishments" shall not be inflicted. Mr. Justice Stewart made the point during oral argument last month, "One of the things that I learned is that he Amendment," he said, "is that the deprivation of life is expressly prohibited because due process does not apply and their implication is approved when there is due process. And this is why I say that to me it is more difficult to argue now. Now we're not talking about the The problem presents two separate questions. The first is, Is it immoral, unwise, or unconstitutional? The second is, Is it immoral, unwise, or ineffective? The questions have nothing to do with one another, but how capital punishment, as such, possibly could be held unconstitutional. The Fifth Amendment implicitly sanctions "No person shall be held to answer for his own过失 unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury." Both the Fifth and the Fourteenth Amendments give further sanction in terms of due process. Griff and the Unicorn WAITER! WAITER! IS ANYTHING WRONG, SIR? YOU PUT MILK IN THE COLD CEREAL BEFORE YOU SERVED IT AND NOW IT'S ALL SOGGY... OH, IS IT REALLY? WOULD YOU LIKE TO SUE OR CAN WE SETTLE OUT OF COURT? MATTHEW POTTER AND WILLIAM HENRY "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff. express wording of the Constitution." viewed by some judges as degrading, dehumanizing, or "incompatible with the dignity of mankind," all those evils; yet human slavery was expressly sanctioned by the Constitution and was not only subject to the Thirteenth Amendment. By the same token, to deny women a right to vote is unfair; but it was made acceptable to the Nineeth Amendment. Precisely. Even if one embraces every activist theory ever advanced about our, more flexible, or "evolving" Constitution, only two adjectives of the Eighth Amendment would be subject to judicial interpretation: Disbemowing a prisoner, or boiling him in oil, might be thus defined by legislative judgment of 41 States is to be discarded altogether, the electric chair and the gas If capital punishment is to be abolished, it ought not to be abolished by judicial decree. This Capital punishment may be "incompatible with the dignity of man" says Kilpatrick, but it cannot be held unconstitutional. T. D. HARTLEY chamber cannot be regarded, at law, as constitutionally impermissible. The California court confused the two questions. The majority declare that, as such, capital punishment, as such, dehumanizes all who participate in its processes". Such "punishment is compulsory" is not a legitimate man." Very well. But these are not arguments of law; they are arguments of policy—they are arguments of a legislator committee room. We ought to keep these things straight. It simply does not follow that a given practice is unconstitutional because it is is to vest in judgers the power effectively to amend the Constitution. It ought to be abolished. Constitution, Federal crimes, and by the individual States, as to State crimes. Or it ought to be abolished. Our outright management of the Constitution, reasonably minded may well disagree on the wisdom of capital punishment. As a public policy, perhaps it ought to be abandoned. But "the express命令 of the Corruption," in Stewart's phrase, has to be uphold. Copyright 1972, The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper NEWS STAFF News Advoter Dall Reinkman Editor News Adverter. Del Brinkman Chip Crews Associate Editor Mike Morlet Campus Editor Scott Becker Kenneth Editor Rita Haugh, Deanna Hill Rita Haugh, Deanna Hill Joye Nernon, Norman Kiley Joye Nernon, Norman Kiley Sally Carlson, Bo Simmons Bo Simmons Assistant Campus Editors Joye Nernon, Norman Kiley Assistant Sports Editor Sally Carlson, Bo Simmons Feature Editor Barbara Spurio2 Editorial Writers Tom Snapper, Mary Ward Editor Writers Tom Snapper, Mary Ward Makeup Editors Joe Yankee, John Goodick Photographers Ed Lalo, Kit Netner Office Manager Greg Sorber, Tom Thornback, Young Tundo Hush Office Manager Greg Sorber, Tom Thornback, Young Tundo Hush BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser ... Mel Adams Business Manager Carol Young Assistant Business Manager Norman Macey Advertising Manager Larry Brown Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Dale Pifingerer Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Dave Murray Dave Murray University Daily Kansan Monday, February 28, 1972 5 t: as g, or unity of human institution was only by it. By this it was to the to be to be This. power the to be as to y the State to be institution, n may lom of public express in" in to be ngton except iter, $10 dations, without essentially lp Crews mof Mosfet Nony Hay, King Kung in Groom in 2&ert in 2&ert Goodrick Goodrick Rush sk Young Sokohot rol Young n Carter n Manley Barnhart ergerders d莹 Lloyd e Murray Delano 100 Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER Warm Weather Brings Out Skates Roller skates have remained somewhat of a novelty on a campus that is currently overcrowded with bicycles. Sophomores Jan Henry, Naples, Italy; Amy Sanders, Roswell, N.M., and Cindy Lawrence, Decided to take advantage of Sunday's warm weather by roller skating along the Jayhawk Boulevard sidewalk. Other people around Lawrence found the balmy weather conducive to kite walking, motorcycle riding, car washing, baseball or simply taking a walk. 'Sunday' Emphasizes Time By STUART CLELAND Kansan Reviewer The days of the week are used as unchrictive subtitles in John Schlesinger's new book, "Sunday, Bloody Sunday," *Varsity Tuesday*, and *Thursday*. They're not really there to let us know what day it is, but simply to tell us, almost subliminally, that the days are full of surprises. And even as we live it, Daniel Hirsch and Alex Greville know that, and because they are getting past their primes, they feel it with a sort of detached panic. Bob Chisel knows plenty of time ahead of him, and uses that knowledge against the other two. Together, they form the triangle around which Bloody Sunday" revolves. FROM PENELOPE GILLIATT's highly intelligent and subtle script, Schleinger has made a perceptive and intriguing him from the flashiness that his humor provides to works, such as "Midnight Cowboy". Rather than trying to impose a message on us via the camera, he draws the film slowly by letting his words and deeds tell us what he and Miss Gillatt are trying to say. The result is a presence and share Bob Eklins (Murray Head), a young designer, plays pieces on out each of his plates the going gets rough, he has, for a while, the best of both worlds, until bored and irresponsibil- PETER FINCH and Glenda Jackson have both been nominated for *Women in Film* (as they say) and it is why. Bringing to their characters a lived-in quality, they succeed in convincing us that they do not exist solely within the confines of a film but also within the afterwards. Finch especially is constantly fascinating as he captures every nuance of a man whose homosexuality is only one choice among his many from than being the single reason for it, as in so many other films. Playing Hirsch with cool restraint, he becomes outwardly every messy. Miss Jackson is also fine as a woman; competent, yet very unsure, woman who knows only that she is not content with her job, her surroundings or herself. Biting at her skin and trying not to cling to Eikins, she communicates achingly the fear of failure. AGAINST TWO SUCH strong performances Murray Head is at a definite disadvantage; still, he calls the charmingly callous Eilings. Overshadowing the characters is the film's constant theme: the inability of modern men to successfully communicate their needs and longings to each other. Unbrokenly stressed, it runs continually throughout. Hirsch doesn't know how to phrase her letter of resignation. Her parents, in one short scene, are shown as being cut off from one another. York on the telephone. York on the telephone. Eventually, of course, this communication breakdown themselves. Each member has different motives which the others cannot grasp, and which they do not understand. It a bleak thesis, and one which can be debated. But agree or not, "Sunday, Bloody Sunday" stands as one of the year's most exciting and provocative films. 'Kidnapped': Flawed Fun By BARBARA SCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor "Kidnapped" (Hilcock 1) has plenty of faults, but on the whole is an adventure film that the faults oem half accessoried in films we see. KANSAN reviews property that were his all along. finely-textured and well-thought-out story which easily transcends its seemingly soan opera plot. been treated to lately, it's a satisfying relief. Peter Finch has a sap opera plot. London doctor in his mid-forties whose urbanity and charm are defenses against a possibly dangerous and certainly often violent patient, but an elusive security of someone, not merely to love, to be to love by, he has much in common with by, the brilliant colleague Jackson). She is aSomeone who career girl who rushes unhappily between her unkempt flat and her unrewarding work in an art gallery or in a theatre Together they nervously put up with each other's anonymous there are not all along there. 'THERE ARE NOT ALL along symbols, ambiguous actions or complex characters we've grown accustomed to seeing in recent movies ("Straw Dogs," "Miss Pippin"), but "Panic in Needie Park"). David Balfour is driven on by one thing: his high ideal of honor and justice Alan Breck, the fugitive who was once the only reason his love of Scotland. All this simplicity could have been sickening, but it has made him Mann's direction keep everything moving swiftly enough so that the film stays both enjoyable and comprehensible throughout. Jack Pulman has written a tight, fast-moving screenplay base. Robert Loeber and his sons, Jeanen "Kinderstein" and Leonard "Davall Bourlow". With a few digressions it follows the travel of young DAVall Bourlow, who leaves home to lead him, after his father's death, to his uncle Ebenebezer's friendly welcome, through his wife, Adrian Ebenebezer, out of a mutiny and shipwreck, across the Scottish highlands in the company of a French spy, and clutches of an unjust government and finally to the wealth and Michael Caine, as Alan Breck, don't exude enough fire to be completely convincing. His taking of the floor just a little too level-headed to allow the emotionalall that he's gotten from Hawkins, Trevor Howard and Donald Pleasure in secondary roles are pleasantly familiar to swasbuckhenders. The duels, the shipwreck, the flight through the heather—none are handled as anything other than ordinary. Neither editing nor direction means them seem at all dangerous. BUT EVEN with its faults, "Kidnapped" is an entertaining movie that holds up because of a solid, tried-and-tried plot and its failure is filled with all the good intentions of plain old romanticism. Furthermore, there is never enough tension and excitement to rank "Kidnapped" with the best Many people won't bother to go to "kidnapped" because they saw another version on Walt Disney years ago and associate it with "classics". Many simply won't have time to see it because they're too busy rushing to the movies or seeing "The Devil's" for example; rather than those they find most appealing. And some who do see it will be turned off by the fear of embarrassment or straightforwardness. But many will find "Kidnapped" a refreshing, though faulty, relief that have complex problems that have been filling Lawrence screens lately. Current Paperbacks Offer Variety Festival to Study Shakespeare, Plays A topical contribution is Robert Kavanaugh's THE GRIM KAVANAGH, 95 cents), one of several examinations of the changing campus scene. Kavanaugh sees a terrified territory by a future with "scene" in its wake, "scene" is a shocking one, and one without optimism unless administrators and faculty change their ways. This sound new! Several nonfiction paperbacks provide enough variety and insights for some absorbing stories, and generally, with the Jew in America. The first is Leonard Slater's THE PLEDE (Pocket, $12.95), a true story of how the Jewish "underserved" supplied arms to the emerging state of Israel many years ago. The book has the sweep and intrigue of its predecessor, as AMEN: THE DIARY OF RABBIN MARTIN SIEGEL (Crest, $12.5), edited by Mel Ziegler. The book was written in personal Serial was going through congregation split over publication of the hardcover version, which seemed to many Plans for the KU Kansas Shakespeare Festival and Institute are being completed now, Jack T. Brooking, professor of drama at the university and principal coordinator of the program, said recently. In Leslie Alexander Lacey's PROPER NEGRO (Pocket, 2:25), an autobiographical face of a race is offered. Lacey High on the list of current paperbacks in fiction is A. Walters, *The Great War* (£1.25), which has been hailed as the Russian novel of World War II. It deals with the Nazi invasion of the Ukraine and has been made a work of art by depicts Soviet oppression and anti-Semitism. As a youth Anatoli witnessed the massacre of 70,000 German soldiers due to complicity of his own country. An entertaining novelty is a compilation by Albert E. Kahn called THE UNHOLY HYMNAL THE UNHOLY HYMNAL consists of the words of Nixon, Agnew, Lyndon Johnson, Humphrey, McNamara, Laird, Rusk, William Rogers, Maxwell Taylor, Westmoreland, John Edgar Hoover, all related to the war, poverty, the youth crisis. affluent black family in the South, and became a militant in an African community, where disillusionment over him. The festival and institute are four theater, English literature, art and music, he said. It will begin June 5 and continue through July 16. Three Shakespearean plays will be presented during the course of the summer. The first play will be presented under the direction of Stewart Vauhann, the second will be seven performances. World War II. Pearl S. Buck abandoned the strictly Chinese theme many years ago; one of her non-Chinese stories is THE TIME IS NOON ($1.25), a soapy story of a woman who has fulfilled. Also on the sentimental side is Arthur Cavanaugh's LEAVING HOME (Crest, 95 cents). This story spans the depression, World War II fights to tell the story of an Irish Catholic family in Brooklyn. Another new one is James *Purdy's* the CABOT **WRIGHT** the BURGESS the story of a rape artist on Wall Street. Along the way Purdy also sits out at the American Museum of Art, where he likewise. In quite different vein is Frank G. Slaughter's **BATTLE** **SURGEON** (Pocket, 95 cents), and perhaps "vinem" he won the prize for captain in the *Corpora Corps in* The last in the series of plays about a woman named Vienna, under the direction of Fred Vesper, instructor of speech and drama. It will be presented An older-timer back on the scene is *Erskine* the *Caldwell's* LunginGINSLER *Gold Medal*, 60 times). Clearly, her heroine who has a series of sexual adventures that stir up an entire town. It is lesser Caldwell. Also offering sexual provocation is *Belle* the *Diagnosis POSITIVE* (Pocket, $1.25), a hospital tale that describes a scandal reaching out to a strange illness striking women clear across the land. The second production, 'Hamlet,' will be directed by Brooking and will be performed five times. Next comes one called OUR MOTHER'S HOUSE (Pocket, 95) who is long along. This one (which sounds like a few years ago), is about seven children ago. Is it about the fact that mother is dead because she are afraid to go into an orphanage. Chills also are. Is she supposed to DISAPPEARANCE (Pocket, 95) cents), a science fiction story that deals with the disappearance of sexuality—at least outer space. *Prophetic? And also in David Levy's THE GODS OF EARTH,* which is billed as ecological science fiction and concern two lovers who are frozen alive in the 20th Century and awaken 500 years later. *David E Fisher's CRISIS* (Bantam, $1.25), a suspense story that believes who he believes has the divine. "HAMLET" will also be presented at KU March 14, 16, 28, 30 and April 1. "It's easier to revise 'Hamlet' for the summer program than to do three completely new shows." Brooking said. The program is being launched at KU this year, and Brooking hopes to see it become continuous. "We hope the community will respond first and foremost as an assemblage of communities that develops, maybe they can participate in some other As usual there are a few Gothics to entertain you this month. One of them is Norah Crest (35, 95 cents), about a school mistress who comes back from missionary life in Africa, looks at the girls in a private school in England. But h! she the school is not all it is purported to be. Jill Tattersall's (35, 75 cents) place is about a girl who exchanges places for a few weeks with a middle-aged governess at a school in Guess's town. What? Mystery haunts the manor. Finally in this category there's Arlade "Pritchett" his girlfriend, Medal, 75 cents). This little jewel takes place in Britain in the age of Victoria, and it's about a governor who must take her wives to Harleigh, in wild old Wales. Vaughan is expected to arrive at KU from New York City the third week of March to cast "Twelfth Night." During that time Brookling will also select replacements for members of the "Hamlet" cast summer festival and lodge. Vesper will cast "The Merchant of Venice" the first two days of summer session. "THE FESTIVAL will include a series of guest lectures by experts in the area for members of the institute." Brooking said, and a book of Shakespeare plays open to the public for a mail admission fee. Included in the institute will be a "cafeteria of courses" about music, dance, theater, music, English, history, theater, speech and drama. Brooking "The committee involved in planning the festival is very interested in developing a certain workshop, and two other workshops," Brooking said. "These workshops would be open to townspoors as well as those from elsewhere." He said the plans for this phase of the program are not yet definite. Campus Briefs Physics Colloquium 'Because' Meeting A graduate physics and astronomy colloquium is scheduled for 4.p.m. today in 232 Mallot, David R. Alexander, professor from Wichita State University, will speak "On the Formation of Planetary Nebulae." Coffee will be served at 4 p.m. in 136 Mallot. "Because," a volunteer listening organization, will hold an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Canterbury Center Goodyear Funds Utah Dance Group Unique The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. Fund has made its fifteh and final payment of $2,000 to the University of Kansas, for its Program for Progress'. F.B. Conrad, Goodyear-Topeka plant building, research, student aid and other funds for building, research, student aid and other programs. By H. Berg Kansan Reviewer Recruiters were on campus last week. Among the more interesting ones were a group of students who, with the Repertory Dance Theatre. Arriving in the middle of the week they conducted a series of informal dance classes at KU and Med Center Now Offers Family Practice Training The newly-formed program is supervised by the Department of Finance in Chicago, where the department is one of twelve at the Medical Center responsible for five years of training. The residency program consists of three years training programs. The University of Kansas MS in Resilience training program in family practice. The program is designed to prepare physicians to teach families resilience. training introduces the resident to the primary clinical disciplines in Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, General Surgery, Ob-Gyn and Dermatology. The training is conducted in the Model Family Practice Unit. gave a concert Sunday afternoon in the University Theatre. the second and third years acquaint the physician with inpatient and outpatient family practice, clinical practice of health care and economic and legal affairs in office administration. The company, currently on tour throughout the Plains and the West Coast, will hold a dance summer for all levels of dancers. The company, founded at the University of Utah in 1966, is a most unique adventure in modern dance. The company's independent body with no "Head" The company is an example of dance in culture and the drama of decision. However, their chief virtue is that all the dancers have learned to dance somewhere else now learning to dance together. His concert Sunday was in three parts. The first part consisted of two pieces: "Noturne," or "Nocturne," choreographed in 1853 by Donald McKayle, was Repetitive Drama Theatre. The work is interesting historically even if it appears somewhat dated by today's more informal style. "Night Scene," or other, "Night Scene," is a mood duet that concludes with an enveloping embrace. The main part of the program was an interpretation of Bertolt-Calder play "Mother Courage," called Mother Courage, some 15 years beyond the point Brecht is seen still hauling her cart from one battle to the next, but confronted with the nightmares of war. The children as spoils of war. The children reveals its strength as it vividly depicts the nightmare of the (children) coming home to nest. The concert closed with two delightful pieces, "Opera" and "Tim-Tal." Opera is a hitherto unknown dance dancer. The dancers are equipped with light-sensitive sirens of varying pitch (grace a Computer Science Department ballerina), Tim-Tal, the final affair on the program, is an impressionistic dance, a musical form played on drums and accompanied by drummers and the tambourra (droning lute). Feb. 28 8:20 Hoch TODAY TODAY The Student Body of The University of Kansas Presents BALLET FOLKLORICO OF MEXICO It's the last program of the season and probably the best! It's FREE with I.D. NO RESERVED SEATS COME EARLY FOR A GOOD SEAT. Non-Students 4.00 - 3.50 - 3.00 6 Monday, February 28, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAS 45 Aubrey Nash Dribbles Behind Back Monroe junior John Bennon, Mike Ioffreys (45) Maneuver eludes John Brown, Mike Jeffries (45) Tough Test Evaporates; Freshmen Down Johnson Kansan Staff Writer By JUDY HENRY The toughest game of the season was what Bob Frederick, freshman basketball coach, expected when the University of Kansas freshmen met Johnson Saturday in Allen Eldred House. KU led from the first minute of the game. Terry Ackman scored Johnson County's first field goal. He did it in the 2nd quarter, when Kansas led, 8-2. It was much easier than that, though. The KU freshmen beat Johnson County, 111-85. It was the 11th consecutive victory for the undefeated freshman, who have defeated Johnson County in their last 12 encounters. But then KU went into a slump and didn't recover until the last nine minutes of the first half. It a four-minute interval, KU scored only six points while Atkinson County to县, 14-14. Frederick attributed the slump to fatigue. He began substituting to rest the guards and forwards WITH 8:43 to go in the first half, KU led, 22:18, and Johnson County never managed to get within four points again. Dale Greenlee, Suttle and Rogers led KU to a 64-39 lead by halftime. Marshall Rogers was found by Johnson county's B.B. Mitchell with a shot and a three-pointer. Rogers made a three-point play on the kick, giving NC 30-28 at third. The ball landed on the three-pointer 30 seconds later. Dale Greene, Suttle, and Johnson County controlled the game and managed to score eight points in five minutes. Suttle was credited with 10 of the 19 points scored by Johnson County. With 13-12 to go in the game, the teams spent nearly a minute timeout without scoring until KU's Doug Innoble spoke the spell with a field INLOES STOLE the ball near the boundary line in Johnson County and play, then collapsed out of bounds. He was carried off of bounds. "The last 10 minutes of the first half and the first 10 minutes of the second half we played as well as Frederick said after the game. floor by teammates Iliees said later that he had stretched ligaments in his left knee and was hardly miss the rest of the season. "We were trying to get the ball off the boards and downcourt as fast as possible." Suttle broke a two-minute cold spell for KU when he stole the ball and drove downcourt to score late in the game. KU's total of 111 points was three point shots of the season high of 114 points scored against俞 Valley Junior College JL. "I was one of your classmates," one gentleman said to B. Horn, a sophomore center to B. Horn. "I never got to meet you before." 12 Players Return For Team Reunion They came from places like Charleston, Ill., St. Louis, Mo., and Greenville, S.C., where business suit KU ties and a few grey hairs, and chapped cigars and pipes. It was a gathering of businesses and men. But those businessmen and teachers, now in their 40's, were 12 members of the University of Virginia basketball team. They gathered for a reception in Allen Field House Annex Saturday afternoon Later, they were introduced at halftime. The team then visited their coach C., "F. Phog Allen," and the bench C., "T. P. Banquet," a banquet at the Ramada Inn. Born, now an executive with Peoria Caterpillar, Peoria, Ill., played on the 1953 team that went to the NCAA finals before losing FREDERICK SAID that Johnson County's performance was hampered because its roster was not as strong as it was sick. He said that Johnson County was first in the Eastern Division of the Jayhawk conference and had been involved in a series of crucial games. in post-season play. He later played AAU basketball for Peoria. In his playing days, Born was considered almost too light to play at 6-foot-9 and 135 pounds. He was out by about 60 pounds, he said. Most of the others appeared much as they had 20 years ago, including a senior foot-9 senior center, weights about five pounds less than he did when he was a junior. "I've been referencing quite a bit. Lovellette excels in the dealer in Charleston, Lovellette spent 12 years in the pros after leaving Others attending the reception were Jerry Alberts, Lincoln, Ill.; Michael St. Louis, Mo.; Charles Billoughe, Wichita; Billoughe, Wichita; Wes Johnson, Kansas City; Kanel John Keller, Great Bend; Allen Kelley, Peoria; Dean Kearney, Bob Kenney, Kansas City, Kan FOCUS ON CHINA The game with Oklahoma Monday should be tough, Frederick said. "If we play full court offense and defense like today," Frederick said Saturday, "we have a chance to win." | | Ig-fga | f10-aa | rf | pf | tp | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Akinson | 7.5 | 2.4 | 1 | 12 | 22 | | Woods | 9.1 | 3.6 | 2 | 11 | 22 | | Wheeler | 8.1 | 3.0 | 2 | 12 | 12 | | Winfield | 6.1 | 1.2 | 6 | 3 | 12 | | Mitchell | 7.1 | 1.2 | 6 | 3 | 12 | | Ishiwata | 6.0 | 1.2 | 6 | 2 | 12 | | Sebekh | 6.0 | 2.2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | | Sebekh | 6.0 | 2.2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | | Total | 11.0 | 3.2 | 42 | 17 | 85 | | Total | 11.0 | 3.2 | 42 | 17 | 85 | DR. DANIEL BAYS Professor of History, KU Scoring 50 points in a basketball game is like bowling, 30 breaking par on the golf tee and stepping straight fush. You remember it. "Mao and the Mandate" -Chinese Communist Party Since 1949 Bud's 50 Numbs Tiger Defense Bud Stallworth of the University of Kansas basketball team has had not one, but six 50-10 wins. The last time he was highest was his Big Eight record 58 points Saturday night in KU's 93-80 victory over Missouri in Allen. As a high school star in the 2013-14 season, he marked the 50-point mark five times. His biggest night was a 56-point performance as a junior. He By BOB SIMISON Kansan Sports Editor | | tfa | tfg | rb | pt | tp | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Fidlerite | 7 | 15 | 8 | 12 | 12 | | Smith | 11 | 2.3 | 1.6 | 10 | 12 | | Smith | 11 | 2.3 | 1.6 | 10 | 12 | | Resorgette | 12 | 6.4 | 4 | 2 | 22 | | Resorgette | 12 | 6.4 | 4 | 2 | 22 | | Haley | 12 | 6.4 | 4 | 2 | 22 | | Haley | 12 | 6.4 | 4 | 2 | 22 | | Roeland | 0-7 | 7.9 | 2 | 2 | 11 | | Roeland | 0-7 | 7.9 | 2 | 2 | 11 | | Totaloren | 47.0 | 17.4 | 13 | 52 | 11 | | Totaloren | 47.0 | 17.4 | 13 | 52 | 11 | "You don't forget those things," Stallworth said in a press conference after the game Saturday. None of the four other seniors who played their last game in Allen Field House is likely to forget the upset of ninth-ranked Owen Horton. The defeat dropped the Tigers to eighth in Big Eight behind Kansas State. JOHNSON COUNTY (85) KU IS 7-5 in conference play, 11-13 overall, with two games to play. Missouri is 8-3 and 19-4. Mon., Feb. 28 Forum Room 7:30 p.m. SUA Forums Big Eight Record Falls "It was a very satisfying way to go out," the Neal mask said. "I read in the paper the other day that Missouri's Greg Flacker said KSU Leads In Big Eight KANAS CITY (AP)—The Kansas State Wildcats have grabbed sole possession of the top spot in the Big Eight Conference all championship scramble with three games remaining The Wildcats took complete charge of the race—temporarily, at least—a Saturday by whipping Oklahoma 80-71 and getting a helping hand from the Kansas Jayhawks, who downed 14th-seeded Hourih, 93-80, and knocked the Tigers out of a tie for the lead. Johnson County 39 46 — 85 Kansas 64 47 — 111 Turnover—Johnson County 24 Kansas 17 KANSAS 15 Nebraska, the league's No. 3 team, just outfall of out the race Saturday night when the team defeated offebaten Colorado at Boulder Kansas State led the Sooners all the way but got a scare with a tackle from Tyler Craig, trailing 37-11, at the half, pulled out for a third time. The Sooners struck back, though. | League | Overall | | :--- | :--- | | W | 1 L | 15 L | | K-State | 9 | 8 | 14 | | Missouri | 8 | 3 | 19 | | Nebraska | 7 | 4 | 14 | | Oklahoma | 6 | 4 | 11 | | Kansas | 6 | 4 | 11 | | Texas | 8 | 10 | 13 | | Colorado | 3 | 8 | 6 | | Okla. St. | 1 | 10 | 17 | Big 8 Statistics trimming the margin to 69-67 with 3:11 left That was Oklahoma's last real but Bob Chipman hit five free throws. Five Wildats hit in double figures, Lon Kruger getting 18. Scott Martin, Bobby Jack and four others each canned 14 for the 5ers. Bud Stallworth Hand is Mike Jeffries! Missouri Coach Norm Stewart summed up their defeat by KU by saying, "We just played terrible games and played all year. Another factor is we don't have a size and quintessence man who can go with us." Scott Wedman got 17 points and Jim Craigton 15 for Colorado. 3-2, but upset of Nebraska. The big face was the triumph we were able to hold Chuck Jura, the star of the reboundes and 17 points. Jura was in foul trouble early and fouled out of the field, held a 27-20 halftime advantage. the team that beat Kansas at home would win the Big Eight. "I thought, 'Well, who says "i anybody's going to beat Kansas at home.' We never lost a Big Bear. One thing this makes it 21 in a row." Stallworth put on a one-man snow to keep the hwgs in a tight formation. He the first half. He missed his first but then opened up for nine of the game. Stallworth did cool off, though. For three minutes after he put a head, 12-8. Stallworth had recovered and moved to a 15-2 advantage. Other winners for KU were Owatson, Schultz and Oxford. Seventh-place was horse; Mike Backus, long horse; Terry Barris, short horse; horizontal bars; flamberton, horizontal bars. The drought didn't last long. Stallworth scored 24 of KU's first 30 points. A one-minute streak during which KU charged from a dribble was advantageous, saw Stallworth make nearly every shot he took. "I GUESS I was pressing them for awake," Stallworth said. "But I was trying to draw fouls on a lot of them." ahead, 28-25, with 8:36 to play. Aubrey Nash brought the crowd up from 17 to 34. She added to another Sailworth score. Two more free throw by the defense. First, Stallworth tied the score by banking in a rebound shot despite the towing coverage of 6-foot-7 John Brown. Then he hit one and was disqualified when Wilson Barrow stepped into the lane. AFTER POURING in 27 points during the first half, Stallworth started the second half with two goals, 47-47. From then, the UM moved to a 55-14 lead on a layup by Nash. The Jayhawks led the way, although Missouri tied the way, although Missouri tied the way, including 83-80, later in the game. The University of Kansas goes gymnastics, dual meet losing streak by defeating the University of Colorado gymnastics, squad They called down to us at the bench that Stallworth was two points out of record, Coach Ted Wensaln said. "We were trying to get the ball up." KU won five of the six events including a three-man sweep in the all-around. Marc Joseph took first place in the event with Al Overson taking second, and John Greenlee taking third greenlee. A baseline jumper put KU With its best score on the road this season, KU totaled 146.2 points compared to 133.45 for CU. had seven seconds to play, KU had the ball after a Missouri touchdown and already broken the Big Eight score points scored by Colorado's Cliff Meely against Oklahoma last year only the statisticians knew. "I thought he had something like 35," Owens said. Gymnasts Score Win Over Buffs Mark Mathews passed the ball to Stallworth, who was immediately fouled by Mike Jeffries. KU gymnastics coach Bob Lockwood was unavailable for comment after the meet. All-around - 1, Joseph K., KU, 47.5; 2, Overeager Grosseau, KU, 47.5; Overeager Iverson, OT, Quinton KU, and Greenlee KU, 8.5; 3 Marvin Pipes KU, Forkins KU, 8.5; 4 Ed Hatch CU, Forkins KU, 8.5; 5 Ed Hatch CU, 8.2; 6 Joseph KU, KU, 3 Mike Jones, CU, 8.2; 7 Joseph KU, KU, 3 Mike Jones, CU, Quinton KU, 3 Greenlee KU, 8.2; Parallel Burs - 1, Joseph K., KU, 47.5; 2, Overeager Grosseau, KU, 47.5; Overeager Iverson, OT, Quinton KU, and Greenlee KU, 8.5; STALLWORTH SANK the charities as the announcer informed the crowd of 15,200 that he set a conference scoring record "I didn't know how many I had until they announced it," Stallwyn said. "I knew I took a lot of shots." Stallworth's total of 50 is the second highest ever scored in a National League game, Chamberlain scored 52 in his debut against Northwestern and in his final home record is 56, set by Oscar Robertson against Arkansas in 1973. Stallworth's mother, Mrs. Isaac Stallworth, was in that room when Alice had seen him play in Alpine Field House Stallworth said. and Fred Boslevic also were in the stands. Mathews, Boslevic, Mask and Nash played their last game in Allen Field Houses Saturday. Mathews, the only one of the five who saw only limited reserve duty, played 72 seconds. He was in the game long enough at that point to have more three of the eight free throws KU to its 10-point winning margin. "It was a great way to finish here," Mathews said. "It doesn't matter how much you play when you win." THE PARENTS of Mathews MISSOURU (80) fig-fga ft-ta rb pf 6-16 7-9 6 4 15 8-16 6-4 6 4 22 Brown 9-15 5-7 12 13 5 23 Griffiths 8-15 5-7 12 13 5 24 Salmon 1-2 1-1 1 1 1 1 Salmon 1-2 1-1 1 1 1 1 Patterson 0-2 0-2 0 1 1 1 Blind 0-0 0-0 0 1 1 1 Blind 0-0 0-0 0 1 1 1 Totals 8-0 6-4 36 36 34 21 KANSAS (93) fissouri 43 37 - 80 ansas 41 52 - 93 Stainthow Biodiversity 19-54 20-63 21-64 rb pf qf Walkway 21-64 22-63 23-64 rb pf qf Biview 21-64 22-63 23-64 rb pf qf Nash 21-64 22-63 23-64 rb pf qf Barrow 21-64 22-63 23-64 rb pf qf Barrow 21-64 22-63 23-64 rb pf qf Fayette 21-64 22-63 23-64 rb pf qf Tayne 21-64 22-63 23-64 rb pf qf Tayne 21-64 22-63 23-64 rb pf qf Total 34.64 25.33 28 25 93 technical four-Missouri Turbovers Missouri 17, Kansas 14, Attendance 15,900 V Y our engagement— in Profile. The diamond, lifted to new light and beauty. VI 3-4266 Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. BULLFIGHTERS WANTED The roar of the crowd, the pretty senoritas, the charge of the bull. the "OLE" of the spectators. Prospective card carrying bullfighters watch this space. SENIORS The Deadline for Making Senior Picture Appointments is March Senior Pictures Must Be Taken Before March 10th Pictures Taken After This Cannot Be Included Make Appointments With HIXON STUDIOS 843-0330 SUA Films and Slavic Club Presents: Georgy Chakhrai's Ballad of a Soldier Russian Dialog with English Subtitles Monday, Feb. 28 7:30 p.m. Union Ballroom 75° Sunflower Surplus, inc. 815 Vermont 843-5000 ANNOUNCES WINTER CLEARANCE ON COATS & HATS N-38 Arctic Parkas 34.95 (were) 39.95 New Southland Parks 16.00 Navy Split hood Parkas Reversible Air Force Crewjackets 12.95 Reversible Air Force Crewjackets 12.95 Canadian Army Coats 27.50 (were 34.95) PACKS Pea Coats Swedish Army Hats 3.98 (were 5.49) PACKS FRAMES IF YOUR MIND ISN'T ON WINTER COATS, COME IN AND CHECK OUT OUR CAMPING LINE! TENTS . FIRST AID KITS AMM BOXES SLEEPING BAGS SLEEPING DAUS FOLDING SHOVELS AMMO BOXES GOGGLES VIETNAM & JUMP BOOTS U. S. ARMY MUMMY SLEEPING BAGS ETC. NYLON CORD CANTEENS COMPASSES STRETCHERS BANDANNAS AIR FORCE SUNGLASSES University Daily Kansan Monday, February 28, 1972 7 KU Women Place 2nd in Gym Meet Barbie Murrow Leaps in Floor Ex ... Winning Grandview swept the event ... Grandview College's one-two punch of Patty and Janice Dunning stole the show from the University of Kansas and Kansas women's gymnasies teams in meet Saturday in Robyn Gilmor The final score was Grandview 85.32, KU 79.85 and K-State 43.50. The final score accounted for 60.57 of Grandview's total points. Patty Duming took first in each of the four all-around with 32.12 points. Janiece Dunning won second place in every event except the third, where she scored Price finished second in that event. Price averaged 8.10 points per game. Intercollegiate fencing meets consist of 27 bouts, with each bout won worth one point for a team. We make up of nine fencers, with whom we compete in each of the three events, the foil, epe and sabre. Fencers must score five touches against their opponents to win a The University of Kansas fencing team edged past the team from the University of Missouri and won the triangular meet between KU, UMKC and the United States Air Force Saturday in Robinson Gym. KU Fencers Squeeze by UMKC,14-13 KU and UMK were tied, 13-13, going into the last bout, which was in the sabre event. KU won he bout, 5-2, to clinch the victor The Air Force Academy was the undisputed victor, defeating KU, 18-9, and tnouncing UMKC, 15-12. The Academy forfeited two UMKC after a dispute arose concerning the directing of an eau bpe. average awarded to a KU gymnast in the meet. "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Joanie Smith provided much of her training in place in both the vaulting and floor exercise events. Smith finished third in all-around with a score of 84.7. Shines Dyeing Refinishing Sue Tagg was the only other KU gymnast to finish in the top three in an event, taking third place on the balance beam. 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon K-State was outclassed by Grandview and KU. Dee Dimmerman of K-State managed third place in the uneven challenge. The Wildcats were buried at or near the bottom of the statistics. The Jayhawks stayed close behind Grandview throughout the meet, coming as close as 44.20-2.0 after outscoring Grandview vaulting. But the Dumbo duo won the top scores winning the top scores needed to catch the talented Grandview quad. Five days The women will take on Washburn University March 1 in Topeka. Their next home meet is March 11 against Wichita State. Saturday's loss snapped the women's unbeaten string at two wins. The Jayhawks are 2-1 in Midwest League competition. Floor Exercise-1, Patty Dunning, Grandview; 2. Jance Dunning, Grandview, 3. Debbie Beal, Grandview; Joan Smith, KU (the) Balance Beam-1. Patty Dunning, Grandview; 2. Janice Dunning. Grandview; 3. Sue Tagg, KU. J. Annie Dunning, Grandview-Beaver 2. Janie Dunning, Grandview- 3. Joan KU, KU Unveen Parallel Bars - 1. Patty Dunning Grandview- 2. Claire Dunning 3. KU, KU Open 24 hrs. per day Grandview; 2. Cindy Price, KU; 3. Dee Zimmerman, KSU. All-Around—1. Patty Dumpling, Grand- All-Around--1, Patty Dunning, Grandview, 32.125; 2. Janie Dunning, Grandview, 28.45; 3. Joan Smith, KU, 26.50. Team Score - 1, Grandview, 85.525; 2, KU 79.65; 3, KSU; 43.50 Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD THE MERCANTILE HERBS AND SPICES MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SAUSAGES Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Daily Daily Kanal are offered to all but one of its employees in color, creed, or national origin. Carol Lee One day 30 Varieties of Donuts Hot and Cold Drinks Sandwiches 5 a.m. 12 p.m. Tuesday, Sat. 5-5 Sun. 5-9 Mon. 5-9 Mon. 170-844 St. 842-3644 Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608. WANT ADS WORK WONDERS each additional word: $.01 days per week COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th FOR SALE DRIVE-IN MACHINE LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING WINDOWS 843-5304 25 words or fewer: $1.00 Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, 2. If you don't use them. Now you can buy stereo components ACTIVE WESTERN 10 Handling System BAUD AUDIO Prarie Avenue. The only free discount house in the midwest. 2E- It is not a disdainment the Etherius have to make. The analysis of Western Civilization." *Campus Madhouse,* 14th W. 14th H. **11f** Northside Country Shop, 707 North Street, Northside, NY 10536. Antiques. Used furniture, collection items, old wood cooking and heating tools, bicycles, bicycle wood, stoves, bicycles. Friendly wood, metals, and other useful items. Open to 12 days. Herb Altenberg. 842-269-1000. You're at an advantage. 2. If you don't. Independent COIN Laundry & Dry Cleaner COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631 Mamiya C 33, TLR. 80 mm f2.8 120/220, and sheet film. 843-8473. Jay. 2-28 Schwinn 10 speed, like new Only used for 3 months. Call 842-2065. 2-28 842-9450 use black cassette? Buy them cheap € 60 tapes reg. £250, our price $150. two tapes reg. £300 or $400. nine tapes reg. £90 or $140. Brew or Drew. 94-82-0209. 2-28 1965 Mustang 289 engine, 4 speed transmission, Call 842-2374 between 4 and 6 p.m. Ask for K2-28 1968 Firebird 400 convertible, 8-track player, hood-tack, air shocks. Call 843-4556 after $ 50. 2-29 1970 Newa SS 386-375 HP 4-speed, Basketball Court, Bucket Seats, Special Interior, A Machine. Also, extra long couch and room, $40 841-314 Call Paul. Chrystal Chandelier, Rose Medal Vase, Wainthall Table, Cast Set, Four Matching Chairs and Rocker Lamps, Glass Mirror, Mirror - Cup, KL in Eudora. 1968 Plym, Runner, 2 door hardtop, 383. 4 speed. Excellent condition. Call 843-7800 after 8 p.m. 2-29 ATTENTION SPORT BOAT BUFFS Attention, drag and ski boards. In service. Available in various states. Shipping. Available to buy Call John Webb at Webb.com or by call John Webb at Webb.com. Leather jackets are, here, cowboy Hawaiian flannel wool and in insanity shirts all under $25.1. Fashion feature of this shirt is the $20 have 20 jeans. 819 Vermont. $79 4. Czech Sting Bass, made 1900. 5. French Sting Bass, included case and booklets (2007). 6. Contact Ron Kling 913-362-2098 (KC) or UDK news room: 2-29 GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD, 64 volumes--$0.00. STORY ILLUSTRATION by Will and Arcil Durant. $0.00. BUILD at 81-7657. dik at 81-7657. KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days GUITARS — 1950 Les Paul. 1968 Pender Mustang, also 1971 Klusman 100 Watt Lead Amp. Chell' call Mike, 844-2342. 3-1 71 Toyota Mark II automatic, factory air, 8-track stereo. 13,300 miles. 842-7896 2-28 '71 Triumph TR 6, AM-FM radio, Mich X tires Make offer. 816 Maine. 842-7724. 2:28 SCHOOL BUS! $2. Chevy, $6. cyl. 2 rear axel rear, good for camper 5 rear axel rear, good for 1 University Sound 4-ethaned mixer, $7.90. CAM 844. 869-6869. Yamaha FG-300 Guitar, hard shell case, 5 months old, $175.98; Cal Richardson's Music Co. 842-0021, 3-1 King-size waterbeds. Guaranteed for five years. Full price, $1750. 841-2530, 308 W. 16th. 3-1 BLEVINS HONDA Auto Foreign Import, 62 Jaguar NXK, hardtop coupe, 300 miles since 1974. (50% off) Jaguar $1475 Paul Wold $520 92 W. 22-15 Topka, Perkea. phone 913-272-150 MONOCUCLAR MICROCSDPE = CASE, light case. Perfect for indoor cases. Light case. Perfect for indoor 210 KUCM, KIUMC, and HAIRMC 210 KUCM, KIUMC, and HAIRMC 863-6659 KAMILAS, K6415, or 93- 863-6659 1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks. Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication 1940 Buck, excellent condition. Only 64000 actual miles. Power steering. All-wheel drive. Snow removal car. Oil changed every 2,000 miles since new Call 812-9000 overnight Cycle Pick Up Service 843 2222 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES AKC Old English Sheep Pigs — 43 $175.00 to $350.00 delivery or K.C. Feb. 25. Call 625-6285 or Leigh L.Post. Leigh Plough, Kansas 61666 Kansas 61666 CALENDAR CALL UN4-4444 For SUA Events Toyota, 70, automatic, tape deck, real fine car $1.295. Call Bill, 843- 3473 Epiphone Rivera guitar double cutaway, two humbucking pickups, sunburst. Like new condition. Call 842-8057. 2-28 1971 Canis, 250, loaded, turbah-airy, air power, radio, 8-track stunner discs, rail, knife, whatd, good armor, communication call. Call 864-1202 anytime. - 3-1 TRY IT YOULL LIKE IT. Rent Winnebago motor home for winter vacations. Free Air Baggage. Free Alicia-Schaer Lawn care. 1-844-782-3541. 1-649-205-3550. 1-848-159-1591. 1-649-205-3550. HRUNSTONES — HRUNSTONES — HRUNSTONES — FRUIT FRUIT — FRUIT — NEW PINS; EARTHSHINE, EAST 80th & Mass. ARGYLE SOCKS FOLI THESE TIMES WHEN YOUR FEET SHOW FUR EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS 161 VW to 171 VW from $485 to $1,995. Bank financing, available. Jayhawk Volkswagen, 252a Iowa 843-2200 2-29 Stereo console - AM-FM stereo radio; record changer; 8-track tape. Looks and sounds good. $275. Call 842-9678. 3-2 NAISMITH CONTRACT — Single room contract. 842-6835. Reasonable. 0.00 MUST SELL 18 MONTHOLD ORIGIN SETTER. Male, have had shots. New- dog house, very gentle. Call 842- 9036 dog Tropical Fish Equipment Aquarium 50 gal. 3-1/8, 3-1/4" complete with graver, heater, plates, air pump, tank filler, filtration system. Films C48-8212-312 for 5.90-32.5 gal. Belt Cleanance — New F10 x 14 wide bitre cuts to $25, plus $25 W.E.T. Free installation at Ray Stoneback® 929 Mass. 3-2 Clip-on VHF bow tie antennas, $1.00 each at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-2 1971 Kawasaki dirt bike. Great condition. Must sell. $400. Also, tender Muttag and must carry fire condition. 82-472 between 4-8 p.m. 3-2-2 1968 Chevette SS, power brakes, power steering, air conditioning, automatic transmission, call 843-8625 between Catalin, call 843-8625 between 3-17 Truck 电话 1971 Honda CB 350, 2600 miles, excellent condition. 843-7006. 3-3 Minolta SHR 101, plus 3 Rokker lens, 58 mm 1.4 inch, 52 mm 1.35 and 35mm 1.55, includes eases, lens boots, cardboard stands, tripod, film finder, $350 or best offer, #843-876-32 House at 500 Ile for sale by owners, Sale price $46,200. woodwork, 4 walk-in closets, 12' bathrooms, 2 bedrooms, park, parkway, good school. Dirt corner lot with car lot. Price $16,500. 843-806-0000 66 Corvete cony. Blue, 427 cu in, 4-speed, AM FM radio, luggage rack, excellent engine. Call after 6 p.m. 842-7250. 3-3 For SUA Events Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court Craig's Fina and U-Haul 843-9694 Pickens Auto Parts 26th & Iowa Ph. V13.13537 500 E.23rd WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH THE TOUGH GET GOING 1963 RENAULT DAUPHINE. 35 miles in the galley. Perfect knot-around car. $125.00. Call 843-5876 evenings. 3,1 and Service Parts at a discount TONY'S IMPORTS- DATSUN FOR RENT LOVE THAT DATSUN I EMERALD, CITY LEATHER, FEAR Emerald City Leather Fear $50.00 Plan or curved bower $50.00 Fresh hummus bread $25.00 Marketplace bread MARKET, BROOK 222 HILLVIEW APARTMENTS — 1735-43 $10 to $190 for $210 and one apartment. Carpeted, elevator, large living room with much of much more expensive apartment. Broadway. WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester. 1-bedroom furnished. 1/2 bath furnished or unfurnished. Parking. Patio or balcony. West Hills Apartments—The place to live in Lawrence. Catch 24 hours a day 8:31-6:59. For rent-one or two bedroom apts, rent one or two bedroom garbage room, all electric, all furnish- tion, color T V to V available. Call 412-360-8975 for Apts Apple Apts 24th and Ridge Court COLLEGE HILL MANOR now available 1 and 2 bedroom floor units in A-C, new dishwashers, w/ earlts, distance to campus. Call $82-530-4967 or email us at collegehillmanor@comcast.com Ridge House Apts—for the budget households. The apts are the maximum and the minimum at best, in town, HR 1, and 2 bedrooms, and room for up to eight. 116 for detail 409 Cordedwood— a three-bedroom apt. SENIORS University Terrace Apartments furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $110 and up, or rentals for up to $130. Apt. 18, B or call, 843-143-59 842-0444 ITS NEVER TOO LATE and it is a long time from Jan. to May to live at attractive One call to Mrs.Forsyth at 202-7A Harvard Road and you can rent the facilities available in Lawrence best located and most attractive campgrounds and Missouri; Avalon Apartments, Apartment Iowa & Harvard Lots of Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of soundproof construction, pleasing and central a/c and unfertilized, and central c/a and reasons you would enjoy living there make this semester in Lawrence a location for August occupancy and locations for August occupancy can be arranged too! 3-5 Attractive, large room 2 blocks west of campus. Quiet. A-C, carpeted, private. Bath, refinishing, entrance, light fixtures. Clean, clean male toilet, maps. 843-727-8181. Rockledge Villa, Limited offer first month rent free. Poor credit may apply. Valid with nigh- titled apt. with all utilities paid. Credit card required. Cash paid. o.m. 843-7731. 3-16 2 bedroom home with basement, fenched back yard, unfurnished $125.00 month. Edmunds Real Estate 801-842 or 842-7462 3-1 Would you like something a little out of the ordinary in an apartment? If so, make sure you are new until school is off. Fireplaces, panelling, lighting, $90/mo. Call NOTICE House for rent: 2 bedrooms, refrigerator and stove included, carpeted, unfurnished. Call: 843-4242 or 842- 1300 2-29 摄影 For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center tf. 864-4441. Last chance to call for appointments for your 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURES. Call before MARCH 1st UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright (816) 474-4676 tt Hixon Studio 10 a.m. 5 p.m. Tony's 66 Service LOUISVILLE, Kansas 60644 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 School Pictures Before March 10th Pictures Taken After This Cannot Be Included Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service Phone 843-0330 for Appointmen for appointment. INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-769-8000. Professional care for children in newborn to 12-mon. Or part-time at 12-mon. Designated婴童护理室. 3-11 DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe Leave aviation from N.Y., or go by bus to Washington IDS issued. Flight Center, 27 North Radium, Madison, Wisconsin $150 (1) TEE FEEM PRIVATE PARTY CLUB. Welcome back student, IV party members. We will host for second semester team meeting for second semester team party members. Nice band stand, black headband, nice gown. We also have special rates for meetings. Phone or contact Jodie Holland at Tee Feem College Service Department, 301 W. Broadway, Boston, Massachusetts 642-8528. After meeting, phone 642-8528. Women's alterations, 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:20 5-13 Spend this summer working in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to ColoradoGolf.com or mail resume 302-648-2012, Boulder, CO 80322 Marianne H. BAR-B-Ques. 515 Mile, 81 Outdoor Club. Bar-B-Ques. 515 Mile, 81 Outdoor Club. Bar-B-Ques. 515 Mile, $200. Nisk or pork ribs $200. $30. Small lobt plate $45. $45. Large lobt Plate. $500. Broiled fish $500. Broiled Braket. Fruit-$180. Open 11am. Coffee $190. Phone 812-367-5155. Sit-Down $37. SWINGING COATS AND CAPES FOR SPRING, THE ALLEY SHOP. 843 MASS. 2-28 Used BOKONOG is where to buy clothes in the city. The clothes are white, wool and Hawaiian shirts, around. velvet Vermont shirt. So it goes. 2-19 Vermont QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Q When is a home a good investment? Town House Town House. Q: Who can invest in a town house? A: Either the young family or an older family. Rating and a small downpayment can move into a Town House Town House. Q: Town House Town house will require some program. For further questions ask someone to help you buy the Town House Townhouse. Afterfter call Dd问 how can you help me buy the Town House Townhouse. FOUND. New ski kits on Jayhawk Bld. Feb. 21, 8:00 p.m. To claim, identify make, size, color, price, and date of your Christmas gift. 372-329, 600-pm. SALE GOES ON 59% OFF ON BELTS & SWEATERS SHIRTS AND OTHER REDUCTIONS EARTH- SHINE, EAST 81st & Mass 2-3 STUDY EXPERIANTO the international language, in Portland for four weeks. Info Information International Expersanto Expersito here 29 July to 5 August. A unique opportunity to experience international language. Information: Summer Sessions, University of Portland, Portsburgh, United States Tutoring in organic and biochem. Call with tutoring experience. Call Rich at 841-3124 or 864-3549. 2-29 Used Motorola portable, sold new for $149.90, new only $50 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-2 Trade-in special-50-Watt Magnasox FM receiver, one-year-old, $100 at Ray Stonehack's. 929 Mass 3-2 2224. Ohio 2. two experienced nursery school teachers after complete day care for children 3-4. All pre-school schools have a registration rate of 83.125; number of beds 3-10 FOUND: Speckled pup with black spots. Looks like hunting dog. Call 842-6980. Dorna. 2-28 WANTED Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 3-7 STUDENTS: FOR YOUR Medical, Chemical, Scientific, Graphic & Commercial Illustrating needs! CABAY ARTS Red Baron WANTED EARLY MODEL JEPJC JCRA JEJRS IF-POSSIBLE. Any condition considered. Call after 0:00 p.m. 842-4026 35 mm. SLR camera: Miranda Senoze, Canon FI-QL, Pentax Spotmatic, Nikromat FT or Minolta SR-T 10 preferred. Call 843-875-3 31-1 Girl roommate or couple to share 2 first bedroom. Unfurnished or furnished at both + extra cost. Workplace. Call Patricia at 842-625-300 REWARDING SUMMER for sophomore and college students, the children of backpackers, children hiking, backpacking, economy many groups, and birthers of western Campus, Florence, Calif. ATTENTION TWINS 18 years and older study to answer health questionnaire Want to buy: Old piano, banjo, string bass, Marshall amp, musical vender, Fender jazz or pro键盘. bass, guitar. Connigment 842-6623 Connigment 842-6623 PERSONAL Kuney Key Press-Job printing from leaders to posters, books to brochures and resumes. 700 Mass. in back cover. Zero Open. In book it is 8:43 a.m. 842-4883. POETRY WANTED for anthology by Andrew W. Schwartz velope for prompt reply. Send to: IDLEWILD PRESS, 1807 East Hawthorne Road, Los Angeles, CA 90021 October 2023 BECAUSE is a listening room. It is open every night, 8-12 p.m. Sun through Thurs., Fri, and Sat, 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. 843-9652 2-29 LONG DRESSES FOR PARTIES THAT ARE SUPER THE ALLY SHOP 843 MASS 2-28 When you don't know where else to turn, call 864-3506. The University Information Center. 24 hours a day. everyday. 2-25 Dear Rip-off. Keep black briefcase! Return class, learn and the thesis notes to Union失伤 and found, first floor candy counter P.S. I love you. 3-1 NOSTALGIA — NEW OLD CLOTHES EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS. TYPING PUNK BUNNY RABBITS AND BLUE SNAILS ARE EVERYWHERE — THINK? EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS. 3-2 Experienced typist will type your term paper, theses or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call, Work I3-3288, MaukmanR. THE CONCORD SHOP - ARTIST CANVAS Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention. 843-0958. 2-29 - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz. pts. - qts. only. 25% OFF - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock —others on order Mass-The Mallis McCONNELL LBR. CO. 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 CSC TOXYTA 1NUMPH Competition Sports Cars Inc Sports Cars Inc. Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Forest Farming Place Our motto is and has always been There is no substitute for quality JY 1. Maitland north of the Kaw River Bridge Phone (851) 1423 Telephone Open 10am Closed Monday 2300 W. 29th Ft. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Hillcrest—KU Union Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!! Phone 843-1211 Maupintour travel service Experienced in typing theses, dissertations and papers. Have electric typewriter with pen type. Accurate and prompt serps writing. Req. Phone: 843-954-854, Mr. Wright Accurate typing of your thesis, dissertation, or miscellaneous work on IBM Selective typewriter font. IBM 3400 typewriter, #901 400 page, Court, 824-1440 for information, 2-29 HELP WANTED Wanted - Figure models -- Amateurs welcomed -- No experience necessities. Hire paid, $75-$100 per person. Hare paid, $75-$100 per person. Hare paid, $75-$100 per person. Kansas Need 2. R-N's for 11-7 shift, Contact Director of Nursing, Ramson Mem- orial Hospital, Ottawa, Kansas 3-2 LOST Now taking applications for wait- ing jobs must be attractive and enjoy- able. Must be attractive and enjoy- able with people and be able to work in a team with people and be able to work even when it will need to. Applicants must be a junior sum- mer and following school year and have a bachelor's degree in compensation is excellent. Phone number of employer is preferred. What do you do between 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. If you have a car and would like to earn $3.00 an hour, call 842-7906 for details. 3-2 Lost in ladies lounge of Union: gold-filed ring, cloudy blue stone; tape wrapped. Mon. Feb. 14. Call 864-1331 after 5.20. THE HIT in the WALL 1 pr. Achilles ski boots in white box. Black with silky buckle size. 9 lost. Jayhawk Blvd. Mlnd 26-8 to 10 pm. If foot is 483-2543 MISCELLANEOUS BRIDAL, GOWN Sample Sale—Size 10-12, up to 75% off, Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, #910 Kentucky. DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order 843.7465—We Deliver — 9th & 11th Kansan Classifieds Work For You! RAMADA INN Figure Sale Salen Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9, Sat, til noon. Spacious room. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free home advice. Scrimmage activities. 843 8500 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS --- 928 Mass 8 Monday, February 28, 1972 University Daily Kansan RICAN Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO Kansas Staff Photo by ED LALLE Kites Popular Sunday The fascination of the balmy breezes caused this KU student to join hundreds of others in the traditional pattice of kite AURH to Consider Change in Funding The Presidents Council of the ACA and its Security Residence Hall (AURH) consider tonight a proposal to remove the presence of condemnation The proposal, by Mike Sawelow, made him junior, and AURH president, would shift association funding directly to the resident activity Sundermeyer said such a move would make AURH "independent and set it up permanently." The proposal calls for a 50 cents allocation per student from a $13 million fund that would remind would go to the halls' governing bodies. AURH would also receive 50 cents from what would be paid to the teachers. Sundemereer said it was Sundermeyer said it was possible that the change could be made for the 1973-74 school year. The budget for next year is already fixed, said Sundermeyer, but he said that it could be made to fit the proposed program. action taken last week, AURA set a new guideline for the selection of candidates. A list of applicants will be submitted to the residence hall, where each applicant will be admitted to the course of the hall in which he is living. The evaluations and application then will be given to an interviewing committee who will make the final decision on acceptance. The committee will be made up of a representative from the dean of men or the dean of women, the resident director of the hall, a representative from the guidance bureau from the college within a program and two students. Student Senate Slate Announced By JIM KENDELL Kansan Staff Writer The election committee will try to set up additional polling places this week for the March 15-16 election besides the traditional polling场 at Strong Hall, Summerfield Hall and the Additional Polling Places Sought At a meeting Friday afternoon, the election committee members decided to send a letter this week to the Unorganized Housing Association, University Residence Halls, All Scholarship Hall Council, Pannellinie Association, Interfraternity Council, and school councils asking them if they are interested in sponsoring a polling Each group will be asked to provide a place for the poll and people to run it. Each will also be given the opportunity when the polls should operate. R. L. "Puff" Bailey, Aitchison graduate student and temporary elections committee chairman, said the committee was trying to increase participation in the race by increasing the number of candidates. He said that although additional ballot boxes might have been purchased to spend money on ballot boxes than advertisements in the Kansan. Hill B 'Oell, Ballwin, Mo., wrote in a letter that treasurer, released the names of the 153 candidates for Student Records that are listed for class office on Friday. Fifty-two senatorial candidates were members of Commitment party. The Commitment slate included Sen. Patricia Hutchinson junior, running for student body president, and Sen. Pauliphomore running for vice-president. Forty-five senator candidates filed membership of the party. The party was led by Mohammad Amim, president for Iran, as Mike McGowan, Western Springs, III, sophomore, running for vice-president. Six candidates filed on the Birthday Party ticket. The Birthday Party is running Joe Landelt, a former U.S. president and Mike Schoenleber, Four candidates filed as Oliver Caitation independents and three independent dependent Oliver Party. Fifty-three independent files in the trial. Twenty-five candidates filed 15 weeks in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Beka University Commitment, Brandon Jie Boot, Lawrence University Kan., Kanyon, Ikopomede, K.U.S.F., Kansas City, Ks., Kupokopomede, K.U.S.F., Kansas City, Ks., Min. Justice Court, Cowdenville, Mo., Min. Justice Court, Topeka, Ks., Murrayville, Mo., Min. Justice Court, Lawrence University, Independent, Paul C. KU.S.F., Lynne A. Priewald, Lawrence University, Independent, Louen Goververa, Grayton, Overland Park Junior College, Independent, Louen Goververa, Grayton, Overland Park Junior College, Independent, Louen Goververa, Grayton, Overland Park Junior College, College Commitment, Kevin Harts, Pittsburgh junior college, College Commitment, Kevin Harts, Pittsburgh junior college, College Commitment, Kevin Harts, Pittsburgh junior college, College Commitment, Kevin Harts, Pittsburgh junior college, College Commitment, Kevin Harts, Pittsburgh junior college, College Commitment, William O. Willis, Lewistown, Overland Park Junior College, College Commitment, William O. Willis, Lewistown, Overland Park Junior College, College Commitment, Nichol S. Schwartz, Overall Fifteen candidates died from Centenial Hospital, Centennial Hospital, Freshman Hospital, Centennial Committee; man. KU SIP, Eastman Mishan, man. KU SIP, Eastman Mishan, man. KU SIP, Eastman Mishan, freshman. U.S.P. Lawrence Mishan, independent, Mike KU SIP, Robert A. Green, Glewitt, V. KU SIP, Robert A. Green, Glewitt, Shawne Mishan, independent, Michael Commencement, McLea McLaughlin, middle school Nothing Mason City, middle school Nothing Mason City, Grady Dery, freshman, independent, dependent, Natalie Robb, Lexa O'Grady, Derly Thirteen candidates died in North College during the fall semester. Minn., sophomore, independent, Matt Burkley, Nitha sophomore, North Committee, North Committee, North Committee, North Committee, Dain, Merriott sophomore, Independent, North Committee, North Committee, North Committee, Nitha sophomore, North Committee, North Committee, Party Creation, Baldwin manhattan party, Party Creation, Baldwin manhattan party, Birthday Party, Baldwin manhattan party, Lawrence sophomore, independent, Edwin Meyer, sophomore, independent, Stephanie Strubble, Glance Ten candidates fled for three weeks in Iraq, where they fought against ISIS. Sophieokoreme hostage Party: Frank Ferguson, Drug Abusers Assisted At Watkins, Headquarters Although there is a growing force for the heroin and other drugs on many college campuses, cases in Kentucky are numerous at KU, Dr. Raymond Schweger, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, said. Several cases each week were brought in, he said, but there were very few student alcoholics. The treatment for someone who has had too much to drink is relatively simple. The patient is put to bed and watched. Not all treatments are that simple. Four people are now instructed to use methadone treatment center; according to Schwegler, people who are addicted to heroin are also instructed to methadone as a replacement. Although methadone itself is an addictive drug, it is not as langerous as heroin, according to Schwegler. A smaller dose of methadone may be safer, said he, and the withdrawal from methadone is not as severe as the Wichita sophomore, for vice-president. withdrawal from heroin. At Headquarters, Sibler said, when a person is suffering from a physical overdose, he is imminent. The most common type of overdose, however, is the psychological overdose, he said. Sibler said that this type of case be handled at Headquarters. MOST OF THE time, he said, people who were having trouble handling a drug call Headquar- ter of the police in the city members. Silber said that there were always two people in the police station is open 24 hours a day. Silber said that the number of calls received by Headquarters had increased. Between September and November of 1971, he said, Headquarters received 350 calls from the members of the team who received 440 calls, and in January of 1972, they received 360 calls. He said that he hoped this was a sign that more people were aware that Headquarters existed and that there were people who could help. Mexico's renowned Ballet Folkorico will present a dance and music building ceremony of the ancient OLMEC civilization to the lively contemporary folk dances of the cultural heritage 8-20 PM at the Mexico Cultural Center. Silber said that the use of all drugs was increasing. Even in Lawrence, he said, the use of antibiotics to treat the University, but had spread to the high school and even to the junior high. Again, the hallucinogens and barbiturates of the drugs most commonly used Both Silber and Schwegler said that law enforcement agencies in Lawrence were sympathetic with the problems of drug abuse. They said that the law enforcement had never asked officials or Watkins to divulge the names of drug users under treatment. The Ballet Folkorico, a company of 75 dancers, singers, and musicians was founded in 1968 by the dance director, director of the company. Included in their concert course performance will be the YAQUI Indian hunters, "Los YAQUI" Indian hunters, traditional children's dance. Ricil Siber director of headquarters, said Thursday that the attack was the most serious problem that he saw, the use of barbed wire. Mexican Ballet To Perform Hum Tenth Campus Bulletin AT HEADQUARTERS, INC., an organization funded partially by the Student Senate, the drugs and PCP, both haloquinone DBD and PCP, both haloquinone Russian Table: 2:30 p.m. Meadowlark Cafeteria. Political Science: 6:30 p.m., English Room. **Journal Club:** 11:30 a.m. Alicove B. **Education Administration:** 11:30 a.m. Alicove B. **Speech and Drama:** 11:30 a.m. Alicove B. **National Museum of Natural History:** noon, English *Marital and Soviet Area*, noon, Curry *Campus Christians:** 11:30 a.m. Alicove B. *Harlensian Lectures:** 11:30 a.m. Alicove B. *Russian Table:** 2:30 p.m. Downtown Miriam Rowse, 6:30 p.m. English Room. Microbiology: 6:30 p.m. Curry Room. Microbiology: 6:30 p.m., Curry Room. McGovern Commemoration: 7:15 p.m., Oread China Forum: 7:30 p.m., Forum Room Concert Course: 8:20 p.m., Hoch Auditorium. Museum Without Walls Film: 7:30 p.m. Union Ballroom. SUAE Special Film: 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. Burglaries Create Problems For Greeks, Residence Halls According to Harrell, a list of names remained in the bails during the breaks could be made available to the police and to the students By ROGER FULK Kansan Staff Writer BY RUGER FULK He said he would like to see the students work with the police to prevent further crime in the halls. SOME OF THE residents directors of the residence bails thought Harrell's idea was worth consideration. Break-ins at residence halls and fraternity and sorority clubs are a problem in school year is a problem not only to students and University of Texas students, but also to Vernon Harrell, a detective at the police department. There were so few people who stayed at McColm during college. Someone did manage to get in the building, they could probably go unnoticed. Harrell said recently that bring broken school year, when most students leave Lawrence, the residence halls were especially unacceptable to him. Carol Mock, resident director of McColm said she thought it was a "great idea," but that there was a drawback to the plan. K.U.P.S. Paul Ranak Lawrence sophomore, Numerator's counsel; magnate, University of Georgia, independent; Robert S. Warren, Edgerron sophomore, Numerator's counsel; Young, Alison Lawrence, Numerator Wright said students who wished to stay during breaks paid extra because the extra time wasn't in their contracts. The team would hire to hire an entire staff to work during the break's. TRUDY SHAY, resident might be Hashinger, said it didn't help the student he would volunteer to the area. She said, however, that student patrols would be good to be good to the students provided. Doors were checked to make sure they were locked before staff got into the gate. All was allowed past the first door. Because of this, Wright said. The security at Nakshmil Hall is tight during breaks, according to Chris Wright, resident director. Those in charge of McColum have tried to maintain as much security as they could over breaks. He suggested that those students who did remain in Lawrence could then take shifts and patrol the halls at night. If they shouldn't be in the building, they should inform the police. work in kinds that require open: she said it might be difficult though, to choose which students could best handle the patrolling Ellsworth Hall is closed during weeks because so few students there attend class. Hanson, resident director of Ellsworth, thought the idea might work. Eighteen candidates for four seats in the New York State Park commission, K.U.S.P. *D* Don Altham, New York State Park commission, K.U.S.P. *D* John Bethea, Sailor freshman, J.D. students rooms were not accessible to non-residents during breaks. Maurice Barnes, vice president of the company, said most valuable items in the house were either taken home by the members or given to a family member. In early January, the house was partially open due to students moving back after the Christmas break. During that time several check books, books and other small items were stolen. NANCY MCEIL, president of the NANCY MCEIL Phorotory, which has suffered a Christmas, said the person who committed the robberies entered the house. Barnes said the biggest problem the fraternity had was that their house was old and had a hard time finding it, which made it easy to break into. CATHY BROWN, president of Alphi Chi Omega sorority, said that during registration this week she noticed a man in one robbery. During the same week, a man had been seen loitering around the building. The man was on patrol, and police who then patrolled the area around the sorority house. McNeil said locking doors earlier and making sure that all of the doors were locked would allow what to prevent further robberies. Nineteen candidate filled for four positions: Benjamin Deborah L. Brooks, Leavenworth Dearborn H. L. Brooks, Leavenworth Reginald Brown, Kansas City, Kan. James Sloff Hall S.D., sophomore, independent. Shauna Stinson Mission sophomore, independent. K.U.S.P. Thomas Poster, Kansas City, Kan. Steven Mishon Mission sophomore, independent. Shauna Mishon Mission sophomore, independent. K.U.S.P. Steven Hogan, St Louis Mon., western Springs, Ile. freshman. Western Springs Ile. freshman. Pearson Commitment, Greenville sophomore. Pearson Commitment, Greenville sophomore. McKe Ridge Sophomore. McKe Ridge Sophomore. Pearson Commitment, Westerville sophomore. Pearson Commitment, Westerville sophomore. Bennett Park, Law. Penn State Mission sophomore. Shawna Mishon Mission sophomore. Shawna Mishon Mission sophomore. Caitlin candidates filled for two weeks in the Fresno Football team Commitment, Bard Martin. Oberlin junior, independent; Bordner assistant, junior education. El Paso, Texas. Smith, El Dorado junior, independent; Smith, El Dorado. Dodge City student, independent. The candidates filed for ten seats in the Kansas. Kansas City, Kan., Kenyon, Education Center, and Washington, D.C. colleges and universities, oversee Parks and Recreation, Overland Park, University of Kansas, Patriot Green, Topkapira, Patriot Green, Patriot Green, Topkapira Newspaper Fund Chooses Students Two KU journalism students will work as copiers for the metropolitan newspapers this summer in supersites of the newspaper Fund. Three freshmen fled for asphorite treasurer J. Arndt, Topeka, A.R.C., Steve Baur, Overland Park, W.T.C.; and Barbara Haman, Crewe, Cour, M.U.S. Joyce Neerman, Kansas City Kan, junior and copy chief for the Kansan, Ginnie Mieke, Omaha junior, are among 75 college juniors throughout the country who have been selected for summer newspaper jobs as reporters and copieditors. Eight candidates filed in the School of Education dissertation submission appointee, Fine Arts Commission, Randy Dempsey, Fine Arts, freshman, KU $ U U Bruce Dempsey Neerman will work for the Dallas Morning News and Micke will work for the Kansas City Times. The Newspaper Fund is supported by Dow Jones and Company, publisher of the Wall Street Journal. TOPEAK A (AP)—Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge, chair of the Republican Committee, said Thursday the Republican committee has taken action to have committee take action in the "power equalizing" school finance plan before the GOP succeeds caucus decides how to fund it. Commitment, Burt Kretzer, Leaveneath Land, Joel G. Kretzer, Usher Chan- ley, Langer, Carrage, Pa. dependent, Clement Moore, Lawrente dependent, Emmett Moores, Lewiston Springs III., sophomore, Fine Arts Com- pany Three candidate files filed for 17 weeks in the Court. Brian Baker, Bariwan, Barbara Brown, Khalil Mahmoud, Khairy Khan Nakhan, Teram, Iran, graduate student. Nigeria, Nigeria, graduate student. Sapela, Nigeria, graduate student. Seven candidates died in the School of Journalism for one week. Venice Chambers, Haitian Republisher, Heurtres, Valley Fail sophomore, Impalae Hickeyson, Dmen Thelen, Malcolm McDowell, Kristen Kruiser, CJUS Cajan Journalism Committee, Jennifer Johnson, Journalism Committee, and Krissa Journalism Committee. Two candidates for Indiana, independent, two candidates for Kentucky, independent, lawrence Richard Markadew, trustee, first year law student, independent, and Stephen Morgan, Lawrence first law year student. Debbee Ruttenberg, Des Plains, IL. F.C. FLL for junior vice-president, and Dave Murffa, Wichita, F.C.C. flied for junior treasurer five candidates filed for two seats in the House. Republican candidate, senior, independent. Steve Ackermann, Cochran, HutchisonJunier, K. S.P. Fox, Pete Mulvey, Paul Wheeler, Craig Kraig, Craig Tulsa, Tulsa, Okla. MINNESOTA COUNTY BID, MCC. C. Four candidates filed for junior class offices including a partial state, "First Class Coalition" (F.C.C.) Three freshman field for top embassies in the U.S. and Europe, including Mark McConnell (Tupelo, I.C.) and Mark McConnell (Tupelo, I.C.), president of Amber Alert, Shawn Mosson, president of Two-Fish, and two freshmen field for top embassies in the U.S. and Europe. no candidates filed in the two School of Engineering and Computer Science for independent, and Diane Keffler Raft. Staff members also have a partial share site filed for nomination to the "Unified Signature Council" (U.C.S.R.) of the University of Maryland. Cannon 1963-71 Two candidates filed for junior prestoes: Bandon, Kansas City, Mo. Independent and Kali Skehnauer, Prairie Village, Fla. two晨煲 menf for sophomore secretary. Ann Dillon, Hutchinson, U.S.C. and Sue Lumax, Topeka, R.C.A. Three Jessica Bliss, U.S.C. Dwight Boring* says... Ten candidates filed for senior class of fice includes two full states, "Action Alliance" (A.A.) and "Unification for Higher Education" (U.H.E.). representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA filed a partial state ...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men "You'll find the best answer to your life insurance problems—both now and later—in College Life's famous college men's policy, The Bene-factor. Let me tell you about it." 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 PETER HUCKLEBURN Four candidates died for senior class president: John Hackney, Whelan, U.H.C.; Harriet Harris, Rockland Park, independent; and John Mangan, Holland, III and John Mangan, Holland, III. *Dwight Boring two candidates filed for senior class vice president. Satie Cowan, Kansas City, Mo. U.H.C., and John Wulf, Morton Grove, III.A. two candidates bid for senior seer Nair, Anasuna, Anaasauna, U.B.C. and Nair, Anasuna, Anaasauna, U.B.C. Two candidates bid for senior treasurer Nel Shorttis, Chicago, IL, A.A., and Alaia, Chicago, IL. A !!BULLETIN!! EXTRA DAY SALE! TOMORROW Feb.29,1972 This Sale Only Occurs Once Every Four Years. Do Not Miss It. Watch Tomorrow's UDK for Details MISTER GUY 820 MASSACHUSETTS Clothing Consultants l THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OD Staff Tells Paper's Story See Page 5 82nd Year, No. 95 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Tuesday, February 29, 1972 10 Kansen Photo by MALCOLM TURNER Workmen Bring in Reinforcements of Steel Construction workers carry steel wire to be used for floor reinforcement in the new Wesley Hall. Completion of the multimillion dollar project would allow the use of this favorable weather has been greatly appreciated not only by the Wesco laboratories but also by sidewalk superintendents as well. Tarr Criticizes Amnesty WASHINGTON (AP) — Selective Service Director Curtis W. Tarr told senators Monday that granting amnesty to Vietnam would be un判 in and set a dangerous precedent. Tarr told Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's judicial subcommittee that the induction system could be wrecked by granting total military power to those exile rather than fight in Vietnam. He said it could jeopardize the safety of the nation in future conflicts, set a dangerous precedent of selective acceptance of laws and be unfair to men willing to enter the armed forces when drafted. "The nation would accept a precedent for permitting the evasion of Selective Service law that might some day be an unwelcome tradition." Tarr said. Tarr said he would instruct draft boards to give these men a chance to reopen their draft status, but Selective Service officials said the number is not likely to be large. However, he said, some Americans who fled the country and were not under indictment might have since become victims of government misconduct status because of Supreme Court decisions. Kennedy who said the United States has become a creator of political exiles rather than a haven for them, criticized Tarr's administration of the Selective Service under reform legislation passed two years ago. The Massachusetts Democrat accused the system of showing "a willingness to unduly sacrifice the right of registrants to the ease of its own operations." While estimates of those who have left the country rather than face the draft have ranged up to 70,000 and the number of applicants has fallen from 20,000 to 14,000, Tarr said 6,000 draft registrants face possible prosecution. He said that if they were not penalized, it would be difficult to get them into the job market. Tarr said the induction process might not be harmed by the proposal of Sen. Robert Tait, I-Osho, to grant amnesty if he is found to have committed either induction or alternative service. But such a bill would be grossly unfair. he said, to 2.5 million men and women who were Vietnamese and to those still being drafted. He said he could go no further than President Nixon, who said recently that no amnesty would be considered until the war and all American prisoners were returned. "How much of a penalty are we going to ask these people to pay?" Kenneth asked, asking if he would be willing. country are getting much of a "free ride." "Most of the political leaders of this country are asking for amnesty from their past positions on war and they're going to publicly to public to try to get it," Kennedy said. Tarr replied later that he believes "that when the authority to induct expires, the can embark on a careful examination of the full problem of amnesty." KU Strikers to Retain Jobs, Oldfather Rules Student picket lines did not appear in front of Strong Hall Monday in light of a statement by Charles Oldfather, University of Kansas attorney, that striking civil service workers would not be discharged from their jobs. University administrators had threatened to discharge striking employees under a Kansas law which says civil service employees off their jobs for five consecutive days without excuse can be considered to have abandoned their jobs. Picket lines manned by students sympathetic to the striking workers had appeared Friday in front of Strong Hall, when university administrative offices located Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, said resignation papers would not be processed for striking and would said they would not be paid for days absent. Referring to the five-day rule, Oldfather said. "We do not find the regulation sufficiently definitive to justify treating the employees as having resigned." Oldfather also asked the state attorney general's office for an opinion on the status of civil service employees who have been off the job, some for eight daws. A new labor law is scheduled to go into effect Wednesday which prohibits strikes Oldfather explained that his letter requested the attorney general's "advice and directives about what posture the attorney should take when he goes into law goes into Wednesday morning." An estimated 100 workers continued picketing at various campus sites Monday, but the University's action drew favorable reaction from them. Some of the striking employees said last week they were not worried about being fired by the University, and that they were so disheartened through court action if they were discharged. by civil service employees. It also calls for a statewide labor agency to employee representation. KU's Spring Enrollment Increases 3.4 Per Cent At issue with the employees is a pay raise approved in November of 1970 that was to go into effect July 1, 1971. The University did not provide the money for the raises. There are 2,873 freshmen enrolled, a per cent decrease from last spring. But there are only 15.7 per cent higher than last spring. Junior enrollment is down 619 from last spring. Taking tacit note of conservative criticisms of his Taiwan pledge, Nixon said he returned to the Capitol that Paul was "reinforced into to decide the fate of any nation. Nixon Returns Home Lauding Peace Work WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nixon returned Monday night from his historic mission to China, defending his pledge to ultimately withdraw all U. S. forces from Taiwan, and proclaiming his journey had made an occasion for a new structure of world peace. He said that it was due to students dropping out because of financial or scholastic problems. Addressing a crowd of several thousand jammed into an airport hangar—and a national television audience—Nixon traced the details of the communique that was issued after his unprecedented talks with Chinese leaders. He repeated a phrase he used several times in China—"Peace is too urgent to wait for centuries. We must seize the moment and move toward that goal now." The numbers of seniors are fairly constant, according to Conard. He said a KU degree was prized and even though students go to other schools in the country, they still come to KU for their senior year. The figures show eight more seniors than last year. Affirms Taiwan Exit Nixon noted the devotion of the Chinese to their way of government, but said: "I come back to America with an even greater sense of faith in our system of government." There are 635 more students enrolled at the University of Kansas, than at this last year, an increase of 3.4 per cent to officials in the registrar's office. "THAT IS what we have done on this journey," Nixon said. He said—without giving specifics—that a procedure had been set up to continue discussions with Chinese leaders in the future. He expressed hope that as a result of his trip 'our children will have a better chance to thrive'. The object, Nixon said, was to "talk about differences rather than fight about them." Enrollment figures show 19,116 students this spring, compared with 18,461 last year. The figures represent Lawrence and Kansas City campuses. we don't bring back any ... until we get to the point of unwitting peace in our time," he continued. There is no magic formula, Nixon said, but "we have made some necessary and important changes." AGNEW, in welcoming Nixon, said "Because of your visit, the Chinese and American people stand further removed from the confrontation the world has feared for decades. We feel easier tonight because of your trip." then, With vice President Spiro T. Agnew at their side, they walked along the ranks of congressional leaders, Cabinet officers and diplomats to the platform Nixon faced the television cameras and the crowd jammed into the large hanger. HE INWOKED the "seize the moment" statement—similar to Chairman Ma Tsetting's phrase "Seize the hour"—when he planted in China a tree planted in China by the U. S. party. Although an increase from last spring, it is a drop of 4.8 per cent for the Lawrence campus from last fall. As President and Mrs. Nixon stepped from the blue-and-white presidential jet, the "spirit of '76," the Army herald trumpeters sounded ruffles and flourishes, and he was the nation's most national anthem and other martial music with five other service bands, joining in. "There were no secret deals of any kind" reached during his talks, Nixon said. As the chief executive stepped before television cameras to report to the nation, he was under criticism from conservatives upset by his pledge that U.S. troops The growth of a redwood takes centuries, Nixon said, "so we hope that the seeds planted on this journey for peace prosper" into a more enduring peace. John Conard, director of University relations and development said Monday that the decrease was normal. But he also had endorsements from some members of Congress, including warm praise from Sen. Edward M. Dickerson, a longtime administration critic. Before leaving Elmendorf Air Force Base near Anchorage, Alaska, on the last leg of his 20,355-mile journey, Nixon told a crowd of about 1,000 that because of his peace for this generation of people is the best since the end of World War II. ultimately will be withdrawn from Taiwan. This is emerging as the mostcriticized portion of a communique issued by the government a week of talks with Communist leaders. Nixon's nine-hour stopover at Anchorage's Elmendorf Air Force Base was arranged so he could readjust to timezone changes. The big presidential jet, the "Spirit of 76," left Elmendorf at 3:38 p.m. EST, and was due at Andrews, just outside Washington, between 9 and 9:30 p.m. Before leaving Shanghai, where he held the last of his series of meetings with Premier Chou En-lai, Nikon told a banquet "this was the week that changed the China. The Chinese and American people hold the future of the world in their hands." "THIS MAKES me realize the big responsibility to bring the world peace—to build a world where we can all live in that was the purpose of our trip," he said. In the communique issued Sunday in Shanghai, Nixon promised to withdraw all U.S. troops from Taiwan and agreed with the Chinese to develop bilateral trade, support the development and contacts between the two governments short of formal diplomatic relations. Administration officials defended it as a logical application of the Nixon Doctrine that allies should be chiefly responsible for their own defense. And they argued that the broad results justify the concession, at any rate. The United States "reaffirms its interest in a peaceful settlement of the Taiwan question by the Chinese themselves," the communique said. "With this prospect in mind, we intend to establish objective of the withdrawal of all U.S. military installations from Taiwan. ACCORDING TO THE 1,750-word communique, the extensive talks with Chou—and a brief session with party Chairman Mae Tse-tung—brought on PRESIDENTIAL ADVISER Henry Kissinger said the wording does not contradict the President's recent pledge to Taiwan, the mutual-defense treaty with Taiwan. change in the two governments' opposing positions on Vietnam. It was the portion of the communique relating to Taiwan that caused most distress. But Rep. John M. Ashbrook of Ohio, a conservative challenge Nixon for the Republican presidential nomination, said Mr. Obama's decision to the President's agreement on Taiwan. Ashbrook said he was distressed also by "the contrast between the conciliatory, deferential rhetoric employed by the United States and the military propaganda that marked the Chinese portions of the communique." "In the meantime, it will progressively reduce its forces and military installations on Taiwan as the tension in the area diminishes." Most Democratic presidential contenders were less sturdier but one, Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington, said "it appears we're doing the withdrawing, and they're doing the staying. That doesn't sound like a good horse trade." SEN. EDWARD M. KENNEDY, D-MAX, a frequent citizen of communi Dysart said it wasn't known whether the defendants named were actually in the building, but said, "We have reason to believe that," knowledge of who was in the building. Dave Dysart, KU umbandsman and Lawrence third-year law student, said Monday the names would replace four or five lawyers. Does listed in the original complaint. Dyart said the named defendants will be sent an interrogatory—a legal paper with questions which must be answered. The parties should also be to get additional names of defendants. At the same time the amended complaint is filed, Dyssart plans to request a hearing in this case. KU to Amend Complaint Adding Sisters' Names Dyart said he didn't think it was the role of the umbandsm's office to act as copplaint, but said he would continue as co-pilant, but said he would Hooper, Liberal, first year lary student. The complaint against the women who occupied the East Asian Studies building Feb. 4, will be amended today to include the names of four or five defendants. Bays Ties China Interest to War The KU ombudsman office was listed in the original complaint as co-plaintiff with the BM. The BM filed its complaint with By STUART BOYCE Kansan Staff Writer The ombudsman's office will also remove itself today as co-plaintiff in the case. According to Dysart, the office must report action after deliberation and consultation. explained that such an order would require the defendants to answer the interrogatory within 10 or 20 days (the time period would be in advance of the court) or be held in contempt of court. If such an order is issued, it and the interrogatory and copies of the original and amended complaints will be sent by registered mail to the named defendants. Because of the Vietnam war Americans desire more information about China, Daniel Bays, KU professor of history, said Monday night. Bays spoke on "Mao and the Mandate- Bays the Chinese Communist Party since 1949" in a talk at New York University. Bays said that until recently China has been known only through the endeavors of Chinese officials. But there was not much of a desire for information about China, and in some people's minds China was a diabolical power making life miserable for the However, he said since the Vietnam war began, it had become more important to know what was actually taking place in South Korea and China and desire to know more about it. BAYS SAID the U. S. government was now dealing realistically with China. Also, receiving facts and impressions about China said because the media can now report directly from Peking, they are more objective and less bewildered. Bays said perhaps now historical judgements could be made about China. Bays explained that in the past China was ruled by the concept of a mandate of the emperor, which delegated power to the emperor and to man. However, the people had the power to take away the mandate from a bad emperor, accounted for the dynasties in China's past. Bays said that even before the establishment of the Chinese Communist Party in 1921 there was a search for a new political system. The old system was not strong. It could not ward off the exploitation of its nations. Thus a new mandate was needed. THE OBJECTIVES of this new mandate were quite clear. Not only did the mandate need to establish unity and control of China in the external status and work on internal change. The Chinese Communist Party was Bays said that when the Communist party and Chairman Mao came into power Bays said that if he was to succeed described by Bays as being a tight-knit organization but spread over a large area. Daniel Bays MUSIC BY and the people. He said it is not just an organization, for it leads and directs the society and has the compliance and cooperation of the people. Bays said the new mandate had rebuttai national power. Externally, China has established respect for its power although it has far to go to obtain national security. INTERNALLY, CHINA has had a series of mass political campaigns and cultural changes in the late 1960s. Since 1949 the social system has been transformed. Social level is now in the party. The destruction of class lines is being achieved. Bays said that this social leveling had been criticized as leading to a mass drabness. However, Bays said, the Chinese now had justice, equality, a minimum standard of health and security and that the achievement was a colossal one. Bays said the party was not self-serving and had retained the allegiance and his impression that he said that his impression that he qualified young people were still joining the party. 2 Tuesday, February 29, 1972 University Daily Kansan People . . . . . Places . . . . . Things People: Star government witness Boyd Douglas Jr. testified Monday that the REV. PHILIP BERRIGAN solicited him to smuggle letters out of the federal penitentiary where both were convicts in the spring of 1970. The defense has sought to depict Douglas as "an agent provocateur" in the purported conspiracy, helping the FBI weave a false web about the defendants. The trial of black militant ANGELA DAVIS on murder, kidnap and conspiracy charges opened with jury selection in a tightly secured courtroom here. The 28-year-old self-professed Communist sat smiling and silent as the names of the first 12 prospective defendants were drawn from a wooden drum. They were five men and seven women. Four were under the age of 21 all students. All 12 were white. Places: MAN, W. Va.—The toll of known dead rose to 67 in FLOOD STRICKEN Logan County and it was feared the number would continue to mount as rescue workers search the remains of 16 coal miners who were almost 350 persons are missing or unaccounted for, officials say. LEBANON—Israel forces withdrew from southeastern Lebanon after four days of attacks on Arab guerrilla havens near the border. ISRAEL claimed about 50 guerrillas have been slain and nearly 100 wounded. Guerrillas acknowledged losses of 20 dead and 36 wounded. The U.N. Security Council demanded that Israel halt the fighting and pull out of Lebanon. SAGON—The South VIETNAMESE army launched another operation inside CAMBODIA and reported nine battles with the enemy in that country and in South Vietnam. Units of the U.S. 1st Airborne Division, lashed with enemy soldiers only 30 miles northeast of this capital. ROME-Italy, with its government defeated and parliament dissolved, has plunged into 70 days of political campaigning for new elections to end the country's worst POLITICAL CRISIS since the war. The elections, Sunday May 7, will test how much the strength of rival political parties has shifted in the past four years and indicate if any new coalition could put together a majority government. TOPEKA-Failure to provide state WELFARE EMPLOYEES a pay increase for the second straight year while other state employees are receiving normal increases would be "devastating." State Welfare Director Robert Harder said. Harded the ways and Means Committee of the Kansas House, it would be very difficult to hold trained and experienced people in the welfare department if they were victims of discrimination in the matter of pay increases for the second consecutive year. Things: The Supreme Court agreed to decide whether radio and television stations are required to BROADCAST PAID ADVERTSEMENTS on matters in public dispute. This means stations may not have to carry paid announcements on such issues as the Vietnam war and conservative topics during this year's election campaigns. However, under a new law, they will be compelled to sell time to candidates. The nation began 1972 with ANOTHER LARGE DEFICIT IN ITS TRADE BALANCE but key business indicators pointed toward an improving domestic economy, the government said. January trade revenue was the continuing distortion of dock strikes which ended this month. A committee of the Kansas House of Representatives voted to put additional teeth in a resolution opposing the vaccination of a permanent resident. Two persons appeared before the Senate Education Committee at a hearing which had been billed as a session to listen to proponents of the "POWER EQUALIZATION" SCHOOL FINANCE PLAN. One of them said the bill should go farther than it does in providing state aid to local school districts and suggested a one per cent increase in the state sales tax to pay for it. TOPEKA (AP) — The Kansas Senate passed and sent to the House Monday a family planning bill which is designed to make women more available to school-age children, then got bogged down debating a controversial farm labor bill and adjourned until Tuesday when the agricultural item up for continued debate. A two week search for $1,000 by Eula Parsons, 1557 E. 19th st, and her six children ended in day at the 4-H (airgrounds). The money had been buried by KLW radio station in January. Clauses were given over the radio to help people find the money. Mother of Six Finds $1,000 Parsons said that two clues, broken circle and closets in the sky, helped her the most. That slow pace brought an admonition from Senate Majority Leader John Hutchinson, that debate must somehow be limited Tuesday on the farm labor bill or the Senate health care bill. The work even a token number of bills remaining on its agenda before the legislature is due to shut down this week. "This deals with a problem we have got to face," Hodge said. "If passed, it will do a lot to alleviate The Senate passed 30-7 a bill authored by Hodge which would set up family planning centers, authorizing them to provide birth control information, procedures including contraceptive devices. Kansas Senate Passes Bill for Family Planning The Senate, with 125 bills and 480 votes, passed a session calendar, managed to take action on only five of the measures in nearly three-hour session AMONG MEASURES approved by the House Monday, July 31, 2007, a penal system, with the emphasis on rehabilitation, and another bill which would create a State Injunction and Intoxication Treatment Act. Those students selected by the Student Services Committee will work with doctors and resource providers, and will develop policies and health care under the direction of Dr Raymond K. Meehan of the student health service. Sub-Committee For Insurance To Be Formed This sub-committee will intensify study insurance policies and choose one to be recommended to the Senate for approval as an optional student loan or plan available at fall enrollment. Students interested in health care are urged to apply for one of four positions on the Student Health Committee or committee for health insurance. Applications for the position are available at the Student Senate office in the Union. Applicants should applications 15 p.m. Thursday. Last year's student health insurance plan was Blue Cross and Blue Shield. "There's a place down there where there is a circle of light poles." Parsons said. "There is a space where there is no line between the light poles.' Parsons said that she had a hunch the money was halfway with the two pots with no run line around them. The in the sky were two water towers and two KU peaks, according to what could be seen from this spot. An opened coat hanger was the tool used to find the money, according to Parsons. Parsons said that she would divide what was left of the money after taxes with her six children. She then gave it to her money on bills and vacations. "Finding it was the game," Parsons said. "I've never had so much fun. I have had more fresh memories of week than I I've had in years." "I didn't want to mess up the ground," Parsons said. A new board position for minority affairs was created for the SUA president, Sack, the new SUA president; members of the board thought it would be useful to have this board supplement other SUA programs. Sack Chosen Next President Of SUA Board "It was a matter of programming, not politics." Sack Marshall, Kansah, Kansas City. Kan, junior, was selected to fill the position. Parsons praised the clue-maker, Jim Chabin, for making such good clues. Officers and members of the 1972-1973 Student Union Activities Board have been selected. The candidates for each position of the new board were selected after interviews held by the Board of Trustees of the Festival of the Arts, Robert Ramsaeer, Prairie School, sophomore films, Mark Scheiler, senior film and arts. Mark Pierce, Seward, Neb. junior, forsums, Kingsley Click, Shalmal Fla., sophomore; Publications Dau Hull, Whittier, Calif.; Kenneth Kubitschek, Salina sophomore; special events, Dan Mayo, Fairway sophomore, Dan Diehl, Prairie Junior暑假. The officers of the new board, chosen after their interviews church night, nine are president Chuck Garrett, vice president; study student; vice president, Tuck Duncan, Wilmette, III., junior; secretary, Stephanie Blackwood, Hoisington sophomore; and Johnson, Ella Ellis. Fairway freshman Temporary Office Space To Stay on Mt. Oread The temporary green buildings in front of Forsyth Hall and on the lawn of the historic brick multiply before they are removed, Kelton Lawn, vice-chief, manages them. Lawton, director of facilities, planning and open office in the temporary office buildings and the record-keeping building north of Watkins Glen. In September 1971 to "solve basic deficits and needs in classroom learning." Llawton he was not sure yet whether additional temporary buildings would be needed as early next fall. With the need for staff training, enrollment, additional buildings might be needed, he said. He said the University had tried to get funding for the buildings from the Kansas Legislature, but when the law recognizes the need, the University association to the Endowment association "meet the mission" He expects to be able to move the temporary buildings off of the Hill when Wescoe Hall is completed. The structures are located in a high-rise space for additional space at the research buildings west of Iowa Street. "This is another case of the University having to go to its own resources to fund its needs," Lawton said. Lawton said his office was in charge of choosing building sites on campus, allowing need to determine the locations. The farm labor bill, opposed by labor and minority organizations who contend it is too weighted in favor of agricultural a series of floor amendments offered by Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Prairie Village, which he said were needed to conform with the federal tax law's prolonged opposition anyway. THE BILL would prohibit strikes and lockouts by agricultural workers during peak marketing or harvesting times, because they were harmful to employers. It establishes "meet and confer" procedures for resolving agricultural labor disputes and arbitration to solve them. suffering and poverty. The people least able to have children are having them. This would cut down on welfare and child abuse. The House passed its penal reform bill, 104-11. It would amend the document of Corrections, headed by a secretary of corrections. The new agency would have divisions of professional services, research and planning, facilities Theives escaped early Sunday morning with personal articles valued at $80 belonging to Karen McBallum in a senior, room 26 McBallum Hall. Federal Office OK's Senate Highway Bill Thieves Strike In Two Dorms TOPEKA (AP)—Sen. Bob W. Storey, R-Topeka, sent Gov. Robert S. Koehler to give the governor Monday the U.S. Department of Agriculture proved the bill passed by the Kansas Senate which will bring the state into compliance with the 1965 federal Beautification Act on billboards. THE HOUSE also gave final passage to a bill which would provide a payment of $25 to any infant born with intrauterine birth control device implanted and $20 a year before the check if see still in place. The House also gave preliminary approval to a bill which would authorize experimental year-round school programs in at least three schools. The Board would make it permissive for any of the state's school districts to begin such a program. Storey urged Docking to sing the bill if and when it passes the House. The Alcoholism and Intoxication Treatment Bill would set a state policy "that alcohols and intoxicated persons may be criminal prosecution because of their consumption of alcoholic beverages, but rather should be afforded a continuation of treatment that they may lead normal lives or productive members of society." The thieves apparently entered the room via a second story window. and jail standards. operations and legal services. The federal government has informed Kansas it must be in compliance with federal billboard regulations on U.S. Highways by March 31 or be penalized 10 per cent of its The robbery occurred while Erickson was asleep in her room. Susan Silfers, Shawnee Mission freshman, reported the loss of a clothing item and several articles of clothing from her room in Corbin Hall. The ninety-nine black-and-white photographs in the book published by University Press of Kansas record rural as well as urban, scenic as well as urban, and cave caaptures ranchers, wheat farmers, horseshoes and Indian children. JAMES FISHER has been a reporter and editor for the Star for eleven years. He graduated from the University of Kansas in 1962 and was a major in History and English. He currently the Stars aviation editor. THE ACTUAL WRITING of the book took approximately one year, during that time Lyle and Just last week, Docking reminded the legislature that action must be completed this month and will lose its federal money. Storey forwarded to Docking a letter he received late last week from Edwin J. Reis, assistant chief counsel for the Office of Environmental Law Division of the U. S. Transportation Department federal highway funds, about $6.8 million. Wes Lyle, a native of Topeka, is the only photographer for United States Press, a free-lance commercial photographer, and for the last six years a state member of the HISTORY Society. His photography has won numerous awards, and he has been exhibited at the William Rockhill Nelson Museum. "IT'S TIME people realize that all those westerners that are now in the middle of a town took place 45 miles west of Salina." Fisher explained. "It's important that people become aware of the issues and proud to be a Kansan," he said. Truman Capote in his book "Cold Blood" described *Kansas* as being a state somewhere "out of nowhere" new book by Wes Lyle and Jamie Duncan "Kansas Impressions: Photographs and Words" allows Kansas to forlse itself through images and to put the state back "in there." "The review of the bill indicates that, if enacted in its present form, it would comply with the Highway Beautification Act of 1863 wrote Storey. "We appreciate your cooperation in this matter." By ED LALLO Kansan Staff Writer New Book Views Kansas From Kansans' Outlooks "After seeing all the T. v. tubes in farm houses as driven by real estate, we are be more than a bunch of wheat farmers," he told to rediscover "It's a shame to think of Kansas," Fisher. "I didn't realize what Kansas actually was till I was driving Denver one night after the game." Fisher stumbled for an adequate theme for the book. It was finally decided with the aid of Yvonne Willingham, assistant director of Kansas, and Ivan Kansas, that it would be best to let Kansas speak for Kansas. Government Career Day TRAVEL WITHIN THE U.S.A. Students interested in government employment will have information at the Government Careers Day, Bill Chestnut, conference and education said Monday. The conference will be from 10 a.m. to noon and 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Big Eight building. Chestnut said the purpose of the conference, sponsored by the DCFU, was to bring together Max Gerhardt and Mia Gerhardt the Wichita U.S. Employment Office, was to inform students of the procedures in pursuing government careers. TRAVEL WITHIN THE U.S.A. SPONSORED BY: Student Union Activities Foreign Study Office SUA Travel Service Dean of Foreign Students' Office Council Room — 4 p.m. FRIDAY, MARCH 3 "Students have no place to go for information if they are interested in government careers. This is an endeavor to enhance chance to find out about such employment." Chestnut said. Representatives from the highway departments, Veterans Administration Hospital, U. S. Army, U.S. Post Office and University College will be at the conference to answer questions. Coming Forums: Travel within Europe 11, U.S. camping and hitching, Mexico-Canada on a student trip. Chiang to Ignore China Pact TAIPEI (AP)—Chiang Kai-she's government declared on Monday that it will consider null and void any public or secret agreement President Nixon may have made with the Chinese interests affecting the rights and interests of Nationalist China. The statement indicated the Nationalists suspect there may have been some Taiwan that was not mentioned in a joint U. S.-Chinese communique Sunday in Shanghai. The government statement focused chiefly on a section in the joint communique saying the States acknowledges there is a need in Asia and that this is something for Chinese themselves to settle. A government statement issued on Wednesday also said the Taiwan question can be settled only when the officials take back the mainland. assistant secretary of state who accompanied Nixon to China and is now on a tour of some Asian nations to explain the outcome. nationalists are particularly the United States may be leaving them open to takeover by the Communists on the mainland. However, the statement on the outcome of Nixon's eight-day visit to China seemed a retaliation of a past Nationalist positions. It is doubtful the backlash against further on the subject until hears later in the week from Marshall Green, the U. S. BULLFIGHTERS WANTED The roar of the crowd, the pretty senoritas, the charge of the bull. the "OLE" of the spectators. Prospective card carrying bullfighters watch this space. SENIORS The Deadline for Making Senior Picture Appointments is March 1. Senior Pictures Must Be Taken Before March 10th Pictures Taken After This Cannot Be Included Make Appointments With HIXON STUDIOS 843-0330 Naval ROTC Announces: The Two-Year ROTC College Program Applications are being accepted for the two-year NROTC College Program leading to a commission as an Ensign, U.S. Navy or 2nd Lieutenant U.S. Marine Corps. Qualifications: - Citizen of the United States. - Married or unmarried. - Second year college student or third year student in a five-year course, in good standing with a "C" average. Graduate students are not eligible for this program. *AI least 18 years of age and no more than 25 on June 30 of the commissioning year. ●$100.00 per month subsistence allowance. - Excellent physical condition. Waivers for defective vision are available. - Draft deferment. - Eligible to apply for scholarship status upon entry into the program with subsequent full tuition and free books. Deadline for Application—April 1st Apply Now for Fall Semester 1972 at the NROTC Unit, Room 115 Military Science Building 864-3161 Benefits: Tickets on Sale NOW! Ticket Prices $2.50 2.25 1.75 ROCK CHALK REVUE 1 ★ Bells SALES LOCATIONS ★ SUA Office, Union ★ Kief's PERFORMANCES ON MARCH 3 AND 4 HOCH Auditorium 8:00 p.m. University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 29, 1972 2 te who ana and Asian accom- are at the seaving the sand and eement in the ing the ledges d that chinese REVUE REVLE Kansan Photo by JIM EATON Rock Chalk Sign Raised in Preparation for Reyne The traditional Rock Chalk Revue signs are being raised once again as Greeks and independents prepare for the annual event to open Friday at 5 p.m. in Hook Auditorium. Despite decreased student interest and dwindling ticket sales, KU-Y members say they optimistically look forward to greater attendance at this year's Revue. The theme for the 1972 Revue is "Life's Losers." Prof's Symphony to Be Played A symphonic composition by Zamir Bavel, associate professor of mathematics at KU, will be featured by the Kirkwood, Mo., symphony orchestra, conducted by Ficelli March 1 in St. Louis. Bavel has been in Lawrence since 1868. He grew up in Israel where he was a mathematics teacher and later principal in Tel Aviv. From 1947 until 1952 Bavel was the first violinist with the Israeli Symphony he studied under Ben Kershul. He played Roy Harris in the United States. in the United States and Israel, Leonard Bernstein has described the rhapsody as "delightful and effective." Bavel said he has been writing music since he was eight years old. He is also a composer and compositions are popular with radio stations. He has written songs for radio stations. "Iraeli Rhapsody," the work beats Bavel work to be in St. Louis has been widely broadcast Bavel said the "Israeli Rhapsody" does not follow a story line or program so that each listener can make his own interpretation TEL AVIV (AP)—Tourists tELD an average of $255 each during the first half of 1971 and the second half of 1972, $8.7 million, officials reported "One thing I tried to do is make the composition interesting for each member of the orchestra." Bavel said. "I wrote melodic pieces, with strings, violins, horns, and each group normally just plays along." Committee Being Formed to Study University Health Insurance Policy for Coming Year Bookstore Projects Aid For Students, 4% Rebate Applications may be made in Student Senate Office 105B Union By FOSS FARRAR Kansan Staff Writer Deadline: 5:00 p.m. Thurs., March 2 Great gift idea. FILET-O-FISH Give something different. Tasty, Hot, Tender. A special sauce. Cheese. McDonald's Filet O' Fish Sandwich. Wrapped free. The Kansas Union Bookstore Committee will recommend at least 4 per cent rebates for patrons, continued aid for the Urban Scholarship Program and the formation of an advisory committee on Monday when it presents its proposals to the Student Senate. McDonald's John Mize, Salina senior and committee member, said the committee's report was based on the work of the 1975-6 school year. Net profits for that year are expected to be $8,000, according to a bureau report issued to the junior Executive Committee this winter. "Since that's the lowest projection of the five year period The Urban Scholarship program provides counseling for minority students, is managed under the direction of Supportive Services. we were dealing with, we felt that we should base our figures on it," Mize said. THE COMMITTEE will propose a minimum of $20,000 be set aside for rebates to bookstore patrons, a minimum of $20,000 for the SES scholarship program and $24,000 for expansion purposes. A maximum amount can be used for SES. The proposed budget for SES for this year is $10,000. If profits exceed $90,000, Mize said, the extra funds will be split a 50-20 ratio. Half would go to Mize and the other higher rebate percentage. If the $30,000 maximum point for SES training funds would go to rebates Mize said the original Student Senate enactment which created the Urban Scholarship Program, led by Ms. Mize and the committee, but the committees' purpose and function had remained vague, and it was never established. The bookstore has never been an official that an advisor committee be Mize said four of the nine members on the advisory committee would be appointed by the chancellor, one each from the Office of Minority Affairs, from Office of Justice, and from the Office of Academic Affairs and at large. The other committee members would include three students, a member of the Union Operating Board and a president of the Student Senate who would serve ex officio. RESIDES OVERSEEING SES'S financial matters, the committee would also appoint the director of staff appointments, staff appointments, serve in a general advisory capacity to the board of directors for annual evaluation of the program. scholarly study of the glyphs, sculptures, architecture and ancient cedars, tried to create a Columbian past of Mexico in dance. Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Kansas Union, said students could still claim 5 per cent rebates for financial aid and other benefits during period 49, which bany July 1 can be claimed until June 30. Mexican Troupers Dance with Fervor The first piece "La Plumia" (the teacher dance) was the welcome dance of Indian students complete with elaborate headresses. The "Chiapas," a suite of nine dance pieces of Mexico, displayed the diversity and flair of Mexican Dance—"La Tortuga my favorite amongst them." Next came a series of rituals and festival dances. "Mass of Chamula" was a quiet, austere religion with the meaning of religious relief with that of Christianity. The Olmeces "was about the ceremonial hunt of the jaguar, an animal sainted to the Olmecs who kept it alive in order to worship it." By H. BERG Kansan Reviewer There must have been a moment of panic backstage as the main floor of Hochstetten started to empty after the flooded Pluma, had ended. It could not have lasted long. By the time the "Chiapas" was under way the balconies had become filled with water and upstairs to get a better look at that was going on on the stage. The Ballet Folklorico of Mexico under the general direction of Amalia Hernandez and her partner Norma Lopez. The Hernandez has helped the Company founded in 1852 by Amilia Hernandez, a former teacher and choreographer of modern dance at the National Institute of Fine Arts, has been a national company of Mexico. Amelia Hernandez, using her knowledge of the music and dance of contemporary Mexico and combing the Dances from the region of Jalisco, including the Hat Dance, closed out a most enjoyable evening. challenge: You only go around one time in life. And you've got to reach for all the gusto you can. You can't settle for less. Because you don't get a second chance. This is the philosophy at the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. Easy enough to say. Not quite so easy to do. And perhaps not so easy to find. That's the challenge. Find an expression of the gusto life. And put it on film for all the world to see. (Or at least anybody who reads the Daily Kansan.) If your picture is judged to be of exceptional photographic content, your entry and credit will be printed in this paper and others like it. And you will be awarded $100. (If you are a professional photographer this offer is not for you, since you already have $100.) A panel, including students at the University of Kansas, will judge your photograph based on its subject matter, rather than your photographic technique. If your roommate is a judge, he won't help you. Please get the name and address from every principal person you use in your photograph. This is important. Otherwise, your picture will be disqualified. You'll have until March 12, 1972 to get this assignment completed, should you accept. All photos submitted will become property of the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. Send pictures with your name and address to: Cooke Sales, Inc., c/o Schlitz Photo Competition, 715 New Jersey, Lawrence, Kansas 66044. Schlitz Someone would like to see what you have to say. CAMERA ©1972 Jos Schlitz Brewing Co., Milwaukee and the world. 4 Tuesday, February 29, 1972 University Daily Kansan KANSAN comment Garry Wills Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. POLAND "When Miller speaks the words pop! pop! out of his flat mouth, the bare hint of a drawal softening the explosions as they drill the air. 'Sure' comes out 'sheeer', and 'pusher' joins in, 'pooooooer', as in 'Sheeer we'll get that poooooer'." A Question of Sensitivity —From a Kansas City Star feature on Attorney General Vern Miller by William D. Tammus You are a good sheriff, Vern, there's no question about that. You even talk like one. I appreciate your dedication to the law and I agree with you when you say, "Nothing breeds disrespect for the law more than a double standard of enforcement." But I don't think you should be governor. In fact, I don't even think you should be attorney general. Things are just more complex than you are willing to admit. A sheriff must above all respect the law. He must impartially enforce laws and be honest. Some of the same and let other people worry about the quality of the law. But a governor or an attorney general must worry about the quality of the law. He must try and find out why people break the law. Is it a bad law? Do conditions exist that prevent someone to violate the laws? Are there too many laws? Are police impartially enforcing the law? You say, "If the people don't like the law, they should work to get it changed," and I agree, but the people, the masses, don't always know that the laws need to be changed. A middle class white suburbanite may not realize that a certain law oppresses inner city blacks. And the policeman that may be enforcing a bad law can be too busy or too involved to see the inequality. That's why we want a governor and or an attorney general with the sensitivity to realize that laws in themselves are not sacred, that the law was designed to serve and protect you, that law fails in these two functions it must be rewritten or discarded. You say your job is to enforce the law. Period. That's it. You say you "enjoy probably more than anything participating with law enforcement officers in an investigation." Why? They're not involved, but also seeing someone who's wronged, someone brought to justice." "Sheeeer," you say, "poverty causes crime. We know that, but in America, no one needs to starve ... and no one needs to go steal." The sensitivity is not there. Those words do not reveal the unintended homogenies from the realization that synthetic dictionaries don't always solve the problems. The point is that in America, where no one needs to starve, people do starve, and consequently people do think they must steal to keep alive. Patriotic platitudes don't fill stomachs. Now you don't have to accept that, but if you won't, you've no business being governor, for America needs governors that will. Go back to being a good sheriff; America needs them too. Mike Moffet Associate Editor S. A. H. It is already clear, this early in 1972, what the year's cultural event has to be. It is the re-release of a series of Charlie Chaplin's classic movies, long withheld from the ungrateful country that denied him lawful ingress. The Tramp Returns All the negotiatory jockeying is The Motion Picture Academy has a special prize to give Charlie this year, and New York's welcome to the Little Theater is also being orchestrated as Peking's welcome to Nixon. (Both have been in the works almost as long—Martin Segal of the Lincoln Center Film Society was on the New York visit last July.) The thawing of this cold war between American authorities and America's greatest artist is fully the equivalent, as he did when he accord being groped for in China. The two thaws have ceremonial resemblances—Charlie's visit to this country is like Nixon's trip to China. He used niceties to be given and observed. worth it- for Charlie is, not only the greatest American film artist, but the greatest American artist. (The fact that he started in British vaudeville has to do with the fact that his artistry is a classic vaudeville, in American forms and technique.) When one says "the greatest," of course, one deals always with elements of arbitrariness. Taste is not dictated, though skilled men largely agree on the area of choice, if not on the particulars of choice. Thus most people would agree that Eugene O'Neill was our greatest dramatist (besides being Charlie's father-in-law), Mark Twain our greatest all-round writer, Rosa Ponselle our greatest opera singer. In other areas, any choice one puts up will be more contested—e.g., that Gerwinshus was our greatest musician, Mr. Chow was our favorite Bing Crosby the best popular singer. In poetry my choice would be Hart Crane, though there are several conventions to be learned. Pound, whose birth here is as little important as Charlie's (or Bob Hope's or Cary Grant's) in England. Eliot had the moment of a brighter Anglican baptism. The norms are not in doubt despite argument over particular tasks. The work must not only be superlatively itself, but distinctive; not merely perfecting what others have tried,but contributing something new Here Charlie has no challenger. The movie form is not solely American—Germans, for instance, techniques to which a British artist had to go school before he could polish his art in America. But our strongest area in film is that of early comedy—with the great Italian (also Britishborn) and Hardy. Not only was Charlie the premier performer in a crowded field of talent. He was also an inventor all across the board. He served his apprenticeship under a directorial giant (Mack Sennett) and went on to make him, by comparison, a midtier. His only rival in this D. W. Griffith–just Griffith's work. As he archaeological awake; one admires it as a warful for its time. Charlie's work is as vital, in its own right, now as when it was made—the mark of lasting art. And, besides, he was his own screenwriter, composer of musical scores, producer and distributor. Not a fan of the movie industry, his talent over in all directions, creative and technical. He sums up in himself the whole cooperative venture of movie-making, the wedding of man and woman, the conquest of the latter by the former. Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate Readers Respond Calley's Heros; CO Plea; Bike ... Sexton To the Editor: The recent series of Associated Press articles on S. ggt. John John Eppes and Jet Petit prison camp and the recent developments on the international scene prompt this comment from a neophyte The American people's short memory of atroities and its acceptance of inhumanly inspired humor have been substantially proved by the phenomenal success of television's "Hogan's Heroes." Therefore, I suggest a new way to start head start on the inevitable sequel, "Sexton's Survivors." My only other suggestion is that in the production of such a series, the most be made of the forthcoming "cultural exchanges" with the People's Republic of China. Surely, in a nation of 871 million persons there can found a sound manifold of monaclosed Col. Klink and his bumbling colony; Sgt. Schultz and his subordinates. That a "Koronei Krunk" would dramatically split open the shrinking "will" between our ears. We would speculate, I would, however, speculation. I would, however, "Gee! Is it ever dark down there! But in time, 'Le it perfectly clear.' bet that William Calley might be glad to make guest appearances if the show should ever need a layer of clothing nothing to augment its "humer." Jerome Esslinger Morrill, Junior Objector My name is Kleiss and I enlisted in the Navy. I've been in the service for more than four years now. About six months ago he was sent to Iraq as a Navy as a Conscientious Objector. The request was denied. I'm in Federal Court and I'm fine on determination on that discharge. To the Editor: When I first applied, I was interviewed by two officers. Both requested the incarceration and recommended me to marshal. Even the commander of船 the Naval Science Unit suggested the training of support from close friends, and Rev. Dutch Stoly, Episcopalian minister at the Canterbury jail. A board of officers at the department personally read the statements from the people as well as my own. A board had back that meeting had been They claimed I was "transitory" and implied that mine was a fleeting attempt to escape obliged service. I was to have to program it for me, program here and sent back to the fleet. However, I hired a lawyer and took my claim to Federal Court. At the time of this writing, I am still here by order of court, pending final decision. What has happened up till now confuses me. I wrote honestly of my beliefs. They were not "transitory" or a devious means for escape. I attempted to convince them that my commitment was sincerely and not an arbitrary whim. They would not listen. So I've gone to court in an attempt to escape jail. But the court's approach is also unsatisfactory. Under the law I am forced to sue my Commanding Officer not only for discharge, but also for misuse of his authority with him. I reject the system, not the man. Moreover, the court is not interested in my beliefs, but rather is reviewing the laws used to deny my claim. So now I sit in uniform at the Military Science Building, five miles from the court. Regardless of the court's decision, I will no longer participate in the military long as I aspire to their purpose. Both the military and the courts of this country claim to tolerate Conscientious Objectors, who have always refused me when they refuse to even recognize my existence. Thus far I have attempted to raise my objection through established sources, but in the faith of this system, But my efforts have so far culminated in a senseless chameleon. I am uncertain how much longer I can remain active, now. I may very well go to prison; if stay, the prison will be of my own making. Rod Kleiss To the Editor: Correction While I appreciate the article on my exhibition (Feb. 22), I must make one historical correction. It is true that we had, motorcycle on the third floor of the building, but it was for a drawing class but this incident, which occurred in 1965, had nothing whatever to do with the accident. It was the KU art department, in 1967. John Gary Brown THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom--UN-4 4810 Business Office--UN-4 4358 Griff and the Unicorn Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except in cases where an emergency payment was required or a year's service must be postpaid at Lawrence, KA 60448. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Quotients expire are not necessarily valid. Students must verify their enrollment status. SLURP OOK! SLURP GYAKK By Sokoloff WILL YOU STOP SLURPING YOUR COFFEE?! YOU CAN'T DO ANYTHING THESE DAYS WITHOUT MAKING SOMEBODY NERVOUS "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." NEWS STAFF News Adviser ... Del Brinkman Editor Associate Editor Associate Manager Campus Editor News Editors Copy Chairs Copy Editors Assistant Sports Editor Feature Editor Assistant Sports Editor Wire Editors Wire Editors Designer Editor Reviews Editor Photographers Office Manager Office Manager Corporation BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams Business Manager Associate Business Manager Advertising Manager Marketing Manager National Advertising Manager Chief Marketing Manager Promotional Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Carol Young Assistant Business Manager Norman Massey Assistant Business Manager Dale Plegerpengert Chief Marketing Manager David Murray Daniel Watson T Uu du d sS w hE tn rS s tO a o s p sA J I L r h. sI n t r a j o g t t s h e a j k l v w r w h o r. l a m m n o c t h i t e n t i n t e r University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 29, 1972 5 cuser not also for is, not but is is, but the my at the , five end.ourt's longer literary to I the im to actors, less to us far as we far be my ished good but my tasted in it I can go to will be Kleiss ad a door of model on this 1965 with art U art (22) , I orical Brown lp Crews Woetfeet Nine Hay, Nine Hay, Kilang Kilang Similson H Begert Wry Ward Goodrick Schmidt k young a dush Skoold ol young en Carter Manley Barnhart ergertes Lloyd Murray Delano NICOLAS CABOT Kansan Photo by TERRY SHIPMAN State Artists Exhibit Skill The best of Kansas art is being displayed at the Designer-Craftsmans show until March 12 in the Kansas Union gallery, Mara Blackwell, Berkeley, Calif. senior, views a hanging oil painting exhibited by Lewis L. Ridioneur, Lawrence graduate student. Students Begin Studies in Costa Rica Six undergraduate students from the University of Kansas began classes in the Junior Year By S. ARTHUR COHEN Kansan Staff Writer The students are Jeanette Clark, El Dorado sophomore; Patti Enoch, Olivette, Mo. Abroad Program last week at the University of Costa Rica in San Jose, Costa Rica. sophomore; Tom Kurata, lawren, Shawney, Shawney Mission sophomore; Margo Milleret, Manhattan junior, Robbie KU Films on Special Projects Released to Television Stations Nearly 100 public relations films on the University of Kansas made for release to television stations are being produced by Terry Gladieu, photographer from University Relations Office. The purpose of these films is to show what is being done with Kansas taxpayers' money, Gladieux said, as well as providing general public interest. Subjects for the films include special projects in aerospace, architecture, geology and history and the Art Museum and the Art Museum. First Med Center To Be Torn Down The original buildings which composed the University of Kaskaskala in the late 19th century were scheduled to be torn down soon and replaced by apartments as the university moved. Dr. Simeon B. Bell, a physician and landowner, donated land and buildings to the University of Virginia where his wife, Eleanor Taylor, in 1905 The Rosedale Urban Renewal Agency will demolish the old Eleanor Taylor Bell Memorial building and possess possession of them on March 4. The Taylor buildings now stand at 311 Seminary, several blocks from the Medical Center complex with Boulevard in Kansas City, Kans The Board of Regents accepted the gift from Bell and approved consolation of three Kansas City medical institutions. dispensary buildings were completed by 1918 In 1924 the first building on the present campus was completed. The hospital is located in Hospital, Bell Memorial was named the University of Kansas Clinical laboratory and The Eleanor Taylor Hospital has been provisionally a pulmonic care unit. Care during the past 10 years the buildings for various research projects. Currently, the only remaining research is conducted by the University of Texas Department's leukemia research will move to 4205 Rainbow Boulevard, the former Rosedale Post Office building. The move to Boulevard was prompted by thousands mike, many isolated in germ-free environments, and sophisticated sterilization equipment installed in the remodeled site. Oread Daily Fails to Burn Long-haired students no longer stand in front of the Kansas Union distributing the Oread Daily (OD). The OD, the University of Kansas' underground newspaper, is debuting. By JAMES COOK Kansas Staff Writer The OD didn't cost anything and many students accepted it. Some refused it. The OD is defunct because the staff refused to do any more work. An underground newspaper has no spokesman. Its staff is elusive. This story, then presents the opinions of former staff members who wished to speak. One staff member wishes to remain anonymous and, for comfort, is identified as the spokesman. The spokesman said the OD had more integrity than the Kansan because the Kansan was "plastic" and "self-censored." The staff of the Kansan, he said, may be aware of social issues but doesn't care and won't write what they feel. He said I didn't know what the real world was afraid to写 about reality. FORTEP PEOPLE worked for the OD but 10-15 people did most of the work. The OD didn't cost anything to print. It was run off on a mimeograph machine, and the students got a school of social welfare. The paper was donated by graduate assistants or was stolen. "Hell, it won't stealing," the spokesman said. "We never had to ask for permission." Journalism The University Daily Kansan would call us irresponsible but we didn't give a visit about the Kansen. It's a rug. "Anyone who reads a newspaper paper needs the accidental printing of an error. An error is an accidental lie. The reader doesn't know what you've done, doesn't know you've made a mistake. What harm is done? Therefore I believe it's all right to read information in both the accidental and the purposeful lie. That difference does it make?" THE SPOKESMAN said a diplomat degree was not do anything to jopardize his chance of getting one. That he makes, makes it worse. They sometimes minimize the important and maximize the minute. This is especially true in a letter, which depends on the paper's beliefs. "I have absolutely no scruples about lying outright about anything. I don't like the word journalism. It implies a whole world. I don't agree with it. I prefer the term publishing," he said. The spokesman said he thought all journalists "take a stand" and he had to do the same if everyone else was. Gus DiZerega, Lawrence graduate student, said he read a book about the war in Iraq. Daily Journal-World that blamed blacks for a racial incident. DiZerega researched the story of four women who were incident for every black-initiated incident. DiZerega wrote a story for the OD telling both sides of the war. "All newspapers are slanted." Williams said, "because they want something to go their way. Herb Williams, a former OD staff member, agreed with the spokesman and said he felt justified in living THE SPOKESMAN said he distrusted the stories so they would be true. And he was the 'game' was to 'saint' and he had to 'saint' his since he was 'saint'. The spokesman said the OD would print anything. contribute to the "revolution." The Vortex's policy was to print simple stories which anyone could understand. "WHEN I READ the story the two men wore the OD twice and the Dizegera said. "They made it look like the whites were to blame. The only way to get a true picture was to tell them. World and the OD, add the two, and divide by two. It was the first and last story I wrote for the OD." WILLIAMS, THE POKEMESK and some friends started the Vortex. They decided to use it as a subjective and every story should "I dig the idea of upsetting the power structure," the spokesman said. "We want power to be able to say, 'the king is a fink.' We use often profanity." The staff motto was "Little acorns make big trees. Plant the acorns in a forest." Vortex wrote "right on" stories for the "18-year old freshman who has never been out of Island Park," the spokesman said. THE SPEOKESMAN SAID THE profanity of the profession editor loved and because profanity was commonplace today, the profanity lost its impact but it remains. "Our editorial policy," the spokesman said, "was up front." "Fuck" lost its meaning. We expanded, diversified and moved to coarser words. "Fuck lost our vocabulary," he had to expand out vocabulary. Gladieux makes the two-to- three minute color films. He is assisted by Dennis Branister, editor for University Relations. Allen Ginsberg visited KU in 1966 and told everyone to smoke marijuana. Ginsberg's speech, the spokesman said, was well received and developed a group that became the readers of the OJ. THE KANASS FREE Press (KFP) was the first underground newspaper in Kansas, Grist, Screw, Reconstruction and all others and the spokesman worked for these newspapers except KFP. "It didn't matter whether it was true or not, the point was that we would print it, and you know, it would be awkward. So we see the word 'fuck' in the paper and would say, 'Wow, these dudes are far out.' It was a power trip, that was all. We didn’t care if the dude wanted to just want to see it in print." The Vortex didn't have an editor because no one would take responsibility for a possible libel suit. The judge couldn't money and wasn't afraid of a suit but was afraid of going to jail. The masthead never contained "The paper, developed a handle," she said. "take over, and 'dare to struggle, dare to win.' I'm really like the dare to struggle one, it was so hard." The films are being released to television news programs for use on light news days. So far, the films have been used over four hours of films. The spokesman said the Lawrence Daily Journal-World ran "useless" pictures of the biggest watermilion in Douglas County so the Vortex ran pictures of women wielding meat knives THE VORTEX ran pictures to fill space, not to educate the readers. Policy prohibited the use of that did not depict communists. The spokesman said the editor would read copy and send it back saying it needed more 'right' to move 'more' power to the people's. Sometimes reporters composed on the stencils and didn't bother to read the conv THE SPOKESMAN believed there was a hard drug situation on campus and wrote a story about heroin. The story caused a legal trial for the Vortex and which provided the impetus for the OD. The spokesman said he lost interests in the Vortex because the editor believed everything in the Vortex was revolutionary or counter-revolutionary. "I asked the editor things like, 'Are curcumbers revolutionary or counter-revolutionary?' people got mad. On an accident newspaper you never, never make fun of the revolution." "I adopted a straight journalistic style, used simple language," the spokesman said. "At the end of the story I said, 'Right on brothers and sisters. Shoot that man.' We got topple the state. You get a lot done by shooting dope and staying in a stugue. The police had me and me a counter-revolutionary. The staff said I had broken the holy rule, I was angry." "One day I woke up and said, 'Good God Almighty, what's wrong with these people?' I became convinced they were psychotic. I hate to use that word, but I never did." The entire staff was messed-up. SEVERAL DAYS later another meeting was held. The women decided the newspaper was too small for the man ran it. They demanded control of the Vortex and issued a list of forbidden words, words that were considered inappropriate. They also issued a memorandum stating that a headline such as "One day I woke up and said, 'Good Ood Almighty, what's wrong with these people?' I "Racists, Facists Pig" would be changed to "Racists, Facists, Chauvinistic Pig." A special meeting was held and the staff decided to abandon the traditional newspaper organization and form a collective. There are three categories of films. One type is shot and sent to television stations requesting the film, and then edited at University Relations. In the third type, the stations come to KU and shoot their own films with the face of University Relations. By this time the Vortex was quarrying in its gravel, and it was plucked from the ground to other newspapers. At this time a military group and a group of OD (Oil Destroyer) units were. A three-day special project film of the Geological Survey and land reclamation received national coverage. "The whole idea of the revolution is that you can be anything you want to be. All we need are people who students became free and we no longer needed. We no longer had a reason to exist. The staff decided, 'fuck, we don't care about the newspaper, we only care about the news,' so the whole staff was composed of a bunch of cynics. They felt powerful. Look at me, they said, 'I'm going to tell the word, "Fuck." In power.' Another film featured a project on light aircraft conducted by the Kohlman, professor of aeronautics at the University and several graduate students. A film about a prefabricated parachute which turns into a rocket. An actor directed by Becaleb Benjamin, assistant professor of physics at the University. "We're lacking in cooperation from people in the University," said Gladieux. "We're always looking for new subjects, and we'd like people to call or write projects of special interest." "At this time the OD developed two new editorial policies, 'stay stoned,' and 'when all else falls smoke a joint,' and what smoke would come in at 9:00 a.m. and would come in at 10:00 a.m. and drink a little wine. At 10:00 a.m. they would smoke a couple of joints and by 1:00 p.m. they were stoned and said, 'wait until tomorrow.' But what happened was that the next day there was a repeat of the previous day's events. What happened was that the sounds cut but it's true." sophomore. Gladieu said he viewed his and Branister's rules as a KU man, but up interviews for people connected with KU on television talk shows. Gladieu was Gladieu's first news before coming to KU EACH DAY different reporters put out the newspaper. The workers varied from day to day as the staff changed. The "flip-flipped slant" went "haywire" when writers went to use drugs when they wrote. The spokesman said the readers of an underground newspaper are leftists and therefore the newspaper itself anyhow, anything, only reinforce established behavior and beliefs. "Since I don't have a clear understanding of what my viewpoint is I've gone as far as I can go. Williams said." The OD went as far as you, as anyone, but the question is his philosophy of 'burn the fucking thing down.' What more can you say after you've said that?" WILLIAMS SAID the staff did a small number of only one understand what the OD had to say. They felt they were wasting time. "The OD, as it was set up, went as far as the OD could go," the spokesman said. "It went as far as it got." The OD did not speak English. The OD was set up to accomplish a specific purpose. Whether or not that end was accomplished here, it's irrelevant. It's purpose was to disseminate the message of 'burn everything' . We saw that the OD wanted our ourselves, 'Wait, what do we do now?' It was just a newspaper and a newspaper is powerless. The end of the development, the end of the cycle. If someone wants an OD let him start one more cycle. If someone wants an OD tomorrow? Hell no." In 1960 the first group from KU went to Costa Rica, and in 1970 it moved to Puerto Rico. The Chalmers Jr. went to the university to renew the contract with the university. "FOLLOWING THE INITIAL trips, both Dean Heller (vice chancellor for academic affairs) and an Dan Waggoner (dean of the College of Science) became interested and investigated the program further. Because of their help and support, she is one of the oldest and most successful Junior Year Abroad programs in the United States." Anita Herfield, instructor in English, taught a program from 1968 to 1970, said. in addition to KU, five other students from the University of Colorado and a school in Arizona are attending the university. The University of Costa Rica and KU offer similar courses, and all students receive credit at their regular home colleges. LOUSE KETO, foreign studies adviser, said the University of Costa Rica had a list of families requested to house students. "Although the students will live in private homes in San Jose," she said, "they will be free to travel and sightseeing." Orientation for the trip to San Jose began Feb. 17 at KU and continued through Feb. 21 when the students departed from KU in June. Most of the students were briefed on the life, politics, history, university and geography of Costa Rica and had individual appointments with former directors to discuss issues at the University of Costa Rica. LAST YEAR STUDENTS who traveled to Costa Rica published three booklets in July, August and November entitled Sunflower. Articles were written by the students about the experiences their Costa Rican experiences and their personal growth. Clark, one of the students who left Sunday, said she first became interested in the Junior Year Abroad Program during her freshman year. "In the summer of 1971 I went to Barcelona, Spain, with the KU Summer Institute," she said. "After I returned in August, I went to Dean Waggoner and Dean Weiss (and graduated from Graduate School) about the program, and they encouraged me to go." Bridges said that when the students arrived in the United States, they felt like strangers and became aware of the opportunities in North American Latin American people dislike. CLARK SAID SHE hoped her patient CLARK SAID SHE hoped her patient would help她 to view both the good and bad of this and other countries in a more objective country. "Living within the Latin culture, speaking the Spanish language as natives do and comparing it with Costa Rican and with the Spanish culture in Spain sounded interesting to me," Clark said. Terry Bridges, a KU senior majoring in Spanish and Latin American area studies who studied in Costa Rica last year through the program, remembered much about the group and its attitudes toward the United States and Costa Rica. "Each of the nine students had a different reaction to Costa Rica and the United States, and living there often gave her differences more noticeable," she said. "Each person has different opinions about the place in world affairs since we were the experience of live abroad. COSTA RICANS were friendly, warm people, she said, and all nine of the group were thankful for her kindness they received while in Costa Rica. "I think it's a beautiful and stable country," she said. "Costa Rica isn't in the midst of political turmoil, but it is one of the nationalism which makes them take a closer look at the United States. It's important for Latin American countries to develop their economies," she added, dependent on the United States." "Travel and exposure to other people and other societies is an important part of my life," Bridge said. "I learned more by experiencing than I ever could remember." Although Clark has never been o Costa Rica, she has heard and read about it. Bridges said, "The family I stayed with had five children and four grandchildren in my family. Every Sunday my family meets in swam, pichoned or engaged in yoga." Living in Costa Rica or any foreign culture provides more than just an experience. It provides an education. During her stay in Costa Rica. Bridges traveled throughout the country "TO GET AN idea about the size of Costa Rica, Kansas has about 80,000 square miles, whereas Costa Rica has 20,000. But Costa Rica has a bigger region than Kansas," she said. "FOR EXAMPLE, we had opportunities to talk to professional people in Latin America, and we became better acquainted with the role the United States played in Latin America. I have mixed emotions about the United States and its roles in Costa Rica." Bridges said. The terrain in Costa Rica and the terrain in Kansas are completely different, Bridges said. On Columbus Day, Oct. 12, the town of Puerto Limon has a carnival because Columbus landed there on his fourth voyage, and she was fortunate to view the celebration, she said. Bridgeids said in Kansas an individual could dry wet across a river to make the difference in the landscape, but in Costa Rica the scenery is too warm. "If a person travels the distance of thirty miles, he can go from a hot, tropical, semi-jungle resort to an arid desert level, cool plateau," she said. Bridges said her courses at the university of Costa Rica compared favorably to the courses offered at KU. "DURING THE two semesters I enrolled in economics, history, literature, geography and archaeology." Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM 1618 W. 23rd March 1st, 2nd, & 3rd BUY ONE SACK LUNCH GET ONE FREE 96¢ THE "SACK LUNCH" 96¢ Giant Hamburger . . . . . . 54¢ French Fries . . . . . . . . 20¢ Small order Onion Rings . . . 20¢ 20¢ Drink . . . . . . . . . 20¢ $1.14 Value Only 96¢ Buy One—Get One Free March 1st, 2nd & 3rd NO LIMIT Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM 6 Tuesday, February 29, 1972 University Daily Kansan FREDMARK Fans Create Their Own Pre-Game Warmud A frisbee leaves the hand of a spectator before the KU-Missouri basketball game Saturday. Sailing the plastic disc does all the work for the players to hit the ball. several games Spectators kept about a dozen of them flying Saturday afternoon. Bad Stalin threw one of his own into the ring. Encore Would Put Bud High on Record Ladder What Bud Stallworth does for an encore to his 50-point scoring performance Saturday night will determine whether he finishes the season with the third- or with fourth-seeded average in conference history. The 6-foot-5 University of Kansas beat the No. 17 single-season scoring record Saturday in KU's 93-80 upset of Michigan. Houser held his counters against Volleyball Team Places 4th in Ames The University of Kansas volleyball team made a strong showing last weekend in its first season since its resurrection this spring. KU tied host Iowa State for second in the college division of the Cyclone Open Volleyball Tournament Saturday in Ames. In a playoff with top winners in open division, KU placed fourth. The meet featured fourteen teams-seven in the college division and seven in the open division. Graceal College defeated the college division, then won the playoff with the non-collegiate teams Independence, Mo., an in- independent team, ousted a game of the playoff bracket, Fort Dodge, lowa, placed second to the Raptors. Player-manager Dave Sinton record for the tournai Stinson organized the team this year after the program had lapsed for Sinson played on the 1968-69 team. He obtained Student Senate funding for a revival this year. 47 set by Colorado's Cliff Meely in a 99-69 victory over Oklahoma last season. Meely also set the single season scoring average record of 30.5 and scored the third best in Chamberlain's 28.3 in 1988 and Clyde Lovellotte's 28.0 in 1952 are second and third. Chamberlain and Lovellotte were both KU products. Stallworth now has a 27.3 average in the league, and an average in the 24.9. To overtake Lovellette, Stallworth must score 32 points in each of the last three games. So far, he has scored 30 points or more in six games this season. His high before the 2017 against Notre Dame **AMONG CAREER scores,** Stallworth ranks seventh in the Big Eight and third in kU history. DeMarcio of Oklahoma is one of the Big Eight, is points ahead of Stallworth's 1,434. At KU, Stallworth is a point At KU, Stallworth is a point ahead of Chamberlain's two-year career total. Stallworth already has made himself the league's most prolific outside shooter. Meely, a former top-tier defense were all towering frontiers. Only three of Stallowns' 19 field goals were shot from closer than 15 feet Saturday night. Two of these times were in heavy traffic the Chamberlain was the only other KU player to reach the 50 point mark. He scored 52 against western in his collegiate debut. KU will close its season on the road against Oklahoma State Saturday and Oklahoma Monday. The freshman team will play us the last game of the season in a 3-1 victory. The JayaHwkets, unbeaten in 11 games, topped the 100-point mark for the fifth time in a 118-85 rout of Johnson County Junior Collegi Marshall Rogers leads the freshmen with a 25.0 point score and a Dairy Greenie, third with 17.7, scored 29 points Saturday. KU Basketball Statistics | | g | fg-figa | perl. | pct. | petr. | petr. |rb | rb | avg. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Steelwork | 14 | 70 | 124 | 340 | 76-123 | 618 | 82 | 156 | 9.0 | | Kirinto | 70 | 204 | 140 | 340 | 76-123 | 618 | 82 | 156 | 9.0 | | Kivitto | 60 | 204 | 140 | 340 | 76-123 | 618 | 82 | 156 | 9.0 | | Barrow | 60 | 194 | 140 | 476 | 36-59 | 610 | 130 | 156 | 8.4 | | Nash | 60 | 194 | 140 | 476 | 36-59 | 610 | 130 | 156 | 8.4 | | Nash | 60 | 194 | 140 | 476 | 36-59 | 610 | 130 | 156 | 8.4 | | Mask | 24 | 119 | 140 | 421 | 12 | 467 | 70 | 101 | 7.2 | | Mask | 24 | 119 | 140 | 421 | 12 | 467 | 70 | 101 | 7.2 | | Bainvillee | 24 | 77 | 140 | 357 | 19 | 255 | 70 | 101 | 7.2 | | Bainvillee | 24 | 77 | 140 | 357 | 19 | 255 | 70 | 101 | 7.2 | | Franklin | 24 | 76 | 140 | 357 | 19 | 255 | 70 | 101 | 7.2 | | Franklin | 24 | 76 | 140 | 357 | 19 | 255 | 70 | 101 | 7.2 | | Franklin | 4 | 4 | 140 | 333 | 3 | 4 | 160 | 0 | 1.2 | | Total | 74 | 132 | 140 | 433 | 371-532 | 657 | 857 | 177 | 14.1 | | Orchards | 74 | 132 | 140 | 433 | 371-532 | 657 | 857 | 177 | 14.1 | KU Women Seek Berth In Tourney The University of Kansas women's basketball team bowed to Fort Hays State College, 53-48. Friday to give them an 8:50 game for the regular season. This puts KU in a playoff with Wichita State University for the spot in state basketball tournament. KU and Wichita State will meet in Emporia Trial night for the playoff game. The state contest will be this weekend at KU. KU defeated Benedictine College, 49-30 Tuesday, giving them an 8-4 going into the Fort Hays game. KU Arena to Host Two Tournaments Although the University of Kentucky has six football fans, it is over two major sports attractions are scheduled for Allen Field House in the next few weeks. The Kansas State High School Activities Association will return its basketball tournament to the field house for the first time since 1989. KU will host the Class A Tournament 3 through March 9. Two weeks later, KU will host championships in the fledged house. National power Iowa State will highlight the event March 24 and Coach Suspects It's Widespread Star Signs Agent Contract INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (AP)—"Colleges recruit a boy for four years to have a better team. Agents sign a boy to make some money. In some ways, they are coaches. Coach George King said Monday after losing one of his stars in an early contract signing. William Franklin, 6-8-foot senior from Norton Vala. He was one of the stars in Purdue's season as a freshman. The season Franklin last week Close Ones Highlight Basketball After three weeks of intramural basketball competition, Sigma Phi Epsilon is the only team to have a perfect record of High Scores Distinguish Intramural Bowling Week There were a number of closely contested games last week. White House Social Club downed the 3-0. A total of 25 games of 200 or more were bowled in intramural bowling competition last week at the Jay Bowl. In the Tuesday Scratch League, the AM Vets got top performances from Bill McTaggart and Rod Heffley to place ahead of the Gringos. McTaggart bowled 235 and Heffley 122. Other top scores were: Skip Tidwell of Kiatawa (28), Randy Witty of Fremont (26), Rich Frankenfield of the Turks (24) and David Payne of the Turks (21). In the 6:30 p.m. Fraternity class, a girl named Kate Kphaea Theta is in france place, and Sigma Chi in second. High scores of the night were rolled by Bob Taylor. Kappa Theta (213) In the All-Campus League at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, the Abelans are in first and the Athletics are in second. (225) , Steve Zimmerman of Sigma Chi (212) and Kenneth McCoy of Phi Kappa Theta (213). The Snarf Patrol had two members bowl over 200, Ralph Whipple (210) and Steve Goodrich (211). Bruce Sims of the Unbeknowns scored 215, Harold Zimmer of the Oil Slicks 210 and Greg Morton of the Stubbers 214. Mike Spek of the Truckers was high for the wager with a 244 game and a 398 series. In the agricultural game of the week, the Turks defeated the Americans 42-28 in the desperation contest. Custer's Last stand outcued Up-Arrows. Numerous runaways highlighted the wreck's action. The wreck took place on Pikka Kappa Theta, 70:24. Pii Pai over Pikka Kappa Sigma, 69:22. Sloop Kappa Tau, 81:56. Pii Dehi over Pikka Tau Deltis, over Tau Kappa Epsilon, 115-12; Naismith over Stephenson, 68-22. Spare Trees over Raintau, over Kappa. Forkers over Raintau's Nads, 59-22. ALKO in沈阳 Sigma Chi No over Raintau, over Grace Pearson B, 60-15. In the Thursday Guys & Dollies League, first place is held by *Aces* + 1 second, by iron Buttons, for winning for the *Aces* + 1, scored a 227. SYLVANIA, Ohio (AP) — The George Foreman, who died after a two-year illness was dropped from third to fourth in the heavy-weight rankings for not boxing "any rated" titles by the National Association announced Monday. Braced Nuta, 25-24; the Sewer Rats edged Middellobbin, 48-47; Pippe belt Zig Zag, 39-38, and C J's White Shake. Districh, 21-19 in overtium signed a contract with an agent, making him immediately ineligible for college ball. Earlier, Marquette's Jim Chones signed a professional contract with the New York Nets and the American Basketball Association. "But if somebody doesn't check into it, who knows? If the facts are there, they would find and the inside, they would have found a whole lot more last year." King doubts if they are isolated instances. "I personally have the feeling it is widespread throughout the country." King told the Indianaanals News. "The fortunate thing is they catch a boy at the right time before the season is completed, he gets there and does it. In William's case it was entirely because of the upcoming ABA draft," King said. "He signed after the Michigan State game, then the post-waste Timing a basketball game at the University of Kansas requires concentration and an ability to work with others, according to Lawrence J. Heeb and Donald W. Henry, associate professors of physical education at the University. "We talked with this agent Gary Donna of Indianapolis, who signed Franklin, as we did with his daughter, who was alone until the time is right. "You can talk to an agent and try to make him understand that coaches have an interest in the player's welfare. King was referring to the case of Villanova's Howard Porter, who signed an ABA contract during the season last year. Hazards Include Badly Aimed Eggs Basketball Timers Detached "This was not a hardship situation, but William does come from very modest means. That is one of the reasons I am susceptible to the right timing." The two men began timing games more than 20 years ago when basketball was played in the 1970s. Can the scoreboard be before that, By JUDY HENRY Kansas Staff Writer Henry and Heeb alternate timing freshman and varsity players to play against other during the varsity games. The first thing they must do is start the clock 20 minutes before that hour, the hour. They said that knowing when to start the clock was a challenge. Allen Field House didn't mark the minutes. The two discussed various problems of timing, but could not agree on any single problem. "The most important problem varies from game to game, because the way you play the thing is that we be able to get the communication from the other. Henry said that crowd noises often it made impossible to hear the officials' whistles, so they had to rely on visual signals from the team. He also said, because players often obstruct the view. For that reason, Heb watches one official during a game while Henry watches the Both men emphasized that the public doesn't seem to be aware of how important it is for them to be able to see it. The usher's responsibility to keep people safe and comfortable is crucial. Ironing out the details in a recently adopted rule allowing freshmen to participate in the Big Eight expected to take the greatest amount of time at the Big Eight meeting this Kansas City, Mo. Athletic directors will begin work Wednesday in the Muehlebach Hotel. Commissioner Chuck Neiasn said last week that he expected the players to make provisions for a possible payoff to decide the Big Eight basketball title in case of a tie. Big 8 to Iron Out Freshman Policy "The big thing would be the freshmen rules in football and basketball," he said. Stinson, of Kansas, director, said. "We still have to work out the rules and methods of putting the freshman eligibility." Big Eight faculty Big Eight will travel Dursday in the Muenchbach. Charles H. Oldfather, University lawyer, is president of the law firm. "It's pretty obvious that we have to clean some ondoing up in the freshman rule, since we left it to this meeting when we adopted the program," said said. "We're going to take some final action regarding that." THE BIG EIGHT faculty to allow freshmen to compete in football and basketball in line with a new National Collegiate League. At the time, the conference said it would retain some form of freshman competition, but whether the present system or a more traditional model has adopted has yet to be decided. Dean Smith's Tar Heels Win 1000th Game Henry said, but often people argue about it while blocking the view. Dean Smith, basketball coach at North Carolina, probably just really mind missing the 20th game of basketball team Saturday. Otherwise, a freshman held out of a Friday game for a varsity game possibly miss plaving in both. Another possibility, Oldfair has pointed out, is that freshman football games would be played Friday and weekend Fridays. Thus, freshmen who did not play in a Saturday varsity game could play in a Monday game. Smith's Tar Heels downed Villanova in the Atlantic Coast Conference. More than that, the victory made North Carolina the sixth school to hold a title in the conference. When freshmen will begin football practice will probably be the most difficult question. How many times will it take two weeks before school begins. Smith played for the 1952 NCAA champion Jayhawk team. "The crucial thing is that we don't have the opportunity to watch the game." Heeb said. "And I hate losing a ball, you have to be deterred." Missison has taken a strong emphasis on freshmen to participate in the gruelling two-a-day August practice sessions. He favors bringing freshmen into drills and begins as in the present system. Two of those six 1,000 game winners are coached by KU graduates. A third is KU itself. KU was the second school to reach the 1,000-mile mark. mark of the race, and he was days before KU, is coached by Adolph Rupp, a member of KU. The other three schools in the 1,000-victory club are Oregon State. St. John's and Pennsylvania. This season the gun has been jamming, the two said. Henry burned his hand recently when the gun jammed and went off prematurely. Heeb got the gun from a fellow officer in straining rope when it jammed. "The end of any period is also crucial for a timer." Henry said. "You concentrate not on the time but on the time and the officials." Sinson fears that combined pressures of adjusting to college football and college academics are barriers to success of freshman football athletes. NEAR THE END of the period, once you watch the ball and the on-ball down from the official overhead scoreboard and fires the gun, the ball goes off. Heb said the game is not officially over until the gun goes off. "It's a tremendous responsibility in the last few minutes." Heeb said. "We don't start the clock until the ball has been touched, the possibility of a hit or great in the last few seconds is great." "If we should make a mistake, we could determine which team we want to win by tipping the Nebraska game, which is in the last three seconds." The game rests on the ability to do time in a fraction of a second. Timing has had its disadvantages, Heeb said. Henry said that they often felt washed out after a game,participating in a lot of action in the last few seconds. He said timing has been easier in the last five years when the ball changed,including the one stating that any time a whistle is flung the clock automatically stops. "I was hit by a raw egg wrapped in a wet napkin once. It was aimed at Missouri coach Bob Cowan and the target and the throw," he said. NEIL YOUNG On MS records HARVEST $2.99 available on 8 track stereo tapes at KIEF'S Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Discount Diamond Needles Hurtest Not Young TOMORROW AT 9:30 a.m. use "Granary Boots" such as Granry was never tempted by . . . In Navy or Black Leather or Suede in Yellow, Red, Brown, Lavender, Camel, Dusty Rose or Wine! Should cost $20.95, but we ask ONLY $15 at the Shoe Rack. How's that for temptation? Use BankAmerican or MasterCharge. ROBINSON'S Shoe Rack Don't do it. A www. go ahead. Open Mon-Fri. 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Sat. until 6 p.m. Sun. - Noon 'til 6 p.m. 711 West 23rd Mall Shopping Center COUPON Listerine Breath Spray Mint Flavor Manufacturer's Suggested Price 88c Sale 49¢ Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru March 5 ed ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Manage---- 5 oz. size Mint or Regular Manufacturer's Suggested Price 89c Breck Open 9:00-7:00 Gold Formula Shampoo Thurs. 9:00-9:00 7 oz. Sun. 10:00-6:00 Dry, Normal or Oily Manufacturer's Suggested Price $1.25 Sale 83¢ You must present coupon with purchase Good thru March 5 DISCOUNT GROUP 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management Sale 69° COUPON Crest Toothpaste Open 9:00-7:00 Thurs. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 10:00-6:00 You must present coupon with purchase Good thru March 5 led ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management red ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management Demure Open 9:00:7:00 Feminine Hygiene Thurs. 9:00:9:00 Dedodorant Spray Sun. 10:00:6:00 4 oz. size Manufacturer's Suggested ZIP Price $1.69 Sale $1.19 You must present coupon with purchase DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Good thru March 5 Now Under New Management ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 29.1972 Problems Hit Occupational Therapy 7 By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer Getting funds to continue the training of occupational therapy students at the University of Texas Health Sciences increasingly serious problem, Leland D. Miller, chairman of the occupational therapy department. "The department is grossly underfunded and understaffed," Miller said. The normal load for the occupational therapy department is 70 hours per year program. The staff consists of 270 enrolled in the four and a half year program. The staff consists The department has offered a curriculum at KU since 1941, and it is now accredited by KU for 13 years, there has never been such a strain on the facilities or such a demand for training of a trained occupational therapist. HE SAID the occupation therapy department operated on a lower salary level than any other department at KU. These students are being accommodated without the aid of faculty raises or updated grades. They also have no budget increases. Miller said. Francis H. Heller, vice chancellor of academic affairs, taught me how to get lower salaries, but Miller was the only teacher in the school where he professed. Some departments, he went less than or equal to noless than an occupational therapy dose. He said it was impossible to rank each department against the others. "I would not categorically say occupational therapy has a lower pay level." he said. Miller has developed the department partly from Allied Health and Science Technology from the federal government. "I've got to be a teacher, administrator and go get the money," Miller said. Two of the six instructors' salaries, are paid with 'soft cash.' The money they earn is the only source of their salaries, and when the grant runs out, as one will this year, there are longer be funds to pay that salary. MANY STUDENTS find it difficult to get into classes they need each semester. "When students find their state can't meet their needs, what will they do?" Miller said. Part of the process, as Miller sees it, is for parents to act as a sounding board to parents as well as to the legislature. To facilitate this outward movement of information, all-student labs meet monthly to discuss enrollment increases. In addition, each class, including the senior block, chooses a representative to attend regular faculty meetings. "We need maximum student pressure to make policy-making to realize where pressure points are," Miller said. "We've got to bring the news to us." The current answer to the problem is the same as it has been in the past. Miller said. "WE WON't throw out our students." A faculty member has dedicated himself to taking as many student comments as he can to wait he said. Miller said that it was absolutely essential for these students to get every course they needed when they needed it. The occupational therapy program allows students of high school to students usl complete seven semesters of academic study plus a nine- There is a need for the occupational therapist because medical advancements have increased the patient population, Miller said. The therapist works with the senior citizen in the field of geriatrics. This field includes arthritis as well as multiple sclerosis limitations. The therapist works with the aged to increase physical mobility. He plans social activities and designs projects to help install a feeling of worth. Job opportunities are wide open, but the learning oo- portunities are suffering, Miller said. "First there were the hippies," "I said. They don't have myone who said, "burn it down." Now are those who are saying, "I'm not going to burn his is his one chance to get an education and do something, and I can't," THE NEEDS of society are not the same as those of the sudden uprune of occupational therapists. To societal needs, MMeH must that he calls a independent review. Miller said the legislature was still angry about the group who wanted to burn things. Miller was a member of that group that is going to be hurt Occupational therapy comes under the department of fine arts. Campus Bulletin "What's the point of reading about what the legislature does?" said John S. McKay, associate dean of visual arts in the University of arts they build highways because it's good for the state." also available on 8 track stereo tapes "Here is a generation of people who are willing to make the sacrifices and to take the risks. I am aware that there are differences between the eyes," he said. Buying a diamond for the first time? Or even thinking about it in the next few months? Now is the time to stop in and get your first comprehensive information about these beautiful mysterious gems. We will be happy to show you a selection of qualities from our book and explain the subtle points that establish the perfection of this precious gem. Your free copy of the American Gem Society's helpful 36 page booklet on "Diamonds" which gives accurate information on grading and pricing. No objection, of course. Stop in soon! MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY NEIL YOUNG ALL ABOUT DIAMONDS History Advisory Committee: noon. Alcove C, Federica. Independence, Kan. Interviews: 10 a.m. Room 305, Kansas Union. Harvest New Young Our Helpful "Blue Book" Dean's Council Agenda: noon, Alcove D, Cafeteria. HARVEST $2.99 Room 305, Kansas Union. Italian Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark Cafeteria. Pharmaceutical Chem: noon, Curry Room. Discount Diamond Needles French and Italian: 12:30 p.m., Cottonwood Cafeteria. Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Marks Jewelers Kansas Relays Commission: 6 p.m. English Room. at KIEF'S VI 3-4266 On MS records SOL' Butee': p.m. Governor Room. Iranian Students': p.m. Read Room. K.U. Synthesized Swim Club: 7 p.m. Robinson Natatorium. INTERNAL: Instructor: 7 p.m., The Room. International Night Committee: 7 p.m. Room 303A 30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. Dillon and Allen Comm: 7:30 p.m., Council Diamonds Room Ski Club: 7:30 p.m., Parlor C. American Airlines Collection: 8:30 p.m. AGS McKay said by the time the money went from the state legislature to the Chancellor to the department of academic finance and fine arts to the occupational there was nothing to distribute. "I won't be timid about it," Millser said. "I want to see income hold abreast of inflation and merit increments." Beglat Student Union: 8:30 p.m., International, Room. 817 Mass. "They're crazy, thank God," he said grinning Miller has been surprised at the high morale of his staff Sports of his faculty, he said, "There always are some people willing to dedicate themselves. They will do it before it was popular." Caps and gowns for graduating seniors and faculty members are now on sale in the Kansas Union concessions office. Caps, Gowns On Sale In Union Office Kevin Remick, Union 保健师, said there were 900 bachelors and doctorate gowns available. The costs are $2.50 for the bachelor and $4.50 for the master. Until four years ago, the University used gowns which were purchased in 1927. Because of the size of the graduating class at the university, gowns, it is now necessary for students and faculty to rent them. The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited summer school program, will offer July 3 to July 15 at the Anthem anthropology, art geography, government, language and government, language and government, board and room. $190. Write Office of the Summer Session, University of Arizona, Tucson. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico SUA Flights to EUROPE $ \textcircled{1} $ Chicago-Paris Paris Chicago May 30, 1972 $299 Aug. 1, 1972 $ \textcircled{2} $ Chicago-Paris Paris-Chicago May 30, 1972 $299 Aug. 17, 1972 $ \textcircled{3} $ N.Y.C-Luxembourg May 13, 2017 $210 Luxembourg-NYC July 24, 2017 $ \textcircled{4} $ NYC-Luxembourg May 21, 1972 $210 Luxembourg-NYA-Cug. 16, 1972 $100 Downpayment Due MARCH 13th Full Payment Due April 17th For further information, contact: SUA Office SUA Office, Kansas Union 864-3477 A. K. MAYER I am delighted to hear you speak. I will look forward to hearing your remarks. Thank you for coming. Fast, intelligent reading holds your attention! You group the ideas sooner and more accurately. You have time for leisure enjoyment! Overwhelmed? Slow, unorganized reading is boring! You lose concentration and perspective You seem to spend all your time studying! Reading Dynamics teaches you how to find the meaning in all those words of words. Our instructor is also a Confident 5. If you want to take Reading Dynamics but do not need the Western Cri reading, you may join the class. READ THE ENTIRE YEAR'S WESTERN CIVILIZATION ASSIGNMENTS IN ONLY 8 WEEKS Begins March 2 and meets for 8 Thursdays 7-9:30 p.m. finishes just before the W.C. Comprehensive Exam of Acal um. Our unique note-taking technique simplifies, organizes and relates ideas in graphic form. FREE Mini-Lesson EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS By Appointment New Class Begins This Week Downstairs at the sound - Hillcrest Shopping Center 925 lows Phone 843-6474 at the Reading Dynamics Institute I Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kauai are offered to students. Students can color, creed, or national origin. Highest price paid for used cars. G.I. Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2- 8608. t One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $0.01 Western City, N.Y. → Now On Sale! There are Two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them. FOR SALE Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 413 West 14th. tt Now you can buy stereo components at FACTORY COST plus 10%·Harris. Your discount is $295 off Prairie Avenue. The only true discount house in the midwest. 2-28 Northside Shop, 707 North Birch Street. Used furniture, Antiques. Used furniture and items, old wood cooking and heating materials, linens, curtains, houses, shovels, fireplaces, wood and grease, popper and peppermint of other items, seven days Herb Albernande, 842-365-7980. 1970 Nova SS. 386-375 HP, 4-叠板, 3-折叠 Speaial Special, A Mesh Machine. Also, extra long couch and chair. HP. #40, 85-125-Call Paul ATTENTION SPORT BOAT BUFFS ATTENTION SPORT BOAT BUFFS. Hi-personal ski and skid hotels. Hi-personal ski and skid hotels. Available in various states of possession. Available in vigorous states of possession. Call us to book a call to Book A Website. Chrystal Chandelier, Rose Medal Vase, Wahut Table, Caulock Set Four Matching Chairs and Rooster, Lamp Sets, Mirror, Call Kit, Lamp in Eudora 2. If you don't you're at a disadvantage Leather jackets are here, cowboy Hawaiian flannel wool and imamily shirts all under $25.1. February feb- tury prices are down 8%. We have $20.90 year 1989 Vernon. 2-28 GUTFARS — 1950 Les Paul, 1964 Fender Mustang, also 1971 Kustom 100 Watt Lead Amp Calp. Call Mike. 843-2342 3.1 1968 Firebird 400 convertible, 8-track player, hood-tack, air shots. Call 843-556 after 5:00 1968 Plym, Road Runner, 2 door hardtop, 382.4 speed. Excellent condition. Call 843-7800 after 8 p.m. 2-29 3. cCreative String Bass, made 1980 Excellent orchestral sound. Includes case and how to $50 or best offer of new instruments (K(C) or URk news room) 2-28 SCHOOL BUS 62 Chevy, 6 cyl. 2-speed rear axle, good for camper base 80.00 $100.00 One University Seoul 4-speed motor, $79.00 $4 John, 86-6556 GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD, 64 volumes-2000. STORY OF CILIZIANization by Will and Arcel Dick at 82-7616. 5-1 Dick at 82-7616. 5-1 King-size waterbeds. Guaranteed for five years. Full price, $17.50. 841-2530, 308 W. 16th. 3-1 MONOCULAR MICROSCOPE 2 oculars, 4 objectives, mechanism modulation student 1150 Inquire - C Place City Kansas City Kansas City 68130, or 91230, City Kansas City KANSAN WANT ADS Auto Import, Japan . 85 Jaguar XTE, hardtop coupe, 200 miles since engine and transmission transducer bought. Parka, Tomica. phone 912-723-1250 Yamaha FG-200 Guitar, hard shell case. 5 months old. $175.00. Call Richardson's Music Co. 842-6021-312 1960 Buick, excellent condition. Only 2000 actual miles. Power steering. Air conditioning. Oil charged every 2,000 miles.肖车 new Call 842-3005 evening call AKC Old English Sheep Pups - 49 $175.00 us. Can deliver Lawrence or K.C. Feb. 25. Call 423-6485. Lewis Lee. Philips. Stockton Kamega 67690 Toyota, 70, automatic, tape deck, real fine car, $1.395. Call Bill, 843- 3472 RY IT YOULL LIKE IT. Rent Winnebago motor home for undergraduate students. Free Alka-Seltzer. Free Alka-Seltzer. 1-844-395-2005. 1-381-155-2005. 1-362-440-2005. 1971 Camaro 550, loaded. turbio- dromatic, alt. power, band-8 track. stereo, disc-brake, rally wheels; good carbon fiber brakes on every cycle. Call 864-1220 anytime an-1 ARGYLE SOCKS FOR THOSE TIMES WHEN YOUR FEET SHOW FUR EARTHSHINE, EAST EIGHT & MASS. RHINESTONES — RHINESTON$ RHINESTONES — FRUIT — FRUIT — FRUIT — NEW PINS! EARTHSHISE, EAST 80° & Ma- n Must sell. 1936 Triumph Bumblebee, 250cc lance. 1936 Triumph Bumblebee, 250cc lance. $8-inch extended forks, lance. $8-inch extended forks, Bush. Battery eliminated Many Bush. Battery eliminated Many Bush. Phone Mark. 316-342-7621. Phone Mark. 316-342-7621. Stereo console --- AM-FM stereo radio; record change; Strap-tape locks; and sounds good $275 Call 842-967-603 1961 VW to 1971 VW from $495 to $1,995. Bank financing available. Jayhawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 843-2200. 2-29 1968 Chevette SS, power brakes, power steering, air conditioning, automatic transmission, excellent call. phone: 843-8425; three-17 Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court 843-8684 Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD NAISMITH CONTRACT - Single room contract. 842-6835. Reasonable. THE MERCANTILE Craig's Fina and U-Haul HERBS AND SPICES MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SAUAGES 843-9694 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days 25 words fewer $1.50 each additional word $0.2 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Clip- on VHF bow tie antennas, $1.00 each at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass, 3-2 Tire Cleanance — New FBD x14, wide belts cut to $25, plus $25.00 FET. Free installation at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 3-2 MUST SELL 18 MONTH GRD HISBETTER Male, have had hats New dog house, very gentle Call 842-32 Tropical Fish Equipment Aquarums gal. 3-10, 3-25% complete with pump. 8-14%, 3-25% complete with pump. reflector lighters, pump. reflector lighters, filter. Banks 843-2321 with 5.00-6.25 Mimosa肋 18.4 mm, plus 3 Bokker leath 58 mm 11.4, 28 mm, 3.5 and 135 mm 3.5, includes cushion lens bodies and lens covers. At best or at best offer 843-876, 2-3 1971 Honda CB 350, 2600 miles, excelent condition. 843-7006. 3-2 66 Corvette convet. Blue, 427 cu. in, 4-speed, AM FM radio, luggage rack, excellent engine. Call after 6 p.m. 842-7505 3-3 1963 RENAULT DAHPEIN 25 miles to the gallon. Perfect kneel-around car $129.00. Call 845-3876 evenings EMERALD CITY LEATHER FEA- ING HAND-CARRY PURSES, FEDER- AL WOMEN'S SHOP $89.00 • $99.00 home furniture bread, 75LA Located at QUANTHILLE 75LA UHER 4400 Report Microphones. 3-track tape, recorder, microphone, power- amplifier, card reader, case care. Bricked kit, area 8.5-9, lathe load structure, 9 X 15 X 27 Cali lubricant. 1962 Buck Special, new transmission, new front tires, new battery, snow tires. Economical and depend- able. Call Dave. 842-658-3 6-8 [anton 84-1 auto-zimmer 8 super iwe- bric 84-1 case and lipid. Companion 84-1 case] used only once [union 84-15 lumineux] used only once [union 84-15 Draves or after 6-24 84-09-060] 10 speed. bicycle. Gilette Tour de France 241c, france. White Brooks Pro Saddle. Campagnolo Himalaya Supercross. BMW. New Call Michigan at 842-7122 or Call Michigan at 842-7126. NOTICE UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright. (816) 474-676 tf For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization—call the Women's Center, tf-864-4441. NANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-694- 690. Professional child-care for children 1 to 12 mo. Full or part-time. Fri. - Sat. Designied occupancy 3-timers. DISCOUNT TRAVEL To and within Europe. Leave anytime from NU or EM, take a bus to the airport (IDS) insured. Flight Center. 227 North Randall, Madison, Wisconsin 31066. Travel.com. www.travel.com. TEE PEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB — Welcome to TEE PEE. We are and we are taking reservations for second semester term partnership party. New band stand, black tie party. New band stand, black tie party. We also have special monthly rates for phone inquiries. P Spend this summer work in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to COLORADOINFO. FOUND 0-26-34 Boulder, CO 80022 Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767. 9:30 to 5:30. 3-13 Michigan 81, Bar-Quo 82, 105 Michigan 83, Quinnipiac 84, 116 Michigan 85, Chickasaw 86, 116 In. Beef-Bricket 87, Buffalo 88, 116 Buffalo 89, Bilbo 89, 116 Bilbo 90, Albany 90, Large 89, Large 91, Albany 91, Large 89, Large 92, p. 9on Phone 84, 125/126, Closed 93, p. 9on Phone 84, 125/126, Closed QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Q. A new townhouse invests in a W. A who will buy a new Town House Twins, Q. Who can buy a Town House Twins, A. Either the young family or a couple of friends rating and a small downpayment can move into a Town House Twin, Q. Town House Twin offers unique tax discounts. Can you come program. For further questions the tenant can help you buy the Town House Twin. After ages call Don Huang. Used BOKONOON is where to buy Jackets – packages cowboy and Hawaiian shirts around, velvet dresses on bananas. So it goes. It makes you look cool. SIX FLAGS Have a look at all the excite- ments of AMERICA—our new 20-minute film is now available and ready for shown to groups and organiza- tors. THE CONCORD SHOP - ARTIST CANVAS - STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock others on order - LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz. pts. - qts. only. 25% OFF McCONNELL LBR. CO. 844 E. 13th St. 843-3877 Tutoring in organic and biochem. Grad with tutoring experience. Call Rich at 843-1342 or 864-3549. 2-29 STUDY ESPERANTO the inter- national center for language credit, in 1828 July, then attend International Esperanto Congre- se here 29 July to 5 August. A unique annual conference on Spanish as language. Information Summer Ses- sions, Oregon, 97203, 3-16 SALE GOES ON 50% OFF ON BELTS SWEATERS SHIRTS AND OTHER REDUCTIONS EARTH- SHINE EAST 6th & Mass 3-2 Used Motorola portable, sold new for $149.00; now only $5 at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 3-2 Trade-in special-30-Watt Magnavox FM, receiver, one-year-old, $100 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Max. 3-2 Set yourself free. Join Gag Liberation. Brotherhood, sisterhood. 7:00 P.M. Mondays. U.M.H.E. Center. 1204 Oread Ave. 2. two experienced nursery school teachers offer complete day care for children 3-6. All preschool skills, abilities rate. 843-135. 3-10 *Are you leaves of one tree and drop in "one sea." Bahal* Faith—Informal Fireides Monday—Pearson College, 7:30 3-4 WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Avail- ance of unimproved or two-room apartments on unimproved 2-bedroom appartment, patio or bayfront West Hillside apartment. Call 248-750-3161, Call 248-750-3161, Call 248-750-3161, Call 248-750-3161, Call 248-750-3161, Call 248-750-3161, Call 248-750-3161, HILLVIEW APARTMENTS — 1733-45 room bedroom furnished and unfurnished apartments. Carpeted, draperies, electric lighting of much more expensive apartments in the city. FOR RENT For rent—or or two bedroom apts, aka. room for a house, garbage, cart- board, furniture, facilities, facility, T V a vs. Call: 414-263-832 or stop by Hillside Apts. Ridge House Apts—for the budget of $25,000. They include the and the maximum space at best rates in town. RI, 1 and 2 bedrooms, and 3 bathrooms. See fig. 116. for details. Cedarwood-1 and Cedarwood-2 are $7,000. University Terrace Apartments — furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $110 and up. Room rates vary by location. 9th, Apt. 1, 8th, Apt. 1-3, 9th, Apt. 1-4, or call 843-1432-5 ITS NEVER TOO LATE and it is a challenge that is not comfortable or attractive. One call to Forsyth at 2017-A Harvard Road and you can attend a lecture with materials available in Lawrence's best beaten and most attractive campus and Missouri. Avalon Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of apartments, construction, please rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, reasons you would enjoy living there, make this semester in Lawrence a location for August occupancy and special summer rates for June october One bedroom studio apt, utilities paid, air-conditioned, close to campus, furnished. Available March 1st. cory. Own entrance. Call 842-2565. 2 bedroom home with basement, fenced back, yard, unfurnished $125.00 month. Edmons Real Estate. 843-601 or 842-7462 3-1 House for rent: 2 bedroom, refrigerator and stove included, carpeted, unfinished Call 843-4242 or 842- 1300 2-29 Fivedays 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.3 Would you like something a little out of the ordinary in an apartment? We'll take it, and we'll now until school is off. Fireplugs are $90, no other costs. 864-4532-1000 2-29 **864-4532-1000** AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Right Now ten 2 bedrooms and one new 10 bedrooms. Aug. 14. Locate 4 one year old 1 bedroom. Available at end of summer. Available at www.berkeley.edu cateting, dishwashers, central ventilation, between 5:30 and 10:20. between 5:30 and 10:20. WANTED Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call. 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 3-7 ATTENTION TWINS. 18 years and older. Study to answer health questionnaire study to answer health questionnaire $18.00 remuneration per both, birth and death $25.00 remuneration per both, CEBE $24.26; cEBE $32.32 or GT Twins $29.86. 24th & Iowa Ph. V13-1352 Pickens Auto Parts and Service Parts at a discount LAWRENCE, Kansas 60044 2434 Iowa VI 1-1008 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 6684A Sports Cars Inc. Competition TRIUMPH 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 CSC TOYOTA THUMPH Five days Roommate or home to couple nice 2 bedroom house. Unfurnished or furnished at no extra cost. Barker Patricia at 943-824-6258 WANTED = EARLY MODEL JEEP CJ22 SERIES IF POSSIBLE. Any condition considered. Call after 6: p.m. 842-4062 3:00 -1 Warm to buy buy. Oln plant, banis, tuank to buy. Military banis, musheli tuank to buy. Military banis, musheli ta Kansas Key Press—Job printing from letters to posters, booklets to books and resumes 710 Mass. in back Zion's Zero. 2 open in 5 dails 842-4483. PERSONAL We repair alliage Volkwagens. We do general surgery, transplants, or just general therapy for those VWs with part and body套上医院的 illnesses Bugnell, 724 North 2nd 35 mm, SLR camera, Miraenda Serenade, Canon FQL-PIqt, Xenon Spatracist Nikromkast FT or Minolta SR-T 101 preferred. Call 845-875. BECAUSE is a listening service. It is open every night, 8-12 p.m. Sun. through Thurs. Fri, and Sat, 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. 943-8552 2-29 POETRY WANTED for authology, Saturday, July 23. Enjoy veil for prompt reply. Send to UELEWILD PRESS, 1867 East Olympic Way, Los Angeles CA 90021 www.cleanup.ca When you don't know where else to turn, call 864-3506. The University Information Center, 24 hours a day, everyday. 2-29 NOSTALGIA — NEW OLD CLOTHES EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS. 3-2 PINK BUNNY RABBITS AND BLUE SNAILS ARE EVERYWHERE -- THINK? EARTHSHINE, EAST 80 & MASS. 3- Dear Ripper-off, Keep black briefcase! Return class, and thesis to Union lost and found, first floor candy counter. P.S. I love you. 31 TYPING Typing done in my home on elite type electric typewriter. Prompt attention. 843-0598. 2-29 Experienced typist will type your term papers, letters or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work CV 3-281; Mrs Kaufmann Experienced in typing tissues, disser- tation and preparation. Have electric telephone wiper with type Pc. Accurate and prompt assist. Req's degree or equivalent. Phone 843-8544. Mrs Wright Accurate typing of your thesis, dissertation, or miscellaneous work on IBM Select typewriter with pice keyboard. Type for information. 842-1449 for information. 2-29 HELP WANTED Wanted = figure models - Amateur artists - for photos - no age limitations Rate paid. $75-$100 per hour Write Box 275, Leavenworth Kansas Now taking applications for wait-list positions must be attractive and enjoy working. Applicants should work under pressure Prefer experience in a position where an apprentant must be available during the school year. Work as part-time, evenings and weekends. Resume 843-1451 at 6:00 p.m. 3-1 Need 2 R.N.'s for 11-7 shift. Contact Director of Nursing, Ransom Memorial Hospital, Ottawa, Kansas 3-2 LOST 1. pr. Achilles skins in boots in black. Box with silver buckles, size 6. Jacket and Jayhawk Blvd. Wed night between 7:30-8:00 pm. If 4-22am use 843-256-325 MISCELLANEOUS BRIDAL GOWN GROW Sale-Sizes: 10-8, up to 75% Fall, and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky "For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Shines Dyeing Refinishing 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Kansan Classifieds Work For You! 1 8 Tuesday, February 29, 1972 University Daily Kansan County Probes Waste Disposal By TOM THRONE Suburban Sacramento of the Douglas County Solid Waste Management Committee discussed ways to handle solid waste in the county last Thursday, David Blackman, chairman of the committee, said Monday. Three of the seven subcommittees held public meetings. The purpose of the committee is to research different possibilities of organization and cost of solid waste disposal. In 1988, a federal government review said the country had a solid waste problem, Blackman said. He said the committee was formed because the state decided to fight the problem on the county level. "EACH COUNTY has to have a committee. The must submit a plan to the state by June 30, 1972." Information by 1976 "Hackman said." "Solid waste is anything that is solid and that you want to dispose of." Blackman said. "The Red Balloon," a French film classic about a little boy who tames a balloon, and "Why Man Creates," an animated history of the creator's place in the world, by J. Roberts. In the Spooter Museum of Art. The series was originally begun for junior and senior high school students, but is now open to the public. It is sponsored by the Wichita Public Library. The two films are the first in the Film Series for Young People, sponsored by The Lawrence Museum of Art and the Lawrence Art Guild. "This is the first time in years that we have offered such a wide range of courses to our museum curator for education, but we will continue if there is a need." "The films were chosen on the basis of quality and unusual treatment of a theme." Brooking wrote, "I have a potpourri of excellence." Youth Films Include Classic Animated History of Creator Other showings include THE COLLECTION sub- committee looked at four methods of collecting in rural areas and was house to house house collection. Large containers placed at si mile intervals were also coriedered. These containers would be six to 10 cubic feet. They would be spared so that no one would b e transport three miles away free a container. VANESSA REDGRAVE OLIVER REED IN KEN RUSSELL'S FILM THE DEVILS x Eve. 7:20 9:20 Matinees Sat. Sun. 2.05 & 4:00 Twilight Prices Good For 4:00 Show Only Hillcrest Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort are HAROLD and MAUDE Eve. Shows 7:35 & 9:20 RURAL AREAS dispose of their own trash by burning or burying it. The farmer, if he ROBERT-LOUIS STEVENSON'S KIDNAPPED COLOR Eve. 7: 40 9: 35 Matinee Sat. Sun. 2: 20 & 4: 10 Twilight Prices at 10 Only Hillcrest ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S KIDNAPPED Walt Disney's Song of the South G TECHNICOLOR Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Granda TELAATL...Telefone V13-7284 handles it on his own land, is not under the supervision of the county. Granada INTEGRAL...Balgara Banco...57849 NOMINATED FOR 3 ACADEMY AWARDS! —Best Actress –Blendle Jackson –Best Actor Peter Finch –Best Director John Schlesinger "If the buries it on his own land, he can get 90 per cent of his cost paid for by the government, he uses it for solid waste. Mr McKinney's said Ross McKinney, professor of civil engineering. "Sunday Bloody R United Sunday" Weekdays 2:30; 7:30; 9:40 Sat. & Sun; 3:00; 5:05; 7:30 9:40 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone 0-1605 "Louisiana Story," which tells about the arrival of oil derricks in the Louisiana bayou country, March 12. Films which will be released on November 9 are "Symmetry," an animated film defining the meaning of symmetry; "Dot and Line," which explores two plane shapes; "Painting in the Sand; A Navajo Ceremony," a portrayal of the traditional sand painting healing rite as performed by a Navajo girl named Lia Thomas The Loan's Necklace; an art exhibition water bird "The Titan," the story of Michaelangelo, will be shown March 28. THE FOURTH method of collection the committee discussed was that each person carry his waste to a sanitation landfill. "Nature as Reality," a comparison of realist paintings with actual scenes of life; "End of One," a comment on the environmental situation; "Daisy," will be shown April 8. "Nanook of the North," the study of the communal life of the Eskimos will appear April 16. On April 23, "The Chicken", "ChairYale", "Glass" and "A Place to Stand," a conservation film, will be shown. The committee would figure a cost and cost of the first time plan and cost of the first time plan. The plan would be figured in cost and time for the person to take the time. "A sanitary land fill is a site where the waste is deposited and kept in an area eight to 12 inches deep," Blackman said. "The landfill can then be used for treatment of his has disease problems. A dump site, however, has waste dumped in it and is open to breeding from rats flys and mosquitoes. Dump sites are not allowed." BLACKMAN SAID the finance subcommittee discussed financing sold waste in regard to the matter there were no laws. was a general revenue tax which would be added to the property tax. Another plan would be a combination of the first two. A special assessment to be figured upon was also owned who was also considered. The subcommittee discussed four ways of financing the services charged by the charge, which would bill for the services. The second method THEY WILL research and evaluate all the possibilities to see which is most suitable for Douglas County, he said. "The special assessment is not used to any great degree around the nation," Blackman said. The management and Organization subcommittee met to discuss the organization of the system. The KU Rodeo and Riding Club doesn't charge any membership fees and is open to any student. Even if a student isn't a member of the club, Lawrence said, he musticipate in the club's activities. The subcommittee planned five ways to organize the project. The first was a system run entirely by the county. Another plan was a system run like a public utility. The third plan was the Municipality plan each city in the county runs its own system. However, the system is responsible to the county government. The fourth method was the multi-county system which is like the county system but involves more than one county. THE LAST system suggested was a combination of any of the other systems. The chances were good that Haskell will have a rodeo next year, he said, and perhaps the clubs would get together then. Lawrence said he had talked with officials at Haskell and suggested combining the two into a joint unit, staging a joint joke. However, the situation at Haskell was similar to the situation at KU, Lawrence said, and Haskell would probably not have a rodeo After the committee completes its research, it will then conduct a series of experiments in the scheme showing the advantages and the disadvantages of each system. KU Club Cancels Rodeo Plan, Cites Lack of Student Support Dave Lawrence, president of the Dave Lawrence school, said last week that lack of money and student support had prevented chances for a spring rodeo here. Lawrence said that although there were about 20 people on the clubs membership roles, only a third attended the meetings regularly. the club sponsored two trail rides the club sponsored two trail rides the semester they have plans for one afternoon trail ride and one afternoon trail ride Lawrence said he thought many people were under the impression that if they didn't own a horse, the cost of riding would be prohibitive. If there were enough people in the club, he might have had a reasonable rate wouldn't be difficult. If enough people were interested, Lawrence said, the club could even give riding lessons and possibly even teach rodeo style riding. Lack of support is the clubs' main problem. "Without student support," he said, "there's nothing we can do." Alumni Officers Elected, Discuss Student Issues William R. Hagman of Pitt shurg was elected president of the University of Kansas Alumni Association at the association's board of director's meeting Feb. 26. Jordan L. Haines of Wichita elected to succeed Hagman as Hagman and Haines will take office immediately following the election. Also elected to one-year terms at the Saturday meeting were Mary A. of New York city, eastern vicinity William C. Douce of Bartlesville, Okla. vice-president; and Craig Angeles, western vice-president. Association, were then selected by board members to serve as alumni representatives to the Kansas Union Operating Board. Charles C. Haverty of Lawrence, and Dick Wintermote, executive director of the Alumni Wintermere said it was the practice of the board of directors to invite presidents of various colleges and universities following Alumni Association business meetings so the alumni keep abreast of student issues. Representatives to the Kansas University Operating Board. Following the elections, the alumni Association board hosted the presidents of $9 KU student organizations at a luncheon in the Union. Special lunchie guests were Dunleavy, Eutuia Emma, president of student body; William M. Lucas, president of the KU Faculty, and Chenclect for the University. EXTRA DAY SALE FEBRUARY --- 29 TUESDAY Every four years, we have an extra day, February 29, an extra day to do business, an extra day for us to get rid of all of the odds and ends we've accumulated over the past four years. We have merchandise left from all of our stores that we want to clear away and we've priced them accordingly. Some of the items are overstocks, some left overs of sellouts, others are our own buyers mistakes, but they are all being cleared away at the lowest prices possible. We'll be open from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Tuesday, February 29, the extra day. SUITS SPORT COATS DRESS SHIRTS BELTS KNIT SHIRTS COLOGNE TIES WASH PANTS SWIM SUITS WALK SHORTS WINTER COATS SPRING JACKETS DRESS SLACKS SWEATERS MISTER GUY 920 Mass. - All Sales Final - No Alterations - All Sales Cash OPEN 10:00 'TIL 10:00