RAVEN
COLDER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.96
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Gould Trial Postponed
Wednesday, March 1, 1972
See Page 8
THE LOCAL WALK- STA
EMPLOYE
LIUNA
---
Students Help to Man Picket Lines in University Workers' Walkout Katherine Photo by JIM EATON
Show of support welcomed by striking University of Kansas public service employee
Student Regent Proposal Supported by U.S. Senate
By DAVID BARTEL
Kansan Writer
WASHINGTON - The Senate passed a "sense of the Congress" resolution Tuesday day calling for student representation on the board of American universities and colleges.
The resolution, sponsored by Sen. Fred Harris, D-Orla, was approved by a 66-28 vote as an amendment to the Orumbus Act now being debated in the Senate.
The resolution does not require boards to
tary basis as determined by each state should receive the encouragement of Congress. This (the resolution) is the single most direct step within the system toward a healthy campus relationship over the long term."
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., reached in lawen, said he was not altogether surprised at the Senate's action, which made him think similar lines had been made presumably.
"The great problem." he said. "is the
Dole could not be reached for comment.
role of the governing board in a public university."
He said consideration of such action depended on whether a board was involved in both state and university actions or whether its role was to create policy decisions. However, he said that it was critical that student needs and concerns be voiced.
Chalimers also pointed out that 70 per cent of the education cost in Kansas was
"The question is," he said, "who represents the taxpayers."
Strikers, University Reach Understanding
By ROBERT E. DUNCAN Kansan Staff Writer
Civil service employees who walked off their jobs ten days ago returned to work this morning. The decision came after a "mutual understanding" about working conditions was arrived upon Tuesday between the University of Kansas and local 1132, said Lloyd Rose, business agent of the union.
Two University officials and four members of the union met in the state personnel director's office for three hours to discuss the workers' problems.
Kevin Nitcher, vice-chancellor for business affairs said Tuesday's discussions centered on clarification of a statement issued Feb. 25 by Chancellor E. Laurence concerning employment and working conditions for civil service employees at KU.
Nitcher said about 113 employees had missed work, ranging from one to seven days absence. Most of the absent workers are employed in the department of buildings and grounds.
UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS agreed to some modifications of the statement, especially concerning the special subcommittee of the University safety committee. There was also agreement on modification to the overtime policies. Details of these modifications are to be released this week by the University.
ALTOUGH THE walkout is over several questions concerning employee representation still need to be answered. In a letter to the attorney general's office Monday, the University inquired about the status of the new public employees relations
Payroll accounts would be altered to reflect the number of days absent, Nichter said. All workers who were off the job will be notified of the adjustments.
See Related Story Page 3
Layton Olsen, executive director of the National Student Lobby, which represents about 800,000 college students, hailed the Senate action as a victory for students.
Olsen said the unexpectedly strong support of the Senate made it likely that the resolution would be approved by a House-Senate Conference Committee.
seat students, "but it would be a clear signal to students and their universities that the Congress shares the view that students have a right to participate in decisions which most effect their lives," Harris said.
2 Senators to Visit China
In the vote on the resolution, both Kansas senators, Republicans Robert Dole and Jon Koehler, supported the motion.
A final vote on the higher education act, which also contains desegregation aid for elementary and secondary schools, is scheduled for today.
By the Associated Press
After the vote Pearson said, "Student participation on the governing boards of the university is encouraged."
President Nixon won congressional leaders' support Tuesday for the results of his mission to China. Also, he disclosed that the two top Senate leaders have been invited to visit Peking in a continuation of Sino-U.S. contacts.
The big news at the White House Tuesday was Nixon's announcement to Senate Majority Leader Mike Wansell, D-Mont., and Minority Leader Hugh Scott, R-Pa.—and leadership Enl-lai planned to invite them to Chennai in a time that will be mutually convenient.
The White House said Nixon received substantial support from the bipartisan leadership of the House and Senate on his historic journey. This was borne out by comment from the congressional leaders who were briefed at the White House.
It was announced that Nixon felt he had already adequately filled in the American government.
Five Sisters Named; Court Orders Issued
In Moscow, the Soviet Union issued Tuesday its first sharp attack on Nixon's trip to Peking, accusing China of "entering the US into conflict" with the ruling circles of the U.S.A."
Five women were named in an amended complaint filed Tuesday by the Bombudsman Office against the women who occurred the East Asian Studies buildings Feb. 4.
PRESS SECRETARY RAYON L. Ziegler said the President was on nationwide television-radio with his statement Monday that he "no further report as such to the nation."
The original complaint against the women, filed Feb. 21, referred to the women as "Jane Does, one through twenty." The amended complaint lists the defendants as Beverly Perry, Lawrence sophomore; Rivian Bell, Overland Park junior; Emily Beils, Lawrence first-year law student; Katherine Lupurdus, Lawrence graduate student; Ann Franke, Prairie Village sophomore, and Jane Does, one through fifteen.
pressions after summit meetings with China's leaders and seven days in that
An article in the Soviet trade union newspaper Trud dismissed Nixon's journey to China as a publicity stunt to capture votes in this election year.
REGISTERED LETTERS were sent to the five women Tuesday with an interrogatory order, Dysart said. An interrogatory order requires the women to answer specific questions, in this case about the women at the occupation, within 20 days. A
Dave Dysart, University of Kansas Ombudsman and Lawrence third-year law student, said that the amended complaint removed the Ombudsman Office as coplaffit. Dysart said it was not the office's business to be involved in the matter.
A request for an order to answer was filed Tuesday afternoon with Jess H. McNish, adjunct professor of business and chairman of the University Judicary, Dysart said. he asked McNish to postpone ruling on it unless it became obvious the women would not answer the interrogatory.
Trud was the first of the controlled Soviet press to deviate from a cautious handing.
The thrust of the article was to portray Nixon and his Chinese hosts as conspiring to decide the fate of the North Vietnamese. The article said Nixon was counting on Peking for support of his Vietnam concessions.
By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer
If they failed to respond to the inter-rogatory order, he said, they would be sent an order to respond. If the women refused to answer the second order, Dysart said, and charging on two counts, refusing to answer the charged order and refusing to answer the court.
He said he thought some of the women would not be University students. If the women had no connection with the Universities they would have no jurisdiction over them.
copy of the original and the amended complaint were also enclosed in the letter.
DVART SAID that as further names were collected, the complaint would be filed.
"All they have to do," he said, "is prove us that they're not students."
"THE WHOLE WORLD condemns the crimes of the American military in Indonesia but is watching intently the activist in the Peking ruling circles." Trud asserted.
Dysart said the University Judicary would have jurisdiction over faculty and staff women, who could be reprimanded or suspended.
The letter asked what position a public employer should take with regard to voluntary recognition of public employee or if a secret ballot election was required.
"They are avoiding anything which would look like a criticism of the U.S.A. The leaders of China broke all records during Nikon's visit to ingrate themselves to the United States. They tried to create a favorable impression of them in the eyes of those who guide the foreign policy of the largest imperialist power.
State Ombudsman Bill Would Cut Court Load
"This they have achieved. But they have also achieved something else: The entire progressive world, along with the condemnation of the activities of American imperialism against the peace and freedom of peoples, also condemns the Maoists for having entered a dangerous plot with the ringed circles of the U.S.A."
law which takes effect today. The bill allows elected representation for civil
TRUD'S COMMENTATORS castigated Nixon's Vietnamization policy and said it prompted the Chinese leaders to invite him to Peking.
A reply is expected from the attorney
Trud said American bombing raids over Vietnam had been increased recently and "this is an obvious result of the American-Chinese rapacrophement."
Both Mansfield, who served as a U.S. Marine in China in 1921-22 and was a professor of Asian history, and Scott, a collector of Chinese and other Oriental art, have previously expressed an interest in going to mainland China.
with Chou in Shanghai, when the question of people-to-people contacts and exchanges between the U.S. and China was discussed, the premier said he knew of the interest of Manfield and Scott of coming to his country.
He told Nixon he would invite them, Ziegler said, and the President passed along the invitation at the White House Tuesday.
ZIEGLER SAID that at the last meeting
AS FOR TAIWAN, Mansfield said reductions in U.S. troops were already being made on the island before the President's trip.
Scott told reporters U.S. troops would not be wholly withdrawn from Taiwan prior to a settlement between its government and Peking, but the present force would remain with Vietnam level of some 2,000 as American forces are plaused out of Vietnam.
Union members would not comment on the future of their organization. The union said last week they hoped to increase membership when they demonstrated to non-union employees the effectiveness of their organization.
Dysart, the co-director and founder of the ambusman office at KU, said the bill calls for a program similar to that of KU. If enacted, Dysart said, the bill would give the university access to universities and cut down on the case load in the courts as has happened at the University.
general's office that will assist the University in its future policies toward civil war
The bill passed the Kansas Senate last week with a narrow margin and is awaiting action by the committee before it goes up for House vote.
At a hearing Tuesday of the Kansas House Committee on Federal and State Affairs, Dwayse Dysart, KU ambushman and Lawrence third year law student, and Sen. Foster, WI tightness, testified in favor of Sen. Schlaep which would establish a state ambushman.
The bill calls for the appointment by the legislature of a state ambassador for a term of four years at a salary of $22,000 per year. It gives the ambassador power to investigate complaints about or to initiate an investigation on his own on any administrative act.
FOSTER, SPONSOR of the bill, said this bill was almost a word-for-word copy of a Hawaii law which established a state ombudsman.
Foster said this would apply to all state agencies including school boards, and city agencies.
The bill says the embudsmath would act primarily in an advisory capacity. He would be given access to public records and the testimony of ojama witnesses during an investigation.
DVSART SAID since the founding of the ombissman office had last at KU over 19 years.
"The ombudsman office was originally established to mediate student and faculty conflicts," Dysart said. "Since then we realized that our function was a legal one. The ombudsman must know the law. The ombudsman must resolve disputes unless the person in the middle knows the legal status of both sides." Dysart said.
Three types of cases have come through the office, Dysart said: those requiring information, those needing mediation and those who must embudham to take an investigative role.
With a staff of 14, the KU umbadmanu
office was the first University program to
be established in Pakistan.
saad. Only three other universities in the United States have an ambulans post-
IF THE LEGISLATURE passes the bill, Kansas will be the third state to have a legislatively appointed state ombudsman. Hawaii established the office in 1967 and Nebraska followed suit in 1969. Oregon has adopted a similar position by executive order
Following the hearing, Dysart said he was surprised at the apathy of the committee. "I felt a lot of pain," he said.
Two representatives very nearly fell asleep during testimonies from Foster and another friend.
Legislature Kills 2 Bills On Colleges
Two bills, one proposing the abolishment of teacher training programs at three state universities, and another creating a panel of educators to study the possibility of teachers being killed at the universities, were killed in committee last week in the Kansas Legislature.
Rep. Bert Chaney, D-Hutchinson, and a
Education Committee,
sponsored both bills.
Although Chaney sponsored the bill, he recommended that the committee not send the proposal concerning teacher training programs to the floor of the legislature.
"I didn't think that it would be well received by members of the general seas-
The second bill, to set up an investigative committee, did not get to the floor either. The Council of Chief Academic Executives decided after Chaney's bill had been introduced.
"I think that even though the bills did not get to the floor they accomplished their purpose. I wanted to call attention to the issues in the area of education," Chaney said.
I'll just keep the text as it appears. No further interpretation needed.
The image shows a long line of laundry hanging on a tree by a calm lake with a bridge in the background. The trees are bare, indicating it might be winter or early spring. There is no visible person in the scene.
Laundry-Drying Weather to End Tonight
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
Recent unseasonably warm temperatures prompted students to pursue various outdoor activities. One of the more interesting was this clothline strung beside Potter Lake. The U.S. Weather Service has predicted a low tonight in the mid-temps to lower
twenties, with cloudy skies and a chance of showers this afternoon. The high Thursday will be in the thirties, a season away from Tuesday's high of near 80.
2
Wednesday, March 1, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Landlord Files Complaint On Shutoff of Electricity
By MARSHA SEARS Kansan Staff Writer
The Lawrence City Commission Tuesday heard a complaint from David Broyles, 1011 Indiana St., concerning a house he owns at 407 W. 138 St. the electric was cut off Friday.
Without a permit, Broyles had installed the house's wiring himself to avoid high electrical costs. The wiring has wrong color-coding and the wiring lacks main electrical disconnector.
The city notified Broyles last Wednesday that the electricity would be cut off by noon Friday and that electrical problems corrected by an electrical contractor. The violations were discovered during a building code inspection in a block area east of the KU building.
Although Broyles said these mistakes existed, he said he had been treated with respect to the five tenants living in the house. Thirty days instead of 44 hours should have been allowed to move on without mistakes, Broyles said. It would be impossible to get bids and contract a electrician within 44 days.
CITY MANAGER Buford Watson said that according to the city electrical code the normal condition when something was defective,
Other commissioners agreed with Hambleton and Mayor Bob Pulliam said most landlords didn't have the knowledge or practical experience in electrical work to wire the houses they own.
Broyles said that he would hire an electrical contractor to wire the house if he were allowed more time.
COMMISSIONER NANCY HAMBLETON said the city had an obligation to protect tenants' safety.
The commission suggested that Broyles study the city electrical code to determine which sections he thinks need to be changed. The commission agreed to look at future city commission meetings.
meter was removed from the house. He said that he was not with the inspector when the house was inspected and that he was not given a list of need electrical corrections. Bryles said he had been notified by the procedure of notification should be in the city electrical code.
In other business, the commission unanimously passed the first reading of Ordnance No. 4290, to include within the city
Bus Company Notes Increase in Business
By SCOTT EATON Kansan Staff Writer
Arguing that the public needs to be protected from the high cost of licensed labor, Broyles said the laws should be changed to allow landlords to do their own electrical wiring. The city electrical code does not allow a person to do electrical work on buildings except his own residence.
The increase in the number of fares the company takes in each week has proved the necessity of the expansion of the capacity of Kansas campus, Ogle said.
If the Student Senate extends the monetary support of the Lawton company, the original limit of March 17, the money the Senate had originally allotted for the company would increase in the continuation of service through the last day of classes, so the company paid the bus company, said Tuesday.
The allotment would probably cover the company's expenses even with the drop off in fairs on the holiday weather in the spring. Oral said.
Oda said that since the Student Senate decided to subsidize the bus ride for students, drop to 10 cents for campus runs. more many people were riding buses
OGLE PRESENTED figures the day before they taken some 80,343 fares from the period of Jan. 24 to Feb. 25, an average of about 16,670 fares.
Ogle said the number of fares the company had taken this semester had held the cost to the Student Senate down to about $5,000 a week. He said that was below what the Senate had budgeted.
Ogle compared the week of Jan. 24-28 to the week of Jan. 31. Feb. 4. The week of Jan. 24-28 saw
Ogle attributed the rise in the number of fares to the return of KU students to classes at the beginning of the spring semester.
2,179 fairs on the buses and cost them $30 a ride. The week Jan 14-31 Feb. 4, however saw a rise in fairs to 16,731. That week cost the Senate only $358.88.
DURING THE WEEK of Feb.
at low temperatures and some
snow, the bus company received
18.035 faws and the cost to the
bus system.
Ogle said the pleasant weather experienced by the Lawrence students was unusual, however, had caused the number of fairs for those two days to increase.
Ogle said there was also a possibility that the bus company would initiate a run past the Ridgeline and West Hills Apartments. He said that if it was possible to get back to Ridgeline run, the run would probably begin when classes resumed after spring break.
Ogle said he was also accusing the prince about the students to the company, said he had contacted his insurance company about him and with them the lowering of the minimum driver age in his policy from 28 to 21. He said lowering the minimum driving age for students to drive for the company, and would provide employment for many people.
AURH Passes Bill To Alter Fee Use
The AURH President's Council budget the present residence half social funds into a fund which would be named the resident
The final decision on the budget proposal is expected to be made today at a meeting of the Administrative Housing Committee.
According to Mike Sundermeyer, AURH president, the fund would be renamed because it would be used for cultural programs and operating expenses, as well as for social programs.
The amount which goes into the social fund, which each hall resident now pays as part of his overall dormitory fee, is $12.
Under the proposal, 56 cents of money should be given to each resident and the other $1.50 would be given on a per head basis to each resident. This $1.50 would be given to each resident.
If the proposal is accepted, AAV will receive only 30 cents per person from the administrative budget. Currently all of the AURH funds come from the AAV fund.
Sundermerley said the AURH eventually hopes to receive all of its funds directly from student funds through administrative channels.
Architect-Ecologist Soleri To Speak Here Tonight
This fall, the budget for the 1973-1974 school year will be reevaluated and hopefully this plan be adopted. Sundermeyer said.
Paolo Soleri, an architect who crosses ecology and architecture to get arcology, will speak at 7:30 p.m. in the Ballroom. His speech is sponsored by the SUA Featured Speakers Committee and the Visiting Lecture Series of Architecture and Urban Design.
In 1969, Design Quarterly quoted Soleri as saying, "Violence against nature is violence against man. Of all the tasks that concern architecture, the one of making an important cooperation with nature and in harmony with man is the most urgent."
THE COMMISSION unanimously adopted March 14 as the bid date for a $1,527,000 grant in general annual improvements.
According to Soleri, his plans reflect his love for nature. He said he wanted to build up rather
Solaris's prospective cities, or arcologies, are complete living systems contained under one roof.
out and down rather than around. His idea is to utilize available space and to preserve nature.
"They host life, work, education, culture, leisure and health. he said, "for hundreds of people per square mile."
limits 1.35 acres located north of the present city limits on North 2nd Street.
Soleri was born in Torino, Italy in 1819. He studied at the Academia Albertina and later at the Polytechnic of Torino where he doctorated in architecture in 1946 he came to the United States and studied under Frank Lloyd Wright for two years.
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Wednesday, March 1, 1972
University Daily Kansam
3
Senate Reverses Anti-Busing Vote
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate, with most of its absentees back in town, reversed itself on the amendment to strip the federal courts of power to issue busing orders in school desegregation
The vote against it was 50 to 47, which compared with the 43-40 tall last Friday to adopt the resolution. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich.
Three of the five Democratic presidential contenders who had been absent Friday returned for the test and furnished the margin support for civil rights advocates to reject the Griffin amendment.
The victory was not final,
however. The Senate will continue to debate the higher education-school desegregation bill up to 2 p.m. today and another version of the Griffin law, a stringent antiburgement amendments still could be offered.
After rejecting the Griffin amendment, the Senate voted 63 to deny a bill offered by the Senate leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., and Hugh Scott, R-Pa., as a member of the bill it sealed in the bill 62-99.
It contains some mild restrictions on busing but does not challenge the power of the judge. The judge busings orders where the judge decides these are required to end imposed school segregation.
the three Democratic hopefuls who voted were Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, Hubert H. Benson of Minnesota, George S. McGovern of South Dakota. Each vote against the Mansfield Scott.com compromise.
Henry Jackson of Washington, campaigning in Florida, said the Griffin amendment is issued by the school district Scott ineffectual. Sen Vance Harkie of Indiana, who has opposed the Griffin amendment, is New Hamburg. The other absentee was Sen Karl E. Mundt, D-SR.
who has been absent because of a stroke.
Opponents of the Griffin rider hath in his unconstitutional attempt to deprive the courts of the right to use an important remedy for an injury, as he did.
The rider had a second provision which would have killed a key section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
This provision would have forbidden federal officials to withhold or threaten to withhold military aid, and thus busing in a desegregation effort.
Southern senators continued to describe the Mansfield-Scott compromise as meaningless. Similarly, would produce more busing.
Dorms Face Fee Increase
Residence hall fees will be increased from $900 to $550 for the 1872-1873 school year, J.J. College of residence, of housing, said Tuesday.
Wilson cited three specific areas which contributed to the increase in fees. Counseling costs will be increased from an annual $180 to a $240 per student. An additional 10c per day will be spent on each resident for food, adding another $15. The remaining $10 of the fee increase will be for service salary expenses, including fringe benefits.
Residents of coeducational residence halls will also be able to provide the equipment $20. This will go to provide added security measures such as mechanical devices and a system recording monitoring of hall visitors.
Hashinger residents in 1972-1973 will pay another $50 for the new experimental programs to be instituted there. Students are encouraged to know about the differences between the hall halls, as well as the differences in expenses before making their choice of a residence hall.
AAUP to Hear 3 Legislators
Three local Kansas legislators will address the University of Kansas chapter of the American Association of University Teachers at a 7:30 p.m. Thursday following a dinner in the Kansas Room of the Union
been invited to the dinner, Clark said.
Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence; Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence; and Rep. Morris Kay, R-Lawrence, will each spend about 10 minutes talking about the University, such as the university's J Bunker Club associate professor of music history and KUAIAP president
Clark said that Richard Zinn, chairman of the Committee on Taxation and Legislation of the Chamber of Commerce, would outline action taken by the Chamber of Commerce concerning KU. The Affairs Committee of the Chamber of Commerce have
A question and answer period will follow the short talks, he said.
The five committees of the KU-AAP will give their reports to Gordon Landes, assistant instructor of English and foreign languages, and to the Status of Graduate Student Instructors, will present a resolution in favor of increasing faculty in and teaching instructors and teaching assistants at the same rates as those of the general faculty, among other things.
Two representatives of the AAUP-Committee N, which deals with economic and professional problems, will comment on two bills being passed. Senate involving the rights of professors to bargain collectively.
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Wednesday, March 1, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Elwell and Pot
Some scientists estimate that nearly 24 million Americans have at one time or another smoked marijuana. Psychologist William McGlothlin of the University of California at Los Angeles estimates that within five years there will be 6 to 12 million weekly users.
The President's national Commission of Marijuana and Drug Abuse will recommend in its report to be released March 22 that all penalties for private (in the home) use of marijuana will be enforced on members of the commission were appointed by the President.
Mike Elwell, Douglas County attorney, spends 20 per cent of his court time prosecuting marijuana cases. This time, spent on what are
called victimless crimes, could be better spent on those who use them, said herb, etc.
In spite of the findings of the President's commission, whose results were not come to easily, Elwell says not enough is known about the weed. His head is in a bag that seems to protect him from enlightenment no matter what the source.
Elwell will not even say maybe. His refusal to step back—even a step—and his devotion to what is being proved a myth leads to the frightening conclusion that the campaign against pot is more than a matter of law—it is an exercise in political morality.
—Thomas E. Slaughter
PETER MCKENNON
The Lindsay staff is now proceeding with plans that include Kansas as a key state in the mayor's program to make himself known outside the Eastern states. His first stop was Arizona, where Lindsay made a remarkable showing in that state's delegate selection convention. All signs point to the Arizona strategy being the master plan for similar operations in Kansas.
Lindsay's Kansas Tactic
Make no mistake about it—John Lindsay, mayor of the second largest government in the United States, New York City, is actively pursuing his new party's nomination for President of the United States.
Testimony to this was the appearance of a Lindsay staff aide, Jim Masters, in Kansas last week. Masters, a KU graduate, is one of Lindsay's important advance men. While in Kansas, Masters met daily with party leaders, student leaders and just about anyone who showed any interest in Democratic politics. "Are you able to build a 'grassroots Lindsay organization'" in Kansas that would capture delegate support in the state's convention process which begins on the local level April 8.
After Lindsay's abrupt change of colors last summer, many political leaders said he was not to be considered a serious contender for the Democratic nomination, at least not in '72. But Lindsay is spending vast amounts of money and time to fund the nomination for the nomination in '72, but more so, that he is a candidate to be reckoned with by the leaders.
"We'll come in here with a 720 load and you can do the job," Masters remarked to one listener.
Garry Wills
Masters was pledging money, media and manpower in an attempt to build confidence among potential Lindsay followers.
Masters was also gauging the reaction to the scheduling of a Lindsay whirlwind speaking tour through Kansas. The only drawback was that the mayor hasn't quite formulated a "farm policy," making it a little tough to make speeches in this, the "wheatland of America."
The general hope inside Lindsay headquarters is that if the mayor of New York City can make a few more showings in the Midwest and West like he made in Goldwater Country, Arizona, then a few more doors may open up at the party convention in Miami Beach next July.
Still, there are some who remain skeptical. One very prominent student leader told Masters he couldn't work for Lindsay because he thought the mayor was only building support for the campaign of 1976. The student was interested in a race for the governorship and race this year. Masters remained silent for a moment, then changed the subject.
Staff Column
Whatever the masterplan, John Lindsay is pulling all strings, purse strings included, to see that Kansans are aware of his presence at the state's district democratic conventions this spring. If the master plan follows the pattern in Arizona, there is every reason to believe that John Lindsay is actively running in 1972. For what, remains to be seen.
By MARK BEDNER
How to Run Away From Virtue
Fred Harris, in his brief frenetic try, attacked "goddam liberares" to live down his reputation as one of them.
Rep. "Pete" McCloskey, who entered an eperitemic war critic, now eases
The mark of the 1972 presidential campaign may well be the fact that decent men have, from the outset, had to apologize for their decency.
milkily away from and around Vietnam, lest he be a one-issue candidate.
Senator "Scoop" Jackson, whose child is in an integrated school, is rather mumbling and heartbeat in his ajeb refusal to take pride in that
soperator Humphrey, who has done long service as a loyal party man, tries to live that down as he repudiates his past under L.B.J. and absurdly presents himself as a young new candidate.
senator Muskie has been a bit elusive about his religious ties — by contrast with Jack Kennedy, who dealt with his Catholicism in the open.
soften his healthy justified contemp for the political process as he pretends he did not "drop out" after the 1968 election.
He has the story of a curt insult to a lady to smile at us and say that he is, maybe, something of a cad. Even his daughter got into the humanizing act—said he was just like any other father—who could not stop him. The told how he played with his daughter after a scary horror movie hanging her doll where it would be the first thing she
But Sen. McGoveri is the one who has been in most open and panicky flight from virtue. He so many decriences to be apologetic for. His task is overwhelming—to explain how he got to be just generally Mr. Decency.
Even Senator McCarthy has had to
saw when she woke up, screaming, the next day. Never has any poor Dr. Jekyll searched so hard for the saving Mr. Hydpeotion.
Only Wallace seems unconcerned about looking worse than he is. He has never pretended to much virtue anyway.
And that's the point. Wallace is scoring heavily in Florida and eyeing other states with hope, because the voters are in a mean and surly mood, responsive and taken expressions of response. We have entered the The Measures.
And no one can beat Nixon in that kind of contest.
Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate
THE GENERAL MARTIAL
我是美國
DEMOCRATIC
CANDIDATES
"Great Leap Forward"
James J. Kilpatrick
Reflections on Crime and Punishment
WASHINGTON—Put the questions of constitutional law to one side. Solely as a matter of public policy, should the death sentence be abolished or retained?
in the wake of last week's decision in California, the issue is before us once again. The California Supreme Court, construing a provision of the State's own constitution, banned capital punishment in an opinion "grounded not in sympathy for the victims of violence, but in concern for the society that diminishes itself whenever it takes the life of one of its members."
The language tells us something of a court that would "ground" a judicial opinion in law, but in "concern." But no
matter. Does society "diminish itself" by imposing the death sentence, however infrequently, a comment for particular crises?
Certainly a great many theologians, penologists, and legislative bodies have thought so. More than 200 years ago, the Italian penologist Cesare Derrito emphasized the unwisdom of capital punishment. His views attracted the support of such eminent Americans as Franklin and Paine. England and Canada, among many other Western nations, have abolished the death sentence. It has been repealed since 1965 in States. Nearly five years have passed since the last execution in the United States. Plainly the trend is against it.
Part of the trend results from a kind of new enlightenment (if it is enlightened) on the whole business of crime and punishment. If we respect concept the concept which should be punished. In this view, crime is not crime; it is sickness. We do not punish sickness; we treat it. By extension, there are crimes that are not punish. And surely they are degrading and debasing for society to claim the life of a sick man.
prisoner. Life and liberty are coupled in our concept of due process. If it is cruel to execute, it is also cruel to imprison. The theory of the new enlightenment cannot condone punishment in any degree, for again, it is wrong to punish the sick.
This reasoning appears to be implicit in the opinion of the California court. Punishments are matters of degree. If a society "diminishes" itself by taking the life of a prisoner, society also "diminishes" itself by taking the liberty of a
So much for metaphysics. The more familiar argument against capital punishment is that it offers no deterrent to heinous crime. The argument requires a close look. To impose sentence solely as a determent—that is, to punish one man as an animal or prisoner as a means to an end; someone else's end. And as C. S. Lewis has written, "this, in itself, would be a very wicked thing to do."
can be used partly as a justification for capital punishment. The evidence is inconclusive. It is reasonable to suppose that in a case of murder, the possibility of a death sentence provides no deterrent whatever. These are the murders—11,000 of them in the U.S. in 1970—that were committed in crimes of passion. Persons in a blind rage will not see reason.
Perhaps the deterrent concept
My own view—I advance it tentatively—is that the old concept of crime and punishment ought to be preserved. If a criminal can be "treated," fine; if an innocent can be "rehabilitated," fine; if a sentence has the effect of deterring others, well and good.
But punishment ought not to be imposed because it is therapeutic; but because it is just.
Thus I would retain the death penalty for a small list of crimes; murder as part of a felonious act; law enforcement as part of a law enforcement officer; assassination; the selling of hard drugs. There might be others. In each such case, I would require a thorough review as a matter of right.
If a death sentence were affirmed, so be it. The execution of a cold-blooded killer, found guilty after a fair trial, is not an act of social deprivation; it is an act of elementary justice.
Copyright 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Copyright 1972
By Sokoloff
PRINK
FLINK
THE
WARRIOR
MIRROR
COMPUTERS AND ROBOTS
EVERYWHERE!!
MACHINES COULD TAKE
OVER THE WORLD IF
WE DON'T WATCH OUT!
PRINK FLINK
THE WORLD OF MACHINES
COMPUTERS AND ROBOTS
EVERYWHERE!!
MACHINES COULD TAKE
OVER THE WORLD IF
WE DON'T WATCH OUT!
HMM...INTERESTING...
WHAT DO YOU THINK,
RORY?
SPROING
Griff and the Unicorn
Readers Respond
SPROING
SWAROFF
Labor Lords
"Copyright 1973, David Sokoloff."
To the Editor:
Strikers, Cycles . . .
Why isn't the University focusing its undivided attention upon the human task of raising students to become university has yet to call in the militia but its public attitudes are significantly different from those of the mine-operators of days old. But this is to be expected in the near future as the senselessness, when 15+ grand a year men deal with 4 grand a year man. It has been, and apparently still is, the American way.
The strike of the Public Service Employees Union has fairly convinced me that the University of Kansas is no different in its values than any other institutional or industrial employer. Men representing the University in investment earn substantially more than $15,000 annually—are consistently in the news telling the public that the strikers are demanding he if he is earning $40,000 yearly or even $6,000? Instead of reacting sympathetically to men who are living in or on the edge of the city, negotiators zero in on bits, pieces, parts of the Union's grievances and in demolishing these parts act as if they were driving the Union's entire case.
What does it matter if the strikers were in error in charging that the University is in violation of the law? Why is the University, as reported in the Journal-World, Feb. 25 (a most biased account, incidentally) wasting its time collecting data on the charges made by the strikers? Why is the Personnel Office wasting its time each day in phone calls to departmental managers? Why are the classified staff is on the job?
John G. Clark, Professor of History
Helmet Help
A bill is now in the Kansas State Senate Committee on Transportation and Utilities which, if passed, will require all motorcycles to be equipped with helmets at all times and to ride with the lights on. This bill is a direct threat to the freedom of motorcyclists and ultimately to all citizens who must oppose this bill or suffer the consequences.
To the Editor:
Those of you who do not ride motorcycles (for those of us who do, need no further prompting to be upset) must realize that this is
more than just discrimination by a minority by our government. We have to step in the tightening ring of government control. Our representatives are willing to sell our freedom for federal highway rights, and we want to portant on our rights? You must consider what your reaction would be if a bill requiring seat belts on cars would naturally be angry that such a decision concerning only your own safety should be made would not be appropriate. We were also required to drive your car with the lights on at all times or supply a helmet for each driver, as naturally, you can see this would be an imposition on your personal rights. By looking at the problem in this way perhaps you can understand the plight of the motorcyclist.
On the floor of the Senate last week, argument was presented that Kansas ought to be the first state to demand with the hope that other states might follow suit. Let's our representatives know we support this type of bole in politics. And we argue for freedom's sake you will help oppose this bill. Write a letter to the Senate Transportation Rep. Morris Kay, or any other senator or representer you know. If you cannot find your own name and send it to your name and send it! By opposing this bill we can show our elected representatives that we will not tolerate further government control of our inenable rights.
—Donald Fornelli,
Lawrence sophomore
Larry's Lumps
Your Feb. 21 issue reports an appearance by Congressman Winn, a member of the which Congressman Winn commented on the advisability of teachers having practical experience in teaching they teach. In this connection the Congressman raised the question whether a Law School faculty had engaged in law practice before entering Law School faculty might find the answer of interest.
Of the 22 full-time members of the law faculty, 19 practiced law before joining the faculty. The average period of practice was four years. The three who did not practice engaged in other legal activities and were later clerkships) directly related to the subjects they now teach.
—Martin B. Dickinson Jr.
Dean, University of Kansas
School of Law
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription request to 60441. Accommodations, goods, services and employment offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Quotions expressed are not necessarily intended as advice to students.
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News Advisor Del Burch
Editor News Advisor Del Brinkman
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Music & Arts Editors Bear Macdonald
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Career Long
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 1, 1972
5
KU Research Center Faces Shutdown
By JOHN REED
Kansan Staff Writer
The General Clinical Research Center at the University of Kansas Medical Center is scheduled to end operation this year. The federal government gram for fiscal 1972 will sustain the center until "phasing out" has been completed Oct. 1.
ps
more
oferers of
law
. The
he was
did not
legal
official
to the
The research center is the only specialized facility in Kansas City for studying the effects of people rather than animals.
KU Flemish Art Expert Given Top Belgian Honor
Dr. Robert Bolinger, director of the center, said, "It is a little confusing to me. You can always like dogs and cows, and people," not people.
The research center and eighty facilities for similar study are
BY CARLA DENNIS Kansan Staff Writer
Erik Larsen, professor of art history and noted authority on Plemish art, has recently written a supplement to his distinguished career.
Crews Cress
Koffe Mofet
Henry Nane Hay
Nane Henry
Ron King
Groom Groom
Attet Beggert
Ward Ward
Jones Jones
Schmidt Schmidt
Sammid Sammid
Young Young
Rush Rush
Scholopf
Larsen was awarded the best government order by the Beverly Hills Cross of the Order of Leopold, for his French publications on his Flemish art, and general from Chicago presented the decoration at a luncheon Jan. 15.
Larsen said he was "very
accented" in the second decoration,
his accent being Belgian.
Belgian government He received
the Knight's Cross. Order of the
Knight's Cross. Order of the
Although a native Austrian, Larsen was a native and educated in Belgium. He graduated from Larsen beame familiar with Flemish art, which is characterized by its *realism*, depth of coloring and closeness to
Larsen received a PhD. degree from Louvain University in 1968 and received his States in 1947. He has been an American citizen for about 25 years.
In 1967, Larsen came to the University of Georgetown. In university, in Washington, D.C., where he was head of the Department of Fine
In addition to his duties as professor of art history, Larsen is director of the Flemish Art Museum. He said his aim in establishing the
arol Young
nob Carter
man Manley
s Barnhart
oppergerdes
nain Lloyd
ve Murray
del Dano
Traffic and Security officers are investigating an assault on a 10-year-old girl near the Campainelle Monday
The victim was standing on the north side of the Campanile listening to the bells when she was accounted by a man she distributed as crew-cut, wearing a camouflage shirt and carrying a camera.
She was able to run away with the help of two unidentified persons who drove her to her home.
center was to "bring together a sequence of studies" of Flemish art at the University.
The victim said she had seen the man in the vicinity of Potter lake last winter, when he was also carrying a camera.
Girl Accosted While Listening To Campanile
Campus Crusade: 7 a.m.. Alcove D,
Cafeteria, Kansas Union.
Campus Bulletin
Room 305.
Government Careers Day: 9 a.m. Big 8
Room. LaGrange, II. Interviews: 9 a.m. Room.
LaGrange, III. Interviews: 9 a.m. Room.
Larsen has published more than 120 articles, papers, reviews and books in journals and magazines. He has also written books on subjects ranging from "Fleam Painting," 17th Century French Cheese and Golden Age.
appropriation of funds to meet the increases.
Salina Interviews: 9:30 a.m., Pine Room.
Social Anthropology: 11:30 a.m., Alcove B.
Cafeteria.
Speech Pathology: 11:30 a.m., Alcove C,
Cafeteria.
Visual Artist: 11:30 a.m. Alcove C.
Cafeteria.
French Table: 11:30 a.m. Meadowlark
Cafeteria.
Schloeb said it was the Medical Center's ambition to continue and maintain the research facility. He said the center is one of several research center from other sources was being explored.
**Design:** 11:30 a.m., Curry Room.
**Museum of Natural History:** noon, English Room.
Russian Table; 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark
Cafeteria.
Placement Officers: neon, Alcove A,
Cafeteria.
Soc. Welfare Curr. Comm.: 2:30 p.m.
International Room.
The 48-year-old widow drives
12,000 miles a month hauling
40,000-pound loads of beef.
Room.
Sec. Welfare Corrections; 2:30 p.m.
Oread Room.
Corrections 2:30 p.m.
Oread Room.
IPC Exec. Counsel 3:30 p.m. Governors
KANAS CITY (AP)—Mrs. KANAS trapped her in a truck black bikini and halter when it’s hot on the road. In Pennsylvania, she has to add a
The Literary Catalyst
1PC Exec, Council: 3:30 p.m., Governors Room.
Laboratory: 3:30 p.m., Governor Room.
Stopping in Kansas City last week to trade in her 1969 rig with 500,000 miles on it for a new 13-car team, she explained her tautting outfits.
3:00 p.m. Forum Room.
History: 3:20 p.m.
Soc. Welfare Faculty: 4:00 p.m.
In-
A. student publication with
more than mind. 64 pages of
short stories and essays,
written by students
throughout the United
States.
Sample Issue 50c National Collegiate
Art History 40 Film: 4:30 p.m., Council Room.
UMC Setup 7 p.m. Watkins Room.
Kappa Pst: 7 p.m. Council Room.
She began wearing the bikini last summer.
p.m.
SUA Classical Follies, "Tintic Follies," 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Authorium.
p.m. Room 122, Maiot,
SUA Featured Speaker: Palo Salert, 7:30
Publications Unlimited
BOX 14, FLOURDOWN, PA. 1931
And what about looking back into the future?
The facility enables the hospital and university to manage an heart disease high blood pressure and diabetes, for which an animal could not suffice as a patient.
KU-Y Advisory Board: 7 p.m. Regional
Room.
Student Senate: 7 p.m. Blr A Room.
Student Senate: 7 p.m. Big 8 Room:
Carilillon Reckal: 7 p.m.
Guest Reckalt: Bassoonist, Rodney Boyd. 8 p.m. Sawbout reckalt Hall
KANU Schedule Stereo 91.5 FM
Kansas Ass'n of Public Employees: 7:30 p.m. Room 122, Malott.
WEDNESDAYS:
The Morning Show
PUBLIC SPEAKER, Palo Salet, 7:30
p.m. Ballroom.
Ballroom, No. 160, Jackson, Mo.
NEW WEATHER SPORTS CAMPUS
7:30 a.m. The Memorial Auditorium
8:15 a.m. New Weather Sports Campus
9:15 a.m. Campus and Community
9:00 a.m. New Weather Sports Campus
9:30 a.m. Music House
9:45 a.m. Morning with the Masters
9:30 a.m. Martingale with the Masters
12:15 p.m. Noon Concert Campus and
12:30 p.m. The Future Of
1:00 p.m. Music from Germany
1:30 p.m. Search for Mental Health—
1:45 p.m. This Afternoon (jazz)
1:45 p.m. New Weather Sports Campus
1:50 a.m. New Weather Sports Medical Center
**Music by Candela Wiley**
7:30 a.m. New Weather Sports Campus
8:15 a.m. The Bruno Waller Legacy
8:00 a.m. For Love of Music
9:15 a.m. THA underground rock in stereo
CollegeMaster
funded through the General Research Centers branch of the Division of Research and National Institutes of Health.
BOLINGER'S CENTER has researched difficult diseases such as thyroid disease, growth disorders, menopausal osteoporosis, cancer, immunology, genetic problems, diabetes and drug reactions.
Dr. Paul R. Schloerb, dean for research at the Medical Center, agreed with Bolinger that the phasing out of the center by the Medical Center will result in the result of inflationary increases in costs and the non-
THE FUNDING BRANCH of the National Institutes has suffered budgetary problems. Dr. Bain's research, in conjunction with the clinical research branch, recently quoted budget figures that reported 169 million in 1993, 165 million in 1990, $39 million in 1971 and $42.3 million in 1968, operating with an increased budget, the national inflation rate exceeds the percentage of budget allocated.
During the last two years, twelve centers have been phased out. De Cseau explained that a new system of emergency reviewed the centers on
DE CESARE said the advisory agency had found the center at the Medical Center not as much morbidity as some others.
"We have been doing some very important research and developing some very important data in these areas," Bolinger
Bolinger believes his clinical research is losing its funding because of budgetary cutbacks in the cause of lack of scientific worth.
The research center provides hospital beds for physicians to study patients with special
an average of once every four years. Of twenty three reviewed cases, one was the Medical Center was one of two that were to be phased out.
laboratory equipment and personnel. Dietary equipment monitors patient intake, and the patient's blood of all excretions is analyzed
CollegeMaster
No. 1
in College Sales
Fidelity Union Life
Insurance
915 Louisiana
842-4650
TRAVEL WITHIN THE U.S.A.
SPONSORED BY:
Student Union Activities
Foreign Study Office
SUA Travel Service
Department of foreign Students' Office
Forum No. 4
of a Series
SPONSORED BY:
Student Union Ac-
civilities
Foreign Study Office
SUA Travel Service
Dean of Foreign
Students' Office
Forum No. 4
of a Series
Council Room — 4 p.m.
FRIDAY, MARCH 3
Coming Forums: Travel within Europe 11. U.S.
camping and hitching, Mexico Canada on a student
budget.
---
Committee Being Formed to Study University Health Insurance Policy for Coming Year
Applications may be made in Student Senate Office 105B Union
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. Thurs., March 2
SENIORS
The Deadline for Making Senior Picture Appointments is March 1.
For That
Special
Someone...
Say it with flowers
Owens
FLOWER SHOP
9th & Indiana
843-6111
HIXON STUDIOS
843-0330
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Senior Pictures Must Be Taken Before March 10th
Pictures Taken After This Cannot Be Included
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Photographer on Duty
3-2 Thursday 9:30-8:00
3-3 Friday 9:30-5:00
3-4 Saturday 9:30-5:00
99¢
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Film Charge
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Use Kansan Classified
Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM
1618 W.23rd
March 1st, 2nd, & 3rd BUY ONE SACK LUNCH GET ONE FREE
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6
Wednesday, March 1, 1972
University Daily Kansan
PITCHING PRESENTS
Mike Englebrake Does Pull-up
Jim Schum, left, uses same machine.
Football Drills Start Indoor Workouts
The University of Kansas football team began its second season indoors under head coach Don Fambrough last week.
The team will go through prespring practice sessions for a month before putting on the pads March 27.
The program is designed to utilize every muscle of the body to develop agility, coordination and conditioning.
Each player goes through a 40-
station circuit, spending ten
seconds at each station. The
player finishes after the
of the three days a week.
"It's a very tough, complete program that's going to help us tremendously," said Roger Bernhardt, a senior guard from North Carolina.
"This is the time of year when you don't have to prepare for a game. It's also the time of the little things that are so very important to a good football team. Farnbrough has covered all over the country and he have agreed that a good off-season program has much to do with the success of the team in play."
Fambrough also stressed the importance of weight-lifting in the off season.
"Here at the University of Kansas we just can't get recruits
Alpha Phi Alpha Wins Tournament
Led by L. Rogers Jones, the KU team blasted William Jewell University when they rolled over Oaktauniversity. 85-10 Baker was the winner.
all over 6 feet 4 and 24. We have to develop them," he said. "I think a good example of this is our freshman team. They gained an average of 15 pounds per man, so we are able to weight lift program."
Confident Swimmers Enter Big 8
By JEFF HILL
A heavily favored University of Kansas swimming team will defend its Big Eight title in the conference meet Thursday.
The frontrunning Jayhawks
50 freestyle—Phil Kidd, Roland Sabates,
Tom Hodgson, Allan McDonald, Mike
Tackett
Bentley, Jeffrey A. and Associates,
Tackett.
100 freestyle - Kidd, Rick Heldinger.
McDonald, Hodson, Sabates.
100 butterfly - Tackett K, Retich K, Mike
Uffern, Greg Tharp,
100 backstretch - Stroke Koolletty, Kidd.
A man is swimming in the water.
Oversize, overtrunk.
100 backstroke - Scott Skultety, Kidd,
Uffers.
100 breaststroke - Bob Wright, Rob
100 breaststroke-Bob Wright, Bob Darrow, Bruce Leaverton.
One-meter diving—Steve King, Scott Davies
200 backstroke-Skullety, Ulfers, Tharp
Randy Hartford
200 freestyle - Holdinger, Hodgson, Steve
Ingham, David Kregley, Sabates.
One meter diving - Steve King, Scott
Randy Hartford
200 breaststroke—Wright, Darrow
Lee
200 breaststroke - Wright. Darrow.
Leaves.
Individual medley - Wright. Darrow.
Leaverton
20, individual medley-Wright, Darrow
Leaverton
Leaverton
400 individual medley—Kempf, Hartford
Skulletty, Wagoner
400 medley relay—Skulletty, Wright, Kidd
Tunkelt or Riehey
400 freesieule relay - Heildinger, Sabates
McDonald, Hodgson or Kidd
400 freestyle - Kempf, Heildinger, Ingham
Kempt, Heldinger, Inglis
Kedley
400 freestyle relay - Heldinger, Hodson
800 freestyle relay - Heidinger, Hodgson
Kempf, Wright or Sabates
Wannan
Ingham, Keagley. Three-meter diving - King, Davies.
will have to cast a periodic glance over their shoulders at the Sooner swimmers of Oklahoma, but KU's super defensive mound is well suited.
KU Coach Dick Reamon had no doubt as to where the challenge would come from.
"Oklahoma a without a question." Reamon asserted.
Qualifying events will be Thursday and Friday, with the championship Saturday.
"The conference is a little different this year," Reamon said. "The teams have a number of individual performers, but no depth."
The Jayhaws are led by sophomore standout Tom Kempf, Kemp吒的 the fastest times in the tournament. During RU swimmers this season.
"ONLY TWO schools have depth this year—Kansas and Oklahoma."
"Kempf's 500-yard freestyle and 1,850-yard freestyle are our only reasonably certain wins in the meet." Reamon said.
Another KU swimmer who will aid the Jayhawks in defense of
Tom Kemp Strokes Freestyle
Victories by sophomore almost certain
their title is senior Scott Skultet.
each individual medley. 100-yard backstroke and 200-yard backstroke in last year's big
KU and OU have met several times this season. The Hawks won the game in overtime, the Sooner-Cowboy Invitational. KU grabbed first in the Big Eight.
Oklahoma may not be KU's
only concern, however.
"IM CONCENDED about what a number of teams can do to Missouri and Oklahoma State, I miss them and to hurt us. Reem said.
KU takes a 6-1 dual meet record into the conference meet, but it is the only meet that counts for most teams.
that's the Big Eight meet. But we feel we can do our best in all our meetings." Reason am said.
Reamon said the Jahawys would have to have an aggressive streak, but he was satisfied with merely defending their title. Reamon said that he was not satisfied with KU's Big Eight title last year for that
"Teams like Oklahoma point for just one meet all year,and
"We're number one and we've been number one for quite a while. We have a lot of pride. We stay at the top," Reason said.
Walt Disney's Song of the South G 10
Walt Disney's
Song of the
South
G
TECHNOLOGY
Eve. 7:30 & 9:30
Granada
TELA1812 | teluguinfo913-5788
Eve. 7:30 & 9:30
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10805647525724
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Academy Awards!
BEST ACTREUS
Glenda Jackson
BEST ACTOR
Peter Finch
BEST DIRECTOR
John Schreiber
BEST ORIGINAL
SCREENPLAY
Nominated for 4 Academy Awards!
"Sunday
Bloody
Sunday"
R 127
F 105
Amts
"Sunday
Bloody
Sunday"
United Artists
Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30
Sat. & Sun: 3:00, 5:05,
7:30, 9:30
(Twilight Hr. 4:30 to 5:15)
Varsity
DIRECTOR - Telephone 10658
"Even though I lost the race, my immediate feeling was not
"I don't want to worry anymore about winning or losing—only about who's going to finish second behind me."
BORNKESSEL, who attended Shawnee Mission North High School, said there were numerous reasons his college career had
Bornkessel Seeks Consistency
"I'm really psyched up this year," he said. "In high school I dominated the field. I want to do the same thing here.
'THEY WANTED me to change my style of running. I'm a strider and don't really look that much. I want to make me a spinner.
He cited his tryst for the 1988 Olympic team. Ranked among the top three in the national record in the 200 meters the week before the trials. At the trials, however, he hit the last hurdle in the race and was
By DAN GEORGE
Korean Sports Writer
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
"This year, though, they're letting me do it more way and I've gone back to my own style. I'm already restaining my form."
In 1968 he was the nation's leading high school hurdier. That same year he came within one quarter of the All-Star Olympic team His college career, though, has been inconsistent, and only sporadically successful. Some of his think he has had affinity with avoiding greatness.
"There'll be 15 guys who'll have a shot at it. But it'll be the three who have the best races at the tournament." It looks like he'll be right up there, though.
Borkessel said his main goal this season was to attain the success that everyone said should have been his all along.
This year Bob Bornkessel plans to change all that.
"Some people blossom under certain coaches and systems," he said. "They can have it in the high school. But up here the system was different. It's a good fit."
The University of Kansas hurdler, who set national high school records at the 100-meter intermediate 49.8 and 36.7, has his eye on the 1972 Olympics in Munich and thinks he has regained the form
"That's all I've thought about the last four years," he said, "and right now, it looks pretty good.
"You have to have a special touch. You have to have to the exact cross hurdle. That's my strongest point, I think–having that
HE SAID HE was also perfecting his ability to go over the hurdle with either foot.
Bornkessel said the most thrilling moments in his career were what "some might view as failures."
not equaled his high school career.
There's a greater distance between hurdles (45 yards) in the halfpipe than in the stands, you tend to do a different step. It's important that you touch the wall before you reach the difference in each step can really heighten your sense of the time you reach the next hurdle.
He said the difference between high school and college practice systems was also a factor.
"A person's overall habits change when he goes away to school," he said. "There are a lot of situations. It takes a lot of adjusting."
one of disappointment," he said. "I 'ran well and the coaches and I figured that my time in the spills was such that if I hadn't tripped, I have run it in maybe 48 or 49 seconds. The winning time was 49.1. I know now if I hadn't tripped, I have won or come pretty close."
"in high school, you're used to winning everything. But then you come up here and everyone is at a shock. You are it. You are a shock."
"I know it hit me hard. Here you face a quality field and you even start losing in workouts. You watch getting down on yourself."
"IT'S GOING to be really hard to figure out," Colorado has the inside track with their sprinters, but it's the other ones that hurt each other more.
"We're doubling up on some events. I'm running the 600-yard, something I'm usually not in."
"I'm kind of a team man," I
he said. "Sometimes I find it
hard to get around in the re-
lays, there's a group and
a group of people off the
individual. It is a lot of work."
There are several factors, he said, that a burden has to watch in developing his style, especially in the intermediates.
It's Drive In Movie Time Again
SHELLY WINTERS
MARK LESTER
"WHO SLEW AUNTIE ROO"
Sunset
MOVE IN OR AFTER: West on highway 90
Box Office: Offices A-30
EDGAR ALLEN POE'S
MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE"
BONUS FRI-SAT
"HORROR HOUSE"
Auntie 7:00, Murders 8:45, House 10:20
MAUDE LOVES LIFE... SHE'S R!
HAROLD LOVES MAUDE... HE'S 18
RUTH GORDON and BUD CORT
"HAROLD and MAUDE"
GP. INTERMEDIATE TEACHERS
ADULT 1.50 CHILD .75
Hillcrest
Adults 1.50
VANESSA
REDGRAVE
Daily 5:00:7-35:92
Sat. Sun. Mat 3:20
Twilight Prices Good for
5:00 show only.
OLIVER REED
Hillcrest
Day: 4.45-7.20:9:20
Sat.Sun: Mat. 2:50
Twilight Prices Good for
4:45 Show Only
KEN RUSSELL'S FILM THE DEVILS
from Warner Bros. A Kinney Leisure Service
ROBINSON'S Shoe Rack GRAND OPENING TODAY
Robinson's Shoe Rack shoe wearers invariably get their man . . . today's the day to track yours down in this little pump. Choice of Black, Navy, Brown, Beige or Lavender leather. Elsewhere it's $12.95. WE ASK A MERE $7.50. Doors open at 9:30 a.m. Today! Use MasterCharge or BankAmericard.
Open Mon-Fri. 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Sat. until 6 p.m. Sun. - Noon 'til 6 p.m.
COUPON
711 West 23rd Mall Shopping Center
Listerine Breath Spray Mint Flavor Manufacturer's Suggest Price 88c Sale 49
You must present coupon with purchase N Good thru March 5
Open 9:00:7:00
Thurs. 9:00:9:00
Sun. 10:00:6:00
ad ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management
---
COUPON
Crest Toothpaste
Open 9:00 7:00
Thurs. 5:00 9:00
Sun. 10:00 6:00
5 oz. size
Mint or Regular
Manufacturer's Suggested
Price 89¢
Sale 69¢
You must present
coupon with purchase
Good thru March 5
DISCOUNT
DRUG CENTER
747 MASSACHUSETTS
Now Under New Management
Breck Open 9:00-7:00
Thurs. 9:00-9:00
Sun 10:00-6:00
Gold Formula Shampoo
7 oz.
Dry, Normal or Oily
Manufacturer's Suggested
Price $1.25
Sale 83¢
You must present
coupon with purchase
Good thru March 5
DISCOUNT
BROUZ CENTER
747 MASSACHUSETTS
Now Under New Management
fed ZIP DISCOUNT BRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Managemen
Demure
Open 9:00-7:00
Thurs. 9:00-9:00
Sun. 10:00-6:00
Feminine Hygiene
Deodorant Spray
4 oz. size
Manufacturer's Suggested
Price $1.69
Sale $1.19
You must present
coupon with purchase
DISCOUNT
BROUG CENTER
747 MASSACHUSETTS
Good thru March 5
Now Under New Management
Fashions on parade
2.00
Fashions on parade
$2.00 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 Parade
BANK MACHINES
willingness
masson change
There's Always a Bargain Waiting For You at the Bargain Table!
2e
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 1, 1972
7
Art Contest to Benefit Rehabilitation Unit
Professional and amateur artists are invited to enter the 4th Annual Tri Delta Art Festival, a University of Kansas Medical Center.
First prize in the professional first prize in the professional an artists college in Santa Fe, N. M. Second, third and all amateur prizes will be cash awards
THE CONCORD SHOP
Donated art objects will be sold
**STRETCHER FRAMES**
many in stock
—others on order
**ANCIST ACKET**
CYLVIC
**LIQUID CYCLES**
8 os. pts. - qts. only
25% OFF
McCONNELL LBR. CO.
844 E. 13th St. 843-3877
at an open bid auction with proceeds benefiting the Children's Rebuildable U.S. Foundation, the local Council honors will be honored at a champagne showing April 22 at the home of the children. 121 W. St. Kinston, Ct. City; Mo. 121 W. St. Kinston, Ct. City; Mo.
Entries must be submitted by April 9. Information about the classes taught at Mrs James Cox, 200 W 981 St., Everland Park, Kan., 642-862-862
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4.4444
For SUA Events
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-up
upset
service
Lawrence kc
2434 lawrence
VI 2-1008
Steamboat
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $0.93
March 18 - 25
SUA SKI CLUB
DEADLINE MARCH 3
614.9477
Red Baron
864-3477
presents TIDE with new vocalist HOT DOG Wednesday and Thursday
Wednesday Special
Pitchers . . . . 75°
Guys . . . . . . . 75°
Girls . . . . . FREE
3125282828282828
get on the grass!!
Today there is a growing concern among students to get back to the organic way of growing things. Cerophyl laboratories has been doing it for years.
We have taken the tender young blades of
weed and transplanted them to rye . . . grasses that have been scientifically grown and tested . . . and compressed them into
the maximum of life-giving nutrients for you.
If you are interested in finding out what grass can do for you, clip off the coupon and mail it in. The booklet, "The Amazing Story of Grass" will be sent to you free. You can also place an order if you like, however, you are under no obligation. This is not a rip off, so get on the grass!
CEROPHYL
LABORATORIES, INC.
4722 BROADWAY
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI 64112
Buy 3 bottles of Cerophyll grass at the regular price of $3.50 each. We'll send you ABSOLUTELY FREE a fourth bottle. Use the free bottle for 30 days and we've been beneficial return the unopened bottles for purchase refund. Order C.O.D. or send check with order and we'll pay the postage.
FREE
TRIAL
SUPER
Please send free booklet
"The Amazing Story of Grass!
This offer good until March 22,1972.
One day
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
FOR SALE
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
8808. tt
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.
You're at a disadvantage.
Ethan Itch comes to the same thing.
"New衣" in Civilization 14. Campus Madhouse, 11
West 14th. 11f
GUTTARS — 1950 Les Paul, 1968
Fender Musical, also 1971. Kustan
100 Watt Lead Amp. Chell! Call
Mike. 864-2342. 3-1
GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN
WORLD, 64 volume=$300.00, STORY
AVENATION by Will and Atelie
Durant, $50.00, $50.00
at 827-616-7031
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
SCHOOL BUST W2 Chevy, & clyl.
2 speed rear axel, good for camper or band, $700.00 One University car body mixer, $750.00 C4
844-865-654
Yamaha FG-300 Guitar - hard shell case, 5 months old. $172.99 Call Richardson's Music Co. 842-8021-31
Three days
King-size waterbeds. Guaranteed for five years. Full price, $17.50. 841-
2530. 308 W. 16th. 3-1
MONOCULAR *MICROSCOPE*
microchip, case light. Perfect for medical stage, case light. Perfect for medical stage.
box 210 KUMC, 391H and Haribrew box 210 KUMC, 391H and Haribrew box 361H, Kansas KC, 0625-833 or 913-663-869
Auto Foreign Import, 63 Jaguar
hardtop cars, 90 miles since
engine
$1,475 Paul Wold 502D W 22 S1
Parka, Topka, phone: 912-725-8247
1971 Caman, 350, loaded, turbohy-
draulic air, air power, radio, 8T
disc brakes, rally wheels, good
circle call. Battery 644-1229 to
cycle Call 864-1229 to 1-51
1960 Buick, excellent condition Only
24-hour service. Steering,
steering brakes. Air conditioning.
Car oil changed every 2,000 miles
since new. Car #82-8520 evening
at 7:30 p.m.
AKC 04 Old English Sheep Pupa ... 36
AMC 175.00 $ ... Car deliver Law
... K.C Feb 25 Call 425-6528
after 6:59 Leh Phels, Stockholder
Kamia 6769
RHINESTONES — RHINESTONES
RHINESTONES — FRUIT —
FRUIT — FRUIT — NEW PINS!
REATSHINE, EAST 8th & Mass.
ARGYLE SOCKS FOR THOSE TIMES WHEN YOUR FEET SHUT FUR EARTHISE, EAST 8th & MASS
Must sell! 1935 Tremont Benvilleville,
Wilmington, NC. 8-inch tank; 8-inch extended forks;
14-inch turret; 16-inch finish; Battery eliminated
final, finish. Battery eliminated. Many
items. Please Phone Mac, 316-342-8200.
Please Phone Mac, 316-342-8200.
Stereo console -- AM-FM stereo
radio; record changer; 8-track tape.
Looks and sounds good. $275. Call
842-9667. 3-2
1968 Chevette SS, power brakes,
power steering, air conditioning,
automatic transmission, excellent
p.m. p.m. 484-8425; 3-17
Clip-on VHF bow tie antennas, 3
each at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
3-2
Tire Clearance — New F10 x 14 wide belts cut to $25, plus $2.90 F.E.T.
Free installation at Ray Stoneback's
929 Mass. 3-2
Tropical Fish Equipment Aquarium
50 gal, 3-1/2" x 3-1/2" complete with gravel, heaters, plant air pumps, water filtration systems. Call 843-8321 for 5:00-9:00.
MUST SELL 18 MONTH OLD IRISH SETTER. Male, has had shots. New dog house, very gentle. Call 842-9036.
1969 Fender Suber Reverb Bam
used only once, perfect condition.
Call 843-2107 or 843-5865
3-7
BLEVINS HONDA
Factory Authorized
Honda Sales & Service
Cycle Pick Up Service
021 333 3333
**An early day**
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.02
1971 Kawasaki wk10. Great condition.
must sell. $400. Also, fender
Mutating and case. fine condition.
must sell. $350. 842-4702 between 4-8 p.m.
3-2-3
Minolta SRI 191, plus 3 Rokker lens,
58 mm. 1.4 inch, 50 cm. 3.5 and 135 mm.
1.5 inches include lens. Lens bodies and
reflector lenses. Film kit. $500 or best offer. M43-8-572-6
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
1971 erman CB 350, 2600 mins.
celent condition 843-7066 3-3
1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks.
House at 500 Ohio for bask by owners.
Workshops, woodwork, 4 walk-in closets, 12
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, park down,
park down, good school, good
lot of car lot with $16,500
843-600-9000
1971 Volkswagen Super Beetle Concep-
tion -Perfect condition -Luxeed
Bright orange with black top and in-
side. Must sell Cell. Karen 842-751-8830
66 Corvette convet. Blue, 422 cu. in,
4-axed, AM FM radio, luggage rack,
excellent engine. Call after 6 p.m.
842-7505
3-3
1963 RENAULT DAIPHNE 3D cars to
the gallon. Perfect knock-around
car $125.00. Call 843-3876 evenings.
3-1
Cannon A81 auto-zoom super 8 movie camera with case and blinded Camera lens. ZOOM lenses zoomed len used only once. UN L4-8226 Drives of Grave or others 4-8226 882-960
UHER 4600 Report Streeve, 4-track
amplifier, power-less battery,
powered button, batteries.
Case. Buckled skis, are 8,9-12
cm. ski equipment. X 9 - 15 X 27
ca. 843 - 759
1962 Buick Special, new transmission,
new front tires, new battery,
snow tires. Economical and depend-
able. Call Dave. 842-6585. 3-6
10 speed bicycle, Gaitte Tour de France 242c, frame. White. Brooke Pro Saddle, Campagio Hub; Simmons Pro Saddle, Campagio Hub. Call Michael at 842-732-1
Alfa Romeo Velocio G.T. DUO
over-head cam, 4-wheel disks,
5-speed Mint condition 634 Mass 842-
6966 3-7
See the guaranteed selection of used cycles at Kat Suzuki 634 Mass. 842-696. Factory authorized sales and 3-7
1971 Honda C.B. 350 Gold, great shape, 2.600 miles. 842-9012. 3-7
See the new water-cooled GT-750 at Kat Suzui. Only $1,640. 634 Mass.
842-6966
THE BUGGER a new dimension
the HUBER keyboard keyset
beyers trained to载货 early
case take it camping, touring shops,
hospitals and the Ride On-401
App 1603
Lange ski boots 1971 "Pro" model
used only three days. Perfect condition.
Size $9'_{2}$ medium $75.00 Todd
Dillon, 834-6400. 3-3
69 Blue VW bug custom walnut interior, super clean, 3 extra tires, excellent condition $1,400 Call 843-7248
Porsche 911L. 1988 Palo red, black interior, AM-FM. Alloy wheels Excellent condition. Call Dale at 842-3329.
1969 Corvette T-Bar 427-100 HP, 4-ep,
P.S. P, B.P. A/C, Condition.
Blae Int. 30,000 miles. $3,195.
Trade贺 428-482 after 2000. 3-3
1971 Triumpth Trophy 500 cce. $1,000,
beautiful bike, like new. $300 cheaper.
leaving country, must sell. Call
843-7881. 3-7
BLR CAMMARAS - Kex I w 1 W麓 L
BROOKLYN HOSPITALS $150, HSP GW V
HOSPITALS $150, HSP GW V
systems. Might consider trading for
systems. Call Jack at JC 450
$890 or JC 4500.
Leather and suede cushions custom made blouses and dresses—Made to order. New shelves 39 & 160 (up to 80) $47.95. This coupon BONUS ON 39-75.
Pickens Auto Parts
26th & Iowa Ph.V13-1353
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
THE MERCANTILF
Parts at a discount
and Service
NOTICE
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
TEE PEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB
Welcome, back students! Its party
variations for second semester form-
ment party person New band stand, black
suit. We also have special monthly rates
meetings. Phone contact John Chipman,
M
For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization—call the Women's Center. If 864-1441
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-7694. Professional childcare center for children 1 to 12. Mon or part-time. Fr. Supt. Designated designed occupancy.
UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call
George Kansas City Birthright
(816) 474-467E
STUDY ESPAÑENTO the international language in Portland for Portland International University International Espaper Conference 29 July to 5 August A unique summer program for Spanish-language Information Summer Seasons University of Portland, Portland, Oregon
Michigan St. Bri-Bar QQ 252, MIck 316,
Baltimore St. Beer-Bar QQ 289, MIck 402,
$145.1 Bed & Breakfast. 1 Bed & Breakfast.
Spend this summer working in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to ColoradoMountains@mail.com or call 503-8423, Boulder, CO 80322
Used Motorola portable, sold new for $149.90, now only $6 at Ray Stonehack's, 929 Mass 3-2
Women's alterations, 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30 3-13
SALE GOES ON - 50 = OFF ON
BELTS SWEATERS SHIRTS
AND OTHER REDUCTIONS EARTH-
SHINE, EAST 6th & Mass 3.2
Set yourself free. Join Gay Liberation.
Brotherhood, sisterhood, 7:00
P.M. Mondays U.M.H.E. Center, 1204
Ovadav Ave. 3-6
2. experienced nursery school teachers offer complete day care for children 3-4. All pre-school skills, motor skills, language are taught. 843-1437. 3-10
Trade-in special - 30-Watt Magnavox FM receiver, one-year-old, $100 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-2
*Are you leaves of one tree and drops in one, wee.* Bahal *Faith—Informal Fireplaces Monday—Pearson College, 7.30* 3-2
Appearing at the Mad Hatter on Wednesday, March 1st and Friday, March 3rd SHINE—a folk trio. Free admission. 3-2
BOKONOQ — renamed, old — Salby
Buxy Buxton custom sewing. Bigg great bargains. Jacket jackets — spring.
Dress jacket dresses — Vermont. Decoupage sweaters. 5-7
FOUND: A Parkway Central High
class ring at the Missouri basketball
game last Sat. Ask for Henry at 843-
5468.
3-3
BUSSIA - SCANDINAVIA, 5 weeks
Aviation training at Scandinavian
small group camp travel (lives in
Europe). Apply online at www.
Whole Earth Travel, EDI US,
Agency or on Transit Travel Ltd.
Box 1043, Auckland, New Zealand.
Artists: display your works in Kansas City? Art work of all kinds needed on on consolement. For information, call John: 842-3628 after 5:00 P.M. - 7:47 P.M.
Gordon Lightfoot. Two tickets, second row, center section on the floor.
Make offer at 842-9682 3-3
University Terrace Apartments
furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $110 up or more.
9th, 14th, 18th, 27th, 36th, 9th, Apt. 18, B-or, call 843-143-52
FOR RENT
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
7 days per week
DRYE IN A MIND
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
COIN
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
901-8161
843-5304
Independent
Baron
Rockledge Wifi Apartments, Limited offer first month rent free. Four months later, rent paid at midnight with all utilities paid for $800/month. Call: 4-000-123-4567.
WANTED
Bridge House Arts-for the budgeted
money. All the items are at best on
the town. ER 1, 2 and 2 bottoms, and
3 bottoms. 4 bottoms. 6 116 for detail
116 for detail 82 Woodward-
842-9450
IT'S NEVER TOO LATE and it is a long time now from time to time that you are confidently attractive. One call to Mrs Forthall at 2017-A Harvard Road and you can get particular details on the apartments and most attractive companies and Missouri, Avalon Apartments, Apartment 504, Avalon Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of Apartments, amundet's construction, rent rates, furnished or unfurnished, reasons you would enjoy living in these locations, make this semester in Lawrence a success, make this semester in Lawrence a success, locate for August Occasionation, and special summer rules for June occupation.
HUILVIEW APARTMENTS — 1723-45
bedroom, furnished and unfurnished.
bathroom. Carpeted. All
electric windows. All
residential apartments.
Hot valet.
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Highway 103 offers campus, 107 Muskegan bedroom apartments available. And the additional rooms available at end of semester are carpeted, dilkwoods, central park, carpeted, kidhome, 8298 between 5:20 P.M. and 10:30 P.M.
One bedroom studio apt. unfurnished,
air-conditioned, close to campus,
farmed. Available March 1st.
Own entrance. Call 442-258-3500.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second room. 1-bedroom apartment, 1-bathroom furnished or unfurnished. Central air, dishwasher, w/car amenities. On-site laundry. Apartment—The place to live in. Call 24 hours a day at 877-360-3800.
For rent - one or two bedroom apts, air conditioned, garbage discharge facilities, facilities, color TV V.S. available. Call for details at Hillview Apts. 24th and 18th floors.
2 bedroom home with basement,
fenched, back yard, unfurnished.
$125.00 month. Edmunds Real Estate.
401-843-7482 3-1
FOR RENT OR FOR SALE. Mobile phone in good condition. 600 qs. fr. partially furnished. dwidwater, same housemate, waver. Phone 843-262-9578.
Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!!
Maupintour travel service
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843.7685—We Deliver—9th & 11th
ECICA TESSEN O
SANDWICH SHOP
Want to buy? Old piano, banjo,
string bass, Marshall amp, musical
viser. Fender or jazz or bass ver-
sion. Congones 842-6623 T-2-2
THE HILE in the WALL
ATTENTION TWINS. 18 years and older study to answer health questionnaires in children $10 remuneration per both, twin parents $25 remuneration per twin, mother $25 remuneration per twin, father $75 remuneration per twin, daughter $25 remuneration per twin, sister $25 remuneration per twin, brother $25 remuneration per twin, grandmother $25 remuneration per twin, great-grandfather $25 remuneration per twin, aunts $25 remuneration per twin, nieces $25 remuneration per twin, nephews $25 remuneration per twin, cousins $25 remuneration per twin, siblings $25 remuneration per twin, niece $25 remuneration per twin, nephew $25 remuneration per twin, cousin
Girl roommate or couple to share
nice 2 bedroom house. Unfurnished
or furnished at extra cost. 2000
Barker. Call Patricia at 842-6254.
Red Baron
WILLY
Need girl to share house $55.00
Utilities included 842-5768 3-7
Women's alterations, 20 years experience.
Call 843-7267, 9:20-5:30, 3-7
KAT Suzuki
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store
DELICATESSEN &
TACOMA
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WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH
THE TOUGH GET GOING
Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-121
634 Mass. 842-6966
PLANNING A TRIP??
842-0444
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATSUN
500 E.23rd
LOVE THAT DATSUN !
RAMADA INN
Figure Salon
842-7323
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 10, Sat. till noon.
WANTED EARLY MODEL JEEP
CJ22 SERIES IF POSSIBLE. Any condition considered. Call after 6:00 p.m.
p. 421-462
Key Press - Job printing from
leaflets to posters, brochures to book
leaves and returns. 109 Hpm, in back
and rear. Zerox Open. In days of 83-
442-840.
35 mm, SLR camera, Miranda Sensea
Firm PQ-1-FQ, Pentax Spatiosmatic,
Nikromkron PT or Minolta SR-T 10-
preferred. Call R83-875.
PERSONAL
NOSTALGIA — NEW OLD CLOTHES
EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS.
7.2
We repair allin Volkwagens. We do medical transplants, or just general surgery. We treat both soft pads and parts VWs with conventional illnesses. Bugton, 724 North Rd.
One 15" JB, Lanning D-120 speaker.
New, used or blown-out. Also, one
After Lanning 15" 421A Call 843-
2107 or 843-2865.
NOMMATE. Share apartment with one person (one bedroom) $1 block no. or campus. All bills paid. $50 a month. base rent. basement 3 to 6 Mon-Fri.
FUNNY HUNKY RABBITS AND BLUE SNAILS. ARE EVERYWHERE ... THINKY EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS. 3-2
HAPPY BIRTHDAY DONNA, with love from Gerty, Middy, Matty, Mabel, Herb, and Tedd. 3-1
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers and research paper types with typeeter. Type accent and prompt setter was used. Contact 843-9544, Mrs Wright.
Dear Rifle officer, Keep brief bluff about us to union and land. First floor to union and land. First floor to union and land. To my sujet Judy kett, who keeps my warm wets for Calka clan.
Dearest... W & J & N & A & B & A
He said he was at a party. He and I, Sorry girl, the stud vicejen is leaving Lawrence this weekend. In case of emergency, take a cold show.
O
Carol Lee
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
Sandwiches
5 a.m. 12:25 Tues. Saf.
5 p.m.
5 Mon.
17:30 21st St.
842-769
CSC
DATA
TRUHMOX
U
Sports Cars Inc.
Competition
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
"For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It"
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
Shines Dyeing Refinishing
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
HELP WANTED
Wanted - Figure models - Amateur
welded - No experience in
measuring or welding
Rate paid, $70-$140 per
warehouse Rate box, 275-Welds,
Kansas.
Now taking applications for wait-
tress positions. Must be attractive and enjoy-
able. Must be able to work under pressure. Please be able to work under pressure. Applicant must be a necessary Air
applicant must be a necessary Air
Work as part of the school year.
Work as part of the school year.
Phone: (212) 546-7800, Phone:
(212) 546-7800, after 400
Need 2 R.N.'s for 11-7 shift. Contact Director of Nursing, Ransom Memorial Hospital, Ottawa, Kansas 3-2
TYPING
LOST
Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses or dissertation. Electric Typestype prompt, accurate work. Call VT-32881, Mt. Racmank.
themses term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM Selector, your choice of type styles. Also editing at rate. Kona, Arizona 840-759-4925 842-565-306
yping done on elite, electric type-
writer No Theses please. Prompt at-
tention 843-0958
1 pr. Achilles ski boots in white
black. Box with silver buckle,
9 Least on Jayhawk Blvd. Night
dress. 3-8 (8 p.m.) if fourth.
483-2628-383
Lost by lyth and Oread two puppies
Sunday nite. One black with white
tail on answers to "eracta," other
white tail on answers to "eracta"
Call Maryany, VI 1-2793-3
-Maryany, VI 1-2793-3
MISCELLANEOUS
Keys on Co-op key ring between Summerfield and Midburn on Friday, Feb 25. To return call Norma, 664-6539 3-3
BRIDAL GOWN GOWN Sale=Sizes 8-10, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky 4-60
SIX FLAGS
Have a look at all the exten-
sive AMERICA—our new 20-minute
film is now available and ready
for showing to groups and organiza-
It is entitled "Have A Nice Day"
and can be scheduled by contacting
Jon Frangoulis, 1800 Engel
No. 328, 864-6058
3-2
843.
85nn
in good food.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
sirloin
1. Mass North of the Kaw River Bridge
LAWRENCE RANKS
LAWRENCE RANKS
Delicious service with
Superb Service with
Steak Sandwich with
Steak, Shrimp, to K. C.
Shrimp.
Our menu is and always beats
SENIORS
Last chance to call for appointments for your 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURES. Call before MARCH 1st
摄影
Hixon Studio
10 a.m. -
5 p.m.
for appointment.
for appointment.
Senior Pictures Must Be Take
Pictures Taken After This
Cannot Be Included
Phone 843-0330 for Appointment
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
---
928
Mats
Wednesday, March 1, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Records:
Nilsson, Neil Young Albums Great
By MIKE BICK Kansan Reviewer
Neil Young's and Harry Nilsson's new albums are going to make it big.
Young's new recording,
"Harvest" (Reprise), is Neil
Young at his best. Young
succeeds in putting together a
coherent range of songs, some of which will knock you out.
Best of the cuts is “Heart of Gold,” with background vocals from John Legend. Restonast. If nothing else, this should be a million seller. Young managers to convey much more emotion and energy. After listening to him, the song
becomes a personal experience.
When a song can be taken in that
context, it shows the mark of a
great artist.
Other cuts worth noting are "Old Man" and "Every Man
diversity of the album.
The best cut is "Without You," the old Baddin hit of 1970. Nilsson packs the song with a twist, making it better how to put everything into a song
KANSAN reviews
Trial Postponed In Gould Case
By ANITA KNOPP
AND RICHARD COLEY Kansan Staff Writers
The trial of the Kansas City 4,
scheduled to begin in October, was
held by William H. Becker Tuesday after Arnold A.
Stead, the prosecutor's chief counsel.
Paul Anthony White, assistant U.S. attorney, at a pre-trial conference, filed a motion to compel Seed to testify in the trial of the four men under indictment for making and possessing bombs.
Randolph Gould, former KU student, is one of the Kansas City 4 indicted last June. Gould is charged in connection with a hit that killed 107, 180 in the home of former Douglas CountyAtty. Danny Young.
Confusion as to who should represent Steen would be crucial during the trial. He was named Chicago lawyer, appeared on behalf of Steen and she had been involved in a fight with him.
BECKER, HOWEVER, said there was no verification that Stead had voluntarily dismissed his previous attorney, Austin and scheduled a hearing at 10 a.m. to today, resolve the matter.
Shute was in the court room and said he had not received notification of dismissal from Seabury. Shute asked Seabury to insure that Stead was not deprived of his constitutional right to counsel of his choice.
Stead, slated to be the prosecution's chief witness, fitness, and summer and expressed a willingness to testify. He had been sentenced to ten years in prison and was reduced to five years after his
appearance before the grand jury.
and have it come out fantastic.
The grand jury indicted Kenneth D. Sandusky, 24; Gould, 23; Martin L. Baumgarten, 28; Richard L. Stanley, 21. They were charged with alleged conspiracy to make transport, and detonate bombs.
WHITE CLAIMED that Stead had voluntarily waived his right to remain silent when he appeared before the grand jury and was charged. He was not entitled to protection under the fifth amendment.
attorneys for the four defendants tried repeatedly to have the court consider their claims and request Wednesday as scheduled. They argued that the trial should be suspended, so the indictments should be dismissed because the defendants would be denied their constitutional right to a jury.
Becker said the motion to compel Seal to testify would be considered after the matter of his counsel was clarified. Jordan requested that she be allowed to testify and be ordered to present all of his legal rights before the motion was considered by the court.
BECKER, HOWEVER, was firm in his firm to consider the case that the attorneys had been notified of the postponement and that the trial would not begin until he so ruled. Mr. Stead's counsel would take up the matter of Stead's counsel. Court is scheduled to hear the appeal to clarify his choice of attorneys.
The court will then consider whether or not Stead should be present. If so, the court will decide when the trial will begin.
In the previous Congress, after the House approved a similar amendment by more than the required two-thirds majority, all efforts to hit it to a vote in the House had failed; opposition filibuster again this year. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., chief sponsor of the amendment, said he imagined the toughest battle would be to muster a two-thirds majority.
Amendment for Women Approved in Committee
WASHINGTON (AP)—The proposed women's rights amendment to the Constitution cleared the Senate Judiciary committee by a 15-1 vote all at attention to water it下 were recalled.
Approved by the House last October by a 354-23 vote, the amendment provides that equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by any state on account of sex.
If approved by the two-thirds amendment still would have to be ratified by the legislatures of at least 38 states to become
The amendment allows seven
years for action by the states and
would not ratify it if it would
would not take effect years later to give state legislatures time to make
actions.
Needs a Maid" (recorded with the London Symphony Orchestra).
>
INTERESTED
IN
PHOTOGRAPHY
Young's whole album is a winner and one that shouldn't be overlooked.
Nilsson's album "Nilsson Schmilssilson" is also very good. Nilsson fans will enjoy the
Walter Neum. Leica Technical
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tography Emphasis on Technique and
Manipulation in 15mm Pho-
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Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
46 West Eighth. Phone 255-1306
Book Reviews
Yet Nilsson breaks away from the ballad to the comical, to the pure blues, without stopping to the album bombards the listener with a variety of sounds and images, to take it, this album is a must.
"Gothic" has, obviously become a hot genre in paperback publishing. And certain names are beloved by those who go for the genre-Phyllis A. Whitney. A group of women among them. The new Whitney is called "THE TREMBLING HILLS" (Creat, 95 cents), it's about a girl trying to find in San Francisco the secret of her past. She and fire come along in time to make for good plot complications.
Dorothy Eden's is called 'MELBURY SQUARE' (Crest, $1.25). It takes place in Edwaun to be a landmark and it's a beauty that brings her relationship with her artist friend. Claudette Nicole's book is
"THE THEM MILL" (Gold)
Vallery Curtis and the Estate of
Verdale and a little girl who
sounds like something out of
the woods.
Other new ones of this type include Jane Aiken Hodge's "GREEEK WEDDING" (Crest, 95 cents) and Barbara Mackaene's "NICE NIDE" (Crest, 95 cents). The first takes place in early 19th century when the Greeks were fighting the Turks for their independence. The second is about a magazine writer who is doing a book on a subject he sees as important things in the man's past that are shocking and terrifying.
STEREO DISCOUNT
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
SUA Classical Films
TITICUT FOLLIES
Wed., March 1
7:30 & 9:15 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium
75c
Under New Ownership
HOME OF THE AZTEC CALENDAR
The Aztec calendar reminds you that memorable events in centuries-old history may be at Casa De Montez. We invite you to share our proud heritage.
CASA DE MONTEZ
MOTTO
- ENCHILADAS
Dine In True Mexican Village "Huts"
- GUACAMOLE
Immediate Carryout Service
- STEAKS
- BURRITOS
- TACOS * TAMALES
- CHILE RELLENO
- CHICKEN
- SHRIMP
- CHILE VERDE
- CHICKEN
Special Luncneon and Children's Menus Also 12 Combination Dinners Cold Beer Served in Frosted Glasses
11 a.m. - 11 p.m. Tuesday - Wednesday - Thursday
11 a.m. - 1 a.m. Friday - Saturday
11 a.m. - 10 p.m. Sunday Closed Monday
842-9455
807 Vermont
★ EURAILPASS & STUDENT-RAILPASS for unlimited travel within 13 European countries. Must be purchased in the U.S. before departure. (Please allow 4 weeks when ordering.)
European Travel Services Offered
★ TRANSATLANTIC YOUTH, EXCURSION, & ECONOMY TICKETS FROM CHICAGO & NEW YORK at NO extra cost to you!!
( Please allow 4-6 weeks when ordering. )
★ INTER-EUROPEAN STUDENT FLIGHTS offer great savings to I.S.T.C. cardholders.
(Please allow 2-3 weeks when ordering)
★ HOTEL ACCOMMODATIONS, MOTORCYCLE PURCHASES, CAR RENTALS, INSURANCE AND ALL OTHER TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS.
SUA Travel Service
Kansas Union
Phone 843-1211
Maupintour
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ANNOUNCES WINTER CLEARANCE ON COATS & HATS
N-3B Arctic Parkas 34.95 (were) 39.95
Navy Split hood Parkas 18.95 (were) 24.95
Reversible Air Force Crewjackets 12.95
Canadian Army Coats 27.50 (were) 5.49
Pea Coats 17.95 (were) 22.95
Army Hats 3.98 (were) 5.49
IF YOUR MIND ISN'T ON WINTER COATS, COME IN AND CHECK OUT OUR CAMPING LINE!
TENTS
PACKS
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FIRST AID KITS
GOGGLES
AMMO BOXES
SLEEPING BAGS
FOLDING SHOVELS
VIETNAM & JUMP BOOTS
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U.S. ARMY MUMMY SLEEPING BAGS ETC.
CANTEENS
TARPS
COMPASSES
STRETCHERS
AIR FORCE SUNGLASSES
AIR FORCE SUNGLASSES
ROCK CHALK REVUE
Ticket Sales Start NOW
Ticket Prices $2.50
$2.25
$1.75
TC
sent
Wed
state
SALES LOCATIONS
★ SUA Office, Union
★ Bells
★ Kief's
PERFORMANCES ON MARCH 3 AND 4
HOCH Auditorium 8:00 p.m.
A LITTLE WARNER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year. No.97
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Soleri Talks Of Archology
Thursday, March 2. 1972
See Page 2
New Board Could Stop State Strikes
TOPEKA (AP) - Gov. Robert Docking sent to the Senate for confirmation Wednesday five appointees to the new state Public Employees Relation Board.
The governor appointed Eldon V. Davenhauer, Topica; Alan Nielsen, Bert Heller; Mark Nathan W. Thatcher, Kansas City, Kan., and Arthur J. Veach, Wichita, to the
Kansan Photo by JIM EATON
The board was created by the 1971 legislature as part of the states Employer-Empolyte Relations Act for Public Employees.
The board will have authority to hold hearings in labor disputes involving state public employees, order a settlement of such disputes and go to court to try to enforce its orders if either side balks in obeying them.
THE RENEWAL CONFERENCE
Local Democrats Explain New Convention Rules at Student Meeting Kansas political system to have better representation policy at conventions
The new law under which the board acts took effect Wednesday. It prohibits strikes by public employees in Kansas and sets up an order "under" process under the board's direction.
Both sides in disputes must agree to arbitration before the board can order it. The five appointments were assigned Wednesday to the Senate's Committee on State and Local Affairs, which will consider them and report to the Senate.
Danaenhan, appointed to a term which runs to July 1, 1975, is a graduate of Pittsburgh State College and worked for the Denver Broncos of the National Football League as a member of the MFI Retirement Board, and is an officer of Laneka. Inc., Toneka.
Democrats View Changes
Neely, whose term runs to July 1, 1974,
is a graduate of Northwestern Oklahoma
State and is associated with Elete Office
Equipment Co., Hutchinson.
By STEVERIEL
Kansan Staff Writer
Procedures and regulations for the new political convention system in Kansas were explained Wednesday night by three local Democrats. They spoke in
Education Bill Passes; Anti-Busing Defeated
By DAVID BARTEL
Kansan Writer
WASHINGTON — The Senate approved a bill that would cut the organic carbon reduction act. Wednesdays, 8th to 9th vote.
Both Kansas senators, James Pearson and Robert Dole, voted for passage of the bill which authorizes $23 billion for education over the next three years.
The final vote belies the controversy that surrounded proposed amendments to the bill to end basing of students for a deseration of schools.
As the deadline for the final vote approached, Senate conservatives sprung a last-minute, surprise maneuver to pass a bill that would limit time for debate expired. Dole, Kansas junior senator and Republican national chairman, took the floor to offer an amendment which turned out to be the final vote in favor of proposed defeated Tuesday by three votes.
AS DOLE finished speaking, Vice-President Sipro Agnew entered the Senate chamber to take the chair, apparently in the hope that the Senate would be tied on the measure returning to their presidential primary campaigns.
George McGovern, D-S. D.; Edmund Muskie, M.D., and Dauire Humphrey, D-Minn, returned from their campaigns in New Hampshire and Florida to turn the stringent anti-biased amendment that was passed last week by the Senate.
The three presidential candidates remained for Wednesday's vote, which failed 48 to 71. James Pearson, Kansas' vice president, voted against the Dele amendment.
With the failure of the maneuver the Senate quickly passed the basic law, which gave the Senate authority.
which had a compromise anti-busing amendment attached Tuesday. The bill now goes to a House Senate Conference between versions passed by each house.
The higher education act, among other provisions, creates a national foundation for post secondary education "to help colleges and universities meet educational needs of the next decade through renewal, reform and innovation."
It also creates an National Institute of education to coordinate educational research and development projects and, in the process, to establish a study of funding of higher education.
President Nixon proposes in his 1973 budget, the purchase of $4 million to the institute.
THE ACT ALSO creates a new form of aid to higher education through general purpose federal grants. The administration promised last year that a limited form of the no-strings-attached grant would be started early this year. But the 1973 budget recommends no funds for such a grant.
The administration reportedly is withholding funds to see what distribution formula is approved by the House-Senate Conference Committee. The House and Senate versions of the bill allocate grants on different formulas. The Senate bill would distribute funds to students receiving federal scholarships and loans at each school. The House bill would distribute the money on the basis of the total enrollment at each school.
The President is said to support the senate version and will recommend $100 million in supplemental appropriations to the Senate to fund grants if the Senate version is approved.
conjunction with the Student Vote
Rockford Rock of the Kansas Union
the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union
The speakers were June McMillan, Democratic committeewoman and precinct vice-chairman for the Democratic Party in Douglas County, Robert Casad, professor of law and David Berkowitz, a local attorney.
All three said the composition of Democratic political conventions at local, district and state levels would be governed by new rules. The rules specify that delegations must be representative of the party constituency in their areas.
To this end, not more than 60 per cent of a delegation may be of one sex. Minorities must be represented in proportion to their population in each political unit.
THE RULES also specify that the population under 30 years of age in each state must be at least 15.
Berkowitz explained the procedure involved in attending the Democratic local unit conventions to be held on April 8. The conference will mark this area have not yet been determined.
He said that to attend the conventions, a person must be a registered Democrat in the geographical area where each convention is held. Those who are registered voters but hold no party affiliation may have to state their name and sign an affidavit stating they will not participate in a similar convention for another party before the election.
There will be three local unit constitutions in Douglas County. The constituency in each district will be determined by county commission jurisdiction.
In Douglas County, according to Berkowitz, one delegate will be sent to the state and district conventions for every 500 votes given for Gov. Docking in the 1970 election.
BERKOWITZ SAID local unit conventions would nominate delegates to attend the district and state Democratic conventions which would be held later this
Anyone who attends the local convention is eligible to run for a position as delegate, Berkowitz said. Each person attending can vote, and the delegate that is available on the delegation.
To have their votes recorded, those who go to the conventions must vote for at least half as many candidates as there are positions.
Casad explained the procedures to be used at the district and state conventions.
He said the primary purpose of these conventions would be to choose delegates to attend the Democratic national convention.
The district convention, he said, would choose 30 of the state's 35 delegates. At the state convention, five at-large delegates will be chosen.
IN ALL, six delegates will be selected from each Congressional district in Kansas at the district conventions. Cassad held a meeting on May 13 throughout the state to be held
Casad said that at all convention levels, committees would be chosen to administer convention business. The committees will accept documentation, Credentials, Rules and Resolutions.
A meeting of the Douglas County Democratic party, she said, would be held at 8 p.m., March 15 at the University State Bank. Persons interested in getting more information on the Democratic conventions are invited to attend, she said.
McMillan said all conventions would be advertised through the local media from time to time.
The next activity to be sponsored by the Student Vote will be a speech, by Gov. Mendel's office.
$3,200 Approved For Dav Care
By HAL RITTER
and CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writers
The University of Kansas moved one step closer to funding a day care center Wednesday night when the Student Senate approved $3,280 for the Day Care Commit-
The allocated money includes $2,500 to match funds from a federal or state grant which would take several months to be approved. The $3,200 cannot be spent until July 1 when the new fiscal year begins, and if the matching grant has been obtained.
A question also arose that it might be illegal to use activity fee funds which are state funds to match a grant of state funds. The answer was that they were paid on whether a state arent is received
The Senate allocation came after Lacute Paden, social welfare lecturer, explained to the Senate the work her subcommittee was doing. The Senate meeting. The subcommittee was created to explore the possibilities of entering a temporary or permanent center.
PADEN EXPLAINED regulations that must be met before the center could be established. She said a center would need a board of directors incorporated as a non-profit organization and that the center would be the byline of the State of Kansas to obtain a grant.
Paden also said the center "should serve primarily children whose parents cannot afford the full cost" of child care, and that there was between $4 and $3 a day per child.
Besides the $2,500 to match a state or federal grant, the allocation included a $600 salary for a director for two months and $100 to advertise for a director.
After John Mize, Salina senior and a member of the Union Bookstore Company, will declare in the Kansas Union Bookstore profits over the next five years, the Senate approved the recommendations of the Commerce Department distribution of the bookstore profits.
THE RECOMMENDATIONS will be submitted to the Executive Committee of the Kansas Memorial Union Corporation for its approval.
The Senate recommended that $24,000 be annually allocated to the bookstore reserve for expansion and that $20,000 be annually allocated for a working capital of $50,000 a year.
The Senate also recommended that at least $20,000 a year be allocated to the Urban Scholars Program for five years and provide books in bookstore student rebate be guaranteed.
The Senate recommended that any profits above the projected 1975 fiscal year level of $9,600 be apportioned on a 50-50 basis and distributed to the Program and the Bookstore Rebate Fund.
A provision in the Union Bookstore Committee's recommendations which would have created an Urban Scholars Administrative Committee to assist the program in its search for additional funding was deleted after a Senate vote.
THE SENATE approved a bill creating a Student Publications Board to oversee the financial management of all student publications which are defined in the bill as "all publications associated with the University of Kansas in which students participate." The recipients of financial or other subsidy or support from the Student Senate."
The board will approve all expenditures made from accounts of the Student Senate that are allocated to student activities, and the accounts of all students, publications annually.
The board will consist of five members of the student body and a chairman appointed by the student body president with the consent of the Senate.
The Senate also approved a petition that will appear on the election ballot as a candidate for the Senate, and approves the petition, the Senate will petition the Endowment Association to loan the Athletic Association $80,000 to an artificial floor surface in Allen Field House.
R. L. BAILEY, Atchison graduate student and chairman of the Election Committee, said the committee would have official polling booths March 15 and 16 at Summerfield Hall, Strong Hall and the Kansas Union.
Bailey also said the committee would assist any school or living group that wished to set up its own voting table. He said the Interfraternity Council had made plans to have four voting tables placed at strategically located fraternities.
The Senate also approved the following allocations recommended by the Finance Committee:
$1,200 to the University Daily Kansan for the summer Kansan.
$2,234 to the KU Amateur Radio Club to buy additional radio equipment, which would be available for use by all students. $680 for the KU Ombudsman Office.
$200 to the Handball Club for transfor-
mation of the national team to a
Tournament team.
75% to the Sailing Club for transportation
an intersectional regatta at Ohio State
University.
$15 from the Senate budget for postage and invitations to the Model United
Worker Dissatisfied with Walkout
Kansan Staff Writer
By ROBERT E. DUNCAN
Civil service employees returned to work Wednesday, but at least one member of the union, Chief Steward Blanche Nitz, is working with the resolution to the walkout.
Nitz said that some employees had a "lack of confidence" in the union and this was perhaps the reason for the conclusion to the walkout.
"I'm rather disappointed with the whole thing," she said.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Wednesday that he would accept the modifications in his statement concerning work policies as recommended by University administrators who met with the union, Local 1132, Tuesday.
The modification included changing employee representation on a special subcommittee of the University safety committee from 30 per cent to 50 per cent.
There was also agreement to equitably rotate overtime work.
NITZ SAID employees really didn't gain anything from the walkout. She said that these changes were acceptable but that no resolution to the pay situation had occurred. The lack of a wage increase since 2014 was as the main complaint of union members.
Nitz's dissatisfaction with the union began last fall. She and Lloyd Rose, business agent for Local 1132, could not agree on several issues.
In January Nitz said she presented a list of 22 items she thought the union should do.
Some of the items were aimed at giving the union member a sense of the union, such as distributing copies of the by-laws, she said.
There was also a conflict between Nitz and Robert. It could not she could not labeled relation school.
Concerning the future of the union, Nitz said she expected membership to drop off
NITZ SAID the union members were sincere in their complaints about working conditions but some were worried about the possibility of losing their jobs.
Rice was unavailable for comment Wednesday. He said after the meeting Tuesday a "mutual understanding" about the situation had been reached between the two.
Nitz said indications that she would resign as chief steward. She said that if the union members were satisfied, then the union had accomplished a minor victory.
Members of the student-faculty committee who were supporting the strike are also unsure of their next step. One member all, they could do now is to "wait and see."
All civil service employees at the University will have an opportunity to elect an official representative later this semester. The manner of how the elections will be conducted is not known; answer to a letter sent by the University to the attorney general's office Monday.
Troop Removal Seen as Aid to U.S.-China Relations
Editor's Note: This is the first of three interviews with University of Kansas professors on the effects and implications of President Nixon's trip to China. Interviewed below is Daniel Bays, professor of history and China scholar.
Worsening relations between the People's Republic of China and the U.S.S.R., the United States' withdrawal from Vietnam and settling of internal debates in China following the cultural clash that erupted years ago reasons the U.S. found itself able to negotiate with the Chinese Communists, according to Daniel Bays, professor of history,
By SCOTT EATON
Kansan Staff Writer
"As China came to develop a conflict of interests with the Soviet Union, it was only natural that they would look elsewhere for a way to balance the power," Bays said. "The logical place to look was the United States, and we wanted to establish contact with the U, S, throughout the 1960's because of American involvement in Southeast Asia."
conditions, the worsening of relations between the communist Chinese and the Soviet Union, had existed since the middle to late 1950's.
Bays said Tuesday that one of the
"AS LONG AS the U. S. remained in Vietnam, and maintained its commitment to them they felt that the U.S. should support China. In fact the U. S. had often said that China."
the reason it was fighting there was to stop Chinese expansion.
Bays said that over the last two years the Chinese had begun to notice the U. S. pullout from Vietnam, and were now beginning to believe that President Nixon really intended to lessen the American presence in Southeast Asia.
"The Chinese feel differently about U.S. power in Asia now," Bays said. "The U.S. doesn't seem to be such a great encircling threat. It's not like the U.S. is pulling out of the Pacific, but rather that it is just backing away from the Chinese borders."
Bays said the solving of some of the problems brought about in China by the U.S. government were "unacceptable."
easing relations between the U. S. and China,
THE PERIOD FROM 1966 through 1969 or 1970 was a very disruptive one to the culture and politics of China," Bays said. "The cultural revolution really unsettled things. It is only now that we are beginning to debate, and this definitely helped in S-U. S., relations."
Bays said the most important thing to come from the Nixon trip to China included in the communique was the U.S. involvement, and we have all its troops from Nationalist China.
"The assertion made by the U. s. that it will soon remove its troops from Taiwan is extremely important," Bays said. "The U. s. has always been committed by both
its physical presence and its treaty to the defense of Taiwan.
"For years the Seventh Fleet patrolled the Taiwan Straits, but that stopped about two years ago. Now the U. S. is withdrawing its troops, but asserting it will stand by its treaty with Taiwan, Bays said.
Bays said the troop withdrawal could only serve to better U. S.-Chinese
"I SEE THE CHINESE much more concerned about getting rid of the physical manifestation of our troops rather than our treaty with 'Taiwan.' Bays said.
"The apparent positions on Taiwan are 'pretty significant'," Bays said. "I'll tell you that."
something like cultural exchange or ping-pong."
Bays said the United States apparently had submitted to the wishes of the Chinese over the Taiwan issue. He said the whole tone of the meetings in China was one of the U.S. backing off from some of its past commitments.
"A pretty good case can be made that both the U. S. and China have taken some unrational positions in the past, and that now they must readjust," Bays said. "The side that is the furthest from reason has the furthest to so."
BAYS SAID THE FIELDS of some of the other Communist blocs involved in the Vietnam War.
See CHINA Page 7
2
Thursday, March 2.1972
University Daily Kansan
Cultural Awareness Goal Of KU. Haskell Course
By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
Students at the University of Kansas and Haskell are attemptng to meet the needs of Together they are challenging cultural prejudices in a course entitled Intercultural Communications: The American
The course is taught jointly by Robert Hamlin, assistant professor of speech and communication and associate at KU. Jim Johnson. Haskell assistant instructor of speech and J. Rodgers. Haskell assistant instructor of business and attend each weekly meeting.
"This is a monumental achievement," Hamlin said Thursday. "This is one of the first students to get an education on an academic level."
THE PROGRAM was originally designed to be an emphasis on Indian culture and was attended by both KU and UTS.
It was begun by Lynn Osborn, professor of speech and drama at KU. The class was taught by Dr. Bill Hamlin, whoました Hamin said, in the spring of 1968.
Since then, Hamlin said,
emphasis has gone from
"interest in" to "awareness of"
the Indian culture.
"It was more like weekly meetings with programs," he said. "There was no interpersonal experience."
Since the program began
Oakland in 1974,
Washington State in Ellincoln.
Wash. to become chairman of
the speech and drama
departments.
HAMILIN SAID a goal of the class was the discovery and appreciation of values in Indian culture are important to communication
This is Hamlin's first semester in the intercultural communications class.
Another goal of the class, he said, was to create an understanding of the class participants in a biculacial situation and advance the cause of communication between each
"We're at the perception stage right now," Hamlin said.
"The group is interested in identity as are most young people," he said. "Non-Indians
KANU Schedule
Stereo 91.5 FM
THURSDAY
7:30 a.m. The Morning Show
7:45 a.m. News Weather-Sports
> a.m. News-Weather-Sports
$ 15 a.m. Filmcast
8:30 a.m. Campus and Community Calendar
New Weather
9:30 a.m. Morning with the Masters
Noon—News-Weather-Sports
9 a.m. News-Weather-Sports
9 a.m. News-Report from Haskell Indian Arsenal
Calendar
1 p.m. Listen to Their Voices
2 hrs. Music and Migration of Canada
12:30 p.m. Campus and Community Calendar
Noon - News-Weather Sports
12:15 p.m. Noon Hour Concert
12:30 p.m. Campus and Community
Calendar
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think they should decide who they are and live it.
"Indians feel their identity is out there somewhere, and they must find it, not make one," he said.
The class, made up of about 40 KU students and 20 Haskell students, meets Monday evenings at Haskell
Guest speakers from KU and Haskell begin the sessions and the rest of the class time is spent in open discussion.
"TO BE TRUTHFUL."
Johnson said Thursday, "the numbers have baffled me."
"Some students would prefer a new teacher to know their better, and they'd get to know each other better. The results would be more pleasant."
The problem has been resolved somewhat, he said, by breaking up into smaller groups for discussion.
Hamilin considers inhibition in
phonemic phonemes. He thinks perhaps
the Indians don't think they are
be analyzed so much in larger
"Whites want more intense personal discussion than the Indians are willing to give," Hamlin said.
"The problem now is that we—non-indians—must learn to work with them, rather than on our terms," he said. "Otherwise relate a to them."
HAMILIN SAID the white students must fight the "I want to help you," and the "open up to me." complex.
Johnson said, "It's not indian to relate that way. Many students had grandparents who had Indian wars. We can't overcome centuries of friction between two nations in a semester of discussion."
Each group tested the other in the first encounters. Hamlin said.
"The whites were pretty naive in their questions," he said. "The Indians they ate and how they felt when a carload of white drenes by them attacked."
HAMILN SAID he would have expected those who had studied interpersonal communications to have shown better feelings of humaneness. He said the KU students often observed in class and the Indians tuned out the obscurity and turned off the communication.
"I have been disgusted by the general insensitivity of non-indian to Indian." Hamlin said. "I'm蒙雀, it goes both ways."
Hamin said if he could have his way, he would stage a weekend program for non-Indian students to take part in intercultural communication.
The Indians, Johnson said, have lived with white society all their lives and don't need a preparatory course.
People . . .
. . Places . . .
. . Things
Miniaturation is the key word in the discussion of analogies.
BELFAST-Terrorists marched a Northern Irish militiaman from his home and shot him to death, minutes after assuring his sobbing wife he would not be harmed. Hours later, a giant bomb rocked Lordenbey, wounding at least 15 persons, including two soldiers, and causing the city center's worst damage in more than two years of violence.
MIDDLE EAST - Syrian jets bombed Israeli positions in the occupied Golan Heights in retaliation for new Israeli air and ground strikes.
THE REV. PHILIP BERRIGAN's initial priority as a militant anti-war chieftain was the blowing up of heating tunnels in Washington, according to an FBI-intercepted letter read Wednesday at his trial.
People:
Treasury Secretary JOHN B. CONNALLY urged Congress to resist, at least for the now, that demand to allow Americans to buy and sell gold. Amending a dollar-devaluation bill to permit U.S. citizens to own gold bullion for the first time since 1934 would be misunderstood overseas in nervous financial markets, Connally said.
Things:
The Kansas Senate, grinding relentlessly through its once-huge backlog of bills, passed 29 measures, including a $1,000 HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION for all Kansas homeowners and a $500 homestead exemption. Commission's for a NUCLEAR WASTE RESTRICTION, in effect.
Places:
A bill REAPPORTIONTING 125 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICTS in Kansas headed for the desk of Gov. Robert Docking while a house committee moved a Senate application to establish a provision for future reduction of the size of the House.
Soleri Advocates 3-D Communities
"I try to learn from nature," Soleri said, "which is not the quiet romantic thing weinianize and complexity there. The
Although Soler's archeologies would increase density in living areas, they could create a careless and creepy possibility for most of the land and water space of the earth to be used for food and recreational purposes.
THE ONLY WAY to stop the car, he said, is to build "islands" which the car can't get into.
"The exhaust of a car," he said, "is irrelevant. What is relevant is the existence of the car."
By MIKE MOREY
Kansan Staff Writer
Arcology is Paolo Soleri's word for art. He is a pioneer of chiteure and culture, Soleri, who has been called a visionary architect, spoke last night in the museum.
Soler developed he idea of archelis, a network of three-dimensional communities which provide his men's needs under one gigantic plan.
Soler's arcologies, which would house thousands of people under one roof, would contain no automobiles.
If man is to live in cultural, spiritual and racial harmony, he said, he must have a physical environment free of pollution of all kinds. Everything that lives there alters life, Solari said, is pollution.
They are building Arcosanti in
direction is always toward infinitely complex and miniatureized systems."
Soleri said the crisis of the present day city was easily apparent. people have decided, he said, that the cities are not worth fighting for and have begun a mass exodus to the suburbs. What was it? "a trend with withdraw which is universal in this country."
SOLERIAID by moving to the suburbs, the American people were asking technology for a reason. We saw that technology which wasn't simple at all.
"We will realize," he said, "the suburbs are not the answer and we need technology a less simple-minded solution. And that when I think of it, I'm happy."
At the present, Soleri and his students are in the process of building Arcosanti, a city which uses approximately 3,000 people.
Several students and apprentices work with Soleri in the classroom. Soleri said he wasn't a very good teacher in the conventional school.
"The only way I can teach anything is to do my work," he said.
SOLER SAID they had pur-
pared 800 acres of grazing land in
the county. They will occupy about 10 acres, he
will occupy about 10 acres, he
approximately 100 feet high.
LONDON (AP)—Britain's population in 1985 is expected to increase by 4.6 percent in 1990, compared with a 66 per cent increase projected for the country.
the same way they have built their working and living quarters, with their own hands and with no professional help.
"You build your life into the building that you are building," he said "so that it really becomes an experience."
Soler, who later was born in Tortoise, is the author of 1918, studied at the Academy of Music and the Polytechnic of Torino, where he received his doctorate in music.
HE THEN traveled to the United States and studied, for two years, at Yale University. After his marriage and a trip to Italy, he returned to the United States and established the Bates Foundation near Scottdale.
Cosanti is where Soleri and his
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The SUA Travel Forum will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Council Room of the Kansas Union, not Friday as was reported in an advertisement in Wednesday's Kansan. The forum topic will be "Travel Within the United States."
Campus Briefs
"People's War- An Application to China's Foreign Policy" is not for today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, is canceled.
In addition to a $50 increase in residence hall fees next year, residents of coeducational residence halls will be charged an additional security rate of $15, not $50 as was reported in a story in Wednesday's Kansan.
China Lecture Canceled
The Mount Oread Bicycle Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Pine Room of the Kansas City Metropolitan Library and will show slides on "How to Drive in Europe last summer."
Bicycle Club
Travel Forum Today
Dorm Rate Correction
OSMIROID PENS
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P. 5. If you want to take Reading dynamics but do need the Western Criticism, you may, let me show you how it looks.
Soler doesn't want people to reject his ideas because they don't like his models, he said.
New Class Begins This Week
office of the Kansas Union oft-
individual travel counseling and
organize and participate in group
travel education programs
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At present, the bulk of the foundation's income comes from Solerl's speaking tours and from making and selling ceramic
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Domestic Travel Forum Today
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When viewing models of his cities, he warned, "Don't think in terms of what you see; think in terms of what the concept is."
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
March 18; camping and hitching,
March 30 and Mexico and
Canada, April 13.
EVELYN WOOD READING DIAMICS
Downstairs at the Sound - Hillcrest Shopping Center.
925 iowa Phone 843-6424
There are four campus offices assisting students with travel plans. The Foreign Study Office strong handles questions and arrangements considering short or long term study on a foreign campus. The Maquintuin office in the Kansas City area manages arrangement such as tickets and reservations. The Dean of Foreign Student's Office in 228 Strong is tasked with travel in the United States. The travel adviser in the SUA
Student Union Activities will sponsor a forum on travel within the United States at 4 p.m. today. Room of the Kansas University.
The purpose of the forum is to acquaint students with travel possibilities and procedures within the United States. Representatives familiar with domestic travel will be available to answer questions and to assist students in setting basis with their travel plans.
The forum is the fourth of a series of seven travel forums sponsored by SA during the EU summit. The forum deals with travel within Europe.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 2. 1972
3
HFHU
HRNU
E
Gary Shivers Broadcasts for KANU
. . . Station features new community involvement
'Chalk' Seeks Lost Appeal
The course will include discussions of pregnancy, the developing child, the birth process and care of the newborn The classes will include training in the Lamaza method of natural childbirth to instructive fathers are encouraged to attend along with the mothers.
The addition of an independent act and a new selection of judges constitute changes in this year. The first presentation is presented at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Hoch Auditorium. This is the theme of this year's event.
By JEANNE ELLIOTT
A series of classes for expectant parents will begin March 6 at the University of North Carolina, where these classes will meet from 7:39-9:30 Monday nights in the Women's Residence, 39th Street and Rainbow Boulevard, and are free. The classes will last six weeks.
Alpha Kappa Lambda and Alpha Gamma Delta will perform "The Odds are Even that At Alma," the story takes off on the story of Adam and Eve in which Mr. and Mrs. God decide to decoreate the world. David Sawell, Sinus Falls, North Leawood senior are the directors. Lewood senior are the directors.
The departments of nursing services and gynecology and obstetrics are co-sponsored the University of Texas maternity nursing staff. Information and reservations can be obtained at the Medical Center.
The program, sponsored by KU-Y, is produced and directed by Andy Bukaty, Kansas City, MO. The program acts sponsored by eight Greek houses and an act performed by an independent group. The task force was the result of a task force study, set up last spring to discover why the most common of its popular appeal
Parents' Class To Start Soon At Med Center
Club to Hold Gourmet Day
The University Women's Club in the basement, and Day for club members and guests from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday in the Walkins Room of the building.
Let the Man from Equitable
Mrs. George Duerksen, chairwoman of the gourmet committee, said this was the first time a gourmet day had been held. The club, composed of 270 faculty wives, expects 270 guests in the day-long tasting of hors d'oeuvres, salads and desserts.
DANIEL LYONS
Buddy Bowles
tell you about The YOUNG PROFESSIONALS PROGRAM offering life insurance with premium financing for full-time graduate students.
KANU Broadcasts For Public Service
By JOE ZANATTA Kansan Staff Writer
"We're in a transitory period," said Brant, "switching from the church to a public broadcast music station to a public broadcast classical music still makes up the majority of air time but the enthusiasm is now on public service."
BUDDY BOWLES
Total involvement with the community is the key to broadband access. Mr. Zucker, director of KANU, said recently. He said this involvement accounted for the new at the FM radio station this year.
BOWLEY
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Phone 843-2616
Helping people build a better life
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A Yankee
DELTA TAU DELTA and Kappa Alpha Theta will present a skirt entitled, "The Cuckoo Story, or Does Anybody Really Need to Learn the Story of an old clock-maker who tries to repair the village clock which was broken by the town drunk. The directors for the skirt are Cary Hack, Lawrence junior, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore.
"The Great Relate, or To Heil With The Title is 'the name of the Deity skit. It features Margaret Goodbody who dies and goes to heaven."
Campus Bulletin
Shawnee Mission Interviews: 9 a.m.
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union
AUAUP: 11 a.m. Alcave C, Cateletría
UC Gourmet Day: 11 a.m. Walkins
a. wkts.
UWC Gourmet Day: 11:30 a.m., Walking Room:
Education Graduates: 11:30 a.m., Alcove
Education Graduates: 11:30 a.m. Alcove
B. Cafeteria
C. Historical History; Aprove. A.
Cafeteria Faculty Forum: noon, Westminster room
SIMS: 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room.
Campus Crusade: 7 p.m., Room 305.
MADS 9 p.m., Ralston, Rooho.
Math Department: 6 p.m., English Room.
KUY Program Committee: 7 p.m., Oread
Room.
Hospital Staff and Women's Committee:
noon, Alceve D. Cafeteria,
Lambda Chi Alpha, 12:30 p.m., Governors
Committee on Instruction: 2:30 p.m.
Regionalist Room.
Ski Patrol Amt. to Council House.
aks st. Peter to send her to hell
sisters, sinners, Nancy
Norris, Norris, Greg Hayward, Shawnee
Mission sophomore, are the
SUA Travel: 4 p.m. Council Room.
AAUP: 6 p.m., Kansas Room.
THE SKIT of Kappa Kappa Gamma and Beta Theta Pi is "The Swet Smell of Success, or How an American Beauty Rose." David Sites. Manhattan junior, Park Junior. Overland. Park junior. Park junior.
Science Fiction Film Club 7: p.m. Ballroom
U. Parochie Club 7:30 p.m. Museum
KU Film Society "Tricla's Wedding"
U. Parochie Club of Arts of "7:30 p.m.
Woodward Auditorium"
The station is now a member of the network. From this KANU receive a 90 minute show originating in Washington D.C., which follows
Mcolm's act, "Sex and the Single Diety, or When It Comes to Sex Gabriel Isn't the Only One Who Was Judged. Bukaty said because the act wasn't one of the top four selected, the decision was made in fairness to all. David Manion, the senior director, is the director of the chair.
The act was added after the oath because it became an act sponsored by independents was part of the recommendations made by the board.
Bicycle Club: 7.30 p.m. Pine Room
English Department: 9 p.m. RegionalList
Rockville
KANU devotes about 30 hours a week to this type of material out of its total 115 hours of air time.
Another new program is "City Limits," which is broadcasted every Friday, 7 to 8 p.m. and distributed in the Lawrence community.
"We're trying to help the community," said Dick Wright, program director of KANU. "We've had a lot of great stories on the air," he said.
This coverage includes city council meetings and current problems present in the Lawrence community.
Another new feature is a Sunday night call in show featuring guests known statewide.
"This gives everyone a chance to be heard," she said. "We've taken everyone from the governor to you-name-it on the show. Anyone can call in and speak."
THE STATION also broadcasts weekly a one hour show, "The Feminist Perspective," which features Emily Taylor, dear of women, and presents the side of current problems.
KANU is currently planning to present two documentaries, one on the Meninger Foundation in connection with another on Haskell Junior College.
Another service KANU is performing is the preparation of public service commercial spots for many of the area stations.
KANU has two sub-stations carrying out this policy of public service.
The AM side of the station is KFNU, which broadcasts daily on TV. Brant will give a purpose of the station, said Brant, is to keep listeners on the AM band aware of what is hap- at the University of Kansas.
AUDIO-READER, carried on a subagusal of KANU, is a brittle computer. She has a 12 hour daily programming schedule of reading newspapers and magazines.
Even the music side of programming has been changed KANU is no longer strictly a classical music station.
"We're close to many large stations," said Wright. "How can we compete and not just be another station? That's why we go to classical music—but it doesn't involve doing folk, rock, blower or jazz."
The station also tapes major lectures on campus and recitals by faculty and students. These are presented when time allows.
ANOTHER NEW ASPECT in their programming is the preamble of dramas. These are broadcasted at dayp. t.m. in binaroual sound.
More projects are planned for the future at KANU.
NOTICE:
MADHATTER WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY, MARCH 4,1972
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4
Thursday, March 2, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Garry Wills
A Polite Scolding
A special student, with the help of one of the campus umbudsmen, has taken it upon himself to take up the cause of the University against the February Sisters, who had taken it upon themselves to take up the cause of women in the University. These two self-appointed representatives of the University intend to bring the Sisters before the University Judiciary for violating three articles of the Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct and acting against the Code of Conduct adopted by the Board of Regents.
Admittedly, the Sisters did violate the two codes when they took over the East Asian Studies Building by disrupting the orderly process of the University, acting disorderly on campus and interfering with the free passage through a University building. However, the orderly process of this University has been much more radically disturbed by past events than by the Sisters' occupation of a building such as the East Asian Studies Building in the middle of the night.
Indeed their takeover of that building seems rather timid compared to the bold marches on the walls of the building and the defacing of University buildings.
The plaintiffs in the case also complained that the Sisters had uttered vulgarities and that their manner was rude while occupying the building. The February Sisters are not the first, and it is likely they will not be the last group, to behave in an "unladylike" manner on this campus. They are merely the first one to be brought before the University Judiciary for not acting the way the Code wanted them to.
These guardians of University virtue want the women to be publicly scolded. They reason that the Sisters' example will dissuade other groups who have grievances against the University from attempting to use them as a weapon in similarly harmless, though unlawful, ways. It might work, but I doubt it. People have been impressed with the response these
women have elicited from the administration.
The action of this group has caused the problems faculty and student women face on this campus to be presented to the public more dramatically and effectively than ever before. In the crisis-like situation, the action the planning for the Affirmative Action Program seems to be receiving a more serious consideration than it has before.
Although Watkins cannot now afford to hire an obstetrician-gynecologist, which is one of the Sisters' demands, there will be space allocated for a women's clinic dealing with the specific health problems of women. The idea of a women's clinic involves students and faculty members is also being more carefully considered.
Could these positive steps have been taken without the nominally extralegal actions of the February Sisters? Marilyn Stokstad, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said about the Sisters' action: "I realize that it is an illegal action, but we've been working within the system and have gotten no results."
The Sisters have at least gotten the machinery of the system started so perhaps now would be the time for them to become more at one with the system. Let the system salve its ego by scouting them. After the trial is over, they can get on with the system and the Sisters can get on with the serious business of making their demands real. They can make sure that the Affirmative Action Program is progressing, continue to seriously consider the possibility of a child care center and work out some of the specifics for that woman's health clinic. Even a woman in the decision making groups of this University could become something more than just someone who "represents the women."
Mary Ward
Readers Respond
More Quotes; Men Reply
Baha'i
To the Editor:
We have observed with interest the many letters commenting on the station of women as defined by religion. As Bahali's we are religiously attuned to the religious teachings have on society and on the development of individuals. Feeling as we do that each religion gives each religion to meet the needs of the time in which that religion appears, and believing that the need for each religion is social and religious teachings for this time in history, we would like to note that the Bahali 'Faith' is unquenchably declare the absolute equality of men and women as a spiritual truth. Our human humanity has two wings—one is women and the other men. Not until both wings are equally profiled with one wing remain weak, flight is impossible. . . Woman's lack of progress and proficiency has made education and opportunity. Had she been allowed this equality there is no doubt she would be the only capacity. The happiness of mankind will be realized when women and men coordinate and advance equally, for each is the help and慰met of the other."
While education of both male and female children is important, education of Babais, the importance of education on women is particularly stressed since parents, and in many societies the mothers primarily, have a major influence on the education of their children. Women who goes to school. Women who have been deliberately kept ignorant and made to feel that they are inherently inferior beings cannot be educated until they attitudes on to their children.
The effect on these teachings on the time in which they were given, the mid-1840's, in Persia, is that they are not seen in one example. The position of women in Moslem societies during the last century can be imagined. Tahiril (The teaching of the teachings of our Faith, against the orders of her husband and father, and became the first woman in religious history to become one of the early band of Muslim preachers of the Manifestation of God, such as the disciples of Christ. She became
known for the purity of her life and for her knowledge and wisdom. Her last words when she was martyred were "You can kill me as soon as you like but you will stop the emancipation of women."
We hope these comments have demonstrated that religion need not confine or degrade women; rather it can have a liberating effect on society, regardless of sex, to become all that they are capable of being.
Marie De Camp Prairie Village Senior
Prairie Village Senior
-Bob Postlethwaite
Prairie Village Senior
-Sheryl Gitchell
Hutchinson Junior
-Claudia Kidd
-Claudia Kidd
-Rick Kersey
Mahannten Senior
-Bill Borland
Lawrence
★★★
Second, we also feel the double meaning of "the popular belief," but what of the popular belief that it is a woman who catches a husband? It seems strange that the word "popular"
chasing women, yet you reserve the right of "landing a husband."
Men of the KU community also feel that the ad appearing in the February 17 issue of the *KU News* distasteful and dehumanizing. "We will also conceive that the majority of women don't go to a tavern to be feasted upon by the appetites of male chauvinists."
Response
However, do you really think that it is us to use such high percentage of people? Since you wish to refer to people's motives in the dubious terms of, "the greater percentage", let's use the greater percentage of men.
First, since you name your family the KU community, we shall have to assume your generalizations are also directed to the men of the KU community. We shall then that the majority of the KU men think that if a woman goes to a tavern with a girlfriend, she will be inviting herself older; NOT HARDLY! Maybe older men and women might think this, but by definition, information you have excluded them.
To the Editor:
chasing her "of landing a husband." Finally, don't you think your final line was a little dramatic and unfair? Who is who in women's clothing? "food?" Women wearing short skirts and flaunting their sex. We will stand by them, but we want to combat exploiting and dehumanizing ads, but first we suggest that you cleanse and disinfect the objects you investigate the beliefs of the "greater percentage" of KU men and investigate another one-sided outrage!
Ron Kettner Shawnee Mission Senior
Jim Fitz
Burlington Freshman
Steven Golden Grainfield Senior
Jack Pearson Shawnee Mission Junior
Glen Scheib Bucklin Soph
Larry Stigge Washington Soph
—Karl Schoettlin S.M. Senior
[Name]
Jeff Steinmetz S.M. Soph
Gus Stoppel Luray Junior
Philip Roth has written an outrageous, wild, intermittently funny take-off on the present administration. It is called Our Gang, and it has fine moments like this: the presidential preacher named Billy of course) tries to comfort Trick E. Dixon, while a student names William White, the White House, by saying "Mr. President, forgive them, they know not what their sighs say."
Boulders And Openers At 20 Paces
The whole treatment of the Reverend Billy may be the best thing in the world to help a chapter and verse from Nauhli Websites to be above politics when he is just below it, serving the ends of politicians while cultivating an ignorance that he
Roth grasps the dynamics of Billy's credential-system: he gains access to
power as a preacher of God to the people, and uses his access to power as a way of impressing the people to whom he preaches God. The proud in station recommend him to the humble, and the humble to the proud. He is God's PR man, who knows everybody because he lives by a life vexed with vice. By continually blessing the institutions he becomes an institution—as American as cherry pie.
Take, for instance, this multiple usefulness of Billy. One of the few genuine revelations in Lyndon Johnson's recent book was the story of Nixon's overture to him just after the 1986 election. Nikon proposed a mutual non-aggressive pact of sorts between incoming and outgoing President. The aim of such an agreement with the vice president branch was—Rev. Billy Graham! How turn down the man of God—it would be like turning down God himself.
In another part of our OuGau, President Dixon explains how three Boy Scouts happened to be killed in Washington: "Through a long night, our brave soldiers, armed only with rifles and gas masks, canisters and gas masks, face a mob of Boy Scouts, numbering nearly ten thousand." The President goes on
television to display the makeshift weapons carried by the street people in camping gear. Just consider all the ways of dealing injury with a Boy Scout knife—the bottle opener alone has a hundred sinister uses.
No, not even that TV speech can outrace events. We have just been given a post-Roth version of Kent State that is more double-thought-out and new-spoken than anything in Roth, or Rushter, and that is more Rushter, prominent Right-Wing and star of the "Advocates" sounds as if he had studied Trick E. Dixon's TV speech to catch just its surreal paths and Wonderland logic. Here is the Rusher account of Kent State: "A group of National Guardmen, outspoken to the contrary, retreated uphill under a hail of rocks weighing as much as seven pounds." No mention of shooting, nor of bystanders (who made up most of that 1 to equation), nor of the difference in armor or training. Only of the horrible word of that "rereat"—which, to add excavation detail to the pain, was "uphill."
Ever tried to fight with boulders at twenty paces? It’s enough to drive you back to your bottle opener.
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
James J. Kilpatrick
Gutless Wonders Chilled
WASHINGTON - On the evening of Wednesday, December 1, the Senate approved an embarrassing, unwarranted and indefensible amendment to the pending Economic Stabilization Act. I have not before enacted an amendment before, in the hope that would quietly go away. Sad to say, it seems to be lingering on.
This is the amendment,
sponsored chiefly by Senator
Alan Cranston of California, that would relieve newspapers, magazines, book publishers, and the radio-television industry from the price and wage controls that apply to everyone else. In the
holy name of the First Amendment, the exemption would accord special privileges to the artisans. But we are supposed to have, we ought to renounce it out of hand. It is no justification that a number of other trades, services and artists are exempt from Phase Two—seafood, jewelry, antiques, art objects, and the like. There is indeed something acutely human in Cranson's "simple question."
"If all these, 'he' asked, "why not the press?" Wigs, but not newspapers? Whips, but not books? Why taixdermy, but not books? Why taixdermy, but not books?
magazines, radio and television?"
The short answer, perhaps, is that Walter Cronek is not a stuffed moose, and the communications industry carries rather more economic impact than the sports team. Short answers will not suffice.
The tenuous rationalization for this amendment is that newsmen are either golden boys or gulless wonders. It is suggested that we might accept special favors, or be punished. This is how Cronek put it.
"The Wage and Price Control Boards will be dealing not only in across the board guideline
rulings applicable to all newspapers, all magazines, all TV stations, and so forth; they will be dealing with individual case-by-case requests for pay or price adjustments. . . This does not mean that the danger is rather clearly to different treatment for different companies, and there is at least the danger—all we are concerned about is the danger—of, first, the Board treating a critically different from a friend and, second, a threat of physical harm when he knows he is going to go before a government board and ask for special consideration."
STOP ...WHITE HOUSE
GO ...THE COURTS
BUSING ISSUE
CONGRESS
"Oh, goody! Here I am . . . stuck at the most dangerous intersection in Washington."
This is, or ought to be, non-sense. By this insulting line of reasoning, newspapers and TV news have any tax assessment, zoning regulation, or lawsuit that depends upon some decision by a public agency or official. We ought to be kept in antispeculative dress, so we can usus, and we ought to be spared the burdens of mortal men. Humburt!
The amendment is wrong in principle. It has practical defects as well. In its original form, the book has been included "entertainners" in the blanket exemption, on the plausible grounds that the First Amendment restricts playwrights, motion picture producers, and stand-up saturators.
who work the nightclub circuit.
On reconsideration, entertainers were dropped. But a vast deal of the communications industry is engaged in the dissemination of information ideas concerning public affairs". It is engaged purely and simply in entertainment. Dean Martin in Las Vegas, or Dean Martin on TV, is the same Dean Martin. It is endearing to suggest that he can be a casino and thawed on the tube.
Once before, in the matter of the Failing Newspaper Act, I reproached my brethren of the press for accepting special privilege. That exemption (from anti-trust laws) was at least of limited application. The Cranston Company would out an enormous loophole in the application of uniform price and wage controls.
Many segments of the industry, I know, are in trouble. Production costs keep climbing. Postal rate increases alone will compel some upward price adjustments. But we of the press must take our lumps like everyone else. So long as controls remain the law of the land, we will sound awfully well and be able to amend, in urging their firm restraint on other men—but not on us.
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Norman Massey
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THESE TELEVISION COMMERCIALS ARE TERRIBLE!
Griff and the Unicorn
By Sokoloff
SOMEONE ONCE SAID:
"YOU CAN TELL THE IDEALS
OF A NATION BY ITS
ADVERTISEMENTS"
IN THAT CASE,
WE'VE HAD IT
SARCLOPP
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff."
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 2, 1972
5
KU
Kenson Photo by JIM FATON
Doris Stubeck Checks Phelps' Uniform
Made all new outfits for porum girls
Teaching Associate Sews New KU Pompon Outfits
After several years of wear and tear at athletic events, the outfits worn by the University of Kansas are now beingthreaded, and beyond further patching up last summer for this year's football and basketball games.
The girls were measured in the spring and final fittings were made when they returned for classes in the fall.
"The old uniforms were in terrible shape," Stubec said. "They were really faded and I was surprised to see how worn they were." The lining was exquisite and had even been matched."
By MARCIA CLIFTON Kansan Staff Writer
Pompon girl Jane Phelps,
Lawrence senesch selected the
children's association in a
associate in design Stubbe took
on a summer project of sewing
Stubeck described the project as being relatively free of
Festival to Start Monday
By LEONARD GROTTA
Kansan Staff Writer
"WE STARTED by trying to design an art and a theatre area the artist wanted to emphasize," said Warren, "then we sent out letters to him about the type talent we needed. We found out who was available, and then we created it."
The Festival of the Arts will begin Monday with a performance by the National Players of the Jean-Louis Adair and Andre Glide admission of Franz Kafka's novel "The Trial."
The festival has been organized by a special committee of the board of directors. It is directed this year by Steve Hastings, Neb. sophomore. We have worked Warren, the committee has been working since April to organize the festival.
The National Players, who have been called the most highly respected touring theatrical repertory company in the United States, have a record of 22 years of continuous operation, which from the longest running classical repertory company in America.
The Festival of the Arts committee comprise about 25 student volunteers who are in charge of the mechanics of the festival as arranging seating, printing tickets, planning publicity, and training participants visiting performers. The director of the festival and the SUA board
are the policy-making body for the festival.
"One outstanding characteristie of the Festival of the Arts is that it can be held in other universities may have folk festivals, theatre festivals, cultural festivals and universities in the United States has anything like the Festival of the Arts."
THE 1927 FESTIVAL has had better ticket sales than the five before it, and although the festival is a relatively young event, Oread it, it seems to have become a firmly entrenched tradition.
There are several purposes for the Festival. Not only is it a place for artists to display distinguished performers and speakers to the campus, but it also serves to assist in offering students an exposure to a wide range of artistic forms.
In speaking of the festival, Warren termed it "our crash-course in culture." He said, "We try to bombard a student in one of our classes in all of their forms, hopefully being to broaden his perspective."
The second day of the festival will be concerned with opera. Boris Goldovsky will speak. He has been attributed with helping to establish a meaningful experience as well as good entertainment. As well as presenting his scheduled lecture in Hoch Aucterium, Goldovsky will be spending two days on visits to students and classes.
ON WEDNESDAY of the festival week, jazz-flute musician
VVAW Plans to Hold Panel Discussions Here
The Vietnam Veterans Against the
War panel discussed panel
discussion at 1 p.m. March
Ellsworth Hall, Byron Ed-
mundson, Lawrence senior, said
There are several more panel discussions tentatively scheduled for later this semester, including one at Lewis Hall.
former reporter for the New York Herald Tribune, has published four popular books. His first, "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Taste," is a collection of the drug-culture of the early 1960's. His second book, "The Kandy Colored Tangierine Flake Streamline Baby" is a collection of children's stories from state of American culture and the personalities which play an important part in shaping it. The Pump House Gang" and "The Bad Times" are the Flak Catchers" that are two most recent creations.
GORDON LIGHTFOOT,
CANADIAN folk-singer, will give a concert Saturday night. Lightfoot was also the musical material which he feels is not only valid artistically, but which also has the potential to be used in an album selling recording, "Sit Down Young Stranger" was released by Reprise Records in April 1970. He was a crowd in Hoch Auditorium
Edmundson said four veterans make up the panel which travels and talks to churebes, living groups and clubs.
Another project plan is a side program. "The Automated Deployment System has happened now in Vietnam." "It is to be shown later this semester or next year."
"There are some combat and hospital scenes, but concentration is on the air war and weapons," he said.
Emdunson said that the organization favors strongly the granting of "unconditional amnesty" to draft evaders.
According to Edmundson, there are 140 slides showing various weapons, weapon systems and what they do.
In the VVAW local newsletter, a statement says "... we want to
Religion School Offers Degree In New Area
The new emphasis is available within the master of arts program offered by the resources of the KU departments of Soviet and Slavic area studies, philosophy and psychology and the School of Religion.
A new master's degree emphasis in international thought has been unified by Lynn H. Dean of the School of Religion.
Herbie Mann will perform. Mann has been in the advance-gadget of the movement to utilize ethnic dance as a tool for working with popularizing the use of the flute as a jazz instrument. He has played in most of the leading jazz clubs in this country, and has performed for nine record companies.
Underground improvisational comedy will be represented by the Portable Circus and its performance by the Portable Circus. The Portable Circus was formed in Hartford, Conn., and College in Hartford, Conn., and group decided to pursue comedy as a career. Working with their co-producer, Jeremy Sherman, the Circus has become one of the most successful new improvisational groups in the world.
Religion in Russia, Japanese religious thought, Buddhist primitive religions and mythologies examples of possible areas of study suggested by James Bradshaw studies in the School of Religion The School of religion is financially separate from KU, but students may be taken by students for credit toward graduation from KU.
FRIDAY NIGHT the Festival will present author and journalist Tom Wolfe. Wolfe is known for his form of reporting in which he interviews people with impressions and personality with his subject matter. Wolfe, a
tell people why we should not have gone there in the first place, why we were wrong as a nation and as individuals in going there, staying there, and now refusing to face the error and correct our mistake."
Also, the organization is collecting books for area prison libraries, Edmundson said.
Workers for McGovern Conduct Local Canvass
The Students '10 for McGovern-
del deliver information packets Satishea
interested faculty and staff
members whom they contacted in
a telephone class last week.
Lynn Knox, St. Louis, Mo,
freshman and campus
bachelor of art from
every faculty and staff member
in the first and second county
districts was contacted.
Nearly half of the faculty and staff, about 500 people, live in these two districts. Twenty-five volunteer workers did the calling.
"We got a better response than I honestly expected." Knox said. She said some of the people the canvassers called were already
The canvassers asked if they were interested in knowing more about the candidate for president. Knox said each caller received 15-20 responses.
working for the organization.
The canvassers asked those to help him. McGovney's views which issues they would like to know more
Knox said the most prominent concern were the environment. The McGovern organization has prepared a series of six leaflets on the issue of crime and justice, defense policy, the economy, education, the health care system.
complications and described the girls as being a "fun group and very slim and trim."
Many of those contacted by the canvassers, however, were more interested in general information than his views on specific issues.
This work was only one of Stubbe's proofs in dresses in design, so that it always been interested in textiles and weaving, but "more than a"
Friday each canvasser will meet the people who responded to his calls. The packets will be delivered Saturday by the canvassers.
Stubec makes all her own clothing as well as her daughter's. She also goes to education at KU. Stubec said that her method of design for her own clothing involved "a perseverance in interpretation of dress patterns."
Stubee's interest in textiles and her acquaintance with members of the KU teaching staff helped them two years ago to teach Design.
"I enjoy teaching very much," subieck said, and added that she especially enjoyed being able to teach her other interests allowing for her other interests.
Stubeck's other sewing projects include designing wedding dresses and tailoring suits and coats. She has also a number of patchwork skirts and other patchwork items.
Prof Gets Funding To Study Behavior
By SCOTT EATON
The National Science Foundation has granted $17,300 to Kenneth B. Armitage, professor of biology, to continue research on the role of social behavior as a control of animal populations.
It is the tenth year the N.S.F. has granted funds to support the project Armitage said it was one of the few companies received such long term support.
"In a general sense we are studying the role social behavior plays in population size." Armitage has problem essentially is that all animals have a reproductive capacity and birth rates that within a few generations would change. Animals do not universe. even an animal with a relatively slow birth rate, such as the elephant, could populate the universe in 1000 years. Some animals keep population under control."
ARMITAGE SAID there were basically two ways that man could control a trool. One way population sizes were limited were by things the population has no control over, such as weather, food shortage
"These are things over which
the population has no influence, but things which do influence the population. "Armitage said."
The second way that population could be controlled could be some regulation of birth rates. This regulation population has in its activities. This regulatory mechanism is
"I don't mean to imply that social behavior requires a lot of marriage said. "But can make it almost certain that some member of a population has a particular character."
Armitage said this could be done by forcing certain members of the population to leave the village elsewhere for food and shelter.
IN THIS WAY, certain members of the community were forced to leave the established area and move to the area with the greatest food and shelter supply, Armitage said. They then had to dorage in the field for months before their lives were much harder to find. This made the outcast animals more susceptible to predators and attack by predators, he said.
Armitage said he had been using the yellow-bellied marmot, a relative of the ground hog, in the studies.
STUDENT & FACULTY SPECIAL
Prime Sirloin Dinner for Two at a Favorite Local Restaurant
BREAKFAST FOR TWO served in your room. (if you prefer)
DeLuxe Room for Two
Complete Package $16.95
TRAVELLODGE
TRAVEL WITHIN THE U.S.A.
Call 842-5100 for Reservation ★ Good for Month of March Only.
SPONSORED BY:
A
Student Union Activities
Foreign Study Office
SUA Travel Service
Dean of Foreign Students' Office
Forum No. 4 of a Series
Coming Forums: Travel within Europe 11, U.S. camping and hitching, Mexico-Canada on a student budget.
7:30 Friday, March 3 Kansas Room, Union
Council Room - 4 p.m.
Sponsored by Women's Coalition
Friday, March 3
Pre-Celebration of Women's International Day
Every Woman Welcome
ALL WOMEN'S DANCE
FREE
get on the grass!!
Today there is a growing concern among students to get back to the organic way of growing things. Cerophyl laboratories has been doing it for years.
We have taken the tender young blades of especially planted grasses such as oats, wheat, and rye . . . grasses that have been scientifically grown and tested . . . and compressed them into tablets to yield the maximum of life-giving nutrients for you.
**you are interested in finding out what grass can do for you, clip off the coupon and mail it in.**
The booklet, "The Amazing Story of Grass" will be sent to you free. You can also place an order if you like, however, you are under no obligation.
This is not a rip off, so get on the grass!
CEROPHYL
LABORATORIES, INC.
4722 BROADWAY
KANSAS CITY, MISSISSOUIR 64112
FREE
TRIAL
OFFER
Please send free booklet
"The Amazing Story of Grass!
Buy 3 bottles of Cerophyll grass at the regular price of $3.50 each. We'll send you ABSOLUTELY FREE a fourth bottle. Use the free bottles to buy additional return the unopened bottles for full purchase refund. Order C.O.D. or send check with order and we'll pay the postage.
This offer good until March 22,1972.
GET The All Leather Upper Hiking Boot, With Durable Lug Rubber Sole and Heel.
For Only $14.99
BROWN'S BOOTS
men's sizes 6 $ \frac{1}{2}-12 $
JC Penny The values are here every day
Use Kansan Classified
SAM'S
CORNER OF 9th & MASS.
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS*
Good Through March 6
SAM'S SUPER COUPON
Gillette SUPER STAINLESS
5 for 89c size Limit1 with coupon
43¢
SAM'S SUPER COUPON
Bayer Aspirin
59¢
100's
$1.17 size
Limit 1
with coupon
SAM'S SUPER COUPON
Box Envelopes
100's
49c size
Limit 1
with coupon
19¢
SAM'S SUPER COUPON
Cepacol
MOUTHWASH
MOSC 1.1
14 oz.
$1.29 size
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with coupon
66¢
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Protein 2
SHAMPOO
7 oz.
$1.59 size
Limit 1
with coupon
67¢
SAM'S SUPER COUPOON
Rise
SHAVE CREAM
11 oz.
$1.19 size
63¢
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with coupon
6
Thursday, March 2, 1972
University Daily Kansan
1953
'How Now! A Rat?'
Earlin Burgert, professional caretaker for animals, used in research, appears to be communicating with one of his rats. He has a friendly relationship with a pair of white rats he keeps for pets
after they ram loose in the laboratory and no one
breaks his spikes he brings his days feeding,
watering and caring for the chicks.
Kansan Photos by T. Dean Caple
(Hamlet, Act III, Scene IV)
THE FACTORY
The animals require vast amounts of water and food, and Burgert is kept busy in food preparation, in checking and cleaning the cages, and in following instructions from faculty members and research personnel who use the animals. Each experiment requires careful adjustments in the animals' controlled living conditions.
I am ready to teach you the basics of martial arts.
BROADWAY STREET PHOTOGRAPHY
By JAMES COOK
Kansan Staff Writer
Some people have horses, some people have dogs and some have cats. Earlin Burgert has rats, 150-600 of them at any one time.
Burgert, a laboratory technician for the department of physiology and cell biology. In this department's research projects
The rats, and rabbits, and opossums, are used for research in reproductive physiology, morphophysiology, endocrinic biology, and antherosclerosis research. Specifically, the processes of ovation, the nervous system's use of energy, the metabolic aspects of the adrenal gland and the pituitary of the aorta are being studied
Burgert's rats are about 1/8 inches long, have tails about 8 inches long, are white, have black markings, constantly wiggle their whiskers.
"They're smelling," Burger said, "they smell everything." Burger's rats are kept in Haworth from attention at 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day. Burger's job is to feed the rats, give them water and clean their cages in a special wash room. Burger scrubs the floors of the room in which they're kept several times a week to keep the cages clean. On the weekends a graduate assistant takes care of the rats.
Burgert said rats could be trained and kept as pets if they own acquired them before they were sold, or retired—old. He has his own pet rat.
"People keep rats," Burgert said. "One professor had one and the other had two. You go to class, even up and down the stairs. The physiology classes experiment with them and the students do their experiments on them. We usually kill them but some of the students, especially the teachers, they take them home and keep them for pets. It's against the rules but they get attached to the students."
Burgert said one woman had a pet rat that "talked" (chattered) to her.
Burgert said he realized that he had seen many people who believed he birds were more afraid of people than people of rats. Some ONTVs have their own way of killing birds.
"We sometimes have a problem with the group cages," Burge said. "A kill weak or sick rat. Then the rats eat the dead rat. When the strong ones卸 off the weak ones, lead them." Then they stop fighting.
Burgert said his biggest problem was with rats that escaped from cages. They can't see their room but they can hide.
The rats are killed with ether or by decapitation. Burgert destroys the remains in an incinerator.
Some of the animals die of old age, others are sacrificed to the expansion of knowledge. Burgert is responsible for burning the carcasses in a special incinerator. At the end of the day he makes time to catch up on the records he must keep on each animal and to
The rats cost about $1.75-2.50 each, Burgert said.
listen to a little music. Data is recorded daily for each individual rat to insure accuracy.
The image shows a person closely examining a document or paper. They are wearing a white coat and a hat, suggesting they might be an official or someone in a professional setting. The focus is on the document, which appears to be important or significant.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 2. 1972
7
Coburn Named Top Star
By BARBARA SCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor
James Coburn received the United Motion Picture Association "Award" Male Star of the Award "Male Wednesday in Kansas City."
The UMPA, an organization of film exhibitors, presented the award-winning movie The Hotel Muehlebach. The festival is the annual Show-A-Rama, the world's second largest film exhibitor's convention and trade show.
Coburn, who climbed to fame as the star of two Twentieth-Century films, the mid-1960s, "Our Man Flint," like Liftin', had made 22 films. But he said in an interview before his death, "I was surprised at receiving the award."
"I really was surprised," he said. "It’s kind of a nice thing for him to be around in Hollywood I'm always around filmmakers, but I never get a chance to meet the theatre owners or the films... I've never been to a convention like this before so it’s kind of nice to come and meet all the (theatre owners). ... It’s really cool if they like what you're doing."
"I rarely see the film after it's
"THE SILENT FLUTE" was probably as close to my heart as anything I've done. "He was a man," he said, the evolution of a man," he said.
Does he even like to see other people's movies?
Coburn's latest release is "The Horns." It tells the story of a shiftless, irresponsible rodeo cowboy who deserts his family.
"I think the fulfillment of that character (in 'The Honkers') was as complete as any I've done.
By MARTY LYONS Kansan Staff Writer
Oliver Modifies Sunday Meals
in the can, he said. "I like to see it from a director's point of view, to be in on the editing and putting. But it once is done—no."
Wilson said that in addition to the change in price had been based on the highest priceBreakfast had cost the guest 70 cents and dinner had cost the guest 125 cents. The cost was $25. There was, according to Wilson, from the students at Oliver to the students at Alicia.
"Oh, yeah, sure. I go out and see all the time. What else are there to do?" he said. is there to the world an impression of real life you wouldn't get otherwise—another level of meaning."
"There's a whole community around the people in the rodeo. That guy is an elder, and this guy's life. And it'd done from the rodeo man's point of view," he says.
Because of the poor attendance at breakfast on Sunday mornings, the housing office rearranged the hours of Sunday from the Hall January 30, according to J. Wilson, a J. Wilson, director of housing.
Brunch is now served from 10:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m., and supper is served from S p.m. to 5:45 p.m. Wilson said.
SANDRA HEWITT, resident director, said the initial surveys showed a favorable response to the program and an proval of the program. The
"We are not serving any more or any less food." Wilson said. "We are just changing the times."
program will run five weeks,
Hewitt said, and then a student
poll will be taken.
"On the whole, the reaction has been quite favorable," Hewitt said.
Wayne Atwood, Lawrence
wayne and resident assistant,
said he was happy to have a
happy but might the restaurants
might not be if the plan were to
TWO OLIVER residents, Brian Nicol, Overland Park freshman and the other three, Culsa, Okla., freshman, said that no one ate breakfast on Sunday anyway the program was good. They also said the plan was to return to school.
Wilson said McCollum had requested the change and it would take effect 6. He KOed a third time the change in the next few days.
"This program meets the style of the students more than Sunday and sometimes noon," Maureen Dudgson, Pittsburgh junior and resident teacher.
Continued from Page 1
China...
have made some secret agreement with Nixon to speed the settlement of the war were well founded.
Bays said secret negotiations were most likely carried on and probably produced some secret agreements.
Bays said he didn't think the North Vietnamese would hesitate to quickly publicize any pressure he received. He began to receive from the Chippewa.
"Chou works rapidly," Bays said. "His mind is like a machine gun. He sets a very stiff pace on an agenda, and I think that he spent far too much time with his mother and earlier with Henry Kissinger to have discussed more than what was in the communique."
BAYS SAID THE U. S. decision to remove its troops from China was sure to affect American relations with that country.
"in 1954, the Chinese teamed
Ho Chi Minh to accept the Geneva
accords, and that didn't turn out
for Vietnam." Bays said.
Bays said some Asian allies of the United States are on American relations with China. He said the Philippines were a rift with the US, this. The Philippines felt they had an undress, and now they also might be able to talk directly to Beijing.
"The announcement of U. S. invitation to make an attack on Mann, relation with Taiwan more strained," Bays says. "Withdrawal of our troops is very important."
Bays said a slow and uneven response from American troops coupled with assurances that the U. S. would maintain its treaty合理ness to minimize the amount of stress placed on relations between the two countries.
"O course, if Chiang Kai-shek met the next week, the whole matter would be a deopper. "Bays said. "But if the enemy 'mains stable' it will adjust well."
Does he plan to enter other phases of film production?
BAYS SAID trade with China was not nearly as important as it had sometimes been made out to be.
"I started acting because I wanted to learn how to direct. And that's still my aim," Coburn said.
"The China market has always
"RIGHT NOW I now I'm working with a group of people to set up an alternative to studio production," he said. "I'll make the Minderbinder Pulp and it will let filmmakers get together as a group with a pool of talent. Nobody works for a salary. We all need, for expenses, but it's our film."
been a grossly inflated myth,' Bays said.
Bays said that definitely some memories of the times when China was not economically sufficient and dependent on the U. S. to supply them for help still bothered the Chinese. He said the Chinese never wanted to repeat that unfair trade situation, and no foreign country would ever again gain any economic leverage there.
So far, backers of Minderbinder Pulp have put up $3 million to finance five films, the first which should be out this summer.
Coburn said that about 70
bureau staff had expressed interest
in working with Minderbinder Pulp,
but that probably about 30 would
be needed.
Bays said the Chinese were
an attempt by the Japanese to
reestablish their empire by
economic and military
"MINDERBINDER PULP grew simply out of the necessity of finding new ways of making films. Everything is open today. When we want to get films today," he said. "Hollywood is all over the world. Now it's just a state of mind. (Studios) are obsolete now. (Businessmen aren't interested in business—they're interested in profit."
Bays said one aspect of the communique issued by the U.S. S.A. is that he was the reference to future cultural exchange. He said if the exchanges included intellectual exchange, each country one country to the other to study, it would be an interesting and important addition to Sino-U. S. relations.
Coburn was, in a sense, a product of his studio system: A young actor films before the Flint movies, he was stereotyped as a heavy male de Lonesome; a twelve-picture contract, seven-picture contract with Twentieth Century Fox that made him a star. His other pictures were the two Flint pictures.
"FLINT WAS GOOD career-wise at first. It was good then." Coburn said. "But I wanted to see what happened. Explore the experience of Flint
There's been talk recently of making Flint into a TV series. Would Coburn play the lead?
more. The producers wouldn't do it."
"No," he said, "television is too boring. It's just day-to-day work and I got enough of that when I started out."
Walt Disney's Song of the South
Granada
TEL. (342) 559-7160
WWW.GRANADA.COM
Nominated for 4
TECHNICOLOR
Nominated for 4 Academy Awards!
BEST ACTRESS
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SCREENPLAY
Glenda Jackson
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Peter Finch
Sunday Bloody Sundy
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BEST DIRECTOR
John Schlesinger
It's Drive In Movie Time Again
Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30
Saf. & Sun. 3:00, 5:05,
7:30, 9:30
(Twilight Hr. 4:30 to 5:15)
SHELLY WINTERS MARK LESTER
THEATRE ... telephone V13-1065
BOX IN THEATRE · West on Highway 90
Box Office Opens 6:30
March 2, tonight, 7:30, 9:15, Woodruff, 75'
Varsitu
A special showing of THE QUEEN, documentary of a transvestite beauty pageant, will immediately follow the exchange of vows.
Auntie 7:00, Murders 8:45
MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE"
BONUS FRI-SAT
"HORROR HOUSE"
EDGAR ALLEN POE'S
MAUDE LOVES LIFE... SHE'S 81
HAROLD LOVES MAUDE... HE'S 18
RUTH GORDON and BUD CORT
"HAROLD and MAUDE"
GP
The President and Mrs. Nixon cordially invite you to
House 10:20
Hillcrest
Adults 1.50
VANESSA
REDGRAVE
Daily 5:00:7.35:9.20
Sat.-Sun. Mat 3:20
Twilight Prices Good for
5:00 show only.
Tricia's Wedding (with the Cockettes)
OLIVER REED
Daily 4:45:7.20:9:20
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:50
Twilight Prices Good for
4:45 Show Only
LAFREDERICK B. CUMMERLE
Hillcrest
I LOVE YOU
KEN RUSSELL'S FILM THE DEVILS
from Warner Bros. 'A Kinney Leisure Service'
DEMONSTRATE
REAL LOVE AND CONCERN FOR GOD AND MAN, JOIN ME WITH YOU. I AM IN FOLLOWING POVERTY AND IGNORANCE, AS WE SEE TO BRING OVER MY HEARTS. I WANT ALL MEN. THIS IS THE TASK OF THE DIVINE WORD MISSIONARY PRIEST AND BROTHER, TO KNOW MORE.
FATHER TOM STREVELEN, SVC
DIVINE WORD COLLEGE DEPT.27
EPWORTH IOWA 52045
D
Include your age, education, interests, address, etc.
--you're a disadvantage.
Earlier way it comes to the same thing:
Western Civilization. "Campus Madison,
West 14th."
It
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Daily Kisan Kanan are offered to all Indian students, to color, creed, or national origin.
Western Cv. Notes—Now On Sale
There are two ways of looking at it.
1. If you use them,
SCHOOL BUS 62 Chevy, 6 x4;
2-speed rear seat, good for camer-
or band; $70.00 plus One University
motor, $75.00 plus Miner, $75.00 plus
BUS 844-656-3911
Auto, Foreign Import, 95 Jaguar
Ferrari sportcoupe, 200 miles since
1963
$1.475 Paul Wald, 5020 W 22 St
Parka, Torquei n.p., 913-272-1250
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
8608
pu
Sunday
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
ARGYLE SOCKS FOR THOSE TIMES
WHEN YOUR FEET SHOW FUR
EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS
TRY IT YOULL LIKE IT - Rent WINTEBURGE motor home for two weeks. Free WiFi. Free Alka-Seltzer Lawn Mowing. Free 1-499-2055. 1-881-1535. 1-622-3440.
RHINESTONES RHINESTONES
RHINESTONES FIRST
Must sell! 1893 Tremont Bonneville
tank, 20" tank, 4" tank,
tank bank, 6" extended tanks,
tanks, battery eliminated
battery eliminated Many
finish jobs. PhoneMark. 316-282-455
phone. Office Mark. 316-282-455
phone.
Tropical Fish Equipment Aquarium
50 gal, 3.10* - 3.25* complete with
graver heater, drippers, drip pots,
and water filters. Cultures 842-3212; 5:00- 9:00.
Filters 842-3212; 5:00- 9:00.
FOR SALE
Clip-on VHF bow tie antennas, $1.00 each at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-2
Stereo console -- AM-FM, stereo
record radio; record夹轨; strap tape.
Looks and sounds good 8257
492-9667 3-2
1988 Chevelle SS, power trakes,
power steering, air conditioning,
automatic transmission, excellent
pellucid palladium call. Pm 840-6425 3-17
FRUIT — FRUIT — NEW PINS!
EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & Mass.
3-2
One 1969 Fender Super Reverb Amp
—used only once, perfect condition.
Call 843-2107 or 843-5865. 3-7
MUST SELL 18 MONTH OLD IRISH SETTER. Male, has had shots. New dog house, very gentle. Call 842- 9036. 3-25
Fire Cureance — New F12 w/ 4kbs
bitcut to $25, plus $250 F.E.T.
Free installation at Ray Stoneback's
'92 Mass.
1971 Kawauki dit biko. Great condition.
Must sell well. Also, tender
condition. Must sell well, also,
tender condition. Must sell well,
also, tender condition.
82-4702 between 4-8 p.m.
82-4702 between 4-8 p.m.
1971 Honda CB 350, 2600 miles. ex-
cellent condition. 843-7006. 2-3
UNER 4400 Report Stereo 4-track
computer, microphone, power-
supply, USB cable. Buckled iKs boot size 8.5-9
cal. Buckled iKs boot size 9. 1 X 15. 27 Cal.
843-795
66 Corvete conv. Blue, 427 cu. in,
4-speed, AM FM radio, luggage rack,
excellent engine. Call after 6 p.m.
842-7505. 3-3
1971 Volkswagen Super Beetle Concept car. The front of the vehicle has a speed-channel opening, 4,000 miles per hour. Bright orange with black top and interior. Must sell. Call Karen. 626-853-6420.
THE BUGGER
the new dimen-
sional,
cycling and bicycle
trainer to carry out
training. Take it campeting, tour-
shopping, the Ride-On Hib-
Shop 1601 Maa
1) One 25 inch lawn mower never used.
11) HP with power drive. $30.00. Call
841-2964. 3-15
1962 Buick Special, new transmission,
new front tires, new battery,
has snow tires. Economic and dependable.
Call Dave. 842-6358. 3-6
See the new water-cooled GT-750 at Kat Suzuki. Only $1,640. 634 Mass.
842-6966. 3-7
show lites *Kinematics* and depend-
ence on the camera's lens.
Canon 840 Ai-zoom super $ movie
automatically 7.5 mm - 80 mm
zoom, for DVDs and projector use,
for David Graves or after c-130
Alfa Romeo vechi G.T. Double over-bread, 4-wheel disk, 5-speed Mint condition. 634 Mass. 842-7
0696
1971 Honda C.B. 350 Gold, great
2,600 miles 842-902. 3-7
10 speed bicycle. Gilet Tour de France 2015. Campagne du Brookside Pro Saddle. Campagnolo Holbrook Criterion "Criterium D'Ardeleur. Like new. Call Michael at 842-712-32
See the guaranteed selection of used cycles at Katz Suziuk, 634 Mass. 842-6066 Factory authorized sales and service. 3-7
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
99 Blue WV bug, custom walnut interior, super clean. 3 extra tires, excellent condition. $1,400. Call 833-7248
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.20
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Landed ski loci 1971 "Pro" model.
Used only three days. Perfect condition.
Size $9.1"; medium $7.00; Todd Dillon; 834-6400; 3-3
1969 Corvette T-Bar 427-HP, H.P. 1499 Speed P, S.B. P, A.And. Blue, Cord Int. 20,000 miles, $195.19 trade, B428-4800 after 2-30
Porsche 911L 1968 Palo red, blacks interior, AM-FM, Alloy wheels Excellent condition Call Dale at 842-3329
Leather and suede coat, custom made blouses and dresses - Made to fit. New shelves 29 & 100 specials all online. This coupon BONKON 7
MARTIN GUITAR - 12 string model D-35, 5-months in excellent condition. Include hardshell case and instrument; Call: RUSS 845-6760
NUR CAMERA36 - Koe 1 w 3 Leaves
SUL CAMERA45 - Koe 1 w 3 Leaves
$155.0 Pensi HVL Penis
$155.0 Pensi HVL Penis
changed systems Might consider
changed systems Might consider
Call Jack 644 or
90 or
80 or
69 Ventura string acoustic guitar with case. Excellent condition. Will accept best offer Call Paul 414-7022 3-8
Nice black kittens 7 weeks old. Box trained, raised with dog $1.00 each
842-1984. 3-8
One 1972 Hoover Dial-A-Matic vacu-
um cleaner slightly used. $45 Call
+++-9864. 3-15
Camaro, 1968, 306-232 hp, 4-speed
postnack, green, black interior, AM-
FM Student needs money, must sell
money. B42 - 842-809-698
P for M. app for
1911 ronna srlsl, excellent condition,
must sell, call Dennis at 843-
7404 3-8
Poll-shaughn. Hungarian sheepdog,
born Jan 21, A.K.C. Male and Fe-
male. Sheepdog breed. Measured
vividly; 4 month males. Weight:
3-15
· 298-791. McLennan, Kanaan
3-15
1956 Chevrolet 2-door station wagon; wc-
6.9l; standard, needs tender lovegri-
care. Those who love her call her
Gertrude 844-110-11
3-6
VW-1967, pretty black bug, new brakes, runs great, stereo. Tim, 842-
7125.
NOTICE
For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center tf-864-4441.
GWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright. (816) 474-4676.
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER, 442-7604. Professional child-care for children 1 mo to 12 mo. Or part-time or part-time. Specially designed children 31–39.
TREE PEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB—teacher fees, and students in a party room. We will welcome伏ation for second term term party member party. Nice hand stand, black dress. We also have special monthly rates for phone meetings. Phone or contact John meeting meetings. Phone or contact John Station Tee Pee Jets 42-48 & 59HB Station Tee Pee Jets 42-48 & 59HB After 9 p.m. on Monday.
Spend this summer working in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further information send $1 to Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80926 3-6 3-6
Women's alterations. 20 years. experience.
Call 843-2767, 9:30 to
5:30. 3-13
Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 515 Mile
Hill, 902-743-2800; ibr Brasket
chanel= $14.5; ibr Beerkraut=
$30.00; Skor or pork ribs=$34.00;
Miniature duck= $39.00; ibr
$18.00; Ibbr Brasket Sugar = $8.00;
Ibbr Brasket Plane=$18.00 11 am;
Ibbr Bracket Coffee=$18.00
Sum-Tue= $17.00 3-17
STUDY ESPEANTO, the international language, in Portland for Portland International Expo. International Esperanto Congress here 29 July to 5 August. A unique language, designed by Summer Session language Information. Summer Session language, Oregon, 97200.
SALE GOPS ONES - 50% OFF ON BELTS - SWEATERS - SHIRTS AND OTHER REDUCTIONS EARTHSHINE. EAST 6th & Mass. 3-2
*We are leaves of one tree and drops in one sea* "Bahal" Faith—Informal Fireplaces Monday—Pearson College, 7.30, 3.2
Set yourself free, Join Gap Lab:
Brotherhood, sisterhood, 7:00
P.M. Mondays, U.M.H.E. Center, 1224
Oread Ave. 3-6
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Parts at a discount
THE CONCORD SHOP
- ARTIST CANVAS
- LIGHTEY ACCESS
- STRETCHER FRAMES
many in stock
—others on order
842-6966
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., pts. - qts. only
25% OFF
McCONNELL LBR. CO.
844 E. 13th St. 843-3877
Trade-in special-50-Watt Magnaxon FM receiver, one-year-old, $100 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-2
Two experienced nursery school
teachers offer complete day care for
children 3-14. All pre-school (Mellissa)
rate levels: 84-135. Rate: 3-10
*
Used Motorola portable, sold new for $149.90, now only $50 at Ray Stoneback's 929 Maxo.
Appearing at the Mad Hatter on Wednesday, March 1st and Friday. March 3rd SHINE—a folk trio Free admission. 3-2
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $0.03
Artists: display your works in *in-*
*city City*. Art work of all kinds need
congruence. For information,
call John. 82-128 (after 5 p.m. P. 3.-M.
4).
FOUND: A Parkway Central High School class ring at the Missouri basketball game last Sat. Ask for Henry at 843-5468
5468
3-3
BOKONON - remodeled sate - Bussy Buzy Busy custom sizing. Sweet big bargains, Leather jackets - tucked in. Vermont Discount sweaters 3-7
Gordon Lightfoot, two tickets, second row, center section on the floor. Make offer at 842-9682 3-7
RUSSIA - SCANPIDAVA 5, weeks
in Europe. Shipment to New York,
small group camp travel (ages 18-
up) from New York, Arleside,
Wilshire Earth, Reynolds Travel,
Lloyd Book, Transit Travel, Lloyd
197, Kurtz Travel, Kurtz 197.
The demands of the *MARCH*
the MARCH MS must oppress
mothers in their attempt to
torture! The spring offensive starts
Another Enterprise, Orange Arkwd
Enterprise
University Terrace Apartments — furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $10 and up. Floor sizes vary from 4th Apt. 1, B or call 843-143-92
DISCOUNT TRAVEL! Discount programs can be fantastic, but also find you in Europe looking for a ride. Check it out SUI #84- 5873.
FOR RENT
If you have come to this state, to help, to educate, to help why you have come into this state and know why you have come to this state. What time Māraja-Ji will whisper in your ear?
For rent—or two bedroom apts.
For rent—or garaged, garbage
cabinets. For rent—or facilities,
cellar. T-V available. Call
Coral Ridge Vista Apts:
24th and Ridge Cottage.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second session—1 bedroom, 2 bathrooms, 1/12 bath furnished or unfurnished. Central a. dishwasher, wi-cat counter, refrigerator. Apartments—The place to live in. Call 24 hours a day a81-3800.
IT'S NEVER TOO LATE and it is in the best possible condition that you can comfortably or attractive. One call to Mrs. Forsyth at 2017A Hart Road and you can book a tour of her facilities available in Lawrence' best best and most attractive campus and Munson's Apartment, and Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of Apartments, Iowa & Harvard Lots of soundproof construction, please centralized or off-unfurbished, reasons you would enjoy living in Lawrence make this semester in Lawrence a special location for August occupancy and any campanelle can be arranged too.) 3-3
Ridge House Aft—for the budget
of $14 million and the maximum space at best rates
of $250,000 per duplex. Prices start at $800,
duplexes $1250. Prices start at $1,200,
block south of Ward 6 Coodarwood.
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited
Savings on furnished apartments that
counsellors can have two bedrooms
furnished apt with all utilisations
for $40.00 each. Call 4:00
1-800-392-5676.
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right next door to campus, HFI Mississippi University, offers six bedroom apartments available. Aug 14-15, rooms available at end of semester. May 20-23, rooms available at end of semester. May 27-30, rooms available at end of semester. May 29, dishwashers, central air conditioning, between 8:28 and 5:30 P.M. and 10:30
FOR RENT OR FOR SALE Mobile home in good condition, 690 sq. ft. partially furnished, full dw候, didw侯, cell phone, Call # 844-312-6150 to 510 $2,998
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
WANTED
Women's alterations, 20 years experience.
Call: 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 3-7
HERBS AND SPICES
THE MERCANTILE
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SAUSAGES
CSC
10YDTA INDUSTRY
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Flr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Want to buy Old piano, banjo,
bass string, Marshall amp, musical
saxophone, Fender jazz or prokazion
saxophone, Cajon or consiglion
84-6623
Need girl to share house $55.00
Utilities included. 842-5768 3-7
Kansas Key Press - Job printing from letters to posters, for journals, books to booklets and resumes. 710 Mass. in baskets. Zaro Open. in six a day. 842-4831.
10" J. B Lanning D-129 speaker.
New, used or blown-out. Also, one
Allerting Lamination 45" 421A Call 843-
2107 or 843-5865.
We repair all Volkswagen. We do small operations, transport cars and repair cars, as experientially we sell parts and vice versa with VWs with all medical issues, Bugland, 2nd, 3-10 2nd
ROOMMATE Share apartment with one person (one bedroom) 1) block No. or campus. All bills paid $50 a month. Roommaster, hausern 1) to 6:30 Tom-Fri.
PERSONAL
NOSTALGIA — NEW OLD CLOTHES
EARTHSHINE, EAST 8th & MASS.
PINK BUNNY RABBITS AND BLUE SNAILS ARE EVERYWHERE - THINK* EARTHSHINE. EAST BU. & MASS.
Experienced in typing these, dimensional terms paper formats and a variety of typeface styles, with ptype size. Accurate and prompt serenades. Req's BS or equiv. Req's Phone: 843-9544. Mrs Wright
Dearest~W J and N & A & B & B
Dearest~W J and N & A & B &
L. Sury girl gets the stuid service is leaving Lawrence this week. Inken.
Dearest~W J takes a lake cool shirt, D & S & B
LOST
Woodnok—spring is a time of renewal. 3-4
p. Archileski skis in white
m. Lost on Jayhawk. Bred Monday
night between 7:30-8:00 m. If found
all 843-2563. 3-2
Lost by lth and Oread two puppies
Sunday night. One black with white
tail on apples to *crachaa*, other
black with white tail to *savanna*
Call Maryham. VI 2-7293-3
Keys on Co-op key ring between Summerfield and McColum on Friday. Feb 25. To return call Norma, 84-653-991 3-3
Book "American Constitutional Law"
Book. Feb 28, 198 on 3:30 P.M. PPE.
please call Nurse Larkin. 1-913-853-
6457 --- letter at 8:00 P.M. PRES.
Ward.
TYPING
These, term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM Selectric, your choice of type styles. Also editing at里州, Mlenda. 842-797-981. 842-560-960.
Typing done on elite, electric typewriter. No Theses please. Prompt attention. 843-0958
HELP WANTED
Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses or dissertation Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call V3-5281, M. Ruckman.
Wanted = Figure models - Amateur
- watercraft - for photography -
- for pictures - No age limitations -
Rate paid. $75-$100 per pet.
Box 275, Box 275,
tannas.
Need 2 R.N.'s for 11-7 shift. Contact Director of Nursing, Ransom Memorial Hospital, Ottawa, Kansas, 3-2
MISCELLANEOUS
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sizes—8-10, 12- up to 75% off, Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky
SIX FLAGS
OVER MID AMERICA
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Thursday. March 2. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Track Team Seeks No.7
By DAN GEORGE
BY DAN GEORGE
Kansan Sports Writer
Bob Bornkessel Spirits Out
Senior sees hunts victory.
Kansan Photo by RICK KERSEY
When the University of Kansas track journeys Fridays to Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium for the 44th annual Big Eight indoor championships, teams will compete in seventh straight indoor trophy.
100
Coach Bob Timmons, however, has no illusions about the lucky significance of that number—he knows it will take more than that.
Other than KU, four teams figure to be right in the thick of what could be the closest meet in this year's Western Conference State, Kansas State and Nebraska are all expected to put pressure on the defending
IF ANY TEAM has an edge, it is most likely Colorado Returning for the Buffalooes are sprinters Cliff Branch and George Daniels, who won the 60-lap dashes in last year's meet.
"In past years we were never
concerned about the Big
Eight concert," she said.
"We weren't sweating it. But this
year there's no doubt. She's
sure to win."
Colorado also features strength in the pole vault with Mike Wedman and Dave Bussarbager who has cleared 7-4th this season.
The Buffs also have a poten hurdling duo in Mike Hill and Wavne Lockwood.
Standing in Colorado's way, the Cowboys are a squad from Oklahoma State. But even more than Colorado's, the Cowboys' hopes rest on just a win.
One of these is hurder-rutter-miler Jim Bolding. The meet mark of 6.9 in the 80-yard highs all in to this Oklahoma State state.
THE MILE and two-mile runs will also be vital events for the Stillwell squad. Miler Mike Mahke is currently rated number 1 in conference, but he faces a tough opponent in Kansas State's Jerome Haleyo.
Nebraska and Kansas State also have the look of contenders. The primary strength of both teams is depth.
The Cornhawks' best is Garth Case, a speedster who leads the team with a time of 11.09. Teammate Wes Leonard holds the third spot.
Another plus for the Nebraska squad is the league-leading (3:07.5) mile-relay team.
K-State's Howe, who has been billed as the meet's headliner, rates as the favorite in the mile. His best this season is 36.65.
TWO TEAMS that will not challenge, however, are Missouri and Iowa State.
Oklahoma may well be the
orktorm horse team of the meet. The Team Oklahoma has two 1000-yard runner in Butch Clifton and the top high school team.
The Tigers' Dave Friese is a prime candidate for the shot put hole, where he will lead Missouri to a win in the 800, but after that the squad's talent is unleashed.
Iowa State's predicament is even worse. Only two members of the team are ranked among conference leaders.
Where, then, does that leave the Javhawks?
Timmons is quick to point out that this year's squad has no of the superstars that have characterized his past teams. Gone are the Ryans and the Titans, but this time, it will be a team effort.
KU's strengths are several. Like skill, last year's long jump season and appears the favorite. Pole vaulter Matcher Hatcher has 16% but will need a maximum effort against "Colorado's" team.
RICK JAQUES, who finished third in the 880 a year ago, now ranks second in the conference in five games. He joined the 1000 with a mark of 2.104.
The shot put is also a key event. There is no finer duo in the big Eggues and Dana Lehc. The two freshmen are ranked third
The Jayhawks could also do well in the hurdles, with newcomer Delario Robinson auditing third-year man Bob Borknessel. Robinson has run a 6-1 victory over Borknessel and Borknessel a 6.8 in the lows.
But for almost every strength, KU has a definite weakness. The biggest question marks are in the medium and long distance races. In the U.S., they play a dayhawk 60 man, has a good chance of beating Nebraska's Cause.
The 440 presents a tougher problem. In Branch and Priestley, KU's Mark Lutz will face perhaps his most difficult
IN THE MILE, Doug Smith's 4:09 is four seconds slower than that of the league leader, and
John Callen' mark of 9:00.8 in the two-mile is almost 21 seconds off the pace.
A similar yard situation exists in the 60-yard dash. Colorado's Branch and Daniels appear unbeatable, and the Jayhawks Emmett Williams have been only moderately successful this year
In the high jump, anything could happen. Barry Schur's 6-6% is only two inches short of the league best.
The mile-relay team of Lutz, Bornkessel, Stepp and Tom Scavuzzo may be a surprise. The team of Michigan State Relays, tops
among Big Eight Teams on a short track.
Timmons knows what kind of meet the 1972 Big Eight indoor will be. He knows it might be decided by a single point.
"Everything we've done has been done with this meet in mind," he said. "We're entering the strongest 24 people we can put in competition, but it's going to an overall maximum effort."
Even Timmons realizes that might not be enough. He knows the odds are against him.
But then, a man who has won six indoor titles in a row has beaten the odds before.
Women to Host Basketball Meet
The University of Kansas will have a basketball team in post-season competition this year, but women will consist of women, not men.
The team's leader is Debbie Artman, assistant instructor of physical education. Artman has teaching the team for two years.
"This is the second year for
the team to play in Kansas,
Artnum. They are two leagues, the Eastern and the Western leagues in Kansas.
The women's team is 9-4 for the year, including a 38-32 victory over the defending champion in a playoff game Tuesday night in Emporia. KU and WSU were tied to win, but the Lake League and played the game to decide which would qualify for the national title.
THE OTHER TEAMS
K-State will play McPherson at 7 p.m. and Fort Hays State at 7 a.m. The losers of the first games will play at 5 p.m. before the third game.
competing in the championships are Kansas State University, winner of the Eastern League. McPherson colleges, the top two teams in the Western League. The championship this year will be held in Kansas State.
Admission is 50 cents for students, $1 for adults.
The KU squad started preparing in November. Artman posted the skateboard and put advertisements in the Kansan for women to try out for the team. Seventeen women responded, and the cut was cut.
Fankhauser, Mary Visser, Judy Raney, Sarah Mebride, Diana Gaines, Marilyn Metzler, Patti McFarland and Elena Rodriguez.
"We have five sophomores who own our game. We play a sophomore taking an opposing team, one has experience playing basketball at KU, and we all take turns playing."
Some of the women have played on organized teams before they came to KU.
THE MEMBERS of the team are Cindy Kelley, Steph Norris, Cindy Currie, Nancy
Steph Norris, sophomore forward, played on an organized team in high school. Her team underdeleted during her senior year.
"SOMETIMES WE WILL play our games in Robinson Gym or in Alain Field House." Artman said. He will show up for our games.
Artman was disappointed about the team's lack of student support.
Artman said the other teams that will compete in the tournament this weekend usually play against figures of several hundred.
There are several differences between women's rules and men's rules.
There is no backcourt rule or time line in women's games. After getting the ball, the team must shoot within 30 seconds. Women do not have one-and-one shots, but they must last two minutes of the game, all players who are found receive two free throws.
Bob Skahan, former University of Kansas quarterback, is now calling signals for the KU athletic department as the academic counselor.
This season has been a ver- successful one for the team, Artman said. But he did want to make a major change in the program.
"I want to put somebody in charge of publicity for the team," she said.
After being graduated from KU,
the spring of 1978, ShanKua
passed away in Missouri,
where he received his
master's degree in business
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"I THE FIRST of each semester is really the most hectic time," said Skahan. "I talk with each student personally prior to enrollment.
Now, in his first year as athletic academic counselor, the personable Skahan has the important and demanding jobs.
Among his duties are arranging enrollment schedules for about 230 student-athletes, organizing a study hall for freshman athletes and obtaining information for all athletes who request them
By BILL SCHEELE
Skahan Puts Enthusiasm Into Academic Counseling
Kansan Sports Writer
Freshman study hall is vitally important, Skahan said.
"The first couple of weeks after enrollment are also very busy. The guys really keep me busy dropping and adding classes."
"Freshman athletes are required to study from 8:00 to
PETER E. WILLIAMS
Hashinger Wins Intramural Title
Intramural Title
Bob Skahan
Hashinger and the independent fought for the championship basketball championship Tuesday night in Robinson Gym. They spent so much of the 24-minute game over the ball that there was a "chance" to win.
As a result, Hashinger earned a 4- victory. Toryean Taylor and Foreman each scored two hits. He was the winner. Weideman added a free throw.
In consolation play, the Ebonies downed Lewis, 21-9, for third place.
Marigay Schopp scored all four points for the Independents.
"We want to improve their study habits during the critical freshman year," Skahan said. "First, we put them in a good environment for study. Second, they need help in them in case they need help."
9:30 five nights a week, Sunday through Thursday. Tutors and English instructors are available to them during this time.
"EVER NOW there are about 50 students who come for some kind of advice," he said. "The varsity athletes come in and arrange appointments with the student."
Skahan said that his duties kept him busy throughout the school year.
Tutors are not hard to find, but they are often well known enough so that graduate students and those working on doctorates be in touch with him.
"We won't take just anybody," Skahan said. "We look for those individuals who are well prepared to teach the student effectively."
Besides being an academic counselor, Skahan is also a scout leader. He prepares the team for the football team. He is working with the football players in their off-season training and prepare them for spring drills.
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Skahan approaches his job with a zestful outlook.
"I REALLY love the school," he said. "I have all the respect in my class because of her academic school, and I really feel fortunate to be associated with it."
"I love working with the kids in the program. It really helps me keep a youthful attitude. It is a hard job, job, and also a critical one."
Skahan said his job reflected his outlook on life.
"First, you must have some experience in your life," he said. This job allows me to have that. "I have a lot of things from day to day."
"Aso, your life should have some variety. I see different poses and different situations to do with a life—consistency plus variety."
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CHILLY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.98
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Student Loans Discussed
Friday, March 3, 1972
See Page 2
Second Team Drops Names From Ballot
A second team of candidates for president had selected the student who was dropped out of the
Bill O'Neill, Ballwin, Mo., junior and student body treasurer, announced Thursday that Charles Orlbe, Clay Center graduate student, and Leonard Grotta, Wichita junior, have asked that their names not appear on the ballot.
M. A. H. M. N.
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Another team, Chris Boyle, Lawrence sophomore and Tracey Egbert, Dighton junior, withdrew Feb. 23 as candidates. Five teams remain in the race.
Grotta said, "The mainstay of our platform was to separate Student Senate from the control of the chancellor and Board of Recents.
McCollum Skit Lampoons Sex
"We researched the senate code, talked to two lawyers and found out that it's impossible. The only way is to bring them together." The powers of the chancellor and the regents.
"So we decided to work on more positive activities outside Student Senate. Student Senate really is like a high school student council," he said.
R. L. "Puf" Bailey, Atchison graduate student and elections committee chairman, said Thursday that Lewis and Naismith Halls and Interfraternity Council will sponsor polls for the spring election.
In keeping with the 1972 Rock Chalk Revue theme of "Life's Lossers", a distraught girl complains to her father about her date the night before in this scene from the McCollum Hall skit. The presentation will also feature interviews with God and Satan
on the topic of sex, and is appropriately titled, "Sex and the Single Dingle, or, When It Comes to Sex, Gabriel Isn't the Only One That's Horny." The Rock Chalk 'Revue begins at 8 p.m. tonight and plays again Saturday night.
Area Legislators Voice Concern For Disputed Revenue Measures
By SALLY MORGAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Until Kansas drastically changes the means of raising money, the state is going to have difficulties. Sen. Arden Booth, Lawrence said at a meeting Thursday evening of the Kansas chapter of the Association of University Professors.
Topeka than it has been in a number of years," said Voelk.
"The atmosphere is much better in
Three local members of the Kansas Legislature, Rep. Morris Kay, R-Lawrence, Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence and Booth discussed the progress of the 1972 legislative session. They agreed that the session had been fairly successful.
Booth said revenue measures would be discussed today in the Kansas Senate. He said attempts would be made to amend from the floor the $4 million cut from the 1973 budget by the appropriations committee.
Booth said the property taxes should be drastically reduced and other means of raising money should be drastically increased.
"The people of Kansas will reject anything which will raise property tax,"
Kay said the legislature had passed an
Lawrence Receives Grant To Fund Naismith Park
Lawrence has received a $46,817 grant to purchase land for a 20 acre park located along the Nassau drainage ditch, one mile north of St. Road between 24th St, and 29th Terrace.
Kansas senators Bob Dole and James Pearson and Rep. Larry Winn announced Tuesday the state's appropriation of federal funds for the park. The city will match grant funds to buy the land. Funding federal grant approval, a approval that must be done between the Lawrence City Park and Recreation Department and Four Seasons Inc., said Wayne Bly of the Lawrence City Park and Recreation Department.
The park, which will probably be named Naismith Parkway, according to Bly, will be developed when federal funds are appropriated. The ditch will be cleaned to make a running stream, said Bly, so the area would no longer be a "mimoso haven." Walk areas and children's play facilities will also be installed, he said.
Since this area is a flood plain, the facilities will be designed so nothing will be washed away when the area does flood. One reason money was granted to purchase this land, Bly said, was to develop it into a flood control area.
As part of the perimeter plan, most of the Kansas River front would be developed into a park within the next four years. Bly said. Children's play facilities, overnight foot trails and a boat landing are included stages for the river front park area.
City Park and Recreation Department was developing the school-park concept. A school would be located inside or beside a park, so the students could use park facilities.
The purchase of this park site was another step toward a long goal to establish a perimeter of parks to surround Lawrence. Bly said.
"Maybe by the year 2000 we'll have the perimeter compiled" he said.
accelerated road project which would be highly advantageous to the Lawrence community. The project, which includes a variety of projects in the development of the Lawrence area.
Commenting on University funding, Kay said the amount of money allotted to the University depended on the amount of cash the university had set aside for budget. He said the legislature was faced not just with allotting the budget money, but also with raising the money to put into a new program.
After the three legislators had spoken, Richard Zinn, chairman of the Committee on Taxation and Legislation of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, Richard J. Douglas County legislators last fall to discuss any legislation which might affect the University of Kansas. He said the committee had also sent a resolution supporting the University's requests to the legislature, to all legislators and to the
Steve Hill, chairman of the KU Affairs Committee of the Chamber of Commerce, said his committee had continued working on town-cown relations.
The various other committees of the AG gave their report at the end of the meeting.
America's Pioneer 10 Blasts Off to Jupiter
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)—Bearing a message for alien civilizations, America's Pioneer 10 rocketed away from earth Thursday night to start the longest space flight ever attempted—a 21-month odyssey to giant, baffling Jupiter and eventual escape to travel forever through distant galaxies.
A 13-story, Atlas-Centaur rocket flashed brilliantly in the night sky as it burst away from its launch pad at 8:49 p.m. EST to thrust the payload away on a high altitude wind. The shot had been postponed three times this week by strong high altitude winds.
The three-stage rocket was to accelerate the spacecraft to more than 31,000 miles an hour, nearly 7,000 miles faster than any previous space vehicle.
"All systems look good. We're proceeding on the normal program," the launch control center reported as the rocket rose toward space.
THE NATIONAL Aeronautics and Space Administration said it expected to know about an hour after liftoff if Pioneer 10 reached its orbit, the largest planet in the solar system.
If all goes as planned, Pioneer 10 will set many space records.
It will be the fastest man-made object in space. It will be the first to penetrate the asteroid belt, the first to explore Jupiter and the first to leave our solar system. It will relay radio data from a record distance.
Unless it crashes into a space body or is capt_red by outer space beings, scientists say it will wander for eternity through the universe, stepping even farther from Earth.
ON THE REMOTE chance it might one day be intercepted by intelligent creatures of another civilization, it bears a gold plaque that tells in drawings and scientific symbols when and from where it was launched and by what kind of people who made it. A male man and woman, the man's right hand raised in a friendly gesture.
Four months into the flight, the 565-pound payload, which is powered by four nuclear batteries, is to fly into the asteroid belt which is composed of billions of pieces of debris that orbit the sun at distances from 170 million to 345 million miles. They range from dust-size to a 480-mile-diameter rock named Ceres.
The probe is to reach the vicinity of Jupiter on Dec. 2, 1973. As it skims to within 87,000 miles during a four-day pass, 13 instruments are to probe many secrets of Jupiter's atmosphere concealed beneath dense, swirling clouds which form pink and blue bands to give it
"The purpose of the forum," according to Cameron Jones, Pittsburg junior and director of SUA forums, "is to help acquaint you with the candidates."
Candidate Forum Offered
Student Union Activities will sponsor a forum to permit candidates for president of the Student Senate to express their views and answer questions from students. The forum will be held at 7:30 p.m. March 18 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
"Students who live in organized housing will probably have several opportunities to meet and talk with the candidates," said Jones, "but for students living off campus, this may be the only chance to become familiar with them."
Each of the presidential candidates will briefly present his ideas regarding the student senate and various issues of the United States, and be able to address questions to the candidates.
the appearance of a brightly-colored beach ball
SCIENTISTS AREN'T even sure Jupiter has a surface. Some feel that because of its high gravity, it may go from a thick gaseous atmosphere, down to oceans of liquid hydrogen, to a slushy layer and then to a solid hydrogen core.
It has more than twice the mass of all the other planets combined, and it has violent, hot springs.
chemical analysis might shed some light on a theory that Jupiter may be in a stage paralleling an early phase of Earth's -the stage when life began to appear-
In 11 or 12 years after launch the craft would become the first manmade device to escape the solar system after it passed beyond the orbit of Pluto. NASA hopes its mission will provide radio data on interstellar space for five or six years after it leaves Jupiter.
Key Financing Faces March 10 Adjournment
As the March 10 adjournment date for the Kansas Legislature approaches, the key unresolved issue is the funding of a program to help citizens or will pass in this legislative session.
Highway expansion, welfare payments, penal reform and higher education will all require revenue for the coming year. It is estimated that finance needed to finance legislative programs.
The problem in the legislature is choosing which tax or taxes to increase or decrease.
The decision is complicated by two factors. One is the sharp difference between the revenue policies of Gov. Robert Docking and those of the predominantly Republican legislature. Because it is an election year, the passage of certain taxes could also be politically damaging.
The legislative reaction to Docking's tax reform program is representative of the problems faced in designating revenue sources.
The program called for funding based on three sources of revenue. These sources were a proposed increase in interest rate, an extension to the loan banks, an exemption from the sales tax for
consumables” and the removal or corporate income tax income tax of certain income tax payments.
The first two measures of this program were killed in committee, and the third is still under consideration by the legislature.
The sales tax has also been considered as an additional source by the legislature. The proposal in committee is to implement a one-cent sales tax increase.
Public opposition in western Kansas has been cited as one of the factors that has delayed this bill. Also, Docking has said he will be the bill if it made it through the legislature.
Other proposals for alternate revenue sources have been considered in the legislature. A proposed increase in the severance tax on gasoline has been rejected and other revenue proposals have not received sufficient support.
Action on the remaining revenue bills is expected within the next week. If financing is not provided in the final six meetings of the legislature, money will either have to be transferred to the legislature will have to go into special session to reconsider the issue.
Graduates Leaving Kansas Net Loss, Steineger Says
Sen. Jack Steineger, D-Kansas City told members of Alpha Delta Pi sorority Thursday that the status of Kansas as a state is being discussed, and has led to a net loss for the state of Kansas.
Eighty per cent of the graduates leave
eighty per cent another state where they can
them their destination.
"When these trained people, in whom the Kansas taxpayer had an educational investment of some $20,000 leave the state, he says the business will pay and sales tax producers," Steiner said.
Steineger predicted that within five years Kansas would move toward the nation's most populous state where junior colleges and independent colleges become the point of entry into the universities which would be concentrated in third and fourth year courses and graduate programs.
Steinger said the Tuition Grant Bill that passed in the Kansas Senate Thursday, is the most affordable option.
could show a financial need, to receive a tuition grant up to $500 per semester. The state would appropriate $1 million in the first year of the program.
He said that these grants would be used at any independent college that had an open enrollment and was not primarily a religious institution.
Opponents to this bill argued that it was unconstitutional because it violated separation between church and state. Supporters of the bill argued that it was unfair to students who were made to students who would be allowed to exercise their freedom of choice.
Steineger, author of the Kansas Clean Air Act passed in 1876, which established a framework for health departments of Health and gave health officials the authority to establish pollution controls, has seen several ecology bills pass this session by big business interests.
Critical U.S. Policy Change Linked to China Detente
Editor's Note: This is the second of three interviews with University of Kansas professors on the effects and implications of President Nixon's trip to China. Eaton interviewed Thomas B. Larson, visiting lecturer in political science.
It was largely change on the part of the United States rather than change on the part of the People's Republic of China that made it possible for the U. S. to begin to work with Chinese in communist Chinese, said Thomas B. Larson, visiting lecturer in political science.
By SCOTT EATON Kansan Staff Writer
"I think the change was much more profound on the part of the Americans than the Chinese," Larson said. "It's the U.S. that has not been willing to have relations with the People's Republic, rather than Peking burning down contacts with the U.S.
"As far as the U. S. is concerned, there are both domestic and foreign situations which have seemed to lead to this change."
Larson said some of the situations were the timing of a President Nixon's trip to China, the changing role of the U. S. in the world, and the so-called Guam doctrine.
"1 THINK HE REALLY STOLE the man on opposition in 72," Larson said of McGregor.
Larson said Nixon had placed himself in a position that was largely invulnerable to insult by domestic opponents in the 1972 presidential election.
alarmed the Chinese, and made them inaccessible but that was not the case.
The change in U. S. policy was also contingent with the re-evaluation of the American role in the world and particularly in Asia following the essential defeat of U. S. operations in Vietnam, Larson said.
Larson said that greater success of the Johnson policy in Vietnam would have
"Vietnam was a political and a military defeat for the U. S." Larson said. "It was a very large political defeat, and did a great deal of damage to the government's status and hold on the population of this country, and its image in the world."
"In the military sense, it wasn't as though we were always defeated in battle, though we did suffer losses. It was more difficult than in the sense of our military objectives."
Larson said the attempt by the Johnson administration to put the blame for the Vietnam war on the Chinese also slowed relations with the Pacific Republic.
"THE GOVERNMENT KNEW then that China was no more directly involved in the Vietnam war than the Soviet Union," Mr. Obama said, fighting China, and even less Russia. It
was a question of expediency on the part of Washington.
"In a war that large, with that many American troops involved, the government must present the enemy as being a danger to the U. S. It was hard to make the Vietnamese look very dangerous when Washington picked China as the aggressor.
Larson said that while it was the U. S. which changed its policy the most to open diplomatic talks with China, the Chinese also had to make some changes.
Larson said the Guam doctrine was also important in showing the change in U. S. policy. The Guam doctrine suggests the U. S. government should give direct role in Asian affairs. Larson said.
"The decisive factor for China seems to have been the passing beyond the cultural revolution and the ensuing growth of its economy, in contrast with the outside world," Larson said.
"THAT WAS COMPLETELY independent of the U. S. China has shown a much greater interest in solidifying its position in world affairs," he said.
"I didn't find a lot of interest in the
"I didn't find a lot of interest in the
descriptions of each side's individual
descriptions of each side's individual
"The traditional position of the U. S. has
Larson said he was somewhat disappointed with the text of the commune the U. S. and Chima released following the visit by President Nixon to
Larson said that the announcement of the U. S. intent to withdraw its troops from Iraq was a significant part of the communique. He disagreed, however, with what he felt was the stress placed by American newspapers as a consequence by the U. S. of a one-China theory.
"The U. S. based its argument on the fact that the Chinese Nationalistist China was supported by the U. N.," Larson said. "In U. N, debate, the U. S. pursued a kind of a two-China policy, supporting the entry of the Peoples Republic into the Chinese Nationalist China be kept in the U. N."
"BASICALLY, HOWEVER, the U. S. has always pursued a one-China policy which includes both mainland China and Taiwan." Larson said.
Larson, who served several years as a Soviet authority with the state in the Caucasus, and American emissary in Moscow, thought that Nixon's trip to China has probably
See POLICY Page 7
2
Friday, March 3, 1972
University Daily Kansan
People . . .
. . Places . . .
. . Things
People:
PAUL E. GILLY was sentenced Thursday to die in the electric chair for his role in arranging and then helping to carry out the slayings two years ago of United Mine Workers insurgent Joseph A. "JOCK" YABLSONSKI and his wife and daughter. No date was set for Gilly's execution, but appeals were expected to take several months and perhaps years. The last execution in Pennsylvania was April 2, 1962. Currently the state has no electric chair, it was or dismembered two years ago by former Gov. Raymond Shaper. J
ACTING ATTY. GEN. RICHARD G. KLEENDIENST denied that the settlement of an antitrust suit against International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. was based on political consideration. He also told the Senate Judiciary Committee he did not know of reports that ITT committed $400,000 to the 1972 Republic national convention until six months after the antitrust settlement was made.
Cuba Prime Minister FIDEL CASTRO is telling intimates he no longer is oppose infiltrally to resuming a more FRIENDLY relationship with the United States. The first evidence of a 'new Castro' came in Chile last Nov. 25 when he declared that an era of misinformation had begun and that Cuba's ministration leaves office. In private conversations Castro has made it known that the statement was no slip of tongue.
MARSEILLE, FRANCE—French customers agents made the WORLD'S LARGEST recorded seizure of pure HEROIN Thursday — 425 kilos, or 937 pounds, concealed in the bilges of a Caribbean shrimp boat. In Washington, U.S. Treasury officials said the cache would be worth $200 million to $450 million on the streets of New York depending on how much it was cut with other substances.
By JOHN PATRICK MAHER
Kansan Staff Writer
Japan Called Asian Key
"The key to the whole
research is not
so much China as Japan."
Felix Moos, KU professor of East
Asian studies, at the Thursday
conference.
Japan has become a modern technological state and as such, is highly competitive with the United States in technology and Europe, he said. Therefore, the United States not only should look at the emergence of China as a power in Asia, Moos said, but also should hold a keen interest in Japan.
Japan evolved quickly from a basic feudal society to become a global challenge. China, Russia and the United States, while China changed very little,
Places:
WHEREAS CHINA was opened
in 1945, the British
nation, Japan was open
peaceably by Commodore Perry
the unfortunate uncle,
the nineteenth century, he said.
I will try to provide as much accurate and relevant information as possible.
Wait, the image is too blurry for me to read the full text.
Let's use a simple layout.
[Image]
[Name]
Wait, the text in the image is:
"BENNIE H. SMITH"
"1936-2017"
"PH.D."
"Associate Professor of Psychology at Columbia University"
Actually, it looks like "Bennie H. Smith" and "Associate Professor of Psychology at Columbia University".
Let's re-read the first line.
"Bennie H. Smith"
Yes, that's it.
Okay, I'm ready to transcribe the text.
Bennie H. Smith
1936-2017
Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Psychology at Columbia University
During the occupation following World War II, many changes took place in Japan. The
Felix Moos
Japanese constitution reflects western influence because Gen. Douglas M. MacArthur's "staff and many technical innovations have allowed the States to have allowed the Japanese to combine the best aspects of the
Commenting on President
the Japanese, were deeply
disturbed by the event and that
the President should have gone to
"THE UNITED States proved once again that we can be had," he again.
According to Moos, the United States has persisted in taking a basically unsophisticated approach to U. S.-China rela-
He predicted that future relations between the United States and Japan would be improved if the United States and China.
East and the West.
Moos, an anthropologist, said the United States should try to understand political arrangements not only in terms of social considerations but also in terms of socio-behavioral processes.
"We should use social science in analysis, not just the GNP," he said.
AS REGARDS Japan, the United States failed to do this in the case of the China trip, he said. I equally is a strong concern in.
Japan, and the Japanese now think that the United States does not understand loyalty, Moos said.
The Japanese know that the ten per cent surtax and the dollar devaluation was directed toward Japan, so help convince them of United States' loyalty. Moas said. Consequently, Japan was encouraged to seek with the Soviet Union.
"The two Asian powers are more leery of each other than of any combination of a western power with either of them," said
ASIANS SAW President Nixon's China trip as the weaker going to the stronger, he said.
"Only the defeated come to the conqueror," he said, referring to the Asian attitude.
Moos said he thought the
president had a presidential advice. Henry Kissinger or Secretary of State
Brett Garrison and not the President, gereal?
A bill to bring KANSAS LEGISLATORS under a state RETIREMENT plan was approved Thursday by the Elections, Fees and Salaries Committee of the Kansas House. The bill now goes to the House for consideration by its full membership. As approved, the bill would provide that any legislator who serves at least 36 months would be entitled at 60 to receive a retirement benefit of $5 per month multiplied by the number of regular sessions he served in.
Loyalty is a strong concept in
Things:
2 Get Biology Award
"Use your big guns only if you have to," he said. "Show strength so that everybody knows you have it, but you never have to use
Two University of Kanaa
of Botswana students
72 William King Candin Award,
given annually by the
department of physiology and
physiology.
his research on the effects of the pineal gland on the reproductive cycle of rats. The gland functions as a biological clock.
Roger Melvold, Henning,
Minn., graduate student,
award for his research on the genetics of pleiotropic genes in mice
Edward P. Wallen, Chicago graduate student, was cited for
The $400 award is made possible through the William King Candlin Memorial Fund of the KU Endowment Association. He was elected by Mrs. Roeser M. M. Lawrence in memory of their son, a former KU student killed in an automobile accident in 1968.
Herbie Mann-March 8-2.50 National Players-March 6-1.00 Portable Circus-March 9-1.00 Tom Wolfe-March 10-1.50
Festival of the Arts Tickets Are Still Available
★ Tickets available at the Door of SUA Office
NDSL Loans Attacked
The National Defense Student Loan (NDSL) program, which allows thousands of students nationally to attend college, is under fire from President Nixon. Nearly 1,000 students at the university in Kansas receive funds from this source for their education.
By STEVE RIEL
Kansan Staff Writer
Nixon, according to Jeff Weinberg, Assistant director of the Office of Student Financial Aid, has twice proposed that the
Student Financial Aid Proposal Meets Chancellor's Approval
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
It's recommendations
"obviously fit my biases or I
wouldn't be so static" he said
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmer Jr. said recently that the report submitted to him by the Department of Justice Force on Feb. 1 was the most thorough, the most conscientious, and in some ways "the most avant-garde" report he had written in 10 years of administration.
THE TASK force reporter tests the skills of the needs adequately, with exception of the superior undergraduate program, which was qualified for the honors program, but did not receive Watkins or Summerfield Scholarship.
The subcommittee proposed institutionally sponsored merit scholarships for top-level students, four-year periods to both Kansas and out-of-state students. The present Watkins-Berger and Summerfield scholarships must be renewed each year and are awarded annually.
J. Eldon Fields, professor of political science and chairman of the scholarship subcommittee, said recently that some of the subcommittee's proposals if approved would be superior students to come in KI
THE TASK FORCE was asked to study all aspects of the financial program at the institution, request, to study all areas of the subcommittees were formed to study the major areas of the program. scholarships loans and grants were studied.
Fields said there were two reasons for University sponsorship of merit scholarships. First county-wide information should inform scholars that KU is interested in the superior student.
Chalmers said he had asked William M. Balfour, vice chancellor of student affairs, to implement the task and to ensure that required added resources. As more funds become available, he said, "recommendations for staff positions can be carried out."
SECOND, four-year scholarships, available along with the present one-year renewable scholarships, would have reduced the value of program was more conductive to individual productiveness.
Balfour that 35 per cent of the James Davis Jr. Scholarship Fund set aside specifically for academic scholarships, would be awarded to sponsored merit scholarships. The subcommittee also recommended the establishment of freshman honors scholarships—one year, non-renewal, with a minimum $100 stipend.
These grants would be awarded to students who qualified for the honors program, but did not receive Summerfield, or Achievement Scholarships.
Concern was expressed by the scholarship subcommittee about equal treatment of minority students in granting
Selection criteria would be the same as those for other students and students in qualified minority students, the funds would be returned to the school.
scholarships. The subcommittee suggested that 10 per cent of unrestricted scholarship funds be set aside for minor students.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Weinberg said *Nixon's* philanthropy made Nixon the middle income individuals who presently received a large part of DSLR funds should instead use Apple.
"Part of the problem right now is that so many students are looking for jobs that employers don't want them." Ward said. "They already have so many applications. Getting a job is not connected with the need. It's a matter of being at the right place at the right time."
NDSL program be replaced by heavier reliance on federally insured loans from banks and lending institutions.
PHILIP GARY, director of urban affairs, proposed the plan primarily to overcome psychological hazards the part of his students. Gary was his proposal that the history of discrimination in America had made minorities skeptical of claims of equal treatment, so might persuade minority groups to apply for scholarships.
Ward said that notices of job opportunities for men were posted outside the Office of Student Financial Aid. A job file for women's positions is kept in the Dean of Women's Office and the student advises may be able to advise women seeking part-time employment.
The work programs subcommittee investigated the part-time employment situation for students, both on and off campus, recommended that an employment center by established adjacent to the Office of Student Financial Aid to make
MARTHA WARD, assistant to the dean of women and chairman of the subcommittee, said that the Office of Student Financial Aid now handles the work-study program and employment for women. The Dean of Women's Office handles employment for women.
Equal opportunity for men and women in part-time employment could be more easily achieved if they were consolidated, Ward said.
The task force recommended that a full-time staff position be created to run the employment center. Balfour said that because of the additional funds required, the would not be started next year.
She said both offices are informed of job opportunities only if employers call; the employers seek employment information.
Ward, said that perhaps students could man the traffic game at football and basketball games. This would allow Traffic and Security officials to move more heavily on security, she said.
THE WORK Programs Subcommittee also recommended that the number of jobs available to students be increased if possible, by spitting into several part-time jobs.
HAROLD KROGH, professor of business, and subcommittee chairman, said there had been a problem with students renaming the loans.
The committee will also look into the Yale University tuition fees for the spring semester fee payment is an extremely difficult administrative task, Kroger said, and further data on the cost of success of the Yale plan is needed.
The loans subcommittee recommended that an additional 15% of the student loan be assigned to the Office of Student Financial Aid, with particular
Krogh said the loan subcommittee also considered a request by using a credit card, such as Bank americad or United States State University already has such a plan in operation.
Chalmeris said that among the new staff positions recommended by the task force, the one involving counseling for loans would be the most likely to be employed at the Endowment Association.
emphasis on counseling students being considered for short-term loans.
SO FAR CONGRESS has balked at the prospect of dropping the NDSL program and has resisted Nixon's efforts. The Senate has rejected the present program weighed heavily in the decision to keep it.
KROGH SAID a problem in the plan is convincing banks to absorb the service charge incurred in using credit cards. In the plan, the cost to absorb the cost, but the state is unable to do so, Krogh said.
If banks would bear the discount, credit card payment could become a reality, but right now they can't jump for joy about it, he said.
The University Senate Committee on Financial Aid to Students will further investigate the matter.
Weinberg explained the NDSL program was superior to federally supported loans, principally because of the differential in interest charges. The NDSL loans carry an interest rate of 6%. Because federally supported loans have to be repaid at 7 per cent interest.
The time period for repayment also differs. NDSL loans are repaid over a period of 10 years, with no interest charged until graduation. Federal insured loans charge interest from the time of loan acquisition and payment is usually required within a three year period.
NEXT YEAR'S funding for the NDSL program, Weinberg said, would probably be comparable to the previous academic year. KU students received nearly $1,250,000 through the NDSL program. Weinberg said the program was designed to help government with state support
The NDSL loans are provided on a need basis, as required by federal law. Family income is the amount in getting one of these loans.
SECOND LARGEST is the NDSL program. The third category is short term loans that benefit the Endowment Association.
The largest category is the offices supported bank loans, which cost $20 million to the student at his home bank. These loans total close to $2 million. Weinberg said his office was in continual contact with the bank.
In the, Office of Student Financial Aid oversees loans totaling nearly $4 million Three are provided, said Weinberg.
Some 3,000 students borrow funds from the Endowment Association annually. A total of 12,500 loans are loaded on a short-term basis.
the federally supported loans. Weinberg said, were provided according to the willingness of banks and financial institutions
presents
TIDE
with
HOT DOG
All of the technical work for these loans takes place at the Office of Student Financial Aid and Management, in basement of Strong Hall.
Red Baron
FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS
IN SITTE OF A large loan program, Weinberg said, hundreds of students were unable to get loans through his office. Many were turned away from the school because of not receive loans from banks.
The default rate on the NDSL program at Ku, Weinberg said, was lower than the national rate of 10 per payment for interest payments on past loans were coming into the office at a place where the license enabled more loans to be issued.
MOMA
ALL WOMEN'S DANCE
Pre-Celebration of Women's International Day
7:30 Friday, March 3 Kansas Room, Union
Sponsored by Women's Coalition
Every Woman Welcome
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the
tive
ions
ade
iam
d of
ion.
Mr.
n of
heir
d in
1968.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 3, 197;
2
Fernando González
KU Professional Sculptor Oliver to Host State Completes Newest Work
Professor Bernard Frazier casts bronze sculpture
By SUSAN HAYES Kansan Staff Writer
A year of work was culminated last weekend when Bernard Frazier shot his bronze sculpture Oklahoma City bank which had commissioned him. Frazier is a sculptor in residence and the owner of an urban design at the University of Kansas. A well-known professional, with many awards credit. Frazier commissioned by the bank to design and construct a sculpture the lobby of their new building.
With the help of his wife, sons and numerous others, Frazier created a sculpture of horses and riders, then built it in the basement of a house. It was part of the lost wax process, with the assistance of Eldon Bart, an artist. An art piece
The first step was to create the design, then build a scale model. The team also took time on the officials, and the architects of the building, the overall design with their helpers, and the helpers who built a full-scale mock up of the lobby area which would be used for all future projects.
A special process termed post-treatment simulates masonry was used in the wall area behind the structure and add the overall height.
The clay mold was built and
examined to see that it complemented the wall area mock up. A plaster cast was applied to the wall covered with wax and invested in a heat resistant metal. It was then gradually heated to 1000 degrees, which caused the wax to melt away leaving a hollow place for sculpture.
After the bronze had solidified, the painter cast was broken and repaired. In the same point, the sculpture was polished and treated before the process began.
This process is unique for something of the magnitude of Frazier's sculpture *The Birth*, his hire and help for part of the work, but with the assistance of architecture and art history in his family, Frazier completed the work and transported it to Oklahoma City without being beaten.
Frazier is a graduate of K. U. and has worked and taught here intermittently since his graduation in 1952, as the request of the University to create 12 dorcas for Dyche Museum. He has done other work here, including the bronze bust of Ernest Lindley, the bronze reliefs on the bronze reliefs on the doors of the Campanile, two of which are now missing, were also designed and built by Frazier. He said he is very proud of the missing ones, but that they will not be completed for two or
The February Sisters' women's health care task force invited several doctors from Wakelin Hospital and the Bacon and Birth Control Luncheon" Thursday in an alcove of the Kansas Union café.
N Susan Lominska, Sayville,
Nixon, sophomore and a Sister,
Jessica, assistant doctor's
doctor's attitudes, the feasibility
of her proposals and suggestions from colleagues.
Dr. Winston Anderson, Health Service physician, said it was a pleasant meeting.
"I appreciate sitting down and discussing some problems with these students," he said. "I think I need to be a doctor or doctors learned a lot from it."
He commented that he knew of no cases where women had been admitted to the ward. He said the reports of refusal of examinations to women had not occurred.
Stead's Rights Debated In Hearing of K.C. Four
Sisters, Doctors Discuss Health Service Proposal
Stead appeared before Judge William H. Becker at a pre-trial conference in Kansas City on Wednesday he wanted to be represented by Susan B. Jordan, a Chicago lawyer, Confusion had arisen and would represent Stead, since he has formally dismissed his former
The status of Arnold A. Stead, the prosecution's chief witness in the trial of the Kansas City Four, remained in doubt Thursday.
attorney. Austin Shute.
But the question of Stead's right to remain silent was taken under adwissement by the court after hearing oral arguments. Written briefs on the question were filed with defense attorneys by today.
Paul Anthony White, assistant U. S. attorney, claimed that Stead waved his right to remain silent when he appeared before a grand jury last summer and expressed a willingness to testify.
A recent discovery by William Bell, KU assistant professor of ontology, could lead to a “pied” microbe in the extermination cockroaches.
Bell has discovered an odor called a "trail" pheromone which cockroaches emit in order to attract other roaches. He when he noticed roaches following the same path as other roaches.
Bell then set up a study in which he found that when given a cockroach cocooch invariably took the odor of his food after several days had lapsed the potency of the odor was strong enough to persuade the roaches to eat.
Prof Developing Roach Lure
Bell would then use a "pied piper" method of luring the cockroachs into a trap of poisoned food by the use of the piped piper. It is just as the pied piper of fairy tale fame led the rats to the river.
Presently, Bell is finding out exactly what chemistry is involved in the makeup of the
"trail" pheremone. He will then try to synthesize the chemistry of the odor.
Insecticides are not only harmful to the eyes of roctops in a house, but leave unpleasant odors and may be harmful to pets and children. Hell
Bell's plans for extermination would, in his estimation, cut the cockroach population quite substantially. Bell said the only way to do this would have on the ecology would be to decrease the number of rats
If a person presently has a problem with cockroaches. But if you want to avoid faucets and making sure that there are no leaky pipes, Roaches can live weeks without food but they can live a few days without water.
The race on the Kansas River, from Manhattan to Lawrence, has been won by the K-State team for the past two years.
race are to be completed at this meeting. Mike Sundermeyer, AURH president, said that the team will hold the weekend of April 15.
But Stead's attorney claimed that Stead was never sworn in as a judge, but instead constituted right to remain silent under the Fifth Amendment.
and mice since their diet is dependent on roaches.
Next, mix a boric acid and water solution, then place it in a bottle with a cotton swab for the top. Place a mixture under the neck of the container in the attic. The acid dehydrated and kills the roach.
Jordan pointed out that Stead still faces possible criminal charges against him in Kansas and Jackson county, Mo. She said that forcing Stead to testify in the present proceeding would violate his right not to be prosecuted.
TOPEKA (AP)—The Senate approved Thursday to extend Gov. Robert Docking's recommended budget for higher education by 50 percent.
three months.
The four under indictment are Kenneth D. Sandsuky, 24; Randy W. Bunting, 26; Richard Bumgarten, 25, and Richard L. Stanley, 21. They are accused of 42 over acts in an alleged theft, transport, and detonate bombs.
The trial of the four men was held in Manhattan on March 1, but the government asked for a continuation when Stead announced that he would face charges.
Representatives from KU who will attend Sunday's meeting are Benn Mann, Independence, Miss., junior. AURH first vice president, and Alex Thomas, junior. AURH first Jubior, AURH first vice president.
The only provisions for the race are that the teams must provide their own canoes, and each team must consist of members of both sexes.
K. U. is one of the few universities to have a professional faculty whose purpose is to add professional touch to teaching and encourage students to be involved in the sequence of a professional at work.
Plans for the annual KU-Kansas State University canoe
Sunflower Surplus, inc.
Team to Interpret Books At Spring Water Show
"Hooked on Books" will be the
same show again, with the
show which will be presented
the KU Synchro Team at 8 p.m.
March 9-10 in Robinson
U.S. Arctic Parkas 34.95 (were)
New Caledonia Parkas 18.27 (were)
This committee consists of AURH Communications Coordinators from the six state schools in Kansas. The purpose of the meeting will be to select a site for the year's Kansas AURH conference.
Reversible Air Force Crewjackets 12.95
This annual AURH Conference is held in the spring and includes residence hall leaders of in-
18. 95 (were 24.95)
ANNOUNCES WINTER CLEARANCE ON COATS & HATS
Navy Split hood Parkas
Forty members of the synchronized swimming class attended a summer perform ten routines which are based on well-known, popular books. Claire McEiray,物理ical education, said Thursday.
Canadian Army Coats 27.50 were 34.95
IF YOUR MIND ISN'T ON WINTER COATS, COME IN AND CHECK OUT OUR CAMPING LINE!
Canadian Army Coats
Pea Coats
McEliray said the program would feature one solo, one duet, three trias and four team chants. The girls interspersed with clown diving.
Swedish Army Hats 3.98 were 5.49
Cherography for the routines was done through the combined efforts of the Rehman Synchro Team Linda Anneberg, Manhattan senior and president of the club, designed the routine by Melissa some of the major acts. McElroy won.
FIRST AID KITS
U. S. ARMY MUMMY SLEEPING BAGS ETC.
GOGGLES
KNIVES
AMMO BOXES
SLEEPING BAGS
FOLDING SHOVELS
VIETNAM & JUMP BOOTS
NYLON CORD
BANDANNAS
In a solo performance, Alice Hodges, Wichita sophomore, will interpret a scene from "Dr. Zhivago."
CANTEENS TAPPS
PACKS
Other dance routines are based on the Bible, "The Little Witch of Oz" that could "the three witches" from "McBeth" and a book by Dr. Spencer. The Sensuous Woman" that is based on the basis for clown diving acts.
COMPASSES
STRETCHERS
Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:30
Sat. & Sun. 3:00, 5:05,
7:30, 9:30
The team began working on the program at the beginning of the
AIR FORCE SUNGLASSES
Nominated for 4 Academy Awards!
BEST ORIGINAL
SCREENPLAY
Admission to the water show will be 50 cents.
Academy Awards
spring semester and has worked four hours a week in the water perfecting the routines, McElroy said.
With the help of the dance production class the club was designed costumes and props for each act. Costuming has been kept to a minimum. McElroy works with inmates freedom of movement.
BEST ACTRESS
Glenda Jackson
BEST ACTOR
Pete Pooh
BEST DIRECTOR
John Schlesinger
BEST ORIGI
Mary Jane
"Sunday Bloody Sunday"
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CLOGS
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
4
Friday, March 3, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
For Relevant Feedback
An appraisal is being made of "Feedback," the KU book of student evaluations of teachers and courses. One obvious shortcoming has been low faculty participation. "Feedback's" value has been minimal for many students whose future professors have not felt the need to be evaluated.
That is a problem with the idea of its execution. There is a more basic flaw in the idea itself. The booklet's author asks students to rate a one-to-five scale of "relevance" of courses to their future careers. That question if I were asked by someone else.
The question challenges the concept of a liberal education at a university. Because a five is good and a one is bad a course which receives a one in any area, including career relevance, suffers. Were *b*
a trade school and all of us interested solely in preparing for jobs, the question would have some validity. But it's not a trade school and hopefully we are after something more.
By saying a course in Shakespeare will not make an architecture student a better architect, we imply that there is some sort of inadequacy either in the course or in Shakespeare himself. This is ample support.
Four years at KU should have a greater impact than to fit us into our occupational niches in the Great Society. Let's not worry quite so much about "career relevance."
Sisters,
Light Loot
Readers Respond
Sisters, A Little Light...
Chip Crews Editor
To the Editor:
A suggestion recently was made that money from student fees be used to install an artificial greenhouse at the Allen Field House floor—hopefully this suggestion has since been disgarded. However, it is a problem because these deems more desirable to use these funds to improve the campus, and through the matter gradually the responsibility of the student government on the student government can be more quickly (theoretically).
Undoubtedly campus lighting presently meets minimum standards, but recent events have merely limited minimum standards are not adequate. Could student funds be diverted to improve the lighting of campus buildings or to student government work in conjunction with the University administrators to make this happen? This discouraging a further increase of assaults and other crimes at night? Furthermore, as it possible the university will respond to this situation by assigning an officer(s) to patrol on foot the areas on campus that students during the evening hours? It is fortunate that these students during the evening hours? It is unfortunate that they walk on campus safely on a walk on the campus a night, but this situation will not improve on its own; instead, the entire® University community should be prepared for a problem before it deteriorates.
Perry Graduate Student
Navy's Nice
I am responding to the letter in which Mr. Kleiss condemns the system which forces him to remain in the Navy. I am in the school where he was educated Education Program (NSEEP) just as Mr. Kleiss was, but I have not followed his case in detail nor do I know him very well. Nonetheless, it is clear to me that he left a number of things unsaid.
An explanation of NESEP should be included before any judgement is made. NESEP is an opportunity which is presented to students who have outstanding potential and are career oriented. Those who are chosen are given a full four year education in the subject of mathematics at any of 21 universities. Their tuition is paid, their books are provided and they continue to receive their entire pay and benefits. There is a demand for students whose concentration can be given to academic matters. Upon completion of their education these men receive a commission that can continue into graduate school
Nothing is free, of course, so there is an obligation for continued service in the Navy. Nothing is free, of course, so obligation is computed on the basis of nine months service for every six months spent in NESEP Mr Kleiss agreed to come to the University of Pearl's school coming to the University of Pearl's school
I must stress that no one is
"drafted" into NESEP. It is strictly voluntary and in fact applicants are carefuly aware of the candidates are judged as much on their motivation as they are on their academic ability. In order to achieve the aims of the program, the students and the Navy the emphasis is on choosing career oriented men. Apparently, then, Mr. Kleiss expressed strong desires to become a naval officer he was aware of the obligation.
I am not insisting that a career in security should suit everyone, but M$'s remind me that a normal enlistment will be expired unless you cannot work without the of this problem and with considerable savings to the company.
—Edward D. Brady
Also, I would not presume to judge the convictions which Mr. Kleiss expresses, but I can see that he will have a formidable task. It is difficult to determine clear motives when a man goes to considerable effort to establish a short time later condemn it.
Legal Lingo
To the Editor:
My disappointment in the UDK reporting continues to grow. Again and again, articles appear which show shi-lsod researching and poor attention to the details of the report. An example of this is the UDK reporting that Dave Dysart is Director of the Ombudsman Office when Pam Hooper is really the member of an advisory board.
The March 1st article, "51 Sisters Named, Court Order Lists, and Damaging to those involved," the article is wored in a manner which implies served with questions or suffer legal reprisals. This is not true. There are no questions or suffer legal reprisals to avoid answering such questions.
First of all, there is a question about whether the University Judiciary can issue interrogatories because this power is not specifically stated in Regulations of the University Judiciary. Furthermore, the very procedure being used violates the regulations of the self-same University Judiciary. There is an important question to submit to such harassment.
Secondly, the women named were chosen at some random, partly based upon women whose names appeared in the UDK, and partly based on women's issues, speaking out on women's issues, and partly based upon Dyask's contacts with women who spoke to him about his libelous suit. Furthermore, the harassment aspect of the suit when he stated the women named were thought to have "knowledge of who was in the suit," and then there are grounds for serving interrogatories and University Judiciary court orders to between 100 and 150 women, among them Dean Emile Barker, a former sufferer, and Elizabeth Banks, etc.
February Sisters, not all are. The headline misses readers to believe all the women named are sisters and may be evidence to indicate that. This is the kind of journalism that plants bias and encourages one citizen. University services (Ombudsman's Office), in his attempts to harass, frighten, and intimidate other citizens,men.
Thirdly, although some of the women named are self-identified
It is interesting to me that since the suit was first improperly filed with the Ombudsman's Office, it has been full of the names of those involved, have appeared daily. Somehow find it hard to believe that a public through the press is not an additional if not primary motive for the suit. Press coverage is a involvement in controversial issues. For example, a prospective lawyer or anyone interested in becoming known as involved in controversial issues, an office attempting to give students legal services and mediate on behalf that would involve members wounds in themselves in such unprofessional actions aimed at the harassment of some people.
-Diane C. Zuch,
Diane C. Zuch,
Junction City Graduate Student
Ed. note: Although Pam Hooper is Dyssart's first choice to take over his duties as director of the department, he is still, as of today, director.
Better Band
I find it rather ironic that the first dance band the Kansan has chosen to review is one of the best. That's why this is a new avenue of interest our university paper has decided to pick up on? Or perhaps NATIONIAS the only band to play in the newspaper review, newspaper review. Nothing good could be said of the mediocre second-rate bands that haunt this town's dance-and-drinking music and so nothing was said at all.
Mr. Zanatella seems to feel that NATION should be more than "a good dance band" whose choice of dresses would be a dance beat." And yet I was under the impression that those going to the Red Baron were going there for just that reason—to drink and or, to dance, to a good dance band.
Being a concert freak myself, I don't mind paying twice or quadruple the Red Baron's annual nationally famous group. But when I'm in the mood for a somewhat less expensive, yet equally enjoyable experience, I like to play a jazz band, preferably NATION.
In 'closing I would like to ask Mr. Zanatta what type of music he prefers to dance to—obviously a pop band or boring term that certainly doesn't do justice to that type of music). Also, I am at a loss to categorize "Jailhouse Rock" and "Blue Suede Shoes" (two of the group's most enthusiastically used songs) as "sterotyped heavy sounds."
-Rosie Boose,
Wichita Sophomore
PETER B. HUNTER
Garry Wills
kind of grim and grotesque."
Cornelia Loves George
MIAMI-Those who think there is a new George Wallace point to things that are largely the result of the new Mrs. Melissa Simmons, the微笑er she has her husband and 50 times prettier. In TV studios, she fuses with her husband's brushes dandruff, tits shadow out of his bunch grained face. She's a
She puts it this way: "I like to see him put his best foot forward. He's a very attractive man, but occasionally-it hurts." He puts it this way: "It's pretty bad pictures, that make him look
No danger of her looking grotesque. As she rushed into a studio for a lone appearance on TV, no one recognized her. She is not so crudely pretty that men turn and stare. But once they see her, there is no tendency to look away. She turns back, eyes down at the coke at hand, and checks the microphone before she is asked to.
It is a morning news show, and the interviewers want to get at political issues, but she easily deflects all such questions. He says in his statement of issues to George; he does it so much better than I do. He says, 'I run the office, and you run the home.' He is very strong on the issues; that's what he's trying to ham speak, he's so "dynamic."
She says it with such a throaty inwardly pleasing smile, such modestly lowered eyelids, that–without ever ceasing to be a Southern lady–she
conveys that he's a manly tiger, and that anyone can see him in action just by attending a rally;
"Have you ever heard him speak? He can just bring a crowd to its feet! He's a big stump speaker—and it's all out of his voice. Why? Jaycees dinner in Daytona, they applaud Senator Jackson at the end of his speech, but the interrupted my husband's speech about ten times, and then he said he was going to conclude."
"He can feel the mood of the people. He knows they want some relief, and he has the opportunity to be their voice. If you want to know what he thinks about the issues, you just go to the rally March 9 at Convention Hall."
It has all been so breatlessly admiring that the questioners had little chance to intervene. Finally she is in charge of the room, and a dynamic wower; 'I am afraid our
courtship was a little ole-time,
both have children, so we had a family
courtship. We ate at its house. We ate
at my house—we went out about two
times, with the security people. We had
nothing with four security men al-
ongside.
Afterward, I asked her how she thought the show had gone. "Did you see," she asks me in return, "how I tossed those questions right back at them? Ask them if they had seen George speak, asked them what they thought of him? It is a trick her mother acquiescence out of a polite nod, as she was doing with me even while describing just how the trick works!
I said I had noticed—noticed, too; she got in the date and place of his upcoming main Miami rally. "That was her," she winks at me. "She winks at me. No doubt of that."
Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate
Smith Hempstone
Laughing at Baseness Is Bad
WASHINGTON—There is this movie playing in our town. You may have heard of it: "It's called a 'Clockwork Orange.'" based on the novel by Anthony Burgess and directed by Stanley Kubrick, which covers of recent issues of Newweek and Saturday Review.
While James J. Kiltpatrick is on vacation, his column will be replaced by that of Smith Hempstone.
"Orange" won the New York Film Critics awards for best picture and direction, which tells the story of a boy who criticizes as it does about the movie.
It all takes place in London at some time in the near future. Kubrick warms up his fans with a song he sang, and gags a gang of four aspiring Charles Mansons (wow!) that, as one is quick to learn, is as nothing but a joke. The gang and a wild ride through the country in a stolen car, during which a number of motorists are caught and admired or famously on their deaths (dig it)?
The quartet of doped-up psychopaths then gains entry into the police force, with telephone to report an accident, administers a crippling beating to him (to the tone of "Singin' in the Rain"), and goes on before his eyes. It really is a gas.
After a little light comedy
of sorts, the leader of
the hoodsmen, playfully
two of his accomplices to assert
another house and Alex beat a
death with a statue of a phallus
(how bout that for symbolism.
At this point Alex gets caught, beaten up by the police.
MOON MOUNIE
The Courtier Journal
USA
By Sokoloff
TEST
TOMORROW
STUDY
STUDY
STUDY
TEST
CANCELLED
SHANUFF
Griff and the Unicorn
TEST
TOMORROW
The artist, if he would be true to himself and hence to his art, cannot hide or gloss over the risk of being betrayed. Yet he need not revel in sadism and bestial lust, reducing all things to their lowest common denominator and wailing in the face that neither is at the truth about man.
Man is now as he always has been, which is to say not very nice, and that goes for all levels. It is difficult to find the few animals which kills other than to eat and one of the few that slays members of its own species. There is, in short, a lack of affinity, that does not afflict other mammals.
You see it in the aggressive way people drive. You hear it in the roar of the crowd at crowds and you know where they are. You sense it in the empty streets of the cities, where men caught abroad after dark walk quickly and purposefully, looking neither too far nor too close to glimpse of it in the emptiness
There is a disturbing current flowing throughout our society and movies such as "Orange" and "Django Unchained." The code by which men have lived, the social contract, if you will, has become undermined and beasts stalk the streets to stalk the streets are, of course . . . ourselves.
sentenced to fourteen years in prison, is released in two years after a drug treatment which includes sedatives, sickening to him and spends most of the rest of the film getting brutally beaten and forced into a bone-breaking attempted suicide. The film also falsely depicts false and despicable one, that all humanity is so inherently evil that it is impossible, indeed senseless, to try to differentiate decent from deceptive decent conduct and indecent.
That will be unfortunate for man is not himself without the touch of bawdiness, of sexuality, of merriment, which proclaims that man can be but few who would not agree that we have gone too far: Rape is not funny, murder is not a joke, kicking a man into a bloody肛pup, despite what the worst critics may say, is not artistry.
It cannot be denied that Kubrick has talent. Some of the scenes crackle with brilliance and great charm, but they are genuinely funny. But Kubrick's genius is a diabolical one, and given the temper of our generation, it seems to be genuinely funny.
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff.
In all probability we will not collapse into the total social chaos on the brink of which we have been compelled to cyclical rhythm in the beat of men's lives and it is likely that the pendulum will swing back again into a new and blue-nosed person perhaps oppressive social control.
There is a name for what "A Clockwork Orange" represents and it is deprivacy. Having seen it, you walk quickly from the theater, looking neither to the left nor to the right, be human and in the night air there is leathery rustling as of the wings of great bats.
behind men's eyes. There is a hint of drift, of purposelessness in our lives.
Perhaps it stems from the notion of the importance of "doing one's own thing." For if self-expression, no matter what its form or content, is the most important trait that follows that one act is no better or worse than another, that the freedom to commit atrocities is just as important as the freedom to feed a starving child. That is a challenge for its doubtful if the survivors of its worst would applaud it.
It is difficult to assess how deep the sickness runs. But it is pretty clear that there has been a shift in focus from cultural mores, of which the content of television and movies and airport bookshops is merely a reflection of permissiveness, the public gets, by definition, what it wants and many of the things it wants are sordid and are known to be
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate Inc.
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 during the academic year except in April and September, for a year 2014. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 46444. 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 Advisor . . . Del Brinkman
Editor
Margaret Editor
Campaign Editor
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Matthew Mackenzie
Scott Spurrier
Joshua Hough, Eric Kramer,
Hilla Beauchamp
Copriefiles
Joey Weissman, Ron King
Jay Carlson, Carla Grassick,
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Bartar Sinnock
Barbara Sinnock
Editorial Writers
Tom Siamagher, Margaret
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Career Young
Bachelor's Degree
Norman Massley
Law School
Dark Pierpegeren
Dave Murray
David Murray
T
Friday, March 3, 1972
5
ol Young
on Carter
Mamley
Barmart
gerderes
dla Lloyd
Murray
delano
A
Kansas Photo by JEFF GOLDEN
Physical Education Classes Begin to Look Up
These KU students may look like they are practicing the blanket toss. Actually, they are participating in a new form of bend-and-stretch exercise. The exercise is part of a training class for physical education majors conducted in Robinson Gymnasium.
The exercise consists of holding the edge of a tarp or blanket, or as in the picture, a parachute, and bending down to touch one's own toes. Everyone then quickly raises themselves to an upright position and flings the parachute aloft as hard as they can.
The Mount Oread Bicycle Club is sponsoring a bicycle tour of Lone Star Lake, at 10 a.m. Sun., Saturday, April 25th for sophomore and publicity chairman for the club, said the tour in Strong Hall, weather permitted.
Bicycle Club to Sponsor Tour to Lone Star Lake
The trip is approximately 25 miles and the club will sell picnic lunches for 25 cents to the riders.
Although anyone my ride, Demo said, the distance involved should be kept in mind. This is a ride down the street," he said.
He also recommended ten speed bikes be used.
There have been two bicycle tours in the past two weeks in Washington, D.C., each participated. On nice days, according to Detroit, you can walk over 60 of the riders are KU students although some Lawrence High School students
Upcoming events for the club include tours every Sunday at a venue in New York. Tour tickets will be within 30 miles of Lawrence and bikers should
Bike Week this year will be from April 2 through 9. The events of Bike Week will include a 60 mile tour of Lake Perry on April 5; a bike ride from April 5; a tour of Lake Star Lake on April 5; and races April 9.
KU Student Forecasts Weather
Nels Shirer, a Lawrence senior, is not a professional meteorologist (his major is math), yet he spends two to three hours a day, five days a week, recording local weather conditions and preparing National Weather Service maps for display.
By LINDA SCHILD Kansan Staff Writer
The high temperature today is predicted as 51 and the low 20. The high temperature precipitation. High Saturday will be 53 and the temperature may
The above information is brought to you not by the institution but by its official Lawrence weather observer, a student who works with weather maps and measuring devices in Lindley
EVERY WEEKDAY Shirer teaches in highs and lows, fronts, squail lines and areas of mats maps and two sets of forecast maps. He receives the mpats from Suitland, Md., over a machine called a fascimile mach, which is similarly to teletype machine.
If you want to find out how the weather is in Barabao, Wis. this afternoon, take a look at these locations nationwide at 6 a.m., 9 a.m. and noon. There is a two-hour delay while the information is relayed to Lawrence. Lawrence posts the outside of room 402, Lindley Hall.
If you can't find Baraboo on the map, don't worry. Weather stations located every 200 or 300 miles from Baraboo, States and Canada send up weather balloons, called rainsbows, several times daily to record data. The area you are in should be close to one of these stations.
WHO LISTENS to Shirer's weather predictions?
his forte, Shirer admitted. He does, receive five-day forecast maps, but he has noticed some peculiarities among them, he said.
"That's a good question," he said recently as muffled student arrose from the graduate students in his lab. Because the maps he works with are national and are mostly forecasting local weather, forecasting local weather is not
"The forecast maps are calculated by a computer," he said, "and are probably accurate." He said the maps are dependable on a local basis.
"I've noticed that maps based on different computer programs"
occasionally come up with different temperature forecasts."
Shirer estimated that the five-day forecast map predict temperatures with 50 per cent accuracy.
Working with the weather maps, which Shirer has been
His role as Lawrence weather observer, however, is a paying position, funded through the KU geography department.
doing wince 1970, is a voluntary job.
Twice daily Shirer records data from small, white weather radar and Matoi Halls. He telephones the Topoka Weather Bureau, the Topeka Wester Burbank.
KU Students Favor Idea Of Two-Child Families
By LINDA SCHILD
Kansan Staff Writer
"Rabbits all over the place,
that's what it would be like. I'd
like to eat and think that my
friend's response of one KU student when
recently asked why she did not
have more than two children."
KU Librarian Suffers Attack By Nude Man
Campus police are looking for the soft-spoken man who accosted an assistant librarian Monday night as she was on her
The victim was walking from Watson Library, where she is employed, to her car in the parking lot east of Espra Hall Fire Station as described as being about 5-foot-6 with shoulder length brown hair, grabbed her by the throat and dragged her beneath a pine tree.
This kind of response appears to be typical on the University of Kansas campus and throughout the country today.
After the man allowed her to leave, the victim noticed a gray car near her car. Police suspect that he had been the attacker's vehicle.
She said the man appeared to be very nervous. He told her he had problems and that he was sorry.
There is a definite trend toward planning families of only two children. Professor of biology, physiology and cell biology and president of the Douglas County chapter of the Growth ZIP, said Wednesday.
"HOW MUCH OF this can be attributed to ZPG is hard to determine." he said
In a small, random questioning of KU students, the majority of men and women said they have only two or three children.
Although almost all said they were concerned with the issue of ZPG, no one was in view was that ZPG had not directly influenced their
A number of students weren't certain which ideas or literature that they had come into contact with could be attributed to ZPG.
Those students who said they tended to have four or more children from large families themselves. Most said they simply like长大.
AS ONE STUDENT said, "A large family is a good environment to grow up in."
Daily Journal World and KANU
Several students agreed with that idea but said they would adopt children after giving birth to two.
Two years ago, Shirer said, he began his work in meteorology as a research assistant to J. R. Eagleman, associate professor of geography at KU, who was studying the corner of a house is safest during a tornado. As a result of this research, Professor Eagleman found that contrary to popular belief, the best corner is the most dangerous.
The majority of students, however, said that for various reasons, they just didn't want many children.
"More than that would drive me crazy," one woman said. "I couldn't handle any more."
"I don't think society is any older in need of large families. The difference than it was ten years ago," another student said. Life's "great."
Financial factors were involved in some decisions. Others said a small family would make their own decision, give each child special attention.
"HAVE A LOT of children?" one engaged woman said. That not what I plan to do. The princess married is not to raise kids."
Two of the women said they planned to have only two children each, but did not intend to marry.
For these and probably other reasons, the trend today is toward smarter devices. In issue of the February 28th issue of Newsweek magazine, experts predict that the projected number of children in a family. Only a 2.1 average per family would be considered suitable population. Armitage said.
Armitage said the trend toward smaller families might change when those now under 25 years become to have their own children.
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Shrir said he had been interested in weather for years but declared a math major because of the weather. "KU is 'just getting started.' He plans to attend graduate school but because of KU's limitations
Shirer said he is in room 402, Lindley Hall, early most week-
demonstrate to those who
been, how weather maps can be re-
The very experienced usually have special equipment, very expensive bikes, and race often, he said.
The bike club is also sponsoring a tour in conjunction with Spring Fling. An event organized by RU Resorts and sororites, and residence halls.
Steamboat
March 18 - 25 SUA SKI CLUB DEADLINE MARCH 3 864-3477
CAPTOWN, South Africa (CAP)—The City council's amenities and health committee has set aside $280 to purchase tailbacks for male members of the Town symphony orchestra.
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6
Friday. March 3. 1972
University Daily Kansam
MISSOUL
45
KU's Aubrey Nash
Scramblers for ball during Missouri upset . . .
Gymnasts Return To Host Meet
After a win and a loss in a pair of dual meets in Colorado last weekend, the University of Colorado gymnasium will return home to face Western Illinois Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium. Starting time for the game is 10 a.m.
The Jayhawks will go into the
last weekend when they defeated
the University of Colorado and
lost to the University of Northern
KU will be facing a tough foot this weekend, according to coach Bob Lockwood.
In their meet against CU, the Jayhawks totaled six winning efforts, the most by the squash team and the least by the slam. The score of 146 to 123.5 in揍.
The Jayhawks were able to muster only two winning efforts in their 140.5 to 138.1 loss to Northern Colorado.
The next meet for the
"Western Illinois can score over 148 points in a meet," Lockwood said. "We will have to win." He'd drop from the gymnasium to win.
KU Golf Team To Hold Tryouts
The University of Kansas golf team will hold tryouts for this season's team March 13 and 14 at the Lawrence Country Club.
Coach Bob Frederick said recently that each player would shoot 36 holes during the two-day try session.
On March 20 and 21, the top half of the initial participants will again play 36 hools. Of this group, 7 will be selected for the team.
Jayhawks will be on March 17.
That meet will be in the last dual for the squad before the Big Eight meet. March 24-25, which will be
Those interested should contact the basketball office March 6 or 7 for an official sign up.
Two Chances Left for Road Win
All-around — Richard Greenlee, AI. Overton, Marc Berger, MD. David Scholb, Marvin Pichs, Horse—Marc Forkins, Richard Schubert, Rings—Greenee, Quinn, Mike Backus, Parallel Bars—Terry Blanchard, High Cooper, Brian Hooper
By BOB SIMISON Kansan Sports Editor
Coach Ted Owens will take a spirited University of Kansas basketball team to Oklahoma this season on the last road trip of the season.
Senior center Mike McCoy is the fifth football player from the University of Alabama been named to the Academic All-American squad chosen each year by the College Sports Directors of America.
Games Saturday in Stillwater with Oklahoma State and Monday in Norman with Oklahoma will close the season when the state takes give KU its last chance to win a game outside Alen Field House.
Mcoy was one of four players from the Big Eight named to the first team. Others *Others* were Kyle Ferguson, Mildren, Nebraska running back Jeff Kinney and Nebraska defensive tackle Larry Jacobson.
The Jahwak likely will be imminent games, games, games and more. First, there should be long frustration about road games; then there's Saturday's night games. Then, there's a long day of long frustration about road games.
McCoY's other recent honors include $1,000 scholarship grants from the National Football Hall of Fame and the NCAA.
Missouri in Allen Field House.
"AFTER FIVE months of basketball, we don't want to go any longer than we have the spirit for it," Owens explained. During the season, we're in excellent condition. We just need to stay sharp.
Missouri in Allen Field House.
Owens is the only practiced
sessions from the usual two hours
of practice, or the final
week of the season.
"We're going down to Oklahoma in perfect shape. We've been having real spirited workouts."
KU takes an 11-13 record into the 7:35 p.m. contest in Gallagher Hall Saturday. To avoid KU's
first losing season since 1983, KU will have to win both remaining games. The Jayhawks are 7-5 in the league and 5-2 in finishing as high as third.
OKLAHOMA STATE, on the other hand, has the worst record in the Big Eight. The Cowboys are in the Big Eight. $19 overall.
One of those five victories, though, was a 68-65 upset of KU in the consolation bracket of the Big Eight journey. KU even series this year by trouncing the Chicago, 85-38, in Allen Field House.
"They're a real deliberate team," Owens said. "If you get caught up in their tempo, they'll
★
KU' will have to play an aggressive game to avoid being caught in a slow, deliberate attack. Oklahoma State, Owens said.
at home, despite the fact KU has come within five points or closer of winning six game on the road. In addition, defeats were by a single point.
beat you."
"JERRY CLACK might just have a chance as a professional guard," Owens said. "I think he's an excellent player."
The 6-foot-3 senior guard
the Cowboys, Oklahoma State's
1.0 score is 6-foot-7 sophomore
Ralph Russon with a 14.1
All 11 KU victories have come
"We've been real disappointed in not being able to win on the road and playing three good games on the road that we should have won. We
HE POINTED out the 59-56 defeat at Iowa, the 84-60 defeat at Missouri and the 84-83 defeat at Iowa State.
★
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"We're just going to try like hell to win." Aubrey Nash, senior guard, said. "We've just got this one, and we're gonna jump on or rebound one free throw away."
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Nash Says KU Basketball Career Frustrating as Well as Rewarding
By BOB SIMISON Kansan Sports Editor
WASHINGTON (AP) — The WashingtonCare hospital is hearing March 20 for Curt Flood's suit against professional baseball. The attack on immunity and pain is scandalous.
Aubrey Nash, like the University of Kansas basketball team he coached in 1985, was a phenomenal success followed by frustrating disappointments during his tenure.
In high school in Hyattville, Md., Nash led his team to a 7-8 record in three years. He was a high school all-American and received 150 football and 125 basball scholarship offers as a senior.
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"I've had an enjoyable career here," Nash said in an interview Wednesday, "but I've also had some frustrations.
Then Nash came to KU. He averaged 18.7 points a game on the freshman team, saw extension opportunities engineered the offense that took KU to the NCAA final in 1970 and then Nash's silvery moon, though.
Bob Jack of Oklahoma was fifth with 182 points and a 16.3 average.
Jura led the conference in rebounding with 128 in 11 games for an 11.6 average. Brown was
one games we lost your year. Nash's role as a guard in the
KU offense has been one of bringing the ball down court and directing patterns. He is averaging 6.4 points a game this season.
The transition from high score to low score was difficult. Nah said, but perhaps difficult was an internal struggle concerning his idea of his own
THAT BAD experience came in the first round of the Big Eight tournament when Nash was a hawk to Oklahoma. 68-44 in overtime.
"It was rough for a while, but I wanted to play," Nasal said. "I felt really bad, because years ago, and after that I was considered unable to shoot, unable to dribble. I couldn't this, I couldn't do that. I lost some
"I missed some free throws down the stretch that, if I had made them, they have boosted us back into it." Nash said.
"When they label you, that's how they think of you for the rest of your life, and they point out every mistake you make."
Stallworth Leader In Big 8 Scoring
Nash's "they" comprises much of the press, but the fans in Allen Field House have booed Nash's
Stallworth sank 135 field goals out of 289 attempts and 88 free throws of 76 attempts for an average of points in 12 conference games.
Stallworth's nearest competitor was Chuck Jura of Nebraska with distant 247 points and the other team with totalized 96 field goals in 169 attempts and 55 free throws in 83 attempts for an average of 22.8%.
KANAS CITY (AP)—Bulwark with the University of Kansas remained far out in front in the Big Eight Conference this week. He crashed this week with a total of 328 points in conference games.
John Brown of Missouri was in game with 227 points in 11 games, place with 69 points in a game, based on 79 field goals out of 48 attempts and 69 free throws.
second in rebounds with 125 in 11 games and an 11.4 average. Scott Wedman of Colorado was third with 124 in 12 games and a 10.3 average. Fourth was Clint Harris of Iowa State with 110 and 10.0 points, followed by Creighton with 118 and a 9.8 average in 12 games.
Jura led in field goal percentage with a .567 accomplishment in sinking 96 out of 169, while Greg Flaker of Iowa in the free throw category with 31 out of 35 for a .886 average.
In team statistics, Nebraska led in field goal percentage with 306 out of 606 for .355 Missouri led in field goal percentage with 248 out of 315 and .787.
The Kansas State University basketball team will act as "bat girls" during home baseball games this spring. A contest is not going on at Kansas State.
Called Brasher's Diamond Darlings in honor of coach Bob Chase, the purple hot pants, will take care of the bats during the game as well as escort dignities into the arena to serve soft drinks to the players.
The girls will be picked according to the elements of charm and personality and their knowledge of the baseball.
K-State Team Has Bat Girls
ROCK CHALK REVUE
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Nash seems to have a knack for coming through in the clutch. She's still in New York year in Norman, Okla., where Oklahoma had KU on the ropes
Nash sank five field goals over the Sooners' savaging defense and knocked out a game-winning one free throw situation late in the game to open a four-pointer.
"THE WHOLE thing was confidence. Now I have confidence, and it doesn't bother me."
"You can bear criticism all the time from the stands," Nasd said. "But you expect that when I get involved, it doesn't bother me any more."
mistakes as well.
"I just do whatever I can to win," Nash explained. "The philosophy of coach (Ted) Owens is to keep the pressure on the other team, and they if finally make a move that might put you back into it.
League Overall
W L W L
K-State 9 2 10
Missouri 9 2 19
Nebraska 7 4 14
Oklahoma 6 4 11
Kansas 7 4 11
Waimea 7 8 13
Colorado 8 8 17
Okl. St. 1 1 19
SATURDAY—Colorado at k-State (TV); Kansas at Oklahoma State; Missouri and Nebraska.
Weekend Games
FRIDAY-Iowa State at
Oklahoma
Big 8 Standings
The Sooners have won seven and lost four league games. Iowa State is 4-8.
Sooners Face ISU Challenge
A loss by Oklahoma would mean the Sooners could do no better than tie for the winner no matter what else happens.
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) —The Oklahoma Sooners, scrapping to keep their title chances alive, face the Iowa State Cyclones Friday night in Big Eight basketball competition.
All other Big Eight clubs are idle. Kansas State, with a 9-2 mark, leads the race followed by Missouri, B-83.
Nash remembers the example of Pierre Russell, who has made it with the Kentucky Colonels that the pros wouldn't use him.
If the pros won't take him,
Nich fides she will be return to KU for
the first game. He must have a
degree in physical education.
Then he want to coach basketb
"I want to play in the pros," he said. "If they don't draft me, I'll try out as a free agent this summer."
NASU'S HIGH school team, DeMatha, came up with an amazing rally when Nash was there. Down 24 points going into the game, the Nassau herder of New York, DeMatha pulled out a one-point victory.
"That was just incredible."
Nash said. "I still tell people about that, and they'll look at me like they don't believe it.
"We had a great coach, and all of a sudden we started rallying." Also, Nash hit 10 straight free throws down the stretch.
Free throws, indeed, have troubled Nash since his varsity career started here. After three years, the college figure is less than 50 per cent.
Bud Stall worth has been Nash's roommate all four years. When you see one after a game, the other is usually pretty close.
Despite his low scoring in college basketball. Nash hopes to be drafted by one of the professional teams.
"It's really been a struggle for him." Owens says.
Nash stays on the floor nearly every day after the others go to the practice field. He either shoots extra free throws, works on his jump shot or plays the ball in a three.
HE HAS also developed his ball-ballling skills to become adept at working a fast break or breaking through a press.
"Now I take pride in making assists. When Bud got his 50 last week, I was just as happy as he was."
"I just had to make the adjust-
ment," cash said. "I'm not a scoring
man, but I'm at the best of it, and that was to
hall-touching and hit the oppen-
dence."
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Begins March 2 and meets for B Thursday 7-9:30 p.m.
must initially just before the W.C. Comprehensive Exam of
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New Class Begins This Week
P.5. if you want to take Reading Dynamic but do not
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 3, 1972
Swimmers Lead Big 8
Swimmers Lead Big 8 Kempf Sets Record
COLUMBIA, Mo.—The Unive-
rse, 17, moved to Tom's
Tommie's record. A 900-pound
freestyle time, moved ahead of
the first day of the Eighth
Grand Prix.
2
BIG LINCOLN will meet Thursday
UK took command with 123
points. Oklahoma State was next
with 103.
Kempf swam the 500 freestyle in 4:46.2. The old Big Eight mark was 4:4-8 by douse Hellerson of Oklahoma in 1968. Kempf was
take a first in any of the five events.
"I think we certainly can be encouraged by our performance today," said KU Coach Dick Reamon.
"We got most of the points I thought we would. We had a super afternoon in the preliminaries." Reamon said.
KU's Phil Kidd tied a conference record in the 50-yard freeze during those preliminaries with time of 21.4. Kidd finished
Track to Defend Conference Title
Coach Bob Timmons'
possibly faces its toughest conference meet in 10 years when it travels to Kansas and Michigan. Big Eight indoor meet. The KU squad will be looking for a seventh coach.
The meet will get underway at 6:15 p.m., with the 60-yard dash and high hurdle trials. Saturday's finale begins at 8:00 p.m.
The Jayhawks are returning with only five place-winners from last year's champions and have strength to make a strong effort to fend off challengers Colorado, Nebraska Kansas State and Oklahoma
The probable RO entries:
60-yard dash - Emmett
Edwards and Delvin William
Edwards and Devin Williams.
440-yard dash—Mark Lutz,
Tom Scavuzzo, Phil Stepp and
Xerk White.
600-yard run—Bob Bornkessel and Phil Stepp.
1000 or 880-yard run—Rick Jacques.
Mile run—Doug Smith
Mile Run—Doug Smith.
Two-mile run—Jon Callen.
Terry McKeon and Kent McDonald.
Oklahoma, the team expected to give the favored Jayhawks the most competition, earned only 96 points and a third place standing.
Stepd and Scavuzzo.
"don't swim as well as I thought," he said in events". Reasoned say, "But they met the medley relay and when your relays are hot, your team is
60-yard low hurdles—
ornkessel, Delario Robinson
and Greg Vandaveer.
High jump—Barry Schur, Gary Johnson and Randy Smith.
Pole vault—Bill Hatcher and Neil Cahpman.
Long jump—Mike Stull, Rogers Jones and Dan Seav.
Reamon is even more optimistic about today's events.
60-yard high hurdles— Robinson, Bornkessel and Vandaever.
Shot put—Rudy Guevara and Dana LeDuc.
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
15- high jump trials.
16- dash hard trails.
15- high jump semifinals.
16- 40 yard low hurdles trials.
16- 40 yard hard trails.
Long jump trials (finals following).
60- 600 yard run trials.
60- 1000 yard run trials.
60- 1000 yard run trials.
Masters 800 yard run.
Masters 800 yard dash semifinals.
interset
5- float volley.
3- jump hammer.
3- 40 yard tigh hurdles.
3- dash.
60- 600 yard hurdles.
半马跑.
60- 600 yard run.
60- 40 yard dash.
2- two-mile run.
100- 1000 yard run.
38- 800 yard run.
"Some of our better events are coming up Friday. The first three events could blow them out if we're hot," Reason said.
The meet concludes Saturday night.
NEW YORK (AP)—Bud Stallworth of Kansas was one of the players chosen in the first round of the American Basketball League's "Secret" college draft Thursday, the Associated Press learned.
Stallworth was picked by the Denver Rockets as was Paul Stovall of Arizona State.
The 400-yard individual meule,
200-yard freestyle, and 200-
yard butterfly are the first three
officials for Friday startings at 1.R.P.
ABA Commissioner Jack Dolph and his aide, Thurlo McCrady, conducted the telephonic draft with the league's 11 clubs.
Names of the drafted players were not supposed to be made public, although the Denver and Miami each broke the cloak of silence.
Women Gymnasts Meet SMS
Ruhle said captains Sue Tagg
The University of Kansas women's gymnastics team will travel to Springfield, Mo. this weekend and southwest Missouri State College
Patricia Ruhle, coach for the KU team, said Thursday this would not be an easy meet for KU.
"We beat them earlier this year by four points," said Ruhle. "For the last three weeks or so, we have been very similar to theirs."
and Barb Murrow are showing excellent team leadership.
Ruhle said that Janice Baker had made tremendous improvements so far this season.
"Gindy Price, our best valuater,
hurt her back last week," said
she. "We're counting heavily
on her this weekend.
though."
"Joanie Smith is probably our best all-around point getter," said Ruhle. "She's another one of our strong vaulters."
Freshman Liz Phillips has also
come a long way and is a hopeful for the future. Ruble said.
In order to go to the National Gymnastics Championships in Des Moines, KU must place one of the top ten teams in the midweek.
Ruble said that the chances for a trip to the nationals looked very good this year.
Policy
Continued from Page 1
"I think it's obvious the Soviet officials are somewhat nervous about U. S. and Chinese officials getting together," Larson said. "But insofar as more or less concrete steps be taken by the Czechs, I don't think the Soviet Union has anything to worry about."
Larson said the Soviet Union might use better relations with
"On a long range basis the Soon leaders are worried about the danger of bullying," said. "The U. S. S. R. might be forced by this development to pursue a more conciliatory line and prevent bulding flowers of this relationship. But I think the Union will take this step in stride."
"THEIR REACTION WILL NOT be one of being more conciliatory to China," Larson said. "I would imagine they will redouble efforts in China and redouble their efforts to reduce China's influence."
Larson said that the Soviets union had been taking steps to lessen the influence of some time. He pointed to the Soviet treaty with India, the Soviet efforts to put its relations under control and the amicable level, and said that the Soviets could even use better information Japan to lessen the influence of some time.
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"SOVIET RELATIONS have been altered a great deal with the signing by Germany of the nuclear non-proliferation treaty," Larson said. "West Germany has also signed treaty with The Soviets and Poland against using force in international agreements."
"I think the Soviets might put pressure on the U. S. by way of an invasion," Larson said. "This has been happening to a large extent since Ruschev fell. Soviet France are a good example of this."
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Larson said the change in Soviet relations with West Germany was another good example of how the US policy which could affect the U.S.
Larson said that this treaty calling on the renunciation of force was the type of vehicle which other agreements are boll.
Concerning the upcoming trip by President Nikon to the Soviet Union in May, Larson said he would be much outward effect.
"I think the Russians will avoid any occasions of a tremendous outpouring of popular sentiment, though not going as far as the
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President Nixon spent only about one hour with Mao-Tse-tung during his trip to China.
empty streets in China," Larson said. "I think, however, they will Nixon like a bit of time with the ton man."
"I LOOKS AS THOUGH THE U. S. is going to have more concrete results from the Soviet visit than the China one unless Russia awards happens," Larson said. "S. I and the Soviet Union have already come to agreement on the first treaty from the S. A. L. T. (Strategic Arm Limitations Talke) which would limit the use of M. S. sites and place some limit on offensive missile expansion."
Larson also expects a more rapid movement on the subject of China's trade with Israel, said that while he doubted much would ever come out of the trade market with Communist China, the trade could become quite large.
Larson said that while the market between China and most western European countries was weak, he said the Soviet Union and western Europe had become quite heavy. He said he could see no reason why the U. S. could take advantage of the market with the U. S. R. J.
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1. If you use them,
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Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
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SCHOOL BUS 82 Chevy, 6 ecy,
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One 1969 Fender Super Reverb Amp—used only one, perfect condition. Call 842-207 or 843-5865 3-7
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WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH-
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UHCR 4400 Report Stretch. 4-track
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1971 Volkswagen Super Beetle Concept car, 14,000 miles. AM/radio bright orange with black top and in-grade Mast sell Call 858. 8:58
1971 Honda CB 350,2600 miles. excelent condition.843-7006. 3-3
See the guaranteed selection of use
cycles at Kat Suzuki, 634 Mass. 842-
6966. Factory authorized sales and
3-7
66 Corvete conv. blue, 427 cu. in,
4-speed, AM-FM radio, luggage rack,
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1962 Buick Special, new transmission,
new front tires, new battery,
snow tires. Economic and depend-
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10 speed bicycle. Gitante Tour de France. Bicycle Tour de France. Pro Saddle Camp, Saundersville "Criterium" Durerailer Like new. Call Michael at 842-712-3261.
THE BUGGER
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See the new water-cooled QT-750 at Kat Suzuki. Only $1,640. 634 Mass. 842-6966. 3-7
Alone Romeo Velchich GT. Dual-
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5-impel Mint condition. C34 Mass. 842-
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98 Blue VW bug, built walnut inlet, super clean, 3 extra tires, excellent condition $1,400. Call 843-7248.
1971 Honda C.B. 350 Gold, great shape, 2.600 miles. 842-9012. 3-7
Lange ski boots 1971 'Pro' model
used only three days. Perfect condition.
Size 9½" medium. $75.00 Todd
Dillon, 843-6400. 3-3
One 25 inch lawn mower never used.
1) HP with power drive. $30.00. Call
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电话
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Porchie 111L 198 "Pal red, black interior, AM-FM. Alloy wheech. Excellent condition. Call Dale at 842-3329
Leather and suede cloth custom made blouses and dresses—Made to order jeans. New shilies 39 & 100 $25. Black blouse, $45. This coupon BONKON 37
Schiwin variety—light and generator, book rack, lock, duck brakes, water bottle, beetle and clips, violet, $8.50 PAC-1Bajaway Toweres after 6:30 P.M.
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1971 Triumph Truck 500 fc, $e. 1,000,
beautiful bike, like new, $300 cheaper,
leaving country, must call. Call
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3-7
69 Ventura steel string acoustic guitar with case. Excellent condition. Will accept best offer Call Paul Jarvis, 843-7922. 3-8
MARTIN GUTTAR - 12 string model D-35, 5 month old in excellent condition. Includes hardshell case and instrument call: **Ulmus** 843-6760.
One 1972 Hoover Dial-A-Matic vacu-
um cleaner slightly used. $45. Call
841-2964. 3-15
Nice black kittens 7 weeks old. Box trained, raised with dog $1.00 each. 842-1984. 3-8
Camaro, 1968, 26-325 bp, 4-speed,
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1971 Honda 350-SL, excellent condition,
must sell, call Dennis at 842-
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APARTMENT Sale-BED "Z" X "B"
King bed, water king bed, wine
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1971 Champion Motor Home—24 ft.
413 dg engine, generator 80 lb. LB.
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165 Chevrolet 2-door station wagon,
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call 842-7555. 3-9
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1968 Ford, 2 Dr, FT fast back, P.S.B,
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Jayhawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa
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JAYHAWK VOLKSWAGEN has a large stock of good used VW's. 2522 Iowa. 843-2200. 3-7
1970 Duster 3-speed, V8, $14.50. We will buy locally owned cars, domestic and VW. Jawhayk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, 843-2200; 3-16
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1969 Camaro, blue, 2 Dr HT, 3-speed,
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UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright.
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Be prepared!
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Higher Education
For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center tf-864-4441.
Michigan St. pit-B Bar-Quiz, 315 MIch. St. Outdoor pit-B Bar-Quiz, 315 MIch. Outdoor pit-B Bar-Quiz, $300. $300. Soap or pork ribs-$30, $40. Small rib-plates-$40, Largerib Plate=$20, Bratket plate-$18, Oven 12am. Bratket plate-$18, Oven 12am. Sun Tues.. Phone 842-3621. 3-17
THE FEE PRIVATE PARTY CLUB-
Welcome back students! We party
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Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843-7685 — We Deliver—9th & III.
X
THE CONCORD SHOP
- STRETCHER FRAMES
many in stock
—others on order
FLU
KAT Suzuki
many in stock others on order
- ARTIST CANVAS
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 ox., pts. - qts. only
25% OFF
Maupintour travel service
842-6966
PLANNING A TRIP??
Let
Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!!
w Mass—The Malts—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-1211
SENIORS
Hixon for appointment.
Studio Senior Pictures Must Be Take
10 a.m. Before March 10th This
Last chance to call for appointments for your 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURES. Call before MARCH 1st
10 a.m. . Pictures Taken After This
5 p.m. . Cannot Be Included
摄画
FOR RENT
Phone 843-0330 for Appointment
University Terrace Apartments furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $110 and up, with parking. 8th Apt., 9th Bpt., 9th Apt., 18th Bpt., or call 843-1432 -5
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Available for second semester — bedroom furnished, bathroom furnished, 11/8 bath furnished or unfurnished. Room furnished. patio, carpet or balcony. West Hills Apartments —The place to live in Lawrence "Lab" 24 hours a day 8AM-5PM.
For rent—one or two bedroom apts, air conditioned, garbage disposal facilities, color TV V's available. Call Baird for Hillview Apts, 24 and 28th Street.
Ridge House Apk—for the budget
Ridge House Apk—for the budget and the maximum space at best rates
dunleys. Start price at $800.
dunleys. Start price at $800.
block wood of Ward.
wood block of Ward.
ITS NEVER TOO LATE and it is a long time from now when we can comfortably or attractive. One call to Mrs. Porychy at 2017-A Harvard Road and you can arrange its institutions available in Lawrence's best-equipped and most attractive campuses and Missouri; Avalon Apartments, Apartment 6, Iowa Valley Lots of Apartments, Iowa Valley Lots of soundproof construction, pleasing central a/c are just some of the things you would enjoy living in these locations make this semester in Lawrence a worthwhile location for August occupancy and
Rockledge Villa Apartments Limited
Rockledge Villa Apartments Limited
students can have two bedrooms fitted apart, with all utilities paid
students can have two bedrooms fitted apart, with all utilities paid
m.p. 843-7721 Calif. After 3-16
m.p. 843-7721 Calif. After 3-16
FOR RENT OR FOR SALE Mobile
home in good condition 600 sq. ft.
partially furnished dishwasher.
Dishwasher Carrier: Cal-
burt 6150 to $9,290
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Right at door to campus, 102 West Mississippi bedroom apartments available. Aug. 19-31; Sept. 8-14; Oct. 1-5; Nov. 7-14; nov. 16-31; nov. 32-36; nov. 37-39; carpeting dwarfwater, central campus; bk-799 between 5:00 P.M. and 10:30 P.M.
A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS TOO
Classic weather. We eat this spring
weather. Tea with ice cream. Welcome
to Freebie TV AU at a state
1123 Indiana, 843-555-5900. Same-
apartments.
WANTED
Need girl to share house. $5.00
Utilities included. 842-5768. 3-7
Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767. 9:30-5:30. 3-7
Kansas Key Press—Job printing from booklets to posters, booktops to books. 710 Maa. print, of the university. 710 Maa. print, of the university. 842-4483.
We repair allting Volkwaages. We a.
need to provide medical general therapy indepensively.
We sell parts and buy the VWs with
general illness treatments, Bugnell, 2014,
3-10
2-10
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
"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
One 15" J-B. Lanning D-130 speaker.
New, used or blown-out; also, one
Altec Ltenger 15" 421A Call 843-
2107 or 434-5865. 3-7
ROOMMATE. Share apartment with one person (own bedroom) ½ block No. or campus. All bill paid $30. Room rental. basement付 $3 to 60 Fri.-Mon.
Female roommate wanted. Call after 5 P M. 942-5921. Share rent, furnished apartment. 3-9
NURSERY SCHOOL vacancies for two girls, one boy, ages 3-5. Call 842-3459 or 847-7764
3-9
PERSONAL
Woodnok—spring is a time of re- newal. 3-8
Deararest J & N & A & B & B
Dearrest J & L; Sorry girls but the stud service is leaving Lawrence this weekend. In case of emergency, take a cold showers.
NEW OLD CLOTHES - A TIME
REMEMBERED - THOUGHT RE-
GAINED EARTHSHORE - EAST 8TH
AND MASS 3-4
LOST
ONLY. GROOVY GRUWBOWRUS
ONLY. GROOVY GRUWBOWRUS
INTO A. DENUM CAVE. FROM
EARTHSHINE. OMOTTO A *FLY*
FROM EARTHSHINE. EARTHSHINE
8th & Mast. &
Lost by lthr and Oread two puppies
Sunday nite. One black with white
tail on an answers to "cracha," other
two with white tail on answers to
Call Maryann. VI 2:279-3
SWS
Keys on Co-op key, ring between Summerfield and McColum on Friday. Feb 25. To return call Norma. 864-6539. 3-3
**Book "America Constitutional Law"**
Mow, Feb. 28, around 3:30 P.M. *Bake* between Blake and, Y. zone Finder *Indiewire* and E. zone Finder *366* clinic after 8:00 P.M. *Reward* after 9:00 P.M.
TYPING
Experienced typist will write
paper, papers, or dissertation
Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate
work. Call V1-32881. Moe, Haackman
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other rate types, manuscript type. Accurate and prompt typing of resumes. Phone 843-9554, Mrs Wright.
Threes, term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM Selector, your choice of type styles. Also editing at typeseture. Rates. 842-797-0189: 843-560-655
Typing done on elite, electric typewriter. No Theses please. Prompt attention. 843-0958
MISCELLANEOUS
BRIDAL GOWN GOWN Sample Sake—Sizes 8-10, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky. 4.56
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Fineest Eating Place
sirloin
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu.
Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steals matric is and always has been
Our motto is and has always been "There is no substitute for quality
111 Miles Kirk of the
Kaw River Bridge
Phone 843-1437 Open 10
Closed Monday
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.
843
8500
DISCOUNT
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WITH
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---
The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
928 Mass
8
Friday, March 3, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Kansam Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG
Star Receives Honors
Ann-Marraret named "Female Star of the Year" . . .
Art Festival to Feature Lightfoot
SPOONER ART MUSEUM: A two-man exhibition of paintings at the Gallery of Modern Art, and Michael Sims, instructors in painting and sculpture. Through
UNION GALLERY: The 18th Annual Kansas Designer Craftsmans Show. Through March 12.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM.
*The Corbisaurus* to the *Great
Temple*.
Fourth of a five-part SUA film
series,
*Museum Without
Look*
FILMS
CONCERTS
UNIVERSITY THEATRE: KU
University Symphony concert.
3:30 p.m. Sunday.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
SUA Popular Film, "Cotton
30 p.m. tonight and 9:30
black cops in Harlem (Godfrey
Cambridge and Raymond Scales
man) (Calvin Lockhard) who
preys on the poor with a back-to-
Africa pitch. Ossie Davis
SPOONER ART MUSEUM:
FILM series for Young People,
The Red Balloon and the
Blue Balloon, p. 15; sunday.
The first is a French film about
a little boy who tames a balloon.
The second is an animated
film about a girl with a
basketball.
WOOORFW AUDITORIUM:
International Film, "Innocence
Unprotected" 7:30 p.m. Sunday.
Directed by Dusan Makavejek.
THEATRE
EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE: "Just Good Friends." 8 p.m. tonight and Saturday.
HOCH AUDITORIUM: The Rock Chalk Revue, 8 p.m. tonight and Saturday. The annual Revue, now in its 22nd year, is a well-
established KU tradition, but one that has grown sour in recent times. Under the banner of "Life's Lowers," this year's tournament is competing for awards which will be presented at Saturday night's performance, a non-competing skit by McColm Hall resident
Ann-Margret: Star Rises, But Vulnerability Remains
Lenglah II Staff: 9:30 a.m., Council Room.
Luno-Brazilian: 11:30 a.m., Alcove B,
Cafeteria.
IN AN INTERVIEW Thursday afternoon, Ann-Margret seemed to fit the 'star of the year' apples as she worked across as one of the more vulnerable performers ever to reach the pinnacle of success. She wore a bright red pantsuit spiced up by a huge blue carnation on her lape, diamond rings on several fingers and a bold black bow carefully on her honey-colored
Museum of Natural History: noon, Curry Room.
Campus Bulletin
It was a return also because in 1966 she stopped in K.C. long enough to pick up UMPA's "Attress of the Year" award. She makes it happen but a performer to win a MPA Award twice.
10806 Social Wellfare Peace Studies; noon
Alcove C, Acaferita.
Physiology, noon. Alcove C.
TODAY
History: 2:30 a.m., Forum Room.
Alcove A. Cafeferia.
Physio-Ecologists: noon. Alcove C
Besides O'Neal and Bandevancy, Mrs Kahn also took part in a musical with Barba Streisand, the eccentric musicologist who steals O'Neal's music.
Ann-Margret is currently riding the highest tide of both popularity and critical acclaim in days ago she was nominated by her peers for an Academy Award for her performance in "Cramal" and was named the "Female Star of the Year" by the United Motion Picture Association, an organization that awards "creatures and owers."
The 30-year-old Swedish-born actress returned to Kansas City to receive UMPA's award at a special dinner on her behalf. She also performed in Kansas City's Hotel Muehleb was the site of her first professional job. She was a band singer in the Muehleb's Terrace Hall with Danny his orchestra at the age of 18.
Psychiatry-Ecologist: noon. Alciveo C
Rohani. noon. Meadowlark. Room.
By BARBARA SCHMIDT
Kansas Reviews Editor
Actress Awaits Premiere
German Department: 2:15 p.m., Governors Room.
Bahal: noon. Meadowlark Room.
Cafeteria.
American Studies: 12:30 p.m., Alcove D
VARSITY THEATRE:
"Sunday Bloody Sunday."
SUNSET DRIVE-IN: "Who Slew Aunt Rieo, "Murders in the Rue Morgue" and "Horror House," tonight and Saturday. Bullet! and "Bonnie and Bullet!" Sunday through Tuesday.
Yugoslavia, 1968
"I WAS at awe—yes, at working with them," she said. "I read the movie magazines and I thought, 'Why are you working with them.' But they were very friendly. I really do enjoy them. I guess they were better suited to this job." Streisand is actually very professional and concerned and intelligent. I can see how she works with everything she does is important
Law School 3:00 p.m. Regional Hospital
RU Folk Dance College 1:30 p.m. 173 Rd. Robinson
A.M.P Popular Films "Cotton to Tommy"
Film School 3:00 p.m. Woodswift Auditorium
2 1/4 p. Room 200
Social Welfare Faculty Development :
p. m. Pine Room.
By BARBARASCHMIDT
American Studies: 12:30 p.m. Alceve D.
Cafeteria:
12:30 p.m.
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark
loft, Cafeteria
12:30 p.m. Government
HILLCREST 1: "North
Country City"
Be a 30-minute featurette.
HILLCREST 2: "The Devils"
HILLCREST 3: "Harold and
Michael"
yugoslavia, 1968.
GRANADA THEATRE: "The Hospital."
Bank of California
Latrida Chl Alpha: 12:30 p.m., Government Room.
Mail: Bank of California 12:30 p.m. Room 2095
"I was interviewed for the part by the director, Peter Bogdanovich. I was 'Last Picture Show' came out... and he wasn't a star yet. After the interview he had me do it. He liked it and hired me," she said.
"The movie is a farce, one of those good old'fashioned comedies like they did in the '30s and '40s," she explained.
The United Motion Picture Association's "Star of Tomorrow" isn't a star-yet. The Kaiser Prize this week to receive the UMPA's annual award, is still looking forward to the permissive of her age and those more as a young actress suddenly thrown into the spotlight than as someone just waiting for an audience or as stardom to open wide for her.
VFC: 7 p.m. International Room.
Women's Coalfire: 7:30 p.m. Kansas
State Building.
Rock Chalk Revue: 8 p.m., Hoch
Auditorium.
superfluous part and I knew that all along, but being written out of my first Broadway show was an awful feel-able, depressing experience.
"It feels sort of unreal in a way," Miss Kahn said in an interview Wednesday. "It's hard to believe it would get an award like this."
Complete Automobile Insurance
For
ALEXIS GARDNER
The red-haired young actress has spent five years in theatre, variety shows and on television (She's Sixteen, St. Tomorrow), award was presented to her on the basis of her first film role, that of Ryan O'Neal's quaky-voiced fiancee Brothers "What's Up, Doc?"
"When I started, I never thought that I would be in the movies," she said. "I was dummy and wore braces and I just never thought about it." And now, the sentence uncompleted, but her upturned, beaming face filled in the missing words.
"How Now Dow Jones" is "buried deep in the past. Right now Madeline Kahn is waiting for me to come in on 'What's Up, Doe.'
among theater exhibitors and owners attending the convention that was both Miss Kahn and the film would be instant hits.
"She's not able to keep doing this at the time she can do it," she can't do a dramatic role after a dramatic role. She needs more "smart" skills. *Smart*
hair. With photographers hustling in the background, her whispery voice made reporters lean in close to hear.
Doing a variety of things seems to be just fine with Ams-Margret. He enjoys working in night clubs more than any other phase of her life.
ANN-MARGRET has made 22 motion pictures, some of which were by Bye-Bye Bye Brenda, a Vulture that is commercially mainly because of her show-stalking performances. But, many of the films she's worked on, the Swinger) weren't so good.
THE FILM 'WON'T be released until later this month, but it was screened Wednesday night at the Odeon Cinema. There's no convention. The general feeling
ROGER SMITH, Ann-dargret her husband-manager was overing nearby. He interrupted its wife to say that playing 3obbie was hard on her, that it ook a lot of out and that she very roles like that continually without it being too much for her.
"Carnal Knowledge" is the cause of much of the attention currently being lavished on Ann Margaret. In the film she plays a character overweight; hattered subject of Nick Nelson's affections.
"Dramatically, "Carnal Knowledge" is the best thing I've done," she said. "I had no idea that it would have such an effect on critics and audience alike. The character of Bobbie still invasions. I meet people like her, and I feel sorry for them."
"There are about five movies I'd like to forget about," she said, with a half-painted expression on her face and pursuing the subject further.
and people seize on the least thing. And being on a Barbary ship is very important to the crew. It gave them a whole 'up' feeling."
"I haven’t had any more offers yet. I don’t know what I’ll do next. It’s a little precarious," she said.
"YES, I'VE been offered a few. But it takes 18 months out of your life, and you, see I have a glance toward her husband, a glance toward her husband.
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"It's 64 men and me," she said. A few years ago that stacked her hair laughed at coming from Am-Margret, for whom quite awished was offered nothing but B-movies laughed and the reporters images. But when she said it in Kansas City Thursday, she laughed and the reporters Golden Globe award, an Academy Award nomination and the "Female Star of the Year" for weeks somehow say that this vulnerable young actress will be taken a little more seriously from
Madeline Kahn may or may not
the “consequences” Ann-Margret feels unprepared to deal with the stress they might have something to do with her extreme sensitivity. When asked if she was affected by stress visibly balked. For about five seconds she lost her compulsion to floundering look in husband Roger’s direction. Then, in a firm whisper he seemed her usual whisper, she said:
"I would like to do a Broadway show, but only when I'm prepared to suffer the consequences," she said.
"Who likes reviews? If you're honest with yourself, I think no one does."
-Margret's next film begins production March 19 in Durango. Colo. It is called "The Train and its co-stars John Wayne.
"I NEVER see them. Roger reads them. I've been crushed too many times. I'm not a masochist."
Agency
VI 3-3012
824 Mass. St.
Her voice fell back into a whisper, and she turned her face downward, lips closed in a tight smile. Smith took the cue and said,
Madeline Kahn
'It's the direct rapport you
Gene Doane
Campus Briefs
John C. Miller, Winchester, Va., graduate student and tenor, will present a rectal at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recall Hall. Among the selections he will sing are Bassani's "Posate, Dormite," Scarlatti's "Dalo Sangue," and Dovak's "Zigunerelodien."
SUA, Anderson Speech
His speech is sponsored by Student Union Activities. Anderson, who was governor of Kansas from 1961 to 1965, recently announced he was seeking the Republican nomination for governor this year.
A guest teacher of the KU Fol Dance Club, Kwadwo Akosa of Ghana, will be teaching African dances to any interested persons from 7-4 tonight in room 123 Robinson. Akosa will also be here the next two Friday nights to teach African dances.
KU Graduate Recital
Former Kansas Gov. John Anderson Jr. will speak at the University of Kansas at 7 a.m. on March 12, in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas
His speech is being sponsored by Student Union Activities
The World Christian Fellowship will meet at 7:30 in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Rice, 2418 Ohio Street. Earl Huyzer, KU professor of chemistry, will speak on science and religion. All students are welcome to attend.
Sports Car Rallve
Science, Religion Lecture
The Jawhayk Sports Car.Club is sponsoring a Hare and Hounds Rallye Sunday entitled "Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd." Registration will be at 11 a.m. in the southeast corner of O zone. The registration fee for club members $2.00 or for club members and $3.00 for non-club members.
Folk Dance Club
Campus Crusade Speech
Steve Clinton of the Campus Crusade for Christ Staff will speak at the 10 a.m. service Sunday at the Reformed Presbyterian Church in Woodbury.
Walter Mehn, Leuca Technical
School of Photography in
summer 139th Photography
Emphasis on Technique and
Color, Summer 140th,
Darkroom, Lenses, and Color.
Summer 141st - 142nd - 148th
Summarl cost
$55.90 - $80.00
enrollment prior to March 7
be on the verge of becoming a "star," but if she does, one thing is for certain. No one can call her star, and she has majoring in speech therapy at Hofstra University, in education, in backyard play or back on fallback if acting doesn't work"). she worked in revues at the Uptairs at the Downstairs in New York City. On Broadway she was a friend of the film "Two by Two" with Danny Kane. In 1970 she was Musetta in theingham Opera Society's production of *Boheme*. And throughout her career she has made frequent appearances on the major TV show *Unknown*. Later this month she'll be featured in Hallmark Hall of Fame's version of
Wolfe's
camershop, Inc.
160 West 4th St. Flint, MI 48502
COLLECTION
海
YAMAHA
TOWER SALE
1969 Honda 250 $140
1971 Honda 300cc. $240
1971 Honda 350cc. $240
1971 Oval Seat 350 1980 $140
1971 Oval Seat 350cc. $240
1971 Yamaha 350 $140
ERN'S CYCLE SALES
716 North 2nd
Phone 643-581
Leica School
INTERESTED
IN
PHOTOGRAPHY
JAPAN
The Marriage of a Young Stockbroker COLOR OF THE WEEK
STUDENT & FACULTY SPECIAL
BUT ALL has not been rosy for Miss Kahn;
CELEBRATION AT BIG SUR
"I was written out of my first Broadway show. I left the Upstairs at the Downtowns to do it," she said. "I was a big party for me and everything," she said. "The last night out of town, when everyone's packing up to go back to Broadway, this little man gave me a pink slip. I thought it was a gift." She continued of the script. It was a
Savings from 40-80 per cent on discontinued items, trade ins, demonstrators. See the Friday Topea Journal or Sat. Topea Capital for partial listings . . . many unlisted values.
Wolfe's 14th Annual Dog Sale Starts This Saturday
BREAKFAST FOR TWO served in your room. (if you prefer)
GEM Theater
Baldwin
Adm. $1.00
Fri Sat Sun Mon Wed Fri
Call 842-5100 for Reservation
★ Good for Month of March Only.
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
954 West 6th Street, New York, NY 10028
DeLuxe Room for Two
Tues-Wed-Thurs March 7-8-9
Prime Sirloin Dinner for Two at a Favorite Local Restaurant
Complete Package $16.95
TRAVELODGE
MADHATTER WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY, MARCH 4,1972
NOTICE:
$ \textcircled{2} $
$\textcircled{1}$
Chicago-Paris Paris Chicago
May 30, 1972 $299
Aug. 1, 1972
$ \textcircled{3} $
May 30, 1972 $299
Aug. 17, 1972
NYC Luxembourg May 23, 1972 $210
Luxembourg-NYC July 24, 1972
SUA Office, Kansas Union
864-3477
$100 Downpayment Due MARCH 13th
Full Payment Due April 17th
For further information contact:
$ \textcircled{4} $
$210
NYC-Luxembourg May 21, 1972
Luxembourg-NYC Aug. 16, 1972
The Camera
by SRO
Put your best foot
forward into spring
with a springy
crope sole and
suede soul in
brown, lilac & peach.
Trensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass
V13-3470
Local Day Care Centers Filled, Have Waiting Lists
Editor's Note: This is the first of a three part series on child care in Lawrence. Tuesday's story will describe a day care center and a day care home.
By MARTI STEWART
Kansan Staff Writer
One Lawrence mother has found a simple solution to the problem of what to do with her child while she is at work. She keeps an alasset because there is no place to take her.
"I don't know the mother's name, so I can't do anything about it," said Anna Fender, social worker at the Douglas County Department of Social Welfare.
Onder said Lawrence did not have enough facilities for all children needing care. She said there were many examples of children who went without adequate care because the mothers, had no place to leave them while they were at work.
According to the Lawrence Association for the Education of Young Children, there are licensed full day care facilities for 120 children in Lawrence. There are four licensed centers and three licensed day care homes.
There are no statistics indicating the number of mothers needing day care for children. The centers and homes that are waiting now, however, all have waiting lists.
"We have to turn away twice as many children as we can accommodate in our classrooms."
BENICVENCE is the director of the
intended Child Day Care Center, which
has a mission to improve quality of life.
"She says the child is very responsible," Fender said. "I think it would take a mature 14-year-old to properly take care of an infant."
Fender said there was a woman in lawrence who leaves her infant with an 8-year-old girl.
Fender said she would choose a nursery school for children of nonworking mothers. She said this experience, for a few hours a day would enable the child to get along with her classmates and be independent of his parents. It would also prepare the child for school, she said.
Bencivence, although she says there is a need for more day care in Lawrence, does not think full day care is ideal for the child of a nonworking mother.
"If the mother does not work," she said, "I feel that a nursery school for a few hours a day is beneficial. All day care is very strenuous for a young child and not
necessary. It creates a strain on the family to the extent that the parents only see the child for a few hours each day. This is a special importance on those few hours'.
CHARLINE FREITAG, director of Head Start's Community Children's Center, said, "For people who can afford it, I think best to have the child cared for in the home, provided the person in charge of the child can care for him like a parent. If the child can't be home and can't get a good person in the home, a situation like ours is better."
State law requires that any person offering child care must be licensed. Regardless of this requirement, there are laws in place where day care is offered without license.
*Unlicensed centers and horns are going outside the law even when they are not licensed.*
"There is often home care for too many children and this may not be good for the child. It is detrimental to the health of the child, if not to his development."
Fender told of an elderly couple who had been caring for 14 children in their home where he lived.
She said that loving children and wanting to be around them was not enough. Supervisors must know how to treat children and must be able to ensure their safety and to offer effective opportunities for social, physical and emotional development, she said.
To obtain a license, a person or center must meet requirements set by the Kansas State Department of Health and the Department of Social Welfare.
HEALTH REGULATIONS include requirements for safe physical facilities of the center or home and adequate staffing and programming that will give the child a
variety of learning experiences.
The Department of Social Welfare, according to Fender, makes sure that day care for children is more than just baby-sitting.
"When I go to the centers or homes," she said, "I watch to see the relationships between the workers and children. Do the workers call out orders or do they get down to the child's level and communicate with him! If a child becomes bored with an activity, he is directed to another activity or told to do something else.
"I look to see if the interest centers are
"1. varied. Children need to be given a chance
to learn and to observe. Scheduling should
be planned. Children may have many activities, that will interest him.
"The young have very few rights," she
said. "You don't offer things are done to
children in order to make them feel like
A LITTLE WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year. No. 99
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Monday, March 6, 1972
Student Court Legality Questioned
2 Testimonies Reflect Split Over Amnesty
WASHINGTON (AP)—Robert C. Ransom and Martyn Kelly lost in the twin war. Ransom strongly supports Rangers and Kelly vehemently opposes the idea.
Their conflicting testimony last week before a judiciary subcommittee headed by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., reflects the deep division on the issue.
Following are excerpts from their testimony.
From Ransom, a New York corporation lawyer:
"if I were to be granted the power to influence this committee's thinking on only one very narrow point, it would be this:
"I would like to be able to dispel forever that popular and prevalent misconception that it would dishonor the nearly $6,000 Americans who have died in Vietnam to grant amnesty now to these many of our fallen soldiers," she added in an interview in the war, by one means or another."
Kelly, an investigator for the Massachusetts Department of Insurance, and
"I did lose a son in 1986, whose name was Daniel Kelly. He was a member of the lst Cavalry Air Mobile killed in the Ashau Valley. What moment this is still in the Ashau Valley.
"But, I do not feel that this American man has left Vikim until every American man has left Vikim."
"Now, the purpose of this committee or subcommittee was to decide whether or not I should be invited to American amnesty. I would suggest this committee would be better engaged in suggesting and designing a memorial to my brother-in-law who died believing in this country's cause."
HOLLYWOOD
"I have not suggested that, I am against the proposal that Sen. Hart mentioned some time ago, which was conditional amnesty.
'Miss America' Crowned at Rock Chalk Revue
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorroris is the story of a Kansas girl who finds success in her job.
‘Miss America’ Crownne Shannon Hackett, Winnetka, III, senior, is crowned Miss America of 1943 in the lead role of The skirt by Theta Teta Prifaternity and t
McCollum Entry Called Obscene, Yanked from Rock Chalk Lineup
By TOM THRONE Kansan Staff Writer
The McCollum Hall skit in the Rock Chalk Revue was removed from the program Friday after the orchestra, the band and Mr. Collins left from McCollum Hall protested the skit.
Problems arose at the technical rehearsal Thursday night, when the orchestra and the audience began to jeer during the McColm Hall skit.
Jess H. McNish, adjunct professor of business and chairman of the University Judiciary Board, ruled against the McCollum skit in a meeting on Friday.
The objectors said the skit, in particular the commercials, was crud, grotesque
McNish, in his decision he did not favor censorship, but he thought they hadadera, who was a priest, thought
He said he did not question the right of freedom of speech and expression, he did not ask for permission to speak.
See Page 2.
"But," he said, "I don't believe that you have the right to perform in this general revue. I just can't be convinced this is the place for the new ground to be broken."
MENISH SAID there was a certain amount of surprise involved in the whole affair. He said it was unfortunate that the police had brought everyone before getting into this situation.
He said he didn't deny McColluh to right to present the skid. He thought the
ANDY BUKATY, Kansas City, Kan,
senior and producer of Rock Chalk, asked
the present if anyone at the meeting had
the authority to make a decision.
The meeting with McNish occurred after an earlier meeting on Friday had failed to make a decision on who had the authority to decide on McCollum's fate.
skit should be presented because it might have some socially redeeming value.
Dave Dysart, KU Ombudsman and Lawrence third-year law student, then suggested that the matter be taken to the Judiciary Board.
"I think the problem is reasonableness." McNish said. "The potential good of Rock Chak far outweighs the potential bad to the University. This is the thing that we must think about because we are on the fire anwav."
David Mannering, Smith Center senior
The McCollum Hall faction in favor of the skit said the skit should be shown in its entirety to see what the audience reaction would be.
THE FACTIONS included members from McColm who were both for and against the skit, and members of the revue who were against the skit.
Mark Harbison, Hays junior who mark skilt, said the skilt represented his own identity.
The three factions present at the meeting decided that they would abide by the decision and that there would be no appeal.
and director of the skit, said it could not be cut or his people would not perform.
The other two factions said the skirt was in poor taste and was against the traditions of the church.
David Shoemaker, Monroe, la. senior,
and a resident who was against the skirt,
said it made blatant references to sex and
religion and he opposed its presentation.
BRUCE BALLETT, Olaithe junior and also a performer in the In-Between-Actions, said the skit would bring embarrassment to the University and to the people involved. Alumni might cut off contributions, he said.
"Morale would be too low if we cut anything," Mannering said.
"I was against the skit to begin with two weeks ago," Bukaty said.
"McColm should not be allowed to present their skirt because it's crude and obnoxious," said Fritz Arko, Mission coach and a performer in the In-Betwens-Acts.
He said a KU-Y spokesman told him that he was too narrow-minded so he reconsidered his stand and decided to include the skit.
Bakaty, who represented the production staff at the hearing, said the skit was appalling because of references to oral sex. He said that the staff, other performers in the skits and several residents of McCollium were embarrassed.
See McCOLLUM. Page 4
Muskie Answers Charge
Candidates Debate Campaign Funding
DURHAM, N. H. (AP)—Democratic rivals in the New Hampshire presidential primary met in televised debate Sunday night, with Sens. Edmund S. Muskie, D-Daine, and George McGovern, D.S. D., in a discordant, disclosing sources of campaign money
The 90-minute, five-candidate session broke no new ground in the campaign for the nation's leadoff presidential primary Tuesday.
Instead, it provided a televised forum for a restatement of the positions and arguments the candidates have sounded across the state.
The format was a four-minute opening statement for each entry, a series of questions put by a panel of our newsmen and a three-minute windup statement.
Muskie used his windup time to challenge MGovern's repeated campaign charge that he had refused to disclose anything about his campaign donations.
MGCOVER MADE public a week ago the names and donations of more than 42,000 people he said had provided $1.26 million for his campaign.
As the candidates' debate ended, he again challenged his rivals to list campaign contributions. McGovern said every person who sought the presidency should declare 'the source of campaign contributions' to his campaign . . .
Muskie has refused to make a disclosure of current contributions matching MoCovern's, and the South Dakota senator has made campaign ammunition of the issue.
"I have disclosed the sources of contributions to my campaign for the presidency," Muskie countered. "I was the first candidate to do so, and no other candidate had done it until almost two years after my first reports were filed." I did so in 1970.
BUT MUSKIE he stopped filing public sports after that because nobody knew.
"I decided we needed a policy that applied to all candidates, including the President."
Muskie noted that this will become the law effective April 7.
"Now, if I may turn to the real issues in this campaign," he said, dismissing the disclosure dispute as something less than that.
The debate formats gave equal time to Muskie, McGovern, Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty, Sen Vance Cook of Indiana, and David Browning. The debate was that he is 32, and integible to be president.
Eight questions were put to the candidates during the program; each of the four candidates was asked.
MGOVERN DIDN'T mention it in the debate, but he has repeatedly quoted to New Hampshire audiences a statement attributed to Muskie that he would be out of the campaign if he disclosed all his contributors.
"The biggest fight seems to be over where Sen. Muskie's money comes from, and why he won't publish it," said Yorty, adding, "Of course, this is no debate."
"I took a position against war in 1963 when the polls showed that it was very unpopular to oppose our involvement in Southeast Asia," said McGovern.
One other point that stirred a heated controversy was the question of when the Democratic contenders became the critics of war in South Vietnam. McGovern, Muskie and Hartke all advocated total U. S. withdrawal from the war zone.
Muskie said the voters could select a candidate who denied mistakes, or not.
"The three senators who are here all voted for the Gulf of Tonkin resolution,"
That measure, adopted in August, 1964, was cited by former President Lyndon B. Johnson as congressional authorization for expansion of the war.
But he said as late as the 1968 Democratic National Convention Muskie was "defending the Johnson war plank while I was trying to end the war."
A complaint filed against the women who occupied the East Asian Studies building at Columbia University.
When McGovern got the opportunity, he disputed that. "There is a difference between senators," he said. McGvern said the Tonkin resolution was misinterpreted and misused by the Johnson administration.
By SALLY CARLSON Assistant Campus Editor
KU Student to Drop Action Against Sisters
The original complaint was filed Feb. 21 with the University Judiciary, George filed the complaint with the ombudsman office, which at that time was named co-ombudsman. The ombudsman and Lawrence third-year law student later removed his office as co-plaintiff.
Peter George, Lawrence graduate student and plaintiff in the complaint, said in a statement released Sunday through the ambulbsman office that he had decided to sue Mr. Browder could be achieved by continuing the present legal action against the February Sisters.
The Jane Doe complaint was amended Feb. 29 to name five KU women and 15 JAP men.
George said his reason for seeking legal action was motivated by a sincere regard for what he considered to be the possibility of occupying buildings on campus.
He said he had never questioned the validity of the Sisters' ends, only the integrity of their words.
"The purpose of our legal response to their extra-legal action was never to choke on the justice of a case."
"I have from the very beginning . . . action recognized the needs of women on that island," she said, referring to the group known as the February Sisters". George said. "I feel that all but one of their leaders was mistreated."
George later said the unjustified demand was that of a woman vice-chancellor.
"I think that's reverse sexism," George said.
He said he thought there should be an equivalent number of women on the committee that selected the vice-chancellor to insure a fair choice.
"It has been truly unfortunate that during the course of the past two weeks certain groups have sought to deal in unfair ways with individuals rather than ideals." George said.
George would not name the specific groups.
He said such an emotional response to an action that should have never been noticed might not happen if he were for either side to "logically analyze the substantive facts and reach a rational conclusion."
China Trip Concerns Prof For Effect on U.S. Allies
Editor's Note: This is the third interview with University of Kansas professors on the effects and implications of President Nixon's trip to China. For this final story, Eaton interviewed Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science.
By SCOTT EATON Kansan Staff Writer
Anxiety about the apparent euphoria surrounding President Nixon's trip to the people's Republic of China and its possible effects on allies of the United States was expressed Friday by Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science.
"I am concerned about the euphoria surrounding the opening of the hospital with Chinese patients is a major problem and concern on the international scene," Ketel said. "I see most of the problems we had before the war, but they havethers introduced by our initiative."
"The almost explosive way we have entered into initiating communications is that they are in the form of radio waves."
the stability between nations, because when you move so rapidly, other nations begin to wonder about your stability in regard to all of your relations in the word." he said.
KETZEL SAID many of our allies would probably begin to wonder about American commitments to them because of the change of U. S. policy in the commitment to Taiwan. The U. S. stated it was going to allow all its troops from Nationalist China.
"In light of the change of our long commitment to Taiwan, allies such as Thailand, the Philippines and Australia cannot help but muse about our commitments to them, if similar circumstances should arise again," Retzel
Ketzel said he was especially concerned about the possible effects of Nixon's trip on relations between the Japanese government and the U. S.
"We almost lost Japan after the two ants we took at their last year." Ketzel said. "I didn't know how to react."
See CHINA TRIP, Page 4
2
Mondav. March 6, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Officials Differ on Student Court Legality
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Recent actions and decisions by the Student Court and the University of Kansas Ombulsman have raised the question of whether either of these judicial bodies officially
According to University attorney Charles Oldfather, a student court existed for many years to hear traffic ticket
William M. Lucas, associate dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design and chairman of SenEx, said recently that another of the court's functions is arbitrator in election disputes.
much of the controversy surrounding the student court stems from the reorganization of the University judiciary. In 1945, an Oldfather, when judicial reorganization took place the Student Court was renamed the Parking and Traffic Court to represent the Division of the University Judiciary.
THE REORGANIZATION
THE REOGRAPHY OF
indictary original jurisdiction in all disputes, Lucas said, with two exceptions.
The court ruled that the Parking
and Traffic Court, and faculty and tenure problems, under the jurisdiction of the Faculty Senate and tenure - Tenure and Related Problems.
The question arose as to how the recent election dispute, involving the legitimacy of the candidates of Richard Dwyer, Jr., and Michael J. Jacobey, Lawrence senior, came before the Court Student.
Oldfather explained that during the reorganization, it was anticipated that the Student Court would have a Student Court. It was eliminated as a standing committee, he said, but elsewhere in the Senate Code, a provision that election disputes between the Student Court was retained.
LUCAS SAID this was an unavoidable consequence of a student Court was mentioned the Senate Code, but there was no mechanism for establishing or acquiring it.
The Parking and Traffic Court,
consisting of nine law students,
and two non-students, heard the
power and Jacoby, and
father also said.
Lucas said the Parking and Traffic Court did not actually have jurisdiction over election law. Mr. Brennan told the hearing division of the
Judiciary.
"When it said original jurisdiction on all issues, I think it meant all issues," he said.
Oldfather disagreed slightly. Most everyone agrees that the Senate would be election for body disputes. To the extent that it exists, it exists as a separate institution. But of the Student Senate wants to eliminate it, the world wouldn't change.
BRAID SMOOT, Sterling senior and vice-chairman of senEx, said he was not opposed to either new rules or changes in Student Court. His main concern is to clarify the powers and authority governing bodies, he said.
Smoit said the Student Court was established by an old All Chief Justice. Despite its virtual elimination by the University Senate's reorganization government, the Court recognized by the Student Senate.
This is because of legislation passed by the Student Senate at that time, which retained all ASC statutes not specifically repealed by the Student Senate. Smoot said. The statute called for the student to be repealed, he said.
"OUR INTENT in passing this
The result, Smooth said, is a Student Court which is recognizing the student Senate by the recess of the University, and there is no provision for its establishment despite its mention in the Senate
legislation", Smoo said, "was not for it to bother us three years later, but to provide guidelines in order to the new student government."
"It's kind of silly to have a student court with only one function—to handle election disputes." But the bodies, which provide counsel and that type of thing should be used.
"A left-over Student Court with questionable powers is silly. The students should know which bodies they should go to. If we use the answer cards, they'll be covered in the Kanan, it misleads the students," he said.
DAVID G. MILLER, Eudora senior and student body leader at Kanan College didn't think the failure to ask the Student Senate to eliminate the
He under current statutes he existed provisions for appeals to the court and it was this court under those protections which heard the case.
"I still believe that a student judicial body to hear election disputes is a good thing," Miller said.
"I hope that the Student Senate will legislate to clarify this issue," said Ms. Sweeney, pleased that the Student Senate has repealed most of the old All Student statutes but I am not sure how she would be revised in the near future."
A QUESTION has arisen as to the authorization of the office of KU ombudsman.
Lucas said Sen Ex investigated the matter and found that there was a professor at the office at the University. There is a studentumbusman's office, he buys.
arbitrate disputes between students and faculty over the determination of final grades, Lucas said.
Three options were available for grade determination, use of the credit option or no credit semester, the credit no credit option no completion of the semester.
Lucas said an all-University ombudsman was established in the School of Law, in case any student was accused within the individual schools.
THE FOLLOWING semester, the office of busmanad Law in the Law School gets funding from the Student Senate, but their request was rejected. The office has issued an unofficial capacity, he said.
Ombudsmen were established within each school of the University following the unrest in Spring 1970. Their function was to
Oldfather said there was nothing illegitimate about the ambusman office, although it was not an official body in the Senate code.
Student Court was an oversight.
Jim Osborne
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its functions are not those of a normal ambusdman, he said, since it provides legal counsel for the court. It is internal University disputes.
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"We suggest to people that they use their social security number when you have a new number, because it will never change, wherever you live," and Holzmeister.
Persons who wish to participate in the program may borrow an electric engraving pen from Capitol Federal to engrave their social security card or driver's license, or to purchase a valuable goods. Holmsteier said.
Valuables Engraved with ID In Plan to Deter Burglaries
A program which focuses on
enabling burglaries and
their liabilities is now being
lawrence. There were 377
burglaries and a loss of $96,820
bargaining.
Richard Holmzeister, vice-president and manager of the agency, said he encouraged home owners to engrave some type of identification on their personal vehicles.
Operation Identification is a national program and is sponsored in Lawrence by Capital Savings and Loan Association.
meister said, after considering advertisements and statistics concerning the program.
Holzmeister said the service was free, although an eight dollar deposit was required, which was
Four decals, reading "We have joined Operation Identification. We have been awarded the premium we have been marked for identification by law enforcement agencies," are given to participants place on winnowing screens.
refunded when the engraving pen was returned.
Operation Identification originated in monterey, Calif., in 1963. Since then over 150 communities have adopted it. Holzmeister said both Kansas City and had started the program.
The decals are planned to discourage burglarls from breaking into these homes, said Holmmeister.
Holmister said that within an eight year period in Monterey only six of 4,000 homes using Operation identification had been burglarized, the remaining 7,000 homes, 1,800 were burglarized.
Capitol Federal began the service in December, Holz-
Opera Authority to Talk
being the master of ceremonies of the Metropolitan Opera News of the Air Show. Goldskovy is the first New England Opera Theatre.
Boris Goldovsky, conductor
of the Opera Opera
Institute in New York K
present a lecture, "Bringing
Music to the Audience"
a t p m Tuesday
Apple Auditions.
At his home in Brookline,
Gardenview is a 10,000-
volume library has been described as one of the
largest and most comprehensive
libraries in the world.
Goldovsky's lecture is sponsored by the Pearson Humanities Series and the Festival of Arts.
He won the 1954 Peabody Award for the Outstanding Contribution to Radio Music for
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KU-Y to Study Racism
People:
Comedian PAT PALUSEN is running for president of the United States, population 200 million. ACTION EDR NELSON wants to be a councilman in suburban San Dimas, population 15,000. it's keeping both off the air. The Federal Communications Commission has ruled that television networks must give political opponents of the two men equal time whenever either appears on the tube in any
**ANGELA DAVIS** is free on bail, but instead of folding their "Free Angela Davis" folder into a single document, she intags it into higher intogaries. As a first order of business, the National United Committee to Free Angela Davis and All Political Prisoners announced a nationwide campaign to remove her court-impressed file.
Places:
The Soviet news agency Tass said Sunday the Soviet Union has promised the newly-independent nation of Bangladesh FINANCIAL AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE. The agreement was signed in Moscow by Bangladesh Prime Minister Muhibur Rahman and Soviet Premier Alexei K. Nossyki, the news agency said. The dollar worth of the Soviet commitment was not made public.
SAIGON—For the fifth successive day, U.S. planes Sunday flew to the island of Palau where the coalition said. No planes were reported lost during the raids. In another action, communist forces battled South Vietnamese soldiers in the Mekong Delta and six government troops were reported killed and wounded.
BELFAST—Security forces launched a massive search of Northern Ireland Sunday for the terrorists who bombed a crowded fast restaurant in Belfast, which killed two persons and maimed others. A spokesman in Dublin for the national "provisional" wing of the outlawed IRA denied responsibility for the blast. Police said the IRA did it, but the IRA spokesman blamed Protestant activists.
The KU-Y racism workshop will be held March 10, 11 and 12 at the United Ministries in Higher Education, 1024 Oread.
Things:
This is the third year for the workshop, he said, however, this is the first time that it will be conducted on a personal level. Previous workshops were conducted on an institutional level.
"The workshop will be
the most important personal
racism rather than institutional racism," Paul Bachman, program director.
The workshop will begin 1 p.m.
Friday with exercises to develop
an atmosphere of trust. The
students are about to
what it means to be white.
On Saturday and Sunday, there will be more intensive small group exercises. The workshop will end at noon on Sunday.
It will be supervised by Mike Sears, Overland Park graduate
student, and Mark Brewer,
Wichita graduate student, of the
Racism Awareness Cooperative.
Bachman said he expected 20 people to attend.
Those interested in attending should sign up at the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union. There will be a $3 fee for four meals.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 6.1972
3
KU Gymnasts Net 5 Firsts Against WIU
Taking first place in five of the six events, including a victory in the all-around competition, the University of Kansas gymnastics team won a strong University of Western Illinois squad, 147.45 to 148.48.
The Jayhawks did not clutch the victory Saturday in Robinson Gym until the final event of the meet. The high bar.
Brian Cooper of KU wrapped up the victory with his first place finish in the event. Cooper tied his team's lead in the event with a score of 9.15.
COACH BOB Lockwood was happy with the performance of his entire squad.
"Western Illinois has a really good high bar squared but our men have not done anything," Joseph also helped the team with his best score ever in the all-time series.
Marc Joseph broke the 50-point barrier for the first time in his career with a score of $0.90 against WIU. He also set a personal high in the parallel bars by winning the event with a score of
"I practiced hard all week for this meet. It was the closest I have ever come to hitting all of my poses." Joseph said.
Both Lockwood and Joseph said they thought that the squad could score 150 points in a meet this year. Lockwood said he then took his team to State University in their meet March 17 in Robinson Gym.
I
Lockwood said that KSU could score between 145 and 154 points in 105-point effort to defeat the Wildcats. Lockwood would also like to beat the Wildcats because of his strong record in a losing record. The Jayhawks now have a 4-5 record, and the Wildcats are the last dual meet of the season.
Norton used Photo by PHIL NETTLE
KU's Tim Quinn Goes into Vault
Gymnasts hit routines for 150-point meet ...
After the KSU meet, the Jayahawks will host the Big Eight meet. March 24-25, in Allen Field House.
KU 174.51, WIU 144.80
All-Around, Joseph KU, 50.90; Jerry
Westberg, WIU, 3; A Olverton, KU
Floor Exercise, Schula KU, 8.40
KU 3. Joumal Novak, WIU
Vaillant 1. Backus, WIU 9.12; 2. Tim
Miller 1. Backus, WIU 9.12;
Parallele Hars- Joseph, KU 9.20;
Tierian Blanchard, KU 3. Pete Peterson.
Overton, KU, 3. Rich Greeneen, KU,
Perman Horse, KU 1. Schubert, KU 9.30, 2.
Joseph, KU 1. John Henderson, KU
WU 1. Joeygh, KU
Columbia, Mo.—Records fell for the University of Kansas swimmers thrashed their way to their fifth consecutive Big Eight in the conference meet Thursday at Saturday in Columbia, Mo.
KU scored a whopping 501
points, 184 ahead of second place
Oklahoma's 317. Oklahoma State
was third with 286 points.
Swimmers Grab 5th Big 8 Title
The outcome was never really in doubt after Thursday's events. The favored Jayhawks led OSU, 103, after the initial day of the meet.
Sophomore Tom Kempp set big Eight records in the 1050-year history of his career. He was also an anchor on KU's record-breaking 800-yard
surpriased even coach Dick Reamon. Reamon figured before the meet that the Jayhawks of the neighborhood of 430 or 435 points.
"But Oklahoma dropped at least as much as that 70-point spread from my expectations," Reason said.
OU needed somebody to take points away from KU. But nobody could do it very effectively." Reason said.
OU had been expected to provide the biggest challenge for the Jayhawks in the defense of the Hawks, but they could stop the. Hawks in this.
"WE DID A super job in this meet," Reamon said.
"This may be the finest team that has ever been put together in a tournament," he said. "The best squad I've ever had." Reamon is in his tenth season.
about as well as the law of averages would allow" he said.
"When you consider that we've got only 19 on the squad, we did
KU's depth was amply illustrated in the 200-year butterfly Top swimmer Kemph of the event by coach Reason.
KU swimmers finished one-two-three in the 200-yard freestyle. Ingham, Hodgson and singer swept the top spot for KU.
"We knew we didn't need him in the 200 butterfly and we wanted to run him in the 400 individual medley." Reamon
SENIOR SCOTT Skulletty swam the 400-yard individual medley in 4.19.8, another Big Eight record. That clocking on the old mark of 42.17 set by Phil Weiss of Oklahoma in Philadelphia.
"He finished second in that and we still got five men in the top nine in the 200 butterfly."
KU's 80-yard freestyle relay team of Steve Ingham, Tom Kempil and Matt Kempil. Tom Kempil set a record with a time of 7.06. The old mark was 7.15.
AN EXTENSION of the string of KU swimming titles is no small possibility.
"We'll only lose three seniors from this team, so I'm quite optimistic about next year," Reasonam said.
'Huskers Usurp KU Indoor Title
But Kempf was not the only RU swimmer to send statisticians scurrying to change the times in the record book.
The seniors are Skultety, Greg Tharp and Bob Wright.
Kempi's 16:48 clocking in the 1650 freestyle cut 3.4 seconds of the old record set in 1969 by Jim Kent of KU.
By DAN GEORGE
This was Kempf's second appearance in the annual conference meet.
BY DAN GEORGE Kansan Sports Writer
"I clutched a little the first year. But one year's experience really helped," Kempf said.
KANSAS CITY, Mo—A late哭泣 of 39 points in the final running event enabled Kansas' six-year hold on the Big Eight indoor title and win the 1928 Kansas' six-year hold on the Big Eight indoor title and win the 1928 Kansas' six-year hold on the Big Eight Indoor Tour night in Municipal Auditorium.
Gaining a total of 46.13 points, the depth-laden Cornushkers edged Colorado by just 21.3 points. KU finished third with
The meet lived up to expectations that it would be the tightest in 10 years. The outcome is in doubt until the final two events.
In the first two events Friday, right, the Jahawks, who raced early and risky behind the long jump of Mikkel Stuil and shot putting of freshmen Jake McGee.
"I think I did pretty well this year," he said.
Tippo will be at 7:35 p.m. KU
unbeaten freshmen will go for
their 12th consecutive victory
from freshmen in the freshmen
in a preliminary contest
The victories gave KU an early total of 14 points and a nine-point lead over both Kansas State and Oklahoma, where the placed eight men on Saturday's
STULL, THE defending champion, posted a career high of 25-34. Guaveau, with a throw of 19.8 kg, also recorded, personal records.
OUGame to End Long KU Season
NORMAN - The longest basketball career. Owens' career at the University of Kansas will come to an end here tonight but RU plays Okla-
"You just need to do the very best you can, and then no sit back and lose," Owens said. "We've tried hard this year and we've had
The record is the worst an Owens-coached team has posted. In 2014, he joined his team finished with a 17-8 record. After that, KU put together four straight 28-victory games for the team, which lasted 197. Last year's team was 27-3.
"We just had a few things to beat." She said of Missouri and at Iowa State--that could have put us up in the title race. But we are not looking back
This season is the first losing one for KU since 1963, when Dick Harp's Jayhawks posted a 12-14 record. This year's squash is 11-14 after a 76-72 loss to Oklahoma on Saturday night in Stillwater.
Instead, the Jayhawks are preparing for their game with Oklahoma. The Sooners at 84-79 and the Titans at 61-50 in the Big Eight. Kansas State leads
| | Bf | Fb | Rb | Fb | Rb |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Jeffries | 14 | 5 | 10 | 3 | 10 |
| Fligcareg | 9 | 10 | 11 | 11 | 11 |
| Fligcareg | 9 | 10 | 11 | 11 | 11 |
| Fisher | 14 | 7 | 6 | 1 | 18 |
| Fisher | 14 | 7 | 6 | 1 | 18 |
| Percentage | 39.6 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Percentage | 39.6 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| | kg/g | n.a. | rb | br | pf |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Stallworth | 12 | 0.4 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| Mask | 16 | 1.3 | 5 | 0 | 0 |
| Mask | 12 | 1.4 | 4 | 0 | 1 |
| Ritroto | 18 | 1.2 | 4 | 0 | 1 |
| Ritroto | 12 | 1.4 | 4 | 0 | 1 |
| Canfield | 14 | 2.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Canfield | 15 | 2.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Maddews | 3.5 | 1.1 | 2 | 1 | 6 |
| Maddews | 3.5 | 1.1 | 2 | 1 | 6 |
| Franklin | 0.1 | 0.0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Franklin | 0.1 | 0.0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Percentages 39.0 66.7
OKLAHOMA STATE (76)
Percentages 39.6
Kansas
Oklahoma State
Attendance-2,500
Okahama ripped KU for a 97-65 victory in the consolation bracket of the NHL playoffs, December, but the Jayhawks earned a 77-74 victory in the final.
the race with a 10-2 record; Missouri is right behind at 9-3.
"We want to do as well as we can for our five seniors who will be in their last game." Owens said.
Those seniors are Bud Stallworth, Aubrey Nash, Neal Mask, Mark Mathews and Fred Bosilevac.
The Jayhawks have little more to play for. KU 18-76 in Big Eight play. All I victories in the 11-14 season had been in Allen Field House.
“It’s hard to predict whether we’ll be up for it,” Owens said. We certainly want to do well, but don’t know how they’ll react.
Oklahoma State won the game at the free throw line with 38 of 43. That broke the record of 37 free throws by Oklahoma City last season.
Here, however, Oklahoma State's Mike Jeffries scored two free throws; Nass missed two, but five made. Five off straight for a 7-244 lead.
KU dropped the four-point decision at Stillwater Saturday night, but it was not enough. Jayhawks forced 30 turnovers and outscored their opponents by 14.
Stallworth brought his total for the night to 28 by hitting two layups in the closing seconds. That made the final marge four.
"We were pressing them, and we fouled," Owens said. "They just hit their free throws."
The Cowboys didn't shoot a
fold goal in the last two minutes of
the game, and their six
Sixs by KU gave Oklahoma
state the opportunity to score 11
KU, down by as many as 12 points at 56-44 with 10 minutes to play, struggled to within 65-62 with slightly more than two left. Nash stole the ball and scored a layup to climax the rally.
A disappointed Jim Ryan returned to Lawrence Sunday after finishing last in his first race of the outdoor season. The former University of Kansas mier and world record holder was 16 mile Saturday in the Meet of Champions in Los Angeles.
LA Race Indicates Problems for Ryun
It was a team effort that resulted in an 85-80 victory for the University of Kansas women's gymnastics team last weekend at State College at Springfield, Mo., KU coach Patricia Ruhl said Sunday.
"He was just real disappointed and somewhat real disappointed about what Coach Bob Timmons said. Timmons spoke with Ryun after a meeting.
"We realize that there are a lot of things we need to talk over and work out," Timmons said. "I think he considers the problem as a challenge."
Tom Von Ruden, who won the race in 3:57.8 Saturday, had a different analysis. He said he was doing what might do better to rest awake.
"Once he builds that back he be okay. He realizes that it's all there right now, and all it will take is some confidence."
California to escape some of the media attention while training for the Olympic trials this summer.
Ryun said the pressure, especially that of the press, may be getting to him. He recently moved to Lawrence from
"I hadn't conquer Jim Ryun," I Van Ruden said. "Something else even could have been mental. I don't think he should continue doing this."
"I went back home to Stillwater and I worked out one day a week—which is really no training at all," Von Ruden said. "We had to run for running again until last year during cross country season.
"No, I'm not going to retire just because of this one race," Ryan said, answering a reporter's question with obvious annoyance.
"I think Jim is staying in it,
"I work out as hard as he does, in
hopes he'll find running fun
he'll do running a lay-off at
what he needs."
Von Ruden said he had gone through what Ryun is going through now after the 1968 Olympic Games.
FAN FOUNDATION
Timmons said Ryun's next meet would be the Florida Relays in late March.
Women Down SMS Gymnasts
Festival of the Arts
Kafka's "The Trial"
BORIS GOLDOVSKY Will Speak Tomorrow Bringing Opera To Life
TONIGHT
THE NATIONAL PLAYERS
Tickets available at door
Hoch - 8:00 p.m.
present
KU's Rudy Guevara
Kansas Staff Photo by GREG SORBER
Heaves shot out
But the Cornhuskers were just starting.
track finals, a total second only to Nebraska's 10.
As the track was being changed for the long race Saturday, Oklahoma State placed with 26 points. Colorado (16) and Oklahoma State (13) were the top teams.
The oval track, however, was to be the Jayhawks' destruction. In the remaining seven running plays, each place but twice for five points.
The final running event was the mile relay. The Cornhuskers not only won that, but also set a meet record of 3:16.1.
OKLAHOMA'S GENE STONE took high jumps honeymoon with a leap from the top before broke the Jahayw score scoring the third place finish for three points.
The death blows to KU's title hopes came in the 1000- and 880 yard runs.
Nebraska tacked on six more with second and fourth place finishes in the 880.
8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Sponsored by Humanities Lecture Series
As anticlimaxes go, however,
Ballou has only defending champion Bill Hearn
and Colorado's Mike Wedman
remained. To tie the tie, a
computer game is required.
With only one event remaining, Nebraska had amassed 46 1/3 points, well ahead of Colorado's 47.3. With a win, with 34 1/2, were eliminated.
Friday night, the Jayahawks' Rick Jacques, unbeaten at either distance this season, finished a distant last in the 880. He had spent the two previous days in the final game and had no injuries in either case.
Both missed on an additional try at 16-6, and the bar was
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lowered to 16.3. Hatcher cleared on his attempt. Wedman was almost over when his arm hit the bar.
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Next up for the RO swimmers will be the NCAA championships March 23-25 in West Point, N.Y. Team scores 700, Oklahoma 601. Kansas 844.
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"I felt that after the preliminaries Friday night we were in real good shape," KU coach Bob Timmons said. "We did the field events and we didn't do bad on the straight (60-yard) track."
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"But, with the exception of the 600 and 440, we didn't score on the oval track. There's five points right there.
18mnet, 6.3m, 60yard low hurdles - 3. Bob Bornkessel,
1.8.
400 yard run - 3. Bill Hill
"We knew it was going to take all we had, so it's kind of hard to accept sporadic efforts. But we didn't get any help from the other teams, either. Just a break or, if it may have been different."
vam scores—Kansas 50. Oklahoma 317.
Missouri 324. Colorado 19. Nevada 884.
20, Colorado 154, Nebraska 884.
Wednesday, March 8. 7:30 p.m. in the
400 freestyle trials. - 3 KJ (Scott Skultey,
Mike Tackett, Wright, Kidd).
Randy Hartford. 6 Roland
Sabater. 2 Allan McDonald.
3 Phil Kid
one of the Harrisburg 8 (but who is to be tried separately, at a later date because he will act as his own attorney.)
TED GLICK
Long Jump -1, Mike Stull, 25%, 60 yard high hkhd -2, Born Borkessel,
. delario Robinson, 7.3
60 yard dash - 3. Devlin Williams, 6.2
Emmett Edwards, 6.3
60 yard low hurdles - 3. Bob Borakkeessel,
in the
Kempf, 10. Hartford.
200 freestyle. Ingham; 2 Tom
Kennedy. Boston 8 Charles
will speak
sponsored by
400 yard Run - 2:1. Phil Steep. 11:2.1.
dash hard 5ach. Mark Luta. 50:5.
dash hard 3. Barry Schur. 6:4. 4; Randy Smith, 6:7.
Pole Vault. 1. Biatcher. 16:3.
Hogan; 2. Hendinger; 5. Sabanes.
20 butterfly; 3. Keith Richey; 4. Marc
Wagoner; 5. Tackett; 8. McDonald; 9. Greg
Tharp.
The Catholic Student Center
800 freeflee relay-1, KU (Ingham,
Hodgson, Heldinger, Kempf)
1650 fresefly-1, Kempf, 6. Wagoner; 7.
Kingdon, 10. Jackson
100 freestyle- 3. Tom Kempson 3. Steve
Ingham; 5. Nick Heidinger; 5. David Kegelwyn
200 individual medley- 2. Bob Wright; 10.
Randy Hardford.
100 backstroke-3 Skulley; 4. Min.
Uffers.
100 breaststroke-4 Wright; 12. Bob
Davenport.
40 freestyle relay -3. KU (Scott Skulley, Mike Tackett, Wright, Klidd). 40 individual medley-1. Skulley; 2. Kempf; 10. Hartford.
50 freestyle--3, Phil Kidd; 6. Roland
Sahales; 9. Allan McDonald.
One meter diving--3. Steve King; 10. Scott
Davies.
Big Eight Room, Union
treetype=2. McDonald, 4. Sabates; 6.
Kidd, 8. Hedginger; 11. Hudson.
Darrow
800 freestyle relay - 1. KU (Ingham.
240).
1550 freestyle - 1, Kempf) 6, Waginger) 7,
Kenny Inglis - 1, Tighton) 6, McDonald) 5, Sabates) 6.
2. netfordian; 4. satules; 6.
...add; 8. Holdinger; 11. Hodgson.
200 backstroke; 3. Skuttyte; 4. Ulffers; 11.
Tharp; 12. Hartford.
200 breaststroke-2, Wright.
100 butterfly-5, Ullersen; 7, Richey; 9,
10, McGee.
Ivins B. Ivins, King; 5. Davies.
Mcdonald medley record. KU.)
Heldinger, McDonald).
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Herbie Mann-March 8-2.50 National Players-March 6-1.00 Portable Circus-March 9-1.00 Tom Wolfe-March 10-1.50
Festival of the Arts Tickets Are Still Available
★ Tickets available at the Door of SUA Office
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4
Monday, March 6, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Regulations Would Raise Expenses
City Zoning Exempts KU
By GARY NEIL PETERSON
Lawrence, like other cities, has a zona ordinance which helps her们 to avoid being an ex-governor adequately provide a workable plan to map and construct the city.
The University of Kansas campus, however, is exempt from adhering to these standards.
THE CITY ZONING code, adopted in 1966, is a set of rules governing the construction of buildings in the city may be used. These laws decree where houses, office buildings and manufacultures are to be constructed. They regulate such things as parking, landscaping, building heights and windows.
The purpose as outlined in the ordinance says in part: "Thezoning regulations set forth the rules for the health and safety to promote the health, safety, morals, and the general welfare of the City of Lawrence and its residents in the streets; to secure safety from fire; panic; and other dangers; to provide adequate housing; and prevent the overcrowding of land."
Despite article 20-202 of this ordinance which states "The jurisdiction of this ordinance shall apply to all land located in the City of Lawrence, Kansas," the University is granted immunity.
from this code and its provisions
Ken Jorgensen, Lawrence B.
Brown, architect's office was responsible for the planning of university
buildings.
He said fraternities, sororites and private residence halls did have to meet the city's safety standards for privately owned and operated
JORGENSON SAIF if the campus were zoned, the residency would conform to the requirements of RD-Residence Dormitory, and the classroom buildings would come under RO-Residential
If the University were required o follow the ordinance it would be in greater financial difficulties ban it is presently in.
These expenses would come from the necessity of planting more bushes, constructing walls, landscaping yards, ranches and exits from the parking lots, widening streets, purchasing buildings permits, certificates of occupancy, special use permits and submitting site plans.
While this would entail great sums of money, it would also add to the cost of the city to handle the increased load, according to large numbers.
McCollum . . .
Continued from Page 1
BECAUSE OF the University's immunity to the ordinance, unjust cases do arise, William Vicary, residence director of
"I TRIED TO PUT McCollson into it successfully but once it viewed it in full light, it was appalling," he said.
THE ORCHESTRA then told him that they would not play if McCollum would allowed to perform.
Bukaty said while the McCollum skit was being performed Thursday night, the band started to play its instruments and the audience of 500 to 600 people had tried to stop it and after several minutes he quieted the noise.
The McColm skit was the second one written by the hall. The other was written because McColm did not have their music and dancing skills.
Bukaty said he thought that McCollium had understood that they were responsible for their own music.
Steve Orcutt, Kansas City
Kenny Reed, resident in favor of the skis, said there was a misunderstanding between the production staff as to who was responsible for the music. McCollum thought that KU-Y
ORCUTT SAID the hall decided to change the script because the
Naismith Hall, said.
leads dropped out, the music wasn't arranged and participation wasn't good.
"We took it upon ourselves to change the script," he said.
He said he took the new script to the KU-Y and Bukaty and KY decided to take a chance on it. He used the script scripts were completely different.
George Pangbun, Erlama. A graduate student and McColum Hall president, said the skit had been approved by the McColum
Nashimh Hall, not located on university premises as opposed to private buildings, is required to meet all requirements of the ordinance.
The skit was performed for the hall last Tuesday night.
In cooperation with the University, Nasmith Hall conforms to the rules and regulations concerning student residents. At he same time; the hall must be the dictate of City Hall.
Bukaty said the McColum skin was not one of the four major skits performed at Rock Chalk Theater, one chosen by the three judges.
McColum residents thought they should be guaranteed a position since they were an early adopter of everything ready to eat. Bukayt said.
The ordinance says that Naismith Hall must have 1/4 parking places for each 2 oceans. He will have a living unit, whichever number is greater. Oliver Hall, on the other hand, need only have the number of spaces so designated by the architect. He will have University planning board.
However, the KU-Y said there must be an independent in the revue and McColium was included in the In-Between-Actions.
Bukaty said he told the KU-Y there would be no guaranteed places in the revue.
IF SOMEONE in any campus university housing wishes to establish what is called a "home out of the home, not outlawed by residence hall contract, that resident may. In any residential area out in the city though, a building should parade of a fine or imprisonment.
This is covered in article 17 of 20-1701 which prohibits a home occupation in a residential area. A home occupation includes an occupant in the assembly of handicraft articles, laundering and pressing, teaching or tutoring and sales to persons on the premises. These types of things can go on if a space permit is obtained from the city.
Although most home occupations such as sewing or attending a class, they could be belated if a person filed a complaint at the police department.
BUSINESS ENs LINewance are required to have an eight-foot high screening fence or wall to separate a loading area from a residential district includes homes and apartments).
The purpose of this is to eliminate the unsightiness of trucks loading and unloading food or garbage of manufactured goods. To preserve the beauty of the area to the residential district surrounding. The University is not required to have such a wall between the residence halls on Daisy Hill and the other apartments and the other halls.
Another incident where fairness to Lawrence businesses is questionable relates to parking lots.
Size and location of these loading facilities is also determined by the city codes.
IF THE CITY or business wishes to construct a parking lot on land located in the city limits, the Building Inspector's office for the building Inspector's office for
approval. Zoned as C-1, off street parking, the site plan size and location on the lot and the placement of all trees, bushes and grass must be shown. A four to six foot wallpapered wall or fence must separate the lot from the street and adjoining property
This part of the code is another
part of the ecological balance, according to
retailers' boaification program,
aimed at a return to natural
ecological balance, according to
The University, however, is not required to uphold the city's responsibility of beautification.
LARGE PARKING LOTS such as X and O zones have no such limits between O zone and Naimshi Hall and another one stands between O zone and the single family homes across Eighteenth
The city zoning ordinance also prohibits the use of parking lots for uses other than parking by car. You may only park any Use for bazaars, charging parking fees over and above the regular charge, if any, would require the obtaining of a special card to 20-607 of the ordinance.
This means that if KU were under the jurisdiction of the city, a permit would have to be obtained in order to charge 50 cents for people to park in O zone for football or X zone for football games.
CONCERNING THE EX- excavation of land for construction purposes, the ordinance in 20111114 requires a special use permit required for adequate measures will be taken to prevent odor, dust, noise, lights, drainage and traffic from being objectionable to uses described.
If construction and excavation problems arise and become objectionable to residents around a construction site, complaints will be filed against the matters will be taken care of to assist Lawrence citizens of their right to peace and quiet guard them by the zoning条例.
But if a professor objects to
because of construction at
Wesco Hall, he has no recourse,
legal or otherwise, to contend
PARKING LOTS in Lawrence must, according to 2011/12(a)(4), "have ingress and egress so that no traffic congestion and hazards."
The ordinance calls for parking lots to be no more than three miles from the city, a distance from a major thoroughfare by way of a major or other road in Mississippi and Eleventh streets are neither one major thorough
fares, yet hundreds of cars are to exit from X. none after a football game, and no drivers have hazard. According to spokesman from the Kansas Highway Patrol department and the Lawrence officers direct traffic on those day.
CORNELIA
Greek Theatrics Differ in Appeal
Kansan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG
Building heights in Lawrence for residences and office buildings, the building site is 45 feet or 45 feet, unless the area of the building site lot is inundated to minimize overcrowding of the land and the destroying of the foundations.
BUT BECAUSE of it, litigation was necessary by the Allen and O'Hara Corporation, owners of the building, a city, a variance from the law, in order that they could build a tensity building with fewer than 50 percent of its square feet.
Ramsay Mills Photo by BAN YONG
Tom Ditchfield Field II
SKNK
Named best actor at Rock Chalk
By STUART CLELAND Kaneon Reviewer
As fraternalities and sororites emerged on their respective skirts, the Chalk Revue" played out its uneven course Friday and Saturday evenings, showing once again the unconscious energy of the annual Greek theatres. As usual, the quality of the production was wildly inconsistent, with various skirts generally providing most of the real entertainment. But even when the scripts were somewhat less original, the energy of the performers and chorus had to be admired. The Lymn Schornick, Yates Center senior, gave a professional sound to the music. And the between-songs were especially polished (except for one female soloist), with special mention going to the choreographer. "There's A Show Comin'"
KAPPA SIGMA and Delta Gamma next presented "The Great Helite or To Hell with the Tithe." The story of a heavenly bounty from the past of Hell, it was plagued by poor pacing and a trite script, although Elliott Hassan, shown commemorating the Devil, and an uncredited
Across the street from Nismith high school was McCollin Elsawon Lewis, Hashinger, Templin Joseph R. Pearson, Fraser and Blake the University was free to study stories high as long as they were structurally sound and con- tributively building Building Code used by the state.
THE EVENING'S first effort,
"The Sweet Smell of Success or
How An American Beauty Rose",
Kappa Kappa Gamma, was an overlong but fun take-off on the Miss America pageant, circle good shing with his dance and dancing trail rise of a ninety-degree door type from Kansas all the way to her success in the concert, some tasteless and humil jokes, the script is (in my opinion) the second best of the evening. As Dorothy, Shannon Halverhout, as many moments, as did Winn Halverhout, Shawne Mission mission, as her wiley manager, explained that real talent doesn't consist of being a great opera singer or ballerina, but in tap playing.
Kappa Sig was funny as a rather bemused Saint Peter. Again the musical numbers saved the day, especially "When You in Hell You Stay in Hell." (Though why should you be a girl on the boys' shoulders?)
According to the ordinance, in a residential-dormitory district, if the building is to exceed the height limit from the building to the front, rear and side property lines or lot boundaries, the building must be four foot or height increase.
IN RESPECT to this law,
normally buildings must be set back off the street at least 50 feet for the first 31 stories.
Elsworth Hall is located about 25 feet from Engel Road passing in front of it. If the campus were under city jurisdiction, the hall would be about 25 feet from the street unless a variance were granted from the law.
the evening's final skit was the *Uckoo Story* or Time of Tau Delta, a tale from Tau Delta and Kappa Alpha Theata. The story of the breaking and repairing of a town clock, it is one of the most charming a capella chorus number, an unappeasantly frenetic melange of smutty jokes, songs and shrieking actors, all of whom appeared to be infiltrated with St. Vitus dance. Perhaps the most endearing character is the town drunk staggered on-stage tucking in his shirtless trousers for work ballerina. This is humour?
FAR AND AWAY the best production was Alpha KappaLambda and Alpha Gamma Delta. The odds are Even that the Bengals seeming rare virtues of talent, imagination and originality, it transplanted the battle of the two teams with funny and touching results. Helping move things along was excellent original music by Eric Braun with clever and well thought out lyrics by Bikales; Daw Swenson, Sioux Falls junior; Nancy Cohen with Brian Martin. Wootham freshman. The script was fine too despite one or two lapses), and I especially liked the incarnation of God, as flashlight sources.
I WOULD BE more hesitant to criticize Rock Chalk if all the skirts were of the same relative height. I would not AKL's and AGD's came up with something far superior to the others in its freshness and originality shows that college students can write entertaining skirts that reflect on trite situations, idiotic plots and stupid sex jokes, future script contributors would do well to follow their example. For only a few years now, it has become the showcase for real creativity that it deserves be.
To determine how large a lot must be to build a residence hall on it, there must be 800 square feet per living unit. The total number of units of the University residence halls on Daisy Hill is 1.479.
This means that a minimum of 1.2 m square feet, incl. about 1.2 m square feet, are the lot area on which Nunemaker is situated, according to figures cited in the land use regulations there is about 1.3 million square feet of land on the hill. If the land site that Nunemaker is on were taken from this university were subject to review by the city, part of a university campus, be condemned and removed.
CONCERNING OFFICE building requirements, the ordinance says that for every 300 parking spaces, a parking space must be provided.
Fraser, with an office space of almost 85,000 square feet, provides 30 spaces, but the office also require 283 parking spaces.
Strong Hall has about 230,000 square feet of office space in it, however only 22 parking spaces exist in the old building to be occupied by workers at Spacefrog. The ordinance would require 776 spaces.
There are approximately 20,000 square feet, useable in space for parking. The location located in the city, the required number of parking spaces would be
82
Kenya Phone To Table
Ellsworth Hall in Violation of Building Code Too close to E ingle Road, not enough parking lot landscaping
StudEx Allocates $1,000 To Pay Marlene Sanders
Emergency allocations and approval of a $1,000 voucher from the budget of the Commission on Agenda at the Sunday night meeting of the Student Executive Committee, its last before Senate
The commission had issued the voucher to ABC news correspondent Marlene Sanders after her recent visit to the campus, but Senate treasurer Bill O'Neill (who, Moe, M. junior, won against the funding of a Senate ruling because of the funding of speakers.
StudEx agreed to approve the voucher after a member of the Board reviewed it and that Sanders was a consultant to the Human Sexuality Series of the University.
Med Center Offers RN's New Program
The department of human
ecology at the University of
Maryland Medical Center will be
offering a nurse-clinician
program for qualified registered
nurses.
Martha Barnard, assistant professor of human medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, will nurse-clinician program. Barnard's program will be family practice.
The program for registered nurses will last one year and will provide training in the first section will consist of four months intensive training in pediatrics and obstetrics-gynecology at the Medical School.
During the second part of the program, the nurse will spend eight months working with a patient emphasizing primary patient care.
There will be four groups of nurses trained during the first year by overlapping the training period and will consist of six to eight nurses.
Because the Finance and Auditing Committee of the Senate will not meet again until after the announcement of an emergency emergency allocations:
A line item change enabling the Free University to use $100 allocated for office supplies for library supplies.
$80 to Kappa Psi. profession-
fraternity of the School of
Pharmacy to sponsor a poison
box at the Lawrence public schools
StudEx also approved $1000 to a committee for "beer and other freshmen" and $200 for a student Senate party with the student.
Funds for the last two allocations came from $1800 left over from the social fund of the lefthand All-Student Council.
Representing the five districts of Kansas, the 130 women voted in favor of a constitution and policies of political parties that have excluded women, and to create political awareness between them. The caucus voted unanimously
State Women Meet, Urge Party Reform
The first Kansas Women's Political Caucus, held in Wichita Saturday, called on the state to work for women's priorities and humanist goals and to recruit and rally support such priorities and goals.
The caucus voted unanimously to:
1. Support Kansas Senate Bill 53, a series of amendments to this Kansas Act Against dissecination, without further amendments.
2. Urge the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment as passed by the House of Representatives without crippling amendments.
3. Recommend that the legislature fund the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women.
The morning session included speeches by Cora Hobble, chairman of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women and Wikimedia to the state legislature from the League of Women Voters, and
Later the women separated into Republican and Democratic groups to learn delegate selection procedures for the different parties.
Georgia Neese Clark Gray, United States' Treasurer under Harry S. Truman.
Five workshop sessions were held in the afternoon. Women in police, local, candidate information, and structure were Jones discussed.
The purpose and goals of state organization for the Kansas Women's Political Caucus were formulated out of the work.
consisting of 'three women from each of the five districts and one delegate from newly formed local women's groups, not already represented,' will serve a one-third share in the caucus. The three women from the districts cannot all be of the same party affiliation and, as nearly as possible, those selected to represent economic and racial groups.
After the state council members were elected by women from their districts, the meeting adjourned to where John Harris, an originator of the National Women's Political Caucus, spoke.
"Other than an increase in educational exchange and a
China Trip...
Continued from Page 1
field of economics with the addition of import duties, and then we announced the President was going to make a trip to China, all of which with no apparent consultation with the Japanese government." Witness the attack by the prime minister of Japan) is in.
"JAPAN IS the industrial, military and economic power in Asia, and has a fantastic economic potential. We need to understand it as unambiguous a way as possible, our relations with Japan.
Ketzel said although all the talk of international politics was centering on Nixon's trip to China, an equally unique and important trip made by him was also been almost totally overlooked.
"The Soviet Union going to Japan was the same as the US," Ketzel said. "The Soviet Union does not recognize Japan, and the two countries have never signed an agreement. Japan has the potential to develop Siberia, but it cannot be with the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union trip to Japan must be considered to be important, as the American triumph."
"I think relations with Japan do not matter, attention now, especially in the region," he said of consultation with the Japanese before we went to China," he
KETZEL SAID not much but came from the Nixon visit to China which could compare to the Soviet Union going to Japan.
Ketzel said this theory stated if a country made gradual initiatives to other nations
Ketzel said this was one way out of longstanding animosity with the U.N. mission. He said the progression of events which led up to the Nixon trip to China bore a strong resemblance to a theory proposed some time ago.
"The Chinese, long before the Communists and before the intruder came here, held themselves as the center of civilization," the Ketelzi insisted. I don't know. But the fact that it was Americans going to Peking cannot help but suggest to some that this is a one-way ticket.
KETZEL said the policy changes made by the U. S. began several years ago and were largely unilateral.
Ketzel said the trip to China was brought on by many factors, including the fact that which made the trip possible were made by the United States. He said the history of China was shaped by its impact as aspect of Sino-U. S. relations.
minimal increase in trade, the only other specific thing was our agreement to withdraw our loans from those that decrease there," Ketzel said.
"I think these unilateral initiatives really began back in 1969 with a number of things the U. S. undertook," Ketzel said. The United States came to the U. S. ping-pong game with the first public reciprocation."
regarding the establishing of communications and the reduction of international to the other nations would reciprocate.
problems it caused, and even the difference in concrete results, the trip to China was important, since it did serve to open communications with
Given this traditional view of China, the rest of the people of China are called Peking has a symbolic way Peking has a central position in Chinese eyes.
"There may be more to it than appears on the surface, but it seems the concessions have been made more on the part of the U. government," Kellet said. "But without these steps to establish communications with China, it would be too difficult to improve our relations with China, with all that means to reducing tensions in the Far East."
KETZEL, SAID even with the
"When communications are absent, there is relatively little chance of information transmission," Ketel said. "The establishing of communications is impossible."
*Without the trip, the chances of future progress would be low.*
e st a b i l i b m e n t ___ of communications with China ___
KE
About the Page
The Kansan has no editorial page today in order that we may come closer to providing adequate news coverage in an extremely tight paper.
Chip Crews Editor
...
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Editor
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examinations periods. Mail subscription prices $6 a semester, $10 a year. Secured mail service. Advertiser advertisement offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily indicative of the university.
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser . . Mel Adams
Business Adviser ... Mee Adams
University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 6. 1972
5
18 Student Polls Approved
There will be at least 15 polls in addition to the three at the Strong and Summerfield halls and the Kansas Union during this year's
R. L. "Puf" Bailhy, Attickson a student and elections committee. Fridays there would be at least three additional dap polls and 12 other polls.
Day polls will be sponsored by the School of Architecture and Urban Design, the School of Engineering in Learned Hall and the School of Pharmacy
There will be night polls at Corbin, Ellsworth, Hasinger, Lewis, McColum, Naismith and Oliver halls. The Intraaftraternity Council and Panhellenic jointly sponsor five night polls.
"This is the best way to increase voter participation and to reach more voters," Bailey said.
Bailey said he hoped the counting of the ballots would go quickly in this year's March 15-16 election, but it will be counted by computer.
"This is the first time we'll be able to use the computer for a spring election. Last fall it worked beautifully." Bailey said.
The winning candidates in this year's Senate races will be eligible to attend a workshop at the University of Jumpeh March 31 through April 2.
The camp is about 75 miles southeast of Lawrence near Drexel, Mo. At the camp the new senators will meet with the old
Prof to Speak On Astronomy
senators to talk about University issues.
"The Scale of the Universe"
will be the top of an open house
讲座 at the Open House in
wichita professor from
Wichita University 48 ond
bursday at 10 am
ol Young
"There will be a lot of activities devoted to creating interaction between student senators," Bailey said.
The retreat will be financed through the candidates' filing fees. Write-in-winners may also receive the retreat by paying $8, he said.
Vice-chancellor for Student
Affairs William Balfour and
Chancellor E. Z.
Laurence
workshop Saturday afternoon.
He said there would be informal activities including canoeing, horseback riding and volleyball.
The lecture will deal with what man knows about the size of the universe and objects in it, and that has learned about the universe.
Spring enrollment figures show that the number of veterans returning to the University of Kansas has increased from 1,167 last fall to 1,209 this spring, an increase of 3.5 per cent, Liz Edmondson certificate of enrollment for veterans, said recently.
Edmondson said the number of students using the GI bill had increased this year.
Veteran Enrollment Up; Use of GI Bill Increases
If the weather permits, the group will then go to the telescope and look through it. The lens is opened. Alexander will explain some of the more interesting objects visible through the telescope, and present look through the lens.
To qualify for educational benefits, an individual has to serve 18 continuous months or more of work and must have to be released from the service under conditions which satisfy active duty obligation. Then he will be entitled to 36 continuous educational benefits, Mongolian said.
The amount of educational assistance allowance is based on the individual's rate of training (i.e., the percentage of the number of dependents, she said.
Alexander is here as part of an exchange program involving several uniuniversities. He addressed the physics subject Feb 28 to a subject of planetary nebulae. He will be teaching a class on stars and their evolution through March 8.
Persons with questions or problems concerning their education benefits should contact
Dean Kackley, assistant to the dean of men, or go to the office of the Campus Veterans, 118B Service window in Strong Hall.
Edmondson said in the past persons went to the Veteran's Service window to sign for their benefits each semester, but he was not signed for their bill during enrollment at Allen Field House.
BLEVINS HONDA
Factory Authorized
Honda Sales & Service
Cycle Pick Up Service
843-3333
1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Open 24 hrs. per day
Independent
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
7 days pe week
COIN
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH-
THE TOUGH GET GOING
500 E.23rd
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN
LOVE THAT DATSUN !
M. ALSOM
TREDO'S
Truck
RESTAURANT & DELICATESSEN
GOOD FOOD IN THE
OLD ITALIAN TRADITION
Have a party in our recently
finished back room.
944 Massachusetts
LAWRENCE KARATE INSTITUTE
GRAND OPENING
FIRST PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL IN THIS AREA
NOW ACCEPTING NEW STUDENTS 731 New Hampshire
Regional and National Champion Black Belt Instructors EDDIE WONG CHUCK NORTHCOTT
JUNIOR BEGINNER PASSING
10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Saturday
VISITORS WELCOME
Phone 842-3157
Open from 1 p.m. - 10 p.m. Weekdays
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
One day
FOR SALE
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kalman are offered at all times. (For more information on color, creeed, or national origin.
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
808
Western Civ. Note=Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
If you don't.
UHBR 4000 Report 5etra, 4-chain tape recorder, microphone, power-supply cable. Case-Buckled case, size 8.9-14 case. Bucket X = 15 X 27 - 6 (34-83) 749-759
1971 Volkswagen Super Beetle Con-
version, 14,000 miles, AM radio
bright orange with black top and in-
side. Must sell Kawer, Karen B.
7122
you're at a disadvantage.
Ekay way it comes to the same
Analysts of Western Civilization.
Campus Madhouse, 41f
Worth 14th.
1968 Chvette SS, power brakes,
power steering, air conditioning,
automatic transmission, excellent
communication. call 843-8425; 3-17
One 1969 Fender Super Reverb Amp —used only one, perfect condition. Call 843-2107 or 843-5865. 3-7
TRY IT TOUGLY LIKE IT — Rent Winnieburg motor home for up to 8 months. Free. Free
Aifa Romeo Velchi G.T. Double over-head, cam, 4-wheel disks, 5-speed Mint condition 634 Mass. 842-6966 3-7
18 speed bicycle, Gitante Tour de France 241°, frame; White, Broke Pro Saddle, Champagne Hippie Simone Galli, Cellular Communications Call Michael at 842-712-3.
See the guaranteed selection of used cycles at Katsu Suzuki, 634 Mass, 842-6066. Factory authorized sales and service. 3-7
1962 Buick Special, new transmission,
new front tires, new battery, has
snow tires. Economical and depend-
able. Call Dave. 842-6585. 3-6
See the new water-cooled GT-750 at Kat Suzuki. Only $1,640. 634 Mass. 3-7
842-6906
THE BUGBER a new dimension
The BUGBER the same way
trailer designed to carry all gear with ease. Take it at camp, touring, shop-
ing at the Ride-On Bike
1601 MLK JR AT the
1971 Honda C.B. 350. Gold, great shape, 2.600 miles. 842-9012. 3-7
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
89 Blue VW bug, custom walnut interior, super clean, 3 extra tires, excellent condition. $1,400. Call 83-7248.
12.5 inch lawn mower never used.
11" HP with power drive. $20.00 Call
841-2964.
Leather and suede coat custom made blouses and dresses—Made to order jeans new sheels 28 & 160 These two pairs are now on sale. This coupon BOXON 30
1971 Triumph Trophy 500 c.c. $1,000,
Beautiful bike, like new, $300 cheaper,
leaving country, must sell. Call
843-7881.
3-7
SLR CAMBASM - Kex 1 w 3 Lwes 2
SRH CAMBASM - Kex 2 w 3 Lwes 2
Wheel Bags $135; Hessian PHSV 125
winder and Aircraft $80; 1 changed
aircraft and Mighty $80; Minitruck
minequipment Call Jack at 644-789-
3200
MARTIN GUITAR-12 string model D-35, 5 months old, in excellent condition. Includes hardshell case. A portable instrument. Fits Bass, 88-96, 6700.
69 Ventura string acoustic guitar with case. Excellent condition. Will accept best offer. Call Paul Sciaro, 845-792-9231. 3-8
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Camaro, 1968, 396-325, hp, 4-speed.
patrak, green, kread, 4 speed.
AM-MF student needs money, must sell
money to MF, 848-809-808.
P.M. for app.
Pickens Auto Parts
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Tony's 66 Service
Parts at a discount
Dath & Iowa Ph. V13-1252
and Service
--spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges.
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
Sandwiches
5 a.m. 12 p.m. Tues. Sat.
5-5 Sun.
5-9 Mon.
5-9 Mon.
1730 W. 23rd St.
1730 E. 24th St.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5.00 p.m., 2 days before publication
Pail-shallay. Hungarian sheeDED,
barn jam 2 B, A.C.M. Bale and Fe-
lled with Grey. Prided individual-
ly 1969-78, McLoud, Kansas. 3-15
APARTMENT SALE - BET. 7½, X '78,
Southern vacant, woman's Raleigh
shelters and brick houses, playboys
shelves and brickyards, plays by
cream maker clothes, women in
many other things. Fax 3-4-10
to 212-965-8365 or 415-665-8365.
Calif. St. Al 416 blocks west of
Wilmington.
VW-1967, pretty black bug, new brakes, runs great, stereo, Tim, 842-7125, 3-8
1971 Honda 350-SL, excellent condition,
must sell, call Dennis at 843-
7604
171 Champion Motor Home - 24 ft.
413 cid engine, generator, 80 lb. LPG
capacity, 14,800 ml., $9,000, 842-7207
Nice black kittens 7 weeks old. Box trained, raised with dog $1.00 each
842-1984. 3-8
1986 Ford, 2 Dr, HT, fast back, P.S. P.B. air, cond air, trans. $1,488. Jayhawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 843-2300 3-7
66 250ce Duart, good condition, must sell
call 842-7555. 3-9
WHAT'S NEW THIS SPRING IN
FASHION - IT'S YOUR TRI
EARTHSHINE-EAST 8TH & MASS.
155 Chevrolet 2-door station wagon, 6-ary), standard, needs tender loving care. Those who love her call her Gertruck. 864-1116. 3-6
1969 Camaro, blue, 2 Dr. HT, 3-speed,
Volkswagen, $1,250 Jayhawk
VK, Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, 843-3-200
- 833-3-200
One 1972 Hoover Dial-A-Matte vacuum cleaner slightly used. $45. Call 841-2964. 3-15
1970 Duster, green, 3-speed, VW
$1,450. We will buy locally owned
carry, domestic and VW, Jahwak
Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 84200-316-2
30
JAYHAWK VOLKSWAGEN has a large stock of good used VW's 2522 Iowa 483-2200 3-7
SCUBA EQUIPMENT-First, Mask,
Bio Pie Lifetime, Premium,
Bus Picure, Lifetime Furniture,
$125 Hawk Knife and $35.95 Spear
Hawk Knife and $35.95 Spear
We see for all your diving
major brands Equip Equity,
Dive Kits, Diving Kits, Diving
Kits, Drive Kansas City, Mo. M4142 4148
www.cuba.com
3-speed 20° boys bicycle, hand brakes, 5-month old, battery operated light, new tires, good condition.
Call 845-7651 after 9 a.m.
Down and out law student must sell his '67 WV. Excellent condition inside and out. Call 842-5857 at 5:00. Free stuffed animal. 3-10
1970 Charger RT automatic, new tires, heavy charger, console bucket tires, one mount, mechanically per-metre, best off-road, M82-8076, best off-road, M82-8076, 3-10
Nikon F Body, additional FT Head,
18-45mm f/2.8 VR lens
variation 135mm f/2.8, 50mm f/2.
Ziss Iron light meter, case, accessor-
ers **695** complete kit
for Nikon DSLRs
NOTICE
T
16 ft. all aluminum granman canoe with paddles, life-preservers, and roof rack. Sears auto stereo tape 18-9.5 in. x 10-7 in. 3:48-18.9 in. - 8-4 in. + 4-6 p.m.
Red 44 Corvall convertible 4-speed.
Looks rough, but it has engine rebuild and other work rebuilt. My music gain: N42-7108, m or a: 4-6 p.m. or 4-8 p.m.
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store
1967 Yanhua 360, street bike, excellent running condition. Would like to sell this week. Call 843-6542 after 2.90 p.m. Ask for Bruek. 5-10
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-769-7604. Professional child-care for children 1 mo to 12 mo. Full-part-time. Specially designed agency. 3-31
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call Greater Kansas City Birthright. (816) 474-4676. ft
843. 7685 - We Deliver - 9th & III
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
634 Mass. 842-6966
THE HILE in the WALL
DELICATESSEN
SANDWICH SHOP
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
DELICATESSEN &
For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center-864-4441. tf
Spend this summer working in the beautiful Colorado mountains. For further details send $1 to COURTROSE Opportunity 302-634-362, Colleen. Boulder 80022
Women's alterations, 20 years, experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30
3-13
STUDY ESPERANTO the international language, in Portland for growth in 2013 and then attend ESperanto at Espanhol University. He here 29 July to 5 August. A unique opportunity to learn a foreign language. Information Summer Seminars. University of Portland, Portland, OR.
Set yourself free, Join Gay Liberation.
Brotherhood, sisterhood, 7:00
P.M. Mondays. U.M.H.E. Center, 1204
Orave A道. 3-6
2. two experienced nursery school teachers offer complete day care for children 3-6 All pre-school skills taught 85-143 Teachers rated 84-137 3-10
BOKONON - remodeled salt - Bauy Buity Busy custom sewing Still great bargain, Leather jackets, spring dresses, sweaters Vermont - Vermont sweaters 2-7
RUSSIA SCANDINAVIA 5 weeks
departure from Bremen to small
small group camping in Sweden.
White World Expedition. After White
Artists: display your work in Kansas City Artwork of all kinds needed on ongement. For information, call John, 842-3628 at 5:00 PM 3-7
DISCOUNT TRAVEL! Discount programs can be fantastic, but can also find you in Europe looking for a ride. Check it out at SAU 844-3727.
The demands of the MARCH
MUSIC must not oppress
"motherly" music, but bring
hirlighth! The spring offensive starts
next week. Another Orange Array
of bands is playing.
"If you have come to this state, to
teach us some good advice, tell me
why you have come into this
state and know why you have come
and know why you have come."
Giru Mauro-Bajal-JI will whitener
$827.00
Giru Mauro-Bajal-JI will whitener
$827.00
HOOKED ON BOOKS, annual water show 8:00 p.m. Thurs and Fri March 9th and 10th. Robbins pool show 8:00 a.m. at the door. **3-10** show
EARTHSHINE HAS A NEW LOOK
FOR ALL YOU GROWN UP KIDS
EARTHSHINE-EAST 8TH & MASS
3.5
The demands of the MARCH 1011 MATCH们 welcome us back Wednesday evening, when the March Mothers will meet with high administration officials with high administration officials. Surze the moment! Today the Mothers sponsored by Orange Aardvark Environments.
Barn Parties! Now available for Barn Parties!
Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry,
Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry,
bar and counter plenty of parking
cell phone cover. Store at cell phone
Cell Ree Foster 4 after m. at $85.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
ITL
CSC
TOYOTA
TRIUMPH
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
PLANNING A TRIP??
Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!!
Let
0 Mass-The Malls-Hillcrest-KU Union
Maupintour travel service
Phone 843-121
SENIORS
Last chance to call for appointments for your 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURES. Call before MARCH 1st
摄影师
Hixon Studio
10 a.m. -
5 p.m.
Senior Pictures Must Be Tr
March 10th
Pictures Taken After This
Cannot Be Included
Phone 843-0330 for Appointmen
FOR RENT
University Terrace Apartments — furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $110 and up. 24-hour room service. Apt. 1, B- or call 843-1423 - 5
For rent—one or two bedroom apartments, with two bathrooms, all electric heating, air conditioning facilities. color T V.5 available. Call Hillsborough at Hillwick, Apt. 24th, and Baldwin at Baldwin, Apt. 10th.
Rockledge Village Apartments Limited
students can have two bedrooms furnished
with all utilities paid for $40.00 each. Call 4.00
866-531-2272.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. Availability of furnished or unfurnished -2 bedrooms, 1 bathrooms, pet-friendly, pelting,妒艺 or kitchen. West Hill Lawners. Call 24 hours a day 811-553-1076, Lawnrs. CALL 24 hours a day 811-553-1076, Lawnrs.
**Dribe House Apts—for the budget minded.** All the popular, featured features include a double bedroom in town, ER 1, and 2 bedrooms, and a third bedroom. For 149k for detail Coodarwood-1 and Glen Burnie-3.
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Right now, Ten two bed new and four new 1 bedroom apartments available. Aug 23rd to September 8th months availability at end of seventh week. www.carpentry.com, www.carpentry.com, www.carpentry.com, dwilhawne, central district, 842-798-5800, 842-798-5800 between 5:30 P.M. and 10:30 P.M.
A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS. Two TOO
WEATHER. Weather is too hot this spring!
Swim in our pool, else indoor living
is better. Weather is cooler.
You can afford $2 apartments.
You can afford $4 apartments.
FOR RENT OR FOR SALE Mobile
phone in good condition. 600 sq. ft.
room, dishwasher, dishwashers,
refrigerator, washer. Call 891-
615 to see $2,999.
APARTMENTS, ROOMS, HOUSES-
several available immediately. Lynch
Real Estate, 1216 La. L4; 831-1691. 843-
1014. 842-3132.
Need girl to share house $55.00
Utilities included. 842-5768 3-7
WANTED
Women's alterations. 20 years experience.
Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 3-7
Kansas City Press - John打印 from letter to posters, brochures to booklets and resumes. 710 Maa, in back Zircon Open on 10:30 a.m. 5:43 a.m. 842-4832.
We repair alliage Volkwagsen. We do it ourselves. We provide a general library immediately. We sell parts and buy WVs with the normal illnesses. Bugleh, 724-310, 724-310
One 15" J.B. Lanning D-130 speaker
New, used or blown-out Also, one
Alea Lanning 15" 421A Call 843-
2107 or 843-5865 3-7
Female roommate wanted. Call after
5 P.M. 842-5921. Share rent, furnished
apartment. 3-9
Red Baron
"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
ROOMMATE! Share apartment with one person (own bedroom) $1; block No. or campus $11. All bills paid $20 a month. 3-7 mon to 6-10 mon. Fri-Sun. Basketball 3-7
NURSERY SCHOOL vacancies for
two girls, one boy, ages 3-5. Call 842-
3459 or 843-7644
3-9
I need a ride to Lawrence from Kansas City Tuesday and Thursday of each week. Will pay Call Clindy, 818-561-8827
3-8
WANT TO BUY-USED FULL On
HALF GOLF SET CALL 843-6507.
.10
TYPING
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other mike types, email addresses and other forms Type Access and prompt type access. Req'd. Phone re-jected. Phone 843-9544. Mrs Wright.
Theses, term papers type accurately and promptly. IBM Selectric, your choice of style types. Also editing at rates. Florida. 842-479-9
842-560-360
Typing done on elite, electric typewriter. No Theses please. Prompt attention. 843-0958
Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses or dissertation
Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate
Call: 843-2811 Rex Mauckman
PERSONAL
Woodnok—spring is a time of renewal. 3-8
ONLY, GROOVY GROUVRWOBUSS
ONLY, GROOVY GROUVRWOBUSS
INTO A. DENUM CAVE FROM
EARTHSHIPINE OMOTTO 'A FLY
FROM EARTHSHIPINE EARTHSHIP
EAST 8th & Main
NEW OLD CLOTHES - A TIME REMEMBERED - THE TOUGHT REGAINED. EARTHSHINE - EAST 8TH AND MASS. 3-9
MISCELLANEOUS
SNIP, SNERDS, BLUE DIVELFS,
TURQUOISE TWIRDERS, AQUN BAN-
REN
ON MY WHAI TA TRIFLE OR
EARTHSHINE-EAST - EASY
& MASS
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale—Sizes 8-10, up to 75% off, Fall and spring fabric. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky
LOST
Book "American Constitutional Law"
Mon, Feb. 28, around 3:30 P.M. Welcome!
Please call Nailure Lause 1-913-3836
366 collect use Lause 9:19 P.M. Reward
- ARTIST CANVAS
- STRETCHER FRAMES
many in stock
—others on order
THE CONCORD SHOP
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., pts. - qts, only
25% OFF
RINNAN
Tiqune
842 2323
McCONNELL LBR. CO.
844 E. 13th St. 843-3877
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Emeritus Editor Place
**Finger Eating Plate**
Delicious Food and Supermarket Menu with Complete Menu. Sandweak Steamed, Shrimp, to K.C. Skeas. There are two options for comfort.
843.
8500
1. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Phone 843.1431 Open 4:30 Closed Mondays
Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 10, Sat. 11 noon
DISCOUNT
DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
---
928 Mass
6
Monday, March 6, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Students for McGovern To Canvass Two States
By JIM KENDELL
Kenan Staff Writer
At least ten students plan to
attend their spring vacations in
Illinois and Wisconsin working for
Sen. George McGowern, D-
Missouri.
Richard Crank, Junction City,
Tennessee, told旅客 that Illinois and Wisconsin,
said Sunday about 55 more people
have they might have crank. Crank's
response was "I'm sorry."
The students will try to build support for McGovern in the March 17 Illinois primary and the Anril 4. Wisconsin primary.
According to Lynn Knox, St. John's college campus coordinator of "Students for McGovenn," the entire trip will only cost the students about $10,000.
ALL MEALS will be provided in Illinois and half the meals will be provided in Wisconsin. Knox County may pay for the meals not provided.
She said the McGovern organization in Lawrence would pay for transportation to and from Iowa. The McGovern organizations in Illinois and Wisconsin will be looking in the home of supporters.
She said, "Our biggest problem at this moment is transportation. As of now we have none."
The organization will try to form car pools to take people to Illinois and Wisconsin Knox said it would be possible to rent buses and vans.
Most of the group's plans are tentative and depend on how much transportation is available and the number of volunteers
The group will leave the University of Kansas March 17 for Illinois. Knox is not sure where they will work in the state.
MARCH 18-20 they will do phone canvassing and make follow-up visits to interested students. Please contact the March 21 Illinois primary.
Honeycutt Trial Set for April 7
Dryure L. Honeycutt was bound over to district court after a hearing last Thursday in Douglas County Court.
Honeycutt is charged with the aggravated kidnapping and first degree murder of his cousin, Ivy Honeycutt on October 30,1971.
The trial will begin April 7.
"On election day we'll be taking people to the polls, babysitting and getting people out to vote." Knox said.
Then the group will probably move on to Wisconsin for three days. In Wisconsin they will return to KU March 24.
Knox is asking people to bring along their sleeping bags, razors, and clothes other than blue jeans. She said the Illinois and Michigan universities probably have plenty of pairs of scissors to cut long hair.
The Illinois primary is a two-
part content. In the first part Sen.
Eugene McCarthy faces former Minnesota Sen.
Eugene McCarthy in a non-
part content.
VOTERS WILL elect 160 delegates to the Democratic National Convention in the second part. Muskie and
McGovern have fielded slates of delegates in most of the state's 24 congressional districts.
Muskie has 104 delegates committed him McGovern 364. McGovern uncommitted delegates assembled by Chicago Mayor Richard Daley will probably win in Chicago's nine congressional seats.
Muskie is favored in the preference poll. He should win more delegates than McGovain, given recent reports, McGovain is guaging.
Wisconsin also has a two part primary. The state elects 67 delegates to the national convention.
Muskie is favored to win the preference poll. He also exerts a strong influence on the delegates. McGovern and Sen. Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn., will play against Muskie.
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KANSAN
82nd Year, No. 100
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Center Tries To Develop Complete Child
Tuesday, March 7, 1972
See Page 2
FRIEDRICH FRIEDRICH
Injustice Portraved in First Performace
The Festival of Arts started Monday night with Franz Kafka's play "The Prison It was performed by the Prison stage for the final act of injustice which needlessly
takes the life of the innocent. The festival will continue with performances by Herble Mann on Wednesday night and will begin Friday evening at 6:30 Saturday night. See Review on Page 6.
Gay Lib Appeal Delayed; ACLU Supports Kunstler
BY JOE ZANATTA
AND ROD HARDY
Kansas Staff Writer
Jack Klinknett, Lawrence counselor for the Gay Liberation Front, said Monday that the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver has asked that two items be submitted before the court can proceed with the front's appeal to be recognized.
Klinknett said the front must post a cost and file records of the appeal.
A resolution condemning Judge George Templar" denial Jan. 28 of court action against the Union's front's case was adopted Sunday by the Kansas affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union. The resolution was sent to the Union's bimonthly meeting in Emporia.
The front lost its first bid for recognition when Topeka District Court Judge George Templar ruled against their petition Feb. 10.
"First, the group has to post a cost bond," Klinken said. "This is to assure the court that the costs will be paid even if the front fails in its attempt to be
recognized by the University of Kansas.
Floyd Horowitz, chairman of the Lawrence chapter of the Civil Liberties Union, said Monday, that the judge's action to deny Kunstler recognition was a direct threat to the civil liberties guaranteed by the Constitution.
"Second, the group must file records of the appeal, which includes all documents accumulated during the trial and which should be kept in the case or whole, to support the front's case."
The purpose of the resolution, he explained, was to continue the challenge of Templar's ruling. Public response would depend on what would be done, Horowitz said.
According to the front's treasurer, a representative of the front will go before the Senate Events Committee Wednesday for discussion to charge admission to the dance.
In order to secure more legal funds, the front has arranged for a dance "in celebration of the First Amendment." The March 10 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Classified Salaries Boosted
$430 Million State Budget Passed, Moves to House
TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas Senate passed unanimously and sent to the House Monday its $430 million general appropriations bill, including an extra nearly half million dollars to provide funds for the state's institutions of higher learning.
The big money bill was the first of a large number the Senate planned to take votes on as it once again worked into early evening.
The Senate also concurred with the House in amendments to 10 Senate bills and forwarded them to Gov. Robert Docking for his consideration--after Sen. Glee Smith, president pro tem, had taken to the Senate floor to criticize the governor for his weekend attack on the Senate for working harder and accomplishing more.
SMITH SAID the Senate could justifiably resent the governor's comments, which he called "intemperate" and likely to hamper the legislature's work as it drives to wind up the 1972 session by Friday night.
Smith, said the Senate passed 114 pieces of legislation last week, worked 12 to 14 hours a day in committee work and in actual session and said "we are well on our
way to achieving a very positive record in this session." Smith said Docking should keep himself better appraised of what the legislature is doing.
Among the bills sent to Docking by the Senate Monday were ones which require every one riding a motorcycle to wear protective headgear regardless of age, increasing the fee for obtaining a duplicate driver's license from 50 cents to $1, and providing that anyone convicted of three serious driving offenses on three separate occasions within a 12-month period and whose license suspended shall receive a hearing.
THE SENATE RESET to concur in House amendments to six bills, including the Senate reappointment bill which includes Sen. Jack W. Robinson's the zone" concept for Sedgwick and Johnson to fill the Senate seat by Sen. Jack W. Robinson, R-Wichita.
The House on Saturday amended the Senate remap bill to rearrange the boundaries of three districts in Southeast Kansas—as desired by Rep. Bob Talkington, R-Iola, who is reported to be eveing a race for the Senate.
Sen. Tom R. Van Sickle, R-Fort Scott, who could be Talkington's opponent,
objected to the House amendments. Van Sickle and Robinson were named to the board of directors.
The reapportionment bill is believed to face a likely victory by Doing, even if the conference committee works out an amendment that would drop the two counties and a nearly 15 per cent population deviation among districts. Doing vetoed an earlier Senate vote.
THE SENATE'S big appropriations bill passed 35-0 after only one attempt to override it.
Seen, Wint Winter, R-Ottawa, tried to add $25,000 to pave the parking lot in front of the state prison at Lansing, which he built. "I'll have it," it taints and a dust blow when it's dry."17
Winter said paving the parking lot would represent a "gesture on our part that we have done to improve his pleas he fell on the ears of many senators who feel the state cannot afford to spend any more money than the budget now needs." But the attempt lost 15-11 on a standout vote.
The appropriations bill and a companion $550 million bill passed by the House last week will fund the fiscal 1973 budget, which will total about $990 million.
million in state general revenue fund money. It is $450,000 move what Gov. Mackenzie said.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee had increased the bill by $541,000 for higher education, most of it to provide salary increases for classified workers at five state colleges and universities which were established in the 1971 Legislature, cut the budget.
Only classified workers at Pittsburgh State College and the University of Kansas Medical Center got their scheduled pay raises last year, and the lack of the increases were a major factor in a walkout of workers at Kansas classified workers recently.
Smith said the raises would go mostly to custodial type workers, "some of the lowest paid workers at our state institutions."
THE SENATE bill includes expenditures next fiscal year of $250.75
GLEE SMITH said the money added by the Senate would provide 5 per cent merit increases for the classified workers for both this fiscal year and fiscal 1973. Smith said Docking had intentionally left out the raises for fiscal 1972.
Nixon, Muskie Lead In Early Vote Returns
The bill raises appropriations for Kansas State University by $262,478, the University of Kansas $84,892, Wichita State $30,883, Emporia State $22,354, Fort Hays State $16,554 and Pittsburgh State $629.
DIXVILLE NOTCH, N.H. (AP)—President Nikon took all 11 Republican votes cast at the tiny resort community of Dixville Notch, leading off the first balloting in the 1972 presidential primaries.
Five of the six Democratic voters went for Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota received one vote.
The voters gathered for a midnight town meeting in a hotel bar to start the voting in the first-in-the-nation New Hampshire originary.
in 1968, the community went 17 for Richardixon, then seeking his current term in the White House. The one to Lydon B. Johnson, the incumbent.
THE VOTING place Monday night was the 19th Hole, a bar in the Balsam's, a resort hotel that is the town's principal industry.
Dixville Notch, about 20 miles from the Canadian border in far northern New Hampshire near land once claimed by both Canada and the United States, has been cast as the first primary vote. A number of other hamlets also cast early morning votes.
All but two of the voters are employed by the hotel. The two nonemployees, Mr. and Mrs. Gorsky, are employed.
The 17 registered voters of the tiny resort community of Dixieville Notch cast their ballots in the 19th Hole bar shortly after midnight.
While New Hampshire voters prepared
cast their presidential primary ballots,
the candidates' campaigns took
over.
THE TOWN meeting opened with each voter at his own green cloth-covered table, marking his ballot. A fire blazed in a fireplace in the dark wood-named room.
KU Approves Plans, to Open Bids For New University Health Center
Later, the townfolk elected a selectman and the town clerk to conclude the session.
Plans have been approved for the new $3,650,000 building to house the University of Iowa School of Law Service, according to Keith Lawton, chancellor and director of facilities, planning and operations. Lawton will open this building be open for fall semester, 1973.
The two-story structure will contain approximately 80,000 square feet of floor space. The building is located on the school campus, southeast by Robinson Gymnasium and northeast of O-zone parking lot. The site of the new building is in a well-defined playing field for physical education and art programs.
The new facility is designed primarily to provide out-patient services for KU
The hospital ward occupies most of the second floor, which will have a minor surgery suite, psychiatric offices, a physical therapy department, central supply office and staff library. A partial building will provide storage space and mechanical equipment.
students, although it will also include a 34- bed ward for in-patient services.
The reinforced concrete building will be of contemporary design with an exterior finish of brick. Windows will be encased in the floor and walls. The building is provided for out-patient services,
The waiting areas, examining rooms, administration offices, x-ray department, laboratory, kitchen, pharmacy and emergency room will be on the first floor.
emergencies, staff and freight delivery. Three separate elevators are included for public passenger service, litter patients and freight.
A 25-cent parking lot for staff and emergencies will be constructed adjacent to the building. O-zone parking lot will provide space for ambulatory patients.
Revenue bonds supported by student fees will pay $3,400,000 of the cost of the new building. The remaining $250,000 will appropriations from state legislature从国家立法机关提取。
The building was designed by George Hampton and Associates of Wichita and Kenneth R. McLain, associate to the state architect.
Bids are opened April 6.
desperation tactics in a dispute over disclosure of campaign finances.
Muskie countered that it was he, not McGovern, who made the first financial disclosures and said, "I'm the one he has chosen to attack."
MUSKIE, THE front-running favorite, and McGovern are the leading entries in a race to be elected next year. Candidates and one write-in campaigner for Tuesday's Democratic primary. On the Republican side, President Nixon is expected to defeat easily his two main rivals.
Voting hours vary, with the polls closing as late as 8 p.m. EST.
IN THAT ONE, the polls indicate Nixon holds a massive lead over two challengers, Reps. Paul N. McCloskey of California and John M. Ashbrook of Ohio.
The other Democratic entries are Sen. Vance Hartke of Indiana; Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles; Edward T. Coll, a social worker from Hartford, Conn., and Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas, a write-in candidate.
Estimates of the Democratic turnout range from 60,000 to 70,000 votes in a contest that has overshadowed the presidential preference PUBBYH.
A poll commissioned by the Boston Globe, and completed Friday, rated Muskiex's Democratic strength at 42 per cent. A survey from a similar survey five weeks earlier.
WASHINGTON (AP)—Issuing the mast-draft call in five months, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird announced that the US would enter into the Army during April, May and June.
The call was the first since October when the Pentagon closed out 1971 with a 10,000 man quota spread over the final three months of the year.
15,000 Men to Be Drafted First Call Since October
No draft calls were issued during the first quarter of 1972 as Pentagon officials wanted to reduce the budget by a billion in new military pay increases generated enough volunteers to fill its manpower needs. Another factor was a congressional order to deploy 70,000 men (up from 65,000)
The administration is trying to achieve an all-vollunteer force by mid-1973. The Army slightly exceeded its 15,000-man altiltail and its tall altiltail by more than 3,000 in February.
"We're making progress," Laird told the winter meeting of the Veterans of Forces.
He said the draft was 300,000 in 1969,
200,000 in 1970, 98,000 last year, "and this
year we will reduce those calls to 50,000 or
less."
This will enable the Nixon administration to fill its military needs in an election year with the smallest draft since before the Korean War. The last time calls fell below 50,000 was in 1949 when 9,781 men were inducted.
Selective Service sources said it was likely that young men with lottery numbers 60 would be safe from the draft this year.
In his speech, Laird defended his new defense budget with its $6 billion increase in military spending. He called the United States held in intercontinental ballistic missile technology "could be rapidly if we do not maintain a strong research and development effort."
Laird said the Russian MRVs were not as advanced as the warheads already deployed by the United States which could be directed to widely separated targets.
The Soviet Union, the Secretary said, is "deploying at the present time multiple reentry vehicles, MRV warheads," on some of its ICBMs.
This had been indicated earlier by defense officials who now, elaborating on Laird's statement, estimate the Russians had 10,000 to 25,000 ICRMs and SSI JCRMs with triple warheads.
The defense chief said he was troubled by the difficulty military recruiters were having on some high school and college campuses.
"You either have to have Selective Service as your nanpower source or you have to have a volunteer program. To be able to serve in America, and we can't have that," he said.
THE MUSEUM OF AFTERNOON
Bids Open April 6 for the New Student Health Center
. . . Architect's drawing shows health center from the Southwest . . .
2
Tuesday, March 7, 1972
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
Child Peeks Out of His 'House' at Day Care Center Local law centers partnered with the aid of private funds.
Local day care center supported with the aid of federal funds
Faculty Senate Balloting Begins For University Council Posts
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Elections of faculty members to the University Council and Athletic Board are now taking place. Members of the Faculty Senate. Ballots are due in the Office's office by Monday, March 20.
The Faculty Senate consists of all the faculty members, the chairs, and senior deans, directors of divisions and several other departments. These senators are elected to the University Council and serve on the University Board.
Council members serve three-year terms which are staggered so that approximately one-third of the members must be elected
Law Review Includes Poor, Ecology Topics
The University of Kansas Law Review for winter, 1972, was released last week by the School of Law.
Comments in the winter edition concern "The Poor. Equal Protection and Public Housing" of New York City. Anssets of Flood Plain Zonnie "
This issue contains articles on "The Legal Status of Under-graduates in Secondary Schools," "Incompatibility: A 'New' Approach to the Dissolution of Marriage" and "Health and Kansas School Finance."
Dick Bernasek, Manhattan third-year law student and editor of the Review, said Thursday the Kansas Law Review, published by third-year honor students who, on the basis of their academic standing and demonstrated writing ability, were invited to compete for staff positions after first year in the School of Law.
He said faculty assistance was also provided.
This is the 20th year of the law school and contains critical and analytical articles written by practicing lawyers, scholars, judges and educators.
Discussions of developments in the law, in the form of comments and notes on current problems, are provided by second- and third students under the supervision of the student editorial staff.
The objective of the Review is to offer individualized training in the use of legal research techniques and analysis of authorities, critical and independent thought regarding legal problems and administrative tasks. The University of Kansas Law Review is distributed to most attorneys in Kansas, as well as law schools in the country.
each year. Outgoing members are ineligible for re-election for two years. There are 12 positions to be filled this year.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said each faculty member was three of his colleagues. Each nominee was asked if he would be averse to running and the names on the ballot are those that agreed with willingness to run, he said.
NICHOLS SAID there were fewer people running this year than last. Thirty-eight petitions compared to 49 last year, he said.
One person for whom a petition was received this year declined to be considered for the council, and James on the ballot, Nichols said.
If a particular school is not represented after the votes are tabulated, Nichols said, the student from that school would be elected in place of the nominee lowest in order on the original list, if the displacement does not result in the school not being represented.
The new University Council will meet for the first time April 6. The meeting was originally scheduled, but the date was changed to allow the Student Senate to elect the student members to the Council, Nichols said.
Campus Briefs
Budget request forms for student organizations and departments which seek money from the 1972-1973 student activity fee are available in the Student Senate treasurer's office in the Kansas Union basement.
Budget Request Forms
Organization funded this year will receive a copy of the form by mail. All requests are due March 17.
Music Therapy Play
The Music Therapy Club will present the play "Quiet Cries" at 7:30 p.m. tonight in 344 Haworth.
The development of a park system along the Kansas River north of Lawrence will be the topic of the Sierra Club meeting 7:30 today.
Sierra Club Meeting
The Sierra Club meets regularly the first Tuesday of every month.
Mechanical Engineers Talk
Dan Palmquist of Lawrence will present an outline of the proposal.
The American Society of Mechanical Engineers will sponsor R.G. Kogan, applications manager of United Computing System, in a lecture on "Computer Applications in Mechanical Engineering," 7 p.m. Wednesday in 309 Fowl Hall.
Guest Explores Day Care World
Ski Trip Openings
Six openings are still available on the SUA ski to Steamboat Springs, Colo. The $144.10 trip from March 18 to 25, includes six days of towns and seven nights lodging. More information, and contracts for the trip are available in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
Editor's Note: This is the second of a three-part series on child care and day care centers in Lawrence.
By MARTI STEWARI Kansan Staff Writer
The Community Children's
Center, Inc. is located on the
second floor of the Plymouth
Congregational Church. Walking
down the corridor, a visitor can
see children from behind
background doors.
Turning, the visitor discovers the owner of the voice, 5-year-old Aaron Horton, who has outstretched for a bug. Hug accomplished, she disappears
"Hi." pipes a small voice behind the visitor. "Who are you?"
"Jackie had a problem of being timid and back and backwards when she first came to the center," said Charline Fretag, a social worker relating to people better and showing her feelings more."
JACKIE IS 15 of 24 children who spend their days at the Head Start Program. The Head Start and financed mainly by a grant from the Department of Health, Education and Self-Defense has been operating since 1966.
All children enrolled at the center are from families who fail under the government poverty rate. A third family of four. All mothers who take their children there must be working or students. There is no problem.
Under the stipulations of the HEW grant, Frettag said, 20 percent of the financing for the church to be made to the community. The Plymouth Congregational Church donated the space, she said, and other "in kind" contributions take the form of non volunteer supplies and supplies.
"SOME PLACES in town are strictly baby-sitting, and a lot of people are doing day care without being licensed." Freitag said.
"Our workers are trained," she said. "We try to develop the child completely. We try to expose them to as many experiences as possible and to help them succeed in what they experience."
The center has two light, airy classrooms with 12 children in them. There are no windows by a teacher and a teacher's aide, so that unless there are volunteers in the classroom, a ratio of one teacher to six children is
The far corner of one classroom is a housekeeping corner. Here the children can sit and relate to others. Fretting said.
"You have to knock before you come in," said a little girl in the housekeeping area.
TWO SMALL BOYS sat in the block building area. They had constructed a low barrier between other eyes, eyeing each other over the ton.
"I'm not sure what they're building." Freitag said. "This activity is helpful in developing large and small motor skills."
One boy sat by himself on a child-sized bed in an area set off from the rest of the room. He was
After spending a year in Spain, she is working on her master's dissertation in the century Spanish sculptor. She received his master's degree in Italian at Mass.
Ms. Griddley McKim Smith has accepted the post of curator at the Museum of Science at the Museum. She was appointed last week by Frank Heller, Heller associate.
Spooner Gets New Curator Of Collections
Charles Eldredge, director of the art museum, said the position is a combination of both teaching and museum work. Smith's duties will include research, exhibition, organization andlication as well as the care and safe keeping of the art objects.
reading. The activity around him did not even make him look up from his book.
This was the quiet corner. This was the quiet corner. This was the quiet corner. This was the quiet corner.
Actually, it's just a list of names.
This was the quiet corner.
This was the quiet corner.
This was the quiet corner.
Campus Bulletin
Room. Kansas Union.
Website Interviews: 11 a.m., in Room
203.
Oklahoma University: 5 p.m. Walkins Room.
Humana Lecture Series Dinner: 6:30
p.m. English Room.
Baylor School of Dentistry: 8:30 p.m. Cutrens
The most active area in the room was the arts and crafts corner, where the children were working with play dough.
OCTOBER
Bedtime, Neb. Interviews: 10 a.m., Gread
Room, Fashion Union
THE MANIPULATIVE corner had attracted the interest of three children. A small girl, who was sitting on the lap of a staff member, was placing colored pegs in a pegboard. The other two were watched and occasionally offered assistance or advice.
Student Teachers: 12:30 p.m., Big Elg
Room.
Delke Sigma Pt: 3 p.m., Pine Brow
Wilson in LAW. Above Bacre C.
Law School: 12:30 p.m. Alcove C.
Student Teachers: 12:30 p.m., Big Eight
Room.
Western Civilization Education, 100th.
Curry Room.
History Advisory Committee: 1000.
Della Sigma Pt: 3 p.m., Pine Room.
Student Teachers: 3:30 p.m., Big Eight
Room, Parkers A, C.
Fretag said the children could also work puzzles or string beads here. She said these skills were useful to children when they started school.
Kansas Law Review: 6:30 p.m., Curry Room.
Sigua Tau: 6:30 p.m., International
Cafeteria.
Class Bureau Administration Luncheon:
"Sometimes those play dough cakes can look quite real." He declared he was going to eat his artwork. "Are you sure you want it?"
History Advisory Committee: noon.
Alcove A.
Women in Law: noon, Alcove B.
Law School: noon, Alcove C.
11:30 a.m. English Room
Western Civilization Luncheon: noon.
HE PAUSED with the cake halfway into his mouth, reconsidered and then grinned.
Iranian Students: 7 p.m., Oread Room.
International Club Committee: 7 p.m.
5054
UA Board: 7 p.m. Governors Room.
FWG: 3:40 p.m. Jacobs Room.
aishwav Room.
western-American Students. 7:30 p.m.
Residential Hall.
Room.
Dillon & Allen Committee: 7:30 p.m.
E. Room.
"I wasn't really going to eat it," he said.
SUA Chua Forum: 7:30 p.m., Forum
Room.
829.
Forum Room.
Baptist Student Union; 8:30 p.m., In
7 p. in., Government Room
IPC: 7:30 p. in., Jayhawk Room.
410 West 26th Street, New York, NY 10024
Fretag said the staff had planned field trips for the children to the zoo, museums and fire stations. The 5-year-old children may go two at a time to help you check out books, she said.
Baptist Student Union: 8:30 p.m. International Room.
Festival of the Arts-Hamantiales Lecture: 8
p.m., Hoch Auditorium.
"We did have an aquarium," she said, "but that met with a bad end. We were going to have some water from the teacher's cat ate them."
She said parents brought the
"MOTHERS are too tired to "read them at night and too tired to "play with them, so mothers normally do. The parents are not physically or financially able to give them comfort." Frieag said. "It isn't that they don't love their children. They bring them here because they need it."
Hazel Patten is one of three women in Lawrence who are licensed to provide day care. Her children play at the backyard of Lawrence, has a large backyard with swings, sandboxes, seesaws and slides. When the children play in the yard, they watch from window over her kitchen sink.
"MOST OF THESE children are only children. I try to make them self reliant. This also gives them the opportunity to play with other children," she said. "I don't care how many times they work out their own works."
Day care for children in a poor home provides many the same benefits as the large centers, but there are fewer children under the care of one.
Patten and her husband were formerly missionaries to the Congo, where he was a Christian education director at the First Christian Church in Lawrence. When Patten began teaching at St. James' College, all of his own children were in college.
children to the center because they knew the children would have experiences there that they would not have at home.
Day Care Financing Tied to State Grant
The allocated money for the subcommittee included $2,500 to match state funds, but if the allocation was not be met by the subcommittee, then Oldfather would not be able to approve the allocation, O'Neill
Numerous problems concerning the funding of a proposed day care center must be resolved before the $3,200 allocated by the Student Senate on March 1 to the Senate Day Care Subcommittee could be established in establishing the center.
Lucille Paden, social welfare lecturer and a member of the subcommittee, said Saturday the subcommittee might have some concerns about the funds. A number of requirements would have to be met, she said.
Bill O'Neill, Bailinw, Mo. junior and Senate treasurer, said Monday that allocation must first be based on the student's Oldfather, university attorney. The questions that Oldfather would have to consider, O'Neill said, would be whether or not the student should have appropriate student activity to be funded from the student activity fee and whether or not the money allocated could actually be used for purpose for which it was intended.
THE LAST FACTOR depends on the receipt of a state grant to the Day Care Subcommittee which will establish a center for the student.
Paden said the State Dept. of Social Welfare, to which he was supposed not accept money directly from the Senate, because it was university based. The allocated amount for an incorporated board, which would then submit a request for funds to the State Dept. of Social Welfare. Paden said
The day care center would have to be a community based center, Paden said. She said it could service the university, but it was not yet a university operated or run by any university department.
"The money I brought in beed with the expenses she then paid to buy the land the money as much, and I do this mainly to fulfill a need in the business."
THE STAFFING of the center would have to be non-university personnel or university personnel in a non-official capacity
The Day Care Subcommittee is working with Faith Spencer, who is a specialist in child care facilities in the division of child services of the State Department. Of his responsibilities, he has the application, Paden said.
PADENSAID any financial aid outside of the Student Senate would help the situation considerably.
No state funds will be available until July 1, when the new fiscal
Paden said an incorporated board had not yet been selected.
KANU Schedule Stereo 91.5 FM
KANU MARCH 7,1972
7:30 a.m. - Morning Show
8:15 p.m. - News and Sports
9:15 p.m. - None-Hour Concert
10:30 a.m. - News, Weather and Sports
10:45 a.m. - News, Weather and Sports
10:50 a.m. - News, Weather and Sports
10:60 a.m. - This Afternoon
11:00 a.m. - News, Weather and Sports
12:00 p.m. - News, Weather and Sports
13
year begins, Paden said. All funds earmarked for day care have already been spent, she said.
O'Neill said if the Senate allocation could not be approved, the Senate might ask the Republican to a private and independent association, to pledge the $2,500 to match the state funds. The Senate would then subsidize an institution's association university project.
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Patten said she tried to make the children feel at home. She does not have set exercises for them.
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The four children had come in from the yard and said they were hungry for lunch.
"It becomes a frustrating experience for them and for me if they have to draw a picture or make something. Children get programmed soon enough at kindergarten and school," she
"ALL RIGHT," said Pattern.
"Lunch is ready. Hang up your
coats. Now, Stephanie, you know what you're supposed to do with your coat."
Stephanie, 4, who had dropped her coat on the floor, and the closet to hand it on one of the low pegs, which were installed for the children' s room.
"How about your ABCs?" Patten said.
Lunch completed, the children began to prepare for their naps. Stephanie and Bret, 4, wanted to sing.
"Sometimes parents aren't very considerate about leaving children here," Paten said as she held her hands up to her children. "I once had a child whose mother would that child would be here long after all the others had gone. The parents would not call and would not show up until 8 or 9."
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They sang an accurate, if somewhat subdued, version of the poem "I'm a Little Teapot." Just as the teapot was to be poured by Stephanie, she would surround the corner, leaving Stephanie to finish by herself
8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 7, 1972
3
Critics Doubt School District Unification
opped it sing it which rens'
By RON WOMBLE
Kansan Staff Writer
Since the turn of the century the over 8,000 small school districts in Kansas have been combined to form larger districts. Much of this unification came about because of a controversial 1963 state law which sets minimum size requirements for all state school districts.
Unification was not easy for many voters to accept and some districts were forced to unify the vote of the voters in those districts.
Advocates of school unification claimed it would be more economical and better for quality of education. An improvement in the quality of education was the primary advantage to C. Taylor Whitler, Kansas Commissioner of Education, but "unification was sold" on the
WHITTIER ADMITTED there
was "no good measure" of the quality of an education and "some districts didn't develop enough districts to be more economical."
Some people involved in education on a local level claim unification has proved to be ineffective. It is also responsible for better education
Three unified school districts (USD) in Ossage County, USD 458 USD 434 and USD 421 have had their students experiences under the new system.
Unification did not bring any drastic changes to USD 458. One of the three attendance centers used but two were maintained.
The KU-Y was schulted to begin an investigation into the conflict between the Rock Chak Revue staff and McColm Hall residents today, in a meeting of McColum representatives.
BOTH KU-Y and Andy Buky, Kansas City, Kan., senior and director of the revue, had given approval to the McCollum skit skirt worn by the skit skirt was performed during dress rehearsal Thursday, several people complained about its content, and the problem was eventually taken to the studio where the skirt was eliminated.
She said the content was much worse than the other skits.
Beyck John, Mt. Prospect, Ill.
junior band member and a member of Alpha Gamma Delta sorority, was one of the first to attend Buckley College where she went to Bucky because the skit "really amazed me."
Stressing the importance of independent groups' future participation in the program, Bachman said he thought the meetings were necessary to problems with future shows.
Paul Bachman, KU-Y program director, said Monday that bad feelings towards the production staff were held by KU-Y and McCollum residents after the release was eliminated from the revue.
Ronald E. Meyer, USD 458 Superintendent, complained that unification had increased the number of employees in office and had created an extra job. He said a principal was still required at each of the attendance centers. The center's position had been created for the new unified
"THE IDEAS behind Rock Chalk are good, but if this had been a movie, it would have been rated X." Hess said Monday.
KU-Y, McCollum to Seek Solutions to Revue Problems
Rick Hess, Omaha, Neb., sent a memo to complaind Thursday about the skit, on the grounds that it was offensive. He felt that the skit should be removed.
David Mannering, Smith Center senior and director of the skirt department, generally satisfied with the decision to drop the act. He said that morale of skirt participants was affected by what presented by what he termed a "hostile production staff," and had a relief not having to perform.
"ROCK CHALK needs to be changed. It should go either completely clean or completely smutty." Manning said.
He said the act would have had a bad effect on children who were learning to speak, Hess also said that while some of the material used in other skits might have been questionable, he said they tasted, to avoid being offensive.
He said the problems McColum had experienced might stir interest within other groups. He said they might become more
BY JEANNE ELLIOTT Kenyan Staff Welter
Stadel said the people in the three old school districts "voted
George Pangburn, Elram,
proud graduate student and
student of the college.
Monday that he didn't find
the skat at all objectionable. He had
seen the skit with the hall's
weekend week and that week
and they agreed to go shopping.
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Wisconsin Department of Revenue: B.S Business Accounting major.
"UNIFICATION HAS RAISED the cost of education sub-
subjects in the claim, without improvment, and
education. He also cited increased paperwork and a new position as big cost increase."
THE NEW DISTRICT could prove to be more economical, according to Meyer, because the smallest attendance center (12 students) had been closed. He pointed out, however, the influence of burgeoning paperwork and extra administrative salary.
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Meyer said he did not "favor nor disfurber unification," but he did not hink the unified district of New York was more educated than the old districts.
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Manninger attributed most of the problems to a communication gap between his staff and Bakufu's production staff.
Steve Orcutt, Kansas City
Kan., senior and McCollum
resident, said Monday that he
believes the act should have been
formed. The committee already
been given approval by both KU-Y and Bukaty,
and because one had the right to
impose morality on anyone's
behavior.
Orcut said the band members were the ones who "should have taken the heat" if they refused to eat, because they had a coworker.
"THE ACT wasn't any worse than it was," he said, "although we didn't have any music to break up what might be termed 'blue' in some places."
Another complaint Orcutt had was the announcement of the Judiciary's decision Friday in a case against Bukaty for Orcutt, Bukaty talked with Claire Gillespie, a reporter, Friday morning and told that the skirt had been eliminated. At the time, the Judiciary had not yet met.
BACHIMAN ALSO questioned Bukaty's conflict. He said Bukaty's testimony. Friday relected Bukaty's history of resentment of her husband.
The state Department of Education has forced unification on us. "Stadel said, 'They have a dictatorship going for them.'"
USD 434 resulted from the unification and consolidation of a small community with high schools in community high schools were closed and a new facility was opened.
Stadel said he thought the people in rural districts shared his opinions on unification.
overwhelmingly not to unify' but wore forced to do so by the state.
THE PEOPLE to be affected by the creation of USD 484 awarded to the university for unification plan was finally instituted without voter approval
Bukaty said he was very tired of the whole matter and he thought it had been given too much publicity.
Although initially he had not wanted the McColum skit presented by him, said he did wish the KUY's weeks ago in approving the skit.
Bukaty said his objections to the skirt it were that it didn't contain enough substance and that it bordered on trash.
He said Monday that the type of audience that was present would be pressured by the skit. He pointed to the woman's mother's weekend for several sororites, and that the woman not have been appropriate.
Lynn Schornick, Yates Center, senior and band director, agreed with Bukaty. How did the skit was "on the raw side."
Thomas D. Hottchiks,
Science Teacher at High
School, said "consolation
was the only answer" for
that area but for areas it may
use more effectively.
Matti F. Brodsky, Wilmette, Isonphore and KU-Y member, participate in meetings this week KU-Y could re-evaluate their position as sponsor, continue to study the task force report, and come up with some ways to avoid any issues of this year's problems.
Another scheme, presented by Craig Patton, provided for an opportunity to connect with a community. This community relations scheme, he said, would invite the Lawrence community members to engage in culture, it would also offer a variety of living arrangements and study areas.
However, Schornick had the decision to pull the skit at that late date was not fair, but, "fairness had nothing to do with it."
KOZENY the public would have ready access to those areas without penetrating the walls of classrooms students. This, Kozeny said, would show an acceptance of the Lawren community while still maintaining the high standards.
A task force report last year indicated a need for independent support in the revue.
THE PROXIMITY group was the third scheme, presented by Bob Wilch. Tecumseh fifth-year architecture student. This plan is designed to have students housed in one large, complex building. An arrangement of this sort, Wilch said, would encourage interaction of all activities and resources in the classroom.
Architecture Students Present Haskell Plans
The second separation would be an area of transformation where the student could relax, eat, or play pool separate from a academic environment as well as special life at his dorm. Koyen said.
One of the architectural schemes, presented by Jeff Kozeny, Lawrence fifth-year architect at the Haskell students two points of separation. A kind of "psychological wall," according to Kozeny, would be formed by an array of windows in front of "community edge." This edge would be the first area visitors would approach and it would lead them into the building, the stadium, the field house, historical information buildings and other things in the community might be interested.
Three architectural schemes to involve Haskell Indian Junior College students in both their experiences presented to the Haskell students by the University of Kansas fifth-year architecture students
HASELL WILL be receiving a $1.5 billion government accommodation expected growth in enrollment from an approximate 1,100 to 1,300 students.
By WENDIE ELLIOTT
Kansas Stoll Writer
Curriculum at the three small high schools had been very limited but Santa Fe Trail's "program is much better" ac-
According to James Harley, assistant professor of architecture at the press of work began in November 1970 by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). During this period, Harley said, he was compelled to chart the charrer at Haskell to determine the needs of the campus. The students and the faculty of the university structure were then invited to assist.
The three architectural buildings Haskell student body after months of intensive studies done by 12 fifth-year KU architecture
THE ARCHITECTURE students presented their ideas to the Haskell students through slides, using slides, maps and drawings.
This plan, according to Wilch, would allow for other innovations such as shopping centers, making Haskell totally independent of the
The study will end just before the project ends, so they then would turn their findings over the the BIA who would hire planners to construct a new city.
OFFICIALS AT all of the schools placed some of the blame for the lack of vote approval of unification on "sentimental ation."
The study of Haskell was the only project of the 12 fifth-year students. Now each of the 12 will be taught in one of the schemes and complete its design.
Hotchkiss said the students from the three former districts (athletic rinks in the past) have been very well to the new situation
Harley said he hoped one of their plans would be incorporated by the BIA.
Walquist thought much of the opposition to unification was based on tradition and the ability to identify with the local school.
"IF IT HAD been up to the students from the start we would have consolidated much earlier." Parents of parents who wouldn't adjust"
Stadel said part of the reluctance of the voters to change involved identification with high school athletics and "community
Unification did not save USD 434 any money. Hotchkiss said, but quality education "outweighs the cost."
"When you take the school away from the town and put it out there, well, it's not the same school." he said.
He also said he did not think the educational services of the district could be provided much more cheaply.
Earl Rowe, Jr. USD 434 School Board, member said he saw "no great increase" in the quality of students as a result of the creation of USD 434
The people in the district "have accepted (consolidation) pretty well," according to Rowe. He agrees, however, that if the state had not required it, unification would have come about in that area.
USD 421 escaped many of the problems of controversy that other districts encountered not only because it was unified "mostly within itself" but occurred because the old district was almost large enough to meet state standards and no other high state was unified with the existing one.
HARVEY WALIST, USD School Board Chairman, the first time she was "just beautiful" because we didn't have to unify with we didn't have to unify
Another reason for the lack of voter support for unification may have been local autonomy.
"I don't think unification has some quite like they thought it would. I don't think they plained that unification had created "animosity between people."
Walquist conceded that many facilities "were uneconomical and defended the value of 'smaller' schools. He said a small school promoted better relations between teachers, teachers and community
"The voters don't like the people in Topeka telling them (they must unify)." said Hot-education. "Education is a local problem."
Some of the reasons the voters had may have been unfounded, according to Education Commissioner Whittier. He said many people believed "if you take the chance out of our town it'll go dead."
The voters in the districts expressed a wide range of opinions on unification. Although many seem to be in the process of making their decisions, the voters have yet to express strong popular support for unification. Stadel said people had "learned to live with"
Harrisburg 8's Glick to Talk
"We have no choice but to live with it," he said.
Ted Glick, one of the Harrisburg Eight, is scheduled to speak at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas University building, being sponsored by the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center.
On April 30, 1971, Glick and seven others, including Father Philip Berrigan, were indicted by the Washington district attorney for harrassing Harrisonburg, Pa., for conspiracy to kidnap Henry Kissinger, to blow up parts of the Washington, D.C. airport, to destroy property of the federal government and the Selective Service system. Glick's seven co-attorneys in the case being tried at Harrisonburg.
Glick will be tried at a later date because he has decided to act as his own attorney. Judge R.
Students Asked To Help Solve Noise Problem
Paul Haack, associate professor at the university said recently that noise pollution was a more subtle and pervasive environmental problem than air pollution.
Haack said people were not aware of sound pollution because society was visually oriented.
Students who are studying industrial problems, design or architecture and are aware of acoustical principles and use this knowledge in their work after graduation to help them overcome the noise problem. Haack said.
"Do consider others," Haack said, "when you go to put on that new mufter so that your bike does not get consideration of others is the key."
Haack said students should support a bill pending in the U.S. Senate which would impose sound level guidelines in the state, and that students could support the bill by writing to their congressman.
The Environmental Clearing House needs students to help find out why noise pollution in this area, Rivian Bli, president of the house.
We must despel the theory that noise means progress. This is because a theory that would prevent action toward solving the noise pollution problem
The Clearing House would like to distribute information concerning the problem, Bell said.
SUA Forum FOCUS ON CHINA Lecture by C. C. Huang on Literature of the People's Republic
Dixon Herman said he didn't want a possible lack of legal knowledge on Glick's part to harm the other defendants.
Tonight at 7:30 in the Forum Room Kansas Union
Glick has openly opposed the Vietnam War since 1969. In May of that year, he returned his draft card to his local draft board, giving him up his 2-5 deferment, and was immediately reclassified 1
Prof to Study Heart Tissue
In September 1969, he was called to Lancaster, Pa. for induction He went, but resumed his job as a draft information center in Lancaster and brought other resisters to the city to speak.
From December 1970 until May 1971, Glick was in the Ashland Federal Prison in Kentucky.
In September 1970, Glick was arrested in Rochester, N. Y., as a member of the Flower City Conspiracy. He and others were charged with destruction of Selective Service records and that they were tried and convicted.
Dr. Robert L. Reis, professor of surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center have been awarded $50,022 for a two-year grant.
The Department of Health, Education and Welfare made the funds available through the National Heart and Lung Foundation's Tissue' study, "Development of Tissue—Hearl Valve Prosthesis."
The National Institute of Health has announced six other grants totaling approximately $330,000 for the Medical Center.
Grants were given for research on microbiology and biochemistry and for new research in otorhinolaryngology, the study of the diseases of the ear.
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) - Fifty-two persons, most of them women, were injured in a car crash behind a big movie theater and rocked central Belfast. Minutes later, another blast wrecked a
The members of the Harrisburg Eight were arraigned on May 25, 1971. At that time, Glick denied that he had ever accused him of invading "in a conspiracy to kidnap or to bomb anything."
"the beliefs and principles which I hold, and for which I am in jail," he said, "do not allow me to take such actions."
Woman Sought to Head Affirmative Action Office
should contact them before the committee's first meeting. March 15.
The creation of a seven-member search committee to recommend candidates for the director of the Office of Academic Activity was announced by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers J. Monday
Marilyn Stokstad, professor of history and chairman of the department of education at Monday that anyone who might be interested in being the Affirmative Action Chair
"We're interested in women who have a strong academic background. We would like the teacher toachlor's degree." Noikstad said.
She said that applicants should be connected with the University in some way, such as a faculty member or a graduate student.
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There is a NEED and a PLACE for all interested.
For More Information Call
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OPPORTUNITIES FOR ACTIVE INVOLVEMENT IN THE 1972-1973 K.U. COMMISSION
Applications are now available in the Dean of Women's Office, 222 Strong, and all organized housing. Applications are due March 10, at 5 p.m. in 222 Strong.
Positions Available
COUPON
ZIP DISCOUNT DRUGE CENTER 124 MASSACHUSETTS
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Open 9:00-7:00
Thurs. 9:00-9:00
Sun. 10:00-6:00
Mini-pads or Maxi-pads
Box of 10
Manufacturers Suggested
Price $3c
Sale 33¢
You must present
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Good thru March 12
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Open 9:00-7:00
Thurs. 9:00-9:00
Sun. 10:00-6:00
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Manufacturer's Suggested
Price $3.00
Sale $2.19
You must present
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Good thru March 12
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Open 9:00-7:00
Thurs. 9:00-9:00
Sun. 10:00-6:00
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Manufacturer's Suggested
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Sale 33¢
You must present
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Good thru March 12
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Open 9:00-7:00
Thurs. 9:00-9:00
Sun. 10:00-6:00
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flavored or unflavored
Manufacturer's Suggested
Price 49c
Sale 29¢
You must present
coupon with purchase
Good thru March 12
COUPON
Stuart Hall
Note Book Paper
Open 9:00-7:00
Thurs. 9:00-9:00
Sun. 10:00-6:00
100 sheets
Manufacturer's Suggested
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4
Tuesday. March 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
BUSING ISSUE
CHUCK HAUNDEY
"And remember the cute little stories in the textbooks about me. The Happy Yellow School Bus?"
Dole's Ploy Fails
Kansas' Junior Senator, Bob Dole, captured headlines again last week as he tried unsuccessfully to secure passage of a strict antibusing amendment to the omnibus higher education act.
Last Wednesday Dole almost pulled off a slick maneuver that would have attached the "Griffin amendment" on busing to the education act. This amendment directly challenges the authority of the courts to order busing to achieve federal standards for authorities from withholding educational funds as a means of pressuring school districts into busing.
The Griffin amendment had been passed earlier when many Democratic senators that oppose the measure were absent on presidential campaigns in Florida and New Hampshire. However, the amendments remain valid when the presidential aspirants returned to the Senate.
Dole introduced the bill again late in the day in the hope that the opposition had again dwindled. As Dole proposed the amendment, Vice-President Agnew slipped into the chair, probably to break an expected vote. It was clear that the antibusing amendment was attached to the education bill.
Dole's plan was foiled, however,
as the opposition had not disappeared. The amendment lost, 48 to
47.
Done has always styled himself a liberal on civil rights issues. His action in support of the Griffin amendment clearly contradicts those claims. For no matter how unsatisfactory busing may be, the fact remains that until neighborhoods integrate, some transportation of students is going to be necessary if schools are to be integrated.
The whole situation smacks of little more than out-and-out politicking. If the Senate were sincere in its desire to integrate America's schools, antibusing legislation would not even have been considered. The courts have not come by their decisions to order busing lightly. It is simply the only way schools can be integrated as long as neighborhoods are segregated. Politicians with the same social science realize that busing is inapparent, and have sought to capitalize on that fact with antibusing legislation.
Consequently, it looks as if America is on the verge of taking a giant step backward in the struggle to comply with the constitution and provide integrated education for her youth.
Fortunately, however, the Griffin amendment failed, and was replaced by the less stringent (but still undesirable) Scott-Mansfield amendment. Also, the bill is now in a House and Senate conference committee, and is yet to be fully approved.
Kansans would do well to write to their senators, imploring Dole to reconsider his stand and praising the president for opposing the antibusing measure.
The battle for equal educational opportunities started in Kansas with Brown vs. the Topeka Board of Education. It would be sad indeed if we were given credit for reversing the progress that has been made since then.
Hopefully, all American citizens who believe in the Constitution and the necessity of equal educational opportunities for all of America's children will make every effort to be a proponent of basing amendments do not succeed.
—Mike Moffet Associate Editor
Bernard L. Hale
The curtain rises on a dimmed scene, depicting the upper story of a dwelling house. Stairs led up to an ominous black opening into the atic. At times a child emerges from that opening, stunned and in disbelief, able to say what has happened to him.
Tragedy Played Too Real
At first these reverents seem to be children of the motherly woman who receives and comforts them, trying to be children of their own darkness. But soon the number of returning children rules that out. The children are here by some other than them.
After a while, enough children emerge from shock to mourn together in corners and try to cope with their fear. From these disjointed contemptions, we find ourselves drawn to the woman, it becomes clear there are many children left up in the attic.
1. don't know," the woman answers, honestly. "They were sent up before I came here."
"Why?" the children finally get up their nerve to ask.
"Why don't you bring them down?" one of the bolder boys says.
Visibly getting up her nerve, she goes toward the attic stairs, and disappears up them. After a while she returns, bringing a flock of children with her.
"We'll try."
There is a happy mulling scene that only gradually turns sour, as some people do not find their friends in the crowd and want to help. Why all the children were not brought down. The woman answers: "I thought it a matter of honor that we not show ourselves licked by whatever it is up to. I left some to show we are not afraid."
"But we are afraid," they chorus. "Bring them back!"
"I don't know why you are complaining," the woman continues. "I did not take them up there. I am bringing them down."
"But not all of them."
"I can't even be sure if the ones I saw were all of them. Some may be captives
of whatever power reigns up there, left some of those I saw, in case some unknown ones make their way out—so they wouldn't feel deserted."
"Don't you think the ones you left feel deserted? Besides, what can they do, if others reach them, that the others could not do on their own?"
"You don't understand the true horror of the enemy up there."
"But I thought you said we have to show we're not afraid of it?"
"Why is that?"
"Anything else would be a bug-out."
"What's the matter with that?"
"That is not because it lacks fearfulness. The more fearful it is, the less fear we should show."
At this the woman started hitting out in all directions, hurting the very ominous she had comforted before "You or radicals." "Or radio-licits." And at her own mention of that word, even more fearsome than the threat from the darkness above, she went hysterical, and shot four of the children in her care.
"We're not a great people. We're just people."
Guest Column
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
Action or Intellectual Morass?
By PATK. MALONE
BY PATR. MALO
Guest Columnist
The world of books is a nice, safe, unchuttered world. It is populated by ideas, thoughts and intrudes, who rarely intehrude.
In ostensibly preparing ourselves for society, we more often retreat into intellectualism. We avoid for as long as we can the encounter with, in James Joyce's words, "the reality of experience."
The University of Kansas is, for the most part, immersed in that world. Students, especially in the liberal arts college and the graduate school, read books purportedly about society and people, and go to class and talk about those books. We perceive as a cloistered university environment—through the opaque covers of books and scholarly magazines.
We are overeducating ourselves. We get our B.S.'s, and then we must get our M.S.'s, and then, of course, our Ph.D.'s. Graduate schools all over the world teach students burrowing their heads into the world of books. And when they get the last obtainable degree, they find that our society does not meet their knowledge; it needs to be taught to them. Ph.D.'s. But we get our bachelor's degrees, and, not knowing what we want next (or, often, knowing that we want to go for as long as possible the great leagues), we go to graduate school.
Our society, for the past twenty years or more, has shown a crying need for social change, a need to reevaluate our intents and values that make truly meaningful the words freedom, justice and equality.
Students of the '60s responded not at all; they retreated into unconsciousness. In the '60's we responded, we reacted, but too much was happening in our actions; it was a period of social activism but also on an intellectually subconscious level Our thoughts were there about what we did not like and what often than not, our thoughts about what we really wanted instead were wague and only hastily felt.
Now in the 70s, our voices have quieted, and some of us (but far too few) are working for positive social change. But many of us now are retreating in a different direction, into intellectual discourse, and we can in our university on a hill. We and we discuss, and we discuss.
"Think as men of action, and act as men of thought." This was the advice given our generation
by Max Lerner Brandeis
University professor of American
Civilization at the Robert F.
Kempner Symposium
at UMKC recently.
Lerner put it well. In the '60s, we acted too often as men of thought, too often as men of thought. There is a middle point of real social consciousness and social acclimatization seem to be skipping over it.
Readers Respond
As our society crumbles around us, we study it, read about it, and analyze it. We analyze everything it does, the nothing it does, we be labels "the generation of thinkers?" For our own sake, I pray not.
Ombudsman
To the Editor:
Kampus Kops; To Larry; Kids
Primarily in response to a recent "comment" in the Kansan office of the purposes and scope of this office, we issue this statement as the official position of the Omaha Office at the University of Kansas.
1. This office is under an ethical duty to accept any complaint brought by any student or staff member at this university.
gation to the person or group seeking his services.
2. If, after careful consideration, this office feels that the particular complaint is not one that would lend itself to a mediatory effort, then it is the duty of the Ombudsman receiving the complaint through with whatever action the office as a whole decides on.
Dave Dysart
Wichita Third-Year Law Student
For the Ombudsman's Office
1. The Ombudsman, as law students, are under a moral, ethical and professional duty to obey the law. It is under the same charge when it comes to enforcing them by accepting a complaint pertaining to a violation of such laws. This is why every lawyer by his profession.
5. The fact that a particular Ombudsa man acts as counsel for a student does in no way mean that the Ombudsa man is himself or merely a counselor, one way or the other—he is simply fulfilling his professional obli-
★★★
Larry
4. If those laws are thought to be vague, unjust or oppressive, then they must be strenken on or changed—not broken and ignored. If one chooses to change the law, it is not accepted. It accepts the consequences. If one disagrees with this, he disagrees with the Constitution of the U.S.
To the Editor:
An Open Letter to the Chan cellor:
It is baffling to me that you could somehow see yourself fit to deliver a speech to the American school in Chicago this March 5 entitled, "Achieving Equity for Women." As administrator on whose campus this month she scant progress in "achieving equity for women," it is doubly ironic that you are chairman of the Committee on the Status of Women and that you committed yourself on Nov. 17, 1971, to appoint an Affirmative Action Committee by Jan. 1, 1972, amount of time. It was obviously only after the action of the February Sisters coupled with additional committee work in light of the gross sex-based inequities turned up by the study of faculty salaries. Paralleling the administrative hierarchy it needs, the committee positions to be saturated by males with systematically higher salaries for men compared to females filling the same positions.
Your concern for the status of women strikes me as being mere lice service offered to placate the women of KU in an effort to sidestangle tangible action. Yet you will never see the progress of achieving equity for women even as you have been a prime example of bureaucratic foot dragging. Hopefully from a man pushed to progress you will find that your efforts would belf his roles within the AAHE as well as the University.
Ann G. Francke
Ann G. Francis
Prairie Village Sophomore
Day Care
o the Editor
I am not a February sister but I have been working on the company for over 25 years and baby-sitting cooperative for women's education and family "children".
There are several day-care centers in operation in Lawrence, where there are more than 20 children. These centers normally charge between $15 and $25 a week for care of 3 to 5 children, and a toddler's center, run with funders' funds and staffed by only one child. These full now with waiting lists, but the infant care center charges $25 a week for its servic
On a national level 1 in 10 mothers is listed head of household. One in three of these fami- lies have children. There are women I know personally who are not students now that they cannot afford baby-sitting care; one woman on the Uti- linary team; one on the low salary her low salary on day care. I am
sure there are other women in this position at the University, but in fact, no University office or department has been concerned about finding out who of faculty, children, and students have children, or how they are
In my meetings with the Student Senate and its committees no one has doubled the need, now, two years after the zero months to 5 years. A cooperative organization in which parents shared responsibility for all children and for the center would be better. It would demonstrate that when a community problem arose like this one, people of different ideas, political persuasions, sexes and ages could work together to solve the problem.
I believe this emergency cooperative babysitting center could be established in our school with a lot of hard work and a minimum of money we could meet this problem head on. Thank you for reading this
Judy Castle Special Student
Kops
May I comment the Kanan for the excellent editorial (Tom Slaughter, Feb. 28) on the ineptness and corruption of our Traffic and Security Division. If assaults have been rapidly increased in recent years then why haven't they made an honest and concerted effort to
To the Editor
The campus police would rather launch an all-out campaign to frustrate students with tickets generated by the university, which in turn generates revenue for the university, which in turn generates revenue for the expense of the student's fees. Students also receive tickets like Green Stamps for the most miniscule and petty excuses ever invented, while forming their own bills to pay their real responsibilities. By fingering the blame for campus violence on non-students, they exploit the obligation to combat it.
By Sokoloff
The issue in question is one of priorities. Which is a greater crime, parking one's car on an unauthorized improper sticker or by stealing a 10-year-old girl near the Campanile, which actually occurred a year ago, to protect the Security Division's sense of priority is so corrupted that miking the students' wallets is more dangerous than protection to all people on campus at all times, then radical reform of parking laws coupled with a shake-up of personnel in the health safety thing for all concerned. It's about time to end the highway robbery of the students, and not just the police, should security. As it stands now we should call our police police, the Bureau of Extrusion, Apathy and dishonor, but also fitting add but also rather fitting.
combat them? Why? Because there just isn't any room.
Griff and the Unicorn
Carl Horowitz
Lawrence sophomore
REALLY?
EALLY?
WHAT'S GOING ON HERE?
I TOLD DAISY THAT SHE REMINDS ME OF LIZA MINNELLI
I TOLD DAISY
THAT SHE
REMINDS ME OF
LIZA MINNELLI
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 7, 1972
5
KU Falls in 2 Overtimes
The University of Kansas basketball team lost its 12th consecutive game on the road to Oklahoma in Norman, but the Jayhawks went down with as much resistance as they will put up all season.
Oklahoma won, 84-82, but it took two overtimes to do it. The Jayhawks struggled back from a loss in the second half to force the extra periods.
The Jayhawks didn't win a game outside Allen Field House all year. KU closed the season with an 11-15 record, 7-7 in the Big Eight. Even so Coach Ted Dews nothing but praise for his team.
"I immensely proud of our team," he said. "The locker room after the game. 'A队 with less character could have taken the easy way."
KU REFUSED to give up
Trailing by 10 points with nearly
seven minutes left in the game,
to allow to withdrew with 1:31
to play.
There, however, scoring ace
there. Stallworth fouled out. He
scored 76-74, then was called for
charging Oklahoma's Scott
Martin missed his free throw, and Fred Bossevile tied the score with 23 points in scoring a follow shot. Bossevile then reflected "Okahoma's a bit tough" in his opening Oklahoma's Ted Evans and went for 28 to KU had the ball with 28.
Oklahoma's John Yule blocked
K-State, MU Might Settle Big 8 Race
For Missouri, 9-3, this is it. The Tigers must win or the conference race is over.
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) —The battle lines are drawn for Tuesday night's Big Eight Conference basketball game of the year between front-running state and second-place Missouri;
Kansas State, with a lo record, could lose and still win the title.
After Tuesday night's brawl—and a lot of people think it will be over, but that's not likely—have one game remaining on Saturday. Kansas State plays at home against fourth place Oklahoma third place Oklahoma here.
Both teams will go into the contest, to be played before an announcement of the victories last Saturday. Kansas State, in fact, has a seven-game lead.
Missouri downed Nebraska last weekend. The Wildcats knocked off Colorado.
Bosilevac's last shot, and the game went into overtime.
NEITHER TEAM scored during the first extra period. KU controlled the tip, then stalled and then struck the five of the five-minute overtime.
THIS TIME, Oklahoma controlled the tip; but turned the ball over when Martin missed a shot. And mask grabbed the rebound.
"We were without Bud, so we two big men (Randy Canfield and Joe) get the tip." Owens explained. "You don't have that war. We don't have an defense big men, so we told them to hold the ball. It worker very well knew how to handle it."
Aubrey Nash was trapped on the baseline with 50 seconds left, and Andrew Pettes picked off his outlet pass to Randy Canfield. Oklahoma's Martin missed a pass and went into a second overtime.
In the ensuing trip downcourt, Tom Kivisto, who had directed the four-minute stall of the first overtime, was called for
The other three teams in the tournament were Kansas State
SM North Star Signs With KU
Freshman basketball coach Bob Frederick took a bit of a risk Monday night in the University of Oklahoma's freshmen gym at Oklahoma's freshmen in Norman. Frederick's KU squad have to take any more chances.
Frosh Down OU Post 12-0 Mark
The women's basketball season came to a disappointing end Friday and Saturday as the University of Kansas team lost to the Women's State Collegiate Tournament in Allen Field House.
To beat Oklahoma, the KU freshmen had to go a 3-1-3 zone. They had never practiced that alignment. It worked, though.
"We weighed we be better off with the 1-3-1." Frederick said. "That's what made the difference for us."
That gave the freshmen a 12-0 record, the best ever compiled by a top recruit. But wasn't she the first undefeated KU freshman squash, Fredrick奢加, but only recently has the freshmen team been expanded to 12 games.
"in all my years of coaching, I've never done something like this," she said. "I telephone interview from Norman's practice I recommend."
Bob Swift, defensive halfback with Shawnee Mission North's state championship football team at the University of intent Monday to attend the University of Kansas, football Coach Don Fambrough
KU was in foul trouble, and Oklahoma was threatening the Jayhawkes' perfect record, so he made it a team out of our usual 2-3 zone.
| | 1g-ga | ft-a | ft-b | pt | lp | tf |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Fideldeke | Smith | 6.12 | 3.94 | 9 | 4 | 15 |
| Skillman | Smith | 6.12 | 3.94 | 9 | 4 | 15 |
| Rogers | 6.21 | 4.4 | 4 | 5 | 16 | 20 |
| Rogers | 6.21 | 4.4 | 4 | 5 | 16 | 20 |
| Haley | 0.12 | 3.3 | 4 | 4 | 21 | 28 |
| Rosel | 0.0 | 0.0 | 4 | 4 | 21 | 28 |
| Rosel | 0.0 | 0.0 | 4 | 4 | 21 | 28 |
| Total | 29.60 | 21.23 | 36 | 18 | 79 | 95 |
tg-fga 18-24 rb gb pt lp
Pritchard 10-24 34 6 4 12
Poston 5-10 34 4 4 12
Souler 10-10 34 0 3 12
Souler 10-10 34 0 3 12
Worstweight 1.1 1.1 0 0 0
Worstweight 1.1 1.1 0 0 0
Swift, which a place-baker, is the first team to win the letter of intent with KU this year. At 6 feet 3 and 185 pounds, Swift is a standout high jumper. He has 24.2 points.
The KU freshmen earned a 39-35 half-time lead, but 6-foot-10 Curtis Johnson benched with five fouls 15 minutes into the second half. He was seventh in the game.
Women's Basketball Ends in Tourney
In the opening round Friday KU lost to Fort Hays, 48-44. The hawks closed the gap to four after sailing by 12 in the third quarter.
University, McPherson College and Fort Hays State College.
Cindy Currie led scoring for KU with 16.
In the early game Friday, KSU defeated McPherson, 51-35.
KU lost the third place game to McPherson Saturday, 44-40, after leading most of the game.
SU defeated Fort Hays, 61-50,
for the championship. Donita
Davenport was the high scorer
with 19 points.
25 Teams Remain 3-0
After four weeks of intramural basketball action, 25 teams have three wins and no losses. They are, by league:
Fraternity C: Beta Theta Pi No. 4, Sigma Phi Epsilon No. 3, Sigma Alpha Epsilon No. 3 and Alma Kappa Lambda No. 2.
Fraternity B: Delta Upsion
No. 1, Triangle No. 1, Phi Delta
No. 2, Tau Kappa Epsilon,
Beta Theta Psi No. 1,
and Laudia Chi No. 1
Independent C; Custer's Last Stand, Templin No. 1, Soc. Dept. and Chicken hawks.
Independent A: Hogs and Cels.
Independent B: Outcasts.
Sewer Rats, Blue Veiners.
Stephenson No. 1 and Pearson B.
Fraternity A: Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Alpha Phi Alpha.
"We got out on them by six after that," Frederick said. "We started to be more careful about the time we were taking over their zone."
An observant Triangle player acted wisely to preserve a 34-33 game. He team trailing by one, a Kappa Alpha Psi player had a one-and-one free throw remained remaining. When one of the
half after he picked up three quick fouls.
As a result, Oklahoma was able to claim a 59-58 lead, their only advantage of the night.
Time-Out over BIOP'S 33-31;
Manie Discovers赶队 on Trial
TBV over Thompson 72; 34-29;
Hawks over Naismith No. 3, 49-7;
Stephenson No. 1 over Grace
Pearson, 73-14; Mothers over
Bronx 8; Jacks over Boys Unlimited,
32-3; Friar's Club over Sequesters,
28-26; Gathering over Rockets,
Kunstlers over Battenfeld,
44-12;
shooter's teammates crossed into the free throw lane illegally, the Triangle player pointed out the violation to the official, who shot it on Kappa Alpha Psi. That allowed Triangle to run out the clock.
Marshall Rogers, the leading
scorer in the three minutes of the game with
five fouls. Tommy Smith and
Mike Fidke each finished the
game.
"We got some key free throw shooting from Smith and (Dale) Greenlee and a key field goal at the end," Priddick said.
"It was a great effort, considering the odds against us with those players out and the foul problems."
A protest by Kappa Alpha Psi was overruled by the intramural committee.
Here are some of the week's more interesting scores.
TOPEKA (AP)—Salina, defending Kansas Class A4 high school basketball champion in the first round of the 1972 state tournament open Thursday in Allen Field House at Lawrenc
Coffeville, runner up in last year's tournament, is in the same bracket and will play McPherson in its opening game.
The 40 teams qualifying for the state tournament competition in the five divisions of competition include three teams with perfect records: Phillipsburg in 3A, Frankfort in 2A and Lyndon in 1A.
Phi Delt Id. 3 over Phi Gamma Delta, 47-15; Phi Delt Id. 1 over Sigma Emape, 48-13; Triangle Emape, 49-13; Sigma Emape No. 5, 2-22; Phi Delt Id. 1 over Psi No. 1, 22-20; Lambda Chi No. 1 over Theta Tau, 69-23.
High School Meet Starts Thursday In Field House
Here are the state tournament pairings to be played in the nation's championship Kansas State High School Activities Association in bracket order for Thursday's first round non-lost records and game times.
4A at Lawrence: Coffeeville (20-1) vs. McPherson (18-3): 1-30 p.m.; Salina (18-3) vs. Highland Park (17-8): 5-18; Garden City Park (17-8): 6-20; Bordeado (15-6): 3 p.m.; Ward (20-2): Topeka West (11-10): 1-10
Semifinal games will be played Friday night, with third-place and championship games Saturday.
Top games were by Mike Kunz, by Sandy Bradford, Albaianes, 12; sackin, Unbeknowe, 20; Joe Jonas, Fullhippers, 26; and John Rudd, 30.
In All Campus League leagues action last week, the Abellians continue to lead the second-place and the third-place Bulldisplays.
Abelians, Vets Lead Bowlers
The AM Vets maintained their ear in the All-Star Scratch game by playing 28 points with he second-place Gringos tuesday night.
High games for the night were the Wilson II, 251; Warren Boozer II, 252; Richard Frankenfeld II, 241; Fried Schneider II, 222; Karl Schoollin, 217; Tom Graff, 214; Randy Olivier, 212, and Skip Tidwell, 212.
Oklahoma picked up four free throws from Yule and Pettes sandwiched a layup by Pettes. Pettes made the score 82-78.
charging Martin. That was his fifth foul
Dou Inlos, university of Kansas freshman basketball player, underwent knee surgery in research Hospital in Kansas City.
Inloes Undergoes Knee Surgery
The operation was performed to correct an injury sustained in the freshman game against County Junior College Feb. 26.
Nash and Taylor each scored field goals in the final 20 seconds of the game, but Petites converted 19 of them. Oklahoma the victory. The Sooners led, 84-80, before Taylor scored with seven seconds to
STALLWORTH HAD scored 29 points in the first half, but he only two field goals during the second half for a total of 33 points. Oklahoma shifted to a zone which effectively stiffened Stallworth.
Inloes, a 6-foot-2 guard, played in nine freshman games and compiled a 3.3 scoring average.
Stallworth led KU to a 14-14 lead after five minutes of play. After that, Oklahoma rolled back within 16-13, but Stallworth scored in the US first 20 points. The kayakade won 20-18 with 10 minutes in play.
"Bud was tired in the second half, and he lost his shooting edge, but he really played a great game for us," Owens said.
"It certainly hurts our pride to have a losing season," Owens said, "but there isn't not much we need." It out and recruit for next year.
THE SOONERS tied the score there and deadlocked it five more times before taking the lead permanently at 34-33.
This season was the first loss in one KU has had since 1963, when a Dick Harp-coached squad posted a 12-13 record.
| | fgfn1g | fgfn2 | rb | pf | tl |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Nainshwet | 5.7 | 0.0 | 0 | 3 | 14 |
| Bovilacve | 6.9 | 0.0 | 0 | 4 | 14 |
| Naich | 4.7 | 1.3 | 10 | 0 | 2 |
| Narh | 4.7 | 1.3 | 10 | 0 | 2 |
| Barrow | 4.7 | 1.3 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Mathews | 2.8 | 0.0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Matthews | 2.8 | 0.0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Campfield | 2.8 | 0.0 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| Campbell | 2.8 | 0.0 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| Kochi | 36.0 | 10.1 | 35 | 8 | 12 |
Owens said he planned to start a recruiting tour from Norman.
| | fg-ja | ft-ja | rb | pb | tf |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Jack | 16 | 7.11 | 7.11 | 14 | 27 |
| Petites | 10.15 | 7.11 | 7.11 | 14 | 27 |
| James | 5.12 | 3.3 | 10 | 12 | 14 |
| Joan | 11 | 1.0 | 10 | 11 | 14 |
| Martin | 6.15 | 2.5 | 10 | 12 | 14 |
| Kurtis | 1.15 | 0.9 | 2 | 10 | 14 |
| Burks | 0.2 | 0.1 | 1 | 1 | 10 |
| Burks | 0.2 | 0.1 | 1 | 1 | 10 |
| Goronov | 26.40 | 28.38 | 13 | 10 | 14 |
| Gerhard | 26.40 | 28.38 | 13 | 10 | 14 |
Fivedays
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $0.03
Percentages 47 74
Kansas 37 39 0 6 - 82
Oklahoma 40 36 0 8 - 84
Hawks 140 140
Let the Man from Equitable
Percentages 45 91
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Alfa Romeo Velochi G.T. Double overhead cam, 4-wheel disks, 5-speed Mint condition. 634 Mass. 842-7 6966
See the guaranteed selection of used cycles at Katz Sanitry, 634 Mass. 842-6066. Factory authorized sales and service. 3-7
1971 Honda C.B. 350. Gold, great shape, 2,600 miles. 842-9012. 3-7
THE BUGBER a new dimension
cycling a lightweight bicycle
to be used on the road.
Take it camping, incurring, shop-
ping. See it at the Hide-On Bike
Shop.
91 Blue VW bug, custom walnut interior, super clean, 3 extra tires, excellent condition $1,400. Call 843-7248
1971 Triumph Trophy 500 c.e., $1,000.
Beautiful like, big new, $300 cheaper,
leaving new, must sell. Call
483-7881.
See the new water-cooled GT-750 at Kat Suzuki. Only $1,640. 634 Mass.
842-6966
Leather and suede cushions custom made blouses and dresses - Made to wear. New shoes 29 & 100 special sizes. Two sizes. This coupon BONKON 7
LCR SIMRAMES - Eex 1 w/3 Lwens.
LCR SIMRAMES - Eex 2 w/4 Lwens.
LCR SIMRAMES - $155. HBSV w/2 Lwens.
LCR SIMRAMES - $155. HBSV w/2 Lwens.
systems. Might consider trading for
systems. Might consider trading for
Call Jack at '490 or $990.
Call Jack at '490 or $990.
MARTIN GUITAR-12 string model D-35, 5-month old, in excellent condition. includes handheld case. A musical instrument; Call Rustle B-88 6766
69 Ventura steel string acoustic guitar with case. Excellent condition. Will accept best offer. Call Paul Jarvis, 843-7022 3-8
June 25 inch lawn mower never used.
(1) HP with power drive $30.00. Call
411-2964
3-15
Nee black kittens 7 weeks old Box trained, raised with dog $1.00 each 824-1984 3-8
One 1972 Hoover Dial-A-Matic vacuum cleaner slightly used. $45. Call 841-2964 3-15
Pulli-shaggy Hurgarten sheepdogs, born Jan 21, A-RC, K-MAC and Fe-ren. Sheepdog training, individually, 4 months male. 913-798-2981. McLoughan, McKansas. 3-15
1971 Honda 350-SL, excellent condition, must sell, call Dennis at 843-7404. 3-8
VW-1967, pretty black bug, new brakes, runs great, stereo. Tim. 842-7125. 3-8
**APARTMENT SALE-Bed 20." X" Bathroom** aquatic vacuum tank bed, bed bath tub, and shower with black bathware and brick tiles. Phyboxy bed and brick tiles. crown man mask is women's shirt. woman's mask is women's dress. 8 PM to 10 AM on PS and PM. 9 AM to 10 PM on PS and PM. 7 AM to 10 PM on PS and PM. 424 of Hospital on 84-424-6-7
EARTHSHINE - WE SELL CLOTHES
THAT ARE THE FUN OF IT ALL
EARTHSHINE - EAST 8TH & MASS.
3-9
WHAT'S NEW THIS SPRING IN
FASHION - IT'S YOUR TRI
EARTHSHINE-EAST 8TH & MASS
.0
1968 Ford, 2 Dr. Dr., fast back, P/S,
P/B, air cond., auto, charge, $1,488.
Jawhay Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa
843-2200. —3
7-7
1971 Champion Motor House-24 fc-
413 cid. engine, generator 80 lb. LRC
capacity, 14.800 lbs. $9,000.842-7270
1970 Duster, green, 3-speed, V8,
$1.450. We will buy locally owned
cars, domestic and V8. Jayhawk
Volkswagen, 2522 lowa, I8-4200, 3-16
1969 Canario, blue, 2 Dr. HT, 3-speed,
1969, new radial tires, $1,250, Jayhawk
Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, 843-2200, 3-7
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.2
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
1987. Yamaha 360, street bike, excellent running coedition from Yamaha 843-6250 or 843-6240 after 2:00 p.m. for Ask for Bike: 3-10
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
3-speed 20" boys' bicycle, hand brakes, 5 months old, battery operated light, new tires, good condition. Call 842-5529 after 3 p.m. 3-10
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
KAT Suzuki
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store
Y
REAL accessory store
'86 250ce Dueatt, good condition; must sell, call 842-7555 3-9
SCURA EQUIPMENT—Phoenix, Mask,
Bee Life保險, Guardian Guarantee,
Bee Brace, Safe Storage, Bee Keeper,
Hawk Kite, and Vest. $39.99
$59.99 for all your diving
major brands. Dive Equips and
Drive. Kansas City, Mo. Mc4143. Phone
Drive. Kansas City, Mo. Mc4143. Phone
Down and out law student must sell his '67 VW Excellent condition inside and out, Call 842-5657 after Free stuff animal. 3-10
16 ft. all aluminum granman canoe with paddles, life-preservers, and roof rack. Scars are stored trooper tighs 34-9 inches wide. 7-8:9 - 8-9 a.m. & 4-6 p.m.
1970 Charger RT automatic, new tires, treadly charger, compact bucket wheel, on-board mechanic, mechanically perfor-
mated. Must have: 200cc, 3-10, 842-8076, 3-10
JAYHAWK VOLKSWAGEN has a large stock of good used WV's 2522 Iowa. 843-2200 3-7
Nikon F Body, additional FT Head,
Nikon 50mm f/1.4m Lens, 110mm f/2.8M
Ziss Iron light meter, case, access
card, 1-888-1383, Perfect 3-10
1-888-1383
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
MISTER GUY employee is selling his personal clothing. 10-yearswear 40-42 w/ blue shorts, white t-shirt and 32. shirts 15-17' & 15-5. showes 10-'17'. Swattees and 11. watches 842-686 www.mistersguy.com
1966 VOLKSWAGEN LESS CABINET
1966 VOLKSWAGEN LESS CABINET
AND CUSTOM CAREFINDING
GREAT CONDITION NEVER BEEN
USED 843-644-3212
STEVOR STEVOR 453-212
10-speed Western Flyer used only three months, $45 Ask for Mike Gaul. 843-7404 3-13
4-piece drum set—excellent condition. Call VI 2-0529 for further information. 3-13
Trade-in special-50-watt Magnavox FM receiver, one-year-old, $100 at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 3
Tire Clearance-New F70 x 14 wide belts cut to $25, plus $25 FET. Free installation at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 3-9
Clip-on UHF bow tie antennas, $1.00 each at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-9
Used Motorola portable, sold new
for $149.90, now only $50 at Ray
Stoneback's, 292 Mass. 3-9
NOTICE
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-7694. Professional care-child for children 1 month - 12 months. Or part-time job. Designer designed enrolment. 3-31
UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Call
Greater Kansas City Birthright.
(816) 474-4676. ttf
For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization-call the Women's Center-864-4441. tf
Michigan St. B-Bar-Qu, 515 Michigan St. Outdoor st. 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STUDY ESPERANTO the international language, in Portland for two weeks. Information International Esperanto Congress here 29 July to 5 August. A unique experience. Information Language. Information: Summer Session Oregon, Portland, Portland, Oregon, 97200
634 Mass. 842-6966
2 two experienced nursery school teachers offer complete day care for children 3-6. All pre-school skills, physical health yard, rest room ages 843-1437
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BKONOKON -- remodeled sale -- Suzie Busy Busy custom sewing Still great bargains, Leather jackets -- spring sweater Vermont Vermont discount sweaters 2-3
DISCOUNT TRAVEL! Discount programs can be fantastic, but can also find you in Europe looking for a bike. Check it out at SUA. 864-3477.
If you have come to this state, to this county, or to any why you have come into this state, do your duty. Why Do You Have Come To This State? De Morgan 82657; Guru Maharal J. will whip ushes 82697; Guru Maharal J. will whip ushes 82703;
Artists: display your works in Kunts City! Artist: work of all kinds needed on consignment. For information, call John. 842-8268 after 5:00 p.M. 3-7.
KNOW THOUW OF A TRUTH, THESE
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REPLACING THE WELL OF WAR.
PREPARE IT FOR THE ADVENT OF
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and Service
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Parts at a discount
- STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock —others on order
THE CONCORD SHOP
EARTHSHINE HAS A NEW LOOK
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Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC 8 oz., pts., -qts. only 50 % OFF
The demands of the MARCH MOTHII oppose our wait to strike Wednesday evening, when the March Mother's Day weekend will meet with high administration officials. "Strike the moment! Today the marchers are sponsored by Green Aarkaavenk展会."
Barn Partied! Now available for rent at Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry, Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry and cooler plenty of parking. Call Joe Strump 211-843-6837,
University Terrace Apartments — furnished apartments available for occupancy (up to 110) 828 W. College Drive, 9th Apt. 1 B-1, or call 483-153-5-8
FOR RENT
844 E. 13th St. 843-3877
DANCE TIL. YOU PUKE THE
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For rent-one or two bedroom apts, rent a room at 1500 sq. ft., all electric kitchen, laundry facilities, color T C W available. Call Apt 24th and Ridge Court
Ridge House Apts—for the budget
builders and the maximum features and the maximum features in town. EF, 1 room; 2 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms. EF, 116 for details. 283 Goadwood-116 for details. 283
WEST HILLS. APARTMENTS. Available for second semester — 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 1 bath furnished or unfurnished. Central a. dishwasher. w. carport. Central b. laundry. Apartments—The place to live in Lawrence². C call 24 hours a day 841-306-9752.
Rockville Villa Apartments, Limited
Kids' Program. Students can have two bed-
room furnished for all with all utilities
app. when each. Call after 4:00
am to get your application.
A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS. Too much
was expected. We can see that
because we have been this spring
in our post in the indies at
outdoor clubs, we induce them
123 Indiana, 84-21-202 and Apatimes
123 Indiana, 84-21-202
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right next door to campus, 102 Missing ManSION, bedroom apartments available. Aug 27th to May 8th. Near availability at all end of semester. Available on weekdays w/ carving, dishwashing, central heating, 842-769-8588 between 5:30 P.M. and 10:30 P.M.
APARTMENTS, ROOMS, HOUSES-
several available immediately. Lynch
Real Estate, 1216 Lla, 843-1601, 843-
3100, 843-1323
FOR RENT OR FOR SALE Mobile home in good condition. 600 sq. ft. partially furnished. dishwasher, refrigerator, microwave. Call 3-865-412-605. toes $2,990
Furnished Apartment, 1424 Indiana.
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carpetting, indoor facilities, off-street
walkway. VI-3 blackwift from Union
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WANTED
Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30. 3-7
We repair alling Volkswagens. We do small operations, transplants, or just general repairs for sell and parts and buy those VWs with sell and purchase. Buglight, B214, 3-10 3-10
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
CSC
Competition
Need girl to share house $5.00
Utilities included. 842-5768 3-7
Kansas Key Press - Job printing from leaflets to posters, books to booklets and resumes. 710 Mass, in back cover. Zero Open, in the face at 842-4843.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
One 15" J-BLanding D-130 speaker,
New, used or blown-out Also, one
Aerial Lasting 41" 421A. Call 843-
2107 or 843-5865.
Female roommate wanted. Call after
5 P.M. 842-5921. Share rent, furnished
apartment. 3-9
NOOMATE. Share apartment with one person (own bedroom) b 5 block n. or campain. All this bill $0 a child. Book room. baerwinter s 2 to 3 on Mon-Fri.
NURSERY SCHOOL vacancies for two girls, one boy, ages 3-5 Call 842-
3459 or 843-7764
TYPING
WANT TO BUY-USED FULL OR
HALF GOLF SET CALL 843-6567
3.10
I need a trip to Lawrence from Kansas City Tuesday and Thursday of each week. Will pay. Call Cassi. *16-561-8827* 3-8
Typing done on elite, electric typewriter. No Theses please Prompt attention. 843-0958
Theses, term papers type accurately and promptly. IBM Selector, your choice of style types. Also editing at Kansas, Florida, Michigan, 842-650-695, 842-650-475, 842-650-360.
Experienced in typing theses, disser-
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Experienced typist will type your letter paper, thesis or dissertation.
Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-2881. M. Ruckman
Experienced typist, Overland Pars,
Kansas. Prompt, accurate work. Re-
reasonable rates. Phone 381-6434. 3-28
PERSONAL
Woodnok—spring is a time of renewal. 3+8
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S午-Prunus. 8-12 PM Sat & Sun
& 4 AM-Mond. 843-6821, 1143-28
38
Will the persons who did not receive the birthday cake their parents ordered please contact the Information Center, 864-3506. 3-9
At lost in Airport, seek hood—pred
plaid blazer. Great sentimental value.
No questions asked. Call 864-188
3-9
Lost 3-2 eye near Fraser black and white speckled pupil with black spots and head. Female. Please bring her to Call 842-6900
Lost 2-26. KU area, 14 mo. old German Shepherd, male, dark, name Jackson, choke collar, 843-1782. 3-13
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Size-Size 8-10, 12 up to 75% off, Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky. 4-20
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KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
6
Tuesday, March 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
---
THE HOUSE ON THE RIVER
Photos and Text Portray Kansas
Book shows the state's quiet and subtle beauty
National Plavers Open Festival
The play is Kafka's statement that law is unjust and that the very institutions we build to
Kansan Reviewer
Rv DENNIS LINGLE
Festival of the Arisa kicked off its week of entertainment Monday with the National Players performing Franz Trial.
Kay, not knowing his offence,
wave counsel in the friend of the
advocate and a discovered artist.
Everywhere Kay turns he finds his
adversary.
cycle of justice follows its path through the faceless bureaucracy ("Nobody is allowed to see the high court managstrates").
KANSAN reviews
his execution and last words,
"Like a dot!"
protect society evolve into monsters executing the innocent
A bank manager, Joseph Kay, is the guinea pig of the law which finds Kay guilty before the trial. He was sentenced to prison, and the investigators can't tell him what he has been doing. He doesn't know. The investigators just follow orders from their superior, the examining commission.
The acting by the National Players was truly professional. It maintained a steady, lively pace and was difficult considering the play.
THE MAGISTRATE takes his orders from his superior. The
law is too powerful and people are not allowed to question the law.
JOSEPH LEWIS displayed his directing skills in the handling of two scenes in particular—the first was just like Kay, a servant to the law, and the trial scene. The priest gave his advice in Biblical times by asking that he be as the omnipresent organ music added to the grotesqueness of the scene. The trial scene was animated by the placement of characters was vital. The relatives of Kay lined the stage with the investigators standing under paintings of "the irony was always present."
There was a definite intensity,
a nervousness, that flowed through
the plaque, creating a
motion in the film,
the character of Joseph Kay
The scenic by design by Philip Granteo, the eclectic architectural suggestive use of projected pictures on a backdrop worked well in setting the scenes on the screen.
KAY'S CHARACTERS were handed to a grotesque exasperation by nightmare effect for the audience's benefit Kay's failure is more likely to happen.
By STUART CLELAND
'Hospital' Conglomerates Maze of Conflicting Ideas
If George C. Scott wins another Oscar for "The Hospital" as the marquee at the Granada prowess, it won't be because of his bad luck. This is the latest effort by writer Paddy Chaykesy, he is about the only
Book Awakens Awareness Of Kansas' Diverse Beauty
Many Americans, especially those living on the coasts, have distorted mental image of the United States. In their mind's eye the country is a gigantic landfill. It is a vast Midwest in general is the "hole."
FORTUNATELY, not all Kansans are so insensitive to the
By LEONARD GROTTA
This coastal-chauvinism has long been the prevalent attitude towards Kansas. One or two weeks of fields of wheat or vast, empty stretches of prairie have come to symbolize Kansas. Even residents of the state have not been immune to this notion that the beauty of Kansas is an interest (let alone scenic beauty). They drive down 400 miles of highway I-70 without ever taking their eyes off the white line, quite possibly on the scenic wonders of Colorado.
natural beauty of their state. In "Kansas Impressions," a new book published last month by the author, the series takes Lyle and James Fitzsaint present a collection of 99 black and white photographs accompanied by a historical text that depicts the beauty of the city the beauty that exists in Kansas.
LYLE'S SELECTION of subject matter is artistically skilled and indicates an awareness and appreciation of beehive building units forms. The variety and diversity of the Kansas skies play an
Wes Wiley is a staff photographer for the Kansas City Museum, where she has traveled 10,000 miles while taking photographs in nearly every corner of Kansas. They not only present a graphic image of Kansas, but also convey what that is characteristic of Kansas.
Differences in Tide Include New Singer
Kansan Reviewer
Tide is probably the best bann playin in the Lawrence-Kansas City area. Most people who have lived there would agree with that statement.
But most of the old Tide Invasion band includes three of their best original songs. "You're Not the Only One" and "Cowboy Song" on the Lovie Awards.
Tide's 20-minute Bedie medley is excellent. It is a beautifully performed piece of memories from the listener back into the '80s.
Even during the two sets without Hot Dog, Tide has chilled a long string of free-flowing jazz solos by Jim Stringer the lead drummer and bassist of jazz solos. These are two ingredients that helped Gide Tide their own music.
Hot Dog, during the one set in which he sings, plays the band and produces it. He produced is a good, hard, dance beat, something Tide avoided in
By JOE ZANATTA
Changes have rocked the band, literally. Tide is now a five-man band, for one set, and leans a little more to hard-rock music than in the music he credits for their new singer. Hot Dog.
The strong point of Tide is the band's creativity. A lot of the songs on this album are from the Brummer and Paul Miller, the bass guitarist. It is not the average music tour but by a lot of musicians but the best songs, with excellent lyrics.
Tide's material is a good
Cash Awards To Be Given To Instructors
Student Union Activities will sponsor the third of a four-part lecture series entitled "Focus On China" at 7:30 p.m. on tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas State University professor of East Asian studies, will speak on "Literature of the People's Republic."
balance of energy and lunacy.
SUA to Offer Third Lecture On Red China
oasis in a desert of wobbling intentions and shifting styles. Building his way through a truly bizarre film that would have daunted any lesser actor, he almost manages to make some of confeting ideas with one of Chayfsky's surrounds him.
Wednesday, jazz flutist Herbie Mann will appear in concert in Heoh Auditorium. He will be followed Thursday by The Portable Circus and Friday by the Woolf Wolf Band. Saturday will be for finals with the with pop music artist Gordon Lightfoot featured in concert.
framework for the talent in the sand. All the members of the group show complete control over their instruments.
important role in many of his photographs. In the photographs used on the book's duicover, the massive forms of gray-black material suggest more substance than the shadowed plains which they cover. In other photographs, views of a cloudless, empty sky convey feelings of immense, cold and unbridled freedom.
James Fisher, also a staff member of the Kansas City Star, was one of the photographers. Most of the text is taken from old volumes of Kansas Historical Quarterlies. Another interesting reminder of Kansas' past, often times they have little knowledge of the graphic material they accompany.
THE TEXT seems to hint that its selection might have been based on a frantic search ("Oh how much I miss this one!" rather than upon a thoughtful matching of the tone of both prose and photography. The text is often adequately, perhaps the inclusion of a historical text is merely a concession to that books should contain words.
Flute solos by Tim Smith and Stringer's guitar and piano work provide much of the instrumental music. They also include the ranks of ordinary rock bands.
THE MOST OUTSTANDING aspect of the book is that it awakens an awareness of the diversity as well as the quiet and subtle beauty that is part of Kansas. Even to longterm learners, it can provide a new perspective as to what Kansas is.
FESTIVAL CONTINUES Tuesday with the speaking engagement of Boris Goldovaky, who has revitalized the opera for many, making it not only a festival but also an entertaining one.
The problem is basically one of concept. No one was apparently quite sure exactly what kind of relationship supposed to be, and so the result is a messy conglomeration of all these factors: satire, love story and murder mystery that tries to be true in an up being not much to anyone.
In this Kafka play the accused had to prove his innocence rather than the state having to prove his guilt.
Four teaching awards, which include three Standard Oil awards and one Fink award, worth $1,000 each, are presented annually to four instructors within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
SOME MOMENTS are quite funny, such as a young intern's description of how pyramidizing errors have practically killed a child. She admitted to being admitted to the hospital in perfect health. At other times a good deal of suspense is generated as an unknown killer systematically begins murdering the staff member for no apparent reason.
BESIDES THE BASIC conflict of themes, THE HASKY has trouble creating original characters and writing believable dialogue for her books. The hung-up member of his generation, is one of two characters - seeming/ going out of hours by building up stories to complete strangers
Still later we get superficial "Strawberry Statement"—type social drama and maximizing the emphasis on hospital's expansion policies and staging tense confrontations with diverse ideas. The idea of ideas is basically a sound premise for film exploration, but when they are all simply uncontrolled spasm of technicolor over the屏幕 of technicolor over the屏幕 of
The other is Diana Rigg.
playing a slightly older version of
the 'booky but charming girl-
friend' the right-most to man-
to-domanate-bear.
UNFORTUNATELY, as actors they can only make the best of their own parts, but they can't
'The Trial' was a fine example of what a professional repository company can do with a large database. You may never missed that fine
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The magistrate was a bumbling idiot constant in knowing who was on trial or for what crime. The magistrate said nothing for the fear that the law accuser from the accuser to the accused.
Five hundred and fifty full-time instructors teach in the College, George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences,
said Tuesday, 65 instructors have been nominated to receive four awards. The extra 100-plus people are assistant instructors
change the script, which goes on to include Scott screaming out over the rooftops in a drunken fit and Miss Rigg's in father (well played by Barnard Hughes) treating a group of students with description of emergency room horrors. But by that time nobody cares.
Good direction might have solved part of the problem, but although he handles the large spikes he often struggles with Arthur Hiller also seems at a loss to cope with Chayefsky's incoherent script. Moreover, his production is sloppy in places: in an attempt to create a clearly visible hanging from the ceiling. Such irritations can only result in an intermittently funny sound, which makes it difficult which is chaotic on screen and frustrating to the audience.
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.
- 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.
- Married or unmarried.
- *At least 18 years of age and no more than 25 on June 30 of the commissioning year.
- Excellent physical condition. Waivers for defective vision are available.
- Benefits:
- Eligible to apply for scholarship status upon entry into the program with subsequent full tuition and free books.
- Draft deferment.
●$100.00 per month subsistence allowance.
Deadline for Application—April 1st Apply Now for Fall Semester 1972 at the NROTC Unit, Room 115 Military Science Building 864-3161
KU
TG&Y family centers
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year. No.101
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Infant Day Care Seeks Efficiency
Wednesday, March 8, 1972
See Page 2
Jury Law Applies To KU Voters
By MARSHA SEARS
Kansan Staff Writer
Kansas' new jury law, which went into effect Jan. 1, 1972, qualifies any registered voter as a prospective juror. This allows a judge to decide whether or not no longer are selected from tax roles.
According to District Court Judge Frank R. Gray, a student who is a Douglas county registered voter may qualify as a defendant in County County as his legal place of residence.
Although students and faculty are now called to serve on juries, Gray said that he often excused them if they could not afford the time or if they had to attend classes.
So far, Gray said, the new system has worked as he had expected. Under the new ruling, he knew that he would have to face many prospective jurors from duty.
Gray has had to select only one jury in the new ruling went into effect, he said, and he found it necessary to select jurors from which to select an available jury.
Gray said the new system had not been its effect even a week, over period of time.
The present jury law states that people are excused from jury duty if they are unable to read, write and understand English, if they are incompetent or if they have, within the last 10 years, been convicted of a felony.
GEET
17
PRE
Resident Voters Are Eligible for Jury Duty
. . . Wilpers, senior, registers at City Clerk's office . . .
Other reasons a person may be excused are: the person has served as a juror within the last year, the person's presence is required elsewhere for the public welfare, the person would suffer hardship by serving as a juror or the person's personal relationship to the parties in the case would make impartiality difficult.
BY ROBERT E. DUNCAN
Kansan Staff Writer
The "sense of the Congress" resolution, which was passed last week by the U. S. Senate and called for student representation on the governing boards of American universities and colleges, had raised the question of the effect it will have in Kansas.
Chalmers said in Kansas the Board of Regents represented the taxpayers and the department.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmeris Jr. said recently the role of the governing board must be examined before membership could be determined.
PAUL WUNSCH of Kingman, chairman of the Board of Regents, said he could not understand why the Congress would pass a resolution of this nature. He said he did not expect a discussion of this issue to be taken over by the Regents' agenda in the near future.
The resolution was passed by Congress as a clear signal to students and their universities that the national government also thinks students have a right to participate in decisions which most affect lives, Sen. Fred Harris, D-Oda, said.
The Regents do have a channel to hear student opinion. The State Colleges
Coordinating Committee, which includes the six student body presidents, representatives from the faculty, administrative personnel and three regents, meet regularly to discuss problems in higher education.
CHALMERS SAID the coordinating committee had succeeded in opening lines of communication. He also said that the need to re-examine the role of governing boards exists, not only in Kansas, but nationwide.
Chalmeris said governing boards that made policies directly affecting students, such as those of private institutions, might require a student member.
The Senate Code of the University of kansas provides for student input in all渗
puts.
The code requires that policy committees include a minimum of 20 per cent student representation. The difficulty with this provision, according to some studies, is that there are not always students interested in participating on these committees.
LOUIS SCOTT, Lawrence senior and presiding officer of the University Senate, said the Senate Code oprovisionation had been effective in some areas.
Senate Executive Committee said, "In cases where students were added to committees and they actually participated, they have added a different viewpoint and improved the effectiveness of the committee."
Muskie, Nixon Win In New Hampshire
McGovern, McCloskey Gain
MANCHESTER, N. H. (AP)-Sen.
Edmund S. Muskie of Maine won the New
Hampshire presidential primary Tuesday.
He defeated George McGovern and a field of George Clinton.
President Nixon swept to an easy Republican victory over two GOP gospels.
McGovern was running second in the Democratic contest, polling a share of the ballots he said would give his White House campaign a big boost across the nation.
"We have every cause to be pleased," he said. "We appear to be holding about one-third of the vote. I don't think Muskie is going to get 50 per cent."
In the Republican content, 50 per cent of the expected vote had been counted, and about 40 per cent of the
Muskie began complaining about a phantom opponent as public opinion polls showed his New Hampshire rating dipping during the waning days of the campaign.
"How we did here, on what was thou… to be Muskie turf, is going to give us a big boost in the rest of the country," he said. He said the results would be Republican national chairman, issued a statement saying the results of the New Hampshire primary reflected "the people are going to make American people are going to make President Nixon and his leadership in November."
MGCOvern said his second-place showing gave him "a leg up on everyone
Rep. Paul N. McCloskey of California was second, with 9,756, or 20 per cent. Rep. John M. Ashbrook of Ohio had 5,020, for 10 percent. Corinne cornedian, had 473 votes for one per cent.
McCLOSKEY REAFFIRMED in Concord his intention of quitting the race and seeking re-election to Congress, if he did not gain 20 per cent of the GOP vote.
The Maine senator said in advance political analysts would measure the outcome not in terms of a victory over his Democratic rivals, but against a landside standard they would set after the balloting.
KU Task Force Petition Seeks Birth Control Clinic
Bv LINDASCHILD
Kansan Staff Writer
To celebrate International Women's Day, pertitions urging the establishment of a birth control clinic at Watkins Memorial hospital will be presented to William M. Balfour, vice-chancellor for student affairs, at 3 p. m. today, according to information from the Women's Center, and Janet Sears, assistant to the dean of women.
The Women's Health Care Task Force organized the petitions, Sears said. The group is one of many subcommittees that work to address women's health. Although many members were involved
with the February Sisters, the Task Force is an independent group, she said.
The petitions have been signed by 1,425 women. Lomusna said.
International Women's Day commemorates the 1857 march of the Female Garment and Textiles Workers in New York, Sears said.
Other activities planned for today include a "fashion show" at 11:30 a.m. in the Kansas Union. Role playing will be used in a satirical review of the different stereotypes attributed to women, Lominska said.
Tentative plans also include guerrilla
guests in front of Strom Hall later in
the winter.
Schedules of today's events are available at the Women's Center in the McNamara Building.
MGOVERN CLAIMED on election morning he had surged dramatically among undecided and uncommitted voters and claimed the contest was razor close.
That kind of an outcome would be a setback for Muskie. McGovern claimed he
Democratic Vote
Here are the vote totals in the New Hampshire Democratic presidential preference primary, with 65 per cent of the expected vote counted.
Muskie 25,259–48 per cent
McGovern 18,431–35 per cent
Yorty 3,611–7 per cent
Hartke 1,717–3 per cent
Coll 182–0 per cent
Write-ins:
Mills 2,867–5 per cent
Kennedy 487–1 per cent
Hawley 189–9 per cent
Jackson 147–9 per cent
McCarthy 20–0 per cent
would look like a winner if he could finish a close second to the heavily favored Muskie, senator from Maine.
The other Democratic candidate were Sen. vance Hartke of Indiana, Los Angeles Mayor Kevin McCarthy and New York City mayor
Hartford, Conn., a social worker who at 32 is too young to be president, and Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas, a late entry student, staged a $150,000 bid for write-in rides.
The Democratic contest overshadowed a Republican primary in which President Donald Trump faced
The 302 polling places across the state seemed as early as 6 a.m. and were closing at 5 a.m.
ESTIMATES OF THE Democratic turnout ranged from 60,000 to 70,000. Well over 100,000 Republicans were expected to vote.
Separate delegate contests, the long list of candidates and the paper balloting raised the prospect of a lengthy election processing process to determine the outcome.
The feature race in New Hampshire was the presidential preference poll.
New Hampshire voters also chose delegates to cast 18 nominating votes at the Democratic national convention, and 14 at the GOP convention.
A change in election laws permitted independent voters, for the first time, to cast ballots in one of the primaries without being as serving as a member of the party involved.
Prof Notes Influence Of Mao on Literature
BY STUART BOYCE
Kansan Staff Writer
Huang spoke on "Literature of the Hung People's Republic" in the Forum Room of the United Nations.
The Communist Chinese think undesirable literature will corrupt the mind of the reader, said C. H. C. Huang, assistant professor of East Asian studies, Tuesday night.
Chairman Mao Tse-tung was mentioned several times by Huang as having had a major influence on the present literary trend in China.
Huang said that in 1942 Mao delivered a speech entitled "Talks on Literature and Art". In the speech Mao set down in the speech, he says, "they have motivated writers since then.
Mao's guidelines said;
—Art and literature must serve the workers.
-Writers must remold ideology by playing themselves into the struggle of the world.
Popularization must be the basis of elevation.
Political criterion comes before artistic criterion.
- Writers must study Stalinism and Marxism for a proletarian outlook.
—The rich legacy of Chinese and foreign literature should be studied.
"There is," Huang said, "undeniable imposition on freedom of speech."
He said that after 1949 "literature of men who had gone to Taiwan was banished"
During the cultural revolution, Huang said theories of literary work were
He said the Chinese people did not think their press freedom was being denied. Propaganda to influence the reader has been an ingredient of Chinese literature.
Huang said that China had not banned all foreign literature. He said that by 1963 there were 300 world classics translated into Chinese.
He said the Chinese did not publish undesirable literature because they thought it would corrupt the mind of the reader.
Communist Chinese literature was not an entertaining type, Huang said. He said it was dead serious and never without a purpose.
Huang said the Chinese people read a lot. Between 1952 and 1982, 60,000 literary works were published and 2.3 billion copies were sold.
The weaknesses were, he said, that there was too much discipline and too little free thought. He said the ideal was over glorified and the heroes were too perfect. There was an over amphasis on revolutionary heroism.
The strengths of the literature, he said,
were it was clean, optimistic and basically
healthy. Crime, self-greeed, racial
prejudice and gangsters were always
known. He said, as was unknown. He said great care was taken to produce children's literature.
Awareness Center Formed to Combat White Racism
By BOB EVANS
Kansan Staff Writer
A Racial Awareness Resource Center (RARC) has been established at the University of Kansas in response to white racism, said Mike Sears. RARC director
Sears, a graduate student in speech communication and human relations, said situations had arisen on campus which had been abandoned and an institutional level. Generally they has been seen as an inability of whites to perceive non-whites as equal human beings with distinct differences. The cases have been dehumanizing for all, he said.
The center, in its second week of operation, is a response to the dynamics and dehumanizing consequence of white racism. Sears said.
"The real source of racism is in white people," Sears said.
"SOME PEOPLE might think the sore intent of the program is to improve communication between black and white students in order to reach the point," Sears said. "The purpose is to help whites develop a white consciousness which will enable them to recognize their
own racism, others' racism, and the institution's racism.
Janiece Bassford, Beloit sophomore, a CWEN and participant in the session, said the group defined terms such as racism, whiteness, prejudice and blackness first.
"We then had discussions, participated in exercises, told what we thought we expected to learn from the session, and explored whiteness and our attitudes toward whiteness and blackness." Bassford said.
*By recognizing that racism, whites are able, in part, to liberate themselves from racism.*
Sears said the first racial awareness training session was held with the Cwens, a sophomore女国的honorary society, from 6 p.m. feb. 25 to 6 p.m. feb. 26.
"For one of our exercises we had an in-group and an out-group," she said. "The in-group was told to try to keep the out-group out and the out-group tried to get in. The two groups were anything from name-calling to physical force. Then the two groups exchanged roles.
"THROUGH EXPRESSING these attitudes we learned more about the other people in the group in terms of their individual attitudes. We also learned that
before you are able to understand others, you have to understand yourself," she
Sears said all the participants unanimously agreed that other individuals and groups in the University should experience a similar training session.
Racial awareness training sessions are open to all who wish to attend, said a spokesman for the RARC. The RARC office is at 204 Nunemaker.
Individuals who sign up to participate in the session will be placed on a list in the order that they notify the center, Sears. When the list has between 12 and 15 names, a racial awareness training group will be assigned on that list will be contacted, be said.
If the interested persons do not want to meet for a weekend, Sears said, sessions can be arranged to meet for three hours one day of the week for six or seven weeks.
SEARS SAID that RARC had received funds in part from the University Human Resources Department. Trust Committee, a fund for the cultural enrichment of residents in the residence
"Twelve group leaders have been selected whose academic, and
professional experiences qualify them as facilitators of white onacontamination," Sears
Each of the leaders has undergone an intensive training and evaluation program.
Sears said that an additional ten individuals were taking part in the training development program and would be qualified to lead training sessions.
Of the 12, two are campus ministers, two are faculty members and one is on the staff of the Kansas State Civil Rights Commission, he said.
"We feel racial human relations training is a vital part of contemporary education," she said. "We seek and realize accreditation for racial human relations training within various academic departments in order to serve as broad a University population as
To provide racial human relations training sessions for those KU persons and groups interested in expanding their knowledge of the dynamics and effects of white racism.
SEARS SAID the additional four objectives of the BARC included:
To increase the awareness of the need
for racial human relations training among persons and groups at KU.
To develop and organize a continuing and growing body of human relations trainers capable of facilitating their own interaction with the dynamics and effects of white racism.
To establish and maintain a system of evaluation of racial training sessions and other RARC activities in terms of these objectives.
Sears said that racial awareness workshop training sessions would be held for resident directors and assistants of the residence halls.
"It's as dehumanizing to patronize a person in a residence hall as it is to subordinate him," Sears said. "Racial fears are based on racial myths. An understanding of the myths is liberating to whites in reducing those fears."
"The RARC will be a success if the people who go through the workshop sessions begin to seriously consider the effects of their own white racism. It will change how we think about racial awareness training on campus."
2
Wednesday, March 8, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Day Care Strives for Interaction, Safety
Editor's Note: This is the last of a three-part series on child care and day care centers in Lawrence.
Rv MARTI STEWART
Kansan Staff Writer
A whirlwind of activity greets and opens the door to the infant's room. All members are checking diapers, washing toys and carrying babies on the floor.
"This is a fairly slow day," a staff member said.
On the floor a staff member plays with a n infant, who is not yet crawling to ask talks to an adult, in a high chair in the feeding area.
The infant day care center is located in a Meadowbrook apartment where only center in the afternoon day care is offered for infants.
The program is under the direction of Todd R. Risley, associate professor of human development, and is sponsored by the Children's Institute Program on Early Childhood Education and the Kansas Center
on Early Childhood Education.
KANSSA LAW stipulates that children under two may not be cared for in groups. It is possible to obtain a license for day care and that they are kept in a private home.
The center is able to operate because it is under the auspices of the state and as such does not require a license.
Mike Catalo, who is assisting Risley on the project and who represents the National Program's project aid, said, "While most of the state's licensing regulations, there are areas in which it differs. We feel that these differences represent a practice and just as acceptable to day care center operation.
Catalo said Shirley Norris, a licensing agent, had rated it three stars for improvement. The result of this visit, he said, was that she sent him an email with suggestions for improvement.
that she asked members of the infant center staff to serve on a state advisory committee to establish licensing regulations for Kansas.
CATALOG SAID the aim of the project was to study the best management center. The center structures the environment to guarantee safety and efficiency to allow for maximum interaction with the child, he
The outcome of the study will be to software materials, a collection of plans and equipment for use in setting up and operating day care centers across the country. Catalogs that materials will be tested by people who have not worked with the project to insure that its methods are effective.
One example of the equipment to be included in this package is a cart for the safe transportation of luggage from the parking lot to the center.
A MOTHER bringing her child to the center must supply the
staff with all food, diapers and supplies the child will need to wear for a day or two in her car in the parking lot. you must jungle her packages and try to make it to the receiving area of the center without losing the child
To make this transportation easier, members of the center would often go to a shopping cart. The sides of the cart are of pliable material and its center of gravity is low to prevent it from falling out or be hurt. Underneath the basket is a shelf on which the child may place the child's supplies.
Cataldo said the center had purposely avoided issues of child development and "education" programs because it was important to first develop a safe environment healthy day care environment
BEFORE ENTERING the two-bedroom apartment that is now occupied, the visitor must remove his street address. The windows and shutters supplied by the center.
"This is a health precaution," a staff member said. "The children crawl around on the carpet and this keeps it clean."
Nine-month-old Macros stood at the low barrier separating the two groups. He watched the staff members as they walked back and forth with him, taking breaks Occasionally he would make a comment to Bob, a staff member of the hospital.
Another staff member said the requirement for graduation was that a child could walk or that he be taught to interact with the adults at the center. The center is specially designed for non-walking children and when they begin to walk, it requires them to different environment, she said.
Rezoning Action Deferred
Rv MARSHA SEARS
THE WALLS of the feeding area and corridors are lined with charts. Staff members record all needs he or she need about the child's activities during the day—when the child slept, when and what he ate, how often his diapers were changed and any problems he encountered.
By MARSHA SEARS Kansan Staff Writer
The Lawrence City Commission Tuesday deferred until next week's meeting a decision concerning the rezoning of four blocks at 20th Street and State Street, which will be housed to duplex dwellings.
Richard Zinn, the attorney who represented Western Home Builders, asked the commission to defer the decision until next week when hopefully, all building companies present. Nancy Ham堡ton was absent from Tuesday's commission meeting. To approve
Zinn said that rezoning of the area from single family housing to multiple-family housing or between single-family housing and multiple-family housing or
the reoning, four of the five commission members would have to vote in favor of the reaming.
ED COLLISTER, the attorney who represented the home owner opposed to rezoning, said many home owners in the area had purchased homes because the city was not housing. Unless, Collison said,
Campus Shelters Lack Provisions
Kansan Staff Writer
the proposed rezoning is for community benefit instead of private gain, the area should not be rezoned.
By BOB EVANS
Colliser said a large market for cheese was growing, and he gave several examples of single family homes in that area which had so quickly when put on display.
Questioning the buffer zone argument, Collier asked, "Who is buffered from what?"
There are failout shelter facilities on the KU campus for about 18,000 people, but there are no emergency storage. Stone, plant modification analyst, said no emergency supplies were available on the campus.
The shelters were designated about 1960 and were then stocked with a supply of water and a type of biscuit, Stone said.
When the tunnel system is connected again, Stone said, emergency supplies for 16,000 persons will be restocked.
Lawton said the three main reasons for the shelters were for protection against nuclear disasters and natural disasters.
Last year, the University was too small to handle because they were 10 years old and had become stale. Since then, the supply must be made by the building at Wesco Hall has interrupted the tunnel system and cut many roads.
Stone said that there was enough space to store food and water for persons in the shelters for up to two weeks.
He said the main need for the shelters now was for protection against local disasters such as an explosion due to a gas leak. The national pulse indicates no pressure in national needs, Lawton said.
One and one-half cubic feet a person or 24,000 cubic feet was needed to store the two week supply of food, he said.
ABOUT 30 AREAS on the KU campus have been designated as fallout shelters by a Corps of Army Engineers and volunteers, said Keith Lawton, director of operations, planning and operations.
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Pioneer 1, streaking toward Jupiter at 20,500 miles per hour completed two critical maneuvers after passing the moon or space of fictional said Sunday.
The shelters could also be used for protection against natural disasters such as tornados.
Pioneer 10 Completes Critical Maneuvers
The spacecraft successfully tested the GPS system, used for Tuesday's planned midcourse change, and spacecraft navigation refraction system that keeps Pioneer linked to earth with a thin radio beam, officials said.
Scientists also turned on the sixth of 11 instruments in Pioneer 10. The mission included maneuvers, a spokesman for the California Institute of Technology and laboratory said. The instrument is a cosmic ray telescope that began back data on the galaxy's high-energy particles detected by the telescope.
Pioneer 10 was launched on its 21-month odyssey to Jupiter from Cape Kennedy, Fla., last Thursday.
He said there was no need to delay the deployment of that area and that share '1986 that area had been protected by a policy of the commission to deny any additional sharing'
WHEN A STORM is sighted the take cover warning is given, he said.
The warning system starts when an observer contacts the Douglas County Civil Defense Department.
The sounding system for the city of Lawrence and the city of New York has KU and downtown mill whistle sound a series of four short blasts followed by a pause. The signal is repeated every minute, minutes, Haskell and a food machine company have whistles that would sound continuously.
When the warning is given,
Stone said, classes are dismissed
and students should go to the
nearest permanent building,
and move there and go toward the lower levels.
In the event of a storm,
students should turn radios to KLWN AM and FM for
music or radio news. Head of head
of the Douglas County Civil
Defense Department said.
BELOTE SAID that campus buildings were for the protection of students and those working for the institution, said he should seek city shelterers.
Emergency power is also available, he said, and that part of the power is for KLWN FM broadcasts.
According to his latest listing o
university fallout shelters
Belolet said shelters were located
in the Lake Michigan area.
Murphy, Malott, Marvin, Flint
Lindley, Fowler, Snowy, Dyce
and Green Jails, Spooner
Ocean and Northern Military Science building,
Watson Library, Watkins
Memorial Hospital, Robinson
Green Jails, Robinson
Lewis, Ellsworth, Hashingh,
Oliver, J. R. Pearson and Corbina
halfa, Alpha Delta Pi and Alpa
horizons, Sigma Chi fraternity, Grace Pearson and Douthart halls.
THE TRAFFIC INCREASE would be an additional problem if the area were rezoned, Collister said.
Also, he said that there is a 200 bed portable equipment equipped with emergency supplies for 14 to 30 days.
Zinn said that rezoning the area to a duplex room would make better use of the land. He said that maybe existing single-family homes would sell but there was money to build a single-family home building of single-family homes.
Zinn said that instead of referring to the amorphous words, "public good," a person recognizes what was more reasonable.
Ernest Angino of 1215 W. 27th St. in Lawrence and of 1240 N. 26th St. in Lawrence for family development. The sale of single family housing is above last week.
He said the $20,000 to $30,000 range of single-family housing was in the greatest demand of any type of房ing. The vacancy is in apartments, he said, is now highest in the last three years.
In other business, the commission referred back to the Planning Commission a request to rezone the area at the corners of the street. The areas would be rezoned from residential to commercial areas. The Planning Commission had previously unanimously rejected the plan to rezone the area to a commercial area.
EGUMENICAL
VIGIL
OF
REPARATION
DAILY DURING LENT
DANFORTH CHAPEL
12:30 to 1:00 PM
RELENT
REFLECTION ON SELF
RELIABILITY OF LIFE
REPHRASES FOR AND
UNION VALUES
REFORDERING VALUES
AFTER THE lengthy discussion, the commission deferred its decision until next week's meeting.
ECUMENICAL Vigil
ECUMENICAL
VIGIL
OF
REPARATION
DAILY DURING LENT
DANFORTH CHAPEL
12:30 TO 1:00 PM
Goulden said about 50 books were available now, including popular authors such as H.G. Wells and Brad Bradbury.
The commission unanimously placed on first reading an ordinance to limit motorized vehicular traffic in city parks. The council is the city manager, city parks are not compatible with motorcycles.
Jazz music Herbie Mann, whose innovations have had a profound impact on contemporary popular music, will perform at m.p. 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium. All tickets for the jazz performance have been sold.
Mann Concert Tonight
Students can bring in books to sell or trade, and the Emporia will handle the books for a 10 per cent commission.
The Emporium, sponsored by the Student Senate, is located in the basement of the Kansas University. You can pay $10 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The Emporium bookstore has recently expanded its selections by opening a science-fiction section.
Science Fiction At Emporium
Gordon Goulden, Topeka freshman and manager of the store, said the expansion was made because text book sales beginning to dwindle, although many books were still available.
Goulden said the store also wanted to attract more diversified customers.
Mann popularized the Latin element in jazz by his extensive use of Latin American and Brazilian musical themes. Jazz is often developed from elements found in Africa and the black culture of Africa
the american South. But Mann's use of Latin musical elements in the Brazilian music of the Boa Nova and music of this genre. Groups such as Brasil "86 have carried the use of Latin music to the realm of popular music.
"Are you still checking diapers every half hour?" Sandy, a staff member, asked.
"Every 15 minutes."
mann also popularized the use of the flute as a jazz instrument. The musician jazz today is almost entirely a result of Mann's music. Rock musicians, such as Ian Anderson and Mick Jones, have used the use of the flute in their music.
"Every 15 minutes."
"Why? Who said so?"
Red
Baron
presents
BLUE
THINGS
Wednesday
and
Thursday
The diaper check is a way of deciding what levels of care are most beneficial to the child and which ones the staff, according to Catalo.
"Todd said so.
Red
Baron
presents
BLUE
THINGS
Wednesday
and
Thursday
Wednesday Special
Pitchers ... 75¢
Guys ... 75¢
Girls ... FREE
"We're developing an across-environment study to look at the children's homes, care centers, day care homes and the childens' own homes," he said. "We want to find a solution for them, care for, instance, how often the infants' diapers are changed, to see what is best for the child. I interested in mothering, kidnapping, talking with the children."
members have some time to themselves," she said. "Taking care of so many infants is difficult. We try to give the staff takes as much as just lunch break and coffee break in the morning."
THERE ARE NOW about 13 children enrolled at the center. The model facility is designed for preschool children, but the greater than that at a center for preschool children, Sandy said, because the infants must leave before school.
DOWN THE HALL from the play area is the crib room. The cribs are placed on a shelf so the child can sit at adult eye level.
"Eye contact is one way we can tell that the child is ready to get up from a nap." Sandy said. "He's well, . . . well, of course. crwine."
Sekou, a seven-month-old boy,
was asleep in one of the crisbs. He
had socks fitted like gloves over his
hands.
"Sekou has some allergies," Sandy said. "If his hands aren't covered he may scratch himself."
The only door that remains closed in the center is the one to the staff's room. The schedule is very similar, and take frequent breaks, Sandy said.
"It's very important that staff
"We are not advocates of day home care," he said. "We are not advocates of a center or not, there are certain days we will do. There is a need for this We are interested in finding the best way to car for infants in
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864-3477
Full Payment Due April 17th
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711 W. 23rd Street
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Wednesday, March 8, 1972
University Daily Kansan
3
People . . .
. . Places . . .
. . Things
People:
SEN. JAMES B. PEARSON, R-Kan., said Tuesday that he voted in the Scott-Mansfield amendment and against the Griffin amendment. Both are amendments to the higher Education Act. "I supported the Scott-Mansfield amendment, which would maintain the progress toward school integration thus far attained," he said. He said the amendment provided for "voluntary local control in a manner not detrimental to the welfare of children or impairing the quality of education." The amendment was adopted by the Senate.
Places:
MIAMI—Two men armed with shotguns and revolvers shot and wounded a pilot and an airline mechanic Tuesday and hijacked a twoengine seaglane to CUBA. Five passengers who had boarded the Chalk International Airline plane for its scheduled flight to Bimini, were aboard the craft, which was flown by the copilot, Bob Wallis. A six passenger jumped off and sounded the alarm. The hijackers shot pilot James Cothron, 49, and Douglas MacKenzie, 48, an electrical engineer.
SAIGON—U.S. reconnaissance flights over North Vietnam have been increased to take advantage of clear skies, American military sources said Tuesday. U.S. fighter-bombers struck antaircraft defenses in North Vietnam for the sixth consecutive day. The air force's largest aerial dugout between American and North Vietnamese planes since 1980 when U.S. bombing of the North was halted.
Things:
THE FEDERAL BUREAU OF PRISONS has quietly changed its policy on prisoner contacts with the news media and says it now permits convicts to send unencumbered letters to newsmen. Bureau officials say they will begin enforcing forwarded "directly, promptly, sealed and without inspection."
A resolution which would have placed a LIQOR-BY-THE-DRINK constitutional amendment on the November election ballot failed to pass by three votes in the Kansas Tuesday. Kansas voters turned down a similar amendment by 11,000 votes in 1970.
Campus Briefs
Career Seminar Today
The Commission on the Status of Women is hosting a Career Seminar from 1 to 4 p.m. today in the dean of women's office. The office will make available job descriptions and requirements for different careers, including "No Experience Necessary" a guide for Liberal Arts majors. Representatives will be on hand to answer questions.
Physical Therapy Club
The Physical Therapy Club will meet with guests from the University of Kansas Medical Center to talk about the team approach to teaching at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Little Symphony Tonight
The Little Symphony, conducted by Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will present a concert at 8ton in Swartwout Rectal Hall. Antonio Perez, bartone, will be featured as a soloist in "Largo al factum" from the "Barber of Seville" by Rossini.
KANU Schedule
Stereo 91.5 FM
Noon - News, Weather and Sports
12:15 p.m. - Noon Court-Concert and
Community Calendar (12:30 p.m.)
1:00 p.m. - John Cohen's of the World Future
Society
100 p.m. music from Germany
100 p.m. "Search for Mental Health-
Health" music
100 p.m. "This Afternoon Jazz"
100 p.m. "News and Weather" UA
Medica
100 p.m. "News and Weather" UA
Medica
100 p.m. "Music by Candlelight"
100 p.m. "The View from the Hill"
100 p.m. "For Love of Music" UA
Medica
100 p.m. "For Love of Music" UA
Medica
10 15 p.m. "TBA underground rock"
stereo
1 a.m.—Sign Off
"Jayhawk Jamboree," a week of spring entertainment and sponsored association of the University Residence Halls, the Interfaith Council and the Panhellenic Association, is located at 20420 North Park Avenue.
Entertainment Scheduled For 'Jayhawk Jamboree'
Campus Bulletin
"We want to offer a diversity of events that will interest all groups." Wisdom said.
TODAY
Webite interviews: 8:30 a.m., Oread
Room, Kansas University
SAGION (AP) - South Viet-
maires operation near the demilitarized
one and the old imperial capital
if Hue, field sources said Mion-
Planners of the Jamboree want to change the old concepts of "Greek Week" and "Spring Fling," according to Larry Wisdom, Overland Park junior and co-chairman of the steering committee for the University community is the goal of the Jamboree, he said.
Brewer and Shipley will highlight the week of events in a concert at 8 p.m. April 8 in Hochfeld sponsored by the junior class.
Webster Grove, Mo., Interviews: 9 a.m.
Pine Room
A POTTERSTOCK festival is scheduled for Friday, April 7, from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tide and Waleh, from Lichland, Neb., will provide music in two 45-minute sets, said Art Schwertz. Western students, freshman and committee members in charge of contracting bands.
Luaal Arts: 11:30 a.m. Alcove B.
Anthropology Undergrads: 11:30 a.m.
Anthropology Undergrads: 11:30 a.m.
Alcove D.
French Table: 11:30 a.m. Meadowlark
Tulsa, Okla., Interviews: 9 a.m., Room
305.
The same evening from 9 to midnight, there will be a street dance on the tennis courts north of the stadium featuring The Chestman Squire.
Gold Medal Club: 11:45 a.m. Alcove C.
Faculty Forum: noon, Westminster
Center.
Museum of Natural History; noon, English
Jayhawk Quarterback Club: 11:45 a.m.
Trophy Room. Alen Field House.
Gold Medal Club: 11:45 a.m. Alcove C.
By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
Museum of Natural History: noon, English Room.
The movie "April Fools" and three cartoons will also be shown Friday at 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
Overland Park, Kansas
A set of relay events will add to Saturday's entertainment. The number of events offered and the number determined by the number entered, according to Pat Tillick, Lawrence senior and copubicity chairman. Next week the program will live living groups for preregistration.
RIDE ON
BICYCLES
Cambodia's high command reported a sharp clash on an island in the Mekong River with heavy casualties on both sides.
RIDE-ON-BICYCLES
French Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark Cafeteria.
Applications are now available in the Dean of Women's Office, 222 Strong, and all organized housing. Applications are due March 10, at 5 p.m. in 222 Strong.
TOPEKA (AP)—Moor John Lindsay of New York City, who is seeking the Democrat candidate in the position, attended a reception in Topeka sponsored by Democrat members of the Kansas Legislature.
Rinker Hall 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark
Cafeteria.
9:30 p.m. Orcad Room.
Carmelium Hall 12:30 p.m. International
Room.
3:10 p.m. Strong Room.
Field Instruction
Room 3:10 p.m. International Room.
6:10 p.m. Orcad Room.
3:10 p.m. Regional Hall.
Student Teachers 3:30 p.m. Big Eagle
FC Executive Council 3:30 p.m.
IFC Executive Council 3:30 p.m.
Government Room
5:30 p.m. Regional Hall
Student Teachers 16:40 p.m. 3:30 p.m.
Ballroom Foyer
8:15 p.m. Aloe Vera
SMMS 6:15 p.m. Jawahar Room.
WA Classical Films 7:00 and 9:15 p.m.
Divine Light Mission 7:00 p.m.
Cabrital Student Center 7:00 p.m. Big
Eagle Student Center 7:00 p.m.
Ananda Marga Yoga Society 8:15 p.m.
KU Lila Symphony 8:15 p.m. Swarthout
Rehbal Hall
Arte-Arte-Herbian Man 8:15 p.m.
Hoxton Auditorium.
Wisdom said that the carnival, if one is held, and the Brewer and Shipley concert would be the only events not free of charge.
Peugeot Kalkhoff Chiorda Fugi Zeus Olmo Solex Genet Sunbeam Hercules in Stock—NO WAITING LIST and We Repair Any Bike! RIDE-O-RICYCLES
SUNDAY THE Jayhaw Sports car Club will sponsor a Gymkana in the Lewis parking lot. The club will also according to Bill Francis, Race Hill junior and president of the club. Cars will run through the obstacle race throughout the day. Francis said the number of automobile classes offered has increased. The Sports car Club of America.
Widom said that only one thing was not yet definite. The planners would like to include a professional carnival April 5 that be northeast of Allen Field House or a smaller carnival, however, are incomplete.
Cafeteria
Sajtynam Quarterback Club: 11:45 a.m.
Tromask Bank, Allen Field Morton
"A Spring Sing" is planned for Sunday afternoon from 1 p.m. until 6 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. There will be a women's men's and mixed division, said Cahy and chairman of the committee, and chairman of the committee.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR ACTIVE INVOLVEMENT IN THE 1972-1973 K.U. COMMISSION
Positions Available
Each group will be judged on appearance, effect of
1401 Massachusetts Ranchmart Shopping Center
presentation, quality of presentation and choice of music. Brown said. The groups will compete for trophies.
Mary Stephenson, Maryville,
and co-chairman of the commissary, accepted
entries until March 17. These
should be sent to 1339 W. Campus
WESDOM SAID the planners were asking for support from Lawrence merchants. He said he was advertising now and that several establishments were going to offer specials like the midnight sales and "Discounts on bill" or the Jahawk jamboree.
Positions Available COMMITTEE MEMBER, COMMISSION BOARD, CHAIR PERSON, TREASURER There is a NEED and a PLACE for all interested. For More Information Call 864-3552 or 843-8768
Commission on the Status of Women announces
YOUR OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Class RING
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7-ELEVEN AND KLWN-FM's BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
All You have to do is register at any Lawrence / Eisenhower No purchase is required. You can now take your student ID number and go to a Kansas University student ID 10. No will be required on Registration.
- The winner of the SECOND PRIZE in the drawing on May 3, 1972 will receive FREE ROOM & BOARD for next semester (maximum of $150).
- At the conclusion of the nine weeks (March 6 through May 3rd), we'll draw the names of the BILLI-LIMMATOR SWEETSTAKE winners. Look at what you can win:
- The winner of the FIRST PRIZE in the drawing on May 3, 1972 will receive FREE TUITION for next semester (maximum of $300)
- The winner of the THIRD PRIZE in the drawing on May 3, 1972 will receive FREE BOOKS for next semester (maximum $50).
Registration may be made at your local 7-Eleven Store.
Drawings will be held live Wednesday, May 3, 1972 on KLWN-FM Radio.
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Wednesday, March 8, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
I
Rock Chalk Rift
I read with some interest editorial comments in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World concern the cancellation of a Rock Chalk Revue presented in last week's Rock Chalk Revue.
The Journal-World's particular brand of hyperbole assumes, first, that the skit in question was, in fact, "off color" and second, that students themselves axed the skit, demonstrating the "independent judgment of young people."
The second assumption is, flatly—false. Jess H.MeNish, adjunct professor of business and chairman of the University Judiciary Board, finally ruled against the skirt after the case was appealed to him. In a bland circumlucubration MeNish said he "did not favor censorship" but seemingly did in this instance.
Acting in its traditional role as conscience of the University the Journal-World bleit on this issue. Whether it acted out of its own will or in consequence, it never perceptions-only the editor of that paper knows. Whatever the case, the editorial distorted the facts, styling the student reaction as "beneficial" at a time when many students were still maximum in legislation and public support."
The first of the Journal-World's assumptions--that the skit was "off-color" is just as perplexing as the second and potentially more dangerous.
demagogues, prudes and parsons have been looking for a good definition of what is obscure for men and don't seem to be any different. Consistency law is vague and difficult to define.
Was the skit, indeed, obscene and in bad taste?
Certainly the toilet humor pandered in certain of the other acts could be called
obscene and in bad taste. Yet these acts continued with impunity.
The line here between obscene and near-
obscene, beindiscernably thin.
A professor who had not seen any of the productions finally decided one was so tired that she left.
Was this rank censorship?
In a production where actors and help are salaried the producer can operate by flat. In this case the actors were amateurs who played on stage in agreement with the production staff to perform.
The production staff had seen the script before performance and, simply, broke their agreement with McColum at the last moment. Andy Bukaty, producer of Rock Chalk, called the skit "appalling", Still, Bukaty had approved the skit.
The skit was censored.
Bukaty broke his agreement and McNish denied those that were to attend Rock Chalk their right to judge the skit on its merits—for themselves. No doubt the audience could decide for themselves whether the skit was in bad taste, as I'm sure they did for the other
In the end, this censorship has the potential to do more harm to Rock Chalk than any of the references to sex or religion in the skirts. The censorship is more befitting a high school principal than a college professor and producer.
The Journal-World's distortion and the last minute cancellation of the skit were both justified in part out of what was called in part for the reputation of the University.
Great universities are not made, though,
out of timidity—but out of honesty and
forthrightness—elements missing in this
affair.
—Thomas E. Slaughter
Readers Respond
Close Larry, But No Cigar
To the Editor:
A letter to Chancellor Chaimers:
I am writing this letter in appreciation of your concern for the university campus (make that plural, campuses. Not until giving the keynote speech at the American Association of the Higher Education Convention did I extend to this magnitude. I am sure it is with a certain degree of trust you have on question today on this question knowing that things on the home front are looking up as women could more could the woman grapes at us.
The Affirmative Action Board has been appointed and they have already met once, three and half weeks. The proclaimed executive order.
Even though out of the more than fifty dean, director and vice-chancellor posts there are no special degrees dedicated to Marilyn Stockstad has been appointed an assistant dean of Liberal Arts and that a woman will be chosen for the position. A Affirmative Action for Women.
Because there are two vice-chancellorships to be filled, we are quite optimistic that the search committee (two women) will be considering female candidates for those positions.
We are impressed that the University has stopped calling child care facilities a "very low standard," and endorsed the efforts of any who would establish such centers—but we do not feel the Student Senate will be willing to finance such programs, so feel somewhat less assured by the way the University has put three possible child care programs into competition with the same inadequate space.
We are pleased that there are six courses offered that deal with the achievement of women looking forward to the day when the achievements of female individuals are incorporated, and with the course work in all fields, and the day when the subject of women is natural, rather than an exotic study.
We are glad that after only two years of pushing, pulling and
meeting with the health service officials, women students can receive a certain amount of obstetric and gynecological care, if they know how and are not too embarrassed to ask for
We are everlasting grateful that women are, by and large, allowed to enroll at this college, given the account of their low hiring potential, expected career interruptions, and problems with attending school full time with students overloaded day care centers.
We are comforted that women are allowed to hold so many jobs and can afford the average salary of $2044 per man, men in unimaginable positions.
We realize that in your position you are doing all you can to see that these women’s privileges are acquired and maintained. Thank you again for this valiant effort, and help support you in your crusade.
P. S. Have a Happy International Women's Day (March 8). Take a woman out to lunch.
ROME—The President flew west to China. I flew east to Italy. He was looking for normalization there. Let me report that everything is in normalization in Italy is like a normal situation in the Army.
Alice Petty,
Nashville sophomore
The government that fell the other day, pasted together provisionally by Premier Giulio Andreucci, was either the King or a monarch who had been in power, so to speak, for only nine days, and may count as no more than an asterisk in the record books. In any event, its failure will result in new elections, when the game begins anew.
Italv's Frustrating Way of Life
James J. Kilpatrick
Italy's political problems hold a dazzling fascination for an American who takes pride in our own confusions. We have trouble understanding liberal run together; it is often hard to tell the Democrats from the Republicans. But our difficulties pale beside the tints of the political spectrum. From the Communists on the left to the neo-Fascists on
the right, it sometimes appears that there's not a lira's worth of difference among them.
The country is still turn up over the issue of divorce. In any orderly approach to the question, you would expect to find the old Catholic, as well as the old divorce, and the old-line Catholics all opposed. Nothing is orderly around here. Communist women, by and large, have been allowed to vote in a law; a great many well-to-do Catholic men, eager to be freed of marriages that collapsed years ago, tend to support the old line. The church held in June of next year on repeal of the law permitting divorce; if the referendum carries, as expected, the situation will return to status quo peacefully, back to the normal confusion.
pieces together since August of 1965. The Colombo government didn't exactly fail; it sort of understated the threat of the saber. The district-coalition came apart at the seams, and when President Leone looked at the Chamber, no答案 could be seen.
Andreotti's abortive government minister to a governors headed by Premier Emilio Colombo he resigned on October 15.
The divorce law was one factor in the collapse. There were many others. By general agreement, parents must be messy. So is higher education. In the whole country, a visitor is often the rank of full professor; the overcrowded universities, once among the finest in Europe, have now been turned into Elementary schools also are suffering for want of adequate funding, but adequate funding from the government party is no willing to support.
Italy's powerful trade unions are no more arrogant, perhaps, than the unions themselves. The United States, but they seem to be less
predictable. A traveler who goes to Rome's airport, expecting to catch a plane to somewhere, is in danger of beingDriver drivers—without the slightest warning—have proclaimed an eight-hour strike. Why the strife? It is a matter of what he knows. It is part of a way of life. It can be a frustrating way of life. Many Italians, it is said, are afraid of losing a job or a little more order, a little more discipline—a small cappuccino, if you please, of stability. As one Italian writer wrote, "When we stir, one hear much talk of the MSI (Movimento Sociale Italiano), the neo-Fasci party, we claim only 4.5 percent of theMSI."
Catching Father Dan
At one point in her letters, the nun tells how she asked the well-known theologian William Stringfellow if he would be able to tell her about disobedience action, risking jail. She reported to Father Phil that
FBI. At first he gave the agent only photo copies of the letters, in which the Berrigan family was referred to as "the bloodiness," and then asked him if he or "little bruv." In these letters, being read by the FBI, the nunt told who was involved in Father Daniel's "surfacing" sermon, Garmontown, Pennsylvania, and referred somewhat condescendingly to those sheltering Daniel. Daniel responded that they must be "over cautious" liberals. It is clear that the group caring for Father Dan was largely distressed from that working with Father
BY GARRY WILLS
HARRISBURG, PENN — A bit of a loophole in the summer for the peace activist, Rev. Philip Berrigan; was in jail for destroying draft records. His brother, Daniel, convicted on the same charge, was a "fugitive living under arrest" for four months, alluding the FBI with surprising ease.
Daniel was finally caught,
served time, and has just
recently been paroled. But how
he was captured has not come to
notice, that it, until last week,
when the man was untravelled in
a courtroom.
While Father Dan was on the run a Catholic nun was smudging letters to her nephew Lewisburg penitentiary. What she did not know was that her courter gave her money for the Agent Delmar Mayfield of the
New York, O'Connor, she wrote:
"Stringfellow may not be usable because he is part of bruv's next move."
That letter reached the courier August 3, and he mailed it across town to the FBI office—which reached the FBI bv August 4.
The Communists, meanwhile, seem to rock along with about 27 of the country's most troubled by divided leadership, and harassed by a Maistrump faction, but they are marvelously well-educated. That's about the only efficiency, come to think of it, in a position where gloriously normalized, fully fouled up.
There was an increase of interest on Agent Mayfield's part at just this time, and he copied of copies now, and so when another letter came from the nun, the agent could read in the original that William Stinkey mixed up with brux. somehow impressed with brux, the "drones around him." That letter was postmarked August 8. On August 11, Daniel Berman signed by the BAI at the house of William Stringfellow.
vote, but in recent by-elections, it has shown spectacular growth. Come May, the neo-Fascians probably will double their seats and expose of the Christian Democracies, and may do much better.
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Copyright, 1972. Universal Press Syndicate
"Take cover! The Americans are descalating their bombs upon us again."
By ED LALLO
Kansan Staff Writer
Passing PoliticsByInStatehouse
Picture and Story
In the final week of the legislative session there is one man in the statehouse that doesn't care which bills are passed. Brown quietly minds his three-seat shoehose stand with the
outlook that "this is my business, and politics is theirs."
"The stand belongs to the
The 67-year-old Brown, despite his notion, is actually a part of the political makeup of the statehouse. For many years he has minded the stand for the Senate and the House members.
legislature, see. When they are in session I'm here! when they leave I go home", explained Brown. "The state doesn't carry me on the payroll though. This is their responsibility in business for myself, see."
The price of a shine for the legislators has gone up in the past few years. What used to be a two-
bit business now has risen to 50 cents a shine.
Brown comes to work each morning at 7 c'clock. His dress is black with a white bow. He pants gray and black suspenders. He has a large, toothless smile. He works every day in the statehouse for two years now, ten of them spent as a custodian
for the Justices of the Supreme Court.
ST. LOUIS
"The justices not only come do the right thing, they proudly point out, "but when I was sick they'd come to the hospital and to my home to make sure we were fine."
The legislators' modern dress trends haven't affected Brown's stand in the least. The new boot styles, like the wide white colors are all taken in stride. Brown said the women legislators brought their shoes to him to do in his spare suit. All of them had gotten on his stand.
Brown has never been back to his airbuckle Bomb, Miss Heirn. She was coming to Topeka. Married and retired, he matured retired and lived by himself.
Despite the continuous opportunity to keep up with the important happenings in the statehouse, Brown leaves politics
"I don't keep up with the bills, see," said Brown. "I'm here to help them service. I never want one of them chambers even."
Brown rides the bus to work each day because of his age.
"I ride the bus to work," he said. "If I miss the bus at night I'd have to stay up here all night or else call a cab.
"I too old to walk home, and besides the doctor doesn't want me to. I not supposed to do anything, according to the doctor."
When the shine stand is put away after the legislature adjourns, Brown will return to work on the television at home or watch television.
Griff and the Unicorn
When asked whether he would go next year Brown said, "If I were going to go next year I'll be here next year. You never know about these things at my age."
ANOTHER DAY,
WORLD...
By Sokoloff
ANOTHER DAY,
WORLD...
I GO FORWARD
ONCE MORE
TO FIND THE MEANING
OF LIFE AND SOLVE
THE RIDDLE OF MY
EXISTENCE...
DON'T MAKE
A BIG DEAL
OUT OF IT
SOKDLOFF
I GO FORWARD ONCE MORE TO FIND THE MEANING OF LIFE AND SOLVE THE RIDDLE OF MY EXISTENCE...
DON'T MAKE
A BIG DEAL
OUT OF IT
SARLOFF
"Copyright 1972, Davtd Sokoloff."
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
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Wednesday, March 8,1972
5
oreme
Housing Committee to Reorganize
dress
own's
new boot
r the
pure all
aid the
t their
spare
them
ack to ss. He before arried retired
By HAL RITTER
CATHY SHERMAN
Kansan Staff Writers
e bills, ere to never numbers
o woi. age, k," he t night l night
With less than two weeks to election, the six Senate committees are finishing special projects and work before
me, and
I want
to do
to the
is put collature return to t home
would said, "If I to me never at my
car except
ester, $10
modations,
without
necessarily
Schwartz said that besides reorganization, the committee was setting new guidelines and goals before the new Senate
Les Schwartz, Overland Park junior and chairman of the Housing Committee, said his committee was being given permission to allow housing and transportation instead of just off campus housing.
Chip Crews
He also said that problems concerning jurisdiction in complaints had been the subject between the committee and the Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic Association and the University Residence Halls.
Carol You...
The function of the Housing Committee is to receive compensation for housing and the Lawrence Bus Company. Schwartz said. The committee also makes inquiries about minimum housing requirements and recommends legislation to the Senate concerning student housing.
Y
SCHWARTZ SAID the committee had discussed the feasibility of running a consumer price survey on student housing
similar to the survey run by the Senate last year, but decided against it.
He said that because of the existing price freeze at the time and because the results concerning housing, rents and conditions in last year's survey had not sufficiently changed, the need for a new survey would not be worth the time, effort or money.
Revising the old All-Student Council Statute on the Publications Board concerning student publications was the main concern of the Communications committee this summer. Submitted by Kansas City, Mo., junior and chairman of the committee, said.
The committee proposed a bill, passed by the Senate March 1, 2009, that mandated Publications Board to oversee the financial management of all student publications, which were defined in the bill as "cells will be associated with University of Kansas in which students participate, and which are the recipients of financial or support from the Student Senate."
COWEN DAY the Student Publications Board was made a subcommittee of the Comprehensive School board will approve all expenditures made from accounts of the Senate that are allocated to student publications and will also approve student publications annually.
health insurance plan to be made available at fall enrollment is one of the projects undertaken by the Student Services Committee this year, Susan Goering, McPherson and the chairman of the committee, said.
Choosing an optional student
The Student Services sub-course for the four-year study in housing insurance plans and Goering said an optional plan would be selected after the new plan is approved.
The committee is also investigating the power of not being aware in which notes from large lecture classes would be compiled and made into a book.
Establishing the Day Care subcommittee to manage the permanent center at KU was a recent job of the Right Reserves and Response Unit. Richard Mackenzie, Hutchinson first-year law student and business educator
MACKENZIE SAID his committee had also been averaging two or three complaints a week from students with grievances against the administration or individual schools.
Mackenzie said his committee listened to students' complaints at hearings and then attempted to arbitrate them.
When student senators miss two meetings, Mackenzie said it was his committee's job to hold up the debate if necessary select a new senator.
Mackenzie said it was the proposed legislation to regulate regulation or amendments to the Student Code to protect and preserve the rights of students.
Mohammed Amin, Ralsenjan,
iran, senior and chairman of the
Academic Affairs Committee,
said his committee had been
conducted in both education and
promotion policies in different
schools and departments.
Amin said his committee had aided professors with grievances against the administration. As an example, he cited the case of a professor who was leaving KU because he was denied tenure.
THE PROFESSOR cited was denied tenure because his department said he had not done enough research and had not had sufficient material published in field-related publications, Amin
Despite a lack of enforcement powers, Amin said he hoped his committee could introduce a teaching quality based on educational ability and the teaching qualities of instructors as indicated by course requirements.
Amin said an additional job of his is communication with sophomores and with course selection and academic problems in the college-with-a-master's degree.
The Finance and Auditing Committee reports to the Senate on all legislation requiring ex-
KU Orientations To Be in April
The freshman class and the Office of School Relations are sponsoring a series of orientation classes for juniors and seniors. Rick McLaughlin, Dallas freshman and freshman class president,
By SALLY MORGAN
Kancon Staff Writer
The orientation sessions, which will be held on three consecutive Saturdays, April 8, 15 and 22, will give high school students a look at the basics such as housing and education opportunities McLaughlin said.
AFTER THE FORUMS, a lunch will be catered at Potters Lake. McLaughlin said the students will attend for each weekend. April 8 the students will be entertained by the various activities of the campus. There will be a combination of Greek Week and Spring Fling. April 22, the students will be at the KU Relays. Because the University has no planned
McLaughlin said each session would begin at 10 a.m. with m. with a guest speaker followed by a "gigantic tour with various stopping off places." At various locations on the campus, students will formuurs KU students, faculty and members will discuss housing dorms and sororites and fraternities, academic opportunities, and student
activities on April 15, the freshmen class is working out some kind of entertainment with SUA such as a more in-depth involvement through SUA and an incident Senate. McLaushin said.
The high school students will be invited by one of three types of letters to receive a type of letter will be a personal invitation from McLaughlin whose names are on a list in the Office of School Relations. These persons have expressed interest in KU by contacting KU officials.
The second type of letter will also be a personal letter from McLaughlin and will be addressed to student high school students in the class presidents and president of student governments.
THE THIRD LETTER will be sent to counselors and principals of high schools by John Myers, and the Office of School Relations.
McLaughlin said a card would be included in the letters which the student could return to for confirmation for the date of his choice.
penditures from the activity fee fund.
For students traveling long distances, Kansas, accommodations can be arranged in University housing on Saturday, Saturdays night. MLCaughlin says.
Bradley said the meeting was closed after a brief business session because it was the policy of the board to close their doors whenever personnel matters were included on the agenda.
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1
6
Wednesday, March 8, 1972
University Daily Kansan
1983
Fans Happy with Season
Kansas State Press by GREED SORBET
KU's Bill Derrick
Valeer gets second chance
Kenan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER
By BILL SHEELE
by BRIAN M. BELLEFORT
Korean Short Story Writer
It's the first time since 1983 that the University of Kansas has wound up on the short end of a win-loss record and it is a new experience for coach Ted Owens. He was an all-time winner since he has been a coach.
But a sampling of KU student fans' reactions to the mediocre coaches' reactions about the season or provoke any hostile feelings about coach Ted Owens. Instead, they seemed moderately pleased with the team.
"If this is the worst season a KU team ever has, I'll be satisfied," Ron Booth, Norton senior said in a recent interview.
"OWEN'S did a good job with a little talent as he had to work with the men of the company." Scott sophomore. "I thought it was a very exciting team to work with."
Karen Dirks, Dodge City sophomore, ephorate McFall's opinion. "I think we did pretty good for our lack of size and lack of rebounding. Bud Walthorn is a great football player. I have ever seen."
John Twigg, Honolulu, Hawaii junior, said, "It certainly was a lot more exciting than last year. Last year we knew w'd win them
all. this year we weren't sure". Most fans singled out all- American candidate Bud Swedell in the key to the Islam's success.
"I WAS surprised that Bud had to carry the team as much as he did," said Ken Spong, Seattledale, Az. graduate student.
"About the only good thing this season," she said, "wearing a white shirt, Wichita sophomore. "Also, the freshmen had a really good guy."
The excellent KU fan interest was reflected in the home attendance, which averaged nearly 13,000 fans a game.
The reaction of some of KU's younger players was a mixture of disappointment and satisfaction.
"Sure it was disappointing," said junior center Randy Canfield. "We got off to a real disappointment, and we improved as the year has progressed. I'm really looking forward to next year."
TOM KIVISTO sophomore
we would have to think we could have done better. A few breaks here and there and we would have been in contention
"We were really in an ironic situation. We had a lot of speed on this team, but we were not able to
utilize it. We needed to run the fast break to survive, but in order to do that we had to rebound. We didn't have the consistent rebounding power to keep it going.
Kivisto looked forward to next year. "We should be real strong next year. We'll be bigger but we'll have quickness and speed
"the sophomores-to-be will really help us, Rick Suttle and Danny Knight should give us the necessary rebounding strength; Jenkins, Rogers and Dalian Greene will give us speed for the fast break."
"NEXT YEAR I think we will have a stronger team effort," said Kivisto. "We won't have to depend on a Bud Stallworth to should be able to play for each one and even out the scoring load."
Dave Taynor, sophomore guard and forward, was disappointed in the losing season.
"Beating both K-State and Missouri was an accomplishment, especially since they were both strong this year," he said.
Coach Owen summed up his in-living season over as a head coach, but disappointing. I think we made good progress. The great attitude we had was a bit strong.
"We beat Brigham Young, one of the best teams in the country," said Taynor. "We also beat all the Big Eight teams at home, stretching our home court. Giants winning streak to 21 games.
but pointed out that the team did accomplish some noteworthy feats.
The KU fans also drew praise from Owens.
Hatcher Wins Second Big Eight Title
"The fans have been wonderful for us, too," he said. "We wanted to show them we were a good team and best Missouri for them."
By DAN GEORGE
Kansas Sports Writer
University of Kansas pole vaulter BHatcher, who started setting records in his event when he was the first high school vaulter to clear 15 feet, has been awarded a medal since he was in the sixth grade.
"I was high jumping then, too—in fact, the high jumping higher than I was vaulting," he laughed, "but then they had the vault in junior high and my interests just fell right it." Hatcher said it.
Hatcher has made the most of those interests. Two weeks ago he reached a personal high of 16 to reach an NBA record. Kansas City, Mo., he won the Big Eight indoor pole vault title for the second consecutive year. He has also qualified for the NCAA men's team March 10 and in Detroit
HATCHER TALKED Tuesday about the pole vaulting event.
One of the most important and difficult things to learn is technique. A primary prerequisite is speed.
"It's a personal challenge. Either you make it or you don't. But each time it's a new challenge, you have something new to learn."
"Timing, especially when you are over 15 years, is also important. Actually I consider it a special event than anything else."
"The optimum vaulter is a good 60-yard man," he said. "You need quickness on the runway."
"RUT YOU have to be able to coordinate yourself on the pole when you're in the air, to be able to safely off and use the pole for leverage."
"Oh, man," he said, "you're just in your own world when you are vaulting. You're out there and you're selfish and selfie and depending on yourself.
ONTARIO, Calif. (AP)—Tesla A. J. Foyt fought off constant challenges from Richard Petty and Bobby Allison to win a race at Detroit. The stock car race Sunday at the Ontario Motor Speedway
Foyt best Allison to the cheekered flag by a scant four seconds to win his second major and National event in two weeks.
Third place went to broadshouldered Buddy Baker, Petty's teammate.
"Missing the pit is probably a
vulnerability's bigest fear. It takes
a certain amount of guts to vault
the pit and get it there. We're
you're going to miss sometime."
Since the pice vault is often the final event in a meet and宴, it usually results in the outcome, the pressure is such that it may cause the total concentration. Hatcher said.
Foyt covered the 500 miles at an average speed of 127 060 miles per hour despite a rash of caution in the area. He took a clock and an oil racing surface.
"YOU HAVE to get to a point where nothing else matters, out of fear, or because you mind and just worry about the bar, not the score," he said.
"Of course, it really gets tough when you know you've got competition."
And competition is what Hatcher had at the Big Eight indoor Saturday.
"It was a unique situation," he said. "I really tried that when missed the shot." Big Eight this year. To get a second shot at Wedman and win
Hatcher is looking forward to the NCAA meet this week but his main goal is reaching the college level. And that means outdoor vaulting.
Hatcher knows that many of those whom he'll be fighting for an Olympic berth will be at the NCAA meet. Among these are Roberts, a member of KU lauer) and Dave Roberts of Rice. Both have cleared 17 feet.
"EVEV AFTER I missed, still logged on and warmed up. Before he vaulted, Wedman could see me and knew he had to make it to win. But sometimes it took me to win it too much. Then you'll show it.
"But he didn't have enough arch-he 's go up and then come down right on the bar. He got above it but not over it."
'Cats Upset MU, Clinch Big Eight
THE BIGGEST outdoor difference is the wind.
Hatcher attributed his victory to his ability to stay cool.
"It's an important meet," he said. "Everyone has been working just for the Olympics and there be a lot of 17-footers, interested in to see how many of them will pay entry in a big meet."
"The conditions are more consistent indoors," he said. "When you have a wind blowing against you, you can't do a thing."
"But with a tailwind, sometimes you feel like you can fly. And I'm hoping for a lot of those this year."
"I knew that most of the guys in the Big Eight are 'psychers' they break down in tough competition," he said.
"Wedman looked good going up. He grabbed the pole right on the end and really went high, like he was going to clear it by a mile.
Lon Kruger, a sophomore, canned two free throws to put Kansas State ahead, 78-74, with 11 seconds showing. John Brown's hook found the mark and knotted 78-6 with four seconds left.
"It's just a matter of getting some minimal problems worked out," he said. "I think I'm ready for 1-foot-0."
Hatcher has no doubts that he'll soon be out of the 16 foot range.
Two quick baskets by Gary Link, a substitute, cut the Wildates bulge to 76-74 with 15 seconds left and revived the Tigers who haven't seen the Tigers with a conference title in 32 years.
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Kansas State came into staid and joy Tuesday. Field House Tues. night and upset tradition at University College 79-78 for the Big Eight Conference basketball championship
Steve Mitchell, a 6-foot-10
junior, was the turning point.
It was Mitchell's book shot that put
the visiting Wildcats ahead to
stay 71-10 with 2:34 remaining
at home. Mitchell had desperate
desperate try for a comeback
After Mitchell's shot, Kansas set the ball after Jefferson the ball after Jefferson missed a free throw with 2:15 left and froze it until there was 1:08 to go.
At that point Mitchell made a decision when he was foiled by Greg Erikson and the Wildcats led 74-70. Two free throws by Ernie Kusner gave Kirkland a 58-31 win.
KU Forms Handball Team Captures Third at Nationals
Kruger sealed Missouri's fate by hitting another free throw with two seconds remaining.
BY JIM SCHUMM Kansan Sports Writer
This was decided Friday and Saturday at the National Intercollegiate Handball tournament in Lake Forest, III.
Last week the University of Kansas did not have a handball team. This week KU does and the third best team in the nation.
By JIM SCHUMM
"Volleyball is the number one sport for girls at KU." McIlroy said, "It really is. It we girls sponsor the volleyball program and invite the boys to play."
junior and Nate Reiz, Leawood sophomore.
"Although three trophies are awarded at the end of the year, we stress playing for fun more than anything else."
KU finished with a 12-point total behind the University of Texas, which had 19 and Lake Forest College with 18.
Gardner reached the quarterfinals in the A division singles before losing to Wes Yee and then defeating Joel Anthony and 21-13. Yee won the division.
Each team is composed of six players plus alternates. There must be three males and three females playing for each team at least once per game, than two physical education majors playing at the same time.
One rule states that women may serve overhead, but men may not.
Anyone interested in officiating the games for $1.80 an hour may join the club. Robinson. One man and one woman official are needed for the game.
Regular season play will be on Tuesday and Thursday nights until April 13. Then the top two
Intramural coed volleyball began Tuesday night in Robinson Hall, where the team competes in eight divisions, according to Claire McErioy.
A couple of provisions in the rules prove that at least not all KU women are ready for equal status with men.
Another says that no man may spike to a woman or her position on the court.
Wenger took second place in the B division, losing to Gene Kraft from Texas. 21-11, and 21-7. There were 32 entrants in this division.
This showing put Gardner within the top eight singles players at the tournament.
teams in each division, 16 all together, will compete in a tournament beginning April 18.
Also in the B division, Reiz entered the consolation bracket after losing to Don Ginsberg from the University of Missouri. He went on to win the Gary Loben of Texas. Ginsberg took third in the upper bracket.
Mekranan and Trees represented KU in the doubles competition but the finals of the consolation bracket before losing to Mike Gerrity and Dave Krantz from the Chicago Circle Athletic Club.
Coed Volleyball Begins
The team was composed last week and made their own arrangements for the trip.
"Most of the guys we were playing against had coaches and were attending school on handball scholarships." he said.
A car was rented and all trip expenses were financed with $200
allocated by the Student Senate. "I wish handball was more popular around hand," said Gardner.
"I don't see why the Big Eight doesn't start varsity handball competition," said Gardner. "I'd like to see the Big Eight Handball tournament right here." Open Handball Tournament March 18 in Austin, Texas.
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The KU team's sabre squad will face UMKC and the Kansas City Metropolitan fencer's club in a singular event Thursday.
Fencing Teams Third
Both the men's and women's teams sent from the University of Kansas to participate in the Wichita Foil Team Invitational fencing tournament Saturday after a fierce competition that included teams from the Wichita fencers' club, the Kansas City fencers' club, the
Kansas City fencing club and the University of Missouri at Kansas City.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 8.1972
7
'72 Class to Be 100th to Graduate
By GAIL PFEIFFER
Kansan Staff Writer
This year's senior class will be participating in the 100th commencement exercises at the University of Kansas.
Unlike the class of 1873, which marched from a barren hill behind Strong Hill (United University Hall (Old Fraser), the class of 1972 will march from the front of the church for commencement exercise.
The University was established in 1866 but did not hold hold formal ceremonies similar to traditions established by the eastern universities.
In his commencement speech, Chancellor John Fraser said that prior to 1873 "there were no students ripe for university education" and they were the first ripened fruits of the institution's educational labor."
John Mize, Salma senior and senior class president, said that since the University observed its centennial in 1965, this years students would not be played up, however it would be acknowledged in the themes of
the commencement program and senior luncheon.
Mize said senior class officers were finishing plans for a senior baseball team before spring break. Also scheduled is a 21 party April 28 at the Mize family home.
Senior class activities have also changed since 1873. The students read and their biographies read during Class Day activity, and there is
Although little is known about the goals of the senior class of 1873, Mize said to president, his goal was "to bring the seniors into contact with the University and to provide a service."
Senior class officers, along with the other class officers, are assigned to all class classes in which all classes participate. According to Mize, activities such as a bicycle ride out to Lake Perry are planned.
Women's Commission To Take Applications
In 1873 the students thought that the University was bare and unwiving. The planting of the university's first step towards ornamentation.
The Commission on the Status of Women is taking applications for committee membership, and for committee activities. The 1972-73 commission activities.
Any woman connected with the University may apply for position on committee and serve on it. Nell Bly, Arkansas commissioner, said Monday of the commission.
A representative will be selected by each committee to form the Commission Board, the body of the commission.
The commission members prefer that all applications be submitted in person, and the dean of women's office. Blys said, but applications will be accepted by the commission.
New committees will meet sometime next week to select representatives to the Commission Board, Bly said. She
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said this was the importance of getting applications in early.
Women who apply for the position of chairperson or treasurer will be interviewed and selected as members of the Commission on Women and Karen Keeling, assistant dean of women and commission adviser.
Applications are available in the Dean of Women's Office, in all organized housing groups and at a table in the Kansas Union.
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17
MARTIN GUITAR - 12 string model D-35, 5 months old, in excellent condition. Includes hardcase case and instrument. Call Hassel-Burg 845-7670
TRY IT YOURLICE LIKE IT - Rent Winnebago motor home for up to four nights on the free air-conditioned. Free Ala-KaSea, Lawnwood and 1-499-2455, 1-381-1501 or 1-322-6463.
80 Ventura string acoustic guitar with case. Excellent condition Will accept best offer. Call Paul Javrs, 845-7922
Nice black kittens 7 weeks old. Box trained, raised with dog. $1.00 each. 842-1984. 3-8
Pall-hajcha. Hungarian sheepdog, born Jan 21. A.K.C. Male and Female. Black and Gray. Priced individual. 796-2881. McLouth, McLaughlin. 3-15
1971 Honda 350-SL, excellent condition,
must sell, call Dennis at 842-
7404 3-8
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
EARTHSHINE - WE SELL CLOTHES
THE ARE THE FUN OF IT ALL
EARTHSHINE - EAST KTH & MASS
3-9
VW-1967, pretty black bug, new brakes, runs great, stereo. Tim. 842-3
7125.
WHAT'S NEW THIS SPRING IN
FASHION • ITS YOUR TRIP
EARTHSHINE-EAST 8TH & MASS
3-9
1917 Champion Motor Home-24 ft.
4113 cid engine, generator, 80 lb. LB
capacity, 14,800 ml., $9,000, 842-7209-
3-97
1967 Yamaha 350, street bike, like excellent running condition. Would like to sell this week. Call 843-6355 after 2:00 p.m. for Ask. Buse 1-800-3355
1970 Duster, green, 3-speed, VB. $1,450. We will buy locally owned cars, domestic and VB. Yawjahk Volkwagen, 2522 lowe. 8420-316 - 200
3-speed 20" boys, bicycle, hand brakes, 5 months old, battery operated light, new tires, good condition. Call 842-5539 after 5 p.m. 3-10
66 250ce Ducati, good condition, must sell, call 842-7555. 3-9
SCUBA EQUIPMENT - First Mack
Pacific Life Lifesaving Insurance,
$125
Hawk Pace Lifesaving Insurance,
$125
Hawk Kirkfeet and Bike
$36.95
Equis & Spar
$9.95 See us for all your diving
tours. All dives by Guver Equip and
Repair Guver. City Mo. M4147. Phone
1-816-763-5788
Down and out law student must sell his '67 VW. Excellent condition inside and out. Call 842-5657 after 5:00. Free stuffed animal. 3-10
1970 Rallyer RT automatic, new tires,
charged wheels, remote bucket seats,
over 20,000 miles, mechanically per-
formant, best offer - 2-10
Mark, 842-807-600
Back. 64 Crout convertible 4-speed.
Looks rough, but has engine rebuild
and other work recently.
Maintains gain 92-7181, 8-9
or 4-6 p.m.
Nikon F Body, additional FT Head,
Bronze Bracket, 2X Sensor,
v15mm f2.8 Lens, v15mm f2.8
Lens, v15mm f2.8 Lens, cam access,
Zion Ion light meter, cam access,
Perfection Edition, 1-888-1383.
Perfection Edition, 1-888-1383.
MISTER GUY employee is selling his
outfit. Outwear 40-42
sports coat, open toe skirt,
32 ahts 13'5" & 15'5. shoes 16'
& 18'. Swaters and 82.48-628
shirts.
16 ft. all aluminum granman canoe with paddles, life-preservers, and root rack. Sears auto steder treads for backpacking. 3261-8.4 - amphibian, 4-6 p.m.
25 words or fewer: $1.50
1966 VOLKSWAGEN, LESS THAN
2014 KIA SPORTAGE, CUSTOM CARPETING,
GREAT CONDITION NEVER BEEN
MARKED - 810-624-8444. ARIEL
STEV BOSS 3A 13 12
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
each additional word: $.02
4-piece drum set—excellent condition.
Call VI 2-0529 for further information.
3-13
1967 Triumph Bonneville, 6,000 actual miles—exceptional condition—extras—9300 firm 843-4250 3-13
10-speed Western Flyer used only three
months. $45 Ask for Mike
Gaul. 843-7404 3-13
Tire Cleaner -New F70 x 14 wide belts cut to $25, plus $2.50 F.E.T.
Free installation at Ray Stoneback's.
929 Mass. 3-9
Trade-in special—50-wait Magnavox FM receiver, one-year-old, $100 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass 3-9
Used Motorola portable, sold new
at $149.90, now only $50 at Ray
Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-9
Clip-on UHF bow tie antennas, $1.00 each at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-9
71 Datum 1200, Coupe 10,000 miles,
factory air, properly maintained,
very clean, runs beautiful. Snow tires
included Call Gagel. 842-888-305-14
1966 Porsche 911, 200 h.p., excellent condition, highest offer over $2,900.
1610 W. 22nd Terr. 3:17
100 cc Kawasaki, 1970 10 speed Trail Boss, excellent condition. 1,190 miles. $375. Call 824-3928. 3-14
71 Suzuki TC 90R under 400 miles,
$550 or best offer.
3-14
Baldwin exterminator amplifier. 4
inputs, many controls. 6 speakers.
2'15" 2'12" 2'8" $170 Call Bob.
864 2376 3
3-14
RMI Electric琴房, 8 months used,
Olds Mender trumpet 3 years old.
Olds Special trumpet 8 years old.
In fine condition. 842-6036. 3-14
Gear up for a super spring break. Be the first on your board to buy an own very own heat-up step-van-64; master over-hauled. 50-10-8471.
For sale: 4' X 3' drawing table
$35, VI 1-3883. 3:14
Sony model 130 V Portable television, $12^{th}$ (diagonal) screen 6 months old Call 841-2964 3-15
VIVIFAR ZOOM LENS. 85–205mm,
automatic. f 3.8 with Nikon mount
Call 842-8528, aff. eve. 3-14
1971 350 Honda, exelent condition,
2,800 miles, $685, 843-706. 3-14
Buoce motorcycle helmet 1 month old,
$15 Call 841-2964 3-15
Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 515 Mich.
St. Outdoor pit Bar-B-Que, 615 Mich.
$300 $200 $100 $80 $60 $40 $20 $1
NOTICE
STUDY ESPERANTO the international language, in Portland for Portland International Expo, and the international Español Committee here 29 July to 5 August. A unique experience is offered by a Spanish-language Information Summer Seminars. University of Portland, Portland, OR.
Two experienced nursery school teachers offer complete day care for children 3-4. All pre-school skills, basic skills, and reading rates are benign. 843-1207- 3-10
Red L
DISCOUNT TRAVEL! Discount programs can be fantastic, but can also find you in Europe looking for a ride. Check it out at SUA 864-372-8878.
RUSSIA - SCANPNAVIA-5. weeks.
Largest population in the small group camping travel (ages 14 and older) of all Earth Expeditions. U.S. Whole Earth Expeditions. U.S. 1497, Kansas City, Mt. Gorilla 64414.
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
storing service
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Be Prepared!
hun-ups
storing service
Tony's 66 Service
KNOW THOU OF A FAITH, THERE
SHOULD BE FLESH. HAIL THE
HELLOL THE WALLEN. ARE PRE-
SENTABLE FOR THE AVENUE of
THE MOST GREAT JUSTICE
bahla' tihl'a. 3-9
"If you have come to this state, to take it with me, and will why you have come into this state and know why you have come into Guro Mama-aral] - will whisper it
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
IHOOKED ON HOOKS, annual water show 8:00 p.m. Thursday, and Fri. March 9th and 10th in Reedville at the door. Really good show. $10
FOR RENT
EARTHSHINE HAS A. NEW LOOK
FOR ALL YOU GROWN UP KIDS
EARTHSHINE—EAST 8TH & MASS
3.9
HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY
HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY
HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY - COULD
WITHINSHINE EAST - CLOUDF
& MASS
Barn Parties? Now available for rent at the Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry. Apple Valley Farm has a cooler and cooler, plenty of parking and a beautiful location. Call Joe Siege 2 against p. 883-545-1700.
SPENDING THE SUMMER in LAW-
INCOME. Enjoy yourself in one of La-
wis' premier law schools, if you call Mrs. Forbes 912-745-4300, living in Los Angeles, 11th & 12th Avenues, or Harvard University, Avaon, or Harvard University, Iowa or payable between June and September. Special rates Find out for more. Law school is a wonderful time to be in Lawis.
The demands of the MACHI MOTH oppressors, we strive to keep Wednesday evening when the March Mother's Day will meet with high administration and a strong response. Surge the moment! Today the mother is sponsored by Orange Aware Inc. sponsored by Orange Aware Inc.
Women's alterations. 30 years experience. Call 843-2767. 9:30 to 5:30. 3-13
For reasonable prices on all glass or any kind of Plexiglas including laminated glass, Shop. 724 North 2nd St, or call 811-329-5600 for the Plexiglas samples that just arrived.
DANCE TBL. YOU PUKE THE
PENTHATIONS EDITIS BEER
PALACE 744 MASS 810 COVEY
SAT 11 & 11. THIS SAT
SAT
University Terrace Apartments
turned apartments available for immediate occupancy $110 and up,
until September 31. 9th, Apt. 1, or B-1, or call 843-143-59
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited
students can get two bedrooms
students can have two bedrooms
furnished apt, with all utilities
paid for $450 each. Call 4-000-
613-8790.
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Right
from $259. Ten 2 bedroom and four 1
bathroom apartments available. Aug
18. 17th floor of apartment available at end of summer; availability is limited.
w captain, dishwashers, central
bell, refrigerator, washer-dryer.
B208 between 3.50 p.m. and 10.
B208 between 3.50 p.m. and 10.
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
241h & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
THE MERCANTILE
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUSAGES
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
Parts at a discount
30 Varieties of Donuts Hot and Cold Drinks
SUNWICHES
5 a.m. - 12 p.m. Tues.. Sat.
5:5 Sun
Hot and Cold Drinks Sandwiches
Single furnished sleeping room with kitchen privileges for male. No pets. Borders KU and near town. Phone 843-5767. 3-14
Carol Lee
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
JOHN MILLER, born August
1972, while teaching at
the University of
Maryland, 862-2348,
862-2348 or 2107-A. Harvard
Lawrence, a graduate from
Lawrence's headmaster, and
a member of the New York
Lawrence's faculty.
Hixon Studio
10 a.m. -
5 p.m.
Nice furnished 1-3 bedroom apartments near town, KU. Also rooms with kitchen privileges, only one room has a TV and cable now 842-700-3929
APARTMENTS, ROOMS, HOUSES-
available immediately. Lynch
Real Estate, 1216 La, 843-101, 843-
102, 841-322, 841-323
WANTED
A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS. 'Too bad' The car won't move! Wish to walk in the pool, like in a living room in your pool like living room in a pool! You can afford $200. You can afford $200. You can afford $200. Savings Apartments
FOR RENT OR FOR SALE Mobile home in good condition. 600 sq. ft partially furnished. dishwasher, dryer. Garbage cans. Call 850-6155 to see. $2,990
Farmhouse Apartment, 1424 Indiana duplex apartment, air conditioned, wall-to-wall carpeting, laundry facilities, off-street parking, laundry from Union I-3777
Alamo, Albuquerque, and Santa Fe. Albuquerque is home to Mimosa & Harvard, and Albuquerque 11 & Mimosa. Then compare the two apartments, some appointed, sound proof and spacious apartments and you will be more sure to have a dishwasher, central air conditioning, and many more features.
Knapsa Key Press -Job printing from Kaunas leaflets to posters, bookshelves to booklets and resumes. 710 Mass, in back cover. Zero Open, in back to a 3-D model **-4485**.
"For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It"
I need a ride to Lawrence from Kansas City Tuesday and Thursday of each week. Will pay. Call Cindy, 816-561-8827 3-8
for appointment.
NURSERY SCHOOL vacancies for
two girls, one boy, ages 3-5 Call 842-
3459 or 843-7704 3-9
Female roommate wanted. Call after 5 P.M. 942-5921. Share rent, furnished apartment. 3-9
"For Feets Sake, If The
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
THE CONCORD SHOP
Senior Pictures Must Be 1 Before March 10th Pictures Taken After This
● STRETCHER FRAMES
many in stock
—others on order
Shines Dyeing Refinishing
634 Mass. 842-6966
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
Phone 843-0330 for Appointment
Before March 10th
Pictures Taken After This
Cannot Be Included
Senior Pictures Must Be 1 Before March 10th
- ARTIST CANVAS
REDUCED
KAT Suzuki
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz. - qts. only
50 % OFF
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
SENIORS
H
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
McCONNELL LBR. CO.
844 E. 13th St. 843-3877
Last chance to call for appointment for your 1972 JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURES. Call before MARCH 1st
摄影
MECONNELL LBR. CO.
844. 511. 267
WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH—
THE TOUGH GET GOING
842-0444
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSU
500 E.23rd
LOVE THAT DATSUN I
UNI
Let
0 Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-12
PLANNING A TRIP??
Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!!
Maupintour travel service
WANT TO BUY-USED FULL OR
HALF GOLF SET CALL 843-6507
1-2 female roommates to live on farm. Private rooms, must be built and prefer own transportation.托管空气,3-4年 842-3949 3-10
Alterations and repair, men and women Formerly with New York Cleaners. 442-2017. 3-14
TYPING
Woodnok—spring is a time of renewal. 3-8
There, term papers type accurately and promptly. IBM Selectric, your choice of type styles. Also editing at Florida, Raleigh, NJ 842-9798, 842-5605.
Typing done on elite, electric typewriter. No Theses please. Prompt attention. 843-0958
Female roommate needed to share unfurnished apartment through finals, June 15-23. 824-744 from 2.5 & after 30:30 PM see at 1301 Los Angeles, No. 11
Experienced typist. Overland Park, Kansas. Prompt, accurate work. Reasonable rates. Phone 381-6424. 3-28
PERSONAL
Experienced in typing theses, distortions term paper forms, other mis-type writing, and drafting. Accurate and prompt service. Req's Bachelor's degree. Req's Phone: 843-8554. Mr. Wright
Typing done in my home, IBM
Selectic, Prompt, accurate work.
Expertenced. Call 841-3556 .9:17
NEW OLD CLOTHES - A TIME MEMBERED - THOUGH RE-REINED EASTHINEST - EAST 8TH AND MASS 3-9
ONLY GROOVY GRWBURWS
INTRO TO THE MUSIC SELVES IN
THEM A DENIM EARTHISHING OUR MOTTO "A FLY
EARTHISHING SOUTH EARTHISHING
"ANT WEST AND
BECAUSE a listening service has:
*Call us. we'll talk about it.*
Sunday 8 PM & Sun
8 PM & M-F. A8: 842-506, 116
stairs.
3-28
Factory Authorized
Honda Sales & Service
Cycle Pick Up Service
841 322 7321
BLEVINS HONDA
1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks.
CSC
TOYOTA THAILAND
Sports Cars Inc.
Competition
2300 W. 29th Tr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
LOST
At lation in, seek hop—red wool blazer. Great sentimental value. No questions asked. Call 864-1196 3-8
Open 24 hrs. per day
Lost 2-3-eve near Fraser black and white speckled pup with black spots and head. Female. Please bring her home. Call 842-6990 3-13
Lost 2-26, KU area, 14 mo, old German Shepherd, male, dark, name Jackson, choke collar. 843+1782 3-13
The red hilted robber. You can keep the money but I would hate to lose my passport and cards. Please return to the police. Call 1532. 1532.
Independent
SNEPK, SNEEDS, BLUE, DIEFELS,
NORBIRDS ARE EVERYWHERE.
NY RABBITS ARE EVERYWHERE.
MY WHAT A TRIFFLE OR
EARTHSPHERE--EAST
& MASS
Had a fender bender, created auto-alan, or did both and need a new tow* 842-0131 after 6 p.m. 842-0131 after 6 p.m. ask for Dick Lawrences' rate, all work guaranteed, all work guaranteed, same location: Haven. 85% w/ br wrecker Lawrence. Call for rates out of town.
COIN
MISCELLANEOUS
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Size—Sizes 8-10, up to 59% off, Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky 4-50
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
1. Mine North of the Raw Water Bridge
Phone: (843) 742-101
Open 9:30 to 12:30 Monday-Monday
Cable TV: Cable Media Network
DRIVE-IN
AND COOP OI
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches.
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Our motto is and has always been
"There is no substitute for quality
Sports-minded couple for summer play in front yard. Please please! Day-in-day-out (impetuity). No children door and outdoor chores at professor's summer home on Lake Champlain. Please apply in writing giving me a chance to Raymond Cee, 1900, Summit Drive.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
HELP WANTED
Attention Seniors. Salem need
part time now and full time at com-
pletion of education for Salmians Ei-
nance Management.
843-4244
trading manager. 843-4244
3-10
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Fineest Bainting Plains
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
843
8500
days per week
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
---
842-2323
RAMADA INN
Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointment necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming grifolds.
Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 10, Sat. til noon.
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
8
Wednesday, March 8, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Goldovsky's Talk Warm, Delightful
By MIKE BICK
Kansan Staff Writer
For those of you who didn't attend Tuesday night lecture, "Bringing Opera to Life," you missed a remarkable evening with an actor.
Goldvokys work of opera as an art form, which he takes as a lesson in the art of Explaining opera to a group of non-opera fans (well, at least me) could seem like a chore but the audience's tentative and tragulous humor quickly won me on. Listening to Goldvokys' enthusiasm was not only a delight for the performer, it was entertaining.
Goldvskoy took opera out of my dab stereotype and analysed it in detail. He was inspired by Lila Olsen, Atwood graduate student and Bill Krusmear, Atchison senior. Goldvskoy helped to establish Moztars's "The Marriage ofigator" vaguely factual work of art transplant into a vibrant, living musical
experience.
Goldovsky spoke on the subtleties and the complexities of his music, as well as the music, the action and the lyrics of the work. Each is integrated to complement the others, to point out an emotion or action to them, and to segment from "The Marriage of Figaro" to illustrate these points. I saw the extreme subtleties and the complexity would have normally overlooked.
Golddvsky's talk enlightened me. As I said, I never was much an op-ed fan. His talk, oddly put into play, purple beauty and pleasure opera can have. Golddvsky captured me and brought me into an analytical realm of opera; he left it with some clarity of what opera really is.
At one point in his talk, Gateman audience and said his business was to make everything make sense. That he did admirably.
KU Art History Picks Chairman
B BY SUSAN HAYES Kansan Staff Writer
Chu-Tsing L, professor of art history, the department has been named chairman of the department of art history for a four-year term beginning in the fall.
Li is a native of Canton, China, and received a B.A. degree from the University of Chicago. He came to the United States to study just prior to the Chinese revolution in 1949 and chose to return to the Communist nation.
Lhasa been on the faculty at the University of Kansas since 1966. His areas of interest include art, sculpture, dance, art, as well as Oriental art,
At the request of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Li will attend a meeting of Hong Kong, helping that university expand fine art department
Li said he hoped there would be an opportunity for him to visit the People's Republic of China in the near future. Since there have been talks about cultural exchanges between the United States and China, Li said the possibility seemed much more likely than in the past.
would gain through such programs. Since there are many differences between the cultures, La said, people can learn from the
M. N. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P. S. P.
Li said he thought both nations
Chu-Tsing Li
other culture ways to better its own way of life.
He said President Nixon had left his mark in history because he was a man of great accomplishment. He napped Nixon's China trip will be big step toward achieving peace.
Souffer Place residents voted Tuesday night against the proposal to allow pets in the apartments.
Stouffer Residents Vote Against Proposal on Pets
Copies of the proposal, which were mailed to residents last week, listed these facts for consideration:
Passage of the proposal would have required a majority vote of the adults in Stoffer Place.
According to Mrs. Harry Downing, resident manager, 85 per cent of the residents voted, and 95 percent voted against the proposal.
usually consisted of chewed or scratched furniture, broken screens, and urination in bedding.
—Damage or injury caused directly or indirectly by a pet is the full legal responsibility of the owner.
-Although there would be no pet deposit assessed at Stouffer Place, some apartment managers in Lawrence had found a broken window and could cover any possible damages to apartments. This damage
—There are a number of infections that immunocompromised cannot prevent, cannot ringworm, excrustion cysts, and some diseases from fleas and ticks.
—The Lawrence leash law will be enforced for dogs and extended to cats. Any pet outside of home will be allowed a leash at all times.
Also included in the proposal was an estimated cost of the innoculations for dogs and cats and the cost of licenses.
Coffee House Planned
Plans for converting the snack bar area in Lewis Hall to a coffee room at Lewis Hall on Tuesday, week. Debbie Lacy, Overland Park Junior and Lewis Hall
According to Lacy, tentative proposals for the coffee house business should be presented on the weekends, as well opening the area to residents as a lounge during the weeks. Plans are also being considered
coffee house were drawn up by Debby Quick, Villa Park, Ill., and Debby Duckworth, taken to the Housing Office where Don Alexander, interior decorator for the dormitory building, designed the final blueprints for remodeling.
Alexander will meet Thursday with Lacy and Mike Sundermeyer, Raytown, Mo., junior and president of the Association for Residence Halls, to complete arrangements for the coffee house.
The original plans for the
TED GLICK
one of the Harrisburg 8 (but who is to be tried separately, at a later date because he will act as his own attorney.)
will speak
will speak Wednesday, March 8. 7:30 p.m. in the
Big Eight Room, Union Sponsored by The Catholic Student Center
By KIRK McALEXANDER
Kansan Reviewer
the destination is soup, or if your sweet tooth prefers, jelly. You must protect gauze and goggles of hero Moldenke's consciousness, we drift like fish through the stranger's silent world of mankind, the first embodiment of Lawrence's David Ohle, dedicated to Edo Wolfe, of the KU English Department, among sports and sports along all-around. Knopf, Motorman, man of one possible future, chugs, coughs and sports along all-around. They keep running incidentally, and one is tempted to see that as the book's main point: a yes, you may persist man neither what matter
Motorman': Man Persists
BUT ITS NOT so easy. For what the future (the future!) makes of Moldenke as man almost, almost shocked. He is
listless and weak, he is most unpretentious and constantly aware of his natural processes and the stresses that circulate, shelter, the weather. There is really very little else to do to him, so he needs to the bleating of his sheeps!
circle, regardless of which
exploring. "T. S. Elliot wrote,
"will be to arrive where we
started and know the place for
DOES MOLDENKE know his place? At the book's end he can
KANSAN reviews
hearts as they (supposedly)
assist the original; innocent
again, he can try to understand
the weather and the time of a
world of two suns, several moons,
and violent gaze storms—all
with a sense of insecurity and
inaccurately measured by
government intervention.
This is what his life is:
primitive in its advanced state.
And so, things go to him,
with strength, with wisdom,
with life see start to come around full
write, "At best I can say that I am at here, although I don't know where, I am at large and about."
"It's so easy—I know, that is. It's hard to tell."
For with more hearts and fewer feelings, more suns and less light, more moons and more or less the same lunacy. Mormon motor through his motor car. He is behind those of his world who would hold him. Bunce, the Big-Brother, in all his
embodiments, knows everything about Moldenke, but his knowledge is impotent as long as she knows how to burn. Burnheart, the man of science who has clutched Moldenke's hearts in his very hands, cannot change and cooperate. Cock Moldenke repulsive can but seldom arouse his feelings, none of these, not even she, can get a handle on her.
THAT, I SUPPOSE, is what persists in man as he approaches souphold: he keeps on getting in the way of the rest of the world. Moldenke remains; that is what happens to him himself. That is the problem and the joy; the question, and—for now—the answer. But the book, so very fine it is, makes no pretensions. It is wise, and in its hands pass. Moldenke may some day pass on, away. No great loss.
SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS
Unified Sophomore Class
Mark McCaughey—Pres.
Bob Marshall—V-Pres.
Ann Dillon—Sec.
Barb Haman—Treas.
Vote U.S.C. March 15-16
Paid by USC
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
I'll see you.
YOUR NEXT SEMESTERS TUITION FREE!
Or Room and Board. Or Books IN
KLWN-FM's BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES.
Just register at any Lawrence 7-Eleven store.
Here's the story. Entries will be taken for nine weeks. March 1 through May 3. We'll have three winners in the BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES. One winner will get a check in the amount of his Tuition up to $300. One winner will be awarded a check in the amount of Room and Board up to $150. And one winner will receive a check in the amount of his books up to $50. KLWN-FM and 7-Eleven have joined
forces to help you make the best of this school year. And all you have to do is register at any Lawrence 7-Eleven store. No purchase required. You don't have to be present to win. All registration blanks must have student ID # to qualify as a winner. Register today for the BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES. (It might help your balance of payments!)
OH THANK HEAVEN FOR 7-ELEVEN [and KLWN-FM!]
832 Iowa
1741 Massachusetts
7 ELEVEN
1909 W. 25th Street
2319 Louisiana
DIVISION OF THE SOUTHLAND CORPORATION
♪
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A LITTLE WARMER
82nd Year, No.102
Student Officer Candidates Speak
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Thursday, March 9. 1972
See page 7
Muskie Seizes Delegate Lead
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP)—Sen. Edmund S. Musk of Maine pulled ahead in his fight to gain a majority of New Hampshire's Democratic national convention delegates as the votes were counted Wednesday.
With 91 per cent of the state's precincts reporting, Muskhe held a 15-5 lead over the 84 per cent.
The close race for the delegates was even more surprising than McGovens' preferential primary showing, since Muskie managers had expected a sweep of the 20 convention slots. New Hampshire will cast 18 nominating votes at the national convention, but each delegate elected in the Tuesday ballot will call nine-tenths of a vote.
Muskie won with 48 per cent of the vote, while Sen. George S. McGovern of South Dakota was strengthening his rival White House bid by scoring an unexpected 37 per cent.
Both McGovern and Muskie are entered there, and both of them Wednesday downgraded the significance of an 11-way race to Gov. George C. Wallace was favored to win.
MUSKIE'S preferential primary vote fell short of an absolute majority of the ballots cast in New Hampshire. The outcome provided a less than overwhelming victory for Florida campaigns across the nation, with a tough Florida contest coming up next Tuesday.
McGovern said he had scored "both a moral and a political victory."
Muskie claimed "a good, solid victory,
considering all the problems we faced in
the war."
He said, "We deliberately sacrificed the
possibility of a maximum showing in order to have some resources left for the other
BUT THE POLITICAL psychology produced by McGoventry's potent challenge to Muskie in his own northern New England state was sure to encourage Muskie's rivals.
President Nixon, who captured 69 per cent of the Republican ballots cast and swept two challengers—Rep. Paul N. McCloskey and John Ashbrook—won the 14 GOP nominating votes at stake in New Hampshire.
The highly publicized Democratic preference primary was waged entirely for psychological stakes, awarding no delegates. Delegates running as pledged, or favoring individual presidential candidates, were elected separately.
In the preference primary, this was the situation, with 97 per cent of the 302 pres.
Muskie 40,425, or 48 per cent.
Mayor Sam Vorty of Los Angeles, 5,244, or 6 per cent.
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas, 3,508 or 4 per cent.
Sen. Vance Hartke of Indiana, 2,326 or 3 per cent.
SEN. EDWARD M. KENNEDY of Massachusetts was the only other Democrat to reach 1 per cent, with 794 write-in votes. Democrat primary, with 96 per
in the Republican primary, with 96 per cent of the precincts tallied, it was:
Nixon 77,398,or 69 per cent.
Nixon 77,598, or 65 per cent.
McClaskey 22,654, or 29 per cent.
McCloskey 22,654, or 20 per cent.
Ashkebee 30,340.
PASCAL KLEIN
Comedian Pat Paulsen got 1,146, or 1 per cent.
Mann Performs
Herbie Mann, jazz flutist, entertained 3,000 people in Hoch Audioritat last night in his Festival of the Arts appearance. His performance is reviewed on page 7.
McGovern's Strong Primary Bid Surprises Local Political Activists
South Dakota Sen. George McGovens' showing in Tuesday's New Hampshire primary caught many local persons by surprise.
Sen. Edmard Muskie, D-Maine, won the primary with 48 per cent of the vote, but McGovern's 37 per cent tally was not as far behind as many had expected.
President Nixon's 69 per cent showing was smaller than most Democrats had before.
mown opponents, Rep. Pete McCloskey, Rcaillin, with 20 per cent and Rep. John Browne, with 15 per cent.
Lynn Knox, St. Louis, Mo., freshman and chairman of the Douglas County McGovern for President Committee, was pleased with her candidate's showing.
According to Knox, McGoventry had said anything over 25 per cent would be a violation of his contract.
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
I
30 and 35 per cent of the votes it would force other candidates to re-examine
"THEER is no doubt now that he is a serious candidate with vote giving power and is a force to be contended with," Knox said.
Knox said McGoverson's showing might draw more volunteers to his campaign who were previously uninvolved because he bought McGoverson didn't have a chance.
James Titus, KU professor of political science and adviser to the Young Democrats, said. "It's more a bale game than it is a race." She fell in the race and Humphrey's untested.
"I think it'll be a big shot of adrenaline. I hope it will give us a big boost," she said. Sam Ford, Independence, Kans. freshman and president of the KU Young Drivers, said, "I was pleased with the results. I was surprised with McGovens showing."
TITUS SAID he expected the New Hampshire contest to have little effect on the candidates' relative popularity in Kansas.
Dianne Murphy Verifies Wing Dimension
Few women students are enrolled in the School of Engineering . . .
"The Kansas mentality is not geared to be interested in this type of thing. I don't
See NIXON Page 7
State Budget Nears Final House Vote
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
and STEVE RIEL
Yorkan Staff Writers
The $430 million appropriations bill including funds for higher education, passed by the Kansas Senate Monday, is now being considered by the House Ways and Means Committee. Debate on the measure will take place on Friday. No, Calvin Strowg, R-Athens, "it" had a "fairly its
Rep. Calvin Strowig, R-Ablene, speaker of the House, said the bill had a "fairly good chance" of passing the House in its present form.
Strowig said an amendment was proposed in committee Tuesday which would allow university employees beginning July 1 instead of the 1, date specified in the Senate version of the bill. He said the motion was defeated and probably be offered again on the house floor.
REP JERRY HARPER, R-Wichita, said the big question facing the House was whether to amend the bill by granting a wage increase to welfare workers in addition to the taxation classified university employees and unaccompanied members, provided for in the Senate bill.
Last year, he said, classified employees at the universities and the Kansas Welfare Department as employees not granted pay raises. Now the welfare workers are the only ones receiving federal aid.
Harper expressed concern that the legislature might establish a pattern of granting pay raises only to groups which have been under the same conditions although they had every right, he said.
Harper said passage of the bill would probably be an all-or-none proposition. Unless increases for welfare workers are required, workers will not receive raises either, he said.
THE APPROPRIATIONS bill now before the House Ways and Means Committee and a companion $550 million bill passed by the House last week will furnish funds for Docking's total budget, which amounts to $990 million.
Keith Nitcher, vice-chancellor for business outlined the bill's implication.
Gov. Docking's recommended budget gave $1,935,169 to KU to be used for wages and salaries. Nitcher said this included as a per cent pay raise for unclassified employee benefits, education and research, and a one-step increase for classified civil service employees.
The section will emphasize the upcoming student elections and feature articles on politics on both state and national levels of government.
An eight-page special spring section will be presented in the Friday edition of the knightly magazine.
He said the University requested an 8 per cent salary increase for unclassified faculty members and a two-step wage increase for classified civil service employees.
Special Section
Also included in the special edition will be a section of sports, with features on the following teams:
HE SAID THERE was no increase in the salaries of extension personnel, and although Dochling did not specify a percentage of salary received in effect granted them a 1. per cent raise.
Docking's recommended budget was then introduced into the Senate Ways and Means Committee. Nitcher said the committee amended the budget and added it to KU's share of the budget. The increase wasearmarked for wages and salaries.
Of this amount, $21,130 was to provide funds for a 5 per cent salary increase to those working in research and extension, Nitcher said.
The rest of the money, $60,417, would permit a one-step increase for classified employees to go into effect on April 1, 1973, Nitcher said.
He said this allocation was based on the likelihood that an appropriation would be introduced in an omnibus bill to provide $400 for an increase effective April 1, 1972.
THE EFFECT of omnibus bill and the amendment to the budget if they are passed, said Nitcher, would be to allow one-step wage increase for classified employees at the universities to go into effect three months earlier than increases for state state institutions. The increase would take effect on April 1 instead of July 1.
Nitcher said the money appropriated by the omnibus bill would finance the wage increases from April 1 to July 1, 1972. The governor's budget recommendation
covers the period from July 1, 1972, to June
30, 1973. The amendment to the budget
would provide increases for the months of
April, May and June 1973.
Docking's budget recommendations for KU total $94,168,076, of which $24,184,949 would come from the general state revenue through taxes. The remainder would be provided by general student fees, interest on a permanent fund administered by federal funds, departmental earnings, traffic fees and other restricted funds.
NITCHER EMPHASIZED that the pay raises for the classified employees would not be retroactive. He said university employees would still be nine months behind their counterparts in other state agencies, even with the increase.
In addition to the appropriations bill, the Senate passed part of Gov. Docking's tax program. The plan calls for an end to the federal income tax as a deduction on state tax returns, applicable to both corporations and financial institutions.
THE MEASURE is expected to raise nearly $24 million in revenue. The bill is due by January 31.
In passing the bill, it appears that the
end of the meeting will be returned at
the end of the meeting on Friday.
The issue of reapportioning Senate districts in the state may require the legislature to meet for a one-day special session. If the matter is not resolved by Friday, the session will take place on March 20.
By MIRI NORTH Kansan Staff Writer
By MIKE MOREY
Glick Says Harrisburg 8 Seek New Peace Activity
Ted Glick, under indictment for conspiracy with seven others, including Father Philip Berrigan, spoke Wednesday night in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union about his role in the alleged conspiracy of the Harrisburg Eight.
Glick and the other members of the Harrisburg Eight are under indictment for conspiracy to kidnap Henry Kissinger, to blow up parts of the Washington, D.C. government and to destroy property of the federal government and the Selective Service System.
Glick said the first time he had heard of the alleged conspiracy was when the charges were filed by J. Edgar Hoover in November 1970.
Glick's seven co-defendants are currently in trial in Harris. Glick will be tried at a later date because he has decided to act as his own attorney, Judge Marcia Mellon, until he obtains a possible lack of legal knowledge on Glick's part to harm the other defendants.
Glick said he preferred to defend himself because he thought it tended to "humanize" the court. It is good to get away from the roles of lawyer, client, judge and jury, he said, and appeal to the jury as a human being.
Boyd Douglas, an ex-convict, to the government's chief witness. According to
C
Ted Glick
Glick, before Douglas' father died last summer he said he couldn't believe a word his son said because he had lied all of his life.
The goal of the Harrisburg Eight, Glick said, is not simply to be acquitted. The trial will be a success, he said, if it causes him harm. It could cause him harming and if it leads to a revitalization
See GLICK Page 7
Few Women Enroll in Engineering
By CLYDE LOBB
Kansan Staff Writer
An article in the February 1969 issue of the Consulting Engineer stated that only one percent of the nation's engineers were women. The article said the few number of women in the engineering field was attributable to "negative social pressures girls to see certain occupations as within the exclusive province of men."
Though the article is somewhat dated, the School of Engineering at the University of Kansas can boast that it "no longer province of men" well into the seventies.
During the fall of 1971 the school had only four women enrolled in a class of 236 graduate students. The reason for the lack of female interest in the School of Engineering might have been best described by one who dropped out of the school.
"I can't stand just being totally desse-
d," Lynn Gibson, Overland Park freshman, who recently left the School of Engineering, said recently. "I found it very hard to be a girl and to be an engineer."
MANY WOMEN who were interviewed said they thought discrimination did exist
to varving degrees in the school.
Gibson said she transferred out of chemical engineering this semester because of the subtle acts of discrimination she felt.
She said that in one of her classes which had 45 students and only two girls, she felt like she had to become "one of the guys" in order to fit in.
Gibson said she hoped to go back into engineering in a few years when she was more mentally ready to meet the social needs of her children. She her in her first semester in the school.
Marcia Hunn, Lawrence senior in architectural engineering, said recently that one of her professors said that only those women who are sure of themselves and who are very sound academically enter the field of engineering. The professor said this was an indication that she had been willing to overcome the traditional biases from men, have thus far taken up this field.
ON THE OTHER hand, Dianne J. Murphy, Tulsa, Oka, senior in aerospace, and Denise Wolf, Mission sophomore in chemical engineering, said they had felt little discrimination. Murphy said she thought the men in her classes look out for
Jamila Islam, Indianapolis freshman in chemical engineering, said men seemed surprised at first, but they accepted her as one of the group.
her.
All the women interviewed said they thought most faculty members readily accept and encourage women in the School of Engineering.
"I seems like they (women) just never enroll at the freshman level and the program is so small." Green said. "When we go out to high schools we recruit both men and women."
"I don't know if it's our fault or whose it is." Reese said.
CHARLES D. REESE, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, said that for some reason women just transfer out.
Don Green, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering said he failed to see any discrimination on the part of faculty members who were recruiting of women would be a good idea.
Concerning job opportunities, Green said he thought job opportunities for women were excellent. He attributed his success to the women's groups and the sex
discrimination laws imposed on companies.
"It is very interesting that women graduates in engineering last year received a higher starting salary than men," Rees said. "This is probably the only profession anywhere where this is true."
William P. Smith, dean of the School of Engineering said he thought women engineers were in just as great a demand as men.
Smith said one reason for women receiving higher wages than men was
He said there was so much pressure on companies to hire women that competition was taking place among companies which caused women to receive higher starting salaries and more job offers than men in some cases.
AN ARTICLE from Chemica-
Engineering, Sept. 11, 1967, said "girl
engineers who graduated in 1966 from 26
leading universities got an average of five
job offers each, some getting as many
as eight or ten."
A recent Women's Salary Survey by the Women's Placement Association from September 1971 and used in September 2013.
See FEW Page 7
Thursday, March 9. 1972
University Daily Kansan
People . . .
. . Places . . .
. . Things
People:
PRESIDENT NIXON, declaring that bureaucrats have been using secrecy stamps too often, ordered sweeping new procedures Wednesday at ending "the many abuses of the SECURITY SYSTEM." In essence, Nixon directed that fewer documents be released in future and that those already designated "top secret," "secret" or "confidential" be made public more quickly than in the past.
Places:
SAIGON—North Vietnamese gunners shelled South Vietnamese bases guarding the demilitarized zone for the fourth straight day, and action picked up elsewhere in the far north. B52 bombers launched more than 20 strikes at enemy positions from Khe San near the zone to the A SHAU VALLEY 60 miles to the south, where the battle was ongoing. The command said the objective was to prevent further enemy bullets.
LONDONDERRY, Northern Ireland—While a 60-second time bomb ticked, a father rushed into a garage and RESQUELD his 13-month-old child strapped to a seat in a car. Seconds after he came out with the baby in his arms, the BOMB went off, wrecking the garage and two dozen cars. The drama came as guerrillas launched a full-scale assault on Londonderry.
Things:
A constitutional amendment designed to remove the KANAS BAN ON LOTTERIES may be debated in the Senate today. It was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee, after it heavily amended a resolution already passed by the House. The resolution, as amended, would merely remove from the state Constitution the rule that "lotteries and the sale of lottery tickets are forever prohibited."
The chairman of the Kansas Legislative Post Audit Committee accepted the suggestion of a state senator that an investigation be made into the STATE'S PURCHASING PRACTICES. Sen. Edward J. Cox, chairman of the committee, said because of lack of "strong, well-defined standards and practices." A controversial AGRICULTURE RELATIONS ACT won tentative approval in the Kansas House and will be up for a final vote today. The House also gave preliminary approval to a bill that would provide a RETREMENT PLAN for members of the legislature.
Officials, Indians Demand Probe in Sioux's Death
GORDON, Neb. (AP)—Leaders of an Indian demonstration here claimed a "total and complete victory" over the state this community after local and state officials joined them in a statement calling for a federal investigation into the death of Gordon.
The statement was signed by leaders of the band of 1,000 Tuesday, and by Sheridan County Atty. Michael Smith, Gordon's Mayor Bruce Moore, and Olive Short, personal representative of the band.
The Indians—most of them Sioux from the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota.
about 50 miles to the north—came to protest official handling of the death of Yellow Thunder, a Soxx from the reservation.
The joint statement called for a
investigation, congressional
investigation and Justice
Department investigation of the
York County Jail.
The Nebraska Legislature earlier in the day ordered the state attorney general to intervene the death of Yellow mulder.
Yellow Thunder's body was found Feb. 20 in a used car lot in Gordon, eight days after he left the team. He was an American Legion hall where a
dance was in progress. He was stripped from the waist down and shoved onto the dance floor. He was struck with a handling prosecution of the case.
Five persons were charged in connection with the death and a preliminary hearing for the five was set for next Tuesday.
An autopsy report listed the cause of death as a brain hemorrhage. Smith said authorities had consoled that overexposure caused the fatal injury the day of the incident at the Legion hall.
Indians claim Yellow Thunder was tortured and castrated by the persons who attacked him at the bank in New York. There were no marks on the body.
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A bomb ripped a hole in an unoccupied building on Wednesday, the second bomb in two days attributed by authorities to a $2 million extortion scheme against the company.
The incidents were the first time bombs have actually been placed aboard jelliness in an airplane, to mount airline sources said.
The bombing triggered intensified search of TWA's 238 planes at airports all over the world. At some airports all passengers boarding planes were asked, as were baggage and freight.
Some airports employed X-ray machines to check luggage, metal detectors to scan explosives and sniff for explosives inside planes.
Blast, Extortion Hit TWA
The bomb aboard the Boeing
Reservoir Replaces Town
By TUULA TOSSAVAINEN
Kansan Staff Writer
In 1896, Richland, Kan., was a town destined for growth Situated in southeastern Shawnee County along the Wakauae river, it was only about 200, but it was rich in agriculture and there was a thick body of timber around the town. There were no empty buildings in the town, and it was desperately needed The town was blooming.
Today, Richland is no more. In the early 1930s, the Army Corp. was built into town with their measuring and marking equipment. They outlined the first plans for the Clinton Reservoir, a project better to fulfill the water needs of the people in the area.
707 exploded at 3:55 a.m., about seven hours after the plane arrived nontopst from New York with 10 passengers and a crew of six. The large hole in the front fuselage, throwing debris about 100 feet at McCarran International Airport. The plane was parked about 300 miles from the crash site.
Kansas Senate Passes Penal Reorganization Bill
a main terminal,
Tuesday, a snaffled out by dogs in
device was sniffed out by dogs in
called back to Kennedy International Airport in New York.
The bill would extensively reorganize Kansas' staff and supervise Kansas Adult Authority and a secretary of corrections in charge of six
Charles Morgan, a restaurant owner, built a new building on a little hill a mile north of Richland. The building, called "Richland," is named Richland, includes a restaurant, barbershop and service station. A few mobile homes also were erected around the new Richland and the American Legion Post built into a nearby double trailer.
TOPEKA (AP) — A penal reproof bill passed earlier this session by the Kansas House cleared on Wednesday at a 23-13 roll call vote.
Still, there is something left in Richland. And that something has been lost. Ms. Lissah lives white house next to the bridge lives Melissa Losh, 94-years old. She moved into the house her mother lived in and is determined to stay there.
Other bills receiving final votes in the Senate would authorize the state' Park and Resources Board
Approval also came Wednesday for a measure that would establish 25 welfare investigators and assist the state welfare director in checking welfare cases, providing assistance for welfare assistance
Hurst Rittel, professor in the College Environment campus in Edison, design team Berkeley, will speak at 7:30 tonight in the Forum room in the building.
The School of Architecture and Urban Design will conduct the first five conferences on design at 3:30 p.m. today in 207 Martin.
Michael Brill from the Buffalo Organization for Social and Technological Innovation will speak. His topic will be "Why We Build a Common What We Build? Or Toward a Common Tool of Evaluative Tools."
Brill will also speak at 3:30 p.m. Friday in 207 Marvin.
chitecture firm in New York, will lecture 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Forum room.
Bruce Graham of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, an ar-
to study the feasibility and issue bonds to build a state reserve on an unprotected region. Kansas and would lower the age of majority to age 18 for all Kan-
Brill and Ritell will speak at 11 a.m. saturday in 207 Marvin. Their topic will be Testing the Student Participation Workshop."
Architecture to Conduct Design Conference Today
on living. The annual summer harvest was from all over. Women displayed their handwork, there were fresh vegetables in the market, people brought watermelon slices were sold. There were sack racks and pet contests for the children and adults.
This is the first year conferences have been held. In the spring, they were brought in about once a month. Fount Smothers, associate professor of architecture and urban design said the lectures in Spring 2013 focused on getting feedback from the students as the school wanted.
The Senate had amended the age of majority bill to include the right to purchase liquor. The House had previously deleted the measure, but now it will bill, and the measure will now go to a conference committee.
IT'S DIFFERENT NOW. The old water pump in the middle of the main street, that once was a warehouse, now is the hardware store, the post office, the grain elevator, the restaurant, the service station, the restaurant, the Masonic Lodge, the two churches and the lumber yard.
The penal reform measure encountered some opposition on the Senate floor from senators who believed it contained no provision for funding
Sen. Edward Reilly, R-Leavenn,
who carried the bill on the floor,
said opponents "worries
living are really insignificant."
The penal reform bill and welfare investigator bills both now go to the House.
Sen. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa, a supervisor of the bill, said it would be amended in fiscal 1974. Winter said the bill would create six departments under the secretary of corrections and hire seven additional training of officers.
Bringing the word of peace and enlightenment to the individual is one mission of the Divine Light Mission and the devotees of Guru Maharaja-JI, a 14-year-old master from India. He is known as the Divine Light Mission. He said Maharaja-JI is a Sat Guru, whose name means "dispeller of罪恶." His mission is
Reilly and Winter were supported by Sen. Harold Herd, D-Dcolward, and Richard Rogers, R-Mannahan.
When he was eight years old, Maharaji-IJ heard a voice at the funeral of his father, who was also a Sat Guru, which told him, "you are he, you are he to carry Word to the world," said Grey
"BUT, THERE PROBABLY will not be any more empty beer cans and other trash than we have," Ms. Lebler, Mrs. Lebler, Mrs. Lebler Humphrey of Berryton said. The lake shore is a mile from the Humphrey house.
the very subtle essence and unity in everyone. Maharaj JI uses no words to convey his message but shows the way to peace in the heart of the industrial through his books.
Sororities Set Fall Rush Plan Orientation Meeting
In 1988, the Corps of Engineers bought Richland. Soon the town will be a flood plain for the Clinton Reservoir.
president of the Capital City State Bank in Topeka, sieid the people her homeown knew water was needed in Kansas.
For the other stated need—recreational facilities—they were not so happy to leave their homes.
Local Followers Seek To Sow Guru's Words
The disciple of Maharaj-Ji,
Maharaja, will speak at a meeting 7 p.m. March 25 in the United Ministries for High Education, 1204 Oread Gate.
Guru Maharaj-Ji has a reported 3 million followers in India and 20 thousand in the US. He visited the United States twice.
Of the $45.5 million total cost of the reservoir, the government used $487,928.8 to buy the 67 properties of Richland.
The Divine Light Mission has nightly meetings at 7:30 p.m. 1232 Delaware Street and invites anyone who is interested to come.
According to Doberty, fall rush for 1972 will take place Aug. 19 and begin with visit all houses on the Aug. 19 and will be invited back by Aug. 20, and On 21. On Aug. 22 the invitations are extended to students in residents. Doberty said students participating in rush would stay at lay-in at their own expense
dents with a 2.00 GPA (on a 4.00 scale) for either the preceding semester or overall and with 14 or more work work would be eligible for rusk.
According to Doherty, the purpose of the meeting is to answer questions interested girls might have about their studies at the University of Kansas.
The basis of the message of the Sat Guru was the name of God or the Word, which, Grey said, "is
The reservoir has been planned since the 1890s, but it was not until the 1970s that an effective contract, which includes the construction of administration buildings, was completed.
An orientation meeting for fall sorority rush will be held at 7 p.m. Monday, March 14, in the Council Room of the Kansas Union, Dorian Dorothy Overland, sorority president, Cynthia rush chairman, said Monday.
Campus Bulletin
President Nixon's budget for the 1973 included an allocation of $8.5 million to begin the Clinton Project
Thomas Bame, the town barber, said people were not satisfied with the price they got from their houses.
Rush registration is planned for April 4 in the Dean of Wonners' office Doherty said. She said all KU students and transfer stu-
ACCORDING TO THE CORPS of Engineers, the land acquisition for the lake is now 43 per cent higher than it was will be finished by 1977. The lake will cover 7,000 acres but, with the needed flood plains, the area the project requires totals 21,118 acres in the townpeople群of how they would water-ski over their old homes. Richland will not be under water. It will fill only when a riseakes above its normal level.
**Heart of America Dewater tournament; a**
**Design Department:** 11:30 am, Above R.
**Speech Pathology:** 11:30 am, Above R.
**Design Department:** 11:30 am, Above R.
**School of Business:** 12:00 am, English
Room.
**American History:** 12:00 am, Alcea.
**French and Italian School:** 12:00 pm,
Obtain Canes Lunches: 12:00 pm,
Obtain Canes Lunches: 12:00 pm,
Alcea. **Basketball:** 10:37, 1 and 8:30
pm, Alcea. **English Room.**
Math Department: 4:00 pm, Curry Room.
Governors Room. 4:00 pm, Oread Room.
Artistic Club: 4:00 pm, International Room.
Physical Therapy Club: 300 pm.
Physical Therapy Club: 7:00 pm, Kansas
Architecture Lecture: 7:00 pm, Forum.
Students for McGavenny: 3:00 big,
China Foundation: 7:00 pm, Big Eagle
KU Film Society: 7:00 and 9:0 pm,
China Foundation: 7:00, Festival of the Arts: 8:00, Hoch
English Department: 9:00, Oread Room.
The succeeding deadlines passed without incident. The bombing in Las Vegas came an hour after the six of the six-hour periods.
Festival of the Arts
TONIGHT
There was no organized
ground for the new gov-
ernment reservoir plan.
Georgia Clark Gray, the
first woman treasurer,
has been owed the pow-
THE PORTABLE CIRCUS!
An Evening of Comedy
The FBI, TWI and local authorities refused to say if they would negotiate with the ex-convict. Neither any money had been paid.
Hoch - 8:00 d.m.
Sources close to the investigation said authorities were checking TWA personnel records for any employees experienced in assaults or with a possible grudge against the company.
★ Tickets available at door-$1.00
Airline personnel had access
the flights to both the New
York and the Los Angeles terminals.
FOCUS ON CHINA 7:30 p.m.
The bomb that exploded aboard the Las Vegas jettimer was somehow smuggled aboard even though the plane was searched in New York and Las Vegas and guards were standing nearby.
HARRY LINDQUIST on U.S. and China —the Future
SUA Forums
March 9 big 8 room
the cockpit or in the restroom behind it, authorities said.
It apparently was planted in
At airports around the world, TWA planes were ringed with guards and searched.
Virtually every TWA flight was delayed, but passengers didn't always mind.
In New York, the departure of five TWA morning flights was delayed due to searches and a sixth flight was cancelled. Both the airline's scheduled flights from New York Airport arrived without incident.
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
Bomb squad investigators were collecting pieces of the shattered fuselage to try to determine the type of explosive used.
"I don't mind waiting, in fact, it’s a relief," a passenger at the Las Vegas airport after being delayed by a search.
"We just have no idea how it go aboard," said Charles Wyre, TWA general manager in Las Vegas.
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Thursday, March 9.1972
University Daily Kansan
3
R
Kansan Photo by MARC MAY
Women Present Skit in Front of Strong
In celebration of International Women's Day, these five KU women staged a cheerful performance Wednesday in front Strong Hall.
satirized certain female stereotypes and paraded with a banner proclaiming International Women's Day.
Natural Childbirth Replacing Drugs
By JUDY HENRY
Kansan Staff Writer
Natural childbirth has been a trend that has periodically surged to popularity in the last few hundred years.
Before the age of drugs, natural childbirth was the only means of giving birth. When drugs became available, women were overseated to eliminate their popularity has run in cycles.
Today the principle of natural childbirth is to educate women about themselves so they are not afraid and can cooperate with the mother. The aim of education involves more than just giving birth with a minimum amount or lack of anesthetic. It is based on reducing fear, and the pain is reduced or eliminated by learning the process and relaxing.
NATURAL CHILDBIRTH'S recent popularity began after World War II when Granty Ready Leather Without Pear, Dr. Lawrence French, French physician, added to the trend when he introduced a natural childbirth technique based on Pavlion conditioning and led.
Lamaze's method is concerned with teaching the prospective mother the physical changes she undergoes during pregnancy and the birth process. Combined with musculature training, Lamaze special breathing techniques for use during delivery, the idea is to allow the childbirth with knowledge. This way a woman will be relaxed and can help in the delivery of her baby.
D R. R A Y M O N D SCHWEGLER, director of the Health Service and an obstetrician-nygeologist, said the study shows the natural childbirth had a great deal of merit for two reasons.
Schweiger said through care, education, pregnant women's misunderstandings about myths and old wives' tales many women afraid of childbirth, and therefore education was vital. Conversing with a woman to relax her so she could be more effective than using forceps to deliver a baby, he said.
He also favors natural childbirth because of natural drugs because are difficult to heseal, he said. He said that when women were heavily drugged, babies were less likely to survive.
was a danger of brain damage. He said a minimum amount of drugs was necessary because the brain induced a state of semi-hypoxia.
NATURAL CHILDBIRTH is not hypnosis, although sometimes hypnosis has been used. Schwegler said.
Schweiger said an important part of childbirth is the rapport between the doctor, which resulted in confidence and cooperation in the delivery.
Discussing the process during delivery, he said, "It is important to down at the proper time and down at the proper time. It saves an endless number of hours."
Schweigler said one problem of natural birthchild was the time necessary to spend in instruction with each patient.
Natural childbirth does not involve just the woman but her husband as well. He must help his wife and remind him to relax. Although the woman can educate her husband, a doctor must spend time with her to ensure the woman who chooses to have her baby by natural childbirth.
MANY ADVOCATES of the university to the husband be present in the delivery room Dr. Kermit Krankenhaus of the University of Kansas Medical Center, said the Medical Center would allow husbands in the hospital to arrive.
Schweiger said he didn't like husbands in the delivery room because he never knew how they might react, especially if an infant was in charge. He also said the process was safer with few persons in the room with fewer persons in the room.
Krantz and Schweger both said natural childbirth was not for all women. They agreed that some women were not mentally capable of giving birth according to they would not be safe candidates for natural childbirth.
MRS. GORTON, Krantz's nurse, said the medical Center has periodically offered natural birth courses for the last 13 years, and expects parents to expect parents began six weeks before the baby was due. The nurses worked individually to prepare the newborn to childbirth, she said, and the Medical Center used qualified Lamaze instructors. She said the course basically consisted of a 20-minute teaching parents about themselves.
Several instruction books, mainly discussing the Lamaze
Campus Briefs
method, have been written about natural childbirth techniques. According to the books, one advantage of natural childbirth is that the woman supposedly becomes so conditioned by and breathing techniques that drugs are unnecessary.
"I wouldn't exactly call it a
labor room," she said. "You've heard of women in the labor room who really scream.
Part of the method is to keep you
Trip Downpayment Deadline
She recommended that women not begin natural childbirth courses until they were eight months pregnant. The reason, she said, was more recent and the women did not tire of doing the exercises.
KU faculty, staff, students and their immediate families who wish to take the SUA summer flights to Europe must submit a downpayment before March 13. The flights will go to Paris and Luxembourg.
Sachem Circle
JUDY KROEGER, Lawrence resident, is one of the many women who have had a child by natural birthbirth. Since her daughter was born 15 months ago, she has been assigned classes in natural birthbirth for the Free University. Although she is not a qualified Lamaze instructor, she teaches because of her experience, she said. She believes that women needed their doctor; permission to participate.
The advocates say that there is nothing wrong with asking for drugs if they are needed. Schweiger said that in some circumstances it was necessary to give the child of the mother and the child
Chamber Choir Concert
The KU Chamber Choir, composed of select students from six choral organizations at KU, will present its annual second semester concert on March 19. The concert, conducted by James Ralston, director of the Activities, will be presented at 3:50 p.m. in swarthout Recital Hall.
KROGEER SAID her inter-
in natural childbirth began when
her sister had a baby by natural
childbirth. She wasn't worried,
because she had been pre-
pared with films and reading
material.
Candidates for membership in Sachem Circle of Oicronim Delta Kappa will be considered after March 13. Sachem is a national honorary organization for senior men which stresses character, academic achievement and service to the University.
"You can do it entirely on your own," she said.
She said the books were self-
explanatory and the class periods
were spent in discussing the
material.
Women Present Petition For Birth Control Clinic
A petition with 1,720 signatures urging the establishment of a birth control clinic at Watkins Memorial Hospital in New York was presented Tuesday afternoon by William M. Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, by nine representatives of the Health Care Task Force.
The petition asks that counseling and education on birth control methods, physical examinations, the use of contraceptives or reproductive devices be made available to women students.
Lominska, Sayville,
N.Y., sophomore and spokesman
for the group, told halffour
of the students who had started
two weeks ago.
"We're not a small group of radical women," she said. "The petition was signed by women in the field, and the members from the University,
"The clinic would free women from the burden of unwanted children by providing a means to avoid it."
He said the petition was very impressive and great use would be made of it.
The women asked Balfour to sign the petition, but he declined. Balfour said later that, as a general rule, he could not sign.
"The health service has been providing these services but on an unevenly basis. Consequently, there were times when the staff would say, "I am an important service that students would like to have for." It is important we know what it means."
"This doesn't mean that I don't agree with the demands," he said.
"The task force has been working in the last few weeks to make these services available on a regular basis and have gone into action now." Way it takes time and patience, we are going to get there."
Survey Questions Students, Faculty To Improve Feedback's Utility, Use
The petition will be presented to Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of health services at the University Hospital with the task force, Balfour said.
Two Films of the Russian Revolution
By STEVE CRAIG
Kennan Staff Writer
The MU Curriculum and Instructional Survey, which publishes a Feedback each week on research in extensive revision to improve the questionnaire, methods of data collection and the methods which information is gathered in Feedback, Dennis Embry, Lawrence senior and survey science staff, at MU.
Two Films of the Russian Revolution
Eisenstein's Oktober 7:30, 75'
With this revision the survey should become a more accurate tool to diagnose the instructor's teaching ability. Embrue said.
FILM SOCIETY
Pudovkin's Storm over Asia 9:30,75
He said the goal of the new survey was to provide students with information that would enable them to choose courses and instructors best fit their personal wants and needs. The survey also would also provide instructors with information about their interests and how they might be improved.
Embry though the old survey had its limitations.
"THE OLD survey was too long and forced everyone that participated into the same definition of what good teaching
March 9, Woodruff Double Bill, $1.00
is; it had no flexibility," he said. "It did its job well at the time, but we learned quite a lot since we knew what to improve." he said.
To meet the suggestions, criticisms of the survey and to provide a better service to faculty and students. Embym distributed questionnaires to over 2,100 students in randomly selected classes. Through the questionnaire, the staff hopes to increase participation. Feedback booklet. A questionnaire was also sent to all faculty members to get opinions about teaching in general and the use of computers. Survey in particular. The survey staff hopes to incorporate the responses of both students and teachers in the redesigned questionnaire.
THE FORMAT of the revised questionnaire was divided into two general areas, an evaluative section and a diagnostic section. The evaluative section contains 22 assessments designed to get student feedback from the instructor, his teaching techniques, the class discussions.
the goals of the course, the texts and related matters.
KU FILM SOCIETY Second Revised Schedule
The material which appears in Feedback will primarily be from the responses to the questions in this section, Embry said.
are sent to the instructor, the departmental chairman, and the school dean. The instructor now results published in Feedback results published in Feedback
The diagnostic section of the questionnaire would be optional in each class, he said, and was able to observe how the instructor. The staff hoped this section would pinpoint both the specific strengths and weaknesses of the instructor's teachings and the courses and the course in general.
"If the University takes it upon itself to say these courses are good, and you must take them, then the students have a right to choose the course and instruct that test suits them," he said.
THE RESULTS of the survey
Embry thinks all courses required by the university should also make the survey mandatory. Students assembled each semester in Feedback.
MARCH 9: 7:30 OCTOBER (1927, Russian) Dir. Sergi Ewenstein
9:00 STORM OVER ASIA (1929, Russian) Dir. V. Pudovkin
MARCH 14: 7:30 BLOOD OF CONDOOR (1970, Argentine)
Wooldry
9:00 A documentary of American genocide, by means of sterilization of South American Indians and the people's war for self-preservation
MARCH 16: 7:30 IMMORTAL STORY (1967, British) Dir. Dyche
9:00 ANA GATHA OF MOREAU (1952, Japanese) Dir. Josef von Sternberg
MARCH 18: 7:30 DOMEN IN REVOLT (1971, American)
Wooldry
9:00 Dir. Dyche and Warhol. A ballet film from the studio that brought you TRASH, (special admission, $1.00)
APRIL 4: 7:30 KOSNA (1963, Swedish) Dir. Ingar Bergman, with Liv Uliman and Bibi Anderson
APRIL 5: 7:30 Collection of Experimental Films, Cybernetic and Computer Generated
APRIL 11: 7:30 PORTRAIT OF JASON (1966, American) Dir. Tanner
APRIL 13: 7:30 JULES AND JIM (1963, French) Dir. Wooddry
APRIL 24: 7:30 Francois Truffaut, with Jean Moreau and Oscar Werner
APRIL 24: 7:30 Collection of Experimental Film, Part 2
Wooldry
9:00 Film from the Dadaists and Surrealists
Single Admission, 75c, Double Bill, $10.00. Still the Best Film Bargain in Town—Less than 23c per Film with Membership.
SEASON TICKETS, 15.00. This Schedule is Incomplete—More Films will Be Booked for May.
Hurry! Deadline For Photo Contest Is 5 p.m. This Friday
Turn in Prints at SUA Office, Union
THE SOPHOMORE CLASS LECTURE SERIES
presents
SENATOR BIRCH BAYH of Indiana
Speaking on
"The Future of the American Political System"
Tuesday, March 14 8:00 p.m.
at the Kansas Union Ballroom
SENATOR BAYH—Considered one of the U.S. Senate's constitutional authorities and a leader in the passage of the 28th amendment lowering the voting age to 18.
Currently working for a constitutional amendment to provide equal rights for men and women. Concerned about the nation's needs in dealing with pollution, poverty, education, and health care.
ADMISSION 50°
Tickets Free to Sophomore with Class Cards Advanced Tickets will be Sold at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd.
4
Thursday, March 9, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Seven Days' Wages
Most students were relieved when the walkout by the maintenance workers was over and the picketers had abandoned their posts. I always felt awkward and a little helpless because of my lack of skill making it probably occurred to most students, as it did to me, that we were being benefitted by the low wages and nominal benefits that workers were receiving, since that helped keep our tuition and taxes down. Nevertheless, the charges levied against this University by the management situation are too serious to be justified by saying such practices save us money.
As in most labor-management disputes, the major issue was money. The University pays its maintenance workers wages that make welfare look attractive. The union wanted to discuss the poor safety credits and that only revision for people injured on the job was one free visit to Watkins. There were other complaints which were claimed by the Union to be violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act such as the University's punitive measure of taking an hour's pay for being as little as two minutes overtime. Attended to the faculty, a good number of the professors at this University would be threatened with financial ruin.
Union officials have reached some sort of agreement with the administration about the workers' situation. However, in the week the employees returned to work the only significant modifications announced were that worker representation on subcommittee for safety interests increased and front office per cent to 50 per cent and a fairer method of assigning overtime work had been promised. The headline news has been that the University now has an
“understanding” of the workers’ situation it remains to be seen whether this understanding will be easier for the workers to pay their bills.
Local 1132 is not a strong union. They have trouble getting workers to join it. Anyone who knows what other unions demand and often get when striking would realize how timid their demands were. It almost seemed as if the union had not set its goals any higher than an understanding. Their major grievance was money but they gave no indication of the wage they thought they deserved. Most of the other complaints they presented to the union were based on comments on when the understanding was announced. Much of the organization for the walkout, including that involved with the distribution of information about it, appeared to have happened after it had begun. The tone of some of their handouts was more conciliatory than it needed to be.
Although this strike, at least initially, appears to have been ineffective, it has secured for the workers the sympathy of most of the campus. Since the Kansas legislature has passed a law for workers to be given a strike it could be difficult for the union to get the University to the bargaining table in the future. But perhaps a way can be found to transform some sympathy to a willingness to effectively help and actively support the workers in their endeavor to obtain a more equitable working situation. Hopefully, this would give them a little more of the financial aid they need. Their seven days of lost wages would have purchased more than 50 per cent representation on a University subcommittee.
Mary Ward
Readers Respond
Blood
Rock; Rifles; Restraint
To the Editor:
The Red Cross and Pershing Rifles would like to take this opportunity to thank the faculty, staff, students, and volunteers of Kansas for their cooperation in the Red Cross Blood Drive which was held on February 9-11. Students participated in extensive exercise and teamwork; gave us a great deal of help.
We would like to add our special thanks to the Stables and to Mr. Ace Johnson for storring that was donated by Mr. Frank McDonald or McDonald Beverage Company. We would also like to thank the Kansan in making the drive a success.
The total donations for the drive numbered 517 pints. This is one of the best totals ever for the event, "the thank you" to all concerned.
—Jesse A. Lobb
E-Co Berets
Jerome R. Doak
Pershing Rifles
★★
★★★
Omission
To the Editor:
The Kansan in its coverage of the March 2 Student Senate meeting omitted some details reported by other publications
1. The committee investigating the allotment of bookstore funds for rebates and support for the Supportive Education Office of the State Department student-controlled committee oversee the SES program. Although the Senate has loudly demanded that the students be given more funds and has condemned anyone who denies this right it voted NOT to set up the committee but to leave the control of the over year of student funds from bookshop fines under current management.
2. When it is asked who currently controls this program a former chairman of the Black Committee will have to statement he has often made for previous publication (and which has not been denied by anyone).
a committee of black administrators in KU personnel offices who he claimed owe their jobs to the Black Students Union and other institutions. In other words the BSU controls the SES program. The BSU had the final decision on the staffing of the program and also who is to be recruited. The BSU reserved a number of the jobs for their officers. Needless to say no
one dares check to see if the tutors actually perform their duties. One wonders if anyone should be being a member of the BSU.
3. The committee also recommended a maximum of $30,000 a year be paid to SES. The Senate rejected this and so currently the only limitation on the sum being ripped off to pay for the bookstore is the amount of profit the bookstore can get from its customers.
4. The senate refused to have a roll call vote on these two matters. Thus each senator did not represent the Senate he represented where he stood.
5. Finally on another matter an effort to put a referendum question on the ballot concerning the use of the student activity room was defeated when a quorum call revealed that not enough senators were left to conduct business. So again the policy of giving students the right to a voice in the use of the library was followed.
One wonders why these facts were ignored by the Kansan. Could it be that the threat to cut off support to the Kansan last fall while unsuccessful on the surface of the earth? The truth is that stopping the Kansan from revealing embarrassing facts about the Senate?
Mike Moffet's exhortation rings forth: All Americans who believe in the Constitution should speak out against the anti-busing amendments currently in Congress. And those who support it are likely to feel just not Americans who believe in the Constitution, that's all.
★★
Which leaves Sam Ervin-to take an example—where? The candidate was Carolina is regarded by his colleagues as the most able and charismatic of all his scholars among them. Surely if any American believes in the candidate's potential scholar among them.
Anyway, the point of all this is that one can oppose busing and still believe in the Constitution, in the Constitution, in words notwithstanding. Perhaps in future Moffet will show more restraint (not to mention rationality) in what he implies citizens with whom he disagrees.
precisely what busing does. )
Exhortation
Jim Gugleta Wichita Junior
Yet not long ago, Ervin was heard to suggest that some kind of constitutional amendment, might be necessary to end the current system. Ervin considers constitutionally unacceptable. (His reasoning is this: The current interpretation requires a subject of school integration is that students cannot be assigned to classes because of their race—which is
To the Editor:
Chalk
To the Editor:
After reading Stuart Celand's review of the 1972 Rock Chalk issue of the UDK, I was disgusted by the view your critical took of the performance. Your writer seems to me to have missed the entire book and was surprised that ARL-AGD script was superior to the others in the show, but that is not adequate reason to cross off tasteless only because the other houses in the show don't happen to have a talent like Eric Bikkele. Revue is cut out to be a proving ground for future professionals. Revue describes as 'tasteless' Celand describes as 'tasteless'纪特"remembers months of hard work by amateurs and not to mention Chalk Revue is not destined to be the "showcase for creativity" which Mr. Celand presumes; and it is not appropriate for amateur students working for a good cause, namely the KUY-
Bob Swift Ft. Lee, Virginia Junior
An
Absurd
Foreign Policy
The two questions about Nixon's attitude toward India is: Why? How could we be so stupid? Our policy there must us join the losing side without even the luxury of losing on a matter of principle. Our actions are neither honorable nor advantageous. So: Why? The answer lies in Mr. Nixon's Wilsonian attempts at an idealistic view of the world, something that involved Wilton himself in troublesome contradictions where China was involved.
The two poles of Wilsonianism were self-determination and internationalism. The two are often at a distance, with the one involved in, "the family of nations," it is often necessary to avoid "medding in the internal affairs" of that country, even when this means de facto support for another denies its people self-determination.
It was this conflict that made Wilson support an autocratic government in China while trying to impose self-determination in Mexico. He felt that the Open Door Policy had to be preserved, if China was not going to
withdraw from the world community. And, as usually happens, conflict gave extraneous interests their opportunity - America's economic power of the "principled" maintenance of an Open Door to trade with the East.
A similar confluence-yet-continual of ideals and ambitions is at work in our moralizing against India. While we fight a war thousands of miles from our borders, supposedly to create an Islamic State, we Vietnamese self-determination, actually to sustain our national interest in anti-Communism, we smugly condemn India for intervening in a situation that girdes her borders, one that involves not only "self-self" but also "self-human" millions of people, and one that inflicts daily hardships on both East Pakistanis and the Indians themselves.
The Indians are in a much sounder moral position than we have been with Vietnam—or, for that matter, with Cuba and the Dominican Republic. Yet administration spokesmen criticize Mrs. Gandhi for "agression" and supported the militant regime of Mexico in its determination" norm must yield, here, to the internationalism goal of improved US-China relations.
Not only is Pakistan backed by China—Pakistan was the original link between the two countries—it was a national institution. Kissinger disappeared for his brief first
visit to Peking. So it is our (Left-approved) overture to China, in the name of internationalism, which led us to the (Right-approved) support of Khan, in violation of the principle of self-determination for East Pakistanis.
Moralism in foreign policy is always rather comic. Hedging and trimming is one thing; hedging and trimming on the part of a fundamentalist Preacher is quite another—and that is the kind of flexibility1 to which we have come to agree with.2 The legal time, Legitimate maneuver in its creation becomes more shiftiness in us, creating self-deception at home and cynical distrust abroad.
This was bad enough when we took high moral ground for opposing a "repressive" regime like Cuba's, while dealing with the governments of Spain and Greece. There was simple-minded officials who were determined it was merely anti-Communist. But Nixon has now followed the logic of our policy out to one of Wilson's poles, by encouraging internationalism with China; and this has caused inevitable stress at the other pole, so that we deny the ability of self-government in East Pakistan.
Were we put in so absurd a posture with regard to the Pakistan war? Because we are pursuing what is now traditional foreign policy for this country—and that policy is itself absurd.
Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate
James J. Kilpatrick
Recent Opinion Raises Questions
RICHMOND, VA—A reckon opinion by District Judge Robert R. Merhige, laying down sweeping new requirements for the desegregation of public schools that will occupy judges, lawyers, public officials and ordinary citizens for months to come. One
group of questions deals with the powers of local government; another deals with the powers of a power-hunrvy judge.
this is an extraordinary opinion.
This is with various appendices, runs on it or 325
words it runs on the other verbosity, it is no doctrinaire verbosity, her doctrinaire
racism that commands attention.
It is rather the breathtaking ambition of this court, literally on its own motion, to rewrite the Constitution and to reorder the lives of thousands of persons.
This particular case, one in an interminable series of school cases in Virginia, arose from
1972
CHRONIC HAUNIE
The Counter-Annual
AT 1972 A. TIMES DAILY
Here
Meritage's order two years ago demanded the busing of some 13,500 pupils in order to obtain a place in the local school. That order applied to the City of Richmond only; it left the two surrounding counties untouched; and it left the city fretting with impatience.
In July of 1970, in a bizarre distortion of his judicial role, Merge himself wrote a letter to Merge suggesting that "consolidation" be explored. The point of his letter—it had no other point—was delicately to hint that merger would have occurred appropriate at law. The plaintiffs, no dummies, promptly sought the relief the judge had suggested. On Monday, Merge insisted the presumption of the case
The City of Richmond, Henrico County, and Chesterfield County are three separate jurisdictions of local government, having their own school district governing bodies. The arrangement reflects a tradition of strong local government, embedded in the State Constitution, recorded in the earliest history of the Commonwealth.
Under Merge's decree, so far as schools are concerned, all this goes by the boards. It is his will that an entirely new school be established, separate separate, a district of 752 square miles and 108,000 pupils. Within this district, an estimated 78,000 children must be bused in an effort to achieve a racial mix to the judge's liking: 20 to 40 per cent black students in a school anywhere with black pupils in a majority.
The court deliberately discards every consideration but one: the natural boundaries with "the most natural bounded neighborhoods." The proximity
of children to schools has no meaning for him. It does not matter that natural attendance plans might be more convenient than the transportation cost, might facilitate the operation of more extra-curricular school activities, and might make more students earn certain benefits which some eduators attach to the walk-in school."
Merrige's order was that the defendants must take "affirmative action to maximize integration." The judge holds that "meaningful integration is not only essential to equality of treatment, but it is required by the Constitution of the United States."
This "requirement," in Mergei's view, is to be found in the Fourteenth Amendment, provided that amendment is in the manner in which it was intended to be interpreted."
One is minded to ask, "intended by whom?" Manifestly neither the framers nor the ratifiers of the Fourteenth Amendment intended that amendment to be so interpreted. The same Congress that ratified the Fourteenth Amendment provided for segregated schools in the District of Columbia. The patent intention was not to require integration, maximized or meaningful or otherwise, but to prevent discrimination and the implications of Hermitage's draconian opinion go far beyond the Richmond area. Taken with other recent egalitarian pronouncements in California and Texas, the decree suggests a judicial activism that makes a travesty of a written Constitution and reduces "government" by more than the government" mere words blown away by the wind.
Copyright, 1972. Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser ... Del Brinkman
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Advtser ... Mel Adama
Griff and the Unicorn
BONK!
SIGH
By Sokoloff
SIGH
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff.
Thursday, March 9, 1972
University Daily Kansan
5
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
Symphony Proves Talent
Christine Leonard Speaks At Forum
She thinks women are losing ground in education . . .
and LARRY HUFFMAN Kansan Reviewers
By PAT MOORE
BY PAT MR and
Facing stiff competition from the Festival of the Arts, the Little Symphony's grouping of the musicians failed to draw a large audience. Those who attended were presented with an evening of Romantic and Classical music in style and talent of the musicians.
Under the direction of Thomas
Gorton, the Symphony gave an
awe-inspiring performance,
proved its members to be very
fine musicians. They displayed
great strength and a definite
strength in their playing.
They could also effectively subdue their playing when Antonio Perez, baritone, performed. Their adaptability kept a sense of motion in the pieces each piece unique and alive.
The evening opened with
Wagner's 'Siegfried Iddil', establishing the trend of crief perfection that was maintained by the composers of his perception by the musicians of its mood gave this performance great depth, beauty and quiet
"Rounds for String and Orchestra," by Diamond contained the greatest range of mood of the compositions. Not only did Diamond enrich its timing and shifting force served to further suggest the skill
and artistry of the musicians.
Senate Clears Cycle Bill
would go into effect July 1, 1972.
A bill has passed the Kans. House and Senate which would repeal the 1797 restrictions on operators and nassengers.
The emphasis shifted as Mr. Perez sang iii D'Provenza, Il Mar' (La Traviata) by Verdi. The opera gave him the primary focus, but the orchestra remained important. It functioned as a foundation rather than a foundation as a blend that came of well.
The new bill, which still must be signed by Gov. Robert Rush, would never allow new restrictions on motor vehicles and passengers.
The bill, tagged Senate bill 104, would require every operator and manager to wear protective ages, to wear protective headador at all time during the operation of equipment.
Speaker Says Universities Failing, Discouraging Women
Leonard spoke at a faculty center in the Westminster Center. She said that in higher education an appearance to be loosening ground.
Higher education has failed women, Christine Leonard, a February Sister and clerk-kistyp by KU, said Wednesday.
"There are quotas set on the number of women accepted by some medical schools," she said.
In 1940 women held 45 per cent of all professional and technical jobs, she said, but by the 1970 figure had dropped to 37 per cent.
"Only 54 per cent of all women with a college education are
She said that in 1940 women made up 28 per cent of all faculty and professional staff positions. In the past three years there had dropped to 22 per cent.
No encouragement is given to women. Leonard said, to become counselors, ministers or psychiatrists. She said women students became discouraged and disillusioned by the few women's faculty members.
"last spring the zoology
last spring the zoology
job market job for Ph.D. D.
Leonard said. "It was suggested
that women graduate students be
working," she said.
Someone objected to this as gross discrimination, she said, but the discussion turned to the question of women who were involved.
The February Sisters are providing a day care, establishing a day care center, health care services, counseling for women and an autonomous nurse.
She said KU perpetuated myths about women and lacked a women's studies program.
Leonard said the February Sisters' sit-in in Feb. 4 was a "consciousness-raising action."
handle bars are to be more than 15 inches in length from the motorcycle seat.
Other things that must be done, are necessary to the establishment of personal women, job placement for women and human sexuality for women.
According to the current law, and consequently the new law, a fire station must be on or three wheeled, motorized or three wheeled, on a public street or highway.
Radio Club Gets $2,234 To Buy New Equipment
The Amateur Radio Club received a $2,234 donation from the Student Senate March 1 which will enable the club to purchase new equipment for students to use in the classroom of the United States free of cost.
America," he said. "The people calls us we run would average around $120 if you had to pay for them."
By KEN HARWOOD
Kanean Staff Writer
Kenneth Gorski, Lansing senior and club president, said Sunday that the money would be used to purchase a 300-watt transmitter, a linear amplifier, which would add 2,000-watts of power receiver for use at the club station in 217 Learned Hall.
The phone patch service is provided by the club at no cost to students. However, Gorski said, the club does not have time to run patches to points in the United States unless there is an emergency.
In addition to the headscarf, the operator and his passenger would be required to wear protective clothing not only is not equipped with a point screen.
"THE FOREIGN student comes down to the station, and then we'll patch him through to, and then we call the radio operator in the student's homeetown who will then put the telephone call through the telephone system and patch it into back up here," Gorski said.
GORSKI SAID that ham radios could provide invaluable service in times of emergency.
Gorski said one of the primary functions of the club was to provide phone patches for calls by ham radio to points outside the United States. This service is offered by foreign students on campus.
"I hope we will be able to run a lot more phone patches into South
Once, he said, a girl in Indianapolis, Ind., needed a very rare blood type and he monitored a plea for ham radio operators to contact the blood banks in their city if they could find the blood type.
"I got the number of the blood bank in Wichita, and they had this type of blood," he said. "I understand you need an airplane from Indianapolis to pie him out. I guess she lived through it."
Gorski said he would like people who are interested in harm radio operations to call him, and he would also show them the club station.
He said the 26 members of the Amateur Radio Club were a part of over 2,252,000 amateur radio operators in the United States.
committee W (women faculty members) of the American Association of University Pressers, also spoke at the forum.
Both the eye devices and headgear will be subjected to provisions set up by the State Highway Commission. The Headgear is all the restrictive regulations and lists of all protective headgear and protective eye devices by the name and type of approved
Handley said that when the salaries for all women and all female members of KK compared, gross inequities were found between the salaries for men and women.
Another provision is the headlight equipped with approved head and tail lights to be operated only when the head and tail lights are
Under the new bill
motorcycles carrying passengers
must be equipped with a footrest
and seat for the passenger.
A full professor who is male,
she said, would make on the
average $2,000 more than a
man of the same professional
rank.
Pershing Rifles Going to Vail During Break
The Pershing Rifles, a national honorary tri-service fraternity for members of the ROTC, is planning a ski trip to Val, Colorado, over spring break, Jeree organizes the organization, said Tuesday.
Members financed the trip by ushering at KU football and basketball games. The group's training room, instruction, lift tickets and food.
The remainder of the expenses will be financed by the individu-
In addition to this trip, the organization sponsors weekly in formal parties, drill teams.
The same could be said in the part for "Largo Al Factum" (Barber of Seville) by Rosini, but the music was in the previous piece was lost at one point when the orchestra played too loudly and overwhimmed Mr. Perez's voice. The orchestra sang with capsulated dramatization of the opera. His gestures and facial expressions covered for the lone flaw in the opera as its segment ended.
Almost every week six women carrying 40 pounds of sugar meet in the basement of the United Pentecostal Church at 12th and Connecticut. A couple of hours above, they hold with 50 pounds of nutritious peanut brittle.
Candy Paying for Organ
The women are selling the items they need from church's new organ. They still have $50 left to pay, but say they are confident they can raise the money.
According to Mrs. L. J. Lewis, been selling the pennant brite for about two years, and the church has been making the payments
advertising to sell the candy," said Mrs. Linda Teichman, one of the women who helps make the peanut brittle. "We just call our different friends, and the word Everyone, everyone likes it," she added.
"The church is not very large." Lewis said, "so we get together and do things like this to raise the money we need for the church."
The candy-making project is a
real communal effort. All of the women in the church try to take turns at making the brittle, the sticky food that very small children to care for.
"We rely on word-of-mouth
"Each time we get together," said Lewis, "we make 200 packages of candy."
Kansas Governor Robert Docking will speak on "Dollars and Bills" at the banquet Thursday night at the banquet meeting of the sixth annual Celebrity Auction.
The University of Kansas will be the site of the 18th annual Heart of American Debate Tournament today.
Heart of America Debate To Begin in Union Today
Fifty-four debate teams from colleges and universities throughout the United States will be represented win the tournament, which is the last major before the national tournament.
KU will be represented by Bill Russell, Omaha, Baja, junior. Tom Dary, Leawood Darby, Leawood Rieel, Overland Park junior.
The 1972 topic is "Resolved: That Greater Controls Should be Implemented to Limit Utilization of Information about Citizens by Government Agencies."
Competition today and Friday will consist of eight preliminary rounds beginning at 9:30 and 11:30 a.m. and 2:30 and 4:30 p.m. each day in the Kansas Union. A pairing board on the main floor will give it over, give exact locations, team and judges for each debate.
Vets Ask Docking to Meeting
interesting because this year's topic affords a variety of affirmative arguments.
Bruns discussed with Mallowk the Illinois veterans' programs that have received a tuition-free attendance at colleges in the state and aided their education.
Ed Bruns, Leawood freshman and Campus Veterans president, extended an invitation Wednesday to the Docking to attend the first meeting of the Kansas Collegiate Association April 7 at the University of Kansas.
Bruns gave the invitational letter to Don Matlock, legislative laison to the governor, at a meeting "to inform the governor's office of existing veterans who have helped return veterans."
The project will be supported for the next year by a grant of $400 from the National Science Foundation. The committee has been approved for two years.
Ralph E. Christofferson, KU association of chemistry, the University of research project entitled "Ab Intio Studies of Molecular
By RICHARD GUSTIN
by RICHARD GUSTIN
Kansan Staff Writer
Mullock said he was sure the veterans cooperate where it could and that he was glad to see that the veterans had done constructive work.
Chemistry Prof Receives Grant
According to Bruns, representatives of veterans community junior colleges in the state will attend the meetings to form a statewide advocate organization. This organization will then seek membership in the National Association of Volunteer Collegiate Students in 1984.
Bruns also said the executive director of the national group had visited Speakers in an open session of a combined committee on veteran affairs next week in Washington, where he represented the veterans of Kansas.
1. That $1000 a year be given to a player for bookkeeping, books and materials would be added in addition to the present monthly allotment received by the team.
employment. It also informs soon to be released G.I.s of the benefits available to them through the G.I.bill.
Dean Kackley, assistant dean of men and Campus Veterans' advisor, will attend the session with Bruns.
Among the proposals Bruns said he planned to make before the committee were:
3. That the amount of time a veteran may attend school be increased from 36 months to 48 months.
4. That receipt of benefits begin immediately upon enrollment in a college or vocation training course.
2. That an increase of 20 per cent be made in present allotment payments.
Four elimination rounds are set for Saturday with the championship debate scheduled for 2:45 p.m. in the Council room.
Tournament awards will be held in a private conference each round. Winners of the ten individual speakers' awards will be announced at a special event.
The second half of the program was given to Mozart's SYNPHONY No. 39 in E Flat. It was a flawless presentation.
Exhibits portraying aspects of the life of the different nations represented in the student body at International Night, April 8.
The team of Chris Rayl, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, and Frank Stewart, Manhattan, placed third in varsity debate.
KU debaters placed third and fourth at the Washburn Invitational Debate Tournament held Sunday through Tuesday.
The International Club, which sponsors the annual event, will host a visit by President Jiahawk and Big I Rooms in the Kansas Union. Students from foreign countries will be at the conference to answer questions about their countries.
"Performance and Professionalism in the 70's" is the theme of this year's conference, sponsored annually by the Institute of University Presses of the University Kansas. Benmar will last through Friday.
Foreign Foods, Exhibits To Highlight Club Event
the Ramada Inn.
A banquet featuring international cuisine will begin at 4 p.m. in the Union Cafeteria. The event will take place from southeast Asia, China, the Middle East, Europe and Latin America.
Tickets can be purchased in advance from the International Club or at the door for $2.50 each.
Following the dinners the international clubs of KU will present a program of music. From 10am to 3pm, p.m. in the Union Ballroom.
The International Club is offering a prize of two banquet whispers to the general audience who submits the best suggestion to the theme of this year's festival. The theme must be brief and attempt to capture the spirit of the event.
Suggestions may be submitted in the student activities center or to Charles Friedrichs, 228 Strong Hall, before March 17.
It is unfortunate that more people did not attend this concert. For those who enjoy classical music, there are always been well worth their time.
Other speakers at the conference include William E. Bain, assistant director of the American Corrections Association, psychologist Roland Rodriguez and Keith Meyer, KU law professors.
Bain's topic will be identifying the "Role of the Police Officer in Changing Times." Rodriguez, psychologist, will examine the impact of self perception in probation and parole work. He will discuss programs which the School of Law has been operating in prisons.
In addition to the speakers, a series of panels and workshops is scheduled throughout the university to be held in University's Corrections Training Program, will chair a panel of Kansas professors and students who will investigate the crime service. Professional Training."
Arthur Katz, Dean of the School of Social Welfare at KU, will introduce and conduct a case study on the importance of practical tone to the seminar.
To attract a variety of professionals involved in the corrections process, two innovations are needed: an audio-program. One is the inclusion of a book display of recent and significant literature in the field; the other is audio-visual display depicting the arboreal and parole process.
GEORGE C. SCOTT 1970 Oscar Winner NOMINATED BEST ACTOR for his role in "THE HOSPITAL"
Eve. Shows 7: 9: 30
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Last of U.S., China Talks To Be Featured Tonight
Student Union Activities (SUA)
Students attend SUA part
lecture series entitled
"Focus on China" at 7:30 ton
in the Big Eight Room of the
on the future of relations of the United States and China.
The lecture will be given by Harry Lindquist of the University of Tennessee. He will be speaking
The "Focus on China" lecture series was planned by SUA in response to the recent interest in the People's Republic of China. His interest has resulted from President Richard Nixon's visit to China.
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Commission on the Status of Women announces
OPPORTUNITIES FOR ACTIVE INVOLVEMENT IN THE 1972-1973 K.U. COMMISSION
Applications are now available in the Dean of Women's Office, 222 Strong, and all organized housing. Applications are due March 10, at 5 p.m. in 222 Strong.
Positions Available
COMMITTEE MEMBER, COMMISSION BOARD, CHAIR PERSON, TREASURER
There is a NEED and a PLACE for all interested.
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864-3552 or 843-8768
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6
Thursday, March 9, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAS
Mike Stull Strains for Distance in Long Jump
Bie Rialt champion one of jayhawks in NCAA indoor this week
Bud Joins Big 8 Elite
Bud Stallworth, the greatest outside scorer in Big Eight history, clinched the Big Eight game in Monday's game at Oklahoma.
He scored 33 points to bring his conference average to 27.8. His closest competition, Nebraska, Chuck Jura, is averaging 21.
promising, KU's freshman squad averaged 93.4 points in the season, the best in KU history. It was the first time the freshmen were more than 90 points per game.
That puts Stallworth fourth on the BIG eight season list since he beats Jerry Reed and KU's Wilt Chamberlain and Clyde Lovellette, all big men who have been in the top three.
Molly set the single season
average at a 30.4
average last
Chamberla scored at a 28.3
pace in 1986, and Loveville
passed to Eddie.
years, an average of 12,500 fans attended the 14 home games. The Jayhawks responded by winning 82-73 and exited UC finished with an 11-15 record.
★ ★ ★
Next year, though, looks
Stallworth's 50-point performance against Missouri in Allen Field House Feb. 26 is a Big Eight single game record.
The 6-foot-5 forward also set KU records with 162 field goals and 388 points in conference play. The team scored 70 field goals and 377 points in 1965.
KU Basketball Statistics
Sailowward pushed his career to total 1,495, the third best total in KU history. Lovellette scored 1,979. Robsch, 1,754.
Although the Jayhawks posted their first losing record in nine
| | g | Ig/ge | pet. | fb/fa | pet. | rb | pt. | avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Staalkewell | 26 | 75 | 336 | 78 | 125 | 84 | 25 | 8.9 |
| Kivito | 77 | 72 | 329 | 78 | 125 | 84 | 25 | 9.0 |
| Kivito | 78 | 15 | 346 | 88 | 47 | 76 | 128 | 7.6 |
| Nash | 78 | 16 | 169 | 88 | 47 | 76 | 128 | 7.6 |
| Barrow | 21 | 82 | 127 | 73 | 16 | 167 | 104 | 6.4 |
| Barrow | 21 | 82 | 127 | 73 | 16 | 167 | 104 | 6.4 |
| Mask | 25 | 49 | 97 | 48 | 21 | 86 | 115 | 7.4 |
| Mask | 25 | 49 | 97 | 48 | 21 | 86 | 115 | 7.4 |
| Bodievar | 23 | 56 | 68 | 42 | 21 | 86 | 115 | 7.3 |
| Bodievar | 23 | 56 | 68 | 42 | 21 | 86 | 115 | 7.3 |
| Franklin | 23 | 56 | 68 | 42 | 21 | 86 | 115 | 7.3 |
| Franklin | 7 | 2 | 333 | 5 | 1 | 130 | 7 | 1.0 |
| Franklin | 7 | 2 | 333 | 5 | 1 | 130 | 7 | 1.0 |
| Totals | 66 | 176 | 1779 | 334 | 354 | 923 | 1919 | 11.2 |
| Totals | 66 | 176 | 1779 | 334 | 354 | 923 | 1919 | 11.2 |
Freshman Basketball Statistics
| | g | f | gg | pet. | fls /ba | perc. | rb | pp | avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Rogers | 12 | 12 | 12 | 345 | 47.70 | 150 | 186 | 22.3 | 13.7 |
| Suttle | 12 | 110 | 202 | 345 | 47.70 | 170 | 197 | 22.4 | 13.7 |
| Nuttle | 12 | 110 | 202 | 345 | 47.70 | 170 | 197 | 22.4 | 13.7 |
| Smith | 9 | 43 | 116 | 398 | 24.33 | 110 | 110 | 12.2 | 3.4 |
| Matthews | 9 | 13 | 82 | 398 | 24.33 | 787 | 144 | 10.7 | 3.4 |
| Mathews | 9 | 13 | 82 | 398 | 24.33 | 787 | 144 | 10.7 | 3.4 |
| Healy | 11 | 12 | 32 | 132 | 12.77 | 414 | 26 | 11.7 | 2.3 |
| Haley | 9 | 9 | 34 | 132 | 12.77 | 414 | 26 | 11.7 | 2.3 |
| Haley | 9 | 9 | 34 | 132 | 12.77 | 414 | 26 | 11.7 | 2.3 |
| Pollard | 8 | 7 | 34 | 163 | 10.12 | 700 | 68 | 8 | 2.3 |
| Pollard | 8 | 7 | 34 | 163 | 10.12 | 700 | 68 | 8 | 2.3 |
| Campbell | 8 | 7 | 1,100 | 163 | 6.12 | 500 | 68 | 8 | 2.3 |
| Campbell | 8 | 7 | 1,100 | 163 | 6.12 | 500 | 68 | 8 | 2.3 |
| Campbell | 3 | 10 | 300 | 71 | 10.70 | 700 | 26 | 13 | 4.3 |
| Campbell | 3 | 10 | 300 | 71 | 10.70 | 700 | 26 | 13 | 4.3 |
| Totals | 12 | 143 | 943 | 470 | 218.38 | 700 | 143 | 10.7 | 32.7 |
| Totals | 12 | 143 | 943 | 470 | 218.38 | 700 | 143 | 10.7 | 32.7 |
Big 10 Suspensions Stick
CHICAGO (AP) — The Big Ten decended Wednesday to allow Iowa to win the NCAA basketball champion Minnesota to beef up for its NCAA tourney effort and lift the five-week suspension of two f-6-foot Gopher players.
In final action in the drawout工序, she signed off Behagen and Corky Taylor from their sideline because of a breach by the team, making faculty representatives, by an 8-0 vote, wiped out any chance for the Gopper pair to win.
The faculty group spent three days of studying transcripts viewing evidence and hearing Behagen and Taylor before sustaining a Feb. 25 verdict maintaining叠脊 by ambassadors in the athletic directors in a federal court-ordered meeting at Minneapolis.
The faculty group also, in a split vote approved freshman play on varsity football and basketball, will test fall, following NCAA policy.
that the conduct of Behagen and Taylor, who both attacked the prostrate Luke Witte. 7-foot Ohio State beaten by Browns in brawl at Minneapolis June 25, was "unsponsormanlike and in violation of conference rules."
The Gophers, making new coach Bill Musselman, 31, the youngest mentor ever to win a Big Ten championship, wrapped up the title with an 11-3 record night, beating Purdue 40-8.
Witte and two other Ohio State
In capturing their first clearness, league crown since 1919, the Grey Cup now commemorates nine conference games without Behagan, a regular, and sixth-place finisher.
KU to Enter 7 in NCAA Indoor
Jacques, who was unbeaten in the 1900- and 880-yard runs until he was knocked out last weekend, is the only member of the KU squad to score in last week.
Seven University of Kansas
tournament champions
the NCAA indoor championships
Friday and Saturday in Detroit's
Cobol Hall. Three of them are big
fans of the game.
Pole vaulter Bill Hatcher, long jumper Mikeiller and shot putter Rudy Guvevar each will be after the second round of weeks. KU Coach Bob Timmons also will take sprinters Delvin Williams and Emmett Edwards, triple jumper Rogers Jones and host instance runner Rick Jacques
Jacques will run either the 1,000 or the 880. Suffering from a sore throat, he failed to qualify in the half-mile at the Big Eight race this season this season is 14.25 out of the half-mile and 2:10 out of the 1,000.
So instead, Stull will go in the long jump. He uncoiled a 25-34 leap at the Big Eight Indoor, only missing his 14th, the 44-year history of the meet.
Sull, the Big Eight outdoor triple jump champion, was 3-1 in the Big Eight triple jump. His best effort this winter was 40-8; 48-6 was the qualifying
Blue Would Play for Release
Jones, a sophomore, managed to meet the triple jump qualifying standard with a 49-11 effort in the
fourth after winning the previous two years.
The faculty group concluded
Hatcher won his second consecutive Big Eight indoor vaulting title in a vault-off with Colorado's Mike Wedman. Hatcher was the third on the bar was lowered to 16-3. Hatcher made it, Wedman missed.
Stars to Highlight Tourney
Stallworth Only Senior Among Stars
The state class 4-A high school basketball tournament starting today in Allen Field House should include entertaining action in the state this weekend. Class 4-A boats will be able to compete at state, but also the bribblestars.
The newspaper selected Walton as college basketball Player of the Year.
That left the Tigers with a 20-5 remainder against the remaining Saturday against Oklahoma. Missouri will make its first appearance in the NIT, beginning on Friday.
Coffeyville, for example, has been tourner up the last two years. The Golden Tornado takes a 20-1 record into the
first meet in the season, a triangular in Albuquerque, N.M. Since then, the triple jump has been in only two of KU's meets.
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP)—Coach Norm Stewart of Missouri said Wednesday the Tigers' invitation to the National Invitation Tournament was "very good tonic" for not winning the Big Eight Conference basketball championship and a spot in the NBA.
Other members were forward Bob McAdoo of North Carolina, a junior; center Bill Walton of UCLA, a sophomore; and junior guards Ed Ratliffe of Long Beach and Brian Taylor of Princeton.
ST. LOUIS (AP)—underclass captured all (BP) News All-America college basketball team announced
"We have a bid to play in the NIT but we have one more game remaining on our regular schedule," Stewart said. That's our first concern since we've know we're in post-season play.
The lone senior was forward Bud Stallworth of the University of Kansas
Stewart said he was not completely surprised the 18-hranked Tigers were selected for his final game, prior to their final game.
Missouri lost its title bid Tuesday night with a 79-76 loss to Kansas State, giving the Wildcats the league crown.
Class 4-A Preps Play Here
Hatcher's lifetime best was 16-legged quadrangular in Field House Dewey and indoor. He has vaulted consistently in the 16-foot range
Stewart Terms NIT Bid Tonic For No. 2 MU
As a asphomore two years ago, Hatcher placed fourth in the NCAA indoor, but he failed to place last year.
"We want to be a good representative of the Big Eight Conference."
Previously named to the
turrenture were St. John's,
N.J., and St. Joseph,
Fortham. Jacksonville,
Princeton, St. Joseph, Pa., and
Rocky Mount.
ATLANTA. Ga. (AP)--Attorneys for the Carolina Dougars of the American Association on behalf of a temporary court order Wednesday preventing former Dougar Jim McDaniels from playing in the Seattle National basketball Association.
"After the loss to K-State this is very good tonic."
Indiana, and Lafayette also joined the field Wednesday.
Robert Gerst, the attorney,
said he was sending the terms to
Oakland owner Charles O. Finley
by telegram in response to
an investment that he has invoked baseball's reserve
on Blue.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Vida蓝's attorney said Wednesday that the star pitcher would play for the Oakland A's for $5,000.00
The motion was presented during a two-hour closed session involving the judge and attorneys the judge, the Supersonia and McDaniels.
U. S. District Court Judge William C. O'Kelley took the motion under advisement, saying he would rule possibly by
Cougars Seek Court Order
Freshman Guevara improved
he can be a free agent after the 1972 season.
Blue, winner of 24 games against eight losses last season when he captured the American League's Valuable Player awards, has sought $82.60 contract. He was named first overall in the major leagues in the season.
year for $50,000 as long as he does not have to sign a contract and is the end year of his employment. Enlakey telegram today. Gerald said.
He said he had no more to say on the matter now.
When contacted at a meeting of American League owners in Sarasota, Fla., Finley was told of Gerst's proposal.
contract reserve clause binds a lawyer in the contract's interest and his contract expires, with the club bound to pay him at least 18 percent of his prior year's salary.
"Absurd," he said.
The rarely invoked baseball
tournament opener at 1:30 this afternoon against McPherson.
Gerst said he was told Finley accused him of "brainwashing" and "trying to deceive" Blue could not be reached and a telephone operator said his phone
"Iain is shocked by his ('Inley's) unwillingness to submit himself," Finley said. "I am outraged by his suggestion that Vida should attempt to negotiate with him alone, since she lacks the confidence." Finley is a multimillionaire.
"Mr. Finley has invoked the reserve clause but offered him $30,000." Gerst said. "But Blue won't simp the contract.
Coffeyville's Fony Pauzakiae, a four-time state top performers. He averages 14.3 points a game, but three of the top five double figures. Pauzakiae is the tourney's most valuable player in the state.
Finley said earlier that he had sent Blue "a letter of renewal and a $50,000 contract for 1972
SAMUEL HAS been compared with Lucius Allen, Kansas City Wyandotte great and former UCLA star, as the best player in Kansas high school basketball. He averages 32.0 points a game.
Salina Central, rated by many the tournament favorite, will defend its 1971 championship. The stellar Nino Samuel to do it.
"I think Charley is becoming in attacking me personally, rather than sticking to Blue's contract, Geral said.
Salina Central will open the evening session at 7 against Highland Park.
This time, Ward brings a 20-1
record, good enough to earn a No.
1 seeding. Ward upset previously
undefeated Kansas City Sumner in regional play last week.
Ward will play the feature game at 8:30 p.m. against Topeka West, an 11-10 team which has hit a hot streak.
It is already assured that there will be no replay of last year's finals in the championship. Central play in the same bracket this time, so the title may well be lost.
Other entries are Garden City (17-4), the team against which Samuel scored 54 points this season; El Dorado (15-8), in its first trip to the tournament since 2013; the Panthers (15-8), a perennial contender.
The Kansas State High School Activities Association will charge ticket prices of $2 for reserved parking. Students must pay $15 and $30 for high school students.
First Round Dairinge
First Round Partials
1:30 p.m. -Coffeyville (20-1)
vs. McPherson (13-8).
vs. McPherson (13-8).
3 p.m.—Garden City (17-4) vs.
El Duca (15-0).
3 p.m.—Garfield City (11-4) vs.
El Dorado (15-6).
7 p.m.—Salina Central (18-3)
vs Highland Park (13-8)
8:30 p.m.—Bishop Ward (20-1)
vs. Topeka West (11-10).
his shot put mark by 10 inches in the Big Eight indoor. He heaved the 16-pound shot s8-13% despite a bruised knuckle on his throwing hand. His previous best was 85 lb. Oklahoma City Invitational.
Williams and Edwards, both too
large to will enter on your
goard. Dawson, with his third in the Big Eight behind
Collard's Cliff Branch and
season, including twice in Big Eight qualifying. He placed fifth in the final with 6.3.
He clocked a lifetime best 6.1 in the semifinals. Edwards has run the 60 in 6.2 four times this
KU Entries
Pole vault—Bill Hatcher, 16- $6 \frac{1}{2}.$
Long jump~Mike Stull, 25-3/4.
880 or 1.000—Rick Jacques,
1:52.5 and 2:10.4.
10.85.0 and 2.10.4.
Shot put—Rudy Guevara, 58-
11%.
Triple jump—Rogers Jones, 491
11.
60—Delvin Williams, 6.1;
Emmett Edwards, 6.2
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 9, 1972
7
P
kansan Photo by PRISCILLA BRANDSTED
Joe Landolt Speaks on Candidacy
He entertains audience for 15 minutes before speech
Flutist Mann Blows Cool, Loses Artistry
By JOHN FISHER
Herbie Mann entertained a crowd of 3,000 in Hoch Auditorium last night for the third program in the Festival of
Mann is a well-known jazz flutist; he has been described in contemporary music anthologies by John F. Kennedy's taste and swirling lines.
... perhaps more responsible than any other single musician for the establishment of flute in modern 'jazz.'
But this was true of Herbie Mann 10 or 15 years ago, when his sound was pure. He has since gone public—or commercial—and the change is unsuspected to him. In 2013 he joined him from remaining an artist.
LAST NIGHT's program
gives you even more pop-rock ("Hold
them") and "Respect Yourself," "Satisfaction," to name a few. There's nothing wrong with pop-rock off the band, but take it to take it and fake it. "Satisfaction"—or as Mann said, "Our version of an Otis Redding
betrayed. Miscellaneous Jagger's shouldn't become soft, gentle, lazy—but Mann did it. This was a kind of Herb Alpert
Mann's style is essentially cool, and when he left behind the numbers where cool is good—and when he left behind the music he left behind good music.
"Battle Hymn of the
Fairy Tales," he wrote,
showed as served a poignant
reminder of Mann's former jazz
greatness. Piercing high notes,
beautiful riffs, a solid medley,
sometimes with a twist, a
achled like a little record player
Glick ...
Continued from Page 1
Glick said the Nixon administration American people to believe that because American deaths had declined the war was no longer active.
Glick said perhaps the ground war was winding down, but the air war was not. Under the air war average of 60,000 tons of bombs a month were dropped in Southeast Asia. Under the Nixon administration, an average of 95,000 tons of bombs a month were dropped.
Gick compared the Vietnam war to the mythical war in George Orwell's "1844." That war was fought on a far away island, and it didn't know anything about it. There were few casualties from the mother country itself and, every so often, there was word of murder. It was as a perpetual war which never gave any indication of ending.
"If this government had its way," Glick said, "that's what this war would be."
Glick said the government of the United States was fighting (two) the Islamic State and another here at home. The war at home is being "forced" by himself, people who resist what they consider to be the unjust use of force.
If the American people don't do something soon, Glick said, there will be a nuclear war or an attack on the United States government's use of the conspiracy laws, wire taping and FBI surveillance will cause the United States to become a nation of robots, of people who do not resist.
Change is needed now, he said. Real change doesn't come from the government or the corporations, but from the people who bring about change, they must take power over their own lives.
when the sound is on too high that's how big the music was. But it only happened once.
Presidential Teams Initiate Campaigns
THE FEW OTHER highlights in the concert were provided by pianist Patt Reddie, probably the best jazz player in the true jazz style. In "Push, Push," in the first set, Mann left the lute and began pounding rhythm. He used his drummer bench, jamming furiously, his pony-tail wagging. Never tipped for its funkiness and flair, it’s too much. It wasn’t to come first—a tough act to come follow.
Although people around me complained "The guitarist had a guitar!" "Tuning it?" Mann also two standing ovations. Mann also got a few obscene catalls and maybe a sniff of some strange substance on his balcony. But he needed the latter to remind him that last night's audience wasn't in some cocktail and not of what we heard belongs.
By JIM KENDELL Kansas Staff Writer
Three of the five teams of candidates for president and vice president of the student body at the Chi Omega sorority.
Thursday night the other two teams, headed by Joel Green, Michael Berry and Richard Dwer, Joplin, Mo. sent off at amma Piu Sba sorao
Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior and Kathy Allen, Topeka sophomore, were the first team to speak Wednesday night.
Dillon expressed his concern at the lack of long range goals for students and in the University in at the University of Kansas.
He said that students have to express their concern over the financial situation at KU and long range program to improve it.
Dillon said he wanted to extend the teacher-course evaluation program to all courses at KU. He said the teachers would be the quality of teaching at KU.
Alien spoke of her desire to convert Student Senate into an organization that would services to all students rather than the groups for a few weeks.
M O H A M M I D AM I N,
Rafsenjan, Iran, senior and Mike
McGowan, Western Springs, III,
sophomore, of the KU Student
Amin said many people are very disappointed with Student Senate because they try to complain things through it and cannot
"The problem is people haven't realized what Student Senate is. It doesn't have any power," Amin said.
Amin said the essential seni-
were organization and
communication. He and
McCowan went on steps to
their success with different
The senate is run by a handful of senators according to Amin. Murdoch, 71, and others involved in the senate. They just come to the meetings, vote, and
Aimm would involve as many people as possible in senate activities by limiting each person to a single connected position at a time.
McGowan said that many times senators vote on bills without knowing what they have voted on. He said if every senator
"IF WE GIVE EVERYONE a responsibility and everyone is involved in Student Senate, then it will work," McGowan said.
MeGowan said most of the student body does not know what Student Senate does or how it operates. He said that coverage was adequate because annan was not adequate because of the paper's space limitations.
was involved in the senate, he would feel responsible to know what's going on.
Since 1967, only 8 women have received B.S. degrees in engineering at KU. Five of these were from 1967, one from 1968, one in 1967 and two in 1971.
More often than not, she said, women hired by engineering firms to relieve public pressure were placed on jobs of lower salaries. They were men, instead of higher jobs of which they were just as canable.
He proposed that Student
bulletin be used to deliver
bulletin for general distribution
after each senate meeting to
inform the student body what
is going on.
There have been only five women at KU who have received their MS. degrees and one who has acquired her Ph.D. at KU
The third slate of candidates to speak was Joe Landoft Kirkwood, Mo., junior and Mike Schoenleiber. Michael somhonore
Landolt, Schoenleber, and 11 supporters who supported them by themselves. Circus, marched into the room of the tune of "When the Saints Come Marching" in *Act* aaron kazoos, a flute and an accordian
They entertained the crowd with a jugging act, a tight rope walker, a pair of tumblers and a magic act for about 15 minutes
HE SAID STUDENT GOVERNMENT was ineffective and that the institution effectiveness in illustration and apathy, according to Landolt.
He said the real power is in the hands of the Chancellor, the Board of Regents and ultimately the state legislature. Landoll recommends that students set up their own tableau to represent their interests.
Landolt's supporters distributed a leaflet which said, in part, that KU president: past KU president: undistinguished records, yield easily to pressure from the college, their periods and say nothing, and we can apologize for the belief as well as anybody.
Landolt said the circus had a purpose. He wanted people to react, whether positively or negatively, and get involved in the electropolis.
A roaring rendition of "Happy Birthday" preceded Landolt's campaign speech. Landolt said, "I'm helping fundings and losing professors."
"THEO WOMEN who are employed in the same jobs as men often are better because they are more meticulous," Gibson said.
Few
Smith said he thought the number of women in the School of Engineering would be increasing and that the slowing population increase
Continued from Page 1
"It is typical today for first grade classes to become smaller each year," Smith said. "For this reason, I am going to be going were going into the field of education will be looking for other fields. Last year alone, there were ten applications for opening in the education field."
since 1967
Another area given much
Possible City Park Sites Recommended at Meeting
Smith cited two main reasons for the difficulty in getting women members in the School of Engineering.
Palmquit said the major problem faced is the lack of a car and van motorcycles. Although he agreed there should be a place for people to ride on the road, he said a said a park was not the appropriate place because of the traffic.
"The school is not recruiting faculty members at all and has in fact given up eight positions in the last ten years," Smith said. HE SADH that women担当教师 the entire field and that it was difficult to draw a sizeable number into teaching positions.
jective in our study was to provide something for everyone. An area north and west of the Massachusetts bridge has been strongly recommended as a place to cook, cooking, and possibly boating. The area once was used for recreation purposes, but has since been occupied by the Water Palmieri according to Palmieri.
Elmo G. Lundigst, director of placement in the school, gave an update on his few women engineers. He said he agreed with an article in the Nov. 3, 1969 issue of Chemical Engineering and management industries "aren't getting a strong enough message across to the girls at the high school level." He decided on a course of study.
Lindquist said he thought the high school and junior high school guidance counselors were often uninformed about engineering and encouraged more specific like physics, math and science.
The recommended areas, land owned by the city laying along the Kansas River banks, were the location where he'd done through the Sierra Club, the Chamber of Commerce, the Audubon Society, the Coon Hunter's Association, Zero Population Growth, the League of the Engineers and the Environmental Improvement Commission.
consideration was north and east of the Massachusetts bridge, which extends to the Mud Creek where a bridge this area could be closed to vehicular traffic, and allowed to develop naturally. This would provide an area for wild life education or for camping and hiking fans.
Palmquist said the main objective in their study was to provide something for everyone
It was also recommended to use the tops of dikes, creating an embankment. Although the group hadn't made any specific recommendations on the application, it would be practical using inexpensive material to surface the dike.
The total land amount involved in the recommendations included over 2,000 acres Palmquit said.
"WOMEN DON'T have the understanding of what engineering is," said Lindquist. They have no mechanical background like many men who have worked on cars, mowers and other vehicles that until recently was only accepted as men's work, he said.
Women lack some of the technical aptitude possessed by men, according to an article in The Economist magazine. Chemical Engineering, but this gap is smaller than the number of women engineers indicate. The findings suggest that 40 per cent could be women, Lundi suggested said.
MARK BEDNER, Lawrence graduate student and a member of the steering committee of the university, to the size of Mr. McGaven's vote.
She thought the proportion of the vote each candidate received in New Hampshire was about the same, and she might have received in Kansas.
J. D. King, chairman of the Republican party in Douglas county, said, "I was real shocked that Muskies couldn't strengthen. It's hard understand. Muskies from the East and McGovern was a political science teacher from a small college in South Dakota. I don't understand
Continued from Page 1
June McMillan, vice chairman of the Democratic party in Douglas county, said she was not particularly surprised by the results.
Nixon . . .
"I think McGovenn made a mistake," she said, surprised by his strength. I also surprised there weren't more candidates with more experience in the job.
Democrats said Nixon's 69 per cent showing was not as good as it should have been. In 1968 Nixon won the vote of the vote in New Hampshire.
"To be candid I was surprised at McClosky's strength. I didn't think he'd get 20 per cent," Bedner said.
King countered, '1898 he had no scars and hadn't had to make any decisions. He'd made decisions he's had to make. He can do any greater than that.'
"I think Nixon's lost some popularity. His showing wasn't quite as good as last time," Ford said.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered on campus. The college colors, or national ornam
One day
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
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-
8680. If
2. you're at an advantage.
Either of its midsidney buildings the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 14th. West 14th. **lf**
FOR SALE
Pui-shaily Hungarian sheeppeds,
born Jan 2, A. K. C. Male and Pemelae.
Black and Gray Pried in India
796-2881. Melkau, Lennasha. 3-15
1968 Chevette SS, power brakes,
power steering, air conditioning,
automatic transmission, excellent
pickup call. Mp 484-8452 - 3-17
TRY IT YOULK LIKE IT -- Rent
more home now for unfort-
erestful guests. Free
Free. Alka-Seltzer. Lawson.
1-499-2485-600. 1-381-1527-
1-622-8440-6400
EARTHSINE - WE SELL CLOTHES THAT ARE THE FUN OF IT ALL EARTHSINE - EAST 8TH & MASS 3-9
WHAT'S NEW THIS SPRING IN FASHION - ITS YOUR TURP EARTHSHINE-EAST 8TH & MASS. 3-9
1970 Duster green 3-speed, V8.
$14,500. We will buy locally owned
cars, domestic and VW. Jayhawk
Volkwagen, 2522 Iowa, 8420-3-26
100
1967 Yamaha 350, street bike, excellent running condition. Would like to sell this week. Call 842-6453; after 2:00 p.m. Ask for Bruce. 3-10
3-speed "20" boys, bicycle, hand brakes, 5 months old, battery operated light, new tires, good condition. Call 842-5559 after 3 p.m. 3-10
1817 Champion Motor Horse - 24 ft.
4713 cid engine, generator, 80 lb. lbf.
capacity, 14,800 mi., $9,000, #82-7207.
SCUBA EQUIPMENT - Pine, Mash,
Knife, Basket, Hat, Bicycle,
Besp. Pac Life Insurance, $120.
Pac Life Insurance, $150.
Hawke Knife and Vest, $39. Spear
$39. See us for all your diving
services. Divers Equip, Major
rider services. Divers Equip,
Driver, Kansas City, Mo. 64134. Phone
717-824-1414.
66 250cc Dueatt, good condition, must sell,
call 842-7555. 3-9
Nikon F Body, additional FT Head.
Nikon 20mm f/1.4, 145mm f/2.5
Nikon Zeiss lens, additional FE Head.
Zeiss Ion light meter, case, accessory.
Zeiss Ion 30mm F2.8, Perfect-30
1-888-1883
Down and out law student must sell his '67 VW. Excellent condition inside and out. Call 845-627 after 5:00. Free stuffed animal. 3-10
1970轮式 RPT automatic new, tires, wheel ramps, console bucket seats, two 20,000 miles, mechanically押存 20,000 miles, best offer, Mark, 842-807-3000
Mark, 842-807-3000
Red 64 Corvair convertible 4-speed
Looks rough, but it has engine rebuild
and other work recently. My mis-
sion is to rent a 425-170hp 4-mph or
4:4 m-ph. 6
MISTER GUY employee is selling his
sports gear. He has shirts, sports cups 3-9-40, shakes 3-2-12, shirts 15-17 & 14-5. Sweaters 10-19,
11waters and latters 842-668-400.
1966 VOLKSWAGEN, LESS THAN
1970 MERCEDES, CUSTOM CAPTAPPING,
GREAT CONDITION NEVER BEEN
USED STEVEN BOREL 84-434-024 ACHIEVE
STEVEN BOREL 3-13
1967 Triumph Bonneville, 6,000 actual miles—exeptional condition—extras
=$900 firm 843-4250 3-13
Clip-on UHF bow tie antennas, $1.06 each at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass 3-9
Tire Cleaner - New F20 *14 wide
belt cut to $25, plus $2.50 F.E.T.
Free installation at Ray Stoneback's
929 Mass. 3-5
4-piece drum set—excellent condition.
Call VI 2-0528 for further information.
3-13
Baldwin exterminator amplifier, 4
inputs, many controls. 6 speakers.
2-15" 2-12" 2-12" $70" $170 Call Bob.
644-2376 3-14
Trade-in special—50-watt Magnavox FM receiver, one-year-old, $100 at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 3-9
71 Datum 1200 Coop 10,000 miles,
factory air, properly maintained,
very clean, runs beautiful. Snow tire
included. Call Greg. 842-3896-3-14
1966 Porsche 911, 200 h.p., excellent condition, highest offer over $2,900
1610 W. 22d Terr.
3-11
71 Suzuki TC 90R under 400 miles.
$350 or best offer. 3-14
Used Motorola portable, sold new for $149.90, now only $50 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-9
100 cc Kawasaki, 1970 10 speed Trail Boss, excellent condition; 1,190 miles. V775, call 842-3948. 3-14
ear up for a super spring break,
e the first on your board to own
your very own best-up step-wave 64
171, motor over-muched 171,
171.
1971 350 Honda, excellent condition.
.800 miles, $685, 843-7006. 3-14
RMI Electric piano, 8 months used.
RMI Meider trumpet 3 years old.
Olds Special trumpet 8 years old.
In fine condition. 843-0360. 3-14
Just sell-1971 Chevy Monte Carlo.
S, FB, A/C low mileage. Excellent
indition. Will sell for low price.
12-4906 after 5.00.
3-15
For sale: 4' X 3' drawing table
$35, VI 1-3883.
3-14
26th & Iowa PH.V13-1353
Pickens Auto Par and Service
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.2
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Pickens Auto Parts
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
813-8040
843-9694
VIVITAR ZOOM LENS. 85-205mm,
automatic, f.3.8 with Nikon mount.
842-8258, alt., eft.
3-14
Sony model 130 V Portable television,
12" (diagonal) screen 6 months old.
Call 841-2964. 3-15
Bueco motorcycle helmet 1 month old,
$15. Call 841-2964 3-15
1970 360 Yankah Kinney books, good book, $600 or best offer Call
843-2574 after 6:00 3-15
Twin speed bicycle, one speed bicycle
Olympia portable typewriter Call
after 5:00. 843-5229 3-15
A triple pickup, Guild electric guitar and a Daneloetto amplifier with twin 12" speakers. Call 843-2310. 3-15
Kernwood KR-44-AM-FM 40 watt
stereo receiver. Wood cabinet included.
Perfect condition. 842-5032 3-15
NODIODY IN LAWRENCE CLEMENS OVERWHEED HERMID PROGRAMS OVERWHEED HERMID PROGRAMS CLING THE NON-ENTITIES OF 1870 BACKONON, 819 VERTON 819 BACKONON, 819 VERTON
1970 Kawasaki Mach III, $800 Nice
842-5434 3-15
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $0.03
Must sell dual 125t1twritable Samusl 555 A4 AMW 85 watt 20 column computer with 12-8" speakers . best offer.
Call 642-3521 between 5-3 P 4-18
1963 Corvair 2 dr. Ht. New tires, good condition. Call 842-9299. 3-15
STRBRO DISCOUNT. Now you can
buy a Strbro DVD at 14% at RAUD
only on only the Strbro Discount De-
sertion. Free Tea, Coffee & Composition
Tee.
NOTICE
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-7692. professional care-for children 1 mo to 12 mo Full or part-time 3-14 mo Full or part-time 3-14 mo
STUDY EISENFARO the internship credit this 12-28th year, then attend a summer program to be awarded a junior opportunity award. A junior opportunity award is given to University of Portland, Purdue University, or Portland, Purdue University.
Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, 351 Mile Mich.
Broadway bar-chair $145, Ile. Beef Briet-
$300. Saw palo pork plate $340. Small
plate- $340. Bar-Fish Plate $80.
Brisket Plate $80. Brisket Plate-$180. Open 11 am.
Wed. Sun. Phone 824-762-9621.
Sun-Tues.
2 two experienced nursery school teachers offer complete day care for children 3-14. All pre-school, kildishee rateable rates. 834-137 3-10
RUSSIA - SCANIDINA VIA 5 weeks.
$200 includes London departure,
$300 includes New York departure,
$300 also Europe. Africa Write
Agency for Travel Trailer (Lux)
Agency for Travel Trailer (Lux)
KNOW THOU, THou OF A TRUTH, THEE
THOU OF A WORD, THEE FALLEN THE WORLD. ARE PREPARING IT FOR THE ADVENT OF
THE GREAT JUSTICE.
Balthasar (h) 2-9
HOOKED ON BOOKS, annual water
show 8:00 p.m. Thursday and Fri.
March 9th and 10th. Redmond peep-
show at the door. Reed's 3-10
show.
EARTHSHINE HAS A NEW LOOK FOR ALL YOU GROW UP KIDS EARTHSHINE—EAST 8TH & MASS 3-9
HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY
HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY - HEAVY
DASS? EARTHSHINE - EAST RTH
MASS? 3-9
Women's alterations, 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30. 3-13
Barn Parties! Now available for Barn Parties. For more information, call Barn Valley Farm on Lake Perry, baid and cooler plenty of parking at Barn Valley Farm or call Doe Stoop after 6 p.m. at 843-715-9200.
DANCE TIL. YOU PUKE THE
PENTHATIONS AT EDITIS BEER
PALACE 744 mass $1,000 CLOE
SAT 10 & 11. THIS SAT
SAT
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWRENCE? You can enjoy in-LAWRENCE that apartment and special summer camp at Avon Park Road, 12th Ave. Apt. 940, Avon Road, Macouir. Apartments 8th & 9th Avenue, 8th Ave. Avon Road, Macouir. Harvard Apartments 8th & 9th Avenue, 8th Ave. Avon Road, Macouir. Harvard can be economical and enjoyable if you spend all 15 at our surprisingly modest special summer camp. This summer a wonderful time to be in-LAWRENCE!
For reasonable price on all glass or any kind of Plexiglas including glass for Shops. 274 North 2nd St, or call 811-555-3000 for samples that just arrived.
KAT Suzuki
Lawrence's first and onl REAL access store. Factory Authorized Sales & Service
trace Anaritmena
FOR RENT
634 Mass
University Terrace Apartments
furnished apartments available for
$110 and up to manage to
come to manager's
8th, Apt. 1-B, or call 483-153 9
8th, Apt. 1-B, or call 483-153 9
CSC
TOYOTA
TRUENO
Rockledge Villa Apartments Limited
first month off rent free. Four
weeks of vacation. Named,
nished apt, with all utilities paid
for $400.00 each. Call: 4-000
755-2389.
TRUMPN
Furnished Apartment, 142. Indiana,
duplex, air conditioned, wall-to-wall
carpetting, laundry facility, off-street
building, location from Fountain,
V 3-5777
APARTMENTS, ROOMS, HOUSES—
several available immediately. Lynch
Real Estate, 1216 La. 843-1601, 843-
3108, 841-3323, 841-3324
FOR RENT OR FOR SALE. MONTE
home in good condition, 600 sq. ft.
partially furnished, dishwasher,
refrigerator, calculator Call
3-542-781-9999 to see $2,999
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Right here to campus, 107 Mississippi University, Jackson, MS. Available online. Aug. 1st 15:30 PM; available online at end of semester. No registration needed. W.C. capturing, dishwashers, central air conditioning between .250 P.M. and .100 P.M.
A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS. Too
easy to find! Classics like
classic Weather. too hot this spring!
Free wifi. Free wifi. Free wifi.
Watek free wifi. TV All this summer!
Availability 1123 Indiana, 843-2616
Availability 1123 Indiana, 843-2616
Single furnished sleeping room with
kitchen privileges for kids. No pets.
Borders KU and near town. Phone
843-7576. 3-14
Competition Sports Cars Inc.
Avalon, 9th & Avalon, Harvard
and Brown, 11th & Illinois. Then compare the cost of living in one of these handsome apartments and you will be able to have more to have a dishwasher, central A.C. here, water utilities paid for, and much more.
Nice furnished 1-3 bedroom apartments near town, KU. Also rooms with kitchen refrigerator only one room has more tables 2-9 able now 842-5007
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
YOUR MEMBERSHIP. 1972, while teaching is still available,
842-2548, or 2167-A. Harvard
Lawrence building built and
lawyer's office located at
842-2548.
WANTED
Female roommate wanted. Call after 5 P.M. 842-5921. Share rent, furnished apartment. 3-9
Kanai Key Press—Job printing from kaizen sheets to posters, bookshelves to booklets and resumes. 710 Maus, in back Zerof Open, zero to 3 days 842-483-8.
We repair all Volkwagens. We do small operations, transplants, or just large repairs to sell parts and buy those VWs with our direct lines. Buhlgen, B7418, 3-10 2-30
NURSERY SCHOOL vacancies, for two girls, one boy, ages 3-5. Call 842-395 or 843-764
WANT TO BUY—USED FULL OR
HALF GOLF SET. CALL 842-6567
3-10
1-2 female roommates to live on farm. Private rooms, must be students and prefer own transportation and secure alpine accommodation. 842-3949 3-10
Afterations and repair, men and women. Formerly with New York Cleaners. 842-2017 3-14
RIDE WANTED: to Los Angeles, Prefer to leave Friday afternoon; March 17th. Can only spare $15.00 toward Dyeing to my girl @ 842-689-8980.
Female furnished needed to share furnished apartment through finals. 7241 from 2-5 & after 9:30 P.M. or 1301 Louise N. 11, 3-14
Place to board an Irish Setter. L.
Smith, 843-5990 3-15
TYPING
Need someone with car staying in Lawrence over break. Make about $4.00 for 1%; hr. per day 824-2860 for 4.00; Ask 4.00; Step 3-13
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Experienced in typing these, designations, term papers, other mike types, typing styles, formatting type. Accurate and prompt typing skills. Phone 845-9544, Mrs Wright.
Typing done on elite, electric typewriter. No Theses please. Prompt attention. 843-0958 4-5
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUSAGES
These, term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM Selector, your choice of type styles. Also editing at Rutland, Florida. 843-797-952. 842-605-965.
Experienced typist will type *will*
term papers, theses or dissertation
Electric typewriter prompt, accurate
work. Call 843-2881. Mt. Hawkman,
Missouri.
Experienced typist. Overland Park, Kansas. Prompt, accurate work. Reasonable rates. Phone 381-6434 3-28
Typing done in my home, IBM
Electronic. Prompt. accurate work.
Experienced. Call 841-2556. 3-12
LOST
Lost 2-26, KU area, 14 mo old German Shepherd, male, dark, name Jackson, choke collar 843-1782 3-15
At lost in Union seek hood—pred wool
plaid shawl. Great sentiment value.
No questions asked. Call 864-1186
3-9
Lost 2-3 eye near Frazer black and
white speckled pupil with black spots
and head. Female. Please bring her
home. Call 842-6909. 3-13
Lost a red billfold. You can keep the money but I would hate to lose my passport and cards. Please return to hotel 1532 and call or 3-141532
3 mo. old black and brown Tierra puppy in vicinity of New Haven Please return. Needs shots. Call 843-6500 3-11
PERSONAL
ONLY GROOVY GRUWBORWS
ONLY GROOVY GRUWBORWS
INTO A DENUM CAVE FROM
EARTHSHINE OUR MOTTOW A FLY
FROM EARTHSHINE EARTHSHIDE
* 8th & Mass A
NEWOLD CLOTHES - A TIME
MEMBERED - THE TOUCH HGT
REGAINED EARTHSHINE - EAST 8TH
AND MASS. 3-9
BECAUSE is a listening service. Hes-
tall? Call us, we'll talk about it.
Let's check the room numbers.
8 P.M. & 4 A.M. 843-9621 116 L.
13:28 - 3
Will the people who did not receive the birthday cakes their parents ordered please contact the Information Center, 843-3506
3-9
Dearest D & S & L. Thanks for the emergency. A cold shower is really more merry satisfying." *L*3 - 3-13
MISCELLANEOUS
BRIDIAL GOWN Sample Sale=Sizes 8-10, up to 75%; off, Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky. 4-20
PINK SNERDS, BLUE DIVELFS,
RABBITS AND RAINBATS ARE EVERYWHERE-
ON MY WHAT A TRIFLE OR
MASS & MASS
A fonder bender cracked an out. Call KAW BODY SHOP, 81-290-824 or 82-1031 after 6 P M ask for Diek Milla. Free proofs, reasonable mileage location Have 25) hr wrecker location Lawrence. Call for rates out of town.
HELP WANTED
Sports-minded couple for summer
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Thursday, March 9, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Faculty, Students Differ on LA&S 48
By PATTY O'NEILL Kansan Staff Writer
"Some of the faculty feel that theses, as said courseurs, lawors, and associate deans of the College of liberal Arts are more important than many of the students like them, and each semester the classes are filled to
This semester there are 1,000 students enrolled in LA&S 48 classes.
The LAAS 48 courses were first established to provide a special interdisciplinary study within the school. Then in 1968 the program was expanded to include all freshmen and sophomores in the five classes. In 1970 the expansion provided freshmen and sophomores with an opportunity to study under senior students in small discussion classes.
SINCE THE LA&S program is not funded by the University.
Lewis said, the classes are taught on a voluntary basis. The Student Senate provides the funding for these courses and are taught by graduate students and occasionally undergraduate students who fulfill full responsibility for the course.
Student instructors within the LA& program receive a stipend and are given a course. Lewis, if the same classes were University funded, a student must pay for the same course for the same load. The faculty sponsors are not paid for their
Student Senate fund permits the program to be more flexible. A survey of 100 students varied a variety of the classes increases. This semester's time table listed 15 classes.
MANY OF THE LA&S courses are the direct result of student participation in a semester a group of Ewells students study English as a foreign professor of English.
teach a course in contemporary American authors. This semester the course was offered under the LAAS program
To teach a LA& 48 course, the prospective student instructor must be interviewed by a screening committee. Undergraduate applicants must be approved to apply for requirements to graduate school
Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, shares the views of those who disapprove of the LA&S program. He said the courses were often little more interesting sessions" taught by bobbysiv.
GORTON SAID fine arts students were allowed to count only one LA&S course towards their graduation requirements because the faculty has reservations about the quality control."
He said that although graduate students taught English and Western Civilization courses, he never asked them to departmental control, whereas
the LA&S courses were not.
The Portable Circus will perform at 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium. The performance will be held during the Festival of the Arts,
"Most of the courses being offered are not even strict rules," he said, adding that the LA&S prjts should be entirely enlightened.
Comedy Group Tonight's Bill For Festival
The Portable Circus is an underground improvement剧场 in Trinity College in Hartford, and Trinity College in Hartford, both college campuses in the eastern United States, the group decided in 1971 to pursue come as a show.
George Sherman is the writer and director.
Gus DiZerega, Lawrence graduate student and instructor of a LAS&C class, said he thought the program was more useful to the LA&S program were hyper-critical. DiZerega has been teaching for three years, and this semester is teaching "Topics and Problems in Freedom and Authority in the World."
"THE COURSE deals with individual rights within society," DIZegara said. "It explores the state's role in the public authority and individual freedom as well as the question of whether these tensions are inevitable.
DlZerega said his class required a great deal of reading, but that as long as class was not very well, he didn't require papers.
Since there is currently no
registration at DEPartment
at LAAS program this
semester includes two classes
related to the women's
sports league.
"Topics and Problems of Woman Professionals in Society"
is a new course taught by Karen Keessing, an assistant to the dean of *Topics* and *Problems* Role Stereotypes and is taught by Loretta Blahna, Lawrence resident assistant. Lewis Hall
JOE LORDI, Lawrence graduate student, teaches one of the more controversial LA&S (Laws and Problems in Astrological Thoughts),
Students Issue Complaints Claim Survival Kit Fraud
"Some faculty members object to the course because it is not strict, but a seminar said Lord Zinn." The term astrology is loaded with bad academic connotations, but I attempt to explain that between technological, historical, commercial and biological implications of the subject.
By DAVE BLISS Kansan Staff Writer
Complaints against several student-oriented businesses have been reported to the Office of the Dean of Men, according to University of Kansas Student Information Center director.
Most of the complaints concerned organizations which have catered to the parent of KU students, offering to deliver to students a birthday cake or a basket of fruit at various prices.
One complaint was filed by Roberta Horn, Sterling junior. She reported her parents had received a letter from an organization called the Jawhawk Help Organization (JSHO).
MRS. HORN paid $11.50 for a survival kit and birthday cake for her daughter.
The group advertised the sale and subsequent delivery of "survival kits" and birthday cakes to KU students. The kits, containing assorted fruits and vegetables, were delivered to the final examination period. The cakes were to be delivered on the students' birthday.
forthcoming birthday. She never received the cake, her daughter said.
The kit arrived at the appropriate time in December. Herbert was Roberta's birthday, Horn's mother had written to him before her daughter's death.
Mrs. Horn had paid $4.75 for the birthday cake and $6.75 for the "survival kit."
"The kit couldn't have been worth over two or three dollars." Horn said.
Other students receiving the kits have estimated their value to be between two and four dollars.
taken their value to be between two and four dollars. THE PARENTS, BRAUCH, Saratoga, Calif. junior, employed the services of an organization called the Student Council to help Braucht's father received his cancelled check as proof of payment, his daughter said she
Similar complaints by students have been voiced at Kansas State University, according to Bob Lippert, a spokesman for the Student Government Association. Flashman has advocated forwarding the complaints to the Kansas Consumer Protection Board, which by the state's attorney general
Until recently, KU has provided no facility to handle business complaints reported by students and faculty members. GILLIAM SAID there was no investigative staff or Better Lawrence to process complaint regarding business practices.
When the number of complaints increased, however.
Gilliam realized the need to accommodate them. The KU Student Information Center now offers a free referral for referral to proper authorities.
Oliver to Offer Forum to Meet KU Candidates
She said that copy markings and insignia used by several manufacturers complains make their advertising material appear more or less stationary which would indicate some connection with a brand.
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Numerous old江ayhawkier yearbooks, enough to complete the sets kept by the University Library. One of the oldest yearbook found was the
Historic Treasure Found By News Bureau Chief
As of Wednesday afternoon, all five candidates were expected to attend.
Dennis Branster, the new
dept. of education at University
of Kansas news bureau, to
treasure hunter at
the university's news bureau, 1400
North Park Ave.
University of California Santa Cruz Summer Language Institute
Included in the fund were hand carved printing plates of the St. Bernard Fraser Fraser Hat, Watkins Hospital, Strong Hail and an aerial boat. Mr. Watkins is one of the most successful
While inspecting the building, Branstier found several dust covered boxes in the basement. After careful investigation, he and other members of the news media were told that materials relating to KU history
The Student Body presidential committee for next semester will be sponsored by Oliver Hall at 8 p. m. Thursday in the living room.
Offers intensive nine-week Programs in
1891 Quivera, the Jayhawker's predecessor.
A set of 78 r.p. m. records, with the songs of Kluu by the songs of Amy Warner in direction of P.M. Swarthout, former school of F. Mine Arts dean, former School of Art deans.
A variety of old pictures and several copies of a magazine, the Sour Owl, were also discovered. The collection was called Archives Library, this said find was a bonus to the collection of books about the University's history.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WARM
82nd Year, No. 103
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Miller Delivers Farewell Address
Friday, March 10, 1972
See Page 5
Prof Says China Needs Birth Control
Nixon's dramatic gesture of traveling to China did appeal to the Chinese, he said, because 24 hours after Nixon's arrival every newspaper in the People's Republic of China carried prominent coverage of his visit and of his trip.
An authority on China said last night that the most dramatic thing the United States could do as a friendly gesture to China would be to "provide massive amounts of birth control aid after having provided a good example."
Harry Llandisquit, professor of anthropology at the University of Tennessee, told a China Forum audience of 30 that politics is important as adding in control of population.
"The one issue that is overriding," he said, "is that all of the rational plans, all of the rational alternatives depend entirely on the control of population within rainland Asia."
Lindquist, who has studied China for 12 years, said he did not think that President Nixon "lost face" with America during his trip to China. The dinner totoes with Premer Chou En-lan, he said, showed that he had received invitation of the Chinese government.
"I DO NOT think that someone less than the president could have made the kind of decisions that President Nixon was able to make." he said.
"One can discuss whether the parting of the ways could have been a bit more uneven."
Lindquist said an undeniable result of the trip was that Japanese confidence in the United States was shaken. He added that he thought the United States and Japan had reached the point where there had to be a "parting of ways."
He said those who have said other officials should have gone to China instead of Nixon didn't realize that in Communist countries almost any agreement which was not made by the top leadership was not recognized.
"MOST CHINESE concern is not with America as the enemy, or the U.S.S.R. as the enemy, but the Japanese as the enemy," he said. "The Japanese could be in the future," he said.
Kansas Photo by JAMES EATON
Harry Lindquist Talks Informally After Speech
Says controlling Chinese population more important than economics or politics ...
Big 8 Advisers Hear Resolution To Alter Seating of Visiting Fans
By MARCIA CLIFTON
Kansan Staff Writer
A Student Senate resolution dealing with seating policies for fans of visiting teams at Big Eight athletic events was presented on Friday to other Big Eight schools last weekend
Charles Oldfather, University attorney,
introduced the resolution at a meeting in
Kansas City. The resolution was approved by
the Student Senate Dec. 1, 1971.
It would require that all Big Eight schools reserve 10 per cent of their total football and basketball seating capacity to attend games. The tickets be sold by the visiting school ticket office, that the visiting school mail to the home team all unsold tickets five days before the game; and that one-third of the students' allocation be reserved for students.
OLDFATHER SAID Thursday that the resolution was presented to each school's athletic department and business manager. The sale of tickets to visiting fans is currently handled on an individual basis by each school.
Olifather said that the main objection wouldn't necessarily be for financial reasons, but that most schools liked to "take care of their own people first." He cited an example of the University of Chicago as having approximately 3,800 seats for K-U.F. students.
"That's less than five per cent of their capacity," Oldfather said. "They could have taken a different course."
Wade Stinson, KU athletic director, expressed the same concern. He said the chances were slim that the resolution would be enacted. But he worked for basketball games because of
Women in Medicine Fighting Bias
BY REVINSTON LN
Kansan Staff Writer
Although the percentage of women in the various fields of medicine is still low, steps are being taken to reduce discrimination and, the number of women is increasing.
By KEVIN SHAFER
Even with steps being taken to reduce discrimination, many women still encounter
Dr. Margaret Haggan, a graduate of the University of Michigan School of Medicine and a doctor at Wkins Memorial Hospital, recently cited some of the problems she has encountered in a predominantly male profession.
Haggan said she didn't go to medical school in her home town of Cleveland because it refused to admit women students.
Instead, Haggan attended the University of Michigan, both as an undergraduate and a graduate. In her class at medical school, she was the event of the students were women, she said.
"I FOUND that when I was looking for an internship that there were two that wouldn't accept me because I was a woman," Haggan said. "One was in obstetrics in Michigan, and the other simply didn't take any women."
One instance, said Haggan, is in Philadelphia where the formerly alfemale medical school is now accepting male students. No longer is the school focused on Pharmacy or the Medical School, but simply the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science.
The University of Kansas Medical Center is initiating a program to insure the equality of women students Chester Wilson and Nicholas Chancellor for the Affirmative Action Program on March 1, and efforts are being made to pressure on the women medical students.
THE PRACTICING staff at Watkins Hospital is made up of almost one-half women.
Haggan said medical schools had been so pressured against discrimination that the difference between past and present was phenomenal.
When asked about possible female-male friction among the Watkins staff, Haggan said, "Here I'd say that they are all very congenial. I don't see any difference."
Almost at the opposite end of the spectrum is physical therapy, which employs an entirely female staff both here and in Kansas City classes.
Jacqueline King, chief of the department of physical therapy at the health service, said that the uneven distribution of men and women in the country is primarily to the salary opportunities.
Women are also becoming increasingly involved in many other areas of medicine.
WHILE THE total percentage of women students enrolled in the School of Pharmacy at the University of Kansas is significantly low, the percentage has risen to 54 percent within two years. Howard Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy, said recently.
Although the total number of women enrolled in the School of Pharmacy showed an increase of 3 per cent over the spring semester of 1971, the percentage of first year women enrolled in the school was 43 per cent in the spring to 1 per cent this fall.
Figures released by assistant registrar Gary Thompson showed that last semester's enrollment in the School of Pharmacy was 24 per cent women.
"The trend is almost perfect compared to four years ago," Mossberg said. "We were running about 8 or 6 per cent female applicants. Quite honestly, there were no women in the elite eliminate female applicants. We take all applications that are academically qualified."
MOSBERG SAID that with the constant increase in the number of women enrolled in the School of Pharmacy, he would like to have more cent women within the next few years.
The School of Pharmacy employs no women professors, but does use a few women graduate students in teaching capacities.
"The truth of the matter around the country is that as we look at Ph.D. applicants, the female hasn't gotten up in the cloud," Ms. Bossberg said. "But it's coming."
Unlike medical students who must attend medical schools to prepare for their profession, KU pharmacy students are able to complete their programs with a course in pharmacology that seems to experience little difficulty even though they are in a definite minority.
Mossberg said that since the profession was so lucrative when practiced, the female student was often reluctant to stop to learn rather than actually practice pharmacy.
MARY SACHE, Easton senior, said she felt right at home in the School of Law at Columbia University.
Cathy Tasset, Pratt senior, said that every student in the program encountered more or less the same problems. Consequently, women students really do not encounter many more problems because they are a minority, she said.
more or less equally, and the minority
is really not that noticeable to
you.
limited seating capacities.
STINSON SAID most students who wanted to attend away games did get tickets. He said he knew of only three or four teams that did not get tickets to see out-of-town games.
Nixon Linked In ITT Battle
Hume quoted Mrs. Beard as describing her confrontation with Mitchell at a reception in the Kentucky governor's office following the Kentucky Derby last May.
WASHINGTON (AP) — An allying lobbyist was quoted Thursday as saying President Nixon told former Atty. Gin John N. Mitchell to go easy in a pending Justice Department suit against the National Telephone & Telegraph公司.
Hume said he confronted Mrs. Beard with a memo she wrote linking a $400,000 pledge from ITT to the Republican National Convention in San Diego and the eventual out-of-court settlement of the antitrust case against the firm.
Brit Hume, an aide to columnist Jack Anderson, said he heard of Nixon's alleged role in the case from Mrs. Dita Beard, Washington lobbyist for ITT.
Here is what Hume told the Senate Judiciary Committee, which is re-examining the nomination of Richard G. Kleindienst to succeed Mitchell as
Shortly afterward, Mitchell issued a statement saying: "The testimony attributing statements to me involving the foundation is totally false and without foundation."
"I categorically deny that I ever had any such conversation or that I ever made any such comment."
"The President has never, repeat never,
made any request to me directly or
indirectly concerning the settlement of the
court and I took no part in that settlement."
House Firm on Antibusing; Education Aid in Jeopardy
Kansan Writer
WASHINGTON—The House of Representatives voted Wednesday 272 to 139 to instruct members of the conference on the Higher Education Act not to compromise on antibusing amendments to the bill.
The rare parliamentary move places the $20 billion aid to higher education bill in jeopardy by leaving no room for compromise between strict House antibusing amendments and the more anti-busting provisions passed by the Senate.
Senate members of the conference committee have said they would stand solidly behind the Senate version. Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, who authored the Senate antibusing amendment along with
Republican leader Hugh Scott, said he would support the Senate version.
Another Senate committee member,
Jacob Javits, R-N-Y., vowed on the Senate
floor last week to uphold "the thinking of
the Senate" in the committee meeting.
If no compromise is reached, it is possible that all federal aid to higher education will expire on June 30 when institution for present programs expires.
The popularity of the present programs makes this unlikely, however, and it is probable that the Congress will pass a law requiring all students to continue present aid to higher education.
If this happens all new programs in the higher education act will not become law. Among those are general purpose grants to colleges and universities that would give higher education direct federal grants for the first time.
attorney general:
'Mitchell said the party in Kentucky had received a letter been contacted to lay down a policy.
"You mean this is what the President said?" Hume said he asked Mrs. Beard, who is now hospitalized with a serious heart ailment in Denver.
In answer to, Hume said Mrs. Beard softened the President's intent to mean that Nixon wanted Mitchell "to make a reasonable settlement."
Former Republican Kentucky Gov. Louis Nunn, who was host at the Derby reception, told the committee Tuesday that she had disappeared in a stupor during the reception.
KU Releases Poll Locations
The official list of 19 polling places for the March 15-16 campus election was released Wednesday by R.L. "Puf" Student and elections chairman.
Students will elect class officers, student senators, the vice-president and president of the student body and vote in a referendum in the spring election.
The referendum asks students whether they are in favor of a Student Senate proposal concerning the Endowment Association.
The proposal suggests that the association lend $80,000 to the Athletic Department for the installation of a Tartan surface on the floor of Allen Field House.
11 all polls will be open March 15. Polls in Learned, Malott, Strong and Sumner will be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Marvin from 12:30 to 9:30 Wednesday.
There will be 13 night polls Wednesday,
including eight at residence halls and five
at graduation.
The residence hall polls will open at Corbin from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Ellsworth from 5:30 to 9. Hashinger from 5 to 9. McCollum and Lewis from 5 to 7. Naismith from 5 to 30 to 7. Oliver from 5 to 9, 15, and Pearson Scholarship Hall from 5 to 9.
Fraternity and Sorority polls will be in operation from 7 to 10 p.m. Wednesday night. Polls will be at Alpha Gamma Delta, Chi Omega and Kappa Alpha Theta sororities, and Delta Tau Delta and Delta Upsilon fraternities.
Pool will be in operation Thursday, March 16, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Kansas Union and in Learned, Malott, Strong and Summerfield Halls. From 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. polls will be open in the fraternity and sorority locations.
A
Debaters Begin Preliminary Round of Heart of America Debate
Kathy and Dave White, representing North Colorado University, take notes for arguing against Tom Devine, Georgetown, who is against making criminal records available to employers KU is hosting 54
Kansan Photo by PRISCILLA BRANDSTED
debate teams from U.S. colleges and universities. The topic for the tournament is "Resolved: That Great Controls Should be imposed on the Gathering and Utilization of Information about U.S. Citizens by
Government Agencies." Elimination and championship round will be at Saturday at 7:48 p.m. in the
2
Friday, March 3, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Docking Expresses Hope For Last Day Legislation
Governor Robert B. Docking said Thursday night that he hoped some of the important legislation of the session would be
"I still have hope that I can become a member of the legislature will make the hard decisions facing them." Docking said in a speech earlier this month that Probaion and Parole Seminar banquet at the Mamada Inn in Jerusalem.
In his speech entitled "Dollar Priorities," Docking listed some of his reco., mendations he had not the legislature had not
Docking said each year he recommend a specific tax law that would legislature which would provide addition revenue and reform tax measures.
Robert Docking
A. P. M. S. M. A. H. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
THIS YEAR, the Senate passed a portion of Docking's tax program which the governor has authorized additional $30 million in revenue to the state. The reform measure would eliminate federal income taxes and eliminate returns of corporations and financial institutions. Docking estimated the plan would raise the taxes of the institutions by 3 percent.
"We still did not have all the real tax reform measures I
recommended,'" the governor said.
Docking pointed out to the Kansas probation officers, social workers and representatives at the banquet that penal reform was hampered by the limited funds available because of the 'state's
Docking said that the most important function of criminal justice was the rehabilitation of offenders. He said his
Dwyer, Green Criticize Large, Inefficient Senate
By LINDA CHAPUT
Kansan Staff Writer
The Student Senate was termed
incumbent and a farce by two
candidates, one of whom is
student body in campaign
speeches Thursday night at the
State House.
"Any bill the Senate passes can be vetoed by the Chancellor," said Green.
Joel Green, Rapid City, S.D., sophomore, who is running on the Aardvark Liberation Party, called the Senate "a farce" because he did it stuffed no real reason except in allocating funds.
Green said he would like to abolish the student activity fee and establish an optional fee in its place. The new fee would have activities, athletics, University Theater, Concert Chorus and the Kansan.
GREEN ALSO said he wanted to help students attain more rights and privileges by appointing a full-time paid instructor. The woman would be an experienced faculty member who could be appointed to the post for three to five years. He must be respected by students, and have a knowledge of campus operations and rules, he said.
Green said he would then like to abolish the Student Senate in its place. He also said the laws and the Senate code so that the Senate could become a body with a majority of senators.
and protection of student rights.
Green said that if he was elected,
he would think that most students
favored this action.
Dwyer, a senior from Joplin,
he said he would like to see a
conference of the Senate.
He said that the Senate was
much too large to be
capable of meeting.
As the Senate exists, it is very difficult to place responsibility on any senator. Most senators have no real communication with their constituents, with their
Dwyer said a smaller Senate would be much more productive. He said he had never have a specific task instead of being assigned to a committee at
"The students should be able to know what to expect from their senator," he said. "And it would mean that the fact that responsibility will be more intense so that a candidate would be more aware of the need."
DWYERWOULD like to reduce funding, except for what is essential to the University.
Dwyer wants to increase funding of the ambulance, the Kenyan State Senate office so that a full-time secretary could be hired. Bill Jacoby, Lawrence senator, suggested that the Senate hold open forums so that various speakers could be heard by the students.
administration had worked diligently in the last five years for penal reform.
HE CITED the work release program, home visitation program, improvements of the school, vocational program, and the blood plasma program at Lansing State Penitentiary as positive steps in the area of penal reform made by his supervision.
Docking also said that although the legislature had spent a great deal of time on reapportionment, it didn't have a sound reapportionment bill with a sound reapportionment bill.
Docking said other important legislation which still had not been enacted included the executive reorganization and state made; constitutional revisions which he recommended to be submitted to the people; welfare reform legislation; environmental legislation; and a bill on the state government.
Docking said he was pleased that the legislature had passed "a few of the important items I 'commended be enacted.'"
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BELFAST—Three terrorist bomb makers blow themselves to pieces in the accidental explosion of an Irish Republican Army gelignite dump in the heart of Belfast, the army reported. The bomb went off as thousands of Protestant workers paralyzed Northern Ireland's industry with a sudden strike to protest the violence that has racked the province since August 1969.
People . . .
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TAIPEI- The military forces of Nationalist China are, by most estimates, well able to defend Taiwan despite cuts in aid from the United States. U.S. advisers said the Nationalists' ability to defend Taiwan could be threatened by any halt in American aid and sales credits.
President Nixon signed a $3.19 BILLION FOREIGN AID appropriation measure and the White House pledged to keep the Peace Corps in full operation despite sharp budget cuts. The total appropriation is $1.53 billion less than the administration's budget request. The largest reductions came in international development assistance and in the military aid program.
TOPEKA - The Kansas Senate mandate the state's first open meetings law and a bill authorizing a $84 million bond issue to expand facilities at the University of Kansas Medical Center, then awarding it $150 million in funding for the session. The open meetings bill is considered a watered-down version of some model open meetings laws, but makes it official. It requires the governor or government at all levels in the state bill be open to the public.
A SECOND AUTOFSY on the body of Raymond Yellow Thunder, six a Sloux who died last month in Gordon, Neb. showed no evidence of an injury.
PRESIDENT NIXON has ordered the nation's airlines, hit by a rash of bomboaxes, to implement tighter security controls in the sense aftermath of a $2 million extortion plot against Trans World Airlines.
Places:
CLIFFORD RVING AND HIS WIFE IDERE were indicted by federal and county grand juries Thursday on charges of fabricating taped interviews, foraging documents and engaging in other schemes in a plot to obtain $750,000 for a bogus autobiography of billionaire Howard Hughes. The 24-page indictment charged the inventor of a surveillance device, Skasken, their researcher, as a co-conspirator but not a defendant.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 3.1972
3
'Hamlet' and 'Rosencrantz' Waiting in Theater Wings
By BARBARA SCHMIDT
Kansan Reviews Editor
ART
SEVEN EAST SEVENTH
GALLERY:
"Funk 'art'," an art,
presentation gallery and
other art objects opens
Sunday. Also on display are
ceramics by Sheldon Cressy,
Hammett, Lawrence senior;
and Fred Burnett. Lawrence
graduate student. Learned, too,
to be a great artist. Intaglios
by Jim Evans, Topea seni-
lor; and Bruce Hiles,
SPOONER ART MUSEUM: A collection of modern sculptures by Bernhard Koch, constructions by Norman Rowe, and Michael Sinn, instructors in painting and sculpture. Ends
SPOONER ART MUSEUM:
First in a series of "mini-tours" on various aspects of Spooner's art, the collection includes Prints and drawings curator Pam Kingsbury will discuss 18th-century English plateware.
UNION GALLERY: The 18th Annual Kansas Designer Craftsmans Show. Ends Sunday. On Monday, winning entries from the 20th Annual KU Photography Contest will go on display.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
Germany—Dada, 7:30 p.m.
Monday. Last of a part-sua
film series, "Museum Without
CONCERTS
CONCERTS
SWARTHOUT RECITAL
HALL: Chamber Choir concert
3:30 p.m. Sunday.
SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: Faculty Recital by the KU Brass Quartet, 8 p.m. Monday.
EDITH'S EDH BALACE:
"The Penetrations." 9 p.m. tonight and Saturday at five: 12 noon rhythm and blues声和boogie music.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
SUA
Popular
Film.
Tonight and Saturday.
Mick Jack as a grappy rock singer
Gay Lib Gets OK to Charge For Its Dance
After Kansas Union Director F. Patrick Edwards, the members of the Kansas University Board Board Thursday morning, the Lawrence Gauger Association charged $50 million in charge 50 cents admission at its dance from 8-12 p.m. Friday in the KU building.
The Front had previously been given permission to hold the dance in the Union by the board, but the board said the University Events Committee would have to pay for admission could be charged.
A representative from the Front went to the events committee meeting Wednesday afternoon, but Emily Taylor, dean of women, said the matter was under the jurisdiction of the committee.
The representative then connected Burge who polled members of the board by sending a sinistre email could not be called by Friday.
KANU Schedule
Stereo 91.5 FM
12:15 p.m. — Noon Hour Concert
12:30 p.m. — Auftorfstream Organ
13:00 p.m. — Candlelight Prayer
13:30 p.m. — After Thirty
14:00 p.m. — Music by Candlestick
14:30 p.m. — Company's Prayer
15:15 p.m. — TBA
**SUNDAY**
12:00 p.m. — The Morning Show
12:30 p.m. — The News-News
12:45 p.m. — The News-News
10:30 p.m. — Serenade to Blue
10:55 p.m. — Music by Candlestick
10:75 p.m. — TBA
**SUNDAY**
14:00 p.m. — Classically Choral
12:00 p.m. — Words and Musical
12:30 p.m. — Chamber Recital
12:55 p.m. — Words and Music
13:00 p.m. — Things
who goes into retirement with
plenty of money to spend,
pretty quickly to find his
privacy disrupted by a bhood (James Fox)
who uses jigger 'house' as a
money bank.
SPOONER ART MUSEUM:
Film Series for Young People,
"Louisiana Story." 3 p.m.
Sunday. Robert Flaherty's 1984 documentary about the discovery of a lichen, which affects its effect on a Califan family.
GRANDA THEATRE: "The Hospital." Paddy Chayefky's cynically melodramatic script is an example of his health care in a modern hospital-complete with George C. Scott as a booing, gull-filled character.
HILLCREST 1: *Prince of Peace* Paolo Pasolini's 1960 film (formerly called "The King") about the life of Matthew) traces the life of Christ with humble simplicity and as much factual realism as possible.
HILLCREST 2: "Sunday
Bloody" Sunday, "John
Schmidt" John Schmidt"
) directed Pereupel
Gillatt's complex script about a
disintegrating love triangle:
Homosexual Peter Finch loves Murray Head, a swinger also being pursued by heterosexual men.
Is Coming" and "Lawman"
"VARSITY THEATRE:
'Klute' and 'Summer of 42'"
The first features Jane Fonda's best performance since "They Shoot Horns, Don't They?" as a woman who is involved in an old-fashioned mystery with an oh-so-straight policeman (Donald Sutherland).
The second is the sentimental tale of an adolescent's (Gary Penn) and of sex (via Jennifer O'Neill).
By TOM THRONE Kansan Staff Writer
HILLCREST 3: "Harold and Maude."
The Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW), said Monday night in a meeting in Elsworth Hall that the war in Vietnam was not winding down but was being withdrawn from automated warfare
SUNSET DRIVE IN: "Valdez Is Coming" and "Iowan."
THEATRE
A slide show prepared and sponsored by the National Action-Research on Military Industrial Support (NRIS) of the American Friends Service stated that the ground war was de-escalating and the air war was
The slide show was prepared from military magazines, newspapers, information from a senior investigator electric battlefield program. It discussed the ways air power was used in the war and the number of people in the war.
The veterans said the air war was used to keep up the war effort with less casualties.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE.
Shakespeare's "Hamlet" and
Tom Stoppie take off on it,
where they go to a party.
Are Dead." The first will be
held on Thursday and on March 28, 30
and April 1. "Rosencrantz" will
be at 8 p.m. Wednesday and
on March 29, 31 and April 2.
Vietnam Vets Say War Being Escalated in Air
THE SHOW said that it was less painful to fight an automated war because less people were killed.
The automated war system uses electric sensors which
detect troop movements, the show said. The sensors send signals to a data-link ground computer on-board computer in a fighter plane. The plane flies to the target and the computer releases signals.
The slide show said that the armament used on the planes was made to main people. Most of the weapons are anti-personal bombs, which contain mini-ammunition pellets on the unprotected people.
ACCORDING TO THE show the Senate reported that the military said that they used these types of bullets that dead is withdrawn from the action when an injured man was shot by him." Secondly, they felt that "the suffering of the living has a more demoralizing effect than the suffering of the dead."
People can protect themselves from the bombs by wearing straw vests or some type of protective clothing.
The show said a system like this didn't need troops to win it because it could be carried on for 15 to 20 years.
Portable Circus Lampoons TV, Society in Comedy Sketches
Bv LARY HUFFMAN
and PAT MOORE Kansan Reviewers
Festival of the Arts continued Thursday night with a presentation of satire and comedy by the Portable Circus. At 7 p.m., the Theatre or the Ace Trucking Company, the five-player troupe gave its impressions of television the way it is used and abused.
The Portable Circus, which originated at Trinity College, has been performing for nearly two decades in Charleston, Mark Williams, Jeffrey Lippa, Chip Keyes and Michael Schumacher (the three months ago), write their own material with the help of their director, George McGregor.
THE PLAYERS wielded their imaginary props and delivered their lines through a series of gestures, with the air of spontaneity even though nothing was improvised. Steve Charleston explained afterwards that all the material was taken from the play against a bad night and to prevent upstaging. The comedy was effective because, as he said, they were free to concentrate on their performance and training to think up the next tok
The act lampooned both television and the audience it introduced, and society imacriment of false impersonation into people via the talk show, the variety show, the commercial show, and the program that weren't for those little white specks on your shoulder") etc., the Cicum kept the audience engaged.
THE SKETCHES touched on almost every aspect of television, from the news team "that everyone likes because we like morning cartoons and morning cartoon shows with their three themes: "Violence.
Tourist Center Promoted Here
Architecture 40, the sophomore design class, is presently promoting a tourist information center for Kansas.
humiliation and violence." Their humor ranged from the subtlety of a game contest show that you don't have to compete with other players in the slapstick in the form of a devil and an angel fighting over the morality of two grammar school students' watches" taking Dick Van Dike.
"The purpose of the center is to help the economics of Kansas by creating jobs through tourism." Michael B. Elliott, Owensboro
Ky', $ophthalmia, said Thursday of the class at studying the design of the center Others are studying potential sights in the state.
A talk show on education-, television brought culture to the circus's "screen" with three speakers, and a poetry bridge the generation gap" A venerable old American poet read Robert Frost, first putting his fellow writers to the test of a new, less festive Spanish dance. A radical activist and did different interpretations of the word 'mother'. Finally came the tale of Tintin, talked of "waves of discontent" until he became seasick. The whole sketch illustrated the consequences of trying to present culture as culture on a mass medium.
TELEVISION'S WOMAN Psychologist and the buddy-buddy news team were depicted as characters who use human mursery to make money. The TV show essay on American society. A serious competitor opposed an essay by a 1980s thinker thought he could win without
‘competing’ The announcer idealized the competitor and descrived the gentle contest as that of a chess player who was trying to destroy the show. Then the announcer was flashed an image of ‘Failure’ by a voice offstage. When the “15-second time limit” elapsed, he was escorted offstage after the chess match.
BECAUSE TELEVISION has somewhat of a foundation in reality, their satire put more than half an episode into the Means of psychotherapy ('I started watching television sports as part of my psychotheraphy. It keeps me in touch with other people. Hoover (an old man who spasmodically relives his past on 'Fake the Nation') and Agnew (reportedly arrested for spitting at a police officer) all included in the burlesque.
The program came to a fitting end with "Father Ronald Gosnell," who wrote words of comfort for the end of a hard day but then walked off a rock, saying, "Spangled Banner," complete with jets and salutes, conclude.
Backstage the members of Portable Circus talked about how Judging was used to Judging from the whisles and loud applauds the feeling was
AT SHAKEY'S TONIGHT
Enjoy the Versatile Tom Eversole at the Piano
7:30 - 11:30 p.m.
and
Light or Dark Beer
$1.00 a Pitcher
8 - 10 p.m.
ONLY 99¢
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ye Public house
544 W. 23rd 842-2266
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Fri., Sat., Sun., March 10, 11, 12
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GAY LIBERATION present
a CELEBRATION of the
FIRST AMENDMENT
DANCE
Riday march 10
8-11 p.m.
union ballroom
50¢ donation for
G.L.F. legal fund
MUSIC: DAEDALUS
THIS WEEKEND BRING ALL YOUR FRIENDS TO HENRY'S
Come see the complete line of RCA car tape stereo, including Stereo 8 and Tape 6.
In car stereo (like everything else), you get what you pay for. That is why RCA is your best buy. Sure, you can buy a stereo player for less—but you won't be spending much on engineering, and sleek styling. Why take chances when you can buy RCA?
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
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Charter & Regular Membership Available Now Call VI2-5248 or Inquire at the STABLES.
Henrys
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THE SOPHOMORE CLASS LECTURE SERIES
presents
SENATOR BIRCH BAYH of Indiana
Speaking on
"The Future of the American Political System"
Tuesday, March 14 8:00 p.m.
at the Kansas Union Ballroom
SENATOR BAYH—Considered one of the U.S. Senate's constitutional authorities and a leader in the passage of the 28th amendment lowering the voting age to 18.
Currently working for a constitutional amendment to provide equal rights for men and women. Concerned about the nation's needs in dealing with pollution, poverty, education, and health care.
ADMISSION 50°
Tickets Free to Sophomore with Class Cards—Advanced Tickets will be Sold at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd.
4
Fridav. March 10, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Guest Column
Paying Taxes on Taxes
By JOHN PATRICK MAHER
A basic inequity exists in federal and state income tax laws in regard to the payroll tax. This inequity should become apparent to tax-payers as they wrestle with their income tax forms and try to beat the April 17 deadline.
The payroll tax is levied against a person's wages or salary to pay for the health and welfare benefits provided for him later in life by the Social Security Administration.
The payroll tax is not tax deductible. Income taxes are levied against a person's taxable income, including that part of his salary or wages that goes to the Social Security Administration.
Each employee pays one-half the total social security assessment and his employer pays the other half.
This is taxing a tax. And in paying state as well as federal income tax, a person is paying tax on a tax twice.
What is more, as payroll deductions for Social Security increase, a person pays tax on an increasing amount of unrealized income.
Where is the fairness in paying taxes on unrealized income?
When a person invests in U.S. Savings Bonds, he voluntarily invests his money in his country to be used for its general well-being. He is paid interest on these bonds, and upon selling them back to the government, he pays income taxes on his actual profit.
When a person is taxed for social security purposes, a payroll deduction is mandatorily made from his wage or salary to pay for his eventual well-being. He draws no interest on this money, and he pays income taxes on money he never really had.
Where is the fairness in paying income taxes on mandatory losses?
Two suggestions are possible: First, change the Social Security laws so that each individual assumes the entire payroll tax burden. Relieving employers from paying half of their employees' payroll tax would serve to remove a source of higher prices.
Second, change the income tax laws so that the amount paid to the Social Security Administration by each individual not be counted as part of his taxable income.
KU
PATTERSON
"I just can't see the problem!"
WHAT'S THAT?
A LETTER.
A WHAT?
A LETTER.
WHAT'S A LETTER?
A FORM OF WRITTEN COMMUNICATION.
HOW DOES IT REACH ITS DESTINATION?
IT IS DELIVERED BY THE POST OF FICE.
Judge Wright held that the death penalty is "unusual" largely because of the declining number of executions in the United States between 1987 and 1989 in 1993 to two (1987), and the fact that there is a trend toward abolition. To which one might reply that the imposition of the death penalty in this country has been growing (a averaging about 100 annually for the past decade) and that the
HOW DOES IT REACH ITS DESTINATION?
IT IS DELIVERED BY THE POST OF FICE.
BY THE WHAT?
THE POST OFFICE. YOU BUY A STAMP FOR A DOLLAR, MAIL YOUR LETTER AND SEVERAL WEEKS LATER, GOD WILLING, IT GETS DELIVERED.
Disc. Publicers Hall Syndicate
The California court's ruling was based on a clause in the state constitution virtually identical to the Missouri Amendment. Chief Justice Donald R. Wright, speaking for the majority, partially based his decision on the long time-lag between conviction and implementation. The obvious reply to that is that the legal process ought to be speeded up.
BY THE WHAT?
THE POST OFFICE, YOU BUY A STAMP FOR A DOLLAR, MAIL YOUR LETTER AND SEVERAL WEEKS LATER, GOD WILLING, IT GETS DELIVERED.
Dist. Publishers Hall Syndicate
However the U.S. Supreme Court may rule, the California verdict will stand in that state barring an amendment to the California constitution. The state court contended that the frequently expressed will of the elected representatives of the people of California, who on several occasions in recent years have legislated bills which would have abolished capital punishment.
Smith Hempstone
Is Society Diminished By One Person's Death?
WOULDN'T IT
BE MORE
EFFICIENT
TO USE A
TELEPHONE?
A WHAT?
!
The death penalty is still permissible in 40 states, although the United States Supreme Court is expected to rule soon whether executions are allowed in a *institution's* Eighth Amendment prohibition against "cruel and unusual punishment." There have been no executions in the United States since June, 1967, and 888 men and two women executed of capital offenses await the decision of the High Court.
A side effect has been the release on bail of Angela Davis, who is charged with murder. He was also connected to the Marin County Civic Center shoot-out in which four people lost their lives. It is earnestly to be hoped that they may lay eyes on Miss Davis again.
WASHINGTON—By a 6-1 vote, the Supreme Court of California has declared the death penalty to be unconstitutional in that state. The court's decision is to give (literally) a new lease on life to 107 death row inmates, including such luminarys as SIRian B. Siran, the assassin of Robert F. Kennedy, a mass murderer Charles Manson.
problems of Britain (for an example) are not those of the United States.
Stanford University law professor Anthony G. Amsterdam argued the case for abolition before both the U.S. Supreme Court and the California Supreme Court. One of his arguments was that the only exceptions to the abortion penalty are "the poor, black, personally ugly and socially unacceptable."
All right. Forget Sirhan and Manson; their cases may be so emotive that it is impossible for any of us to render a balanced judgment. Take instead the case of Ernest J. Akens Jr., who was then represented before the national and state supreme courts.
Does anybody really believe that Aikens was sentenced to death because he was "poor," or that his mother was socially unacceptable? "I do not know (or care) whether he was black or white, but I rather imagine that the severity of his sentence is greater with the fact that he beat, raped and stabbed to death two women, one of them five months pregnant, and shot to death the car of a car who gave him a lift.
In his opinion, Judge Wight stated that the California court's decision to suspend the sympathy for those who would commit crimes of violence but do not want to do so.
diminishes itself whenever it takes the life of one of its members. A noble sentiment. A noble sentiment. Quentin, let alone that of the United States as a whole, truly be diminished by the execution of her husband's will, importantly, can society afford to turn men like Alkiss free from they have served eight or 10 years in prison. The sentence frequently amounts to:
There's the rub. What is the alternative? To keep them caged for the reminder of their natural lives? In Judge Wright's eyes the judge has an edge, perhaps correctly, constitute "theeps and unanim punishment?"
Abolitionists like to claim that those who favor the retention of the death penalty do so largely out of an atavistic thirst for power. The right to kill something in that but not much. What law-abiding people want—and have a right to expect from their government—is that men Sirhan and Manson and Akhenat never walk the street again.
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision may not echo that of California. But if it does, the U.S. Constitution requires legislatures are going to have to frame legislation which provides decent folk with the protection to which they are entitled in an effort to ensure that a share of depressed psychopaths.
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
AP Backgrounder
N.H. Primary Sets Pattern
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP)- Sen. Edmund S. Muskie's victory in the New Hampshire Democratic primary enhances a pattern likely to be a familiar one in the long primary season: a race that fails to narrow the big Democratic field of candidates.
As in the nonprimary states of Arizona and low last month, the Maine senator led the field in New Hampshire and appeared to either break even or claim an eagle in convention delegates.
But the political benefits were divided more than one way and none of his foes plans to get out of the country, poor New Hampshire showing.
Even Sen. Vance Hartke of Indiana and Mayor Samuel F. Yorty of Los Angeles planned to move on to the next round of the 24 primaries in which more than 1 million delegates will be selected.
Because Democratic delegates
case for division up delegates,
even primary leaders won't be in
position to sweep a large number
of voters.
Thus candidates will be able to pick up a few delegates here and a few there in order, to keep in the contest until the big June 6 California primary, when theinner winner will receive 271 television-ready-18 per cent of the 590 needed for the presidential nomination.
Except for Muskie, who is running every election practically every fall, the few fellow candidates, most of the Democratic contenders are
pull the frontrunning Maine senator back to the field.
Muskie complained in New Hamphire that the need to spice up the terrain for a reason he failed to get the landslide endorsement he sought would have been more effective.
Of his major opponents, only McGovern conducted a full-fledged bid in New Hampshire.
In Florida next week, McGovern is expected to finish quarterback in 11man field. Muskellady probably for second place behind Alabama Gov. George C. Humprey is been Hubert H. Humphrys.
In Illinois a week after that, Muskie's only rival in the presidential preference contest is former U.S. Senator Jude Gilley M.Carthy
But Humphrey, Sen. Henry Jackson of Washington and D.C., who will go straight from Florida to Wisconsin to prepare for the April 4 primary in muskie and MeGovern also are
Despite the strategy of his rivals, Muskie remains favored in the early primaries except for Florida.
Muskie still has an important part of his initial advantage—the importance of the congressmen and other congressmen and their success in his futures.
This is why the Maine senators' aides say only he has the potential of putting together a convention majority. And with the rest of the country in future primaries will have to do more than finish strong second.
Garry Wills
From Legend to Reality
In this dessicant time of too much politics, one can refresh the soul with Elie Wiesel's new book, *The Art of Survival*, a collection of Hasidic Jewish tales.
It is the pseudo-scientific conviction that return to Washington with the white belt behind back in reality—that one must, for instance, go back through Parsen Weems's book on the White House and Washington to the General's own journals. But some people record is inconvenient—in legacy.
St. Francis is one of these, the farther back one goes in the Franciscan literature, the more important a glow of magnified impact. It is precisely in the eyewitness accounts that every story is a
Israel ben Eliezer, the eighteenth-century founder of Hasidism in Poland, is another great Jewish sage. His phrase—a legend in his own
time—startlingly literal. He not only had a legacy, but was one. We are all such stuff as dreams are made on; only most of us are nightmares—so it is hard to believe in them. There is a history that is all legend, we do find this Baal Shem Tov (as he was known)
Like St. Francis, he exerted great influence, but more by his person than by any teaching. Such men do not come to instruct, but do so because from them, it is only by force of their blessing—as the birds learned to talk from St. Francis. And, once again, the first, best-authenticated stories are miracle stories; that is not true of them, nothing is.
Readers of Elie Wiesel's fine novel Beggar in Jerusalem have already met modish versions of the stories that are the glue holding together these descendants of the Baliah series of lectures he has given, series of lectures he has given,
recounting as simply as he could the tales he heard as a boy from his Hasicid relatives. The bitchen of Martin Burber's. But the oral form and the sense of tradition—of a duty to hand on what one has done—will continue, and returns us to real "sources" better than anything else could—anything that is, short of hearing from one's own grandfather.
After the Baal Shem Tov, teachers of a more distinct sort followed (as Bonaventure did St. Francis). Seismicism is the true fact that earthquakes are Tradik or community model, hardened himself against hope;
Griff and the Unicorn
concerned any Messiah who might come to such an age as this; he saved Talmud by the gift of God, his provoke His action.
N
By Sokoloff
Mil
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Th dow $80,0 men tan
These men were survivors, believers, doubters, tough and soft at the same time—men not all of whom have been killed if a particular Rabbi is genuine? Ask him if he knows a way to chase impair thought processes. Do you know you'll be a fake?" They formed a great chain of teachers, and we are lucky that they were still though not the 'ast link, still read to teach us.
Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate
TwiANG
TwANG
TwANG
TwANG
@#!!!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
TWANG
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
TWANG
井獅!!
Drieskamp
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription@univ.kansas.edu. Estimate $60.00 for K-12 education programs. 6044 Ackermann Services, services and advertisement offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions and notices may not necessarily be accurate to the original address of Regents.
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff."
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Friday, March 10, 1972
University Daily Kansan
5
Miller Valedictory Lists 10 Achievements
By JIM KENDEL
Kansan Staff Writer
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David Miller, Eudora senior and outgoing president of the student body, met with reporters Thursday afternoon to talk about
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Miller discussed several current issues and went on to list ten accomplishments of his administration plus a few disappointment.
Miller first explained his part in the referendum which will face voters in the March 15-16 campus election.
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The referendum asks for student approval of a Student Senate proposal to the Endowment Association.
The Senate is asking the Endowment Association to lend $80,000 to the Athletic Department and provide a surface in Airfield House.
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The Tartan surface would permit the installation of movable bleachers on the north and south ends of the field house.
MILLER, who first made the proposal, said the $80,000 loan could not go into effect until the corporation raised $160,000.
It would also permit students to use the field house for recreation mornings, evenings and on weekends. The team will date four basketball courts.
The $80,000 loan would be added to a loan which the Endowment Athletic Department in 1966 to expand the east side of the building.
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Miller said this $35,000 loan was originally made for a period of 15 years, but was being repaid ahead of schedule. Miller said the Endowment Association could lend him $80,000 without much difficulty.
Miller admitted that Wade Stinson, director of athletics, has said the Athletic Department did not have enough available to install the surface.
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However, Miller said, he would like the Endowment Association to be ready to move if the Athletic Department finds the money.
Miller talked about the bus situation at KU. The Student Senate is now subsidizing the Lawrence service to give wide bus service to KU students.
MILLER SAID he would announce early next week whether he would recommend him for bus service past March 17.
The Student Senate has guaranteed support of the company until that date. The Student Transportation Committee of Student Senate has recommended that subsidies be ex-
Miller said he was optimistic for the extension of service past March 17. He said the Student Center had $800 a week on the bus service.
Miller said he expected the subsidy before March 17 to total $50,000. The subsidy spends a similar amount on subsides after spring break, the total subsidy will be far under the budget to subsidize the bus company.
"I think you have to conclude when we're providing a service for 15,000 users a week, it must have some value," Miller said.
Correction On Shelters
MILLER ALSO discussed school councils. School councils comprise Student Senate members on school policy making bodies, on school policy making bodies,
It was incorrectly reported in Wednesday's Kansan that the fallout shelter on campus and plant modification analyst, said Thursday that the shelters had never been built.
Next year school councils have allowed 75 centers for each student to attend school. The councils are free to allocate the money as they see fit within their budget.
Stone said had the shelters been stocked at that time, the supplies would have become outdated about a year ago, and they hadn't.
Miller said this is an effort to open lines of communication between senators, the policy makers in their schools and students.
Since the council will have to
schools, they will have to concern
themselfs more directly with
schools and become in-
formed in them.
Miller said his number one concern this year had been trying to live up to campaign promises he made a year ago.
He said the shelters could be stocked after the completion of Wescoe Hall.
HE SAID his first accomplishment had been to increase the responsibility of the vice-president vice-president, Molly Lafflin, Lawrence senior, was the first vice-president to finish the term.
One of the changes which Miller made in the office of vice-president was to make the vice-president presiding officer of the
Miller said his second accomplishment was to involve non-senators on Student Senate committee and experimented with a work experiment worked very well.
Student Senate.
Third, Miller said he had initiated the workshop for new student senators to be held the last weekend in March.
Miller said the workshop would help the new student senators learn how Student Senate operate could become effective seating.
MILLER LISTED his four accomplishment as the completion of the reorganization of Student Senate begin in 1969.
He said all the old All Student Council statutes had been replaced with new rules designed to make Student Senate more
He said he had set up regular minutes we take and test the six Student Senate committee chairmen are now members
Miller said the reform of the Student Executive Committee was his fifth accomplishment. He has been forced to make it a functioning body.
the chairman of StudEx is now elected by the members of StudEx. These changes have helped the board commit, according to Miller
Miller said his sixth accomplishment was the establishment
of a resource center for Student Senate. He said that before this year accurate minutes of Student Senate activities had not been
Miller's seventh accomplishment was the implementation of last spring's referendum on the national activity fee to support athletics.
Miller said the establishment of the Emporium book exchange was done by his administration. Through the Emporium students can sell books and give them away.
The referendum showed that voters wanted to use the activity fee to subsidize the Athletic Fund for the children priced student athletic tickets.
MILLER SAID any student who wanted it could now obtain accurate information on the status of a student in the bill at the Student Senate office.
The institution of the Un-organized Housing Association was MKM in 1938. The association represents all students living in off-campus
Campus Briefs
Miller said he had tried early in his career to get into college as a student leader on campus to discuss Senate Senate problems with them, but was hampered by the lack of faculty.
MILLER SAID he was disap-
pointed he did not establish better
communication between Student
Senate and the student body.
The tenth accomplishment of Ms. Sahar's career was the first student Senate debate. The audit showed how Student Senate made all of its expenditures.
A lecture on Japanese Ink Painting of the 14th century will be given by Carla M. Zainie at 3:30 p.m. today in the Spooner Museum Lecture Room. Zainie, a doctoral candidate in art history at the University of B.A. from KU in 1964, has studied in Malaysia and Japan.
A film presentation of 'Andre Cole—A Christian Illusionist' will be shown at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the Reformed Presbyterian Fellowship Center at Kasol Drive and 23rd Street. Cole is one of the founders becoming a Christian, he no longer calls himself a magician.
Japanese Art Lecture
Miller commented on his conservative image. Heckers correctly aware that his image was more conservative than those of his
The KU-Y racism workshop will be held this weekend at the United Ministries in Higher Education, 1024 Oread. The workshop will begin at 7 onight. Those interested in attending should sign up for the office in the Kansas Union. There will be a $4 fee for four meals.
The five candidates for student body president will be together on the "Call-In-Thing," a program where people can phone in questions and comments on the air. The program starts at 1:30 p.m. at the University of North Carolina on both university stations, KANU 9.15 FM and KFKU 12.50 AM.
MILLER SAID the time limitations made it difficult to sustain interest in a piece of legislation. He compared the situation to Congress, which issued day in legislative session.
Miller said he had tried to keep ideology out of his administration. He said ideological enemies had interfered with him more than the helped.
Tom Wille, author of the Electric Kool-Aid Test, will hold an answer-question session 3:30 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium.
Candidates on Radio
There will be a meeting of undergraduates in the College Assembly to discuss the formation of School Councils at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Racism Workshop
Miller said he opposed elitism and actively worked against it. He was a supporter of the elitism in Student Senate was actually a sizable commitment to the student body.
Miller said the Student Senate should concentrate on the funding of services such as the Concert Course series.
Miller did admit that his support of the Athletic Department could be construed as an ideological position.
Tom Wolfe Informal Talk
'Christian Illusionist'
Miller responded to charges of elitism which have been brought against his administration by several presidential candidates.
Miller said he also was disappointed that the Student Senate hadn't gotten out of the business talking so many organizations.
College Assembly
on his time.
Wolfe is scheduled to appear as part of the Student Union activities Festival of the Arts at 8 a.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
However, he said, if it was ideological, he was supporting him. He said he honestly had tried to represent student opinion in his speech.
He admitted that this had been difficult at times because an appreciable percentage of student body did not vote in student elections, so it was hard to know if he was a true student.
MILLER SAID he won't sure
he fits better in our space.
He saves time and we center
we more than babysitting and that it would require a lot of work and
time.
Miller said he didn't run for reelection because most of proposals he was interested in were initiated this year.
Personal considerations were also involved in his decision. Besides, he said students de-
veloped new faces in the Senate offices.
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"I not going to try to force my philosophy of student government down someone else's hand," he said in a hand as possible, he said.
Miller said his primary goal at the moment was to get enough credits to graduate from KU.
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Friday, March 10, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Election Committee for Muskie Names Co-Chairman for Kansas
The national Muskie Election Committee announced Thursday that the North Carolina team, Paul Aylward as co-chairmen of the Kansas committee for
Lueck is a businessman from Netakawang and a past district chairman in the Arkansas Democratic party. Aylward is an present democratic chairman of the First Congressional District.
In a press conference in Topeka
a member of Muskie's national
staff, Jerry D. Dougoua,
D-Marie Martin, and his
close ties with the Kansas Democratic party and that Muskie was pleased to begin his Kansas effec
"The appointments of Lueck and Aylward mark our initial efforts in Kansas in behalf of ben. Muskie." McDougal said.
LUECK SAID he has encountered widespread support among members of the Democratic nomination muskie Aylward agreed, saying that Muskie clearly held a "commanding lead" among the state's senators. He hadn't seen any widespread support for the Hemer Jacksons for the Democratic nomination and for the民主选举。
Judge Places Gardenhire On Probation
Keith E. Gardenhire, 19. former university of Kansas student from Wichita, was placed on three years probation after having served almost three terms in the Army term for aggravated battery.
Gardenhite was found guilty no
November 10, 1971, of wounding K.
Snyder, 25, of Topeka. The
sentence was imposed on Dec. 13,
1971, in the Douglas County
Court of Judge Frank GRANE
The assault took place Dec. 7, 1970, during the protest on the KU campus at Jackson University. Jackson, former assistant to the dean of men, who had been fired by the University for purchasing ammunition in Toperka on July 17.
Gardenhire was painting the word "strike" on the entrance stairway wall of Watson Library and was approached by Shyder. A scuffle ensued and a shot was fired, wounding Snyder in the neck.
Gardenhire's prison term became returned to Lawrence less than Tuesday from the Kansas State Industrial Reformatory in
The condition of the probation, imposed by Gray, is that Gardenhire live in Wichita, which prohibits his attending KU.
Fetal Antigens Topic of Talk By Scientist
Norman G. Andersen, director of the Molecular Anatomy Laboratory at the National Laboratory, will be the 14th annual Henry Werner Lecturer in the University of Kansas chemistry department,
Anderson will speak March 14 on bryonic and Fetal Augens in Human Cancer* and March 14 on "New Biological System for Disease" at the New York University.
Anderson has been head of the cell physiology group at Oak Ridge and in 1955 invented the zonal centrifuge.
that he didn't know whether John Lindsay had enough strength to capture any delegate slots to the national convention from Kansas. Neither of the co-chairmen, Jake and Mark George McGovern who ran second to Muskus in the New Hamshire primary.
There was brief discussion concerning the possibility of Gov. Robert Docking being considered as a running mate for Muskie in
the event Muskie wins the nomination at the Democratic convention.
MODEUGAL SAID he thought Docking a "most distinguished and able governor" but that he was not one of the vice-president's spot.
Alyward said that Docking and Muskie "got along well" but that he could not distinguish which was better. The former favored at the present time.
"I just don't think the governor has made any commitments vet," Ailward said.
McDougal said that Muskie thought the youth vote would have a significant impact on this election. Mr. McDougal Senator was actively seeking the support of young people in his bid for the Democratic nomination, and, if he was successful, in the presidential presidency after the convention.
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Major John Lindsey of New York will speak at a reception in Topena March 19, according to the Democratic leadership. Hutchinson, Lindsay is a candidate for the Democratic nomination for president. Chaney said he will attend the event and will offer to encourage candidates to run for the Kansas Legislature.
Mayor Lindsay to Address Kansas Democratic Reception
lature and to provide funds for their campaigns.
Lindsay will be the third pres-idential candidate to speak in Kansas in the last six months. He spoke at the Democrat's convention, spoken at the Democrat's
Chaney said Lindsay was coming to Kansas to gain support for his campaign for president.
annual Washington Day Dinner in Topeka Feb. 18, and Sen. Edmund Muir, D-Maine, spoke on October 17, 1971, in Topeka on Oct. 17, 1971.
The reception will be at 5 p.m. March 19 in the Downtown Ramada Inn in Topeka.
Lindsay has been mayor of New York City since 1966.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 10. 1972
7
Festival to Feature Tom Wolfe Tonight
The Festival of the Arts will feature author and journalist Tom Wolf at 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
Tom Wolfe, who time magazine called "America's foremost pop-journalist," has written a systematic form of reporting in which he integrates his own subjective impressions and personality with his subject matter. Wolfe, formerly a reporter for the New York Times, owns a magazine columnist, has written four best-selling books.
The most interesting aspect of Wolfe's writing is that he matches it to brave and坦率的 butties by the fact that Although Wolfe reports actual occurrences, he tries to capture the accents, scenes, dialogue and characterization.
Wolfe's first book, "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" dealt with Ken Kesey and the Nixon Presidency. His second book, "The Kandy Colored Tangerine Flake Streamline Baby" is a collection of articles concerning the current presidential candidates' personalities which play an important role.
important part in shaping it. The title article of the collection was about car customizing, which was "latest craze" in the Los Angeles of the early skirts. "Gang" and "Radical Chic and Moto Masing the Flack Catchers" are hit two most recent books.
All tickets for his performance have been sold.
The Festival will be concluded with a concert by Canadian folksinger Gordon Lightfoot at 8 a.m., also in Hong Audiorium.
Lightfoot is a folk singer who has enjoyed a good deal of success in the late 1970s years. Perhaps his best-known songs are "Early Morning Rain" written several years ago, and "Boy I Smell," "Bird," first recorded in late 1970.
Faculty, Students to Offer Adapted Berrigan Play
The play, written by Saul Levitt, is an adaptation of one written by the Rev. Daniel Levitt, a law professor proceedings in Catsonsville, Md., where nine men and women, including Father Berrigan and his brother, the Rev. Philip Levitt, attacked and destroyed government property. The group, composed of Catholic laymen and priests, openly destroyed the Catonsville draft records with homemade napalm. He took place in 1968, as a protest against the war in Vietnam.
A group of KU students and faculty members and others are planning to present the play, the Trial of the Catonsville Nine," Alice Match, in an effort to draw attention to the Harrisburg conspiracy trial.
Much of the plot of the play consists of the court testimony by the defenders, stating their belief that by destroying the draft records they could save lives by bringing an end to the war. Their action was taken with the help of a friend who would be brought to trial. They
had little expectation of being found not guilty, but wanted to use the trial as a forum to address the world.
The Harrisburg trial is similar to the Catonville trial, and the performers expect to draw on the cast from the trial through their production. As part of the preparation for the play, the cast sponsored a speech by Ted Glick, one of the defendants in the Harrisburg trial.
The play is sponsored by the United Ministries and directed by Peggy Baldwin. The cast includes Diana Lynch, University attorney; Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Welfare; Hiram Stockwell, assistant director of the university; the author Don Baldwin; Robert Sheleton, assistant professor of religion; Craig Robinson; Nolan Will; Audrey Anderson; Masse. sp h o p m a s e s w o c hengwerd; Wamego junior; Jay Stinson; Monte Giddings, McPherson senior; Laurel DeFoe, Schowengert; John Homore; Deb Holmes, Topeka homore; Barley, Fairy sophomore.
KANU Will Broadcast Drama with 3-D Effect
A drama recorded in binarial p.m.
Sunday on FM radio KANU. It is the second in a series of weekly dramas presented by
To receive the full effect of KANU's "Binaural Theater," the listener must use stereophonic headphones.
Doyle said the broadcast could be listened to without stereophonic headphones but much of the 3-D effect would be lost.
"The effect of binaural sound is that it can be used as a chief engineer of KANU, said Thursday." It "is not only a sense of right and left but a sense of the way I think," he said.
The recordings are made by the National Center for Audio Recordings in Minnesota. This week's program is "Miraventure," by Julian Dicker.
The system, Doyle said, has been hindered by a lack of people with stereo equipment. Now that stereo equipment has become available, he said, he predicts a growth in inbound sound broadcasts.
A binarual recording is made by simulating the position of the human ear with a microphone on each side of a board. This procedure records the sound as the listener would actually hear it.
Yale Professor to Speak On Sodium in Intestines
Peter F. Curran, professor of physiology at Yale University, and Peter R. Curran, co-peaued transport of sodium and coupled acids in the intestine at 4 p.m. March 16. Wah Hall-East at Kansas Medical Center.
Five days
Minority Hiring To Be Included In New Policy
The Affirmative Action Board
the University's draft of a policy statement
to meet HEW guidelines for
hiring women and minorities at
the university.
Shaffer said that the board members also discussed the institution of a University-wide committee and a procedure and that a subcommittee would develop a written plan to be acted on at the next meeting.
Juliet P. Shaffer, associate professor of psychology and board member, said Thursday that final board statement would be taken at the next Wednesday meeting. The board said it would be released until then, she said.
The Board approved the creation of a Task Force, Shaffer, to devise a personnel information system which will enable the Board to obtain efficiency and personnel will be helpful to develop an effective affirmative action program.
Curran's talk will be televised in October and is part of Lawrence campus. The talk is the third in a series of biological science lectures at the Medical University.
Curran received a Ph.D. in biochemistry from Harvard and spent two years as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Copenhagen. He is a member of the Biophysical Society, the American Physiological Society and the American Association of Molecular Society of General Physiologists. He served on the Biophysical Science Training Committee of the National Board for the Molecular Biology Panel of the National Science Foundation and the editorial boards of the Journal of Physiology and the Journal of General Physiology. In 1987, Curran was chosen as the recipient of the National Association of American Physiological Society.
The next lecture in the series will be presented by Dr. Leo Aabood, of Rochester, N.Y., who visited April 6 on brain research.
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Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to college, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
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TRY IT YOULL LIKE IT — Rent a motor home for unforeseen expenses. Free Alta-Skeet Leaward. Free Alta-Skeet Leaward. 1-495-205-200, 1-381-155-200, 1-362-440-400, 1-362-440-400
1968 Chevrolet SS, power brakes,
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automatic transmission, excellent
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1967 Yamaha 350 street bike, excellent running condition. Would like to sell this week. Call 843-6455 after 2:00 p.m. Ask for Bruce. To order.
Palli-shiahy. Hungarian, sheepdogs,
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1970 Duster, green, 3-speed, V8.
14,150. We'll buy locally owned cars, domestic and VW. Jayhawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, 8430-2-316
3-speed 20" boys bicycle, hand brakes, 5 months old, battery operated light, new tires, good condition. Call 842-5559 after 3 p.m. 3-10
SCUBA EQUIPMENT - Fine, Mask,
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Bicycle Knife and Vent, $39.59
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Down and out law student must sell his 67 VW. Excellent condition inside and out. Call 842-5657 at 5:00. Few stuffed animal. 3-10
Red 64 Corvallis convertible 4-space.
Looks rough, but it engine hri rebuilt
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1920 Rally RT automatic, new tires, rally wheels, console bucket tires, 20,000 km, mechanically per mile, best offer - 30, 50, Mark, 842-8076
Nikon F Body, additional FT Head,
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MISTER GUY USER is selling his bike. He's a 24-year-old, sports coach 29-40, skates 31-32, shirts 15½ - 4 to 15-5, shoes 10-12. Swaters and Eats 824-684-686.
1966 VOLKSWAGEN, LESS THAN
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1967 Triumph Bonvillee 6,000 actual
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4-piece drum set—excellent condition.
Call VI 2-0529 for further information.
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71 Suzuki TC 90R under 400 miles,
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Baldwin exterminator amplifier,
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71 Datum 1200 Coupe, 10,000 miles,
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1966 Porsche 911, 200 h.p., excellent condition, highest offer over $2,900. 1610 K. Ward 32nd Terr.
100 cc Kawandaki, 1970 10 speed Trail Boss, excellent condition, 1,190 miles.
$375, call 842-3948. 3-14
RMI Electric piano, 8 months used,
Olda Mender trumpet 3 years old.
Olds Special trumpet 8 years old. All
n fine condition. 843-0306.
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Sony model 130 V Portable television,
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VIVTPAR ZOOM LENS. 85-205mm,
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Buro motorcycle helmet 1 month old,
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1970 360 Yamaha Enduro runs and calls good, $500 or best offer. Call 843-2574 after 6:00. 3-15
Ten speed bicycle, one speed bicycle.
Olympia portable typewriter. Call
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1970 Kawasaki Mach III, $800 Nice
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59 'Jaguar XX 150 Drop-head coupe
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Minolta S28 Single lens reflex w.l. wide angle =$75.0. Also 35.2 Wide Angle Rokker, 200 F. S28 Solarg Telescope =$69.9 F. S28 Solarg Telescope =$64.95 F. Bacalaye 644-8539 or 843-5693 3-16
1969 Toyota Corolla, excellent condition.
Gets 30 mg. $995. Call Steve at
843-4393 or 842-7291. 3-16
SeaCap Equipment-Pins Mask Snorkel
Skiing Equipment - Skis/Ladies Lifetime Guarantees $120.00 Wet Surf Super Sport $99.00 Hawk Kite Surf Combo Air Gun $99.00 See us in Combo Air Gun. $99.00 See us in Combo Air Gun. major brands ski equipment, ski gear, skier equipment, ski equipment, ski gear, ski equipment, ski gear, ski equipment
SMART BUY" 1990 ROADRUNNER,
TRACTION AND OUT-DUE-
TRAIN AND OUT-DUE-
PRICED LOW $41,990.00
LENT CONDITION CALL: 842-583-0000
"69" VW Bug custom interior, perfect mechanically. New tires. Phone 843-7284
NOTICE
Michigan St. Bar-B-Qe, 515 Mch.
St. Outdoor, bar: B-Bar-Que, 516 Mch.
$30.00; Oak or pork briquet, $34.00; Scalp
$18.00; or pork briquet, $18.00; Beef Brisket Sand - $8.00; Beef Brisket Plate - $18.00; Open 11 am to
9 p.m. Phone: 842-3543 Closed
INPANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-
7694. Professional child-care for
children 1 mo - 12 mo. Fully or part-time.
Fli. Specialized care required 3-31
STUDY ESPAÑANTO, the international language in Portland for Fort Collins, Oregon and International EspaÑante Congress here 29 July to 5 August. A unique American language Information Summer Series Language. Information Summer Series Language. Oregon. 97203 3-16
DANCE TIL YOU PUKE THE
PENTRITATION AT EDITH'S BEER
PALEAGE 744 MASS $10.00 COME
10 & 11, IT SHIPS FHI. 3-10
SAT #
THE MERCANTILE
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
2. two experienced nursery school teachers offer complete day care for children 3-4. All pre-school skills, education values 83-143. Values 83-143. 2-50
BUSSIA - SCANPINAVIA 5. Travel
small group camp travel. Age 18-
up. Small group camping. Travels to
Whole Earth Expeditions Ltd. U.S.
Agents for Travel Train Ltd. Book
travel agency in Whole Earth
Expeditions Ltd. U.S.
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
HOOKED ON BOOKS, annual water
show 8:00 a.m. Thurs. and Fri.
March 8th and 10th Robinhoods are
show 5:00 at the door. Recommend
3-10
Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30.
FOR RENT
Pickens Auto Parts
Barn Parties! Now available for booking at El Paso Ajipe Valley Farm on Lake Perry, Apache Valley Farms on Lake Perry and cooler plenty of parking. Call Joe Stroop after 6 a.m. at Carl Zoe Stroop after 6 a.m. at 824-205-1791.
6th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAW-
YARD. Enjoy yourself in one of Law-
yers' favorite jobs, or check
rates if you call Mr. Forsey,
Jr. Loving in Living Agrar Apartment, 14b and
Living In Riverside, 13b and Availon, or Harvard Square, Ivy and Augusta, payable between June and August
for a fee. Find out for yourself and
your rates. Find out for yourself and
a wonderful time to be in Lawyers.
and Service
FREE—GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPY,
14 WEEKS OK, HOLD, ALL SHOTS,
BROWN & BLACK, CALL
BULL-841-2702. 3-14
For reasonable prices on all glass and
caps for projects, including glass-
cladding for projects. 724 North 2nd St. or call 411-
603-9585. Six-samples may just arrive
at the warehouse that just arrived.
University Terrace Apartments
furnished apartments available for
occupancy. $110 and up.
Come to me at 433-8433,
9th Apt. 18, or call 843-1433
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited
of the city. Students who
can students have two bedrooms
nished apt, with all utilities paid
for $400 per month. Call 400-626-7831.
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Right
outside, two bedrooms and four fow-
ers. Ten new 2 bedroom and four fow-
er apartments. Aug. 1st
4 one year old 1 bedroom and 4 of unifo-
mental apartments. All apartments
are carpeting, dishwashers, central
air conditioning, windows between
30 and 50 feet between 3.00 and
P-M
A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS. Too much? The car won't stay stationary at the door. Swim in the water. Like indoors at a fairground. The office at an airport. 123 Indiana. 84-216-2178. APSTUDIO.
APARTMENTS, ROOMS, HOUSES-
several available immediately. Lynch
Real Estate, 1216 Lla, 843-1601, 843-
6024, 843-3232
Furnished Apartment, 1424 Indiana.
duplex air conditioned, wall-to-wall
capturing, laundry facilities, off-street
living. Fully equipped.
I 3-5777 I 3-1778
Single furnished sleeping room with kitchen privileges for male No. pets: Borders KU and near town. Phone 1-3767 3-14
Carol Lee
Parts at a discount
THE HILO in the WALL
Nice furnished 1-3 bed apartment near town, KU. Also room with kitchen furniture, only one bed available. 3-29 able now. 842-5007
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
the estate of John A. Lawrence,
1872, while selection is still available.
Born in Philadelphia, he received
$45-$58, or $107-$129, at Harvard Law
School, where he built homes and
Lawrence's own built houses.
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Openreach ja WLAN Phone Order
843 7685 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th
WANTED
Avalon, 9th & Avalon; Harvard
11th & Minnort. Then compare the cost of living in one of these hand-
built apartments and two spacious apartments and you will be more to have a dishwasher, central A.C. heat and water utilities paid for.
We repair allied Volkswagens. We do uncom-
pensational transplant, or on-site repairs,
We sell parts and buy those VWs with
special briefs and business, Bristol.
2nd, 3d, 14-19
2nd
Kansas Key Press - Job printing from leaflets to folders, brochures to booklets and resumes. Flip Tabs. in back Zerol Open 0 pages in 10 days 842-4835. 842-4835.
WANT TO BUY—USED FULL OR HALF GOLF SET CALL 843-6507
9.25
1-2 female roommates to live on
farm. Private rooms, must be
students and prefer own transportation.
842-3940 3-10
AMC
Alterations and repair, men and women. Formerly with New York Cleaners: 842-2017 3-14
Female roommate needed to share furnished apartment through finals. Half block from Utrecht. $60 more 842-315-2722, www.usatl.org. At 130 Lousiana, N.J. 11; 3-14
Place to board an Irish Setter.
843, 539-590
3-15
Need someone with car stay in
Lawrence over break. Make about
$40.00 for 11; hrs per day; 82-682-
4:00 after 4:00. Ask for Jeff
3-13
RIDE WANTED: to Los Angeles. Pre-
fer to leave Friday afternoon, March
17th. Can only spare $15.00 toward
dive gear to my girl. 842-689-0000
Need girl to share house, $50. Utilities included. Close to campus. 842-5768
3-16
Would like to buy good short form (size 9-10 or 10-11) at inexpensive price. Call 1-299-4031 (Kansas City, Kansas) after 5 P.M.
Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service
Tony's 66 Service
Lawrence, Kansas 60444
2434 Iowa VI 12-1008
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
"For Feets Sake, If The
Shoe Fits . . . Repair It'
Shines Dyeing Refinishing
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
THE CONCORD SHOP
- STRETCHER FRAMES
many in stock
—others on order
- McCONNELL LBR. CO.
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., pts. - qts. only
50% OFF
- ARTIST CANVAS REDUCED
TYPING
HELP WANTED
Typing done on elite, type writer. No Theses please. Prompt attention. 843-0958 4-5
rich
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations term paper writing, research paper writing, typewriter writing with ptype. Accelerate Type. and prompt suite writing —texted. Phone 843-8054. Mr Wright.
These, term papers type accurately and promptly. IBM Selector, your choice of type style. Also editing at state, rate, Kansas. 842-979-4175. 842-560-355.
Experienced typist Overland Park,
Kansas. Prompt, accurate work.
Reasonable rates. Phone 381-6434.
3-28
Experienced, typified will type your term paper, thesis or dissertation Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-72581, Mr Manckman.
PART TIME SECRETARY, single.
Call 842-9660 between 8:30 to 10:00
3-15
844 E. 13th St. 843-3877
Attention Seniors. Salem need part time now and full time at completion of education for Saiman Enrols students. 845-4244 tranfigt manager. 845-4244 3-10
PERSONAL
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Sports-minded couple for summer job. June 1st through Labor Day Job. Must be children please front door and out of the house. Apply to summer owner on Lake Champlain. Please apply in writing giving details. Raymond Park, 1003 Sunset Drive
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
KAT Suzuki
Dearest D & S & L. Thanks for the emergency. A cold shower is really much more satisfying!" L- "13
BECAUSE a listening service, Hassle-
Call? Call us, we'll talk about it.
Sun-Thru-Fri 8-12 P.M. Sat & Sun-
Sat 6-4 A.M. 843-9562, 116 Lafayette
Rd.
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
634 Mass
842-6966
Open 24 hrs. per day
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
DRIVE-IN
AND COUP OIP
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
842 5104
CSC TOYOTA INDUSTRY
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842.9450
COIN
Independent
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
842. 9450
LOST
Lost a red billfold. You can keep the money but I would hate to lose my passport and please return. I lost-and-found or call 3-141532
111 Mass North of the
Kawai River Bridge
Phone:
855-731-2041
Open 10am
Celebrates New Year
Lost 2-3 eve near Fraser black and white speckled pup with black spots and head Female. Please bring her bin. Call 842-6900
MISCELLANEOUS
Lost 2-26, KU area, 14 mo. old German.
Shepherd, male, dark, name
Jackson, choke collar, 843-1782 3-12
Your Complete Service
BRIDAL GOWN GOWN Sale- Sizes 8-10, 12 to 75% Fall, and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky.
Had a fender bender, cracked auto
dash. Call KAW BODY and need a tow?
KAW BODY #82-0131 at 6 P.M. ask for DKE
丰保. Free estimate, reasonable
amount. Call KAW BODY at same
location. Have 25 JB. w/捅er
Lawrence. Call for rates out of town.
Lawrence. Call for rates out of town.
3 mo. old black and brown Terrier pup in vicinity of New Haven. Please return. Needs shots. Call 843-5-13
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Fineest Eating Place
Ample Park Spaces Available
RAMADA INN
Figure Salon
842 2323
3409 W. 6th 842-7700
500 E.23rd
TROPHY CAR
WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH—
THE TOUGH GET GOING
$ ^{n0} $Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest-KU Union Phone 843-12
sirloin
Spaicus new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges.
LOVE THAT DATSUN !
Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!!
842-0444
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks. Our menu is and has always been beautiful.
IVK
Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9, Sat. til noon.
PLANNING A TRIP??
Maupintour travel service
TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN
---
043
0500
DISCOUNT
PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
The Stereo Store
LUDIOTRONICS
...
928 Mass
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
YOU
8
Fridav.March 10.1972
University Daily Kansan
Tourney Upsets Become Routine For Prep Teams
By STEVE STRAS
Kansas Sports Writer
Upets were the rule instead of the exception, Thursday in the final game. The tournament in Allen Field House. The numbers one, two and three are used in the scores.
McPherson started it all by defeating number two seeded Coffeeville, 63-49, in the opening game of the tournament.
Garden City was the only team in the tournament that wasn't upset. The Buffaloes defeated El Dorado in the second game of afternoon play, 72-44. Garden City won by Stewart Nelson 28 points.
In the evening games, Topeka
Central, the number three seeded
team, 45-39, and Topeka West
defeated Ward, the number one
seeded team.
In the Topeka Ward-West game, the Ward scored with the first basket of the night. For the rest of the first quarter, the two teams faced each other in Topeka West scored with less than two minutes left in the quarter to take an 11-8 lead. By the end of 13:10, after the first quarter
WITH LESS than a minute gone in the second quarter, Clinton Smith of Ward connected for a basket to give Ward a 14-13
M.C.PERIHSON (4) 60F FYVILLE (4)
Ultry (4) 4.10
Ubry (4) 4.10
Prousek (4) 4.12
Plumier (4) 4.10
Frederick (4) 4.11
Bilch (4) 6.13
Ewain (4) 4.11
Ewin (4) 4.11
Tern (4) 4.11
Total: 49 11 48
TOBERA W. (28) L.E.C. WARD (6)
TOPPER 2 (n = 5) F 1.5
White 0 0 1
Black 0 0 1
Burkei 17 9 1
Petitt 12 7 1
Petitt 12 7 1
Zarker 0 0 1
Cox 0 0 1
Cox 0 0 1
Rolls 34 12
Tavener 34 12
Heendicka 6 12
Smith 12 8
Smith 12 8
Kranatz 1 2 8
Watts 12 8
McPherson 18 12 15 18-63
Coffeyfeild 17 14 10 8-49
Team fouls - McPherson 11, Coffeyfeild 13.
Totals 19 20 58 | Totals 19 12 50
Tonkea West 13 18 14 13–58
Toperka West 13 18 14 13-56
Kansas City Ward 10 17 11 13-60
team fouls - Toperka West 25, Kansas City
Ward 17 18 15 14-60
Smith, Smith
Kanatara, Kansas City Ward
Tourney Scores
CLASS 3-A
WIKWAKU
Shawnee Mission South 30, Lawrence 48,
Wichita East 77, Shawnee Mission East 60,
Wichita Southeast 66, Shawnee West
Ward was plagued throughout by power (alarm 33.3 per cent) and free fire (16.4 per cent) shooting. Topeka West wasn't the best option, as it came from the field), but the Chargers connected on 20 free fires to Ward '12. That was the fewer of the two.
Wichita North 82, Topeka 66.
lead. Twenty seconds later, Brize Durbin of Topeka West hit a basket to put Topeka West back in the game. Durbin never lost the lead after that.
82. Toppek 80
CLASS 4-A
Highland Park 45, Lancefield 30,
Garden City 72, Doriado 44,
McPerson 63, Coffeerville 49,
Topeka W 80, Ward 50
CLASS 1-A
At Dodge City
CLASS 2-A
At Hutchinson
Kansan Photo by JOE COLEMAN
CLASS 3-A
The star for Top 106a West was the Star for Topeka West was a senior forward forward with points to lead all scorers. He also scored in six rebounds. Most of his baskets came from the five to 15-feet range, which secured in double figures.
LEADING SCORERS for Ward were Jim Tavenier and Jim Hicks. The first in the game of semifinals tonight, Highland Park will face McPherson. The second game on Thursday at Topeka and Topeka West. Tipoff for tonight's action will be at 6 p.m. action at Topeka West play at 8:30 p.m.
The Soccer Club will play these amateur and college teams this season.
March: 18—at Kansas State, 2
p.m.—19—Feld, 2 p.m.—25—at
Ottawa, 2 p.m.—26—Atlas, 2 p.m.
Little River 38, Lucas 48,
McCracken 6, Lebo 38,
Lyndon 51, Axell 42,
Bogue 61, Pawnee Heights 59.
April: 1—at Missouri, 2—m.
8—Salina Soccer, 2 p.m.
9—Atkinson, at Kansas City, 3
p.m.
10—Huggett Tournament,
Kansas City, 22—3
Big, Eight
Booster, 30—
International, 2 p.m.
Frankfort 25, Fronenack 64,
Onagua 50, Yates Center 47,
Atwood 61, Haven 46,
Spearville 76, Hesston 53.
Thomas More Prep 27, Augaua 50.
Chapman 36, Parsons 41.
Topeka Hayden 41, Goddard 37.
Philipstone 68, Shawnee St. Joseph 68.
Phillips
May: 6- Ottawa, 2 p.m.; 7-
Feld, at Kansas City, 3: 30 p.m.
14-Atlas, at Kansas City, 1: 30 p.m.
21- Liatos, 2 p.m.
Kansas State has been the only team to defeat KU this season. The Jahawks have defeated Missouri and Wichita State.
KU downed Kansas State College of Emporia 3-1, and tied Ottawa University, 3-3, last week. that gave KU a 3-1 record.
The winners of the two semifinal matches will play for the championship Saturday night at 7 p.m. The winner will play for third place at t.p.m.
The University of Kansas
Society of American
Internationals, a Kansas City
amateur team, at 3:30 p.m.
Sunday at Swepo Park in Kansas
Soccer Club Seeks No. 4 In KC Game
HIGHLAND PR. (43) 14
Black 6 5
Blank 3 6
Rocker 3 6
Rucker 3 6
Wright 4 6
Weight 4 6
SALINA CES. (18) 14
Black 7 5
Samuel 1 Samuel
McClain 0.2 3
McClain 0.2 3
Hooderock 0.2 3
Hooderock 0.2 3
18 9 45 Totals 14 11 35
Hillbark Bank 12 13 12 8 13 45
垒
MUSTANGS
34
Nino Samuel Lopes Dowcourt
College prospect performs in tourney...
Highland Park 12 12 8 13 13-45
Salina Central 10 10 12 13-45
Highland-Highland Park 20 Salina
Central Park 15 Pooled out-Outer, Highland
King
EL DORADO (64) GARDEN CITY (72)
Watts 0.19 Ketterer 0.18 Ketterer 0.18
Walton 0.19 Broome 0.18 Broome 0.18
Spennaman 0.19 Boone 0.18 Boone 0.18
Sanford 0.19 DePew 0.19 DePew 0.19
Café aid 0.19 DePew 0.19 DePew 0.19
12 64 Totals 26 20 72
El Dorado 16 10 17 21-64
Garden City 16 13 18 17-72
team fours - El Dorado 21, Garden City 17
poued out - Fagg. El Dorado
Prep Career Ends for Samuel Salina's Star Doesn't Shine
By ED LALLO Kansan Sports Writer
In the first day of the Class A-4
hill school, a tournament
field House Thursday,
one of the most highly
regarded players in Kansas
ended his high school career on
somewhat less than an
average.
Nino S Samuel, Salina Central's 6-foot-5 All-American center, fell far short of his billing, and Salina scored by Topека Highland Park, 45-39.
Samuel, with a career average of 32 points a game, managed double and triple-timed most of the evening. Samuel's best showing in the game came in the 19 rebounds he pulled down for
The muscular, 210 pound senior showed the crowd that he was capable of playing good ball, but his hands were powerful frame, propelled well into the air to clear the boards for Salina, was indeed an awful
IN THE LOCKER room after the game, Samuel, in tears, attributed the loss to his poor shooting both from the field and
COLLEGE PARK, MD. (AP) — Paced by six falls, five in the heaviest weight classes, Iowa State won its first defending champion Oklahoma State after Thursday's pregame round in the 42nd NCAA Tournament.
Iowa State Leads NCAA Wrestling
"Over 200 schools have contacted me already," Samuel said.
the charity strine
Samuel's unimpressive showing in the tournament, however, will have no effect on him. He will be a college basketball offer.
One of the schools which is highly interested in landing Samuel is the University of Kansas.
The University of Kansas women's gymnastic team will win Wichita State University, College of Emporia and Kansas State Teachers College of Education, at 8 a.m. saturday in Robinson Gym.
"We're interested in him, and we hope that he's interested in Kansas," said Sam Miranda, KU assistant basketball coach.
Jo Jo White and Bud Stallworth assist Owens in his annual summer basketball camp.
It's definitely high on the
highest Samuel said. I have the
same advice from Sam Miranda and Sam Miranda. As a matter of fact, I attended the basketball
game with my mother.
The Cyclones of Iowa State compiled 21 points while advancing seven entries to Friday's quarter finals.
Samuel's feelings about KU seem mutual.
"NINO WAS having one of hose nights that the ball wouldn't
The University of Kansas
voleball team will compete in
the NCAA tournament on
Saturday in LaMoni, Iowa.
Competition in three divisions
go down for him," Miranda said about his showing Thursday. "He's just a tremendous player. All players have a bad night."
Host Graceland was champion of the Iowa state meet. Other familiar teams will be Fort Dodge, Iowa; the run-uper two weeks ago; Independence, Mo.; Shiloh, Iowa; and Kansas City YMCA.
When Samuel comes around to making a decision about his basketball career, probably in his late 30s, he rate high on his list now might not rate high enough. Members of the KU coaching staff have said that UCLA and Long Beach State indicated interest in Samuel.
KU will compete in the seven-seat open team, player coach Dave Stinson said. There also will be two B divisions.
Right now Samuel's main concern in making the all-America high school team trouts in Dayton, Onio.
"The top players in every state go to Dayton," explained Samuel. "If fifteen are then chosen for this country, that's a lot of this country and Europe."
Volleyball Team To Enter Meet
Five of the six other teams in the open division were at the Iowa State Invitational Feb. 28. They were fourth in a field of 14 hepres.
LAWRENCE ART CENTER
The sixth entrance will be Davenport, Iowa
Robert Benedict, director Experienced professional faculty Classes for beginning and advanced students in drawing, painting (acrylic or oil), water color, photography, film and children's art and craft.
Call 843-6336 for more information (if no answer call
843-9575) Office hours 10:30 - 12:30
Only Stallworth Draws All Votes for Big 8 Squad
Classes begin March 27
846 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Indiana (Above Owens Flower Shop)
ENROLLING—March 15, 16, 17
GEORGE C. SCOTT 1970 Oscar Winner NOMINATED BEST ACTOR
KANSAS CITY (AP)—Bulldawntall, third highest scorer in Kansas basketball history, was a unanimous choice Thursday for the 2013 national championship and was named captain of the 1972 Associated Press honor奖 four
STALLWORTH, BEING eyed closely by the pros, roiled up 658 points this season for a 3.5-point difference over Dave Robishew were the only Jayhawks ever to make more career points than Stallworth.
No other player received the vote of every sports writer and commentator. Chuck Jura of Nebraska and John Brown of Missouri each won a run.
the other players on the first team are Kansas State's David Hall and Oklahoma's Bobby Brown, the seniors except Brown, a junior.
for his role in "THE HOSPITAL"
Colorado's Jim Creighton and Oklahoma's Martin just missed taking the first team berras away from Hall and Jack
The Jayhawk sharpshooter established a record for a conference game less than two weeks ago when he dumped in 50
& 2:00 - 5:00 Weekdays
843-9575) Office hours 10:30 - 12:30
Eve. Showts 7:30; 9:30
Maithees Sail, & Sun.
1:00 to 5:00 PM
Bargain Rates 5:00 Only
Granada
Industrial Park - 15165 N. I-540
BROWN HIT 32 points in Missouri's loss which gave Kansas State the Big Eight title Tuesday night, and Tiger Coach Norm Stewart praised his ace's effort by saying, "I think John Killen once again that he's the best all-around player in the league."
Jura has scored 531 points for a 21.2 point average. He leads the conference in rebounding with 285 for an average of 11.4 a game. Jack has hit 425 points, averaging 17.0, and Hall, with 353 points.
Brown is Missouri's highest scoring junior ever. He has 548 points and is only the fifth team to have more than 500 points in a season.
against Missouri. He leads the conference in scoring and is the seventh highest pointmaker in Big Eight history.
After Stallworth's 50-point show against the Tigers, Kansas Coach Ted Owens described it as "the most challenging performance I have ever seen."
All five first team players lead their respective clubs in rebounding.
But the Trojans also have Henry Hines, the meet's 1971 long jump champ, plus strength in the
Don Quarry, the Pan American Games winner in the 60-yard dash, and two strong performances in the lance, Lance Babb and Jerry Wilson, are some of the better known performers for Southern colleges.
Villanova's strength is concentrated in running events—such as the 600-yard run, distance and speed. Brian McIlroy in Brian McIlroy in the 880.
Villanova to Defend NCAA Indoor Title
Besides Creighton and Martin,
the second team includes Al Eberhard of Missouri and Lonnie Browning of Oklahoma, sophomores, and Martinez Denmon of Iowa State, a junior.
Honorable mention went to Jared Brewster of Alabama and Al Nissen of Nebraska. Greg Flaker of Missouri, Clint Harris of Steve State, Steve Mitchell and Erwin Dugard of Iowa, and Aubrey Nash of Kansas.
SARAOTA, Fla. (AP) — The Chicago White Sox voted Thursday, 31-0, to strike unless they come up with an acceptable increase for the players' current agreement expiring March 31.
Two world record holders,
Herb Washington and Marshall
Dill, plus a spendid mile-rate
playoff victory for Michigan's title hope.
jane fonda donald sutherland
DETROIT (AP) -- Villanova's powerful track squad, seeking revenge for a one-point loss to UCLA, met, meet, meets, opens defense of its NCAA indoor track title Friday and least three serious challengers.
Pole vaulter Tom Blair, who has cleared 17-3/4s and sophomore hurdler Jake Rutland of Pepsi standouts, Collins wasn't a winner for the Quakers in the ICAA but he pitied up points while running 10 races in one day. He competed in the sprints and 400 meters.
GEM THEATER Baldwin
7:30 p.m. Fri.
5:15, Sat., Sun. March 10-11
McCABE &
MRS. MILLER
Julie Christie
Best Actress
R 30
Making
The Wildcats, who won here last year with a total of 22 points, must defeat Penn and withstand the challenges of Southern Texas-Texas-Paloo and possibly Michigan State to defend their crown.
FASHION FASHION
Texas-El Paso has Fred DeBernardi, who has equaled the NCAA record of 67-10 in the shotgun.
klute
440 and the mile relay.
Weekdays: Mat. 1:30
Summer: 7-30
Winter: 8-25
From 3:00 in / 6:10 in & Sat.
Late showing of Mat. 1:30
Varsity
TelA178 ... Telephone No. 3-2665
Together...
6 Academy Award Nominations
SUMMER OF '42
A Robert Mulganian
Rehab At Ralph
Kane
North Warren
Illinois
Tues., Wed., Thur. R
March 14, 15, 16
ADULTS 1.50
Shows 7:20, 9:25
Matte White for 4:10
Twilight Price Good for 4:10 Only
Hillcrest
Glenda Peter Jackson Finch MurrayHead
A Joseph Janni production of John Schlesinger's Film
R United Artists
"HAROLD and MAUDE" RUTH GORDON and BUD CORT
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Special Section
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.103
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
A Look At Elections
Friday, March 10, 1972
Five Teams Outline Campaign Issues
Decentralized Power Amin's First Priority
By HAL RITTER
Kansan Staff Writer
A decentralization of power within the Student Senate would increase the effectiveness of student government at the University of Kansas, Mohammed Amnun, Ralsenian, Iren senior and student body candidate said candidate in a recent interview.
"There is a concentration of responsibility and work on the shoulder of a very few
[no clear text for image]
He said the majority of senators came to Senate meetings and voted on legislation and that was the extent of their involvement.
Amin said no senator should have more than one major responsibility in the Senate, such as membership on a committee, and that Senate duties should be distributed among the greatest number of senators possible.
"Communication between senators and students needs to be improved," he said. "Involving a larger number of senators would do this."
To further increase senate-student body communication, Amin said, the Senate should publish for interested students a monthly news bulletin of Senate activities.
"We should give an account of the student activity fees every month telling how much has been spent and for what and how much is left," he said.
Amin said he had two ideas he thought
the Student Senate could work on, one that involved students with part-time jobs and internships.
He said the University did not have enough night classes for the growing number of students who found it necessary to work part-time.
Studying other schools and how they handed the night classes would be one of the most important parts of a degree.
Arin said he thought women did not receive a fair share of student activity fees because they had received funds from the Senate were predominantly or exclusively male in mem-
Redistribution of the funds would provide women with financial equality, he said.
Amin said he thought the Student Senate was important to the University as a "channel of communications between students and the university system."
"The Senate is a unifying tool for the student body," he said. "You can't protest government policies."
The presence of students on University Senate committees is important, he said, especially when faculty members are split in opinion. The committees are the determining factors in decisions.
Amin said he selected Mike McGowan, sophomore senator from Western Springs, as his running mate because they shared similar views about the role of the Student Senate.
Landolt Uses Farce To Reveal Problems
Landolt and his running mate. Mike
By HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writer
Employing tactics of force and ridicule to interest KU students in real problems is the method Joe Landolt, Kirkwood Mo., taught in his campaign for student body president.
BILL LOMBERT
Joe Landolt
Schoenleiber, Wichita sophomore, created the Birthday Party with the purpose of "continuing the fine tradition of mediocrity in KU student government."
Landolt said apathy was reaching "epidemic proportions" at KU, and that the Student Senate was "more a cause than a cure of this disease."
He said the Senate was "far removed
from the will of the student body" because only one-fourth of the student body voted and because the Senate had no power to enforce its legislation.
He said the chancellor was responsible to the Kansas Board of Regents and that the Regents had to rely on the state legislature for funding.
"This is the crux of the power in the university," he said referring to the [Jordanian]
"Massive student involvement in demanding more money from the legislature is the key to solving the University's problems. Students must keep firstrate professors," he said.
Landolt said the student senators and student body president should be the leaders in "mobilizing and coordinating student activity to effectively lobby for more funds for the University" instead of wasting time arguing at Senate meetings.
He said that through the student body president's meetings with representatives of his communities, a campaign to coordinate efforts in obtaining increased funds for higher education.
He said it did not matter whether the reaction was negative or positive, but that a reaction was important because it was the first step toward involvement.
Landolt's生日Party platform designs of unrealistic proposals designed to make students realize the Senate "as a legislative organization is a laKE." he said.
1970
David Dillon
"If more people vote this year than last year because the campaign is interestless," she said.
MARY S. ROBERTS
"We think our platform will at least get a reaction from everyone who reads it," he said.
Mohammed Amin
Optional Activity Fee Green's Campaign Goal
By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
Restructuring the Student Senate into a more representative body is the goal of Joel Green, Rapid City, S.D., sophomore candidate for student body president, and
10
Joel Green
his running mate, Joel Payne, Kansas City, Kan., sobomore.
Green said the role of student government should be that of representing student rights, privileges and responsibilities in the University and not one of allocating the funds received from the student activity fee.
"An optional activity fee would give the students a chance to decide what they wanted to do with their money," Green said. "A lot of people on this campus don't want many of the University organizations to use their money."
Green, who represents the Aardvark Liberation Front, proposed that the student activity fee be eliminated in its implementation and be replaced with an optional one.
Green said that if there were an optional student activity fee, there would not be any additional cost.
groups now funded by activity fee allocations would basically be funding them
Once the Senate's role of allocating funds is eliminated, Green said, the Senate would be able to investigate problems of student rights more fully. Better communication between administration, faculty students could also be achieved, he said.
Green said that he saw the need for a full-time paid ambushd for the University. He said that a number of other students had ambushed him and the University of California at Berkeley, had ambushed them and that they were tween the administration and students.
"The ombudsman program now is a good one," Green said, "but the oombudsmen (who are law students) have to be very hardworking, so would be more accessible to the students."
Green said that he thought the Senate was not representative of the whole campus, but that it represented various living groups and off-campus as well as the present representatives from
He also said the voice of the Senate was not representative of the whole student body, because the voice of the people was from the majority of students who are too apathetic to vote.
To open up lines of communication between the administration, Senate and students, Green said there would have to be a greater investment in government and a lessening of bureaucracy.
"Consequently," Green said, "it is difficult to gauge the mood of the campus when everyone doesn't participate in student government or in voting."
Green said that he would like to see the Senate developed to where it would not be necessary to hold meetings on a regular basis. "It was important of the work would be done in committees."
Green said neither he nor Payne planned
the salaries for the student body
because he felt they were too large.
"It would be hypocritical to accept salaries from the system that we are trying to employ."
Election March 15-16
Dillon Lists Concern For Academic Funds
By HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writer
Higher education in Kansas, the academic program at the University of Kansas and the KU Student Senate are the basis of the campaign for student body president of Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior.
Dillon said recently that he thought a continued interest in higher education by the University community was necessary to adequate funding by the state legislature.
Better communication between the University and legislators would also enable the University to spend money it did receive in the best way possible, he said.
DILLON SAID HE wanted information similar to that published in Feedback about faculty members to be used as supporter of the salary increase for a faculty member.
"We want students to think of the teacher's capacity to teach," he said. "In order to get an increase the teacher has got to be able to teach."
Dillon said the role of the Student Senate needed to be changed with a reorientation
The emphasis now is on politics and
finance, and I'd like to shift that to student service," he said.
Dillon mentioned the health system and student insurance plan which were operated through the Senate to illustrate that they would perform services for the student body.
"The Senate has a lot of resources and a lot of man hours to offer." he said.
DILLON ALSO SAID he thought the Senate could begin a job placement service that would help students obtain employment connected with their educational interests.
He said a big problem of the Senate that needed to be overcome was "showing people that our senators are not
Despite the apathy of most students toward student government, Dillon said he believed there was a need for a Senate at KU and that it would survive as long as it was flexible enough to change with new attitudes on campus.
He said the activities of the Senate including its programs and the work of its committees needed to be publicized more urgently, he said. The Senate could know what it was doing.
**WE HAVE CONTROL of the activity**
(technology students should know what we
are doing)
He said he chose Kathy Allen, Topeka sophomore, as his running mate because she was "quilted to implement the ideas of our team" talking about concerning student service."
Dwyer Wants Senate Pared to Essentials
By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
The primary function of the Student Senate should be that of a student rights group, according to Richard Dwyer, Joppa State University and candidate for student body president.
This would require paring the Senate down to the bare essentials, Dwyer said recently. This would entail reducing the number of senators, reducing the student body and increasing much of the bureaucracy and paperwork involved in operating the Senate.
Dwyer said there was alienation in the Senate and many of the senators were not fully informed or aware of the issues they voted on. A smaller group would eliminate this alienation, be said, and interaction would be greater.
"Often senators don't vote in accordance with their constituents," Dwyer said. "It would seem to me that most senators never consult their constituency."
As a result, many students think that the senate is a joke and are not interested in it.
Dwyer said a mail ballot sent to all the students would increase the participation rate.
be eliminated or reduced also."
Dwyer proposed a system to select committee members, in which senators interested in a certain committee would serve on a special committee to a special committee of senators.
Dwyer said he would like to see an optional student activity fee evolve in a
"We can't just eliminate the whole student activity fee, however," Dwyer said. "There would be a lot of worthwhile projects, such as the Kansan, that would
Dwyer and his running mate, William Jacoby, Lawrence senior, said they would not accept the salaries of student body president and vice-president if elected.
"I don't see the need to pay someone to allocate money," Dwyer said. "There is no money."
(2)
Richard Dwyer
ested in the job, why should they be subsidized?"
By eliminating some of the structure and bureaucracy that has become inherent in the system, Dwyer said the Senate office operating costs could be reduced and less expensive to fund, required. All this money could then be funneled back to the students, Dwyer said.
Apathy, Splits, Complaints Characterize KU Elections
BY JAMES COOK
Kansan Staff Writer
By JAMES COOK
The University of Kansas' student government has never been stagnate. changes, some expedient and colorful, often make everyone, best describe KU's campus politics.
KU's present form of government was the University Senate Code in 1969. This code, drafted by a university committee, created the Student Senate, the Faculty Senate, the University Senate and the University Council. These organizations are the present form of University government.
But this present form did not develop overnight. And it may not be the final governmental system. Campus political processes do not involve the fluid process of change and modification.
radicals, reactionaries, ballot box stuffers,
phones and crazies.
In the past, political parties had controlled KU's student government and the Greeks had controlled the political parties.
SOME ELECTIONS, such as the 1952 election, split the campus into two groups:
As with all political systems, KU's student government has experienced
In 1952 fraternities and sororities, with their block votes, dominated campus PMS.
In the '52 election the Independents united to form the FACTS party. The opposition, the Pachacamac party, was firmly entrenched.
But 52 saw the emergence of a cohesive independent force, a force which would have been unthinkable had it not occurred.
The central issue of the campaign was whether All Student Council (ASC) would accept an offer to host a conference.
of school representation or be put on the basis of proposed residence-districts.
In '51 FACTS held KU's first party primary. FACTS won a majority of the vote and it was clear that constitutional amendment was amended to require all campus political parties to hold primaries. The amendment also provided that only members of an approved membership could vote in party primaries.
PACHACAMAC LEADERS insisted that all students be allowed to vote in the primaries. FACTS leaders countered that party primaries had never been set up in such a fashion and said the idea of having a primary was not validated if all students were allowed to vote.
A special election was called to decide on the ASC amendment. Less than one-fourth of the students turned out to vote and Pachchun took votes, easily defeated the amendment.
FACTS immediately included the reorganizational issue as part of their party platform for the coming spring general election.
THE AMENDMENT would have provided the university with a more equitable system of education.
The student council president urged adoption of the ASC amendment. The amendment would have changed voting districts from a school basis to a residence basis, would have changed the method of election from a system where a district nominated a candidate and the whole district would have limited any one district's council membership to no more than one-fourth the total membership.
The purpose of the amendment was to prevent any one group from running a slate of candidates into office. This, it was hoped, would break down the Greek-
Pachacamac won the ASC election with
1,396 votes to FACTS' 1,103 votes.
But FACTS had shown the independents could be united.
Pachacamac was instructed that it must require closed party elections. The ASC has a policy of holding elections but on the morning of the Pachacamac elections, party leaders encouraged all candidates to attend.
Independent political split.
The ASC was enraged and Pach candidates were excluded from the show.
Vox Populi (Vox) and the University Party (UP) opened the 62 campaign. But
The ASC, controlled by FACTS, voted to allow Pacchacam candidates to run in the spring election but denied them party support. The ASC also allowed Pacchacam no longer existed, but in fact was allowed to run its slate of candidates. Pacchacam won the ASC election with
a third party, Action, envision to bring a new area to campus politics national issues.
IN $2 the John Birch Society, the Young Americans for Freedom and various members of the state legislature claimed that the school board is a communist and socialist element. Civil liberty groups were demanding that blacks be admitted to fraternities and sororities, and the administration refused to allow any student organizations pressured for action.
Action pulled national issues into KU's elections.
"The new party," an editorial in the March 21st Kansan read, "is interesting in that it represents an attempt to take action on controversial issues through the established political organizations. This is something that has not been done as
See ELECTION. Page 3
2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 1972
Governor's Race Open
By STEVE RIEL
Kansan Staff Writer
With elections still more than eight months away, interest is growing in the governor's race. Republicans have only two candidates from the major parties have made it clear that they will run for governor. Speculation about other possible candidates, however, has enlarged the field.
The two declared Republican candidates are former Kansas governor John Anderson Jr. and Ll. Gov. Reynolds Shultz. A possible Republican candidate is Morris Kay of the Lawrence area.
Democrats who have been mentioned for the governorship should be asked to decide should he decide to seek an unprecedented fourth term, and should he decide not to.
ON THE DEMOCRATIC side, the key question in this year's gubernatorial race concerns the issue of docking. If docking chooses to run for a fourth term as governor it is likely he will be the Democratic nominee. However, if the decides to challenge Republican Sen. James B. Pearson for his Senate seat, B. Pearson may challenge any contest.
Under these circumstances, Miller, who has said that he would not oppose Docking for the office of governor might become the candidate.
A campaign between any two of these possible candidates will involve a close look at their strengths, weaknesses, holds, or has held, public office.
Crucial to Docking's campaign would be his three-term record as governor from 1987, by defeating the incumbent governor, Avery, with a campaign largely based on tax collection. Mr. Docking was a banker in Arkansas City.
SINCE THEN, DOCKING has successfully sought reelection on economic platforms. Notably, in the past, Docking has against increasing state revenues. Some of the manifestations of this policy have been his intention to minimize the costs of the state tax as a source of state income.
Docking's tax reform program, which went before the legislature in 1985 and which increased in interest rates for idle state funds held in Kansas banks, an exemption from the federal tax on the deduction of federal income tax payments for corporations from state income tax.
The first two measures were filled in committee and the third in legislative legislature. Docking has threatened to veto a proposed amendment.
has said tax increases should be the people to pay. To this end he recommended that corporate and income taxes be used if they are not.
OTHER FEATURES of Docking's record include an expanded program proposed in 1988. Until this session the bill had failed to gain needed support in the legislature. Docking was also responsible for recent cuts and higher education spending
The cuta were designed to assess the state of state education. The institute reinstated the reduction in education while higher education some money for more investigators proposed that more investigators be hired to minimize waste in the state.
He has been criticized because of his failure to gain cooperation of the legislature on many of his proposals.
Miller's public record stands on his work in law enforcement. Before he became attorney general last year, he was sheriff in Sedgwick county. He received a bachelor's degree in night school in Oklahoma.
MILLER' CAMPAIGN for attorney general was based on a law and reform and impartial treatment of all before the law. In addition, he espoused the position and regardless of the political repercussions, in order to preserve respect for the legal authority.
In more than a year as attorney general, Miller has received the most publicity for his anti-drug campaign that began in 2013. He has been publicized for the efforts of his office in attacking illegal gambling in the state. Miller also called for enforcement of laws prohibiting consumption of liquor and fairly at college football games.
Less publicized is Miller's role as legal adviser to the state. He served on a committee than 500 legal opinions and has started civil suits for anti-trust cases.
ANDERSON WAS the first to officially declare his candidacy for governor earlier this year. He was governor of Kansas from 1981-45 and in "d e f e l d e g e n o r e d" George W. Bush's second term, his third term as governor.
Prior to his election in 1960, Anderson was attorney general. He served as governor of modern times in Kansas to the end of the governorship after leaving office.
remove the block to passage of legislation that he attributed to a Democratic governor and a Republican governor. Republican Anderson has said that he could institute a measure of governor and the legislature.
Highlights of Anderson's term as governor are linked to his 1982 when Republicans vaccinated nearly office in the election.
SHULTZ HAS also said that he
must be running the
run in elected lieutenant
governor, he was a
responsible to the legislature
Lawrence.
In the 1970 election, Shultz was a law and order candidate. He particularly disunified disorders arrested at that time on the KU campus.
As lieutenant governor, Shultz helps to remove lewisons by removing lewisons in a possible way the storage of nuclear waste material at the Atomic Energy管理局
Kay, now majority leader in the Kansas Legislature, is another possible Republican candidate for governor. In a recent interview, she said that he would not announce his candidacy for governor, one
way or the other, until the legislature had adjourned. He said this was his most important responsibility at present.
KAY SAID he supported higher education and that partially through his efforts, some of the funding provided to universities, and colleges.
Anderson said he wanted to
He supports the new highway construction program that has just passed in the legislature and said that because it would cost more than the most important bill that had cleared the legislature this year.
The jobs, he said, would come during the summer and would provide employment for some students and college students in the state.
As the first Tuesday in November draws closer, the issue of candidacy will become one of the biggest opportunities to view more closely the candidates. The five possible candidates mentioned here do not mean a definitive list of who will actually seek the governorship.
McGovern Group Works on Issues
By SUSAN HAYES
Kansan Staff Writer
The Douglas County Chapter of
the Republican press has the only political group on campus which is openly national presidential candidate
The group was organized early in the semester by Lynn Knox, St. Louis freshman. Although most students who attend college come from University of Kansas students, it is a county-wide anyone can become involved.
Knox explained that at the present time the main purpose of the organization was to win support in the Democratic national convention. Changes have been made in the organization of the Democratic party which make it more work within the system, she said.
Delegates to the convention were previously selected by the county democratic committee and the mittenwomen. The process for selection this year will begin April 8, when district meetings are scheduled. Any registered voter may attend and vote for the people who will elect the delegates. The only time an official attends an affairdstating that he will
not participate in another party delegate selection, Knox explained.
In an effort to gain publicity for Sen. McGovern and to encourage voters to attend the April 8 meeting the chapter has been asked to hold halls and the Kansas Union to distribute literature and has conducted extensive telephone canvassing. A dance was sponsored recently by the group to highlight the importance of self-supporting organization.
Knox said she doesn't feel there is one main issue in this presidential election because there are so many diverse groups with interests to be considered. She said that in order to keep the system intact, the McGovern organization is an "issue-oriented group."
"We believe in Sen. McGovern, in what he's said and what he's implemented, but we are flexible group. We are open for a coalition. It won't be like 1988. We should connect this time." Knox said.
The group doesn't have plans in the near future for another money-making project, and the issues what is important, she said. The group plans to work now on in-depth people of the issues, Knox said.
Most Offices Open To Qualified Voters
By KEN HARWOOD
Kansan Staff Writer
A number of state and county offices will be up for contention in the upcoming elections according to state law, anyone who is a qualified election lawyer may do so.
D. E. Mathia, Douglas County clerk, said that every county office, except County Comptroller, will be eligible for election this fall. Mathia said that this year is an off-year for city courts.
Filing for county and state offices must be completed by noon, June 20. he said. A person who signs the election or Democratic primaries may file by paying a fee or by turning the ballot into the county's electorate.
Elwill M. Shanahan, secretary of state, reported from Topeka that 185 congressmen would be open for elections in November. On the state level, 40 senatorial districts, 20 county offices, some over 1,000 county offices, some
district judges and members of the state school board will be up for elections, she said.
Her main concern, she said,
was whether people would use
their right to vote.
"We want everybody to be voting this year. There no reason for anybody in Kansas saying they can't vote," she said.
"We will have an early mass registration in our colleges, in our universities and our junior colleges August. Where will they be?
"Will they take the time to go back and ask for an absentee ballot?" Will they be living in the city in September as they live now?
"If you move or if your name is changed by marriage, then you have to re-register."
Shanahan praised the work of the Kansas Legislature for their work in regard to elections.
"They have made it possible for almost everybody to vote; the sick, the disabled, the people that don't know how to get involved in federal service," she said.
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Pearson Up This Year
By MARCIA CLIFTON Kansan Staff Writer
Of Kansas" two S. U. Senators,
election this year, but James
Pearson's term will expire next
year. He'll be awarded Pearson for the office of
president.
Sen Pearson announced he would seek his third Senate term at the Kansas Day breakfast in Topeka in January.
There is speculation that Gov. Robert Dockling will also seek the Senate position, but he has not been asked to join the Wichita Eagle, in late December a representative of the Wichita Machinists in Washington, D.C. earmarked $1,000 for the Wichita order of machinists to support construction projects.
Docking, however, has not officially acknowledged the establishment of the "Docking for Senate" committee which was established in 1982.
The deadline for filing is not until June. A spokesman at the Republican state party headquarters said even though Pearson was the only announced Republican candidate thus far, he would endorse any single candidate until after the primary elections.
An official at the Democratic party headquarters in Topeka is "a little early to say anything," she said. "anything we can say about Docking's plates at all. No one at his office will admit anything."
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In spite of this uncertainty, it appears that Pearson and Docking will be the leading
POLICE CollegeMaster
contenders for the office.
Pearson's office in Topeka said
Sen. Pearson had not finalized his
campaign plan, but he campaigned on the basis of his extensive experience in Congress, as well as his above-average writing attendance.
During the 91st Session,
Pearson served on the 10 sub-
committees and as ranking
Republican on three of these.
Subcommittees of the Commerce Commission, on which Pearson has served, are the aviation and communications, consumer protection, environmental and surface transportation.
Pearson has also served on the African affairs, arms control, Euronean affairs and Near
If Docking files for the Senate position, he will probably campaign on the basis of accrued fees and three terms as governor. Throughout his terms in office Docking has advocated strict guidelines for, if not reduction of, taxes, and a well as a lid on taxes.
Eastern and South Asian affairs subcommittees of the Foreign Relations Committee.
U
On the Economic Committee,
Pearson has been a member of
the Committee on Economic
government, economic progress
and inter-American economic
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 1972
5 US House Incumbents Will Probably Run Again
By JUDY HENRY
Kansas' five seats in the House of Representatives will be dispatched in November during the national elections.
The five incumbents are Keith G. Sebelius, R-First District; Dr. Susan E. McKinney, R-First District; Larry Winn Jr., R-Third District; Garner E. Shriver, R-Fourth District; and Joe Skubitz, R-Fifth District. None of the five incumbents were re-election, although each Washington office has said it is expected that the incumbents will announce their intentions to run for office.
Rep. Skubitz's Washington credited such an announcement to Skubitz, but the representative had not formally announced his
Bob Miner of the Republican Headquarters in Topeka said the deadline is June 20 at noon. Although he said it was not the same thing as an official announcement of can-do action, Mr. Miner waited to make an official statement before the congressional district conference in March 1976.
MINER SAID that the "Republicans said and encouraged him to run," and that there would be no official Republican candidate for the Second District until after the presidential election, a representative from the 2nd District, William R. Roy, is the only Democrat among the five
The representative from the First District, Keith Sebelius, representing Representatives in 1968 and took office in 1969 for the 91st Congress. He was a state senator becoming a national representative.
Sebelius is on the Agriculture Committee and the Interior and Insular Affairs Committee. He is also on six subcommittees, livestock and grains; departmental operations; environment; national parks and recreation; and territorial and insular affairs.
Rep. Sebelius summed up his main interests in a letter, saying, "There is one goal I would like to be able to accomplish would be to see the day when the farmer and small businessman earn the fair price at the marketplace."
He said his principal concerns were "farm income; economy in the government; the plight of our citizens; the need for an opportunity for minority citizens with specific emphasis upon our Indian citizens; and, finally, restoring faith in our government our nation's young people."
Seibelius hired W.D. Moreland, dean emeritus HF Fort Hays State College, as a special staff assistant to research the health effects of pesticides and programs in rural areas. Two of Seibelius's main concerns are reorganizing and coordinating federal programs for the elderly and passing programs which would bring results to rural areas.
DR. WILLIAM R. Roy of the
Democratic representative.
Before taking office in 1971 for
the 2nd Congress, Roy was a
member of the House.
Because of Roy's background as a doctor, his prime concern
DURING THE last legislative session Winn voted for a bill concerning federal aid to institutions of higher education."
"I am a strong advocate and supporter of federal aid to our institutions of higher education. In most cases, the colleges and universities would be free to spend the money as they see fit," he said.
Winn said in a letter, "Equal rights is another subject in which I feel strongly. I co-sponsored the anti-abortion campaign." He voted in favor of its passage.
has been health care and public health and the environment. He was appointed to the Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee, and is a member of the American Council on Public health and environment.
Election...
Kyle Craig, Joplin, Mo., sophomore, was the candidate for student body president from the University Party.
The amendment, which has not been passed yet, states that the United States shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State.
One of Winn's main concerns has been ecology legislation. He authored a bill to establish the National Ecological Reserve in Kansas. He also sponsored a call foring a global environmental research program of the United States.
Shriver, dean of the Kansas delegation to the House, is on the Appropriations Committee. He is the ranking minority member of the committee and a member of appropriations subcommittee, which is responsible for the funding of U.S. foreign assistance programs. He is also a member of the labor, health education and other appropriations committee.
The result was chaos with political leaders changing from party to party overnight, often party to party platform with them.
The representative is also one of the authors of H.R. B. 680, which calls for an all-veteran army and a pay scale for a pay scale for such an army.
Continued from Page 1 consistently as possible. The existence of pressure groups or activist organizations working with controversial issues should not be considered as necessarily bad, however. They have often performed useful work undoubtedly continue to do so*.
The representative from the Third District is Larry Winn Jr., who took office in 1967 for the 90th Congress.
In March of 1967 there were three political parties on campus, Vox Poplau, University Party and the KU Progressive Alliance (L). The KUPA soon soiled in support of the University Party.
Garner E. Shriver of the
House of Representatives in 1961,
He was a state representative
from 1961 to 1963, and a state
signator from 1953 to 1962.
His main efforts in the past year have centered on assisting the communities in his district that have been affected with the flooding. He is also including Wichita. He has been active in implementing programs
Roy was a co-sponsor of the National Cancer Attack Program, and his subcommittee has also presented two measures for the Health Manpower Training Act and the Nurse Training Act. These provide training for 50,000 additional doctors and 100,000 additional nurses by 1980, and a decisive to practice in rural areas.
Winn is a member of the Science Astronautics Company and the Air Affairs Committee. He is on the manned space flight subcommittee and the science, research and technology team. Winn is also assigned to the Select Committee on Crime and the task force on labor law.
"The Political Clowns," the Kansan's March 28th editorial, commented on the antics of one such political organization that they called a mockery. They were an insult to this campus. Any faith that KU students have had in campus politics has surely been shattered, or at least taken a long way backward, because of the election."
ROY VOTED for the Manila amendment calling for withdrawal from state if POWS were released, and he voted not to extend the draft for two more funding against funding the SST program.
Ken North, Shawne Mission sophomore, was the candidate for student body president from the Vox Poplity.
THIS FEELING was not shared by Vox or UX members. They were thrown in the path of the new party. And some leaders, in a hurry or a panic, did not take the national provisions stand in their hands.
In an interview written up in the March 28, 1967 Kansas, Craig said his party was interested in "trying to eliminate committees that are dead until we review if any functioning or overlapping."
He said communication must be established between the committees and the Council.
IN THE SAME paper an interview with North was published, said he thought the campaign said the university security were main issues.
The lead head in the Kansan of April 21, 1967, announced that Craig won by a landslide. The leader, 278 for Craig and 800 for North.
The lead editorial by Barbara Phillips that day said, "Power was the issue and everybody had something to say about it. Vox's platform was based on the concept of student power and empowerment. I depended the idea of power and what it might do."
Other things he mentioned were the unfair University system of firing for parking violations, elimination of the ASC representation system and a better lighting system on campus.
Another problem he mentioned was loss of teachers through lack of salary and overload.
North said the student government needed to recapture the support it lacked.
Phillips also said the voter turnout was discouraging.
of economic adjustment in Wichita, which has had a high unemployment rate. He fought against it and eventually Act to provide public service jobs, and Wichita was one of the first states to receive funding under the Act.
If any pattern may be seen in the pattern of student apathy before the campaign and student new party begins its programs.
LES ROSEN. Shriver's administrative assistant, said that his team is assured adequate funding for the Vietnamization program, so that U.S. troops could withdrawn according to the schedule.
Roen said, "I would say that his main concern has been the economy, and he's been very careful about machinery that would lead to an all-vulnerable army. In 1967, he wrote in a book, 'How to End the Draft,'
Joe Skubitz, representative of the Fifth District, was elected to the 80th Congress in 1963. He was a Republican and a legislative assistant to two Kansas senators during the 20世纪60s, his election as representative
He belongs to the Interstate Foreign Commerce Committee and the Interior and Insular Departments. He also assigned to the national park subcommittee and the transportation and aeronautics committees.
He is a member of the mines and mining subcommittee, which is now working on strip mining. The new legislation would force coal
companies to clean up the land they have stripped in the past, including leveling it and replanting grass.
Mike Marden, one of Skubitz's Washington staff, said that Kansas has a state law requiring that all stripped land be returned to its natural state, but it did not apply to land stripped before
MARDEN SAID Skubitz's tree was considering legislation dealing with nation-wide strikes as a result of the recently settled war.
On the Vietnam issue, Skubitz said that it was not the United States' role to be there.
In a prepared statement, he said, "We seem to be playing the role of an ambassador, that national determination was carried out in all nations with our help. I think we now realize such a stewardship just isn't our job."
Marden said that Skubitz always voted against raising the national debt ceiling, in direct opposition to the Administration. He said that Skubitz thought the budget should balance the budget.
Also Skubitz has been a leader in order to keep the federal government on track. Energy Commission from dumping radioactive waste in the ocean.
Marden referred to the fight to keep the atomic waste dump out of Kansas as "one of the toughest fits that I have ever seen."
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Jayhawk Towers Apartments are on the only private-owned site virtually surrounded by the University of Kansas campus and organized houses. It's just a few steps to Allen Field House and Murphy Hall . . . and only a few minutes walk to classroom buildings. Parking is available to you in our multi-level structures.
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Friday, March 10, 1972
University Daily Kansan
THE NEW VOTERS
THE OLD POLITICAL ORDER
I can not believe it! Those silly things.
"Can you believe it? These silly things were our parents' favorite toys."
Eligible Students Fail to Register
By LINDA SCHILD
By LINCOLN CHRISTIE
Kanean Staff Writer
In Douglas County, where the KU student population alone is close to 18,000, only 1,246 of the 17,685 registered voters are between the ages of 18 and 24, an majority of the city clerk's office said Friday.
Why are so few students registered?
Bruce Molhott, assistant professor of microbiology, who helped with a voter registration drive during enrollment last fall, said he had been too occupied with KU registration to worry about voting. Transportation downto register and information on voted were offered, he said, but it was too early for students to be interested in interest most students
The problem now, according to Mark Bedrick. Emporia's graduate student Derek Vite Steering Committee, is that the majority of students find it difficult to visit the county clerk's office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
REGISTRATION forms are
available in the First National Bank building or at the county clerk's office. All records and registration records are kept.
Any person who would be 18 years old by the election day in question may register. Elwil said he was secretary of state, said Friday.
"It makes no difference if you're 180 or 74," she said. "A regimented voter, regardless of age, may vote in a local state, or national election."
Students may choose to register in Lawrence or in their home school. Students may require for residence states that a person must have lived in Kansas for six months and within seven years to be eligible for registration.
"STUDENTS WHO spend the summer in another state may still register in Kansas," said Michael Davis, associate professor of law. "That's the classical bat-ness we've student vote that we've won."
Students who want to register in Lawrence but will change their place of residence by next fall must register twice or not registrally until they address 30 days past the address next fall, Shanah said.
Davis warned that students should be aware of their precinct's boundaries.
"Moving across the street may put you in an entirely different district." he said.
Another factor that would cause present registration to be voided, Davis said, was a change of name. A person who changes his name may be assigned temporary divorce or other legal procedures must register again.
SHANAHAN SAID that Kansas voters had until 20 days before an election to register.
A voter declares his party affiliations by his choice of ballots during a primary election, she said.
Davis pointed out that many KU students who wished to vote in the primary elections this fall have to vote by absence ballot.
The Kansas primaries this year would be held on Aug. 8, Shannaan said. Absentee voters should be registered and vote in elections officer early in August.
Kansas has no presidential primaries. Only state, county and local candidates are included on the ballot
There are a number of election bills now being considered by the Kansas Legislature, Shanahan wrote. "We are not when the legislature adjourns, these may change some of the present registration and election laws."
By JIM KENDALL
Kenan Staff Writer
Kansan Staff Write
Students Crank Convention Machinery
In 1972 millions of young voters are looking forward to their first opportunity to vote in a presidential election.
Some of these young voters at the polls already actively involved in selecting the Republican and Democratic nominees for
Voter participation in the nomination process begins at the convention to designate a procedue to the congressional district and state conventions. Finally the parties select their nominees at a national convention.
J. D. King, chairman of the county, said county Republicans would have their county convention the fourth week in
THE REPUBLICANS will elect 31 delegates and 31 alternates to the district and state conventions. The local convention will decide if the same delegate attends both conventions.
The number of delegates to the district and state conventions is set by the governor. Republican candidate for secretary of state received in
In the 1970 gubernatorial primary election, Republican candidates received 7,330 votes to the county clerk's office.
The primary election is the only occasion Kansas' voters must declare their affiliation with one party or the other.
THE DELEGATES from Douglas county will attend the third congressional district April 15 in Shawnee Mission.
The third district is situated in the extreme east central part of the state. It comprises Johnson, Lake City, and part of Wyandotte counties.
The delegates to the five Kansas district conventions will select two delegates and two alternates to the national convention and one presidential convention, at each district convention.
They need not select the delegates to the national convention from among the delegates to the district convention, because a national convention delegate.
AT THE STATE convention
AT the state congress
will select ten delegates
alternates at large for
the national convention as well as
the national congress.
Twenty delegates will represent Kansas at the Republican national convention August 21 in San Diego.
The presidential election will be held in April. The nominees carries the state, the seven presidential electors will vote for him for president.
JARVIS BRINK, chairman of the Democratic party in the county, executes district will select a total of 21 delegates and select a total of 21 delegates and
There will be three local Dougston County courts, Douglas County April 4. The party will hold one in each of the county commissioners' offices.
The Democratic party has a similar nomination process with some variations.
21 alternates, seven delegates and seven alternates in each county district, to the county district and state PPOSHOUSORS.
In the 1970 gubernatorial primary election 1,679 votes were cast for Democratic candidates. In the office of the county clerk.
At each Democratic distric-
convention May 13 delegates will
select six delegates and six
and six to attend the national
convention.
At the state convention June 10 in Topeka Democrat will select five delegates at large to the nine Republican caucuses and the seven presidential electors.
THIRTY-FIVE delegates will represent Kansas at the Democratic national convention July 9 in Miami Beach, Fla.
There is still time for students to get involved in the local conventions. Some students are already participating.
On the Republican side Larry Cook, Meriden freshman, was selected Feb. 26 as a delegate to district Republican convention.
He will represent Jefferson county. He is a precinct commissioner for Commerce Chris Baker, Valley Falls freshman, was selected as an alternate from Jefferson County at the same county Republican office.
THE SECOND DISTRICT has its convention March 11 in Topeka. It is composed of deserts the northeast section of the state.
Cook said that in Jefferson county four men and four women were elected delegates. One delegate, Cook, is in the 18 to 21 st
Five women and three men were elected alternates. Baker was elected in the 18 to 21 age group.
Cook said, "They weren't even trying to get a cross section, but they did. People are very different. They're young people, he介入了."
Baker said, "They'd like to have the young people at the convention. They want to draw the young vote."
POINTING TO THE fact that more and more Republican women are getting into office, they are also party treats women well too.
This is the first time Republicans have had open local conventions, according to Cook. He attributed the low turnout at the convention, about 35 people, to unfamiliarity with the new system.
Baker explained that alternates take over the position of any delegate who can't attend a convention for some reason.
The Democratic party won't have its local convention until April 8. So not many students will attend the definite plans to run as delegates.
ONE ORGANIZATION actively working for a Democratic presidential candidate in Douglas county is the chairwoman is Lynne Knox, State Lt. Mo. Louis. Morhous.
Knox said the McGovern organization will select its candidates for convention delegates in at least the first and third county districts during the March. In a mock convention,
She said that in the second district, candidates may be picked differently because no
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DAN CONYERS, Lawrence senior, is running as an uncommitted delegate, though he said he leans toward Chisolm. McCarthy, Mr. McGovern or Mr. McGovern rather than Muskle or Humphrey.
students and few faculty members live in the district, though the group does have some support there.
Conyers is the chairman of the Young Democrats in the third congressional district. He has sponsored a bill for about two and a half years.
Conyers said he is running because he wants youth to be represented in the Democratic party.
"I'd like to see someone from KU go to the national convention. I'm well known in the district, I feel safe and confident than most students," he said.
He explained that older students reluctant to choose someone as a national delegate had only been associated with the party in the 1960s.
CONVERYS SAID that he worked in former Sen. Eugene McCarthy's campaign for the president; heckled the creek campaign for his campaign. In representative in 1870, Mike Glover's campaign for Kansas
representative in 1970 and Tom Moore's campaign for Kansas representative in 1970.
Both parties have pledged to have open conventions without discrimination on any basis.
This year the important
document has been issued in
fairest and most open ever
conducted in our state," William
Paladin, Republican, state
governor.
"As far as the young people
being involved, we're 100 per cent for that and they're welcome." King said.
THE CONVENTION rules state participation "shall in no way be abridged for reasons of security, sex, color, or national origin."
On the Democratic side June McMillan, vice chairwoman of the Democratic National Council, said, "I think we'd be very able to elect some of the 18-year-olds."
olds."
The Democratic rules state, "It shall be the duty of the state to ensure that all party officers or every level encourage young people, women, and minority groups to seek representation to delegates to party conventions.
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University Daily Kansan
10
"It ate rty to en, seek rty as of tes
Friday, March 4, 1972 5
41
Bill Hatcher Measures Heigh
Senior训役員 for more records
Rebuilding Year Ahead for Track
By JEFF HILL
Warmer weather will bring University of Kansas track men scurrying out of Allen Field to watch the track soon, but the Jayhawks may not be up to the calibre of track squads of the last two years.
"Anytime you lose eight All-Americans you're hurting," KU Coach Bob Timmons said.
Although KU and track have become as familiar a combination as Anheuser-Busch and beer, the two companies are for Timmons and the Javahawk.
Among the most severe KU losses from last year are shot putters Karl Salib and Steve Wilhelm.
"They were the two best shot patters in the United States when the French came to North America. Ready to fill the void left by sabl and Wilhelm are freshmen from Stetson."
Bill Penney, a KU record-holding hammer thrower, was also graduated last May. His departure left such a gap in that designation. The Immons literally had to advertise for more hammer throws.
George Cohimia, Larry Dreyfus, Gary Alverson and Steffan Schay answered the call.
and making some progress," Timmons said.
"They've been working hard
The quarter-mile relay and mime relay should be strong enough to cover the distances men are in competition to fill the four-quarter-mile relay positions. Tom Seavuzzo, Mark Lutz, Dee Spiegel and Phil Steep are the top contenders.
KANSAN
Roger Jones and Mike Stull will provide KU with a strong triple jump.
Barry Schur, who holds the KU record in the decathlon, will provide strength in that event as well as in the high jump.
Track Schedule
Other top KU performers are Sam Colson in the javelin.
April: 1—at UCLA; 7-8 at Texas Relays (Austin); 15-2 at State; 20-22 Kansas relays; 30-26 Drake Relays (Des Moines).
May: 6- Southern Illinois; 19-20 at Big Eight championship (Manhattan); 26-27 at USTFF championship (Wichita).
Gowara and LeDuC in the discus,
Bork bennestell in the 40-yard
quarterfinals, ques in the half-mile,
and Bill Hatcher, who holds a KU
indoor jumping platform.
Timmons figures Colorado as the team to beat in the Big Eight outdoor meet.
"It's going to be the same teams doing well indoors except
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — The most famous of American horsemen is still three months away but Churchill Downs has been getting more training.
Owens Will Coach Pizza Hut Classic
Although the basketball season has ended for University of Chicago Coach Coates, will coach at least one more talented group of college players
The college all-stars will be chosen by a vote of basketball fans who patronize Pizza Hut Inc.
"The whole idea is that everything is pitched to one day," says Bob Gorham, a former sports writer and the track's resident manager for the past 36 months. "All we do is embellish on that."
outlets and the Pizza Hut Basketball Classic Advisory Board.
Owens has been selected by Pizza Hut Charities Foundation to coach one of its college all-star teams in the recently launched Pizza Hut Classic. The game will begin April 15 in Las Vegas, Nev.
Pizza Hut puts to pit eight players from the NCAA's eastern region against eight players from the western region.
Proceeds from the game will go to Pizza Hut Charities Foundation Inc.
Immediate benefactors this year will be Wichita State University and the Sacred Heart College of Wichita and the U. S. Olympic Games.
Officials Prepare With Flowers For Derby Day
When spring fever strikes,
there's only one thing to do about it.
Indulge yourself in some indolent activity.
Parks Offer Seasonal Diversion
Drew Masters, Roark Park junior, for example, said he plans to do some bicycle riding. He also takes him on biking around Lawrence for niceties.
But what is there to do in La Jolla, University of Kansas students contacted by the University Daily Kansan had no idea, but a few
To get a broader idea of what Lawrence has to offer in the form of trips, you may travel to the Parks and department offices at Bp Massa Hospital.
FREDERICK C. DeVICTOR,
assistant director of the department, pointed out that Lawrence andarks, several with pennic pavilion.
Junan Wolfokwitz, St. Louis
Junan, said he looks forward to
garden games. He plays a
some tennis this spring. He also
plans to play Frisbee at Potter
Field.
Robinson Park, at the intersection of Massachusetts and 6th streets south of the Kaw Bridge.
A person who wants to go on a
These parks are open all year. The picnic pavilions are not reserved and can be found at Centennial, Centennial, and Clinton Parks.
Walnut Street Park, 7th and Walnut streets.
Lyons Street Park, between 7th and 8th streets and north of Lyons Street.
Lawrence Parks
Central Park, between Kentucky and Tennessee streets and between 6th and 8th streets
East Lawrence Center, between 10th and 11th streets and between Pennsylvania and Delaware streets.
South Park, on Massachusetts south of the main business district.
Park Hill Park, entered from Utah Street.
Edgewood Park, entered from Maple Lane north of 19th street. Veterans Park, at 19th and Louisiana.
Parnell Park, on 19th street. Edgewood Park, entered from
hawks.
Centennial Park, between 6th and 8th streets on the north and south and Iowa and Rockledge on the east and west.
Indian Hills Park (proposed), near 27th street.
near 21st street.
Prairie Meadows Park (unde-
Broken Arrow Park, between Haskell Junior College grounds and Louisiana Street.
developed), off 28th Street.
Walley, John F. Park (univ
Clinton Park, adjacent to Pinckney School between Maine and Mississippi streets.
Holiday Hills Park (undeveloped), west of Kasold.
oped), west of Kasold. Water Tower Park between
Ludlum Park, across 9th Street from Sunset School.
Lincoln Park, off Maine Street north of the hospital.
Water Tower Park, between Oxford and Stratford streets.
Deerfield Park (undeveloped), adjacent to Deerfield School
Martin Park, one mile west of Lawrence on Peterson Road.
picnic can pick up a picnic kit at the Community Building on 11th Street. This kit includes horseshoes and stakes, volleyball and net, a softball, two bats, a basketball and five dollar deposit is required.
Future park plans in Lawrence include the opening of four new parks. Deerfield, Holiday Hills, Hills and Prairie Meadows.
There are also plans for the development of a new sports complex and river front and landfill developments.
On Friday night of the affair, a film and an outdoor dance are planned to relay at the football stadium and a band concert at Potter Lake on Sunday.
pool, two recreation centers, five tennis courts and eight major ball diamonds. The locations of these facilities can be found either in the phone directory or by giving a phone number to Recreation Department a call.
BESIDES THE 21 parks, the city of Lawrence has a swimming
The Parks and Recreation Department, according to DeVictor will also offer classes in the spring for recreation. Most require a fee. DeVictor said the park would begin about March 20.
Sponsored by the fraternities, sororites, residence halls and scholarship halls, the spring firing begins in begin April 4 and end April 8.
Some of the classes offered are slimmestats, a class emphasizing physical exercise; adult modern art; color painting, and oil painting.
The Community Building gym will open on Monday and play Saturday, and Sunday. The Sunset Hills gym will be open for men's free play on Tuesday
Coming up in about a month is the KU spring fling.
at
Two of the biggest chores in preparing for May 6- Derby Day- this year are tickets and flowers.
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Churchill Dennis receives about 7,000 ticket requests from all over the world, most of which they can't fill.
"Our biggest public relations job is saying no," says Gormhain, adding that the first obligation is to stockholders and borsmen.
"Our goals are really conference-wise. We're down from where we've been." Timmons said.
Sometimes they do go out of their way to accommodate. Last year Gurhan corresponded six times to the director in order to get him a $15 seat.
Gormah turns down many Kentuckians who feel they should get tickets because they live in the state.
"We've got to build back up again. As to whether we can do it in a year, I don't know," Timmons said.
Another year-round task is preparing the flowers. This job falls to gardener Don Lord and his seven-man staff.
"We hold off as long as possible," says Lord. "But it all depends on the weather. We play with it or frost or a frost. We play it by ear."
In order to bring most of the 75,000 flowers to bloom as near to Derby day as possible, Lord tries by the last Saturday in April.
hammer throw and triple jump events which take place only in outdoor track.
AR3a
Kansas State and Oklahoma will be better outdoors," Timmons said.
The flowers—geraniums,
petunias, sage, dusty miller,
marigold, achytrantes and
tulips have hit their prime on
the three or four times in
the 21 years that has been at
Church Hill滴.
Timmons figures UCLA, University of Oregon, Brigham Young University and Colorado as the best teams on the national high school football team.
Timmons attributed the greater outdoor strength to the addition of the javelin, discus, decathlon, stechlease-
"I know we'll be better outdoors," he said.
MISSION MUSEUM
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 patients on wooden containers carved in the stone.
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 hand by Sidney Endacott of England, a brother of Frank Sidney. He used a well-known sculpted artist and artist, and some of his work is in the drawing room of the Lord Holtfox 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 chin stool. A access cluster of mirrors and stained glass window above the fireplace gives the effect of an atonar in a chapel.
The tower, which gives the old castle appearance, has a starway leading to the third floor. Above the tower room is a roof garden which, inbye dayne, was shaded with ownings and used during the summer months. The ballroom with spacious window seats on the third floor
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
The Castle Tea Room
The Most Unique Restaurant in Lawrence 1307 Mass
Reservations Suggested 843,1151
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The Red Baron
Blue Things March 10,11
SPRING SPECIAL
Joint Session March 15-18
Kansas March 22-25
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6
10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 1972
Drills to Sharpen Football Passing
By MATT BEGERT Assistant Sports Editor
It is a pretty good bet that pass
coverage and pass coverage will be the
biggest diversity of Kansas football team
when they take to the field to be
played.
Three coaches who will assist the KU staff this spring will be concerned primarily with offense.
John Hadi, former KU all-American quarterback and player for the San Diego Chargers of the National Football League, three weeks of spring drills to help with the over-all passing game.
Hadi is a two-time all-Amer-
ican (1960-61) and 2013 first in the last season in passing, with 233 completions in yards and 21 touchdowns.
JOE SPENCER, who coached Joe Nastifah's offensive line when the New York Jets won the Super Bowl in 2014. KU football coach staffing.
Hadl was the NFL's man of the year in 1971 for his community involvement and his performance on the football field.
"Joe sure ought to help our pass protection," head coach Don Fambrough said recently about his new assistant.
Spencer was the Jets' offensive line coach in 1968-69. He then took a similar job with the St. Louis Cardinals last year. He has played for the Cardinals and a team in the Canadian League, the Edmonton Eskimos.
Spencer began his pro career in 1948 with the Cleveland Browns during the seasons they won two straight pro championships.
His playing career was ended by an injury while he was playing for the Green Bay Packers in 1952.
The KU pass receivers will have help from Te Plumb, who has coached outstanding pass players to Christian and Tuila Universities.
PLUMB PLAYED three years as an end at Baylor and was a member of the team that went to 1960 and the Gouman Bowl in 1963.
He played for the Buffalo Bills in 1962, but an injury forced him to quit playing and he started coaching.
He coached high school teams from 1963 to 1965, then went back to his home state California to teach at Cerritos Junior College in 1966-67.
From there he transferred to college coaching, going back to Texas for a job with Texas Christian University. He was with the TCU he moved to three seats on the team he moved to a position with Tulsa.
Two of Tulsa's top receivers, Jim Batur and Jim Shaw, were coached by Plumb, were drafted by the NFC in the recent NFL draft.
"We are installing a different type of offence," Fambough said recently. "It's not entirely new, but we are trying to build an army of cyber-crime hunters, an offense built around the personnel we have available."
FAMBROUGH SAID Plumb will work mostly with receivers on the team. Plumb will re-illustrate his setting in his tufa.
He said the coaching staff would be working with the sophomores to make sure they accomplish one of the major objectives, which is to make sure they have insight in people in the right positions.
"It's always exciting to go into spring practice. I'm looking forward to it," he said, as Iershani I haven't had a chance to have much contact with in connection with the varsity team. Fambridge said about the sophomore.
“AS ALWAYS,” Fambrough said about spring practice. “it is so important because we do a lot of experiment with people
playing both offense and defense."
Most of the football team started pre-prep workouts the week before the games, and said. The workouts are mostly for conditioning purposes and in preparation for footwork drills, work on the universal weight machine and cares.
The workout is divided into 22 stations and each player goes through the course twice, with a two-minute rest period in between.
"We do a lot of work off the football field," Fambrough said after inspecting the daily drills.
The spring practice will end with an intersquad exhibition game scheduled for either April 28 or 29. It will be played either in room in Memorial Stadium or at night in the Haskell stadium.
PRACTICE IS scheduled to continue five weeks, and workouts will normally be on Monday. Thursdays and Saturdays of each week.
Junior college transfers Mitch Sutton, Terry Adams and Mike Gardner, who were recruited in the 1970s to play during the 71 season, because of an NCAA eligibility ruling, can be counted as the same ruler because of the same ruling
The ruling, which was made retroactive, stipulates that junior college transfers must have at least two hours to be eligible to graduate from the junior college and have completed a play after their first semester of attendance. Transfer students who transfer under any other college may play.
Sutton, Adams and Gardner were recruited before the NCAA were able to attend the spring practice if the ruling had not been
OFFENSIVE coordinator noted that the plan was to recognize the offense, although he added that the same basic offense at attacking would apply.
He said the staff was looking at them and that they would pass and pass protection and that there would be an emphasis on developing a good balanced system.
He said an effective running attack was essential so the team could adapt to varying weather conditions during a game, such as wind and rain, which tend to make a passing game undesirable.
MILWAUKEE
Ryun Prepares for Outdoor Season
Jim Ryun, world record holder in the mile and former KU track star, trains in Allen Field House in preparation for the outdoor season. Ryun recently returned from California to KU and played in a soccer game at the university's school. Ryun's goal is to make the U.S. Olympic team this summer.
NCAA Eligibility Ruling Affects JuCo Transfers
About a year ago the University involved in a controversy concerning the eligibility rule for incoming junior college football
The NCAA enforced a rule have a 2.0 grade average the semester immediately preceding the move to be eligible for varsity
The interpretation sent the University junior college recruits, Mittle Schaffer and Mitch Adams, to the sidelines for the 1911 season. They will play as captains.
the University of the Pacific was forced to freeze 17 prospects last season.
Not much has been said this year about the rule, but the rules and practices are a very basic and important football with the enforcement of this rule, some incoming recruits are forced to play without the rules.
KU, Kurt Nieman and Delario
Robinson, survived the rule and
will participate in spring
workouts this year.
Nieman came to KU from Fort Scott Junior College, where he played quarterback the last two seasons.
TWO TRANSFER athletes at
"At 5 feet to and 100, I just
bake enough to play the game.
I'll do it at the high school (
Tepeka High)." Nieman said.
"'So if I don't play a junior
team, I'm out.'"
"I think I'll be moved to the hawk position," said Nieman, a Scaffold recruit who him in the defensive backfield. Scott by Dixon Foster, now a KU Scott by Dixon Foster, now a KU
At Fort Scott, Nieman piloted his team to the winters bowl in 1976 and 1978 years at Fort Scott, the Greyhounds compiled a 21-10 victory.
ROBINSON ATTENDED Southwest Junior College in Los
He came to KU on a track scholarship. He received both track and football offers from the Eight and KU in the Big Eight.
Nieman was recruited for Fort Scott by Dick Foster, now a KU assistant coach.
Angeles where he was a split end on the football team and a hurdler for the track team.
Jap
SOMEWHERE IN YOUR HEAD THERE'S A WILD ELECTRIC DREAM
He will be used as split end on the football team.
it won't be known until next fall, when they are eligible, just who will be playing for the Jayhawks from junior colleges.
BATON BOUGE, La. (AP)—The Maravich of Louisiana State is fired Monday along with his two assistants, the school announced Tuesday.
The firings are effective immediately.
Mick
Come see it ir
PERFORMANCE
The two assistants fired were Jay McCreary and Greg Bernbrook
Jagger
It's much more difficult
to see you have to arrange your
name in the room when you
year first my meet was Jan. 21.
This year I didn't have one until
"It's going to take a throw of it to 68% to 18% feet just to make the team," said Wilhelm, who scored at 70 feet to win at Mujahid.
P
NEITHER HAS been throwing exceptionally well so far this season. Both hope to reach their peaks later in the spring.
Before the games in Munich this summer, both must prove themselves at the Olympic July 7 and 8 in Eugene, Ore.
Both Wilhelm and Salb commented about throwing on their own in comparison to being on the KU track team.
where underground meets underworld
"I've just recently found out that it's more important to have good technique than strength," said Salb.
X
The 1972 Summer Olympics is the world's only practical training track distance world right now, including former University of Kansas shot putters Karl Saal and Jeffrey Mackenzie.
MARCH 10 & 11
7:00 & 9:30 p.m.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
"That's why Al Fearbach is doing so well this early in the season," said Wilhelm.
---
Wilhelm, who ballooned to 297 pounds once since last season, said that form and technique were his main problems so far.
Both Experience Form Problems
Salb of Crossett, Ark. he already done something to improve the situation. He went to Canada for a week to train with Gabor Simões, who is the most experienced man Sali was concerning the weight events.
By JIM SCHUMM
60c
Kansan Sports Writer
Ex-KU Shot Putters Eye Olympics
"I learned more in just one week about shot put techniques from him than I have in my four years at KU," said Salb. KU has
beer joint MOTHER MARY'S 2406 10WA
WILHELM INTENTS to go back to train with Hank Norberg, his high school coach in Los Altos, Calif. this spring.
Both men have decided to give up the discus event and concentrate on the shot put at the Olympics. The Umpires in the States will field an excellent discus square, all throwing well over 200 feet.
"I threw about 61 feet at the beach. My kids my junior year." Salb said. "I went to coach Norberg. I then threw 16 feet $1 inches and qualified for the national team."
Salb and Wilhelm have been timing weights and training torques at Kansas. This was one of the major reasons they both had for taking the shot.
"The magic of Jim Ryun and Kansas was just too much," said Salb.
An average day in the weight room would consist of about three hours of lifting. Both bench press and squat weights are 752 lbs. Those weights are simply
workout weights, not maximum lifts.
IN THE NATIONAL Football League's annual college player draft last month Salb was selected by the Buffalo Bills. This season, he will him as well as many football enthusiasts around the country.
If they offered me $300,000 like someone else I know (O.J. Cobb). We go to Buffalo today. But they aren't and I've got a wife and child to care for.
shot, which doesn't bring much money," Salb said.
Wilhelm is presently enrolled in the School of Law at KI!
"The Law School here is fantastic," he said "All the professors are really great."
Wilhelm plans to finish school at KU, but Salb expects to move in the near future.
"I've spent four and a half years here and I think it's time to move. I've seen Arkansas and Iowa, I've seen something like something else." Sala said.
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University Daily Kansan
10
Friday, March 9, 1972
7
Camino
Raseball Team Lacks Hitting
Dan Heck Cocks to Throw on the Ru.
. Senior quarterback becomes a shortstop
Next Three Years Promising
Basketball Outlook Bright
Kansan Sports Writer
By JEFF HILL
Marshall Rogers Puts up Jumper
... Freshman guard should help varsity
KANSAS
For University of Kansas students spied by last year's top-notch basketball team led by Dave Robisch and for those who were unaware, witness a winning season, the next three years hold great promise for NU basketball. That waited on the 1971-72 freshman sushi.
Marsall Rogers, Rick Suttle,
Darle Daleenie, Tommy Smith
and Mike Fiddelke will ascend
to the freshman season from the
freshman team.
The varsity Jayhawks will lose the heart of their进攻, Bud Swarthowr, and a key defensive player who has been starting lineup. Fred Bosovic, Neal Mask and Mark Mathies who will be graduated this spring.
"Every one of our seniors has made a positive contribution this year," Ku coach Ted Owens said. "We have a great consistency from all of them."
BUT THE OUTLOOK for next season is by no means bleak.
"One of the things we're going to pick up is height. We've missed rebounding this year. Rick Suttle went Knight will help," Owens said.
Knight is a talented 6-foot-10 freshman who was ineligible for freshman competition this season, however for the varsity, available.
Between Knight and Suttle, also 6-foot-10, KU board strength might begin to resemble that of the 1870-71 season when 6-foot-10 Robbisch and 6-foot-11 Roger Stegall began sweeping around Alen Fold House.
Suttle led the freshmen in rebounding and finished second
in scoring average. However, in only two games did Suttle encounter a center near own size.
"We wish he had the bigger man, but I think he has the capability to be an outstanding player some days," said Bob Wickman.
TOMMY SMITH, a 6-foot-4 forward who can jump with men several inches taller, will further fortify Jiahawk rebounding.
Dale Greeneer may also help to fill the shoes of Nash. Greeneer blitzed KU opposition on more deadly 12-5 foot jump shots.
In addition to the sophomores-to-be, the Jahayhaws may pick up more help from incoming freshmen and will only allow which allows freshmen to play for the varsity takes effect next season. KU can't sign any freshmen before April 1. Owens doesn't have any signings before April 19.
Top scorer for the freshmen was Rogers, a quick guard with an accurate shooting eye. Although Rogers may not be able to take leadership in a leadership of Aubrey Nash immediately, he promises to help
New Coach Awaits Golfers
With the coming of spring, the team will have a chance to compete March 24 in the first round at Alvaram Hall's golf course.
"Overall, we should be a better shooting and better rebounding team next year," Frederick said.
New faces on the University of Kansas golf team should bring big returns.
Because golf is a minor sport, the KU golf team doesn't get as much publicity as perhaps the golf team, but coaching change takes place.
Baker University will be the host school, Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia will also play in the triangular meet.
Bob Frederick, who became the freshman basketball coach last season, will also assume the
head coaching job for the golfers.
Last year's coach was Charles O'Neal, who took a position with the government.
"We have a chance to have a fine golf club this season," Frederick said recently. "We don't have to ask who should really help us."
The team hasn't even been set yet as tryouts will be March 13 and 14.
ROGER WELLS, an Aurora,
Cadoader senior, be the team
chief coach. He took third place in the Big 8
meet last year in Stillwater. With this performance he barely
felt like a 'big' major-team for the NCAA meet.
According to most baseball experts, pitching is 75 per cent of the game. It would be hard to find a better pitcher than more than University of Kansas baseball coach Floyd Temple. He is depending heavily on his mount staff to bring the seven Big back into Big Eight contention.
Last season, Temple's squad, in spite of a hitting attack which averaged 17 points to the bottom of the conference, winning only six games and losing 15. Overall the team was
Temple Bases Hopes on Pitching
Bill Kipp, Lawrence freshman,
made the catch in making
making the team. He played fall golf for the Jayhawks and
according to coach Frederick
"We were very poor," he said.
"Last year I found out you can have outstanding pitching and ball control, not win without a good defense."
Temple pinpointed the team's problems to a defense that committed 76 errors in only 33 games.
WITH ONLY eight lettermert returning, Temple is looking for several newcomers to fill the gaps.
There will be eight golfers selected from the tryout field but only six will compete in each remaining two will be alternates.
The most questionable positions appear to be in the infield. Two seniors, Steve Burrows and Kyle Kluge, the top candidates for the first base job. Both are also pitchers. Last year Corey Played behind second team all-conference first baseman Skip James, who was graduated
Frederick said that golf was much more a team sport than many people realized.
Shortstop figures to be a fight Borecky, freshman Tempel describe as "young but former Iowa awkward quarterback Heck was drafted as a professional prospect out of high school.
Bill Glass, a transfer from Miami, Okla., Junior College, apparently has second base but without Wolf can also play there.
All home meets will be at the Lawrence Country Club. Last year they were at Alvamar.
GEORGE JOHNSTON, a juice transfer from KANSAS City, Kan., and a Ban Johnson League player, at basketball base, although basketball player
Dave Taynor is also out for the spot.
Jerry Evans and Don Lahir are today experienced outfielders who have been fighting three rookies for the jobs. Formost of these is Robert Ohm, whom Temple considers the most man he has coached at KU.
Behind the plate, newcomer Dick Bradley will replace two year regular Larry Matson, who was recently named a strong defensive prospect.
Flovd Temple
Enthusiastic New Coach Hopeful For Tennis Team
March 18—at Washburn (2);
20–Washburn (2); (22)
Emporia State (2); (27)
College Emporia (2); (31)
Miami (2)
BASEBALL SCHEDULE
April 1–lowl State; 7–at
Nebraka (2); 8–at
Nebraka s. 14–at
Colorado(2); 15–at Colorado;
Missouri (2); 22–at
Minnesota at Oklahoma
or Oklahoma
By BILL SCHEELE
May 2–Friends University (2)
(6)–Kansas State (2); (2)
–Kansas State; 15–Oklahoma
State (2); 16–Oklahoma State.
Mike Howard is optimistic about this year's University of Kansas tennis team. Howard, a former Oklahoma student and a former Oklahoma State tennis player, is in his sixth season as an assistant tennis coach.
Offensively, Temple said, the
Bob Lockwood, also gymnastics coach, is the head coach of tennis.
Howard has spent several hours a day since the first of February coaching, training and conditioning the KU tennis squad. He has thrashed the squad to nine earners from over 30 who tried us.
"The players are really anxious to get started," he said. "We've really been working out hard. Tennis is a very strenuous sport, and a player needs to be in condition to prevent injuries."
Lettermen are Cal Simmons,
Alexandria, Va., senior; Tom
Carlson, Leedwood junior; Mark
Wick, Leedwood junior; juni-
cer and Karl Kingsgle, posi-
tion senior and Karl Kingsgle,
Kansas City, Mo., sophomore.
The KU squad consists of five lettermen and four newcomers.
MAY: 1 at nBrakawe; 2 at nBrakewe;
Colorado! 1 a.m. (m); 6 northwest Missouri State
(p.m.) 19-30 at Big Eight
APRIL: 4-at Washburn;
1-Oklahoma at (p. 11);
1-Emporia State (p. 13).
15-at Omaha City
16-Akron at Oklahoma
17-2-Kansas
Statel (1 p. 11);
29-at Missouri!
MARCH: 11—at Northwest
Missouri State; 18—at
Arkansas; 23—at Oklahoma
State; 30—at Emporia State.
NON-LETTERS are Ron Shaffer. Hutchinson sophomore; Jim Isaac, sophomore; Jim Isaac, Newton freshman and Deli Dyat, Sept. 15.
"These boys are a real credit to the University," he said. "They all come out on their own. They really like the game and are athletes. They compete for practically no monetary reward.
Tennis Schedule
Howard said that all the players were students first and athletes second.
! League match
provide full scholarships for tennis players.
"They are also first-rate students. I believe that nearly all of them have at least a 3.0 grade average."
Howard said that although KU has little scholarship money to distribute among its tennis team, he knows that with other Big Eight schools that
Oklaoma. Oklahoma State and Missouri all provide five or so scholarships, but it has no said, KU has two full schools to distribute among
"WE SHOULD be in the first division of the conference," said Howard. "We should be very competitive. However, perennial champions Oklahoma and Colorado will be the teams to beat."
Jayhawks will be "scratching and scrambling for runs."
Howard has pushed for several reforms in his first year as a leader of the KU court, the appearance of the KU courts, supported a new system of college admissions, championed and urged that Kansas City be the permanent site of the KU court.
The KU courts, located west of Allen Field House, are being resurfaced this spring and the resurfacing produces too much glare. The painting improves the appearance of the courts and the resurfacing brings them up to the heights of other Big Eight schools.
Three of the team's four 300 hitters of last season, Paul Abbott and Kris Bryant. Temple, are gone. Most scoring missed is Wobble, now in the New York Mets organization, with 386 and hit nine home runs.
THE BIGGEST change from last year, however, will be the new method of scheduling and conference team championship.
In the past, the conference team was required to perform on the basis of performance in league tournament, since all the teams did not meet each other in competition.
WITH SO many new faces, it is difficult to determine how well KU will do at the plate this year. A lot depends on Wolf, who hit 356 and knocked three home runs in 1871, and Bradley, who is also a power player. Heck could also add some punch to the lineup.
However, this year each team pays every other team in the tournament $10,000. These duals will be combined with the results of the tournament to determine a winner.
The round-robin duals determine about 70 per cent of the total team score, and the league champions, 30 per cent. Individual champions, however, will still be determined solely on the basis of their performance.
Another change is in the number of singles and doubles year there were five singles and two doubles matches in dual competition, six singles matches and three doubles matches. This increase in opportunities to participate.
"IT SHOULD be a very interesting season," said coach Jillian Green. "A season will mean more than the conference tournament. Every conference match will be played on home soil and all air some interest in tennis."
"We're going to have to try to get a few runs and hope it's enough."
"It is hard to right now," temple said. "We're not sure if the scoring runs I just don't think we could ever expect match the hitting
"I know that KU can build a good tennis program." Howard Barker said of Wade Stinson and some publicity. Wade Stinson has been really out on our setup. It will take a little time, but I'm really optimistic."
This is where Temple's pitching staff comes in. With the Jahyhawk's scoring ability in doubt, the mound corps will have to hold the opposition to a challenge of runs, Lackily the KU staff be a veteran one and may well be the best in the conference.
Of the five returning pitchers, three figure to be starters this season.
THE WORKHORSE OF the group was Bill Stiegemier, who pitched 61 innings, striking out 41. His record sank to three wins and five losses after he went 43 on-base and earned run average was 3.39.
The staff's number two team, Wolf, who has developed a hard curve to complement his fast ball and the quickness of the pitch. Corder is the only southpaw of the starting trio and mixes off-speed pitches with excellent control. Last season he walked 43 innings and 43 innings. His record was 3-5.
many new faces and really haven't got a chance to see the other teams."
Last year's Jayhawks were heavily favored to contend for the Big Eight championship Temple Hill prediction for this year's sound.
He knows, though, that his
"IT'S REALLY too early to tell," he said. "We've got too
Ron Mason and Bobby Cox are the remaining veteran pitcher. He pitched 140 while recorded an ERA of 3.00 while going 11. Cox was injured in the game.
eight returning lettermen represent one of the lowest totals in the league and could put him at - disadvantage.
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Friday, March 1972
University Daily Kansan
No Wonder This Man Has An ...
I'll tell you the story. I was a child when I saw this. My parents were very proud of me. They were very happy that I was growing up and that I was becoming a successful person. I was always dreaming of being a big star in the world. But one day, I met my real life partner, and we fell in love. We went on an epic road trip together, and we met all the best people in the world. We spent a lot of time together, and we even shared a kiss. And after that, we had a wonderful reunion. I remember crying and laughing at the same time. It was a beautiful experience. And I feel very proud of my parents and my friends.
ULGER
Kansan Staff Photos
by
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PACIFIC SUNDAY EDITION
ALICANO
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KILMORE
TOM WILSON
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CARLOS MAYOR
Ted Owens Basketball Coach University of Kansas
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CLOUDY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
82nd Year, No.104
Monday, March 13, 1972
Tom Wolfe Informally, Formally
See Page 5
Deserters:
'Amnesty Is Not Enough'
STOCKHOLM (AP)—Leaders of American draft resisters and deserters who have found refuge in Sweden say they are "not enough to bring the home colony.
"I'm not going back," said George Meals of Atlanta, Ga.
Meals, 27, and others among the estimated 670 U. S. draft-dodgers and Army dropouts living in Sweden have discussed the amnesty projects under which they don't want forgiveness because they aren't the guilty ones in the Vietnam war.
"Every American tax-paying citizen is a criminal for paying taxes that provide money to the government."
Robert Argento, 26, said, "If arnesty would think of about 200 of us would think of going back."
Argento, employed by the Swedish government to work among fellow defectors, is an exception in the refugee community.
He has a working knowledge of Swedish, good health and a regular job. He and Meals have been in the country for more than three years.
Others in the detector ranks are less sure of themselves. They still make the rounds of leftist sympathizers or girl friends, carrying their sleep bags from apartment to apartment. Unable to speak the language, they are unable to work
"Amnesty—the they talk about amnesty but I don't even have the money to go to the movies," says a U. S. visitor to a deserter gathering in provincial Malmo.
The Swedish welfare agency pays for the weekly social meeting and free meal, saying it helps officials keep track of the deserter community. Nearly all the deserters draw government benefits, such as free health care.
but they remain young men cast adrift in a foreign country.
Fifteen deserters are serving jail sentences for drug peddlers, authorities report, and nearly half the resisters have been caught in the police, often petty sniffing.
Two have committed suicide, official records show.
walks into the U. S. Embassy, asking for
them to stay in New York.
The withdrawal of U. S. troops from Vietnam has turned the flow of resisters into a trickle. Now an average of one in every 10,000 people is in Sweden. He nearly always gets it.
The singer's eyes are upward as he looks at the audience.
Combining folk rock music with country sounds, Canadian singer Gordon Lightfoot entertained a Saturday night audience in Hoechst. The band's sound is upbeat and fun.
Lightfoot Soothes Festival of Arts Audience
his clear and simple style. The packed house is uncomfortably warm, but the audience was pleased with the performance and the delivery.
Amendment Urged
U.S. Primary Is Proposed
WASHINGTON (AP) - Two of the most influential members of the Senate will propose Monday a constitutional amendment to national presidential primary election.
Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana and Sen. George D. Aiken of Vermont, the dean of Republican senators, say the present system of law guarantees on separate dates under different laws in a circus, unfair to the candidates and the electors.
The candidates pick and choose state primaries in which they think they can be successful, Mansfield said in a speech prepared for delivery in the Senate. He presented two tests offered the voter or the host before final voting on their resemblance of similar opportunities.
MANSFIELD SAID the real issue in Tuesday's Florida primary, for example, has little, if anything, to do with the issue of selecting a presidential candidate."
Straw-vote referenda on school buses and on equal opportunity in education have been placed on the Florida ballot and are a national issue. But who might otherwise have staved home
The Mansfield-Aiken constitutional amendment would provide that the primary be held early in August of the year, so nominations would go to which candidate polled the most votes, as long as it were at least 40 per cent of the votes cast
in each party.
IF NO ONE received 40 per cent, a runoff between the top two finishers would be held four weeks later. Under the Mansfield-Aklen amendment, parties in both constituencies conventions to nominate vice-presidential candidates and adopt platforms.
To become effective, the amendment would have to be approved by two-thirds majorities in the Senate and the House, and be ratified by at least 38 states.
"We've been fed up for years with these crises taking place in various states," Mauger said.
Mansfield noted in his speech for today that the number of states holding statewide primaries this year is up to 25 from 14 in 1968.
THE CANDIDATE, Mansfield said, is found "enmeshed in a maze of laws, customs, and bad practices that leave him physically exhausted, financially deflated and more often than not, politically defeated."
There are also provisions to guarantee that the would-be candidate's support is not just regional. He would need to meet a minimum petition requirement in at least 17 states, as well as the over-all 1 per cent figure.
To get on a party's primary national ballot under the proposal, a potential candidate would need the signatures of one member who is in the last previous presidential election.
Senators Give Pros, Cons of Experiences
By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
The Student Senate received both praise and criticism this week as many of those senators eligible to seek reelection this year have served in previous experiences in the Senate this past term.
There were a number of reasons several
For some, being a senator was an educational and satisfying experience. But for others, it was a source of stress.
senators were not seeking reelection. Some were too busy. Others planned to force their attention on interests in the Senate, while others had disaffected with the Senate and charged it with elitism, inefficiency or bias. Senators sailed the Senate was worthless.
George Livingston, Plainville graduate student and senator from the Graduate School, said that he was still interested in Senate activities but would rather work on
Legislative Appropriations Include Pay Raise for University Employes
After 16 hours of virtual nonstop
contact Friday, June 25, the Legislature
concluded its 972 session.
The House approved a $430 million appropriations bill, passed by the Senate last week, in Friday's session. The bill included funds for higher education which would provide a five per cent pay increase for faculty members at state institutions, as well as a one-step increase for classified employees at the universities.
The seven state-supported schools are the University of Kansas, the University of Kansas Medical Center, Fort Hayes Kansas State College, Kansas State Teacher's School, Wichita State College of Pittsburg, and Wichita State University.
Hill said that $75,000 which had been appropriated to replace the steam lines from the former school and Sprague Apartments Jan. 30 at KU would be deducted from the fiscal 1973 budget and would be placed in the fiscal 1972 budget, as approved by the governor.
The appropriations for all state-supported colleges and universities were passed substantially, as recommended by the Clyde Hill. R-Yates Center, said Sunday.
The legislature will reconvene for a special one-day session March 20 to consider the extension of the property tax lid law and its local sales tax provision, an omnibus pay raise bil and the lowering of the age of the majority from 21 to 18.
particular interest to Lawrence, since the city enacted a half-cent retail sales tax
HILL, CHAIRMAN of the House Ways and Means Committee which studied the appropriations, said $15,632,265 had been appropriated from the state general fund to increase salaries and wages at KU, an increase of $112,810.
The Majority Age Bill, including an amendment which would permit 18-year-olds to buy liquor, was passed Wednesday in Senate. The House approved the bill Fri. 23rd.
Sen. Bob Storey, R-Topeka, said the House committee had raised the legal age to buy liquor from the proposed 18 to the present 21.
The state general fund also allocated more money for the Kansas State Geological Survey, the training of firemen and general research at KU.
THE SALES TAX question is of
The omnibus pay raise bill, if enacted.
would provide classified civil service employees at the universities with a one-step pay increase three months early, on April 1 instead of July 1. The bill would also raise the salaries of legislators and other officials with the exception of the governor.
committees and projects than serve again as a senator.
Several highlights of the 1972 legislative session were the restoration of last year's welfare cuts, a penal system reform involving the construction of a new prison facility and the reapportionment of the legislature.
SOME OF the committee work is the most important part of the Senate," he
Livingston said he wasn't so interested in attending the Senate meetings because he didn't have enough influence to be effective. He also said he thought too much time was devoted to discussions concerning the activity fee allocations.
Livingston said he supported the recent Senate enactment that would annually allow college students to activity fee to various activities such as the Concert Course and the University Daily Kansan. This way, Livingston said, he haggled over those allocations each year.
Svoboda said the Senate probably did represent the feelings of the majority of the students most of the time. She said that even though the majority of students didn't vote or participate in the Senate, a cross section of students "that happen to be strong enough" would strongly Strong on election day" probably represented a cross section of the students.
Livingston also supported the recent enactment that distributed funds from the county to residents in town used in whatever manner the council of that school decided. This also alleviated some problems in deciding how the fee should be spent, Livingston said.
LIVINGSTON said the ideal situation in student government would be one in which all students could be a part of the Senate. He suggested a method that would give each school a certain number of votes, and then determine how the school's votes would be cast in the Senate. He questioned the feasibility of such a method because he
Diane Downing, Overland Park sophomore and Nunemaker senator, said that she really enjoyed being a senator and that it was a very educational experience. She chose not to seek reelection, however, because she is planning to get married and
didn't think that many more students would become involved.
Livingston said that the Senate was more or less a group that liked to be politically involved and if a change was needed, they would attend. There wouldn't really be much of a difference.
DOWNING SAID that the Senate was fairly representative of the students and also important because the Senate's allocation of the activity fee provided the means for students to obtain funds they wouldn't ordinarily receive.
Jan Svoboda, Chapman junior and Pearson senator, said the Senate was too involved in petty politics and personal games to be effective.
SHE SAID that legislation was often passed as a result of the personalities of the persons who presented the legislation rather than the issues themselves.
A lot of time was wasted, Svoboda said, because much of the discussion was unnecessary and often caused by news reports that weren't related to any Senate issues.
Downing said a workshop that would explain political procedure would be very beneficial to new senators. She said that in the beginning of the Senate term last year she didn't think that many new senators knew what was going on.
Downing said she thought the Senate had done an effective job, and if she had time, she would be interested in working with Senate committees.
wanted to devote more time to other things.
"IWANTED TO get into the Senate as a learning experience, and this was accomplished," Supti said. "I didn't get into the Senate as much as others did, so I thought that I would make room for someone else to serve."
David Saptic, Overland Park junior and Engineering School senator, also decided not to seek rejection because he wanted to direct his time in other areas, he said.
Suptic said he thought the Senate was worthwhile, although a small group of people who wanted to take the time generally did all of the work. Suptic said a meek person would have difficulties trying to deal with this.
See SENATORS, Page 8
Pearson Says Primaries Cost Too Much
By MARTI STEWART
Kansan Staff Writer
He said the results indicated to him that Sen. George McGovern, D-S-D, D., had enhanced his position as a respectable, Democratic candidate in the race for the Democratic nomination.
Sen. James B. Pearson said Friday that the amount of money spent on presidential primaries in the United States was becoming "almost immoral."
Rep. Paul McCloskey, R-Calf, and Rep. John Ashbrook, R-Ohio, do not present serious threats to President Nixon, according to Pearson. He said both men were in office for a short time, an influence Nixon's political policies and that neither expected to gain strong support.
Pearson said the New Hampshire primary on March 7 was only "round one in a war of nerves" and only the beginning of psychological warfare.
"PETE McCLOSKEY is doing what he really thinks he needs to do," Pearson said. "He doesn't need a joke, not necessarily because of his political convictions. If he can only get 10
"I hope to God someday we can find a better way to elect our presidential candidates than by putting them through this nationwide obstacle course. The candidates will oppose the voters, and end up being what of an absurd, comic steele chancellor"
per cent of the vote in New Hampshire, then that doesn't say much about the depth of a town's economy.
Pearson said he did not know who his most likely opponent would be in the coming senatorial election, but he thought that Mr. Obama made that it would be Gov. Robert Docking.
"GOVENOR DOCKING would be quite all right with me," he said. "We stand for justice."
Pearson said he did not think the President's visit to China would have any short term effects on trade or on setting up diplomatic relations with the Chinese.
"There are two issues that separate our governments—Taiwan and Vietnam. Neither will be resolved in the immediate future," he said.
"The people of this country never see
achievements unless they have something in their hands. Did we make money out of it? Or was there some physical achievement?
"A new feeling and attitude were really the great things achieved—something quite substantial. I think I've been as President on this trip as I've ever been."
PEARSON SAID the changes resulting from this trip would not be with Red China, but in U. S. relations with Japan and the U. S. S. R.
When Earl L. Butz was first nominated for Secretary of Agriculture, Pearson said he had "never been able to prove that."
"The mail in my office was running strongly against him. I felt an enormous tide of opinion against him," Pearson said. "I felt at that time that there was a need for purpose and unity and direction in the farm industry.
See PEARSON, Page 7
"Butz had said that nothing could be done about the great migration from the country to cities. That's where we parted company."
I'll just put the text on the image as it appears.
The person is holding their hands together over their mouth, obscuring their face. Behind them is a wall filled with framed portraits of various men in suits and ties.
Kansan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG
Sen. Pearson Reflects on Issues "Busing is an aband waste of money"
2
Monday, March 13. 1972
University Daily Kansan
21
News Briefs
People:
ALABAMA GOV, GEORGE WALLACE said Sunday he would come out on top in this Tuesday's Florida primary, although Sen. Hubert Humphrey charged a Wallace victory would have little effect on the race for the Democratic presidential nomination because the Alabama governor was not "a card carrying Democrat."
MARSHAL LON NOL dismissed PREMIER SHIRK MATAK and the entire cabinet in Phonin Penh Sunday and indicated he might confirm his rule as all-powerful chief of state by proclaiming himself president. The semiparalyzed marshal switched from premier to chief of state two days ago. He told newsmen he exclaimed that job and shift its responsibilities to the new office of president.
Places:
SAIGON—U.S. military sources said Sunday several North Viteranese tanks were destroyed by American planes in raids in southern Laos during the past week. A spokesman said, judging from aerial photographs, the tanks were believed to be Soviet-made T-45s, the largest and most powerful tanks encountered by the allies in the war.
Things;
Another major RAILROAD LAB CRISIS looms this month and Secretary of Labor J. DABL Hodgson said pressure was mounting in Congress and the nation to limit strikes that grow out of such disputes. There have been four nationwide rail strikes in recent weeks, including a strike by specialty congress. The latest dispute involves rail workers of the AFL-CIO Sheet Metal Workers International Association.
Chalmers Favors Equity for Women
Cancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said he favored achieving equity for women in graduate studies and faculty status in a speech given last week at the University of Chicago on Higher Education in Chicago.
"In faculty ranks, proportionately fewer women are employed as full professors." Chalmer's said.
Chalmers said he favored increasing the admission of women into postbaccalaureate colleges, while he appointed of women to faculty positions and increasing the number of women in administrative positions.
CHALMERS CALLED for
new steps to develop
compassionate students
programs for women students,
possibly in traditionally maired
students.
Chalmers cited various reasons for the present status of women in the curriculum materials, the lack of adequate regulations, and the "deliberate" male bias in the enrollment or employment women in an overly traditional classroom.
Chalmers said women should be encouraged to complete degree programs that were intertwined by marriage.
The appointment of women to faculty positions had been slow because of several reasons.
Chalmers said, the most important being that a predominantly male faculty, consciously or unconsciously, was biased against the employment of female colleagues.
"Unless or until a department, school or college can provide reasonable balance in its employment of women, continued preference should be given to appointment of gifted women."
IN THE PAST MONTH Chalmers instituted an annual scholarship at University of Kansas. He directed the board to fill the assistantship to the Chancellor which will deal with women's health.
Chalmers called for all institutions to develop boards of Affirmative Action, as stated in the Affirmative Action Act. Affirmative Action programs. He said that all areas of faculty employment must be investigated to see where employment and salary existed.
Chairmen said the greatest desecrancy that existed in public education was in the small number of women chairing departments or serving as deans. It has led to hundreds of colleges and universities.
Black Convention Votes; Separate Politics Wanted
GARY, Ind. (AP)—A National Army officer mired deep in parliamentary wrangles, voted Sunday to set up a permanent black political force in Iowa.
The convention also named the chairmen of state and other delegations as a steering committee to make the event succeed.
"If we do nothing else today we will have made a revolutionary step toward a black political movement called the African world," said the Rev. Jesse Jackson, head of Chicago's People United to Save Humanity
Rep. Charles Diggs, D-Mich., said he would go as far as to call the new movement a third party. Both he and Jackson are running in black political organizations in Mississippi, Alabama, South Carolina and other states as examples of what the new movement is calling for.
AN OUTLINE for the new organization was drawn up by the New Jersey delegation before it arrived, and was endorsed.
As approved by Sunday's plenary session, it would be made up of about 427 people, 10 per cent of the delegates registered for the weekend's convention, and would be conducted in a committee of about 50 people.
"The national assembly would function like a congressional body," said the resolution that endorsed candidate Aimee endorse candidates, support candidates, run national voter education and registration drives, lobby for bake interests, assess black progress, make changes to the convention and to the black community generally."
State delegation chairmen who met with the platform committee until mid past midnight said their groups were happy with the basics of the new "national black agenda," which called for "basic action to all the existing American economic and cultural systems."
It was the second consecutive early morning session for the doctors to discuss and issue the agenda late Saturday after hearing two days of testimony.
"IT'S TIME to liberate ourselves and control politics in our community," Jackson said.
"Without the action of a black political party we are doomed to remain in an unrepresented Democratic Party and the rumble seat of the Republican party."
The platform committee,
which had called for a new
"black political movement," gail-
gained again after debating
until dawn.
THE RESOLUTION added that the assembly "would also be a chief brokerage operation when it is able to power political institutions.
The national black agenda topped short of forming a newarty, but contained a long list ofasic recommendations.
"The plight of black people is a result of the workings of the American system," the agenda said.
Delegates were scheduled to vote on the document later Sunday.
Specific recommendation included:
North Korean Campaign Plays on South's Fears
BY WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent
The interesting things about it are these:
A spinoff from *President Nixon*'s China visit is visible in a peace offensive being waged by North Korea. The Communist North Korea has joined it at once in a search for "peaceful reunification."
This hardly means that peace will break out suddenly after 22 years of bitter North-South rivalry already North Kore has its motives.
A state of war still exists between the two Koreas and between the North and the U.S. in the Korean War. Korea. There was an armistice in
Third, rationalization about what went on between Nixon and Chou, the president of China, convinced themselves that the United States eventually must suspend all relations from South Korea. The party's official newspaper, *Nodong Daily*, not only gestures to South Korea last week that its recent move was in danger of being tossed aside and sacrificed because the Americans could no longer afford a diplomatic settlement.
First, the campaign indicates that North Korea can capitalize on doubles and feats that may have been left in South Korea by the Nixon Xion Kou.
Second, the propaganda makes it evident that in the Moscow-bearing feud, North Korea now has a new official's editorial says the Nixon-Chou-meeting was "a great victory for the Chinese people," and it is "a good thing to strive to normalize ties with Russia so that could infuriate the Russians.
Costs of Pollution Curbs To Hurt Small Factories
Walter Hamilton, a deputy assistant secretary of Commerce and chairman of an industry committee that reports to the newsman that industrial executives found the report's projections "less bad than they were."
HAMILTON CONCEEDED THE National Industrial Pollution Control Council which, in turn, administered entirely of representatives of
But the study, the first comprehensive government attempt to assess the economic impact of pollution, said these impacts would not wipe out any general industrial categories. Nor did the report attempt to define the financial burden derived from curbing pollution.
The report was issued jointly by the Environmental Protection Department and the Commerce Department on Environmental Quality, and the Commerce Department. Its underlying studies were done, and by 11 private consulting firms.
IF THE GOVERNMENT took no action to alleviate the impacts, the report speculated, both states were 972 and 1889 might depress GDP. Great National Product some $6 billion a year below the level it otherwise would reach, retail annual economic growth slightly, increase unemployment slightly, increase taxes by some $100 million a year.
The joint federal study indicates that the large corporations are the ones in the best position to survive the downturns inherent in the markets lost by the earlier companies that go under.
1953, but there has been no peace
said. By spending some $7 billion on compensating the police, by appropriating policies the government could bring to address the growth rate, and employment rates.
Prices, in that case, would rise at first and then fall, ending up about where they would have been anywhere in 1980, the report
But such tactics would cause a
austere increase in demand for
about $2 billion per one percent
each year and reduce exports by
almost 2 billion a year.
*Source:*
"The bigs are worried about this too," said Hamilton, "because it exposes them to the attack for dominating the market."
large corporations.
In the Nixon-Chou communique, Nixon pledged the United States to maintain close ties with and support of the South Korean regime while backing its efforts to seek relaxation of tension.
Nationwide, the study said, antitropical costs would have a negative effect on employment, push prices and imports up, and employment and the Gross Domestic Product.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The costs of curbing pollution will put hundreds of small factories out of work, and lead to unemployment and local recessions to the communities that depend on them, a joint effort by the EPA.
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—A BLACK controlled committee to calculate "an appropriate reparations payment based on the cash, and for exploring the ways in which the black community prefers to have this payment processed."
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—An urban based homeestead weep "the billions of dollars worth they have spent on land now owned by the federal government" from bromb
—Black owned systems of communication for black communities.
- Black unions formed as
a part of the struggle for
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- A guaranteed minimum
income of $6,500 for a family of
—Free public education national health insurance and day care centers.
Self-determination for the District of Columbia, whose mayor, city council and judges are elected by the federal government.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 13, 1972
2
Photo by HARVEY HASLEE
LOVE
'Love' in San Francisco Takes Best of Show
Harvey Husler, Lawrence winner, wins two top honors
Photo Winners Selected
Entries in the Fifth Annual Kansas University Photography Contest were judged Sunday at Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
The judges were James Enyear, assistant director of Spooner Art Museum; Brian Lanker, photographer for the Capitol Journal and Herb Williams, a local studio photographer.
In the Picture Story category, first place went to Steven Craig, Garden City junior. Second place went to John Larkin, Prairie Village junior, and third place Schubert, Ramona sophomore.
In the Abstract category, Kafka won first place. Second and third places were won by
Thomas Hammel, Wichita sophomore and William Judy, fifth year architecture student. Students receiving honorable awards will be Lawrence and Lawrence senior; William Thomas, Eudora senior; Bruce Kruz, Florisant, Mo., junior; Richard Chiar, Peterson, Willmette.
in the Sports category Judy took first place. Second place was won by Ray Smith, Lecompte Thompson, won third place, freshman, won third place. Delano and Burke, Kunze City, Mo., graduate student.
In the Human Interest Feature category, first place was won by Hasler, second place was won by Larry Cavageh, Dessen senior. Third place was won by Darras Delamiae, Pittsburg sophomore. Fourth place is honorable mention with Paul Greenbaum. Lawrence graduate
student
In the Experiment category first place was won by Maleone Turner, Pittsburgh Junior. Second place was won by Tulsa, Lula, Oka, sophomore. Third place was won by Kafka. Sang Obama received honorable mention.
In the Scenic Pictorial category first place went to Hasler, and second place to Charles Behm, and third place to Rick Kester. Manhattan senior. Receiving an honorable mention were Robert Burtch, Bronson senator, Kafka, Haslier, Colin Stewart, Wichita senior.
By RON WOMBLE Kansan Staff Writer
The property tax, basis for funding education in Kansas and most other states, may change if the pressure of the pressure for change came from a recent court case in California, Serrand versus Ivy
The California Supreme Court overturned that state's method of financing education with revenues generated from a property tax because the plan violated the equal protection clause.
School Finance Inequities Studied
The California court said, "We have determined that this punishment discriminates against the poor because it makes the quality of a child's education a function of the work of his parents and neighbors."
MOST STATES, including Kansas, use methods of financing public education similar to the institutional California method.
The inequities the court found in the tax existed because the tax is levied on the value of the property in the school district to the county government and the tax. This means that two districts with equal populations could tax property at the same rate, but the district with the most valuable property would be the most revenue for its schools.
The inequities in the Kansas system may be greater than the other states, as Senate Education Committee Chairman, Joe C. Harder, R-Indiana.
Harder said Tuesday that the property tax paid for 56 per cent of the operating expenses of the company rose to 89 per cent for Kenya.
HARDER ARGUED that there was "nothing wrong with the property tax if the inequities districts could be solved."
Harder said. He listed three key factors that generate sufficient revenues to be considered for financing the taxation of sales tax, income tax and corporate taxes.
Harder's committee has been working on a way to finance education with a combination tax and employer contributions of the major taxes. Harder said one possibility was to shift 'some of the burden to an income tax on employers'.
"You can not operate schools without taking into consideration
the property tax," Harder said
In devising a new education finance plan, the Education Committee will use the Willard bank as its base, according to Harder.
THAT BILL required that a minimum local effort* toward filling the district be made by each school district. The local effort would be made primarily through a tax on the birth of the district (a property tax).
If a district's local effort could not finance the school district's budget, the deficiency would be
made up by the state. If the district's local effort expends funds, those funds would be returned to the state for poorer districts or in poorer districts which were unable to finance their budgets.
Some critics have charged that such plans for equalization of mediocrity in education and mediocrice education by pulling down the per pupil expenditures
ROTH HARDER and Rep. Raymond C. Vaughn, B-Rurlington C. Vaughn, B-Rurlington harder said there was 'some correlation between the quality of education and cost per pupil that was not "necessarily" lowering the yearly expenditure per pupil would not necessarily increase
The committee members feel a "mind act" soon to devise a new curriculum for their school education. Vaughn said three cases challenging the present curriculum were discussed.
in Kansas courts now
Any tax method based on centralized collection and distribution by the state will be used. The opposition from some legislators.
carried to the federal level through the court system.
The controversy has been
Early this year President Nixon and there was "one fund" that could afford the state there can be no compromise. Local school boards must have
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The advantages of year-round schools outweigh the disadvantages, Lawrence School Superintendent Carl Knox said last week. But he doubted that schools could start a year-round program soon.
American educators have been advocating year-round public schooling for the Kansas House of Representatives approved a plan, last week which would create an all-private school system. Knox said that one of the major
Knox said that one of the majo, advantages of a year-round system was the increased opportunity for students to get a
broader education.
"The extra time could be used by the student to take subjects that interest him other than the required courses." Knox said.
**UNDER A year-round school program students would still attend school the required 180 days. However, not all students may attend the traditional September to June. The optional vacation or extra study quarter would fall at various times of the year. Knox offers an advantage for students wanting vacation time employment.
Britain and China Agree To Ambassador Exchange
LONDON (AP) - Britain and China have agreed to exchange ambassadors, 22 years after London first recognized the continent. British and Chinese sources disclosed Sunday.
The agreement came in the past few days after Britain acknowledged Taiwan to be part of China and the Communist government the lawful ruler of the whole country, the informants said.
Campus Briefs
Computer Association
There will be an organization meeting for the women's in coercilevolleyball team at 4:30 p.m. today in 124 Robinson.
Student body presidential candidates will present their views and more questions at a forum sponsored by SUA at 7 A.M. tonight in the University Building on Wednesday, February 19.
Paul Blair, four-time national Spearfishing Champion, will be speaking to members of the Scuba Diving Club at 7 p.m. Tuesday in
Women's Volleyball
The Association for Computing Machines will sponsor a lecture, "Developmental Systems and Languages," at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Pine Room of the Kansas University. The lecture will be given by Gabor T. Herman, associate professor of computer science.
French Club to Meet
Scuba Diving Club
The French Club will sponsor a program of French songs at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union,
Candidates' Forum
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KUMC Cancer Program Gets $25,000 Boost from Masons
Informal Panel Discussion by 3 Faculty Members
Tues., March 14 7:30 p.m.
The Kansas Mason,
Foundation has pledged $25,000
for cancer cure, teaching and
education.
The Kansas Medical
Medium, according to Henry A. Bubb,
founder of trustees.
1624 Alabama
The board of trustees has approved a program to support a new focus on oncology in the Medical Center's expanding cancer research center (head of medical affairs vice-chairman for medical affairs at the Medical Center, confirmed that the money would be used to hire an additional staff member).
Dr. Bath. Hoogstraten,
professor of medicine, was named director of the cancer program. The program involves department of medicine, pediatric pathology and radiation therapy.
Bubb said the Masons hoped to see the faculty appointment perpetuated over the years. An annual funding campaign is
Campus Bulletin
Journal Club: 11:30 a.m. Alove B.
Caterer: Education Administration: 11:30 a.m.
Alove C. Caterer: Museum: noun, English
Christianity: 12:30 a.m. Alove A.
Caterer: Christians: 12:30 a.m. Alove A.
Caterer Table: 12:30 p.m. Meadowland
Caterer Table: 2 p.m. Memorial Room
underway throughout the 82,000-member Kansas Masonic Foundation. The funds will be used to improve education and expansion of this program.
Housemothers: 2 p.m., Centennial Room.
Henry Werner Lecture: 3:30 p.m., 124
Malott.
Sample Lecture: 9:30 p.m. Forum Room, Parkers
Static and Soviet Area Lecture: 3:30 p.m. 100
Microbiology Dinner: 6:30 p.m. Curry
Room.
Slavic and Soviet Area Lecture: 3:30 p.m.
107 Fraser.
Rep. William Roy, D-Kan., has asked all members of the Kansas Medical Center to attend in the effort to have the Medical Center named one of the 15 major cancer centers in the nation. Roy played a leading role in the adoption of the new center.
Currently, the Medical Center has a grant from the National Institute of Health to study the feasibility and needs for the Medical Center to be named a clinical cancer research center.
O'Donnell, Jacqueline *O'Donnell Academy Collegium* 4 P. m.
332 Malott.
Slavic Language and Literature Dinner; 6
Room.
Microbiology Dinner: 6:30 p.m., Curry
R06M
Undergraduates in College Assembly Meeting: 7.30 p.m. Forum Room.
Museum Without Walls Series: 7.30 p.m.
P. C. COLLINS HOUGH
Sociology Dinner: 6 p.m., Watkins Room.
Discussion Club Dinner: 6 p.m., English Room.
Student Teachers: 3:30 p.m., Forum
Room, Parlors.
Students and Staff Area Lectures: 3:30 p.m.
Room.
Friendship Dinner: 6:15 p.m., Kansas
Room.
Slavic Language and Literature Dinner; 6:
Slavic International Room.
Sebastian Room, W. Watkins Room.
Rieke said the appointments of
Shivie Club: 7:30 p.m. Pine Room.
Faculty Reeval! 8 p.m. Swarathout Reeval!
SUNY INSTITUTE - 1 p.m. LOAURIE ROOM
SIA FESTIVAL - Student-Body Presidential
Candidates: 7:30 p.m. left, Right Room,
8:30 p.m. left, Left Room.
Slavic Language and Literature: 7:30 p.m.
International Room: 7:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Room: 7:30 p.m.
Dinner Room:
Undergraduates in College Assembly Meeting: 7:30 p.m. Room Forum. Museum Without Walla Series: 7:30 p.m. Audiobook Auditforum.
several more cancer specialists to the Medical Center faculty, preliminary plans for a new cancer treatment area and laboratories for clinical research and tests, were some of the steps that are needed in the medical Center becoming a regional cancer treatment center.
Over 1,000 new patients with cancer are registered at the Medical Center. In 1971 patient statistics showed a daily average of 72 cancer patients, 15 per cent of the patient list. One hundred additional patients were out-patient clinics each month. The patients are referred to the Medical Center from every area and from surrounding states.
MERCURY MUSEUM
On Capricorn Records
Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Discount Card Number
at KIEF'S
Discount Diamond Needles
BEING JEWISH MEANS . . .
ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND
More than bagels and lox, Sunday School, Hillel or comfortable fraternal cliques. It means CONSCIENCE, PRIDE , SACRIFICE and a VISION.
2 Record Set $6.88
EAT A PEACH
Students for Israel at K.U.
"BEYOND THE MIRAGE"
Tonight at 7:30 in Dyche Auditorium
"Under our present system, each summer Lawrence employers are swamped with people who want to everybody who wants a job can get one. With the year-round program, only about one-fourth of the student body would be employed by job at the same time." Koonx said.
will present a free film entitled
Greater utilization of the taxpayers' investment in the facilities would be advantage that appeals the most favorable facilities would be in constant use.
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4
Monday, March 13, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
TOMMY HENDRICKS
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
Play It Again
As I intend to set down a few thoughts on campus elections, I think it would be appropriate to first outgoing administration farewell.
Although I have often been at odds with David Miller over Senate issues, I must sincerely commend him for his dedication to a difficult and often thankless job. He's now doubt done as good a job as anyone. He is the body that held the post in the past, and probably a better job than many.
He did it because he wanted to do it, and he has enjoyed the job. And I have enjoyed watching and com- ments from his administration. I wish him well.
On Wednesday and Thursday of this week it all starts again, when a few of the 19.118 students at KU will be on campus, and a show of shows, campus elections.
You will soon be hearing all the reasons why you should or should not vote. The supporters of campus politics will be telling you that if you are a concerned student, you should vote. Those that have become disillusioned with politics will tell you that voting is a waste of time, that there is no choice among the candidates, that the Student Senate is a farce.
Well, both viewpoints have some validity.
Some of the practices of the Senate are laughable, but with the Senate's
power to divvy up the activity fee, it becomes a $400,000 joke, at times not too funny. So if you're not laughing, you'd better vote.
If you do though, you'll be in a minority. Last year 26 per cent (4,704 students) of the student body voted in the spring elections. The winning presidential candidate garnered 22 per cent of the votes cast. So as you can see, the don't give a damns, outnumber the give a damms when it comes to KU student politics.
The ironic thing, of course, is that those that don't vote are often the loudest complainers when the Senate starts doing its thing.
so what's the answer? As far as I can see, there is none. Politics on the campus are no different from politics anywhere else. They are marked by truth and deceit, good decisions and bad decisions, dedication and irresponsibility. That's the story of democracy. Those that get involved will have some impact. Those that don't care will stand by the side and snicker at the whole thing until something happens that they don't like and then they'll start bitching. Some good will come out of it all—hopefully more good than bad.
It's no different this year than it
ever has been, or ever will be.
—Mike Moffet Associate Editor
Readers Respond
Concert
To the Editor:
Mann
I was very disturbed by the review in Thursday's Kansan of Mann concerts, double Mann. Mann is the modernist style he did if he didn't dick it and feel he could play with it. Anybody who laughed didn't do his research. Mann has appeared at most major pop and rock festivals held in the city.
no others, as was implicated by the reviewer. Mann was misquoted; Mann's use of "dus" in the *Otis* version of the Otis Riding version of the Mick Jagger tune." A minor point, but he noted the slopper's stylish-western-style music is soft and lactic, not stereotyped hot or cool. It "coo!" it. The reviewer obviously does not appreciate the flute as a wide-ranged, improvisational instrument, very hot in the hands of Mann.
I disagree with the cut at Herb Alpert, who is excellent in his sing, which Mann did not. As to having "borrowed heavily" from robe the numbers listed on the score sheet, the category performed. There were
wrote himself. The reviewer ignored him, the bass man, and he left with an unfinished totally professional and black. Reduke and Mann, discussed in his book, were excellent.
The guitar player did take time to warm up, but he later almost stole the show with his blazing. He was a bit of an extra several sets, one of which he
I sat in the balcony and smelled strange fragrances from the room, a reviewer clumsily created. The obscene remarks were not catalls but a perfume called *Purple*.
This type of sloppy, inaccurate, based reviewing is a discredit to the Kansan. It would have been better to have had a straight line to his head because many people have said to be the best they ever heard at KU.
Robert T. Burtch Bronson senior
James J. Kilpatrick
In Hornblower's Shadow
WASHINGTON - Four years ago, in the late winter and early spring of 1968, the "Arnibeater affair" was much in the news. I wrote three columns and a magazine piece on the case; and looking back at the copy today, I am no more ashamed than I am now. I'm confident I can copy. A working reporter never knows enough, even has never time; his stuff almost always falls short of his aspirations.
Now Neil Sheehan of The New York Times has published a book, "The Arnibert Affair" (Random House 1986) that supported Lieutenant Commander Marcus Aurelius Arnibet in 1988 are compelled to a reexamination of the position as part, but only in part, I retract.
This was a famous case. Sheehan's brilliant book probably will make the best-seller lists. Already the author has been
Poor Arnh贝尔! Poor, doomed Arnh贝尔! He was the young naval officer, a graduate of annapolis, who took over his first mission in World War Harbor just before Christmas of 1965. He was made skipped of an aging destroyer-picket, the Vance, assigned to patrol off the coast in a virtually unprecedented action. Arnh贝尔 was summarily removed from his command. In disgrace, he was exiled to a place on the island of Francisco. In time, he was ridden out of the Navy altogether.
interviewed on the CBS morning show, Arnie haser has sued him for $5 million in libel. And the book is indeed brilliant. It is brilliant in art and architecture. Daphilh mackeler in the moonlight. It both shines and stinks.
Two years after his abrupt dismissal from command, when the story broke into the national
news, many a Washington correspondent (including Sheehan, at the time) was trapped in the deadline net that is said to have been The Armherite's own account; the Navy would not talk; and there never was time to run down the adverse witnesses a reporter had received from Sheehan's useful (eat subsequently to take three months off and to do all the careful digging the case described in his report, has destroyed all that remained of Marc Armherie.
The story, at the time, was that Arnheiter had taken command of a warship that had been loafing its indulgent way through a Vietnam assignment. A spi-polish Dutchman, over-eager, had been required to necessarily drastic measures to bring the ship to a fighting pitch; his efforts had been undermined by junior officers who ridiculed
his determination and conspired maliciously against him.
Sheehan explodes this account—over-explodes it. As Sheehan tells it, Arnheiner emerges as a liar (he knowingly ordered that false position reports he made) as a wizard (he covered his eyes with a curtain) over his overheated imagination conceived that the ship was under fire); an egomaniac (he dictated a letter recommending that he be decorated, and ordered his help to maintain his account, Arnheiser was self-considerate, querulous, domineering, and absurd. He was a garrulous bole, a tyrant, a vainglorious windbag. He knew nothing of machinery; he was a mechanical madder and endangered his own crew to serve his own vanity. He did nothing right or well.
indictment. His evidence is especially telling on the matter of Anrheiber's firing upon imagined targets on shore. Sheehan has produced new grievances that did not figure in the 1968 hearings; the evidence includes toilet seat, for example; and Anrheiber infuriated the crew by taking incessant showers when water was under ration.
Sheehan's investigation tends to support much of this
Yet it is hard to square this grotesque painting of a real-life Captain Queeq with Armheret's captain, the first prior to his command of the Vance. Sheshan skates too easily around the Navy's gross violation of Armheret's rights at the time he was commissioned as it is, wholly masses the pathos—the poignant human tragedy—of Armheret's fevered ambition: He wanted to be a captain, and it seems he didn't know how.
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
A. E. F. B. R. S.
Garry Wills
Hubert Stumps In Florida
ORLANDO, FLA. —Everybody in Humphrey's Florida primary staff is trying to deny the rumors of inner division and personality conflicts. But he said it was "the real Robert Meyer Moter Inn," is the voice of Joe Breecher, Orange County coordinator, raised in loud altercation with advance man D Ward: "As far as I'm concerned, you are screwed up with three times more than anyone else."
Humphrey is late, as usual. Before the day is over, he will leave people waiting for over two hours at a
shopping center. But at his first stop he is only 40 minutes late, and he bubbles on saying, "My gracious! I'm 10 minutes early by my schedule!" Means, that's the trouble. His schedule, and the announced local one, are at odds. He'll try to straighten that out with his central Florida campaign leaders this afternoon—at a meeting which stretches and matches the schedule of the candidates from the shopping center, can't get anyone to tell him anything; "But he hasn't left yet—I can still hear them talking in the background."
His morning address is billed as a major pronouncement on women's rights (day care, equal pay, maternity leave, political posts). It is its own act of insurrection: it has inject little jokes along the way for all of which Muriel plays straight man: "Muriel claims she is underpaid, but I'd debate that with her."
The gathering is one of Southern liberal ladies in hats, who see no irony in passing out Muriel's pop-up-Hubert recipe for beef soup:“He likes to tell everyone it gives him vim, vigor, and vitality.” Muriel, face tan under the white hair, is wearing a parts suit as he has been taken away when but when her husband is late, she has to fill up time with an address in praise of him.
Out at the shopping center, the newspaper announcement has brought a few middle-aged women, some from New York and others from contrast with the young crowd Lindsay attracted at the same site. A Pennsylvania lady supports him against all grumbles—one old couple in love and one teenager after two hours, even they packed up the furniture and moved off. "Fine way to lose votes" the man was muttering.
Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate
GOD MADE MAN
IN HIS IMAGE
MAN TOOK ONE LOOK AT HIS IMAGE AND FELL IN LOVE.
GOD MADE MAN IN HIS IMAGE
MAN TOOK ONE LOOK AT HIS IMAGE AND FELL IN LOVE.
GOD GOT WORRIED THAT MAN WAS BECOMING TOO CONCEITED AND MADE WOMAN.
WOMAN TOOK ONE LOOK AT MAN AND SAID "THAT'S MADE IN GOD'S IMAGE?" AND INSTANTLY BECAME IDOLATROUS.
GOD GOT WORRIED THAT MAN WAS BECOMING TOO CONCEITED AND MADE WOMAN.
WOMAN TOOK ONE LOOK AT
MAN AND SAID "THAT'S
MADE IN GOD'S IMAGE?"
AND INSTANTLY BECAME
IDOLATRUS.
MAN TOOK ONE LOOK AT WOMAN
AND SAID "NOW THAT THERE
ARE TWO OF US I AM LESS THAN
MC.
SO THEY WENT THEIR SEP-
ARATE WAYS AND NEVER
SAW EACH OTHER AGAIN.
Dist. Publishers Hall Syndicate
MORAL: WE ARE SURROUNDED BY
IMPOSTERS.
A man walks up a steep slope.
1971 JOB PERMIT 12-19
Primarv Brew Thickens
By HUBERT MIZELL
BY HUBERT MEELEE
Associated Bruce Whit
MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—Eight Democratic candidates and a lone Republican stumped Florida for Thursday searching for votes in Tuesday's presidential primary, the school punks was the main issue.
Gov. George Wallace of Alabama bypassed a planned campaign visit to Key West after the state rejected racial unrest was "oat her" hot there.
"Wait 'til Wallace gets here",
blacks had chanted Wednesday night as word spread about the attacks. Visit schools. Wish们 have been closed in the nation's southernmost city since racial disturbances at Key West High School on Tuesday. West High are scheduled to reopen today.
The one Republican campainer, Rep. John Ashbrook of Ohio, spoke in Lauderdaer against busing while a group of
GOP celebrities and officials led by Gov. Ronald Reagan of California and Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona began tooot the Nixon administration's in an Appreciation Day rally.
The busing of school children,
continued to be the central issue
and Florida's governor, Reubin
Askew, loomed as a key figure
along with the White House
aspirants.
Askew is fighting a non-binding
antibusing straw vote on the March 14 slate. He got the backing Thursday to secure a迎eergreeregistrate in South Dakota, that made a stop in Tahawashee.
Wallace, at a Miami breakfast meeting with 200 persons, charged that busing was senseless.
Sen. Edmund Muskie, the democratic winner of last week's New Hampshire presidential preference primary, admitted he faced an uphill fight against Wallace in the Florida election.
primary," Muskie said in Tallahassee, "but I might be satisfied with less this one."
Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York City, accompanied by aides and newsmen, went to RG Industries in Miami, where he worked as a news columnist. "Saturday night specials" are assembled weekly.
"I am never happy with less han first place before a
"may we come in?" the mayor asked a woman who came to the firm's front gate. Lindsay sawed an empty handgun which he said was found in his garage for $25 by merely showing a driver's license and a credit card.
Griff and the Unicorn
AND THAT'S WHAT I THINK.
By Sokoloff
WHAT'S THE MATTER?
AREN'T I ENTITLED
TO MY OPINION?
WHAT'S THE MATTER?
AREN'T I ENTITLED
TO MY OPINION?
OF COURSE
YOU'RE
ENTITLED
TO YOUR
OPINION...
... NO MATTER
HOW
STUPID
IT IS
SANDLOPE
OF COURSE
YOU'RE
ENTITLED
TO YOUR
OPINION...
... NO MATTER
HOW
STUPID
IT IS
SOCIAL OFF
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Published at the University of Raxmany during the academic year 2017/2018 and in its digital version on www.universityofraxxane.edu.tr for all purposes. All materials should be kept in a secure place or in a locked cabinet and not to be taken by anyone without proper request to copy, paste or additional online access. Expressed gratitude is received for any assistance you may receive with these materials.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 13, 1972
5
Journalist Wolfe Talks on Campus
His Afternoon in Flint
By LEONARD GROTTA Kansan Staff Writer
Tom Wolef, white pants, white jacket, white wint... Except for a dark bib and the bulky shirt with a head cover and just-barely receding hair, he could have been Yul Brymer in a of a Mr. Clean commercial.
Wolfe Talks of 'New Journalism'
Speaking in a relaxed and casual conversational tone that indicated he was willing to pretend he didn't notice the tape recorder and the two cameras Tom Willehle with White Wife will make-believe "chat" with reporters and journalism students.
PETER RICHARDSON
The conversation quickly drifted to a discussion of what has happened to movement politeis of the 60%. Especially the sudden radical-persona advocacy "working within the system."
"THE WHOLE THING really dates from Abbie Hoffman's haircut," remarked Wolfe. "It turns a terribly significant act."
By this time there seemed to be a slight sense of disappointment in the room—apparently Tom Wolfe read his book of his verbal stream-of-memories that make his books such a dazzling read. Instead we were seeing Tom Wolfe, rented-personality of the University of Kansas.
In response to a question about Agnew and recent "establishment" attacks on the media, Wolfe resigned.
"It's a really beautiful day
when Walter Cronkite can feel like a martyr!
"NEWS PEOPLE think that the most prestigious thing that has ever happened to them is that a terrorist was asked why. Why Agnew attacked the television newscasters in the first place. They have never biased the news; all they have done is print a PI copy for 20 years ..."
"It's going to be about vanity . . . There's so much of it!" Wolfe went on to explain:
"What is your next book going to be about?" asked a young man apprehensively nursing the cat between himself and Wolfe.
"I GOT THE idea when I was in Italy last year. I visited the public square in Florence where the Renaissance monk named Savonarola held what were called the 'Bontries of the Vanities.' ... anyway, the whole thing of vanity became fascinating to me.
When asked about the significance of the current Women's Lib movement, Wolfe said:
"At first I didn't think that it was as civilization as it is. It could very easily lead to some changes in our society. . . . I . ah,
It was one of the very few times during the hour that Wolfe was at a loss for comment.
. . Next book to be on "vanity" .
With a relieved smile, Wolf walked out of Flint Hall into the warm afternoon sunshine and began his short treck across the campus to the Kansas Union. It was an unusually warm day for him, but that is what white fabric looked as though it were beginning to wilt.
Two University of Kansas
Downtown Athletic
elimination rounds of the 19th
annual Heart of America
Debate Tournament Saturday in
Pittsburgh.
Debaters Win 4th Place
Bill Russell, Omaha, Neb., junior, and Bill Hensley, Wichita, joined, placed fourth for KU.
The University of Southern California placed first and second in the nation for ten consecutive years. Washington University and the University of North Carolina tied for third.
Fifty-four debate teams from colleges and universities in the United States participated in the competition.
By DAVID HEALY
Kansan Reviewer
His Evening in Hoch
For the second night in a row, Hoch Auditorium was hot and sticky for Festival of Arts. Its walls were covered with crimson draperies and backed by dusty blue draperies, was bare and dimly lit downstage center. Our children should live so long to see a Festival at KU in an auditorium.
There were patrons weary after four nights of the cultural marathon, scholars pooped journalists awaiting the "word"
Tom Wolfe, who time magazine has called "America's foremost pop-journalist," was introduced
Wolfe said that the novel had been the dominating form in liturgical novels and that novelists claim exclusive rights to the metaphysical and the emotions. The second-ranked novelist is an expert in analysis and insight. The journalists are relegated to their sole job is to gather facts.
WOLFE CALLED journalists the drayhorses of the system. The
THE YOUNG WOLFE briskly brisks to the podium as we wearing a wristband that double-knit suit with vest that I was wearing. The nerdion. The stage lighting made his suit appear stark white. This set him off from the blue cur-
The evening immediately took on the aura of a journalism convention. Wole started by recognizing various "new journalists" in the audience included our own Dean Bassett.
journalist next to me kept saying "That's so true."
Wolfe said that the 'new journal' had a paraphrase journal and developed among feature writers in the 80s. It was then defined as 'a bastardized version of a journal's information of journalism and utilizes the atmosphere andizes it.'
As Wolfe began talking about Jack Kerouac, Thomas Wolfe, George Plimpton, Paul Gallica and other such writers, my at-succes was to be behind me. Rain? It sounded like rain. But how? There had not been a cloud in the sky when I came. The journalist thought it was good.
Wolfe began talking about his theory of memory sets, in which one's memory, a memoir image of a scene and an accompanying emotion. It reminded me of Prost's 'tea' and 'snow'.
I NOTICED that a good fourth
the audience downturns had to
be taken, and the audience
Quilty in two or threes, unable
to top off the week with a Friday
show.
I asked the journalist beside me what he thought of Wolfe. He said, "I'm not sure if Wolfe's speaking ability I agreed and said that he had seemed confident to pass it on pressed with his penchant for talking about writers other than
AS WE LEFT, the journalist and I noticed that a firefuel had set on their cabinet. Puddles of water flashed in the air. The west stairs had been soaked. On our way out, two men were walking down to water in Hoeh's entrance lobby
Women Voters Seek to Inform
Konvan Staff Writer
By SALLY MORGAN
**Australian State Attorney**
The **Tasmanian League** league women Voters provides one woman to vote. Women become informed about the stands taken by area candidates.
The League has a program which involves distributing nonpartisan information on candidates and issues, campaigning to encourage and vote, compiling a candidates' questionnaire, and having a candidates' meeting.
Harriet Nehring, president of the Lawrence chapter of the League of Women Voters, said Thursday the Lawrence chapter determined what its voter service program for this year would be. She said it would definitely include the standard pattern of a candidates' conference and a candidates' meeting.
The candidates have a limited
words in which to answer the
questions. Write them on
Lawrence Daily Journal World
then publish their answers as a
commentary.
HEBRING SAID
the candidate questionnaire is as complex as the three questions which 'the league feels reflect our interests and prime values' of the sport, which include the issues which really bring the candidate into
"I have no idea how effective the questionnaire is, but I feel it is not necessary, since the state does not provide a report." We say "try to steer away from the personal background of the countries to the important issues."
at the candidates' meeting, which is held after the primary election in August, voters have an opportunity to meet the candidate to discuss the important issues with them, Nehring said.
NEHIRING SAID she wanted to see the League involved in greenwaste recycling about how delegates were selected for the nominating committee.
Nehring said the League had not actively camped to get 18-year-olds to register because the league would register all persons between 18 and 21 who appeared eligible. If the county were not allowing students to register, then the league would become active, she said.
Although it very strongly supports the 26th Amendment,
"The League feels any student or teacher who faces the vote where he resides most of the time," Nehring said. "With students, that place is near."
Nering said absentee voting limited the ability to vote in Kansas because the ballot must be sworn by an officer and the person must swear he would not be in his preoccupation on election day. She said this was the first time she had seen the Secrecy of the ballot is not protected, she said, because an absentee voter's name is on the ballot. That means that it is sent to his home preset.
NEHRING SAID another reason the League had not actively campaigned for voter registration in 2012, campaign for registration "in which the young people are doing a good job of informing University of Kansas students about the community on the new voting age."
According to Nehring, the League does not take a stand on the effect of the 18-year-old vote and says that it did not say the new voters had not had any appreciable affect on the outcome of elections in which they voted.
was founded in 1820 when woman suffrage was written into the Constitution, the Lawrence Institute of Technology and the 1930s. Nebring said the League was formed because the newly franchised women needed to learn how to carry out their duties. She said she was members of the voluble public.
Membership in the League is open to all women citizens 18 and older. The group, which averages 200 members, was comprised mostly of faculty wives. She said the women were selected to recruit women from the community, especially women from minority groups, to give the group a voice.
ASSOCIATE MEMBERSHIPS are available to non-citizens and men. Nebring said. Associate members participate in deciding the positions of the League on various issues but cannot vote at all.
According to Nehring, the League never supports any political parties or candidates, only various issues. She said the organization was "active," the organization was "participation in government." The League works to achieve this goal through various programs which the members decide are important and worth studying in depth.
NEHRING SAID the most recent program, one of the more successful, was the League's effort to restore the welfare cuts
Although the national League
According to Nethring, the League worked to help the affected players regain their legislative membership in January of this year. Although a local chapter of the League cannot lobby under any law, it is required that League, Lawrence League members were able to talk to area legislators and to observe at League meetings.
Nehring said a movement was organized to call the legislature into special session to supplement the welfare budget and petition to Governor Robert Bentley, she said the plan was unrealistic.
THE LEAGUE has one registered state lobbyist who is
SAVE UP TO $400
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made by the Kansas Legislature in 1971.
"The waffle issue has taken more combined and sustained effort than anything we've ever done," Nehring said.
Tues. & Wed. Night
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at KIEF'S
Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
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authorized by the by-laws. The observers from local chapters report to her because she is a member of the twelfth meeting at the same time.
2 Record Set $6.88
ON YOUR NEW M/CYCLE AND TOUR EUROPE!
Through the League's efforts and the efforts of other groups, appropriations were made to cut the cuts effective July 1, 1972.
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MARCH 15 & 16
6
Monday. March 13. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Marquette Out of Tourney
KANSAS CITY (AP)—The National College Athletic Association dropped Marquette and Oklahoma State to regional basketball tournament Sunday following Warrior player Matt Kendrick's decision to affidavit disclaiming reports he had entered an agreement with agent for professional basket-
Marmurte's berth in the beginning Thursday at the University of Dayton, will be formed at University, an NSF program, an NSF program.
The NCAA eligibility committee fordressed Lackey who forfeited his eligibility to playplaying Saturday in an NCAA first round playoff game against
in such situations, NCAA rules dictate that a team's performance and records must be
deleted, and its place in the standings vacated.
THE SPOKESMEN said in the players' letter that they sign offward that only Lukas refused. The University has issued a Hockey will sign offward affidavit petition than appeal to the NCAA committee for resolution of eligibility.
Lackey, a senior forward, is not excused by actually signing a team offer to join the team. Rather, he is charged with entering into an agreement with a new coach and athletes in discussions and contract bargaining with the team.
The Nets signed Marquette's star center, Jim Chones, to a
It had been reported that Lackey had been chosen by the New York Nets in the American Basketball Association draft.
reported $1.5 million contract when the Warriors had four regular season games left, but the Mavericks quashed two of those contests.
"This is quite a surprise to me and quite a shock, too. I heard the news last week that I didn't but I didn't know there was anything wrong. I don't know who they are going to put down to play Kentucky. This really jazzes me."
CONTACTED IN Athens, Ohio Bobcats' Coach Jim Snyder said of the NCAA action:
Asked if he thought Ohio, beaten by Marquette in Saturday's first round game, might be better in that game. Snyder said: "If they've been in touch with our director of athletics about anything like I haven't heard it. Whether they'll win will get a bye, I don't know."
The NCAA eligibility committee said in its statement announcing the ruling:
Tom Hansen, an NCAA spokesman, said a representative of the organization would be at campus late Monday morning.
If Lackey signs an affidavit at the hearing, Hansen said, "the Markup committee will be position to appeal to the eligibility committee to restore the contract."
MARQUETTE HAS informed me that he prepared to sign the affidavit, his coach Al McGürein in charge of the committee did not elaborate.
Hansen said it was the first time to his knowledge that a team had been ruled insultible while participating in a tournament being played.
Track Team Shut Out at NCAA
KU failed to get a man into the track finals. In the 880-yard run
For the University of Kansas track team, a perennial powerhouses 1972 indoor soccer club on an unrelated sour note Saturday. The squad failed to score a point in the eight NCAA Indoor meet in Detroit. The Jayhawks had won two twice in the last three years.
Southern California, led by strong showings in the long jump and shot put by Henry Hines and Doug Lane, won the meet with a total of 18 points. Michigan State won, 15. Behind each, behind with 18 points.
preliminates. Rick Jacques ran
deliminates. Rick Jacques ran
Delvin Williams ran the 69-ya-
dash preliminary in 6.3 and 6.2.
Only Williams made it to the
In the field events, the results were equally disheartening. Mike Kessler jumped title a week ago, maneuured only 23 feet 10. Shot put Rutger Guvea and pole vaulter Bill Gould received conference champions, recorded marks of 56 feet 10 and 15 feet 6. Rogers Jones triple jumped 47
COACH BOB TIMMONS attributed the Jayhawks' poor performance to inexperience and
the fact that the team seemed to be down after losing the conference meet to Nebraska last week in Kansas City, Mo.
"You have to realize that four of the seven men we took, Guevara, Jones, Williams and Edwards, had never been in a national meet before. Timmons and that's a lot of pressure."
McPherson Wins 4-A Prep Tourney
For the fourth time in the four-year existence of the Class A+ state high school basketball tournament, a different team was tied for first place Saturday in Alen Field House. No school has won more than once.
"But we knew we didn't have that kind of team this year. We didn't honestly feel that we could win the NCAA meet.
"So we pointed our season to the conference title and we were told that we would have a couple of events we could have taken it. But we had it, and it was disap
"I but I think our guys weren't as high as they needed to be for the nationalists. We had keye for the season for the conference meet
McPherson claimed the title by defeating Garden City, 68-51.
McPhrerson surprised the favored Buffaloes by forging a 18-point first half lead.
he conference sort of took care of itself, and we concentrated on the nationals.
"But you really can't afford to be down in a national meet. Then hev 'll annihilate you."
Timmons said, however, that he was optimistic about the upcoming outdoor season.
In the third place game,
Topkea Highland Park made up a
five-point defection during the
defeat of Topkea West. 40-44
Another factor was Mc Pherson's ability to control the scoring of Siew Nelson, high scorer of the tournament with 72 points. Nelson scored only 11 points in Bullpins' tough zone defense.
"We'll be a lot stronger outdoors," he said. "We don't have a national team, but we'll be better."
Topeka West fans and players
don't have something to cheer
on when they play. They
received the Class 4 A-
Sportsmanship Award on the basis
Volleyball Team Finishes Last
"They did a lot of learning during the day, but we could have used the power of the experienced guys," Stinson said.
The University of Kansas
offered a summer decision to the Internationals, an amateur club, Sunday afternoon at Swope Park in Kansas City.
Timmons said the indoor season could only be described as disappointing.
"It was," player-coach Dave Stinson said, "Kind of a disaster."
Darlan, who holds every scoring record at KU, was lost early in the game. He injured a knee while trying to scoop.
"We tied with Iowa State, but we were murdered them when we played against our team." KU closed the meet with 15 and 15-3 victories over the
The Heart of America tour-
nament will be March 25 at
Shawnee Mission. South high
school hosts the contest on
three levels of competition.
KU finished the meet with a 3-9 record, the same mark Iowa State posted. That created a tie in the seven-tteam open division
In its second tournament of the season, the University of Kansas volleyball team was dealt a severe seabreak Saturday. KU won the game over seven teams in the Graceland College Open in Lamonii. Iowa
KU earned a 2-1 lead early in the game, but Gunn and Guy Clausen and McClain. The internationals rolled back in the second half for two more goals of the game.
KC Team Drops KU Soccer, 3-2
The soccer team will travel to Manhattan for a game with the Nets, who return to Lawrence to host Feldi. a Kansas City amateur team.
Four of the team's top six players, including Jake Sparrow, Season was the only player who had had tournament experience. With six men, Simon had just one goal each.
of crowd conduct, team sportsmanship and the spirit of the cheerleaders
"We'll have problems in the long relays and we lack depth here," he said. "We're been great and that we have a good chance at the big Eigh
"WE HAVE never been concerned with any but two meetings," he said, "and those are the Big Sight and the NCAA. In the past,
This state tournament was unusual for a number of reasons. Salina, Central, Coffeville or Ward would be the team to leave Lawrence with the first place and get past the first round of play.
All of the teams at this year's tournament played rugged defense, and all of the players a tremendous amount of hustle.
Instead, a little known center in Garden City. Stew Wilson. New York. An acutal shooting. Nelson tied the most points in a game by scoring 4 against Topek West. He also tied the record for most field goals in a season.
Scoring records seemed sure to fall at this tournament, because of such high scoring threats as Tony Pauzaskie of Coffeeville and Nino Samuel of Salina. One one made his presence felt.
| | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Keller | 0 | 1 | Hill | 0 | 1 |
| Pille | 1 | 0 | Brown | 0 | 1 |
| Phillips | 0 | 0 | Brown | 0 | 1 |
| Bayer | 0 | 0 | Francher | 6 | 18 |
| Bayer | 0 | 0 | Francher | 6 | 18 |
| Sharer | 1 | 1 | Kwin | 0 | 1 |
| Sharer | 1 | 1 | Kwin | 0 | 1 |
| Wells | 0 | 0 | Ki | 0 | 1 |
| Wells | 0 | 0 | Ki | 0 | 1 |
| Total | 20 | 147 | Total | 19 | 186 |
Total: 20 147 Total: 19 186
Garden City 9 12 10 16 44
McPherson 15 22 16 14 47
Peterson 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Boble 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Hobe 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Durbin 4 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Fitch 4 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Flitch 3 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Burket 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Burket 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Silliman 11 44 144 Totals
opeka West 8 10 19 7-64
lightbound Park 11 13 12 8-
Team foops-to-Teama West 13, Highland
crk 25 Foops-to-Runner Highland
Tennessee West 8 10 19 7-46
Michigan West 8 10 19 7-46
15 20
21
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Jim Jamieson, who bolted into contention with a phenomenal 63 in the second half, and 70 was tied at 279 with rookie Leonard Thompson, who had a
Chris Blocker, the big guy who was tied with Heard for the lead in the 10-5 game, slipped to a 73 and was one of a back at 296, four backs strokes from
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -Jerry Heard, one of the young lions in Florida, on the pro tour, fired a final shot that won the first prize in the Florida Citrus
Heard, who has a habit of whistling softly to himself as he strolls down the fairway, won by a quick fast-finishing bobby Mitchell.
Young Heard Wins Citrus Open
Mitchell, who finished almost an hour earlier, reeled off five consecutive birds in one day in 30 and finished with a .662-278.
It was the second tour title for the handsome 24-year-old whose three-time champion gave him a 276 total—12 under pau on the 687-yard Rim Pinar
Bullpup LeRoy Urey Stops Fast
Topeka West's Mike Sillivan, Bcurin Bridun back
Super-Mex Lee Trevino, one stroke off the lead at the end of three rounds, just couldn't get it
South African Gary Player had a 66 for 281 and was tied with Jack Nicklaus, who had a 69.
Arnold Palmer missed the cut after Friday's round and did not play the last 36 holes.
PENNESSEY
Kansas Staff Photo by TOM THRONE
Sue Tagg Performs Floor Exercise
Senior tied with Joanne Smith for first
K-State, Missouri Close With Victories
Memphis Terrapins Join NIT
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK (AP)—Maryland, having its best season ever, and Memphis State, the Missouri Valley Conference co-champion, officially accepted bids Sunday to complete the 16-tem team field for the National Invitation Tournament at Madison Square Garden.
Commission on the Status of Women announces
Both teams lost Saturday night in college basketball games that snapped the regular season playoffs. North Carolina knocked Maryland, Georgia, and for Baltimore, NC-46 for their post-season title, while Louisville downed Memorial State 85-22 in the second half.
Maryland, 23-4 under coach Leach Driesie, plays its first NIT game Saturday afternoon and makes the first NIT for the Terrapins, the first NIT for the 6-foot-11 sophomore. Tom Larson averaging 20 points a game.
Memphis State, making its fifth win on Sunday, the record and is paced by 6-2-Larry Finch with a 24-point average. He's not underway Saturday night in the NIT against Oral Roberts, 25-1, the nation's highest scoring team.
Virginia, 21-6, another Atlantic Coast Conference representative, opens the tourney Friday night against Lafayette, 20-5. Fordham meets Jacksonville, in the double game of the double-header.
Syracuse, 20-6. plays Davidson, the regular season Southern Conference champion, on the court for a spot in the program as St. Joseph-Maryland. St. John's, 17-9, engages Big E eight represent Missouri, 21-5, on the Saturday night at Roberts' Old Roberts-Memphis State.
the other first-round pairings
pit Princeton, 19-6, against Indiana,
17-4 and Niagara, 18-8
Taylor, 17-4 and Paso, 20-6
Sunday afternoon.
The Wildcats, headed for the
Thursday game against Texas in the first round, outlasted Nebraska
81-76, in overtime at Manhattan.
Larry Williams, Lon Kruger and Dana Beer check the pair of hands on his wrist twice or seconds of overtime to give the Cats a 12-5 BIG Eight match. MARSHAL MUNRO, MARYLAND 1988.
Nebraska forced the contest into overtime when the Corrente defeated the deficit in the last four minutes. Brandy Lee's two free throws with 24 seconds remaining left at the end of regulation play.
The Tigers, bound for an
intriguing-round National
Invitation, have been
against St. John's Saturday night in Garden,
spurred by Okanagan.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR ACTIVE INVOLVEMENT IN THE 1972-1973 K.U. COMMISSION
DAVID HALL topped K-State with 16 points when Bob Zender added 14. Chuck Jura had 20 for Nebraska, which finished in a four-piece tie with Kansas in the big game at 74. The Huskers won 12 over 8.
Missouri outgunned the Sooners during one stretch early in the second half, 25-8, en route to a victory. The season against five defeats
There is a NEED and a PLACE for all interested.
Greg Flerk tallied 19 points and John Brown contributed 17 for Mizzou, which ended Big Eight play 10-4.
Applications are now available in the Dean of Women's Office, 222 Strong, and all organized housing. Applications are due March 10, at 5 p.m. in 222 Strong.
Positions Available
Saturday's play closed out the league season but the conference title was determined last fall. Auburn won at Missouri, 3-7-6, in Columbus.
COMMITTEE MEMBER, COMMISSION BOARD. CHAIR PERSON. TREASURER
Following Kansas and Nebraska in Big Eight final standings are:
Oklahoma, third in the conference at 9-5 and 14-12 against all cowards, was headed by Andrew Yelpard. John Vile had 13 for the Sooners.
For More Information Call
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Iowa State, 5-9 and 12-14;
Colorado, 4-10 and 7-19, and
Oklahoma State, 2-12 and 4-22.
Women Gymnasts Win Triangular
The University of Kansas women's gymnastics team is for regional competition by regional State Teachers College of Emphora and Wichita State Gymnast Saturday in Robinson Gym.
The women will travel to Bookings, S.D., Wednesday for the regional meet conference Thursday and Friday, coach Patricia Rühl said recently. Performances in the national championships may identify individuals for the national championships March 30出发 April in Des Moines, Iowa.
KU scored 80.05 points
Saturday to outstand KSTC's
68.25 and Wichita State's 60.35.
Sophomore James Smith was
the bright spot for KU. She tied with teammate Sue Tagg for first in floor exercise with a 7.30 score and placed second in the balance beam with 7.15. Smith claimed honor with total of 27.20.
KU swept the floor exercise.
Behind Smith and Tagg, Barbie
Murrow placed third with 7.10.
Behind Smith and behind Smith
in the balance beam.
Cindy Price accounted for KU scoring in the two remaining events. She placed second in both the vaulting and the uneven barrel bars. In vaulting, her score was 8.10, in the unevens, 7.10.
"We would like to go for first in the regional," Ruhl said. "But we expect to finish in the top three."
Hosts Say Play Inside; KU Drops Tennis Dual
KU lost the meet, 7-2.
"We needed the practice anyway," Howard figured.
KU hadn't practiced indoors on a wood floor, Howard said. Consequently, the Jayhawks were prepared for the faster indoor game.
"It was a nice day," assistant coach Mike Howard said. "We expected to play outdoors, but we had to stay indoors, and we'll come all that way."
Whether the practice they got will be beneficial is perhaps questionable. The only two KU won were played outdoors.
When the University of Kansas tennis team showed up in Maryville Mo. Saturday for a game, the hosts wanted State, it was a great day for tennis. But the hosts wanted to play indoors on a wood floor.
The team will hit the road for meets at Arkansas Friday. Oral
Tom Carlson downed Nor-
thern Lakers, 6-3 and 6-2, in
Lagerhead, 6-3 and 6-2, in No.
5 singles, and KU's Ron Shafer
defeated E.E. Douglas, 6-7, 6-4
and 6-2.
Karl Klingesky, 63-6-0.
Singer Tom Carlson, KU, def.
Jouis Lagrave, 61-5-0.
No. 3 xingles -Phil White, NW, def. Chris
Henry, 6-3, 6-3
No. 4 xingles -Per Carllsson, NW, def.
No. 4. shingles-Per Carlsson. NW, def.
Karl Kingley, 63, 6. 60.
Bernie Borg, 75, 8. 90.
Joasl Lagheryd, 53, 6-2.
No. 5 singles - Ron Shaffer, KU, def. Ed
Douglas, 6-7, 6-4, 6-4.
Roberts Monday and Oklahoma State Tuesday.
NORTHWEST MISSURGIRL KANSAS 2
No. 1 stinger–David Intolteil, NW, def.
Cal Simmons, 6.2-6.4
No. 3 stinger–LIU Wei, NW, def.
No. 2 singles - U1 Henning, NW, def. Mark
Wick, 7.5, 6.4
No. 3 singles - Phil White, NW, def. Chris
Henry, 6.3, 6.3
simmons Henry, 6-2, 2-4, 6-4
No 2 doubles—Hennig-Carlsson, NW def.
Jones, 5-3, 6-2, 6-4
Sunday's Exhibition Baseball
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DePaul 6, 4.4, 8.4.
Duke 1, double, 2.4, IntlIntence, NW, def.
Simmons H, 6.2, 2.4, 8.4
Chicago (A) 5, Kansas City 1
Detroit 7, Boston 0
Minneapolis 6, Milwaukee 14, Oakland 4
San Diego 8, Tokyo 0
San Francisco 0, California 5
Texas 6, Montreal 2
St. Louis 1, Cincinnati 5, Philadelphia 6
Los Angeles 3, Atlanta 0
No. 3 doubles - Wank-Douglas, NW. def
Kingleshay Sheffer, $7, f4, f4.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 13, 1972
7
Survey Shows Dropout Rates
By KENT PULLIAM
Kanean Staff Writer
Only 58 per cent of Kansas high school seniors attend college after their graduation, and of these only about 55 per cent graduate from college, said Anderson, professor of education.
Anderson is the executive director of the Master Planning Committee and works with the situation in Kansas. There are representatives from all the states involved.
The study of Kansas high school seniors was done for a group of Rotarians, to include in it students present in a trip across Africa.
... study showed that 88 perc
of the students who enter
the high grade. Of those who reach
his senior year, about 95 perc
cent of them are male.
THE PERCENTAGE of Kansas high school graduates who attend college are 18 per cent. The other 44 per cent, go directly into a four-year college or university. The other 14 per cent first attend college.
The percentage of those who enter college and receive a degree is 45 percent. This includes those students who take more than four years to complete.
sent on to a four-year college.
According to the American Council on Education, the dropout rate has decreased a pattern. A nationwide study was conducted by the council, and was taken by students who enlisted in military service.
THE NATIONAL STUDY was conducted by Alexander W. Astin, director of the council's office of research. It showed that college dropout rates started in 1964 did not get a degree during four years. The two-year college dropout rate was higher than the four year dropout rate. Dropouts at the two-year colleges, 34 per cent had their transcripts
Women were more likely to attain a degree than men were, but after the four year period the percentage of men still enrolled in school was higher. This was attributed to the number of men who were enrolled in five year colleges with as architecture or engineering
The director of the Office of Action will advise the University administration and work with the Affirmative Action Board con-
Nearly 90 per cent of the persons entering the two-year college expected to get a degree in engineering. However, 60 per cent of that group had left college after their first year. Less than half of those who left, had their transcripts sent on to a four-year college or
Marilyn Stokstad, professor of art history and chairman of the search committee, said that the candidates should have a strong academic background and be well prepared in some way with the University.
ASTIN SAID that women and black students had a higher dropout rate than white male students.
Committee to Meet to Fill New Position for Woman
Students who said they smoked or turned in papers late in high school dropped out more often than others. Astin said, "The evidence for refusing to habit or a lack of concern in academic pursuits, and although many studies have indicated that smoking has a negative effect on academic achievement the reason why is not clear."
The seven-member search committee appointed Monday by Chancellor E. Laurence of irr. hr. received candidates and receive applications for the director of the Office of Affirmative Action for Women is now preparing for the committee's first meeting March 15.
The student who made A's in high school was three times as likely to receive a degree than the student who received a lower than C's in high school.
AMONG THE STUDENTS at the four-year colleges or universities, those who had no religious preference were more likely to express a preference. At the two year college students who indicated a Protestant preference were more likely to persist in going on to a four-year college, those with other preferences.
there is clearly a relationship between the performance of students in high school and their college, according to the study.
Pearson voted against the Griffin amendment because he thought it would turn us back 20 years on our achievement of a post-Soviet democracy.
ployment of women at the University.
The students who received high grades and high test scores on their tests were dropped four times as likely to complete college as the student with the lower scores. Virtual none of these scores were dropped on their tests dropped out of college without requesting that their transcripts be sent to a university.
Pearson
A short time after the February Sister's presented their demand, wished to thank her for vice-chancellor for women affairs, Elizabeth Banke, assistant vice-chancellor, for the position of Chancellor's assistant for Women Affairs by
PEARSON DOES not expect Congressional action on the question of amnesty. He said he would have time to talk about amnesty because there were still people being killed and wounded in Vietnam and because there were more men in war and men missing in action.
Continued from Page 1
However, Banks declined the position because of her academic credentials and those chosen by Chalmeras as a member of the search com-
"A WHEN A PRESIDENT wants a "man to implement his political policies, you just about have to go along with him," he said.
Pearson said he had expressed his criticism in a letter to the President, but had later voted to confirm the nomination because he thought the President had him pick his own "political family."
Pearson said he was opposed to busing, but he had voted for the Mansfield-Scott busing amendment because it provided busing, and was a voluntary measure to be taken when needed in cities.
"Although in a country with a
Saxon juridocracy, where
forgiveness is our nature, I just
think it is the right time to
talk about it."
Other members of the committee are Myrtle Bailer, in-house insurance officer and retirement officer in the business office; Vicki Hamer, Lawrence graduate student; Pamela Miller, insurance officer; Emily Taylor, dean of women.
Five days
Pearson, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he thought U. S.
troop strength in Europe should be reduced. He said there was no longer a need to drive back a wall against Islamic State and European nations that were destitute after World War II now have enormous economic strength.
"EVERY REASON we had to place divisions in Europe has changed today," he said. "If we haven't proved our commitment two decades and that we are a response to the attacks, then I doubt if we, ever will."
Pearson said he thought withdrawals by mutual troop reduction by the Warsaw Pact nations and the NATO nations
He had not voted for certain candidates in the Senate and Europe, Pearson said, because Russia had offered mutual withdrawal. The Senate was asking the question.
Many of the newly enfranchised voters will vote about the same way their parents do, Pearson said. Although he thought college students would be more liberal in voting, Pearson says they are a lot of people out there who are just as concerned as you are.
"Fifty-five per cent of the new voters are out working or are housewives are in the military," he said. "College students to look beyond the campus to get the rest of them going."
TOPEKA (AP)—Republican leaders of the Kansas House of Representatives postponed the consideration of Democratic Gov. Robert Docking's veto of a house apportionment bill until he appeared effort to round up the votes needed to override.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
One day
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
each additional word: $.01
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kampan are offered to students without regard to color, gender.
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power steering, air conditioning,
automatic transmission, excellent
p.m. p.m. 104-642-3728 3-17
Pall-shyangi. Hungarian, sheepdog,
born Jan. 2 A.C.M. Bale and Petelea
Black and Prince Creech.
Baltimore, Maryland. 3-10-
796-2881. McLouth, Kansas. 3-10
1970 Duster, green, 3-speed, WV. $450. We will buy locally owned cars, domestic and VW. Jayhawk Volkwagen, 2522 Low II, 8420-210-36
SCUDA EQUIPMENT-FINANCE. Masha
Kaufle, Lifetime Guarantee; $125.
Nike Pac Lifetime Guarantee; $125.
Nike Kiltie and Vent. $39. Spare
$29. We set up for all your diving
needs. Call us at 800-765-2210
major brands. Equity and
Masha Kaufle, City Mo. Mc 64134.
Phone: 816-765-2210.
MISTER GUY employee is selling his personal clothing. Outwear, hoodie & jacket sizes 42-50. 32 shirts 15-14 & 15-5. Show clothes 10-14 & 9-12. Hats 82-68-82. $6.00
1966 VOLKSWAGEN, LESS THAN
1986 FORD JOB AND CUSTOM CARPETING
GREAT CONDITION. NEVER BEEN
SOLD. 834-603-4414. SKIP
STEVE JOES 15.42
1967 Triumph Bonneville, 6,000 actual miles—exceptional condition—extras—$900 firm, 843-4250 3-13
4-piece drum set—excellent condition.
Call VI 2-0529 for further informa-
tion. 3-13
71 Suzuki TC 90R under 400 miles.
$550 or best offer. 3-14
Baldwin exterminator amplifier 4
inputs, many controls, 6 speakers,
2*15*, 2*12*, 2*8*, $170 Call Bob,
864-2376
3-14
71 Datan 1200 Coup. 10,000 miles
factory air, property maintained, very
clean, runs beautifully. Snow trees
included. Cal Gap. Gregg 8690-384-5
144
1966 Porsche 911, 290 h.p., excellent condition, best offer over $2,900.
1610 W. 22nd Terr. 3-17
100 ce Kawasaki, 1970 10 speed Trail Trail Boss, excellent condition, 1,190 miles, $375, call 622-3948 3-14
1971 350 Honda, excellent condition.
1800 miles, $85, 843-706-30.
3-14
For sale: 4' X 3' drawing table
$35, VI 1: 1883
3-14
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
RMI Electric piano 8 months used,
Olms敦mendez trumpet 3 years old.
Olds special trumpet 8 years old.
in final condition B43-8066 5-14
Must sell-1971 Chevy Monte Carlo,
PS, PB, A/C low mileage Excellent
condition. Will sell for low price.
842-906 after 5:00. 3-15
Sony model 130 V Portable television, 12" (diagonal) screen 6 months old. Call 841-2964. 3-15
Buco motorcycle helmet 1 month old,
$15. Call 841-2964. 3-15
1970 360 Yamaha Enduro runs and looks good, $600 or best offer. Call 843-2574 after 6:00. 3-15
Kenwood KR-44 AM-FM 40 watt stereo receiver. Wood cabin included. Perfect condition. 824-5032. 3-15
Must sell dual 1215 turntable Sanani S55 A AM4 85 watts 2 columns columns with 12-8" speakers "best offer"
Call 842-3501 between 5-6 P. M. 3-13
Ten speed bicycle, one speed bicycle.
Olympia portable typewriter. Call after 5.90, 843-3229. 3-15
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court 6084
NOBODY IN LAWRENCE, CLIMB-
ING OVERWHELM DEMI-PRO-
CESSIONS OVERWHELM DEMI-PRO-
CESSIONS CLING THE NON-ENTITIES OF
BOKONOON, #93 VERBOOM 125
BOKONOON, #93 VERBOOM 125
A triple pickup Guild electric guitar and a Danaelectro amplifier with two 12" speakers. Call 845-2310 3-15
25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02
1970 Kawasaki Mach III, $800. Nice.
842-5434 3-15
Pentax HW hw use, clip-on mount,
50 and 1/4 Takumar lens $135 - XAA
I wise (50,2 9 P S lens & 40
lens + 40 lens) -400 call: 864
or 853 or 864-303
1963 Corvair 2 dr. Ht. New tires, good condition. Call 842-9399 3-15
NESTERO DISCOUNT. Now you can get Nestero's discount plus 10% at RAY AUDIO. Use only this优惠! Only here: Sterro Discount House in NYC, NY. Take Tee Coffee & Consulting Service.
Minolta S150 Single lens reflex w.18 lens $75.90 - Also 35.20 Alu lens Rington $24.95 S Poiler Tele-Run $24.95 S Poiler Tele-Run 6449-8421 or 8449-5066 - 3-16
SMART BUILD' 1996 1650 RoadCUNNERMAN
TRACTION AND OUT-DUEL
ANVEYNOB AFTER 5:00 P.M.
(AM) AFTER 8:00 P.M.
LANDING CONDITION CALL 842-2856
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
*J5 Jaguar XK 150 Drop-head coupe*
$1799 Cail 841-3530 3-16
1969 Toyota Corolla, excellent condition.
Gets 30 mm. $95. Stove At
843-7933 or 842-7291.
3-16
SeaTech Equipment - Fine Mask Snorkel Kit
Lifetime Guarantee; $125.00 Welcome
LifeTime Guarantee; $125.00 Welcome
Snorkel Sport Kit $99.99 See Hawk Kite
Kiteboard Air Gun, Air Gun, Air Gun.
Air Gun, Air Gun, $99.99 See us
stock stock with major brands.
Bottle Stock with major brands.
Bottle Stock with major brands.
Bottle Stock with major brands.
Bottle Stock with major brands.
Bottle Stock with major brands.
"69" VW Bug custom interior, perfect mechanically. New tires. Phone 843-
7294 3-16
SKIING Ply to Denver for a package roundtrip. Or check on a package plan for skiing both Wall and Beak skis during spring break. CALENDAR 3-17
1962 Bick Special, new transmission,
new front tires & uwns, good
mechanical shape, economic &
degradable $200; Call Dave, 642-8587.
Boots, Pole & Wooden Skis. 210 cm.
Call Roles, 842-0709. 3-17
65 Volkswagen, 58.000 miles. Very
good condition. Murt sell! 843-6403.
9.18
Electric typewriter, new $120, sellor for $55. Men's bike, $45 Giannini Brazilian Guitar $50. 842-239-3-15
NOHISFIELD COUNTRY NHL HOUSES
Bridge Antiques used furniture, collections items, oak wood cooking and lighting fixtures, fireplace stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, other useful items, open 9 to 5 of other useful items. Herb Allenberg, B42-7129
Webster's Mobile Homes
1970 BSA lightning 650, royal blue and chrome, excellent condition, open TT pipes and relied on cables. Call 832-762 612 for 4:00 P.M. 3-17
Hammond M-2, fine cabinet Can be made portable. That has unmatched "Hammond" touch and sound $500
811-6632 3-17
ASIA Chip trip if you log in, but move Asian style. Details Japan to Iran for $1.90 to Merdeka. 11841 Teueunil Road, Clinton, Michigan. 69266.
Michigan St. B-Bar, Q-12, Mish. St. Outdoor pit. B-Bar Q-12
St. Outdoor pit. B-Bar Q-12
$30.00 $30.00 or jock rubs $34.00 $34.00
$10.00 $10.00 or briquet $80.00
B-Bar briquet B-Bar Sund. $80.00
Breast Brisket Flat.-$180 Open 11 am.
Breast Brisket Phone: 842-765-9000
Sun-Tues. 3-17
NOTICE
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Your Complete Service Dealer
Ample Park Spaces Available
2408 W. 6th 842.7700
Ample Park Spaces Available
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
1
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Parts at a discount
Wkdays 8-5:30 Sunday 10-3
W. 61th 842-77 Just West of the
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER. 842-7694. Professional care-for children I - 12 mw. or part-time. Fri. Specialized design environment.
STUDY ESPERANTO the international language in Portland for Stanford University's International Esperanto Congrese here 29 July to 3 August. A unique event to learn about the international language. Information: Summer State University, Oregon 97203 5-16
DANCEANCE T. YOU PUKE THE
SINCENTUAL BETWEEN EDUCATION
BASALACE $14 MASS $18 COUCH
TACHER 10 & 70 $9 CURVE 30
CITY VIII
RUSSIA • SCANDINAVIA 5 weeks
• Small group camping travel 15-
large small group camping travel 15-
Whole Earth Travel Ltd. U.S.
• On or Transport Travel Ltd. Book
20% off RUSSIA + $20 off
RUSSIA.
Barn Particed. Now available for booking at Apple Valley Park in Lake Perry, Apple Valley Park in Lake Perry and cooler plenty of parking. Call Joe Stronge after 6:30 p.m. b452-789-4111.
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAW
and working in a law firm, you enjoy yourself in one of Lawwrites' offices. You may be asked to report if you call Mr. Fryer. Please do not answer, as he will live in Apex Apartments, 38th & Avon, or Howell Apartments, 51st & Avon. You can be economical and enjoy the amazing medina specials that are available at his inspiring medina specials. This summer a wonderful time to be in this summer a wonderful time to be in
for reasonable price on all glass on any kind of Plexiglass including Plexiglass 124 North 2nd St or call 811-267-3566 for plexiglass samples that just arrived.
FREE-GERMAN SHEPARD PUPPY,
14 WEEKS OLD. HAS ALS
SHOTS, BROWN & BLACK
CALL BELL.
841-292-7026
3-14
FOR RENT
Women's alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30 to 5:30. 3+13
Need people to invest in Ceasan 168
for use as a parachute jump plane.
Call Dick Mauk at 594-318 or Jim
Baker at 842-668-6. 3:17
VOTE-SEMITE APATHY BEGINS
BOTENE APATHY-ELECT
APATHY FROM THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL
INSTITUTIONS. Paid for by
Mary O'Neal.
LEARN SKYDYING 1st jump
LEARN SKYDYING 2nd jump
mjumpter first piano role,
and qualified instruction. Classes begin
after a $50 fee. Call DAD call
after a $60 fee. Call DAD call
THE CONCORD SHOP
University Terrace Apartments — terminated apartments available for lease by the university to come to manager's office, 1529 West 9th Apt. 1-B, or call 843-1-53-9
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited offer free first nine month free. Four years warranty. Ninety-nine nished apt, with all utilities paid for $400.18/month. call: Antoine 400-295-3657.
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Right
through January 21, the new 2 bedroom and four row
1 bedroom apartment. August
1st, 4 one year old 1 bedroom.
Available at end of semester.
www.carpeting.dishwashers.central
northwest.com.
988-357-0088 between 3 PM and 10 AM.
THE MERCANTILE
For SUA Events
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
Open 24 hrs. per day
- STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock others on order
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., pts. - qts. only
50% OFF
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
EINE SNAILAGES
844 E.13th St. 843-3877
McCONNELL LBR. CO
- ARTIST CANVAS REDUCED
KAT Suzuki
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store
A PLACE FOR ALL REASONS. Two people sit in the kitchen, eating food. We bow to the group sitting in our own pool, like indoor lounge furniture. The group asks if you can afford Sawyer Aptiments, you can afford Sunny Aptiments.
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
Furnished Apartment, 1424 Indiana,
duplex air conditioned, wall-to-wall
carpeted, laundry facilities, off-street
bathroom, laundry from Island Inn
V: 3-7177 M: 3-147
Farm furnished sleeping room, with kitchen privileges for kids. No pets. Borders, KU and near town. Phone 453-7677 3-14
Nice furnished 1-2 bed apartments near town, KU. Also rooms with kitchen privacy, only one room with refrigerator. Able now 842-5097 3-29
Avonian, hi & Avonian, Harvard Square, hien & Harvard, Andreas and Harcourt, two of our most loved contel of living in one of these handsome apartments, with spacious apartments and you will be more to have a dishwasher, central heating, and many more features.
WANTED
COLLEGE HILL, MANOOR APARTMENTS & 2 bathrooms furnished and maintained. Use of all amenities will be all at our welcoming kitchens with fresh fruit, wine & desserts. WT 110, WT 139, AW 28 or 31. WT 149, WT 150, AW 31 or 32.
NOW IS THE TIME TO SERVE HER
1972, while service is still available.
Vice President, Bank of America,
862-2548 of 1071-A. Harvard
Lawrence, built home and office
Lawrence, built home and office
9th & MISS
843-5304
Kansas Key Press-Job printing from booklets to letters, brochures to booklets and resumes. Th 815m, in bank room. Zier Open 20m in day 3: 822-483.
634 Mass. 842-6966
Female nominate needed to share furnished apartment through finals. Husbill taken from Union No. 802,军区 824,Union No. 825,庐山区 826,庐山区 1301 Louisiana, No. 13-14
Alterations and repair, men and women. Formerly with New York Cleaners: 842/2917. 3-14
Place to board an Irish Setter, L.
Smith, 843-5900
3-15
WEDDING WANTED: to Los Angeles,
HIDE TO leave Friday afternoon, March
17th. Can only space $15.00 toward
them. See to my girl, 84-236-6900.
Need someone with ear staining in Lawrence over break. Make about $4.00 for 13, ht per day 826-280 (unless 4, Ask for 2K) 3-13
Need girl to share house. $50. Utilities included. Close to campus. 842-5788. 3-16
BLEVINS HONDA
1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks.
Factory Authorized
Honda Sales & Service
Cycle Pick Up Service
Tony's 66 Service
Be Present!
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
Carol Lee
COIN OP LAUNDRY
19th & LA.
843-9631
2434 Iowa VI 1-1008
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
Sandwiches
5 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Sat, 5-1-Sun
7 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Sat, 1730 - 2030.
842-3664
TYPING
COIN
Would like to buy good short form
size (9-10 or 10-11) at inexpensive
price. Call 2-899-4031 City.
Kansas) after 5 P.M. 3-14
If you have two or four DEEP PUR-
PLE tickets you would like to sell,
please call 842-7122 3-17
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu Steak Sandwiches
Instructor to teach Tal Chi. Phone
842-2040. 4;
SCUBA GEAR. Must have before spring break. Need all equipment related to diving. Call 842-5820 and ask for Val Landes 3-17
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K C. Steaks
842-9450
THIUMPH
Experienced in typing Thesis, dissertations, term paper, other mixed type, manuscript types. Type Accuracy and prompt service. Req's Phone 843-9544, Mrs. Wright.
LOST
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Forest Forest News
TOYOTA.
Thus, term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM Selectric, your choice of type styles. Also editing at Iowa, Florida, Kansas, 840-679-452, 842-656-395.
Typing, done on elite, electric type-
writer. No Theses please. Prompt attentión.
843-0958 4-5
Experienced typist will type your term paper, thesis or dissertation.
Electric typing prompt, accurate work. Call 843-2811, Maixuckman.
Bachelor's degree required.
Sports Cars Inc.
Typing done in my home, IBM
Selectric. Prompt, accurate work.
Experienced. Call 841-2556. 3-17
Independent
11. Miles North of the
Kaw River Bridge
Salem
Phone: 561-287-4900
Op: +30
days per week
Experienced typist, Overland Park,
Kansas. Prompt, accurate work. Re-
reasonable rates. Phone 381-6434 3-28
Our motto is and has always been
"There is no substitute for quality."
COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W. 6th
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Competition
3 mo old black and brown Terrier puppy in vicinity of New Haven. Please return. Needs shots. Call 843-0536
Last 3-2 eye near Fraser black and white speckled pup with black spots and head. Female. Please bring her home. Call 842-6900 3-13
Lost a red billfold. You can keep the passport but I would hate to lose my passport and cards. Please return to hospital or call 1532 1532
Let
CSC
EAGLE
PLANNING A TRIP??
21
Maupintour travel service
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lewis, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Red Baron
Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!!
00 Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-121
"For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits . . . Repair It"
Shines Dyeing Refinishing
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
Lost 2-26, KU area, 14 mo. old German Shepherd, male, dark, name Jackson, choke collar 833-1792 3-12
USED CLOTHES- 84% VERMONT- HEAVY
USED CHAIRS- 82% VERMONT- HIGH
BOXES-TASK-BOXES- 80% OVERFLOW-
HOKONKON- SAYVS- NEVER SAY
SAYS- NEVER SAY
GALLOK- 81% VERMONT- 3-15
Brown framed glasses in once last Monday. Please call 842-4548
3-15
HELP WANTED
between Robinson and Watson-
girl wohl hat-is white with blue
tim-is from Minden and of great
importance. It was found. I took
Cynthia. 864-1977 3-17
Sports-minded coach for amateur
hockey (hoop) and ice hockey
(hotellite). No children please. T-Shirt
or a summer hat on your own. Lake Chase
club, or a day off at the Rockefeller
referrer: Raymond Cerf, 1000 Saddle
Rock, NY.
MISCELLANEOUS
PERSONAL
BIDALG GOWN GOWN Sample Sale -Sizes 8-10, 12-10, up to 75% off, Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910, Kirkham. 4-20
PART TIME SECRETARY, single
Call 842-9660 between 8:30 to 10:00
Had a fender bender, cracked auto
CAW KAW BOY SHOP, 841-2900 or
m2-0131 after 11 a.m. ask for Dk
recharge, all work guaranteed,
all costs covered, same location
Have 25' hw. w/ receiver
Lawrence Call for calls out of town.
Lawrence Call for calls out of town.
Dearest D & S & L, Thanks for the emergency. A cold shower is really much more satisfying." L" 3-13
BACISECA is a liaison service Ha-
sseville. Call us, wiell talk with
Surin University, 842-352-1021,
surinuniversity.com or
616-794-9111.
Surin University, 842-352-1021,
surinuniversity.com or
616-794-9111.
THE HILE in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Open 8am to 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Iii.
A Person Is Known by the Company He Keeps Keep Good Company
ADVERTISE
U D K
ADVERTISE
CHEVROLET
100
DRIVE A DATSUN!
500 E. 23rd IONY'S IMPORTS- DATSUN 842-0444
RAMADA INN
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. til noon.
843
8500
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
UDIOTRONICS
The Stereo Store
...
928 Mass
8
Monday, March 13. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Anderson Wants 'Strong States'
By JIM KENDELL
Korean Staff Writer
Former governor John Anderson brought his campaign for the Republican gubernatorial nomination to the University of Texas.
About 35 people heard An-
derson speak about the oid vote, state government,
education, welfare and penal reform before he opened the floor
Anderson was governor from 1984 to 1986 and attorney general from 1987 to 1992. He has served as chairman of the National Governors' Conference.
Anderson said the Kennedy and McCarthy campaigns for president in 1988 had given youth
an insight into the political system.
HE SAID ONE of the major results of the youth upheaval in California is that people more interested in working through the political crisis have gone to war.
State government needs to be strengthened to cope with prerequisites. It can't handle because of its remoteness, according to Anwil.
Anderson became executive director of a group called the "Citizens' Conference on State Reform" shortly after he left office in 1965.
Anderson said the group had worked to see that state legislatures met more often and
for longer periods of time.
This is necessary because women are creating a larger than government role, and Anderson said. States must take a larger role in solving problems,
ON THE SUBJECT of education Anderson said, "We're lagging more than we were last year and more than the year before that."
He said at one time the funding KU received from the state was ranked sixth in the nation. He said KU was now ranked 8th.
Anderson said he was con-
cruely grateful to students
available to higher education
in Kansas, students were losing
opportunities to learn from good
States ought to be responsible for working with the federal government in funding welfare.
Only an unreasonable person could deny welfare to the elderly, the disabled and dependent children. Anderson said.
HE SAID the state was having passed a bill for penal reform but he praised the legislature for its recent passage of a penal reform law.
During the question and answer period Anderson fielded questions on taxes, education, the campaign and other issues.
Anderson said he would like to redistribute the costs of education and shift the burden of property tax from the property tax payer.
He said this could be done by equalizing taxes and the institution of a value added tax.
Education will receive more support from the legislature in the future, Anderson said, but
taxpayers are demanding reform in educational administration.
in education. In another DUOFFERED the legislature would reverse itself on the abortion issue. He said once legislation was passed on a controversial issue, only a year in the state would reverse it.
Anderson has welcomed other candidates into the governor's race. He is now the only major candidate for governor. Anderson is also an independent if he did not receive the Republican nomination.
Hespeculated that Gov. Robert Docking might try for re-election, though many have speculated that the governor would run for the U.S. Senate.
Anderson said he favored some reforms of state government. He would like to see consolidation of the county courts the counties wanted consolidation.
MR. VOLDURG
BLUNK
Jackin
706 MASS
CUSTOM TIMELESS
WHERE
BLEEKS
HE CARRY'S ON
THE GLAMOUR
TEXT
Senators
Continued from Page 1
Suptia said he thought most of the deliberation at the Senate meetings was necessary to insure a fair decision, although occasionally a political battle erupt into a personal battle
Supic said a retreat, similar to the one this term, would help to overcome staffing gaps in the Senate. It would also eliminate personality conflicts and enable greater collaboration.
SUPTIC SAID that financing and auditing were the most important functions of the Senate and most relevant to students.
Suptic said it was important that the Senate administered the allocations of the activity fee system because it is one area, Suptic said, where the Zenate has power. Financing and auditing also gave the Senate something really concrete to do. "There are so many power in other areas," Suptic said.
. . .
Kingsley Click, Shalimar. Fla., sophomore and Olver senior. She was the most effective now but she said she thought that it was still in its early stages.
CLICK SAID that she enjoyed being both a good and bad experience. She said that she would not want to be hurt by her mother, however, because she thought she could do things of more consequence in other ways.
She said only a few key people in the Senate understood what was going on. She said that she had been told enough information and often enough investigation haddn't been done before an issue was brought to her attention.
"In the Senate you are a little bit stifled in what you can do," she said.
Click, who is chairman for SUA forums, said that there was a lot more participation and involvement in SUA programs than in the Senate.
Click said that a workshop for senators was a good idea, because they get involved. In a workshop, she said, senators would get involved. Senators which would be eliminate personality conflicts. Senators would also get information about Senate procedure.
STEVE DAVIS, Topeka junior
senate candidate, will be
Senate was entirely worthless.
"All it is is one big committee,
and committees can never do
anything."
"No one ever looks to make the
money," she said. "It's just a quantity organization
with more committees, and
committees never do anything."
Davis said that the Senate spent most of its time on financing and sustaining and didn't have to constrain itself with allocating funds. He said that there was no way to set priorities on allocations and that that program be made. Some were while programs weren't funded, he said.
"The All Student Council was too much high school for the students." Davis said. "So the school had a way of buying off the sales."
DAVIS SAID the only power that the Senate had was that of allocating funds for the activity fee. But even this was overseen by Mr. Bass, who said. Davis made no suggestions for changes in the Senate.
"Just leave it the way it is," he said, "because that's the way people are today. They have a research and committees."
People just assume that they have to have a Senate, even though it may be best not to have one, Davis said.
Davis said his Senate experience wasn't entirely worthless.
"It ushered me through an idealistic period probably faster than people. Once you're in the Senate you lose your idealism.
"I'M HAPPY that I'm not going to be in the Senate next year," Davis said.
David Awbrey, Lawrence graduate student and Graduate School counsel, said everything he learned in the Senate had been done.
Awbrey, who was the first president of the Student Senate three years ago, said that there were problems with the Senate to do but allocate money.
"The Senate is getting irrelevant," Awbrey said. "It isn't doing anything. It just looks good on transcripts."
"We did everything that could be done," Awbrey said of himself and his successor, Bill Ebert. The Student Senate is as good as "a ever going to be. All that is left to protect what has been done
"TO SAY THAT the Student Senate speaks for students is absurd. The Senate is just the babysitter of the students rights. It's like nothing to most people on campus, but you've got to have it."
A more optimistic view of the Senate was taken by those senators seeking reelection.
"I get personal satisfaction in meeting new people and working with them," said Bill O'Neil, Bailin junior and student body treasurer that I'm interested in what he learns from having a part in the University."
One of the major reasons O'Reilly is running again, he said, was to carry out a lot of the efforts and solutions he initiated and sponsored.
"The Senate needs the backing of student administrators to ensure they get their work done. The Senate is often overzealous on legislation and lacking in funding."
'O'NELL SAID the activity fee allocations were overemphasized in Senate. He said that this was because the Senate has only had control of the activity fee for a year and a half and was just getting accustomed to handling money. He said the budget could only only two budgeting sessions.
Lightfoot Caresses Music
Gordon Lightfoot is gentle on your mind. The tall Canadian who so successfully combines folk rock with country sounds presented a concert in Hochstetten in 1972 and was superior to any of the other offerings of the 1972 Festival of the Arts.
Lightfoot's music belongs to that special genre cultivated and refined by such artists as Bob Dyian, John Sebastian and Elton John. He is also exquisite James Taylor. But unlike Dylan, Lightfoot does not have to depend on catchy lyrics to sing, but his songs are engaging. He is more powerful than Taylor and has a style more individual than either John or Sebastian. His music is his own, and it caresses it as if it were a lover.
By MARILYN K. KING Kansan Reviewer
THE RESULT of Lightfoot's talent is a sound that is wholly pleasing to almost everyone. His songs have been written by Paul and Mary in their early years. It is heavy on the folk and easy on the rock. There is nothing more beautiful than his music. Most of his chord progressions remain the same, but they are only modulations up or down the scale to add variety. And his country offerings steal clear of the pop music, howling so that even the most
The second set began slowly and was not helped along by Lightfoot's breaking a string and then having tuning problems that led to an awkward moment. But he had slipped back into his own style, and though most of his numbers lacked the power of those in his first set, his "Sweet Mignet" and sense of humor helped the initial let-down worthwhile.
DIDDY TOMS J. R. STERN A. CATERPENT Present
PRINCE
OF
PEACE
"The Gospel according
to St. Matthew"
2
days only
He finished the set with Roy Acuff's "The Auctioneer," which was light and funny but pale in color, like footlight own compositions.
HE ALSO PERFORMED KHRISEkofferson's 'M. and Bob McGee.' which sounded good, old-fashioned. Johns' Spain's way of handling the wounds would better have been omitted from the set. It was the one song that was obviously not Lightfoot, the magic was temporarily lost.
Due to the Emotional Content of This Show
No One Admitted After the First 10 Minutes
Lightfoot played two 50-minute sets that displayed the full spectrum of his talents. He began a series of skateboarding soldiers, then slipped into "The Sunny Side of Life." His first set was highlighted by his own "If You Could Read My Mind," which he followed up with "Me" and "Don Quixote," a new and whimsical number that starts by recounting the deeds of the knight errant, then blends realism with elements of pushes and drug users.
IT'S DIFFERENT...
SO WAS HE!
LIGHTFOOT CAN PLAY a guitar as well as Dylan, and is even more versatile. He switches his guitar to sixstring, and has a string cation that keeps his rather monotonous chord progressions from becoming boring. He has been teaching his guitar they were extensions of Lightfoot himself. Warsaw Haynes on electric bass is never over-loved by Climbers plays lead guitar with Lightfoot's own sensitivity and style
The second set ended with a ballad of the Canadian Pacific Railroad, a song commissioned by the government of Canada for his 20th anniversary celebration. It is really a trilogy and transmits the power, fears, dreams and strength of the men who built the CPR. The song is a work of art that can be written about subjects other than lost loves or unjust wars and still be exciting and meaningful—a fact that was lost somewhere between Peter, Paul and Edward, and the advent of the Beatles.
Hillcrest
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LIGHTFOOT PLAYED two encore numbers. The first was not memorable and should have been "But then he played." In the Early Morning Rain," after a audience damn fine laughs, He received two standing ovations, and not since Buff St. Marie was at KU two years ago has a student left a concert feeling so good.
A great time to hand to introduce unique whatever experience that will be entertaining and energizing for everyone. Film and television filmmaker, writer, director, playwright.
PLAYBOY
ald's
Shows 7:15 & 9:40
Adults 1.50 — Child .75
THE FIRST JESUS WASN'T PLASTIC
rabid CW hater has to enjoy what he hears.
GEORGE
C. SCOTT
1970 Oscar Winner
NOMINATED
BEST ACTOR
for his role in
"THE
HOSPITAL"
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SUMMER OF '32
A Robert Mulligan
Richard A Ruth
Production
For the Metropolitan Bros.
TECHNICOLOR
R
jane fonda
donald sutherland
klute
A
Together...
6 Academy Award Nominations
SUMMER OF '42
A Robert Muligan
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Producers
from Warner Bros.
TERMCOLOGY R
Weekdays: Mat. 1:30
Summer—7:30
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Sat. & Sun. Continuous
From 3:00! (Fri. & Sat.
Late showing of Summer
af 11:25)
jane fonda
donald sutherland
klute
pioneer theater
from warner bros.
Varsity
INSTITUTE ... TECHNOLOGY 1985
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Murray Head
R United Artists
Shows 7:20, 9:25
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A Joseph Janni production of
John Schlesinger's Film
"Sunday
Bloody
Sunday"
Varsity
TelA1478 ... Telephone 91-065
"Sunday Bloody Sunday"
"HAROLD and MAUDE" RUTH GORDON and BUD CORT
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HILLCREST CHURCH CAFE AND MUSEUM
THE SOPHOMORE CLASS LECTURE SERIES presents
SENATOR BIRCH BAYH of Indiana
Speaking on
"The Future of the American Political System"
Tuesday, March 14 8:00 p.m.
at the
Kansas Union Ballroom
SENATOR BAYH—Considered one of the U.S. Senate's constitutional authorities and a leader in the passage of the 28th amendment lowering the voting age to 18.
Currently working for a constitutional amendment to provide equal rights for men and women. Concerned about the nation's needs in dealing with pollution, poverty, education, and health care.
ADMISSION 50°
Tickets Free to Sophomore with Class Cards—Advanced Tickets will be Sold at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd.
A LITTLE WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
82nd Year, No.105
Federal Ruling Liberalizes Abortion Law
Tuesday, March 14, 1972
See Page 2
MARK DUNN
Kensan Photo by JAMES EATON
Student Candidates Debate Before Both Spectators
One candidate walked out in the middle of the forum . . .
Tax Defeat to Affect City
By MARK BEDNER
By MARK BEDNER
Kansan Staff Writer
City officials remained bewildered today at the Kansas legislature's surprise defeat of the local half-cent sales tax option renewal last Friday.
The local sales tax approved by Lawrence voters a year ago permitted the city to hire an additional 42 policemen and to enact a cost between $400,000 and $450,000.
But the House of Representatives voted Thursday 58 to 14 to kill the bill extending the sales tax option beyond the present expiration date of Dec. 31, 1972. An attempt to revive the bill Friday by the Senate failed to narrowly defeated. It took 63 votes to reconsider the motion, the supporters could muster only 61.
City officials plan to descend on the legislature en masse during the one day wrap-up session March 20 in hopes that the House will once again reconsider the local policy.
If the option is not renewed in some form before the legislature adjourns on March 20, the 42 police and firemen will be 'laid off' the end of this year, officials predict.
CITY MANAGER Buford Watson said Monday the city would work with area legislators in preparing a program to submit to the House on March 20.
"we hope to appeal to the nober
natters in giving us the needed authority
to take action."
Watson said his office was "very surprised at the lacklusterness" of the agreement. According to Watson,
Democratic Hopefuls Blast Wallace on Primary Eve
MIAMI. Fla., (AP)—A corps of Democratic candidates hustled through campaign springs Monday, chorusing criticism to Gov. George C. Wallace on the state's abortion bill and expected to draw a record turnout of voters to unscramble an 11-way race.
Who wins may be less significant in national political impact than the order of the least influential states.
Alabama's Wallace ran through his libyan campaign themes in Orlando, hamming at his opposition to school integration and order and a strong national defense.
"NOT ONE of the other candidates
What the Lawrence officials were not ready for was the bill's becoming a representative of representatives Morris Kay and John Vogel, both Republicans, contended the bill was defeated by rural representatives and supported or Governor Docking's proper ability.
Watson, the bill had been followed closely through the Senate committee that approved it with little debate. The feeling was that the Senate should accept the Senate's approval of the bill.
"I find it hard to believe in my heart the voters of Florida are going to vote for a wormout demagogue like George Wallace," said Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, campaigning among senior Democrats, who door in to door in St. Petersburg and Miami.
stands a chance of beating George Wallace except Hubert Humphrey." Hubert H. Humphrey, the senator from Minnesota, told 300 Jacksonville longshoremen.
Humphrey said Wallace was never going to the Democratic nomination for the White House.
The Governor's office replied that the supporters of the local tax extension had agreed to allow them to have permitted the cities of Lawrence, Manhattan and Topeka to retain their half-cent sales tax and would have given other counties a similar improve a similar tax by Sept. 1 of this year.
IN TAMPA, Sen. Henry M. Jackson of
Washington picked up Muskie
in the first playoff startings.
The supporters ignored the compromise and during a late session Friday directed their efforts towards reviving the House bill. The bill failed by a margin of two votes.
A spokesman for the Lawrence police department said Monday the department had hired 26 patrolmen with the funds provided by the sales tax. In addition the creation of the office of police-community relations was established through the half-event sales tax. Both the patrolmen and the relations face the possibility of being held hostage by the tax officer to pass the House. The spokesman only said that the police department was working with the city manager's office on the tax bill extension.
THE SALES TAX had been earmarked for the police and fire departments when it was approved last April in the city of Oakland. The city approved the tax the city hired the men.
The revenue from the sales tax now brings in between $400,000 and $450,000.
Candidates Debate Platform Proposals
By JIMKENDELL Kansan Staff Writer
Two Students Hear Views
Candidates outnumbered spectators by more than three to one Monday night at an SAU forum for candidates for student body president and vice president.
Only two spectators listened to three presidential candidates outline their platforms before the candidates answered questions from the audience.
One presidential candidate,
D lyer, J朋, Mo. , senior, walked out of
R dyer, J朋, Mo. , senior, walked out of
as he left he said, "This is unmitigated bullshit, and I refuse to mess with it."
Dwyer's running mate, William Jacoby, Lawrence senior, announced at the conclusion of the meeting that there was a plan to send four students to attend the University of Kansas next year.
IF DWYER is elected and does not
return to KU, Jacoby would automatically
kill DWYER.
Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior and University Commitment presidential candidate, injected a new issue into the campaign Monday night.
Dillon said one of the things Student Senate could influence was the campus police force. Dillon said he would try to get the students up with a walking police force at night.
He said, "Traffic and Security ought to be concerned with security as they are with traffic."
The increasing number of rapes and assaults, which have occurred on campus at night recently, prompted Dillon's concern.
The two spectators, Steven Campbell, Lawrence sophomore, and Randy Sayer, Topika freshman, listened as Dillon made the evening's opening remarks.
DILLON SAID his three priorities were greater funding of the University, academic betterment and increasing student services.
Dillon said that he and his running mate, Kathy Allen, Topika sophomore, were proposing that a Hospital Operating Board be hired to put into the administration of the hospital.
Allen said that one of the things the board would look into was the insurance policies of the firm. The question recently whether pelvic examinations should be covered by
Dillon said services had improved at Watkins hospital. Pregnancy tests and birth control pills are now available free to students at Watkins, according to Allen.
JOE LANOULT, Kirkwood, Mo., junior and presidential candidate for the Birthday Party, told the audience that his sister, Lauren, was to break through the abyss at KKU.
Llandtolt told the group that if he was ejected he would try to organize students to form a club.
Llandtand the Student Senate had no real power. The only way students can get to the school was by bus.
Allen said, "I doubt very seriously that any girl want birth control pills was turned away from Watkins unless she had a medical problem."
the legislature, by-passing both the chancellor and the Board of Receits.
Jacoby told the audience that he and Dwyer were running to try to force the other candidates to take stands on issues. Jacoby said they had been unsuccessful so far,
Jacoby said they were running on a platform of reducing and possibly eliminating the activity fee, reducing the number of Student Senate representatives and using student government as a tool in getting students elected to the legislature.
JACOBY SAID reducing the number of senators would make each senator more well known and more accountable to his constituents.
Mohammid Anun, Rafsanjian, Iran,
senior and presidential candidate of the KU Student Party, said he was running on a platform of limiting each student senator to one position in the senate, reconsidering priorities for the activity fee and studying
Campus Buses To Continue
The current bus service on campus, which was to be funded through March 17 will be continued for the rest of the semester and during finals, David Miller. Eudora senior and student body president, said Monday.
Miller said he had discussed the continued funding of the service with the Student Transportation Commission and decided there would be sufficient funds remaining from the Senate appropriation to continue the semester. He cited a duration of the semester, unless there was a dractic reduction in riders.
The 10 cent fare would be continued, he said.
the feasibility of more night classes.
Amin said the senate needed to be reformed to make it an effective body. The greatest problem with Student Senate is that many senior senators aren't involved in it, he said.
Amin said new senators expected too much of Student Senate and become quickly dischernished when they found out it couldn't accomplish very much.
To correct this problem Armin wants to limit each student senator to one position on the senate. This would get the maximum number of senators involved.
AMIN SAID he would like to conduct another referendum on the activity fee to fund the military training their money. He criticized past referenda as imprecise and of little
Amin said he thought women were not getting their fair share of the activity fee because much of the money which funded them was to male dominated organizations.
Anim wants to study the feasibility of increasing the number of night classes for working students. He said as a working student he has decided to suit schedule both a job and classes.
The low attendance at the forum reduced the questioning period to a kind of "no" on Monday.
Dillon criticized Amin's plan to reorganize the Student Senate saying that it had spent three years reorganizing itself and now it should do something.
Amin responded that the Student Senate was not nearly as effective as it could be and said more efforts at reorganization should be made.
Dillon criticized Landolt's plan of going directly to the legislature saying that he would rather play his cards with the chancellor and the Board of Regents.
Landolt responded that the only way students could hope to get any power was by going to the legislature and by trying to get students elected to the legislature.
Racial Implications Raised In Selection of Davis Jury
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) The prosecution in the trial of black militant Angela Davis dropped the only black member of the potential jury Monday, drawing gasps from spectators and participants.
"We are now confronted by the spectre that Miss Davis may be tried by an all-white jury," defense attorney Howard Moore Jr. told newsman. Moore noted that she could not resist any reason, but added, "In this case it is apparent that the reason is racial."
Astt. Atty. Gen. Albert H. Harris Jr. used the state's fourth peremptory challenge to remove from the panel Jane Hemphill.
The government's earlier questioning of Hemphill had brought accusations of a conspiracy to remove the governor.
attorneys claimed Harris purposely embarrassed Hemphill by revealing that her husband had been arrested in a gambling raid.
As Harris emerged from the courthouse after court recessed for the day, a group assembled outside shouted taunts at him. The defense earlier Monday dropped from the potential jury an anti-Communist witch and he'd had little contact with blacks.
Defense attorneys, who had tried unsuccessfully to oust William O. Hotaling for cause, used their first peremptory move to remove him without having to state a reason.
The state, meanwhile, removed the only student on the panel—a 26-year-old who said he didn't quite understand the theory of circumstantial evidence.
Gay Lib Issue Highlights Third Student Senate Term
By HAL RITTER
Kansan Staff Writer
By Friday a new student body president and vice-president and 91 student senators will have been elected to office at the University of Kansas for one-year terms.
Since that first meeting of the third Student Senate session since the All-Student Council was ended in the spring of 1969, the Senate has experienced frustration, feelings of accomplishment and gratitude that have served those that have lasted until 3 or 4 m.
These newly elected representatives will take over the reins of KU student government from the body which was formed in 1972. The Student Senate meeting, March 24, 1971,
At that meeting David Miller replaced Bill Ebert as student body president, and Molly Lafflin, student body vice-president, presided over the first of 12 Senate meetings which have spanned three semesters.
At its second meeting, April 4, the Senate passed a proposal that was to have repercussions in the fall. That proposal added three non-journalism students and one journalism student to the University Daily Kansas Board, eliminated a Student Senate representative on the board, and took away voting powers from two board members managing editor and business manager. The voting powers were later resigned.
THE FIRST two meetings of the Senate were spent appointing committee members, reorganizing the standing Senate committees, introducing bills for first readings and taking a preliminary vote on them, and submitting it to the Finance and Aguding Committee.
The motion was called "a testimonial to the responsibility of the student body" by the administration and was lauded by Gov. Docking and state legislators, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., and KU administrators.
It was not until its third meeting, April 21st, that the Senate really made the headlines.
Nevertheless, the referendum was defeated April 27 by a vote of 2,151 to 1,878 in what Miller termed it "vote against the minimum level of financial support for
higher education in Kansas and against the burden on the students' shoulders.
The Senate held its last meeting of the spring April 28 and approved the Student Activity Fee allocation from the Student Activity Fee before adjourning at 3:35 a.m.
FROM ITS BUDGET of $399,850 the Senate allocated $389,257 to school and departmental groups, inmatsurals and student senates. The Kansan, the KU Athletic Department and the University Theatre, Approval of a budget left unaccounted for.
At its first meeting of the 1971-72 school year Sept. 15, the Senate recognized the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front as a legitimate student organization, touching off one of the most controversial issues at KU during the fall semester.
Chalmer's was invited to attend the next Senate meeting to discuss the recognition because he had refused twice before to give his Lib descendant *Lib desi* Senate recommendations.
ALSO AT THE MEETING, Miller proposed a bill which called for an all-University vote on eight options concerning the activity fee.
At its meeting Sept. 29, the Senate acted on both measures of the previous meeting. After Chalmers defended his stand against a proposed law that colleges and universities should work "to remove ourselves institutionally from involvement in the individual sexual proclivity of our students," the Senate adopted an appropriation of $600 to the Front.
The Senate also approved Miller's student poll on activity fees that contained eight options ranging from the present $24-a-year student fee to no activity fee.
On October 20 the Senate passed a bill creating a committee to study All-Student Council Statute Five that dealt with the dispute between the Senate, Kansan and Jawahhar.
ATTACHED TO the bill was an amendment cutting all funds to the Kansan in an attempt to make the Kansan Board comply with the enactment passed April 8 that changed the composition of the board.
Studying the problem of conflicts of
A week later the Senate restored funds to the Kansan and passed a bill that added one student, who was not to be a senator, to the Kansan. Of the four included in the earlier bill,
interest within the Student Senate was the purpose of an ad-hoc committee created by the students.
THE SENATE ALSO decided to subsidize the Lawrence Bus Co. during finals and from Jan. 17 to March 17 by an allocation of $15,184.
These were the highlights of the Senate
Three Senate meetings held since the spring semester began were spent approving numerous allocations of funds for the Watkins Hospital Methadge Clinic.
Also at the meeting the Finance and Auditing Committee presented a report made after the opinion poll on October. Although students voted in favor of the present activity fee in the poll, the Senate voted against it. The $3 a semester to provide for increases in necessary funding. The Senate voted against the increase in fees.
This semester the Senate has passed legislation limiting campaign expenditures by candidates for student offices, has created a Student Publication Board to oversee the financial management of student publications and has approved rules that ensure if matching funds can be obtained from a federal or state grant.
meetings of the past year, and they do not attempt to touch on all work done by senators outside the Senate meetings or by committees.
CHANGES HAVE also been made in the past year in the structure of the Senate itself, including a trimming of the standing committees from eight to six, creation of a new Senate Judiciary committee and reorganization of the Student Executive Committee to increase its effectiveness.
The latter committee was also involved in an amendment to the Senate rules that allows the first reading of a bill to come in, before passing, speeding up the legislative process.
In February the Senate passed 11 pages of legislation comprising the revised Rules and Regulations of the Student Senate. These regulations completed the reorganization program, which began in the All-Student Council was abolished in the spring of 1989.
The Emporium, a book-selling service for students, was opened by the Senate Dec. 13, a bike week was sponsored Oct. 11. The Senate Workshop was held on Nov. 13 and 14.
ANOTHER WORKSHOP is planned for after elections, and expenses will be paid.
2
Tuesday. March 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Court Action Liberalizes Kansas Abortion Statute
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A three-judge federal panel has ruled that the Kansas abortion law by decision violated the 1970 statute unconstitutional.
Monday's ruling liberalizes the requirements for a hospital to satisfy all other requirements to contract for treatment. A struck down was the requirement for a three-member panel of physicians to approve all abor-
The court upheld the law, although the prison was provisionally to be consistent with the due process and equal protection clauses of the 14th Amendment.
THE RULING was issued in response to a suit filed last September by plaintiffs listed as Douglas Hospital and Douglass Hospital in Kansas City, Kan. and Dr. Lynn D.Weller Jr., a physician in Kansas
The ruling was made by Judge Delma Delimont Jr. of John Creek, County of Appeals, Jail of Appeals, E. Brown, chief of the U.S. District Court of Kansas and U.S. District Court of Louisiana.
The first provision found unconstitutional declared that abortions could be performed only in hospitals approved by the Health Department, a creditation of Hospitals (JCAH). The plaintiffs claimed that only 22 per cent of all county hospitals in Kansas come under JCAH
The section of the law necessitating a three-doctor panel to approve abortions was
challenged on two counts. The
classified abortion procedure and
that the classification bore no
reasonable relation to govern-
SECONDLY, the provision interfered with the physicians' fundamental right to administer drugs. His patients, the plaims said.
The court agreed that nowhere in Kansas law must doctors consult before performing surgery.
The plaintiffs argued that the three-doctor panel stipulation was baseless and curtailed the availability of abortions, as well as infringing on fundamental individual and marital privacy."
The plaintiffs contended that Douglass Hospital met all other requirements of the law except specifically challenged in the suit.
The action had been brought after Wasyndae County attorney Donald Reilly ordered the directives of the state attorney general, ordered the hospital last July 27 to cease performing his duties and the Hospital officials testified they complied with the directive in writing and provided briefs from Mencheng's office.
THE COURT refused an injunction sought by the plaintiffs to keep the county attorney's office from issuing a statute. The court said such an injunction would be ordered when it was "deemed necessary."
Menghini said Monday af-
Kelley reported progress in decreasing reliance on the draft in the last six months of 1971. He said in that period seven out of 10 enlistees were true volunteers and with six out of 10 a year earlier.
Kelley said it was too early to measure the effect of pay increases that became effective Nov. 14, but volunteer enlistees on the Corps of Cadets numbers above 241 increased 29 per cent in December and January compared with the same two months a year earlier.
But, he said, "the fall-off in draft-motivated enlistments has been more rapid than the increase in volunteers.
"in spite of maximum efforts to ensure reenlistment, it does not appear that we can beat the military," said an assistant secretary of defense for manpower, said in testimony before Armed Services committees.
Kelly said the military had not yet used the collent bonus to purchase combat personnel, but "at present we have no incentive to increase access necessary may be needed for Army's ground combat skills and possibly other equipment."
terhoen he had not yet received a copy of the opinion and would make no statement until he had studied the ruling.
Because the suit was handled by a three-member judicial unit in the State Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme Court without a separate hearing before the 10th Circuit.
The enlistment bonus could run up to $3,000 for extended enlistments.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Congress Monday that additional incentives may be needed to achieve an all-volunteer armed force is under consideration.
Atty. Gen. Vern Miller and his chief assistant, John Martin, said another alternative open to the legislature would be to have the legislature act quickly to change the law to satisfy the court and at the same time place some reservations on who can obtain revisions.
No announcement was made whether the state will appeal the ruling.
Low Volunteer Rate Slows No-Draft Plan
The Kansas Legislature had rejected all attempts to change the law, which went into effect in July of 1970.
of 1971.
the lawmakers are in recess until Monday, when they return for a final one-day session before adjournment for the 1872 session. If finally no chance the legislature will implement the law before it adjourns.
from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), delegates from Tennessee, Maryland, and Illinois sit against forced integration and for "quality education."
"I not for it," said Mayor Richard Hatcher of Gary, Ind., among others, who shouted its approval of the South Carolina resolution opposing integration. "I suspect it will be crucial to get the support of the President's policy, and in my judgment, I would do well to reconsider."
An orientation meeting for fal-
sency rush will be held tonight
through Friday. Attendance to the
Kansas Union to answer
questions and explain the rush
GARY, ind. (AP) — The first
Convention revealed
fundamental disagreements
among black Americans on
racism.
Vote KUSP
MOST OF THE delegates agreed, however, on strong support for 'quality education' in community control of schools."
School busing to improve the quality of education was one of the key issues in conflicting resolutions, along with shouted denunciations of integrationists, segregationists from the hectic convention floor.
"Sex activates the thyroid gland, burns up cholesterol and calories, exercises every muscle in the body and strengthens, but it is not as powerful by making it more blood for a short period and then relax
Before the convention was over Sunday, all the conflicting resolutions had been tentatively settled. A study by a convention committee.
NORTH COLLEGE SENATE
Thane Hodson
Stephanie Struble
Linda Doherty
Rush Meeting At 7 Tonight
"A healthy night of sex is nature's tranquilizer, reducing stress and creating a general sense of relaxation and well-being.
Delegates Disagree on Busing At Black Political Convention
The delegates included:
—A condemnation of school bus violence by racial integration, introduced by the Florida delegation.
The doctor's message is that the old theory holding that sex is bad for a weak or aging heart has been disproved.
Paid by KUSP
Sex, Scheimann maintains, is good medicine for the heart:
"A Virginia reply that read, "We categorically reject all state laws that discriminate racially segregated public education. " We strongly condemn the practice of business in the consideration of whether states should be required to disestablish racially dual systems of public education."
—The Congress of Racial Issues (CORE) description of Nixon as a "raist" and the explanation that although CORE agrees with Nixon's opposition to him, using "is for different reasons."
—The South Carolina delegation's opposition to "racial integration of schools as a form of segregation" method . . . based on the false
NAACP delegate Ivore Price said the resolution "is definitely against the policy of the NAACP and people feel it was not a legal vote."
notion that black children are unable to learn unless they are in the same setting as white children . . .
Dr. Eugene Scheimann, a Chicago sexologist and columnist who wrote an article in the April issue of Forum, an international journal
NEW YORK (AP) — "Sex is not only here to stay," the doctor says, "it can help you stay here longer."
TO THE CONSTERNATION of many delegates,including those
Not only that, but he is saying that there are mutual fears between men and women for heart, and further, that men with sexual frustrations are more prone to heart attacks.
Docking Seeks Support For Tax Lid Extension
Use Kansan Classified
SABETHIA (AP) - Gov. Robert Docking urged Kansas citizens Monday to join him in an all-out campaign to get the state legislature to extend the property tax and its adjoins next Monday night.
passed in 1970, from its scheduled expiration date of Dec. 31, 1972, for seven months to July 31, 1973.
The other would make permanent the local sales tax authority under the tax id law. The extension of the remainder of the law
One would extend the tax lid.
"I in the week ahead, I will stump the state of Kansas to ask the help of taxpayers to win the federal property tax lid." D跋 said in remarks prepared for delivery to the Nemaha County National Farmers Organization barbecue farm on Friday at High School Monday night.
The Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee has tabled the bill to extend the tax lid ten months, and the House as a whole killed a Senate-passed bill to extend the local sales tax and also rebuffed an attempt to reconsider action on that bill.
The legislature, now in recourse for 10 days before returning for a one day windup session next month, will decide the property tax lid law which be revived and acted upon if the lawmakers are so disposed.
Meanwhile, in Topeka Monday,
Rep. Murray Kay, R-Lawrence
and House majority leader, said
he would move when the lateure returns next week to
the authorization for Topeka
Lawrence and Manhattan to continue their local sales taxes.
Kay said he is having amendments drawn for adding to a bill still in the house calendar which expects that sales tax authority for the cities.
Sex Linked To Longevity
Ross DISNEY
MENS WEAR
Moonlight Madness
SUPER SPECIALS TUESDAY 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
DRESS SHIRTS $3.29 values to $9.50
GEORGE C. SCOTT 1970 Oscar Winner NOMINATED BEST ACTOR for his role in "THE HOSPITAL"
Flare SLACKS values to $14.00 $8.99
Corduroy & Twill $3.29
JEANS
All Sales Final
No Exchanges or Refunds
Eve. Show 7:30 .9:30
Mammals & Sun.
Bargain Rates 5:00 Only
Granada
INHALIANCE STREET 412
RossDISNEY
MENS WEAR
Due to the Emotional Content of this Show
No One Admitted After the First 10 Minutes
Hillcrest
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THE FIRST JESUS WASN'T PLASTIC
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 14, 1972
3
TIMES OF THE WEEK
Kansan Photo by PATTI O'NEILI
Lanterns on Tree Used as Warning
Pre-Civil War marker stands near Baldwin
Signal Oak Warned Citizens of Attacks
By PATTI O'NEILL
Kansan Staff Writer
At the top of the Big Hill near Baldwin there once stood a stately owl called "The Eagle," which was called because in the days of the border troubles in Kansas between 1851 and 1861 men munged at the entrance to surrounding area of approaching slave raiders. These were the days when the issue of slavery yet been resolved in Kansas
According to a 1938 issue of the Lawrence Journal World, the tree died in the spring of 1914 and left its white marker was set down in 1938.
Today the Signal Oak is gone and in its place stands a granite boulder to commemorate the spot.
It is not known how old the Signal Oak was, but according to
On a clear day, from the top of the Big Hill, the buildings of Mount Oread can be seen to the north and Vinland to the northwest.
a 1910 issue of the Baker University Jubilee, it was used by white men in the times of Indian wars to warn of Indian attacks.
The Big Hill, where the Signal Oak stood, is about two miles northeast of Baldwin. It can be seen from a gravel road until a sign says that "Christ died for your sins" in a cross. Except for the sign, the place is quiet and untouched as it must have looked many years ago. Today the kids who come there at night to park and throw parties, according to Mrs. M. S. Rowan, down the road from Signal Oak
KU Delegates to Attend Annual Women's Meeting
The theme for this year's convention is "Women-Men: Partners in Humanity."
The Commission on the Status of Women will send delegates to the Intercollegiate Association of Women Students (LAWS) for March 29-April 2 at Arlington Park Towers in Chicago.
Convention cost is $80 which includes room and board and registration fees.
Any University woman who is willing to pay her expenses is eligible to attend the convention, according to Karen Keesling, women. Those interested should contact Keesling before Friday.
Keesling said the Commission would send representatives from the resident halls, sorority houses and other living areas.
Commission members who will attend include Casey Elkes, Kansas City, Mo., senior and national president of the IAWs; Emily Taylor, dean of women and national adviser, and Grace England, England. Ark. special student and executive director of IAWs.
Convention activities will be opened by Don Ward and Rita Costeck-Ward, who did a program last year at KU for the human sciences on love. The Wards teach a sexuality course at Michigan State.
Keynote speakers at the convention are Gloria Steinem, women's movement leader and editor of Ms., and Martha from Michigan, who sponsored Michigan, who sponsored the Equal Rights Amendment.
Other convention activities include a panel discussion on "Innovative Women" featuring Brig. General Jean Holmes, the first woman appointed to this position in 1972, and KU student and White House fellow, who is currently working with the Department of Labor.
Janiece Mendenhall, also a former KU student who is in charge of the women's program for the General Service Administration, will talk with Rosemary Woodside, director of the Independent Voters of Illinois on a panel on "Partners in the World of Work."
Virginia. Allan, deputy
attorney for the State Department,
affairs for the State Department,
with three women foreign service
officials will discuss "Women
Attorneys" in St. Louis.
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
Language Options Sought
A caucus of the undergraduate representatives to the College Assembly of Liberal Arts and Sciences convened at 7:30 p. m. Monday in the Kansas Union. A law amendment designed to imme- diation of college modification of College requirements was discussed.
"Birth Control: Shared
Information on human sexuality seminar from 6 to 9 tonight in Oliver Hall and
Wednesday in the Eight
Lodge."
John Poley, Wichita senior,
presented a draft of an art
exhibition and the full Assembly Tuesday which would improve attendance at the event.
The amendment provides for the election of at least one alternate from each CWC and department and for a checklist containing the names of student absences, which should be recorded.
Sponsored by the commission of the Status of Women, the program provides birth control and a discussion of various birth control methods by Rae Sedgwick, Bonner Springs high school student and registered nurse.
Birth Control Seminar Topic
UNDER THE amendment, two consecutive absences would constitute grounds for automatic removal of a representative. The other constituent amendment would then be charged with appointing a replacement.
The amendment also provides for recalling an Assembly representative containing 25 names or 10 percent of the CWC of declared members.
RESPONSE TO the petition was favorable. Poley said it was difficult to single out one particular department in compliance with He said that was why the Assembly's Educational Policies and Procedures Committee (EPPC) was currently conducting a blanked study of requirements for the entire College.
Results of the study, which investigated modification of foreign language and western civilization requirements and a studies degree, will be presented in a workshop some time in April.
John Masterson, Falls Church,
Va., junior, presented a petition
modifying the foreign language
requirement in the College.
Masterson proposed that a student still be required to attain a proficiency through the second course in a language. After that, several options would be open: one must pass a proficiency exam or take the two remaining courses to obtain his 16 hours proficiency; or he could substitute two courses worth a minimum of six hours in the literature, music or art of a particular country or region.
Even though more all-encompassing proposals for the petition come forthcoming, for the petition to present the petition dealing with foreign language universities interested in meeting of the full Assembly. One
The Wheel of Trust ...
ORGANIZATION OF
The School Council for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will be joined by Mr. Cox, the College's Student Senate Representatives and student participants in policy making efforts within the school departments. Poley said he would ask George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, to call the meeting.
head or faculty members were unsympathetic, there was little a student could do.
representative pointed out that presentation was better than the proposal would be discussed on the floor of the Assembly and not buried in the
The final moments of the meeting were devoted to the conversation. The student had when placed in a course taught by an incompetent teacher.
a series of books that can reawaken in modern man the knowledge of how to search for himself. From diverse lines and places and from a wide variety of traditions and literary forms, these works offer a fresh perspective on the search for consciousness. Through these works the series as a whole will attempt to offer new perspectives on the ultimate purpose of human life within the boundless scope of cosmic existence.
POLYE SAID if there were no students participating on policy making committees within the departments or if the department
THE SACRED PIPE. Black Elixis Account of the Raven Wites of the Ciglia Baur. Recorded and edited by Joseph Eisen Brown. A beautiful work, rich in detail. The book shows how the entire Sicilian nation sought to conform its religious rhythm of the hymn of outer and nature. $31-45 BORN IN TIBET. Roberts. The life of a young turku of Tibet provides an illustrative example of living Buddhism in its confronts the realities of daily life.
Representatives discussed evaluation methods and brought a portable video tape camera to portable video tape camera to view his map. He instructed to view his map.
A new series for the new awareness
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OUR LIFE WITH MR. GURDJIEFJ, Thomas de Harmanm. A rich personal evocation of what it meant to be close to the great spiritual leader G. I. Gurdjiefj. The Russian composer Thomas Gurdjiefj was a man of great importance at Gurdjief's side through years of war and revolution. $1.65 STRANGE LIFE OF WAS VOKSIN, D. P. Dusenky. Duration, infinity, and eternal recurrence are the themes of this spathing novel. Oursuprey was one of Gurdjiefj's most brilliant works, and it was his meaning and magical possibilities of existence. $1.45
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UNDERSTANDING ISLAM. *Fritsch School*. The universal aspect of Islam must be stressed in the interpretation of its teachings.
THE NEW MAM MAJURIE Nicole. A new view of Jesus parables and miracles. Makes a fresh connection between their psycho-logical significance.
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These and other outstanding paperback papers are on sale at your campus bookstore now.
False Alarm At Watson
SENIOR CLASS MEMBERS
ST. PATRICK'S DAY SPECIAL!
March 16th
WATCH FOR FURTHER DETAILS!
SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS
Unified Sophomore
Class
Mark McCaughey—Pres.
Bob Marshall—V-Pres.
Ann Dillon—Sec.
Barb Haman—Treas.
Vote U.S.C. March 15-16
Paid by USC
The Lawrence Fire Department was called to Watson Lake to investigate smoke coming from the seventh level of the book
There was no fire and no damage to the library. Although no definite cause for the smoke was found, Traffic and Security said they thought that the smoke was from electrical circuits.
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THE SOPHOMORE CLASS LECTURE SERIES
presents
SENATOR BIRCH BAYH of Indiana
Speaking on
"The Future of the American Political System"
Tuesday, March 14 8:00 p.m.
at the Kansas Union Ballroom
SENATOR BAYH—Considered one of the U.S. Senate's constitutional authorities and a leader in the passage of the 28th amendment lowering the voting age to 18.
Currently working for a constitutional amendment to provide equal rights for men and women. Concerned about the nation's needs in dealing with pollution, poverty, education, and health care.
ADMISSION 50c
Tickets Free to Sophomore with Class Cards--Advanced Tickets will be Sold at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd.
4
Tuesday, March 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Griff and the Unicorn
—Of Whimsy and Dreams
Editor's note: In the fall of 1969 two improbable characters first appeared on the Kansas editorial page. They were, and remain, Griff and the Uncorn. Their creator, Dave Sokoloff, a junior majoring in advertising and editorial art, created the two sometimes whimsical and hapless characters way back in Chicago before coming to the University of Kentucky. And the Daily has appeared regularly since 1989 and daily since spring of 1971.
This is a collection of some favorite strips. His comments accompany the cartoons.
The phone rang very late one Saturday night and a voice asked me, among other things, where the ideas came from for "Griff and the Unicorn." That's a very awkward thing for me to explain even at a decent hour—never mind 1:30 in the morning. I guess most of my ideas come from just fooling around. Like I said, it's difficult to get across. For this article I chose those cartoons that I could connect to a specific source. There are a couple here that can't be traced to anything exactly, but are included because they're favorites of mine.
"This idea came about one night when my drawing of a bed looked like it had feet. I wondered what would happen if it started walking around. Griff was put on the bed and he took it from there."
ZII?! WUZZA WA?
WHAZ GOIN' ON?
ZIT! WUZZA WAFT WHAZ GON'T ON?
MAN! MY BED IS WALKING AWAY WITH ME! WONDER IF I SHOULD VELL FOR HELP OR SOMETHING...
NAW... SOMEHOW I CAN'T SEE ME SHOTTING: "HELP! I'M BEING KIDNAPPED BY A BED..."
"It seems like all the conversations between Griff and the Unicorn are taken from dialogues with myself. Mine is one of the few jobs where talking to yourself can be an occupational asset."
MAN! MY BED IS WALKING AWAY WITH ME! WONDER IF I SHOULD YELL FOR HELP OR SOMETHING -----
NAW ... SOMEHOW I CAN'T SEE ME SHOTTING:
"HELP! I'M BEING KIDNAPPED BY A BED."
I'M SO MISERABLE
AWH_
ANYTHING,
I CAN DO?
NO THANKS,
GRiff_
I'D JUST LIKE TO WALLOW
IN SELF-DITY
FOR AWHILE
CLICK!
CLICK!
IGG!
CLICK!
CLICK!
I CAN'T STAND IT!!
YA AAAAAA!
CLICK!
WILL YOU STOP CLIPPING YOUR NAILS!!!?
AMAZING HOW LITTLE IT TAKES TO SET SOME PEOPLE OFF.
"Last summer I worked for a retail clothing store in the Chicago suburbs washing tuxedos. In the laundry room, a big, wiry, black steam-presser named Larry clipped his nails now and then—it drove me up the wall."
"Since mythical beasts are used in the strip, some research has to be done regarding fabulous animals. The Phoenix, a bird which has to set fire to itself to continue its species, seems to have been given a bum deal. But at least it made some material for a cartoon."
WITH PROUD DEMEANOR
AND LOFTY GATE, THE
LEGENDARY PHOENIX
ASCENTS THE FIERY PYRE
THOUGH I WILL PERISH
IN THE FLAMES, A NEW
PHOENIX WILL ARISE
FROM THE ASHES
WHAT A HEEK OF A WAY TO RAISE A FAMILY...
HELLO SIMON!
I HAVEN'T SEEN
YOU IN A LONG TIME
"MARSHA?"
SYLVIA?
JANE?
ELAINE?
GUEN?
LISA?
PAM?
CYNTHA?
ELLIE?
SUSAN?
LILY?
VERONICA?
DOTTY?
MANE?
SYLVIA?
JANE?
ELAINE?
GUEN?
LISA?
PAM?
CANTHA?
ELLIE?
SUSAN?
LILY?
VERONICA?
DOTTY?
MIANE?
"This sort of thing happens to me too often—there is nothing to do but draw a comic strip about it."
"Believe it or not, this idea is taken from an actual conversation between my father and me, except the topic was the relative value of Dick Cavett as opposed to that of Johnny Carson. It was Dad who, as I remember, disparaged Cavett as an 'intellectual.' Griff has my line."
HEY! WHAT ARE YOU READING?
MARSHALL MCLIHAN
HEY! WHAT ARE YOU READING?
MARSHALL NELUHAN
YICKK!
AN INTELLECTUAL!
YICKK!
AN
INTELLECTUAL!
HEY! WHAT ARE YOU READING?
MARSHALL McLUHAN
YICKK!
AN INTELLECTUAL!
FIRST TIME I’VE EVER HEARD THE WORD USED AS AN OBSSCENITY...
EVERY NOW AND THEN,
I GET THE FEELING
THAT WE'RE NOT ALONE
IN THE WORD
WE'RE BEING WITCHED
AND LOOKED AFTER...
EVERY NOW AND THEN,
I GET THE FEELING
THAT WE'RE NOT ALONE
IN THE WORLD...
WE'RE BEING WAITED
AND LOOKED AFTER...
IT'S A
COMPORTING
FEELING...
SOMETIMES IT'S
KIND OF CREEPY...
FIRST TIME
I'VE EVER
HEARD THE
WORD USED AS
AN OBSCENITY...
SOMETIMES IT'S KIND OF CREEPY...
"I'm not sure where I got the idea for this one. I'm not sure I want to know."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates $6. a semester, $10 a year. Second class postpaid at Lakeside, Kan. 60044. Accommodation fees are not required for employment advertised in this publication to be calculated or a national fee are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas at the State Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
Editor News Advisor ... Del Brinkman Chip Crews
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Advisor ... Mel Adams Carol Young
Tuesday, March 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
无
KU Clinic Aids Slow-Learners
By MARSHA LIBEER
Kicking a ball represents more than playful activity for Rob. It is therapy to improve Rob's eye-coordination.
For Anne, playing with dominoes will hopefully strengthen her eye-hand coordination.
There are approximately 20 Kansas elementary school students, who like Rob and Anne, are working with the University School of Medicine at Motor Clinic in overcoming various learning disabilities.
The clinic, one of only several on college campuses throughout the United States, is directed by cdc. (U.S. Department of Education) professor of physical education.
CARLSON SAID the clinic was started in the fall of 1970 after he had been a member of members decided it "had value and a place at the University and a lab."
The previous summer Carlson worked with Nita Sundbye, professor of education, and Floyd Hudson, assistant professor of education, to see how they could children with learning disabilities.
Sundayde said recently, "When we first began, we tried to look at kids with emotional, remedial and perceptual-motor problems.
We looked at it from all different points of view."
Carlson said they felt their work seemed to be having some positive effect on the children. So the clinic beaten.
THE CLINICS' fame spread from Lawrence to other Kansas towns. Students now come for the annual Leavenworth, Baldwin, Kansas M. McLoughlin and Wellsville. He also refers to a referral from Dudge City
A clinical diagnosis for each child includes a parental assessment of the development of the child thus far, a physical examination by a doctor, the checking of records and referral to a remedial programs the child has been in, a talk with the child's parent, and an evaluation of clinical test results.
Twelve clinical tests are given at the clinic. The tests check cerebral aurotic discrimination, reflexes, learning aptitude, motor control, reading difficulties, visual perception and motor control.
graduate student, gives the Kansas Test of Perceptual-Motor Dysfunction, an experimental examination which tests motor abilities such as throwing, handwriting, and hopping.
Most of Miller's testing has been with hyperactive children, who she thinks are the hardest to handle and seem to have the most problems.
Miller said of the diagnostic testing, "I feel that there is a great benefit for the children, in that can help the basis of therapy for them.
"It is a good feeling when you know that you might be doing something for the children."
Dennis Knapczyk, Lawrence graduate student, also administers diagnostic testing of children at the clinic.
KNAPCZYE SAID one test he gave, the Detroit Test of Learning Aptitudes was one of the better tests that is given."
"It ites on all of the skills needed in classroom settings," Knapezyk said.
children in the clinic gives me a frame of reference," he said.
Carlson said, "The child that comes here has normal head development and no arm is retarded. He is encounters difficulty in school in some area. Some of them are significantly behind. We have several who are in the fourth or fifth grade in school and read at the first grade level.
"THEY ALSO have what we call perceptual-motor problems. They have some distortion in the way they perceive their environment and respond to their environment in the sense of doing something."
He said he enjoyed working with different types of children. "I've taught in special education, and working with
Carlson said the problems varied with each child and the results of the evaluation have not been decided that nothing was wrong with the child, to recommending that he attend Menninger Foundation in Topeka.
He said, "If the child is perceptual-motor problems, then we should give him an attempt to widen up behavioral goals or objectives that we would like to accomplish toward achievement. Once we've set up these
Senate Passes KUMC Bond
JEAN PYFER, assistant professor of physical education, supervises the perceptual motor program, and Gordon Alley, professor of education, supervises the academic program.
The Kansas Senate authorized a law to provide for the expansion of clinical and basic science buildings at the University of Kansas Medical
The academic program was new to the clinic in the fall of 1971. Carlson said the clinic had been 100 per cent successful of early failure to incorporate an academic program.
objectives, we begin to plan a sequence of activities for the child to do."
The new basic science building and hospital addition at the Med would provide for an expansion of the number of beds, increase in the number of beds by about 350 and, at the same time, an increase in the enrollment of local students.
The Board of Regents would be authorized to issue up to $44 million, to be paid by fees and rental charges.
Construction to expand the square footage of floor space of the Med Center by about 50 per room. Built during the last six months of 1973.
"I think the problem we had was that when the children came to us, they were two or three academic areas," he said. "Now we started an academic program and we're in a different ball game because we can often get them to play with our class very close to their class."
Claimant Drops Damage Suit Against Elwell
A claim for $10,000 in damages against Douglas County Court officials has been withdrawn, Jerry Donnelly attestant county officials. Thursday.
The claim withdrawn by death was for damages which allegedly occurred when county officials impounded a package containing
The money, found in the Kansas Union Bookstore November 1, 1971, was claimed by Schaake, but was withheld by Ewell and other county officials. He hearing on a motion by the plaintiff in the final disposition of the money will be住 at 2 p. m. March 14.
The Portrait-Personality category of the Fifth Annual Kansas University Photography Museum, from a story in Monday's Kansas.
More Photos Win in Contest
First place in this category were to Lisa Schoeseer, Topeka sewachew from Kansas City, Kan., senior, won second place and Schoeseer also won second place.
Ray Totten, Shawnee fifth year
college student; Pete Sang,
Overseeing
John Hourhon, Metuchen, N.J.
received honorable merit
Campus Bulletin
TODAY
Supervisory Seminar: All day, Forum
Room.
R6055 Italian Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark
Architecture of Kansas City Interviews:
9:30 a.m., Room 305.
Supervisory Seminar: 10 a.m., Forum
Seminar 12.15 p.m., Big
Eight Room.
Student Teachers: 12.30 p.m., Jaykawh
Table 11.30 a.m. Meadowlark
Cafeteria
History Advisory Committee, near
Washington Square
Scholarship Halls: 9 a.m., Council Room.
Archdiocese of Kansas City Interviews:
9:30 a.m., Room 365.
History Advisory Committee: noon.
Alcove C.
Dean's Council Agenda Committee: noon.
Dean's Council Agenda Committee: noon.
Alceve D. History Seminar, 11:15 a.m.
Supervisory Seminar: 12.15 p.m., Big Eight Room.
UCS-45 HW 3:30 p.m. Council Room.
SIMS: 3:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room.
College Assembly: 4 p.m. Woodruff
Auditorium.
First Nighters: 6.15 p.m. Centennial Room.
National Merit Scholarship Committee: 1
p.m. Regionalist Room,
ACM: 3 n.m. Pipe Room
Room
SIMS: 6:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room.
Tau Beta Plz 7 p.m. International Room.
Iranian Students: 7 p.m. Oread Room.
Senator Bayh Press Conference: 7 p.m.
Big Eight Room.
College Assembly: 4 p.m.. Woodruff Auditorium.
First Nighters: 6:15 d.m.. Centennial
SIMS: 6:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room.
Panhellenbee 7:15 p.m., Camellia Room.
French Club: 7:30 p.m. Nakshatram.
8:45 p.m. wk. Wakings Room.
9:15 p.m. Seelye: 7:30 p.m. Woodruff
Audiolorum.
School Earth Mayn Lecture: 8 p.m.
Ballroom.
English Poetry Reading: 8 p.m., Jayhawk
Room.
Pam Shelley 7:30 p.m. Woodruff
Auditorium.
Senator Birch Bayh Lecture: 8 p.m.
Ballroom.
BDE Light Room.
French Room: 7:30 p.m. Kansas Room.
French Chair: 7:30 p.m. Walkins Room.
KU Film Studio: 7:30 p.m. Woodward
Panellendei : 7 p.m., Council Room.
SUA SkI Clab: 7 p.m., Forum Room.
Barnet. 8 p.m. University Theatre.
Latin American Area Colloquium: 8 p.m.
Regionalist Room.
SMS: 8 p.m. Big Eight Room.
Pearson College Humanities Lecture: 8:15
Reception for Bayh: 9:30 p.m., Kansas Room.
1. Groom Room
Sigma Delta Chi: 8:15 p.m., Council Room.
Baptist Student Union: 8:20 p.m., International Room.
1
Alley said it seemed that perceptual-motor activities were not enough for the children who needed help in academic areas.
**WE MAY FIND a good reason to stop.**
He has trouble in arithmetic."
Skate Boarding Helps Neck Reflexes
*“Playing” at the clinic may be helpful for Anne Edwards*
Kansan Photo
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If you'd like to spend your evening in a pleasant, relaxing atmosphere; come to the SANCTUARY.
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"The program is not supported in any way by the University," Carlson said, "and is not supported in any way by grants from the outside. The program is funded by institutional fees and periodic donations."
The child comes for half hour periods, Carlson said, and it is suggested the child come in five hours, the child come in for one hour periods, receiving half an hour of help in perceptual-motor activity and self-regulation.
Carlson called fees for the clinic as "very economical."
Call Vi2-5248 or Inquire at 1401 W. 7th
The cost for a diagnosis with all the tests is $6. The fees for minimum inpatient care is $2.50 is charged for an hour of perceptual-motor and academic training.
Let the Man from Equitable
TANAZI KUMAR
Cooperative to Start Grocery
The Sunflower Food Cooperative, a newly formed consumer service, will attempt to provide food at lower prices, as food and price information members when its operation begins.
Buddy Bowles
tell you about THE YOUNG PROFESSIONALS PROGRAM offering life insurance with premium financing for full time graduate students.
BUDDY BOWLES
2602 Bellie Crest
Lawrence, Kansas
Phone 843-2616
At an organizational meeting Wednesday night at the Kansas Union a spokesman for the cooperative said by paying a five dollar fee members could share inventory of buying and selling products.
Helping people build a better life
THE EQUITABLE
The Educated Life Assurance Company
helping people build a better life THE EQUITABLE
The cooperative will be at 131
7th St., and will provide staple
foods such as milk, eggs, grains,
meat products, cereals, dairy
products and other foods
requiring refrigeration will can afford the necessary amenities.
The Ananda Marga Yoga Society made the original plans for the cooperative.
Money for buying the food is a major problem. Three hundred dollars are available from the Food Conspiracy, a cooperative which went out of business in the house of a lack of organization.
The spokesman said the $200 and the membership fees would provide rent, lumber, insurance and food.
When the cooperative becomes a stable operation, funds will be provided to the spouses' vehicles, more food and advertisements, the spokesmen
The cooperative will try to buy
directly from farmers around Lawrence until land can be purchased or rented by the organization. The spokesman said they hoped land will even be bought for organic gardening.
Food will be bought wholesale and resold at the same or reduced price.
The cooperative will be made to base its efforts. People who would like to build, buy, advertise or advise should call 843-408-00 or to 723
P
A successful cooperative will give the people an alternative to the high-priced grocery stores in this area, the spokesman said.
Fly your own jet!
FLY NAVY
(COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY) CLASS OF
NAME
STREET
CITY
STATE ZIP CODE
CLASS OF
(COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY)
Clip and Mail To:
U. S. Navy Recruiting Station
2120 Broadway
Kansas City, Mo. 64108
Kansas City, Mo. 64108
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE PRESENTS
HAMLET by William Shakespeare
April 1
March 14 •
16 • 28 • 30
8:00 p.m.
ROSENCRANTZ
ROSENCRANZ and GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD
by Tom Stoppard
March 15
17 29 31
8:00 p.m.
April 2 matinee 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre-Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: UN4-3982 KU Students Receive Free Reserve Seat Ticket with Certificate of Registration
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.
You shell out $130, and get a Student-Railpass. All you need is the bread and something to show you a bonus.
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 schools. So with low air fax and Student-Railpass you've got Europe made.
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. Take a look at this image. The coupon for a free folder, complete with railroad map,
STUDENT-RAILPASS
The way to see Europe without seeing like a tourist. Eurasiapass is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.
Eurailpass, Box 90, Lindenhurst, New York 11757.
Please send me your free Eurailpass folder with railroad map. □ Or your Student-Railpass folder order form. □
Street
192A
---
City State Zip
6
Tuesday, March 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Open Meeting Bill Clears Senate, Goes to Docking
The first open meetings hill ever passed by the Kansas Legislature was approved last week by the Senate after sections of the bill were deleted on the publication of a House committee.
The bill, which was sent to Gov. Robert Docking, establishes as a state policy that meetings of legislative and local governing bodies are required.
Any group that receives or expends public money or is supported in whole or in part by the group must hold open meetings except when the group wishes to adjourn to a closed meeting.
The justification for closing any meeting must be stated, according to the instruction may be taken the closed session. Closed meetings may not be used as an indication of the bill. Participation by a member of a board in a meeting in violation of the bill would be a
Del Brinkman, assistant professor of journalism, said that an open meetings bill had appeared in the Senate and many times in the past but had not been approved until now. He said he knew of only six states that didn't have an open meetings bill as representative of the Topeka
Three Charged After Incident At The Inn
Two Topeka men were scheduled to be arraigned today at 10 a.m. in Lawrence Municipal Court on charges resulting from the shooting of an officer on Saturday in front of The Inn, 19th and Massachusetts Streets.
The men are Gary Wayne
Buskirk, 21 and Duane Larse
Chenault, 30 and of Topeka
who posted a message
to the Douglas County Jail
Buskirk is charged with disorderly conduct, failure to yield to an emergency vehicle, and two counts of aggravated assault.
Chenault is charged with aggravated battery and disorderly conduct.
A third Topeka man, Raipn. Ortega, who will be arranged at 8 a.m. March 27, posted $200 in charges of disorderly conduct
Police reported they received a call about a fight, after an argument between the Topeaks and other patrons at The Inn.
The Topekans, who were reported to have been intoxicated, were asked to leave.
The Topeka men allegedly took a car from the trunk of their car, pick it up and two persons were hit during the incident, but they were not notified.
Buskirk allegedly got into the car and started driving in circles, hitting persons in the street, the police reported. It was estimated that as many as 30 persons may have been in the street at the time.
Four Haskell Indian Junior College students, who were injured, were taken to Lawrence for treatment and later released.
Officers said Chenault and Ortega then into the car and Buskirk tried to drive north 18th street at about the time the police stopped by police at about 16th and Massachusetts streets, and a knife which had been thrown out of the car was recovered by an officer.
They were Gerald Francis, 20, of Dover; Barker, who was apparently suffered cuts on his legs and elbow. Frank Weakins, 20, of 404 Wheeling; by a car and applied by a brace and ligged braces; Lowell Wesley, 19, of 304 Barker, who suffered leg bruises inflicted by a knife; Joseph Holden, 21, 204 Barker, who suffered back and scapu apparently inflicted by a knife.
Interviews
The Bell Systems, B.S. Civil Engineering,
B.S. Electrical Engineering, B.S.
Mechanical Engineering, B.S.
M.S. Mechanical Engineering and B.S.
M.S. Mechanical Engineering and B.S.
Corp of Engineers, B.S. M.S. Civil
Engineering, B.S. M.S. Civil
George A. Hormel and Company, B.S.
Engineering, U.S. Military required.
Engineering, U.S. Military required.
Any degree. Sales. Sales Management.
Provident Mutual Life Insurance Co. Any degree.
Sales. Sales Supervision. Sales Management.
The St. Paul Business Companies, B.S.
Business, B.A Liberal Arts; Sales;
Management.
Corporus Corp., B.S., M.S. Sales.
Business Company.
Xerox Corp. B.S., M.S. Sales Representative.
WEDNESDAY
Firestone Tire and Rubber Company. B.S.
Mechanical Engineering. U.S. citizenship
required.
Cool Pain and Varshah Co. B.S.
Engineering; B.S. in Chemical
Engineering; B.S. in Chemistry
Armstrong Corp. B.S. in Finance
Armstrong Corp. B.S. in Business
Advisory Group; B.S. in Sales
Gorp. B.S. in Mgt. & Sales
Press Club before the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, which studied the effects of compounded amendments.
On recommendation of the Inquiry, Mr. Nakabu said the bill which provided that 25 voters could seek a court injunction to prevent a violation of the law was approved.
Brinkman said the Kansas open hearings bill is weak
L圣路易斯市
Engineering Railway Com-
munity
St. Louis State Univ.
Engineering Technical Uni-
versity
Mechanical
Engineering
citizenship required.
B.S. M.B.A. Business.
B.S. M.A. Liberal
Arts.
Macy's- Missouri Kansas Division: B.S.
Business Administration, M.B.A.
The Trane Company.
A proposal that would consolidate the Indian Centers of Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas will be held on Thursday night at the bimonthly meeting of the Lawrence Indian Center in the Stidham Union at 7:00 p.m.
B S. , M B.A. Business, B A. M. A. Liberal
B S. , M B.A. Business, B A. M. A. Liberal
B S. , Mississippi State Business, B S.
compared to those of many other states. Some states allow closed meetings only for the discussion of specific items, such as the biring or firing of an employee or negotiation or acquisitions.
Indians Consider Move To Consolidate 3 Clubs
"Even though the bill wasn't as strong as other states," it was a fact, Mr. Brinkman said. "It showed the legislature's faith to open up to immigration."
FRIDAY The Trane Company.
Francis Skenandore, president of the club, said the Indian centers must demonstrate a commitment to order to receive sufficient funds.
He said the centers decided to consider consolidation at the Urban Indian Conference three weeks ago in Kansas City. Skenandore thought, "the centers have a greater attention on the many Indians in northeast Kansas who depend on Indian clubs."
if the three centers unite, they would initiate a proposal soliciting funds from the Department of Health, Education and Human Development of Housing and Urban Development and the state of Kansas.
Skeananden doesn't expect aid from all three, but hoped that at least one of the three would be available to all of all three centers will meet Thursday at the Stidham Union to answer the question on the question of consultation.
Skenandore said if the local club became dissatisfied, it could
dissociate from the larger organization. However, if the consolidation of the Wichita Indian School would try to get the Wichita Indian School to join them. This would form a far-reaching partnership to help Kansas Indians together.
The School of Education approved Thursday a universal credit-no credit grading system and no effective in the fall semester, 1972.
Education OK's Credit Option
No education courses have previously been offered on the credit-no credit option.
Dale P. Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said students have an option to take courses for credit-no credit. We feel some students are begged that way, with no option
The committee agreed that no more than 20 per cent of the course hours submitted for the
The Administrative Committee of the school, which approved 4 to 5 students, agreed that each student teaching course, also agreed that education students could elect to have one course credit - no credit or no credit - any course can be selected by students for the option of extra professional education and those fulfilling minimum requirements in the teaching major, minor or post-graduate.
Students who transfer into the School of Education may elect credit-no credit grading for classes taken while enrolled in a school. You must agree. If these courses are graded credit and are in the student's m n i m u m requirements or his teaching or concentration, they will be accepted to count toward his degree.
RCA Gets OK For China TV
degree could be graded credit-no credit.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The approved an export license for U. S. firm to maintain a satellite television station in mainland China.
Indian Center Plans Move To New Home
The Indian Center of Lawrence and guarded headquarters at 1925 Madison about one month, said center secretary Molie Hawkins
The action applies to equipment sent by RCA to set up an earth station in Shanghai, sources said.
Hawkins said the center, which was begun Oct. 15, 1914, had been built in 1920 for building for its headquarters because it relied on donations and aid from the community.
The center acts as a combination community service agency and clearing house for clients of the county. She said Francis Skenandore, center president, Skenandore said the center either supplied the needed bed, clothing or counseling or helped with its own county agency that could help.
Vote For TERRY DUNN
TERRY DUNN
STUDENT SENATE
NORTH COLLEGE
INDEPENDENT
BRET
WILLIAMS
FOR STUDENT
SENATE
LAWS
INDPENDENT
Attention Juniors
ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND
TOWERS
On Capricorn Records
SUSIE COWDEN
ALEX THOMAS Treasurer
VOTE U.H.E. for Senior Class Officers
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Dine In or Carry Out
Every Tuesday Eve. 5:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.
SPAGHETTI NITE 2 for 1
Buy one spaghetti dinner at regular price and receive one FREE!
- Open 7 days at 11:00 a.m.
- Close Mon. thru Thurs. 1:00 a.m.
- Fri. & Sat. 2:00 a.m. Sun. 11:00 p.m.
KU Film Society
MERCADO DE LA SALIDA
BLOOD OF A CONDOR (Bolivia, 1970)
"The dramatic surprise of the San Francisco Film Festival. It graphically shows the wide gulf between the elite whites and the diverse Indians. Past and present stories are related in sophisticated parallel fashion, and the culture of the Indians is revealed through natural and very interesting episodes, a quite simple and universal theme."
Tues.,14 March 7:30 p.m. only Woodruff Aud. 75c
Tues. & Wed. Night
World Cinema
Rock Music
at MAD HATTER
THE PENETRATIONS
Free Admission
MEMBERS & GUESTS
"We think the content of student teaching is different from what goes on in other campus courses," he said. "It's difficult to say if same standards on this course as on campus courses."
different situations student teachers must meet.
Billboard
Barnet and Natalie, Princess of the House of Battenberg.
POP
BREWER & SHIPLEY
Shake Off the G霉素
Anaima Fazlali MFA, 2023 JDIP
**Museum Director**
Brown & Weiner. A **JDIP** Associate Director of the first floor and second floor of the first floor and third floor of the museum, and the curator of the center. An **JDIP** Associate Director of the center. An **JDIP** Associate Director of the center. An **JDIP** Associate Director of the center.
**Annaima Fazlali MFA, 2023 JDIP**
**Museum Director**
Brown & Weiner. A **JDIP** Associate Director of the first floor and second floor of the first floor and third floor of the museum, and the curator of the center. An **JDIP** Associate Director of the center. An **JDIP** Associate Director of the center.
BREWER & SHIPLEY In Concert Sat. - April 8th Hoch Auditorium
MEET THE ORDER THAT IS 113 YEARS YOUNG
Paintists are often called the "modern" order but it isn't just because we are only a little over the age of 20, it's because of what we stand for.
The Paulists were founded by Isaac Hecker, one of the earliest monastic brothers. Hecker, who was a convert to Carthusian and a century ahead of him, instituted the first missionary society of priests established in, and built on, Jerusalem.
Father Hecker's vision was a community that would "meet the needs of all people, as they arise." For this reason he wanted his students not to be overlooked in special works. A special project might be suitable for a particular time and environment, but sometimes would require different techniques and approaches that work better with them.
That's why the Paulists are so interested in parish. University or college or mission... whether he is involved in ecclesiastical panel or the Paulist can decide on his life, but he has the freedom to use his own talents in his own way to create a community.
Paulists are not custodians of the past, but explorers of the future.
Now you know why we are called "modern."
how we why we are called "modern. For more information about the Rev, Donald C. Campbell, C.S.V. Pocum Director
ACOMA VOLS 2007
paulist fathers.
415 West 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019
1972 Spring Elections for
Student Body President
Student Body Vice-President
Student Senate Class Officers Petition to Athletic Corporation
VOTE!
★★★ COMPLETE ★★★
LIST OF
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MARCH 15 & 16
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Kappa Alpha Theta—1433 Tennessee
Alpha Gamma Delta—2005 Stewart
Delta Upsilon—1025 Emergy Road
Delta Tau Delta—111 W. 11th
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Tuesday, March 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
7
Royals Whip Montreal, Post 1-1 League Record
PORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) —
Fort Myers is preparing for 11 for its inclusion four doubles, and whipped the Montreal Express Monday in a basketball game.
The Royals, who even their team's league record broke from a crash on the sixth inning on a double by Amois Otto off the left field and Lou Kravitz.
Both blows came off veteran left hander Denny Lemaster, the loser.
In the eighth, Kansas City put it
well and he was a man who
barned Taylor on Bohy
Knoop's double. Bob Oliver's
single and Ed Rijkerrick's
Al Fitzormer, the second of
three Royal hurriers, yielded the
monte tallies in the fourth
on walk to Keith Lampard, a
But the rest of the 16-team field promises that they won't be easy marks for the Atlantic Coast Conference tough wives.
NEW YORK (AP)—Maryland,
the top-seeded team with one of the best records in college, won Monday as the basketball team to beat in the 35th National Invitational.
"We're much smaller than they are—as a matter of fact, so are a lot of teams. But we can win here in the back court from our backcourt men."
the week-long tourney gets underway Friday night with a doubleheader领 Virginia, 21.6 of the ACC against against Tulsa, 8 of the Maryland, 8 paired with Jacksonville, 17.7. The Maryland-SL. Joseph's game is part of a Saturday afternoon doubleheader, Davidson, 19.8 of the Southern Conference, Syracuse, 20.4 in the opener.
"I like to lead St. Joseph's to the favored team," said Coach Cunningham. "He is a sophomore syllabus school at a drum beating luncheon, but I'll go with to have lunch."
St. Joseph's 19-8 the runner-up
Conference, meets Maryland, 23-
5, in one of the first-round games
this Saturday at Madison Square
Terrapins Favored In National Tourney
Baseball Scores
double by Johnny Boccabella dn Ron Brand's single.
But Fitzmorris, who earned the victory, doubled home two runs off Lemaster in the fifth.
Oral Roberts, 25-1, plays Memphis State, 21-6, of the Missouri Valley Conference and Johnsons N.Y. T9-7 takes on Nebraska in Saturday night. The first round closes Sunday with Princeton, 19-6, of the Ivy League, playing Big Ten represent Indiana, 17-7, and Niagara, 18-8, meeting Western Athletic Conference
Lefty Driesell, the Maryland coach, wouldn't say whether his
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Boston 3, Philadelphia 2
Atlanta 1, New York (A) 0
Arizona 1, Oakland (A) 5
Baltimore 5, Texas
Kansas City 4, Montreal 2
Houston 4, St. Louis 2
Philadelphia 8, Pittsburgh 8
Los Angeles 2, Cincinnati 1
Chicago (N) 12, Milwaukee 1
Southpaw Jimm Rooker allowed one hit while blinding the Expos through the first three innings. Roger Nelson allowed two hits and shut out Montreal the last season. The Expos dropped to 1-2
Hal Wissel, the Fordham coach, agreed that Jacksonville wouldn't be easy, either, but we "are not in our big teams."
"Maryland certainly looks like one of the toughest," conceded Memphis State's Gene Barton, whose club must be considered a strong candidate for the national's oldest post-season tournament.
Delta Upsilon Pours in 137 In intramurals
Only twelve teams have 4-0 records after five weeks of competition.
Delta Upsaion scored 137 points in an intramural basketball game last week, while holding Phi Kappa Sigma to 17.
In the Fraternity B League, Phi
Delt No. 2, TKE, Beta No. 1,
Lambda Chi. Triangle No. 1 and
No. 1 have perfect records.
In Fraternity C, Beta No. 4 and AKL No. 2 have the best records. The Hogs and Pearson A are 4-0 in Independent A, and the Blue Vetters and Pearson B have identical marks in Independent B.
Here are some scored scores:
SAE No. 2 over Sigma Nu, 47; U4-
Kuntilers over Grace Pearson,
45-17; Blue Veiners over
Meteorology, 43-18; Mothers over
Haber Dashner, 43-19; Diffy Q
Alpha Siu over Lambda Chi No.
over Stephenson, 72-21; Naimshi
over Grace Pearson, 60-20; Bun's
Boys over Stoner Family, 44-17;
Alpha Pi over Lambda Chi No.
over KLAN, 40; Beta over Na. 7-
44-21; Beta No. 4 over AKL No. 1-
45; Sigma Chi No. 3 over Phi Siu
over Shooters over Fantastic, 66-17.
Pipco over BFD, 41-40; San Cago over Embryo, 35-33; Birds over Physics Dept., 31-30.
Starter Returns
team is the "UCLA of the East," a quote attributed to him earlier in the season.
"I don't think anyone will equal John Wooden's record out there," said Driesel, referring to the five straight national titles.
Dick Erström of Bloomfield Hills, Mich., a well-known track star, drove the Kansas Relays next month to the 4th version of the relays.
All Lefty wants is a chance to win the NIT. He has that.
Buchanan Visits Football Team
The University of Kansas football team entered its last week of prespring indoor practice sessions Monday with a visit from Buck Buchan, an all-purpose basketball player for the Kansas City Chiefs.
Ernst has been startling track meets 24 years. He has been a familiar figure at the Kansas Relief League, the鞭马 San Francisco and the Big Eight indoor and outdoor meet for several years.
After three weeks of football
warm-up training, Bambrough invited Buchanan
to KU to relate some of his
professional experiences to the
Buchanan spoke about motivation for playing at the professional level.
"I've been playing professional sports for four years, and every Sunday I play a game," Buchanan said. "I start getting high on Tuesday or Wednesday afternoon, I'm mentally high enough, I can play an athletic shirt."
KANAS S CITY (AP)—Mar-
tie's countervictory basketball
team was reinstated Monday to
play in the NCAA tournament.
Buchanan also commented on the teamwork aspect of playing in the National Football League
in the National Football League.
"There are three groups of players for us, the innenmen, linebackers, the deep backs," Buchanan said.
"We always try to work as one cohesive unit."
Warriors Reinstated
The NCAA ruled that the Wolverines were again close to winning a Division I Middle regional. The action was taken after Marquette's Bob LackeyRubberized their jerseys.
"When Johnny Robinson or one of the guys has a pass completed on him, then all of the three have failed." Buchanan said.
The ruling by the college body came after a long meeting Monday afternoon.
Marquette's seventh-ranked powerhouse was given the thumb Sunday from the prestigious team that led the team's star forward, refused to disclaim reports that he was not a player for the professional contract.
He was among 10 athletes from six unnamed institutions who wore jerseys with the letter that effect. Lackey was the only one who baked at signing Sunny Leaf.
The NCAA at once dropped Marquette from the tournament and moved Ohio University, which lost 73-49 to the Warriors in a tournament.
But Lackey reversed his adamant position Monday morning, quickly signing the letter to Lackey pleasing the inequality ruling. Word of Lackey's Monday move followed a meeting at an off-campus site between Marquette officials, including Warren Brown, Sauceda, and Warren Brown, an assistant director of the NCAA.
A Marquee spokesman said the meeting was called at an off-campus site to avoid traffic. Students were also included Saeeda and Coach Al
McGuire, on whose advice Lackey declined to sign the affidavit.
Saucea had said after a meeting of the athletic board Sunday night that the school would reinstatement to the tournament.
McGuire said he did not believe Lackey had signed papers with any agent for a professional basketball team.
There had been reports that Lackey was picked by the New York Giants and the American Basketball Association in a secret draft.
"He answered that question directly to me," said McGuire. "I believe him. He's always been straight with me."
The victory over Ohio qualified the Warriors to meet Kentucky at Dayton, Ohio. Thursday night in the Midwest Regional semifinals, unless the suspension is lifted, Ohio will fill Marquette's spot.
It was the second crisis in relief for Marquette, whose state was already signed with the Nets and was forced to leave the team near the Arizona State.
KU Signs Ark City Pair
Head football coach Don Fambrough announced recently the signing of two Arkansas City high school stars to Big Eight scholarship agreements with the University of Kansas.
Leslie Begay, 6-foot-1, 200 pound backback and linebacker, and Jerry Gilmore, 6-foot-2, 195 pound running back and defensive back, are the new additions to the KU squad. Both played nearly every down for Arkansas City the last two years.
Gilmore was the leading scorer for Arkansas City last fall with 195 points, followed by ball time 79 times for 310 yards and grabbed nine passes for 188 yards.
posted a 10-11 record in the heavyweight class this year. Gilmore was named to the Ark Valley's second all-conference squad after averaging 13 points a game during the season.
Begay was also a wrestler and
Begay and Gilmore are the 24th and 25th high school athletes to sign Big Eight letters of intent with KU this year.
HUTCHISON, Kan. (AP) — Top-ranked Vincennes, Ind., and Dalton, Ga., both undefeated this season, lead the 16-game field in college basketball tournament that opens in Hutchison Tuesday.
Top Teams Open In Juco Tourney
Outdoor Workout Thursday
KU to Host Track Meet
Rather than mull over the Rutgers and Kansas' disappointing indoor season for another week, coach Bob Timms has scheduled a 13-event all-comers meet for October. The meet will be a warm-up for KU's first full-scale outdoor meet April 1 in Los Angeles against
The NCAA Indoor meet was a week earlier this year than it has been in recent years, so Timmson was faced with a two-week gan
between the end of indoor track and the beginning of outdoor track.
So he scheduled an outdoor workout with competition from Kansas State. Wichita State, Kansas State, College of Arts and Sciences, Owatonna Marymount and Missouri Valley have indicated that they will send
The meet is open to all college athletes and post-graduates with amateur standing.
Running events are scheduled in the 100, 220, 440, 880, mile, 440 intermediate hurdles, steeple chase and 440 relay. Field events will be the high jump, pole vault, hammer, hammer throw and discus.
KU finished the indoor season with its worst showing in the eight-year history of the NCAA Indoor.
In the seven previous meets,
(UK squared earned one or more
individual championships each
war except 1966.
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University Commitment
"Interest in higher education, in academics in services for students"
DAVID DILLON President of the Student Body
KATHY ALLEN
Vice-President of the Student Body
ARCHITECTURE
Warren Taylor
Susie White
COLLEGES-WITHIN-THE-COLLEGE
BUSINESS
Steve Hughes
Gary Lasche
Rob Ramseyer
CENTENNIAL
Ed Bruns
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Rick McLaughlin
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NORTH
Mert Buckley
Brad Dillon
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OLIVER
Liesberie Butler
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John Wuff
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Richard Bilski
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Pat Green
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Brent Messick
Dave Murfin
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Jan Kessinger
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FINE ARTS
Ruthi Becker
Bruce Fiebach
Lynn Radke
PHARMACY Craig Walker
LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES
Betsy Adams
Susie Cowden
Barbie Downer
John Grayson
John Hackney
Cameron Jones
David Miller
Bill O'Neill
Jason Reid
Louis Scott
Neil Shortlidge
Vote March 15-16 VOTE The Commitment
8
Tuesday, March 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
For One Cast, It Is a Season For Two Plays
By SCOTT EATON
After nine weeks of rehearsals dating from November 29, two plays, "Hamlet" by William Shakespeare and "Rosemantre" and Guildenstern are Dead by Tom Stompar, are in the final week of their openings for their openings this week at the University Theatre.
"Hamlet," written around 1800 and Rosemont, "and Goldenstein's play," written in this decade, show different characters. The same cast is used for both the plays, and for the most part the actors play the same roles in them.
The plays will run on after nating nights, with the 'Hamiel' opening tonight. The play will be held in downtown Dead" opening on Wednesday Performance will stop for spring break, but will reopen with another performance.
Jack Brooking, professor of speech and drama and director of the play, was also involved in the plays were accustomed to breaks of that sort in the play.
"The time off can be good because it allows the play to settle a bit." Brooking said.
Brooking said the rehearsals for the two plays had taken somewhat longer than usual.
"We usually rehearse six eight weeks generally," he said. "Actually it took us a total of nine weeks for both plays."
Brooking said the additional rehearsal time was needed because the same cast was used in both plays. Each actor played the same character in both plays, and they had to learn more than one man.
Brooking said he thought Hamlet related very well to the human condition and the character of man.
THE VANESSA
"We've assumed a basic kind of motif which really inimplicates us as spying, peering, peeping and eavesdropping, and we really look at the nature as a kind of character, which do with many elements of the human condition and what we feel is the character of man," she said.
"Different ways of spiring are important to the characters that they, as Shakespeare put it, out of the heart of the mysgery."
"Until they do pluck out the heart of the mystery and find the truth, they have a great deal of trust in people taking appropriate action.
"Certainly the very core of this mystery, around which all of the characters move and suffer, has to do with political assassination. The truth is that he suffers to that of eyes watching, people spying, hiding and so on."
TWO SKULLS AND A CHALICE
Props are prepared for the technical rehearsals.
"We've taken the costumes and the set an important part from one of Hamlet's lines, when he likens his world to a garden gone to seed—things rank and the overripe, decadent garden.
"Hamlet" is the second Shakespeare play that Brookings has produced. He directed "Macbeth" a few years ago, looking more like "hamlet" was much more difficult to direct than "Macbeth."
"Hamlet" is one of the most difficult of Shakespeare's plays to play, but it certainly a much more highly complex tapestry than 'Macbeth'
Brooking said the play was becoming tighter in practice after a searching period in which it was necessarily loose.
"It must remain loose during the search period." Brooking suggests that the actors but remains open to ideas the actors bring. They have discussions together in trying to find what of the play must be found, and then, once you discover that, what of the play must be become aware of structure and form, and it is very important that it be tight where it needs to be.
Brooking said certain parts of the play could be pre-planned to expedite the production. Things like a set up and all are set up before the play even opens and all are run by skilled people. Lights can be preset for certain scenes and presents simply turned on when a scene happens.
Brooking started work on the script of Hamlet last spring.
"The director has to start long enough ahead of time to get the play ready." Brooking said.
Characterists are portrayed by the same actors in both play: Hamlet, played by Sir Trussell, and William Shakespeare, played by Mark Rutherford.
play (easy), brooding some
play (hard), bruising some
T Russell, Lawrence
graduate who plays the
Hamlet in both plays, said
Brooking was using the most
difficult method to work on the
song. Brooking told Shakespeare's longest plays.
To shorten the play, Brooking
had been cutting the play by
individual words rather than
using them as a whole.
of Rosenstein and Guldestern, played by
Mandy Patinkin, Chicago
THE LAMBERTS
Guldenstern Are Dead," the set revolves on a turntable for scene transitions.
Kansan Staff Photos by GREG SORBER
The main set for both plays is a multi-leveled wooden structure. In "Hamlet," the set is in three levels, with each level having four characters.
Faith
The ghost of old Hamer letches to his son. The eerie effects the apparition are enhanced as he rises from the stage floor.
THE KING AND THE QUEEN
In the green room, actors wait for their cues between scenes. The Ghost, Castulo Guajara, Sila, Argentina graduate student, plays a duet between them.
(1)
Paintinik and Kemmerling, almost constant companions during rehearsals, practice their lines of "Rosemantra and Goldenenstein Are Dead" in the green room while playing.
Director of "Hamlet," JACK Brooking, gives stage directions to Trussell. The director and actors share interpretations of
the play during a "searching period" that precedes a "lightening up" of the play.
MARIA SEGURA DE LA PALABRA
1.
The Demark court assembles in brilliant Eikabeth costumes when a somber Hamlet mourns his father's death.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 14, 1972
9
For One Cast . . .
Continued from Page 8
lines or acts, he said. He said that the timing of the lines must be preserved and that this created a kind of drama. Russell said that even with the cuts made in the script, the play would still run about three and a half hours.
Trussell said the play remained exciting even after the months spent at rehearsal.
"Now it's exciting in a different way." Trustell said. "Six months ago, when we started work, there was no possibility of playing Hamlet. Today it is exciting, too, because of the knowledge I'll be playing."
Truellson said he had been working on the play much longer than just the time he had spent in rehearsal.
"I started work the first week in September, right after I was cast," he said. "We didn't actually start rehearsals until November. I have met with the coach practically every day since."
Tussell said the amount of work and the type of work he was doing were far more physically than being than most people realized.
"After a run-through, I am out of breath and tired," he said. "I had to play in a football game. There is a level of personal energy that there isn't at all constantly. There is a great deal of energy involved in just playing."
embles in costumes mourns
When an actor is on stage, Trussell said, he must speak about four or five times longer and more often because ofversation so he can reach out to the rear of the theater. He said, however, an actor could never allow himself to sound as if he was speaking in great deal of exertion he said.
Trussell said the cast of the plays was spending the remaining time working on the precision involved in the parts.
"It's something that has to be very precise—so that a foot doesn't vary more than a few inches in each performance," he said.
He said the Hamlet he played in the Shakespeare play was much different from the Hamlet he and Guildenstein are Dead."
"The lines are the same; the characters are the same; the blocking is the same. But the role
LAWRENCE
in 'Hamlet' is serious, while in 'Rosencranz and Guildenstern' it is comedic. "Trussell said"
HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
HOLLYWOOD, CALIF.
0.12,000
NOV 26 71
NIGHTCLUB REVIEW
Goodman shop
Brewer & Shipley
their Earth-sharing future, and fostered a strong sense of community. With his encouraging and kind manner, Reich has been encouraging and fostering a sense of community. Travelled the world with festivals and exhibitions in Guatemala, New Zealand, Indonesia and Brazil. Good friend (Godfrey) in his bachelor's degree program.
Brewer and Similee have been in recent months they have even had an agreement to play their roles. The Love Live the Voice wounded coach by the death of her crooner has survived an ignoring judge. Her success at the age of 46 meant that he must not be forgotten of the act ofcupping with the system and recessions changing like no one else. Both her guitar技法和 her rock technique took off lacking in touch with her greatest fight against the evil forces of Davien A! All Along the Winged Turtle charmed a soldier who was taken away near the Traubelble
BREWER & SHIPLEY
In Concert
"It is much more difficult to play in 'Hamlet' because it is a tragedy. It also requires the role of Hamlet has so many lines that everyone knows. It is easy to imagine a conventional way so the audience won't say. Here comes Jude, the clever villain."
Sat. - April 8th Hoch Auditorium
ROBERT EVERETT?
Find Him March 15-16
VOTE EVERETT
NORTH COLLEGE
SENATOR
Tussell said he had had no time for anything else except play practice and teaching his two classes at KU. He said that he had been spending about five or six hours a day on the play.
Truell said that working for two different directors hadn't really presented any problems. David Froman, assistant instructor of speech and drama, said he had been told that Guldensher Are dead.
Pd.—RE
"Their methodologies are different." Trussell said. "But they have had a number of experiences over what they want to do.
Mandy Patkin, Chicago
monohome, who plays close-
ence hockey at Wrigley's,
time spent on the play was
limited other
writes.concered
"I spend my entire evening here five nights a week." Patinik said. "That leaves no time for home.
"In 'Rosencrantz and Gundestern, everything is rosencrantz side of things we don't see in 'Hamlet.' It might look a little titled, but it is broadening I. Rosencrantz is just a silly little
"Rosencrantz and Guilden-
stern" gives a chance to show
private as contrasted with public
lives."
JAPAN
never engage themselves. It is a kind of death in human life.
Castilo Guerra, Salta
Argentina graziano atleta
the champ and glitter,
and a member of a traveling band
of players in "Rosencranz and
the Champs," who are being
plained "Rosencranz and
Guidenstern Are Dead" this
week.
Guerta also played the roles of the players in Argentina, his native country. Rosengrant and he know about bad things in Argentina, but have no control: They can't decide what is real, so they go on and on, not involving themselves, gambating at terrible odds. He knows, however, didn't gumble or drift without engaging 'themselfs'
"Rosencrantz and Guilden-
stern have no engagement with
anything. They are lost; they
David Froman, assistant instructor of speech and drama and director of "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead" said that seeing "Hamlet" before seeing "Snow White" would make it easier Are Dead" would make it easier to understand the second play.
emphasis on design
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ENGINEERS
VOTE
Dave
Murfin
For
Student Senate
Vote Commitment
Performances of "Hamlet" are scheduled for tonight, Thursday, March 28 and 30 and April 1. "Roenacerntse and Guldesternen" are scheduled for Wednesday, Friday, March 28 and 31 and April 21.
Member American Gem Society
NBS Member National Bridal Service
ECUMENICAL
817 Mass
Vigil
RE:LENT
REPARATION
DAILY LENTH LENT
DANFORTH CHAPEL
12:30 to 1:00 PM
RE:FLECTION ON SELF
RE:NEWAL OF LIFE
RE:PENTANCE, FOR INDO-
BAN, FOR ENGINEERING
RE:ORDERING VALUES
Want to know more about grad school and professional opportunities in anthropology?
ANTHRO STUDENTS
Informal Panel Discussion by 3 Faculty Members
Tues., March 14 7:30 p.m.
1624 Alabama
St. Patricks Day Bash Fri. March 17 12 noon to 12 Midnight
843-4266
NE BLOCK WEST
4023 Canbridge Kansas City, Ks.
3 BANDS
ALL PRICES REDUCED TILL 7 p.m.
GREEN BEER AVAILABLE
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.
"Stonewall"
Naval ROTC Announces: The Two-Year ROTC College Program
*At least 18 years of age and no more than 25 on June 30 of the commissioning year,
- 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.
- Married or unmarried.
- Qualifications:
- Excellent physical condition. Waivers for defective vision are available.
- Eligible to apply for scholarship status upon entry into the program will subsequent full tuition and free books.
- Citizen of the United States.
- Draft deferment.
Benefits:
Deadline for Application—April 1st Apply Now for Fall Semester 1972 at the NROTC Unit, Room 115 Military Science Building 864-3161
- $100.00 per month subsistence allowance.
KU
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered without regard to color, creed, or race.
One day
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
One dav
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.
FOR SALE
If you use them, you're at an advantage.
It is a dvd/video.
Either way to the same
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Western Civilization."
Campus Madhouse, 411
West 14th. tf
- if you don't,
you're at a disadvantage
NCUBA EQUIPMENT-First, Mask
Hawk Pac Lifetime Guarantee $125,
Hawk Pac Lifetime Guarantee $125,
Hawk Kultle and $39 Spars
Buffalo We Buy us for all your diving
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EQUIPMENT
TRY IT YOULL LIKE IT — Rent
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1-362-4400
1970 Duster, green, 3-speed, VK.
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Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, 8428-310-6
1968 Chevrolet SS, power brakes,
power steering, air conditioning,
automatic transmission, exchange,
call 415-643-8250 between 3-7
midnight.
Pulli-shaju, Hungarian sheepdog,
born Jan 13, to AKA C Mc and Fe-
male M Mc. She is a virginous,
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798-2901. Louth, Kansas 3-15
71 Datum 1200 Coup, 10,000 miles,
factory air, properly maintained,
clean, runs beautiful. Snow trees
included Call Glenn. 842-808-30-14
71 Suzuki TC 90R under 400 miles.
$350 or best offer. 3-14
Baldwin exterminator amplifier. 4 inputs, many controls. 6 speakers.
2-15" 2-12" 2-8" $170 Call Bob.
864-2374
1-3
1966 Porsche 911, 200 h.p., excellent condition, highest offer over $2.900.
1610 W, 22nd Terr. 3-17
109 cc Kawasaki, 1970 10 speed Trail Boss, excellent condition. 1,190 miles.
$375., call 842-3948. 3-14
1971 350, Honda, excellent condition.
2,800 miles. $685. 843-706. 3-14
For sale: 4' X 3' drawing table-
$35. VI 1-3883.
table-3-14
RMI Electric piano, 8 months used,
Olds Mender trumpet 3 years old.
Olds Special trumpet 8 years old.
in fine condition. #835-036. 3-14
VIVITAR ZOOM LENS, 85-205mm,
automatic, f.3.8 with Nikon mount.
Call 842-8528, aff., eve. 3-14
Must sell-191 Chevy Monte Carlo,
PS, PB, A/C low mileage Excellent
condition. Will sell for low price.
842-306 after 5.00. 3-15
Sony model 125 V Portable television,
12" (diagonal) screen 6 month old.
Call 841-2964. 3-15
Buceo motorcycle helmet 1 month old,
$15. Call 841-2964 3-15
Ten speed bicycle, one speed bicycle
Olympia portable typewriter Call
after 5:00, 843-5229 3-15
1970 360 Yamaha Enduro runs and looks good, $600 or best offer. Call 842-3574 after 6:00. 3-15
NOBODY IN LAWRENCE CLIMBM
OVERWATCHES OVERWATCHED DENIM PRO-
PRISES CLING THE NON-ENTRIEF OF
BOKONON 89 VERDUMT - 5-10
BOKONON 89 VERDUMT
Kenwood KR-44 AM-FM 40 watt
stereo receiver. Wood cabinet included.
Perfect condition. 842-5632 3-15
A triple pick-up Guild electric guitar and a Danaelectro amplifier with twin 12" speakers. Call 843-7310. 3-15
STREFO DISCOUNT. Now you can
buy a $50 GST plus 10 at RAUD AUO-
CIST plus 19 at RAUD AUO-
cist only true Stree Discount House
for Free T茶, Tea, & Consulting
Free T茶, Tea, & Consulting
Pentax HW Hs use, clip-on meter,
and 10/14 Takumar lens $135. XEA
I wrench 50/29 P S lens & I
wrench 60/29 P lens~$46 Call 864-
891 or 543-866
1963 Corvair 2 dr. Ht. Nitro, tires good.
Call: 842-939-999. 3-15
1970 Kawasaki Mach III, $800. Nice.
842-5434. 3-15
SMART BATT 1991 *1186* ROADRUNNER H
HAMILTON AND CAN OUT-DUEL
TRACTION AND CAN OUT-DUEL
PRICED LOAT AT $1,495.95 EXCELLENT
CONDITION CALL 3-816-241-16
Minolta S28 Single lens reflex w:1.6
lens=79.50, L=45.20 Wide Angle
镜头=12.80, Wide Angle
photo, 12.80, P Acura Coral
Photo, 644-8514 or 843-6696.
3-16
1969 Toyota Corolla, excellent condition. Gets 30 mpg. $99. Call Steve at 843-4393 or 842-7291. 3-16
Boots, Poles & Wooden Skills. 210 cm.
Call Rick, 842-0709. 3-17
"60" VW Bug custom interior, perfect mechanically. New tires. Phone 863-7284 3-16
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
25 words or fewer $1.50
each additional word $0.20
Deadline .5.00 p.m. 2.00 yrs before publication
*J'S jaguar XK 150 Drop-head coupe*
*$1799, Call 841-3530*
3-16
Auto Service Center
2&d & Ridge Court
843-9694
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Webster's Mobile Homes
Your Complete Service
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
65 Volkswagen, 58,000 miles. Very good condition. Must sell! 843-6401. h4f
Sequential Equipment -Fins Mack Snare
Lifetime Guarantee $125,000. Wet Suit
Lifetime Guarantee $125,000. Wet Suit
& Vest $90. Spurs Guns $75.
$400 for all your diving needs, drags,
scopes, gear, and equipment.
Divers Equip & Repair businesses.
Divers Equip & Repair businesses.
City, Mo. 64134.
Electric typewriter, new $120, sell
for $55. Men's bike, bikes $45, Giannini,
Brazilian Guitar $50 842-2398 3-15
NORTHFIELD COUNTRY SHOP
Bridge Antique, used furniture,
collectors items, old wood cooling and
furniture, wooden tables, stoves,
bicycles, fireplace wood,
and other useful items, open to 5
seven days. Hwy Allenbury, 842-769-5100.
1920 BSA lightning, 460, royal blue and chrome, excellent condition, open TT pipes and rejected calls. Carb 843-7562 after 4.90 P.M.
Harmond M-2. fine cabinet Can be made portable. That unattached "Harmond" touch and声 $600.
842-6623. 3-17
1962 Buckley Special, new transmi-
nation, new front trees & snow, good
mechanical shape, geometric & de-
signed $200. Call Dave, 843-4587.
SKIING) Ply to Denver for a roundtrip. Or check on a package for skiing both Waitt and Brecken during spring break. Call 800-341-9720.
AISA Chang trip; if you judge, move Asian style. Details Japan to Iran for $1.00 to Merdeka. 11841 Tuecomel Road, Tunis. Mich. Cipher 9268
Ample Park Spaces Available
Two-door Station Wagon. 1953 Chrysler, 4-6yli, c-edi. trans. Mint sell before spring break. Make an offer. 844-1116. 3-28
1962 Ford Galaxie 500 4. dr, fwd
automatic 45,000 miles. New brakes,
shocks, ignition switch, oil change.
Sports package. $250 842-8363 3-28
Most must-airize 1972 Corvette T-Hat Coupe air conditioning, automatic. Contain Dual Turbo Belt between 84-3233. Financing available 3-28
20" bicycle, good clean condition,
battery operated light, five month
old hand trak器, ideal for
4M-3400-300 3 P.M. food grade
3-28
1917 Champion Motor Horn-24 lt.
413 cd engine, generator, 80 lb
LC capacity, 14,800 miles $9,000 842-
7207 3-28
8 track stereo tapes $3.59 with this coupon. Gregg Tire Co. 814 W. 2rd. 3-16
Make KU Student Government even more anonymous. Vote Birthday Party for Joe Landolt (Pres.) and Mike Schoenbeer (V.P.). 3-28
HORSES BOARDED, EXCELLENT
FULL STALL CARE, CLOSE IN
BED. BEDSIDE MIRROR &
FACILITY ALSO, ENGLISH SADDLE
FOR SALE 842-1406 726-983
NOTICE
You just have to see our new shipment of India prints. They're unusual, beautiful and waiting for you in mind. Mind Hodge Pidge 3-28
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER. 842-7694. professional child-care for
mom i m ~ 12 mo. Full or part-time.
Specially designed emt. 2:31
3409 W. 6th 842-7700
Barn Parties! Now available for
Barn Parties! Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry,
Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry, and cooler plenty of parking
and cooler plenty of parking.
Call Joe Stroop after 6 p.m. at 843-215-8000.
STUDY ESERAPANTO the international language, in Portland for Portland Univ. Programming Internationa Esperanto Congress here 29 July to 5 August. A unique opportunity to learn the International Language. Information: Summer Session University of Portland, Portland, Oregon.
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
RUSSIA - SCANDINAVIA 5, weeks
European travel package, departure,
Small group camping travel,
Bachelor's degree. Welcome.
Whole Earth Expedition. Wild
Agents for Travel Travel. Lid, Box
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SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWYER
LAWYER is one of Lawyer's most attractive offers in law practice, offering you a call to Mi. Forbes 892-516-3400 or Living In Apartments 812-379-8340 or Availon or Harvard Square, Iowa & Harvard can be economical and emotional. At our outstanding modest special summer, a wonderful time to be spent this summer a wonderful time to be
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
261h & Iowa Ph.V13-1353
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THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUISAGES
FREER - GRMAN SHEPHERD PUPPY-
PIE, 14 WEEKS OK, HAS ALL
SHOTS, BROWN & BLACK CALL
BILL, 941-2702 3-14
Need people to invest in Cessna 180
for use as a parachute jump plane
Call Dick Mauk at 594-3189 or Jim
Baker at 842-6686
3-17
For reasonable prices on all glass or
plexiglass materials, contact Plexiglas,
including acorns for design. 128 North and 251 East or call 610-374-9682.
plexiglass samples that just arrived.
KAT Suzuki
LEARN SKYDIVING 1st jump
jumpmaster instruction, jumps, ride,
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at 304-589-8267 826-589-8267
University Terrace Apartments — terminated apartments available for lease in 410 and 110 acre lots to come to manager's office. 9th Apt. 1-B, or call 434-183-592.
FOR RENT
SENATE- SENATE APATHY BEGINS
MICHAEL R. O'NEAL, SENATOR
MICHAEL R. O'NEAL, SENATOR
FROM THE COLLEGE OF LIBRAL
SENATES FINANCED $P 3,458
MICHAEL O'NEAL
3,458
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited
Rockledge Villa have two rooms for
nuptial apt. with all utilities paid.
Call after arrival: 843-7721
843-7721 3-146
REAL accessory store.
Furnished Apartment, 1424 Indiana,
duplex. air conditioned, wall-to-wall
carpeting, laundry facility, off-street
blocks. Stock from Union Street.
V 3-5777
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Right
now 1 new bed, fourteen
new baths, two new
beds 2 new baths fourteen
new baths, two new baths
two new baths, two new
baths, two new baths,
WANTED
Single furnished sleeping room with kitchen privileges for male. No pets. Borders KU and near town Phone 843-5767 3-14
A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS. Too much of a place! Weather too hot this spring? We offer a hot tub with free water. Wet free boots. TV all but at the beach. Awesome restaurants. 112 I21 University, 843-516-3101
NO IS HERE THE TIME TO RESERVE
NEW HAVEN, MA - SEPTEMBER 1972, while selection is still available. 842-206th or 207A. A Harvard Law School alumnus. Lawrence Building, located on Harrison Street.
Avalon, 9th & Avalon; Harvard, 2nd & Avalon; 11th & Maryland. Then compare coe of living in one of these handsome apartments with two of the same apartments and you will be more to have a dishwasher, central heating and many more features and many more features. 3-29
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $0.03
Afterations and repair, men and women. Formerly with New York. Cleaners. 842-2017 3-14
Kaplan Key Press-Job printing from scaffolds to posters, brochures to booklets and recycles 710 Mass. in back Zerol. Zero. Open to 5:30 a.m. 842-4838.
Nice furnished 1-3 bed apartments near town, KU. Also rooms with kitchen privileges; only one bedroom available. Barely able now 842-5097 3-29
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APART-
MENT & 2 bedrooms furnished and
1,500 sq. ft. of apart-ment space, all electric kitchen with
sink, dishwasher, refrigerator,
1741 W. 11th Apt. 3B $38,900
1741 W. 11th Apt. 4B $38,900
Female roommate needed to share furnished apartment through finals Union #60 mwr 482-7241 from 120 Union #60 mwr 482-7241 at 130 LOUISVILLE, No. 11 5-14
Place to board an Irish Setter L.
Smith, 843-5990 3-15
RIDE WANTED to Los Angeles, Prefer to leave Friday afternoon, March 17th. Can only spare $15.00 toward gas. Can see to my girl 942-860-6807.
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
634 Mass
Would like to buy good short form
size (9-10 or 10-11) at inexpensive
price. Call 1-299-4013 Kansas City.
Kansas) as soon as P.M. 5-14
Need girl to share house, $50. Utilities included. Close to campus. 842-5768 3-16
SCUBA GEAR: Must have before spring break. Need all equipment related to diving. Call 842-5820 and ask for Val Landes. 3-17
842-6966
TRIUMPH
CSC
10XOTA 150MM
Competition Sports Cars Inc.
If you have two or four DEEP PUN-
LEE tickets you would like to sell,
please call 842-7122 3-17
Instructor to teach Tai Chi. Phone 842-2040. 4-3
Working girl needs to meet her 2 bedroom mobile home with another working girl or student. Nice, quiet. Working girl needs 842-9454 (Susan). 3-28
TYPING
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Worcester, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Experienced in typing these, dissecting and editing texts. Have electronic typewriter with type spec. Accurate and prompt typing. Send resume to Phone 845-9544. Mr. Wright
Typing done on elite, electric typ-
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KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
10
Tuesday, March 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Film Betrays Christ Epic
By RON PARKER
Kansan Reviewer
"Is prince of Peace" (Hilestier 1963) or "Prince Paso Pasolín 1965"? The answer is to go to St. Matthew. "There's no room in the church." Studios usually save that operation for their white elephants; "Gospel" was a big one.
CRITICS WENT wild when the film was first released, which was certainly one of the biggest over-reactions in movie history. Pasolini shot the film on a machine with no actors, cheesy costumes and inferior equipment. The settings consisted mainly of vacant runs.
I think the critical acclaim was mainly a reaction against the film, which he described as 'The Crude black-and-white photography and the clumsy welcome change from George Stevens's wide-screen picture post cards in "The Greatest Story of Tomorrow" that the sets and costumes must have seemed refreshing after the movie' Bronton's "King of Kings."
The new title is also even more exciting with the new interesting. The ad pictures a wild-eyed, laughing Jesus—an intriguing one-on-one encounter to the poster of very different from the Jesus in the film, but more about that
AMERICAN CRITICS habitually cherish "little" pictures, particularly foreign ones. And the acclaim often falls on her coarseness and dullness of the film. This is no doubt what
Poets Snyder, Simic to Read
The University of Kansas Evanston sponsoring poetry readings by Charles Simic, KU's poet in residence, and Peter on Tuesday evening.
Simic, who has translated the Bible and is interested in the philosophies of the far East, will read his poetry at 8 p.m. tonight on the Jahwah ymkhad.
Snyder, who concentrated in the University of California at Berkeley, will read his poetry at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Forum.
Both poets will give public lectures on poetry at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday in the Forum room
happened with "The Gospel According to St. Matthew."
Non-actors are often an asset, because they have real, lived-in, than directors have a penchant in voicing Italian films are always dubbed in later, so a good actor can dub his voice onto some non-Italian movies.
Pasolini rounded up some interesting faces, but many of them seemed contemporary, betrayed particularly by their tapered noses.
dialogue was like. The words and the voices are inconsistent with the images, so it's possible that the Italian dialogue was less oriental. It seems to have been done by a militant catechism class.
The film's main fault, however, is the characterization of Jesus. The Jesus of the film is humorous and insipid-looking. Many facets of Jesus' life and death are arguable but there is no question what may have had tremendous charisma. Pasolini's Jesus is a pedantic
couldn't have been that hard.
The film does contain some compelling moments. The opening scene has Joseph reacting with anger and hurt at Mary's pregnancy. The slaughter of the infants by Herod's army is a cry for her babies, babes flying in the air and babies dashing and screaming.
There are many other striking images—Jesus' awmengness when he met the girl named Magdeline's simpering grin about her; Jesus mother trying about her; Jesus mother trying about her.
The 1972 Commencement Committee had its first meeting at the University of Kansas on June 30 to plan for the 100th University of Kansas commencement ceremony.
Commencement Planning Begins
its first two years.
Although the University has been open for 108 years, this will be only its 108 commencement. KU was a preparatory school for
Larry Hebb, associate professor of physical education and chairman of the committee, said this fact was likely to be mentioned in the commencement program. The program would reflect a centennial theme. He said there were no special activities being
planned to commemorate the centennial, however.
STEVE CLARK, assistant university Association, said he made letters Wednesday to prospective graduates who were seniors information contained general information and a cap and gown order form.
Similar information was sent to graduate students and the prospective schedule of events and general information was sent to the prospective graduates'
This year the commencement platform will be constructed 30 feet to the south of its position last year in the stadium.
desperately to push through the crowd when he's carrying the cross of the Apostles tossing iron or thorns after the crucifixion.
KANSAN
bore, and this makes the idea of adoring crowds inconceivable.
seem real, because they always appear be widened an uncomfortable in their funn clothes.
MUCH OF the film consists of people standing around and staring. Jesus has most of the scenes he uses, including speeches and epistles taken from the Bible. The film has been described as one that knows what the original Italian
THE FILM abounds with inaccuracies, which are too numerous to detail. The silent one, though, is worth mentioning. A woman in her early pregnancy Mary appears to be in her early teens. Later on, when Jesus in his ear (whirls) says, "My life may have been hard, but it
But these are only moments.
Too much of the film is clumsy and boring. The plot is difficult to follow, even if you know it.
The film does not seem to be in heart seems to be in the right place, but too little else is.
Bayh to Speak Tonight On U.S. Political Future
Senator Birch Bayh, D-Ind,
will speak on "The Future of the
American Political System" at 8 p.m. tonight in the Ballroom of The Auditorium where will be the second speaker in the Class of 1974 Lecture Series.
Admission is free to those holding Sophomore class cards. All others will be charged 50 cents.
A former candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, Bayh is considered one of the most liberal in Congress. He was a leader in
passing the 26th Amendment which lowered the voting age to 18.
At present, Bayh is supporting proposed amendments that would allow men and women, lower the age requirements for election of representatives and senators, to vote on president and vice-president.
The first speaker in the sophomore class lecture series was John Forbes Kerry, leader of the Veterans Against the War.
Bluethings Breathe Excitement Into Lawrence Music Scene
By JOE ZANATTA Kansan Reviewer
The BlUEthings are about the freshest breath of air to blow onto the Lawrence music scene in quite a while.
The five-man band, which played at the Red Baron last year, has a new ensemble that unstintish combinations of talent available for those who frequent the dance-drink establishments. The group performs in the music of the Bluelights.
The group's performance is tightly controlled. All their songs are played at the same point of being stale. The energy of the group prevents that from occurring.
A lot of the Blueshins' power comes from Dave Mayers, the group's founder and deliver smooth, soft vocales as effectively as hard, gut-splitting vocals. It's also good for a singer, but one that works well within the band's spectrum
The Bluethings touch upon almost all phases of pop music. They hard rock and do a few vocal trials that rival Three Dog Night.
The band's final set is the best, "Bulldog," featuring organist Jim Langknecht, a bouncing drummer and a number guaranteed to please everyone most devoted Leon Russell fan. Traffic's "Low Spark of High" and the classic "Blue Suede Show" are show off not only the band's vocal
talents, but also their instrumental abilities.
"I know I'm Losing You," their closing number, is the music wrapped into one song. All the drive, energy and enthusiasm of the Bluthings comes to a head in awe at their musical power.
---
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Hussein, Israel Deny Agreement to End Occupation
AMMAN, Jordan (AP)—King Hussein will proclaim a revised constitution today that declares the occupied west bank of Jordan an autonomous part of his kingdom, sources close to the royal palace said Tuesday night. But they denied a report in a pact with Israel for return of the territory.
Radio Badghad said Tuesday that Hussein had reached a peace agreement with Israel that would make the west bank an autonomous Palestinian state with an Arab Jerusalem as its capital. Widespread denial greeted the Iraqi report. Israeli authorities called it nonsense.
The king was scheduled to announce his proposal at a news conference today.
Palace sources said the steps Hussem would announce are "purely internal ... for the first time."
do not involve any agreement with Israel."
WESTERN DIPLOMAT in London said the king's plan, as outlined to the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union, called for an end to the war settlement, but was not based on a peace settlement.
Sources in Jerusalem said a statement by Secretary of State William P. Rogers that "immediate developments" were expected in the situation sent the Israeli Cabinet into hurried consultation, Israel asked Rogers to clarify the nature of the request and the Committee in Washington, the informants said.
IN DISMISSING as nonsense reports of a set-
tement, one Israeli official said, "We wish they could be true." A Foreign Ministry statement denying the rumor lacked, however, the usual disclaimer of diplomatic meetings.
Some diplomats in London theorized that Hussein wanted to undercut Israeli plans for municipal elections in the west bank territory scheduled for later this month.
The king might urge Arabs in the territory to boycott the elections and call instead for a plebisite
PALACE SPOKESMEN mentioned nothing of a peace agreement, however, and Jordan's ambassador to the United Nations dismissed the Iraqi reports as "totally unfounded."
The Jordanian U.N. ambassador, Abdel Hamid Sarafar, said Hussein's announcement would be of interest to all leaders in the region.
bank but would have 'no special significance as far as the development of the diplomatic situation with
The two countries have remained in a technical state of war since the 1967 fighting.
The Israeli Foreign Ministry contended it knew nothing of the Jordanian monarch's plans.
Observers in Jerusalem cast doubt on the report of agreement by recalling that Israel had consistently refused to consider relinquishing control under the Jordan River its natural security border.
SPECULATION IN Beirut but that Hussein would disclose a peace offer rather than a set-timing.
Any separate settlement between Jordan and Israel could be expected to bring soot from leftist forces, in addition.
As outlined by Baghdad radio, the peace plan would call for:
Hashemite ruler
—Part of the old Arab city of Jerusalem as capital of the Palestinian state with Amman remaining the capital.
A proclamation of a new federal state under the Hashemite throne to be called the United Arab Kingdom. It would be made up of two autonomous states, each with its own government and parliament.
A Palestinian state government with jurisdiction over the entire west bank and the west bank of Israel.
RAIN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
LISBOA
Wednesday, March 15, 1972
Bayh Speaks on State Primaries, Wallace
Effects of Strike Still Uncertain
Wallace Grabs 42% of Vote In Florida; Muskie Falls 4th
See Page 5
. . . 'Frightened' by Florida results . .
MIAMI (AP)—Gov. George U. Wamman stormed to a stormed victory Tuesday night in Florida's Democratic presidential primary. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey ran a distant second, while Sen. Edmund S. Muskie was far back in the field.
As the election night court neared completion, Wallace had 42 per cent of the votes. He expected that with 19 per cent showing that doubled Musk's total, Humphrey gained most among candidates other than the Alabama governor. Jackson had 13 per
Among 10 defeated Democrats, Muskie of Maine was the big loser. He ran fourth, behind Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington.
Muskie was back with the also-ran entries, at 9 per cent.
PRESIDENT NIXON swept to victory in Republican primary that never was a Republican.
And Florida voters declared by a gigantic 74-26 per cent margin that they would like the U.S. Constitution amended to forbid the compulsory busing of school students in order to racial balance. They also voted heavily for equal education for all children.
On the Republican side, this was the count with 98 per cent of Florida's 2,841
Nikon 357,138, or 8 per cent, Rep. John M. Ashbrook of Ohio 35,976, or 9 per cent; and Rep. Paul N. McCloskey of California 16,982, or 4 per cent.
McCloskey quit the presidential campaign after the New Hampshire primary last week but his name remained on the ballot.
Wallace Win Scares Bayh
HUMPHREY HAILED the results as a
By STEVE RIEL Kansan Staff Writer
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., in a press conference Tuesday night at the University of Kansas, said that early returns in the Florida primary, showing a plurality for George Wallace, had caused him to reassess his role in national politics and asked President Obama to "positive electable alternative to Richard Nixon," for the Democratic party.
Bayh said that Wallace looked at governmental problems in "two plus two equals four equations" and that such reasoning didn't work anymore. He called Wallace's appeal demagoguery, which in itself did not solve governmental problems.
Later, in a speech sponsored by the sophomore class, clayy expressed his fears about the future.
"TO SEE GEORGE WALLACE getting 50 per cent of the votes in one of the 10 largest states frightens me," he said. At that, the governor of several hundred people applauded.
In the press conference before his speech Bayh told reporters that in general he did not support the Aiken-Mansfield proposal for a national primary. He said nationalizing state primaries would force voters to choose their party instead of half that number as is done now.
The cost of such a campaign, he said, would be probtable and would tend to cost the country a large part of the cost of a nationwide campaign. Only wealthy candidates and those who were already well known would have any chance of succeeding under such a system, he said.
HIS SPEECH focused on the American
IN ASSESSING the type of candidate to
nassack against Nixon for the Democrat-
rats Baylore.
wide appeal among the broadest possible constituency. A vice-president nominee should be chosen who will reinforce the Democrats on the right or left, he said.
The youth vote will be an important determinant in choosing the vice-president, according to Bayh. He said that with 11.5 million new young voters to the Democrats would choose a candidate for the vice-president who had appeal for them.
When asked if he would accept the vice-presidential nomination, Bayah said that anyone who was asked would accept, but not deny it. The fact she explained that the vice-president was essentially a "yes man" for the president and had no real power to effect social change.
He stressed the importance of the new rules applicable to political conventions and to the exercise of his role as a member of the Democratic Reform Committee, he was influential in structuring the political convention in Miami to be the most democratic in Italy.
Bayh declined to name his preference for the Democratic presidential nomination, but said he would announce it within the next week in Indiana, his home
BAHY SAID that if young people were to register to vote and become interested in the election, it would be because the candidates had found an alternative to Nixon.
Bayh said that Rep. Wilbur Mills, D-Ack, and Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., joined the effort to expand the program.
"You can't out-Nixon Nixon, or out-Washington Wallace" so said, referring to their own actions.
BAYH SAID that crime had to be attacked at its source. At present, too much time is spent on incarceration and punishment, when it could be better spent in other ways. He said hard drugs were one of the key causes of high crime rates today.
"Shortcutting freedoms doesn't make the community safer," he said.
He said that an atmosphere of fear in our society had created a reliance on short-term planning.
political system and its viability in dealing with contemporary problems. He said that the system would work, but that its performance depended on the willingness of American citizens to give time and effort toward that end.
Babyh stressed his own contributions of working within the system as an indication of the change that was possible. He also worked in his work with constitutional amendments.
Bayh expressed his concern for the trend toward reduction of constitutional protections by the government. He noted an increase in government surveillance and a lessening of judicial safeguards as symptomatic of the problem.
Bayah said the people of this country overwhelmingly favored the removal of the electoral college, but that this would be held up by a senate filibuster last session.
Bayh was a leader in passing the 25th Amendment which dictates succession in case of presidential disability. He was elected in 1934 and then which changed the legal voltage are to 18.
AT PRESENT he is working in support of the rights of women and age requirements in the election of senators and representatives, to provide equal rights for men and women, and to have women participate.
sign that he and not Muskic was the
ominous among progressive
Democratic candidates.
Muskie, who came to Florida a shaken front-runner for the nomination and leaves with a serious blow to his campaign, said he'd win some battles ahead.
Democratic Results
Jackson said he had gained "a tremendous boost" for his campaign. He
These are the vote totals in Florida's Democratic presidential preference primary with 590 votes for the 2,841 Democratic candidates reporting.
Wallace 514,483-42 per cent.
Humphrey 230,947-18 per cent.
Jackson 17,563 - 13 per cent
Muskie 109,449 - 4 per cent
Lindsey 81,065 - 7 per cent
McGoverson 74,282 - 6 per
Chisolm 44,747 - 4 per cent.
McCarthy 5,812 - 0 per cent.
Wills 4,610 - 0 per cent.
Mullins 3,950 - 0 per cent.
Vryse, 2,756 - 0 per cent.
said he was disturbed at the Wallace victory, and surprise that Muskie ran so hard.
In winning the primary with a strong showing across the state, Wallace gained a near sweep of the 81 delegate votes Florida won in a Democratic national convention in July.
With 97 per cent of the vote counted, he had 75 delegates. Humphrey had the six awarded to the leader in the 11th district, which includes Miami Beach.
Nixon swept the 40 Republican nominating contest by winning 87 per cent of the statewide GOP.
THE WALLACE VICTORY guaranteed that Democracy are going to have to cope with a new form of government, long primary season ahead. Wallace has said he intends to campaign in at least 10 more states, and in a spintered field, he could prove formidable in some Northern
"After tonight, all the other Democrats are in trouble, I'd say, said Wallace." I was a bit shy. "Let's talk about it."
For Muskie, who won but not by the anticipated margin in New Hampshire last
Tuesday, the far-back Florida showing was a sharp defeat.
The bandwagon psychology his organization sought to fashion with an array of political endorsements prior to the primaries had weathered New Hampshire, but it was unlikely to survive after Florida.
Humphrey said he'd leave it to Muskie to assess the vote.
"I never said he was the front runner," the Minnesota senator said.
The statewide primary winner captured 20 Florida delegate votes at the Democratic National Convention. The other 61 were apportioned among the state's 12 congressional districts, with the winner in each district receiving its share.
IN THE REPUBLICAN primary, Nixon
virtually turn the tide of all the
delegates to 40 all the votes.
There are 2.1 million registered Democrats in Florida, 773,000 Republicans, and a turnout of close to 70 per cent was forecast, with interest stirred by the announcement of an anti-contrievey over the busing of school children to achieve racial balance.
That issue was on the ballot in the form of an advisory referendum which asked the voter to register an opinion on a proposal and the amendment to forbid compulsory busing.
For Democrats seeking White House nomination, the big question was who
finishes in the first of a half-dozen all-candidate primaries.
George Wallace
By JIM KENDELL
Kansan Staff Writer
Students will elect the president and vice-president of the student body, student senators and class officers, and vote in a referendum Wednesday and Thursday.
The referendum asks students whether they are in favor of a Student Senate proposal that the Endowment Association lend the Athletic Department $80,000 for the installation of a Tartan surface on the floor of Allen Field House.
R. L. "Puf" Bailey Aitchison graduate student and elections committee chairman, said Tuesday he had no idea of how large the turnout would be.
Voting Begins Today In All-School Election
By TOM THRONE
Kansan Staff Writer
ROTC Cuts Review Again;Apathy Blamed
This year is the fourth consecutive year that the review will not be held. However, the three military units on campus plan to have some trove of awards ceremony.
A lack of student and faculty interest has made planning a Tri-Service Military Review for this spring impractical. Col. Carson, a professor of army ROTC, said recently,
ILO
The Navy is planning a Spring Review at Alumni House, 14 in front of Alumni Fish House, for outstanding performances, Ma. Richard Brinegar, assistant professor of Navy
The Air Force will present its awards at
"Dining on the Moon," p.m. 10th April, 20 B.
Air Force Base Billings, Montana.
The Florida state was particularly big for Muskie, striving to reassert himself as the leader of the game in Democratic White House contenders. A minority victory last Tuesday in New Hampshire, on his New England home farm, helped off to a shake up in the primaries.
The Army has no definite plans, but they will have a change of command and awards ceremony sometime in the spring, Riedel said.
Riedel said there had been a slight drop in the freshman Army ROTC enrollment the last four years because of the Selective Service has called fewer men each year.
The candidates have created no issues and the Kansan has not provided enough evidence to make a determination.
Eddy said the number of people enrolled in Air Force ROTC had also dropped. However, the number commissioned is about the same.
The enrollment in Navy ROTC is about the same as last year, Brinegar said. The present number enrolled is 111 men. Brinegar said the Navy courses had changed over the years and were now officially acceptable to the University.
Bailey said, "it's been a lackluster campaign as far as I can see."
"I'm really disappointed with the Kansan in its covering of the election," Bailey said. "In the past the Kansan has been on the issues, if not the candidates."
The candidates for president of the student body have nearly concluded their campaigns. They spoke Tuesday about campaigns for election and their campaigns.
MOHAMMED AMIN, Rafsenjan, Iran, senior and candidate of the KU Student Party (KUSP), said his chances of being elected were good, but with so many candidates in the field, the outcome was hard to predict.
Arin said, "I think we appeal to the best of our minds. We are very viscous. We don't need for his big legs."
Amin said student government was the most important issue of the campaign. He said that to get anything done changes must be made in Student Senate.
Amin said he expected the support of a few of the fraternities and sororities, most of the residence halls on Daisy Hill, many of the students and many of the black students.
He said of the campaign, "I really wish I'd had more time to reach more people. Most of the people we contacted are young, healthy, and willing because we didn't reach enough people."
KUSF will disclose its exp andidures soon after the election, according to Argin.
DAVE DILLON, Hutchinson junior and presidential candidate of University Commitment, was not overly optimistic about his chances.
"I think our chances are not too good if people don't turn out," Dillon said.
Dillon said he didn't think there was any central issues in his campaign.
See KU ELECTION Page 2
2
Wednesday, March 15. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Campus Briefs
Concert Chorale Tonight
Concert Chorale Tonight
Concert Chorale will present a concert of sacred and moder
choral music at 8 o'clock in Swarthout Rectal Hall in Murphy Hall
The choir is under the direction of Darrell Benne.
Psychiatrist to Speak
Louis H. Ferman, M.D. and Kansas City psychiatrist, will speak on the theory and application of transactional analysis at 7 onight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Transactional analysis is a theory of interpersonal relations.
Senior Recital Thursday
Carol McAmis, Hutchinson senior, will present her senior piano recital at 8 p.m. Thursday in Swartworth Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. McAmis will play works by Scarlatti, Beethoven, Brahms and Bartok.
The Women's Gift Team will have an organizational meeting at 4 p.m. Thursday in 124 Robinson, Karen Keeling, assistant dean of women and organizer of the team, said anyone interested could attend.
Wood Sculptor to Talk
Cecil Carstenier, wood sculptor, will be the guest speaker of the Sculpture Club at 7:30 tonight in the sculpture-studios of Baily Arnex. Carstenier, who has just published a book, "Craft of Wood Carving," will present some of the wood carving. The meeting is open to all interested persons.
Psychology Colloquium
The department of psychology will present a colloquium at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the Froom Room of the Kansas Union, Dr. Wilbert J. McAhey from the department of psychology at the University of Arkansas and Dr. Andrew D. College Teaching. "All interested persons are invited to attend."
Engineer Magazine
The Kansas Engineer Magazine is now accepting applications for editor and business manager. Interviews will be held April 10 in 217 Learned. Those interested should contact Kirk Vann, editor, 842-365-2174, Kristy Willite, faculty adviser, or Lee Knapp, staff writer, 843-667-0911.
Continued from Page 1
KU Elections . . .
Dillon said he would get support from every part of the campus.
Dillon said he intended to release his list of expenses to the election committee. Thursday
"I don't think this is a matter of an issue," he said. "It's a matter of who people can handle or who are issues of competence than issues.
He said the biggest problem of the campaign was to get students to realize that there was an election.
"The only reason we had to spend much money was to let people know there an election." Dillon said.
RICHARD DWYER, Joplin,
Mo., senior candidate of
in North Miami Places
(PIMP), in Nundaure
of winning the election.
Dwyer said other candidates had spent a lot of money on their campaigns and he wasn't known by enough people to win.
He said the main issues of the campaign were reduction of the activity fee, reduction of the number of senators, abolition of officers for officers of the student bachelor user funding for the University.
"Our support will probably be nil because we haven't tried to influence people," Dyer said. "There are no money on the campaign."
Dwyer said that whether he comes back to KU next year or will not will depend on the results of the election. Astory in Tuesday's report said that there was a 90 per cent chance he would not return.
JOEL GREEN, Rapid City, S.
D. sophomore, said his chances of
being very good. He said he, Dewey
Landik, Kirkwood, M., junior
and candidate for the Birthday
on the same platform.
*
Green said that because Landolt had advertised himself better than he had, Landolt would have won all of the votes he might have got.
Green said his most important issue in the campaign was the proposal of a full-time paid embassador for KU. He said he would help solve problems through mediation and consultation.
Green said his support would come from independents who didn't agreed with the way Amy Limbak had run their campaigns.
HE SAID his campaign had been very successful, considering the amount of money he had spent. He said he had spent $2 so
Landolt said his chances of
winning were "fair to partly cloudy". He said if the fraternities and sororites came out to vote, Dillon would win.
If the residence halls came out to vote, Amin won win, help in Landot. He said his support came from "the woodwork."
The main issue Landolt has with apathy, he campaign with the Birthday Party Traveling Circus to shake students out of their
of the campaign Llandott said,
"I wish I could have
more effectively
with the circus. If I had to do it
over again, I would have
more effectively
with the circus."
Students will also elect 83 student senators and 12 class officers. Twenty-five candidates and 163 faculty and 185 filled for Student Senate.
LANDLOT SAID he had spent less than $30 in the campaign. He said there was no way he could win. He said or a party the size of Amiin's.
Nineteen seats are uncontested and 15 are unfilled for. The 19 uncontested seats included 17 in the Graduate School, three in Education, three in the Graduate School, two in the Law School and two in the School of Social Welfare. The offices of the treasurer are also uncontested.
ALL 19 POLLS will be open
Wednesday. Polls in Learned,
Learned, Uberferried
halls and in the Kansas
be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
there will be a poll in Marvin
12:30 to 5:30
Wednesday
Before a large attendance of home owners, the Lawrence City Commission voted three to two Tuesday to deny a request for rezoning of the 2500 block of homes in Greenwich Village housing to duplex dwellings.
No one filed for 14 of the Student Senate seats in the Graduate School or the office of junior class secretary.
The residence hall polls will be
Gorban from 8 to 19 p. m.
Elsworth from 8 to 19 p. m.
Hashingter from 5 p. m. to 9 p. m.
Colum and Lewis from 5 to 7 p. m.
Oliver from 5 to 19 p. m.
Oliver from 5 to 19 p. m.
Pearson Scholarshall Hall from
By MARSHA SEARS
Kansas Stiff Writer
There will be 13 polls open Wednesday night, including eight in residence halls and five in fraternities and sororites.
Richard Zinn, attorney representing Western Home Builders, addressed the complaint against his application for rezoning. He said the rezoning involved only four lots and only a few additional cars and people. He said the four lots were planned to be added and if the lots were rezoned to duplex dwellings, the area would have graduated zoning. Also, he said, rezoning would make the area one continuous type of zoning.
Duplex Zoning Rejected
The request will be returned to the City Planning Commission for approval and mendation that it would be desirable to maintain single-use facilities.
ED COLLISTER, attorney
representing the area's home
owners, said this rezoning was
a good deal for the land and
good. He said a home owner had
the right to have the zoning kept
was when he purchased the
land.
Fraternity and sorority polls will be open from 7 to 10 p. m. m. Wednesday, Polls will be at Alpha Gamma Delta, Chi Omega at 10 a.m. m. Thursday, Sororities, and Delta Tau Delta and Delta Upsilon fraternities. Polls will be open Thursday from 8 a.m. to 5 p. m. in Learned, Maloit, Strong and Summerfield from 9 a.m. to 4 p. m. From 1 p. m. to 3 p. m. polls will be open in the five fraternity and sorority houses.
Commissioner Nancy Humbles said zoning changes were serious and home owners' investments should be protected.
The commission unanimously passed a grant request of $7,000 to be provided by the city and the purchase of an ambulance.
the city money because it would require one less man on sanitation pickup. Special arrangements would be made for people who are physically unable to carry out trash. Because such tasks are not placed in place is not practical. Stouffer will remain a carry-out area.
Also unanimously passed was a change in the sanitation service from carry-out service to curb entry areas. In these areas, the change would save
The commissioners then voted to deny the request for rezoning
THE COMMISSION passed
municinally an ordinance to pay
the necessary funds for resor-
tions located at 15th and
lowe streets and at 19th and lowe
sewers in the 1000 block between Illinois and Mississippi streets were approved.
"This area is critical because it takes all the flow from the Kansas Union," said George Doug, director of public works.
The plans for reconstruction of
Local Legislators Discuss Allocation of State Funds
BY ANITA VOGEL
Kansan Staff Writer
Funding of state institutions was one of the primary concerns of the 1972 Kansas legislature, two local legislators said in a discussion with a small group of faculty and students.
Defiant Frisbe Thrower Creates Traffic Tie-Up
Sen. Arden Booth and Rep
Lawrence Police arrested Monday for throwing a Frisbe across the intersections of 12th and Oread and 13th and Oread
Police reported that when Schall was taken to the police department they discovered a stolen vehicle and failure to pay parking tickets.
Officers were first called to the inspection of the Schall throwing a Frisbe, was reported. Police said they warned Schall not to throw the frisbee.
John Vogel, both Lawrence Republicans, discussed the last legislative sessions in a program sponsored by the Business Club.
The University Council will convene at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in 108 Blake for its last meeting the election of new members.
Discussion will continue on the calendar for the 1974 academic year, beginning at the Feb. 17 meeting of the department period, the exam schedule, the placement of holidays on Monday were points of interest for students.
Council to Hold Final Meeting On Thursday
Police reported they received another call a short time later saying Schall was still throwing the ball. The officers returned to the intersection and told Schall if he was frightened, Prise again he would be arrested.
Booth said the tone of last session's legislature had greatly improved. He said the legislature had over-reached to the things that were needed, now realized that the requests for funding were not out of line.
Police reported that Schall started to throw it again and was thrown back. She threw missiles across the intersection and with failure to stop, she crashed.
The Planning and Resources Committee is to report on its progress in establishing criteria for determining which faculty members are granted sabbatical leaves each year.
"It's hard to answer the question. 'Were we as generous as we should be?' Booth said. "We were generous as we could have been." Booth and his generosity as we could have been.
"The timing of the February Sisters, the strikers and the gay liberation suit was poor. They were in session and not in session. It did not hurt the fund but it made the job more difficult." Vogel, a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, said attitudes on legislative funding.
"The legislature has gotten over letting little things like the February Sisters effect budget allocations as happened in prior months," he said. "The Board of Regents controls the policy. It is up to the
legislature to draw attention to what we want and the Board has been responsive."
Fly your own jet!
FLY NAVY
Vogel said that no change in funding was expected next year except the normal increase. More money would probably go to vocational technical training and junior colleges he added.
Clip and Mail To;
(COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY) CLASS OF
NAME
STREET
CITY
STATE ZIP CODE
U. S. Navy Recruiting Station
2420 Broadway
61037
On the restructuring of the tax system, Vogel indicated he would favor an increase in sales tax, but a decrease in property tax.
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Support class sponsored lectures concerts and similar events.
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JIM ASH-V. Pres.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 15, 1972
3
People . . .
. . Places . . .
. . Things
People:
PRESIDENT NIXON told Congress Tuesday that cuts and delays in United States military aid to allies "could have a destabilizing effect at a time when calm confidence in our support and perseverance will be critically needed." Nixon, in a special message, said approval of his $2.3 billion new military aid request, a $400 million budget increase, "as we begin to make adjustments in our international role."
Places:
*MAGON*—The allied commands reported a series of victories Tuesday along South Vietnam's western borders, including destruction by bombers of a major enemy headquarters in eastern Cambodia. Field reports and communiques reported at least 166 North Vietnamese killed and more than 100 bunkers and huge quantities of sums destroyed.
BELFAST—Irish guerrillas, striking swiftly at the close of a three-day truce, unleashed a furious bomb and gun offensives Tuesday that killed two men and injured many others across Ireland. Two militants blasted Belfast, Londonderry and a number of other towns.
Things:
Both labor and management Tuesday asked the Pay Board to approve a 2.9 PER CENT PAY RAISE for 15,000 West Coast dock workers, the biggest one-year pay increase it has yet considered.
They argued at a formal hearing that the raise is justified for 10 years of rising worker productivity that has saved employers an estimated $74 million annually in tilted to at least an 8.9 per cent increase under standard guidelines, and said that increased productivity gives sufficient grounds for the board to consider granting even more.
Lewis Hall Coffee House To Be Ready Next Fall
Remodeling of the Lewis Hall vending area into a coffee house will begin after hall residents get permission. Debbie Lacy, Overland Park junior and Lewis Hall president, said Saturday that the coffee house would be ready for use when the hall re-sponsored in the
Members of the Lewis Hall
2 Sigma Chi's Sent to Tahoe By Fraternity
A unique "bom voyage" party given at Kansas City International Airport Friday night in the spring resulted in the departure of two fraternity members, Mike Chelter, Blero freshman, and Harvey Tretbard, Wichita freshman. Lake Tahoe, all expenses paid.
"Everybody in the house paid $6.50. For $6.50 you got your name put in a hat," said Phil Skipper of the Junior and Sigma Chi member.
"Everybody went to the airport, and our house mother drew a cake for us. We all got to Tahoe," Davis said. "We all packed a suitcase because the weather was bad."
"We were going to rent buses and let everybody get smashed on the way to the airport, but it was too hot." The combined $6.50 donations were to have paid airfare and all guests on Friday night through Sunday.
Most of the Sigma Chi men it accompanies them if their name was drawn. But Chester chose Trehera as his traveling compass.
"They called us and said they won't be back until Thursday," Davis said.
Sigma Chi plans to have another bon voyage party next year.
K.U. STUDENTS
Rally Port Isabel
Padre Island
BUS OFFICE
VARIETY
Wednesday,
November 25, 1970
BREWER & ShipLEY:
*TARKIO* (Kama Sutra).
Continuing the highly
contemporary line of the
album, Brewer & Shipley's
country/lifestyle flavored
set should elevate the due to
a large audience. The pair's
guitars are augmented by a
collection of musicians
including Mark Nafalin and
Jerry Garcia. The latter's
guitar is particularly effective.
As shown on "Oh Mommy",
Brewer & Shipley are also
fine songwriters. The latter's
statement under the publica
carefree country song.
BREWER & SHIPLEY
Sat. April 8th
Hoch Auditorium
Planning Board are working with advisers on details of the project, such as choice of carpeting, and furniture arrangement
The walls will be painted and additional graphics will be done. The walls will be pre-fabricated already in the area will be re-uppolstered, and cube tables and cabinets will be installed.
D Becky Quick, Villa Park, Ill.
senior, designed the moveable
cube chairs, called glides and
which will have formica tops.
The coffee house will have a seating capacity of 57, plus a small bar with a sink, would be constructed in the area now occupied by vending machines. The supervisor for the dormitory supervisor for the working with the planning board in stocking supplies for the bar.
Mitchell Testifies to Committee On Meeting with ITT Officials
WASHINGTON (AP)—Former Atty, John G. John N. Mitchell testified Tuesday he met for 35 minutes with the president of International Telephone & Telecom and iteledman had disqusured himself from taking part in anti-trust suits against the conglomerate.
But Mitchell told the Senate Judiciary Committee that the discussion in August 1970 dealt only with ITT president Harold Gemené's arguments that the courts were antitrust policy was too vigorous.
Mitchell, who disqualified himself because his old law firm had no knowledge of the case, said there was no discussion of the company's court battles with the plaintiff.
Mitchell enriched knowledge also of a reported $400,000 pledge by ITT to help finance the renovation in San Diego next August.
THE COMMITTEE was in its eighth day of hearings requested by Richard G. Klindemann on a request that the ITT gave Jack Anderson that ITT was given a favorable settlement of the action after making the pledge.
Kleindienst was deputy attorney general at the time of the settlement last July. He has been nominated to succeed Mitchell who stepped down as governor in 2015 and Nikon's re-election campaign.
The committee gave unanimous approval to the nomination prior to Anderson's accusation. The Senate has not acted on the committee's report but Chairman James O. Cox will position that as far as the committee is concerned the nomination stands approved and he plans another committee vote.
AS MITCHELL underwent rather mild questioning from Democrats, there were some who said he will be traveling to talk with ITT lobbyst Dita D. Beard, now in a heart ailment
Mrs. Beard, 53, is the author of a memo cited by Anderson as evidence that the antitrust enforcement commitment are related
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-NY, a former surgeon who reported from two heart surgeons who examined Mrs. Beard and reached an understanding that he was not harmed.
department with respect to conglomerates.
"I assented to the meeting on the express condition that the pending litigation would not be settled." Sween agreed to this condition.
Mitchell said his meeting with Geneen came at the ITT executive's request. It's purpose, however, is to over-all antitrust policy of the
would fly to Denver, probably next week.
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4
Wednesday, March 15, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
If nothing else, the student elections today and tomorrow will offer the student body the chance to fund yet another badly needed program.
No on Proposal
The Allen Field House floor proposal, as David Miller calls it, would add $80,000 to the outstanding balance of the $355,000 seating expansion debt in Memorial Stadium. The additional student money would, in theory, allow the Athletic Corporation to extend the area covered by the stadium. The additional money would add four basketball courts that could double as badminton and volleyball courts.
The proposal should be rejected. The proposal seems a good intention but hardly sound practice for several reasons.
The proposal should be rejected.
Most importantly, the Athletic Corporation does not have any immediate plans for the installation of just such an artificial surface. According to Wade
Stinson, director of athletics, the corporation is not emphasizing capital improvements at this time, but rather the maintenance of existing facilities. The Athletic Corporation would be were to vote in favor of the proposal there would be no guarantee that the Athletic Corporation would commit itself to the installation. The Athletic Corporation is no closer now than it was two years ago to the installation. It seems to make little sense to backtrack behind a proposal that, for all practical purposes, does not exist.
Space, Sex, Senate . . .
Editorials in the Kansan have opposed student funding of programs and facilities the University and State should provide, and have criticized students must fund programs, they should be programs that make better sense than this one.
—Thomas E. Slaughter
To the Editor:
I was happy to see your headline article, "America's Pioneer 10 Blasts off to Jupiter." The team pages a day page Friday. March 3, 1972.
Plaque
Readers Respond
There was a small error in the ninth paragraph of the UDK article. The sentence, "On the basis that people are be intercepted by intelligent creatures of another civilization, it bears a gold plaque that tells in drawings and scientific symbols that this world is and by what kind of people," should have two words inserted between the words "gold" and "plaque." The sentence should also hold an oilized aluminum plaque.
A sketch of the plaque and a detailed caption may be found on page 13 of "Aviation Week". February 28, 1972. issue.
—Howard W. Smith Associate Professor Aerospace Engineering
To the Editor:
Candidates
Surely the troubled shades of past KU laureates such as Bill Ebert, Dave Abbrey and Ken Eraison enabled easier tonight in the knowledge that another year has produced another fine collection of students from the Senate. Perhaps these brooding spirits and the general reader will find a little examination of KU's teaching and an illuminating experience.
The current point arises from a class grouping of the Student Senate candidates, where the student will be a solid lead (54 candidates), one third of those filing). One might be hasty in judging KU student activity at this point, but credence is added by the fact that the freshman class runs a strong interest in the total of 182. At the other end of the scale, we might glance at the Graduate School, where a block of students have an interest of a paltry three candidates. It could be that the sophomores know something that the graduate notice of the Graduate School?
It is probably an over-extension of the available facts to conclude that the KU Student Senate is the governing body of students who enjoy the sounds of their own voices. Now if we only knew how many of those sophomores were star debaters back in high school, we'd draw some real conclusions.
Conspiracy
James Beckman Concordia graduate student
I have one complaint about the account of Ted Glick's talk Wednesday evening. One of his hosts told me that Mr. Glick public about the nature of the
To the Editor:
charges against the Harriburg group. As is the case with most of the press across the country, you seem to have missed the point.
The first indictment charged six anti-war activists with a plot to kidnap Henry Kissinger and bomb government heating equipment in the minimum sentence of life imprisonment (for conspiracy to kidnap).
But after continued grunjury investigations, a new indictment was handed down last April. Two men who were one of them), the charge was changed from "conspiracy to kidnap" to "conspiracy to commit crimes against the States," which carries a maximum sentence of only five years. The conspiracy was expanded to include a series of raids on draft board raids in nine states. The new indictment was constructed in such a way that the government would be able to kidnap and or bomb charges and still win a conviction. In other words the Harrisonburg Eight could be charged for related to draft board raids, yet the general public would still be under the impression that they had kidnapped and bombed the Harrisonburg group believes that this is a calculated plot on the part of the government to attack the anti-war movement.
Sister Dolores Heidrick Catholic Student Center
McCollum
To the Editor:
During one's life, one encounters few really important issues; issues like war, racism, poverty and community hygiene. You can also such overwhelming magnitude that I felt compelled to write this letter. That issue is, of course, the skit in Rock Chalk Bevie.
Having read the skit and seen it performed once, I must say that I
was relieved to see it rightfully banned from the Revue. Rock Chalk is no place for filth like that.
McColum's skit was by far the most appalling thing I've ever read or seen. Its mentioning of death constitutes blasphemy of the worst kind! Its obvious mockery of one of this nation's leading religious figures borders on insane. And slander aren't enough, Mr. Mannering and his cohorts must also be accused of ignorance. In their skit they portray God as a man. How stupid can you get!
I command Mr. Bukaty, his production staff, members of the other skirts and of the orchestra for standing up to him as he did, and the peddlers. It's people like this that made America what it is today!
There are many people I know who feel the way I do. That is why I'm suggesting to the KUY team to review a committee to review and edit all skits to be presented at future Rock Chalk Reviews (sic). Let me say that this is not the only thing that must protect the youth of Kansas!
Well I've had my say, and I know that every deed God-fearing man and woman on this campus agrees with all II've said.
Bob Steen,
Smith Center senior
Review
To the Editor:
In the sometimes rich, often rancid reviews that assault our eyes from the UDR occasionally fail to understand succinctly describing the event, and making reasonable comment upon it without sullying both the review and the performance. We have seen in the review of the Humanities Lecture by Boris Goldswyk as being both pleasantly interpretative and persuasive.
—David Radd, Lawrence graduate student
AP Feature Note
Seating Opera Buffs
NEW YORK (AP) —Cheers and hisses绕道 through the Metropolitan Opera House on the fans, not for the stars, but for the fans.
Bing picked the winning tickets from a bowl filled with $91 numbered stubs. He said he had purchased the standing-room tickets and was donating them to the homeless or normally sell for $2.85 and $1.85.
when the tickets were to have gone on sale. At that time, Helen Quinn, unofficial organizer for the regular standees—who often wait hours to buy their prized seats—suggested a first-class, first-serve basis.
The cries came as Sir Rudolf Bing, retiring general manager, announced the winners of 175 awards to the gala farewell in his honor.
The unusual lottery occurred because of a mixup last Sunday
Then, as usual, she allowed the opera buffs to leave, as long as they returned at a specified time. She insisted that security guards insisted it was the only official line. An uproar ensued and finally Sir Claire married him and proposed the lottery system. Among the winners on this Sunday was none other than Miss Queen, who drew the biggest hand of all.
100
James J. Kilpatrick
least— these are not love affairs. To fall in love with Florence is quite different. What is one to say about a 2,500-year-old woman? A woman coming back is a failure in love again.
A Love Affair With Florence (The City)
FLORENCE, ITALY- I am involved in a love affair—again—and would distract you from the New Hampshire primary returns long enough to share the experience with you. The pleasures of pondering the Muskie percentage are wonderful.
It is hard to explain why this is so. Florence evokes neither the passions of Rome nor the mysteries of Venice. Its architecture is not especially distinguished its river, by day, is full of statues; its gardens are attractions in food, music, things to do.
Every traveler who crisscrosses our own good land knows what it is to have a favorite city: Charleston in early March, when the sun warms and the camellias blossom; Washington in the spring; Chicago in the late summer, Boston in the fall, New York at home; San Francisco may stay. Beyond our borders, a man can develop an abiding affection for Montreal, London, Paris, Madrid, Lisbon, for Leningrad at dusk, Berlin by night.
But these are not-not for me, at
Yet if you have fallen in love with Florence, you catch an afternoon train from Rome, and with every mule anticipation grows. The unseeing eye absorbs the old Dai Vinci lancases to the east and west—wineyards, jade-leaved olive trees, cedars standing straight as furls umbrellas, red-roof villas surmounting the hills and commanding the valleys. At last the sun glims on the city's great cathedral, the chapel of St. George, its mistery a master; and the heart leans on.
economy and bogus progress, and the pedestrians of Florence now stand obediently at the curbs, slaves to the rights commanding "alt" and "avant."
The carabiniert also seem to have vanished from the stage. These were the walking officers, caparisoned in blue trousers, who buckles, parading two by two, handsome devils, supremely ornamental, the hint of a blinkie in their eyes. They survive in Rome, but a traveler misses them in Florence.
It is always the same. This city is bathed in light, awash with light. Here is the Florentine gold of a painter's dream—a light refracted off ancient houses, elusive and unforgettable, a light compounded of amber and topaz,
cream and mustard, brass and bronze,
pale yellow, light honey: You cannot fix
a color for it. You do not see the light,
exactly; you see through it, as one sees
the world through white wine. There is
a feeling sometimes that the light will
stick to your coat, like spring pollen;
light to be brushed from your hair.
Florence has to be seen by foot. There is nothing to be gained by driving; there are only tempers to be lost. To walk there, you have to know how to know the delightful exhaustion of discovery; there is always one more inviting corner to be turned, one more pizza that opens like a window, one more wine that fills up the Dante lined; here the Brownings; the stakes and straw were burned that sent the mid Savanarola—where? To walk the city again, and again, is to find someone to riccord. I remember, I remember.
What does the lover love most about this mistress of a city? It is the city's natural air of inconcern. Florence does not work at beautiful or try to be exciting. She wakes in a shower of light, and she stays in it for hours with only a glance for Michelangelo. By night she wears the Arno like a golden necklace at her neck. For such a mistress a man will travel half around the earth, if only to murmur to the mute girl before he descends into ricordo." Remembering, after all, is what a love affair is mostly all about.
Of course, it is not always the same. Time was when one could pass a happy hour entranced by the traffic cops, white gloves, superbly accreted, as they worked their magisterial authority along the Lungario. It was pure ballet, scored to pizcize Flat horns. Most of the cops have disappeared, victims of
Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Garry Wills
Father Berrigan's Courtroom Liturgy
HARRISBURG—Harrisburg, a grey dour Pennsylvania brightened considerably by the tender Daniel Berrigan arrival.
When Father Berrigan was paroled in Connecticut, he said that freedom is an unfinished business, and that he was only acquainted with the stoed trial in Harrisburg. Getting down here from his parole area (New York City) took some time; but as soon as he could make it, he would be under his rough greying cowl of hair, chewing gum, wearing a
That's why the government has to keep bringing him to the waitchair* (to which the handcuffs are attached, pinioning Philip, who he trial for (a murder for Adeen Hirekissan). He has to carry pounds of papers and material, and he can hardly lift them. He's also going to government, he thinks, wants to break his brother's spirit—an
What about Daniel's own travel here? "It was a difficult thing. I had to check right in here to my
JOHN P. MILLER
How had he found his brother?
"Better than ever. I think the trial has improved his style.
Today, Gary Wills records for us the arrival of Father Daniel Berrigan at the trial of his brother Phil in Harrisburg, Virginia. Father Dan's arrival brightened the day, says Wills.
He seemed to enjoy the bailiff's "Oyez" chant, and followed everything with pussed alert eyes. The half-tailed hall-distributed half-amused.
black turtle-neck sweater and baggy mustard-colored corduroy pants.
At a break in the court session, Berrigan was his old self greeting people, warm, yet ironal, open-hearted, alternating the Blunt and Sneezy.
Douglas Boudys, the government informer on his brother, sat in the witness box, and intrigued the Reverend Dahiel (who had never met him) that Douglas later as "a poor rag doll torn apart and not too skillfully rebuilt by the government." That was because damage the government could do to his brother and the other defendants, they would survive, as human beings; but what they were supposed to have no power to undo. He hoped that Douglas's rehabilitation might come, someday, somehow, from those he now considered their realizing they are fellow victims.
He is asked about his removal from the government's case on the Kissinger plot (the was not in court), and that plotting is supposed to have occurred). "They didn't name me in the second indictment but," he says. "Maybe my name's written there in lemon juice." Nothing seems unlikely to him after that first interview, dropped on him out of nowhere.
A reporter says, "You mean your name will appear if we hold the second indimentum up to a flame?"
watcher. I'm a disappearing species, and they have to keep close check on my movements."
"No," he answers, "better to din it in good bourbon."
The answer goes with his flip kind of piety, his almost breezy apocalypses. Asked what work he is engaged says aursa, "I was asked to cross hung around his neck, he answers soberly. 'It was made for me by another inmate'—out of two large screws. As Dan Bergrand himself had forged them, and asked in particular the drach proceed of this trial.
Copyright, 1972.
Universal Press Syndicate
MOON HANDIE
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Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff.
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University Daily Kansam
Wednesday, March 15, 1972
[ ]
Strike Settlement Remains Vague
By RICHARD COOLEY Kansan Staff Writer
Although the walkout of University of Kansas civil service employees ended almost two weeks ago, the terms of the settlement they negotiated with the administrators are still not known.
When the workers returned to their jobs on March 1, it was announced that a "mutual understanding" had been reached between the administration and representatives of the Classified Office Employees Union. Local 1132 led the dayy walkout.
days and s postage advertised expressed
The terms of the agreement reportedly centered on a conference issued Feb. 25 by Chancellor E Laurence Chalmers Jr. regarding University policy on student-athletes in the union during the walkout.
lip Crewens
Mike Moffet
Steve Scott
Tom King
Simon Klinger
Simon Klinger
Spurlock
Jacques Jones
Jacques Jones
Schmidt
Schmidt
Nik Netzer
many Young
Sokoleff
Sokoleff
THE REVISED statement was to have been released last week, but the chairperson, celler for business affairs, said he had never asked the Chamber because Chalmers had been out
treel Young
n Carter
m Manley
Barnhart
pergeredes
nda Lloyd
e Murray
del Danl
of town and had not been able to give attention to the matter. Nitcher said that Monday the statement should be released this week.
Blanche Nitz, chief steward of the local union, said Monday that she did not know why there had been a delay in her administration in releasing the statement. She said the original statement was incomplete because it dealt with only seven grevances behind the walkout.
SPECIFICALLY, THE NITZ
repeatedly contended the UNZ
demands primarily involved
wages which only the legislature
recognized.
"Most of our demands concerned harsh working conditions, some of which are illegal, which the chancellor does have the
Nitz also charged that throughout the negotiations the administration had given misleading interpretations of the law, and required subtle techniques to discredit the union and to break its strike.
Rieks said Ellers had agreed to start this special one-year study July 1.
power to correct," she said.
Adviser to Study KUMC Courses
Dr. Russell J. Ellers, professor of pathology at the University of Kansas Medical Center, has been named a special consultant to Dr. William O. Rieke, vice admins of the Medical Center.
"We feel especially fortunate that Dr. Eilers has agreed to undertake this study," Rieke said. "His longstanding interest in medical and allied health is well known, many contacts and strong state and national reputation make him especially well qualified."
By JOHN REED Kansan Staff Writer
"The union's demands had been presented for eight months," she said. They were presented again to the Administration in the office of the president, but before the press quoted the administration as saying they didn't know what we wanted.
Eilers will conduct an intensive national study of the feasibility of developing a unified health curriculum at the Medical Center.
Nitz also said that Chalmers had told news media after the walkout but began that he had not spoken. He listened to a list of demands by the union.
In regard to the Chancellor's policy statement of Feb. 25, Nizir was the only one to incomplete most of its provisions were, in her opinion, unreasonable.
THE CHANCELLOR'S statement clarified University policy in seven areas relating to civil service employees; safety, overtime rotation, promotion and transfer, work classification, schedules, eating facilities and grievance procedure
Eilers was named "Pathologist of the Year" by the College of American Pathologists and the American Society of Clinical Pathology. He met in Boston in October. He also is a board member and the American secretariat of the International Committee for Pathology and a member of the World Association of Pathology Societies.
Eilers will spend much of the next year visiting universities studying various experimental curricula.
Eilers joined the Medical Center faculty in -1857 as an associate professor of pathology. He received his Ph.D. in clinical pathology laboratories of the medical technology training department and administates begin July 1.
Nitz criticized the wording of several of the provisions. For example, the provision relating to assignment is "assignment of employees to work assignments of a different classification shall be based on a good faith demand" and stipulates that employers must "from 'changes in organization'."
Nitz charged that wording left workers unaware of any job, regardless their classification, as long as they could justify its basis.
She also criticized the provision regarding weekend work schedules which stated that employees should be made on a rotation basis and posted in each work area." Nitz said that in many cases周末 work was unnecessary and that employees do nothing but waste time.
"THE ONLY value that weekend work has is to save the University money," she said.
the weekend schedules were begin, she said, only after provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act be paid time and a half for work performed in excess of 40 hours per week. Under the present conditions, her work on weekends are given to her during the week to insure that
Whitman Says Rise in Prices Will Subside
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Nixon administration expects the post-freeze inflation builge to subside by Easter. But, if it doesn't, new ways to slow the price rise will be tried, the new head of President Nixon's Economic Advisers said Tuesday.
Marina Whitman, who was sworn in Monday as the first woman member of the council, told newsmen the price-control system could be tightened to address the problem areas where prices have risen too rapidly or other action could be taken.
Commission Leader Urges Involvement
BY ANITA KNOPP
Kansan Staff Writer
"We are open to all suggestions and ideas for next year's commission and encourage all women to get involved," Mary Mitchelson, Baxter Springs Chairman of the Commission president of the Commission on the Status of women, said Monday.
Mitchelson, a member of this year's publicity committee, replaced Casky Easek, Kansas City, M.D., commission president for 1972-73.
Mitchison said there would be a place for anyone interested in her, and she had asked as president she saw herself as a director of the commission.
Group Tries to Point Out Israeli Woes to Students
Students for Israel is a new campus group that is attempting to point out the problems of Israel to University of Kansas students
Paul Schwartz, Marshallhoff,
Ia., sophomore and chairman of
the organization, said Students for
Israel was trying to show the
stories of Jews in the world
through movies and discussion
groups.
"Within the next year, 56
thousand immigrants are expected,
"and they will all need homes,
medical attention , and
education."
collecting money on campus for financial aid to Israel.
"None of this money is used for defense," said Schwartz. "It's all used for humanitarian purposes, such as schools and medical aid."
The group will also be
第18回戦争の写真
"The hierarchical structure of the commission is not important," Mitchelson said. He intends to come from the work organization. I have no definite idea I am trying to impose. As many women as there are that I will deal with." Mitchelson said.
She said the role of the commission at KU was to meet the needs and interests of women.
"This extends," she said, "as far as women make it evident to us."
Next year Mitchelson hopes the commission will take a more active role in issues that involve women and take stands on them. The commission will be basically the same as this year but with some changes, because the commission's programs will cover a wider spectrum, she said.
SUA Classical Films
SEVEN SAMURAI
Wed., March 15
7:30 in Woodruff 75¢
& 9:00 in the Ballroom
Mitchelson urged anyone interested to apply for committee positions throughout the year.
Nitz said the University's policy on overtime rotation was also unfair, because it stated that the policy of distributing such assignments is "when the University becomes aware that overtime assignments are necessary hours or less, and assignments are to be worked."
they do not exceed 40 hours. Nitz said she thought the plan violated the Fair Labor Standards Act.
Appointed treasurer for next year was Romi Ehrenburg, then a member of the 12 committees also met last night on the commission board for next year.
The "In-house" procedure
She said the provision, in effect, gives supervisors a free hand in assigning overtime work because they could always claim that they were not aware of the assignment until the last minute. University officials have explained University's policy on grievance procedure, which stated that the procedure "will be utilized after completion of the procedure has been exhausted."
refers to the worker's right to present his grievance to his immediate supervisor, who then discusses it with the foreman.
"When the complaint is against the foreman, it is unlikely that the matter will go much further once it gets to him." Nitz said.
Nitz said that she thought many workers involved in the walkout worked well, but what had been accomplished by the negotiations and that the administration had added to the walkout agreements and statements. She also thought press coverage of the walkout biased against the workers.
Nitz said she hoped formal meetings would continue, although the future role of union leaders in the administration was unclear.
"I would like to continue meeting with them on a personal basis once a month," she said.
Vote KUSP
NORTH COLLEGE SENATE
Thane Hodson
Stephanie Struble
Linda Doherty
Paid by KUSP
Brewer & Shipley at the Troubadour
WARREN HAMMACK
That's where she always something going on at the moment. There were moments when they didn't. Not from the party, not from the affair and often there was something more. It was driven by anger. She was driven and bellowed with anger.
Michael Brewer and Tom Stipple are impressive performers. In a word, they are the most eclectic of all tour dates. Tuesday night, there was no nonsense. Tom Stipple played on an acoustic guitar, but even about the way they turned up it朋克 like overtetched formulas. When Stipple played with the band, discipline, confidence, and tremulousness were essential. With only their acoustic guitars, Brewery and Stipple were played on both vocals, bass, drum, and piano in the Budapest venue. Brewer and Stipple more than once showed the material to the stage, it felt as if the audience were part of the music. "Tarka Road" on your radio, you would live five. Excavation of the
The guys played the quilters they like have a synch line connecting them. They put their hands out a wall of a lbf of sound if you remember, the recorders sit on the ceiling and the players sit in the comp and compete for production. Kairi's hard working baskets and toolkit are also essential. The actual sound was even more for Nathan. Each three of Snowley and Kairi were more than six times as loud.
response and incident to a news耳
winter kept them right on a basically
massive scale. They were quick to keep always interesting through a set and they managed quiet talk with their attack occasionally for variety. A
Kingston Kingdom team could sound new and then, especially when the abbot entered. The employment of the wider interval in the folk song and Street Theater tended to be trapped in this condition. Certainly not in Dilys' "All Along the Watchtower" and who other than I would think of the
indicative of the confidence displayed was the fact that they hit us with their performance of the time, as you know, the sure fate of a group of four friends. After just four hunters we had heard both big hits; it was a rather dating affair with a friend, and not very well known. The remainder of the three featuring new album and from their earlier WorldWide album, the show became even more memorable with the Tumormera, completing with "Wild" (their 2004 album) and an encore, "People Live Each Other."
I say this was a successful
grantment partly because I thank
that some ways the most successful per-
formers have made the Whichita's to
number.
BREWER & SHIPLEY In Concert Sat. April 8th Hoch Auditorium
M
mondey
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Shake
March 10 thru 19
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15¢
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d's
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This is an invitation for you to take advantage of Lawrence's newest private club. The SANCTUARY offers you convenience, enjoyment, and relaxation. Cocktails and hors d'oeuvres are served seven days a week from 4 p.m.-3 a.m. And for your added convenience the SANCTUARY will be open during spring break.
The Sauurtuary
Charter and Regular Memberships Available Now Call VI2-5248 or Inquire at 1401 W. 7th
THE FIRESIGN THEATRE:
THE
ONLY ROCK GROUP
IN THE WORLD THAT
DOESN'T NEED MUSIC.
Throb to
that jungle beat!
Baffle your
foreign friends!
KO 31099
DEAD FRIENDS
THE FIRESIGN THEATRE
Festival, Academy of the Arts
Halloween Welcome SHOW
Thrill to
searing solos!
Freak out (or in)
with the famous Firesign
raw animal energy!
Turn it up real loud
and dig the feedback!
THE FIRESIGN THEATRE:
THE
ONLY ROCK GROUP
IN THE WORLD THAT
DOESN'T NEED MUSIC.
Throb to
that jungle beat!
Baffle your
foreign friends!
DEAR FRIENDS
THE FIRESIGN THEATRE
Firesign Carnival 1973
Williams on the Radio from
Thrill to
searing solos!
Freak out (or in)
with the famous Firesign
raw animal energy!
Turn it up real loud
and dig the feedback!
Twenty-nine new,
heavy hits from
mouths of The Firesign
from their avant-garde
series! Starring
Vanni, Whole
Small
Get it on! Bang a marshmallow! Laff yourself sick! And, yes, you can twist to it!
"DEAR FRIENDS."
The FireSign Theatre.
On Columbia Records
and Tapes *A* specially priced 2-volume
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE PRESENTS
HAMLET by William Shakespeare
March 14 •
16 • 28 • 30
April 1
8:00 p.m.
ROSENCRANTZ and GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD by Tom Stoppard
March 15 17 29 31 8:00 p.m.
April 2 matinee 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre-Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: UN4-3982 KU Students Receive Free Reserve Seat Ticket with Certificate of Registration
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6
Wednesday, March 15, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAS
15
Stallworth Drives Against K-State
Bod will play guard in pro basketball
Stinson Revives Volleyball Team
By JIM SCHUMM
After a lapse of two years, the Iowa Volleyball Club is banked on its success. It hosted the annual Heart of America Tournament March 25 in Kansas.
Dave Stinson played in 1968 and 1969 before the team disbanded. This year he formed the team for the manages, coaches and plains
Stinson, who is not related to University of Kansas Athletic Director Wade Stinson, had difficulty forming the club.
"It was mostly an event through the University to gain recognition as a club," Stinson said. "I took it as a six to eight hour trip."
"After going through this process, we applied for membership in the United States Volleyball Association.
"We submitted an itemized request to the Student Senate, and I might add that I thought that we were treated more than fairly.
The team received $550 to cover equipment and travel expenses.
"ANOTHER OF the problems we encountered was we didn't get the word out early enough." Stinson said.
"The Ken Allen Company of Chicago will be there. They have a couple of Olympians on their team."
The tournament season in the Midwest start in early October and end in November. Heart of America Tournament will be Shawnee Mission South
Also competing in the tourn-
ment will be Ball State, the
Dallas Athletic Club and the Air
Force Academy.
"There will be 53 teams in the tournament in both the women's and the men's divisions," Stinson said. "Some will finish in the country when they do."
COMPETITION WILL begin at 8:30 a.m. and last all day, Stinson said. He predicted it would be "quit an exhibition of power" over the next few weeks.
Sinson said there was a big difference between power volleyball and intramural volleyball.
"In power volleyball, the technicalities are watched much closer," he said. "The game is more intense. The competition is much harder."
"We could be much better if we could find some place to practice, or maybe play basketball teams, the only time we can practise in Robinson is on an ice rink."
"We practice at South junior high school, but that is only one night a week. Sometimes it it's very hard to get everybody together."
The team is composed of ten men. Two are foreign students. The two, Misi Maga, Pago Pago graduate student, and Tyan Kanale graduate student. The two graduate student, both played on their country's national teams.
STEVE SCHLEGEL, Bonner Springs junior, transferred to KU from Southern California, where
ENGINEERS
VOTE
Dave
Murfin
For
Student Senate
Vote Commitment
he played a lot of beach volleyball. Stinson said.
Other team members are Steve Boles, Lawrence senior; Hill Boeser, Lawrence junior; Larson, Prairie Village senior; Stephanie Topoka, sophmore; Dave Hare, Lawrence senior, and Steve Candler, Tula, Oka., graduate.
Stinson said although there was a growing interest in volleyball in he area, there wasn't much of it of becoming a varisty sport.
"I just don't think it would be feasible right now," Stinson said. At a recent tournament in Iowa, the team were only three teams from the Big Eight. KU, Iowa State and Missouri, Stinson said.
"Kansas State was supposed to come but they didn't even show up," Stinson said.
Stinson's biggest concern is for next year.
"Now that the volleyball program is active, we need to keep it that way," he said. "Next hope toope to have large-scale tryouts."
Bud Waits for Offers
By JEFF HILL
Kansas Sports Writer
After three years of brilliant performances for the University of Kansas basketball team, Bud Stallworth has only to sit back and wait for the international contract offers to arrive.
Stallworth already has been selected by the Denver Rockets in the first round of the American League, and is a member of the National Basketball Association has yet to conduct its draft. But Stallworth's impressive basketball abilities should win him an early NBA choice as well.
The NBA is generally considered the more talent-rich league, but Stallworth said he played in the same team to which he played in leagues.
"The way I look at it, if I have the ability to play in one league, I
Stallworth has a long list of records and honors to use as bargaining power in contract negotiations. He won three all-time KU career scorer this season, displacing Wilt Chamberlain from that position this season. He was an All-Big Ten player for the second consecutive year.
STALLWORTH SAID that he had been contacted by the Rockets but that no contract terms had been discussed.
have the ability to play in the other," Stallworth said in an interview Tuesday.
"Being selected all-conference is a thing you want to work for. It's a lot to be proud of," Stallworth said.
Denver last year selected the number two all-time KU scorer and a former teammate of Stallworth. Dave Robisch.
"Dave told me it was a pretty
good organization to be associated with. He likes it up and wants his friends to play. I have a good opportunity to play, and that's what I want."
STALLWORTH HAS spent
ALLWORTH HAS spent
forward spot for KU. But 6-foot 5
Stallworth realizes he must
become a guard if he is to play
with the defense.
"I know I'll have to work on my balancing to handguard in the guard. I did not handle the ball that came off at KU." Stallworth said up court at KU." Stallworth said
"I like to play guard, but I probably won't play strictly guard." Stallworth said. "I'll swim in a swingguard and forward."
Stallworth's play at KU was characterized by his smooth, nearly perfect form on long-range jump shots. His offensive
The discus event is a good example of what kind of meet it will be. The event was originally scheduled for the benefit of reshimen weightmen Rudy Jevarva and Dana LeDeuc, Greer
"I haven't really thought about it," Salb said when asked whether he would enter the meet. "Yeah, I think I will throw the cups. I always do well when I happen to thrown the discus for a while."
"THIS IS just a fun meet for the athletes." Greer said. "There's no pressure. The guys who want to compete will compete."
Even so, the event could prove interesting. KU graduates Karl Salb and Steve Wilhelm may enter the discus.
Both, however, will leave Thursday for spring vacation. LeDu will fly fjy to Tacoma. Cash, and Guerva, to Newark.
"I want to work with kids in underprivileged areas in the off-season. That's why I majored in social welfare," he said.
Salb and Wilhelm are training in the shot put for the U.S.
Stallworth said the 1970-71 season was the most satisfying for him. That was the year KU went to the NCAA semifinals and fourth, after being highly ranked in the press polls all season.
Stallworth has done as well in social welfare as he has on the job. He is a graduate of the academic all-American last year and more than a 3.0 grade point average.
"But as far as my own individual performance goes, this season was my best." Stallworth said.
Meet Promises Surprises
Stallworth has plans that don't pertain to basketball.
skills more than any other facet of his game have earned him a shot at the pros.
Invitations to send athletes have been extended to Kansas State College of Pittsburg, Baker, Ottawa, Marymount and Missouri Valley KU assistant Tuesday Harvey Greer said
Action will start at 2:30 p.m.
Events scheduled are the 100, 220,
runs, the 440 intermediate
hurdles, the steepelech, the 440
relay, the high jump, the pole
throw, the hurdles, the hammer
throw and the discus.
The University of Kansas track eam's all-comers meet Thursday in Memorial Stadium will be such a casual affair that he starters won't even know who is leading. (Anderson is all-whores. Who线们 will go on.)
Olympic team tryouts this summer.
By BOB SIMISON
Kingsman Sports Editors
"WILHEM WILL throw too," Sail said. "We work out with weights Thursday afternoon, so we will throw a little discus throwing contest."
He'll bring rain, he throws it so high. "
"That would be great," he said.
"You have to see Salb throw it.
Greer was surprised at the possibility that Salb and Wilhelm would show up.
Ray McGill, the former K-State high jumper who clears the bar in the Olympics, has said he will come to the U.S. after graduating work at K-State.
Red Baron
Mike Stull, KU'S Big Eight indoor champion long jumper, will perform in the triple jump. Other KU stars include Mark
Lutz in the 440, Tom Scavuzzo in the 100 and Bob Bornkessel in the 440 intermediate hurdles
presents
The meet is open to all college athletes and post-graduates with amateur standing.
"I THINK you'll see a trend in this kind of meet. Greer said. "They're a big thing on the West Coast, and they're a real populal with the athletrs."
JOINT SESSION
WEDNESDAY thru SATURDAY NIGHTS
Use Kansan Classified
Gymnasts Set Records
University of Kansas gymnasts set two school records Saturday in the Kansas Open gymnastics college. The University College in Independence, Kan.
Richard Schubert, Lawrence
senior, broke his own record of
9.45 in the side horse by scoring
9.55 Saturday. He won the event,
together.
Tim Quinn scored 9.05 in vaulting, and Brian Cooper earned a 9.0 on the high bar.
KU brought home the top three places in the sidehorse. Behind Schubert, Joseph Howard placed second, and Henry Tolstoy placed third with 7.95.
Sponsored by the Kansas
continuing education
meet event to open all Kansa
gymnasms, KU coach Bob Lok-
wood said Lockwood took only
120 hours.
Blanchard, the only other senior on the squad, had set his record of 9.25 in a meet three weeks ago.
Terry Blanchard raised his own Terry of 9.25 to 9.40 in the parallel bars. He was the only other Jawshack to win an event.
Schubert broke his own record for the second time. He had held the world title until he horse of 9.35, reached last year, and 9.45, scored earlier this season.
The four remaining titles were the 1972 N.Y.C. Giants, Ken Snow won floor exercise, vaulting and high bar for the Wildcats, Jimmie Simmons had the
LAWRENCE ART CENTER
The gymnastics team will close its dual season Friday in Allen Field House against Kansas and the teams are favored to win. Lockhart K-State had beaten KU in gymnastics only once in history.
Compulsories are basic routines required for qualifying in the Big Eight meet March 24 and 25. The gymnasms perform more difficult routines for finals and finals. Lockwood explained
"I gave us a chance to work on our project," he said. "We've been just working on compilers, so this was about our first opportunity to do some new work."
Robert Benedict, Director—Experienced professional faculty Classes for beginning and advanced students in drawing, painting (acrylic or oil), water color, photography, film and children's art and craft.
CENTENNIAL COLLEGE STUDENT SENATOR
KUSP
ENROLLING—March 15, 16, 17
Classes begin March 27
Call 843-6336 for more information (if no answer call 843-9575) Office hours 10:30 - 12:30 & 2:00 - 5:30 Weekdays
& 2:00 - 5:30 Weekdays
846 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Indiana (Above Owens Flower Shop)
STUDENT NIGHT Wed. Nights 5-9 p.m.
Cheeseburgers 20°
Big Shefs 39°
Dbl. Cheeseburgers 39°
Super Shefs 55c
Hamburgers 15°
VOTE KEVIN WHITE
"You can't cook hamburgers at home for these prices"
CENTENNIAL COLLEGE STUDENTS:
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
9th and Iowa
for the KU POM PON SQUAD
TRYOUT
Workshops to be held Wednesday, March 15 Tuesday, March 28
First Preliminary Tryout MARCH 30
All Clinics and Preliminary Tryout will be at 7:00 p.m.
in
Allen Field House
please enter through southeast door
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 15, 1972
7
Heck Returns to Baseball After Three-Year Lavoff
By DANGEORGE
Kansas Sports Writers
Dan Hock, who for most of two seasons called teamed as quarrelers and had a strong Kansas football team, has come back to baseball. Coach Floyd Yates
Dan Heck Contemplates Season
Pro drafteffors for fun in baseball
"Right now, it looks like he's got the edge on the shortstop job." Temple said "He's got some experience and he a good skill to perform that minute and we're pleased with his performance in practice."
In high school he was twice named to all-conference baseball team as a senior was voted his team's most valuable player. After high school, Heek was chosen in the major league baseball division by the Atlanta Braves.
kansan Staff Photo by KIT NETZER
Heck has not played baseball since his freshman year at El Camino High School in California, but the KU senior's experience in the sport dates back to 1930.
"IT WAS A big surprise to me that I was drafted," he said. "I'd gotten some mail from five or six major league teams but nothing that sounded serious. I didn't get a call and graduation, and everyone kept congratulating me. I didn't know what for the coach told me."
Unsatisfied with the Braves' contract offer, Heek decided to continue his education. Atlanta's year ago him expired a year later.
After batting .317 in his first year at EI Camino, he shifted his concentration to football. It was the same kind of mind that he transferred to KU.
"It was just football," Heck said. "I wanted to play in a major competition. And I wanted to get away from home and to a small,
Heck said that in junior college he soured on baseball.
"I DON'T LIKE to play baseball when it isn't fun," he said. "People ruined it for me. I got tired of it. Well, I didn't get tired—people made me tired of it. It could be different here."
Heck has played every baseball position except second base and right field, but he said he preferred shortstop.
"I've been playing shortstop ever since I was six," he said, pointing at the way he acted on action there. You have to know what the pitcher's throwing, who up and where to play him. "He was mostly a matter of basics."
"All you have to do is stay on the ball and look it into your eyes, but a little deeper than others because it is much stronger. I can afford it."
onger and can cover more
rea."
HECK SAID he had to make his biggest adjustment in hitting. He had had trouble recognizing the zone and keeping his timing back
"Right now," I am, "I'm aggressive." Heck said, "I'll just stick with the flat fastball in front of curves and I'm打 fastballs off the end of the bat." At this stage of the season, I'm almost as well himself primarily a fastball hitter.
"It's a lot easier to get your itching back on the fast heaps," she said. "I throw one past me now. But I can hit the curves, too. If I just sit
At 6 feet and 180 pounds, Heck said, he had never been a power hitter.
"I'm more of a drive liver hitter,
I work well, I work well, I work
worry about home run, just
want to be consistent and hit
the ball solid. I like to hit it on the
ball."
HECK SAID the 1972 Jayhawks, despite their inexperience, could surprise some people.
"We don't have any home run hitters," he said, "but we have guys on the team who can drive them in from second and third.
"And we've got speed. I think that can make up for power. We'll be able to steal runs, get runs we
shouldn't get.
"I think if we can get enough experience in the non-conference games, we could be a real scrappy, fighting team."
our pitching staff is considered one of the best in the conference. We can hold the other players in check, we'll give away too many runs.
KANSAS CITY, MO. (AP) — The Cincinnati Royals, plagued by poor home attendance, climaxed their territory Tuesday by shifting their National Basketball Association franchise to Kansas
Only the official approval of other NBA member clubs stands in the way of the transfer to this league. The NHL sports organizations in the Chiefs of the National Football League and the Royals of the American Baseball League. A National League franchise is also being sought.
Vice Axelson, Royals' executive vice president and general manager who appeared here at a news conference on Friday clear by last December the team "was not going to make it in Cincinnati" and that he was able to convince Max Jacobs, the board of, the need for action.
"WE HAD ONLY two choices— either sell the team or move it," Axelson said.
Axelson, who said San Diego has been among the other leading contenders for the title of "City a" great basketball city.
Because attendance at Cincinnati had averaged about 3,500 fans per game, Axelson indicated team officials anticipated no difficulty in the BAA transfer. The plan will require approval by 13 of the 17 members of the board of governors.
One of Kansas City's primary points is that the manager, who was the successor of the National Football League's Chiefs in selling season tickets in
A STATEMENT SAID the Royals hoped to play "at least 21
St. Patrick's Day Bash Fri.March 17 12 noon to 12 Midnight
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Cincinnati Royals Plan Move Of NBA Team to Kansas City
"Together"
"Mulligan"
"Stonewall"
Royals Lose to Phils, 7-4
ALL PRICES REDUCED TILL 7 p.m.
GREEN BEER AVAILABLE
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — Jumping Mike Hundley for five hits, the Philadelphia Philas in the first run in the innest tined Tuesday in the Kansas City Royals 7-4 in an exhibition baseball game.
The left-hander, who retired the first 10 Royals in order, walked two and struck out none.
Steve Carlton, 20-game winner last season for the St. Louis Cardinals in a trade for pitcher Rick Wise, went the first five innings for the National Leaguers and stymied City on two singles and one run.
Veteran catcher Tim Miles left the assault with two singles, a double and two runs batted in. Left three runs with a single and ground out. Paul Schal and rookie Katie McGee each had one run for Kansai Gunma.
John Mayberry supplied the only extra base hit for the Royals.
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Just send in the coupon, or talk to the Professor of Aerospace Studies on your campus. (If you're class of '75, next year is your year.)
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games in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium during the 1972-73 season, and approximately 10 in Omaha or Louis, depending on building a scheduling "business."
Staverman, assistant general manager in charge of promotions.
Axelson said Oct. 14 was a tentative opening date in Kansas City for the team.
Others in Kansas City representing the Royals included head coach Bob Cousy and Larry
Axelson said he hoped to help the team's name despite Kansas City having a baseball team with the same title.
Ambrose Lindhorst, Royals' attorney who made the announcement in Santa Clara, said he was best about Cassou continuing as coach.
SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS Unified Sophomore Class
Mark McCaughey—Pres.
Bob Marshall—V-Pres.
Ann Dillon—Sec.
Barb Haman—Treas.
Vote U.S.C. March 15-16 Paid by USC
HURGES
HOT TUNA
BURGERS
on Grunt records
HOT TUNA $3.47
at KIEF'S
Open 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Weekdays
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Discount Diamond Needles
Use Kansan Classifieds
patiorde
2 edifil
on 06
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
The Following People Will Be Supporting U.H.E. for SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS:
MIKE SUNDERMEYER
BETSY ADAUS
DORIAN DOHERTY
DEBBIE LACY
ENNIE LACY
NORM VAUDRKAMP
MIKE PARKS
WALLY CURRY
THINA LACY
CATHY BERO
RUSSE ORBN
CATHY BROWN
OUIIS SCOTT
TIMES VAUDRVAINEN
GINNY ADLERSON
MARK TUCKER
PAT BREINER
AGENES BEHM
ED TAYNE
STAN PLUMMER
-MERI MOFFET
KATHY SHELDON
WARNER
RUTHI BECKER
CATHI HEDGE
BRAD BURGESS
KATHY MACKEY
MARCIA BERTSON
STEVE HEFFLEY
KAY PARSON
STEVE SCHAFFER
SEYLA FOUT
MICHAEL CLAY
BARB RADEMAKER
GINA SANTE
BEN MANN
AT GRAVEN
SOVER MANY
JACK WERNER
CARRIE HACK
BECKEY PENNY
KELLY KELLY
STEVE HUGHES
JANE PHELPS
BUB FREEK
NUN SHINGKY
DEAN CHERPETEL
LARRY PUTNM
JAREY WASMER
JAYE PERINS
DAVE TRAPE
BETSY MORGAN
SIMON WERNER
E COOK
C C PORTUGUEZ2
RON WINGER
HERB SIZEDRE
O QUEEN
BARBIE MURROW
STANTON McMILLIAN
INVISION
R GARVIN
MARY MITCHELSON
SHARI PROHAKSUA
FORD LENN
DEBBIE BINGHAM
TRACY EGBERT
FRIEDA FOARD
FORD LENN
NANCY NOWELL
LYN WALLIN
GALE YORNER
HORMEL
JOHN MUSGRAVE
MIMA KAY WASSINGER
JERRY LOCKETT
KATY MALONE
DENNY EARLEE
MARY LABELL
ROXIE REIN
DIANE DIX
AWANVAN STAINES
SARAH STAINES
NANCY FULLER
ANDY BUDKA
BECKY HURST
SIGHTHORN
DAVE HOLCOMB
FRANCE KAELSON
D SCHOON
KATHY VARGILIO
BILL STAKES
KYLE THOMAS
DEMON DUSKS
JACK TURCOTTE
MARY KING
JOH STRONG
KYLE THOMAS
SCOTT STEPHENSON
MARY HARRINGTON
D ZOALT
PHILLIPS
WARD SIMPSON
LINDA WEIRSch
CAROL LIPPIT
WAD WAI
IRMA HAYDEN
JULIE EVANS
MARILYN MITCHELL
ANN HAWKINWOOD
NANCY GRAVES
We Hope You Will Also Be Supporting Us At the Polls Today—
JANE DODD
MARGI GRAHAM
DAVE SUPTIC
BUBLER
JOHN VALENTINE
BETH CARROLL
RUBEN BERMUDEZ
MARJA NILSON
WHEEVER
BETSY MORGAN
GINA BURGESS
JILL HANDKINS
VAN KALEMAN
HARRIET RYFT
KATHY BOHL
MIKE HALL
SUE WALDO
STERMAN
KATHY ELLIIS
DAVE McCADDEN
CINDY BROWN
VETERAN
DAN STROHEMYER
JAN CRAWFORD
CHRISE FERGUSON
KATHY SMITH
BRENT HUNT
CAROL NORDUFT
LORAL McGOVERN
ANNE BECKMAN
MELYN YIN EW
JAN MUSGRAVE
GAYLE GREEN
PEGGY BARTER
LAUDIA JANET
MELYN YIN ARCK
MIKE HELBERT
BETSY FOARD
John Hackney—Susie Cowden—Nancy Archer—Alex Thomas President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer
8
Wednesday, March 15, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Frosh Previews Revived
By CANDY HERBERT Kansan Staff Writer
The freshman previews
the program will once again bring
new students to the University of Kansas campus this June. John Myers, director of
student affairs at UWK
The summer previews will consist of six sessions which each last one and one-half days, Myers said.
"We hope to begin the previews on June, and run to the end of July," he wrote. "We will be two sessions per week—one on Monday and Tuesday, and one on Thursday."
Myers said the emphasis of the preview would be placed on academic planning in an effort to
streamline fall enrollment procedures.
"There is no human way possible now." Myers said, to deal adequately with freshman students who must come to KU. Students should choose their classes and enroll all in a period of two to three days."
MYERS SAID students attending the preview sessions would complete all necessary procedures before picking up their academic folders and filing them at Allen Field House in the fall.
"Students will not only fill out their Student Registration Data Sheet, have their ID photos taken and be tested for the examination, but will also have a
Vacation Hours For Buildings
By MARTY LYONS
Kansas Staff Writer
There will be two residence hall open during spring break. In the fall, students remain open at three dollars a night with no food service after 10 a.m.
Corbin and Oliver halls will close at 12.30 p.m. Saturday and will reopen on noon March 26. Gertrude Sellars Pearson, will reopen on noon March 26. Pearson halls, will close at p.m. Saturday. All except Lewis will reopen on noon March 26. Lewis will re-open at a p.m. March 26. Elswick Hall will close at 5 p.m. Elswick will re-open at noon March 26.
The offices in Strong Hall will be open on March 24, to marry Brara Memorial Hospital will be open at regular hours but will have one
The Kansas Union will be closed at 2 p. m. Saturday. It will be open from 7 a. m. to 7 p. m.
Monday through Friday, and will be closed March 25. On March 26 the Union will be open from 2 p.m to 9 p.m.
**Spencer Library will retain**
normal hours 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
on Friday and Saturday.
Library will be closed March 19,
but will be open from 8 a.m. to 5
p.m. Monday through Friday.
Spencer Library will resume
regular hours March 28.
The Law. Earth Sciences and Science libraries will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
"During this period, students will be able to meet with the dean of the school they choose to enter and an adviser so that they may take the courses they wish to take during the fall semester," he said.
chance to plan their course schedule," Myers said.
The Math and Music libraries will be open from 8 a.m. to m.non and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Myers said he hoped that these teachers, though they are guaranteed to the students that the students could change courses when they enrolled in the program.
The Political Science Library will be open from 8.15 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. The Engineering and Information Center will be open Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m, but will close Sunday. It will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday through closed March 25. It will re-open March 26 from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Troubles for the show will be April 5. Entry forms are available in the front desks of Lea and Binhun and must be returned by March 31.
A talent show, sponsored by residents of Lewis and Hasingher halls, will be held at 7 p.m. April 10, in the Lewis Fighting Ring.
Prizes for the winners will be for first place, $15 for second place and $20 for third. The show will be open to the public and there will be no admission.
Women's Halls To Coordinate Talent Show
Cassie Hageman, Stockton
Bernard Ross,
Great Bend senior are
chairmen for the show. Ross said
the show, which would
run on show this summer,
a half, would be able to use a wide
range of talents and short in-
spired programs.
The 2,500-book library was housed in one room of old Fraser Hall when Watson began work at KU. The collection outgrew the
CollegeMaster
Watson Day Planned For Staff, Students
PRESENTATIONS BY professional schools at KU, such as the School of Business or the College of Business would also be featured. Merskys
THE IDEA of sponsoring a Carrie Watson Day came from her experience as a bibliographer, who thought many people did not recognize the importance of libraries and encouraged her to depend upon libraries, she said, because without libraries she would be no record of civilization.
"THE UNIVERSITY discontinued the previews after the summer of 1989 because the university had not been testing Program (ACT) in the late 1980s made our placement tests unnecessary." Myers said.
"KU was really one of the first institutions to offer such a program, and our previews served as a model for programs began by many other universities around the United States," he said.
The University of Kansas libraries will celebrate what is hoped to be the first annual Carrie Watton Day on Wednesday for discussion between library employees, students and faculty.
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Watson, for whom the main library buildings is named, was born in 1904 and served for more than 60 years. She served as head librarian from 1957 to 1982.
Initially, the previews were established to administer an eight hour block of placement tests to students who wished to take a physical examination could also take their physical examinations during previews.
said. The cost per student will be from $15 to $40 for four meals and a room in either Gertrude Pearson Hall or Corbin Hill.
Such presentations, Myers explained, would show students what would be expected of them when they enter the professional school as a sophomore or junior. Students with information sessions would also be offered to give students an internal perspective of KU.
The freshman previews program was started in the 1950s for administrative purposes, Mvers said.
The library staff will meet in the morning on Carrie Watson Day to hear anecdotes about Watson and the library. Students, faculty and other Lawrence residents are invited to the library to help with the library and to offer criticism and suggestions to the staff.
"The old two and one-half day sessions were also becoming more of a social function for academics," he said. "the academic one."
These sessions would concern topics such as housing, fraternities, sororites and student government.
Myers said he hoped the preview sessions would also benefit those students who did not attend.
"If we can help even half of the freshmen entering the dinner, they will need to be advisers and administration officials will have much more time to spend with those students in the first term of enrollment period," Myers said.
Information concerning the summer previews this June will be sent to all freshmen who have been admitted to KU. An
THE FRESHMAN PREVIEWS will be self-supporting. Myers
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)—In a report in the angina in the Angelva murder-kidnap trial accepted an all-white jury of eight women and one man.
library by 1884 and was moved to Spooner Library, the bequest of William B. Spooner, Boston merchant and philanthropist.
Campus Bulletin
Campus Crusade 7 a.m. Alcove D
Cafeteria, Kansas Union.
Design: 8 a.m., Alcove B, Cafeteria
Lincolnland Committee College
Interviews: 8 a.m., Room 305.
FNC: 10 a.m., Redemption Room
DISC: 10. a.m., Regional Room
English Poetry: 10. a.m., Forum Room
Social Anthropology: 11. a.m., Alcove A Caféfera
Visual Arts: 11:30 a.m. Alove B
Cafeteria
Speech Pathology: 11:30 a.m., Alceve C
Cafeteria.
French Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark
Library Study Group: noon, Cottonwood,
Cafeteria.
Social Welfare: 12:30 p.m., Alove D.
Cafeteria
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark
Russian Table: 12.30 p.m. Meadowark
Undergraduate Field Instruction: 2 p.m.
Oread Room.
Art History: 2.30 p.m. International
Undergraduate Field Instruction: 2 p.m.
Oread Room.
Art History: 2:30 p.m., International
Room.
Room:
EBC: 3 p.m. Regionalist Room.
IFC Council 3: 10 p.m., Governor Room.
Human Sexual Seminar: 6 p.m., Oliver Hall.
Jason James Jensen K. Kawasaki
Jaycee Jaynes Dinner: 6:30 p.m. Kansas
College Hall: 6:30 p.m. Carson Room
East Asian Studies Dinner: 6:30 p.m.
English Room.
Speech Communications Lecture: 7 p.m.
Carlson Rectal? 7 p.m.
Design Department? 7 p.m., Council
Room.
Sociology Dinner: 6:30 p.m., Curry Room
East Asian Studies Dinner: 6:30 p.m.
English Room.
Sachen: 7 p.m., Regionalist Room.
Bresee: 7 p.m., Oread Room.
srvine Light Mission: 7:20 p.m., Jayhawk
Strength.
**PO:** 7:30 p.m. Governors Road
218 West 9th Street 7:30 p.m.
Forum Hall
400 North 5th Street 7:30 p.m.
Forum Hall
Woodside Auditorium
Workday
Wednesday, 10:30 a.m and 9 p.m., Dynegie
Center
Design Department: 7 p.m., Concil
Room.
Reta Data: 7.30 p.m., Congress Room.
nformation packet containing physical examination forms will also be sent.
Vote For
TERRY DUNN
STUDENT SENATE
NORTH COLLEGE
INDEPENDENT
BRET
WILLIAMS
FOR STUDENT
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Our representative will be here
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"All we really want to do," Myers said, "is help students. If we can help students, we can help he University as a whole."
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ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL
THE LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB IS CELEBRATED
ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL
THE LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB IS CELEBRATING ITS FIRST ANNIVERSARY BY OFFERING TWO SPECIALS TO THE WOMEN OF K.U.
1. Complete two month program for two only $35.
2. Complete three month program for only $45.
Start exercising now so you'll be in shape when summer arrives.
Bridge Ct.
--just happens to conflict with spring break this year, therefore, our annual ST. PAT'S CELEBRATION* will be held on Wednesday., MARCH 15th. BIG GREEN PITCHERS and favors will be happily distributed and OUR NOON SPECIAL will consist of CORNED BEEF & COLCANNON with homemade VELVET GREEN CAKE! At 7:00 p.m., PITCHERS WILL BE REDUCED TO 75'!!!
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BLUN
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706 MASS
CUSTOM TWELER
ST. PATRICK'S DAY
*Join in our celebration and show your true colors.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 15. 1972
9
Vote for
PALEN
for SENATE
from PEARSON COLLEGE
Good Mood Productions and Good Karma Productions
present
THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND
plus ALEX TAYLOR
Saturday, March 25
8:00 p.m.
Municipal Auditorium
-K.C., Mo.
Tickets $4, $5, $6
on sale at KIEF'S
JAMES COBURN
"THE HONKERS"
in
United Artists
Weekdays: 2:30, 7:30, 9:25
Sat. & Sun.: 3:00, 4:50, 7:30,
9:25
:25 Varsity
THEATER --- Telegraph No. 3-1965
SUMMER OF 42 PLUS—
Jane klute Donald
Fonda Sotherland
Summer 7:30 (Fri. Sat. 11:20
"THE HOSPITAL"
United Artists
GEORGE C. SCOTT
Nominated for
Best Actor
Hillcrest
7:20
9
9:16 Hillcrest
captain MILKSHAKE
Hillcrest
SUCH GOOD FRIENDS
AN OTTO PREMINGER FILM
DIVAN CANNON JAMES COCO JENNIFER O'NEILL
KEN HOWARD NINN FOCH LAURENCE LUCKBNILI
LOUISE LASSER as Marcy BURGESS MEREDITH as Kalmar
O. SMITH SINGING "SUDENLY I'DENTLLY ALL TOMORROW"
Granada
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Evenings 7:30,9:30 Adults $1.50
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One day
842-0444
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
25 words or fewer: $1.00
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered by UCB. Attendance may be cred, color, or national origin.
FOR SALE
fightest price paid for used cars. G.I.
oe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 21-
67.
Western Civ. Notes-Now. On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it.
If you use them,
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
wear a tie at a wedding
you at a djavantage
Enhance way it comes to the
same thing
New Analysis of Western
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TRY IT YOULL LIKE IT - Reit WORKER nursing home for infirmities. Free Alba-Akser, Leiter Service. Five Alba-Akser, Leiter Services. 1-849-305-8222, 1-849-305-8226, 1-849-305-8242, 1-849-305-8249, 1-849-305-8250
968 Chvelve SS, power brakes,
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automatic transmission, excellent
calibration. Cal 948-7422.
3-17
Phi-ball-sham. Hungerst, sheereps,
born Jan. 24. A.K.C. Male and Female.
Black and Gray. Prind indie
769-2881. McLennan, Kansas. 3-15
1970 Duster, green, 5-speed, V8. $3,450. We will buy locally owned
vehicles, domestic and VW. Jayhawk
Volkswagen; 222i Iowa, 325a; 2800-3-360
Must sell -1971 Chevy Monte Carlo,
PSI, PE, CA, low mileage, Excellent condition. Will sell for low price.
842-1096 2:50. 3-15
Sony model 130 V Portable television,
18" (diagonal) screen 6 months old.
Call 841-2964 3-15
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
SCUBA EQUIPMENT - PRIKE, Make,
Roe Poe, Lifetime Guarantee, $125
Hawke Knife and Vent $20.00 Spar
Hawke Knife and Vent $20.00 Spar
$9.95 For all your diving gear,
mounts, Divers Equipment and
Diver Kits City, Mo. 64134, Phone
Divers City, Mo. 64134, Phone
1966 Porche 911, 200 h.p., excellent condition, highest offer over $2,900. 1610 W 23rd Terr. 3-17
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Ten speed bicycle, one speed bicycle,
Olympia portable typewriter. Call
after 3:00, 843-5329. 3-15
Buco motorcycle helmet 1 month old,
$15. Call 841-2964. 3-15
1970 360 Yamaha Enduro runs and looks good. $600 or best offer. Call 843-2574 after 6:00. 3-15
Kenwood KB-44 AM-FM 40 watt stereo receiver. Wood cabinet included. Perfect condition. B42-5032. 3-15
A triple pick-up Guild electric grom-
and a Dandelion speaker with twin
12" speakers. Call 843-2310. 3-15
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TASERS OVERWELM WIMM PRO-
CLING THE NON-ENTITIES OF
THE DECISION BACKONOON 819 VEMORE
BACKONOON 819 VEMORE
1963 Corvair 2d Ht. Nit New tires.
Condition Call 842-9399 3-15
Call 842-9399
1970 Kawanaki Mach III, $800; Nice-
842-5343. 3-15
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can purchase the CD plus 100 at ARAY BUDIO-CONST plus 100 at ARAY BUDIO- only true Stereo Discount店 You can买Free Tea, Coffee & Consulting Services.
Pentax HW v3 case, clip-meter, monitor and 10.4 IXa Kalamari luma-135 $139
I wrench, on 28-39 R-lets & 26-20 R-lens
or 849 or 952-866
949 or 852-666
3-16
'59 Jaguar XK 150 Drop-head coupe
$1799. Call 841-3530. 3-16
Minolta S28 Single镜头 w/1.8 lens $79.50 Also 35mm Wide Angle镜头 $79.50 Also 35mm Wide Angle镜头 Telephoto Camera Telephoto Camera 12.8 PS OPS Accelerator Telephone Call 864-1238 or 843-3666-0001
Three days
1969 Toyota Corolla, excellent condition.
Gets 30 mpg, $995. Call Steve at
843-4393 or 842-7291 3-16
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
SMART BILL 1990 $499 ROADRUNNER
TRANSACTION AND OUT-OUEIL
TRANSACTION AND OUT-OUEIL
PRUCED LOW AT $1,499.00 EXCEL-
NT CONDITION BILL 462-899-0000
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court 843-6044
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
The eduaries
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.02
SeaTech Equipment - Fire Make Survival Lifetime Insurance $125.00 Wet Suit Lifeline Furniture $125.00 Weed Killer & Veil $90.00 Spray Tank $75.00 for all your diving needs, largest Divers Equips & Repair Services like
"69" VW Bug custom interior, perfect mechanically. New tires. Phone 843-7284 3-16
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Boots, Poles & Wooden Skis 210 cm.
Call Rick, 842-0709. 3-17
SKIING Ply to Denver for $50
roundtrip or on a check on a
plank for skiing both Wall and Breck
snowboard during spring break. City:
832; State: CA-17
1962 Buxi Special, new tramway,
new front trees and shoes, good
mechanical shape, economic and
depedable $269. Dick Hailer, 84-5835.
Electric typewriter, new $120, sell for $55. Men's bike, $45. Giannini Brazilian Guitar GS0, 842-2398, 3-15
NORTHISE COUNTRY SHOP 707
N. 2nd, 3acks North of River
Burton, brick factory building,
item trees, old wood cooking and
sandstone huts, outdoor shades,
bicycles, bicycle firewood, map
boards, other useful items, open
to 5 of other useful items, open to
5 of her Herb Allenberg, 8,
3139
'65 Volkswagen, 58,000 miles. Very good condition. Must sell! 843-6403.
3-17
1970 HSA, lightning 650, royal blue and chrome, excellent condition; open TT pipes and rejected carbons. Call 843-7362 after 4:00 P.M. 3-17
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
Hammond M-2, fine cabinet. Can be made portable. Has that unmatched "Harmond" touch and sound. $650.
842-6623. 3-17
$^{207}$ bipiece bicycle, good clean condition, battery operated light, five months old hand brake, new frame 42-520 142-520 3 A P M, deep clear 3-28
Two-door Station Wagon. 1936 Chevrolet, 2-cyl. gd; trans. Mobil sell before spring break. Make an offer. 864-1116 3-28
ASIA: Cheap trip if you judge, but
make naval style. Details to Japan
for $10.60 to Merbeka, 11841
Tecquiel Road, Clinton, Mich. 49258
"For Feets Sake, If The Shoe Fits Repair It"
1962 Ford Galaxie 500, 4 dr. V8, new brakes, boots, 65,000 miles. New brakes, boots, ignition switch, oil change, fuel pump. Vehicle for sale $250.84-8336. 3-28
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
Must airforce 1927 Corvette T-Bar Coupe, air conditioning, automatic power steering Coatings for Bristol Motor Company 483-3233 Financial financing 3-28
1971 Champion Motor Home -24 ft.
41 cid engine; mount 80 lb. LPG
capacity, 14,800 miles $9,000 842-
7207 3-28
Shines Dyeing Refinishing
8 track stereo tapes $3.59 with this coupon, Gregg Tire Co. 814 W 33rd,
Make KU Student, Government ever more anonymous. Vote Birthday Party for Joe Landolt (Pres.) and Mike Schoenbier (V.P.). 3-28
You just have to see our new shipment of India prints. They're unusual, beautiful and waiting for you. We've had them in mind. Hodge Paddle 3-28
HORSES BOARDED, EXCELLENT
FULL STALL CARE, CLOSE IN
STUDIO, DAILY PARKING,
FACILITY ALSO, ENGLISH SADDLE
FOR SALE BASE 942-1406 - 826
Wr.-Mr. Hiem creation, Short, dark brown. Scafs Facial Sanitary-temperature control Westinghouse Electric 3-17 3608. Best offer. Charm 3-17 3608.
Western suede with padded brown suede sand. Beautifully tooled skirt panels and leather covered stirrups. Best offer, 842-9749 3-29
Open 24 hrs. per day
1 Mini Bike for Sale Call 843-0524
3-15
BLEVINS HONDA
Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service
Tw-door station wagon. 1958 Chiclet.
ROV-6, cyl. adr. Must seal before spring break. Make an offer,
864-1116
3-17
Electric guitar, solid body, Amplifier.
12-inch speakers, wired 80-watts.
Very nice, must well between 5.30-
7.00 102.32mm noise 4 - 5/17
Electric guitar, solid body, Amplifier.
12-inch speakers, wired 80-watts.
Very nice, must well between 5.30-
7.00 102.32mm noise 4 - 5/17
RUMMAGE SALE Saturday, March 18,
7:30 to 12:00 meet at the Community Building Lawrence Community Nursery School. 3-17
A REAL BAI DPT OFF- Four-point dress 14. Fusion Deep-Depth Dish Utility Net (16 inches) mounted on measured Fitt, Mistauction. Excellent condition $80 takes all Cases 842-585-980
Pickens Auto Parts
1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks.
26th & Iowa
Ph. V13-1353
24th Ave. B-80
NOTICE
1964 Ford Falcon Sprint, V-8 Power,
equip. elc. Kawan Bass amplifier;
1970 Lincoln V-8 Power, 1971 Dodge
V-8, Van-8 automatic.
N42-93217. 1131 Obsolete.
3-28
and Service
Klitus Malander at BOKON-NOW. First attend through April 1-5. Learn here for new items each week. Beware the all, all sweaters 25' off 48 Verona.
1971 Kawasaki 500, Mach III, Excellent condition, 2,400 miles. $850 firm. 2:15
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
Michigan 81 Bar-B-Qe, 515 Mile
Sixton 101 Outdoor bar B-Qe; 515 Mile
Barside 101 Outdoor bar B-Qe; 515 Mile
$30.00 $15.00 or pork ribs $4.00 $30.00
$15.00 $30.00 or beef Brisket $5.00 $8.00
Beef Brisket Fiat=$18.00 10 am
Bar-B-Qe $81.00 825 Mile
Sun-Ton
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-7694. Professional child-care children I m, II m - 12 no. Fri - Part or part-time. Fr. Specially designed enviroment.
Parts at a discount
Harn Partier: Now available at Harn Partier. Attend a celebration of Apple Valley Park on Lake Perry, and cooler parking at Harn Partier. Find parking at Collie Stroop after 6 p.m. at B83-105.
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
STUDY ESPERANTO the international language, in Portland for Portside International International Espersono Congress here 29 July to 5 August. A unique experience for summer travelers language. Information. Summer Season. Oregon. Oregon 97203. 3-16
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAW-ENFORCEMENT
can enjoy yourself in one of Law-
Enforcement if you call Mr. Poray, 803-
215-6970 or live in Argo Apartments, 412-
th Street and 15th Avenue, Avaion,
or Harvard Square, Iowa or
Avalon, or Harvard Square, Iowa
at our surprisingly modest special
department. At all times this
summer a wonderful time to be
AND COOP IN
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN OP
634 Mass.
For premium prices on all glass or any kind of Plexiglas including the Shops 124 North St. or ea 8411-7234 for $199 and the samples that just arrived.
Independent
COIN
LEARN SKYDIVING 1st jump contrain. Includes your remote control, monitor and qualified instruction. Class calls 5.00 jump first if $200 pack Call Dock jump first if $400 pack
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Need people to invest in Ceasna 160
for use as a parachute jump plane.
Call Dick Mank at 594-3189 or Jim
Baker at 842-686-680. 3-17
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
VOSTE-SENAT APATHY BEGINS
MICHAEL T. VOSTE-SENAT
VICE MASTER R. O'NEAL SEMAN
FROM THE COLLEGE OF LIBRAL
SCHOOLS PACED BY
MICHAEL N. O'NEAL
3-12
A
FOUND—One coat at the "Hawk"
FOUND-844-1490. Describe
3-17
days per week
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4.4444
For SUA Events
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
840 9450
Suring has spring sale, Adults only. Discriminatory sale of fixed gear, ski boots and mountaineering borgans BOKONON. 819 Vermont. Copyright 2013. Diamond City christopher false
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
Sandwiches
5 a.m. 1:15 p.m. 2:35 s., Sat.
5 Sun
5 Mon.
5.9 Mon.
1730 W. 3rd St
SKIDYIVENS - Transportation, unlimited is starting a parachute center 12 minutes North of Lawrence. Selected from the 350s 15 after P.M. 3-30
842-9450
Carol Lee
FOR RENT
In three arenas with almost enough money and money to buy land and buildings, we have $3,000 now. Navarresi We have $3,000 now. We are an organic, recycling housewife. Help to help, and build our own home. P.O. Box 3254 Yahhawi. Submit your P.O. Box 3254 Yahhawi.
University Terrace Apartments — furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $110 per month. 9th floor. Art I, 18, or call 843-1423 8-57
Rackridge Villa Apartments, Limited
official inn in Montreal. Free Four
days up to December, no restrictions.
nished apt with all utilities paid
for $100.00 each. Call Ariel at 4.00
555-999-8222.
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right now to buy inpusl MH10591nst. Bedroom bathroom available. Aug 27th; bedroom bathroom available. Aug 27th; mattress available at end of service period. Aug 28th; w eating table, dishwasher, central heating, kerosene gas. Aug 28th; between 3:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.
A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS. Too cool! The car won't start? Walk to the pool and swim in our pool. The indoor ringer plays on your computer. You can you pamper yourself. You can anoint. Aquarelle. You can dance. Sundae. Aquarelle.
Nice furnished 1-3 bed apartments near town, KU. Also room with kitchen privileges only on three floors. Available now. 842-5007 3-29
Furnished Apartment, 132 Indiana,
duplex apartment, wall-to-wall
carpetting, laundry facilities, off-street
building, back from Union Hill
V: 3-1777
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
1972, while the solution is to
August 1972.
Make one call or visit to Mrs. For-
rest and book it all the details about
the managed gardens apartment,
managed gardens apartment,
managed gardens apartment,
Squamous Ith & Aveyard and Ágrio
cost of living in one of these handsome
apartment apartments and you will be
more sure to have a dwindler centrally
located apartment and many more features.
5-28
COLLEGE HULL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing for summer and fall, the college has unfurried apartments. Most utilitarian a/c, all electric kitchen with dishwasher, refrigerator, dry facility. Special summer rates. 174 W. 190 bld. SB or 31 d/b/l. 174 W. 190 bld. SB or 31 d/b/l.
WANTED
Kansas City Press -Job printing from letter to posters, to booksellers, to book publishers. E-mail KC Press at lenyzeo.com or of Leny Zero's. Open to 5 daily. 842-4803. 4-3
RIDGE WANTED: to Los Angeles. Pre-
ride to leave Friday afternoon, March
17th. Can only spare $150.00 toward
gas Dying to see my girl. 842-689-0000
FOR HOME
Be Prepared!
fune-ups
starting care
Lancaster, Kansas 60044
434 Floor
123-1200
Tony's 66 Service
Your Complete Service
Dealer
Ample Park Spaces Available
3409 W. 6th 842-7706
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
Webster's Mobile Homes
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
Just West of the
THE CONCORD SHOP
- STRETCHER FRAMES
many in stock
—others on order
- ARTIST CANVAS REDUCED
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., pts. - qts. only
50% OFF
23
McCONNELL LBR. CO.
844 E.13th St. 843-3877
X
---
Baron
Let
Maupintour travel service
PLANNING A TRIP??
Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!!
00 Mass-The Mall:-Hillcrest-KU Union Phone 843.12
Place to board an Irish Setter L.
Smith, 843-859-3000 1=15
Need girl to share house; $50. Utilities included. Close to campus: 842-5768.
If you have two or four DEEP PUR-
LEL tickets you would like to sell,
please call #42-7122
3-17
Instructor to teach Tai Chi. Phone 842-2040. 4-3
Working girl needs help to her 2 bedroom mobile home with another working girl or student. Nice, quiet, calm. 824-743-6049 for ask for Susan. 3-28
SCUBA GEAR. Must have before spring break. Need all equipment related to diving. Call 842-5820 and ask for Val Landes. 3-17
MGovernor canvassers need ride to St. Louis area. (Alton, Ill.) Will helpnav gas. Call 864-4094 or 864-1217-329
Female wants room with kitten-
privileges, now through finals or
willing to share apartment. 842,1283.
5.79
TYPING
Wanted: Panel truck Ford, Chevy o,
Dodge in fair to good shape Call Bob
at 842-9783. 3-29
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations and publications. Have electric typewriter with pica type. Accurate and prompt刻录. Send resume to Phone 843-9544, Mrs Wright.
Typing done, on site, electric typewriter. No Thesees. Prompt attention. 843-0958 4-5
Experienced typist, Overland Park,
Kansas. Proptom, accurate work. Rea-
sonable rates. Phone 381-6434. 3-28
Typing done in my home. IBM
Solecire. Prompt, accurate work.
Experienced. Call 841-2556. 3-17
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typetwriter, prompt, accurate call. Work #432-8381. Mt. Maackman.
These, term papers type accurately and promptly. IBM Selector, your choice of type styles. Also editing at rates, Kindle, 840-279-458, 842-565-6.
Fast, accurate typing by experienced typist.
Pica type. Reasonably priced.
Phone 842-2053. 3-29
LOST
Brown framed glasses in black case last Monday. Please call 842-4548. 3-15
USED CLOTHING- 819 Vermont—BE
WASHINGTON BOXES–DENVER OVERFLOW
HORONKON SAVES NEVER SAY
MILWAUKEE GALONE 819 VERMONT
3-15
Lost between Robinson and Watson—girl works him in white with blue gown, but his hair and of great sentimental value. It found Cybilla, 864-1897. 3-17
Lost small, female dog, part poodle with wavy tan hair and white tip on tail, wearing black collar. Call 842-329-5700. If not home, keep trying.
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
THE HIDE in the WALL
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III
Red plastic notebook and grey book
by Harnak and Fest in Praetor 119 or
at the Wheel, last Friday afternoon.
Please call 842-6240 for Steve. 3-17
MISCELLANEOUS
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale-Size
8-10, up to 75% off. Fall and spring
fabrics Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky,
4-20
There's nothing miscellaneous about our new India prints. They're unique, spellbinding, and just waiting for a buyer to appear. Hodge Podge, 12 & Mass
Had a driver, broken, cracked auto
license. Call KAW HODY SHOP, 841-800-
842-0131 after 9 a.m. ask for Dick
wrecker, all work guaranteed, all
work time guaranteed, same location. Have 25% wrecker
charge. Lawyer Call for rates out of town.
Competition Sports Cars Inc.
Keep KU Student Government Mediocre! Vote Birth Party for Joe Landohl (Pres.) and Mike Schoenleiber (V.P). 3-28
BECAUSE a in listening service. Hassled
Call us. we talk about it.
Bachelors Bash & Books
8 P-M 6-A M 843-9625 L 13-P
at AMS
CSC
TOYOTA THUNGMA
PERSONAL
"Busty not itself with this world,
for with fire we test the gold, and
with gold we test our servants:
Bah'a b'u I ash"
3-16
HELP WANTED
and Service
PART TIME SECRETARY, single
Call 842-9660 between 8:30 to 10:00
3+15
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Need neat, aggressive part-time sales
work. Requires experience for established company,
in business over 20 years. Send application
in care of Box 105. Daily Karen's
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Parts at a discount
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu
Steak Sandwiches,
Cheese
Experienced drummer for rock bass.
Must be willing to join union. Call
Jeff after 6. 843-9334
3-29
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Fresh Fooled Place
1. Mines North of the
Kaw River Bridge
sirloin
Phone 843.1431
Sideline
Open 4:30
Closed Monday
Kansan
Use
843.
8500
Classifieds
RAMARA INN Figure 10 842
spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free house swimming. Privileges
Houz ssecikilay for the busy cedar's schedule. Daihyi $y$ to $t$. Sat. il nook.
Houz specifiklay for the busy cedar's schedule. Daihyi $y$ to $t$. Sat. il nook.
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
---
928 Mass
10
Wednesday, March 15, 1972
University Daily Kansan
1. 2.
'Hamlet' Needs Some Polishing
By MARILYN K. KING
Alas, poor Hamlet. Upon his body and spirit William Shakespeare wreaked a pure tragedy, or the art of licking his heart. "Hamlet" first appeared about 1600. It is probably Shakespeare's most famous play. More melancholy, it can be said that its five acts to three by skilfully cutting unimportant lines and has left us with a three-and-a-half offering hitherto, with a little chance could be a fine production
Brooking's version of the book, from a plague that ruins many Shakespeare recitals, lines that are delivered too rapidly to be understood.
MOST GUILT OF this offense of speed is Earl W. Trussel, a fine actor who displays great sensitivity and knowledge of his role as the doomed Danish prince. He could personify death simply by his eyes. And his brooding countenance at the beginning of the story will look cheerful by comparison.
Seminar Time Correction
"Birth Control; Shared Responsibility" is the topic of the Human Sexuality Seminar from 6 to 9 tonight in Olive Hall and Thursday in the Big Eight Room where the report incorrectly reported in Tuesday's Kansas that the seminar began Tuesday night.
PHNO
PENH
Cambo-
ladesh
himself president of Cambodia
Monday and set out to name a
new government to aid him in
new war in Cambo-
ladesh.
Unfortunately, Trussel
Amazement is supposed to be upon her, but it's hard to believe even after Hamlet says so.
William Kuhlke is Hamlet's wicked uncle. He does a creditable job and can be understood in almost all instances
Then there are Rosenkrantz and Guildenstern. Hamlet's two
KANSAN
reviews
swallows many of his lines, and his enunciation gets sloppier as the play progresses. In his clawening scenes he is almost a different character, but makes clear that he is confident in brooding mood with believability.
HE IS NOW a loppa, giggly boy with a high-pitched voice who sings and speaks in audience Mike Klemmering is nothing as Guildenstein, except that he is talking.
FRED VESPER as Polonius,
the Lord Chamberlain, comes
worried about his children, a
little too ambitious, and very
much worried about his children, a
little too ambitious, and very
much worried about his children, a
maintains his character ex-
ceptually well throughout the
book.
friends from Wittenburg U.
Mandy Patkinkin takes the opportunity as Rosenkranz to
develop his dresself versatility as an actor.
Anita Massse is all but inaudible through all but her ears, and sits on the bed wooden-faced as she pedals around the room.
Patinkin's fine performance.
More on those two tomorrow.
would fit his character better.
As is his usual suit, brooking has gone in for a flamboyant panting of color and grandose entrances, music and beautiful costumes by Chez Shakespeare. He adds Shakespeare used lots of sound effects, but it should either be there or not. It is too soft for the audience, so either before it should or after it should. Sometimes it drowns and sometimes the audience must strain to hear it.
THE FENCING SCENE between Laertes and Hamlet is thrilling and shows real skill and courage. They must protect any protection, and one wonders if someone might really be run through before the play plays.
properly bare and serves a number of purposes. The lighting is superb.
There was great disparity among the acting abilities of the performers. Carolyn Weber as 'The Bride' is not only hard to understand, but lends no substance to her character. There is a chance that she is changing moeds, but her final dementia is well executed, though if the entire role could be changed, that section, nothing would be missed.
would fit his character better. "Hamlet" is a big chunk to bite off and chew. The first chomp is the difficult, and the east is past it. The opposite performance succeeds performance will be a little easier to swallow
The ghost of Hamlet's father performs well, but walks around the stage as if he's on his way to a ball game. A more studied gait
The set by Bill Evans is
VOTE FOR
JOHN G. GRAYSON
Senator
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
KANU Stereo 91.5 FM
5.30 p.m.-News, Weather and Sports
5.35 p.m.-Report from the KU Medical Center
Noon - News Weather and Sports
12:15 Noon - Hour Course - Campus and Community Schools (12:30 p.m.)
1 p.m. - John Coates of the World Future
1:30 p.m. Music from Germany
2:30 p.m. New-Weather and Sports
3:30 p.m. Mental Health-
Managing Your Money
4:30 p.m. This Afternoon (jazz)
5:30 p.m. A Benefit Concert
6 p.m. - Music to Candlelight
8 p.m. - View from the HIL
9 p.m. - View from the Library
10 p.m. - Music to Candlelight
11 p.m. - News, World Sport and
ground rock in
soundroom
12 p.m. - Sign Off
Europe is a four letter word:
SOFA
Play the word SOFA and press your finger to the right. After 2 minutes, the word SOFA appears.
As the word SOFA appears, the hand gesture of putting fingers together in the palm of the hand is performed. This gesture is used when you want to represent the word SOFA.
The hand gesture of putting fingers together in the palm of the hand is performed. This gesture is used when you want to represent the word SOFA.
The hand gesture of putting fingers together in the palm of the hand is performed. This gesture is used when you want to represent the word SOFA.
The hand gesture of putting fingers together in the palm of the hand is performed. This gesture is used when you want to represent the word SOFA.
1972 Spring Elections for
Student Body President
Student Body
Vice-President
Student Senate
Class Officers
Petition to Athletic Corporation
MARCH 15 & 16
VOTE! COMPLETE LIST OF
McCollum 5:00:7.00
Lewis 5:00:7.00
Oliver 5:00:9.15
Ellsworth 5:30:9.00
Hashinger 5:00:9.00
Naismith 5:30:7.30
Corbin 6:00:9.00
Pearson 5:00:9.00
March 15, 5:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. & March 16 1:00
5:00 p.m.
Strong
Summerfield
Union
Learned
Malotf (Pharmacy School office)
Marvin (March 15, 12:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m.)
Kappa Alpha Theta—1433 Tennessee
Alpha Gamma Delta—2005 Stewart
Arizona Road
Chi Omega—1345 W. Campus
Delta Tau Delta—11 W. 11th
March 15, evening only
POLLING PLACES
March 15 & 16—8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
I'll just stick with the original text.
YOUR NEXT SEMESTERS TUITION FREE!
Or Room and Board. Or Books. IN
KLWN-FM's BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES.
Just register at any Lawrence 7-Eleven store.
Here's the story. Entries will be taken for nine weeks. March 1 through May 3. We'll have three winners in the BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES. One winner will get a check in the amount of his Tuition up to $300. One winner will be awarded a check in the amount of Room and Board up to $150. And one winner will receive a check in the amount of his books up to $50. KLWN-FM and 7-Eleven have joined
forces to help you make the best of this school year. And all you have to do is register at any Lawrence 7-Eleven store. No purchase required. You don't have to be present to win. All registration blanks must have student ID # to qualify as a winner. Register today for the BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES. (It might help your balance of payments!)
OH THANK HEAVEN FOR 7-ELEVEN [and KLWN-FM!]
832 Iowa
1741 Massachusetts
7 ELEVEN
1909 W. 25th Street 2319 Louisiana
DIVISION OF THE SOUTHLAND CORPORATION
Z
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COMFORTABLE
82nd Year, No.107
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Senate Blocks Voter Registration Through Mail
Thursday, March 16, 1972
See Page 2
Wallace Says Primary Win Sign of Hope'
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — A jubilant Gov. George C. Wallace said Wednesday his victory in the Florida Democratic presidential primary is a turning point in political history and a sign of hope for "the average citizen."
The next target in his quest for the Democratic nomination he said, is the April 4 primary in Wisconsin, where his presidential efforts began eight years ago.
Wallace, returning home aboard a rented executive jet, was greeted at the airport by several hundred cheerling well-wishers. One girl about 9 years old waved a sign reading "Welcome home, you living doll."
The 52-year-old governor said the vote Tuesday in Florida where he ran well ahead of 10 opponents and won 75 of the state's 81 delegates to the Democratic National Convention, meant "the direction of American politics took a different turn."
Wallace said "the political leadership" initially established Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, who ran fourth in the race for unifier for the presidential nomination.
"It means that the party is going to have to have a platform that gives the government back to the people or it can't win," he said.
Wallace declined to predict how well he would do in Wisconsin, but he said "we know that the average citizen in Wisconsin and other states, in my judgment, feels just like they do in Florida." Wallace's views on tax reform, busing and tax reform and crime control
Wallace, who had begun his first term as governor 16 months earlier with the battlery "segreation forever," ran in the Wisconsin primary in 1964 and got 24 percent of the vote in a surprisingly strong show.
USER
CHECK
Kansan Photo by RICK KERSEY
Computers to Speed Ballot Tabulation
Ted Stradley, Lawrence senior, changes on computer
KU Polls to Close at 5 p.m.
First Day of Election Draws 2,100 Voters
By JIM KENDELL Kansan Staff Writer
Approximately 2,100 students, 12 percent of the student body, voted Wednesday in the campus elections, according to R. L. Anderson. About a third of student and election committee members
Students voted Wednesday and are voting today to elect the president and vice president of the student body, student senators and class officers and to decide
on a referendum.
Polls opened 8 a.m. today and will close at 5 p. m. in the Kansas Union and in Learned, Malott, Strong and Summerfield halls.
Polls were scheduled to open at 1 p. m. and close at 5 p. m; at Alpha Gamma Delta, Chi Omega and Kappa Alpha Theta Tau and Tau Delta and Delta Upsilon fraternities.
Bailey announced Wednesday night that
Computer to Accelerate Campus Vote Counting
Poll will close at 5 p.m. today, and the results of the March 15-16 campus election should be known by midnight, Robert Bowers, vice president of the adviser to the election committee, said Monday. Last year's results were not known until 4 p.m. the day after the election, but this year's should be known by December if any of previous campus election, he said.
Duncan said the midnight estimate was based on the fall elections, when a computer program was successfully used to count ballots. This week's campus ballot is made up of 40,000 computer ballot counting system, with the possibility of counting 41,000 ballots.
Preparing the ballots for counting delays the process. The ballots must be separated and fed through a reproducer that punches out the pencil marks on the card. Ballots that have been folded or crumpled may not be rejected and must be counted by hand.
No election results will be given out by the computation center. Students calling or coming to the computation center for elections only delay the vote counting, she said.
Duncan said all the results would be given to the campus information center and to the news media for those students. He said that the election results early Friday morning,
Chalmers Notes Affirmative KU Campaigns
By ROBERT DUNCAN
BY KRISTEN DONCH
Kansan Staff Writer
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Wednesday that he had noticed a basic difference in the campaign for student leaders and campaigns of the past two years.
Speaking at his weekly press conference, Chalmers said all the candidates had been invited to attend a cermen for the University of Kansas. The difference among the candidates, he said, was that he didn't have a job.
The Chancellor said the presidential candidates' affirmative approaches to science were appropriate for the University reflected the atmosphere of the total University community. In past years there has been a candidate who has "anti-university" point of view, he said.
CHALMERS ATTRIBUTED the lack of campaign issues to the progress made by the Student Senate this past year. He said that in general he liked the outcome.
Chalmers also attributed the progressive attitude of the past Student Senate to student body president David G. Miller,
"I have found working with Dave a pleasant and thoughtful experience," said Cain.
The Chancellor cited Miller's "uniting commitment to the University" and the many hours he had to assist the University.
The athletic department has long-range plans to surface all but the north end of Allen Field House with a synthetic surface that would be covered if the entire floor be covered at an additional cost of $80,000, which would be obtained by petitioning the Endowment Association.
CONCERNING THE petition, Chalmers said he supported the need to improve
Humphrey Concedes Wallace Vote Power
MIAMI (AP)-Florida Democrats have sent their party a message in deep South accents of Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama.
S. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota conceded Wednesday the Alabama
Muskie to Try to Regain Lead in Illinois Tuesday
CHICAGO (AP)—Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, his front-runner status weakened by a fourth-place finish in the Florida Democratic presidential primary, now turns to Illinois and Wisconsin primaries in the role of a challenger.
Muskie's first chance to regain his stature as his party's top presidential hope comes Tuesday in Illinois' primary, in which he is challenged on the ballot. Republican Gov. McGovern of South Dakota and former Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy of Minnesota
Wisconsin voters will elect 56 of the state's 67 delegates. They will be shown on a district-by-district basis in the state's nine congressional districts.
In the nonbinding preferential contest
with heads the ballot Mukke and
McKee. But the result is a tie.
Wisconsin's April 4 primary includes all
11 Democrats who were on the Florida bill
to raise the minimum wage.
Muskie and McGovern are competing for a share of the 160 national convention delegates who will be elected Tuesday. The delegates will be selected later by party leaders.
Richard D. Cudahy, Muskie's Wisonson chairman, said "He (Muskie) is the underdog, and he is going to come out fighting."
Wisconsin.
Muskie earlier was rated a favorite in
McGovern and McCarthy forces are working together unofficially to halt Muskie. Daley's regular organization appears to be leaning toward Muskie, but the powerful mayor has not made any endorsements and is embattled, in state and Cook County challenges to his organization.
Muskie won only 9 per cent of the vote Tuesday in Florida's 11-candidate contest. Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama captured 42 per cent, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota 18 per cent and Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington 13 per cent. McGovern had 6 per cent and McCarthy took less than 1 per cent.
governer would be a formidable foe in primary elections to come.
McCarthy said that if he were to receive 40 per cent, it would be a victory.
The head of McGovern's Illinois campaign, William Rosendahl, said, "Wisconsin is clearly a battle between McGovern, Wallace and Humphrey."
Muskie forces predicted early that their man would win 75 to 80 per cent but have revised their figures downward to 60 per cent.
"No doubt about it," said Humphrey, who asserted that a second place finish in Tuesday's Florida primary had installed a new governor and contender among progressive Democrats.
THE NEXT big confrontation of the Democrats will come in Wisconsin April 4, when the whole field battles again. That won't be easy, especially for the battered Muskies.
This Tuesday is the first time Illinois voters can elect delegates committed to candidates, although at least half the spots are expected to be won by uncommitted delegates controlled by Chicago Mayor Richard J. Dale's organization.
In Florida, Wallace gained 42 per cent of the vote in an 11-way contest, and said that showed the people "want me to be the nominee of the Democratic party." Humphrey gained a far back 18 per cent of the vote.
Wallace has bitterly opposed basing of school children for purposes of racial balance, and he clearly got a boost in Florida with that issue on the ballot.
In an overwhelming straw vote, Florida voters marked yes on 74 per cent of the ballots cast on a proposed constitutional amendment to ban busing.
Sen. Henry K. Jackson of Washington who, like Wallace, campaigned in opposition to busing, ran third in the general primary, with 13 per cent of the vote.
polls would also be in operation today in Gerlin Hall from no. 1 to o. p. m., and in Berlin from no. 2 to o. p. m.
THE COUNT in nearly complete returns was 1,113,384 or an amendment to end records.
Bailey said he was disappointed with the turnout Wednesday. He had hoped for either a very light turnout, which would be easy to count, or a very heavy turnout, which would make the counting worthwhile.
THE REFERENDUM asks students if they are in favor of a Student Senate proposal that the Endowment Association lend $80,000 to the athletic department for the installation of a tartan surface on the floor of Allen Field House.
All ballots cast Wednesday were taken to the Traffic and Security office Wednesday night for safekeeping. This morning these ballots were to have been taken to the Computation Center and prepared for counting.
facilities but was not convinced he agreed with the method promoted in the petition.
The ballots will be counted tonight when all ballots have been prepared for processing. None will be counted until all have been prepared.
Wallace swept the statewide primary vote, running strong almost everywhere, carrying every county, and capturing 75 of the 81 national convention nominating candidates. With other 6 by winning a congressional district that includes the Miami Beach area.
He said he had gained a big boost by running ahead of Muskie.
The legislature passed last week a supplemental wage increase for civil service employees, and leveled the salaries of non-teaching faculty with teaching faculty.
Chalmers also announced that he had signed a comprehensive statement concerning the policies that affect civil service employees at the University.
Chalmers said he looked forward to *u*, day when more than 50 per cent of the students would be taking exams.
He said he thought the statement covered all the grievances listed by members of the civil service employees union which staged a 10 day walk out this February.
The Alabama governor plane at least 10 more primary contests and in a splintered field, he is sure to add substantially to his delegate strength.
THE CHANCELLOR commented that the Affirmative Action (AA) committee had been actively working to meet the need for establishing an action program at KKU.
Chalmer's said he was delighted with the attitude of the Kansas Legislature and their support of higher education as demonstrated in the passing of the Governor's recommendations as well as two supplemental items.
However, Chalmers said, there still exists the need for even greater support from the NHS.
ing that although he recognized the differences between the needs of women and those of minorities, the University must develop one action program and that a committee represented by all groups could best do the job.
Chalmers defended his committee, say-
If the same proportion of students vote today as voted on the second day last year, this year's total vote will be about 3,400 or 19 per cent of the student body.
HOWEVER, ALL seniors who have one or more semesters of work left to complete their degree may vote for senior class officers.
Bailey said there were several problems Wednesday. At the poll in Corbin Hall the pollsters ran out of of sophomore class officer ballots for about an hour. At other polls poll workers handed out only one ballot or a multiple set in some instances.
Last year 2,890 students, 17 per cent of the student body, voted on the first day of the election. On the second day 1,814 students voted, 11 per cent of the student body.
Bailey said he expected other problems to turn up when the computer counted the digits.
Bailey said seniors may vote for president and vice-president of the student body, senators and on the referendum but not for class officers.
Bailey attributed the comparatively light vote to an uninteresting campaign. He said no one was interested in the issue, and there were no real issues in the campaign.
LAST YEAR 4,704 students, 28 per cent of the student body, voted. David Miller, Eudora senior, was elected with 1,005 votes, 22 per cent of the total vote.
Bailey said that at the present rate he estimated that by the time the polls close he would have to wait.
NATIONAL AVE.
Only 21 Assaults Reported in Last 7 Months Amani Photo by DAVE BI
Bob Ellison, captain of Traffic and Security, has advised women to travel in public-litged areas, and may should make use of the airport's transportation services.
Aansan Photo by DAVE BLISS
campus at night. Fear of assaults is greater than actual ones, he said. See story on page 6.
2
Thursday, March 16, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Ombudsmen Modify Role, Chalmers Releases To End Judicial Actions New Labor Policy
The Ombudman's Office will no longer bring any charges to the University Judiciary, such as her husband, Sisters, Kris Hall, Lawrence first year a student and newly admitted student, ombudmen, said Sunday. She said the office would be solely concerned with investigation and handling the case.
The 12 new members of the Ombudsman's office discussed several major policy changes at its first meeting Sunday.
"We've decided to get out of the practice of litigation and move toward a more functional function," said Barry Halpern. Lawrence first year law student at the University.
Tim Boudewyns, Des Moines first year law student and member of the ambulance said Ms. Boudewyns should be more effective mediators if
none of the parties involved have to worry that we'll use whatever they tell us in a suit against them."
HALL SAID, "If it should arise that a problem cannot be settled through mediation, we would have to resort to war." We still have in work this out."
All University students and employees are eligible for the services of the Ombudsmen's Office. If the problem is campus-related, an ombudsman contract problems, an ombudsman can give advice and assistance. But if the problem is legal, an ombudsman from University, such as a landlord tenant disagreement, the individual would be referred to Legal Aid or a downtown attorney. Halpern saw the Ombudsman's
Office is a 'student function'
"We think that students would
Mail Voter Registration Blocked in U.S. Senate
By MARK BEDNER
Kansan Staff Writer
A Senate bill creating a national voter registration program, to be administered by the Federal Census Bureau came to the floor of the Senate on Tuesday for a six-minute amendment to table the bill, in effect killing it, passed by a vote of 46 to 42
The bill was sponsored by the Post Office Committee, which administers the Census Bureau. The chairman of the committee, Geneva Bureau, said Wednesday the bill would direct the Census Bureau to send post cards to every household by filling out the post cards and sending them to the local election official, the voting age members in each household would automatically be registered to vote.
A SPOKESMAN for McGee said the bill was meeting opposition from southern senators and conservative groups who feared they would register many Blacks and poor people before the general
Widow Gives $1,000 to Fund KU Law Aid
The scholarship will be awarded annual grants to a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity to which Smith belonged while attending
election next November. In an interview with the Kansas 45 in 2013, McGee said to the floor for a vote, McGee's office said the voting would be
A gift of $1,000 has been received by the University of Kansas Endowment Association from Helen Smith Liggett, with whom she holds the Carl T. Smith Scholarship memory in memory of her brother.
A 1929 graduate of the KU School of Law, he was a member of the Weichia law firm of Foulson, Siekfim, Powers, Smith and Eherbardt at the time he received his Ph.D.
"We count it a 47 to 47 right now," he said. If the Florida State back in time we could swing it, he said, referring to the Democratic Senators who had been campaigning for the Florida governors.
Some of the other points the opposition raised against the bill are that it forms being used by "certain political machines" and the opponents contention that the Judiciary Committee should not
WE FEEL these are straw dog issues," he said. "The bill provides for a federal agency to check on defendant forms, or any other rule that the contest. We haven't overlooked the chance of fraud, but I don't think that's the real reason behind their opposition to the bill."
In a telephone interview Tuesday in evening Kansas Sen. James Pearson said he didn't vote on the registration bill.
WOODY ADMITTED that the bill was being stymied by some Republicans but said there were many "moderates" supporting it.
Bob Woody. Pearson's legislative aid, said Wednesday that the Kansas Senator still has a vote to be presented. An hour before the vote was to come to the Senate floor, Woody said Pearson was still looking at the governor.
When the bill finally reached the floor of the Senate, the amendment to table passed by the Senate and the amendment to table the bill.
Robert Dole, the junior senator from Kansas, voted in favor of the amendment. Dole's office said it would not be reached for comment.
be more effective in dealing with some kinds of problems than would the Dean or Men's Office or the Women's Office." Halpern said.
People . . .
. . Places . . .
. . Things
Hall said many students felt more confident in bringing the staff to their office than to any administration office that might have a headcount.
BELFAST, Northern Ireland—Two British army bomb experts were blew to bits by a bomb they were trying to defuse. In Newry, civil rights leader BERNADETTE DEVILN, a member of Britain's Parliament, got a suspended sentence for defying a ban on parades. Authorities in the Irish republic to the south began a crackdown on guerrilla leaders.
KING Hussein of Jordan proposed Wednesday the establishment under his rule of a semiautonomous state of Palestine on the west bank of the Jordan River, once Israeli occupation forces withdraw. Premier Golda Meir of Israel rejected the plan, saying it "negates the cause of peace and puts obstacles in its path." The Palestinians and most of the Arab world denounced the proposal.
ATTY. GEN. VERN MILLER confirmed that Harold R. "Nappy" Nye has been relieved of his duties as a special agent in charge of the west region of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. Miller would not comment on specific reasons for Nye's dismissal.
SAIGON—U.S. B25 BOMBERS demolished another North Vietnamese base camp in eastern Cambodia, and South Vietnam. (NASA)
Places:
News that the SPACE SHUTTLE STATION apparently will be located in Florida, not in Kansas, is disappointing, Lt. Gov. Reynolds Shultz said. Shultz is chairman of the Kansas Economic Development Commission. Earlier, Al Kauka, Wichita attorney and chairman of the Governor's Space Shuttle Advisory Committee said that the decision by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to use a recoverable launch vehicle for the shuttle probably eliminates Kansas as the national space station site.
GOV. ROBERT DOCKING said he would be stumping the state for the rest of the week seeking popular support for extension of the property TAX LID. However, two Republican legislators opposed to the extension are hot on his trail. The lawmakers return to the Capitol next Monday for one day of considering vetoes by Docking and wrapping up any other unfinished business.
ONE OF the things the ambulance wanted to emphasize was their sincere function as a whole Hall said that the powers of the director were very limited and that all policy decisions would be made by the group, not by any part of the group.
Things:
Gov. Robert Docking signed into law 69 more bills and announced the vetting of two more measures. Among the bills signed were TWO TAN MEASURES which are expected to produce $24.45 million in new revenue for the funding the fiscal 1972 state budget.
People:
The statement contained changes in provisions relating to makeup of the safety committee, the training staff and weekend work schedules. It added a provision regarding late check-in by employees and one on call.
The statement is a revision of one released Feb. 25 during negotiations between the KU administration and representatives of the Classified Information Board. Local 1132, which led a 10-day walkout to protest salaries and working conditions.
A revised statement on
UK civil service policy on
UK civil service policy on
were released Wednesday by
Chancellor M. E. Laurence
Jr. University Jnr.
The new ombudsmen are: Kris Hall, Lawrence; Pam Hooper, Liberal; Fat Siriridge, Prairie Village; Geary Gorp, Kansas City; Mines; Kearney Moines; Kelley Sears, Shawnee; Geoffrey Lind, Kansas City; Kan, Rod Proffitt, Lawrence; Barry Halpern, Lawrence; Mike Weiser, Philadelphia; Earl L泊Lurgeon, Nick L泊Lurgeon
Policies on utilization of the grievance procedure were left unchanged.
THE NEW POLICY on safety gives greater representation to employees on the subcommittee. It also permits that one-third of the membership of the safety committee consist of female members. The new policy provided for a
'The Fox' Shifts Strategy In Antipollution Campaign
CHICAGO (AP)—He's a phantom outdoor to polluting industries and a hero to those who would protect the environment.
"The Fox," a resident of northwestern Illinois Kane County, somewhere near the Mississippi River, makes his works, works incognito.
Over the last three years he's gained attention through his antipollution exploits which have helped in plugging sewer outlets and pouring dung on the floors of secretaries as startled secretaries shriek.
But "The Fox" may be switching tactics.
"I'm not going to say I'm never going to plug up another sewer or
Preserving his anonymity, he spoke on a conference telephone call Tuesday to a subcommittee of the secretary of state's Advocate Committee on the 1972 Environment on the Human Environment
stuff up another chinmew," he said. "But I'm getting more and more into what I wanted to do in the first place—to educate."
"The Fox" said he's been working with youngsters organizing writing campaigns to representants and generally working within the system. He said he hoped to continue in that direction, but based on any success he had, he hopes with youth on his previous exploits.
He did not say how he handled the identity problem when working with youths.
He laughed off a suggestion that he was breaking the law
"If industry were not breaking the law," he said, "there never would have been a 'Fox' or the need for one. . . I get tired of seeing the courts drag their feet while the environment died and the giants continued on their merry way. . . I did what I had to do."
POLICE
Fly your own jet!
FLY NAVY
COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY
(COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY) CLASS OF
NAME
STREET
CITY
STATE ZIP CODE
Clip and Mail To;
U. S. Navy Recruiting Station
Kansas City, Mo. 64108
IRISH DAY at SANDY'S featuring
MURPHY'S DUBLIN
MASTERPIECE DEW
(HI-LO) and 5¢
37¢ a cup
MUSIC BABY
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday
Sandy's HAMBURGERS come as you are...hungry
sub-subcommittee consisting of two
members from each area
represented on the sub-
subcommittee. Oo commit-
member will be elected by
employees and one member will
be appointed by the
administrators.
Under the new policy, the chairman of the sub-committee will be elected by the administration rather than being elected by members, as under the old system.
Overtime assignments as stated in the new policy will be "distributed equally, insofar as possible, by maintaining a rotation list, in alphabetical order, of specific work unit who normally perform the work during regular working hours."
IN THE NEW policy, the procedure can be waived "as a result of an emergency or unforeseen circumstances." The old policy stated that the procedure could be waived when it was considered appropriate for overtime work eight hours or less before it would be worked.
The new policy gives greater weight to seniority in granting promotions, but the University will continue to promote primarily on the basis of demonstrated qualified candidates are considered, the policy reads, will seniority prevail.
Transfers resulting from openings in other departments will be based on essentially the standards used for promotions.
THE SANCTUARY IS OPEN
If you'd like to spend your evening in a pleasant, relaxing atmosphere; come to the SANCTUARY.
The Sanctuary is Lawrence's newest and most unique private club. For your convenience, it is open seven days a week from 4 p.m.to 3 a.m.and during spring break.Treat yourself at...
The Sauurtuary
Charter & Regular Memberships Available Now Call VI2-5248 or Inquire at 1401 W. 7th
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thursday,friday,saturday only
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d
Across From Lindley Hall on West Side of Campus
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
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 16, 1972
3
Court Case Rise Linked To City Police Increases
By MARSHA SEARS
Kansan Staff Writer
Since 1968, the number of cases heard yearly by the Lawrence Municipal Court has almost doubled. Kulsaen, assistant city manager, the court heard 8,328 cases in 1968 and 6,311 cases heard in 1971.
Kallen is collecting statistics from the last two or three years for a study of the city court system and the staff that could be completed in a week.
"Since the 100 per cent increase in the number of Lawrence policemen, court cases have increased, astronomically." "More petty theft and traffic cases are brought to court now
"THE MUNICIPAL Court is now setting cases for May 23." The Municipal Court is held only on Friday, so you may more nights and only eight or nine days are scheduled for each day. When you try to operate a court on the same time schedule for twice the number of days, handle, you can set your case.
The solution to the city court's problem probably will be to schedule more court time, Kalsen said.
Gerald Cooley, city prosecutor,
said court cases had increased
because people are more closely
connected to police and more
arrests are made.
'THEE ARE more policemen now since the citizens of Lawrence voted last July for a law to prevent them from finance additional fire and police
protection." Cooley said.
Not only arrests, but also the number of crimes has increased faster than population growth, he said.
"The high incident rate doesn't seem to diminish. Those who are caught represent a small portion of the population, are actually stealing," he said.
People are experiencing a
painful day. They are a pain and a
pict of pain usually. Usually
the person who was arrested
must wait two months for a trial,
or face charges.
CHARLES C. RANKIN
Juvenile Court Judge, said
human fractures are one reason
the long period between an
arrest is needed.
He said it was often difficult to find a mutual date when all the persons involved in a case can come to court. Sometimes witnesses are out of town and in the trial to be postponed, he said.
A person charged with a misdemeanor can expect a two month wait before his case is heard in court.
KU Med Center Hook-up To Aid Kansas Doctors
The University of Kansas Medical Center will become part of the national Medline bibliographic system. March 20
The Medline service will transmit bibliographic information on medical literature from the National Library of Ireland.
Within 15 minutes the Kansas doctor will find which medical journal articles might answer his medical questions.
The list of pertinent articles
to be transmitted from the com-
munication system to the
communication system in
Bedneta, Md. to the Medical
Doctors may telephone the Clendening Library at the Medical Center for a
bibliographic search during regular office hours, Monday through Friday.
Free long distance telephone service is offered by the Kansas Kansas health personnel who have limited medical library resources.
Cleendening Library statt
check out the appropriate journals to the inquiring
mail or photocopies of the article
The Medline system will provide Kansas doctors with access to more than 150,000 articles published since January 1989.
The Medical Center will be one of 170 participating regional centers in the new Medline system.
Camping Over Spring Break Offers Cheap Ways for Fun
By CLARK ANDERSON
Kansan Writer
Camping out is almost a necessity unless you want to pay the 2 dollar a day rates at resort or camp for a few dollars per week or free, but get there on a Friday or you will never get a chance. You need to be careful need can be carried in a car trunk along with your food. Supplies should include a tent, sleeping bag, water bottle, cool water, water coolers, water jugs, cooking pots and pans, plates and cups, and a cover for the car to save it from rain.
If you've decided that there is no way you're going to go home and watch the sun rise, then spend your spring break watching ocean waves
Food should be bought ahead of time, because prices are higher in the summer. You can choose cooked meals that can just be heated in a covered pot and eat, because anything else you can get a lot of sand in it, and after a week, grit is not too appetizing. Take your vegetables, meat, and salad for the soup spoilage. Get a gas or charcoal stove to cook on because chances are there will be a campfire and what you do find you will want for night camping in hot dogs and beer are great for parties, but don't pitch your cans all over the kitchen if you wan
IMMORTAL STORY (1968)
a film
written, directed and starring
ORSON WELLES
with JEANNE MOREAU
7:30 p.m. only 75'
Thurs. March 16 Dyche
IMMORTAL STORY (1968)
a film
written, directed and starring
ORSON WELLES
with JEANNE MOREAU
7:30 p.m. only 75'
Thurs. March 16 Dyche
Good Mood Productions and
Good Karma Productions
present
THE ALLMAN
BROTHERS BAND
DR. JOHN
plus ALEX TAYLOR
Saturday, March 25
8:00 p.m.
Municipal Auditorium
—K.C., Mo.
Tickets $4, $5, $6
on sale at KIEF'S
ALEXANDER D. MURPHY
Good Mood Productions and
Good Karma Productions
present
THE ALLMAN
BROTHERS BAND
DR. JOHN
plus ALEX TAYLOR
Saturday, March 25
8:00 p.m.
Municipal Auditorium
—K.C., Mo.
Tickets $4, $5, $6
on sale at KIEF'S
St. Patrick's Day Bash Fri.March 17 12 noon to 12 Midnight
tiesburg get on U.S. 98, which runs southeast to Mobile.
South Padre Island, Texas:
Same as to Corpus Christi except
stay on U.S. 77 until Russellton,
Texas (100) to South Padre
Island
Here are directions for several vacation spots that are recommended by the American Automobile Association.
New Orleans, Louisiana: Take the turnpike to Kansas City to U.S. 71 South. Get off on Routes 13 and 16 to Springfield, Mo. At Spinnaker on U.S. 60-E-435 to Interstate 55 and on U.S. 34 to New Orleans.
Florida: Between St. Louis and Nashville is a mess but beyond that it is one easy stretch. Take Route 4 (to Lebanon), Route 4 (to Lebanon), I take U.S. 50 East from Lebanon to Lebanon to Interstate 57 south from Vernon, Ill.; take route (15) east to Albion, Ill., and take (130) south to Interstate 64 from 64 Mt. Moriah to Clarksville, Tenn.; then stay on Interstate 24-U.S. 41 through Nashville, and keep on Interstate 24-U.S. 41; then stay on which goes through Chattanooga. Just outside of Chattanooga get on Interstate 75 South and stay on Interstate 49 South and Atlanta and take it to Florida.
Mobile, Alabama: Take the same route to New Orleans but get off Interstate 55 onto Interstate 20 East at Jackson, Miss. Hit the highway and get off again at the US air force base Hattiesburg; just south of Hat-
SAM'S CORNER OF 9th & MASS.
HEALTH &
BEAUTY AIDS
Coupon Prices Good March 16, 17, 18, 20
SAM'S SUPER COUPON
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20 oz. Bottle
$1.59 size
77¢
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$1.09 size
47¢
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2 oz. Tube
$1.59 size
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6 oz. Can
$1.29 size
66¢
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ALL PRICES REDUCED TILL 7 p.m.
GREEN BEER AVAILABLE
IMMORTAL STORY (1968)
a film
written, directed and starring
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Thurs. March 16 Dyche
Good Mood Productions and Good Karma Productions present
THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND
DR. JOHN
plus ALEX TAYLOR
Saturday, March 25
8:00 p.m.
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It's really very simple. And very inexpensive.
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4
Thursday, March 16. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Election Apathy
This year, as in years past, the candidates running for student offices promised to inform the students and to get them involved in the decision making process of this University. The problem with both of these worthy goals is that most of the students on this campus seem to be dead set against being either a teacher or a page newspaper articles, most students do not know why the buses are running, what the February Sisters want, what Concerned Students are about, why all of the concern about the activity fee or why a number of things have happened, haven't happened or should happen. Despite posters, handouts, meet-the-candidates forums and one font page and most students will vote in this year's elections because "I don't know any of these people or what they stand for and besides I really don't care."
It probably would not make too much difference if everyone were intrigued by campus politics anyway. The percentage of students voting in elections would be favorably impressive. Consequently, senators might be more confident about their right to represent their constituents. It is likely that student politics would be a little livelier and a little more interesting that it is now. Nevertheless, the way student senators would vote in that situation would probably not be too different from the way they do now.
It is hard for students involved in campus politics to understand why most people do not share their interest. They do not realize that most people become involved in something only to the extent that it
affects them. Students pay the $12 activity fee as part of their tuition and most of them are as little concerned about how that part is spent as they are about how the rest of it is spent. It is money that is no longer in their pocket and they are no longer worried about it. Students have no monetary interest in the Senate. Most students do not see any affect it has on their lives unless they happen to belong to an organization that is requesting funds from the Senate.
The only way to get students concerned about their government would be for the Senate to do something which would adversely affect the students or for it to do something so outlandish as speculation on the sanity of the students or would more trouble than student interest would be worth and would hurt the Senate more than help it.
Students, like the rest of the population, have a right to be apathetic even though they are part of the "involved (concerned, aware, etc.) generation." Student officers will not be able to get the majority of students involved in this University unless the students want to, or think they have to, get involved. Most students would be happiest with a government that would conduct itself in such a way as to not force them to get involved. Hopefully in the future, student politicians will face that fact and base their campaigns on something that has a chance to succeed, since students will continue to passively demand their right to remain uninvolved and unaware.
Mary Ward
JUSTICE DEPT.
G.O.P. CONVENTION POT
"But you've gotta believe me! I had nothing to do with THIS wiretap."
[Name]
A Snort Of Snake Oil
Americans are patiates for pseudo-science. Even our snake-oil must be peddled to us out of laboratories, full of chemicals and chemicals like "inburried A&T" or the like.
A perfect example of this is Edith Efron's book on TV network news bias, called The News Twisters, which masks a set of absurd political opinions behind a hard-cocus-pod of scientific "methodology." Mr. William F. Buckley is so impressed by this Rube Goldberg apprehension that he refers to its use in the Unquestionable Efron. She is more like the Iodemic Efron-i.e., the I.E.
The political judgments, which I deal with elsewhere, are the funniest part of the book, but the "methodology" is what she makes the most extravagant use of it. She dismisses as a quite easy matter; but the latter attains her anew every time she contemplates its complexities. And it is this white-smocked cool frenzy of the laboratory that is supposed to stimulate us as blasphemeres against Method.
What the great Method really comes down to is—counting. And it is somewhat disconcerting to find that she has not even perfected this skill, which is her principal boast and claim upon our attention.
Asked to explain her wondrous process on TV, she gasped that "There is no way I can explain it. You would have to read six pages of methodology." Actually her book only takes two well-padded pages of large text and then ends with an %> page appendix explains it and gives lists of her research files.
What was too difficult for her to do on TV I can do for you in one sentence: Emax Efron counted the words said for and against key issues or candidates on TV during the last part of the 1968 convention.
Now, that wasn't too hard to explain, was it? In fact, what was really difficult was making this crude process look like something breaking it down into steps—which reminds me of Stephen Leacock's "How I Come In Out of the House," called "How to Come In Out of the House."
election—and by some miracle of acumen she sat on the period just before the election specifically, the last seven weeks of campaigning.)
Watch Miss Eron agonize. Step one she chooses the newcasts for her word count, because they have more news than do the non-newcasts. Wearing as this choice was, she staggered on to the stage. She wore a little which were, well, the Main Issues. But now (Step three) she had to choose a period for taping newcasts about the
Step seven: "finally, I totalled the number of words spoken on both sides of each issue."
Step six: "when all such opinion was isolated, and filed (first one, you note, the number of words issued) counted the number (always the best count) of words of opinion 'for' (carried over quite marks) and (didn't issue this issue) shewred, her last provisio."
Fourth, having decided to tape during this period, she -taped. A crucial step, you must agree.
Step five she brushes past in a hasty manner—choosing just what words she wants. If the task is simpler than it may sound²), gives her leisure for the crucial final steps, which should be quoted in their futile devotion to Pure Science.
She counted, and then added. One at a time. The latter, after the former; not, as a messy investigator might do, all together. The technique, you will agree, is breathaking, all seven steps of the procedure. You can stand down for the vulgar. And no wonder Mr. Buckley and many others have said (in effect) 'Wow!'
This way to the snake oil.
Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate
Readers Respond
Herbie; Rich; Tom; David...
Pills
To the Editor:
I was amazed to see the Kansan quote Kathy Allen, candidate for student body vice-president, as she gave a speech that any girl wanting birth control pills was turned away from Watkins unless she had a medical problem. Ms. Allen said that she had no facts. The Women's Health Task Force has published and circulated personal testimonies of women who were indeed pregnant because of the personal moral convictions of the doctors they saw at Watkins. Documentation of these testimonies is available (names and dates) on request.
According to the Kansan, Ms. Allen also said that free birth certificates were available for Watkins This is not true. I checked this out with the interviewer and they told by Mr. Gillespie that unless the policy had been changed and they were not informed, the pharmacy does not give out free birth certificates.
—Peggy C. Scott
Prairie Village sophomore
Such misinformation is hard to believe on the part of a woman who is chairman of the Senate's Student Services Committee. Her statements are not a statement of fact on the front page of the Kansan, it is worse than just a mistake. Her remarks are damaging to those women in her health services at Watkins, and especially to women who may read the Kansan and go to Watkins expecting free birth care or receiving a moral lecture in return for their effort). Allen's statements raise serious question as to her qualification for office. It was difficult for women to vote for women to vote for Mohammad Amin, who has at least said that activity fees should be redistributed to give women a chance to vote. Taking considerer the $400,000 at stake, this is not a minor issue.
To the Editor:
Wolfe
Tom Wolfe was talking to Leonard Grotta and David Healy last Friday night. Both Grotta's "Evening" and Healy's "Journal of Journalism" apparently the parent parachaundron fathering both articles. If Wolfe's Grotta and Healy's minds back
**us** or **friday night's讲座**, they will remember Wolfe's detailed description of the university interview on Joe Louss at the airport and on the screen. Tom Wolfe's suit probably got as much print space during the conversation with his wife after deplaning or the interplay between a former Mrs. Louis and a professor, Mr. Louis now Kansan readers are assured that Tom was not a Wolfe in cheap clothing. Wolfe set the Joe Louss interview up in an example of the degenerate journalism of the early sixties while the Kansan writers prove prevalent in the early seventies.
Mr. Gretta—Why should Wolfe "reel off his verbal stream-of-consciousness impressions that I read?" You must read "read." If you did not want Wolfe's personality revealed to you, last Friday afternoon in Flint Hall would have been better baby. She was not a baby. The man was here to be heard, not to be re读. Mr. Healy—"my memory set" led Remembrance but you simply gathered your fact and in turn d exploit it but failed to connect it coherently to Wolfe's theory for her article. Perhaps your journalist friend was right in assuming that it was gas escaping in Hoch; it was gas escaping in your article. Since you are a cult reporter I will give you a scoop. It was Kensley's Merry Pranksters who soaked the west stairs and dramatic concluding paragraphs.
Grotta and Healy obviously did not get the "word" Perhaps the first one was for foremost soo-p Journalist's. With all journalists in Wolfe's Dyreshow, then Grotta and Healy raised a complete the random titled "parajournalism." If Wolfe could administer an acid test on those articles, he would be a Parajournalism Horse factor of about 12; very base and very many articles that appear are frequently in the Kansan raising journalism? It is too bad it is not possible to walk on a paper.
To the Earl:
After reading Mr. Fisher's review of the Herbie Mann concert, my only question is
Mann
To the Editor:
Allison Bowen Hinton Shawnee Mission sophomore
-Melody Johnson Lawrence junior
greatly reviewers? I would reviewer appreciate knowing Mr. Fisher's audience and evidently know what he is doing instead of an 'instant jacrifice' for a man who is quite successful in his field and evidently knows what he is doing long. I wonder if Mr. Fisher will ever be as successful in his chosen field if he continues to write his reviews on opinion pages or in Herbie Mann's sound purge 10 or 15 years ago, but I question how many of last night's talk videos Mr. Fisher has posted to her Herbie Mann 10 or 15 years ago. It seems that Mr. Fisher has forgotten that most of last night's talk videos were posted to the 12 years old that long ago. Mr Mann evidently gives his audience what they like to hear (as attested by the statement of Herbie Mann 10 or 15 years ago) standing ovations). It merely reminds me of last year's concert with jazz pianist Ramsey Lewis keeping time to the music by tapping their feet and clapping their hands. Any true lover of the audience only seemed to come when that is inconsistent and that clapping and tapping of the feet is almost impossible. But still the audience only seemed to come when swinging into a familiar "pop-kick" version where they could follow the beat. Perhaps the problem with that is that what is artignant to the fact what jazz represents. If this is the case, then I say "brave" to an audience enough to sensize what the audience likes and give it to them.
Miller
To the Editor:
During the Student Senate and class officer elections, you will be able to vote on the Allen Field or the Endowment Association to select "yes" will petition or request the Athletic Association and the Endowment Association to select the Floor Proposal. Under this proposal, in accord with the Athletic Association's decision to open the floor, the Field House would be open in the morning and evening hours for recreation. By opening the floor in the north and south end of the field house (they are already in on the east and west sides) our east-west basketball courts.
The north and south courts
Two other points should be made (1). This is not a matter of special emphasis but academic to extra-curricular project. These funds could only be available for this project. (2) This proposal is on behalf of the Association raises about $160,000 to pay for the tarsant surface. The funds will be used to expand the institutional facilities as proposed.
The petition is presented to ask you to make the decision. Please do so.
Funding for the proposal is very complex. In 1966, the east side of the Memorial football stadium in St. Louis brought students' students' request for better seating. At that time, $35,300 was borrowed from the town hall expansion. It was to be paid back by 1891 from revenue raised by the sale of student season football sales in recent years have been higher than projected estimates, it now appears the loan will be repaid. The proposed agreement therefore proposed to add the cost of the Field House floor proposal (not to exceed $80,000) existing agreement would increase a $80,000 increase in the current loan would also mean that the cost would be shared by many students just those currently enrolled.
David G. Miller President of the Student Body
could also be lined for other indoor sports such as volleyball and badminton.
Traffic
Griff and the Unicorn
To the Editor:
HI, PARTNER!
HOW ARE
YOU TODAY?
THAT'S
A
DIFFICULT
QUESTION
TO ANSWER
GRiff...
By Sokoloff
HI, PARTNER!
HOW ARE YOU TODAY?
THAT'S A Difficult Question to Answer Griff...
IF I SAY I'M FINE,
I WOULDN'T BE TELLING THE TRUTH...
...AND IF I SAY HOW I REALLY AM, I MIGHT DEPRESS YOU FOR THE REST OF THE DAY.
YOU'D BE A SCREAM ON TALK SHOWS
1. too, would like to
congratulate the Kansan for the
excellent editorial (Tom
Fearon) for Fea's Security and
Security division. After
reading the letter from Mr.
Ross, I was surprised that
reaction was on brother!!
IF I SAY I'M FINE,
I WOULDN'T BE
TELLING THE TRUTH...
...AND IF I SAY HOW I REALLY AM, I MIGHT DEPRESS YOU FOR THE REST OF THE DAY.
Before I continue, I would like to state that I personally have not received any parking tickets for violations on campus in the two years I have worked here. I do not intend this letter to knock the students we get back at them for transgressions of my own.
YOU'D BE A SCREAM ON TALK SHOWS
zoning restrictions. Is it any more unfortunate that a 10-year-old is attacked than a 20-year-old?
It is truly unfortunate that because of the "Green Stamp" policy regarding traffic tickets and the unrealistic zoning restrictions, our campus officers are unable to sphere of apathy and insecurity.
Please, please, before it is too late, let's see the student body as a whole coupled with all faculty and staff members unite for the security of our totally unrealistic parking laws and a thorough investigation of our Traffic and Security division personnel. Only by doing this can we regain campus respect for our campus officers.
As a mother of a 10-year-old, I cannot help but view the question on one hand of where the adult supervisor was at the time the photo was taken. On the other hand, however, consider the 20-year-old student who must walk perhaps several blocks on unlighted and unprotected roads to reach his destination on campus at night simply because of the unrealistic
-Geraldine J. Rasmussen
Publication Sales Supervisor,
Kansas Geological Survey
E O
Dwyer
I read with great interest the story in the Tuesday Kansan relating how you stormed from my office to your job that you would not mess with that "ummitigated bullshit." I wish to command for you this message and you that some mischievous culprit has had the unmitigated gall to surreptitiously enter your office and give you body president!" I am sure the person has done this reprehensible deed without your permission. I have a little experience in the affairs of student government as yourself would ever consent to having his hand in the university's sincerely hope that you will be successful in your efforts to find this person who has placed you in the idiotic position of the student to run for student body president.
To the Editor:
Dear Rich Dwyer:
Steve Emerson Topeka senior
Congrats
Despite KU's relatively poor basketball season, I think this year's squad deserves congratulations. The put out work worked as well as the more than any KU squad I've seen. This extra effort was needed because they had to overcome adversity on at least two counts: they got the team worked up, and year's team, and 2) consistently "very questionable" refereeing, especially on the road, where it was most difficult. Stallworth got hot, he was tapped for 2 or 3 "fouls" which sent him to the bench or slowed him down on the court. And he never drew shots shooting 20-30 times, with 4 or 8 hands in his face. And it seemed the other team always got into the l-and-i before us, and that the key men never fouled out, and
Thank you, KU, for a very exciting season.
-Gary Kaplan
Hutchinson senior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas during the annual review of year-end budget and statements, and the final report for the fiscal year 2018. The University expresses all rights reserved to the publisher. All information provided without regard to color, copy or nationality is expressed with all respects without prejudice.
Editor
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." Business Manage
Cip Credit
BUSINESS ST AFF
Business Advisor, Mkt Adama
Credit Card
NEWSSTAFF
News Advisor Del Brinkmaat
Chip Crews
Thursday, March 16, 1972
University Daily Kansan
5
KU Medical Center Staff Supports Growth of Family Practice Training
By JOHN REED
Dr. Jack Walker, chairman of the department of family practice at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said Tuesday that family medicine here and across the country.
Walker said of the new department's progress. "The new president is a physician, after many years of debate, has apparently now received widespread enquiries by students and the public."
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from that
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to mishole
vacated
vaccinated
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your
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urs of arfs
kg his
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find
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Currently there are three programs in family practice in Kuwait, the KU Medical Center, Walker. These three programs, and approximately 54 specialists in family medicine and will produce
Five years ago none of this was happening in Kansas, Walker said. The department approved family practice residency programs in the state.
ays and postage vertiased pressed
"THE PROGRAM alone will
ol Young
Hearings Set
For 2 Charged
For Inn Fight
not keep young family physicians in Kansas, "Walker said. 'Special efforts must be made by the Kansas Medical Society, the Kansas Health Association, or communities to attract and hold these family doctors in Kansas."
"Results take a number of years. A new resurgence of faith in Christ, the rural health problems of Kansas, but this program is a challenge."
Preliminary hearings were set for March 24 for Gary Wary Buskirk, and Dusan LareeBuskirk, at 2 p.m. after the arrival in Douglas County court yesterday. Buskirk is to appear at 2 p.m. at the Douglas County Courthouse.
Dr. Kermit Krantz, chairman of the department of obstetrics 921508 and the clinical services, said his department was supporting the
Krantz said "Residents in Dr. Walker's department will rotate through obstetrics and sports medicine principles of obstetrics, minor surgery and office gynecology so that they will be able to go into a practice with the highest level of health care. The family practice of modern
The men were arrested after an incident Saturday in front of The Inn at 19th and Massachusetts Streets.
medicine must be supported in Kansas to the utmost."
Buskirk is charged with disorderly conduct, failure to yield to an emergency vehicle, mischief and two counts of aggravated assault is charged with aggravated battery and disorderly conduct.
DR. LOREN J. HUMPHEY,
chairman of surgery, said, "I am excited about the establishment of the family practice residency program in which we have agreed completely in the area of surgery in which the family practice residents should be trained, and I am committed to the
The family practice department plans to move from its temporary quarters at 2605 W. Third Avenue, formerly the former Wesleyan Convalescent Hospital, 4125 Rainbow Blvd., lce. 1 June. The building was recently acquired by the University of Florida Health System and is used for use by the Medical Center.
At the new site, the department will develop a model family practice unit that will simulate real-life medical practices of young physicians might practice.
THE DEPARTMENT has interests beyond the training of resident physicians. Medical student involvement in the training of physician assistants and nurse clinicians, and the establishment of a teaching program in addiction addiction addiction are being planned.
"Alcoholism and drug addiction are the main threats we feel that the family doctor should be the key professional involved in such health care."
Walker said, "We will use the facility as a laboratory for young
resident physicians and medical students to observe family practice in its natural setting, as well as training with which they normally work."
Dr. Leo Cooper and Walker make up the professional medical staff of the department. They plan to add another physician this year (1973, two more full-time physicians will be in the department.
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63-Hour KUOK Marathon To Start Friday at Oliver
Donations from local merchants, such as food and records, will also be given away.
KUOK, the KU radio station,
will broadcast their fourth annual
63-hour live marathon from
Olivier Hall. begin at 9 a.m.
and finish at 5 p.m.
manager of KUOK, said Monday.
Beer will be given away at the
marathon Friday night, Dolan
said. A football game will run
concurrently with the marathon
to be a car smash Sunday
afternoon.
Dolan said 63 hours was chosen as the length for the marathon because of the "Big G3." that he on which KUOK operates.
Prof Bequeaths $58,000 For KU Scholarships
The Kansas University Endowment Association has received a bequest of nearly $200,000 in Lichen of Lawrence, the association announced Tuesday to Ruth Lichen Memorial Scholarship Loan Fund for her students. The funds are students from Leavenworth or
Leavenworth county who are preparing to teach.
Australia A Blunder Down Under
THE REAL truth about Australia.
how heavy, how easy, unpopular
business, how low prices, how
expensive. Australians news at the page
our excuses and how we were
not treated by Australia. Our history
of Sunday 19th May 2016
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The VENTURE Catamaran $695
length: 15'2"
beam: 7'11"
weight: 235 lbs.
draft: 7"
sail area:
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genoa: 55 sq. ft.
racing crew: 1 to 3 people
BELLINGER MARINE SERVICE
704 VERMONT
843-2973
master charge
THE INFORMATION GROUP
Also, be looking for discussion groups in your living units
3:00 p.m. Potter's Lake
9:00 p.m. Templin Basketball Courts
G
3:00 p.m. Allen Field House Lawn
9:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
A crown
Love Offerings Will Be Taken
JESUS GIRL SUPERSTAR
Do You Think You're What They Say You Are?
LOVE SONG IS A GROUP WITH A NOW SOUND FOR JESUS
Acclaimed by Rolling Stone Magazine
Monday, March 27
"When you ask somebody what our songs are about there's no ambiguity. What we're saying is Jesus one way. If you want the answer follow it."
Free Concerts
Tuesday, March 28
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beam: 7'11"
weight: 235 lbs.
draft: 7"
sail area:
main: 105 sq. ft.
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racing crew: 1 to 3 people
BELLINGER MARINE SERVICE
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6
Thursday, March 16. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Ellison Disclaims Assault Fears
By KATHY ELLIS
Kanean Staff Writer
Bobby Ellison, captain of Traffic and Security, said recently that incidents of assaults on campus were statistically no different than any community of 20,000 to
"I think the fear of assaults is greater than the actual number of assaults." Ellison said.
An assault charge may be brought against someone if there is actual physical danger or if spoken threats have the potential to cause harm. In 1971, through January 1972 there have been 21 reported assaults. This number included men and women who were analyzed by time of day.
A LOT of common sense, Ellison said, provides the best protection. Women should travel in two's, well-lined areas and on foot to reduce the risk of transportation. Ellison said he had observed an increasing
Photographer Shows Indian, Birth Essays
Two slide displays of photo essays were shown by an award-winning photojournalist Brian Lanker Tuesday night at the University of Kansas chapter meeting of Sigma Delta Chi fraternity, the journalism fraternity, in the council room of the Kansas Union.
Lanker, photographer for the Topeka Capital-Journal and writer, photographer for the Year Awards in 1971, showed displays of pictures portraying the American Indian and a natural childbirth. Rich Clarkson, director of photographs for the Journal and award-winning free lance photographer, introduced Lanker and spoke to SDX students about his national's relation to the media. Clarkson said a suburban newspaper with its smaller staff could provide the photojournalist a better opportunity to take photos and to communicate and to communicate more effectively to the reader than national magazines. He said that with fewer editors to exercise a lot of control, many things can take place here."
Police Link
Stolen Key
To Dorm Theft
Lawrence Police reported a burglary at Naismith Hall Tuesday resulted from entry into the house by a purse stolen earlier in the day.
Police reported the purse of Anne S. Woodruff. St. Louis sophomore, was taken by two Union Kansas University Bowling Alley.
Woolfrid wroff told police that along with the key he had been given, he was watch valued at $20 that belonged to her nontmite. Carol J. Steven, Kirkwood. Mo.
Dwight Boring* says...
PETER TAYLOR
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*Dwight Boring
209 Providence
Lawrence, Kansas
Phone 842-0767
number of women hitchikers, a practice which was not conducive o safety for women.
representing
THE COLLEGE LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
OF AMERICA
... the only Company selling
entertainment in Calgary, Man
Traffic and Security has become more accessible to those who do not drive. Ellison said. T and Q parking ones were opened for student parking.
... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
to the Watson Library area to be closer to the campus. If the manpower were increased the manpower required by more footmen, Ellison said.
Also, the front lobby of Hoeh Auditorium is opn nightly. There is an intercom from the front lobby to the dispatcher so that
Campus Briefs
Europe Travel Forum
There will be a forum on traveling in Europe by car, bicycle,
motorcycle, bumbo and European student flights at 4 p.m. today in
Paris.
APO Service Fraternity
The Lambda Chapter of the Alpha Phi Orgia National Service
Fraternity will have an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m.
at the University of Florida.
Johin Ginka, associate director of libraries and chapter adviser will speak. The officers will explain the Alpha Phi Omega program
All registered male students, especially those with Scouting experience, are urged to attend.
Mv Lai Vigil
There will be a vigil commemorating the fourth anniversary of the My Lai incident of the Vietnam War from 12:30 to 1 p.m. Thursday in Danforth Chapel. This vigil is part of the Ecumensical Peace Vigil every day during Lent.
Women's Caucus
The Lawrence Women's Political Caucus will hold their first meeting at 7:30 on the basement of the University State Building.
Ambassador Bush Talk
George Bush, ambassador to the United Nations, is scheduled to schedule April 14, at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Annual大会.
A spokesman for the Chamber said Wednesday, that a time for the banquet had not been set, but that it would probably begin at 7 a.m.
The spokesman also said that only Chamber members would be allowed to attend the banquet.
purse snatchings or assailms may be reported. A public telephone and rest rooms are also in the front lobby.
INSPECTOR VERNON Harrell of the Lawrence Police Department said recently that in 1971, 50 arrestees were surrounded the campus and on the campus proper there had been eight arrests for rape or assault. The officer discordantly conduct in 1971. But fewer than one-third of the 59 arrests for aggravated assaults in 1971 were committed in these areas.
When people hear about more than one rape they think everyone is out raping someone, but not. Someone is raiding causing several incidents
To temporarily distract an attacker a would-be victim can stretch her fingers in the attacker's eyes, use the palm of her hand to grab the arm or knee or raise her knee to his groin. Harrell said. These measures must be successful the first time in order to avoid angering the attacker to the point of alarm than he initially intended.
KU WOMEN have their own methods for protection, which range from walking in the well-fenced yard to kneeling on a karate. One freshman enrolled in a karate class also takes self-defense lessons. Carrying bags or oat pocket has become one common practice among girls.
It was incorrectly stated in Wednesday's Kansan that Lewis Hall would re-open after spring break at 9 a.m., March 26.
Residence Hall Correction
All residence halls will re-open at noon. March 26.
One girl said she walked back because she saw her being followed and carried her on her coat pocket. Another girl, on attackers, belonged, flung her arms about as though she were going to jump. The attackers were frightened away. However, both Ellison and Harrell said that common sense would prevail.
However, both Ellison and Harrell said that common sense while walking on campus was the most valuable presecution.
Search Group Submits Names For KU Posts
The final selection of a vice chancellor for academic affairs and research and graduate studies, KU is expected to be made in the next several weeks, according to Claire L. Laurence Chairman Jr.
A search committee appointed by the chancellor in January to recommend candidates for the two posts, recently submitted a
Francis Heller, who now holds the post of vice chancellor for academic affairs, will resign his position after Roberts distinguished professor of political science, a post which has been vacant since the spring semester.
the creation of the post of vice chancellor for research and key academic necessitated by the recent decentralization of the graduate
Ronald Calgaard, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, has served as chairman for the search committee made up of 13 faculty members and 3 students. The committee was met regularly to discuss candidates for the positions.
VOTE FOR
JOHN G. GRAYSON
Senator
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
GEORGE CARLIN TALKS ABOUT HIMSELF AND HIS NEW ALBUM. "FM & AM."
C
About a year or so ago I discovered I was no longer in my act. The main reason I had become a conditional was missing self-expression. The art wasn't me. It was all door sockets, quiz contestants, newsletters, little old ladies and weatherheads. Now I'm in there again. This album represents that transition.
I'll just stick to the text.
The image shows a person with long hair and a beard. They are looking directly at the camera, and their mouth is slightly open as if they were speaking or smiling. The background is plain and light-colored. There is no other visible detail in the image.
It's called FM & AM because FM represent my newer freer approach to comedy and AM is the older more rigid style I'm coming away from.
"This album is important to me because it tells a lot about me..."
14
"FM & AM"A new George Carlin album. Now available on Little David Records and Tapes.
(Tapes distributed by Ampex.)
An Atlantic Custom Label.
Little David
LD 7214
New KU Antiwar Committee Plans Education-Action Week
A week with workshops, films,
information tables, a vigil and a
media evening will be sponsored
by the Peace Education and
Action Week Committee, Nancy
Jorn, research assistant for the
Social Welfare and chair of
the committee said Tuesday.
The newly-formed committee had its first official meeting on Monday to discuss the events. Planning is in the air, the volunteers are still needed. Jornas
into action after they saw slides of the National Action Research of the Military Industrial Complex on the automated air airplane-India China at a vigil Friday in Danforth College, Jorn said.
These people were prompted
Possible topics of workshops include History of the Vietnam War, Family and Economic Expenditures, Amnesty, Draft Counseling and Peace
The media evening will feature anti-war songs, poetry and slides. A play, "Trial of the Catonsville
Vote For
TERRY DUNN
STUDENT SENATE
NORTH COLLEGE
INDEPENDENT
BRET
WILLIAMS
FOR STUDENT
SENATE
LAWS
INDENDENT
BRET
WILLIAMS
FOR STUDENT
SENATE
LA&S
INDENDENT
DON'T FORGET TO VOTE
1972 Spring Elections
for
Student Body President
Student Body
Vice-President
Student Senate
Class Officers
Petition to Athletic Corporation
COMPLETE LIST OF
POLLING PLACES
March 15 & 16—8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Strong
Summerfield
Union
Learned
Malott (Pharmacy School office)
Marvin (March 15, 12:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m.)
March 15, 5:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. & March 16 1:00:
5:00 p.m.
Kappa Alpha Theta—1433 Tennessee
Alpha Gamma Delta—2005 Stewart
Bishop College—2105 Brad
Chi Omega—1345 W. Campus
Delta Tau Decla—91, 11th
March 15, evening only
McCollum 5:00:7.00
Lewis 5:00:9.10
Oliver 5:00:9.15
Ellsworth 5:30:9.00
Hashinger 5:00:9.00
Naismith 5:30:7.30
Corbin 6:00:9.00
Pearson 6:00:9.00
MARCH 15 & 16
Nine" will be presented at 1204
Oread march 31-April 2. Peggy
Baldwin the director
The committee will meet again
in p. m. tonight at the
Canterbury House. Information
is available from Nancy Jorn at
843-9321.
Yellowstone Park
Backpacking into un touched lands. See nature as it was when mountain men gazed on it over a century ago. Book tells where to go, see, wear and eat. A must for the person who wants to get off the beaten path Send $2.00, Arnold Agency, 206 East Main, Rexburg, Idaho B34440, MONEYBACK GUARANTEE.
Concert Reviews Billboard
BITTER END, NEW YORK
Brewer & Shipley
Preceding them was Staff, a new group looking for a record company whose electronic rock is in roll and a mix of rock and pop with talent hunters. **IRACTRACHER**
Kama Sufa's Brewer & Shaper, and made some beautiful beverages and made some beautiful paintings. Their establishment they shine with some of the finest in the region and inaugurated their barnacles and impaired charters. They provide a kind of warmth and although not all at the same time, their material takes out of some of the sling from Mommy, from their current role as an emblematic protective妻衬 and county sheriff. Their closing number "Withi Kama Sufa" means how well they do work and how well they serve the community.
Brewer & Shipley
CashBox
Chet Nichols
BITTER END NYC - it is still important to perform well at an end performance as good if not better than on account. Brewer, Duncan and the natural ability to combine beauty with skillfulness such as "People Love Girls" but others such as "People Love Men" also head start at the finish line.
The two albums may lead you to them. Shilpa were part of the Salt Farnell Shilpa band, and their musicians, just the credits on their two Kara Tuma albums (including "Hold My Hand") are still popular. Hickens and Jerry Candlan indicate an album by Braver & Brower, an evening with
The most enthusiastic response was to the several of them from "On Me, From Me" and "My which they lovingly decapitated it." The one Talk to the Line" was "One Talk to the Line."
This is a group that was overloaded once. But that was a long time ago. I the vibrations that were felt at the club were real. The club itself Brieber & Wiley have it made.
BREWER & SHIPLEY
IN CONCERT
SAT., APRIL 8th
- 10 P.M. -
HOCH
AUDITORIUM
WITH
FUNK 'N' PUNCH
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 16, 1972
7
1204 Peggy
'Rosencrantz, Guildenstern Author Performs Post-Mortem on 'Hamlet'
By MARILYN K. KING
Kansan Staff Writer
An artistic parody is amusing and usually provides a certain ironic twist, tasteless and at worst a mortal sin. Tom Stoppard has provided both the insight and a little humor in his tragedy of "Hamlet" with "Rosencrantz and Guddenstein Are Dead." Using the techniques of Shakespeare, Stoppard has performed a post-mortem on "Hamlet" to determine the reason for the affliction of the characters—theme pre-determined death.
Stoppard's conclusion is simple. Man, being mortal, lives with impending death, develops an inability to tolerate invisibility bearable, and yet at the same time is fascinated and repulsed by the idea of dying. For all his stoic philosophies, no man can accept to accept his own mortality.
THREE HOURS is a little too much time to take in much detail. The 18G9 could have been reduced by at least a third without that help, and the whole thing becomes rather boring before the second act
The excellence of the actors saves the play. For a change, the actress has to be heard. Enunciation is clear and lines are of moderate speed and well projected. The improvement of "Hamlet" led to a production of "Hamlet" with delight.
&G&T are sent for by Hamlet's uncle and mother to discover what is making the prince act as if he were mad. The question of
KANSAN
MANDY PATINKIN as
Rosencranz stallts a bit much,
but it is done so well in character
that this light offence is easy to
the "who am I really?" bit is becoming a bit hackneyed in modern theatre, especially when the answer turns out to be "nobody."
SOME of the scenes are lifelisted directly from "Hamlet," with lines and business intuit. But Shakespeare must much liberty with the Bard in many instances, and these scenes, though initially funny, do not take over easily. Claudius fall all over each other in their freezed passion. There is a classic melodramatic scene in which Hamlet is stung by Claudius, which is not shown in "Hamlet," in which the love-striken prince can only hold his head and groan at Claudius' accusations. At the reluctant maid. The scene does nothing for anybody and gives Shakespeare every right to stoppard for the rest of his days.
Mike Kemmerling as
Gideon. His performance was much
prepared over a long-period
performance. His character was
well-developed, and though most
of the scenes are humourous,
they are also well-realized.
Hamlet's sanity is never answered, and the play is a series of events that involve Hamlet in which RG appear. Then, as the 'Hamlet' characters fade from the scene, they find themselves puzzled and bungle their way through the duty they are required to fulfill, and they very funny in many places, but
Fine voices, good control and a rich harmonic blending were the
Concert Chorale Excels, But Few Attend Recital
and PAT MOORE Kansan Reviewer
By LARRY HUFFMAN
While, Rosenteranz and Guldenstern drew the crowds, a few concert-goers ventured into Swartwhall Recital Hall to hear Benne, assistant instructor in choral music, conducted the choir. The music, which was predominantly a cappella, spanned the periods from the early to the early 20th century.
tone of voice that seemed to border on mild hysteria, he handled G's emergence as the true protagonist of the play with a whimsical eye to build and retreat more, but does good job in his first major lead.
strong points of a good concert. It was slightly flawed, however, by an inconsistency of voice and instrumentation, and in *Monterverdi*'s "Magnificat Primo," by the competition in string ensemble. The problems were minor but they put the concert on a somewhat less than excellent level.
The 7-Up Company paid Mandy Patkinin, Chicago, IL, sophomore, to play a 1980s "teen angel" in a TV commercial.
By MARIEL BIMM
The value of this concert depended largely on how the listener felt about the type of music on the program. Its purity and authenticity ranged from somber to lively and its performance was a fine one.
Nostalgia Profits Linked To Current '50s Revival
Dan Mayo said the reason for the Dan Mayo was money. Mayo has been one of the leaders of the SUA concerts this year. He also works at the Cowtown Ballroom in Kansas City as a DJ and arrangements controller.
Musical groups, comedy acts and clothing manufacturers have recently brought the 1950s back to life. They could do it doubt if they should be revived.
"Somebody did it first and it caught on," Maya said. "Now people are milking it until there isn't any more profit."
"The 1950s were an ugly 10 years," one student said. They were teenagers, not kids. Basically it was just a lot of kids making themselves as artisans.
Still, there must be a reason it caught on in the first place. The nastalgia that made Busy Berkley's "No, No, Nannette" a hit was "No, No, Nannette."
"Yet *Students for McGoventry* hold a successful sock hop featuring Lonny Fame and the Beltones. The Nitty Gritty Dirt开会 20 minutes of their concert doing a parody of the 1950s.
Campus Bulletin
**AAPU:** 11 a.m. Alcove C, Cafeteria.
Education Graduates: 11:30 a.m. Alcove B
premium study: 11:45 a.m. English Room.
Faculty Forum: noon, Westminster
Center.
Psychology: noon, Alcove D; Cafeteria,
Latin American History: noon, Alcove A.
Faculty Forum: noon, Westminster Center.
Cafeteria.
French Department: 12:30 p.m., Col-
tonwood Room
East Asian Studies: 12:30 p.m., Curry Room.
Social Welfare: 12.30 p.m. Oread Room
Slavic Club: 1 p.m. Pine Room
Mathematics Department 6 p.m. English
Room
Date: 6.30 p.m. Course: Cereal
Induction 2.30 p.m.
Regionalist Room.
Psychology Colloquium 2.30 p.m. Forensi
Human Sexuality Series: 6 p.m. Big 8 Room.
Mathematics Department: 5 p.m. English
Hamlet. Stoppard uses them enact the story of Hamlet for those not familiar with the tragedy. They also are one of his peers, who are dead, which are expressed mainly through Castulo Guerra, the leader of the players. Guerra is excellent and makes his changes from one role to the next because of Houdin changing costume.
Room.
SUA Travel Forum: 4 p.m., Council Room.
No. 308.
Sociology: 6.30 p.m., Curry Room.
Science Fiction Filmed Lecture: 7 p.m.
a.pus Crusade? 7 p.m. Parlors A, B, C,
Regionalist Room.
Late Instructor: 7 p.m. Room 299.
Science Fiction Film 7 p.m. woodwright.
RU Film Society: 7:30 p.m., Dyche
Auditorium.
Alpha Phi Omega: 7:30 p.m., Room 305
SIMS: 8:15 p.m., Oread Room.
forgive. He unstages Kem-
melering improved thereafter and Patinkin keeps the show moving with his versatility
recedes it acquires a hazy glow until it seems things were near perfect then.
English Department: 9 p.m.. Regionalist Room
Senior Recital: 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
For the university student in his 20s, the 1950s fit the nostalgia of college students exactly how he felt, at least what he saw in older brothers and nephews.
Earl Troussel as Hamlet plays the prince with apolemb and has stopped biting off the ends of his sword, knowing all the difference in the world.
English Department: 8 p.m., Forum Room.
There is a group of actors in the play; the same that appear in
David Fremont directs R&G and has taken a difficult play, where he is tasked with blocking and interpretation, and produced a worthy complement.
"Everybody likes to look back o forget the troubles of today," Mayo said.
Eight of the characters are slain in "Hamlet"; two more die in the battle with Sweeney, escape, and that, as Sophocles and Shakespeare both knew, is the basis for tragedy. Stoppard was called "the most responsible because he, like Hamlet, Oedipus, and all tragic figures, is powerful to overcome his own death."
JAMES COBURN
"THE HONKERS"
in United Artists
Weekdays 7:30, 7:30, 9:25
Sat & Sun 8:30, 3:00, 4:25
9:50
Varsity
Training ... 12:05
GEORGE C. SCOTT Nominated for Best Actor
klute Donald
Sutherland
Hillcrest
SUMMER OF '42
Summer 7:30 (Fri.), Sat, 11:20 Also, Klute 9:25 Only
captain MILKSHAKE
7:20
9
9:15
Hillcrest
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7:30
9
9:15
Hillcrest
Hillcrest
SUCH GOOD FRIENDS
AN OTTO PREMINGER FILM
DYAN GANNON JAMES COCO JENNIFER O'NEILL
KEN HOWARD NINA FOCH LAURENCE LUCKINBILL
LOUISE LASSER at Mary BURGESS MEREDITH at Kalman
OOC. SIMM TISININGG $'SUDDENLY. ITS ALT TOMORROW
Granada
INTEGRATE……signal 13-5702
LAWRENCE ART CENTER
Robert Benedict, Director—Experienced professional faculty
Evenings 7:30,9:30
Adults $1.50
ENROLLING—March 15, 16, 17
Classes for beginning and advanced students in drawing, painting (acrylic or oil), water color, photography, film and children's art and craft.
Classes begin March 27
FACULTY MEMBERS
Call 843-6336 for more information (if no answer call
0123-6575)
846½ Indiana (Above Owens Flower Shop)
& 2:00 - 5:30 Weekdays
843-9575) Office hours 10:30 - 12:30
This is an invitation for you to take advantage of Lawrence's newest private club. The SANCTUARY offers you convenience, enjoyment, and relaxation. Cocktails and hors d'oeuvres are served seven days a week from 4 p.m.-3 a.m. And for your added convenience the SANCTUARY will be open during spring break.
The Saurtuary
Call VI2-5248 or Inquire at 1401 W. 7th
Charter and Regular Memberships Available Now
Call VI2-5248 or Invoice at 1403 W. 7th
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
One day
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered by the College. A college or national origin
Highest price paid for used cars G.J.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2:
8088
iff
Western Civ. Notes—New On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
You're at an advantage If you don't.
**When you at a disadvantage.**
Eh-ee, way it comes to the weekend.
*Western Civilization.* "Campus Madhouse, 41*
*West 14th.*
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- 3-10
1966 Porsche 911, 200 hp, excellent condition, highest offer over £2,900.
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KANSAN WANT ADS
Pentax HD VE w/ case, clipmotor
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I washer w/ 20 P-9 Lens & PS
brush set, $90 - $60
K91 or M35-506
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1969 Toyota Corolla, excellent condition.
Gets 30 mpg. $995. Call Steve at
*4933 or 842-7291*. 3-16
59 Jaguar XK 150 Drop-head coupe
$1799 Call 841-5530 3-16
Boots, Poles & Wooden Skils. 210 cm.
Call Rick, 842-0709. 3-17
SeaTech Equipment - Pins Mack Stone
Engineering - 150,500. 12hrs.
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Super Sport $1999. Hawk Huff KKW
Motorsport Airplane Aircraft
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1962 Buck Special, new transmission,
new front tires & shows, good mechanical shape, economical & desirable. $290 Call Dave. D4-738-5142
SKIING Fly to Denver for $50 roundtrip or on a check on a package plan for skiing both Wall and three Rocky Mountain spring break. Calls 8732, 8731, 3-17
NORTHISLE COUNTRY SHOP 707 N, 2nd, 3bk. North River of North Waterfront besides them, old wood cooking and berry bins, timber shelves, dressing shirts, bicycles, fireplace wood, shelves, other useful items, other of other useful items, open 9 to 5 day Heller Abelberg, 8 to 5 days 1319
ASIA Cheap trip if you judge, but move Asian style. Details to Japan for $1.90 to Merdeka. 11841 Tuncum Road, Caledon, Michigan, 49288
1700 BSA lightning 650, royal blue and
chronite, excellent condition, open
TT pipes, repaired cables. Call 832-
7362 after 4:00 P.M.
3-17
must sertificate 1927 Corvette T-Bar Coupe air conditioning, automatic power sheeting Dervin Harris Mobil 18605-4843-8423 Financing available 3-28
Hammond M-2. fine cabinet Can be made portable. That has unmatched "Hammond" touch and sound $500
K-62-632. 3-17
20" bicycle, good clean condition, battery operated light, five months old hand brake, two tires 44-350-350 after 3 P.M. Reason: 20
1982 Ford Galaxie 500, 4 dr. V-Brane automatic, 65,000 miles. New brakes, shock injection switch, oil change kit, transmission. $250.82-833. 3-28
Two-door Station Wagon 1955 Cherry
rolley, 6-cyl. std. stent Must sell before spring break. Make an offer,
864-1116
3-28
1791 Champion Motor Home—24 lf.
413 cid engine, generator. 80 lb.
capacity, 14,800 miles. $9,000. 842-
7207 3-28
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Make KU Student Government ever more anonymous. Vote Birthday Party for Joe Landolt (Pres.) and Mike Schoenlee (V.P.). 3-28
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.02
2434 Iowa V1 2-1008
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
staffing service
Lawrence Kansas 66044
THE MERCANTILL
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUCEES
Deadline : 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
FINE SAUSAGES
HOSPENS BOARDED, EXCELLENT
CLOSE IN, LIGHTED RIDING AIRFIELD,
FACILITY ALSO, KENGLISH SADDLE
FOR SALE: 842-1406
You just have to see us our new shipment of India prints. They're unusual, beautiful and waiting for you in Hodges, inside Hodge Pound 3-28
Wr. Mr. Hirth creation, Short, dark-brown Scaas Facial Saliva-temperaure control, Westinghouse Electric 6088 Best offer 3-17 6088 Best offer 3-17
Two-door station wagon. 1953 Chevrolet, 6-cyl. std. trans. Must sell before spring break. Make an offer. 864-1116 3-17
RUMMAGE SALE Saturday, March 18, 7:30 to 12 noon at the Community Building Lawrence Community Nursery School 3-17
Electric guitar, solid body, Amplifier,
3rd inch speakers, watt-rms, WRS,
very nice, must sit well between 5.30-
7.00 1022 Tennessee, no. 4, 17-19
800
A REAL HIP OFF—Four (count) hauls 14 lbs. Deep-Dish Cremate with two (2) bags of moistened moisture mounted. Fit Musculature. Excellent condition. $8 takes all. Call 682-7453.
Ford Falcon Sprint, V-6 Power,
4-speed, ee, Kiawoo Bass amplifier,
200 watts, 245-1 speakers, 196 Doug
Lagerthorpe, 800-watt stereo system,
842-5712-1131, 1131 Ohm
3-29
1071 Kawasaki 500, Mach III, Excellent condition, 2,400 miles. $850 firm.
3-17
Lane Lanning 710, Stereo Receiver,
miteracd 720 microphone. Automatic
turbidity and record change. 2 Changer.
turbidity. 6 months old. Battery
842-1265.
1967 Duracell 160 cell. Runs good, but needs a few minor repairs. $290. Call 843-8511 or go by 748 Arkansas. 3-20
Two David Beauty stereo cabinet with J.B.L. D-120 speakers, J.B.L. crosses, and wide diaphram covers for high freaks hotels. 9634 0-28 0-30
9634
Drum set; 2 bass drums, 3 small tots,
floor toe floor and snare. Also stands
and fabric cases. Will sell cheap .842-
9654 3-30
64 Chevrolet StepVan. Good engines, body, etc. Easily make a new camper. Call 813-9471. Make t: 3-28 a reasonable offer.
NOTICE
Michigan St. Bar-B-Qe 315 Mich.
St. Bar-B-Qe 316 Mich.
Bar-B-Qe $10, Beef Brisket
$30, Slab or pork ribs $30, Small
$40, Beef Brisket $40, Slab
$180, Beef Brisket Sand $80, Beef
Brisket Plate-$180 Open 18 am
Sun-Tunnel House 842-289-7620
Sun-Tunnel
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-7694. Professional center for children in first 12 months = 12月. or part-time in first 12 months. Designated enrolled. 3-31
STUYLIE ENSPARTO the international language in Portland for Portland Opera. Visit us at International Expereperato International Expereperato here 29 July to 3 August. A unique experience, an amazing language. Information Summer暑夏 Resort Oregon Oregon 97203 3-16
Barn Partied! Now available for
Barn Parking at Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry
and cooler plenty of parking
and cooler plenty of parking
Collie Strange after 6 p.m. at 843-
515 Call Coil Strange after 6 p.m. at 843-
515
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWYARDS
Among the lawyers most attractive are of Lawyers who make more money if you call Mr. Perry Foley, Jr., a partner at Harwood Road Living in Argos Avenue (Mission, Missouri), Appointment Apts., MH & AR, for your legal needs. Harvard, can be environmental and educationally rewarding, 15 at our suitably mentored special counsel, and 25 at this summer a wonderful time to be here.
For reasonable prices on all glass or an kind of Plexiglas, see the KNW Body Shop. 124 Nurtil, 2nd St or call 811-536-7500. Plexiglas samples that not arrived.
LEARN SKYDIVING 1st jump
jumpmaster includes jumpside and
jumpside.
Jumpers train on jumpside and
jumpside. Train & jump same day. Each
day there is a jump at 842-666-4867.
for 294-389 or 842-666-4868.
Need people to invest in Caua 189
for use as a parachute jump plane
Call Dick Mauk at 254-3189 or Jim
Baker at 842-6686.
3-17
FOUND--One coat at the "Hawk"
684-1490 Describe 3-17
SKYDIVERS - Transplantation is starting a parachute center 12 minutes of Lawrence. Selected interns, parachutists trained. *853-319-4700*. PIMA.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
CSC
Is there anyone with almost enough money and interest to buy land and move to a new city? We have $1,000 now and our residents, organic, recycling homeowner, and local entrepreneurs, recycling homeowner, we help you do the same. R. Anderson's P.O. Box 3245 Jayhawk Subdivision P.O. Box 3245 Jayhawk Subdivision
ST 18 STREET SHOE REPAIR OPEN
THURSDAY, MARCH 16 FOR SHOES
PICK UP- STORE WILL BE CLOSED
UNTIL UNFINISH TURNER 3-16
8th St. Shoe Repair open Thurs.
16th for 16 shoes pick-up. ST 3-16
FOR RENT
University Terrace Apartments — formated apartments available at University Terrace. Come to manager's office, 1259 West 9th Apt. 81, R-B or, call 463-443-529
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER *Right
home to campus* for MU Mississippi,
basketball, and bedroom apartments are Aug.
13. Students with available rentals at end of semester
are able to pay $99 per room, $49 per
campus, diltiawax, central
library, 7:289 between 5:20 PM and 10:30 AM.
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limits,
offer first-floor rent right from the
floor. Room furnished with all williams paid for
with 843-7721. Call after 4:48
483-7721
TOYOTA
A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS. To see
we can eat out? Walk to Wake-
up Swim in our pool. Like indoor hiv-
ing? You can afford a beach for an
auction. You can afford AstraZeneca.
Formulated Apartment, 1142 Indiana
diplex an conditioned, wall-to-wall
carpeting, indoor facilities, adjo-
tive spaces.
3 I-3777
3 I-3777
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
Nice, furnished 1.3 bed, apartments near town, KU. Also rooms with kitchen privileges, only one room, private bath. Available now. 842-507-3. 3-29
WANTED
Avalon, 9th & Avalon, Harvard
and Arvada, Harford, and Arvado,
11th & Mishawaka, and end of living in one of those handsome apartments where you will be surrounded to have a dabblewah, central A.C. heat, water utilities paid by the public, and more.
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
1922, while selection is still available.
Now the time to select a new
BUS. 852-2460 or 2107 A. Harvard
Lawyer, he built local offices,
and Lawrence House, located
on the southwest corner of
the house.
COLLEGE DULL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing for summer and winter apartments, our unfurnished apartments. Most utilities pad a/c, all electric kitchen with dishwasher, refrigerator, dry facility Special summer rates 84-321-8200 84-321-8200 SJ7 84-321-8200
Wanted. Panel truck Ford, Chevy, or Dodge in fast to good shape Call Bob at 842-9783 3-29
Need girl to share house. $30. Utilities included. Close to campus, 842-5788,
3-16
SCUBA GEAR Must have before spring break. Need all equipment related to diving. Call 842-5829 and aid for Val Landes 3-17
Kaufman Key Press-Job printing from leaflets to posters, bookshelves to book and resumes. 710 Mass. in back Zerol 200 Open in 5 days 842-4883.
McGovern canvassers need rides to St. Louis courts (Allen, IL). Will help pay gas. Call 864-4089 or 864-1217. 3-29
Female wants room with kitchen privileges, now through finails or willing to share apartment 842-1283
3-29
Sports Cars Inc.
If you have two or four DEEP PURPLE tickets you would like to get, please call 842-7122. 3-17
Working girl needs to share her 2 bedroom muddle home with another working girl or student. Nice, quiet, relaxing. 842-724-9046 for ask for Suan. 3-28
Instructor to teach Tai Chi. Phone
842-2040. 4-3
Graduate student seeking summer employment in any Wind of campus location. Send resume to Roommate roomate. Call after F. P.M.
842-5921. Share phone. Furnished
room.
Competition
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2911
TREVENGER
Webster's Mobile Homes
Your Complete Service
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
3409 W. 61th 842.7700
Ample Park Spaces Available
Five days
Just West of It.
Drive-In Theatre
Drive-In Theatre
TYPING
Experienced in typing these, dimersical term papers, other types, miter typing and document types. Accurate and prompt typing type. Acquire and promote skills. Contact Phone 845-9544, Mr Wrigley.
Typing done on elite electric
writer No. Theses please Prompt attention.
843-0958 4-5
Experienced, typist will type, will use term papers, theses or dissertation
Electric typeticwriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 812-2811, MaRMankan
These, term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM *Selections*, your choice of style types. Also editing at: www.ibm.com, Kuala Lumpur, 842-695-4759
842-695-3605
LOST
Experienced typist. Overland Park,
Kansas Prompt, accurate work.
Reasonable rate. Phone 381-6424 3-28
Typing done in my home, IBM
Selectric. Prompt, accurate work.
Experienced. Call 841-2556. 3-17
Fast, accurate typing by experienced
typist. Please type Reasonably priced.
Phone 842-2853. 3-29
Lost between Robinson and Watson—green wood hat! We need a hat! Denmark and of great sentimental value. If found, contact Cynthia, 861-197-9
3-15
Lost small, female dog; part pouch with wavy tan hair and white tip on taw, wearing black collar. Call 824-5700 If not home, keeptrying 3-28
Red plastic notebook and grey book by Harask and Fest in Fraser 119 or at the Wheel, last Friday afternoon. Please call 842-6240 for Steve 3-17
Small gray tiger cat on campus
March 5. Answers to 'Lacy Gray'
Sits on shoulder. If you have her,
call 823-923. We miss her. 3-28
PERSONAL
BECAUSE is a laitering service. HasLed:
Call us, we ask about it.
8 F-M 6 A-M 843-9652 1116 Lac
3-08
uprinter
"Busy not myself with this world, for with fire we test the gold, and with gold we test our servants." Baha a 'u' lah 3-16
Keep KU Student Government Mediocer* Vote Birth Party for Joe Landit (Pre) and Mike Scholeher (VP). 3-28
HEL! IU Thomas Jefferson is alive at the University of Virginia, Happy St. Patrick's Day tomorrow. Nance I say you! New Girl Wizard of U. Na
MISCELLANEOUS
BRIDAL, GOWN Sample Sale—Sizes 8-10.12, up to 75%, off Fall and spring fabrics, Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky. 4-20
Had a fender bender cracked auto brakes. Call KAW BODY SHOP 842-2690 or 842-1031 after 6 F.M. for Dick Wickens, all work required, 20 years since location HAW. wr hewker Lawnmen. Call for rates out of town. Lawnmen. Call for rates out of town.
There's nothing unassuasive about our new India prints. They're unique, spice-bounding, and just waiting for the perfect moment to appear. Hodge Pledge, 9th & Max
HELP WANTED
Experienced drummer for rock band
Must be willing to join union. Call
Jeff after 6:43-9334 3-29
Need neat, aggressive part-time time-based. Direct selling at commercial offices and businesses over 20 years. Send application to care of box 165. Daily Danica Kramer.
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Jath & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Wkdays 8.1-20 Sunday 10.3
Parts at a discount
KAT Suzuki
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
634 Mass. 842-6966
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
YOU
5
Thursday, March 16. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Busy Gym Coach Farms
By BILL SCHEELE
Kansas Sports Writer
What instructor at a Kansas university lives on a 262-acre horses, chickens, dogs and cats a bucolic professor from Kansas State University? Wrong. It's Bob Lockwood, University of Kansas.
"I grew up in Lawrence.",
"I learn I loved it and all my life
I would love to do it. I could drop my line in a fish pond
or run down the river to shoot a
paintball."
"I bought this place near McLouth, a 15-minute drive from here, about four years ago. I've been on it for two weeks on two more. There is plenty of timber, pasture and wildlife. It is an ideal situation for me, my dog and our family."
Besides his agricultural activities, Lockwood has duties KA utra menal director, tennis coach and gymnastics coach. In the summer he manages the municipal swimming pool.
HOW DOES he get everything done?
*Sometimes* I *wonder*
Luckwood said, "I work twelve
hours a week and I vacation
because I enjoy what I do
so much. Time really goes
by."
"Sometimes being intramural director interferes with coaching and training," the former also director of the Big Eight gymnastics meet, which will be held in New York.
"The duties of meet director are taking me away from the boys right at the time I should be coming," she said. "I practice quite a bit right now."
Lockwood said that his absence should have little affect on the gymnasts.
"We try to develop in the kids the 'maturity to go through with' that they need, and Loeckard said. "I've found that if a kid needs to be pushed, he will be a medicine athlete. The really fun thing is that we train him to work out on their own."
1986
LOCKWOOD HAS developed his coaching philosophy during nine years at KU.
"A gymnastics coach must be three things, a clinician, a programmer and a strategist," he said.
Bob Lockwood
"First, you must know the aspects of each event through observation. Then make adjustments with a boy's routine and assist him in making adjustments."
Second, you have to organize workout for each type of exercise you want to participate in different events and therefore need different routines.
"Third, you must be a strategic planner. You must prepare your team to meet the peak performance on the day of the meet. You must be sure they are ready."
"FOR EXAMPLE, a couple of years ago K-State came in for a dual meet. Robinson Gym was
packed and the KU band, yell leaders and pompon girls were there.
"It made chills run up and down your spine when the band played 'I'm a Jay, Jay, Jayhawk. The boys were so that they did their routines too quicky and lost points.
"I had to call them together
"I had to call them together
not overtly, we first started
hitting our routines, but it was too
late. We lost by seven tenths of
Lockwood said that this had been an enjoyable year despite KU's 4-5 dual record.
"We had a lot of young athletes who experienced much, but I really enjoyed coaching them. They have improved, and that's what we do."
Looking forward to next year, Lockwood said that KU should have an improved team.
"Our younger athletes, of course, should be improved," he said. If all the top high school masseuses that they would like to come to KU do enroll here, then our program will be in very fine
KU will host K-State in a dual at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Allen Field House.
UCLA's Walton Tabbed AP Player of the Year
NEW YORK (AP)—Sophomore Bill Wallon of UCLA, who looks like Huckleberry Finn and plays like Superman, Wednesday was named college basketball player for the year by the Associated Press.
The red-claired,灯笼-shaped center was given a 3-march over Dwight Lamar, the nation's leading scorer from Iowa State and nationwide voting by sports writers and broadcasters.
Walton dominated the balloting the same way he dominated the opposition this year, leading Bruns to a 2-0 record. Studied Bruins to a 2-6 end.
THE AVERAGE of 21 points and 15 rebounds a game didn't tell the entire story of the 6-foot-11 star.
Others receiving votes were Virginia's Parkhill Doug Collins of Illinois State and Henry Walton's senior teammate.
"I've never seen a player who makes the outlet pass and starts the fast break as well," said UCLA Coach John Wooden, "He
"our opponents hit in the 30 per cent range during the year and Walton is greatly responsible for that. Not only because of the bad blocks, but because the team is always looking for him."
does so many things that don't
do show up in the box score, like
intimidation. How do you
measure that?
WALTON, WHO COMPARES favorably to Bill Russell and Kareem Abdul Jabbar (Lew Alcinder) in their collegiate prime, is deceptive in appearance. He has thin legs and curled hair. Floppy, carrot coated hair puts a pale, frail-looking face.
"I think you have to be a real student of the game to appreciate the way Bill plays, said Caitlin. "We play the playmaker." We are only now beginning to realize how good he is. With Bill back there on defense, the rest of us can afford him to play. We can cheat on our fast break."
He plays with tendonitis in both knees and must undergo physical
therapy each day before he puts on his uniform.
Once a game starts, however,
he seems remarkably healthy.
He has a fine shooting touch from
his right hand, and he tremends
tremendous defender. Perhaps
his most impressive maneuver,
though, is his lead pass on the fast
break. Opposing coaches say he
may be the only other country in
the country.
Walton's sophomoric environment requires the bench and keeps up a constant chatter to himself and opponents, has baffled teammates.
As for statistics, he shot 63 per cent from the field, 70 per cent from the foul line and had a game-high point production of 37 Oregon and 24 rebounds against both Washington and Texas.
Walton, a modest type, shies from publicity.
"I don't like to be singled out as an individual because we don't play as individuals, we play as a team," said Walton.
Champ UCLA To Defend National Title
PRESS UCLA will open its first nine straight sixth national basketball championship Thursday night in the west, while in the East two of the Bruins' leading teams. North Florida will play grudge games.
1. Noranked UCLA will play Weber State in an NCAA Far West regional semifinal game at Provo, Utah. Long Beach State and San Francisco will meet in the regional final set for Saturday.
Second-ranked North Carolina will play South Carolina and third-ranked Penn will play St. Louis. The games came at Mantown, W. Va.
North Carolina missed the NCAA tournament last year when the Tar Heels were beaten by one point in the Atlantic Coast Conference playoffs final by Penn. The team became an independent. Penn was humiliated 90-47 at Villanova in the East Regional
The North Carolina-South Carolina game figures to be one of the most physical of the tournament.
He lost the heavyweight championship to Joe Frazier last year when each received $2.5 million for the fight.
All's 30th birthday was Jan. 17.
"The kids say everyone over 30 was treated very well," I trusted. I don't feel old. I don't feel any different than I did at 20.
"I never say anything about the government. It out of politics. This government has never treated me bad. A couple of times I lost my job. But the government gave me the vote of the Supreme Court."
He referred to the high court's ruling in favor of his objection to military service as a Muslim minister.
Steve Elliott, offensive and defensive signal caller for Kansas City's Oak Park High school last fall, Tuesday signed a Big Eight letter of intent to attend University of Kansas next year.
Oak Park Star Signs Letter To Attend KU
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"I'm going to meet the same person. Nixon did," he said. Now I'm going to give the President a hand.
BILER A NEW ERA
Al, before leaving Wednesday for Tokyo and an April 1 fight with Mac Foster, said, “If I hadn'ttalked as much as I did, I would be a billionaire today. A lot of you can say you can be, but they can be at the wrong time. Now I know when to say certain things.”
For the rematch, expected
ticket numbers are $10,
and I must be paid. The slave
days are over. We want $3 million
each. But I guess we might come
into conflict.
Elliott, quarterback and Suburban Nine football championship team, was named the Kansas City Star's All-Metro first team.
VACATION HOUSEWATCH
LOS ANGELES (AP)—Uhmannamal Ali, who has turned 30, said Wednesday he like 20 and would choose his words more carefully with more timely news that he could revive the last 10 years.
At 6 foot 2 and 205 pounds, Elliott gained more than 900 yards total offense as a sprint- quarterback. He called the defensive signals for Oak Park and averaged six tackles a game.
With bracelet $260
With strap $225
Stainless steel
with strap $198
down a million." Ali also said he had been invited to Red China by the Chinese government to spend about five days there after the Foster fighter. He met the same
Ω OMEGA Electronic Chronometer
Lawrence Security Patrol will check homes, apts, sororities, and fraternities nightly during spring break. Rates $1.00 a day and up. Call 843-5235 between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m.
Ali Says He's Wiser
Marks Jewelers
Del Estele, certified gemologist
817 Mass.
VI 3-4266
AGS
Ryun Expected to Run Mile
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Jim Ryun is expected to run the mile this afternoon in an all-comes track meet in Memorial Stadium. Action will start at 2:30 p.m.; the mile will be the second event.
Greer reported Tuesday. McGill is doing graduate work at K-State.
Events scheduled are the 100,
285 and 440 dashes; the 880 and
1360 dashes; the hardriders, the steeplechars,
the steepelechars, the relay, the high jump, the pole vault, the jump, the hammer, the ladder and the jumper. The meet is intended as a warm-up for KU's first outdoor event in the season April 1 at UCLA.
general jeans
1000 Mass.
We open at noon, 'cause we stay 'till 9:00.
Except Saturday when we open at 9 a.m. and stay 'till 5 p.m.
general jeans
1000 Mass.
Sponsored by the University of Kansas track team; the meet is open to all college athletes and is held on Saturday, standing. Seven area colleges
The discus will be an attractive field event. Karl Salb and Steve Wilhelm, former KU weightmind, possibly will fill the void left by freshmen Rudy Guevara and Jorge Guerrero, prepared early for spring vacation.
Tom McGill, a former Kansas State high jumper in the 7-400 class, has said he will attend the meet, KU assistant Carrove Harve
and universities have been invited.
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SENIOR CLASS MEMBERS
FREE BEER AT THE STABLES,
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6 p.m. - 12 Midnight Sponsored by Senior Class
CLASS CARDS & STUDENT ID's REQUIRED
Sill
K-
000,
date
140
the
us
a
at
Rain
RAIN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Field House Floor Still Uncertain
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
82nd Year, No.108
Friday, March 17, 1972
See Page 3
JEANNA HAYES AND JOE PARKER
Kansan Staff Photo by KIT NETZER
University Commitment Wins Landslide Election
. Allen and Dillon lead party to victory . .
Experience, Numbers Key Factors In Commitment's Strong Showing
By JIM KENDELL
Kansan Staff Writer
Dave Dillon's solid presidential victory came as no surprise to close watchers of the election. The Hutchinson junior had a number of factors working in his favor.
The strength had experience of Dillon's ticket were two of these factors. Dillon's University Commitment won 44 Student Union election in this election, and lost only eight.
The rival KU Student Party, headed by Mohammed Ammed Rauf, Rafsenjan, Iran, senior running for president won only 13 seats, losing 32.
Eleven senators and the former president, vice-president and treasurer of the student body ran with the University commitment. Only two of these senators left.
The traditionally strong fraternity and sorority vote could have been another significant factor in Dillon's election. Its members had a significant small turnout, 22 per cent of the student
body. Dillon is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity.
Dillon claimed that the fraternity and sorority vote was not a factor in the election. The strength of this vote will not be known until a breakdown of the number of students who voted at each poll is released.
Dillon's organization was further strengthened by his campaign manager, Braydon Feldman.
Analysis
junior. Duncan's experience in KU elections was an obvious asset. Duncan has been advisor to the elections committee for two years.
Amin was hampered by a presumably low independent turnout. None of the KUNP candidates had previous experience before Senate and most are not well known.
Dillon said the size of the presidential
Hackney Named Winner In Senior Class Contest
By STEVE REIL Kansan Staff Writer
Voting for senior class officers produced a rift in party solidarity. Two offices were won by members of the "Action Alliance" (A. A.琢) and two were won by the "Unification For Higher Education" (U. H. E.) party.
John Hackney, Wichita, was elected senior class president by a margin of 17 votes over his closest opponent. Stowe was also affiliated with U. H., E. H., HxA with A.
The results show Hackney with 379
Vice-president is Susie Cowden, Kansas City, Mo., who received 618 votes to defeat John Wulf, Morton Grove, ill., with 380 votes also with U. H. E., Wulf with A. A.
The secretary and the treasurer of the senior class are both affiliated with A. A. Pum Henderson, Mission, was elected president of Nancy Anchura, Anamasa, Iowa, of U. H. E.
votes, his 362 and the independent
hawk, Kevin Harris, Roeland Park,
with 169.
See CLASS CONTEST, Page 8
vote shows student confidence in student government. Actually 800 fewer students participate.
This represents a decrease of 21 per cent from last year, even though there were 19 new entrants.
Dillon's 1,854 votes, 48 per cent of the total number of votes, do show that Dillon was a heavy favorite among those who did vote.
Dillon has promised to continue essentially the same policies as his predecessor, David Miller, Eudora senior, who received only 22 per cent of the total vote in 1971.
The passage of the field house referendum came as a surprise, even to David Miller. The fact that about 600 less people voted in the referendum than voted for president indicates the voter's lack of knowledge of the proposal.
Though Chancellor E. Laurence Chambers Jr, said the $32 per cent "Yes" commitment, it is less than commitment to athletes, the margin is less than overwhelming. It might possibly represent no more than the effort to vote on yes on a question rather than no.
Most of the 18 senators who ran for re-election won. Only four lost.
Neither the Birthday Party nor the
Oliver Coalition Independents won any
part.
The Independent Oliver Party did surprisingly well, winning all three seats it filed for. This minority party was led by president of Oliver Hall and a student servant of Oliver Hall and a student servant.
Independents did not fare well in the senate races. Nine independents won in the runoff, including two Republican
Fraternity and sorority affiliation seems to have played a large role in the decision-making process.
The four candidates who won all reside in fraternity or sorority houses. Even though two separate coilations each had a woman with two opponents敌resided in "greek" houses.
Dillon, Referendum Post Top Victories
Rv STEVE RIEI
ROBIN GROOM Kansan Staff Writers
Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior, was elected student body president with 1,854 votes of the 3,969 cast for the office in the two-day campus election that culminated with the announcement of winners early this morning.
Also successful was a referendum to ask the Endowment Association to lend the Athletic Association $80,000 for the installation of an artificial surface on the floor of Allen Field House. The referendum passed by a vote of 2020 to 1243
Despite the use of 19 polling places this year as compared with the six used last year, voter turnout dropped more than 20 per cent.
Dillon and Kathy Allen, Topeka sophomore, his running mate, received 48 votes to Dillon and Kathy Allen, commitment party in a sweep of Senate seats, winning both seats. Only 8 members cast ballots.
ALLEN AND DILLON attributed their victory to a positive campaign and Allen, before the vote court was known, said she had been told the apparently large turnout at the polls.
"I hope this election shows something about apathy at KU," she said.
Last year 4,704 students or 28 per cent of the student body voted for president. This compares with 3,835 or 22 per cent of the student body during a 21 per cent drop in voter input.
One losing candidate, Mike Schoenleer, vice-presidential candidate for the Birthday Party, said "We weren't surprised by the way the elections turned out," he added. "I can utilize means of communication and I more to communicate with the students."
Election Turnout Low
Other candidates were not so pleased. Ricky Dwyer, Joplin, Moe, senior, said "I'm going to give him a chance to go着 to have another year to operate. I'm glad that the person who spent most money got the election - it's only right. I felt like it was just a day off for picking up the literature."
JOEL GREEN, Rapid City, S. D., sophomore, was sure of his defeat. He left for Rapid City earlier this week but left in September to commence the defeat of his Aardvark party:
1 'acknowledge the tacit support of the overwelling majority of students who
Mohammed Amin, Rafsanjen, Iran,
senior, said he was dissatisfied with the
job.
He said he had expected stronger support from the residence halls where much of his campaign effort had been spent.
The results of the election, he said, were questionable. He indicated he would check into election procedure. Amin said he was ready for further comment until this had been done.
"The one thing we tried to emphasize in this campaign is that the Senate is not worthless and this vote shows it," Dillon said.
HE SAID the students turned out much better than he had expected and that the results were satisfactory.
Nixon Outlines Anti-Busing Plan
Nixon told a nationwide TV-radio audience Thursday night his program would "focus our efforts where they really belong—on better education for all of our children rather than on more busing for some of our children."
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon today sends Congress details of a plan to block further court-render busing of pupils from public schools for $2.5 billion into subpar schools
Nixon ordered the Justice Department to "intervene in selected cases where the lower courts have gone beyond the Court's requirements in ordering busing."
He said a constitutional amendment to ban bans deserved consideration but was not the immediate solution because of the need it required to enact such an amendment.
THE PRESIDENT called Democratic and Republican leaders of Congress to an early morning White House conference to review his recommendations. White House officials will discuss the authoritions talk about the constitutionality of Nixon's proposals with newsmen who
"What we need now is not just speaking out against more buing but action to stop it. Above all, we need to stop it in the right way—in a way that will provide better education for every child in America in a desegregated school system."
regularly cover the Supreme Court
NIXON SAID action was urgently needed because of some recent decisions by lower federal courts that, he said, "have gone too far, in some cases beyond the requirements laid down by the Supreme Court."
Declaring that he spoke for "the great majority of Americans, black and white," Nixon reaffirmed his off-task opposition to segregation by declaring racial balance in schools. He added:
Nixon acted two days after Floridians, in a straw vote with no legal effect, voted by a 3-1 margin against busing and after George C. Wallace, campaigning against busing, won the Florida Democratic primary with 43 per cent of the vote.
The President unveiled his key proposal in these words:
"First, I shall propose legislation that
HE LEFT ALL details for today's special message. White House sources said it would be wrong to assume that the Senate approved a bill already approved by the House—that would stay court busing orders until all appeals are exhausted. The Senate approved, then rejected, a proposal to move the Senate to order to order busing to end segregation.
would call an immediate hait to all new basins ordering by federal courts—a
In his live TV-radio message, Nixon omitted most details of his proposed Ideal Plan.
He said the legislation would concentrate federal school-aid funds in education.
"That means," he said, "directing over $2.5 billion in the next year mainly toward improving the education of children from poor families."
He also called for "an educational bill of rights for Mexican-Americans, Puerto Rican, Indians and others who start their work as teachers." He made it clear that he would make certain that they, too, will have
equal opportunity."
IN URGING LEGISLATION rather than a constitutional amendment to deal with the busing question, Nixon argued in approach" he has a fatal flaw - it takes too long.
Nixon said the question of constitutional amendment 'deserves a thorough consideration by the Congress on its merits.'
Declaring "basing is a bad means to a good end," *Nixon* argued it was dangerous nonsense" to contend that oppression to busing meant one is antlack.
Although he acknowledged that race prejudice underlies some opposition to busing, he said "millions of concerned parents . . . oppose busing not because they are desegregation but because they are for better education for their children."
Nixon said he probably would not satisfy those on either extreme of the national debate on busing but said: "I believe that the majority of Americans of all races want more busing stopped and better education started."
"We are the types of candidates that can deal with the problems coming up," Delia told CNN.
Kathy Allen said the sweep of the Commitment party candidates in the
He said he was surprised the referendum passed, because he didn't think students would want to fund such a long-plan.
Presidential Finals
Dillon - Allen 1854
Amiti - McGowan 1072
Landoll - Schoenleber 480
Dyer - Arloby 180
Green - Payne 134
election came as a surprise. She attribuited
to the Committee candidates to
hard work in campaigning.
Alen said she would do everything in her power to implement her party's platform
SCHOENLEBER, vice-presidential candidate of the Birthday Party, said that Dillon had 50 people on his ticket, compared to the seven candidates on the
Birthday Party State, that Dillon had people in every living group and help from a lot of influential people like Tuck Duncan. (Duncan is Dillon's campaign chairman and also adviser to the Student Senate Elections Committee.)
Schoenleber said Dillon and Commitment has paid $1,000.
"There were probably quite a few Dillon supporters on the election committee, said Schoenleber "That's the way politics pre."
David G. Miller, outgoing student body president, said last night that he thought the referendum passed because it was true that there were very limited facilities for recreation and that a lot of students would appreciate having more.
He said he thought the funding proposal was designed so that a great number of students over a long period of time would be footing the bill and at the same time there would be no extensions of the East Memorial Stadium construction of the East Memorial Stadium. I love it.
The proposal is conditioned on the athletic departments raising the necessary $160,000 for the artificial surface on the floor.
★ ★ ★
Senate Election Results
Following is the list of candidates who competed in elections Wednesday and Thursday for the Student Senate. The numeral after each school designation indicates how many senate seats to be occupied in each area; the member's names are printed in bold face type.
Betty Adams Comm. 772
Betsy Brown Comm. 813
David Miller Comm. 809
David Dilmer Comm. 811
Cameron James Comm. 811
Jamie Hawkins Comm. 811
Lee Schwartz Comm. 811
Lewis Kidd Comm. 811
Bett Williams Ind. 130
Bill McDermott Ind. 130
Billy Reed Ind. 130
Bonnie Jo Beck R.U.S.P. 157
Benjamin P. Clement R.U.S.P. 164
Frank L. Chaucer R.U.S.P. 163
Frank S. Hancock R.U.S.P. 163
Jamie Blockmum R.U.S.P. 164
Neil Jackson R.U.S.P. 164
Neil Burdidge Comm. 150
Danny Rife 150
Jim McDowell K.I.S.P. 150
James E. Duckett 150
Lymnae A. Freedewald Ind. 150
Gary A. Freedewald Birth. 150
Gary Weber Birth. 150
Michael H. Neill 150
CENTENNIAL—4
Rick McLaughlin Comm. 87
Ken Rubickshaw Comm. 79
Revin J White K.U.S.P. 64
Terrence J White K.U.S.P. 54
Mike Failor K.U.S.P. 54
Annie Failor K.U.S.P. 54
Robert Green K.U.S.P. 49
Stephen Bryant K.U.S.P. 48
Eliza Hamm K.U.S.P. 44
Honda Nutting Ind. 40
Evan Nutting Ind. 40
Robert Hume Ind. 26
Olivia Cady Ind. 26
Mike Eaumann Ind. 18
*VERMER* NORTH COLLEGE—3 Comm. 149
NORTH COLLEGE-3
Bankier Mert Comm. 189
Brad Dillon Comm. 188
William Foster Comm. 187
See SENATE RESULTS, Page 8
SUMMER GOLD HALL
DIRECTORY
LUNCH STATION MUSIC
PARKING AND FASHION TEENS
PARKING AND FASHION TWO-WOMEN
PARKING AND FASHION TOTAL
COMPUTATION CENTER OFFICE
COMPUTATION OFFICE
COMPUTATION OFFICE
COMPUTATION OFFICE
PROGRAM BOOK
PROGRAM BOOK
PROGRAM BOOK
STORE BOOK
STORE BOOK
STORE BOOK
Kansas Photo by JAMES EATON
Ballot Returns Require Patience
. . . Schmitt, Scott, Dillon wait . . .
2
Friday, March 17, 1972
University Daily Kansan
People . . .
... Places . . .
... Things
People:
GOV. GEORGE C. WALLACE, victor in the Florida primary, moves into Wisconsin next week for the first of 12, and perhaps 13, more primaries in his quest for the Democratic presidential nomination. He is counting most heavily on seven key states which have a total of 623 votes at the nominating convention in Miami Beach.
GOV. ROBERT DOCKING concluded his three-stop personal campaign for extension of the state property tax in Pittsburgh, Kan., with a verbal counterattack at the two Republicans who have denounced his efforts for the tax lid. In Topeka, Docking also indicated he might decide soon on his political future. He said he has not decided what office he will seek or if he will continue in political
HAROLD S. GENEEN, president of International Telephone & Telegraph Corp., testified Thursday that his company's commitment to help underwrite the cost of the Republican National Convention was "a damned good business investment."
Places:
WASHINGTON - Brewing threats of a renewed West Coast dock strike, the pay board trimmed a 20.9 per cent longshoremen's raise by about one-fourth. There was no immediate comment from Harry Bridges, president of the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union, who had repeatedly promised to shut down Pacific ports if the board trimmed so much as a penny from
SAIGON - South Vietnam forces reported they had destroyed another base camp in their drive into eastern Cambodia. In South Vietnam, soldiers were bombing a base camp.
Things:
President Nixon has set May 22 as the startling date for his VISIT TO MOSCOW for his second summit talk with Communist leaders in Moscow.
The United States put six demands to the Vietnamese Communists for liberalizing PRIORITY OF WAR CONDITIONS, but received no specific response. The Communists insisted the prisoners are being humanely treated. The North Vietnamese added, if the United States "responds seriously" to the Communist peace plan, American prisoners could return home before Easter.
A bill requiring Kansas drivers to have an EYE EXAMINATION AND RULES OF THE-ROAD TEST every four years was one of two measures迎由 Gov. Robert Dockling. He said his objection required four earned color photos of the drivers on the new driver's licenses.
Local Doctors Say Court Decision Will Not Change Abortion Policies
By ANITA KNOPP Kansan Staff Writer
Little change in abortion activities is expected in Lawrence by local hospitals, counseling agencies and doctors following a decision Monday by federal court that the state liberalized the 1970 abortion law.
The three panel judge struck down two provisions of the law as required by the provision allowed only Kansas hospitals approved by the Joint Commission of Accreditation of Nursing Abortions. Under the revision, any hospital satisfying all other legal requirements may contract with a hospital.
The second ruling struck down the requirement for the approval of three doctors for an abortion because it is not necessary, the court said.
Watkins Memorial Hospital and Lawrence Memorial Hospital will not be affected by the first provision. Both hospitals were approved by the JCAH to perform abortions before the revision.
CHUCK DENNISTON, administrator at Lawrence Hospital, said that no real change was expected in the hospital's policy. Dennison said the board had not received requests for health department and until it had the hospital reorganized under a established under the prior law. He said he understood that hospitals could choose whether they wanted to perform
"Without checking with the hospital's lawyer to discuss the legal limits of the ruling, I wouldn't know how this would affect our policy." Dennismil said, who would conjecture that the physician still require the consent of three physicians for all abortions.
Dr. Raymond Schwegler
SWHWELER SAID the obstetricians and gynecologists on staff had the necessary equipment at Lawrence Memorial, where cannot afford to duplicate the equipment, Schweller said.
director of health services at a county hospital had been certified by the JCAH since its origin, it was not equipped for operations of this type.
Dr. Henery Buck, a gynecologist on the staff of Lawrence Memorial who acts as a consultant to Watkins, said he expected very little change in abortion availability in
Buck said it was not difficult now to obtain an abortion in this country. "I would notice a change, but the law does not allow that," Buck said he agreed with the
revisions would make it easier. Buck said he agreed with the court decision.
"I think the courts will tend to liberalize the abortion laws even more," he said.
"THE DECISION to allow one doctor instead of three to decide who should receive the costume here," Buck said. "There is not a charge now for consultation from a doctor whose possible change in cost is if public health centers are allowed to perform abortions as in New York."
Jamestears, assistant dean of jomestedes does abortion abortion, would be most beneficial for the small community hospital in the area.
Chris Avery, one of three counselors for Abortion Referral at the Women's Center, said the change should make the general
"People might start accepting abortion as normal," Avery said. "But the law says it is law." Lawrence are no hard to make she said, and the requirement for
While Lawrence is not expecting problems with the revision, there is speculation that legislative opponents of the bill will attempt to tighten up the law in the final session Monday.
Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, in an interview Tuesday said the House Ways and Means Comptroller's meeting Sunday session to take care of some of the supplemental legislation. Vogel said if there were time, discussion on the law revisions might arise.
Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence also said there was a great possibility that discussion would arise over the court's action.
three physicians was never a problem.
A bill sponsored last week by Rep Frank McMaster, R-Wichita, considered a strong
supporter of strict abortion laws, is the only vehicle opponents would have to rewrite the law
MCMASTER, IN A telephone interview, said there was a possibility that he would try to bring up the revisions Monday.
"I haven't read the court's decision," she said. "I must check the tenor and content of the opinion of the court's decision. It would be rank injustice to have a court decide on or will not take action Monday." It is possible that other groups might be involved.
"With only one day left, it will be a very remote possibility that there will be a change in the law. If the leadership of the House and Senate is the importance of rewriting the law, then a bill could maneuver through legislative channels to override Mr. Day's session," McMaster said.
A recent telephone survey conducted by the Commission on the Commission indicated a wide range of questionnaires and responsibility of the University to establish a child care center for university personnel and students.
The students polled almost unanimously that all women should be protected to birth information and information would not object to a woman being selected to fill the recently vacant chair-chancellor for academic affair.
The survey was conducted to determine the mood of students regarding issues of special concerns in their courses and the students at the University of Kansas. Names were randomly selected from the student directory of these students listing a Law school telephone number and address.
A total of 156 men and 128 women were polled in the survey from Feb. 28 to March 6.
Campus Survey Indicates Split on KU Child Care
Population Growth Controls Recommended by Commission
The report, issued Thursday,
stirred dissent even among the
24-member commission which
includes four Roman Catholic.
WASHINGTON (AP)—A presidential commission, in a dramatic series of records and interviews, is growing population, advocates an easing of laws restricting education and fertility control.
In the first part of its final report to the President and the Secretary General, Commission of Population Growth and the American Future detailed reasons why America should not stop the growth of population.
TOWARD THAT end it now
"Public and private health service costs cost of contraception of preterm delivery and first-year pediatric care and of voluntary medical treatment of infertility. The total cost could be $8 billion a year, a $1 billion increase over all expenditures, public and private."
States adopt laws which will permit minors to receive contraceptive and prophylactic information and services.
—All restrictions on access to voluntary contraceptive sterilization be eliminated.
Vegetarians Defy American Diet
recommends:
Whether it is fried chicken, sirloin steak, chuck roast or lamb, meat on the dinner table is an American tradition. But to some, the thought of eating meat was a grateful as the thought of not eating.
Sally McGee. Kansas City, Mo. senior who is an instructor of a nutrition class, said she was a confirmed vegetarian.
By JERRY VOKRACKA Kancan Staff Weiter
"I NEVER noticed any ill effects and I felt really good. I did lose 20 pounds, but you can be a man still and仍 will be fat," she said.
"There are three different groups of vegetarians M-Gee eat meats mostly vegetables and eats only animal products. A acto- animal product is used to his diet, and a lacto- animal addicts eggs to his diet."
Mckee said she was a lacto-
vegetarian.
Meegan said she had been a vegetarian for three years. But she said there was more to being vegetarian than just not eating meat.
Reilly said she didn't think she really better for psychological health. She read much about vegetarianism, and was usually skeptical about the truth.
"A PERSON can be a vegetarian and eat just totally these so-called vegetarian cookbooks, they will use white sugar and flour and everything else. That's not the way I eat. You can be an unhealthy vegetarian. You must do some work and still continue to eat candy bars and sugar products, you must be doing it for some reason than your health, or you must totally ignorant." McGee said.
McGee said she became interested in vegetarianism when she was enrolled in a yoga class.
"I had a bad temper and someone told me if I didn't eat it I would be so mad," he more passive, so I tried it. But I also got interested in yoga and felt better when I stopped eating it. I would get rid of my temper," he said.
Pugles Reille, a junior at the University of San Francisco, said she became a vegetarian because she wanted to learn with the results of a meatless diet.
PAT **WILDS.** Atchison
wildlife. It has a micro-
biotic. Wilds said a micr-
was different from a vegetarian
because he ate 70 per cent grains
"I started reading about it and discovered that most myogas are vegetarians and they advocate vegetarianism. I just decided to eat a whole bunch of meat to able cut me out of my diet. But when I stopped eating meat, I felt so good I decided to keep on doing it, and find out why I felt so good. I started researching about vegetarianism," she said.
"Whether it is true or not or hard to say. But it is a wide spread belief. This is one of the reasons that the area are so passive." McGee said.
"Trying to describe what it is
"When I ate meat, I felt like I always had a lump in my stomach that wasn't there when I stopped eating meat," said
REILLEY SAID "Obviously, there would be less to digest and that he had a lighter feeling about himself.
not like eating meat is really impossible because you can't describe it in objective terms. But I think people who have stopped eating meat can describe it among themselves." McGee
the problem anymore," Wilds said.
"I had really bad allergies, and medical science didn't do anything for them. They gave me crayons and glue to eat meat. I did not have
"When you sit down and eat a boast with potatoes, you have a bounty of flavor. When you quit eating meat, you feel lighter and bouncier." Wilda
MeeGee said that vegetarianian's not just a way of eating, but a philosophy. She said her family learned to respect that
"My family first thought I was nuts, and my father thought I was a communist. But they didn't believe me. My younger brother who is 17, and he has become a vegetarian also. My parents are totally adapted to it now, and they never force me to eat. But don't believe in," McGee said.
Wilds said he had everything except turkey and the stuffings. He substituted rice for the turkey.
AT THANKSGIVING DINNER
while everybody is eating turkey
with all that goes with it. McCee
said she only eats vegetables.
"My parents first thought I was
The Lawrence Women's Political Caucus, formally organized Thursday night, took its first formal session in the letter to the federal legislature demanding passage of the Equal Rights Act, which is to be voted on today.
Women's Caucus Wants Equal Voice in Politics
To call for the enlistment of women of all political persuasions, economic levels, age groups and racial and ethnic backgrounds to work for wom-
nagers in priorities and humanist goals.
The goal of the caucus is to represent a group of women committed to gaining an equal voice and place in government. The women said they wanted to get good men and women elected to city offices, the city commission office and the city legislature.
Nancy Harper, 1414 Prospect,
proposed the organization, appointed herself chairman.
By GAIL PFEIFFER Kansan Staff Writer
To urge reform of existing policies of political parties which have excluded women;
Opposition arose from a number of women who belong to the League, including members of the Members of the League are not allowed to publicly endorse a
To recruit and rally behind candidates who support these priorities and goals:
OTHER GOALS are:
The group will seek the support of other women's groups in Lawrence. By doing this, similar concerns will be directed toward the same goal.
And to create political awareness through educational endeavors.
kind of wird. But then they saw the change that came about in me. Now they think it is all kind of good. My mom tried it for a while, but I was not better. But my dad couldn't without meat on the table, but she knows the importance of not eating meat now. Now they eat less meat than they used to. Not healthy, but, it is healthy." Wilds said.
Members of the caucus agreed upon the following recommendations for the group to support:
The establishment of a task force to improve the image of women and eliminate the role of gendered content presented in teaching materials.
WILDS SAID it was just an American custom to have a roast beef started breeding cattle to get more tender meat, and now 'they are starting breeding cattle.'
The establishment and maintenance of adequate, non-compulsory child care centers in local communities.
Further debate on this issue was postponed until the next meeting. March 28.
Rights Amendment.
Bellies said not having meat on the table was sometimes an indication that you weren't providing right for your family.
The appointment and election of qualified women to policymaking positions.
The support of an individual's right to determine his personal reproductive and sexual life
THE FUNDING of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women by the governor.
The passage of the Equal
"It takes a lot of land to graze cattle that could be used for raising crops. There won't be enough meat in the future, and we need to cut down on meat, and live on a meatless diet." McGee said.
McGee said that Frances "will be a leader for a small Planet," points out that in the future people won't be able to afford meat, especially beef.
MCGEE SAID there were other books about vegetarians that instructed parents how to raise their children vegetarianly.
"SOME VEGETARIANS could go into a restaurant and order a grilled cheese sandwich. But I couldn't do that. They would make it out of white bread, it tastes like chicken and they use American cheese. While that is vegetarianism, to me it is unhealthy," McGee said.
"After nursing, instead of "Aid the child cows milk, you substitute soy milk and condition it to be a vegetarian." McGee said.
"In Lawrence, there is no place to eat. You can go to a restaurant and get a salad, but it isicky, and is usually a chef's salad. What they do is pick off the meat off the vegetable platter, who are vegetarians, eat cheese pizza, but I don't particularly care for it," McGee said.
MeeGee said she wouldn't eat meadow vegetables because they are not all the previews. She said she preferred frozen vegetables when fresh ones are available.
Dining out presents a unique problem to those committed to vegetarianism.
McGee said she used to live in San Francisco where there were restaurants who catered only to vegetarians.
Guru Maharaj
"Finding fresh vegetables is the hardest part." McGee said.
"People get more DDT from eating meat than they do vegetables. What happens is that DDT will get on the grass, and the DDT will kill it and more a hummer concentrate it into eating more of it," she said.
She said the feat of insecticide on fresh vegetables didn't worry her.
His disciple mahatma fakiranandji will be at 1204 Oread, SAT.
MARCH 25th, 7:00 p.m. For program and initiation into knowledge. DIVINE LIGHT MISSION
1223 Delaware St.
Phone (913) 842-8927
MCGE SAID that if a person became a correct vegetarian, his body would be more sensitive to drugs and alcohol.
abortion services in states with
abortion restrictions, be specific to
abortion be specifically included
in comprehensive health
insurance benefits, both public
and private.
THE COMMISSION, headed by John D. Rockefeller III, was established by Congress in March, 1970.
—That "with the admonition that abortion not be considered a primary means of fertility restricts restricting abortion by being long-term statute and such abortions should be performed on request by duly licensed physician in other conditions of birth."
It recommends "federal, state and local governments make funds available to support
"You're also not destroying animals needlessly," said Reilley.
Mgr, James T. M. McHugh, director of the Catholic Church in Philadelphia for Life, said by advocating abortion the report "is naive in its assumptions, punitive in its treatment, and be treated with benign neglect."
Campus Bulletin
Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering: 9 a.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union
Ekgishk Welfare : 10:30 a.m., Cimco Room
Social Welfare : 10:30 a.m., Groom Room
B.School : no. Alam, Aceleve B.
Psychia-Ecologist: no. Alamev, Aceleve C.
MPA Student: noon, Aceleve D.
Social Welfare: noon, Cottonwood Room.
Bahal: noon, Meadowlark Room.
Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineers.
Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineers
Luncheon: noon, Kansas Room.
Museum of Natural History: noon, Curry
Luncheon: noon. Kansas Room
Museum of Natural History: noon. Curry
Bath: noon.
Room.
English Department: 12:30 p.m. English
Room:
Humanities Committee: 12:30 p.m.
Attn.:
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark
Roosevelt University
Students: 12:45 p.m. Room 229
National Committee 12:30 p.m.
Alcove A
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark
Latin American Studies: 2 p.m.
Centennial Room.
Social Welfare Faculty: 2 n.m. Pine
Room:
German Department: 4:30 p.m.
Regional Room
tennial Room
Social Welfare Faculty: 2 p.m., Pine Road
Robinson.
Gymnastics Meet: K.U-Kansas State:
7:30 p.m., Robinson Gymnastium.
The report said a recent national study revealed 14 per cent of 15-year-olds and up to 44 per cent of 19-year-olds reported being sexually abused that only 20 per cent of these girls used contraception regularly.
K.U. Folk Dance Club: 7 p.m., 173 Robinson
Gymnastics Meet: K.U.-Kansas State:
7:30 p.m. ROOM 1257 OLYMPUSMUSEUM
SATURDAY
CAR Board Meeting: 10 a.m., Pine Room.
Children of American Revolution: noon.
MEDICATE
CAR Board Meeting: 1 a.m., Pine Room.
Children of American Revolution: noon,
Centennial Room.
**Beginning:** 12:30 p.m.
Children of American Revolution: 1 p.m.
Pine Room.
Carillon Rectal: 3 p.m.
Carillon Film Series: 3 p.m., Spooner
Lectures.
The study calls for a "joining of public and private forces to assure that adequate child-care care be available to all families."
8:00 p.m.
Municipal Auditorium
-K.C., Mo.
It called for research efforts to develop contraceptives and other methods of fertility control "that are safe and free of any adverse reactions; effective, acceptable, and available accessable commercially rather than medically; and inexpensive, easy to use."
Tickets $4, $5, $6 on sale at KIEF'S
THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND DR. JOHN plus ALEX TAYLOR
Good Mood Productions and Good Karma Productions
Saturday, March 25
The survey indicated unanimous support for the Affirmative Action Program as outlined by the university, which states that the university, along with all other federal contractors can't discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, nationality, promotions, and tenure. Survey responses concerning a KU day care center were almost equally among yes, no, and undecided.
The major difference between the responses of men and women was over a question as to the need for classes in women's studies.
present
They play and sing nine of their songs and one outsider, and present a very roxy sound indeed. Hall a dozen guitars on stage, the music is joyous dedication of the songs.
The slow easyyaping tenor of their song, the obvious subject to practice, playing and singing, and the fine recording all add up to the sound of their song.
Tarkio: Brewer & Shipley (Kama Sura KBS2 2024)
Mike Brewer and Tom Shipley are establishing themselves as composers of folk music for country tunes, and this album is a movement to their success.
Practically every song in the album is very good, but 'One Toke Over The Line,' sort of a country gospel tune has the obvious implication and the litle tune are excellent.
The album is delight, and
is intended to bring the
singer to be a fresh
adventure of the country rock composing
and performing field.
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Friday, March 17, 1972
3
University Daily Kansan
P80
Kansas Photo by HAVE WOOD
Simulated Cockpit of Donated Beechcraft Plane Ideas from jet transport design useful to small planes
Jet Design Used On Small Planes
The theory that the performance and stability of small planes can be increased by borrowing techniques from jet transport design has been applied to a Cessna Cardinal, according to the chairman, chairman of the department of aerospace engineering.
Kohlman said that the Cardinals' construction would be completed in early April.
Jet aircraft are designed for maximum speed, and take off and landing characteristics are second in priority of construction. Small planes are produced with take off and landing qualities of importance, with cruise airplane problems handled later.
Kohlman and Jan Rockam,
professor at JBI, thought the
use of USB in smaller wing span plus high lift devices, a small aircraft could be
available to meet the plane's
performance while maintaining
the plane's original take-off and
landing.
The smaller wing may make handling dangerous at stall speed, Kohman said. He has modified the Cardinal with high lift devices known as Kruger flaps, which are trailing edge flaps, similar to those used in jet airliner design. The flaps are used on a jet plane
Spoilers, used to control the airplane's roll and rate of descent while in flight, have also been added to the Cardinal. Although aliens are currently being used to research plane they will eventually be replaced by a full span trailing edge, Kohlim said.
The high lift devices are operated by a conventional electromagnetic system used by aircraft, aircraft manufacturers, and the helicopter plane was constructed of the same materials as the original Cardinals, so that additional cost of production might be kept at a
KU Sabbatical Policy Revisions Proposed by University Council
About three years ago, Kohman and Koshan presented the results of their modification to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA subsequently provided financial support for the project.
"When we are uncertain as to production cost, we have remained conservative," said Kohlman.
to slow its speed in preparation for landing and take off.
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
A report that suggests faculty be financially obligated to return for one year instead of two after graduation is discussed Thursday by the University Council and sent to the Chancellor. The council recommends revision of the criteria for determining faculty receive sabbaticals.
The report differs from existing policy in the establishment of secondary criteria, if the primary criteria are not present or the management of the applicants is equal, the immediacy of opportunity for the candidate, length of service and change in responsibility are all to be given equal weight in the recipients of sabbaticals.
Chalmers told Kansas now had a paperwork sabbatical member takes the role of member takes the sabbatical leave, he said, the remaining instructors, in effect, pay for it by the members' duties. He said the University was thus faced with the problem of an increased cost.
A FUNDED PROGRAM,
temporary replacements to
hire and enhance the possibility
that more faculty members could
The report recommended that all sabbatical leave applications be reviewed by the Committee on Promotion and Tenure. The primary criteria for promotion are the application and the scholarly or artistic accomplishment of the work.
Chancellor E L Laurence Chalmers Jr. said "so be it to all proposals that could be imputed with our recommendations that cannot be carried out by the University will receive appropriate channels, Chalmers said.
More than 25 student research assistants have been involved in the program, said Kohman Tiwari. They are also students in science degrees and one master of engineering degree have been awarded to students who have demonstrated leadership skills.
The recommendations were presented in a report by the Planning and Resources Committee of the Council.
THE COMMITTEE suggested that the type of leave requested, a full year at half pay or a half year salary, be granted by granting leaves. Once a faculty member has applied for a particular type of leave, the report may be made in the nature of the leave cannot be altered except by reapplication.
The present University policy on sabbatical leaves, governed by regulations of the Board of Regents of the University, that the number of leaves granted each year must not be more than the total number of faculty members.
Chalmers said these suggestions could not be implemented unilaterally by KU, but he would push for a raise in the per cent quota in conjunction with a funded sabbatical program.
The report called for reduction of the post-leave service agreement from two years to one year and for the regulations of most universities in the country. It also recommended raising the 4 per cent ceiling to accommodate a greater per cent of students applying for sabbatical leaves.
The "alimmy clause" requires an instructor to remain at the University for at least two semesters. If you need to do this necessitates compensation of part of the compensation given to the faculty member while on leave. The repayment is based proportionally to the twoyear period not served.
Opportunity for rebuttal of any negative communication with the department chairman or dean must be made available to the candidate, the
Because faculty members may not know about positions and inances by the suggested Nov. 1, they are encouraged to contact that only 75 per cent of the
awards he made from applications received by Nov. 1. The remainder would be selected and applications submitted by Feb.
THE REPORT said unsuccessful applicants could reapply for sabbatical, but would be given preferential treatment.
If the number of applications
Chalmers Says Problems Face Field House Issue
Despite the outcome of the vote in the referendum, many of the two problems must be overcome, according to bachelor E. E. Laurence
In a discussion at a meeting of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers Wednesday night, problems were getting the needed money and finding other methods of dealing with the problem.
Chairmiers aid the favored the sea of putting artificial surface basketball goals, because it allows a more efficient use of space.
Chalmers called Wade Stinson a "tough taskmaster," who had to be held accountable for the department did not overestend and that there were no concerns.
When questioned about the worth of the student government, Chalmer's said, "Student government is not mickey mouse riding on the allocation of $40,000 isn't exactly playing games."
The chancellor went on to say that this was the best year, in terms of interaction, that he has had with the student, government.
Chalmers pointed out it would take only $10 per year per person to place KU 8th in the nation in support. KU now ranks 26th.
On the subject of the university budget, Chalmers said it was time that the basis for support of universities be a "zero-based budget," how many dollars do you need to do and how many dollars do you to do.
Chalmers said he thought the departure was because of diminishing. He said some of the departures were caused by the University's position on the rule.
He pointed out that the University was operating on the same funds as last year with 500 faculty and 14 fewer faculty members.
meeting all the necessary criteria exceeds the number of available sabbaticals, according to the report, applicants who never received a previous sabbatical should be given preference.
"People expect us to instruct and not research," he said. In the next few years instructors will be emphasized. Chalmers们说
Henry Shenk, professor of physical education and chairman of the Calendar Committee, presented 1973-74 calendar, first submitted 1973-74 calendar, first submitted
The calendar adopted by the Council provides for two additional holidays, Columbus Day and Easter Monday.
At the Feb. 17 meeting, dispute
days for enrollment in a spring
semester. The revised calendar
provider provides a three-day
period period.
NEITHER OF THE REVISED calendars provided for a "stop day" between the last day of classes and the beginning of the examination period. Several students in the spring semester was altered to give students three days to prepare for finals. The fall semester schedule could not be arranged to include an in-person seminar or the office will investigate alterations in the exam schedule.
The difficulties in drawing up the calendar stemmed from guidelines imposed by the educators (COCAO) and teachers (COCAO). COCAO sought to make the beginning and end of classes and holiday periods more accessible. The calendar committee found it difficult to follow the guidelines and to comply with the wishes of students and classified employees.
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"It has been a tremendous external effect," said Burchard, "and stories have been able to use the program for direct application of theories taught in
The first test flight of the
Early April, said Kohlman. He
said he would fly the test vehicle
to Lawrence from its production
center.
The plane was donated to the research project by Cessna Aircraft. A light Beechcraft aircraft given by Beech Aircraft, Inc.
Correction On Marathon
The KUOK 63-hour live
coverage of the match in
April 7-9. It was incorrectly
reported in Thursday's Kansan
that the marathon would be
held on Saturday.
Stanley Schaake, who had been trying since Nov. 1 to have turned to him $11,400 which he left in a brown paper package in the United States Union Bookstore finally met with success Tuesday.
$11,400 Package Recovered After 3 Month Court Battle
When the money was found in the bookstore last November, it was immediately confiscated by the authorities for identification by the owner.
According to Hans Peterson, Schaake's attorney, Schaake returned to the bookstore within one-half hour after he had left the money there. He correctly identified the amount of money in Schaake's account determinations of the bills, and the type and shape of the package
Country Atty Mike Ewell, who had placed the money in a safe deposit box at the State Bank, wouldn't give it to Schake, even though he was the owner of the bank.
Peterson introduced a motion for summary judgment at a
hearing Tuesday in Douglass County District Court, saying that there was no disputed issue of any material fact to be tried.
The motion was sustained by Judge Frank Gray, who agreed that the money was since the money was found were time enough for anyone having a loan.
Peterson said he thought that the county attorney's office was using its capacity as custodian of
the money as a means of holding the money long enough to determine how Schaake had acquired it.
Judge Gray ruled that the attorney demanded an explanation of the source of the money because it had seized the money only in connection with the case, ruled that the money be returned to Schaeka as soon as a court order was issued.
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4
Friday, March 17, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Carless Campus Cops
A representative of the Traffic and Security office wants to play the statistics game. Statistically, the University is in the minority of assists by a community of 20,000 to 20,000 he says.
In a previous editorial on the subject of campus assaults it was suggested Traffic and Security redirect its priorities—from a parking enforcement mania to protection for those who must travel on campus at night.
Unwilling to express public concern for the problem, Traffic and Security thinks "the fear of assaults is greater than the actual number of assaults." The plain voice of women refuse to walk on campus alone at night does not bother the campus police.
Traffic and Security seems unable to find time to do a statistical breakdown of their own by time and place of the report, but will add my own statistical inferences.
They list 21 assaults reported from July
1 through January. This number is probably a small portion of the actual assaults that were never reported for one reason or another. Fear and or embarrassment probably keep many from reporting assaults.
By their nature, assault and rape are warm weather crimes. Statistically then, it would be safe to assume the majority of the rapes came not in a seven month period but in the few warm months between July and November. For two of the months in this statistical period school was not even in session.
Finally, it is strained logic comparing this campus with a town of 20,000 to 25,000. The social elements are radically different. It follows that the crime statistics can hardly be compared with any credibility.
—Thomas E. Slaughter
Readers Respond Dwyer, Hamlet, Cops...
To the Editor:
An open letter to Stevie Emerson:
I read with interest the letter to the editor in which you suggested that I (Dickie Dewer) attempt to win the ballot for student body president. You mentioned that you "couldn't understand why students would vote for the ballot for student body government would ever consent to having his name placed on the ballot." In the affairs of student government would ever consent to having his name placed on the ballot (Office) admittedly, my term in the Student Senate, my participation in the University Council and my directing the Interfaternity Council are not criteria for seeking such a position as secretary as well as information the IFC is a "self-funding" service organization at University College. Because I must be prepared to present my student body officers and other student bureaucrats, some of which you just might happen to be not a qualification either.
The rationale behind my proposals to reduce the number of student senators so that their constituents might be induced to take action, and to make it relevant to student government. This might endanger our fine tradition of calling a referendum every time a major issue arises. I would not concern themselves with the essential components of student rights and the restoration of proper funding of the University of Kansas, before irreducible debt is done, is not important either.
I irrespective of my views, you can rest assured that I will find that students are more likely to name on the ballot. Why should I waste my time, sani monetary compensation, on giving students an opportunity to learn what 80 per cent of the student body believes to be "unmitigated bullshit" I haven't found the answer for you. "repreensible deed," but at least I know that he isn't out in front of Strong handing out egalitarian policies, and elected to fantasized positions of importance within the existing bureaucracy PULL YOUR BACK
Dickie Dwyer Joplin, Mo. senior
The Arts
To the Editor:
It is astounding the amount of talent that goes unnoticed on this campus. There was a School of Music and Dance, but no one am pushing it to say there were forty people in attendance. The music was not all heavy music; some were selections from the 16th century up to a very modern Alan Dorsey number. The musicians were not all professional, so we got of your seat with a 140 decibel wall of discordant polyphonics, as is the case in a number of other musical forms. They were professionals, accomplished in their vocation. They all more than superbly command of their instrument.
It was refreshing to hear clear, clean, resonating tones, meticulous precision well articulated and affective movements. They are a far cry from the cacophonous, antiphonal, monotonous collaboration of grating noise and resonance, as "music" today. I grant, you this is not representative of all musical groups today, but the number it does far preponderates in passing thought, or challenge, if you desire to deem it so, I would like to hear any typical modern-day band drummer拌栗 NOT mean blasting so loud that
tonal distortion ensues), and articulate ability with one of the trumpeters last night.
I am sure there are those who vehemently oppose my evaluation of modern music. But I do not of history there have always been people who could make noise and deafening sounds of insublurious music, but not the ones venerated as gifted. Up until now man has sought that which is esthetic and pleasing. We all have naturally misconstrued to mean seeing how dissonant and distorted you can amplify a naturally natural sound. It is me. I am my sincere hope that all music will not degenerate to the level of infantile vociferation and hideous discord. The only performance we had was the minuscule audience. *Larry Larsery*,
Hamlet
To the Editor:
The "Hamlet" review was a paradox in itself. One savage line followed one sweet sentence, cuthot mixed with gingerbread, terminating in a milk-tokt compromise that bordered on horribility at night "Hamlet" was not a shoddy unpolished performance.
Gordon Lightfoot comes to K.U. singing through his nose and telling poor-taste jokes. In all his earthly glamour he commands a smile, a headband and the "Kansan." The next review describes "Hamlet" as if it were a McDonald's hamburger: "a big chunk to bite off and chew... the sickness of it is difficult... succeeding performances easier to swallow."
University actors are supposedly learning a trade while saying something to audiences. In the plane, the Kansan does not need to be a sounding board for prescribing one's own prejudices.
Campus Cops
is the method to your madness?
—Gordon L. Ratzlaff,
Lawrence grad student
On Tuesday, March 14, Traffice and security staged another well-planned operation. While new officers in Naismith Dr. and Sunnyside Ave., between Crescent Rd. and Illinois St., the campus police department issued parking tickets to automobiles in distant zones. Why didn't they post officers near the barricades? The direct, many vehicles sat waiting as much as five ten minutes until they had a turn to get through the single lane of the barricades. Once past the congestion of one barricaded area, students often had to wait equally as long at another location, scattered all along these streets.
Before students complained, "I have no traffic and Security squadrals." They based their opinion on the increased rise of crime on campus, saying that the time would be spent trying to prevent could be spent trying to prevent these crimes. Traffic and Security tried to get around this by saying that most of the crimes were committed by students. This really puzzles me because Traffic and Security officers carry commission cards from the Lawrence Police Department so they can give them jurisdiction in the city and county. Now, due to the neglection of yet another duty, we must observe that perhaps we also have a Security Squadr nor a Traffic Squadr.
To the Editor:
The total usefulness of this group of men is quite unequal. If you would like to hear a stand from Traffic or security on these
Ronald Nault.
LaGrange, Ill., sophomore
LIL' GEOGE
"Oh! Ah got a bran' new pair of roller skates ..."
BUSING ISSUE
Garry Wills
We Are All Silly
If they didn't help fill campaign purses, said Rep. Chelf Holfeld, D-Calf, "the power of lobbyists would be practically nil."
When I took my sons to see Fellini's The Clowns, they were puzzered by the stylized and creatively inventive ten-year-old laughed with recognition at one scene, and said of the clown, "He's imitating
My son, of course, had got things backwards. Stan and Ilana (Laurel and Hardy) were very funny in a clowning. But very worthy descendants, and great healers of the generation gap. The early children were equally successful in my front room when the children and their friends watch in the afternoon to down to adults after a dinner party.
He was, of course, a wooful bewildered ditherer, being a white-face clown of French tradition, the square-jawed kind that dressed like a peacock and a silly authoritarianism
There is something archetypal and
endlessly suggestive about
timorousness exactly
counterpointed. Ollie is the
would-be, he can,
and his preferences
as threadbare as the wide worn
pants strained so far around his backside. W. C. Fields had the same ineffectual pompey, the flour court-language, shabby-dressed with cloths, the modest way of indicating urgency to be impressive.
But Bill Fields did not have a menial in constant attendance, on whom to try out his grand career. But he found a key humanizing touch of pathos in Ollie—a true chevalier hidden under the loutish mck-chivalry, thin and tawdry as trapped in Nuzhu Panda's incongruous body. Just to see him sweep off his hat as a lady goes by, or w斑dver ever so exquisitely dressed, Bill escorts a person with dumpy flourishes into a room—to watch this is to see the human spirit spring up from the dust becoming its own caricature.
But if Ollie, the bully, has a Secret grandeur, Stan, the downrodden, has a mastery, for tough and opportunistic use, and opportunistic completion air and the surface innocence, he has a constant awareness of Number One. Some forget that Charlie Chapin has the airborne awareness of Number One. Some forget that Charlie Chapin has the airborne awareness of Number One.
started out as a frantic and
outcast scrambler after the main
chance. Stan somehow managed,
what even Charlie didn't, to keep
him from being filled gleam of
calculation in his hapless eyes
and victim's gaze.
Given these two mansiled
chamber-music ensemble of
lofty tunes was made possible-
endless light variations on
them.
Buffoon Authority gets Sane
Idiocy into an impasse, then
turns with genuine unjust outrage
of the fine mess you've gotten
us into!"
Best of all, bully and bullied find themselves equally on the run, and must team up against an unpredictable stupidity of a pursuer. Worse.
We are all silly, and on the run,
harried and indefensible idiots
whom no one in his right mind can hate. Yet hate you do—till we look in the cinema-a mirror and see
him crying, laughing, crying,
dumb, cheeky and shy—and then,
for a moment, forgive ourselves
with laughter.
The lobbiesist is a major force in the U. S. government. As an assistant to an interest group or business, he also is an accepted fixture along
Dopey Sidekick diffidently suggests the obvious, which bails in Nincompoop Expertise.
Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate
AP News Backgrounder
Lobbyists Pull Funds Strings
By G. C. THELEN Jr.
Associated Press Writer
For Harold O. Lovre, the American Trucking Association lobbies it, $4,500 for the 1970 Dodge pickup truck Ford, the House Republican leader. In this case, said Love, a former South Dakota coworker was personal. We came down to Congress together. He a friend."
WASHINGTON (AP) — Countless strings entwine Washingtonobberswith the morecompellingthan campaignmoney,whichthe officialgeneralusesand elected officials generally use.
The question now being raised in Senate Judiciary Committee hearings is whether a connection between the alleged pledge and a subsequent Justice Department decision to abandon an antitrust cases against ITT.
For Dita Bear, celebrated
washington lobbyst of
international trade,
the Telegraph Corp. the sum was
$400,000 reportedly pledged by a
ITT subsidiary toward financing
the republican National
Convention
"Do you or don't you accept what purports to be a campaign cost?" "Is it a fee or a be a fee for a speech plus expenses? "Holling asked. "What expenses?"
Where, asks Rep. Richard Bolling, D-Mo., does the legislator draw the line in dealing with lobbyists?
the corridors of power, and generally an honorable one. Yet nagging questions remain about him; assigning dollars at his command.
bribery. We are talking about influence that is almost subliminal. You don't know you are being influenced."
There are citizens today who associate lobbies with bribes, high living and nefarious ways. In fact, all but a handful of the several thousand Washington lobbies are regarded by the media as honest, hardworking proponents of a cause or interest.
"We are not talking about
"Lobbying is a much misunderstood process.
sometimes abused and often carrying bad connotations," said Rep. Charles E. Bennett, D-Fla., former chairman of a House Select Committee on Ethics. "Lobbying is nonetheless a vital component in daily interchange between the people and their government.
"Put simply, it is the prescriptive group which governs before governmental bodies, and it is not, of course, for any thing that is other than good
values lobbyists for their expertise.
lobbyist-educators, as
these lawyers,
lawyers, businessmen,
public relations
men, former
government
officials and former
and congressmen.
Rep. Olin E. Teague, D-Tex.
Some 1,200 are registered with Congress. They represent the interests of unions and corporations of local governments in associations, causes as various as world peace and population control.
James J. Kilpatrick
Committee Views Right to Work
WASHINGTON—It is part of the nature of news, sad to say, that some of the most important hearings on Capitol Hill attract the attention of reporters. The point: The hearings being conducted by Congressman Frank Thompson Jr., of New York, are among公众 employees
Thompson's special subcommittee is taking a chair in the high-stakes game. Upwards of 10,000 members are employed by state, county and municipal governments. If they can be drawn into the same board, they can act as their owners that exists in private employment, the unions will have a bonanza—and both taxpayers and non-taxpayers will have a new ballgame.
Roughly one-third of these
objection, that public and private
public employees are not same;
the role of the employer is
quite different, and the rights of
public employees are different.
As Thompson's hearings continued this week, congressman Sasaki brought around two witnesses from Michigan to speak against one of the key provisions in the several pending legislation. A former investigator for the City of Detroit; Mrs. Carol Applegate wrote a letter to Blanc Community High School. Both of them are old-fashioned defenders of a person's right to pay duty.
Mrs. Applegate had been teaching for 18 years before the
T. W. SMITH
Kilpatrick today argues against compulsory union membership for public employees, "olivary union employees, as much good sense in public sector as in the private sector."
Thompson's subcommittee is exploring the subject generally, with a view to recommending its designation the field. The basic National Labor Relations Act now requires union members can join unions, of course, but the unions' powers, privileges and restraints are subject largely to the own idea as simply to remove the old exclusion, and thus to treat public unions under the same law that apply to all the rest.
public employees already are organized. The American Federation of State, County and City workers is now in its 38th year; it numbers 525,000 members and is growing at the rate of a thousand new members a week. The American Federation of Teachers, representing federal workers, is of comparable size. The American Federation of Teachers and the National School Board work in a battle for the classrooms. Six of every 10 new jobs are in public employment. Not even the teachers offer so great a position for union organization.
Grand Blank school board, in June of 1969, ordered her dismissal. There was no need for the qualifications or skill. Her offence she falsely refused, as a matter of principle, to pay due to a teachers' union that had won them money. She helped help from the National Right To Work Legal Foundation, she sued for reinstatement. On January 21, the judge of Ingham County said the she had been wrongly fired.
Other free and independent teachers around the country have not been so fortunate. Court decisions are mixed, and state law requires that spokenmen take the familiar view that "free riders" are not to be tolerated. Unions thrive on compassion and insist that tribute to freedom should be embraced in a bargaining unit. Defenders of the right to work, on the other hand, insist with equal vehemence that public employees upon membership or non-membership in a labor union.
Whatever the merits of the union shop may be in a local factory, the compulsory device has no place in a school, a firehouse or an army. Voluntary unionism, by contrast, makes as much good sense in public employment as in the private sector. If Thompson's subcommittee is determined to bring the federal government into compliance with the principal principle of personal freedom ought to be preserved.
Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year each building and hall is designated as a "University Outreach Site." Students who are enrolled in all classes without regard to color, or national origin, ordinances imposed by the university may attend any event held there. University officials must accept and permit attendance.
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Friday, March 17, 1972
反
in er no er no s a to To to To Men ed eyed men ene vurt rate to to nit. nit. oy oeyeed the ice st,st, n's to entent
University Daily Kansan
Grads Face Tight Job Market
By MARSHA LIBEER
Kanean Staff Writer
Some recent graduates from the School of Education at the University of Kansas are working as secretaries, farmers, waitresses, waiters and bar tenders, according to the latest Annual Report published by the KU Educational Placement Bureau.
School of Education graduates,
as well as graduates from all other RU professional schools,
are among the highest eight in market in recent years.
Many college graduates have been correlated to accept jobs in fields totally unrelated to their major areas of study.
Herold Regier, placement director for the School of Education, said, "Last September there were still 200 graduates looking for teaching in the fall. September won't be any better."
THE EDUCATION SCHOOL OF EDUCATION placement bureau reported placements of 469 of the school's seniors found teaching positions.
A comparison of the number of experienced KU graduates placed in Kansas Schools were placed for the 1969-1970 school year only 167 were placed for the 1970-1971 term. A total of 410 experienced KU graduates were placed in teaching positions in Kansas and 1971-1971 school year, but only 301 were placed for the 1971-1972 period.
Mildred Young, placement director for the School of Business, reported that 16 per cent of the 1970-1971 business school undergraduates had found employment. She said that 17 per cent had reported they were undecided about their future, 7 per cent were 'fulfilling' a military requirement 15 per cent had entered graduate school and 45 per cent had not reported their occupations.
WILLIAM LUCAS, associate dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, gave an op-eration for graduates in architecture.
He said that most of the 1971
Art Museum to Display Lithographs of Hartley
The first exhibition of the lithographs of Marsden Hartley, American painter of the generation of American artists will be shown March 18-April 16 at the Spooner Museum of Art.
Hartley's first lithographs were done in Berlin in 1923, and he is well known. According to Charles Eldridge, director of the museum, these prints reflect the influence of Cezanne and other French artists.
"Although Hartley's interest in Cozanne's art is well-known," she discussed in reference to his works from the middle of the decade onward, while he was a student at the master's home in Aix-en-Provençal the lithographs of 1823 gave evidence of an earlier interest in cozanne.
are the basis for his present fame.
A spokesman for the museum said recently that a special catalog prepared for the show would be available.
"There are a couple that aren't doing much of anything, but that's by choice." he said.
architecture graduates were working in their chosen field.
Also a writer. Hartley's poems were collected and published in his first book, "Lady of the Arts," he also wrote a volume of essays on the arts, "Art's," published in 1921.
Lucas said that the approximately 80 programmers would not have to look as hard for jobs as architecture graduates had had before.
Hartley's last stay abroad, in his spare time, is at Alps Airport-Partenkern-Eldridge said the works Hartley produced of the Alpine landscape
ELMO LINDQUIST
school graduate in
Engineering, said that 70 per
percent of the questionnaires送
to 1971 engineer school graduate
Of the 85 questionnaires returned, 36 reported that 1971 engineering graduates had found a colleague who was Twelve graduates reported they entered graduate school, 18 entered military service, seven 18 entered college, ten ceptanes, ten became foreign students and two reported they were either undecided or had work in other occupations.
Lindquist estimated that there would be an approximate 15 per cent increase in job opportunities this year's School of Engineering.
He said that many of those graduates employed in social work were working in the Kansas City and Topeka areas.
He said that graduates without master's degrees found considerable difficulty when trying and jobs in areas of social work.
The 1971 graduating class for the School of Social Welfare was the first class to be graduated from that school.
These prints were Harley's last works in lithography. Eldridge said, but their impact was felt in the artist's works on his return to his home state. He painted six paintings of M. Katidan.
Hugh Cotton, associate dean for school leadership, believed job outlook for pharmacy graduates was very encouraging, despite the lack of demand.
Cotton said that each of the 55 pharmacy school graduates of 1971 were able to find jobs in retail pharmacy.
Forrest Swail, assistant dean of the school, estimated that between 15 at a rate of 20 per cent of last year's students and returned for graduate school.
"They had to search a little harder, but they all have jobs," he said.
Hartley spent the rest of his life in Maine, Eldridge said, and the series of paintings which resulted
DANA LEIBENDOOD.
dana did the school's assistant dean of the school during the said that there were 227 graduates from the school during
A total of 129 of the 227 graduates reported they had
accepted positions in areas of journalism. The priest school has a few students having found employment in journalism. Both years most of them attended college.
DAVE MITCHELL, lawrence student and placement director at the university said that graduating law students were not exempt from the groups of college graduates meeting seeking professional employment.
Martin Dickinson, dean of the School of Law, said that in 1969 many of the law students could not afford to attend school the situation had changed.
Dickinson said that although law students had to do more job hunting now, the market for law was still sufficiently open.
He said this was partially due to the increasing number of students entering law schools.
In 1968, there were 285 students enrolled in the KU School of Law. In 1971, the figure jumped to 470, and in 1972 it has reached 500.
Axelrad said the long range goal of the organization was to create enough interest that a new museum be built. The immediate goal is to raise money to help Spooner Art Museum increase its collection. Because of lack of space, and increasing curators, the museum is unable to purchase new works, she said.
Students Organize to Buy Art Works for Spooner
An organization to acquire art and information from the new museum building is being planned. Nadye Axelrad, Hinsale, lil. graduate student, and Mary Gilliam, of the school.
Axelrad said she hoped that nominal entry fees for the exhibition, and other funds can be used to fundships for organization members.
Axelrad said that since the organization would be paying for new art work, members would have a voice in the pieces chosen.
"It will be a good chance for the University as a whole to see what the students are doing," she said.
Other plans include an outdoor exhibition, for students to display and attempt to sell their work, Axelad said.
Axelrad said that the organization would bring speakers and flight staff for KKM's tour purposes. She gave group tours for members would be planned to visit major museums throughout the world. The group also circulated on campus this week to determine the amount of time needed for each organization. Axelrad said that those she had received so far indicated a great deal of interest in the survey are available at Spooner.
The organization will be sponsored by Jeanne Stump, instructor in art history.
Engineering Exposition to Be Held April 6, 7 and 9 in Learned Hall
The time of the first meeting will be announced after spring break.
**ANSWER**
Engineering Ex position will be held April 6, 7 and in Learned Hall and will no longer have Relay as it has in the past.
By CLYDE LOBB
Kansan Staff Writer
GEM Theater
Baldwin 7:30
Admission $1.00
Fri.-Sat., Sun.
6:00-9:30
THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN
Prof Helps Predict Tornadoes
By DONNA DALE
Kansan Staff Writer
"There's a storm coming up, a whopper in the vernacular of the peasantry." —Professor Marvel in "The Wizard of Oz."
Tues. Wed. Thurs.
March 21-22-23
RABBIT RUN R
If a tornado hit lawrence, it is doubtful that it would sweep anyone to the Land of Oz, but an extensive damage and loss of life.
Joe R. Eagleman, associate professor of meteorology and Nels Shirer, Lawrence senior, his undergraduate research assistant have studied prediction and damage caused by tornadoes.
THIS METHOD did not consider the wind factor as a
Forecasting is done by calculating the amount of humidity and the instability of air and determining the presence of a cold front.
Tornadoes occur when unstable warm, humid air is near the ground and colder air is dry aioł. A funnel forms in front of a cold front as the cold air pushes the funnel to a cold air out of the way. said Shirter
Engineers, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Engineering Learning Association and the Human Factors class electrical engineering
As yet, Knox is not certain just what steps will be taken to balance the budget, but some research system will have to be trimmed.
variable. Eagleman incorporated wind direction into this calculation.
Lawrence Educator Calls Legislators Inconsistent
The "hue and cry" for quality education within Kansas is the emphasis on financial provisions, according to Lawrence. Lawrence's Lawrence superintendent of schools
"At a time when our state legislators say they want better education, it is contradictory to the case that we should it. It is inconsistent," Knox said.
"Our district was fortunate and its valuation increased for the last two years," Knox said.
The defeat of House bill 716, passed on Tuesday, taxable sources to be distributed where the students actually are. For example, said Knox recently.
He also said funding schools through property taxes failed to provide equal educational opportunities for all students.
New building projects and
business investment by $23 million but this year, this sort of revenue increase will be minimal, said
"Poor districts do not have property that is valued highly, and the taxes from this aren't maintained in wealthier districts." Krugman
Knox said teacher salaries were likely to suffer because of the lack of effort, instead of the usual merit incentive.霜冻 is frozen at last year's rate.
This theory of combining winning when presented with has proven to be more beneficial in predicting tornadoes compared to past simulations on current data and be incorporated into the present winnowing strategy.
In 1971 Kansas allocated $10.2 million less for public education than most school districts in Kansas felt this cut in funds and cost.
"Our costs for operation will increase with inflation. Some phase or phases of our program must be cut in order to avoid a deficit." Knox
The awards banquet will be held on Friday, September 17. The guest speaker will be Victor A. Koelzer, head of the National Water Commission.
According to Knox, a law provides revenue for school employee children. After the Sunflower Ammunition Plant was shut down, the school district had lost many employees, though few of those leaves left.
If a person is warned of a tornado, certain precautions to take include country, it is best to move perpendicularly to the tornado, said Shirer. This is the quickest way to get out of the tornado's path.
Knox thought the revenue increases and would allow her to network, though he thought the cost of living increases could still make cutting the business out.
A TORNADO cannot be identified on radar. It must be identified by an observer. If a person thinks he has sighted a tornado, he may call or television station. The station will get in touch with the proper authorities. It is important to report funnels, even if they are small, because thunderstorms funnels. Eagleman said.
defense budget, he said. Also, there was a station in lawrence Residents had to depend on Topeka or Kansas City for their defense budget.
The sheriff's department, the highway patrol and volunteers help to spot tornadoes. When one is sighted, the Lawrence and University sounding systems are used. A series of four short blasts caused by a pause is repeated from three to five minutes.
A storm shelter is the best protection, and second, when a building's cellar facilities are not available, a small room, such as a closet or bathroom on the floor of the house. An approach of the tornado or in the middle of the house is the safest place to be.
A SMALL ROOM is better than a large one because the ceiling is smaller and safer to walk in, walls. Shirer said. Also, precaution should be taken when visiting campus, on campus, most buildings, because of their size, are safe. The main consideration is flying around campus, corridors would be safer because of danger from glass in the window
"The warning systems in Douglas County aren't very adequate," said Eagleman.
THE HIGHEST OCCURRENCE of tornadoes seems to be in the northeast and south central areas of the state. Since these areas are more likely to have a high rate, likely to be reported. Oklahoma has the highest rate of tornadoes per square mile, Sherir said.
REPARATION
This is probably due to the civil
In recent years, Lawrence citizens have reported clouds which did not touch down, last spring and in 1967. In 1964, a storm destroyed Lawrence, but turned northward before it reached the city.
In Eaglemans' research, it was found that frame houses with deep roofs and stronger joints were better to withstand the ugh winds.
transportation.
The exposition will officially open at noon Friday, April 9, with the crowning of the queen of the academy by the engineering students March 27 and 28 from a list of five students. On Saturday, April 30, over the awards banquet April 9.
RE:LENT
His research, which has been compiled in a report, "Thunder, Tornadoes and Damage to Buildings," has been submitted to the Department of Health, Medicine and Welfare and is being considered for publication by the University Press of Kansas.
Lee Knap, Easton senior, said the year "was a time the position was was" engineering and engineers are in step with the ways the world is changing. We are the demand society places upon them. This year's "We've come a way, be a lady."
Tickets for the awards banquet are $2.25 and may be obtained at any department office.
The five finalists were selected Sunday in the Kansas Union by faculty judges. Ten girls were interviewed individually by the judges in the Centennial room on these, five were selected
DAILY DURING LEN
DANFORTH CHAPEL
12:30 to 1:00 PM
The five selected were: Jane Burnside, Garden City, sophomore; Paulette Guipre, Westminster, Col., freshman; Marcia Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Junior; Kathy Roche, sophomore, and sophomore, and Susan Stably, S束 Bend, Ind, freshman.
Vigil
The Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers is focusing their display on the future. Their latest communications for public
On April 7, from noon to 9 p.m. and on April 8, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., displays from different departments and student materials from the School of Engineering will be on view in Learned.
The project will provide low-income housing for the elderly in a 120-unit seven story building, Duncum said.
REFLECTION ON SELF
RENEWAL OF LIFE
RE PENTAGRAM, FOR INDIVIDUALS
RE ORDERING VALUES
EGUMENICAL.
He said the majority of the units were one-bedroom efficiency units. Duncum there would be six two-bedroom
Project to House Elderly To Be Constructed Soon
Babcock Place, a low-income housing project for the elderly of Washington's stagees. Hugh Duncan, executive director of the housing authority of North Carolina.
Duncum said they were hoping to award the bid to B. B Andersen Construction Co. of Topeka, the low bidder. He said the bid would be awarded and the first part of the deal during the first part of April.
Babcock Place was designed for elderly, handicapped people, Duncum said.
The project would be located at the corner of 17th and Massachusetts streets, close to Dillon Plaza, Dumcun said.
"There will be income limits," Duncum said, "but they are not official."
He estimated the limit for a couple would be $4,500 and the limit for a single person would be $3,900. So that these were just estimates.
The American Society of Civil Engineers is preparing a display showing a chronological model of the history of civil engineering.
The University of Kansas
Rocky Mountain
showing the amateur radio in its
service role. They will feature
voice communication
and recording equipment.
Motorcycle Racing
Duncum said the project would take about one year to complete.
Other student organizations which are preparing displays are Theta Tau, Tau Beta Pi, Eta Kappa Nu, Society of Mechanical
The building itself will be an L-shaped complex facing both the upper and lower floors of the floor would be nonliving space—a lobby, office and maintenance
units for special cases where two people had to live in separate rooms.
Fly your own jet!
FLY NAVY
(COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY) CLASS OF
Clip and Mail To;
NAME
Clip and Mail To;
U. S. Navy Recruiting Station
2420 Broadway
Kansas City, Mo. 64108
STREET___
CITY___
Lawrence Security Patrol will check homes, apts, sororities,and fraternities nightly during spring break.
VACATION HOUSEWATCH
Rates $1.00 a day and up.
Call 843-5235 between
McDonald's
901 W. 23rd
9 a.m. and 9 p.m.
McDonald's
Get your
Shamrock
Shake for only $15¢$
March 10 thru 19
McDonald's Shamrock Shake
d's
BEGINNING OF THE NEW YEAR WITH A FIRST BOOT AND SHOES.
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.
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
6
Friday, March 17, 1972
University Daily Kansam
1983
David Kessler
Runs 100 for fun.
Women Go To Regional
The University of Kansas women's gymnastics team will travel to South Dakota State and be in 18 for a regional tournament
Patricia Ruhl, coach of the women's squad, said the team would be shooting for first place and that they were at least finish in the ten three.
The women's team has been defeated only once this year, by Grandview College, which will be a tournament in South Dakota.
KU will send 10 women to the regional tournament. They are Joanne Smith, all-around; Sue DeLandry, right; Beam; Barbie Murrow, floor exercise; Cindy Price, vaulting and uneven parallel bars; Janice Baker, unenew parallel bars; Bakeen Taylor, unenew parallel bars; Maier, uneven parallel bars; Liz Phillips, floor exercise; Penny Pyle, balance beam; Becky Robinson, vaulting; and Patsy Robinson, floor exercise and vaulting.
Walk-On Sprinter Gets His Kick; Gymnasts Host KSU Rvun Wins Mile in Informal Meet
The top three teams in the tournament will qualify for the national tournament.
By BILL SCHEELE Kansan Sports Writer
Nyum Knyon won the mile, and he scored 137 points in a record in the high jump jumps of 41% Thursday in "in just for fun" all-comma's trace meet 'eat at' them.
David Kessler, Paola freshman, was one of the comers. He entered the meet "just for kicks" and finished fourth and last in the 10-year班 in 11.4. McMullen met Edwards of KCU in won 9.5.
Kessler was going to enter the triple jump, he said later, but decided not to when he found out the beginning of the landing pit was 41 feet from the jumping floor. He can only triple jump 40 feet.
Kessler, whose training diet includes "Bud and hamburgers," plans to continue his career this spring at the City's Swome Park, he said.
Ryun, who has not lost at Memorial Stadium since his sophomore year in high school, clocked a 41.15, easily beating
former Kansas Stater Dave Peterson, who finished second in 4.19.3. Ryun ran a $8.5 on his last quarter.
RYUUNS NEXT meet will be
RYUUNS NEXT meet will be
Saturday Champions at Los Angeles,
Champions at Los Angeles,
March 4, Ryuun was clocked in
Most of the 300 fans exited after seeing Rory make his return performance at KU. Only about 50 were to watch the rest of the meet.
Schur needed a record performance to defend the ball. Schur jumped a mile McGill. McGill also jumped 6 feet 10%, but McGill had two misses to win.
"I changed my approach from a straight one to a curved one," explained Sehr. "It seemed to help me, so I will continue using it."
Schur lined up behind a goal post in KU's north end zone, circled around it to the west and downward, seemingly awkward angle before
FORMER KU shot put great Karl Salb won the discus with a toss of 175 feet 3 inches.
clearing the wavering stick in his "Fosbury Flon" fashion.
KU coach Bob Timmons scheduled the meet to help prepare his team for a first game against UCLA at Los Angeles.
"I think the meet helped our squad," said Timmons. "I think any kind of competition is better to compete outside for one thing."
"UCLA is the defending national champion in track, and they have a very strong team again this season. On paper there are many reasons."
"Of course, track meets are not contested on paper. If our boys are up for the meet, we could surprise them."
"It will be a very interesting, high-quality meet. I know that the boys will enjoy the trip."
The meet was an informal and loosely conducted affair. The K-Staters said they came "just for a workout."
Bill Kehmeier of KSU entered four events—the 440-yard dash.
440-yard relay, 440-yard intermediate hurdles and 120- yard high hurdles.
**Sheet Activities**
100 dash—1. Emmett Edwards, KU. 9.3; 2.
Delvin Williams, KU. 9.7; 3. Greg Van
daver, KU. 10.2.
200 dash. Mark Lutk, KSU 3.9; Jin Lee,
KSU 4.1; Duncan Sullivan, KSU 4.1;
Dashiadore 1.4; Mike Leus, KSU 8.8;
Kevin Shulian, KSU 4.5; Tj Martin, KSU
5.2; Jill Witmeyer, KSU 3.9; Lutz
8.4.
860 run -1, Jim Graham, KSU, 2.0(1), 2
Joseph B. McGowan, KSU, 2.0(2), 2
Kiara L. Miljun-Kiron, ok KU, 1.1(5), 2
Javee G. Moore, ok KU, 1.1(5), 2
Kiara L. Miljun-Kiron
Stephiepeakle, J. Allon Cullen, KU 9; 4.4/2
Kent McDonald, KU 9; 4.5/0 water jump;
440 relay I. Tom Scavaron, Lutz
Hampton, I. Williams, ILL 4; 2.5 KSU
GLI 2; 3. IIORRA, IL 4
KUSI, 32; 5.2, knee, KUSI, 4.1, Val Scherfberg ex KUSI, 6.2, knee, KUME, 4.3, Kemeler KUSI, 6.5,
Triple jump -1, Mike Kull, KU-41, 81;
Jerome Jones KU, 47(1), Kiwaya Orrantz, 81;
José Hernandez KU, 47(1), Kiwaya Orrantz,
120 high hurdles—1. Vandaver, KU, 14.0
2. Kehmieier, KSU, 14.8
440 intermediate hurdles — 1. Humphrey
High jump- 1, Harry Schur. KU, 6/10½.
(Breaks average of 6·1 by John Iwuchi in 1983.) 2, May McGill. KU, 6/14·3½.
(Breaks average of 5·6 by Skiel, KU, and Randy Smith. KU, 6·4).
KC, 64.
Pole vault-1, BILL Hatcher, KU, 15-8; 2.
Don Marris, KSU, 15-0; 3. John Hardwick
KSU, 15-0; 4. Sid Mead, KSU, 15-0
Pole vault: 1B. Bill Hatcher, KU, 154; 2K. Jeff Goss, KU, 154;
3K. Nick Jenkins, KU, 154; 4K. Died Mush, KU, 140;
156; 157; 158; 159; 160; 161; 162; 163; 164; 165; 166;
167; 168; 169; 170; 171; 172; 173; 174; 175; 176; 177;
178; 179; 180; 181; 182; 183; 184; 185; 186; 187; 188;
Dryfax, KU, 125; 4K. Shane Schay, KU, 125; 4K.
Dicus-1, Kari, Salb. ex-KU, 175-3; 2 Geary King, KU, 139-1; 3 Gery Palmer, KU, 132-3; 4 Marc Harris, KU, 106-0
KANSAS
25
TRAIN
Emmett Edwards Lunges for Tape Ahead of Delyin Williams in 100
Greg Vandaveer, right, runs third; David Kessler, left, finishes fourth with a grin
The University of Kansas baseball team will open its 1972 season Saturday in Topeka with a doubleheader against Washburn University. Coach Floyd Temple is banking on solid pitching and improved defense to start his victory on the right foot with a victory.
Baseball Season to Open
Temple, with his youngest team in 19 years, will have only three lettermen in the starting lineup. One of them, Bob Wolf, will be on the mound. At first base will be Steve Corder, who will last season, and Jerry Evans, a 2nd hitter, will patrol right field.
Rookies slated to start are Bill Glover at second base, George Hankins at short stop, Robert Ohn in left field and Chadd Renn in center. Catching will be either second baseman or newcomer Dick Bradley.
Temple said that Washburn was a well coached team.
Glass, Johnston and Bradley are junior college transfers, and he was the first time at KU after two years as quarterback on the Jayhawk football team Ohm is a homomorph, did not play last season.
Wolf will be the Jayhawk starter at pitcher in the first game. Tempel plans to go with a 3-0 starter in both games. Both are veteranSenior righthanders and may form the nucleus of Temple's staff. Stiegemeyer was 3-last year in the 2014 ERA; Wolf was 1-5 with 3.54.
They generally have, "a representative team," and the team has a letter back and that means an experienced team. They'll have an office door.
Temple agreed that nexexperience could be a major actor in the squaud's success and help him stage his lineup was feasible.
"I'm going to play the people I think are best at each position," he said. "they'll either play up or someone we'll beat them out."
The KU offense will emphasize speed and base running this year, he said.
But the aspect of the 1972 Jayhawks that please Temple most is their improved fielding ability.
After Saturday's contests, which begin at 1:30 p.m. at Washburn's Ichaob Field, the Jayhawks return to Lawrence Monday for another twinbill with the St. Louis Saints, southwafar who was 3:38 with a 4:40 ERA in 1971 and Mason Ranson (1:14, 3:00) will get the call for KU in
"Those boys out there have them, they're aggressive; they're not afraid to go get that ball. We look much better there than we than they."
"I'm pleased with our progress defensively," he said. "I know our infail is improved. There's no question about that.
these games.
Wednesday Temple's squad will play their third doubleheader in a row when they host Kansas State Teachers College.
Soccer Scheduled For Spring Break
The University of Kansas soccer team faces a tough four-game spring vacation schedule after an absence of absence of its top scorer.
Darlan, who holds every ranking record in KU, suffered a knee injury against the internationalistas last Sunday. Roskam said he did not know whether Darlan would be back for the games during the vacation.
Emporia. Wolf and Stiegemeier will return to the mound for those games.
"It all hinges on the availability of having Guy Darlan play. The team depends on him to win, but it's bulk of our work," Rosak said. "Rosak is."
Starting times for both doubleheaders is 1:30 p.m.
Jan Rosakam, coach of the team, said it might be a difficult task for the team to improve on the skills. The aid of inside Guy Darlan.
The Team will meet Kansas State State Manhattan and then return Sunday to Lawrence to play Feld, an amateur team. The Team will travel to Ottawa to play Ottawah University. The following day KU
Boyke Gaffar, team captain, said he was not sure who would be playing in the games, because the club did not believe they would be home for vacation.
Gaffar plans to use an A and a B team to play against the other three vacation. The B team will play against K-State and the A team will play against the other three teams.
will take the field against Atlas, another amateur team, in Lawrence.
KANSA5 CITY (AP) —Topranked Eau Clair, Wis. blew an 11-point lead and trailed for nine minutes of the second quarter. The team conquered ninth-seeded Augustana, III. 77-70, Thursday night in the NAIA basketball champions in Municipal Auditorium.
The University of Kansas
gymnastics team tackled the
season at 7:30 tonight in Allen
Field House against a strong
opponent.
Richard Dorsey's 27 points, in the second half, led, second-seeded F. Austin to a 72-65 victory. Then Calif., in the night's opener
Favored Team Wins in NAIA
The Jayhawks have been over the past year and upset the Wiltshire, who have one of the strongest teams in the Big Eight this year. KU coach Bob Eighn
"If we hit all our routines, we can score in the low 150," said Lockwood. "K-State's highest score this year has been about 15S, so they know they have to perform well in all events to be us."
Western Washington faced Garden-Werb, N. C., and third-seeded Kentucky State met St. Louis in later quarter final games.
The 3,000 Eau Claire faithful turned Municipal Auditorium into a jungle as Johnson hit a turnaround jump from just outside the free throw line to put the Blugolds ahead for 63 with 11 minutes remaining.
Celebrate Your Lawrence Spring Break at The Stables?
Lockwood expressed disappointment that tonight's dual and the Big Eight meet here in St. Louis this spring for KU students, spring break for KU students.
Oh well, join us for a pitcher of beer and enjoy yourself. We'll be open Mon-Thurs 6 p.m.-12 and Fri. and Sat. 2 p.m.-12.
SUA Flights to EUROPE
Chicago-Paris Paris-Chicago
"We have good interest in gymnastics at KU in the past few years, and we are excited the conference in attendance. It's too bad that all the students that would like to see the meets won't be here. We really need the girls."
For all of us who can't afford trips to Florida, Padre Island, or Africa, the STABLES will be open during spring break!!! Come on down and we'll ask ourselves what we're doing in Lawrence, Kansas during break!! For the time being, maybe we can consider Lawrence the capital of the Midwest?
May 30,1972 $299
Aug.1,1972
And don't forget our 50° pitcher hour, 3-4 p.m. Friday.
Chicago-Paris Paris-Chicago
THE STABLES
$\textcircled{1}$
$ \textcircled{2} $
Lockwood said that there was
May 30,1972 $299
Aug.17,1972
$ \textcircled{3} $
Blue Retires Due to Conflict Over Salary
NYC-Luxembourg May 23, 1972 $210
Luxembourg-NYC July 24, 1972
NYC-Luxembourg May 21, 1972 $210
Luxembourg-NYC Aug. 16, 1972 $210
$ \textcircled{4} $
OAKLAND (AP) - Vida Blue, baseball's top attack in 1971, said Thursday he was retiring from the game because Oakland A's owner Charles O. Finley had raised to raise his contract
Full Payment Due April 17th
But Blue, the 22-year-old pitcher who was 24-8 in his first full major league season, giggled when he announced he would take job in business instead of playing at Finley's this season at Finley's $50,000 offer.
For further information, contact:
SUA Office, Kansas Union
864-3477
He said Thursday he had received an offer to work for Dura-Steel Products of Los Angeles in charge of public relations.
Blue and his attorney began
asking him for a $15,000 bonus.
Finley countered with a $50,000 offer and has stuck with it throughout more than a year.
"I believe my requests are reasonable and that I have indicated a good-faith willingness to compromise," said Blue, who declined. And according to Finley, indicated once he'd size up for $85,000.
Blue has offered to play for $5,000 if he did not have to sign a contract that would bind him to the same team next year.
Eiffel Tower
The public relations job reportedly would pay Blue $48,000 a year.
"There is a little more rivalty than in other duels, we said. That was the point of their bitter. Many of the gymnasts were strong. A personal rivalry going. Kagep
has a couple of Lawrence boys on its team.
"In almost any sport, you will usually find that it is the fans, not the players, who have bitter attitudes," he said.
A KU-ID card will admit a student to tonight's dual.
St. Patrick's Day Bash Fri.March 17 12 noon to 12 Midnight
O
In Chicago Finley said: "I'm sorry to learn that Vita has decided to retire from baseball. He has a great future ahead of him. As long as he is retiring, I'm happy that he has selected the steel industry and is starting out as a professional player five years with U.S. Steel in Gary, Ind., the first four years serving my apprenticeship in a position where I would have a change of heart anytime in the near future and decide to return to baseball, we would be extremely happy to have him with
ONE BLOCK WEST
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UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE PRESENTS
HAMLET by William Shakespeare
March
28 • 30
April 1
8:00 p.m.
ROSENCRANTZ and GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD
by Tom Stoppard
March
17 29 31
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April 2 matinee 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre—Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: UN4-3982 KU Students Receive Free Reserve Seat Ticket with Certificate of Registration
J
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 17, 1972
Bud Makes All-American; Wooden Coach of Year
NEW YORK (AP)—John Wewer, a senior coach of outspombles at UCLA, was selected Thursday the Associated Press' college basketball Coach Richard Snyder.
The Associated Press also announced the selection of all American team. KU's Bud Winfield was chosen to the third team.
Wooden won his fifth coach-of the-year honor in a season that he wasn't supposed to.
The Bruins' Quiet Man, who lost four of his starters from last
year's national champions, won the Pacific Eight title and 28 straight regular-season games with basketball babies.
When University of Kansas coach Dick Reason takes his swimmers to the NCAA meet in Chicago, he will have a team for a charge.
"The master does it every year a different way," said an admiring coach.
Nine KU Swimmers To Go to Nationals
He did this last year with Baldan. The first-year center who was named to the all-America team.
The Jayhawks will enter nine men in the national championship event, their largest total so far.
KU swimmers will enter eight events. Phil Kidk will swim the 50 freestyle; Scott Skultey, the 400 individual medley, and Tom Kemp, the 500 and 150 freestyle, enter the one and three-meter races.
"This is the best team we've ever done to be a team," he said, that we have some numbers, we'll feel like a team and not just a bunch of individuals when we meet.
Wooden, who generally places players in the all-American another in Henry Bibby, the second wizard who made the second team.
Competition will begin Thursday evening, five days before for the next three days will be devoted to qualifying heats, finals will be in the morning.
The two relays, in fact, appear to be KU's best bets to score points. Reamon said.
Kidd will join Roland Sabates,
Rick Heidinger and Allan McDonald on the 400 free l艇ry relay team. Kempf and
Steve Ingham, Steve Ingham and Paul Hodgson on the 400 free l艇ry relay team.
RU ENFANTS
50 freestyle—PHIL Kidd (best time: 21.67)
400 individual medley-Scott Skullety
(4:18.88)
500 freestyle - Tom Kempf (4.46.27).
500 freestyle - Kempf (16:37.26).
One-meet driving-Steve King (40.26)
Three-meet diving-Dirley (47.50)
400 freestyle relay - Roland Sabates, Kidd,
Haddinger, Michael McFarlane
Rick Heddinger, Allan McCormor,
Paul Ingham, Paul
Hodgson, Kempit, Ralph
That means the fields will be smaller for relays than for individual events.
"The talented individuals are all at just a few schools, and each seol is limited to one entry in eah relay." Reason explain
Winning, though, is another matter.
"Iindiana has it pretty well wrapped up again. I don't see how they can lose it," Reamon said.
"Each of our representatives is or enough under the qualifying requirements to seat," Reamon said. "We have good chance as anybody does
Southern California should claim behind championship wins in team said. After that, UCLA, Stanford, Ohio State, Michigan and vice battle for the top spots. KU's highest NCAA finish was 20th in
"These national meetings are an opportunity anything can happen. A team just goes and things start to newball. There can be a lot of
That applies to the individual events and the relays, too. Reasonam said. Kidd in the 50 and 60 years ago especially good chances to score.
"We just want to give a goo, account of ourselves and represent our conference well," Reasonam said.
KU won its fifth consecutive Big Eight title two weeks ago with 501 points, 184 better than second place Oklahoma.
The other all-Americans, also announced Thursday, included Dwight Lamar of Southwestern College and Mark Scott of Scarborough scorer; Ed Rattile of Long Beach State; Marquette the Jim Chones and Tom Riker of South Carolina
Along with Bibby, Barry Parkhill in Michigan; Dwight Louiseville and Robert McAdoo of North Carolina made the second team. The third team included Roberts; Brian Taylor of Princeton; Maryland's Tom McMillen; and Wil Robinson of Pittsburgh.
Wooden, who won coach-of-the-year honors in 1964, 1976, 1989 and 1970 was a runaway this time. In nationwide voting by sports teams and broadcasters, fewer than the three runners cumulative.
Wooden has never changed his basic coaching style through five straight years of NCAA titles.
"get 'em into condition first," he said, "and make the players feel confident about their opponents. I teach them to execute fundamental opportunities in words, in our shooting drills, in we do everything quickly—shoot.
"Ad we play as a unit. We always think of passing the ball before shooting."
The 1971-72 college basketball All-America team as selected by the Associated Press on the basis of sports writers and sportscasters
Bill Walton, UCLA, 6-foot-11, sophomore,
hometown, La Mea, Cal.
6-1, junior, Columbus, Ohio.
6-2, long Beach State, 6-6, junior,
Columbia, OH.
Jim Chones, Marquette, 6-11, junior,
Rachie, Wix
Tom Riker, South Carolina, 5-10, senior.
Hawkins, N. Second Team
Barry Parkbill, Virginia, F.A. junior State
Barry Parkhill, Virginia, 6-4, junior, State College, Pa.
Dwight Davis, Houston. 6-7, senior
Houston.
Jim Price, Louisville, 63, senior, In
dianapolis, Ind.
Healy Bobby, CCLA. 6-1, senior.
Franklinton, N.C.
Robert McAdoo, North Carolina. 6-9
baylor Counselor
Princeton, Princeton, 6-2; Januar, Perth Amboy, N. J.
Tom, McMillan, Maryland, 6-19
Richie Fougus, Oral Roberts, 63, junior
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Baldwin, Pa.
Bud Stallman, Kansas, 6-5, senior.
Hartselle, Ala.
Fivedays
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $0.03
Will Robinson, W. Virginia, 6-2, senior
Unlionto, Pa
Tom McMillen, Maryland. 6-10,
sophomore, Mainsdell, Pa.
Hall Lifts K-State to Win
Midwest regional basketball ournament.
Kansas State, 19-8, the Big eight champ, advances into Saturday afternoon's final against fourth-rated Louisville.
DAYTON Ohio (AP)—Catch-f quick Florida State whipped the Tampa Bay Heat for shooting, Kentucky to upset Marquette, 85-68, with surprise in night in NCAA Midest regional semifinal games.
Florida State, Kentucky Win in Mideast Tourney
North Carolina Penn to Meet
MORGANTOWN, W. Va (AP)-Third-ranked Penn helm off a late Villanova surge and outlasted the tenacious Wildcats. 78-67. Thursday night in the first game of the Eastern basketball regional.
The Quakers will meet second ranked North Carolina, a 92-60 victor over South Carolina in the NCAA finals. The Saturday's regional championship game. The Tar Heels established their early and stymied Gamecock all-American Tom Riker.
The Quakers adjusted, however, aided by several Villanova turnovers.
After holding a fair,
comfortable advantage through
most of the game, Penn fell
victim to a Villanova full-court
shuffle with 12-point lead
shrink the 6-8, with 4:30
left in the game.
Missouri Valley Valley which, which edge No. 8 Southwestern Louisiana, 88-84 in the night's other game.
Florida State outscored Minnesota (17-1-2), in the last minutes of a minute of the first half for a 35-24 win and never trailed thereafter.
The independent Seminoles, 25- will face the Southeastern Charm, 16- Wildcats, 21-6. Saturday afternoon, at 7 p.m., final决赛 in Iowa City.
Roland Garrett, firing over Minnesota's zone defense, led the charge with 23 points.
Texas, 19-8, rallied from an 11-point halftime deficit and took the lead, 48-47, with 4:41 to play in a game of the 6-foot-7 Hall went to work.
The Big ten titlists couldn't cope with the Seminoles' speed court press when Alabama still court press when easy basket shoose for easy baskets.
His rebound basket pushed the Wildcats back into the lead, and he added seven more points while he shot 12.9 percent for a 60-50 lead with 1:48 left.
Sophrone Danny Beard dead Kansas State with 10 points; Hall scored 24, scored 12, and Lon Kruger hit 11. The Wildcats shot 46 per cent from the field and held a decisive edge with Hall grabbing 12.
Sophomore Larry Robinson scored 22 points, Joe Lenox 14, and B. G. Brosterbusch 10 for his second goal in a regional eximeval in 10 years.
Balanced Louisville bottled up
Balanced Louisville two one scoring
duo in the open eight-rated Cajuns on
eight-rated Cajuns on Saturday
afternoon consignment game
The University of Kansas
tennis team will start its spring
vacation with a three-match road
triumph in Oklahoma and Oklahoma
this weekend.
Tennis Team Seeks Win
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
KU lost its season opener against Northwest Missouri on Thursday. Mo. The Yahawks showed up expecting to play outdoors, but
Members of the team are Cal Simmons, Mark Wick, Chris Henry, Carl Kingsley, Tom Carlson and R Shaffer.
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
KU will play the University of Arkansas Saturday afternoon in Fayetteville.
From there the Jayhawks will travel to Tulsa, Okla, for a Monday afternoon match with Oral Roberts.
said that the team wasn't as strong this year, but it was well balanced.
The KU team was unprepared to play on the wooden surfaces of the indoor court, which makes for a struggle. KU dropped the meet, 7-2.
The final match of the trip will be with Oklahoma State University Tuesday in Stillwater. Mike Howard, assistant coach to the team, will lead the game.
Parts at a discount
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
days per week
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
FOR SALE
THE MERCANTILE
Open
24 hrs.
per day
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
8608. 15
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUSAGES
Independent COIN Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kunan are offered by the following organizations to color, creed, or national origin.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One day
1 a collegehouse
Either way
new analysis—
New York of Western Civilization™ Campus Madhouse, 41
West 14th. 41
DRIVE-IN
AND COOIP O
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
TRY IT YOULL! LIKE IT - Rent Winnings motor home for upfront rentals.
Free Alta-Schaef. Lawnwardry.
Free Alta-Schaufel. Lawnwardry.
1-326-844-1095. 1-449-2055. 1-326-844-1095. 1-915
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
COIN OP LAUNDRY
19th & LA.
8-13-9631
Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale.
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
SCUBA EQUIPMENT - Pine, Mash,
Foxworth Life Insurance Guarantees,
$29.95 for one life insurance.
Hawk Killie and Vest $39.95
Spear $99.95 for all your diving
trains for major brands Equipe
and Quirrel. Drive Kansas City Mo. 64134 Phone
801-255-7222
2. If you don't
Three days
1966 Porsche 911, 200 h.p., excellent condition, highest offer over $2,900
1610 W2d Tern. 3-17
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can
buy a stereo plus 100 at RAY AUDIO-
COSPLAY plus 100 at RAY AUDIO-
only live Tire Discount House in
the same building. Tire, Coffee &
Consulting services.
1968 Chevrolet SS, power brakes power steering, air conditioning automatic transmission, excellent call. m 840-8425, between 7:30 a.m.
Seliu Equipment - Finx Mack Stores
Seliu Equipment Lifetime Gauranance $125.00 Well Suit
Lifetime Gauranance $125.00 Well Suit
& Vect $50.00 Sloe Kits & Kltf
& Vect $50.00 Sloe Kits & Kltf
For all your diving gear, Set up an
account for your diving gear.
Divers Equity & Repair Services
Divers Equity & Repair Services
6434 Phone 1-816-762-5088 4-13
6434 Phone 1-816-762-5088 4-13
1962 Black Special, new transmission,
new front tires & snows good mechanical
shape, economic & dependable $200; Call Dave, 645-737-317
SKING! Ply to Delivery for a package roundtrip or check on a package for sailing both Walt and Bill. Visit www.walt.com during spring break. Car 3-17 8373.
Boots, Poles & Wooden Skills. 210 cm.
Call Rick, 842-0709. 3-17
NORTHISLE COUNTRY SHOP 707
Bridge Antique, used furniture,
collection items, old wood cooking and
furniture, fireplace, stove, bicycles, fireplace wood,
stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood,
of other useful items, open 8 to 5
days. Herb Albertson 3-4
3159.
1970 BSA lighting 650, royal blue and chrome, excellent condition, open TT pipes and rejected carbons. Call 843-62 after 4:00 P.M. 3-17
65 Volkswagen, 58,000 miles. Very good condition. Must sell! 843-6403
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Hammond M-2, fine cabinet. Can be made portable. Has that unmatched "Hammond" touch and sound. $650.
842-6623. 3-17
20" bicycle, good clean condition,
battery operated light, five
months old, hard hand brakes, new tires
425,245 last 3 AFTER 1998
3-28
ASIA. Cheap trip you if luggage but move Asian style, Dedicated to Japan for $1.00 to Merdeka. 18441 Tequemal Road, Clinton, Mich. 69236
1962 Ford Galaxie 500, 4 dr. V8, new brakes, 65,500 miles, new brakes, shock ignition switch, oil change, vehicle safety condition. Good gas. Price $250-842-8336
Two-door Station Wagon. 1956 Chevrolet,
6-cyl.驻, stans. Must touch
forest spring break. Make an offer.
864-1116
3-28
Your Complete Service
JUST WEST OF THE DRIVE-IN Theatre
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Ample Park Spaces Availability
3409 W. 6th 842-7700
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
Must service 1927 Carnevite T-Bar Coupe air conditioning, automatic power alerting Dervin Barris Mitsubishi Mitsui M-3423-3221 Financial financing ...298
Make KU Student Government even more anonymous. Vote Birthday Party for Joe Landoll (Plev) and Mike Schleiberer (V.P.)
1971 Champion Motor Home - 24 ft.
41d cid engine; 80 lb. Lift
capacity; 14,800 miles $9,000 842
7207 5-28
IOISHER BOARDED EXCELLENT
FULL-TITLED CARL CLOSE IN
HONOR OF JOHN L. KENNEDY
FACULTY ALSO ENGLISH SADDLE
FOR SALE 842-1066 842-1066
You just have to see our new shipment of India prints. They're unbuilt yet and are designed for these prints. Spring was designed with these印材 in mind. Hodge Paddle 3-28
Western saddle with padded brown suede seat. Beautifully covered tokied skirt panels and leather covered sturdy trousers. For 842-9749 3-29
Wig-Mr. Henni creation, Dark, hard-wearing. Fearful. Sanitary-temperature control. Westinghouse Electric 3686. Best offer. 2-17
Factory Authorized
Honda Sales & Service
Cycle Pick Up Service
A REAL HIP OFF - Four count
Reel Reel Off
BLEVINS HONDA
Electric guitar, solid body, Amplifier,
12-inch speakers, 80-watts, WRTs,
very nice, must wait, between 5.30:
360, 1022 Temperature, no. 4, 17
1022
Two-door station wagon. 1955 Chevy
toilet, 6-cyl. ad, trans. Must sell before spring break. Make an offer.
864-1116. 3-17
HUMMAGE SALE Saturday, March 18, 7:30 to 12 noon at the Community Building. Lawrence Community Nursery School. 3-17
Ethan Malaender at BOKONOW—Now through April 15—Watch here for new items each week. Beware of heat, all sweaters are 3-28 or 3-29
Two David Beauty sten stere cameras with JBL, D-120 speakers, JBL clousers, and wide diapers for real high resolution 48-3209654 for real high resolution 48-3209654
1058 Dodder pick-up with t30r, 318 V-8, 3 speed, low mileage, good condition. A bargain at $500 Call 643-2626
Factory Authorized
1944 Ford Falcon Sprint, Vol. 84, Range
4-speed, ect., Cadia, Bass amplifier,
won ww. 3 speed, sparser amplifier,
kw. 2 speed, sparser transmission
Cab. 82-5712, 1111 Ohio
3-29
1971 Kawaii 500, Mach III. Excellent
drive, ect., # 64735, $3.17
= # 64735
Lawrence, Ks.
Aber Laiting 714 Steria Receiver,
miracord 750 automatic, Automatic
turbulence and record changer. 2
Aber Laiting, 6 months old, 4 hours
842-1265
3-28
106 Duret 100 or Rums good but
not excellent. Bass instruments
843-953 or 843-950 for Arkansas
3-400. Drum set 2 bears drum, 3 small toms,
4 bass drum, 3 hi-hat tab, fabric bars. Will sell cheap. 842-
950
64 Chevrolet Step-Van. Good engine, tires, body, e.e. Easy make a fine camper. Call 833-9471. Will take a reasonable offer.
1964 WW-NEW PAINT WITH REBELT EQUILINE-EXCELENT CONDITION GODDY TO HIGHERM BID DOWNSI 1020A-DWA CALLI-31812 8112
193.6 Mercury Monterey 4-D, AT
75,000 miles. Needs repairs,
water pump and heater. Selling cheap. Call
842-565-6 after 6 P.M.
3-31
Pennes' has bikes for all, women's 3-speed training bikes $79.98. Women's 3-speed training bikes $64.98. And Rider's 3-speed training bikes $69.98. The 828 Moss .3-31
THE CONCORD SHOP
Double bed, mattress, box springs,
bedboard. $30. 843-2860 afternoons
and evenings. 3-31
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., pts. - qts. only
50% OFF
844 E.13th St. 843-3871
McCONNELL LBR. CO.
Tony's 66 Service
Red Baron
- STRETCHER FRAMES
many in stock
—others on order
- ARTIST CANVAS REDUCED
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
KAI Suzuki
BED, king size like with mattress and sheets, $160. 2 twin beds $350. 4 queen beds $350. Vanbarn vacuum, $2. 5 photo frames $460. Call Frank. #64-3230 3-17
634 Mass
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
1967 Volkswagen, very clean, Many extras. Built for highway driving. $890. Phone: 842-7560. 3-17
NOTICE
Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 515 Mich
Chicken-chicken $14.5, Ile Beef-Breaker
$30.0, Shab or pork (brk) $30.0, Small
B beef-Breaker $8.0, Beef Brietake
$8.0, Beef Brietake Sand $8.0, Beef
Brietake Plate $1.90, Open 11 am
Sun-Tue, Phone 872-623-1011
3-17
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER. 842-7094. Professional child-care for children 1 month - 12 months. Full or part-time position. Specialized design required. 3-21
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWHENCE? You can enjoy yourself in apartments or on the campus of all special summer schools or at our Harvard Road School, 647-289-3510, or at our Harvard Road School, 647-289-3510, or at our Missouri University Building, 901-848-2540, or at our Harvard Building, 901-848-2540, or at our originally mixed modeled special summer school at our uniquely mixed modeled special summer school at our uniquely mixed modeled special summer school a wonderful time to be
Barn Partied. Now available for rent at Calico Valley Park in Lake Perry, CA and cooler plenty of parking and cooler plenty of parking. Call the Backdrop after 6 p.m. at 843-217-9000.
LEARN 8X SKYDIVING 1st jump
learn basic skiing, jumps and skis
jumpmaster free, plan sides and edges
training on slalom and snowboard
Train 8 jump & start day. Each
week 2hrs of training at 524-3890 or Jim at 862-4878.
(3)
For reasonable prices on all glass or
air-filled of Plexiglas including
air-filled of Plexiglas, 124 North and 87. or call 811-
360-9522 for air-filled of Plexiglas
plexiglas samples that just arrived
Suring has spring sale, Adults only,
adults only. Exciting, exciting, tittilizing
horizons: BOKONON, 819 Vermon
BOKONON, diamonds, charistopher fales.
Need people to invest in Cressa 1804 for use as a parachute jump plane Call Dick Mauk at 294-3189 or Jim Baker at 842-6868. 3-17
FOUND—One coat at the "Hawk"
Call 641-1490. Describe
3-17
FOR RENT
SKYDIVIES-Transportation unified is starting a parachute center 12 minutes North of Lawrence. Selected students attend 3115 after 5 P M. 3-30
Is there money with almost enough money and money to buy hoy land and Nearstings? We have $3,000 now and we can build organic, organic, reecycling home and build our land and help you do it. We help you do it. PC Box 324 Jawahal School. PG Box 325 Jawahal School.
University Terrace Apartments — furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $10 and up, 28 hours a day; Apt. 9, Bt. or, call 843-152-5
FORD
SANDWICH SHOP
Carol Lee
30 Varieties of Dennis
Hot and Cold Drinks
Sandwiches
5 a.m. 11 a.m.-Tues.
5-5 Sun
5-9 Mon.
5-9 Mon.
23rd St.
842-843
A Person Is Known by the Company He Keeps
Knock Good Company.
500 E.23rd
DRIVE A DATSUN!
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN!
PLANNING A TRIP??
Let
Maupintour travel service
Mass-The Malls-Hillcrest-KU Union Phone 843.1
Make Your Spring Break Arrangements Now!!
RT
A PLACE FOR ALL SEASONS. Too
much! Choose your weather. This
classware. Weather too bad for this
spring nest. Your nest! Like indoor liv-
ing room? Wear a jacket and be sure
to stay indoors. Apartment:
1123 Ibis Way, 842-2166
Avalon, 9th & Avalon; Harvard
Staff house, fresh water, and Argo
cost of living in one of these hand-
made apartments and you will be
more suited to have a dishwasher, central
A.C. food and water utilities paid,
and have a telephone number.
Nice. furnished 1-3 bed apartments near town KU. Also rooms with kitchen appliances only one room on right. able now. 842-5007 3-29 842-5007
Furnished Apartment, 1124 Indiana,
duplex, air conditioned, wall-to-wall
captainship, laundry facilities, off-street
warehouse, from floor 13
V 3-1777
COLLEGE HILL, MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing for summer and fall in a beautiful unfurnished apartments. Most utilities paid are; all electric kitchen with refrigerator; dishwasher; day facility; Special summer rates. 421-836-7990 W. 19th Apt. S/18; Shr. 834-8200
Unfurnished house for students—8 rooms—6 can be used for bed or study room. 617 W. 4th, 843-843-3-29
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
1725. while selection is still available,
843-2248 or 8017-A Harvard
Lawrence building located near
Lawrence building located near
WANTED
Rockridge Villa Apartments Limited
first installment free. Four
months of rentals. Applies to
augmented apt with all utilities paid
by occupant. Call after 4.
p.m., 843-7731
Kansas Key Press-Job印刷 from posters to posters, booksheets to booklets and resumes. 710 Mass. in back Zion Zero. Open II to 5 daily 842-4843.
Working girl needs to her 2 bedroom mobile home with another working girl or student. Nice, quiet. Age 84-125 years. After 5:30 for Susan.
842-0444
If you have two or four DEEP PUR- PLE tickets you would like to sell, please call 842-7122 3-17
Female wants room with kitchen privileges, now through finals or willing to share apartment 842-1283
329
SCUBA GEAR. Must have before spring break. Need all equipment related to diving. Call 482-5820 and ask for Val Landes. 3-17
Graduate student seeking summer employment in any kind of camp-related work 482-438 at night. 3-30
Wanted. Panel truck Ford, Chevy, or Dodge in fair to good shape. Call Bob at 842-9783. 3-29
Instructor to teach Tai Chi. Phone 842-2040. 4-3
McGlover canvassers need rides to St. Louis area. (Alton, IL.) Will help pay gas: Call 864-4089 or 864-1327-
3-29
Female roommate. Call after 5 P.M.
842-5921. Share rent. Furnished
apartment. 3-30
WANTED. Someone with good arti-
cal talent and good lettering capabil-
ities. Phone 842-5248 after 1:00 PM
3-31
TYPING
Experienced in typing theses, discussions, term paper forms, other mime types, and email types. Accurate and prompt service. Contact Phone 843-9554, Mrs Wright
Typing done on elite, electric typewriter. No Theses please. Prompt attention. 843-0958 4-5
TOYOTA
Competition Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Trak.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Thurs. term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM Selector, your type style. Also editing at reasonable rate. Kenda. 842-679-452
842-605-361
Experienced, typist will type, your term paper, terms or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate. Call: 843-3281. Mra Kaumank.
Experienced typist Overland Park,
Kansas. Prompt, accurate work. Re-
gulate phone. Phone 381-6434 3-28
Typing done in my home, IBM
Selectrie. Prompt, accurate work.
Experienced. Call 841-2556 3-17
Fast, accurate typing by experienced typist. Piae type. Reasonably priced. Phone 842-2653. 3-29
LOST
Lost small, female dog, part poodle with wavy hair and白尾, white tip on tail, wearing black collar. Call 876-5780. If not home, keep trying. -3-29
Lost between Robinson and Watson-*
grew wool hat--i- white with blue*
hair. I lost the hat and of great*
sentimental value. If found,*
sentimental value. Cynthia. 843-1977. 3-17
MISCELLANEOUS
Small, gray tiger hat on campus,
March 5. Answers to "Lacy Grey"
Sits on shoulder. If you have her,
call 812-9352. We miss her. 3-28
Red plastic notebook and gray bag
by Harmon and Barnet for 119 or
at the Wheel, last Friday afternoon.
Please call 842-6242 for Ship: 3-17
BRIDAL GOWN SHOW Sale—Sizes 8-10, 12-14, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal. 910. Kentucky. 4-20
Had a fender bender, cracked auto door.
Call KAW BODY SHOP. 842-2800-6131; 6 P.M. ask for Diek Riese, all work guaranteed rates, all work guaranteed rates, same location. Hawk 251; br wrecker Lawrence. Call for rats out of town. Lawrence. Call for rats out of town.
There's nothing miscellaneous about our new India prints. They're unique, spool-bound, and have a distinctive design that we they dislike. Hodge Podeh, 3rd & Mass
PERSONAL
Keep KU Student Government Mqueuer? Vote Birth Party for Joe Landist (Pres.) and Mike Schoehler (VP). 3-28
HELP WANTED
BHCAUSE is a listening service. Haskell "Call us, we talk about it. We talk about it." BHCAUSE 8 F.M.-6 A.M. 843-962. 116 to U.S. 3-u-28.
Here's to pool, whisky sour, sire-
brew, wine, campher, and getting
lost in the country You're really
great. Thanks. Me
3-17
Experienced drummer for rock band.
Must be willing to join union. Call
Jeff after 6, 845-9334
3-29
Need trust, aggressive part-time time.
Direct sell at commercial office,
or work from home in business over years. Send applications in box of Care 001, Dunkirk 109. DailyKnock
LAWRENCE KANSAS
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The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
928
Mass
8
Friday, March 17, 1972
University Daily Kansan
TIM KINGLEY
Kansan Photo by DAVE BLISS
Conrad Speaks to Faculty Forum
"cited 'historical precedent for amnesty' . . .
Minister Says Amnesty Should Extend to Vietnam
BY JOHN PATRICK MAHER
Amnesty or repatriation with full restoration of the rights and privileges of citizens should be extended to Vietnam war draft evaders and deserters, the Rev. J. W. C. Thursday at the Faculty Forum.
Explaining amnesty and distinguishing it from pardon, he cited the case of Burdick v. United States (1914). "The one (amnesty) overlays offense, the other (pardon) remits punishment."
"My point of view would be that we have a significant amount of money to spend on the next nasty" said Conrad, who is KU Lathera Church in America.
" 'Amnesty' is related to the word 'amnesia,' which means to forget or overlook," he said.
"Pardon is granted to one who is certainly guilty," he said. "Amnesty is granted before any determination has been made."
THE PRESIDENT is empowered to grant pardons, Conrad said, but the Congress grants amnesty.
A bill (S.3011) concerning amnesty has been introduced in the Senate by Sen. Taft of Ohio, he said.
The bill would grant immunity from prosecution and punishment for draft evasion after Aug. 4, 1984, if certain conditions are met.
Under the conditions of the bill, draft evaders must turn themselves in within a year after the death of the individual (including those already convicted of draft law violations) must agree to serve three years in prison before being admitted in Service to American (VISTA), a Veterans Administration hospital, a Public Service hospital, or some other federal agency.
THE TAFT PROPOSAL deals only with draft evaders," said Conrad. "A second group, not the bill, are the deserters."
He said draft evaders were currently subject to five years in jail and a $10,000 fine upon conviction, and deserters were also subject to four years confinement and a bad discharge discharge from the military.
According to Conrad, the desertion rate has doubled between wesn World War II and the present.
"Those in the deserter group have gotten into the military and gotten turned off," he said.
Conrad made a distinction
received 464 votes.
Class Contest
Continued from Page 1
Neil Shortlidge, Chicago, IL., is the co-founder of five votes. He defended the Thomas, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, who received 417 votes. Thomas
In the race for senior class offices more votes were cast each for secretary, treasurer and vice-president than for president.
In junior class elections three of the four offices were taken by the "first Class Coalition" (F.C. the update for secretary were write-in.
President of the junior class is
Continued from Page.
Thane Hodder K.U.S.P. 77
John Hoffman L.B.C. 66
Larry Beck L.B.C. 53
Steve Beck Ind. 55
Steve Beck Ind. 54
Linda Diberty K.U.S.P. 34
Rook Eveett Ind. 28
Hog Run Ind. 19
Terry Dunn Ind. 14
NEMAKER COLLEGE
* Paid Rank* Comm. 77
* Pat Johnson* Comm. 74
* Paul Newsmore* Comm. 72
* John Young* Comm. 68
* David Gillman* Comm. 65
* Mike Fangyh* U.K.F. 29
* Frank Rakey* Ind. 24
* Shave Brown* Ind. 24
* Warren Brown* Ind. 24
Senate Results...
Need M-Fadden Ind. Oliver 12
Jake Rehmer Ind. Oliver 18
Lester Burton Comm. 63
Lester Burton Comm. 63
John Wulf Comm. 66
John Wulf Comm. 66
Skip Kalenderhausen Oliver Co. In. 14
June Griffith K.U.P. 58
June Griffith K.U.P. 58
Susan Cashin Ind. Oliver 13
Susan Cashin Ind. Oliver 13
Mitch Akin Ind. 41
Mike Kelly K.U.P. 53
Jason Kelly K.U.P. 53
Jason Kelly K.U.P. 53
Ellen Weidon Ind. Oliver 18
Ellen Weidon Ind. Oliver 18
Pet Kumarat
Comm. 101
KU School of Architecture
Derek B. Hruskens
Comm. 102
KU School of Architecture
Wendell Nichols
Comm. 72
Sumner University
Comm. 72
Joseph Hollander
R. U.S. P. I.
Sweenen Hogan
MISCHA
Births
Steven Hogan
MISCHA
Births
Tomas Foster
R. U.S. P. I.
Reginald Brown
Ind. 39
MISCHA
Births
Alice Hicks
R. U.S. P. I.
Donald L. Crumn
Ind. 26
Donald E. Crumn
Ind. 26
Downe Clarkett
R. U.S. P. I.
BOOK OF ARCHITECTURE
Warren
Comm. 45
Cindy Snyder
Ind. 40
Naples State
Comm. 18
Naucle White
Comm. 18
BUSINESS-3
Gary Latham
Comm. 113
Save Highness
Comm. 107
Robin Holmhower
Robin Holmhower
Births
Mark Krull
R. U.S. P. I.
Zion Schmitz
Ind. 22
Zion Schmitz
Ind. 22
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
Barbara黛尔伯特
Comm. 162
Darwin Institute
Ind. 134
Debbie Elming
Ind. 132
Mary Guehn
MISCHA
Ind. 131
Debbie Ruttenberg, Des
Plains, III, also F. C.C., is the new vice-president with 635 votes of 649 cast. Jim Harrel, outgoing sophomore class president olympia, collected the rest of the vips.
Skip Kaltenheuser Prairie Village, of F. C. C. He won by 12 votes over his independent opponent, Jack Bondon, Kansas State.
In the election for secretary,
she wins the 19th position, votes which placed her above the other 88 - write-in candidates.
She is Sharon Mesh, Wichita with a Sharon Mesh. Wichita with a Sharon Mesh.
For
Complete Automobile Insurance
GROATES, M.D. (BOWL 1)
Brian Johnson IA 114
Brian Khanian R. U.S.P. 114
Bernard Cyprien Ind. 12
McCallum Ind. 12
Dwight Ind. 12
Diane Brecher Ind. 12
Alan Jahnman Ind. 7
Jim Jahnman Ind. 6
Lorey McMheran Ind. 7
Nutson Ind. 12
Joan Baker Ind. 12
Robert McVey Dway 12
Davis Ind. 12
Eric Rusho Green 12
Gene Rusho Green 12
Heppig Ind. 12
Hewitt Ind. 12
Gene Doane
Richard Blanki Comm. 128
Phil Liamas K.U.S.P. 125
Agency
ENGINEERING-3
Jin Wufeng Comm. 151
Dave Martin Comm. 129
Brad Mackenzie Comm. 96
Brent Musicki Comm. 96
Kevin Malone Comm. 96
Kevin Malone K.I.S.P K.1.S.P
Mark Makani K.1.S.P K.1.S.P
Gorillal La Ind. 38
Gorillal La Ind. 38
Wilkinson La Ind. 48
Wilkinson La Ind. 48
SCHOOL OF FINE ART, INC.
Rainbow Group Comm. 75
Lynda Reeves Comm. 75
Lydia Reeves Comm. 75
Randy Driverer K.U.S.P. 28
Eddie Krautter K.U.S.P. 28
Kurt Brustert Ind. 45
David Burke Ind. 45
VI 3-3012
824 Mass. Sr.
Mully Laimin
Comm. 79
Staff Elk
Comm. 78
Mark Sliva
Ind. 10
Kristina Potla
Ind. 10
Ruth Hearst
K. Jaffe
LAW SCHOOL-1
Comm. 34
Richard Mackenzie
Ind. 14
Tim Broomfield
Write in
Tim Broomfield
FOR PHARMACEUTICAL
Craig Walker
Comm. 16
Craig Walker
Comm. 12
Nel Abel
Ind. 14
Steve Averbach
Comm. 6
Je Dandre
FOR WALKFIELD-1
Comm. 2
Je Dandre
FOR WALKFIELD-1
Uncontested for teasuer was
Dave Murfin, Wichita,
who received 654 votes. He is with F.
C.C.
all offices in the sophomore
class elections were filled by
"the Three Coalition"
S. C.) candidates. Two other
sides of slates of elections.
"We Three Coalition" (W. T. C.) and "River
Cancele" (R. C. A.).
committed.
Mark McCaughay, Prairie Village, was elected president of the sophomore class. He received 201 votes and Warner Lewis of Topeka, R. C. A. and Randy Bell, Hutchinson, with 200 and 120 votes respectively.
Vice-president Bob Marshall, M. Vince-Jones, Jon Neff, Topica, of R. C. A. got 215 votes; James Ash, Shawnee Mission of W. T., C. G.
Ann Dillon, Hutchinson, was elected secretary with 495 votes. Her opponent, Sue Loxman, of R.C. A. received 428 votes.
Sophomore treasurer is Barbara Haman, Crewe Coeur, Mo. who won an WO tournament. Jan Arida, Topea, of R.C. A. got 120 to Steve Bauer, C. candidates. Steve Baru, Overland Park, finished with 124.
Final examination schedules (for summer and the preliminary examinations) course offerings for the summer session may be obtained at the university.
Registration and enrollment for the summer session is Friday, June 2. Classes begin on Monday, June 5 and end Saturday, July 29.
Spring finals begin on May 11 and end at noon May 19.
Registrar Lists Exam Dates
Students who are presently enrolled are eligible to continue in the same school within the University this summer.
Enrollment Closes Today For Local Art Classes
Enrollment for the third session of the Lawrence Art Center will and today Classes from March 27 through May, 13.
being a vocation course, he said
BENEIDT SAID) another an out of the school was to offer courses in art and science. Benedict teaches four of the eight classes offered. He received his bachelor's degree and his master's degree in fine arts from KU in 1963 and 1969. Benedict has also been a professional instructor in Denver and Los Angeles.
Drawing, painting, still photography and creative film are courses offered by the center. Benedict said Tuesday that the most popular course with students was the art史 had been still photography.
A course in adult crafts was previously offered, but Benedict said that this had conflicted with the course he taught in Lawrence. He said that the course also did not have the same course courses. It leamed more toward
Raymond Baird, Rick Mitchell and Steve Cromwell are other instructors. Baird and Mitchell are graduate students and have taught other art courses. He is also a professor in psychology and is completing his master's degree in photojournalism at KU.
between those who deserted because of the war and those who were fleeing criminal charges.
All the instructors have exhibited their work in museums or galleries. Benedict currently owns about three galleries in Colorado.
The center was formed last August to offer "art courses emphasizing aesthetics rather than courses with a vocational atmosphere," according to the director, the center's coordinator.
"Those persons guilty of felonious crimes should not be considered for amnesty," he said.
NOT ALL draft evaders and deserters want amnesty. Conrad said. Some want the government to take action before they would come back.
They want repatriation rather than amnesty, because amnesty has overtones of forgiveness, he said.
mittee on Budgetary Matters and
Advancement of the Schwarzkopf Sapp.
physics professor who will teach for
the College Evaluation and
Advancement of Instruction
They say the war was wrong, and they were right and need no forgiveness, he said.
Conard said that, although he supported the granting of amnesty, he could see that it would have been easier for that many persons served and took their risks in the armed service because those granted amnesty might have kept G. 1s from getting jobs.
A college assembly workshop will be held April 8 to discuss alternate degree programs and requirements of Arts degree requirements in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, John A. Landgrebe, chairman of the Educational Policies and Procedures Committee (EPPC) subcommittee on degree requirements, said Tuesday.
Landgrebe said at the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences assembly that although 79 per cent of the questionnaire favored creating either variations in the B. A. degrees at new alternate degrees, there was general agreement with the present requirements.
The EPPC approved for one additional year the North College LA&S 48. Eastern Civilization program as an alternative to the freshman-sophomore filling the freshman-sophomore and graduation requirements.
The EPPC also discussed the possibility of a three-year pre-medical program instead of the usual four years and decided students should have a B. A. before going to medical school.
College Workshop to Discuss LA&S Requirement Changes
The EPPC approved a recommendation from the Degree Requirement Sub-committee to evaluate the feasibility of establishing both or more four-year Liberal Arts and Sciences Colleges.
Curricular changes in the College and College general have been proved by the EPPC. Ten courses have been added to the curriculum, which changed titles and or descriptions, and two courses have been removed.
Sapp said that his committee was recommending the funding of 13 proposals for improving instructors in the college.
According to Dean Shankel, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the assembly heard reports from students on campus in systematics and ecology and chairman of the College Com-
CollegeMaster
No.1 in College Sales
He sketched the development of Haskell, beginning in 1884 as a vocational school. His goal was to teach the Indians English and Dutch.
By WENDIE ELLIOT Kansan Staff Writer
Postokn explained that the spainis pictured in the Northwestern helium balloon. He said they came into use when the Spainis introduced the horse to the spainis.
MISCONCEPTIONS of the past are still hindering an understanding of the information Poste has said watching John Wayne kill 70 Indians with one bullet on Saturday night television was not a mistake.
During the 1930s, Haskell included a high school system.
The American Indian today can anticipate an average life span of 44 years, 800,000 brothers and sisters with annual incomes of up to $125 million hunt and fish on government land where permits are being sold to non-Indians, Wayne Postak, coordinator of Indian Activities at Haskell Indian Junior College, and their husbands Wednesday.
Postoka said most of these problems were being resolved with the new George Armstrong Clint as an idol for letting the Indians win
A more realistic example, he said, is that many people still think that Indians live in teepees.
Language barriers help to perpetuate prejudices against the Indian, according to Postak. He said that "the most dialects in the North American continent which accounted for the majority of all languages which an all could understand."
IN 1934, the stadium was built with funds donated from Indians
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842-4650
CE Department Names Willems New Chairman
Former Misconceptions Hinder Modern Indians
Nicholas Willems, professor of
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"The emphasis on education is different now," he said. "Now they let the students decide for themselves what their rules will be."
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Trips downtown were limited to two times a month and all students had to be in their dorms by 6:30 every night.
In 1940, a vocational department was started. It offered 16 trades, including blacksmithing and upholstery.
IN JUNE of 1969, the college underwent a change from
In 1961, the phasing out the high school began, one grade at a time. The class of 1964 was the first to graduate to class grade from Haskell.
He said if one were to examine a grade levels of the 20 and 21-year-olds, he would find that the rival team, he would find that the rival teams had been beaten by third year.
Indians were proud of the football team which played in the stadium and they wanted to help. Postaksa said at that time, the Haskell team played Notre Dame, University of Iowa and the University Kansas—and had best them all at one time.
Enjoy the Versatile Tom Eversole at the Piano 7:30 - 11:30 p.m. and Light or Dark Beer $1.00 a Pitcher
The military-style controls on the students have changed since he and his brothers and sisters attended Haskell, he said.
Presently, Postako said, Haskell is in phase one of a program to construct seven new buildings on the campus. He said they were working to make them the top junior college anywhere.
Haskell Institute to Haskell Indian Junior College. Last month it was recognized as a candidate state accredited junior college.
AT SHAKEY'S TONIGHT
Edgar Koshatka
SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR &
ye Public house
544 W. 23rd 842-2266
And who should pop up played paling steel guitar but the Grateful Dead's Sgt. Pepper played on the session are Nick Gravenstein, Mark Nafatin, and drummer Bob Jones. A fine blend of country, rock, jazz, and exquisite productivity.
544
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The excavated rock dacks reveal the remains of a prehistoric site this remote. Their material is fresh from the earth and is lavishly displayed at Hammersmith Museum, which houses "Seven Lives Long Time" and the "Stone Lawn Long Time."
Sat, April 8th Hoch Auditorium
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CLOUDY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
82nd Year, No. 109
$160,000 Needed To Support Referendum
Tuesday, March 28, 1972
See Page 2
Court Charges Gould In 2 Kansas Bombings
By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer
Randolph Gould, 22-year-old Overland Park resident and a former University of Kansas student, was arraigned on three counts of assault after the county after ending an 8-month extradition battle by leaving Missouri and turning himself in to Douglas County authorities. A preliminary hearing has begun against him, p. m. today in the Douglas County Court.
Gould and three others were indicted by a federal grand jury in July 1971 in connection with the May 14, 1970, bombing of the Lawrence home of then-State Senator Larry Burridge and the June 20, 1970, bombing of the Southgate State Bank in Prairie Village.
U. S. marshals arrested Gould in Missouri in September 1971, and he has had preliminary hearings in the Western State court. He is in connection with the federal charges.
A CLERK for the Western District Court said Friday that a trial date had not been scheduled yet, although Ron Clark, Gould's lawyer, said he had filed a motion Tuesday to demand that the case be tried immediately.
Gould has fought extracitation to Kansas since September, where he was wanted on bombing charges in both Douglas and Johnson counties. An extradition hearing led to Gould's arrest in Missouri, but before the hearing took place, Gould and Clark drove to Lawrence
where Gould surrendered to Douglas County officials.
Clark said he would not comment on the reason Gould turned himself in.
"That's between Randy and myself," he said.
Earlier Gould had indicated that he was fighting extradition because of the $50,000 bond awaiting him in both counties. He has posted $22,500 bond in Missouri.
Dr. Folkman, 39, is surgeon in charge of the Children's Hospital Medical Center in Boston and a professor at Harvard Medical School.
When a cancer cell is born, it goes through a long, silent period before it shows as a solid tumor, millions of cell divisions later. Dr. Folkman explained
They might also make big tumors shrink to a harmless size.
**GOULD WAS** arraigned Wednesday in the Douglas County Court, when he was officially charged for three felonies: criminal destruction of property, unlawful duplication of device and felonious assault with a deadly weapon with the intent to kill or death.
Clark argued the amount of the bond, $50,000, with Douglas County Court Judge Pro Tem Charles D. Stough. After hearing testimony from Gould's father, Alan Gould, stowered over the bond to $20,000. Stowered over the bond, Mike Elwell said Friday that that bond was bond Wednesday afternoon and was released to Johnson County authorities.
Blocking the chemical would keep cancers dormant, or asleep, and small in
But when it is no bigger than a BB, it can be sidetracked into a permanent dormant state. This happens when the body's blood supply and then keep stimulating new capillaries as it grows larger. If it cannot get blood, its growth slows down and up and there is no method "for garbage."
A clerk for the Johnson County Magistrate Court said Monday that could have been arranged two bombing charges Monday afternoon in Division 1 of the Johnson County Magistrate Court. A preliminary hearing has been scheduled
The cancer sends out a special chemical signal that causes capillaries, the tiniest blood vessels, to grow toward and then into the tumor. These cells can expand to a large, leathal size.
BURTON
This chemical signal stimulating capillary growth now has been isolated, and methods are being sought to block its action. Dr. Judah Folkman reported Monday to an American Cancer Society seminar for science writers.
Dr. Folkman and his associates have isolated what they call the Tumor Angiogenesis Factor (TAF), which is the chemical prod to stimulate capillary Angiogenesis. Angiogenesis means generating a blood supply. Most solid tumors release TAF.
AFTER THE Douglass County arraignment, Mrs. Alan Gould said, "Unless you know what real heartbreak is, don't know what this is. I know my son."
Ambrose Saricks
One main discovery is that a cancer, regardless of how it starts, cannot grow larger than a BB shot unless it gets its own blood supply.
She said she knew her son was not guilty.
Chalmers Names 2 Deans To Vice Chancellor Posts
Discoveries Could Limit Tumor Size
By MIKE MOREY Kansan Staff Writer
William J. Argersinger
A new vice chancellor for academic affairs and a vice chancellor for research and graduate studies was announced Friday by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmer Jr. at a meeting of the Kansas Board of Regents in Topeka.
William J. Argersinger, dean of research administration, will become the first vice chancellor for research and graduate studies.
Ambrose Saricks Jr. will succeed Francis Heller as vice chancellor for academic affairs. Saricks was a member of the KU faculty for 20 years before becoming dean of graduate studies at Wichita State University in 1970.
CLEARWATER BEACH, Fla. (AP)—New discoveries have opened a door to keep human concers small, "asleep" and harmless.
Argersinger's position is a newly-created one which will combine most of the duties of his present position and those held by the dean of the Graduate School.
ARGERSINGER AND Saricks will assume their new positions this summer.
ARGERSINGER AND Saricks will assume their new positions this summer. Both men were recommended by a senate committee and headed by Ron Calgaard, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Saricks, from Wilkes-Barre, Pa., holds B. A. and M. A. degrees from Bucknell University and a Ph. D. from the University of Wisconsin. Before joining the KU faculty in 1950, he taught history at Ohio State University for three years.
While at KU, Saricks was a professor of
Fees Due at Enrollment
Bv ROBERT E. DUNCAN
Kansan Staff Writer
The Kansas Board of Regents amended Friday the Compensate Fee Schedule for the University of Kansas by making an amendment to the regulation. The option, passed on the
recommendation of Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and will become president.
All fees, including those for private music lessons, practice room rentals and laboratories will be due at the beginning of the enrollment process.
Campus Officers Deny Election Irregularities
By JIM KENDELL
Kansan Staff Writer
The elections committee chairman and the new student body president denied Monday there were any serious instances in the recent campus election.
Questions were raised in the final days of the campaign whether Robert "Tuck" Duncan, Wilmette, Ill., junior, had a conflict of interest.
Duncan was both adviser to the elections committee and campaign manager of the University Commitment Party. He was in the room where the ballots were counted
Questions were also raised when some polling places ran out of ballots for as much as an hour at a time. Concern was that people lying loose about certain polling places.
Bailey said Duncan only advised the committee on how elections had been run in the past. Duncan was elections committee chairman last year.
R. L. "Puff" Bailey, Atchison graduate student and elections committee chairman, commented about the Duncan case.
"I don't see any conflict, because the men were merely procedural matters." Bullen
Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior and student body president, said Duncan was
present in the room where the ballots were counted for several reasons.
Secondly, Dillon said, Duncan was the only person with enough experience at ballot counting to do as quick a count as was made.
Duncan was the representative of the Commitment Party in the room. The KU Student Party also had a representative present.
Bailey said possibly stuffing of stray referendum ballots had had little effect on the referendum. He said there was no problem. He also asked the issue for people to stuff ballot boxes.
Amin was concerned about some irregularities on election night but said Monday it was difficult to document the events, would probably not raise any charges.
Hommad Amin, Ralsenian, Iran, senior and defeated presidential candidate of the KU Student Party, declined comment about any specific election irregularities.
Dillon said, "He wasn't involved in anything that could have changed the
Bailey said the fact that some polling places did temporarily run out of ballots was likely a factor.
"I doubt that there were a dozen people who didn't vote because they ran out of cat food."
Some of the other state schools presently operate by collecting fees at enrollment time. The regents approval to allow KU to begin this practice will permit University administrators to define some of the problems involved with early fee collection.
ONE UNIVERSITY administrator said the policy must begin so the number of students enrolled would be known at an earlier date. He said early fee collection would also allow for a more efficient method of processing fees.
The regents also authorized the publication of notice of the sale of $3,400,000 in revenue bonds for the purchase of a new student health center for the KU campus.
The Regents did not take action on a recommendation from the Council of Presidents that the tenure policy for state colleges and universities be amended to include a provision that would not allow students to classified employees to qualify for tenure.
The Regents approved a plan to allow the KU Endowment Association to construct an outdoor courtyard at Murphy Hall. Plans for the courtyard will have to be submitted to the state architect's office for final approval.
MEMBERS OF THE Board of Regents,
state college and university presidents,
student senate, and faculty members of the faculty at each institution will attend a retreat in Tokepea April 28 and 29. The group will discuss issues of concern to all state schools and exchange views on policy matters.
In other action, the board approved the recommendation by Chalmers to make repairs in air conditioning and temperature control units in Malott Hall, the Museum of Art, Haworth Hall, the Occupational therapy department.
The next meeting of the Board of Regents will be April 28. It will be the last meeting before the end of the KU academic year.
history and an associate dean of the Graduate School
He was vice chairman and chairman of the KU division of the United Fund drive and as president of the Lawrence Kiwanis Club.
SARICKS WAS also a member of the faculty committee that selected Chalmers as the successor to former KU Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
Argersinger, from Chittenango, N. Y., received his B.A. and Ph. D. degrees from the University of Chemistry at Cornell from 1992-44. He worked two years for the Monsanto
See Related Story Page 2
Chemical Co. on the Manhattan Project, the production of the first atomic bombs which were dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima.
Arngersinger, a member of the KU faculty since 1946, was a professor of chemistry an associate dean of the School of Science and chair of faculties for research. He has served vice chairman of the Council of Associated Midwest Universities, secretary of the Mid-America State University and president of the Organization for Tropical Studies.
AFTER SARICKS takes office, Heller will return to teaching with the University of Political science, where he will hold a Roy A. Roberts Distinguished Professorship.
William P. Albrecht, dean of the Graduate School whose position has been incorporated into the new vice chancellorship, will retire June 30 from administrative duties and return to a professorship of English.
All-White Jury Acquits Two Soledad Brothers
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—An all-white jury Monday acquitted the two surviving Soledal Brothers, black convicts charged with murdering a white prison guard.
The two—John Glutchete and Fleetia Drumgo—and George Jackson, a third Soledal Brother who died in San Quentin violence last Aug. 21, are the prisoners Angela Davis is charged with plotting to free.
"The verdict is beautiful" Miss Davis said in San Jose where the black Communist militant it on trial for kidnap, conspiracy and murder.
She is charged with providing the evidence, which she did on the court-room break attempt in which a judge and three abductors died. The prosecution contents the purpose was to ransom the woman's family. She said.
Clutchett, 28, and Drumgo, 26, were accused with Jackson, 28, of beating guard John V. Mills to death Jan. 16, 1970, at Solidaion铲在 Monterey county.
The Superior Court jury had deliberated the case since Friday night
Jackson, whose book of letters from prison became an underground best
seller, died with three white guards and a convict, convicted in what prison authorities authorized to take.
...ed the case since Friday night. With the innocent verdicts were read, the innocent verdicts were read, and hugged their court-appointed attorneys—Richard Silver and Follid Silliman.
"But our fight is not over. Drumgo is been indicted for what happened at San Quentin when Jackson died. So we had to go to New York, Izell Williams, Drumgo's mother, said."
Drumbo is charged with murder in the Murdo County indictment stemming from the murder of a local businessman.
The assault in which Mills died came three days after three black Soldai convicts were killed by the gunfire of a police car. They were wounded in yard menee among black and white people.
The prosecution contended that Mills was beaten with his own flashlight and then tossed from a cell tier to a concrete floor three floors below.
★ ★ ★
Prosecution Links Affair To Soledad Rescue Plot
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)—The prosecution said Monday that Angela Davis had a "close, passionate, and physical involvement" with convict George Jackson during a meeting in her apartment on Friday, the scheme to free him ended in murder.
"There was such a close relationship that the defendant considered herself married to George Jackson," prosecutor Albert Harris Jr. said.
Harris in his opening statement to the jury in Davis' murder kidnap-capspiracy trial, said he was "deeply in love" with San Quentin and needed to rescue him from San Quentin Prison.
Harris said the most convincing evidence of the love affair and the subsequent violence will be love letters that he sent to Jackson, who was killed last August.
One letter, he said, bears a postscript by George's brother Jonathan who allegedly carried guns into the Marin County Civic Center, where four persons died on Aug. 7.
On July 8, 1971, Harris said a meeting was arranged between Jackson and Davis,
then incarcerated at Martin County jail. They met at the jail mess hall, Harris said, then spent time alone together in a private holding cell.
"Her motive . . was passion," Harris said," . a passion which went beyond a respect for human life, even the life of George Jackson's brother Jonathan."
Jonathan Jackson, a judge and two convicts were slain in the Aug. 7 shootout
convicts were stained in the Aug. 7 shotout. Jonathan and the two black convicts hoped to rescue Soledai Brother George Jackson from San Quentin Prison in return for
Davis, he said, was waiting at San Francisco International Airport to join the team.
"By then, her life and her fortune were firmly committed to George Jackson," said
"Solead Brothers" was the name given three unrelated block convicted accused of killing a woman.
George Jackson was killed last Aug. 21 in what authorities claimed was an escape attempt from San Quentin. The other two, a man and a woman, by an all-white jury in San Francisco.
Docking Threatens Budget Veto as Final Vote Nears
BY RICHARD COOLEY
Kansan Staff Writer
By RICHARD COOLEY
Topека-Final action on the $12 million-plus omnibus appropriations bill is expected today when the Kansas Legislature reconvenes for a one-day session.
Governor Robert Docking, protesting what he termed a “spending spree” by the Republican-controlled legislature, last week threatened to use funds to power unless legislators act to reduce spending.
In a series of news conferences across the state last week, Docking said legislative spending was up by more than 10%
He called on legislators to "act in a financially responsible manner to keep state finances in or-
Included in the omnibus bill is $61,454 to finance pay raises for University of Kansas classified civil service workers, effective April 1. The money was temporarily deleted by the House Ways and Means Committee in last Monday's session, but was restored before the bill passed the House.
DOCKING'S CRITICISM has led many to believe he will use his line-item veto power to trim legislation.
Also in last Monday's session, the house approved the issuance of $44 million in bonds to finance the expansion of the University of Kansas Medical Building construction was decisively voted down.
THE BONDS would finance construction of expanded teaching and hospital facilities in Kansas City as part of a plan to establish a clinical branch at Wichita State University.
Regardless of what happens in today's session, there is general agreement among area legislators that the law should be passed.
session has been a vast improvement over last year in terms of support for higher education.
Chancellor F. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said he was pleased with the legislature's action in terms of a bill to give him greater autonomy.
"But in terms of overcoming the lack of resources this year, I can’t really say that I am pleased with the situation," Chambers said. "It would be a very good budget if I were the process of going through a zero-dollar year."
CHALMERS EXPRESSED hope that the legislature's action would begin of incremental significance, high edgings.
"I hope it represents a return to the old Kansas tradition of putting emphasis on religious and educational institutions as the bedrock of the state, and it should help us build to a new level of excellence," Chalkers said.
Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, said that the
general tone of this year's session was much more favorable to higher education, but denied that education's low funding last year stemmed from punitive motives.
Rep. John Vogel R-Lawrence, said he thought there had been a punitive attitude on the part of the police in connection with the attack.
"The situation which came about last year was not an adequate reflection of the attitude toward higher education," Booth said. "We just happened to come to the last minute with inadequate revenue and the financial situation and higher education suffered, but I don't many of us in the legislature were proud of it."
BOOTH CITED the decreasing militance of the student body as one factor in the improved atmosphere. He also praised the work that students build legislative support for higher education.
stemmed from militant student activities on Kansas campuses.
"A lot of people were deeply disturbed about some of the things that were going on on college campuses last year," Vogel said. "There was a general feeling that University administrators should be more strict, and I think the legislature's action was in a sense an attempt to strike back."
VOGEL AGREED that the decreased militance of
the air force year had improved the
legislative atmosphere.
"Very few legislators felt that we had dealt correctly with higher education in the last session," he said. "We were wrong because a lot of students, faculty and alumni became involved in the political process in efforts to improve the situation. As a result, I think we have been in discussion between these groups now than ever before."
2
Tuesday, March 28.1972
University Daily Kansan
Chalmers Fosters Broad Administrative Reorganization
Editors Note: This is the first story in a three part series dealing with the reorganization of the company. Chalmers became chancellor.
By JEROME ESSINGER Kansan Staff Writer
Although quiet moods and little revolutionary activity have been reported on U.S. campuses for years, the university has "quiet revolution" at a level of the University that is not usually associated with rapid or violent change, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said in a recent interview.
At the University of Kansas, visible and perhaps revolutionary changes are being implemented by University administrators in a process University reorganization."
The goals of the reorganization that KU is planning and developing are far more broad than the reorganization goals of any other university or college. Students, teachers and other administration
KU reorganization involves three concepts; decentralization of the Graduate School's operative functions, which include student admissions and recordkeeping; a formulated budget system; and a complex, data-driven a-b-s e d information system.
Francis Heller's resignation as vice chancellor of academic affairs and the creation of an additional vice chancellor office
have been the two most visible indications of KU reorganization, most KU administrators said.
The two new vice chancellors who will fill helter position and support the chancellor for research and graduate studies, were appointed
AMBROSE SARICKS, dean of graduate studies at Wichita State University, will succeed Heller as chancellor for academic affairs.
William Argersinger, dean of research administration at KU, will be the University's first vice president for research and graduate studies.
The new office of vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, was created to offer opportunities of his present office with those formerly and presently held by the dean of the Graduate School. William P. Albrecht, graduate dean, will retire June 1 from the department and students and a professorship in English.
The main functions of
the forwarding present office
are the forwarding present
faculty and some student,
preparatory for research grants
and programs.
Argersinger, in an interview three days before his visit to Israel, said that in line with decentralization, he expected the schools and departments to respond appropriately to negotiations and applications
Campus Briefs
Docking Speech Tonight
Gov. Robert Docking will speak at 8 tonight in the Kansas Union Hall. His room is the third in the Student Volunteer series and covers this on Tuesday.
County G.O.P. Meeting
'Making of the President'
"The Making of the President, 1968," will be shown at 7:30 tonight in 308 Dyche. The film is based on a book written by Theodore White. There will be no admission and it is open to the public.
It is speculated that Docking will either seek an unprecedented fourth term as governor of Kansas or oppose Sen. James Pearson.
Reorganization Progress
The Douglas County Republicans will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Ramada Inn to choose delegates to the district and state conventions. Students who are registered Republicans in Douglas county are eligible to vote for the delegates and run for delegate positions. Anyone who is registered to vote in Douglas County is a Democrat. They should register as a King, President, County chairman. "We want all the Republicans to come to the meeting including students, faculty and all the townpeople," he said.
"ITS HIGHLY improbable that I would have directed Wade Stinson said Monday referring to whether the $160,000 would be available in the form of a grant."
Even if the $160,000 were made available, Stinson said he was leery of adding $80,000 to the $355,000 borrowed from the Association in 1966 which was the idea behind the referendum.
THE 1966 LOAN was obtained to pay for the expansion to the team, and will not be completely repaid until 1981. The loan is being repaid with the $5 and $4 each season, and student season football and basketball ticket, and was arranged so that the annual payments would be increased over the 15-year period.
Before either party can consider the $80,000 proposal that the other party would make $180,000 to finance the surfacing of the other two-thirds of the field
Simpson said drastic increases in operating costs had placed the company on a budget where any excess money was spent on operations instead of capital improvement.
that had been done by his present office and the Graduate School.
By HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writer
Although 62 per cent of the voters said yes to the referendum issue in the spring elections two weeks ago, it is possible none of them would be KU when an artificial surface is installed in Allen Field House.
Since the organization of any university is constantly changing, there are no abrupt, single events that mark a reorganization process, said Nina Cormier, director of system development.
MOST OPERATING Functions
of the Graduate School, except
the Humanities and Social Sciences,
Liberal Arts and Sciences, have
been decentralized to the various
institutions.
They agreed, however, that the phase of reorganization was not a matter of course. These are some of the important events in the current phase of reorganization.
Stinson Doubts Effect of Poll
The problem behind the referendum, which called for the endowment of the Endowment Association to loan the athletic department $80,000 to cover the north end of the field in synthetic surface, likes in funding.
—The initial plan for decentralization of the Graduate School dates to 1968 when the graduate school was established. W. Clarke Wescoe a proposal for reuniting research administration with graduate schools for decentralizing most operational functions such as recordkeeping and admissions and for retaining a dean of the graduate council to set policies.
Besides the time and money spent watering the dirt, Stinson said the field house was useless in the heat because of the muddy surface.
Stinson said the annual payments were based on expected enrollment increases and subsequent increases in the number of customers. However, he said enrollment increases had been below predictions causing fewer tickets to be sold than expected, and an addition of $80,000 to the loan account would make repayment more difficult.
AS FOR ANY action resulting from the referendum, Dave would be elected president, and petition would soon be sent to both the athletic department and the finance department supporting the 80,000 loan.
He said he believed the vote, which signified approval of the resurfacing issue, indicated his agreement to recognize a need for more recreational facilities, but he was not sure the vote expressed the method of funding or technical aspects" behind the proposal.
"It's a shame it hasn't been utilized more." said Stinson.
He said because of the dirt floor the surface had to be watered down each morning or it would be too hard. He suggested a football practice in the afternoons.
UNTIL THE surfacing project is complete the use of Allen Field House will continue to be limited, Stinson said.
—No action was taken by Weseco's administration and, in 1968, the proposal was recalled. In its place the graduate faculty voted to extend an area of study which has been in effect since fall, 1968.
Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment would have to be approved by the Athletic Board, the University administration and the governing body before the loan could be made.
"From there really it's out of our hands." Dillon said.
A NEW University code went into effect March, 1989. The code created a new governmental department designed to provide greater student faculty representation in the university's decision-making processes. Its basic organs were Student and Senate Executive Officers, Faculty, University Libraries, Faculty, and Student Seniors and a University Council.
—E. Laurence Chaimers Jr. we are pleased as U.S. chancellor of the University to install address, "Academic Freedom is Respect for Truth," Chaimers stressed a hope for the U.S. government to plan" for university organization which would be characterized by research and evidence updating and evaluation.
After a short time as chancellor, Chalmers told he favored teaching in the University reorganization, Chalmers then assigned an ad hoc committee on the arts at the university to the sciences at KU, to consider the reorganization of graduate studies and the colleges-within-the-college. The committee was appointed by the dean, Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, who appointed themselves cochair-
Complete decentralization of all graduate student admissions and records is expected to be achieved by Fall 2013, said in a March 21 interview.
A SUBCOMMITTEE of a University Senate committee on organization recommended the establishment of its administrative structure in spring, 1970. The recommendation used outlines of the organizing chairmen for chancellorship.
-Reorganization was approved by the Kansas Board of Regents in June, 1970.
The ahedo committee on organization of the arts and sciences reports to the report of one of its two subcommittees on April 12, 1971. Three main principles of reorganization were recorded. One that graduate studies and research administration be combined under one ad-hoc committee and chancellor for research and dean of graduate studies. Two, that the operational functions such as enrollment and records of the faculty are handled to the various schools and the college. Three, that the graduate council be continued for establishing overall policy and moving and appraising programs.
On Jan. 17, Graduate students reported to their areas of study time in recent University history. Most graduate records had been decentralized from the Graduate School to separate schools and universities.
A seven-member task force, in a confidential report of which on behalf of the public, recommended functions of Argersinger's new office on
One of the 11 functions described was that "divisions not directly related to instruction" be moved to the new office of vice chancellor from offices such as the Office of chancellor for academic affairs.
—the seven-member task force was appointed by Chalmers on Oct. 19, 1971, to make recommendations to him on the development of a position of vice chancellor for research and graduate studies.
—The University formally announced the Heller, vice chancellor for academic affairs, would "give up his position" at the start of the semester.
A few weeks after that report was received by Chalmers, it was announced that Heller was "giving up" his position.
—A task force, called Task Force II, was appointed by the graduate council Feb. 4 to define the faculty of the new vice chancellor for research and graduate study, the graduate faculty, the graduate council and the faculty of the liberal Arts and Sciences, the schools and the professional schools. The group delayed most the new vice chancellor was chosen.
—These three points were approved "in principle" by the executive committee of the graduate council on May 10, 1971.
THE GRADUATE council, in a May 21, 1971, meeting, approved in principle the same bill as the one passed but only after much debate.
Chalmers said on March 15 these divisions would interact little with undergraduate education and teach wholly to faculty research, statewide services and graduate instruction and research. However other areas not directly related to academic instruction would have no office of research and graduate studies. The Kansas Geological
The search committee was composed of both students and faculty, Chalmers said, in keeping with the policy of equal student representation in the department, he said. Process, David Miller, student body president, was one of the committee's student members.
Survey and the Computation center are included in such areas
A 16-MEMBER search committee, appointed by Chalmers to recommend to him the candidate for office in chancellor offices, suggested both Argersinger and Saricks in its Feb. 28 report to the chancellor. Chalmers, however, said on March 22 that he had received the search committee's notice within the past week or 10 days."
Chalmers stressed that each was familiar with the personnel, structure and goals of KU and highly respected by the faculty.
Concert Reviews Billboard
Kama Sutra's Briefer & Sister, Martha Sutra, made and made beautiful unisexinec choreography that was based on the establishment. they shine with some kind of magic and make them appear harmonious and inaugurating chapel. they are a kind of creative mind and although not all at once they make their material takes out of the same clothing. Mommy, from their current protective maternity and country style protective maternity and country style Their closing number "Witch Shirt" showed how well the dun work
Beginning July 1, KU will have five vice chancellors for the first time in its history. Argersinger is one of the administrative ranks of three other vice chancellors in the KU administrative hierarchy. KU will also have a vice chancellor of student affairs at the Lawrence campus, Keith Nitcher is vice chancellor of business affairs and William Hakee is vice chancellor of health the charge of the KU Medical Center.
Preceding them was Stuff, a new group looking for a record company whose electronic rock 'n' roll and psychedelic music were the talents of talent hunters **IARTRACHER**
CashBox
BITTER END, NEW YORK
Brewer & Shipley
committee followed, said
Chalmer, was for persons
knowledgeable about KU history
BITTER END, NYC-11 is still taller than Tiffany. The ballerina is a live performance and it does not bet on height as on records. Browner will play a role in helping the ballerina to combine beautifully with ballers such as “People Love It” gave her more life at Life Theater. Gave her new stage life at Tiffany.
Brewer & Shipley
Their two album may lead you to their two albums. Shupey were part of the San Fran club-nic Gravevettes, workshop of Nic Kuta and Kata Sura (including a few others). Hojkins and Jerry Mack indicate an Hojkins and Jerry Mack indicate an Brewster & Shupey evening at Brewster & Shupey evening at
The most enthusiastic response was to the overall of the cuts from 'Worst of the Worst', which they lovingly debated in my witness, who they lovedingly recited. 'One Take Over The Unit' were the two words that had been cut.
Opening the bill was Chef Michel Ternes, who came from Kansas City. Proposals because of the good Kansas City air, heat and humidity conditions of being the warmup act in being warmed and winning the competition. Chef Michel Ternes delivered a fine and inventive dish.
"IT IS OF extreme importance." he said. "that the
Chet Nichols
Chalmers said he conferred with the search committee about finding candidates who would "work on moving the University to a more marketed and greater decision-making the level where funds are spent
This is a group that was overloaded once. But that was a long time ago. It the vibrations that were left at the club when he shot it. The Brewer & Browner have made it.
IN CONCERT
BREWER & SHIPLEY
SAT., APRIL 8th
He said he was much in favor of the new computer data-based information system that is a goal of many organizations' reorganization plan.
Argsinger, before his appointment as vice chancellor, said that most of the obscure details of University reorganization would "depend on the talents and concerns of people who are to be made a chancellor positions and their interactions with the chancellor."
two persons I appoint work well together."
- 10 P.M. -
Chaimers gave the committee members no directives regarding the sex, age, race or area of residence. But he nevertheless However, he said he thought the KU women’s organizations had been created in the creation of new offices for women and were not still demanding that a woman be installed as one of the chairs.
In announcing his choices among the candidates for the two positions, Chalmers said he was "delighted that these two educators have agreed to serve as vice chancellors."
WITH
FUNK 'N' PUNCH
HOCH AUDITORIUM
TO DATE, the three other vice chancellors' offices have not been so much affected.
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Tuesday, March 28, 1972
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'Godfather' Epitomizes America
r vice t been
By BARBARA SCHMIDT
Korean Reviews Editor
Gangsterism has become an attractive way of life, crime just a profitable business venture; it gives your personal tool to get things done speedily and economically. There is no longer any right or wrong, but you must be ready for business" and "best for the family." Such are the ways of the
come across as valid extensions of the unjustified American creed that was not wrong even at the expense of justice, mercy, fair play and human
"THE GODFATHER" is a
the光明感pectrope of corporate
tourism. It is meant to underwurf activities. It is the story of an aging Mafia leader and his wives.
KANSAN reviews
Tickets for the concert are $2.25 and $3.50 and will go on in the SAU office at the Kansas Union at a date to be announced.
I loved "The Godfather" from start to finish, but frankly I wish I hadn't. It stands opposed to too much violence and Christian morals and ethics that have been pounded into my head for 20 years. This alone I could accept. But "The Godfather" is a more anti-marital unethical acts as the central at heart of what we affectionately call "the American way." The brutality, the crime, the unthinking cold-bloodedness of the mob power are played to extremes, to be sure, but nonetheless they
Blues guitarist B. B. King will perform for the Kansas Relays concert April 22 in Hoch Auditorium. King will play "Ladybird."
world in the best new picture to play Lawrence in more than a year. it's called "The Goosefather" and it doesn't make you realize you've got two dollars to spend and three hours to spare, don't miss it. Believe me, it's the best movie I ever saw.
King has been called "King of the Blues" and the worst greatest blues guitarist. He has been playing over 25 years and has performed concerts on 104 college campuses in 34 states.
With this kind of rationale, "The Godfather" is a natural for violence on screen. But whereas the movie's violence for its sensationalist value, "The Godfather" treats it matter-of-fact. By the last third of the movie, blood-spattered bodies being riddled with bullets has become like slaughter on our highways or in Vietnam—just
Burglaries Decline Over Spring Break
IT'S A PRIMITIVE, simple-minded kind of thinking, a takeoff on the childhood "good guys vs. bad guys" tradition. Both sides have become the bad guys and nobody cares about morality anymore because now it's just a way to make things right "right" in the "The Godfather": the main characters are all children; the contrary characters are all corrupt entertainers to journalists to police—with money and family and the sole inductions to loyalty.
son gradually replaces him in the limelight. The father (called the Godfather in reference to his relationship to other members of his family) treats both treat the syndicate simply as "the family business," to be run economically with money and power as the end reward. In the case of death and crime is only incidental to their thoughts. They and their men are ready to kill or be killed without remorse, in the knowledge that, to them, it is nothing personal."
Lawrence police reported a substantial decrease in vandalism and property damage in Kansas residence halls, fraternities, sororites and apartments during spring break in comparison with semester start.
By JERRY M. VOKRACKA
Korean Staff Writer
He said fewer apartments were burglarized or at least reported as burglarized to police.
Veronan Harrell, Lawrence factor in the decrease was that people were not as familiar with the spring holiday as with the summer.
HARREL SAID no burglaries at fraternities, sororites or residence halls had been reported to date.
"A few fraternities and
academics, who have dwellers,
reported to police they were
leaving and asked to have
sex冈nocked over the break," he said.
Police reported that on Sunday, a 12-year-old student returned to law enforcement investigated only one apartment burglarized and only one where the suspect was found.
Fraternities and sororites reported no burglaries or acts of vandalism to their houses.
Cindy Ullom, Leawood senior and president of Delta Gamma sorority, said her house was very well checked during the break.
another everyday occurrence in the American way of life.
"People checked the house everyday, and it was double break. We also notified police. The minute we returned, the house was checked to make sure everything was intact," said
MARY STEVENSON
Maryville, Mo., junior and president of Gamma Phi Beta sorority, said her sorority didn't take any special precautions in the caretial locking of the house.
"To my knowledge, there were
no students to play or
occur. But a couple of the guys
stayed at the house over break
and this may have something to
do."
Bruce Boedecker, Benton senior and president of Delta Chi fraternity, said he knew of no incidents in his fraternity.
Rusan Orban, Kirkwood, Mo., junior and president of Sigma Gamma Rho, was the only one incident, the theft of a bicycle belonging to one of the students.
"THE BIKE was left outside and when the owner returned didn't have any other problem. A couple of the brothers stayed at the house over break and made sure they were always locked," said Orban
Orban said they took only the usual precautions of stopping mail delivery and locking up all valuable house property.
Resident halls also have not reported any apparent burglaries yet.
Chris Wright, resident director
of Naismith Hall, said she also had had no burglaries reported to her.
King has made numerous recordings, "The Thrill Is Gone"
being one of his most recent.
WRIGHT SAID the usual precautions were taken of not allowing non-residents past the lobby and keeping doors securely locked. She said all bikes were built into the building and locked.
John Shepard, Lawrence police
public relations officer, said the
decrease was a good sign and
could reinnam low if people would
be suspicious activity in
residential areas to police
immediately.
Wright said she thought the security precautions taken by other living groups may have stemmed from an article that appeared in the February 28 issue of *Kansas about institutional sexual assault* could be taken by living groups to deter burglars.
SHEPARD SAID there were three methods of reporting suspicious activities, burglaries or other crimes to police.
"The first is to dial 911 which is the police emergency number, or to dial 842-8467, which spells out 'police' and the second should only be called if emergency situations exist and police assistance is needed. The third should only be called if public information and should be called if a person desires information and a possible emergency does not exist," said Sheard.
Shepard said the VICTIMS number was not widely known. He said it was created about two weeks after 911 as emergency numbers.
BUT IT IS this very acceptance of violence that makes "The Godfather" a disconcerting film. The captial fact of life, but criminals are coddled and romanticized. Setting the film in the late 1940s and early 1950s, screenwriter Chris Cornell writes the screenwriter Francis Coppola (an Oscar winner for last year's "Patton" script) have written these detailed—from cars to clothes to sets to popular songs of the period—to make the whole thing a subtly nostalgic tour de force for fans without loving the time, the places and the characters, even in you do have to block out of your view what it is that you're loving.
B. B. King To Perform
The strike virtually cripped industry. A Trade Union Congress organized an unrestricted $130,000 of Northern Ireland 215,000 workers walked out
Protestants Halt Industry
BELFAST (AP) —The Protestants struck back in Northern Ireland Monday with a riot, the BBC reported. Befast to a virtual hall.
The strike, protecting business takeover of the government, started with a cut in electrical power and company workers were among the first to honor the strike call. Ousted Prime Minister Brian Faulkner called for a campaign monocerule to be organized by the British overlord, William Whiteleaf, who will rule for the next year.
Correction
It was incorrectly reported in the March 17 Kansan that the team had won a game against them held April 6, 8 and 9. The correct dates of the Exposition are April 7, 8 and 9. These dates do not apply to the games as they have in the past.
MARLON BRANDO plays with Corleone, the ageing Mafia head. He is less explosive than he was when he played with Tom Cruise's "A Streetcar Named Desire," but his performance brings to mind the realities of 30 years. At 47, Brandon is still one
hell of an actor, and his God-father proves that, given the right property, he will long live. But most facinating actors around him used the Dick Smith's makeup (Smith turned Dustin Hoffman into a 102-year-old man for "Little Big Man") Brandevoe kisses a man with a quiet gentleness in contrast to the harshness of his "business" activities. And the aura of love humanity adds to the aura of deception, making it all the more important to care for and condone their violence.
"THE GODFATHER" is a movie about a man many episodes, plot and character haven't gotten lost in a maze of complexities. And neither is the weight of the picture sown on one character. Bruno is a unifying force, but it never becomes just another man. James Cain are excellent, and Bobby Duval, Diane Janeen and Richard Casteler are also involved.
"The Godfather" is one of those rare movies a critic could write
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rems about and still only scratch the surface. As an allegory on the American state of militant talents, as a nostalgic glaze backwards and as an exciting story of dangerous action comedy, it has a thought-provoking entertainment at its best. But somehow what it says about America, not just in terms of violence, is more than a little upsetting.
Follow-up Events Wednesday, 3:00 p.m.
Forum Room of the Kansas Union
Panel Discussion on Religions
Panel will be comprised of representatives from various campus religions.
College Life created the college of college for college students. It is behind the planning and research of the college of college company serving college students.
C. W. PARKER
You should know all about the story. You tell it your short story with a happy ending—a short story through the year ahead. And through the year ahead.
Residence Hall Group Discussions
Topic: "Jesus Christ: Superstar or God?"
Wednesday and Thursday
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Phone 842-7067
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UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE PRESENTS
HAMLET by William Shakespeare
March
28 • 30
April 1
8:00 p.m.
ROSENCRANTZ and GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD
March 29 • 31 8:00 p.m.
by Tom Stoppard
April 2 matinee
2:30 p.m.
University Theatre-Murphy Hall
Ticket Reservations: UN4-3982 KU Students Receive Free Reserve Seat Ticket with Certificate of Registration
AN OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT NIXON
Dear Mr. President:
I do not believe you when you say that the Indochina war is winding down.
I know that American soldiers are being replaced by automated weapons, computers, and sensors that cannot distinguish between the footstep of a child and that of a Viejo gorilla.
I cannot camelot be given the torture of a child and that of a Viking guitoria.
I know that Vietnamese children cannot run and play freely, because they must wear heavy straw vests to protect themselves from exploding "anti-personnel devices" and must continually be alert to sirenings of bombing raids.
I know that American corporations are growing rich by designing bigger and better and more clever methods of destruction.
I know that while we are spending 61 per cent of our national budget on the military, a family in my hometown of Lawrence, Kansas has only the burners of a stove to heat their home in winter and an 86-year-old woman has no gas and lights because her meager Social Security allowance didn't stretch far enough.
I know that a Vietnamese man, woman or child laughs and dreams and cries and plans—just like I do. An becomes fearful—just like I do. And needs both legs to walk—just like I do. And loves his
spalled and angered by the conduct of our country in Indochina.
You and I are responsible, Mr. Nixon. The time has come when no decision is in fact a decision for extended disaster. Now is the time for turning; from war to peace, from death to life.
PEACE EDUCATION AND ACTION WEEK
By replacing ground troops with machines, the Nixon Administration has tried to remove the Indochina War from public consciousness and project the appearance of peace. The purpose of Peace Education and Action Week is to promote awareness and suggest alternatives for action concerning the war in Indochina.
PEACE EDUCATION AND ACTION WEEK
March 27-31
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
MONDAY, MARCH 27
9:30:3:30 "The Automated Air War" - Slide show being shown on the half hour (9:30, 10:30)
5:00:40 "Cold War: The Flood" - Slide show
930-3:30
7:30 p.m. (tit) But What Do We Do—Forum Room,
Union; watch for specific titles in UDK,飞兵
TUESDAY, MARCH 28
9:30-3:30 "The Automated Air War"
7:30 p.m. (film) Once Upon a War—Big # Room Union
7:30 p.m.
All day Workshops on war, peace, political action, individual acts of resistance, etc. in the Union. Watch UDK and flyers for time schedules and titles.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29
9:30-3:30 "The Automated Air War"
(film) Winter Soldier Investigation—Jayhawk Room, Union
THURSDAY, MARCH 30
9:30-1:30 More Workshops in the Union.
8:00 p.m. Encountering Our World: an evening of anti war, media.
FRIDAY, MARCH 31
10:30:2:30 Vigil for Peace and Reparation, outside Danforth Chapel
8:30 p.m. Trial of the Catonsville Nine, United Minis-
ties Building, 1004 Orcad. Also being presented
by the North Carolina Chapter of the National
Athletic Association.
4
Tuesday, March 28.1972
University Daily Kansas
Penal Center Diagnoses Felon's Needs, Behavior
By GINNIE MICKE Kansan Staff Writer
Experience demonstrates that any attempt to rehabilitate a person convicted of a felony before he is understood as an innocent victim, will produce negative results, according to George W. Thompson; superintendent of the Kansas State Reception and Diagnostic Center. The diagnostic center, in which he is part of the Kansas Penal System.
"This diagnostic understanding is essential before rehabilitation or treatment indicated." said Johnson recently.
The purpose of the diagnostic center is to evaluate a convicted felon, outlining his needs, assets and liabilities. The staff at the center concentrate on inmates who are inmates in an anti-social manner.
Thompson said only 26 states had some type of evaluation of convicted felons and that most of the programs for the prison program as the one in Kansas
THE CENTER uses the team approach in evaluating an inmate's readiness to work, psychiatrist, psychologist, psychiatrist and chaplain were assigned to each inmate, and that the evaluation was on "a very good" basis.
The social worker gets the social history of an inmate by interviewing his parents and family and through community agencies, former employers and military services.
The psychologist evaluates va-
terials with a pittitude of
achievements and clinical
personality tests and
personal counseling are also a
THE CHAIPLAIN researches the religious background of each inmate, as well as providing an understanding of his life. He is also responsible for conducting worship services and interpreting the work of the inmates.
The psychiatrist is the team leader, and the amount of time he spends directly with an inmate depends on the individual case
KANU Radio Wins Awards For Production
KANU radio station has received two awards for its production of an hour long music on musical Aaron Copland
The program won first place in the West of West awards, the best of West awards, and Educational Society for Telecommunications, an
The production also won the Major Edwin Armstrong Award for excellence in FM broadcasting in the non- music category, given by the Armstrong Foundation.
The documentary was produced and edited by Mark Klugman, Kansas City, Mo., Garry Leawed senior; and Gary Shivers, special projects director for KANU. It was recorded at Ottawa University, where he presented a concert in November.
It is being distributed to stations of the National Public Radio Network, of which KANU is a member.
THE PROGRAM includes an
interdispersed music and
music part of his discussion with Ottawa in musical examples with narration.
Kansas Rivals To Run Race On Kaw River
The third annual canoe race is
Kansas residence halls and the
Kansas State University residence
halls will be April 15. The race will be
held on Friday, April 16.
We've never had any restrictions about who can enter the residence hall, but anyone aimed primarily at the residence halls, but anyone can enter." John Hill assistant to the residence hall system, said Monday.
Hill said each cane must start and finish the race. The crew must go in the same direction the race, but there must be three people, representing both sexes, in the canoe at all times, he said. Coast Guard safety rules will be enforced.
"One thing we want clearly understood by the contestants is that you are in a position to take responsibility for their safety," Hill said. "The enter at their
"We'll start around noon on Saturday and finish up sometime on Sunday," he said.
To enter the race, which will run from below the bridge in Hallettsville, Lawrence bridge, a student should contact Ben Mann, vice-president of the KU Association of University Resident Halls, at 844-9875.
The average stay at the center is about 45 days, said Thompson. By the fourth week, the staff tries to pool its knowledge and resources. By the fifth week, he reports that report should be finalized.
ALTHOUGH MOST of the inmates at the Diagnostic Center stay there for evaluation purposes only, there are about 25 prisoners assigned to the on-site work on a permanent basis.
Since 1982, when the center began operating, over 4,700 cases have been evaluated. Thompson said a sample survey of these cases led to the recommendation of inmates was 26 years old, with a ninth grade education.
Most inmates have a history of broken homes and poor job stability.
Some 37 per cent on the survey were Kansas residents all their lives, with 47 per cent having married before juveniles. Thompson said. Thirty-five per cent had been in correctional institutions before
Thompson said there had been a marked increase in the number of children in the care group. The young adults, ranging in age from 18 to 25, compose about 75 to
“IN SUM, the inmates’ self-image is of having failed in everything, including crime,” he said. “Our motivation is often bereadness and despair, and they are wrongly held by aging out by ageing up their aggressions.
"Ninety per cent have plead guilty to the crime as charged or
Any male convicted of a felon can be referred to the Diagnostic Center by a district court judge. A female conviction may be reformally in Lansing.
to a lesser charge.Most have had a court-appointed attorney."
When the center was first authorized by the state in 1861, it was originally planned to have all three judges on the bench. Because the maximum capacity of only 120 made this impossible, the statute was modified. The district court judge now demands that he refer to the center.
JUDGE FRANK R. GRAY,
district judge for Douglas
County, said he determined
which people to recommend for
diagnostic evaluation on the basis
of their performance in a ceer's
pre-sequence investigation.
He said the lack of adequate space did not enter into his decision. Rather, he referred a lawyer to the court whether he would benefit from it.
As a general rule, Gray sends young and first-time offenders. Diagnostic Center is the biggest Kansas in determining whether a person convicted of a felony should stay in a penal institution or leave.
Most of the cases referred to
the center from Douglas County
are recommended for some type
of probation, said A.D. Davidson,
and parole officer, and
these accommodations are
adhered to by Gray.
A SENTENCE can be modified up to 120 days after sentencing. A judge can lessen a sentence by not having it cannot lengthen it. If a person goes on probation before the 120th day, it may not loss any of his civil rights.
"In addition to evaluating persons who come directly from the courts, we also examine prisoners who have served their sentences and have been referred to the center by the Board of Probation and Parole," Thompson said. "We also examine inmates at the request of institutional institutions for purpose of helping to implement the rehabilitation prescribed for them within the prison system or inmates who may have difficulty in their adjustment to prison."
NORTH EDGE STREET
THE WILLOW BANK
STORES
City to Build 'Sawtooth' Curbs
Some cities were built in Downtown.
. Same curbing was built in Osawatomie .
Editor's Note: This is the first of two articles about the downtown redevelopment of Lawrence.
By CHRIS MILLER
Kansan Staff Writer
In its analysis of the condition the central business district the Massachusetts Street between 6th and 11th streets the plan for the city's downtown.
Efforts to improve the overall appearance of the central business district can be traced back to 1964, when a St. Louis firm of city planners developed a growth of the city of Lawrence.
"IF THE Lawrence central business district is to maintain a strong position in the future, it must offer service areas, it must offer those shopping and service facilities desired by the population it will serve. Beauty and convenience are found in parks, offices and disorder . . . The Lawrence central business district should become an exciting object of civic pride, spreading its fame across the additional limits of its trading area.
After eight years of effort and two different attempts to obtain federal funds for development, the Lawrence downtown business will be revitalized this year with help of the federal government.
The plan goes on to describe the
Lawrence to Start City Redevelopment
KU Women to Recognize Outstanding Woman Grad
By MONA DUNN
Providing a chance for University of Kansas women to be honored for their contributions to the University, Women's Recognition night, which is sponsored by the KU Commission on the Status of Women, will be at Wooldavid Auditorium.
One of the awards given will be to the outstanding women graduate of 1972. Martha Ward, assistant to the dean of women.
announced that the winner would be selected by the women vote, not by the men's choice on a nomination blank Women's Reception Committee.
The nomination blanks were sent out to women living in university housing and to the campus off-campus housing. Ward said.
outstanding women graduates,
Debbie McAdams, Webster
Groves, Mo. sophomore and
a member of the recognition
committee, said
MEMBERS OF THE Hall of Fame selected by the Recognition Committee on the basis of their present contributions to the University, McAdams said.
Students for McGovern To Pick Delegate Slates
Nominating blanks were sent with a letter to the University faculty, staff members and alumni who were asked to assist Committee in their selection of the Hall of Fame members.
By JIM KENDELL
Campus Bulletin
Students for McGovern will hold a meeting at 7 p. m. tuesday in the International Room of the McGovern building considering to run a McGovern
THE WOMEN were asked to nominate a graduating senior college student something to the University and who was the outstanding senior college student.
Draft Template: 9:30 a.m., Parlor A.
Italian Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowlar
Table
Pine Room,
Draft Help: 9:30 a.m., Parlor A.
IVCE Office: 7 a.m., 299 Kansas Union.
Latin American Seminar: 9 a.m., 305 and
Pine Room.
Southwestern Publishers Interviews:
n.m. Oread Room.
Italian Table: 11:30 a.m. Meadowlark
Cafeteria.
History Advisory Committee: noon
Dean's Council Agenda: noon. Alcova D.
Biochemistry Lecture: 3:30 p.m., Forum.
Room.
McGovernor for President: 7 p.m., In international Room. and Nurse Club. 7 p.m.
Film Society 6 p.m., Woodbroom Room,
Bischkertstein 8:30 p.m., English Room,
Kingsway 10 a.m., Della Sigma Pt. 7 p.m., Centennial Room
Kapa Pt. 7 p.m., Pleason Room,
Rockefeller Center 9 p.m.
SUA Board: 7 p.m. Governors Room.
International Night Committee: 7 p.m.
Parker A.
K.U. Synchronized Swim Club 7 p.m.
Robinson Natlarium
Volunteer Information: 260-845-3100
Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel
7:30 p.m. Big Bear Bay
SUNY New York 7:30 p.m.; BU room 9
KU International Law Society; 7:30 p.m.
Regionalist Room.
KU Elite Law Society; 7:30 p.m.
delegate or alternate in the April 8 local unit conventions.
This meeting will be the first of four meetings this week aimed at selecting McGovern slates of delegates in each of Douglas
The third county district
MecGovern meeting will be held
Wednesday at 7:30 in the Big
Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
Thursday night, McGovern supporters in the first district will caucus at 7:30 p. m. in West Virginia to select their delegates.
Lynn Knox, St. Louis, Mo.
freshman and chairman of the
Douglas County McGoverson for
President committee, said, "All
persons interested in selecting
McGoverson should attend."
KU Film Society) 7:30 p.m., Woodruff
Student Vote: 8 p.m., Ballroom
Knox said those attending the McGovern slate, making meetings would participate in and learn about the convention rules.
SECOND DISTRICT
MG罩Government leaders will meet at 3 p. m. Saturday in Ballard Center to engage the state剥
University Theatre, "Hamiet" 8 p.m.
Murray
The mock convention will give people experience in the process, which the McGovern states will
to win, according to Knox.
McGovern supporters will elect three women, and three men and one person at large to represent
The selection of the three men and three women will be in accord with the Commission's recommendation that men and women be equally selected.
Knox said the delegates would be selected by categories Women will be selected separately from men.
The McGovern Commission studied and rewrite Democratic convention rules after the 1988 presidential election to make the party more democratic.
The second district convention will be at the 4H Fairgrounds. The third district convention will be at the Lawrence High School cafeteria
ON APRIL 8 the district conventions will begin simultaneously at 2 p.m. in the first county district convention will be in the Douglas County conference.
Knox said that everyone who has even expressed an interest in McGovern's candidacy was contacted about the meetings.
"Right now the book is in a holding stage." Seymour said. "We have to wait for all the pictures to come in, and then the will be to sort them and make the images on which to publish."
KU Prof Editing Photo Book
MeAdams said that the faculty members and alumni were asked to choose their nominees from 12 colleges where they are areas of education, fine arts, social work, medicine, liberal arts and sciences, journalism, business, law, engineering, design pharmacy, and religion.
By EDWARD L. LALLO
A pictorial essay of life in the United States on Tuesday, March 21. Mr. Keller put together by William Put together by professor of photography at photographic school.
THE RESPONSE has been thin. Seventeen photographers from 13 states have submitted pictures. The largest contributor is a young woman.
In the letter which was sent to the faculty members and alumni, the nominee should provide a successful model for KU women students in the choosing of their positions in becoming effective citizens.
The book, tentatively entitled "A Split Second in the Life of the U. S.," will be the result of a mutual effort of over 800 newspaper articles and college photographs of 50 states who photographed one aspect of life at exactly 2 p. m. E. S. on March 21.
"The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has promised to expand the country laid by its own over-Windy, Utah." Seymour said.
Publication of the proposed book is still "up in the air."
Kansan Staff Writer
according to Seymour
He said that Dick Pollar, director of photography for Time-Life Inc., has expressed interest in the idea.
Indians Approve Efforts To Consolidate Centers
"We have had help from a loto people." Seymour said. "Hal Buehl of Associated Press is
pickuping up the President and Vice President for us, along with the Democratic presidential candidates.
"RIGHT NOW, though, all I can do is sit back and keep my fingers crossed that everything works out," he said.
Each center is to draw up a tentative constitution that would govern the consolidated centers, which would be governed by the Lawrence center, said recently. The three documents will be presented at a general meeting of the committee in Topeka. Skenandore said that the best points of each would be incorporated into the final constitution
In a recent joint meeting of the Topoka, Lawrence and Kansas members voted to combine their respective centers into a more
"The Women's Recognition Committee tallys all the votes that are returned to them. While the committee tallys the votes, the actual selection of the women students is the women students." Ward said.
Susie Boceli, Kansas City, was voted last year's Outstanding KWoman Graduate by the University women students.
The Wichita Indian Center will
Several women will be inducted on Women's Recognition night which is in its third year of existence. It was created by the KU Commission on the Status of Women, faculty, staff members or
be represented at the April meeting and will be included in the next session of the constitution, Skenandzaro said. Member of the center also served as a vicar, and the tribal leaders from the Potawatomi, Kickapo, Sac and Pocono Mountains constituted.
Untilnow, Skenandarie said, the reservation Indians have been somewhat resentful of the aid given to the Indian centers which the non-reservation Indian has sometimes feel aid given to Indian Centers cuts and available to them. He mentions the bess of hope to dispel some of these fears at the upcoming meeting.
People .. Places ... Things
People:
general appearance and character of the downtown area in 1964 as 'not at all satisfactory,' suggesting that the area from 7th to 10th street on Massachusetts be used for a parking area, removing traffic jam, from Massachusetts Street
LOBYBIT DITA D. B. BEARD, who linked the White House to international telephone and Telegraph Corp. before collapsing, died on Saturday, January 13, 2014.
A federal judge in the Berrigan trial ordered the acquittal of EQBAL HAMAD on two charges, including sending a letter threatening to kidnap presidential adviser Henry Kissinger. After his arrest, he was freed, along with six other defendants accused in an antitwar plot.
IN 1966, the city finance visits from three urban design consultants. Although one of the three consultants originally agrees with the deal of a design firm, the team needs to plan such a mail he agree with the other two that a mail was not feasible for Lawrence.
GOV. ROBERT DOCKING said he has prepared a message for the Kansas Legislature on its return today urging the property tax law bill to be made permanent and that it be strengthened. The governor will be available for a one-day meeting to conclude the work of the 1972 session.
Places:
MOSCOW—The Soviet Union launched an unmanned space probe that is to reach Venus in July and plunge into the planet's hellish atmosphere for a try at a soft landing. The spacecraft, Venus 8, is believed to have a mission very similar to that of Venus 7, the last
SAIGON—Enemy troops were reported massing near Phnom Penh, indicating the possibility of a major assault on the Cambodian capital. Their fears were substantiated by official reports of heavy ground fighting near Pai Kasey, 20 miles south-west of Phnom Penh, and an attack near the capital suburb of Kompong Kantuet Sunday night.
Declaring that the worsening welfare mess has become "a social and political time bomb," President Nikon demanded that Congress complete action this year on his WELFARE REFORM Act, which would ban the amassed $480 million in the ramshackle welfare system, patchuped on many times in the past but still basically unchanged since it was first enacted as emergency legislation in the mid-1930s. "Among its provisions, the act requires that welfare programs be a figure associated by welfare rights groups as too low. The omnibus legislation also increases social security benefits by 5 per cent.
Things:
LEFTIST GUERRILLAS KIDNAPED three British radar technicians from the Black Sea coastal town of Unye, Turkey, and reliable sources reported the technicians were being held as prisoners. The United States Constitutional Court agreed to reconsider the death sentences.
A bill to raise about $2.5 MILLION ADDITIONAL STATE REVENUE from a surtax on individual incomes is being prepared for introduction in the Kansas House today, Speaker Calvin Strowig said. He said this would give the legislators a choice.
In August of 1966, city officials submitted plans for a renewal project estimated to cost $350 million. Housing and Urban Development (HUD) of the federal Department The Project was not approved for federal funding, called for development of Massachusetts Street into four separate block-long parking spaces requested $630,182 in federal funds.
THE PROPOSED project is covered pavilions, shelters, textured sidewalks, a new surface for Massachusetts Street, underground utilities, numerous plumbing outlets and up of the arcades, landscaping along Massachusetts 7th, 8th, 9th streets, 'scramble' type traffic signals, enabling pedestrians to cross an intersection any direction at the same time.
In 1968, city officials submitted a similar plan with an estimated cost of $1,743,846 to the federal government under the authority granted in 1968. Again, federal authorities refused to fund the project.
Recently, $550,000 in federal funds was made available to the city through the Neighborhood Development Program (NDP) of HUD.
Although plans have not been finalized, Schaake said the project would tentatively be funded by a $30,000 four-funded by HUD through the NDP and one funded by the city of Lawrence. About the same amount of money will be invested in the project by the city and the NDP.
DON SCHAKE, executive director of the local office of the NDP, said recently this federal money would be used for some type of revitalization of the area, possibly this summer.
The city's contribution of about $400,000 will pay for removing the 'trown' of Massachusetts Street streets and repaving of the streets and repacing of the streets.
SCHAKE EXPLAINED that over the years, the paving in the middle of Massachusetts Street was removed without removing the old places. In places originally buried in the 1805 may still be buried under the paving. As much as two feet of paving may need to be removed.
New 'sawtooth' curbing and guttering sloping away from the curbing, some sidewalks at the curb, and the other constructed with federal money.
Federal funds provided through the NDP will pay for several improvements.
Some underground utilities including waterlines and conduit
for street light wiring,will be federally funded.
NDP funds will also furnish street furniture and plantings, including benches, benches, receipetables, telephone booths, improvements in the existing side areas, according to Schake.
SCHAKE SAID the loca- office of the NDP was budgeted $50,000 for 1972. The city, he said, had to expand the private market to raise capital for the project. The federal government repays the notes, deducting interest paid to the government and some supervision charges.
Actual engineering and construction costs of the project must be $40,000. Schaake said, because the downtown project, planned by Downtown project, will require local NDP office, and interest paid on the project must be based on the cost.
If all of the money is not used in this project year, he said it will be spent on other forms of government. All of the funds will be spent, he emphasized, only if they are used for the needs of the community.
Much of the results of the project, Shaake said, will depend on the participation of local merchants.
SCHAKE SAID $50,000 was a minimum figure for federal paralegal projects. He described it as "kind of a drop in the bucket to the employer."
To obtain uniformly new sidewalks in much of the area, 51 per cent of the merchants must have a district office district to finance construction of sidewalks. Although the city could require about 25 per cent of sidewalks because they are hazardous, Schaake said 50 per cent of the sidewalks should be hazardous, but they are not hazardous.
Under a benefit district, the merchants as a group pay the cost of the new sidewalks using their own equipment, and the merchants more. Schaeke said, since it would involve repaving large areas of sidewalk than uncoordinated individual efforts, that would uniformly excellent sidewalks.
ABOUT 25 per cent of the sidewalks are in excellent shape now, he said, and need not be replaced.
Convincing the downtown merchants of the advisibility of forming a benefit district will be a function of the Chamber of Commerce, rather than any other group, according to Schake.
He said it would also be up to the Chamber of Commerce to allow its owners a businessman to to shop improvements in their storefronts. They must be shown, he said, the appearance of their stores.
Many stores, such as Weaver's, have recently completed remodeling of the store's shape. Schake said, Others, however, need reconstruction, he
The theory behind the redevelopment, Schaake said, is, "There is so much private and public investment (in the central business district) that you can't afford to waste it. It is a matter of economic survival in the strictest sense."
Editor's Note
It is again necessary to drop the editorial page in order to provide space for adequate news coverage. We apologize to our readers. Chip Crews
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 28. 1972
5
Corder No-Hits C of E
NY
Kansas Staff Photo by EDT 1411
Steve Corder Launches a Pitch
Jawhack a hurt injured a no-hitter ...
Champs' Defeat Aim of Gymnasts
By BILL SCHEELE
Blanchard and Schubert were runners-up to the ISU stars in the Big Eight gymnastics meet night in Allen Filed House.
Terry Blanchard and Richard Schubert, record-setting University of Kansas gymnasts, will get one more chance to defeat Iowa State University Dennis Muzar and Russ Hoffman.
Iowa State, winning its fourth consecutive Big Eight championship, topped second place Oklahoma by 18 points. The team will defend its NCAA gymnasiums April 6 at home in Ames.
Prior to his performance
Safety Sawyer of Blanchard
silently paced the corridors of Allen Field House,
preparing himself mentally for
the race.
Although both KU gymnasies performed well, Blanchel lost to Mazur by 4 of a point in the game. In the second by 2 of a point to four-time Big Eight and two-time NCAA horse champion Hoffman.
His performance was excellent, but not good enough for first place. His last collegiate领会 will be at Ames next week.
Schubert, also a senior, said after the meet that he was satisfied with his routine.
"I was very aggressive to you," he said. "You perform too conservatively in a Big Eight meet, but tonight I was hitting my stunts one right after another."
"I really wanted to beat Hoffman. He's everybody's target. I'll have one more chance, though."
Hoppy Batter of Nebraska was the meet's only double champion, winning the horizontal bar and the vaulting events.
Other individual winners were Kirkings, Oleson and Kolokhwa, Oleson Lewis of Oklahoma in floor exercise and Bob Roth of ISU. In the all-around competition.
Iowa State qualified seven gymnasts for the NCAA meet. Nebraska, K-State, Oklahoma and KU each qualified two.
Kansas State finished third, Nebraska fourth, KU fifth and Colorado last.
By DAN GEORGE
Pitching was the name of the game Monday afternoon at Quigley Field, and Steve Corder fied a two-hitter effectively. They tossed a no-hitter and a two-hitter to lead the game with four stories over College of Emporia
The tennis squad lost three matches during spring vacation, and the team traveled to the University of Washington where they defeated, 9-0.
Two days later, the squad traveled to Oral Roberts University. The squad fared better against ORU two days before their match with KU, ORU was ranked 7th in the nation.
The KU squad opened their Big Eight season March 21 against Oklahoma State University with a 5-4 loss.
Golf Postponed
"We did what we planned to do," Coates Floyd Temple said in a conference play with a winning record of Emporia. "They really a good hitting team but you can no-hit anybody, it's not going."
Showing in Florida Meet Makes Jim Ryun Happy
A triangular golf meet that was to be hosted by the University of Chicago on March 24 with Baker University and State Teacher's College of Emporia has been postponed. Coach Bob Frederick said Monday.
In the first game, Corder's
shackling of the Emporia hitters
was less than a quarter of a
shortstop Jerry Westbrook in the
sixth inning and by errors by
Glass, Dan Heck and George
Corder struck out seven
in the nightcap, Cox gave up a leadoff song to Westbrook in the first and a single to Steve Howard with an awkward walk one and struck out six
KU will host Big Eight favorite Iowa State in a doubleheader Friday.
The next scheduled meet is April 6-7 with Nebraska at Lincoln.
Jim Ryun, apparently rediscovering a measure of fun in running, expressed satisfaction last weekend with his splits in two relay events at the Florida High School. He ran half-mile and three-quarter mile legs with Club West of Santa Barbara, Calif.
IN THE HITTING departm-
ent, the Joshawks were more than
added to the team's roster,
Rohert Ohr and seniors Bob
Wolf and Dan Heck, they banged
The KU attack got underway in the first game when Ohm singled in the first inning, stole two and went to third on a passed ball. Ohm knocked him in with a sharp single down the base line
In the fifth, Ohm again singled
and stole second. Rightfielder
Dona Lahit grounded to second but
on an error; Ohm scored when
the ball was outfield wide and wide. First
baseman Wolf then slammed a pitch over the fence near the 380-
yard line. Ohm had its 4-0 margin of victory
In the third inning of the second game, KU again got on the board when Ohm bunted his way to first and second baseman Glass. Glass scored from the field but the throw from the outfield got by the catcher
Ryun ran a 1:48.6 half-mile
Friday in a two-mile relay. His
world record is 1:44.9. In the
first round he asked a kicker
a 2:56.3 for three courters.
In the sixth, shortstop Heck doubled to left field Third base on a ground ball and out Cox fowl out. Then Ohm tripled down the right field line to
pressure and I'm relaxing as I get ready. I'm satisfied with my progress this weekend."
"I felt real good," Ryun said.
"Relays are fun; there's no real
IT WAS THE second shutout
for Corder and Cox. They
combined 158-74 last Monday against Washburn
the score of both
those games.
Ryun will run his first qualifying race for the 1,500-meter Olympic trials April 22 in the Kansas Relays.
Temple was pleased with the pitchers' performances.
"Corder's got a variety of pitches," he said. "His fast ball
The wins also brought KU's consecutive victory string to seven games. After dropping a 14-6 win in the first game of a doubleheader March 18 in Topeka, they rebounded for a hefty 15-6 victory in the nightcap. The KU team played second doubleheader sweep when they played Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia with 6-1 and 6-5 victories.
unexceptional, but he's got a good curve, changeup and slider. And he knows how to use them in the kitchen. He cooks and he food are smart picnics.
Wendrick,ok a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w
Westrock,cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Paterson,cf 3 0 0 0 0 1.0 Lahil,bf 2 0 0 0 0 0
Daley,bf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Turkey,lb 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Polebrook,lb 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Brenn,cb 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Miao,fb 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Hocke,bs 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Ubermore,c 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Bernie,c 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Cole,cb 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Burton,c 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Cole,cb 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
College of Emporla 000 000 0-0
Kannas 100 030 x-4
HR.-HW-Fo (1) SB -Bm 2. Glass.
BH.-Westbrook (1), LAH -S0-Peterson,
Titus, Peteatite, Howard, Deway,
LDB -Cole of Emporis 4, KU 6, RBI-
LDB -College of Emporis 4, KU 8, RBI-
lp h r er bb so
Zecco (L,1:1) 6 7 4 7 3 1 4
Corder (W,2.0) 7 0 0 0 1 7
WP- Corder
Time - 1:20. Umpires—Goeble, Groneck
A-100.
Second Game
Westbrook, cs f 2 0 Okm. hf b r b
Watertown, cs f 2 0 Glass, B2 b r b
Peterson, cf 2 0 Glass, B2 b r b
Turley, ib 2 0 Order, B2 2 0 0
Turley, ib 2 0 Order, B2 2 0 0
Howard, 3b 2 0 Wolf, wf,lf 2 0 0
Howard, 3b 2 0 Wolf, wf,lf 2 0 0
Piananes, c 2 0 Been, cf 0 0 0
Piananes, c 2 0 Been, cf 0 0 0
Totals 22 28 Cot, p 0 0 0
Coll. of Emporia (0) Kansas (3)
Rancho 320 002 001 001
**Glass:** 3.0 Conv. B-14, Glass B-18; SH-08, Sac-Peterson, B-18
**Order:** order C-09; Turkey-Foward, Mission B-17
**LB College of Emporia 3.0 K-8; RU-18**
**LB College of Emporia 3.0 K-8; RU-18**
nw buy BSA, TRUMPH NORTON,
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Y
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Sponsored by K.U. Student Vote
817 Mass
Governor Robert Docking speaks on The Student Vote Questions & Answers Following Speech
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Baby Kannan are offered at 150 W. 23rd St., Chicago, cedar, creed, or national citrion.
One day
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $0.01
FOR SALE
WANT ADS
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
8608
Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
2. If you don't you're at an advantage.
We are a dualdivision.
Either Here is the analysis of new things—"New theories of Western Civilization." "Campus Madhouse, 14th West. 14th"
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SCUBA EQUIPMENT-FINAL . Mackenzie Tank, Task Regulator. Rifle, Five Life Skiers. Wet Suit Super Sport, $49.95 . Kawai Kite and Vest $39.95 . Spear Skiff $39.95 . $29.95 for all for your diving or major brands. Divers Equipment. Repair Ser. Inc $80. Batteryars Ser. Inc $80. 4-101-763-5783. 4-101-763-5783.
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NORTHPINES COUNTRY SHOP . 207
Bridge Antique, used furniture,
bridge antiques, old wood cooking and baking utensils, old wood stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood, of other useful items, open to 35 of other useful items, open to 35 of other useful items, day Herb Albernard, a3139.
Two-door Station Wagon. 156 Chevy
Two-room, std. tyrs. std. Must wifi before spring break. Make an offer.
864-1116 3-28
20' boy bicycle, good clean condition, battery operated, light five months old, hand brakes, new tires 45355 3539 3 P.M. Bike deal 24-8
1962 Ford Galaxie 500, 4 dr. V8
发动机 65,000 miles. New brakes,
shocks, ignition switch, oil change,
electric windows. Price $249,936.
$249,936; $825,836. 3-28
Must aseffice 1927 Corvette T-Bar Coupe, air conditioning, automatic transmission. Rent with ratt between 8 & 5, 843-7474 after 843-3233. Funds available: 3-28
1719 Champion Motor Home-24 f.
4113 eid engine, generator, 80 lb. LG
capacity, 14,800 miles. $9,000. 842-
7207. 3-28
Make KU Student Government even more anonymous. Vote Birthday Party for Joe Landolt (Pres.) and Mike Schoenbee (V.P.). 3-28
HORSES BOARDED, EXCELLENT
FULL STALL CARE, CLOSE IN
FACTILITY ALSO ENGLISH SADDLE
FACILITY ALSO ENGLISH SADDLE
FOR SALE B42-1406 842-1406
You just have to see our new shipment of India prints. They're unimaginable. You know what Spring was designed with these in mind. Hodge Paddle 3-28
Western saddle with padded brown
suede seat. Beautifully covered teek
panels and leather covered stirrups.
Best offer. 842-9749
3-29
A REAL RIP OFF- Four count
Recharge Rip Off
Reverse Magm Prip four times already mounted. Fit MUITMAG. ExcelForm
Rip off. B09 takes all. Call 651-2378
after 5.
Ford Falcon Sprint, V-8. Power
4*eased, etc. Kesau Bass amplifier.
200 watts, 4'15" speakers, 1967 Budget
Bass amplifier.
842 - 827-5113, 1131 Ohm
3-29
Ethan Malaender at BOKON-NOW... Through April 11... Watch here for new item each week. Beware of the Vermont, all sweaters 2-3/8. Vermont. 3-2/8
Ailee Lanning 714 Stare Receiver,
miraacord 750 automatic. Automatic
turretable and record change. 2 Ailee
Lanne's 600 records, 6 months old.
842-1265
1958. Dodge pick-up with topper 1918
v-8, speed, low turbine, good condition.
A bargain at $500. Call 864-
6262.
1967 Ducati 1600 Runs good but needs a few minor repairs. $200. Call 843-8551 or go by 748 Arkansas. 3-30
Two David Beatty stereo cabinets with J.B.L. D-130 speakers, J.B.L. crosses, and wide dispersion for high fritk chests 9644. For high fritk chests 3-30
Drum set; 2 bass drums, 3 small toms,
floor toom and snare. Also stands and
fabric cases. Will sell cheap. 842-
9654 3-30
1964 VW—NEW PAINT WITH RE-
FRESHING COAT. CAKE CONDITION
GOES TO BURN. DERR
DER 380 IOWA-B-5 CALL 842
8120 112.
94 Chevrolet Step-Van, Good engine, tires, body, etc. Easy make a fine camper. Call 843-9471. Will take a reasonable offer.
1963 Mercury Monterey 4-D, AT.
75,000 miles. Needs repair, water
pump and heater. Selling cheap. Call
842-6590 a 6 P.M.
3-31
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE FINE SAUSAGES
CSC
TOYOTA ENGINEERING
Competition
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
25 words or fewer. $11.54
Sports Cars Inc.
200 W. 31st St.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Pennsy's has biked for all, women's 3-speed touring bike $78.98. Women's 3-speed touring bike $69.49. And Men's 3-speed touring bike $69.38. The 3-Mast K900. 3-31
Double bed, mattress, box springs,
bedboard $30. 843-2860 afternoons
and evenings. 3-31
1971 Kawasaki 500, Mach III. Excellent condition. 2,400 miles. $550 firm.
Phone 864-6353 3-29
J9 Jaguar XK 150 Drop-head coupe
$1799. Call 814-3530 3-28
Camaro 1968, 396-325 hp, green,
black interior AM-FM Puns great.
Call 842-8039 3-30
71 Yamaha 90 Enduro, perfect condition
$350 842-9671 4-2
4 inch ebronse T-shirt "penacle" snare drum, including stand, 30" Zilpian cymbal, both almost new, 824-9270 in afternoon; both almost new, 3-38
NOTICE
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-769-8900. Professional child-care for children 1 to 12 mo. Full or part-time. Designer designed daily. 3-31
Barn Partiets! Now available for the first time in Chesapeake Valley Farm on Lake Percy. A Valley Farm patio and cooler, plenty of parking and cooler, plenty of parking. Do not stop before 6 p.m. at 845-202-3521.
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWRENCE: You can enjoy yourself in the apartment of your choice, summer 23rd or fall 24th, or all summer 25th. The Harvard Road, Massachusetts, Mt. Vernon Airport, Missouri, Avondale Apartment, Bain & Burke, Havencan is economical and beautiful. At our complimentary motel special prices, we invite you to enjoy this summer a wonderful time to be here.
For reasonable prices on all glass or
ceramic surfaces, you can
for projects for use at Kaw Body
Shop. 724 North 2nd St, or call 811-650-
3926 for sample samples that just arrived
LEARN SKYDIVING lt burt course **8** Includes jumps, ride and qualified instruction. Class takes 8 hours
Spring has spring sale. Adults only.
New York City, exciting events, utilizing
hangarba BOKGNON, 819 Vermont
BOKGNON, 819 Vermont
christopher false. 3-29
SKIDYVIEWS—Transportation unlimited in starting a parachute center 12 minutes North of Lawrence. Selected to participate in 3115 after 5 P-M 3-30
Is there anyone with almost enough money to build their own house like the Neartures? We have $3,000 and now we need organic, recycling homeestead furniture. Our help we help you do the same. R Anderer built box 524 Jayhawk substation. Lawn Care.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. John Wells, 842-5220 ff
FOR RENT
University Terrace Apartments — furnished apartments available for immediate occupancy $110 and up. Apt 3, Bldg. 1 or call 843-726-3900, Apt 1, Bldg. 1 or call 843-726-3900
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Right
in the picture are two bedrooms and four new
furnishings. Ten rented 2 bedrooms and one new
furnished 1 bedroom. Aug
1st, 4 one year old 1 bedroom. Bedrooms
available at end of summer.
9% capturing, dithlashore, central
and southwest between 30,000 and
35,000 between 30,000 and 10,000
P.M.
Nice furnished 1-3 bedroom apartments near town, KU. Also rooms with kitchen privileges, only one room in the house is able now. 842-507-3900 3-29
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
the 1972, while selection is still available.
Miles 852-3248 or 2107-A. Harvard
Lawrence has been built and renovated,
Lawrence's building beamed and tiled.
Avalon, 9th & Axalor, Harvard Square, Iowa, and Harvao, Argos and Austin. We are cost of living in one of these hard-won apartments and the spacious apartments and you will be more to have a dwalthower, central location and many more features. 3-29
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited
students can rent two bedrooms apt. with all utilities paid
students can have a Call after 4:20 p.m., 843-7731
Unfurnished house for students=8
rooms-6 can be used for bed or
study room. 617 W. 419, 843-8443. 3-29
Share size big house with one-two others. Private room ½ block from stadium. Cheap. Also 3-speed bicycle for sale. 842-2584. 4-3
Tony's 66 Service
Hairling Service
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Be Prepared tune-ups
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Ample Park Spaces Available
3409 W. Buford 842-7790
T 2000
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
3409 W. 6th 842-7700 Just West of the Drive In Theatre
Webster's Mobile Homes
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
Fivedays
15 words or fewer. $1.75
each additional word. $0.63
Your Complete Service Dealer
WANTED
Kaney Key Press—Job printing from leaflets to printers, bookshops to book and resumes. 170 Man., in back of Zarembo. Open to b. 34-538. 842-483.
Working girl needs to share her 2 bedroom nurseries with another woman. She wants to clean location. B42-705 for 3:30 a.m.
For Suzanne. B43-819. - 328
Female wants room with kitchen,
privileges, now through finals or
willing to share apartment 842-1283.
3:29
McGovern, canvassers need ride to St. Louis area. (Alton, IL). Will help pay gas. Call 864-4089 or 864-1217-3
- 329
Instructor to teach Tal Chi. Phone:
842-2040. 4-3
Wanted. Panel truck Ford, Chevy, or Dodge in fair to good shape. Call Bob at 842-9783. 3-29
Graduate student seeking summer employment in any kind of campus-related work 842-1458 at night 3-30
TYPING
WANTED. Someone with good artistic talent and good lettering capabilities. Phone: 812-5248 after 1:00 P.M.
Female roommate. Call after 5 P.M.
842-3921. Share rent. Furnished
apartment. 3-20
Typing done on elite, electric type-
writer No. Threes please Prompt attention.
843-0958 4-5
Experienced in typing these, dissertation term papers, other mis-type tapes, and editing documents. Type Accurate and prompt screen type. Acceptabl
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Experienced typist, Overland Park,
Kansas. Prompt, accurate work. Rea-
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Fast, accurate typing by experienced typist. Pica type. Reasonably priced. Phone 842-2053. 3-29
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale-Size 8-10, 12-18 to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky. A-4.50
MISCELLANEOUS
Had a fender bender cracked, cracked auto
Call KAW BODY SHOP. B41-2800 or
nz-81231 after 6 P.M. ask for Dekk
reasons, all work guaranteed, reasonable
name location KAW. wr. hr worker
Lawrence. Call for rates $250 out of
Lawrence. Call for rates out of town.
There's nothing miscellaneous about our new India prints. They're unique, like the new ones on our site. Come see them before they disappear. Hodge Paddle, 21 & Maa.
Happy Birthday to you. Happy Birthday to you. Happy Birthday dear Lee. Happy Birthday to you. Your Retailing Friends. 3-28
PERSONAL
BECAUSE is a listening service. Has-
tled? Call us, we'll talk about it.
Sun - Hurray. 6-12 Fm. Sat & Sun.
Mon - Hurray. 4-13 Fm. M-Sun.
Tue - Hurray. 11-38 Fm.
Keep RU Student Government Mediocre* Vote Birth Party for Joe Landt (Pres) and Mike Schoenleer (VP). 3-28
"My love is in thee, know it, un-
thou mayest find me near unto thee"
Baha u'ilah 3-36
LEE. With every day our friendship
grows greater. Have a very happy
birthday . With warmest regards.
K. 3428
LOST
Lost small, female dog; part paddle with wavy hair and white tip on wail, wearing black collar Call 842-5700 If not home, keep trying. 3-19
Small gray tiger cat on campus, March 5. Answers to "Lucy Grey" Sits on shoulder. If you have her, call 812-935. We miss her. 3-28
HELP WANTED
Experienced drummer for rock band. Must be willing to join union. Call Jeff after 6, 843-9334 3-29
PART TIME SECRETARY Single
419.825.8067 between 7:00-10:00
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
and Service
26th & Iowa Ph.V13-1353
Wkdays 8-5:30 Sunday 10-3
Parts at a discount
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843 8948
843-9694
KAT Suzuki
Lawrence's first and only
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Factory Authorized
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634 Mass. 842-6966
6
Tuesday, March 28, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Don Likes Spirit
By JIM SCHUMM
Kansas Sports Writer
Head coach Dunn Fambrough welcomed 89 University of Kansas football players to the team to practice sessions Monday.
There are 29 returning lettermen. Nine of these were starters last season.
"I thought it was a very well-organized practice for the first time," he said of the spirit and enthusiasm. Maybe the cool weather, had been enough to prepare.
Four quarterbacks alternated in running the offense.
They were David Jaynes, who started two games last season as a sophomore, and then who was a receiver last fall, Rick Jones, a redshirt who lettered as a sophomore in 1970 and Brent Anderson, a sophomor from Georgia.
Fambrough said that he would experiment with some younger players by moving them around to different positions.
"One of our goals this spring is to teach the techniques of every player," he said. "We don't have time to work with them on an individual basis."
Fambrough said that practices would continue to resemble the first one with the exception of added contact.
"Today certainly showed me that we have a lot of people who are willing to pay the price."
The team will practice on Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays and have scrimmages on Saturdays.
This Saturday afternoon's practice will be open to the following.
The University of Kansas Soccer Club won one, tied one and lost one last week.
The team tied K-State, 4-4, lost to Feld, an amateur club from Kansas City, 51, and won by 10 points. The team lost to Kansas City amateur group.
In the K-State game, Edmund Ohoimada of Liberia scored two goals for KU.
Soccer Club Now 4-3-2
"We were not too good on defense against K-State," said Boye Hoyke, KU player from Indonesia. "Sobi Bakterjee of our best defensive players was injured and this hurt us."
Gaffar said that Duglar Dan of the Central African Republic, KU's all-time leading score, was also injured, but should be ready to Big Eight soccer club tournament April 22 at Boulder, CO.
The KU club's record is now 4 3-2.
1960s
Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBEE
Unsung Women's Gymnastic Team Qualifies For Try at National Title
Janice Baker Balances on Beam in KU Meet
Shouldered six in valuing Saturday in regional finals
For the first time in its history,
the University of Kansas
won its third national
qualified as a team for the
national championships March 30
Coach Patricia Ruhl said that all ten members of the team qualified at the regional meet last weekend in Bookings, S. D. She said she was pleased with the remarkable third place finish.
Sophomore star Tom Kempf set three of those records. He trimmed his KU record and big league freestyle from 4,695 to 4,417.
The team scored 77.5 points, losing only to Grandview with 78.4 and Adolphus of Augustus with 85.0.
Janie Baker and Clindy Price placed sixth and seventh ahead of Smith in vaulting. Price with a seventh on the uneven parallel Tang with a second on the balanced wing were KU's only other placements.
PHIL KIDD, Allan McDonald,
Roland Sabates and Rick
Hedinger teamed in the 400
freestyle relay to produce a
3.008, 02 seconds better than
a big Big Eight and KU records
Smith introduced several new floor moves into floor routine. She then followed that pattern, however, when the judges scored the routine as less difficult than in previous rounds.
strong finish. "The team was the talk of the meet," Ruhi said, because we never had placed before it and many surprised a lot of people.
exercise periminaries. After the first day, Barbie Murrow was second and Sue Tagg, third. Tagg played against Phillips moved up to seventh.
Kempf's two other came in the 1650, freestyle. He made 16.17 toreplaced the school and conference record. In the same race, he was timed in 9.480 for 1.000 yards. His old school record had been
In her first year as coach, Ruhl led a young team to a 7-1 dual record.
Joni Smith starred for KU.
In the 800 freestyle relay, Kirkland and Paul Watson swam in 7.05-48. That replaced the 7.06-54 in Big Eight and KU record
"It was truly a fantastic meet." Reason said. "We knew the times would be fast because it's an Olympics year, and the times
KU Swim Marks Fall in NCAA
University of Kansas swimmers failed to score a single point in the NCAA swimming championships last weekend at the nationals. Reamon didn't look at it that way. After all, his Jayhawes set five school records, and the U.S. national team fielded a powerful swim squad.
"How can I be disappointed when we entered eight events and we had to play together on Monday. "The kids hearts were in the right place—they were
Placing ninth in all-around
on the perimeters in the flooring
cise before placing fourth in the
finals. She also placed eighth in
The team will leave for Des Moines Wednesday on regional region 1. The team will leave for 2 teams. Kansas will probably team up, and we will biggest teams to the meet, Rush tail.
The KU team was the surprise of the regional because of its
LEXINGTON. Ky. (AP)—Adolph Rupp's unprepared basketball coaching career at Kentucky ended Monday night with a quiet announcement of his first win over the school's athletic board.
Kentucky's Rupp Retires as Coach
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usually run in four-year cycles. But it was just a phenomenal show of this country's strength."
KU had plenty of company in the pointless category. Only 20 of the 84 teams in the meet scored, Reamon said.
"It was just a big dual between Indiana and UCSR," USEM said. "I think we have teams that scored reasonably well; and about 15 other teams that scored reasonably well."
INDIANA WAN its fifth consecutive NCAA title with 390 points. South California, the Southern border, inner-up, placed second with 371.
"Our kids were not disappointed. We saw the
"Looking at it in perspective": Reamon said, our country is proud of everything in the Olympics with a huge exception of the backstroke.
national standards, so now we have to work to reach them. And we're moving in that direction."
This year's Big Eight championship squad will lose only three seniors next year. Reason pointed out.
We want to come back from this meet with, significant功率, but the team doesn't mean just scoring. We don't mean it's a power to be reckoned with.
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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.
- Second year college student or third year student in a five-year course, in good standing with a "A" rate. Graduate students are not eligible for this award.
- Married or unmarried.
- *At least 18 years of age and no more than 25 on June 30 of the commissioning year.
- Excellent physical condition. Waivers for defective vision are available.
Benefits:
subsequent full tuition and free books.
- Eligible to apply for scholarship status upon entry into the program with subsequent full tuition and free books.
- Draft deferment.
●$100.00 per month subsistence allowance.
Deadline for Application—April 1st Apply Now for Fall Semester 1972 at the NROTC Unit, Room 115 Military Science Building 864-3161
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MIDWESTERN PREMIERE
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KU to Obtain Budget and Information System by July
Editors Note: This is the second story in a three part series dealing with the reorganization of the University since Chalmers became chancellor.
By JEROME ESSLINGER
The current phase of reorganization will be nearly completed by July 1 and the University will then have its first real operating budget and information system, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., said recently.
Chailers said the new formulated budget and information system was "the only way to cope with some of the questions being asked of higher education institutions," a federal government, when funding for higher education is at an all-time low."
Until recently, the University budget system had been based on a "wish list" and a "shrinkage fund for classified and unclassified salaries," according to Chalmers.
The wish list is the term for the projected budgets that have been
recommended and submitted by dears and department chairmen to the chancellor and the vice chancellors for academic and financial University budget was then drawn up.
THE SHRIRKAGE salary system, which is still in effect, is part of the state allocation of funds whereby the University must establish its required unclassified or teaching budget and 95 per cent of its classified or civil service budget. The shrinkage concept is based on the state legislature's four percent and five per cent position vacancies.
The wish list and shrinkage salary system will be eliminated or shortened by the new formulated budget system, Chalmers said.
A "personnel payroll budgeting system" will be initiated in the formulated budget, and will give deans and department chairmen more flexibility in managing their time more formally had under the shrinkage system, according to the Chancellor.
ALSO ELIMINATED will be the University's ability to maintain a financial operating reserve at top administrative levels as had been the case when funds were more plentiful than they are at present
Chalmers said he had "other eliminated or decentralized" such a reserve.
"It's not altogether clear to everyone at the University that this is the case," he said.
"As a matter of fact, I'm certain that one of the reasons for the myth that the student was not strong at Strong Hall there was a half million dollars that could be used for classified salary increases—stems from the fact that three or four years ago that probably would have been true."
UNDER THE FORMULATED budget system, the only administrators with financial reserves will be the deans and officers who will have small expierency carries.
The University's relationship with the Kansas Legislature is inherently involved
with reorganization. A basic aim of the formulated budget system is to be able to convince legislators that more money is need and must be obtained for higher costs.
Being able to lobby on a scale equal to
corporate organizations, a goal of
regionalization.
WHAT IS IMPORTANT, however, according to James K. Hitt, director of systems development, is that unlike a corporation, the University must have a budget system to "allocate scarce resources." This is accomplished objectives with minimal loss." This is much different from the maximum profit motive of corporations.
The Kansas Legislature's becoming more involved and interested in how University funds are spent, is also investigating the budget system, according to Chalmers.
However, Francis Heller, vice chancellor for academic affairs who will leave his office June 30, said in a recent interview that he didn't expect the
formulated budget would "work any miracles in terms of getting legislators to appropriate new money or become intensely interested in University affairs."
HELLER SAID that whether the new budget system would produce more money hung on a number of factors it not related to what it was spending. He thought the Kansas Legislature would be concerned with where money was coming from than where and how it was being spent.
“As I see it,” Heller said, “most of the key members of the legislature are going to be interested only in the final figure and it’s going to take a really major effort to them involved at the levels at which Chancellor Heinrich was involved in the educational process.”
Heller said that he saw "far more political difficulties in the future for the left," he added.
"Perhaps this is a factor of age and experience," said Heller.
the vceancellor said that because of his "many years of administrating and
close exposure to Kansas politics, he might not have been as optimistic about the new direction.
"I think it's conceivable that Dr. Chalmers might have preferred that my job be done differently, but since his arrival here I think I've done whatever I wanted," he said to the chairmen to understand what this technique would involve. Heller said.
"If I had been asked to remain in office and the formulated budget were implemented," Heller said, "there's no money. You would have done my damgestep in mid-September."
A FORMULATED BUDGET will promote accountability among faculty and administrators, said Chaimers. He said faculty would be held accountable because faculty members could blame deans or other administrators for not getting pay raises that they thought were appropriate.
"Now," said Chalmers, "we can honestly tell that the money we pay us is not ours."
Moe
CLOUDY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.110
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Seven Students GOP Delegates
Wednesday, March 29, 1972
By JIM KENDELL Kansan Staff Writer
Seven KU students were elected Republican delegates to the third district and state conventions Tuesday night at the Ranada Inn.
About 40 Republicans at the f0ccal convention picked 31 delegates and 31 alternates. Two students and a faculty member were among the alternates.
Black Studies Offers Variety
Voter Panels Are Planned
See Page 2
Tim Treacy, Wilmette, III, senior, has planned two panels to educate voters on climate change.
THE FIRST panel will focus on the job of the presidency, the campaign and electoral processes and voting. The final session will include political rhetoric and press manipulation.
By JAMES COOK
Kanean Staff Writer
See VOTER, Page 9
Treacy said he believed the average American voter lacked an understanding of how his government operated. This makes the voter susceptible to a smooth-talking candidate, who might say anything and promise everything, he said.
The first panel will be held at 7:30 p. m., April 18 in the Kansas Union and the final panel will be at 7:30 p. m., April 25 also in the Union.
The purpose of the panels is to provide the atmosphere of a forum, where voters can question professors who have studied history and constitutional aspects its historical and constitutional aspects.
Treacy said he saw the presidency as a job with constitutionally defined powers.
"I think we must think of the government as a unit made up of fairly simple components," Trecy said. "I'm firm in the belief that if you know what the job entails, whether it's the presidency, the city council, or whatever, if you know where you're working, care, you have a base to work in selecting a man to fulfill those responsibilities."
Everyone who attended the meeting and wanted to be a delegate or an alternate was elected. The other positions were filled by nomination from the floor.
The student delegates are Mary George, St. John senior; Peter George, Lawrence senior; Jerome Osburn, Lawrence special student; Terry Reynolds, Lawrence graduate student; Robert Sunderman, Bill Webster, Cartage. Mo. freshman.
Richard MacKenzie, Hutchinson law student, and MacRick Walker, Newton law student, were selected alternates as was Dr. Jeffrey associate professor of political science.
Osborn said, "I just came to see what
osborne was on. I guess I'm just in this for the
moment."
Miller said he was surprised by the openness of the convention. He said he had expected a slate of candidates to be prepared to win the convention by the organization.
J. D. King, chairman of the party in Douglas County, said he was quite satisfied with the make up of the delegation. He said representative number had been small and town, men and young and old representatives had been elected.
Watson Honored Today
The gt group selected 17 men and 14 women as delegates. There are 16 male alternates
King said the low turnout caused by poor
weather and a lack of interest in the
regional presidential race.
John Weatherwax, the convention secretary, said those who attended the convention were mostly Republican party members. They do the real grassroots work for the party.
The convention gave King the authority to fill any positions which opened because of illness or death.
The delegates and alternates will attend the third district Republican convention April 15 in Shawnee Mission. They will also attend the state convention April 29 in Topeka.
King said no one in Douglas County had
said one interest in becoming a delegate to
the national convention.
See DELEGATES. Page 9
Today is Carrie Watson Day, KU faculty, students and Lawrence residents are invited to Watson Library from 3 to 5 p.m. to recognize the library profession and to honor Watson's life and work.
Carrie Watson
[Name]
Watson graduated from KU in 1877 and became assistant librarian in the library. He then went to a library had only 2,500 books. Watson spent many years organizing the library, and she enlarged it before she retired in 1921.
Watson was a KU librarian who worked for the library for more than 60 years. This is the 114th anniversary of her birthday.
Watson studied library methods by visiting great eastern libraries. She is credited with building a solid foundation for the present library system.
Coffee and cookies will be served in the basement lobby of the library near a new exhibit featuring memorabilia of Watson.
中華民國 70 年 8 月 29 日發行
Gov. Docking Delivers Address in Ballroom . . . Says progress has been made in voter registration . . .
Kanian Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
Docking Reflects On Voter Gains
Proposes Reforms
By STEVERIEL
Gov. Robert Docking, in remarks delivered at the University of Kansas Tuesday that progress was made during his audits to facilitate voter registration. He also chided the Kansas Legislature for delay in completing the vote for two additional legislative sessions.
Docking's speech, is sponsored by the
Student ID code, was given in the Kansas
University Journal.
Docking said reform should be made to remove difficulties encountered in registering to vote. Registration centers, libraries, and insurance maximum access to applicants.
In his formal presentation, Docking said many victories were won which made it easier to register to vote in Kansas. His victory was because law during this legislative session;
DESPIE THESE legislative victories, Docking said many obstacles still existed to voter registration in Kansas. These issues were not fully resolved to recalcitrant election officials, he said.
These laws make registration and voting easier for servicemen, allow changes in party affiliation to be made by voters 30 days before the primary election, and require that the general election eligible to vote in the primary if certain forms are signed.
Restricted registration hours, according to Docking, should also be revaimed to
Shultz Bases Nomination Platform On Efficiency, Increased Industry
ny LINDA SCHILD
Kansan Staff Writer
To improve the quality of Kansas law enforcement agencies and the effectiveness of prison rehabilitation programs, Shulzt said trained staffs should be placed in positions should be placed in positions of responsibility for these areas.
l. Lt. Gov. Reynolds Shultz officially announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for governor of Kansas last week in Topeka.
His platform consists of programs to improve the state government by making it more efficient, plans to reinforce the state government's role in industry, and Kansas, he said Tuesday.
"We need to eliminate the duplicity that exists," he said. "There is no reason why we shouldn't bring efficiency experts as business does."
"THE HEAD OF the highway patrol, for instance, serves at the pleasure of the governor," Schultz said. "As the governor changes every two years, so do his appointees. This is one area that needs to be taken out of politics."
"I would like to take a new look at the
picture of government," Sulluz said.
Shultz said that a bill passed by the legislature this session concerning prison reform typified the changes he would like to see in that area.
"We need to update the whole system," he said.
"Better vocational training is necessary to deter criminals from becoming repeat offenders."
program we must bring in people trained
in the job, not just political
appointees, he said.
Vocational and technical education should also be increased to help those who drop out of high school or college, Shultz said.
The new bill will not take effect until July 1, 1974, because funds create a problem in implementing such a program and needs is needed to find a trained staff, Shulk az.
"Of every 100 children enrolled in kindergarten, 84 never graduate from college," he said. "We have to do something to help those who drop out. Maybe we ought to start vocational-technical classes in college."
SHULTZ SAID that he does not agree with the recent proposal made to the Kansas Legislature to consolidate the universities and colleges across the state.
He did say, however, that duplication in education needs to be examined. Although he would not hazard an example, Shultz said that in some classes, taught in every school by full-time professors, duplication could possibly be eliminated. Money gave to universities to be used for better faculty and produce a higher quality of education, he said.
Increased industry in Kansas would
be the state in more than one way,
Shultz.
More jobs would ease unemployment and, in increasing opportunities for Kansas youth, would give more young people reasons to remain in the state.
INDUSTRY WOULD also broaden the tax base, he said.
"The state has only three ways to raise money. Sales taxes, property taxes and income tax," Shultz said. "Property is no longer a sign of wealth, especially for the retired, yet property taxes are the heaviest of the three."
Broadening the state gross product would create a more equitable tax program for the average citizen, he said. Shultz has no solution yet, but said that some way must be found to finance Kansas government without relying upon property taxes. He argues that the state has studied this problem for three years.
Shultz, the second Republican to enter the gubernatorial race, said that he thought he could unify the Republican we have. Kramer's "better than anyone else we have."
Governor Robert B. Docking's plans for the fall election are impossible to forecast, Shultz said. He predicted Docking would probably wait until June to reveal his
FORMER GOVENOR John Anderson of De Soto, who announced his candidacy several weeks ago, can not accomplish this unification. Shuttle said.
Shultz, a native of Lawrence, said that his family would move back from Topeka as soon as the present legislative session comes to an end. In the next few weeks he plans to travel throughout the state to visit his platform at the grass roots level
Shultz served in the Kansas Senate for six years before he was elected lieutenant governor in 1970. He is a farmer and rancher in Jefferson County.
allow people who cannot register during business hours to become registered
Docking criticized Republicans in the legislature for advancing a bill that would have restricted special registration hours before issuing of the voting rolls. He vetoed the bill.
This delay, he said was unnecessary and he noted that the legislature could act quickly when it wanted. He said rapid response would be vital to vetoes was indicative of this ability.
He said that the legislators had attempted to close the registration places an hour earlier than is done now and limit registrants to three hours for registration would be in effect.
When asked if he would appoint a student as a regent in Kansas, Docking said that he would consider it. He said, however, that the time and money necessary for such a position would be overwhelming to a student.
Docking said that the extension of voting rights and the recent enactment of a bill giving majority in most matters to 18-year-olds was not a violation, the reclamation of total citizenship."
IN RESONSE to questions from the audience, Docking said the Kansas Legislature should have concluded business before the end of its 60-day session instead of having to resort to special sessions.
He termed recent actions by the
instrumental confusion at the end of the session.
Docking said that the outlook for higher education in Kansas was bright. He referred to expansion of medical facilities and growth in the junior colleges as important in the overall picture of education.
Locking's presentation was limited to a half hour because he had to return to Tupkea to act on bills passed in the special session. He did not fill in progress at the time of his speech.
House OK's Rights Bill
step. Carlos M. Cooper, R-Boner Springs, changed his vote from "No" to "Ave" to give the resolution its required 84 votes in the House. Two other representatives then switched their votes to make the final count 86-37.
TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas House voted Tuesday to ratify an equal rights for women amendment to the federal Constitution.
The only two women in the 123-member house voted against ratifying the amendment. They are Reps. Glee Jones, R-Hamin, and Josephine Younkin, D-Ramino.
Opponents of the bill raised one principal argument—that the proposed amendment had not been discussed sufficiently for the Legislature to proceed with ratification.
The opponents said there were several people opposed to the amendment and they had been given no opportunity for a hearing.
Rep. Jack Euler, R-Wathena, said the Kansas House would be the laughingstock of the nation if it rejected the resolution to ratify the amendment.
rie said Kansas had a long history and tradition of being in the forefront of the war. He says he was born in 1853.
2
Wednesday, March 29. 1972
University Daily Kansan
A
Black Studies Program Uses Interdisciplinary Approach
Kaisan Photo by MARC MAY
Includes African, Afro-American and Caribbean Studies
KU Black Studies Are Varied
By JAMES COOK
Kennedy Staff Writer
Swahili I, Elementary Swahili II
Racism and Reaction, and
courses offered by the University of Kansas department of Africa
Student and faculty demands for more 'relevant' courses began in the late 1960s and provided the impetus for the expansion of such as those offered by KU's department of African studies.
Although African studies at her universities concentrate on African history, KU's program combines African Afro-American and American studies.
Jacob U. Gordon, chairman of the African Studies Program, said in a recent interview the committee had instructed ministries roots, and a dichotomy which often exists in such programs. Gordon said KU was probably the only university that had a program that combined the three areas.
KU'S PROGRAM also is unique because it stresses an interdisciplinary approach integrating black studies with courses and programs on the black way of life.
Gordon said several departments, including the department of African studies, including the departments of history, American studies, Latin American studies, geography, English, sociology, and psychology.
The KU department of African studies and the UCLA Center for Afro-American study has a survey to assess the directions black studies were taking. The study indicates such results are not set pattern. Some focus on culture, others on research and still others follow a departmental route.
Along with its unique program, KAU's African studies program also assists Kansas school systems, penal institutions and communities by providing advice on problems and human relationships.
"OUR GREATEST task right now." Gordon said, "to help schools and colleges throughout the country, we begin to understand their problems.
Critics of ethnic studies say the courses offered are fads that quickly lose their appeal.
Last year 500 students enrolled
in African studies courses at KU each semester. This year that number has almost doubled and now offers a bachelor's degree.
Although some critics say a black studies program will lead to a chain of academic studies with low academic standards, many argue that is part of a major social problem should be studied. Supporters of black studies also point to the need for an understanding of黑历史 and the "a part of the human story."
All areas of the university are effected by budget cuts. New departments, especially the arts, require problems adapting to such cuts.
"One of my greatest tasks," Gordon said, "is to prevent raids
"Black professors are in great
competition and the school that
can pay the bills must con-
tinue with larger universities
such as Northwestern and UCLA
A black professor with a new degree, Gordon said, is paid more than an experienced white professor who may have written his own books. He's more than enough professors but, because there are few professors of African studies, the new professors can shop for the best
on our faculty. To get black professors you must practice reverse discrimination. It's hard to get people to understand that.
"I HAVE to convince the administration that the University must divide areas of priority and reorganize
"but the values are far beyond mere academe. We now have a different program which leads to mutual benefit. But I have to communicate that ability to respond adequately, considering the lack of resources in our school."
"Just because a professor is in best means he know anything," Gordon said. "The blackest prof of them all may be the most."
investments. Ethnic have academic value if the University can afford to get people who have expertise," Gordon said.
Even with sufficient funds, there is still a problem acquiring professors with a background in black studies, Gordon said.
from "white" institutions with no black studies program and, as a result, had no understanding of the field.
Gordon said national failure to recognize and understand "basic black problems" has made it hard for some administrators to understand problems the new study program must face.
Many white students, Gordon said, now enroll in African study courses.
"They usually don't say anything the first few class meeting, and they." And they shook do all their meetings. Most of the whites are surprised to find that I'm not wearing an Afro and making militant
"Once the semester gets going things open up. In the end most of the students enjoy the course."
GORDON SAID many black professors received their degrees
Four Blocks Along Massachusetts To Be Redeveloped This Summer
Editor's Note: This is the second of two articles about the downtown redevelopment of Lawrence.
By CHRIS MILLER
Kansas Staff Writer
If all goes well, the downtown area of Lawrence will undergo major renovations this summer.
The Osawatime redevelopment also employs "sawtooth" curbing, similar sloping of the rock crosswalks, and landscaping.
A similar reconstruction of the central business district has been done on a smaller scale in Osawatomie.
Initiated in 1966, the project in autocamat was completed in the spring of 1970. The development of $176,299.25. The redevelopment area a block in width.
Activities to Begin For New Senators
Elections and a)] the campaigning and politicizing that accompany them are over for another year at KU. But for those who were successful in the recent contest, the work has just begun.
BY HAL RITTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Dillon was chairman of the Finance and Auditing Committee during the past Senate term and was also the chair of four nonassentors as members.
"As far as I'm concerned we're going to have to help have from outside the Senate or else it would just be too much work." Dillon
Dave Dillon, newly elected student body president, said earlier this week that the first meeting of the new Senate would be and that a workshop for new senators would be held this weekend.
Dillon said during the remaining weeks of the spring semester the Senate would be concerned with the 1972-73 activity fee budget and with the committee committees and chairmen.
By HAL RITTER
Dillon said that interested persons could obtain committee applications in the Senate office in the Kansas Union and, that the applications had to be filled out interviews could take place.
THE SENATE began accepting a petition for committee membership, he said, and he emphasized that the positions were open to any KU member.
Lawrence project, involving an area a block in width and about 100 feet long. The project begins June 1, with completion by October. The estimated total cost is $465,000.
He said the project involved only changing the slope of the street and repaving it, concerning parking lots and parking lots, and land-scaping. Landscapeaping, he said, involved planting trees and shrubbery and affixing perennial hedges in benches and drinking fountains
Gordon L. Schrader, city manager of Osawatomi, said recently that when the plan was over, the downtown area was in a poor state of repair, with cracked curbings, poorly painted streets, and cracks.
THE SENATE meeting next
wednesday will be a joint meet-
ing of the old and new Senate, Dillon
said. Among the first business on
the agenda will be to elect three
members of the senate among those that were not
reelected and to elect 10 U.S.
University Council, he said.
SCHRADER SAID that 17 of the downtown property owners had voluntarily redone their buildings conjunction with the city's project.
Dillon said a handbook with a model lease and explanations of resident liabilities and how to address housing problems was needed.
Dilton ran for student body president on a platform that promised to address the area of student services. He said many of his ideas would not work in a school setting after his programs had been further developed during the summer.
The type of development employed in Osawatomi is, Schrader said, particularly because there redeveloped being done within the original configuration of the town. He noted that the streets could not be changed, and the existing buildings could not be removed, this reconstruction would have been more difficult.
If enough money is available, Dillon said he hoped the Senate could retain a lawyer to aid him off-campus housing disputes.
A model lease for off-campus housing residents is one project Dillon said he hoped to "get down on paper during the summer."
Schrader said that although there was a possibility that the city made a federal funds to help finance the project, the city made no application for either federal or municipal funding. The said, was financed solely with
MUCH WORK has been done concerning the theory of a model lease, he said, but no one knows what work when put into practice.
The biggest problem apartment complex residents face is recovering deposits, and residents of houses have difficulty earning landings to house in a safe condition, he said.
Costs for improvements fronting on the owners' property were assessed to individual owners, and owner paid for any new sidewalks, all plantings and 20 per cent of the cost of repaving out to the center of the street near the area his building fronted.
IF, FOR EXAMPLE, Schrader said, a building had a frontage of 100 feet, the owner paid for all new sidewalk laid within that 100 feet, all trees and bushes planted along that 100 feet, and 20 per foot. A separate street along the street along that 100 feet, out to the center of the street.
Most of the owners and managers of businesses, were, according to Schrader, in favor of the project. He said 75 per cent of the owners had signed a petition requesting the project. Buildings were demolished then, he said, comprised 90 per cent of the project area.
individual merchants' and city funds.
Property owners who rented the building said he, so that nearly one third of the cost of the project was实际上 paid by merchant in the deal.
OWNERS OF downtown buildings, contributed 31 per cent, $4.852 77, towards the total cost of the project.
Plans for the Lawrence project call for the city to pay the entire cost of changing the shop of the building and the funds will finance new curbs and guttering, new sidewalks, coatings and seeping. The installation of some
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DOWNTOWN
underground utilities in
imphibian management with
federal funds. (Underground utilities were not a
osatomega development.)
LAWRENCE'S DOWNTOWN merchants will pay only for any new sidewalks laid along their store's frontage and any face-lifting they may choose to do to own stores on an individual basis.
Schrader said that given the opportunity to begin again as the city had in 1986, he would favor a market center and discounted the idea of a pedestal mall, saying that most of the local businessmen had not even been around.
By DONNA DALE
The Peace Education and
Committee, a volunteer com-
mittee and sponsoring workbo
about the war, will have a
vigil this week to educate
students and suggest action about
peace.
Kanxan Staff Writer
A slide show on the automated
a show was shown on Monday,
and Tuesday, with a repetition
of the slide show, a
slide show of the Carson
Cavaliers Nine," Daniel
Berrigan, are planned for today.
Thursday is Friday. The play
will be on Saturday.
Nancy Jorn, head of the
office, made sure the
turnout for the slide show had
been quite good. She said
admission was charged only for
the slide show.
11:30 a.m. — Grassroots Politics, Betty Jo Charleton, International Room.
Political Action, L.
All Day — Vietnam Veterans Talk about War, members of the 10:30 a.m. Political Action, Lane Baily, Youth Caucus,
Indochina War Workshops Planned to Suggest Action
Political Action, Lane Baily. Parlor C..
12:30 p.m. — Motivating
Ourselves and Others for Peace
Action Coalitions, John Wright,
Michael Snyder, and Vince
The Soviet Union, and World
The Soviet Union and Vietnam Thomas Larson, Parlor C.
1:30 p.m. — Political Action, Lane Baily, Parlor C.
Resistance: The Harrisburg Trial, Rick Carrier and Dave Hunt, Parlor C.
2: 30 p. m. — What Can a Person Do? Anne Moore, International Room.
3:30 — Peace Candidates-
Campaigning for McGovern,
John Pole, International Room,
Amnesty, Innermost Steffen and Don
Barnett.
7:30 p.m. The military
museum, please come to Weiss,
International Room. No
attendance as a personal Lifestyle, Des
signed in advance.
Nonviolence, Kansas City, Mt.
Thursday Workshops:
10:30 a.m. — War and Fascism
Raf Sanchez, Parlor C.
7:30 p.m. — Film, "Winter Soldier Investigation," Jayhawk Room.
12:30 p.m. — Nonviolent
Tactics in Working for Peace,
A Church in Warriors A. The
Church in War, Warriors A.
Tim Miller, Parlor C.
10:30 a.m. — Nonviolence as a
Personal Lifestyle, continued.
The Draft, Bill Cutler, Parlor C.
10:30 a.m. — Nonviolence as a
Personal Lifestyle, continued.
Parlor A. Grassroots Politics,
Betty Jo Charleton, Parlor C.
1:30 p.m. — Nonviolent
CLEARWATER BEACH. FLA-
(AP)- Life under high social
stresses may make people more
sensitive to cancers, a sextensi-
al Tuesday
For instance, "Oh Mommy, this child may miss me from the title is really a Brewer and Shipley political song about how it says right here that a REAL OK has a revo lation. Now at least as a great line, but taken in the context of the song in which he buoyed a great line, good time number, if it becomes not sinister, not fearful, good time such terms, it does a bit to warm the heart, doesn't
Or consider the beautiful
"Song From Plate River";
General Custer. And his last
stand,
"go the lines."
Tarkio Road, Mike Brewer and Tom Sipmieri's third album, Surra, shows them to be a solid and unpretentious country folk duo, writing brilliant as they are ennobled with their refrains and humble melodies. On top of this, they have had the good fortune to work with Gravenites) and well known musicians as Mark Nafatin on keyboards and Jerry Garcia on pedal steel. There is nothing complex here – no 12 level attempts at Dylanesque guitar wizardry – but in the end, it's probably a saving Brewer and Shipley come off as human beings and it gives that album a quiet grace that makes them achingly strive for in the coming months and never forget.
framed by beautiful images of cold and desolation; turns itself into a sweetly lit room, where a lovely Lady Like soul which a lovingly Lady Like aretha could have a ball. A smile, much like much the same vein, with a chorus that stays with you long after you leave the house. Over The Line' is one of the more perfect statements of where those all important in the United States today.
TAPKID
WESTERN TICKETS
I think it was Pete Johnson, writing long ago in the book about John Braden's sadly neglected album on A&M and a music that had the ability to call up other eras, times long since变着花样 on the face of Fear For Love. For Music, music had the ability to work in much the same way, recreating an existed somewhere around the turn of the century, a kind of Indians was still clean and fresh when railroads sprung and when trains were time when all of us (at least in retrospect) seemed to be a kind of front nostalgia, if you will, probably a product Cassidy movies that endlessly paraded across our lives, too heavy, its soft of nice needed them, and now, when things are getting just a little heavier, its soft of nice needed them.
TARKIO ROAD, Brewer and Shipley (Kama Sulra KSBS 2024)
3: 30 p. m. — Tax Resistance, Otto Zing and John Weismuller, Parlor C.
2:30 p.m. — Nonviolent
Tactics, continued. Parlor A.
What Can a Person Do? Anne
Moore. Parlor C.
8:00 p.m. — Encountering Our World, Danforth Chapel.
Tactics, continued, Parlor A. Reparations, Dutch Stoltz, Parlor C.
ROLLING STONE/FEBRUARY 4
At any rate, that's the reason I like Brewer and Shipley. Whatever your opinion, you will likewise LENNY KAYE
ROLLING STONE
Brewer & Shipley
In Concert
With Funk 'N' Punch
Sat, April 8th
Hoch Auditorium
Tickets at Kief's And
Student Union-SUA Office
"Shake off the Demon"
at Kief's only $2.99
Friday:
10:30 a.m. — Vigil for Peace and Reparation, grove outside Danforth Chapel.
8 p.m. — "The Automated Air War," Dyeche Auditorium.
8:30 p.m. — "Trit of the
Catsville Nine," Nine.
Ministries Building, 1242 Oread.
It will also be presented Saturday
and Sunday. Tickets for the play
may be purchased at the door.
BLAH, BLAH, BLAH
BLAH, BLAH, BLAH
BLAH, POOBAH IS
DEFINITELY NOT A
CASE OF...BLAH, B
BLAH, BLAH, BLAH,
BLAH, BLAH, BLAH
50%
SUA Flights to EUROPE
$\textcircled{1}$
$299
$\textcircled{1}$ Chicago-Paris May 30, 1972
$\textcircled{2}$ Chicago Aug. 1, 1972
$ \textcircled{2} $
Chicago-Paris May 30, 1972 $299
Paris-Chicago Aug. 17, 1972
NYC-Luxembourg May 23, 1972 $210
Luxembourg-NYC July 24, 1972
$ \textcircled{3} $
NYC-Luxembourg May 21, 1972 $210
Luxembourg-NY-Cug. 16, 1972 $210
$ \textcircled{4} $
Full Payment Due April 17th
Eiffel Tower
For further information, contact:
SUA Office, Kansas Union
864-3477
WRIGHT SLACKS ARE FOR LOOKING GOOD
Wright Slacks have the greatest fit going. And fashion that never stops. Like the new patch-pocket ventura model shown here. It's one of many - jeans, dungarees, nitty knits, dress flares, widerbottoms. We have them all - but we won't have them long Hurry on down.
UNIVERSITY SLACKS
The University Shop
Next to Discount Records
WRIGHT SLACKS ARE FOR LOOKING GOOD
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 29,1972
3
People ...
... Places ...
... Things
People:
KING HUSEIN of Jordan met with President Nixon Tuesday but the White House said no stand was taken on the monarch's plan to establish a semi-autonomous Palestinian nation on the West Bank of the Jordan River. Hussein is in the United States not only to help keep the Jordanian army on the ground but to national military aid from the United States, particularly in the form of modern battle tanks, rifles and new military aircraft.
Reacting to criticism, some big retailers said that they were not responsible for RISING Prices for meat and other foods. Those who operate at the retail level said that the pressure of competition kept them from passing along all of their costs increases. President Nixon, in a news conference last Friday, said that the spread between what the farmer gets and what the consumer pays was too great, and that he would "take action" if food prices did not come down.
PRESIDENT JOZEF CYRANKIEWICZ of Poland, a falling star in the Communist hierarchy, resigned, an official announcement said. Henry Jablonski, a member of the party's ruling Poliburo and until recently a minister of education, replaced him.
Places:
Things:
SAIGON—American B52 bombers hammered suspected enemy targets in South Vietnam in a campaign to break up any enemy attempt at starting an offensive. The U.S. Command said the bombs logged seven missions in South Vietnam, three of them in northern Thien Thu Province and the others in the Province of Kontum in the central highlands.
Food Contamination Limits Announced
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Food and Drug Administration made public the first time it will require contaminants as rodent droppings, insect fragments, or mold it allows in processed food.
The so-called filt-tolerance guide below which the defect is unavoidable under current technology and is the agency said, it conceited it has been too secretive in the past about these defects.
Although the technical guidelines dating back to 1911 have been zealously shielded from public view, FDA officials acknowledged that the food industry has obtained general training and experience years through government seizure cases taken into court.
The limits cover microscopic insect fragments, rodent parallels and caterpillars. The cysts, fruit-fly eggs and rot in food products such as fruit juices, cheese, yogurt, eggs, flour, grain, spices, chocolate, nuts and jam and jelly.
For example, the FDA said it generally allows one rodent pet dish to be used if there is damage or damage in 10 per cent of coffee beans, up to 10 million bottles.
a maximum of one per cent insect
culture in 10% salt and
pepper, mold in from 20 to 40
percent of most tomato products
samples in cages in 100
cents of soil.
FDA officials said there was no way to avoid such defects from food supplies, even with modern technology, and processing technology
"Unless you grow things in a greenhouse there is no defense." The defendants, Virgil Wodicka, director of the PBA's Bureas of Foods, said at a hearing on Monday.
"The only answer is to remove them as your wife does from garden vegetables."
Officials said the guidelines were maximums, above which the government moves to seize or sell food products from commerce.
Although FDA officials insisted the process of preparing filth tolerances for public release had been delayed, they conceded that they conceded it was speeded along by a recent threat to Chicago Sun Times newspaper William Hines to force disclosure of the Freedom of Information Act.
FDA General counsel Peter Hunt said they were not released because he was the agency feared private industry leaders rather than outside limits.
Kansas Teacher Retirement System was merged with the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System.
A MEMBER of the conference committee on the tax lid-local sales tax measure said the department agreed upon a plan which called
House Approves Appropriations
- Extension of authority to levy sales tax until December 31, 1973 for only the three cities that have been named cities, Topeka and Manhattan.
Prison Break Delays Davis Trial
SAN JOSIE, Calif. (AP)—One prison者 was slain during a jail break in which he caused a one-day postponement of the Angela Davis trial. Two
Teachers retiring since the
receiver is more likely to
receive much higher benefits
than those who retired earlier.
The omnibus appropriations
bills passed last year and
extension bills had been the
major items holding up ad-
dministration.
The jail break, which deputies said was not connected to the trial, erupted on the second floor of the Santa Clara County jail where four inmates Davis and her attorneys arrived at the courthouse 200 feet away.
Udershershery Tom Rosa said three inmates—two Mexican Americans and a white—came into the medical section on the second floor of the main jail where she was being treated with 12 inch blades on a 20-year woman secretary and a male public defender.
Rosa identified the dead man, who was shot at the jail elevator; as Jacob Zitcher, 30, also known as Chuck Williams, a San Quentin
The House and Senate joined in ratifying the federal equal rights for women constitutional amendment.
—Authority for any other city or county to levy a local sales tax would expire with the tax lid.
TOPEKA (AP) — The Kansas Legislature adjourned adjournment Tuesday night, completing action on a multi-million dollar ombits bills and reaching apparent agreement on two other major bills.
Final action on the appropriations bill was by the House. It adopted a conference report which took out the bill to boost retirement benefits of teachers who retired before the
The Senate approved a conference committee report on the salary bill and sent it to the House.
The House approved the tax lid local sales tax extension conference committee report and sent it to the Senate.
@
Her Beauty DESERVES THE FINEST
The appropriations measure went to the governor.
One bill would extend the sales tax lid and authority for some local units of government to lower local sales taxes, and the other would provide pay increases for most official officials, including legislators.
He said they threatened to kill the hostages if their demands weren't met.
The murder-kidnap-conspiracy trial of Miss Davis first was postponed and then recessed for the day, at the request of her attorney. The defense had been scheduled to begin opening statements.
After seizing the hostages, the three inmates had demanded that the sheriff's department supply a getaway车 with the motorcycle.
Lucas and Guerrero were taken to a hospital where doctors described them as "in an emotional state of shock."
For almost two hours, Rosa
M
Her Beauty
DESERVES THE FINEST
The unusual 14 K gold mountings enhance the beauty of this 8 dia mound encrusted Beau tifully styled, perfectly crafted, they fit together in perfect harmony.
Bath Rings $229
Ray Christian Jewelers
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Springtime is Ringtime
ROSA SAID the other two in-
ventors, uca, 22, and Ted Guerrero, 31,
Sue Kawamoto, 20, and public defender Alex Leonoff, 31, were
The undersherifr said first word of the escape attempt came at 8:40 a.m. when the jail internal alarm sounded. It was all over at 8:40 a.m., one minute after the final shot was fired, he said.
FIRST PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL IN THIS AREA
VISITORS WELCOME
Cenie J. Williams Jr., president of the National Association of Black Social Workers, will talk on the viability of the social work profession through the blacks at 7:30 tonight in the Union Room of the Kansas Union
violation of probation
excapee and convicted murderer.
Open from 1 p.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays 10 a.m.-3 p.m.Saturday
Phone 842-3157 731 New Hampshire
Lt. Don Tamm said Zitzer, who was serving a life term for killing an American hostage escaped from San Quentin Prison Dec. 13 by stuffing a dummy in his bed and scaling a 20-foot wall of a rope fumed of prison denial.
Talk Tonight
On Social Work
For Blacks
back into the elevator where the two other were holding the camera while the single shotgun blast, Rosa said.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
might shout louder, rose said.
Deputies then rushed into the
elevator to capture the other
immates and free the hostages.
An informal discussion is to be held at 4 p.m. in Parlors A and B of the Union.
Lucas was being held on a federal bank robbery charge and Guerrero was awaiting transfer to another bank. She was a robbery conviction and
LAWRENCE KARATE INSTITUTE
$\bigcirc$
said, she sheriff* deputies the trio, who finally ended the desecration demanded immediate freedom, threatening to kill the hostages
[Image of a man with an open mouth, wide eyes, and a thoughtful expression. He is wearing a light-colored shirt and a dark tie.]
YOUR NEXT SEMESTERS TUITION FREE!
Or Room and Board. Or Books. IN
KLWN-FM's BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES.
Just register at any Lawrence 7-Eleven store.
Here's the story. Entries will be taken for nine weeks. March 1 through May 3. We'll have three winners in the BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES. One winner will get a check in the amount of his Tuition up to $300. One winner will be awarded a check in the amount of Room and Board up to $150. And one winner will receive a check in the amount of his books up to $50. KLWN-FM and 7-Eleven have joined
forces to help you make the best of this school year. And all you have to do is register at any Lawrence 7-Eleven store. No purchase required. You don't have to be present to win. All registration blanks must have student ID # to qualify as a winner. Register today for the BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES. (It might help your balance of payments!)
OH THANK HEAVEN FOR 7-ELEVEN [and KLWN-FM!]
832 Iowa
1741 Massachusetts
7 ELEVEN
1909 W. 25th Street
2319 Louisiana
DIVISION OF THE SOUTHLAND CORPORATION
4
Wednesday, March 29,1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
PETER SCHMIDT
01. 685
Campaign Promise
Dave Dillon and Kathy Allen are to be congratulated for winning the recent election for student body president and vice-president. During their campaign they made promises which, if achieved, will be of benefit to the students. Not the least of these is to show "what the Senate is really about." I will be one of the students most eagerly awaiting this piece of information.
Student government is a self-perpetuating organization. Even in notably apathetic years there will always be someone willing to fill an office, even if it is just for a joke. There will always be student government but it will not always be the same thing. In years past, student governments could sponsor dances or get women's curfew hours extended. Things have changed and now student politicians have become involved in University affairs from academics to finances in addition to specifically student affairs. The range of subjects the Student Senate is now attempting to deal with makes it hard to determine what it really is about.
Perhaps it is time for the Senate to limit itself, thereby giving certain things the benefit of full consideration by senators. Admittedly, one of the hardest tasks facing senators each year would be that of deciding what problems or ideas they would work on that year.
Of course, it would be impractical for the Senate to become totally oriented towards a few goals since that might hamper its ability to react effectively to unexpected events or problems that usually arise every year. But such a system would give a direction to the Senate and might eliminate the aimless legislation that is voted on at most meetings.
Certainly good things have happened in the past because of Senate action. I think that those accomplishments were due largely to the efforts of a few people who did have an idea or saw a problem that needed to be solved. Those people were willing to take on the task of getting the Senate to do something. I would like to see the whole Senate become task-oriented rather than just a few energetic individuals. I can not help thinking that discussion in Senate meetings with that type of orientation would be more interesting than the endless legislative bickering about finances and parliamentary procedure. All senators could become involved in achieving goals they chose for the University and its students, as well as enjoying more interesting meetings. That would be an achievement.
Mary Ward
PETER R. BAKER
Askew's Crutch for Chicken Liberals
Liberals are funny little critters. Right now they are lamenting President Nixon's call for Congressional action against school busing. They only intercept this threeudge to force Florida's Governor, Ruben Askew.
Liberals are positively standing in line to nominate Governor Askew for inclusion in the next edition of Pro姨s press release. If you become a kind of loyalty test, as embittered "old liberal" John Roche rushes to assure us: "I want him (Askew) to know that whatever it may be worth—or be known as an Askew Democrat."
What brought about this burst of long-distance hero-worship? Well, Jon Nordheimer of the New York Times described it as “an ankie. an Okie from Muskogee who
believed—really believed—in the American dream." Those types are getting (quite understandably) rare, Liberals must salute the last few left.
But Askew's own action shows why the breed is dying off. When the Florida legislature added an anti-busing referendum to the state's primary vote, Askew—instead of vetting that move, or ignoring it—put a cosmetic second recommendation to the referendum test, a proposition in favor of equal education for all.
This, we are asked to believe, put him in a tough man-o-a-mo battle with George Wallace. It matched, as the Times put it, "the idealist Askew against the gufftower Wallace." Good against evil. Our guy against theirs.
Actually, of course, what it did was make Askew Wallace's paty. The second referendum immeasurably helped the first. It allowed people to vote in the referendum, assuring others (and their own conscience) that they are not really racists.
If anyone doubts this, all he has to do is look at Nixon's request to Congress. The President does not merely ask for a vote on the budget; he also pushes busing; he also pushes intothe
meaningless—a law to require that “no state or locality can deny equal educational opportunity to any person amount of race, color or national origin.
So Nickham has gladly adapted Aaskew's covering clause. The villain is doing the same thing the hero did—yet liberals are more supportive and applaud the latter. Of course former Aaskew's motives were noble, and Nickham's ignoble. But the effect is the same in both cases—the pious assurance allows men to indulge in the gut issue. In that sense, Aaskew did not want the politician to show them along in his own simpleminded way. The more Aaskew drew attention to the referenda, the more he got out and debated, the more people he drew to the polls—and the more Wallace profited from the public's feelings, the lethargic voters stirred to an unaccustomed literacy of protest. So, a profile in courage? Maybe, but hardly in wisdom, prudence, or political sense. An ally of Wallace can not make much of a defense by saying that he is an incumbent helper—Who needs that kind of meddling on the scene?
Copyright 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
James J. Kilpatrick
Political System Analyzed
WASHINGTON—Want a book for rainy-day reading? Try "The Party's Over," by David S. Broder, just published by Harper & Row. It is the best political book of the season—must-read because of government—but it comes on the chill of a January drizzle.
Ours is a town of 3,000 journalists. All list of the top ten would include Broder of the Washington Post. For more than 16 years, he has been covering unflappable cool-hand Lake who writes like a man driving nails. Broder's purpose in this perceptive book is to analyze the decline of our two-party system, to urge a return to responsible government and the consequences if the national parties are allowed to fall into further decay. He sees the country paradoxically in a time when the economy is his honestest: He sees little prospect of improvement. He provides enough ammunition, if one were so minded, to shoot himself bright fluttering bird of hope.
Political parties emerged almost with the beginning of our Republic—the Federalists of Mr.
Adams, the Republicans of Mr. Jefferson. It was one of the unexpected dividends of our election process, a product often incidental to the number of strong major parties came to be fixed at two. With few exceptions, that pattern continued through the time of Harry Trump.
This was the period of party loyalty, party discipline, party spoils, and party distinctions. It is hard to remember, but there truly was a time when the parties offered a dime's worth of difference—slavery and abolition, soft money and hard money.
silver and gold, free trade and protective tariff. Once there were legions of Democrats who would have supported vote to vote for a yellow dog; members of the GOP, on their side, not were less wedded to cannibalism.
What has become of the rock-ribbed Republican, the yellow-dog Democrat? They have gone the way of the grizzly bear and the wheeoping crane. Not yet extinct, but now very rare. The rise of a civil service system in New York has prompted patronage; not even a post-mastership remains today. With no spoils to distribute, party leaders had no spoils to deny; incentive and discipline alike
HURERT'S
FUNPERRY BANDWAGON
TIME TO RETIRE. INDEED! I JUST GOT
A NEW RECAP JOB IN FLORIDA!
A man with a party hat walking in the rain. He holds an umbrella as it rains. The water is covering his feet and he appears to be underwater.
Griff and the Unicorn
Rainy day
At his most pessimistic, Brother is filled with forebodes. He sees the specter of a man on a horse. He knows that if he were to be avoided, the people must again become "partakers" in the political process; and through born-again parties, inspired by their leaders, they seek clear and coherent goals.
By Sokoloff
"Individual citizens feel they have lost control of what is happening in politics and government. They find themselves powerless to influence the course of events. Voting seems a pointless charade. These are the millions of Americans express today, after 16 years of government impasse."
as Broder observes, something more subtle was going on. In a pathetic scramble to offer all things to all people, the parties failed to perform their "unifying and clarifying function." They tended to compose their platform on an theme from "Annie" by the composer. Can you do I can do better. What has this failure produced?
"Individual citizens feel they have lost control of what is happening in politics and government. They find themselves powerless to influence the course of events."
It is a large order, but “if we do nothing, we guarantee our nation will be nothing.” That is Broder’s parting shot. He has written a letter of condemnation to thunder, and to turn the last page is to near the rain falling.
dissolved. Then came television, which tended to free an ambitions candidate from dependence on party organization.
A man in a suit holds an umbrella under a rain cloud. Below him is a stormy sea with bubbles, and a life guard figure with a striped hat.
While these manifest developments were taking place,
Broder finds the same disenchantment at every level of government. Unlike many of his fellow liberals, he avoids the error of supposing that all citizens are the only ones and all stupidity in city hall and the state house. His criticism goes evenly across the board.
Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff.
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not contain any special characters. All correspondence according to space limitations and the editor's judgment should provide their name, year in school and home; faculty and staff must provide their name, position, and others must provide their name and contact information.
Letters Policy
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
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use courtesy of Mama's daily during the academic year for holiday baskets and holidays. Please contact your Mama at 401-623-3795 or visit www.mamasbaskets.com to all listings without registration, a credit or national origin, expressed interest or any other condition. Mama's website is www.mamasbaskets.com.
NEWS STAFF
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News Adviser . . . Del Brinkman
Editor Chie Creew
Associate Editor Rita Haugh, Eric Kramer, Joe Spatter
Campaign Editor Rita Haugh, Eric Kramer, Joe Spatter
Copy Chief Joyce Carlson, Rob King
Associate Editors Rita Haugh, Eric Kramer, Joyce Carlson, Rob King
Sports Editor Bob Simmon
Feature Editor Bob Simmon
Feature Editor Tom Singleton, Mary Ward
Editorial Editor Tom Singleton, Mary Ward
Wife Editor Joyce Carlson, Rob King
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H
Wednesday, March 29. 1972
we do nation odder's otten a stand and to the
HUD Approves Landscape Ideas
船 Crewships
like Mofetke
like Scout
lew Scott
Ron Klinga
ob Simpson
at Bietgerk
with Ward
Jonesen Ward
with Schmidt
KH Neter
KH Netter
soc Rush
soc Rush
idays and postage
advertised
expressed
T
504
Lansan Photo by MARC MAY
Bridge Target for Beautification
Federal grant to allow new lighting, landscaping
Officials of Housing and Urban Development in Kansas City, Mo. gave approval *Marco* 16 to the project beautification projects planned by members of the Lawrence Neighborhood Development Program.
The development program's first year project of landscape and sidewalk improvements on Massachusetts streets between 1987 and 2005 has been completed. Members of the federally-funded program have suggested beautifying the bridge area at Lawrence's northern end for the second year project in a three-year improvement program.
Lawrence Halpin and Associate Architects, suggested architecture structures, suggested planting trees and foliage and developing a playground in the street between Massachusetts and Vermont streets at the south end of the city.
Additional suggestions made by Halpern Associates were no hedge light districts and lane dividers at the 6th and 8th segments streets.
Don Schaake, Neighborhood Development Program director said Monday that he hoped the project will provide a grant from Housing and Urban Development. Notice of the amount of funding, he said, will be made in September; detailed plans will be made. Designing and construction of the project will begin this July and be completed in June 1973, Schaake said.
Members of the Neighborhood Development Program had技术 development of a park at the north end of the bridge, but Schaake said the grant would be much more useful to fund beauty to the north end of
Prof Tapes for Radio Series
Peter Dart, associate professor of radio-television film at the University of Kansas, recorded a half-hour program for the Voice Awards in 2014. American Cinema to be broadcast worldwide this summer or fall. Dart's recording, which includes Griffith and Sergien Eisenstein's innovative techniques on the American and Soviet film, is one of 24 audio tape prepared about the country for the series.
Dart said the Voice of American was the radio arm of the U.S. Information Service and transmitters all over the world.
Dart said Griffith's technique of juxtaposing images in his 1916 film "Intolerance" had an effect on his artistic vision. Film-makers, Eisenstein for example, worked with Griffith to shattering of catfish with scenes of the slaughtering of Cossacks in his first film (1924). "Strike," and this was an imitation of Griffith's first film.
the bridge.
on American television advertising.
Teenage Soviet film-makers cut forceful, revolutionary films based on Griffith's techniques so that the accumulative impact of these films was great. Dart said, "The American film," the American film "has been negligible," he said. The greatest influence of intercultural has been
Dart said it was notable that Kansas was represented in the series. He said the potential for success with the team would be several million people, with the intelligence of most countries to attain and Canada, represented.
Schake said the landscaping of the park, with the first year's landscaping between 7th and 10th streets in the 600 block of Massachusetts Street.
President of the National Association of Black Social Workers and Currently a Regional Director of Urban League
CENIE J. WILLIAMS, JR.
Dr. William O. Rieke, vice chancellor for health affairs at the University of Kansas Medical Center, and Dr. Daniel H. National Board of Medical Examiners and appointed as its anatomy test committee.
The $500,000 will be used to acquire property to enlarge the intersection at 6th and street at 7th, with landscape the surrounding area,
Will Speak Tonight
Wednesday March 29
—House Mgr.
—Stage Mgr.
Ushers/Securities
—Hospitality
Come in or Phone SUA Office
(UN4-3477) for Interview Time.
SUA Announces
B. B. KING IN CONCERT APRIL 22,1972
INTERVIEWING MARCH 29,1972 for Committee Positions:
Gen. Chairman Ass't. Chairman
Ticket Chairman & Committee Publicity Chairman & Committee
in the Forum Room at 7:30 p.m.
Sponsored by SUA and The Social Welfare Dept.
ROBINSON'S
Shoe Rack
Open Mon.- Sat. 10:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. — Open Sunday Noon 'til 6 p.m.
Sure, we know it's Easter time . . . but Easter, Halloween or Christmas time . . . we still cut prices! So you can save on fresh, new shoes style; we sent to italy for this dilly wedge sandal. In Bone Leather, Navy Suede, Black or White Krinkle patent. Others ask $10.95. *Shoe Rack? Just$8.
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Patronize Kansan Advertisers
PARKING LIST
Pictures talk. Some little boys don't.
Some inner-city ghetto have special schools. For little boys who don't talk.
Not mute little boy. But children with withdraws, so afraid of failure, they cannot make the slightest attempt to do any thing.
Some don't talk. Some don't listen. Most don't behave. And all of them don't learn."
One day someone asked us to help.
Through Kodak, cameras and film were distributed to the teachers who gave the cameras to the kids and told them to take pictures.
And then the miracle, Little boys who had never said anything, looked at the pictures and began to talk. They said, "I will tell you about this."
to hide." They began to explain, to describe, to communicate. And once the channels of communication had been opened,
We're helping the children of the inner-city. And we're also helping the adults. We're involved in inner-city job pro-
grams and other initiatives.
What does Kodak stand to gain from this? Well, we're showing how our products can help a teacher—and maybe creating a whole new market. And we're also cultivating young customers who will someday buy their own cameras and film. But more than that, we're cultivating alert, educated citizens. Who will someday be responsible for our society
After all, our business depends on our society. So we care what happens to it.
Kodak More than a business.
6
Wednesday, March 29, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Pompon Tryouts Start Thursday
By CANDY HERBERT Kansan Staff Writer
Preliminary tryouts for the 1972-1973 University of Kansas Pompon Girl Squail will be held at 7 Thursday night in Allen Field Museum. The junior and co-chairman of this year's squail, said recently.
Phelps said that clinics had to teach Pammon girl hopefuls routine. "I'm a Jaheyh," that judge to be judge on Thursday night.
"Approximately 40 to 45 girls attended the two clinics to learn the routine and practice different jumps and movements," she
After the preliminary tryout Thursday evening, the field will be cut to 25 girls. Phelips said.
"During the week between the reunion, I will try out the different routines for 25 girls who have different routine from the old pompon girl. We make up a new oneself."
At the final tryout, which will probably be April 6, they will then be judged on both these routines. Phelps said.
GLORIA DOUGLAS, adviser to the pompon squad, said that the girls trying out would be selected for police and police coordination and spirit.
A girl can try out for the squand if she had at least a 7.0 G. P. A. of freshman or incoming freshman or outgoing senior can enter the competition.
Phelps said that a panel of approximately 10 judges would be chosen to select next year's
Sachem Picks 12 Junior Men As Members
Twelve men have been selected for membership in Sachem, the senior men's honourary society, and seven deans, dean of men, has announced.
Sachem was established at the University of Kansas in 1910 to promote a strong research and contributions to the campus community. Since 1947, it has been affiliated with Oicronc International leadership society for men.
The new members are Paul
Schoenberd, iola senior; David
Dillon, Hutchinson junior;
Junior; Robert Geoffarth;
Lawrence fifth year engineering
student; David Hull, Whittier,
Greenville; Robert Geoffarth;
Greenville, Texas, senior;
Benjamin Mann, Independence,
Mo., junior; Richard McKernan,
Mo., junior; Robert McKernan,
McLaughlin, Dallas junior;
William O'Neill, Bailin, Mo.
juniper; Paul Shellico, Wichita
juniper; Michael meyer, Raytown, Mo.
juniper
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) —The Ways and Means Committee of the Kansas House voted today to approve legislation that would clear the way for possible consideration of ratification of an amendment to the federal Constitution.
HE HAD THE VISION...
WE HAVE
THE WAY.
When the Paulists were
displaced.
founded in 1858 by
Ian Hackett he was
first religious institute
of priests established in North
America by an American and
Canadian missionary.
Father Hesher, who was a seminary professor, said the Paula's to be free of compulsory activities so they could be able to meet the needs of the Church in every age group.
Today's Poultry can be as inexpensive as fish, but they give the freedom to use his own talents to do his own thing. He is a master of cooking, or a presser, radio or relay.
Father Hecker discovered the value of communication early. With his monthly publications, he founded the foundation for the Paulist (Newman Press), the country's largest Catholic institution of Catholic literature.
Today, Father Hacker's vision and forebear led to the event that brought his vision and film centers on a scale that perhaps, not even he attends.
But then, he had the vision He showed us the way.
nomnon squad.
For more information on the Paulists, write to: Rev. Donald C. Campbell, Vocation Director, Room 500.
"We hope to have judges representing the basketball and football coaching staff at the 2015 NCAA Championship Black organizations on campus.
pauist fathers.
"We're also trying to get a former pompom girl and two former yell leaders to serve on the panel," Phils said.
415 West 59th Street New York,N.Y.10019
PHELPS SAID that all squad places were open in the tryouts and that no preference would be given to them who were presently girls goners.
"Five girls from this year's squad are trying out, but they don't like to make it, though, there will be room for three new pompon girls."
The 1971-1972 pompon squad was different in several ways from squads of former years. Phhells said.
"This year, instead of electing just one chairman as former squads have done, we elected two
co-chairman. Having two girls worked out quite well, because there is really too much to do for one person.
"We also did a show at every home half-time, which has never been done before.
PHELPS SAID that any prospective pompon girl must have time for practice.
"Usually the squad practices four to six hours a week for football games and two to three weeks a week for basketball games.
Also coming up is the selection of a KU student to represent the University as the 1972-1973 Jawhawk.
Vince Biltza, field director of the Alumni Association, which owns the Jayhawk said he would be on an individual basis.
"We have had tryouts in the past, but they never really worked because there was nothing definite to judge on.
The main qualities Blotta said he looks for in a Jahawk are strength, a good sense of balance. The organization and overall good sense.
Usually interested people contacted us.
"Good sense," Bilotta said, "is really important. The Jawshak is the attention, that if it does hurt the University's image."
BILOTTA SAID wearing the costume almost verged on athletic ability. Made Merriman, a former Jockey, and present Jayhawk, agrees.
"When Eldon Prutt was selected as the regular Jyahawk and he played about two years ago, it was mainly on our ability to carry the ball."
Merriman said that he took over as regular Jayhawk when Prutu graduated last December, and that he hoped to continue as
the Jayhawk until his graduation in 1973.
Bilotta confirmed that Merriman would probably be allowed to continue as Jayhawk if he wished.
"I do hope that someone is selected as an alternate though, because wearing the costume takes a great amount of time and energy, especially during basketball season." Merriman
"Also with an alternate, I could main his so he would be主编 his so he would be主编 Jayhawk when I graduate, just as Prut helped me when I was his
Merriman said he was sure Meriman said he was sure Sophomore and wearer of the baby Jayhawk costume, also want to continue as a regular member.
"Although at first it was hard on her, she just loves it now," Merriman said.
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At the conclusion of this mini workshop (March 8th through May 3rd), we will draw the conclusions from our experience in creating a free PRISM in the drawing on May 3, 1972 will receive FREE Prism. * The winner of the first PRISM in the drawing on May 3, 1972 will receive FREE Prism.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 29, 1972
7
Budget and Information System.
Continued from Page 1
Continued from Page i spend is all we have and will receive."
The wish list was especially misleading, said Chalmers, because faculty members would ask for money or positions and then "when they settled and the faculty adjourned, actual allocations were made."
A CONCEPT of administrative positions "having a life of their own with dollars attached" is a prominent theme in Jimerson's moral philosophy.
"This concept makes so much sense to me that it almost self-evident. Yet they are people within this approach for whom this is almost as foreign as it if applebable. Chalmer explains."
A fallacy of the present budget system, Chalmers says, is that a new budget is drawn up each year. This means there are a lot of positions again and no way to determine whether any or all of the new departments, reduced or increased in salary or whether the incumbent is the same as in previous years.
Such a concept is not designed to slow down anyone or decrease human flexibility. Chalmers said
THE UTILIZATION of this concept will provide a much-needed historical record of the United States, according to the Chancellor.
Chalmers acknowledged having difficulty convincing the state's other university and
college administrators of the merits of a formulated budget system.
Moreover, Chalmers, Hitt and Heller agreed that KU could have much difficulty if it were the only institution of higher education that tried to maintain a limited budget system in Kansas.
THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas
Information System for Planning
and Development is the unit
primarily involved in setting up
Whatever benefits that a formulated budget and budget adjustment will depend largely upon the establishment of a complex, computerized information system. The information system is expected to coordinate and store it if a decentralized level of the University and predict necessary adjustments for expected or even unanticipated levels.
The office, located at 1318 Louisiana St. in a three-story clapboard structure that was once the residence of former KU Chancellor Francis H. Snow, is located at K. Hitt, former KU registrar.
Hill, in a March 17 interview,
wrote that the University
reorganization is "a
Robert Townsend's book. 'Up the
Organization!'" stands on a
large stone wall.
zation, according to Hitt
UNIVERSITY GROWTH is the main stimulus for reorgani-
" G row w t h . m a k s
decentralization necessary
which, in turn, creates a greater
need for an information system."
"Whoever I describe my job," said Hitt, "people say, 'Aha! Big Brother!'"
"Now we have the technology, the third-generation computer, which will predict resource needs by model building and simulation.
Although he agrees that such a question is valid, the payoff in good cybernetic system. Hittie will make a decision and little resource loss.
"It's worth the cost, I think, of developing a complex data-based information system, even against the odds of unwise disclosure." said Hirth
"Presently we lose resources allocations because of poor decision-making and not get the information that they need," he said, and "the same problems remain with our system also establishes controls which can be imposed."
Disclosures of information to the wrong applicants, Hitt said, will also be prevented by the employer on whom information is stored.
"The most satisfying justification for this system that I've found yet is that I'm not so sure anyone's information is so
Hitt said he was uncommitted to any one form of university organization.
AT LEAST, said Hitt, under the new information system we will know what the information is and where it is stored.
secure right now in the decentralized, conventional files. A student's personal file exists in half a dozen offices around here and more darn people can go at now that you have any idea
WHATSAHPOOBAH?
"I cannot be favorable or oppositional to any form of organization that presents itself, that' the Chancellor's job. I
information center in 1962
A CYBERNETIC, computer data-based information system, he helped Florida State administration graduate students "llegally" reproducing whole animal specimens at the university's expensory lab.
realize that organization must always change patterns in information and modify these for information at various levels in the new organization," said Sandra.
Chalmers said that he had "virtually insisted upon" the need for a computer system, especially the information system that the university is using.
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were projected at one-quarter of
a million dollars for the third
Chalmers said he had other experiences with similar information systems. In the 50's and early 60's he worked for
It's what I managed to establish at another university, he said. When he was vice president for academic affairs at Florida State University, he said he wanted to
THE INFORMATION system that is planned for the University, Chalmer's, is similar to ones now used by the U. S. Army, the International Telephone & Post Office, and Early Warning Defense System.
Thompson Ramo Wooldridge,
Inc. (TRW), using classified
information from satellites in
international model-building and
research, he said. Chancellor said he was still in contact with TRW as a consultant, but was associated with the company, much lesser degree, than before.
Thompson Ramo Wooldridge developed missile defense systems to produce the M-14 rifle for the U. S. Army in 1981 and worked on Atlas, Titan and Minuteman missiles and coordinated the U. S. Air Force's missile defense program.
Both Hitt and Chalmers said they thought the parts of the information system already set up themselves proved themselves favably.
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8
Wednesday, March 29, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Dependable Sign of Spring Fails; Birds Migrate Prematureb
The spring weather promised by such signs as the large flocks of birds seen in the area recently has failed to materialize. Instead, cold rain and wet snow made the prospect of March's "going out like a lamb" seem a
Kansan Staff Photo by KD LA11.0
cried joke. The gloomy weather may have fitted the mood of students who had to return to classes from school.
nevitably a poor welcome for those students who spent their vacation on the southern Texas coast, but it wasn't all bad.
A complaint service available to all members of the University of Kansas community who have complaints about any student who was started by the student services committee of the student senate.
The service was originated by Kathy Allen, Topeka sophomore, and has been in operation for about a month.
Complaint Service Available
According to John Wulf,
Mortgage, Ill., junior and head of the complaint center, the service is designed to accommodate complaints by students about any student services.
Wuff said that because of its cold spring break, not many complaints have been filed. Many of those complaints that have been filed are still under review.
the Senate and consequently no action can be taken on them
Wulf said the service should be used by students who have complaints in the specific areas of student services, such as the cafeteria, food court, and Watkins Memorial Hospital and the various food services
throughout the campus
Posters with complaint forms attached to them are in various academic buildings on campus. The forms and either drop the complaints in boxes near the front door, then attach them to the Student Senate office.
BLAH, BLAH, BLAH
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BLAH, POOBAH IS
DEFINITELY NOT A
CASE OF...BLAH, B
BLAH, BLAH, BLAH,
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Ph.D. Work Led to Largest Concordance
Computer Helps Compile Book
By MARILYN K. KING
Kansas Writer
The largest concordance in the world has been compiled by Dean E. Klinger of the English at Baker University and Lawrence resident, with the help of the huge Honeywell 635 upper deck at the University of Kansas.
The 7000-page "Concordance to the Plays and Prefaces of George Bernard" contains nearly twenty countries and is nearly times the size of other giant concordances, as those to those in the heart of Europe, Wordworth and the Bible.
It was published in February be Gale Research Co. of Detroit,
The concordance, which is Bevan's dissertation for his Ph.D. degree, took five years to complete. Aided by a key punch and the help of a friend in the Bevan home in Lawrence for a year and a half, and the honeywell computer, Bevan was able to accomplish in a relatively short time what a friend in Lawrence might have taken several months must complete by hand.
"SOME OF the scribes who were born in Palestine Wordsworth concordance worked for most of their adult lives, and many died before the work was completed."
Bevan described a concordance as an "ultimate index" to a literary work. It lists alphabetically each important word in the text, "and," "the," and other common words; tells where the word is
used; and may give the context in which it is used.
The Shakespeare concordance, second in size to Bevern's, has more entries than the more entries per page, but entries in the Shaw concordance are from two to four times longer. There are more entries 11 by 14 by 17 inches.
The size of the concordance can be attributed to the fact that Shaw, a British playwright and composer, was continuously from the late 19th century until his death in 1850 at the age of 43. He is best known among them "St. Joan," "Man and Superman," and "magnificent woman" the inspiration for the Broadway musical "Musical Fair Lady."
Bevan received a grant of $1,500 from the Kansas City Regional Council for Higher Education for the keypunching work, which was used to create the keyboard and hire key punch operators.
THE SIXTY plays and prefaces referred to in the concordance contain more than two million punch cards, punched into computer cards. Omission of common words resulted in a 60 per cent reduction in volume, but a staggering increase in the number needed to produce the concordance.
"I would come home at night and there would be a stack of cards about a foot high that had been punched that day. I put the pouch of puffed each one and a punch a new card every time I found a mistake.
You can't erase a hole in a card."
You can’t erase a hole in a card.” THE FINAL. computer programming. You must be employed every available magnetic tape drive in the machine and proofread and separated from its carbon copy before it could be to Gale Research Co. of New York. You must concordance. The there print pages were photographed, reduced by 50 per cent and printed at 8.25 x 11 inches.
"I read the entire contents of the concordance three times—once in play and preface form for my Ph. D. exams and twice in entry form when proofreading and primotit." Bevan remarked.
Bevan decided to complete the concordance after his thesis adviser, Edwards. AEdwards, a doctor of Engineering at the university there was a need for one. It will allow research to be done on Shaw that was never before discovered and discovered several potential thesis topics while completing the concordance and will probably paper a year on Shaw. Shaw.
"SHAW IS THE greatest English dramatist or playwright is the most favorite literary figure. "He was a public man, not a literary one."
The concordance will be purchased by libraries and private scholars at a cost of $275. Bevan said that British and American colleges should be interested in the concordance. However, as yet
By LESLIE RISS
Kansan Staff Writer
'Because' Offers Listeners For Troubled Students
"When you're weary and feelin' small,
When teras are in your eyes, I will dry them all."
The above words, are part of a popular song sung by Simon and Garkinuck. **Bridge** Over Water Water support and friendship when a person is tired, lonely or depressed. The song gives worthy advice, but people often have trouble listening, because enough to listen or help.
"Because" is a listening service that was created last year to care for students who are concerned for other students who need someone to listen to their needs.
The idea to start the service originated in a University of Michigan school where it was representative from the National Health Association spoke to the state senator. The result that it was a national problem and very evident on college
The class decided that a good way to do something to combat loneliness would be to start a game where that students could go to or call
The group decided that a convenient location for Because was 1116 Louisiana. Although Canterbury House is connected with the Episcopal Church, because it is not part of the service. The building was available and the atmosphere was because 'we were established there.'
Students starting Because were given minimal training by Thomas Reilly, assistant professor of psychology.
Many calls were received when the service began last spring. When the fall semester began, a teacher was unorganized and unused.
A student who called the service in the spring, called again last fall to ask when it would start happen. He and other students got to know the organizer of Because. 15-20 students volunteered to help.
Several of the volunteers went to the Mental Health Center at Akilwa where he Dyndsy Neekabu supported. He support. He agreed with them
that the listening service should not be professionalized because some people's needs do not require professional help.
Because has become better
organized she knew this service
for her. She will be 8-12 p. m. every week night and
from p. m. to 6 a. m. on Sundays.
The calls that are received are primarily from lonely, depressed students.
One male freshman called who was living in a dormitory and was having trouble finding friends. He called Because to talk and tell someone his problem. Later in college, he met Captain House to talk further.
A female graduate student missed her boyfriend who lived in California. She needed to talk to counselor and called the listening service.
A recurring problem seems to be adjusting to a college environment after being in other environments. Receives calls from veterans or
Other students call when the pressures, demands and frustrations of school reach a peak.
call all kinds of people
call and visit, students who are
become part of the group,
heist to call. Most of the
doctors can not warn, they advice
them.
students who have been used to a home environment.
Names of callers or visitors are not recorded and there is no obligation to call again. Students need to be aware of personal needs and privacy.
people who have called the
intensiveerview call back again
to suggest feedback is usually that they
glad it is available. Several offer
feedback is available.
Because is an official campus service and has a faculty advisor. You should go to Canterbury House or call Because. The Because
One listener at Because said, 'Some of who have been in college would be available 24 hours a day. We would like it to become a regular feature.'
The listening service has received approximately 25 calls this semester.
Books about doctors have always been big sellers, whether they are inspirational fiction like "The Invisible Man" or nonfiction like "American Doctor's Odyssey." One that has been high on the best sales lists now in paperback, is William A. Lynch's *Surgeon* (Pocket, $150). It is an account of life in New York's famed Bellevue Hospital, where Nolien was both interested and will fascinate many readers.
New Nonfiction Offered
Books:
libber 'way ahead of her time.
A new biography that has received critical acclaim is ROMOLA N IJNI SKY'S NIJNI SKY (POCKEY, $1.50).
NIJNI SKY performs at batel performers of all kinds but batel performers of all kinds. This book
Somewhat different among the new nonfiction works is IRVING a book that was written AND OTHER MANIACS (POCKET, $1.50), a book that is not nearly as jazzy as its title, and a book on several famous women who write rules of their time: Cleopatra, Holise, Mosee, de Staal, Marie Wallewska (Napoleon's wife), Victoria Woodhull, a woman's Victoria Woodhull, a woman's
libber 'way ahead of her time.
no British university has asked to purchase a set. He pointed out that Shaw was popular in the UK and that he was accepted in England.
Bevan said that though he had no immediate plans to compile another concordance, he was contemplating doing one on
KANSAN reviews
tells how a young woman won Nijlsjack away from the impresario Diaghieff, who was virtually controlling the dancer's career.
Of special interest to many
readers will be a biography,
written mainly among people,
BROWNIES and SHIRLEY
SHIRLEY CHISHOLM
CPOKET 12 cents. Shirley
chikoff was elected woman to
women to be elected to Congress.
Samuel Johnson, who, next to Shaw, was his favorite writer.
Shaw, was his favorite writer. Bevan now holds four degrees from the University of Oxford. He is a major in the U.S. Army Intelligence Corps and was recently appointed to the reserve force at Fort Bragg. The U.S. Embassy in London.
Undergraduate Teaching Assistantships are available for next fall in certain undergraduate lab courses in the Biology Dept.
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES MAJORS!
- Salaries start at $500.00 per semester.
- Approx. ten hours work per week and enrollment in Bio. 83 (Laboratory instruction, 2 hours fall semester only) is required.
- Obtain application forms in Biology Office, 249 Snow.
- Deadline for application: April 3,1972
Fly your own jet!
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Wed., March 29 7:30 p.m. DYCHE AUDITORIUM
Public Invited
University Daily Kansan
MOTION PICTURES
Wednesday. March 29. 1972
Kansan Photo by PRISCILLA BRANSTED
Old City Hall to Be Altered into Community Museum
Will display artifacts from Douglas county and KU museums
Watkins Museum to Display County's Historical Objects
Plans for the old City Hall building at 11th, and the former City Library, converted into the Elizabeth Watkins Community Museum are under way. Ethen Smith, a member of the Douglas County Museum, has been leading the project.
The museum, which will be an historical museum, will exhibit anything which has been relevant
to Douglas county history, he said.
"that means that anything which is associated with Douglas county will be used, such as tools, clothing, tools or clothing." Smith said.
A spokesperson for the Historical Society said there were plans for both KU's Spooner Art Museum and the Natural History Museum.
to have floors in the Watkins Museum to display various historical items.
Smith said the Douglas County historical Society Museum would move from its location to 745 Vermont as soon as the Watkins facilities were ready. He said the society hoped to have the museum fully completed by this summer.
The program, which is good for one to three hours of credit in political science, entails spending a week at Mount Rushmore at the same times as churches by accredited persons in Dept. of the American Presidency
In charge of the program at KU is Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science.
The cooperative summer program includes seven midwestern state universities. The University of Nebraska, KU, Kansas State University, the University of Colorado, Colorado State University, the University of Miami, and the University of South Florida.
This year's program includes several notable authors. Speaking will be George Reedling, author of "The Twilight of the Century," and Thomas Hodgson, author of "Presidential Leadership of Public Opinion" and "The American Presidency: the Intel Center"; Hugh Sidley, author of "Inherent Values"; President; and "A Very Personal Presidency: Lyndon Johnson in the White House"; and Douglas Cater, author of "Power in Washington" and "Douglas Branch of Government."
Chalmers Talks on Unrest
Ketzel said that a student interested in the program should meet with him to determine the amount of credit to be received. The credit will be given in either undergraduate or undergraduate study.
Participants should make a $25 deposit to assist them of a class reservation. The deposit can be made in the student section or C.R. McKibbin, academic director of the department of psychology at the University of Nebraska.
Students interested in the program should contact Ketzel
The 1972 session will run from June 26 to June 30. The class is limited to three students ($75 per student, which covers room, board and transportation fees).
BY ROBERT E. DUNCAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Students at the University of Washington studied the American Presidency in a summer program called the Mount Rushmore museum.
7 Schools To Study Presidency
Chalmers, subdit his written "Taking Social Conflict in Pressure Cooker called Ca Ca" by a symptom of great social unrest.
The Chancellor cited the wwi as an example of the University of Kansas as an example of how an administrator needs to deal and adapt to the challenges of this era.
By ROBERT E. DUNCAN
Chalmers said, recalling the night when persons threw rocks at the windows of the Military Academy, she judged the judgment we came within a hair's breadth of turning KU into a Berkeley, a Wisconsin, an Oregon, and so on. A massive show of unformed personnel for the purpose of
In a speech prepared for delivery to the Association of College Union's International-International University, Lous this morning. University of Kansas Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmer Jr. outlined his thoughts concerning violent conflict on college campuses.
numerous arrests would have required the continuous presence of law enforcement personnel for months thereafter."
Commenting on the general case, Chalmers concluded, "A campus under perpetual siege from within and without may be kept 'open', but it can scarcely its educational functions when concerns about personal safety are most pernicious in everyone's mind."
Chalmers said there were four lessons we can be learned from campus experience with social conflict. The necessity of creating peaceful relations and the prevention of social conflict, the development of effective, strong student development of effective communication and the providing of opportunities to work directly or indirectly upon the problems that underlie the learning process.
"The proper management of soot change sequesters soot and prevents the expositions of concern may occur without disruption or violence," he said. "Soot changes are not easy."
information Center (rumor control) had provided a very effective device for continued discussion about the University community.
"The business of doing it" is the greatest challenge facing campus leaders, he said.
In terms of campus leadership Chalmers said, "It's long past the time we can ask that men or women cannot do what we want, or cannot permit, and begin to accept what we can and will do, but about the business of doing it."
The speech was delivered before administrators and staff members of college unions across the United States. Chalmers sold the group that it was important to resist the violence and social conflict be remembered when attempting to resolve the social lilies of society.
Honor Recital Tonight
The Honor Recital of the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts will be presented at 8 a.m. Hall. Students are selected for the Recital on Tuesday, February 25, ballet on the campus of superior performance on the student
recitals held twice a week.
Appearing on the program will be Gwen Rummer, Lawrence freshman; Jordan Kellner, Neodeshia junior; Donald White, Tulsa sophomore; Richard Schutte, Ft. Madison, Iowa sophomore; Ivan Thomas, Louis Jr. junior, and Patricia Alvarado, Monterey, Mexico
Campus Briefs
possibility of establishing one-to-one relationships between universities and midwest colleges and universities and predominantly
The black schools are in need of help in the areas of rural development and perhaps larger institutions could supply expert in those areas.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chellier E. problemes of some southern Negro colleges at a meeting of the Office of Advancing Public Negro Education
Kansan Staff Applications
Applications for staff positions on the University Daily Kansan will be available Thursday from Chip Crews, editor, in the Kansan newsroom. Forms also will be in the offices of the dean of men and women of the university; applications is April 7. Other applications must be in by April 10.
The establishment of such relationships would allow for exchange programs between schools involved, Chalmers said.
Voter Panels . .
"I'm sure it doesn't take an expert to answer the questions," she says. "I just need an expert to understand the reasons behind the way our world works."
Francis H. Heiler, vice chancellor for academic affairs and professor of political science of Richard H. Nehring, professor of history and Earl Nehring, associate professor of political science will form the governing body.
A candidate, Treacy said, takes the aspects of the presidency that he knows he can fulfill and adjusts those responsibilities to himself. He says, "Look, I can do this; I've done that before." This will help him to be more like the man. Treacy said. He said the opposite should be done.
Chalmers said the meeting had been called to discuss the
Chalmers is an advisory member of the office and was a founding member of the International Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges.
Treacy said the panel would attempt to acquaint voters with what the president does on a "day-to-day" basis."
Sociology Prof to Speak
TREACY SAID he hoped the panel would combat apathy that the system itself seemed to encourage.
Continued from Page 1
Robert Hamlin, assistant speech and drama professor; Donn Parson, associate professor of speech communications and journalism; Robert M. Pitcket, professor of journalism will form the final panel.
Pierre Larch, visiting professor from Belgium, and his wife will present an evening of theatre. "The Games of Love in the French Classical Theatre, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Centennial Room," he says. "Theatre is a place for young people to club. The program will be in French and there will be no charge."
Treacy said the American government must decentralize the states, if this is not done, he said, the federal government will continue to grow. Treacy said the voters are not going to get governments solve their own problems. Until this is done, he said, the government will never work on it.
Chalmers also reviewed the possibilities of student exchanges between these institutions. All of them were discussed at the discussion stage, he said.
Walter Sedelow, professor of sociology, will speak on "The problem of Sociology" at 30 to 8pm at 914 W 81st ST. Tern Allison University, 2625 West 76th Street, Washington, DC 20007.
French Theatre Thursday
Black College Problems Viewed by Chancellor
"SOME WOULD have us
beneath him, in the
in that someone is working
with our problems and
everything we go to be all
Tracy."
"that's crazy. We try to get rid of our responsibilities and put them on others. We've got to start handling the truth; we have got to
Experts in areas of minority problems and issues affecting blacks might come to the larger universities and colleges, he said.
English Topic Of Conference
The 16th annual Kansas Association of College Teachers of English conference will be held at the University of Kansas at Skid Row. More than 100 English instructors are expected to attend.
Included in the program will be workshops on curriculum, the process and advanced placement and the transition from high school to college.
Speakers will be G. Dale Gleason, Hutchinson Community Junior College; Virginia Schneider, Kansas City Kansas Community Junior College; College of Law Lakeside University; and William Lebae department of linguistics. University of Pennsylvania.
B. F. TREE of the KU Division of Continuing Education is the coordinator for the conference.
All sessions will be held in the Kansas Union.
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demand the truth on a 24-hour-a day basis."
With less than two months remaining in the year that students cannot up to three month exercise program. The preschool and last minute assign- ment may be difficult to maintain any regular exercise routine.
MISS CONSTITUTION
hese reasons we are offering a
"I hope the panel is interesting." Treacy said, "I want it to be positive, loose, easygoing, a non-partisan thing, i.e., not so hard that it affects our attitude toward the way the concept of a government is not really as complex as we make it out to be."
student special. Enroll now for only $25 and pay online or visit your want between now and the end of the semester, stricctions at all, come in as many days as you would want to stay away from way to get in shape for the vacation. Two and three month student specials for those girls who will be here this fall are 404-4044 for an appointment.
Continued from Page 1
Delegates . . .
LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB
At the district convention the delegation will select two candidates. The national convention August 21 in San Diego, Calif. They also met at the international conference.
At the state convention the delegates from each delegate and ten alternates from the state as a whole to the national convention and two national electors.
---
Before the convention Shirley Vaughn, secretary of the party in Douglas County and fund raising chairman in the third district.
On Buck Night, April 25,
Republicans throughout the
county will canvass their
goals to raise money for
the party.
King said Republicans in the state had a budget of $1,392 to contribute to the state party organization and the party needed to raise $5,000 more to fund their campaign.
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Wednesday, March 29.1972
University Daily Kansas
Haskell to Establish Indian Hall of Fame
An American Indian Sports Hall of Fame will open on the Haskell Indian Junior College campus in October, William J. Burgess, dean of instruction at the project, announced recently.
The board of directors of the Hall of Fame is now considering more than 200 athletes for the inaugural season. The induction has not been announced yet. The board will make its decision in July. After the initial inductions, Burgess said, three new athletes would be added each year.
The Hall of Fame will be composed of male and female athletes nominated by the hall of Fame nominating committee and the Hall of Fame.
The athletes must have been retired from sports for two years and must be one-fourth Indian
ONE OF THE first athletics to be inducted into the Hall of Fame will be Jim Thorpe. Burgess said, "We are proud to announce football, baseball and track star at Carlisle, Pa. Medals he won in the 1912 Olympics were later taken from him because he had been selected for playing baseball
Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER
Burgess said that an intensive effort was being made to secure Thorpe's medals for the Hall of Fame. "There is not a possible that the medals were being held in Sweden, and that many other groups were also involved," Burgess said.
Rabbit Weller, Tom Sidam, and Maze McClain. Burgess said that these men were teammates when Haskell played football against
Other athletes being considered include John Leve.
Billy Mills, former Haskell and KU distance runner, will also be a prime candidate when he retires, Burgess said. In addition to his track activities, Mills is an assistant commissioner of Indian affairs.
Rich Schubert Executes Routine on Sidehorse-
Senior record-holder is preparing for run at NCAA title next week.
As an alternative to that plan, Burgess said, the Board of Directors has asked the Bureau of Indian Affairs that Hawaiuahawaii be appointed to Hall of Fame. Current plans are for Hawaiuahawaii to be razed
THE HALL of Fame will be held on October 23rd in Stubbans Union Burgess, said until other arrangements can be made. He said that the ultimate goal was to build on the Haskell campus which would not be funded by the U.S. government.
According to Burgess, Haskell alumni have donated $200 toward this goal. Organizers hope to see more than $100,000 raised
Included in the Hall of Fame when it opens will be metal plaques honoring accomplishments. A duplicate will be presented to him or his wife.
In addition, a bust or painting of each athlete will be shown in a gallery along with books about or by him and clippings about him. Students will watch films of the athletes would be a part of the Hall of Fame.
Bucks Drop Opener
Rv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Golden State Warriors upset defending National Basketball Association champion Washington. The Milwaukee in the first game e
Kempf May Double Value To KU Swim Program
"My goal is to finish in the top three this year," said Schubert. "of course everybody wants to be one, or a chance if I hit my routines."
Schubert placed second to Russ
Hoffman of Iowa State, two-time
champion in the state meet,
and will have to beat the
defending champ to have a
win.
Many college swimming teams are crying for swimmers like Tom Kempf of the University of Kansas. As super as Kempf is, though, KU may draw another year. He has a younger brother.
Kempf, Bartvilley, Okla.
in the 1,600-yd freestyle and
500-yard freestyle and anchored
800-yard freestyle related jam.
Kansan Sports Writer
"HOFF MAN IS the guy to nail.
He's the one everybody's after."
Schubert said, "I've beaten him
a couple times, but I've only
beaten him once when we both hit
him." He's a pretty tough
guy to beat.
By JEFF HILL
KU coach Dick Reamon is optimistic about the possibility of signing the voucher Kennf
He bettered both of his 1,650 free and 500 free marks in last week's NCAA swimming championships in West Point, N.Y.
"He'll be coming up here next year," Kemp said. "He's an allaround boy. He're really going to help the team."
But Kempf's return is only part of the reason for optimism about KU swimming for the next couple of years.
Gary Kempf. Tom's younger brother, may attend KU next year.
"GARY IS ONE of the most outstanding prospects in the midwives. He's got the same good condition that Tom Hewson." Reason said.
We hope to sign him. But we can't announce anything until after April 19." Reamon said.
"As an all-around swimmer, I have to say Gary was better than I. He can swim more events." Kemfat said.
1985
The image shows a swimmer holding a towel on his shoulders. He is wearing dark swim shorts. The background appears to be an indoor pool area with tiled flooring. There are no other people visible in the frame.
Seubert, a Lawrence senior major in business, has shown steady improvement through his college career. He has broken his last year, twice this season. His current record is 9.55.
"I broke my times way down. I was pretty close to making all-
This year should be Rich Schubert's season to finish among the nation's top three sidehore men in the NCAA gymnastics meet April 6-8 in Ames, Iowa. He finished in the top six and in the top six as a junior, so his goal this year is the top three.
American in the 1,650," Kempf said.
"Tom was facing the touches, college competition in the West Point last week the did not matter. I had I said reedon." Reason said.
Schubert has averaged about 9.2 this season when he has hit his routines.
passed the 70-foot mark in 1965 when he recorded a 70-74 put. He was named Mexico City in 1984 with a throw of 67-43. His world record is 71 feet.
Shot Putters to Return
Fenuerbach has defeated Matson seven times since the last indoor season.
the NBA playoffs.
Two of the world's top shot putters will compete in a special event at this year's Kamas Haysays by Bob Timmons has announced.
Matson, who placed second in the 1964 Olympic games, first
In their first confrontation of the 1972 season, Feuerbach defeated Matson outdoors for the first time.
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"I keep two averages, one for all routines and one for the routines that I hit," Schubert
KEMPF TOOK fifteen place in the 1,650 free style and finished eightth in the 500 freestyle. In the first week of bettered his previous best time.
Kemp's time of 4:41.7 in the 500 broke his personal high of 4:46.2. The latter time established a Big Eight best.
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Kempf knocked nearly 210 seconds off his own Big Eight standard in the 1.650 freestyle race. His top effort had been 16.37.22
Now Kempf will work for the Olympic trials in June.
By BILL SCHEELE
Kansan Sports Writer
TREVETY
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Kempf attributed his swimming success to "hard work and determination."
"He's got an excellent chance at the trials." Reamon said.
"There are two basic differences in Tom this year," said Reamon. "He has grown in weight, and he is physically stronger."
1. Kemp can beat the Olympic qualifying time, he will become eligible to try out for the Olympic team.
Schubert Aims for Spot In Top 3 on Sidehorse
"He's an outstanding workout swimmer. He works tremendously and is a great Reamon said. "Tom has a temperament that be most succulent."
"TOM HAS been truly inspirational for our program," Reamon said. "The marks he has made in our pool are just part of it."
The Bucks, winners of the Midwest Division, now trail甘州队 by seven games and seven series to decide which team will play for a berth in the NFC.
Kempf said Reamon's coaching had helped him to progress.
Coach Tommy Heinsohn of the Celtics, however, says he believes a superior bench goes his boys the edge.
"If we can recruit two or three more good swimmers, I think we have a great chance of winning them." The sixth straight time," he said.
Los Angeles, the dominant team of the season, hosted the Chicago Bears in a late game Tuesday. The Lakers, who scored at least 10 points in each of 81 games, won the Pacific Division.
"Good swimmers come to KU because of the facilities and the team." He said, "we coach him. Kemp said, 'We're the best coach. Reamism is the best coach I've ever had, and I’ve had quite a competence in competitively since I was six."
Kempf looks toward another championship year for KU next year.
Golden State was runner-up to Los Angeles in the Pacific Division. The Bulls were No 2 to Milwaukee in the Midwest.
The Celtics, once the perennial terror of the league, play an Atlanta team that has come alive in a series of long-haired Pete Maravich.
The Boston Celtics, champions of the Atlantic Division, begin their series at home Wednesday night against Atlanta, the Central runner-up. The Baltimore Celtics winners, open against the Atlantic runner-up New York Knicks Friday at Baltimore.
Long Jumper Stull Seeks Olympic Trip
Unlike most Olympic hopefuls,
Stull could make the team as either a long jumper or a triple jumper.
He has been constantly improving since he left his hometown of Mechanicsburg, Pa. where he holds the state high jump record of 22.4. His best triple high competition was 46-2.
Stull also holds the Mechaniesburg High School high jump record of 6-4.
After graduation, he attended Northeastern Colorado Junior College where he was the captain of the team group his sophomore year.
His best meet there was the
14 KU Athletes Named Among Collegiate Elite
Fourteen University of Kansas
College Athletes are selected to appear in this year's
edition of Outstanding College
Athletes of America, an annual
Coaches and athletic directors nominated the athletes according to their accomplishments in
Women's Softball, Tennis to Start
Women's sports and coed tennis competition will begin next week in the Womens' Recreation Association association Tuesday.
Entries in both sports must register with Claire McErlery, women's physical education instructor, by 5 p.m. Wednesday
athletics, community service and campus activities. A board of advisers headed by James Jefrey, former executive director of the Fellowship of Christian Women, made the final selections.
Football — Mike McCoy, Hiathawa senior; KenyCoPage, Dodge City senior; John Schroll, Hutchinson junior; Gary Adams, Bartlesville, Oka, junior; Bruce Adams, Shawnee Mission freshman, Park freshman, and Odell Weidner, Toona freshman.
Tennis matches will be at 4
p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Satellite ballgame play will start at
4 p.m. Tuesdays and
Thursdays.
Track—Sam Colson, Mankato junior and Bill Hatcher, Shawnee Mission senior
Gymnastics—Richard Schu bert, Lawrence senior.
Swimming-Tom Kempf,
Bartlesville, Oka., sophomore
and Scott Skullet, Omata, Neb.
senior
Rocky Mountain AUJ College meet. There, he won the long jump with a 24-2 and the triple jump with a 48-0.
While in junior college, he bettered his lifetime marks to 24-8 in the long jump and 48-3 in the triple jump.
AT THAT time, Stull was still two years away from the Olympics and thinking about coming to KU.
When KU recruited Stull, he was told that he would be used only as a triple jumper. Coach Bob Timmons later learned that he needed another long jumper. And Stull was the man he turned to.
Since coming to KU, Stull has become the fifth best indoor long jump talent in the nation and reached that mark March 4 at the Big Eight indoor meet with a leap
This effort gave him his second straight Big Eight indoor title and placed him among the top four jumpers in the nation.
"I've been jumping right around 25 feet lately, but that has to get better." Stuall said. "I'll try to make the team to make to make the Olympic team."
THE OTHER jumpsers Stull will compete against are Jerry Procter from Redlands College, Henry Jones from UCLA and Marian Woolford, OU.
"I talked with Jessie Owens at the 1971 Outdoor Nationals and he really seemed to think I had a great chance to make the team."
Owens is a former world record holder in the long jump.
Just thinking about the Olympics really motivates me," Stull said. "I think that is why I have been improving so rapidly."
Stull hopes to complete graduation requirements here next fall, but he plans to continue long-jumping.
"If I don't make the Olympic team, I'll probably join a track club around here," he said. In 1974 he tried to make the team in 1976.
FOREIGN STUDENTS and Foreign Wives LEARNING POTENTIALS
A learning skills course designed for you
Offers
How to study in varied materials
How to preview for general ideas
How to read for details
How to review
How to enlarge vocabulary
How to spell correctly
How to listen for meaning
How to take notes from readings
How to take notes from lectures
How to remember what you learn
How to study for examinations
How to take tests
How to read faster
Meets $1\frac{1}{2}$ hours twice a week for 5 weeks. Call today for deta
THE FIRST LESSON IS FREE. If you decide to continue, the remaining 9 lessons cost only $35.
Small, informal groups; lots of individual attention.
LEARNING POTENTIALS
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute
925 Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Phone 843-642-
Red
Baron
presents
JOINT
SESSION
Wednesday
and
Thursday
Wednesday Special
Pitchers . . . . 75°
Guys . . . . 75°
Girls . . . . FREE
explained. "When you miss a routine and score about 7.0, it really hurts your average.
21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
"This year, I have been more consistent than I've ever been," he said. "I'll put on my routine all the time. I've hit on about 80 per cent of them. It's really fun."
Schubert is working on a "C" dismount, the most difficult type, in preparation for the NCAA meet next weekend. If he perfects it, he thinks it will add one- or two-thirds of his score, which could be improved.
"Most times I don't watch the other performers," Schubert said. "I try to keep myself
EVEN THOUGH the nation's
desperate performers will be compelled
the NCAA will, Schubert said,
he probably will not be watching
prooccupied concentrating on my own routine I try to get away and make things go well. Schubert said his tail, slender Schubert was ideal for a sidehorse woman
"A stocky body is better for an all-star gymnast. A stocky body is better for different events, but usually not the sidehorse. Conversely, a sidehore man usually can't be a star because of his body type."
"The body of a sidehore performer should be long and linear," Schubert said. "A slender body is not so a woman as a man." Skinny legs are an asset when doing the scissors movement.
The tricep and upper back muscles are the most important for a sidehorse specialist to develop. Schubert said.
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
All Seats $2.00
No Twilight Prices
R Calibration Instruments & Precision Products
The Godfather
Starring
Mothers of Invention
Rings Starch 20th Anniv. Babel
Dall 4 12 39 19 55
Early Matinee Sat. 2:30
Early Matinee Sun. 2:30
R COLOR United Artists
- Show Times This Week -
Daily 3:30 7:00, 10:10
Early 8:30, 9:30 p.m.
Box Office Open
Mon.-Fri. 3:00 p.m.
Sat.-Sun. 12:10 p.m.
Theater Policy
- Tickets on sale for that days per formations only!
- No reserved seats or tickets
- All ticket sales final
"200 MOTELS"
INCISIVE WIT AND INTELLECTUAL
STIMULATION
JEAN-CLAUDE BRIALY
ERIC ROHMER
CLAIDE'S KNEE
GP
Daily 4:15.7-30.9:25
Early Mat, Sat, Sun. 2:20
Hillcrest
INTERNATIONAL TAPES & SHOW
WALK DISNEY
PRODUCTIONS
Bedknobs and
Broomsticks
TECHNICOLOR
Granada
INTERNATIONAL TAPES & SHOW
Eve shows 7:30.9:30
Continuous Shows thru
Mon, Fri, Wed, Mon,
NOW Thru TUES!
Hillcrest
Hillcrest
JOHN WAYNE &
THE COWBOYS
Performance • Technology • GP
Shows: 2:10, 7:25, 9:35
Varsity
BALL 11 ... PAGE 1665
WALT DISNEY
PRODUCTIONS
Bedknobs and
Broomsticks
WALT DISNEY
PRODUCTIONS
Bedknobs and
Broomsticks
TECHNICOLOR
Granada
TALK AT LLL...(Apologize)
Tel. (855) 234-1234
Eve shows 7:30, 9:30
Continuous Shows thru
May from now!
NOW! Thur TUES!
SUGAR & SPICE
& EVERYTHING
NICE FOR SPRING
Sugar, sugar . . .
and lovely . . .
romantic
long dresses with
a look of the pas
Off-the-shoulder
sheer flower
print in bright
spring colors.
For Easter,
parties and
the prom
$34
SPICE
YTHING
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the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 29. 1972
11
MUSEUM OF ART
New City Library Quadruples Space
By MARCIA CLIFTON
Kansan Staff Writer
When the Lawrence City Library closes its doors for the last time this summer it will be replaced by a new building that the size of the current building
Wayne Mayo, head librarian,
tried Tuesday that the new
library would be about June 15. He said the move in the new library would take
more than a month.
The new library will probably be ready to use by late August and will be dedicated in early fall. Construction began in April.
The new library will have two leases and space for future expansion. The library will be built to house around 50,000 volumes according to Mayo, and additional storage will be available library opens in will be able to offer twice that amount and will include two additional libraries.
MAYO SAID that there were currently 3,000 to 5,000 bound periodicals in storage and an additional 7,000 to 9,000 volumes in storage. All these will be furnished for the facility when we use the new facility openings.
"It will be a big improvement," it said. "We will be offering it of the same quality of the best offer, but we'll also have more space and can expand our ser-
The record collection and listening area for music will be located in the library. An art exhibit and print loan service are being offered.
Mayo said that another area which would be expanded would be children's programs. More children are enrolled and the actual space allow for the children's section will be doubled. A special room for story hours or similar activities has been incorporated into the new library.
AN AUDITORIUM with a window, it will be a part of the new library, will two meeting rooms. These rooms will be available for use by students.
Mayo said that bookdrops throughout Lawrence would be utilized within the next year.
Of $1,751,000 needed to finance the new library, all but $122,000 was raised through bonds and financed through local property taxes. Mao said. He said they have already decided a number of their plans for future services through the current budget.
MAYO SAID he would continue to confer with the director of the high school adult education program to work out programs that would be offered in the future. Mayo said one area might be in constructing a film program. Projectors will be installed in the new library and Mayo said that a film program would be a feasible
Money Donated For Burn Unit
25 words or fewer: $1,75
each additional word: $.03
The new library will also offer longer hours of library use, according to Mayo. Wheras the library is now only open two nights a week, it will be open five nights a week. Mayo also said the library will be open on Sunday afternoons, beginning in January, 1973.
Latins Attend KU Seminar
The University of Kansas will be hosting the twelfth annual Seminar on Higher Education in the College of Business at Pine Room of the Kansas Union
The program was planned in cooperation with the University of Virginia and the University Simon Bolivar Caracus, Venezuela. It is the George Waggoner Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The theme is educational innovation and experimentation. The problems of coordination between national planning and local policy and the traditional autonomy of the university will be discussed.
U.S. CAMPING AND HITCHING
Five days
The University of Kansas Extension Association recently received $450 from the Lawrence Memorial Hospital Auxiliary and the Kan- town Health Department District 17, to help finance the burn unit at the University of Kansas Extension.
Sponsored by:
STUDENT UNION
CITIES
FOREIGN STUDIES
Office
SUA TRAVEL
SERVICE
DEAN OF FOREIGN
STUDENT'S OFFICE
Forum No. 6 of a Series
Happy Birthday
Thursday, March 30
Council Room - 4 p.m.
Coming Forums: Mexico—Canada on a student budget.
The burn unit will serve as a treatment center for severe burn cases, as a training center where professionals in paramedical personnel can be trained in modern methods of treatment, and as a research facility.
Todd Seymour, fund director for the endowment association, has announced that he proposed burn unit was directed through the endowment
Seymour said the contract bids for the burn center would begin at least 60 days prior to the proposed construction date.
Campus Bulletin
IVFC Office: 7 a.m. 299 Kansas Union.
Campus Crashde: 7 a.m. Alcove II
Latin American Seminar: 0 a.m., 305 and
Pine Room.
SOFA
Pay the world $20.1 million per year to support international humanitarian efforts.
The organization is a nonprofit organization that provides aid and relief to victims of war, disaster, and other crises worldwide.
SOFA is a global organization dedicated to protecting lives and helping people recover from disasters. It works with governments, NGOs, and other organizations to provide assistance and support to those in need.
SOFA has received numerous awards and recognitions for its work. The organization was named one of the "Top 10 Global Organizations" by Forbes magazine in 2013.
SOFA is committed to providing aid and support to those in need, and is a key partner in the international community. It is also involved in promoting peace and understanding through its work.
SOFA is a member of the International Organization for Peace (IPC) and the World Health Organization (WHO). It is also an active member of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
SOFA is a member of the International Women's Day Committee and the Global Volunteer Network.
SOFA is a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO).
SOFA is a member of the World Bank and the World Bank Group.
SOFA is a member of the World Health Organization (WHO).
SOFA is a member of the International Organization for Peace (IPC).
SOFA is a member of the International Women's Day Committee and the Global Volunteer Network.
SOFA is a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO).
North Kansas City, Mo. Interview: a.m. Oread and Regionalt Room
Europe is a four letter word:
French Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark
Cafeteria.
Lefertte:
Artists: 11:30 a.m. Alcebove
Social Anthropology: 11:30 a.m. Alcebove
Social Anthropology 11.30 a.m. Above C Computer Center room. room. English Room.
Biochemistry: noon, Curry Room
Latin American Engineers: 12:30 p.m.
Centennial Room
Russian Table: 12.30 p.m., Meadowlark
cafeteria.
Education Administrative Staff: 1 p.m.
Governor's Room.
Council, 3-17.
Seaclift Welfare Council; 2:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Room.
2:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room
IVFC Panel: 3 p.m. Forum Room
IVFC Panel: 3 p.m., Forum Room,
Day Care Committee: 4 n.m., Gove
IVFC Panel 3 p.m., Fortum Room.
IVFC Committee 4 p.m., Governor
Room.
SUA Forums Dinner: 5 p.m., English Room.
Institution of Public Affairs: 6 p.m.
GOVERNER'S Room.
Breezer 7 p.m. Oread Room.
Speech Committee & HR 730 p.m., In
Date: 7 p.m. Parrot A.
Breese: 7 p.m. Oread Room.
bernational room.
SUA Classical Film: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff.
SUA Forums Film: 7:30 p.m., Jayhawk
Room.
Room
KU-Y: 7:30 p.m., Regionalist Room.
KU-Y: 7:30 p.m. Negotiator Room.
McGovern for President, Big
room
American Pharmaceutical Association
: 30 p.m. Parlor C
30 p.m., Parlor C.
SUA Forum: 7:30 p.m., Forum Room.
NSIMS: 8 p.m., Council Room.
Sigma Kappa Lecture: 8 p.m., Ballroom.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
2km & 10kW PR. V13-1353
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Parts at a discount
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUSAGES
Fidelity Union Life Insurance
915 Louisiana
842-4650
PULI ICO
One of America's outstanding private boys camps located in northern Minnesota offers an array of openings on the skate for the 1922 Compensation Tournament. Compensation includes salary, round robin competition and board and laundry. This is an unusually large tourney, with only men of the highest character and achievement permitted. For a full preparation, visit www.compensation.com. For camp bridge, 26 Shannon Court, Northbrook
CollegeMaster
SUMMER IN WISCONSIN
One day
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, service and employment advertised in the University Daily Kawai are offered by the university. Please color, creed, or national origin
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
KAT Suzuki
Western Cv. Notes-Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them.
FOR SALE
Higher price paid for used cars. G1.
Joe's Used Cars, 601 Vermont, VI 2-
3808.
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
for you at a disadvantage.
Even if way it comes to the same
subjects, Analysis of Western
Civilization 41,
Campus Madison, 41f
West 14th
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage
SCUBA EQUIPMENT-Film, Mack,
Bachmann, Raytheon, Rivet Guiars,
Roe Hat Pole Insurance Guarantees
$125.00, Hawk Kuvic and Vest $39.95
Hawk Kuvic and Vest $49.95
$9.95 for us for all your diving
national friends Friends Equity &
national friends Friends Equity &
drive Drive Kansas Mo. Mc4143 Phone
Drive Kansas Mo. Mc4143 Phone
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can
buy a new stereo at $299 plus 10 at AY BAY AUDIO -
$357 plus 10 at AY BAY AUDIO! Now your stereo Discount House in
America. Free Pizza, Coffee & Consulting
Services.
Safety Equipment - Plus. Pack Nasker
Seatbelt Guarantee, Wet Jacks,
Life Guarantee, Wet Jacks &
Vest $29.99, Spine Gear, $75.00
for all your diving needs, largest
for your diving needs, largest
Diver's Equip. & Repair Service,
Diver's Equip. & Repair Service,
64134 II. 1-861-762-5987
64134 II. 1-861-762-5987
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
A REAL RIP OFF -Four fourteenth Reverse Mage plus four thirteenth mounted. Fit Muskets. Excellent Reverse Mage $90 take all three after 5
NORTHISE COUNTRY SHOP 707 N, and 3 beds. North of River Hwy. E to the left is a large herbarium bottles items, old wood cooking and baking supplies, hives, fireplace wood, display boxes, other useful items, open 9 to 5 of other useful items, Birth Albums, 3159, Birth Albums, 5-6
1964 Ford Falcon Sprint, V-8 Power,
electric, etc. Kespa Bass amplifier,
290 watts, 245 speakers, 1967 Dougie
Bass, bass controller
842 - 52712, 1131 Ohrman
3-29
2. If you don't ___.
1967 Ducati 160 cs. Runs good, but needs a few minor repairs. $290. Call 843-8531 or go by 748 Arkansas. 3-30
Ethan Malander at BOKONO—Now through April 1st —Watch here for new item each week—Beware of the Vermont, all sweatshirts, 3-29
Western saddle with padded brown
suede seat. Beautifully touched skirt
pants and leather covered straps.
Best offer, 824-9749
3-29
Drum set: 2 bass drums, 3 small toms,
floor tom and stair. Also stands and
fabric cases. Will sell chap. 842-
9654 3-30
1964 VW-New Paint WITH REAL
ENGINE EXCELLENT CONDITION
GOES TO HIGH BEDDING
FOR 20A-HA-CALL
8112 3625
Two David Beauty stren stem earphones with JBL I. D-120 speakers. JBL Crossovers, and wide dispersion for heat kill models 49-3209654 For heat kill models 49-3209654
Penney's has bikes for all women's. 3-speed touring bike $39.98. Women's 3-speed touring bike $69.98. Men's 10-speed bike $99.98. Women's 20-speed bike $99.98. Men's 30% Mass
1952 Mercury Monterey 4-D, AT,
76,000 miles. Needs repairs, water pump and heater. Selling cheap. Call 842-6562 after 6 P.M. 3-31
4 inch chrome Sonar "peacock" snare drum, including stand; 20" Zildjian cymbal, both almost own, 842-9270 in afternoon.
Double bed, mattress, box springs,
bedboard $30. 843-2860 afternoons
and evenings. 3-31
1971 Kawasaki 500, Mach III, Excellent condition. 2,400 miles $850 firm
Phone 643-6233 3-29
CSC
C
2300 W. 29th Tr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Competition
CALENDAK
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
U
BLEVINS HONDA
Sports Cars Inc
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
25 words w/ fewer $1.50
each additional word $.02
Deadline : 5.00 p.m. 2 days before publication
1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks.
Factory Authorized
Honda Sales & Service
Service Center
cycle Pick Up Service
Ampeg T15-11 solid state base, amps
applied with 1S speaker and B2S-B
extension cable to 0-15 speaker
condition. Maintain
Call 842-7643 Muster 3-29
1958 Dodge pick-up with towper 189
3-4 speed, low mileage, good condition.
A bargain at $500 Call 864-
6202
Carnaro, 1968 396-325 hp. green
black interior AM-FM Runs great
Call 842-8029 3-30
'71 Yamaha 90 Enduro, perfect condition. $250 842-9671 4-3
250 Suzuki Savage Trail Bike. Less than 2,000 active miles. Call 842-9356 evenings. Excellent condition.
Chevy II Neva 70 for sale. SS-306—Coupe — Bucket steer — Power seat brake — 350 HP. Call Arangan, 843-5487, 2-51 PM on MWB. 4-44
MONOCULAR MICROSCOPE. 4 objectives, 2 seizures, Mechanical stage, and 3 injuries. 815 Contact 515 Contact C. Place, Box 210, City, Kansas, KS 65013-932-663-863
VOLKSWAGEN, 1967. Bug, new brakes, stereo, $825. Cheap. Tim, 842-7125.
VW Bus. 62. Kits good—must sell
842-9738 S-31
Dorrell M-600 Photo Echorex (show)
Viewers monitor with wi-fi
viewers monitor with wi-fi
wanted gift, with sharpness
wanted gift, with sharpness
aluminum Acetamide, 8th
aluminum Acetamide, 8th
MOTORIGIA 8-stack stereo tape system,
encompassed 6 inch speakers,
speakers included, additional back units allow music enjoyment in car home. Fred Puckett. N8-835-155.
10 speed for sale. Good condition.
with extras. Must sell. Call 842-2001
3-31
Excellent and cancels tape recorder outfit with 119 Volt plug-in attachment included. $25 at Ray Stone Store. Mary. Many new models reduced also.
195 Chay. Panel Vary. adam mode.
Really good engine, body ok. best offer over $75. Clear title. Call Linda at 843-207-3111
3-31
If you have a typewriter skip this贴 if not, call us. Manuals HM1 Standard and S Electrics. For students by telephone. Students by phone. 843-644 and save.
Complete set of men's golf clubs hung,
included Four woods, all in use.
For information call 841-6800 at 6:00
on weekdays and for aid. For Hack 4.
RED HIDER - Mellee Shop --安娃娃, ballets, missileless custom work. Reasonably priced -- we deliver Monday first 3-5pm until ...-3-6pm
NOTICE
71 Datum 1200 College, 16,000 miles,
very clean, factory air, runs beautifully,
must sell. Call Gregg. 842-3589
4-4
Panasonic stereo with AM-FM tuner $75, 10 speed CD player like new, floor model, large screen TV, Z84-160-3-33
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
a.m. 12.p.m. Tues. Sat.
5-5.Sun
5-Wed. St.
1730 W. Monst.
842 3644
1965 WW camper-bus, includes full camping equipment and AM-FM radio. Engine recently overhauled, runs $1,000 kcal. Blds 643-6760.
Carol Lee
Electric Wurlitzer piano—15" speaker with 2 "10" aux speakers! $150, 843;
1782. 4.4
Barn Partiest. Now available for pickup from the Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry, Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry, and cooler plenty of parking at the Cajun Cottage. Stop at 4 p.m. Call Joe Stroper after 6 p.m. at 825-310-7991.
INFANT DAY-CARE A42-694.
694. Professional child-care for
children a 1m - 12m. Pail or part-time.
Pail. Special design for
instrument. 3-3H
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
Lawrence, Kansas 660
Tony's 66 Service
Red Baron
2434 Iowa V12-1008
Open
24 hrs.
per day
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWRENCE. You can enjoy yourself in the sunny hills or the quiet suburbs, immerse yourself if you will call Mrs. Hewlett Road in Anglo-America at 426-950-2131, Avon
For reasonable prices on all glass or
any kind of Plexiglas, call Kowbys
Kows 123 North 2nd St. or call KOWBYS
shops 123 North 2nd St. for sample that just arrived.
LEARN SKYDIVING I lot jump course. $40. Include 6 hour virtual training and qualified instruction. Class date: 10/25. Ages 14 and up. Ages 18 and up. Ages 19
Sorting has spring sale. Adults only.
Discriminating stock of finest gold
wear; designer dresses, suits,
bargains BOKONON 819 Vermont
Townhouse sales. Catalog.
clichart tales 2-29
In there aisles with almost enough money and money to buy land and store it. We have $2,000 now at Neartown's Home Depot. We have $3,000 now at organic, recycling, homefeed You任你 in an office and build ours and your PO. P.O. Box 2244 Jawahir St. Palm Beach, FL 33127
SKYDIVIES-Transportation unit is starting a parachute center 12 minutes North of Lawrence. Selected students will receive a $3,000 3115 after 5 P.M. 5-26
New wide field, F 10-4, first quality only $25 payee, 50-FEAT at Ray Stonehill ($199.99; white) $300 (114-$399) $149 payee, installation Ray Stonehill, 4-11
FOR RENT
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right now Tow new 2 bedrooms and four new 3 bedrooms. List 1 one year old 1 bedroom. List 2 two year old 2 bedrooms. All apartments close and quiet with compacts, dwellings, central air conditioning between 5, 10 and 20 P.M.
Nice furnished 1-3 bedroom apartments near town, KU. Also rooms with kitchen furniture, only one bathroom available now. 842-2607 3-29
NOW IS THE TIME TO HERVESE
1972, while selection is still available.
1972, selection is still available.
822-2348 of 1972. A.H. Harvard
lawyers have both been hired and
have held both positions.
Avalon, 9th & Avalon, Harvard
10th & Avalon, Harvard
11th & Halsey. Then compare the cost of living in one of these landmarks's apartments and you will be surprised to have a dishwashner, central C.A. hater, and water utility paid up.
Unfitted house for students-
rooms- 6 can be used for bed
or study room: 617 W. 4th, 843-843, 3-29
Ruckledge Villa Apartments, Limited for the month rent free. Four $490 apartments with enlisted wtl and with all utilities paid for $690 each. Call Alt 4:00 212-758-3800.
Shaire nice big house with one-two others. Private room, 1 block from stadium. Cheap. Also 3-speed bicycle for 842-5254. 4-3
SUMMER RENTALS. All types and prices, all near campus. Reserve yours now. Merle Lynch, 212 Lca. 843-501-841-3323 4-10
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
843.7485 - We Deliver - 9th & III
SANDWICH SHOI
THE HILE in the WALL
Independent
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
COIN
AND COIN OP
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS
COIN OP
LAUNDRY
19th & LA.
842-9621
TAXIS
A Person Is Known by the Company He Keeps Keep Company.
500 E.23rd
---
DRIVE A DATSUN!
TONY'S IMPORTS
DATSUN
WK
See
PLANNING A TRIP??
Maupintour travel service
00 Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-12
MUST SIBLIEARE 2 bdr. 2 bath
MUST SIBLIEARE Apt. Available
attractive kitchen with dish
shelves, attractive kitchen with dish
shelves, suitable for the summer
calf. 82-8196
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
DIP1PXE, FOR KENT, 714 Ride房
BESX, 8725 pat. us., 2 bedrooms,
regenerative dryer, water,
recycling bin, laundry,
835-290. Available immediately.
-48
Kansas Key Press-Job printing from
broadsheet or zine. Books to brush,
and resume. 210 Maus, in back
of office. 310 Maus, in front of
3-5 Aids. 428-483.
Bloom with cooking area in exchange for work for the summer term. 845-4-8
WANTED
842-0444
Instructor to teach Tai Chi. Phone 842-2040. 4-3
Female wants room with kitchen
previrges, now through finals or
willing to share apartment 842-1283
3-29
Wanted: Panel truck Ford, Chevy, or Dodge in fast to good shape. Call Bob at 842-0792.
Graduate student seeking summer employment in any kind of campa-
related work 842-3438 at night. 3-20
Female nominee Call after 5 P.M.
842-3021 Share rent. Furnished
apartment. 3-30
McGovney canvassers need ride to:
St. Louis area. (Athens, Ill.) Will help pay gas. Call 864-4099 or 864-1217-
5:29
WANTED. Someone with good arti-
cle talent and good lettering capabilities.
Phone 812-5248 after 1.00 P.M.
521
TYPING
Typing done on elite, electric type-
writer. No Theses needed. Prompt attention.
843-0958 4-5
Experienced typist will type you
term papers, theses or dissertation.
Electric typewriter prompt, accurate
work. Call 813-6281, Mr. Hawkman.
Those, term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM *Seize* your choice of type styles. Also editing at Florida, Miami, Georgia, 847-605-492, 842-605-493.
Fast, accurate typing by experienced typist
Typist Type Reasonably priced.
Phone 842-2053 3-29
- ARTIST CANVAS REDUCED
- STRETCHER FRAMES
many in stock
—others on order
THE CONCORD SHOP
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., ptx. - qts. only
50% OFF
McCONNELL LBR. CO.
844 E. 13th St. 843-3877
Experienced typist will type thesis
manuscripts, themes etc. Reasonable
**Call:** 843-2107
ADVERTISE UDK ADVERTISE
TYPING IBM, pica type. Fast, accurate, neat. Call after 5:00 p.m. or on weekends. 845-2186. 4-4
HELP WANTED
Experienced drummer for rock bands.
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119 high school class ring, Parkway Central High School, red smooth stone, with "P" on face of stone at俯面 P.B.L. on face Call 864-6833
One kitten, seven months old. White with one blue and one green eye. If found please return to 618 North 12th.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.111
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Campus Center For Child Care To Open in Fall
Thursday, March 30,1972
See Page 2
Traffic Nets $180,000 For 1971
By MARK BEDNER
Kansan Staff Writer
Mike Thomas, director of KU Traffic and Security, said Tuesday that approximately $180,000 was paid into his department last year from the sale of parking permits, parking fines and fees in the parking fees taken in at athletic events.
"The revenue pays for the salaries of our officers and for parking lot repairs,"
But as Thomas said there was a catch. Because Traffic and Security is in the same area, we have to struggle with rising construction costs while receiving little in the way of a budget increase in their appropriations from the state. The costs for parking lot expansion are high.
In a tight budget year as the University faced last year, the annual costs often exceed the annual revenues. This was the case when 45 percent of the 66 per cent increase in the price of parking permits this past year, which eventually was denied by the President's wage-price
THEMAS SAID the revenue lost each year from parking fines not paid amounted to thousands of dollars. Although the department had no records of student's transcript for failure to pay parking fines Thomas said be did not know of any student who has not been graduated from college.
"One person I know of had trouble in transferring some records to another school. He had a long record of traffic and the amount of damage was no shade of gray in his case although we did make an effort to reach an understanding with him," Thomas said.
Thomas said there was a limit on the amount of money a person had to pay each
"The maximum is $110. This limit was set by Cancellor Wescoe before he left and we honored it since then. I’ve heard stories of students who paid three to four dollars for lunch and that was set, but I have no way of knowing if they are true or not," Thomas said.
IN RESPONSE TO the recent criticism of Traffic and Security for restricting parking zones after the daylight hours Thomas said he felt there was a misconception that needed to be cleared up.
"We don't make any of the rules governing parking restrictions or fines," she said. "Most things are decided by the University Board and the Board of Regents. In fact I
Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THRONE
Fernando H. Fernández
See TRAFFIC Page 5
'Holy Hubert' Preaches in Front of Strong Hall
"Evil is in you," Holbert Lundesley, traveling evangelist said Wednesday to about 150 people in front of Strong Hall. He told the crowd that if they really knew God, or had God in their lives, they would spread the word of Christianity. Harold Matney, Ottawa law
student and former graduate student at the University of Calif. at Berkeley, said that Lindsey was a former bible salesman and now talks on campuses across the nation. Matney said that he had seen Lindsey at Berkeley where they called him "Holy Holcyt."
To Clean Water
House OK's Pollution Bill
The measure, believed to be the largest single nondefense authorization ever approved by the House, now goes before a joint conference of the House and Senate Public Works Committees to iron out a proposal that one passed last November by the Senate.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House Wednesday passed a $24.6 billion water-pollution-control bill aimed at cleaning up waterways, perhaps by 1961. The vote was 378 to 14.
A SPIKESMAN for the Environmental Policy Center said it was "a fraud on the public to put a dirty-water bill in a clean-water wrenching."
The House bill calls for $13.3 billion to be spent from fiscal 1973 to 1975 for the federal share of constructing sewage-treatment works and, for the first time, sewage-collection systems. The total called for by the Senate is only $14 billion.
Significant differences between the House and Senate versions are expected to delay for some time agreement between conferences.
The House bill calls also for the National Academy of Sciences to complete, within two years a study on the costs of requiring industries to utilize by 1981, the best available technology to purify wastes discharge into waterways. After that, the agency received the letter and decided whether to impose a 1981 deadline for utilizing the best means available.
THE SENATE BILL RIGLY adopts the 1981 deadline and calls also for all discharges into waterways to end by 1985. The House, in contrast, considers 1985 to
Residents, City Rehash Annexation
By MARK BEDNER Kansan Staff Writer
Residents of a large tract of land recently annexed by the city met with city commissioners late Wednesday afternoon over a variety of issues posed by the annexation.
Lawrence Mayor Bob Pullam said the meeting was designed to answer some of the questions residents had raised over the weekend. The commission's attempts to reach an
understanding with the opponents of the annexation.
City Commissioners Nancy Hambleton, Jack Rose and John Erick, along with Pullham and Assistant City Manager Daniel Schmidt, the city will meet in servicing the annexed area. Pullham discussed police and fire protection for the area and the procedure for placing street lights along the existing roadway so that would be constructed in the future.
The present city policy calls for a street
City Sales Tax Extended to 1973 To Finance Police,Fire Protection
By MARSHA SEARS
Kansan Staff Writer
The 1972 Kansas Legislature late Tuesday night, extended Lawrence's authority to levy its half-cent sales tax until Dec. 31, 1973.
Lawrence citizens voted last July for the half-cent sales tax increase to finance additional fire and police protection. Authority for local sales tax is provided under the property tax lid law, which originally was to expire Dec. 31, 1972.
Lawrence, Manhattan and Topea adopted this local option tax to help provide for extra police and fire protection, and Tuesday the legislature voted to allow only these three cities to continue the local option tax.
Commissioner Nancy Hambleton said Wednesday, "Assuming that the legislature realizes that cities have to supply their peoples needs from sources in revenue it should help cities find alternate sources if the legislature imposes controls."
The legislature extended the property tax lid to May 31, 1973. The tax lid limits annual increases in expenditures by $680,000. If the state gets increase unless voters approve more.
Since the half-cent sales tax was not extended permanently, Lawrence may have the same problem with the legislature every year.
Gov. Robert Docking said in a March 11 speech, "If the lid is allowed to expire, the police will not force it; either will increase property taxes to pay for the upgraded police and fire protection or dismiss policemen and firemen to cut spending prior to the vote of the people."
Hambleton said the legislature should feel obliged to help cities find alternate housing.
Docking said he wanted to make the tax lid permanent and close the loopholes. These loopholes, he said, allowed some workers to escape some of the bill's restrictions.
"The basic purpose of the tax lid is to permit the citizens and tax-payers of local units of government to determine whether taxes should be increased." Docking said.
sales tax was not extended after Dec. 31, 1973.
light at each intersection. But since the annexed area is largely rural, a problem exists because of the long distance between intersections.
RESIDENTS OF THE area said the intersections were so far apart on the county roads that street lights would have to be placed between intersections in order for residents also asked Pullman when the city planned to begin installing the street lights.
Palliam said that because the city had not officially annexed the area in terms of property tax revenues until 1974, the lights could not be installed before then.
Much of the discussion at the meeting centered on the residents' fear of a high assessment being leaved on their property and that it would be construct a sewer system in the area.
Don Kufah, a resident and spokesman for the group, asked Kallsen how much the sewer system would cost the property owners.
"The construction cost would be somewhere in the neighborhood of $120,000," Kallsen said. "We have figured from other projects that it costs roughly 7½ cents a square foot to put a sewer line in."
PULLIAM assured the residents that the city had no immediate plans to put a sewer line in the area. He said he had received instructions from septic tank systems and did not wish to pay for a sewer system. The mayor explained to the group that state law governed the placing of a sewer system only where it is need because of obvious health damage.
with county health standards, the city would not construct the sewer lines.
Kallsen said that as long as the septic tanks met the area's needs and complied
One resident remained unconvinced and questioned the commissioners on what action would be taken if he refused to pay for the cost of a sewer line.
"I'd have to refuse to pay it because I just can't afford it," he said. "In fact, 80 per cent of the people out there couldn't afford to pay a $3,000 seat assessment."
Palliam told the residents he felt that their worries were understandable but that he couldn't forsee the construction of any sewer lines by the city unless the area had been prepared for the future and the new residents requested the city to construct sewer lines.
Another area discussed at length was the Commission's proposal to 'buy out' the residents preventing the residents from absorbing the cost of a new city water system being built.
The proposal was seen as a concession to the residents, aimed at cutting down the individual cost increases caused by the city's annexation of the land.
"It could mean a minimum savings of "10 dollars a month to the residents," Kushner said.
MANY OF THE residents question Kallison's evaluation of the savings they could expect if the city bought the water lines from the rural district. They also learned that the water owners of the rural owners of the water system, in this case the residents themselves, give their consent to the sale of the system. Pallium said he had been given conflicting instructions from a commission would check on any rule governing the sale of the district's water system.
be a national goal, not a government policy.
The Senate version also would establish a federal-state permit system but would retain the 1899 Refuse Act system which House spokesmen called dulicative.
In addition, the House bill would abolish the 1899 Refuse Act permit system that requires industries to receive a permit before discharging wastes into navigable waterway. The permit system is controlled by the federal-state permit system in which states would issue permits to industries complying with federal guidelines.
The House bill would prohibit persons from filing citizen suits to halt pollution unless they could prove that their interests were affected. The Senate version leaves to the courts to decide the issue of parties of interest.
Case Worker Advocates Base Income
By STUART BOYCE
Kansan Staff Writer
A $12,000-a-year guaranteed annual income was advocated by Cenie J. Williams, President of the National Association of Black Social Workers, in a speech Wednesday night in the Forum Room of the Union.
Williams, who spoke on the role of the social worker in society, said that social workers participate in a variety of activities which allow them to deal with other people.
"Because they have the opportunity to understand quality in life, social workers have the potential of becoming the best leaders." Williams said.
Williams said that social workers "must become a powerful lobby, must provide leadership and become vocal advocates for ideas."
SOCIAL WORKERS are “going to have
to wake up and lead this society to its
ascent.”
"We have always had socialism for the elite," he said.
"Congressman have free medical care. Lockheed Aircraft Corp. was given big bacon."
He said it was time for socialism to be applied to all classes.
WILLIAMS SAID he deplored the fact that there were 50 million hungry and destitute Americans while the government paid farmers not to grow crops. People are forced to steal because they are victimized by this society, he said.
"I am advocating a guaranteed annual income of $12,000 a year," he said. "A 'Bronx' fund is being established."
Williams said that Whites in America should realize that Blacks are not the only groups of people who deserve this.
"Blacks are not on the draft boards. They are not in Congress. They are not in the Senate."
He said the problems facing Blacks in America were 'small compared to the U.S. population'.
Social workers can create a sense of awareness, he said.
"They can live with a sense of hope. They can adopt the idealism of youth instead of looking for 1,000 reasons why they can't do something.
DeansUnsure of Reorganization's Long-Range Effects
Editor's Note: This is the final story in a three-part series dealing with the reorganization of the University since E. Chalmers Jr., became Chancellor.
By JEROME ESSLINGER Kansan Staff Writer
The concepts of reorganization are understandable but we are not sure of long-range implications that it might produce, said most of nine University of Kansas deans interviewed in the past two weeks.
The deans, who said they were disenchanted by the free use of ambiguous terms to describe the reorganization process, expressed a variety of concerns regarding centralization, the formulated budget and the computerized information system.
current reorganization process was "sort of fuzzy—like walking through fog."
Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, said the
"We can't predict whether it will work to improve or work to a disadvantage." Howard E. Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy, said.
MOST OF THE DEANS interviewed said they would like to see a clarification of functions of the new vice-chancellors, and would work within the new organization system.
such a clarification, however, may not come soon. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said recently he intended to give his colleagues personalities define relationships. Any definitions, he said, will probably be worked out after at least some experimentation by all administrators interacting with the new organization.
vice-chancellor for research and graduate studies would have an assistant for research and an assistant for graduate studies.
William P. Albrecht, dean of the Graduate School, said he assumed the new
WILLIAM ARGERSINGER, dean of research administration, was recently named to the new vice-chancellor position. Except for some yet unspecified divisions, all positions in the operating functions of the Graduate School will be incorporated into the new office of vice-chancellor for research and graduate studies. Some divisions of each office are still expected to be decentralized to departments such as the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Albrecht said that Argeringser's new position would probably have only staff responsibility over the graduate council and some overall policy and governing responsibilities of University graduate programs.
George Waggoner, dean of the College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences, said he thought the deans' concerns "might be based on the deans' council's wanting to have a more inclusive curriculum for the two once-chancellor positions."
Some deans said they were concerned about the possible extent of increasing administrative duties because of decentralization of graduate students' records and admissions from the Graduate School to schools.
Another concern of some deans was that increased administrative duties were required.
ALL DEANS interviewed said they create some difficult cases for their schools because of increased office loads and bookkeeping without additional clerical
Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of
Fine Arts, said, "We already spend much
of our time in the studio."
committee meetings looking at each other, so that we don't have enough time for interruptions.
DEANS HAD DIFFERING opinions on
amendment and their understanding of transgression.
"When we get roles so mixed up that everyone gets involved in administration, we need to make sure students are for students to study and the real administrators' arms are tied behind their backs."
Gorton, however, as most other deans,
saw a possible benefit of decentralization.
In recent years, many departments would be given a greater voice in reviewing graduate students'
One dean said he had been completely informed and understood nearly all aspects of reorganization. Another dean said he knew no reorganization almost nothing about reorganization.
Some deans wondered whether increased revenue and other aspects of a decentralized, formulated budget system would change the emphasis from the quality of education in a school to the quantity of students admitted.
Tight budgeting has prevented the growth of the School of Business and put an added emphasis on quality of instruction, Clifford Clark, dean of that school said.
Clark said he hope reorganization "at least gives students a greater choice in what to do."
The new budget system will have a formula based on historical records, evaluation and predictions from a computerized information center, according to the Chancellor. The formula is based on data from schools and departments and give credibility to the total University budget submitted to the Kansas Legislature.
See REORGANIZATION Page 3
9
Thursday, March 30, 1972
USLA
Pompon Squad Tryout Practice Ends with A Kick
Gloria Jahn, Leavenworth senior and last year's coach captain, helps in the cheerleading clinic session. The tryouts for the 1972-73 pompon squad begin tonight at 7 p.m. in Allen Field House. This
preliminary judging will cut the field to 25 girls. The final judging will be held on April 8, when 8 regulars will receive the awards.
Commission Plans Study Of State Residence Halls
By BETSY MORGAN Kansan Staff Writer
The Commission on the status of Kansas Residence halls will meet on Monday in P. m. p. press conference Monday in the conference room at Templin Hall. The commission was given the opportunity to nominating Committee of the Kansas Association of College Residence Housing on March 5.
Joe Speelman, Dodge City first year law student, is chairman of the commission. Speelman said that the idea for the commission came about as students living in Detroit worked with the discouraged with the inability of
Campus Bulletin
Latin American History: noon, Alcove A.
History M. Phil Fellow: noon, Alcove D.
Library Study Group: noon, Cottonwood
Room.
Suppose I lecture directly upon Finals.
Geological Survey: noon, Centennial Room.
Spencer Lecture Series: noon. English Room.
Spencer Lecture Series: noon, English Room.
Faculty Forum: noon, Westminster Center.
SUA Travel Forum: 4 p.m., Council Room.
History: 4 p.m., Jayhawk Room.
Jibie/Cuk Room. 4 p.m., Forum.
Committee on Instruction: 2:30 p.m.
Governor's Room.
BORN 1943. Wm. J.P.m., Columbia Room.
History: 5 p., Jayhaw Room.
India Club Rehearsal: 5 p.m., Forum
Room.
3 p.m. Poulm Room.
Casa Roam. KU-Y: 7 p.m. Governor's Room.
African Club: 7 p.m. Parlor A.
Campus Crassade: 7 p.m. Big 8 Room.
Room 162: 7 p.m. Parlor B.
Science Fiction Film: 7 p.m. Woodruff
African Club: 7 p.m. Parker A.
Ulson
Science Fiction Film: 7 p.m., Woodruff
Regionalist Room
Council for Exceptional Children: 7:30
Campus Crusade: 7 p.m., Big 8 Room.
Oread Room and Parlor C
Mexican-American Students: 7:30 p.m.
Philosophy Club: 7:30 p.m., International Room.
BSU: 7:30 p.m., Pine Room.
French Club: 7:30 p.m., Centennial Room.
p.m. In theatre.
p.m. "Trial of the Male Nine."
p.m. United, Missouri, Center, 10948 Org.
residence halts to do anything but sponsor dances.
According to Speelman, the commission is a semiprivate investigatory committee, which will provide information and resources to residence hall living, as well as lobby for changes in the halls.
The commission is made up of students living in Kansas evidence hall. It was founded on the basis of letting those who are not active in its activities, rather than relying on a representative basis.
By John PATRICK MAHER
Prof Reflects on Soviet Goals
ANOTHER ACTION OF the Commission will be lobbying against state laws which would make it unlawful for residents to live in residence halls. As occupants rate in the halls at 40 percent, Kansas legislators felt the need to require students to live in them. The department on bonds held on the halls courts
Since about 1950, the Soviet Union has given support to nation-building in the world, although many were not communist. Thomas Larson, visiting professor of political science,
However, the Soviet Union was pursuing a course of "peaceful disarmament" and emphasized Soviet security and protection of the Soviet Union.
In a speech given at the Kansas Union on "The Soviet Union and Vietnam," Larson said the Viet Minh were no exception to this policy of support. The Soviet support of the Viet Minh led to the
This way, Speelman said, the Commission could get an overview of the direction halls were moving.
IN THE 1960s, because of the Soviets' interest in following a policy of peaceful coexistence with the United States and political interests of the Soviets and the Vietnamese communists diverged he, said. But, the United States began to support Vietnam beginning in 1965 alleviated some of the tension between the Soviets and the Vietnamese caused by that policy.
OVER THE summer, the commission will begin phase one of sending questionnaires to students who will be living in residence halls or in other student accommodations and will be done on a continued basis throughout the year measuring students' reaction to residence halls.
After 1965 the Soviets used the Vietnam War to pressure the Chinese communists into coordinating policies concerning the invasion of Laos, refused Larson. This was at the time of the Sino-Soviet rift, and the Soviets benefited from this refusal, because it showed the unwillingness of the Chinese to cooperate in a unified com-
"This led the USSR in 1854 to encourage the Viet Minh to accept a temporary partition of Vietnam," said Larson.
Data will be collected from each dormitory system in Kansas concerning hall age, its architectural type, the bond strength of the walls, the past, present, and predicted occupancy rates of each hall
He said that the Soviets sent large quantities of military goods
The deadline for entering Spring Sing, one of many activities of the Jayhawk Jamboree, has been extended to April 28th. Wichita junior and coachmanry of Spring Sing, said Wednesday.
Monday Is New Deadline For Spring Sing Entries
Brown said each group is eligible to have one tool, an equipment, and must sing one selection with a fast beat and one selection with a guitar.
She said the selections must be memorized and should not exceed 10 minutes in length.
overall performance, independent of individual categories.
Brown said all entrants were required to submit two copies of their sheet music with any changes marked, by the deadlin
Entry forms are available at the Alpha Phi sorority house from Nancy McNeill, Manhattan junior.
Categories for the contest are female, male, and mixed. Trophies will be awarded for the best team and the best based on points for the best
The contest is scheduled for 1 p.m. Sunday, April 9, in Hoch Auditorium.
to North Vietnam through China
"The Soviet Cohn has seen the major source of military supplies to North Vietnam," said Larson. "He has benefited politically and militarily from the involvement of the United States in Vietnam."
"The Soviet Union was aware of the dangers of escalation, and it looked for a while that the war ended in the Indochina area," he said.
but it had motives for wanting to end the war too, Larson said.
KU Child Care Center To Open Next Semester
Larson said the Soviets won-
By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
A child care center, which is being developed by the Student Center, will be opened in late August to provide University students with
Judy Bencivengo, director of the Lawrence United Child Care Center and a member of the team that designed her have a capacity for 50 children, ages one through six, and would represent children from a cross country trail.
A tentative budget request for a $20,000 allocation from the senate to establish the center has been worked out, Benevencio said, and would be presented to the senate as a center director for the center was selected.
There would be a sliding scale of fees for the child care at the center, based on parents' ability to pay. Benciven said.
The $20,000 allocation would be in addition to the $3,200 already allocated by the company. This money was appropriated for the director's salary in setting up the program and to cover any expenses incurring the center. Beveringo said.
THE SENATE ALLOCATION would cover the first month's operating expenditures, the cost of rejuvenation of a building and grounds and the cost of purification for the center, Benevengo said.
The center would serve children in single-parent homes and families in new parents were working and parents day, full time child care, Bencivengo said. Enrollment in the center was a first for our first served basis, she said.
Once the center was established it would be self-supporting, Bencivengo said. The operation and maintenance of the food pad by the parents of the children at the center, she said.
THOSE STUDENTS whose incomes fall below $4,000 a year are eligible for federal day care funds, Benevicengo said, and apply to the Douglas County office Department for this aid.
center would be determined by the end of April and the director would be selected by the committee by April 15. She said that the committee was accepting applications for the director's office because these applications were available in the Dean of Women's office.
Bencivengo said the director of the center would be required to visit with children in experience in day care or in preschool teaching and would have to be either a certified pre-school teacher or have a degree in child development.
BENCIVENGO SAID both the staffing and the location of the
Bencivengo said all staff members of the center would be qualified in day care. She said there would also be an extensive library and computer developed. Information this will be available by June.
Bencivengo said the committee would not be applying to the State Department of Social Welfare for a grant to establish a day care center in Puerto Rico, they说 tremendously doubtful that the committee would be granted any state funds because of limited state funds, an overbundance of qualified applicants and the University's association with the University.
wi
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith will never be like this.
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ANGELA DAVIS told the jury in her murder-kidnap-conspiracy trial Wednesday that the prosecution was practicing male chauvinism in trying to prove that she plotted violence because of consuming passion. Davis denied the prosecution claim that she plotted for the escape of convict George Jackson, who they said was a member of the Freeedom of the freedoms of three convicts known as the Solide Brothers.
People ...
... Places ...
... Things
In a final bait at FBI informer BOYD F. DOUGLAS JR., the defense called the Rev. Philip Perrillian's onetime prison confidence "a liar, a scoundrel and a confidence man." As the defense moved to a close, hundreds of demonstrators chanted, sang, prayed and danced on the streets below the ninth-floor federal courtroom in support of Berrigan and the others on trial.
People:
A WICHITA ATTORNEY又 said he planned to file an action in federal district court today challenging the House apportionment law.
BELFAST -Violence ripped across Northern Ireland aboard a British takeover designed to stop the killings in the province. Prosecutors say it was tied to their jobs at the end of a two-day strike to protest British military forces in Britain. Faulkner and his ministers paid a farewell visit to Gov. Lord Grey. The outgoing Faulkner and his cabin are expected to resign from office, but Mr. Whitehead arrives in Belfast to take up the reins of government.
SAIGON—For the first time in the war, North Vietnam is considering hurting its air force into the fighting in South Vietnam.
Places:
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A waiting son's gentle hand on the shoulder of his tearful mother dramatized the reunion of families and friends with the OPENING OF THE BERLIN WALL. The meeting, and many like it, marked the first day of an Easter pass period granted to West Berlin by the German Communists. A half million West Berliners were expected from Berlin for the fortified wall before the eight-day pass period ends April 5.
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dedered how much the United States gained militarily from the laboratory experience the war provided.
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He said the Soviet Union had been deficient in "globally mobile forces" such as the United States could deploy.
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"The Soviet Union has continued to negotiate through the UN and is now pursuing non-proliferation treaty was signed after the restriction of nuclear weapons.
"Unlike the Chinese, they did encourage North Vietnam when it took steps toward a settlement," he said.
The Soviets had not responded to appeals from the United States to help end the war, he said.
842-5451
The new members of the Athletic Board, elected by a mail ballot sent to faculty members, are Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, Debert Bellow, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Robert Sterling, professor of business.
2 Deans, Prof To Fill Board
Larson expressed his personal opinion that the Soviet Union wanted the war to end.
In 1967 the Soviet Union was
THE SOVIETS had done nothing to settle the war that the North Vietnamese did not want them to do, he said. But neither have the Soviets withdrawn from negotiations during this period.
chary of appearing to have reached a detente with the United States when Premier Kosygin visited Glasborne, N.J. he said
814 W 23rd
"It was uncomfortable for them at that time to seem chatty with the U.S., then when he met Vietnam was going on," he said.
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Thursday, March 30.1972
2
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Reorganization Effects
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in the
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when
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Continued from Page 1
KAHN SAID he thought the new budget system was very rational and would give cleans the building to organize long-range planning.
Because the School of Administration has only five graduate students in a one-year old program, he said, we have "no pass" context to hold.
if a dean were not using salary funds as the vice-chancellor for research and graduate studies thought he should, the vice-chancellor could still curtail his work following year, Albright said.
"I realize, though, that other densities have much more problems with the formulated budget and decentralization than I do," he said.
Albrecht said that under the formalulated guidelines a vice-chancellor for research and graduate studies would have some budgetary responsibility as a faculty member, while chancellor for academic affairs would allocate funds to individual students.
WILLIAM SMITH, dean of the School of Engineering, said he expected reorganization to give clearer voice in salary issues.
"I can't account for why salary increases are uped and downed by someone in the upper administration, even when tight budgets were no longer needed."
Although deams will be forced to be more responsible for the "shrinkage of salaries," this will not eliminate "unhappy faculty
members who think they're worth more than they're being paid," said Smith.
Most deans said they did not want to be overloaded with lobbying responsibilities.
. . .
"A dean shouldn't and can't carry all responsibility for acquiring money." Katz said.
"It scares the hell out of me," he said, "it sounds like '1984."
Gorton said he was "not really sold" on the formulated budget or computerized information system.
Silber said the statistics alone didn't represent the complete picture of Headquarters' progress and value, however.
"How can you measure the value of a song or a painting? These are dependent on the spirit that is be plugged into a computer."
Headquarters has a 24-hour switchboard service and Silber said they received an average of 99 calls or walk-ins each week. It was almost twice the number contacts there were a year ago.
At least one dean said he did
nothing in the business with a formulated budget system.
The branches of higher education in the whole state must go
to the district.
"You can't rely on statistics when you need men" he said.
A few dews they asked they thought the presentation had "handwritten" comments on reorganization had not included a broadest possible range of philanthropy.
GORTON SAID that beae of the University's diversity of institutions, he could not see how one could spill out of a budget system.
By MOLLY LAFLIN Kansan Staff Writer
Differences among the graduate faculty had been aired at the meeting of the graduate council with reorganization "in principle." At the meeting, one member asked why the meeting was being held where other members were away from Chalmers said the main reason
"It's only when you hear the desperation of a suction caller, the fear of someone on a bad trip, or the progress toward resolution of major problems when a teammate comes around and try again that you really begin to appreciate this year's work," Silber said.
Headquarters Starts Drive for $10,000
Headquarters, Inc., a nonprofit organization that deals with personal crisis aid and drug management, raises fund raising drive by sending out over 4,000 letters requesting information about Kansas faculty members. Lawrence businessmen, professional people and past contestants.
$750 in contributions had been collected since the letters were sent out a week ago, Riie Siler, director of Headquarters said. The range from $1 to $500, Siler said this year's goal was $10,000.
THE DRUG PROGRAM at Headquarters is divided into three main categories, the first of which is prevention.
Bing Hart, a headquarters volunteer, said the prevention program was educational and was primarily handled over the phone. Silber said he had spoken to students and brought in troops to approximately 25 classes at the University and about 10 high school classes.
Hart has done a lot of consulting for other programs in the industry and believes his biggest contribution to his development of an analysis program in which drugs were evaluated and labeled as to their content.
"In the two years that the analysis program has been in effect," Hart said, "plus the analysis of drugs dating back two years. We have never found any psilocybin or mescaline."
Silber said the programs at Headquarters were dependent upon staff, and were a lot of things Headquarters could do if they had the resources to pay their staff, which presently are very limited. They are paid director. To carry on merely the present operation, however, the funds are accumulated in the fund drive.
Another graduate faculty member said he was concerned about some of the secrecy surrounding reorganization.
for moving swiftly was so the transition could take place under Albrecht's supervision.
A LETTER FROM the department of physics and astronomy was read which said that department was strongly concerned that would decentralize or weaken the Graduate School.
Waggoner and Albrecht, two administrators involved in reorganization, were on most of the committees.
"Although I've been in on the whole thing more than any other person and have been taken into the Chancellor's confidence." Albrecht said, "it seems to me that the people we were widely representative."
Nearly all deans interviewed between parts of reorganization Francis Heller's leaving the office of vice-chancellor for education.
Some deans said they had expected Heller's resignation. They said, however, that the debate between Heller and Chalmers.
Most deans said they had a great deal of respect for Heller and had developed much trust in them. We sorry to see him leave office.
"It takes a certain amount of trust and security to do what Heller did," one dean said, "and it requires the actors in a good administration."
HELLER DID not resign until Chalmer's task force had made him a director of the functions of the office of vice-chancellor for research and study.
One administrator, who was a member of the task force and was also an adviser said, "We discussed Heler's possible resignation within the task force and Chalmers obtained from us on such a possibility."
A special subcommittee of the task force was appointed by Chalmers to make official the recommendation of Heller to a Roy Roberts Distinguished scholar after the department of physics science recommended his appointment according to Albrecht.
"The Chancellor told me the department was considering the changes, but don't know how formal the subcommittee came up with the subcommittee considered."
HERMAN D. LUJAN,
chief executive of the political science, said recently that during Christmas vacation he would not leave the Holer might leave office. So he informed the political science faculty, and they recommended a change in his position.
"I'm not sure how Chalmers got the idea for considering Heller for the Roy Roberts Chair."
In reply to Lajan's statement that he had been informed of Helser's possible leaving office, he said in the announcement Jan 7, Chalmers said, "Let's just say that was a face-saving 'measure on our side.'"
Chalmers said his philosophy of University administration
"differs from Heller's and every other administrator at this University."
Francis Heller, in a recent interview, said that much of the "speculation about my leaving" would be to an overuse of certain terms."
"Aloo. I told Chalmers when he stepped down whenever he said that it was in the interest of the University's progress. Heller
HELLER SAID he knew that w at his hes with it. "I operated on a very personal basis—much different from the way my mom did."
Some deans said they saw Hitler's aggressive treatment as a possible indication that humanistic values might not be desired in the new curriculum.
Such a description could be applied without concern to individuals, Clark said.
"I don't think one can divorce a man from his position—I don't understand the new description of life, or a life of its own." Gorton said.
Clark and other deans, however, said they thought that personalities would still be involved in positions having a life attached. Owned by Chimers attached, he explained they had explained he was.
"I'm sure we will still have value judgments even down to the school in the decentralized system," Smith said.
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UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE PRESENTS
HAMLET by William Shakespeare
March 30
April 1
8:00 p.m.
University Theatre-Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: UN4-3982 KU Students Receive Free Reserve Seat Ticket with Certificate of Registration
ROSENCRANTZ and GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD by Tom Stoppard March 31 8:00 p.m. April 2 matinee 2:30 p.m.
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4
Thursday. March 30,1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Rights Bill Passed
The United States Senate passed the Equal Rights Amendment last week. It has taken almost 50 years to get the amendment through both the House and the Senate so it is obvious why groups concerned about the rights of women were so elated with its passage.
Some of the opponents to the amendment had argued that it was unnecessary because the 14th Amendment states "no state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the rights of citizens of the United States . . nor deny to any person the equal protection of the laws."
If that amendment offered real protection to women there would not be states with laws limiting a woman's right to handle property and start businesses. State colleges and universities would not have discriminatory-adjunctives against women students and employees differently than the men involved with those institutions. Surely, there would not be states with laws proscribing more severe punishments for women who commit criminal actions than for men. If that amendment had any relevance to women, it would have been able to vote then instead of having to wait until 1920 for the 19th amendment which gave women the right to vote. Since voting is one of privileges of citizenship and since women have not received equal protection under the law, either the 14th Amendment has been seriously violated or the law allows women to vote or citizens. Neither is a particularly pleasant explanation but I hope it is the former.
It is also hard to understand the Supreme
Court's reluctance to hear cases dealing with sex discrimination if women were to be considered as having the same protection enjoined on all men was not until November of 1771 that the Supreme Court used the "equal protection" clause of that amendment to ban arbitrary sex discrimination. For too long the only court that had jurisdiction on women by the Constitution was that of voting.
The Kansas House and Senate ratified the amendment Wednesday after snuckering, bible quoting and facetious arguing. It was trying and somewhat degrading as a woman to listen to some of the comments made on the floor.
Hopefully all that will be in the past soon and women will be able to enjoy all of the rights they deserve, including pay sponsibilities. Now it is up to the state legislatures to ratify the 27th Amendment which guarantees "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States."
It was embarrassing as a Kansas to have to acknowledge how foolish and uninformed much of the discussion by my state legislators was. One of the representatives was not even sure the United States Senate had passed the amendment. At any rate, they did pass it and I am happy and thankful that. The other amendment but I hope they will move a little faster. More than a half a century is a long time to wait.
—Mary Ward
Readers Respond
Mann; Hamlet; Women...
Herbie
To the Editor:
After reading the reviews of the Herbie Mann concert and the Little Symphony concert in the March 9 issue of the paper, I really question what qualification the reviewers have for their jobs.
The Mann concert was reviewed by John Fischer. To begin with, the headline of his article incorrectly implied that the performer must be on stage. Fischer then states Mann has lost his artistry by changing to a more commercial arrangement of pop-rock pieces. Although it is true that Mann's style has changed, it is still possi- tively been bored or unattended when using a style chart, already familiar to them. As to the arrangements, it is the progression of an arranger to ar- rangees chosen. The beauty of music is its infinite possibilities of variety. Fischer also stated that Mann received some obscene cata- lities or shouts of approval. The performer, carefully, he would have heard that the shouts were either requests or shouts of approval. The performer re-ected at another person in the balcony, not at the performers. I felt that the program was very appropriate for a cocktail lounge, as Fischer suggests. I doubt that many cocktail lounge crowds can be represented by sounds of the group, much less even recognize most of the songs.
The Little Symphony concert was reviewed by Pat Moore and the rest of us, unbelievable in this review we were the statement that the Mozart flawless presentation. "I would think that a reviewer would be more careful in his choice of instrument than his ignorance. In the field of music it is impossible to have "flawless" performance by humans
Jackie Zastera Omaha Senior
Sisters
To the Editor:
This is an unofficial report of the temporary emergency daycare committee of the February Sisters, subtitled WE WAS SHAFTED.
To say I am discouraged is not true. To say I am angry, weary, bruised and bitter is true.
I've looked into the eyes of Senex, Studex, Auditing and Finance, and Student Senate. I've spent hours planning, talking, asking questions about my sisters weary and fall away from eight to two to just me. I've heard the sympathetic often patronizing voices say, "Yes, we always add," but you don't please us, we don't please to help you."
The logic of the idea, the magnitude and emotion of the need, these were not the relevancies. We had different plane. "Do you know the laws, do you know the people? Aha, you haven't worked on this project yet." My work is done on a noisy teletype, eight hours a day at the library. My college education requires me to take a forake house pay of $331 a month. And when I get home, I cook and clean and sew and iron and mostly care for two beautiful children. In addition, I work another job, planning a day care center. It's a full time job, planning a child care center. You have to work in the house and children. It is truly my job to take on three full time jobs! Is that what the men who are the frontmind of the women who need have?
It is so strange that bitterness is my reaction to the professor she messes me he is underpaid? I've seen it in school and it hard to understand my weariness as I put my children to bed and explainaining again that dad yelled at me when there isn't money to pay allowance this week? Is it really old and old-grown? Are giant accusations that I am unprepared, don't care how your children are cared for? Is it unrealized that the child care center is bureaucratically shoved under the rug (off to a committee of experts) by the teacher in my low salary (keeps训下 down, you know), an interest in not finding the answers them- way, now on to the important work).
I've met so many men who can't understand, don't see why in the world women are angry with men because why they feel they must move.
you, mister, I'm merely trying to survive in a world not designed for me.
I'm not playing games with
Christine Leonard Library staff
Reviews
To the Editor:
I am curious about Marilyn King's knowledge of the theater. I do not profess to have an abun-titude with acting, but can tell a poor performance when I see one. Miss Kimg remarked in her review of "Rosencranz and his friend," in which she chael Kemmerling 'handed G' emergence as the true protagonist of the play with superb subtle flair, but without the opening night show. Kemmerling's performance was shallow and lacked any understanding of the audience, training. Indeed it was an improvement over the previous night's performance in Hamlet, but it was void of feeling for the part.
The play was full of mistakes from the beginning, yet apparently Miss King chose not to attend her evening in the lobby since she failed to mention any of these tickets she said the show would start at 8:00 p.m., but instead it started at 8:00 p.m. Then as it began with Kemmerling pulled Patinkin on the platform during the curtain call for no apparent reason. It is unclear why the reviewer failed to notice it.
The body of the play was full of light misques and sound misques and set difficulties. Yet the play had a lot of any of these blunders. The biggest mistake of the play went unnoticed to Miss King. At the end of the play, a man is to announce that the performance was applauding at the time yet he went right ahead and said his line. That guy could have come over from the local junior-high to deliver that line so badly.
The play reeked of non-professionalism yet Miss Kring failed to notice it. I suggest that Miss Kring have her eyes examined and the ears before she attempts to hear her before another University production.
PETER KING
John J. Welsh Wichita junior
The Establishment Bundys
The Establishment protects its own. The great recent proof of this was William Burdy's appointment as editor of the most prestigious magazine in the area of international policy, Foreign Affairs.
At the time of his appointment, last summer, there were critics within the magazine's sponsoring organization, the Council on Foreign Relations. How they asked, could Bundy preface over these mistakes, could he make mistakes when he had helped make those mistakes, as a member of the Johnson administration?
The Establishment pack was off and howling, with charges of a "new McCarthyism." McCarthyism has always meant, for men, attacks on members of the club—they are not nearly as quick to spot the danger the non-members are concerned (e.g., the harassment of the Berrigans).
Good old reliable Arthur Schlesinger got into print against Bundy's critics as 'self-appointed keepers of the morality
of others" Kenneth Galbrath was "revolted at the idea of trying to deny somebody a job." (It be revolted, right? It be denied, richer Richard Kleinstein a job?)
Well, Bundy's critics have been vicious, by the biring of The Foreign Affairs books editor, John Stossinger. This was done by retiring editor, Hamilton Fish Armstrong, so Bundy would not have the onus of performing the task when he takes over; but Armstrong let it be known that he was doing Bundy's request (as, indeed, he would have to, during this lane duck period).
What was Stoessinger's offense? He was told that he did not distribute words of praise evenly on all sides of an issue—an odd requirement for a book editor. Must he praise the devil each time he lets slip a good word for God?
The cryptic reference to his offense is clarified by a letter Stoesinger got before the one from Armstrong. This came from William Bundy's brother, who just happens to be an Establishment figure even more formidable, and whose first complaint was than brother Bill -from McGeorge -"Mac" issued the first warning on high that Mr. Stoesinger was not being equitable on Vietnam.
Actually, in the issue Bundy referred to, the reviews had been restrained and far from "onsedited." One said Johnson's The Vantage Point" seeks to juxtapose.
tify, not analyze." The Pentagon Papers were called "a Greek tragedy in four acts." An incisive criticism of the Bundy apparatus was rejected because of "exaggeration and overstatement." True, one review agreed that President Johnson had misled the people on those attacks in the Turkish Kokun but—that it was the administration, including some members of Johnson's own administration, have reached.
That McGeorge Bundy felt this sample of reviews too biased, that he intervened in person, that his brother William did even more, and that Hanif was along with this—nine of these studies on our surprise studies of the our Establishment
It is clear that the brothers Bundy mean to protect their careers from the kind of analysis now centering on Vietnamese that brother William's editorial job is to create a new, this defensive enterprise. Mr. Snoesinger was just one victim of the process. There will probably be others. After all, we can't let "the new McCarthyism" deprive men of jobs, can we? "me" in that sentence, the Establishment's author. It is the Establishment's task to make the world safe for the Bundy.
Which leaves to other students of foreign affairs the real task of the future—to make the world safe from the Bundys.
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
James J. Kilpatrick
Nader's Dreams Worry Some
WASHINGTON - A Senate subcommittee has been busy, busy, busy this month, marking up a final version of the super snopper bill. Before long we will know exactly what senators Javits of New York and Hugh McCarthy are proposing in the way of new consumer legislation.
The general features of their little monster already are well known to professionals in the field. After all, this is the third
year of the war. The two liberals have it in mind to welt together the strongest elements of their own 1970 bill with the strongest elements of the House Bill approved last October. In this election year they will envision a final product of irresistible appeal.
All this calculated to bring a smile to the dour face of Ralphie's gentleman's ideal is to create a sense of authenticity in an agency Agency with more teeth than
a barracuda, and to let the creature swim at will among the many government offices now under his control is an eye on consumer interest.
The country needs such an outfit about as urgently as Florida needs an April freeze.
WALLACE
DEWAGOGUERY
BUSING
EDICT
"Now. I trust that I have made my
position perfectly clear."
Consider a few specifics of S.1177, the Javits-Riboff bill. Among other things, the bill would empower the director of the CPA to intervene in any 'matter or proceeding' that in management "substantially affects the interest of consumers."
The wording is important. In the bureaucratic lexicon, a "proceeding" implies a formal hearing or investigation conducted with all the safeguards of the Ad Hoc Council. It also requires the authority of a new consumer agency were limited to intervention in such a proceeding at least the ground rules would be clearer. But what is "a matter"? It could be anything. And in this day, the challenge of government is involved in decisions that "substantially affect" the consumer.
The Senate proposal would make the new agency the master of all them. The proposed CPA could demand that the food and drug administration, for example, initiate a proceeding against all manufacturers of cough syrup. If the FDA declined, it could be used as a childhood made to stand in the center "to make public in a current and concise statement its reasons therefore."
Even the President of the United States would be ordered around. The FDA's hypothetical refusal to initiate a cough syrup proceeding could be appealed to the President, "who shall by order published in the Federal Register decide whether the proceeding shall be commenced "
When these same sweeping provisions were proposed to the House last fall, Florida's congressman Don Fuqua made a recommendation that might "substantially" affect the consumer. He found no fewer than 30 agencies, ranging alphabetically from the Atomic Energy Commission to the Tennessee Valley Authority whose responsibilities subject to the oversight of the Consumer Protection Agency.
The prospect is grim for both government and industry. In order to justify its existence, the CPA would be compelled to dispatch hordes of zealous investigators to confront intervention. in a paper blizzard, orderly regulation and business freedom alike would be lost. In the end, the overprotected consumer, the object of all this solicitude, would be gasping in a cotton wollcoon. Perhaps that would be necessary that gentleman's dreams, alas, are other men's nightmares.
"Commended."
"The new Consul agency would have the authority "as a matter of right" to leap into any court action based upon final action by a federal agency—so long as the director of the CPA is involved. It is likely to have a substantial adverse effect upon the interest of consumers." The language is too broad. It would reduce old-line knowledge of the government to hollow shells, drained of effective power.
Griff and the Unicorn
Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate. Inc.
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-aged and should not exceed 100 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, so please send them to the Editor's Desk. Please 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.
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I'VE BEEN
INVITED
TO A PARTY
YOU'RE
LUCKY, GRIFF
NOBODY EVER
INVITES ME
ANYWHERE
I CAN'T
GO ON
LIKE
THIS...
A BOTTLE OF SHOE
POLISH! I'LL
DRINK IT AND
DEPART THIS VALE
OF TEARS...
A BOTTLE OF SHOE POLISH! I'LL DRINK IT AND DEPART THIS VALE OF TEARS...
I CAN'T GO ON LIKE THIS...
A BOTTLE OF SHOE POLISH! I'LL DRINK IT AND DEPART THIS VALE OF TEARS...
By Sokoloff
HEY!!
DON'T DO
THAT, PAL!
WHY
NOT?!
WHY
NOT ?!!
FOR ONE THING,
I HAVEN'T
POLISHED MY
BOOTS YET...
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff."
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Thursday, March 30. 1972
5
University Daily Kansan
JAMES BOWMAN
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALU
Alpha wave lecture given by William Thaw
Barbara Clark Applies Psychic Power
Abha wears headdress given by William Thaw
Lecturer, Student Show Use of Psychic Power
In a demonstration of psychic power last night, a University of Kansas student "located" and contacted her doctor. She did not know, diagnosed a partially paralyzed leg of the woman, described how the woman walked and gave a detailed description of the woman's condition.
The student, Barbara Clerk,
Glendora, Calif., senior, was
awarded the degree from the
director of training for Psychic
Dynamics, to illustrate the
psychic powers which Thaad said
had not learned but had
not learned to develop
After a lecture on Alpha brain research in Kansas University Union Bank, demonstration of how Alpha power applies Applicant's grade to graduate of his Psychic Dynamics seminar, was selected by Thaw for the job.
Clark with his mother's name, age, hometown and the fact that his mother had some sort of illness. Under the direction of Thaw, Clark "located" the woman's body, "entered" the house, "examined" her body for imperfections.
George Selders, Shawnee Mission sophomore, provided
"I'm spoken by it," he said.
"I really teaches my interest. She described everything beautifully."
With minor difficulty, Clark located the woman's right leg as the area of aliment and described the paralysis. She then described the dining room of the woman, which sits down to the color of the carpet.
Seiders verified the results of Clark's psychic "trip" and said he had never met Clark or Thaw prior to the demonstration.
Thaw will be presenting another lecture and demonstration tonight at 8:00 p.m. at the Appalachiappa sora university, 1323 W. Campus.
Campus Briefs
'Shakespearean Tragedy'
Henryk Ziwerski, deputy director of the English institute at the University of Poznaan in Poland, will lecture on "The Development and Decline of Shakespearean Tragedy" at 3 p.m. today in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
Travel Forum Today
There will be an SUA travel forum on camping and campground equipment at 4 p.m. today in the Council Room of the Kansas
Mock Convention Tonight
A mock convention for the first commissioner district will be held at 7:30 tonight by the McGovern for President Committee of Douglas County at West Jr. High School, 276 Yale Road. Persons attending are expected to be McGearn in the first commissioner district will be selected.
Faculty Recital Tonight
Robert Ward, assistant professor of piano, will present a recital at 8 tonight in Swartwhort Recital Hall.
There will be a collocum on "Contemporary Chile" moderated by Ronald Caligiati at 8 onight in the Regionalist Room of the Kiel University.
Colloquium on Chile
At first you think "the Cowbys," (Varsity), is just a right-wing salute to the values that won an imaginary West. And for a while this supposition applies to the film of the film is nothing more than a sort of dopey combination of black humor and less the Beasts and the Children.
Wayne is this rancher, see, and there's this big cattle drive shaping up "through four hunts" on the nearest territory" in Mountain trouble is that his bird help have all taken off for the mountains to hunt gold, so he's left with nothing but a dozen or so birds to want to come along as herders. (The cowBOYS, get it?)
By STUART CLELAND Kansan Staff Writer
ANYWAY, OFF THEY GO, but not before a stranger steals their psychopath (shows up to ridicate the whole operation and subly threaten Wayne, who merely has harder and tells him to beat it.
Well, of course he're reluctant, but they soon show him that they are not men. In fact, you begin to wonder why they haven't cornered the bronze buoncé, cattle driving market before this, they're all so big.
It goes on. School is ridiculed as a place for girls. Black-white clothes are the norm in little homiles. A traveling group of prostitutes is placed off streets.
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP)—The merger of International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. with the Hartford Fire Insurance Company is worth a court challenge by Ralph Nader and three others.
For instance, there's this Chicago who can ride and cut cattle better than they can fight with one of the white kids, so Wayne, who always jumps to the simplest conclusion, orders him a shotgun and rescues the white kid from drowning. Then they go through a series of nothing scene that is enough to make you gag. Meanwhile, a kid who stutters is browatened by Wayne and he goes into the water enough to warn anyone of what was happening. The reason, according to Big John, is that he has no experience with the cure. The natural, surely, is to repeat "you son-of-a-bitch," until apparently, but effective, an unnatural
The drive, (and the film) progress, and as they do, we are treated to a collection of some of our favorite films. Our buff could ever hope not to see.
THEN THERE'S THE obligatory "first taste of whiskey" seeme, where Wayne and Roscoe Lie Browne (playing the most improbable post-Civil War black ever filmed) stepped on top of it, there's a cute next-morning-hangover routine.
'Cowboys': Harmlessness Hides Horrid Conclusion
I've been this sarcastic about the Cowboy bouts because, although simplistic, it's mostly just kind of hard boondour, that is. For then the film takes a new twist, and the "bows into-into" bit is taken to
ITT Victorious
Nader's suit, dismissed Wednesday, was the last pending challenge to the merger, the largest in U.S. corporate history.
BRUCE DERN and his buddies
East on 13th
RAY AUDIO
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Take gravel road to back of 1205 Parira Road, Open Mon-
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Continued from Page 1 am the only representative from the security department on the University Council."
He said one motion was made to the Parking Board last year to allow parking in a "graduated parking fines," only to be defeated by the University
Continued from Page 1
"I think the Parking Board will try to abolish the graduated system again this year, but I don't know whether or not it will pass the University Council. All of us is wait and see," Thomas said.
As far as providing more information at night Thomas said he questioned the legality of pulling men off one another. He also pointed out that the two Regents and the Civil Service controlled the job classifications in the firm.
"WE ARE SOMEWHAT
understaffed right now anyway,"
Thomas said. "Basically the
Nancy Birkhart, library staff member, recounted the history of Watson's life and experiences at U.S. Army headquarters said Watson began her service to the University in the fall of 1877 when she saw Chancellor Marvin Mansfield teach students. She offered to help him and he accepted. He hired her as assistant librarian, a position she held until open to University faculty only.
John Glicka, director de novo, the library, spoke on "The Retired Library" and "The Past 24 Years," and he said he had found the library willing to change when change was needed. He said the library was a good place for you to reorganization; if you located yourself in a certain room and stayed there, the department you would eventually come to you.
He said the department had studied the plans of many college security work. He also heaped his department would be able to follow a similar plan in the future on the security force at KU.
department has no more men that it did three for four years ago. There were assaults on campus and parking violations that go undetected is the way it happened.
Thomas said that when he started as director two years ago he was the only person in practice of assigning foot patrolmen to cover areas on campus. They are usually one or two patrolmen, and a patrol from 6 to 11 p.m. during the late hours until early morning the campus is covered by at least three patrolmen.
Watson Day Activities Tell Library's History
The Watson Library staff and University of Kansas students and faculty celebrated the first Wednesday on the 114th anniversary of the librarian's birth. The day of recognition began with talks by the library staff about Watson's past, present and future.
"Also we have the security officers who patrol the dorses, walking those areas continually." Thomas said.
Holy Week Services
Maundy Thursday 6:00 Paschal Dinner
15th and Iowa 843-6662
Week Services
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Good Friday 8:00 Tenebrae Service
Saturday around 9:00 p.m. Easter Vigil will begin
Easter Sunday
5:30 a.m.
Son's cake celebration including breakfast
11:00 Easter Service
JOIN US!
DAVID HERON, library director, spoke about the present position of the library. He paid rivate to those who had worked there, and he said that they were responsible for its present excellent organization.
Robert Malinowsky spoke about the future of the library in a paper he published last month, *La Ahead*." He said the branch libraries were very crowded and that studies were underway to make it possible to do improve them.
KU students and faculty and
students were invited to a
reception at a library
basement Wednesday afternoon
to meet and talk to the library
come back, steal the cattle, and shoot Wayne five times, (in the back, natch). After delivery a boy's leg is wounded, but the film just overt. By now those kids have absorbed the John Wayne credowell, hook line, sinker, and they're out for blood. The girl's finished," says one, somehow keeping a straight face.) And they got into grim-faced little killers to show their victims the same type of no-mercy that Dern showed Wayne. Finally, completely in off, in a sickening vicious way, which is best left undescribed. But you get the idea. Supposedly Wayne was "sick" and "cowboy" is rated PG (parental guidance suggested). But its final message is infinitely more gruff-house porn could ever be.
Ted Shlechter, Wichita sophomore and chairman of the Students for Lindsay committee, will speak at Iowa University Wisconsin primary would show strong support for Lindsay and weaken McGoverson's position as a leader.
Lindsay Workers Seek Support
Describe what he termed a liberal coalition ticket. Shleicher, the district convention to be formed with an alliance with the Wyomingans.
SUMMER IN WISCONSIN
One of America's universities, Wichita Falls University announces a limited number of openings on the staff for the 1923 class. Wisconsin announces a limited number of openings on the staff for the 1923 class. Compensation includes salary, round trip airfare, board and family fees. This is an unusually low rate among most of the highest character and academic information. write D. C. Brooke, Shannon College, Northbrook, IA 46062
Johnson counties' delegates.
These two counties have a majority of delegates, according to Shleicher.
Tentative plans are being made, however, for participation
in the California primary
he encouraged anyone
he encouraged anyone
interested in working with him to
contact him at Ellsworth Hall.
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We feel that college and universities must respond to the needs of the communities that surround them and not just to their own needs.
Our campus is located in three areas; Washington, Columbia and Baltimore.
We are now considering applicants for Summer and Fall, 1972.
Contact: Antioch College
Anne Bernstein, Coordinator of Admissions:
805 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, Md.
Telephone: 301 752-3656 21201
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6
Thursday, March 30, 1972
University Daily Kansan
ISU to Test KU Record
By DAN GEORGE
Kansan Sports Writer
☆ ☆ ☆
To the surprise of almost everyone, inexperience of University and KK baseball team has roared off to one of its strongest starts in the season.
But, as far as coach Floyd Temple is concerned, you can toss that record on the window.
KU Baseball Statistics
Composed primarily of junior college transfers, sophomores and freshmen, the Jayhawks have used solid fielding, timely hitting and great pitching to against non-conference opponents.
"It doesn't mean a thing," he said. "It means you can big like league exhibition games. You find out some things and you decide what kind of people you've made."
ranking
| | sh | r | rb | sh | rb | hr | sh | hr | avg |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| World | 2 | 5 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 90 |
| Oman | 62 | 11 | 18 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 300 |
| Wolf | 31 | 14 | 16 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 300 |
| Wolf | 27 | 3 | 13 | 8 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 481 |
| Heck | 23 | 3 | 15 | 8 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 481 |
| Heck | 22 | 4 | 7 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 218 |
| Herecsey | 23 | 4 | 7 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 218 |
| Herecsey | 4 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 250 |
| Rowen | 12 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 250 |
| Rowen | 23 | 4 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 221 |
| Rowen | 25 | 4 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 221 |
| Corbett | 17 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 176 |
| Corbett | 6 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 176 |
| Cox | 6 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 167 |
| Cammerer | 6 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 167 |
| Hansen | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 000 |
| Hansen | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 000 |
| Strang | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 000 |
| Strang | 221 | 42 | 75 | 34 | 8 | 2 | 1 | 130 | 130 |
"We figured we have a good team and a good non-conference record, although no one ever lost to us. We get rough in conference play. It's going to be tough scoring man and tough keeping others off the floor."
TEMPLE'S PRIMARY concern now is defending champion Iowa State. KU will host the game this weekend, beginning with a 1:30 p.m. doubleheader Friday at Iowa State. Game start will happen at 6 a.m. Saturday start will be at 7 a.m.
★★★
Iowa State, despite its 2-6 run, is ranked seventh in the nation by the Collegiate Baseball newspaper. The Cyclones are on the road to victory against executive Big Eight baseball title and have 15 returning lettermen.
| | Planning | w1 | h | k | r | er | bb | sa | ee | im |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Corder | | | | | | | | | | |
| Cox | 2-0 | 14 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Cox | 2-0 | 14 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Brandon | 1-0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Brandon | 1-0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Skippergen | 1-1 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 1 | 10 | 0.52 | 0.52 |
| Skippergen | 1-1 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 1 | 10 | 0.52 | 0.52 |
| Treak | 1-2 | 12 | 14 | 8 | 1 | 10 | 14 | 18 | 0.63 | 0.63 |
Although they boost depth in nearly every department, the team won six pitching, Canadian fletcher Don Powers led the staff last season with a 4-arm mark and a 2.38 BAM record. The BAA Villeran Bill was RRed 1 and 3.00.
Also available is all-Big Eight catcher Larry Corrigan who can pitch if necessary. As a result of his record with seven victories,
CORRIGAN WAS also the Corsair last season with a 328 average. Elsewhere, the Iowa State attack is not quite so potent. Outfielder Rafe Rodriguez had 388 and Tadleman, who batted .388 the year before, tailled off to 250 last week.
Defensively, the Cyclones look best in the outfield and behind the plate Harry Dietrich Zuk and Adam Rodgers. A third-corner, Corrigan, probably Iowa State's most versatile player, is generally considered the league's top scorer.
To stop the Cyclones, Temple will count heavily on a Jayhawk pitching staff that has surrevenred only eight earned runs in 52
innings for an average of 1.26 per game.
Bob Wolf, who has pitched one-hitters his last two times and doubleheader. In the nightcap, the Jawahlers have with Bob Cox, who has not matched two hits that he tossed a no-hitter against College of Emporia Monday, will face Kentucky in KU. He also has two shutouts.
"TIM QUITE confident in our pitching staff," Temple said. "We're not going to shut out people like we have, but these they're going to tolerant control and they're going to help them earn their wash on base."
He cited the improved defense as one reason for his staff's effectiveness.
"Fielding isn't errors," he said. "It's the ability to cover ground. This year, especially at Caltech, we're in Glass. We've got the guys who
can do it. Those pitchers can make the batter hit the ball at someone and not be afraid of what will happen."
Offensively, the Jayhawks, with an emphasis on speed, have been surprisingly active in eight games. They rapped out 73 hits for a .330 average, though lacked in pitching to suit it with 16 stolen bases. Eight of those were by freshman left, who, with 18 hitts, was batting .500.
"OHM DOENN'S know all there is to know yet," said Temple. "but he's learning He's learning to bunt and he's getting on base and putting pressure on him to be an excipler player."
Others who have swag big bats for the Jayhawks this season are pitcher first baseman Wolf Mills (435) and shortstop Heier (318). Wolf, who has the team's lone pitcher, is in the squad with eight batted in.
"These boys have gained confidence from these non-conference wins." Temple said. "They've been coached club and a sound club."
"But there's no telling what's 'til you get out there. Baseball's a funny game. There are nocinches."
Hockey Team Has Title Shot
BUCHAREST, Hungary (AP) — The U. S. hockey team, the 1972 Olympic Games silver medalist, retained a share of the gold with the last-minute #6-5 victory over East Germany Thursday. The victory was the third for the team and keeps the American team in Poland. The Poles, however, have a better goal average.
Women Gymnasts Warm Up Today
The University of Kansas women's gymnastics team is in Des Moines, Iowa, today to compete in the National Women's Gymnastics Championship. The team's third place finish at the regional meet in Bookings, S.D., will allow the team for the national competition.
The women will participate in warmup exercises today. The preliminaries will be Friday and the finals Saturday.
KU will take a 7-1 dual record to the championship meet.
Nine districts will be represented by 27 complete teams. Other spots in the championship meet will be filled
by individuals who finished in the top 10 in their events at the regionals.
The two other Region 6 schools in the area teams to the national netball team, Augustus, the regional college, and Grandview College, the regional high school.
KU women who will compete are Joannie Smith, all-around; Sue Tagg, floor exercise and Sue Raupert, floor exercise and floor exercise; Cindy Price, vaulting and uneven parallel bars; Janice Barken, uneven parallel bars, vaulting and balance beam; La Phillips, floor exercise and balance beam, Patsy Beard, floor exercise and vaulting.
Two other team members made the trip to Des Moines as non-competitors. Becky Robinson, a vaulter, will not perform because each team is scheduled for four games. Mary Maier, who works the uneven bars, was injured in the regionals.
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Open from 1 p.m. - 10 p.m. Weekdays
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The Godfather
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All Seats $2.00
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The Godfather
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—Show Times This Week
Daily 3:30-7:00, 10:10
Early Mat. Sat., Sun. 12:30 p.m.
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Sat., Sun. 12:10 p.m.
Theater Policy
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performance only
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—All ticket sales final
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Wondering about the future? Don't wait too long to make the right decision. Think about it now.
Think about $100 a month while you continue your graduate work. Think about fulfilling your military obligation as a Commissioned Officer—with a good chance you'll be continuing your work in your major field.
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Thursday, March 30, 1972
Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER
Terry Blanchard Performs Straddle-Through
KU record-holder in parallel beds will complete career in NCAA
By BILL SCHEELE
Kansas Sports Writer
Terry Blanchard, a University of Kansas gymnasium for four years, plans to graduate from Kansas State University next fall.
Because KU offers no courses in animal doctoring, Blanchard, in addition to his required 12 hours at KU, is enrolled in 11 courses in residence courses from K State, Wyoming and Oklahoma State.
Blanchard wants to be a veterinarian.
Blanchard is taking correspondence courses in poultry and beef cattle nutrition and veterinary products and animal nutrition.
After he completes his undergraduate degree, he will attend K-State four more years to become a doctor of veterinary science.
"I grew up in a big city, so I didn't have a farm background." Blanchard, a Wichita South resident, said the little kid I would bring home any
University Daily Kansan
animal my mother would let me.
I just decided after my junior year that this was what I wanted to do, work with animals.
"Besides, I didn't have enough hours of foreign language to graduate from KU. I think K-State only requires five hours."
In the meantime, Blanchard is preparing for the NCAA finals at Ames, Iowa, next weekend.
I'm taking it pretty easy this week and will aid Blancheard, the KU record-breaker. I have bars; 'Sunday, Monday and Tuesday of next week I will wail for the game, taper off, and Thursday will be a day of rest before competition.'
"HOWEVER, I wanted to stay in KU to compete for the gymnastics team," she said. "I take a few correspondence courses and then attend K-State next fail to qualify for their athletic program in veterinary medicine."
"If I make it through compulsions, I should be in good shape for the optional finals. I am not going to good as any xbody in the original."
If the issue was in doubt beyond the first quarter, the Celtics were on the ball for most of the period when a sparked by John Havlicek, Dave Cowsen and Jo Jo White broadened a 95-83 lead. The Clippers moved 9-margin within six minutes.
BOSTON (AP) - Unleashing the patented fast break breaks every time they were needed, the Old Timer All-Stars and National basketball Association playoff they once ruled with a victory. Hawks won Wednesday night.
Jo Jo Helps Lead Celtics to Victory
"I AM LONGER than most people, so I have a harder time with compulsories, which are often used in the bars," Blanchard said.
"If I make the finals, I will be more aggressive than I was at the last game. I will be second. At the Big Eight meet didn't want to blow my chance to qualify for the NCAA, but in the finals I won't have anything to lose."
Havlicek, who had a game high 32 points, led the Celtics on their first splurge of the night. They shot from a 80-28 disadvantage at eight point in quarter to an eight-point lead in the second two minutes of the second period.
The victors gave the Celtics, 10-7, the champions, a 1-0 edge in the beats if-seven first round series over Montaia, runner-up in the Central Division.
enjoy confidants of the arena.
"You need to calm down and contend with it."
Blanchard, "“sometimes overdo it when I watch my competition.”
by Don Nelson and Tom Sanders Hudson finished with 29 points
Alanta controlled much of the early going soley on the performance of Lou Hudson, who had to wear a mask. The walted effectively thereafter.
Blanchard does not like to watch his competitors in action. He has never performed Saturday night at Allen Field House in the Big Eight meet. He wanted to participate because heaine in the empty corridors of the town.
After Atlanta narrowed the起击 62-87 early in the third quarter. Havlickew, Cowens and reserve players scored all three points and 13 rebounds, set the Celtics on another fast breaking charge. Within six minutes, Boston had opened an 87-67 lead and ended seriously threatened again.
Despite the many long, hard hours of work gymnastics demands, Blanchard said, it does not get boring.
Walt Bellamy had 20 for Atlanta and Pete Maravich had 19.
For Boston, beating the Hawks is the major issue. The games this year are adjudged 25 while Cowens, who led a strong Celtic reboundting effort with 16,
Play in the Western Division playoffs will continue Thursday. Milwaukee will attempt to even its series with Golden State at 1-1 and Los Angeles will host Chicago, Lakers lead 1-0, in their series.
The series resumes Friday night in Atlanta.
Baltimore and New York will open their Eastern Division seminal series Friday in Baltimore.
"I really enjoy working out," he said. "I also enjoy having a variety of sessions is over. I won't train as hard for the open weeks of course, but I will do it later."
Illinois Tackle, SM North Star Sign With KU
Two more high school senior football players have signed Big Sign to the University of Kansas, Coach Don Farnbrough announced
Trembzynski established a reputation as the head coach for Thornton Fractional North High School. He played every minute of the season during a practice session during his last two seasons. He was an all-state selection from his team.
Darrell Trembcznyk, a 6-foot-3, 220-pound tackle from Calumet, III. and Bob Henry, a 6-foot-4, 200-pound quarterback from Shawne Mission North. He agreed to enroll at KU next fall.
Henry quarterbacked Shawnee Mission North to its third straight. Class 5-A state championship last season.
Three-Run Homer Gives Royals Win Over Tigers
"That's at Augusta, Ga. and next tournament Trevino has skipped years. His return will be under international attention and Trevino nothing better than to rock the staid and go Augusta National."
With that in mind, he took a week off from the tour to prepare for this event and for the Masters.
Trevino has played well this season—he ranks 10th on the money winning list with $42,912 —but he hasn't won. And he's heading into one of the biggest surprises, his stunning, spectacular career.
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — Third baseman Paul Schaeil hit two doubles and a three-run homer Wednesday to lead the City Royals to a 6-2 exhibition baseball victory over Detroit.
Happy Easter
Russell Stover
CANDIES
Easter Greetings
Box ... $1.60
VILA 3201
VILA 3201
VILA 3201
HILLCREST
Fruit & Nut
Egg
$1.65
Omahawk
Milkcrest
WAXE
PLAZA CENTER
RANEY
DRUG STORES.
FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY
DOWNTOWN
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) — Lee Trevino, making his last start before a mid favorite in the ranked as a mild favorite in the $200,000 Greater Greensboro Open Golf Tournament.
Baseball Scores
Kansas City 6, Detroit 2
Cincinnati 12, Philadelphia 6
Boston 5, Houston 3
Alabama 4
Los Angeles 6, Minnesota 2
Hiltonhead 6, Cleveland 1
Nashville (N) 6)
Frankfort (N) 6)
California 2, San Diego 1
Arnold Palmer, South African Gary Player, Billy Casney, Tony Jacklin of England, George Archer—all but a handful of the game's greats—were on hand for this year's rich event, but the focus of the action was on the squat figure of the swash-buckling Max M.
Schaal's homer in the seventh for rookie Chuck Seebach climaxed a four-run spree by the inning that started the innings with a homer.
The Royals received standout ruler pitching from Roger Miles who bailed out starter Mike Hankey with the bases full in the fourth.
Detroit scored its runs in the second on a double by Jim Nirupth, a single by Norm Cash. Northrup, a single and a single by Ed Brinkman.
Undergraduate Teaching Assistantships are available for next fall in certain undergraduate lab courses in the Biology Dept.
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES MAJORS!
Amos Ols, who singled in a run in the first, also socked a homer for Kansas City in the fourth.
- Salaries start at $500.00 per semester.
- Approx. ten hours work per week and enrollment in Bio. 83 (Laboratory instruction, 2 hours fall semester only) is required.
- Obtain application forms in Biology Office, 249 Snow.
- Deadline for application: April 3, 1972
LEARNING POTENTIALS
A learning skills course designed for you
FOREIGN STUDENTS
and Foreign Wives
HILLCREST
Fruit & Nut
Egg
$1.65
RANEY
DRUG STORES
FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY
PLAZA CENTER
DOWNTOWN
How to study in varied materials
How to preview for general ideas
Lee Trevino To Warm Up For Masters
How to read for details
How to review
How to enlarge vocabulan
How to enlarge vocabulary
How to listen for meaning
How to spell correctly
How to read faster
How to take notes from lectures
lw to remember what you learn
Meets 1½ hours twice a week for 5 weeks Call today for details
How to take tests
Small, informal groups; lots of individual attention.
THE FIRST LESSON IS FREE. If you decide to continue,
the remaining 9 lessons cost only $35.
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute
LEARNING POTENTIALS
Hillcrest Shopping Center
925 Iowa
Phone 843-6424
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DIAMOND
Never have you seen a more romantic diamond pair! A blaze of brilliance in a true heart shaped setting of modern design.
Choice of 14K white or yellow gold
809 Mass. Lawrence
BRIDAL SET
Springtime is Ringtime
Ray Christian
JAYHAWKER TOWERS
KU
APARTMENTS
1603 West 15th
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
Surrounded
All Utilities paid
K. U. Campus
Now Leasing for Summer and Next Fall
Not more than 5 minutes walking anywhere.
Tenant Storage Rooms on each Floor Incinerator dump on each floor
300
2 Bedroom Apartments
Modern kitchen with disposal
by the
Your own thermostat for heat and air conditioner
Auto parking included Heated swimming pool
treated swimming pool
Tenant Storage Rooms c
All-Brick walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and quiet
Two elevators in each building
plete laundry in each building
The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing
Bath tub, shower, two lavatories each apartment
Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see Convenience — Comfort — Safety — Extras
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered by the Department of Art to color, creed, or national origin.
xxxxxxxxxx
FOR SALE
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.61
One day
largest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
8608. tf
Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale
There are two ways of looking at it
If you use them.
WANT ADS
1. If you don't,
you're at a disadvantage.
you're at a disadvantage
ther way it comes to the same
trial. Analysis of Wedder
illustration.
Campus Madison, IL
14th Feb.
STEREO DISCOUNT Now you can
COFFEE plus 10 at RAY AUDIO-
CENTER, only the true Stero Discount House in
only Stero Tea, Tea Coffee & Consulting
NORTHSIDE COUNTRY SHOP 707 N 2ND A 34K BLOCK River River Park, 919-685-7075. Lets feature letter items, old wood cooking and baking items, vintage bicycles, fireplace wood, snowshoes, bicycles, fireplace wood, other useful items, open 9 to 5 on other useful items, Herb Aberleberry 8-5-1515
Société Equipement-Fins Mask Storage Lifetime Guaranes $10,000. Wet Surfaces Guaranes $25,000. & Vest $9.99. Spare Guranes $7.75. For all your drying needs, locate the Divers Equipment & Repair Services Divers Equipment & Repair Services 415-686-3222 Phone 1-866-3222-4154 Phone 1-866-3222-4154
1967 Dacaiti 180 cc. Burns good, but needs a few minor repairs $299 Call 843-9551 or go by 784 Arkansas 3:30
Two David Beatty stereo cabinets with JELL D-130 speakers, JELL crossers, and wide dispersion covers. For real hard hacks only 3-30
Drum set; 2 bass drums, 3 small tones,
toon and tare. Also stands and
fabric cases. Will sell cheap. 842-
9654 3:30
1964 WK - NEW PAINT WITH
REBUILD ENGINE - EXCELLENT
CONDITION GIVES TO HIGHEST
JOB RATES 100 JEWA = 0.5 CALL: 842-
8182
195, 700 miles. Heads, needs repairs, water pump and heater. Selling cheap. Call 842-6568 after 6 P.M. 3-31
Penny's has bikes for all *women*. 3-speed touring bikes $79.98. Women's 3-speed touring bikes $69.98. And Penny's has ski shoes for all *men*. 3-speed ski shoes $24.98. 3-speed Mastax shoes $21.98. 2-21
Double bed, mattress, box springs,
bedboard. $30 843-2860 afternoons
and evenings. 3-31
4 inch chrome Sonat "pancake" snare drum, including stand; 20" Zildjain afternoon. 4-4
71 Yamaha 90 Enduro. perfect condition. $350.842-9671. 4-5
Cansaro, 1968, 306-325 hp, green
black interior AM-FM Runs great.
Call 842-8029. 3:30
1955 Dodge pick-up with topper; 180 V-8.5 speed, low mileage, good condition. A bargain at $500 Call 644-6262
6262
3-31
250 Suzuki Savage Trail Bike. Less than 2,000 actual miles. Call 812-930-4300 evenings. Excellent condition.
WB Bike. Best for adults. Not recommended.
VOLKSWAGEN 1967 Bug, new brakes, stereo, $825. Cheap. Tim, 842-7125.
Chevy II Nov 70 for sale SS 296 - CoucketBucket - Power-disc brakes 250 HP Car Aria 813. 4847. 5-2 on PM MWF 4-4
MONOCULAR MICROSCOPE, 4 ocular lens. Mechanical stage, light. Case perform. $150 Contact C. Place, Box 210, 313-625-8800 Kernels, Kamins, 6143-932-6529
10 speed for sale. Good condition with extras. Must sell. Call 842-2961
5-31
Dorsey M-600 Photos Entertainer (new)
model. Viewer (manual with spice 12)
wanted gift), viewers (spice 12)
wanted gift), with spices $15
wanted gift), aluminum $15
wanted aluminum, acrylics $15
wanted aluminum, acrylics $15
MOTOROLA & 8-track stereo tape system, wood enclosed 6 inch speaker, bedside jack, power transformer, built-in camera, in-car home. FRED Puckett, 843-8252.
1950 Chev. Panel Van; sedan model.
Really good engine, body ok. Best offer over $75. Clear title. Call Linda at 843-207-3111.
Excellent used cassette tape recorder outfit with 110 Volt plug-in attachment included, $25 at Ray Stone Mall. Many new models reduced also.
ickens Auto Parts and Service
24th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUSAGES
Sports Cars Inc.
KANSAI CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
35 weeks or fewer $1.50
each addition
5.00 mln. 5 days before arrival
CSC
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 3 days before publication
Competition
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
If you have a typewriter skimp the IBM
hard drive. If not, call us. Manuale, IBM
Standard and Selective. For students.
For phones. For students. Phone 842-434-
and save.
Panasonic stereo with AM-FM tuner
$75,10 speed Chidora like new; floor
model, large screen TV. 842-1640 3-31
RED RIDER - Leather Shop - sandals, belt, shoes, miscellaneous accessories. Reasonably priced 09h Omaha City Monday from 1-4p Saturday - 2-4 P M
1963 WV camper-bus, includes full campground and AM-FM radio. Engine overhauled, runs great. $1,500 per cell. Call RSVP. 843-747-6000
YAMAIAH 1970 650 cc 924 Schwarz Road after 6 P.M. Excellent condition 4-5
Electric Wurlitzer piano—15" speaker with 2.10" aux speakers. $150, 843, 1782.
THE LATEST IN STEREO - Must sell
stereo. 30" inch television.
stereo tape player. Plays only a few
songs in my car. Used only a few
times in my car. 4x4 drive. 24 waits
$95. 842-7523-9556
$95. 842-7523-9556
66 Black HT, 4 ft. AT, PB, PS, PW.
Air conditioned. New tires less than pristine. Excellent condition $1,255
Catalytic炉 843-1059 or 842-2024 4-5
1970 Sunoco TC-90. Two range gun
box for street and trail. Great
condition. 4,000 miles $250 including
insurance and helmet. HI-8405A
-4
Minolta SR-T 101 camera like new.
$290 Call Mark, 842-6751. 4-5
(1971) Kawasaki 500, March III, exe-
cient condition, 2,400 miles $850 firm
Phone 864-6354 3-31
1967 Mistung Fastback, Power Steer-
ing, Automatic Air, Afx Air, Maxi
Mate, 24" Wheel Rim, Replacement
Glass, New Tires, Reconditioned
Dash, Owner-Ship, 3-40
843-4843
Feder Jauer (Jaehne with hard case; Fender Jonah) combo and combo and 40 XWXR speaker cabinets. U-13-12, and 2 horn drivers. Shure unit with 40 XWXR speakers with stand. U-44-2366 well-known. U-44-2366 well-known.
Brand new. Magnavita. Component
furniture. All new. $290 a pair, now $400 per
pair. Newly refurbished. Knoxville Seated
System. Newly refurbished. Stonewall
System. Newly refurbished. Stonewall
System. Newly refurbished. Stonewall
$1500 AIG STONELAND
1971 Kawasaki 125c Enouro. 1400
kmiles, like new $475 Phone #843-5508
or see at 2092 Princeton Blvd. 412
FOR RENT
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited
Rockledge Village Free Four
students can have all utilities paid
initiated with all utilities paid
student credits Call after 4pm,
m. 843-7731
**VALIABLE THIS SUMMER. Right**
Furniture 1 bedroom and four new f
Furniture 2 bedroom and four new f
Living room 4 one year old 1 bedroom spat
Furniture 3 two year old 1 apartment
All apartments clean and quiet with
air condition, and dining room
and air condition, between 5:30 P.M. and 10:30
P.M.
Share nice big house with one-two
private. Other room, $1 block from
stadium. Sale Also 3-speed bicycle
for Cheap. 842-254-98
4-3
SUMMER RENTALS. All types and
prices, all near campus. Reserve
yours now. Marie Lynch, 1216 La-
bure, 843-1601, 841-3232.
4-10
MUST SUBLEASE - 2 bid. 2 bath, unfurnished Garagehouse. Applicable to a family of 4 or more. all-optic kitchen with dishwasher. all-electric appliance this summer. Call 822-8196
DUPLICEX FOR RENT, 2714 Ridge Court, $175 per m, two bedrooms, refrigerator, fireplace, garage, pool. 832-329. Available immediately. 832-329. Available immediately. 4-4
Room with cooking area in exchange for work for the summer term. 842-
7863. 4-4
SHAHAR APTS - MUST leave betweenserver ends, will lease from either 1st or 15th of May 1 bdm. Mitchell St., 320 W. 46th Ave. Call 845-8287 (aaf or eft).
Dried to try find to that ideal apt.
1 & 2 BR, 2 bdrm, apts and available 1. 2 & 3 bdrm, apts and prices ranges throughout the city and price ranges throughout the city.
McGrew Agent, 901 Kentuckie, K424.
2 BR, 2 bdrm, apts and available 1. 2 & 3 bdrm, apts and prices ranges throughout the city and price ranges throughout the city.
APARTMENT FOR RENT One room
apartment, air conditioning Available
first at 19 West 14th. Call 62-45
9153 after 4.5
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
staircases
wirerances 6604A
LAWRENCE, KENTAS 68044
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Webster's Mobile Homes
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Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
Ampie Park Spaces Available
3408 W. 26th St. 819-7729
3409 W. 6th 842-7700 Just West of the
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
634 Mass. 842-6966
Five days
Lawrence's first and only
REAL store access.
Factory Authorized
Sales & Service
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $0.3
KAT Suzuki
NOTICE
INFANT DAY CARE CENTER 842-7694. 5034 pediatric care for children 1 mo to 12 mo. Full or part-time. Specially designed emergency. -31
Barn Partier! Now available for rent at The Garden Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry and cooler, plenty of parking at the Barn. Strange or not, Joe Strange after a p. at 8:30 am.
SKYDIVIES—Transportation unified is starting a parachute center 12 umb of North Lawrence Student student training 44-30 1133 after S.P.M.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits). American Health & Life Insurance Co. John Weller, 842-5200. ff
LEARN XSKIVING. In jump course, participants get general rental equipment and qualified instruction. Class that is taught after first is $50.00 per CD flash drive.
New wide bale F 7.0 f1 first quality only $25 plus $50. F 1.07 at RAY new wide bale F 10.00 at RAY new wide bale F 14.00 at RAY new wide bale F 20.00 at RAY new installation at Rocky Mountain $20.00 Fast free installation at Rocky Mountain $20.00
BCAUSE meeting April 4 Also
please sign up for April. Call 843-
9652 for more information
4-3-
Magnavox Custom Stereo System Reg. $159.90 at $100.00 at RAY STONEBACK'N's 4-5
TYPING
We can find any book for you. All subjects, rare books, free bindings, eWrite Write T. R. Mankins 371 Beacon St. Boston, MA; 02116 4-12
Typing done on silite, electric typewriter. Na Theses please. Prompt attention. 843-0958 4-5
Expertized in typing themes, diner-
ing, and home décor. Have electric typewriter with
typeeer. Accurate and prompt typing.
Phone 815-9344. Mrs Wright
***
Theses, term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM Selector, your choice of type styles. Also editing at state, Florida. 840-675-45
842-565-6
Experienced typist will type your term papers, themes or dissertation.
Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work #432-8281. Mt. Hawkman.
TYPING, IBM pica type. Fast, accurate, neat. Call at 5 90 pm. or on weekends. 843-3186. 4-4
Experienced typist will type thesis, manuscript, themes, etc. Reasonable rates. Call 843-2107 4-4
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt, reasonable rates. Please call 843-7954.
WANTED
Graduate student seeking summer employment in any kind of campus-related work, 842-3458 atight. 3-30
Kansas Key Press-Job printing from kaisers to posters, brochures, books to booklets and resumes. 710 Mass, in back Kayser Zion, Zero in front to 3 days 842-4843.
Instructor to teach Tai Chi. Phone 842-2040. 4-3
Female roommate Call after 5 P.M.
442-5921. Share rent. Furnished
apartment. 3-30
PERSONAL
WANTED. Someone with good arti-
tal talent and good lettering capa-
bilities. Phone 842-5248 after 1:00 P.M.
2-31
"My love is in thee, know it, that thou mayest find me near unto thee." Baha'u lilah 3-30
DECAUSE is a listening service 843-
9652. Sun thru Thu 8-12 P.M. Fri.
& Sat 8 P.M.-6 A.M. 4-12
HELP WANTED
PART TIME SECRETARY: Single.
Call 842-9660, between 8/20-10/00, 4:43
LOST
One kitten, seven months old. White with one blue and one green eye. If found please return to 618 North 12th. New Haven, Reward 4-4
MISCELLANEOUS
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sail—Sizes 8-10, to 17-5" off, Fall and spring fabrics Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Kansan
1
Classifieds
Work
For You!
8
Thursday, March 30, 1972
University Daily Kansan
B.
Kansan Photo by BECKY PIVONK
Kanan Photo by BEECK PIVOSKA
Perrigan Trial Repeated
Katz, Oldfather, Shelton, Baldwin turn actors
Conflicts Depicted In 'Catonsville 9'
"Trial of the Catonsville '9' a play by Father Daniel Berrigan, will be presented at 8:30 p.m. at United Ministries Center. A benefit performance for Lorien School will be presented at 8:30 p.m.
"The play paints a vivid picture of who the people are and what they are doing. They admitted burning the records but thought they were not responsible."
Baldwin said they thought, people were more important than paper and that the paper they used was merely a death certificate.
The play concerns the October 1978 shooting at Cattalouville, Md., who burned the local draft files on May 17, 1988. Reed Don, Baidan's campus
In the journal of defendant Philip Berrigan, Baldwin said, he compared the act of burning the files to watching a house burn with children inside. Berrigan also noted that not burning it would be a crime to break in. If it was burning and there were children burning in it,
THE PLAY," Badwin said, "talks of resistance to a society with screwed up values. It raises eternal questions that are always
Baldwin said the play tied in with Holy Week because it was involved with life and death in the war and could bring about new life.
Baldwin, who plays Daniel Berrigan in the play, said the role had been deepening and adding layers of complexity to identification with the character he played. He said he thought the part was important as preparation was for the role.
"THE POLITICAL PURPOSE of the war against whom the feelings that we are involved are no ways to stop war legally," said Arthur Katz, Dean of the War Department.
Katz, who plays the defense attorney in the play, said the peace movement is what the peace movement were beautiful people who were informed of.
breaking in would not be a crime.
Jolyl said most of the tickets appealed were for having no parking permit. Tickets given for noncompliance zone were also appealed.
A reorganization of the KU court this spring combined the functions of the old student traffic officer and the Faculty and Staff Tribunal.
Campus Traffic Court Hears 69 Ticket Appeals in March
During March, 69 traffic tickets issued by campus police were filed in the Department of Traffic Court, according to Pat Jolly, Overland park freshman.
By LARRY GOLDSMITH
Of that number, 35 of the appellants forfeited without hearings, 24 appeals were granted and 10 were denied.
Three of the justices of the new court meet each Tuesday night to hear appeals on traffic tickets and traffic and Security officers
In the past there was a court composed of law students for student complaints, and a judge who could handle complaints by non-students. Ed Kapian, Lawrence second year law student and chief counsel to the court.
"As a rough estimate, around 50 per cent of the appeals are granted. It's about even." Kaplan said.
THE NEW COURT comprises seven second and third year law students, one faculty member, and one KU staff member.
officers did not attend the KU court hearings because the court did not have the power to subpoena witnesses.
airness of the court by saying,
"We regard the traffic ticket as evidence of a wrong act, and it's up to the student, staff or
A hearing may be obtained by submitting an application to the Office of Traffic and Security in two weeks of receipt of the ticket.
"The people in the play," he said, "have this kind of commitment."
Some appellants have complained that they had to submit written proof of the circumstances in which the ticket was given, and that the officer who gave it was never able to attend the trial.
Kaplan answered complaints
Depending on the number of cases pending, a hearing may be held a month or more after an application is submitted.
THE TRAFFIC COURT of the city of Lawrence requires the officer who gave the ticket to be at the court session.
After an applicant is notified that his application has been accepted, he must sign the court order to prove which his case may be heard.
Kaplan said that the ticketing
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David Kendall, assistant superintendent of schools, said the visit by the team from UNC was part of a two-year-old exemplary program and that Lawrence's program to teach students about occupations was chosen to represent middle size school districts in Kansas.
SUA Flights to EUROPE
Seats still available
but HURRY1 →
Full payment due
April 17th
For further information contact: SUA Office
Educators See LHS Program
Kansas Union 864-3477
GET $1 Back
during
Jayhawk
Jamboree
Week
April 2-9
No Limit
BUY 10-GAME
BOOK passes for
$5.00 ($7.50 value)
and receive $1.00 in
cash when the 10
games have been played.
PUTT PUTT
GOLF
FREE PLAY
Present this coupon
for a free play on:
$ Day
Monday, April 3
$ Night
Thursday, April 6
PUTT-PUTT
GOLF COURSES
AMERICAS QUALITY COURSES
PUTT-PUTT GOLF
Some of the other main authors are Charles Oldfather, professor of law, and Robert Shelton, assistant professor of Speech and Comprehension.
Tickets for the play are $1 and can be purchased at the door, Baldwin said.
A team of educators from the University of North Carolina (UNC) and representatives of the U.S. Office of Education and the Department of Education observe the Lawrence School system's Career Education program Wednesday.
PUTT-PUTT
GOLF COURSES
AMERICA'S QUALITY COURSES
OPEN DAILY-CALL FOR INFORMATION
T-Shirts, Jerseys, Jackets, Tank Tops,
All Colors and all Sizes.
ALL GREEK DESIGNS AVAILABLE
You can choose your design . . .
We apply it right then, right there.
Takes less than a minute!
One OK. On A Kick or
Special Group Decoration.
A NEW CONCEPT IN DECORATING
T THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE!
NOW AT THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE!
INSTA-PRINTED SPORTSWEAR
(All shirts include one Free Design.)
kansas union BOOKSTORE
NO MORE PENCILS, NO MORE BOOKS, NO MORE TEACHERS' DIRTY LOOKS.
I will take you to the beach.
TWA INTRODUCES THE 1972 GETAWAY $ ^{*} $ PROGRAM.
This ad wasn't written to amuse you. It was written to get you to think. To think of how few school vacations you may have left.
Before you know it, the 9 to 5 hassle will be starting. So this summer may be your last real chance to travel. To help you plan your getaway, let us send you our free Getaway Kit. With the Kit you can get:
A coupon booklet that gives you a room and continental breakfast in either a guesthouse or student hotel in Europe for only $4.80 a night.
TWA's Stutelpass.*
Also included are free coupons that can be used for bullfights, use of a bicycle, theater tickets, sightseeing and more.
No advance reservations are needed.
123 Bed and Breakfast Adventures.
2- to 7-day guesthouse packages to any of 50
European cities. Among them Amsterdam, where
you can spend 3 days for only $22. And Athens,
where 3 nights cost only $16.
TWN's Capture! Good Application
With TWAs Getaway Card, you can charge airfare, hotels, meals, car rentals, Getaway packages and more. And then take up to two years to pay.
It's the most widely distributed, widely accepted
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TWA's Youth Passport* Card.
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FBI Continues Hunt for Twelve 'Top Ten' Fugitives
The Federal Bureau of Investigation's "Ten Most Wanted" list is currently overflowing its quota of desperate individuals are beginning to take a place on its rolls.
The FBI's "Ten Most Wanted" list now has 12 names. When the list was first published in March 1950, 10 criminals were considered the most dangerous to the public were placed on the list, Paul Young, special agent in charge of the Kansas City, Mo., division of the FBI, said recently. The list also contained more than 10 names because of the nature of various crimes, the viciousness of the criminals and the danger to the public.
THE FIRST woman to be put on the "Ten Most Wanted" list was Ruth Eisemann-Schier, charged in the Barbara Jane Mickle kidnap case. She was
placed on the list Dec. 28, 1968, and remained there until her capture by FBI agents at Norman, Oklahoma, on March 5, 1969.
Marie Arrington, charged with the manslaughter of her husband and the murder of a lawyer's secretary in Florida, was the second woman to be put on the list. She was placed on the list May 26, 1989, and then she was removed from the list reduced the present list to three women.
The fugitives on the FBI's list have several characteristics and habits in common. They will travel as far as possible and will use numerous disguises.
After a person commits a criminal act, he wants to get as much mileage as possible between himself and the scene of the crime. Young said. The Top Ten Crimes that were arrested an average of 966 miles from the point where the crime for was committed.
Wanted’ list. Prominently displayed across his chest was the statement ‘Don
JAMES RINGROSE holds the record for direct distance traveled from the crime scene by a Top Ten fugitive. He was apprehended March 29, 1967, in Osaka, Japan, 7,015 miles from New York City, N.J., and sought for interstate fraudulent checks.
One of the most dramatic combinations of a speedy apprehension and distance between the aircraft and ground.
case of California prison escape and bank robber Charles Gove, who was executed on November 14 in a Murray Grass thrash on Bourbon Street in New Orleans about 1,900 miles from the escape site. He was arrested Feb. 16, 1966. He was also added to the "Ten Most Wanted" list.
YOUNG SAID a person could be placed on the "Ten Most Wanted" list and the assistance of the FBI could be requested by local authorities when some evidence has been obtained. State lines to avoid prosecution for murder, assault with a dangerous weapon, mayhem, burglary, rape, kidnapping, extortion accompanied by threat of death, or attempting to destroy property attempting to destroy property by fire or explosion, inciting a riot or an attempt to
commit any of these crimes. The FBI can also be brought into action to find a fugitive who flees across state lines to avoid giving testimony in a felony conviction, or to confine him after having been convicted of any of the previously stated crimes.
THERE HAVE been 315 fugitives on the "Ten Most Wanted" list since it was first published. A total of 293 of those fugitives have been arrested. Of those apprehended, 177 have been arrested by FBI agents, 69 have been arrested by local authorities, 36 have been joint arrests and 11 have been sent to prison for suicide and process was dismissed on 10 because their cases were no longer prosecutable.
No criminals, originally on the "ten Most Wanted" list are among the present
fugitives, Young said. The last man removed from the original list was Henry Mitchell, wanted in connection with a Williston, Fla., bank robbery. The federal police station where Mitchell was dismissed on July 18, 1986, when one hundred ONE HUNDRED and one Top Ten fugitives have been apprehended as a result of information provided to local authorities or the FBI by alert citizens, Young said. These arrests resulted from publicity concerning the fugitives, which appeared in newspapers, magazines, on radio programs and from the wanted posters distributed nationally by the FBI.
The FB arrest of Stanley Fingerger on
the SEC charges that he gassed his
expedition by publicity emphasizes the
See FBI, Page 2
Winter Weather
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
See Page 7
82nd Year, No. 112
Friday, March 31, 1972
Erich Segal, Jim Ryun Run In Lawrence
Kansan Photo by MARC MAY
TACO
See Page 10
Two-Way Traffic Called to Halt
Traffic Control Plan To Alter KU Streets
One-Way Streets Proposed
Jayhawk Boulevard will be one-way and have parking meters . . .
BY RICHARD COOLEY
Korean Staff Writer
A new traffic control plan which would turn Jawahry Boulevard and Memorial Drive into one-way streets and place four to five hundred parking meters on campus currently being formulated by the University of Kansas Parking and Traffic Board.
Some of the major changes included in the proposal are making Memorial Drive one way west from Mississippi to West Campus Road, making Jayhawne Boulevard, was east from West Campus Road to 1410 St., and installing a 25-call tent mile at
Robert Malinowski, assistant director of the library and chairman of the Parking and Traffic Board, confirmed Thursday the plan was being formulated, but said details would not be released until next week.
Family Fights State School Funding
By KAREN KLINKENBERG
The Serranos in California and the Caldwells in Desoto Kansas have something in common. They both do not like the state methods of financing public school funds, but Supreme Court said the method of funding education by local property taxes was unconstitutional, in desoto the debate has just begun. If the same ruling comes in Kansas, it would be a case that could alter the character of public education today.
In Serrano v. Priest the California Supreme Court said, "A public school financing system which relies heavily on individual students from among individual school districts in the amount of revenue available per pupil for the districts' educational grants." It discriminates against the poor and less privileged. Fourteenth Amendment." In other words,
they said that a child's education could not be based solely on the property his parents owned or on their wealth and that when local property taxes funded the largest part of public education, many children were deprived.
IF THIS CALIFORNIA decision is upheld in the State Supreme Court, the entire system of funding public education could change.
But it is significant, according to Richard Hatley, assistant professor of education, that in this decision the court told the legislature that they have two years to create a new system or the court will find one. Whereas in California the
Similar decisions have been reached in other states, and over 30 suits are being heard by the United States Supreme judge panel in the federal court also concurred that such a method of funding education was unconstitutional as it related to the equal protection clause, and that such cases were not upheld.
IN DESOTO, KANSAS, the James Caldwell family has filed a suit of a similar nature attacking the financing of schools in which their children attend school.
courts ruling was referred for a decision to a lower court. It is the opinion of some judges that the appellate court had a possibility of going straight to the U. S. Supreme Court without going through the federal appellate court system because one of the judges on the three-panel committee had been indicted.
Mrs. Caldwell said, "We pay so much here, and we are not getting that much back." The Kansas Association of Teachers would join them in the suit. The suit was filed in behalf of the Caldwell's two children, Michael, a junior high school student and Michele who is in the elementary school. Filed in December 10, 1971, the suit was against the State of Missouri for district, and others named in the petition.
Senate Revives Power Of Publications Board
"The responsibilities of the publications board under the ASC constitution were wiped out when the new Senate came out in 1986 and that was not "asn't been active for about three years."
The Student Senate Publications Board, a body that has existed for years yet has been inactive the past three, will begin functioning again after new members are appointed when the Senate reorganizes next week.
HOUSE, WHO was chairman of the old board, said his board worked with the Communications Committee in preparing the bill the Senate approved.
The bill gives the board the right to oversee the financial management of student publications of groups that receive funds from the Senate.
House said part of the reason the board was being revived was due to the financial crisis.
HOUSE SAID there were "constantly little hassles" involving minor student issues. He said groups oftensigned printing contracts that they did not understand, and that the board wanted to "check its contracts and make sure it was getting a fair deal."
John House, Raytown, Mo., senior, said Thursday that the new board replaced an ad hoc committee created by the old All-Student Council.
The petition, which was filed in Johnson County District Court, stated the complaints in the suit. It alleged that the Kansas Constitution and protection clause in the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and sections one and two of the Kansas Constitution of Rights by establishing a school system with "of fiscal neutrality in education" by the financing of public school children's education based upon the wealth of the child's family, his school district or another than the state of Kansas as a whole.
The Kansan receives about one-third of its operating funds from the Senate, and he said the Senate would only look at how its allocation was spent.
Also to be affected by the board is the University Daily Kansan, but House said the board's concern with expenditures by the Kansan would be limited.
The board's membership, as stated in the bill, will consist of five members of the student body and a chairman appointed by the president with the consent of the Senate.
"We want to protect them, but also encourage them to work on their own," he said. "It's not going to be a takeover by the Student Senate."
"The Student Senate bears the liability for any losses by the yearbook, and it took a while to realize that."
Alton Thomas, University architect,
confirmed Thursday that his department
had completed preliminary cost and
feasibility studies on the project and said
the findings would be presented whenever
Malinowski requested it.
A spokesman for the Student Senate Transportation Committee, however, said he had learned some details of the plan and proposed to eliminate it from the campus bus system.
The board would try to get the yearbook table under sound financial control, he said.
MALINOWSKI WOULD neither confirm nor deny the information, but said details of the plan would probably be made public. The student's Office is Student Executive Committee (StudEx).
THE METERS would be installed free of charge and a percentage of the revenue from them would go to the company which is responsible for the payment would go to the Traffic and Security division.
when the Senate passed a bill March 1 that created a new board and made it a subcommittee of the Communications
"Right now students and faculty are assigned to one, and if they can't park there for some reason, they have to park elsewhere. We will welcome you. We hope the new plan will give faculty and students a wider range of courses, and we believe the permit they will purchase," he said.
to eliminate as far as possible the need for special permits."
The plan also calls for changes in parking permits designed to give students and faculty wider choice of parking areas, Malinowski said.
THE PETITION also alleged that under this financial system in 1970, approximately 65 per cent of all Kansas educational revenues were raised from the taxation system and from the system of school financing, the petition continued, school districts created by the state had widely varying amounts of taxable wealth per pupil. In 1970, they adjusted valuation to approximately $4,000 adjusted valuation per pupil to approximately $15,155 per pupil.
Malinowski said the need for the changes had grown out of the lack of parking facilities at Wesoe Hall, the building that was constructed on Jayhawk Boulevard across from Strong Hall. The original plans provided parking space for 150 cars in the building, but because of excessive construction costs the parking facilities had to be scrapped.
As a result of such differences in wealth, the petition stated, the school districts have widely variant expenditures per pupil of similar age and grade levels. These range in Kansas from a low of $1,048 in Salem to $2,144/74 in Mukwau. In Des Moines the average per student is $7,746 and the per pupil expenditure is $608.95.
Malinowski said his committee had been studying budget problems connected with the project and had found that the plan "is feasible as far as budgeting is concerned."
concerning education. Because substantial disparities in the quality and extent of available educational opportunities exist in districts of Kansas, the petition said some children did not receive educational opportunities made available to children attending public schools in Kansas, where they were state.
A second part of the suit charged further discrimination by the financing system. The Caldwells and people in a similar position, according to the petition, are taxed more heavily than other persons upon the same valued property in order to keep them away from education in their school district. In Desoto the general operating mill is 614.93.
THE CALDWELLS and others in a similar position, the petition continues. The judge will adjudicate.
"Our next move will be to present details of the plan to StudEx and SenEx and get their reactions and suggestions," Malinowski said.
The spokesman for the Student Senate Transportation Committee charged that the new plan, if enacted, would seriously impair the ability of students probably kill it. He said as a result of the re-designed traffic flow, bus service would be reduced, costs would go up and the faster traffic resulting from the plan would be reduced in bus boarding and departing from buses.
The Kansas Association of Taxpayers Inc. is the second party in the suit. They are a non-profit Kansas corporation organized to protect their members against theft of taxes and to just legal protection for the property owners of Kansas.
MALNOWSKI ADMITTED the plan would force changes in bus service, but said he did not think it would eliminate service altogether.
"THAT MEANS we're going to have to squeeze all of the people who will be using Wescoe Hall into present parking facilities," Malnowski said. He said the Parking and Traffic Board had realized some time ago that changes were going to be required, and had begun formulating plans.
The Parking and Traffic Board, under Malinowski's leadership, initiated the planning. John Thomas, director of Traffic and Security, and Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for physical plant, were also involved.
"I think buses will be able to adapt to our plan fairly well," he said. "There will naturally be some problems, but I don't think it will eliminate buses at all."
See FAMILY FIGHTS, Page 3
Malinowski also said bicycle traffic had received top priority in the committee's planning and every effort had been made to facilitate bicycle traffic in all directions.
Malinowski pointed out that one of the problems with parking and traffic control was that there was no state money available.
THE ADDITION of parking meters would not only raise much-needed revenue for the department but also eliminate the system of guest perimia, he said.
Asked about the installation of parking meters on campus, Malinowski said the plan called for "four or five hundred parking units" in campus, from dormitories to the union."
He said the meters would be placed in 'high-turnover guest areas in an attempt
KU Group Debates Insurance Plan
By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
An optional Blue Cross-Blue Shield insurance plan, chosen by the Student Senate Student Services insurance plan subcommittee, will be offered to University students for the second year at fall enrollment.
Options and changes in the current Blue Cross-Blue Shield insurance plan were discussed Thursday by members of the insurance plan subcommittee and representatives from Blue Cross-Blue Shield. The final plan is to be submitted to the Senate for review at the end of April, 2015. Topics to promore and chairman of the committee.
The plan most currently favored by the subcommittee is one similar to the University Blue Cross-Blue Shield plan of 1968-69, which would probably increase insurance rates with a few more options, and would cover more student needs. Allen said.
THE FAVORED PLAN would include full coverage in a semi-private hospital room with no deductible charges in Watkins Hospital and $25 in other hospital. The current plan allows $30 a day for semi-private room charges.
Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of
Watkins Memorial Hospital, said that full room charge coverage was preferred, because a $30 a day room rate allowance is required in many other hospitals are much higher.
There would also be full prescription drug coverage in the favored plan instead of a regular prescription.
Bill Seilen, representative from Blue Cross-Blue Shield, said the costs of birth control pills and insulin would also be higher. But many people were not aware of this.
ONE OF THE MAJOR points of dispute in selecting the options in the final plan will be the maternity options, Dr. Schweiger said. Maternity coverage will be contested, Dr. Schweiger said, because any options finally chosen by the Senate would have to be paid for by all students and parents. Schweiger said he thought many students would balk at paying for maternity coverage that they would not use.
The current plan does not have any maternity coverage Dr. Schwegler said, because in the previous year a majority of the student senators had ruled out the maternity coverage and instead couldn't afford it with maternity coverage expenses, he said.
Dr. Schweiger said that some sort of maternity coverage was important,
however, because many students had asked for it.
MATERNITY COVERAGE in the plan would cover hospital and doctor's fees for both infant delivery and abortions, and any pregnancy and delivery complications, depending on which deductible option was chosen.
Alen, said the selection of the options in the final plan would have to depend on the results of the experiment.
Alen said she would like to get more students involved in selecting the insurance plan options. She said it was important for the Senate to be aware of the number of students who would actually benefit from the various options.
The subcommittee will present a preliminary recommendation at the Senate meeting on Wednesday, Allen said, and she also said she hoped that students interested in the insurance plan would come to express their views.
The insurance plan subcommittee was just recently formed and members chosen two weeks ago, Allen said. In previous years, the Student Services Committee selected the insurance plan, but more recently, the plan had been accomplished in a subcommittee devoted exclusively to the insurance plan, Allen said.
2
Friday, March 31, 1972
University Daily Kansan
FBI Continues Hunt . . .
Continued from page 1
favorite hobby of singing sentimental Irish lullabies in Barrocons. He was reportedly heard singing lustily in a Colorado Springs tavern and recorded what he saw he was mickey apprehended.
THE FBI offers no reward money to private citizens who assist in the apprehension of Top Ten fugitives. Young, often said, is one of the most organized organizations, such as the Crime Commission, will offer a reward.
Most of the Top Ten fugitives have criminal histories and have been sentenced to prison crimes, Young said. Byron Rice, the present Tennessean, wants "to be mercilessly murdered an armed car guard during a robbery, has previously worked for the police."
ANOTHER PRESENT TOP
NAGHTIFIVE, Taylor Teadon, charged with murder and assault to the police record, criminal record, which began when he was 18 and includes convictions for burglary and arson.
Benjamin Paddock, presently wanted for escaping from a federal prison in Texas, was serving a 20-year sentence there for robbing a Phoenix bank in 1983. Besides bank robbery, he was convicted of automobile larceny and confidence game.
Many of the Top Ten fugitives have committed other crimes while on the "Ten Most Wanted" list. Three of them, fugitives, crime is their way of life, and they have been apprehended by local authorities during the commission of other crimes. On May 1, 2015, captured March 1, 1965, after he attempted to rob a Charlotte, N. C., bank. Cole had been on the "Ten Most Wanted" list for five years before escaping from a Nashville jail.
The majority of the Top Ten fugitives surrender peacefully and calmly when arrested, Young said.
EDWIN GARRISON, one of five men to be placed on the list twice, said to FBI agents who arrested him for the second time, "I glad it's over. I know the FBI you can't fool the FBI long."
Jesse James Gilbert, apprehended by FBI agents in New York, congratulated his captors with the comment, "You men are real gentlemen and if I had to be seduced, I'm glad it was by the FBI."
Many of the Top Ten fugitives are exceptionally bright people. Young said Bernardine Dohrn, a student at the mob action, riot and conspiracy, received bachelor of arts, master of arts and doctor of law degrees from the University of Chicago. He was also a member of the National Lawyers Guild. SUSAN SAXE, now on the list of charges of murder, theft of property and robbery, graduated from Brandeis University in June 1970, magna cum laude and was subsequently a graduate student at Brandeis.
More than a year and a half ago “Ten Most Wanted” list had more than 100 fugitives were wanted for such crimes as murder and bank robbery.
newer breed, sought for such crimes as sabotage and inciting a riot.
Since October 1970, four of the 16 fictives have been arrested. Arrington was arrested in New York City and charged with murder, was arrested April 14, 1971, in New York City, and charged with inciting a riot and arson in Cambridge, MD., was arrested Oct. 6, 1971, in New York City. Karleton Armstrong, girlfriend of defendant destruction of government property and conspiracy, was arrested Feb. 16, 1972, in Toronto.
ALL FIGHTIVES put on the Top Ten have violated laws of the United States. Although the FBI has been criticized by the New York Times, political activists on the list, Young said, the FBI considers only the nature of the crime, the viciousness of the criminal and the danger to the law-abiding in selecting criminals for the list.
There are presently, however, seven fugitives on the list wanted for crimes ranging from theft and terrorist acts to conspiracy.
On April 15, 1989, Cameron Bishop, 30, one of the first activists accused of sabotage, was arrested allegedly dynaming four transmission line towers in Colorado that supplied power to defense plants. Bishop is a former instructor at the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), a loudly militant New Left group opposed to state involvement in Vietnam and an existing government policies.
ALSO CHARGED with sabotage are Lecur Burt, 24; David Fine, 26. Dwight Armstrong, 21; David Fine, 29. Dwight Armstrong, 21
Dohn, 30, a leader of the Weatherman faction of SDS, was put on the list Oct. 14, 1970, for moo action, arresting arrest and aggravated battery following a crash in Chicago on Oct. 9, 1968. Dohn has publicly described herself as a revolutionary Communist.
IN ADDITION to Bishop and Dohrn, Saxe, 23, and Katherine Power, 23, are also reputed to administer the revolutionary group. The group is dedicated to attacking the United States military system and is tasked with defending and power were placed on the list on charges of a Sept. 13, 1970, bank robbery in Brighton, Mass. A letter, purported to be from Saxe, said the robbery was committed. Finance finance goals. Saxe Power are additionally charged with theft of government
People .. Places .. Things
After two weeks of testimony, the jury began deliberations Thursday in the trial of Uintune Mine Workers President W.A. "TONY" BOYLE and two other UMW officials. They were charged with conspiracy and participation in all or some of 11 illegal campaign contributions totaling $49,250 made from 1966 through 1969.
People:
LEAVERWORTH—A group of inmates at the U.S. Penitentiary refused to work and presented authorities with a list of demands, some of them far afield of prison conditions. The 130 inmates refused to report to their jobs and gathered in the exercise yard, and were presented officials with a list ranging from demands for the federal minimum wage to one that "all harrassment stop immediately."
A faced lady woman witness, who was held hostage in a wild shootout, wept at the ANGELA DAVIS trial as she conceded that her testimony may have been influenced by the prosecution. Maria Graham, 50, after two hours of cross-examining by defense counsel, said she had received evidence that the prosecutor had encouraged her to recall shouts of "Free The Soledad Brothers" during the hours she was held hostage.
Places:
ANKARA, Turkey - Police stormed a mountain village house area and killed 10 Turkish kidnappers but not the terrorists turned their guns on three foreign hostages and shot them to death, a government communique reported. The hostages were radar equipment that was being worked at a Turkish air force radar station when they were killed. One of the dead terrorists was Turkey's most wanted fugitive.
BELFAST-Guerilla extremists mounted bomb and gunfire attacks in Northern Ireland, killing a British army explosives expert and a woman bystander. Two dozen civilians were wounded. The new waves of violence erupted on the day the British Parliament legalized its takeover of the province and ordered in an extra 600 troops because of fears of Easter fighting.
Things:
Congressional investigators say 32 INEFFECTIVE VACCINES were allowed to remain on the market for at least 10 years while drug regulators quietly exchanged memos. Furthermore, for three years the Division of Biologies Standards released flu vaccines even when its tests showed potency to be as low as less than one per cent of standards, the General Accounting Office said.
property from a National Guard Armory at Newburyport, Mass., on Sent. 20, 1970.
The remaining five fugitives on the present "Ten Most Wanted" list do not have backgrounds as political activists or terrorists.
JOHN W. CLUISER, 40, who calls himself the "Florida Fox," has been on the present list the longest On April 18, the longer he was in office at his institution. Clouser is charged with transportation of a stolen car into the school district.
Charles Herron, 35, is being sought as one of five men involved in the shooting of one police officer and the critical wounding of another on November 27.
Along with Heron, Teaford, 37, is also charged with murder and assault with intent to commit murder. On July 18, 1987, in connection with her death, a California prison parole, allegedly murdered his 74-year-old grandmother, shot his sister, a passing motorist who stopped to aid the wounded girl and a deputy off attempting to apprehend him.
ON FEB 21, 1966. Rice, 36, and two accomplices, allegedly shot and killed an armored car guard in Mountain View. Calf., during a robbery with $30,000 was seized. Rice is charged with armed robbery and murder.
TOPEKA (AP) — A Topeka
student was attacked by the Meningheri.
Foundation and four doctors Thursday,
allegedly he had been kidnapped.
Paddock, 46, is another fugitive who has been charged with armed robbery. Known to his friends as "Old Baldy" and "Big Daddy", he is being sought as an escaped prisoner from the Federal Penitentiary in Tuna, Texas, where he was serving a 20-year sentence for robbing a Phoenix bank in 1960. He was put on the list June 10, 1969.
SUMMER IN WISCONSIN
hopped and held for 22 days. The suit was brought by Mortimer A. Berlin.
the capturing of Top Ten nativities is a cooperative effort in the administration's press and other public information media. This combined effort has proved valuable for safety and security of law enforcement's most螺eking problems, the fast-paced criminal "intelligent" Young said.
One of America's outstanding private buses carsms, located in northern Wisconsin, operated on the staff for the 1932 Commemorative exhibition. Round table discussions, compensation include salary, round table discussions, board and dunny. This is an unusually large exhibit that most men of the highest character and wealth have not been able to provide information, write D.C. Broad bridge, 286 Shannon Court, NorthBroadbridge.
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Friday, March 31, 1972
Family Fights State...
Continued from Page 1
Continued from Page 1
THE ALLEGED IN THE POLITICAL REPORTS OF the term of financing education had "no rational basis to the receiving capacity. They said that because this financing system is based on a common persons for a species taxation when no rational basis supports such," these people were being denied equal protection under the
At present the attorneys are trying to get the attorney general's office to narrow the scope of his case, take it to court, according to David J. Waxse, an Olathe lawyer who filed the petition in Johnson County District Court. He is the law firm of Payne Jones.
The state of Kansas does provide funds to school districts according to a rather complicated set of rules. Factors included in the formula are the number of students and the quality of teachers which is based on how many years the teacher has served and the hours of college credit he has.
ROBERT LYDELL, attorney for the Desoto School District, said that the foundation formula really did dive students of the
state of the right guaranteed by the equal protection clause. He served in a number of county wide basis and locally, for Desoto, it worked as a attorney.
In Lawrence Unified School District No. 497, the amount spent per pupil is $704, said Kenneth Fischer, assistant superintendent for special education at 74 per cent comes from local property taxes, 25 per cent from the state and 1 per cent from the federal. Fisher said. There are other sources of funding for innovative programs and those for the deprived child.
The Desoto school district has joined the Caldwells in some parts of the suit. They also do not vote on matters of the state's matter of distributing funds is constitutional. The school district agreed they can not provide an education equal to other richer school districts.
IN ALL CASES of this nature it was usually assumed that the quality of education is proportionate to the amount of money spent. Most teachers and educators would agree that you should teach your children to buy books, materials and equipment. Another factor in
quality education, according to Fisher, was the interest of people in the community, the amount of time they spend, and the expend for the education of their young people. Indirectly the result of this is the amount of time students are spending. But according to Lee See, teaching assistant in education, the idea that there can only be one teacher there is a lot of mystery to simulate.
"Dollars and cents does not get a quality education," he said but what is needed is more emphasis on the basic teacher-student pair. He would want live teachers and not dead machines, he added.
A teacher could have the tape equipment, the new textbooks, new language lab and overhead monitors. But still she'd still be the same bad teacher.
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WHAT'S YOUR SCENE FOR THE SUMMER OF 72?
Francis said the clean-up week was being held next week partly because college students would be able to town and would be able to help.
WHAT'S YOUR SCENE FOR THE SUMMER OF 72?
Will you have a degree and no place to go?
A Chamber of Commerce spokesman said that the organization organized projects had been slim and that numerous tools still were required.
Invest in America's future—and yours.
"The animal kingdom has always taken care of its clean-up problems quite nicely, but bamfals pull up their own equipment and clean up the clean-up process," said Francis. "We're all going to have to live in this world a long time, so every one that lives here, even part-time residents, should not be part of the problem."
The theft of a Blue 1966 Pontiac From a Zone at 4 o'clock reported to campus police by its owner, Gary Summers, Leavenworth
Make the Air Force Scene as an officer and pilot. Check now on our "No Obligation" Testing - Physical - Application Procedure.
For the whole 9 yards, rap with your Air Force Representative at the Student Union, 5 & 6 April; or call 843-3000 anytime.
Let us show you where It's At !!!
Annual Spring Clean-Up To Begin on Saturday
Carol Francis, a coordinator for the clean-up, said the purpose for the clean-up week was to spruce up Lawrence in time for Kansas Relays and to make the area a better, cleaner place to live.
The Research Development and Environmental Control Committee of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce will host a dinner for the city beginning Saturday and continuing through April 8.
Army ROTC
NO OBLIGATION — DIG?
Car Stolen
From A-Zone
wishing to participate
Army BOT
Summers told officers that the car, valued at $1400, was stolen while he was in his room in Hall R. Pearson Residence Hall.
In the past, Lawrence clean-up weeks have been limited to one week in the fall and spring. Francis said that she hoped the clean-up effort would not be made in the summer and that individuals concerned with the environment would spread the good example.
Any assistance or information on the clean-up week can be obtained from the Chamber of Commerce, the Department and metal lapel buttons will be provided on request. The Lawrence sanitation, park and recreation department will provide extra trash pickups and guest speakers for groups.
864-3311 Application deadline April 5.
SENIORS and
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Wondering about the future? Don't wait too long to make the right decision. Think about it now.
Think about $100 a month while you continue your graduate work. Think about fulfilling your military obligation as a Commissioned Officer—with a good chance you'll be continuing your work in your major field.
Think about the 2-year Army ROTC program. For further information contact the Professor of Military Science.
203 Military Science Building.
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10 a.m.-6 p.m.Sat.
FREE PARKING MASTER CHARGE
1420 Crescent Road—Across from Lindley Hall
4
Friday, March 31, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Applications, Anyone?
For at least the past three semesters, the Kansan has received severe criticism for such bugaboos as faculty domination, chauvinism for the J-School, and 'safe' editors. We have been written to criticism from our readers.
Dedicated critics have maintained that the faculty controls the Kansan, that if faculty members don't have to intervene on every issue, it is only a matter of politeness. It who that lackey "safe" editors who agreed with them were elected.
All of this is absurd, as we have said so many times. However, the Kansan Board, which did and does contain a student majority, responded by taking special care to publicize the fact that any student, regardless of his major, is eligible to be editor of the Kansan. Stories were
run in the paper and applications for the position were made available in the offices of the dean of men and the dean of women.
Yet in these two semesters the efforts failed to attract one editor applicant from outside the School of Journalism.
Realistically, these criticisms of the Kansan will be around as long as the paper itself is. But the important thing now is that it is again time to choose a new staff. The possibility exists for a continuation of what is being produced now or for a radical change in the paper's philosophy. Perhaps, as in the past, the dissidents will suddenly become silent and anonymous. That would be too bad, for now is their chance.
—Chip Crews Editor
HOH HAYDIE
the courier-journal
1972 J. A. MAIN SCHOOL CAT
*Humannum . . . Acute and chronic LIT-titis accompanied
by severe campaign-chest pains ...
Readers Respond
Campus Cops : Doing a Good Job
To the Editor:
As Chairman of the Parking and Traffic Board, I must take a stand concerning the University of Kansas Traffic and Security Department. The strong words of our colleague Mr. J. Reagan's statements of "The police dole out parking tickets like Green stamps for the most miniscule invented..." and "we should call our campus police, the security department, because insecurity" would not have been used. I am sure, if those persons had done some research into just what department is responsible for
Some other statistic statistics were reported. 19, 28 vehicles were required 832 parking permits sold, $8,207 in parking permits and campus parking permits.
In order to give the entire University Community the security and patrolling protection of campus, 25 days per year, there are 35 policemen, 8 clerks and secretaries, 10 doctors and 5 policemen are designated as follows: 1 director, 1 captain, 3 shift, 1 leavants, 3 shift, 1 dormitory doctor, 1 investigator patrolman and 8 dormitory patrolmen. These 35 persons do all of the University's parking and traffic control, and addition, one of the men is required to drive the University bus when needed, and traffic is paid for out of parking and traffic income which includes traffic fines and income from the sale of firearms, $159,441 income, $82,467 was from faculty-, staff-, and students. No money from state banks is used for parking and traffic.
tickets issued for parking violations of which 11,140 were for non-registration or sticker not held by permit; 895 city park tickets issued; 215 city moving violations issued; 203 accidents investigators; complaints and offenses reported to 88 officers, 1 homicide, 2 raps, 8 burglaries, 220 larcenies over $30, 322 larcenes under $50, 16 firearms, 12 assaults, 1 sex offense, 2 disorderly conduct, 1 suicide attempt, 5 disturbances, 59 fires, 12 missing persons, 17 molestations, 10 assaults, 12 bombs, and 24 bomb scares. It must be stressed that complaints and offenses have to be reported before any can do any kind of investigating.
tried to park legally, then it would be much easier for the Traffic and Security personnel to do their patrolling.
It is unfortunate that some feel that the campus Traffic and Security personnel are out to help them. It has been mentioned that a car in O-zone at 4:00 a. m. with an improper skater was ticketed. In the hour to hour patrolling, isn't it possible that the officer would check cars in O-zone at that hour? If there was a robbery, assault, or the like and that car was involved, we would then have word of where the car was at a parking lot. If the police are patrolling various lots, isn't it part of his duty to check for illegally parked cars as well as on other parking spots and happens? He surely isn't expected to overlook violations just because he happens to be looking for something else. In many cases the illegally parked cars bushy with a person individual who is walking from being able to proceed by the most direct route, resulting in his arrest, closely parked vehicles, a molester, exhibitionist, or what ever may be waiting. If everyone
I assure you that with the present limited staff, the Traffic and Security Department is doing as good a job as can be expected. We are making staffing and financing of other large universities in the U.S., you would be amazed at how we have been able to do as well as we were at our earliest point in the Parking and Traffic Board have spent many hours reviewing or "investigating" the total operation. As a result, there will always be people who everyone will cooperate and give the changes a chance.
—H. Robert Malinowsky Chairman, Parking and Traffic Board
UNTIL THE PRESIDENT SAID HE NEVER QUESTIONED THE SINCERITY OF HIS OPPONENTS.
I NEVER QUESTIONED THEIR SINCERITY EITHER.
BUT HE MADE ME WONDER.
AND UNTIL THE PRESIDENT SAID HE NEVER QUESTIONED THE PATRIOTISM OF HIS OPPONENTS.
I NEVER QUESTIONED THEIR PATRIOTISM EITHER.
BUT HE MADE ME WONDER.
AND THEN I WONDERED IF I WAS SUSPICIOUS OF THE SINCERITY AND PATRIOTISM OF THE PRESIDENTS OPPONENTS.
AND NIXON WASN'T.
COULD I TRUST HIS LEADERSHIP FOR ANOTHER FOUR YEARS?
SO I DECIDED TO SWITCH SIDES.
3-26 ©1972 约翰·雷利
Dist. Publishers-Hall Syndicate
James J. Kilpatrick
Amendment For Women Termed Folly
WASHINGTON—It was late on the afternoon of Wednesday, March 22, when the Equal Rights for Women amendment finally came to a vote in the Senate. Delaware's William Roth happened to be presiding.
"On this vote," he announced, "the yeas are 84, the nays are 8. Two-thirds of the Senators present having voted in favor; the negative, the joint resolution is passed."
---
Very well. The amendment, by its own terms, will become effective two years after ratification. This would indicate an operative date in the year 1978, as no earlier ventured: By the summer of 1978, the jubilation singing will have died;
The packed galleries broke into happy applause. It took several minutes of gavel-pounding to get things quieted down. After more than 50 years of unrelenting effort, proponents of the ERA have moved on to morning, Hawaii had become the first State to ratify. Half a dozen others since leaved beacon. The ERA may well break the 100-day record set last year in ratification of the 18-year-old vote no army so unresistible, as they say, as an idea whose hour has come.
PETER BARNES
March 22 of 1972 will be denounced here and there as Black Wednesday; you will be hearing anguished cries for repeal.
The amendment is unmitigated folly. It cannot be compared with the 19th Amendment, which in 1920 guaranteed that women should have an equal right to vote. The legal effect of that amendment was clear, crisp, and incapable of misunderstanding. In the case of the ERA, though thousands of pages of law review articles have been written about it, the legal effects are unclear. Howard H. Harden's Professor Paul Freund, a great institutional scholar, has said that the Equal Rights Amendment "will open a Pandora's box of legal complications," but the hoary allusion paints an inadequate picture.
What we are talking about, in terms of this amendment, is "equality of rights under the law." Such equality henceforth shall not be denied or compromised by any State on account of sex. The phrase has a beautiful bell-like ring. Who could oppose equality of rights under the law? Senator Sam Erwin could—and he
Senator Sam Ervin could—and he had the courageous assistance, at the
last ditch, of Senators Bennett, Buckley, Cotton, Fannin, Goldwater, Hansen and Stennis. Mississippi's James Eastland was paried against the resolution. Time will prove their apprehensions and reservations well found. They perceived that the ERA, as part of the supreme law of the land, would not permit equality by law upon a society that does not want sexual equality in fact.
Take one of the simpler legal complications. Under Social Security, women may retire at 62, men at 65. This distinction must now be obliterated. To date, only about 1% of male retirement age would create serious social and economic consequences, and would play have with the actuarial soundness of the Social Security system. But to raise the age would set off political explosions.
The Senate debate heard much talk of compulsory military service for women. Once the ERA becomes effective, every 18-year-old girl will have to register for the draft. These changes require a separate service under precisely the same terms and conditions now applied to men. This means combat duty; anything less
would be constitutionally impermissible. As Hawaii's Senator Fong uneasily speculated, the privacy laws recorded women, if any, "is uncertain."
Legal complications at the Federal level, by comparison with those involved in State legislation, are much less severe. Amendment overnight will abolish hundreds of protective statutes dealing with inheritance, marriage, child support, and industrial life. Some of these statutes might have been repealed through the normal legislative process. But the effect of the ERA will be to dump them all—rest periods, maternity leave, national limitations, the whole works.
It is futile to object. The rush for ratification is on—Hawaii, Iowa, New Hampshire, Nebraska, Delleware, Missouri, Arkansas, King Calante. The tide rolls in. But three or four years hence, when the impact of the ERA begins to be felt, a great many women will be finding that this equality is not so beautiful after all.
Copyright, 1972
The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Garry Wills
Mr. Fix-It or Mr. Flub-It
Peter Flanigan, who put together the key people in settling ITT's merger difficulties, is to this administration what what Eisenhower or Abe Forta to Eisenhower's or Abe Forta to Johnson's—the Mr. Fix-It.
He is the White House's He is the President millionaire for dealing with millionaires—and he is not particularly good at handling particularly serious problem comes up. I am called in to consult and advise on it, such as the Pentagon bankruptcy, the Treasury fraud, bankship and things of that nature.
The charge, now, is that Mr. Flanigan found a compliant White House Fellow (the Fidelity Award) in a promising promoring company heads and military comers) to give, in no time, the technical excuse to fix his own words, what kind of fix does Mr. Fix-it think proper? And what kind of brokering does the master deal—a dealer relationship" engage in.
While the facts of this particular case undergo current dispute, a more general hint of
Flanigan's code has just appeared, and from a surprising quarter. National Review has published a waspish exchange of letters between Mr. Flanigan and Buckley's editor, William Buckley.
Buckley, an administration man until recently, had given Flanigan a recommendation for the president to one source of Flanigan's power has been his job as chief recruiter of Nixon's staff. But Flanigan let him know that favors are not not observe the Flanigan Code.
'And what is that code? It is, crudely put. It we butter you, you buttered it, buttered it (and buttering), or else. How had Buckley broken the code?' By giving John Ashbrook buckley, and Buckley distinguishes from '(sponsorship)' in primary defiance of the President's resident buckley, after this opposing even this much defiance of the President his brother support in the Senate and that William Buckley went
with his Right-Wing constituency in order to control it, carefully saying the primary challenge is the matter of November desertion.
But that is not enough for Flanigan. As he has boasted in the book, his little band of brothers, at the top" and once admitted to the brothorship, you don't flink on it. Flanigan, as Mr. Klassen said, "One could hardly expect that recommendations from supporters of McCloskey President are likely to receive the same careful consideration given the recommendations from a support him in season and out."
There is the Code of Flanigan in all its blatant, telling us how Nixonites are **re recruited**, and stay in good favor:
1. Support must be total—“in season and out."
2. Thus, any defection at all is total deflection—support for McCloskey is indistinguishable from that for Ashbrook.
3. Appointment comes through
members of the brotherhood to men recognizing the overriding bonds of brotherhood.
4. All others, even the most
the same careful consideration.
(One would think all qualified
maximally careful consideration.
In other words, the prime consideration is not how good you are, but how bound you are—and that's what he bought. Mr. Buckley's crime seems to be, in Flanigan's eyes, that he would not stay bought.
brutal statement of the Code suggests that he did know the rules he was playing by—and that he failed to lose that constituency Buckley was trying to humor and deflect constructive (if critical) support.
Buckley's shocked reply to this
Mr. Flanigan may be learning that the quick-operating favor-trading Mr. Fix-It turns easily. The efficient efficiency, into a Mr. Flub-It. That is one of several things to be decided by the ITT investigation.
Copyright, 1972. Universal Press Syndicate
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper
NEWSSTAFF
News Adviser ... Del Brinkman
BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams
Business Manager
"FULL MANY A FLOWER IS BORN TO BLUSH UNSEEN, AND WASTE ITS SWEETNESS ON THE DESERT AIR"
Gray
A flower with a book in its hands.
Griff and the Unicorn
"FULL MANY A FLOWER IS BORN
TO BLUSH UNSEEN,
AND WASTE ITS SWEETNESS
ON THE DESERT AIR"
Gray
SIGH!
WHY
ME?!
By Sokoloff
SIGH
WHY ME?!
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 31. 1972
5
---
the Code show the and that helped buckley deflect critical)
Syndicate
earning favor- easily, of his Flub-It.ags to beigation.
Chlp Crews
Carol Young
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
off
100%
Dyche Museum of Natural History recently opened a live exhibit of fish and amphibians of Kansas.
MORNING
The display is located on the sixth floor of the museum and features 20 different kinds of fish from the nearby Lawrence, in Cherokee County in southeastern Kansas and in the neosho River. Rivers and salamanders from the area are also included in the exhibit.
Museum Exhibits Fish, Amphibians
Museum Features Live Fish Exhibit
... Displays life cycles for amphibians and fish ...
---
The amphibian display is appropriate for this time of the year because the animals are already emerging from winter activity, and are now in public education said Wednesday. He said salamanders were already entering the breeding ponds in St. Louis, and that frogs were choring throughout the Lawrence area.
d Sokoloff.
KU, City Omit Official Notice Of Arbor Day
Traditionally, trees are planted on Arbor Day, April 10, but no tree-planting ceremony will take place. The University of Kansas grounds, according to the city park department and KU campus, will host the event.
Harold Bilch, superintendent
of the Claremont Chap-
KU, said no official ceremony
day ceremony had ever been held at
the University in the 17 years he
worked there.
Although 276 flowering crab trees are to be planted this week around Malott, Blitch said the planting would be done by April
"We just do our routine jobs," he said. "We leave the office and special events up to the mayor and those who like special observances."
The city Park and Recreation Department said no city Arbor Day ceremony was planned.
The display is open to the public and will run through mid-May. Two special features are an aquarium showing aquatic invertebrates which provides food for fish, and an aquarium of the life cycle of an amphibian from egg to aquatic larva to adult.
Ashton planned and assembled the new exhibit, with help from Wt. Swearington, museum toumass assistant, Pliasi, museum assistant.
Student Nurse Wins Fulbright
A Fulbright Scholarship to study at Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand, has been awarded to Connie Miles of the senior nursing student at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The three men, along with Joseph Collins, herpetologist and museum preparator, and Don Huggins, aquatic biologist for the state biological survey, spent two weeks collecting animals to collect collecting animals for use in the exhibit. The next show will be of lizards of Kansas.
For
Three bicycle tours and four races including a 60-mile "Tour de Perry" are scheduled for April 21. Four additional jamboree. The Mount Great Bicycle Club and jamboree sponsors are planning the races
The "Tour de Perry," a round trip to Lake Perry beginning at 16 a.m. Sunday is the first tour. It allows you to make a sack lunch for the trip.
Jamboree Bicycle Races To Feature Lake Tour
Automobile Insurance
The second tour, the
"Lawrence Peregrination"
begins at 4 p.m. April 5 and will
cover a 10-kilometer course in
Lawrence.
The last tour of the week will be the "Lone Star Lake Gallivan" beginning at 1 p.m. April 8. It will stop in a trip of train Lone Star Lake
All of the tours will begin in front of Strong Hall at the designated times.
April 9 the campus will be closed to traffic for the bicycle cause. A ride by Jayhawk Boulevard in front of Bailey Hall, continuing on a 1.3 mile course down 14th Street to backing down to Jayhawk Boulevard.
The first race, for semi-
Voter Sign-up Starts Monday At 6 Locations
Once a person has registered in the city of his residence, he is eligible to vote in city, county state and national elections.
According to Douglas County Clerk D. E. Mathia, many KU students already have registered for a first week and more to register next week. To qualify as a Douglas County resident, a person must have lived in Kansas for a least six months and this precinct for at least 30 days.
Persons may register at the county or city clerks' offices Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and at the three Rush's food stores and East Market food store and Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Thursday and Friday from noon to 8 p.m.
Voter registration week begins Monday for Douglas County residents.
Gene Doane
Carruth Poetry Contest Offers $350 in Prizes
VI 3-3012
824 Mass. St.
More than $350 in prize money will be awarded in this year's William Herbert Carruth Memorial Poetry Contest.
The annual contest is sponsored by the University of Kansas department of English and graduate students at KU.
Entrants are asked to submit one to three manuscripts to the English department office later than 5:30. FriDAv April 14.
to prevent any bias by the judges.
Entries will be judged independently by a panel of three. On the panel will be an alumna of KU, a member of the student council, and a noted man of letters.
This year's first place winner will receive $200, second place will receive $100 and third place $0. Prizes will be awarded to the best poet rather than being awarded for the best individual poems.
The contest was begun in 1928 by friends of William Carruth, former professor of German and former vice chancellor of KU. The contest has remained stable and founding, with the only variation being the amount of prize money awarded to contest winners.
experienced racers, will start at 12.30 p.m. The race is for cyclists who have raced before and will be an eight-1an race.
The second race starts at 1:30 p.m. and is for beginners. It will be a four-lap circuit.
The third race will start at 2:30 p.m. and will be an eight-lap team relay race.
The final race will be a 25-lap sanctioned criterium race for members of the Amateur Bicycle League of America Bicycle champions from all over the country. The race will take place at Dale Denio, Enon, Ohio, sophomore and publicity chairman of the Bicycle Club
Racial awareness could be identified with self awareness, Mike Sears, director of the RACial Awareness Program, Thursday at the Faculty Forum.
Speaker Links Race Problem, Self Awareness
Speaking on "Discovering Whiteness," she said that white people had a need to maintain a distance from racial problems and that they were just beginning to witherize with people of other races.
He said whites should ask themselves what they really believe in concerning race.
"Racism is a problem of the white majority and not the blacks." Sears said.
Many liberals could easily be rednecks, according to Sears.
"Racism is not a rational thing," he said. "It is emotional."
said Thursday.
He said that "white guilt" was much talked about but little understood.
"Most people confuse guilt with fear," he said. "It surprises me how a small group of blacks can take over a dormitory."
Denio said 15 to 25 volunteers were needed to count laps and the races. Interested team should contact him at 844-1030
Campus Bulletin
Dog Scrounges Mystery Cache Of Marijuana
IVCP Office: 7 a.m., Room 299, Kansas Union.
RACTE: 9 a.m. Bld. Room
Education Administrative Staff: 9 a.m.
(504) 216-7800
ARKANKS CITY, Kan.
(AP)—Police are keeping a closer eye on a dog owned by an Arkansas City school teacher.
Education Administrative Staff: 9 a.m.
Regionalist Room:
Latin American Seminar: 9 a.m. Room
201 and 202.
Latin American Seminar: 9 a.m., Room 305 and Pine Room.
English 2 Staff Meeting: 10:30 a.m.
English 2 Staff Meeting 10:30 a.m.
Council Room
NCU NW Festival 10:30 a.m. Woodruff.
RACTE: 10:45 a.m. Fortorm Room.
Luno-Brazilian: 11:30 a.m. Alcove B in the
Cafeteria.
Council Room.
SAA Film Festival: 10:30 a.m., Woodruff.
KACTE: 10:45 a.m., Forum Room.
Shakespeare Luncheon: 11:30 a.m.
English Room.
KACTE: 12 noon, Kansas Room.
Physio-Ecologista: 12 noon, Alicve C in the
Luno-Brazilian: 11:30 a.m., Alcove B in th
Cafeteria.
Shakespeare luncheon: 11:30 a.m.
Cafeteria
MPA Students: 12 noon. Alcove D in the Court
*Students: 12 noon, Alcove D in the Cafeteria*
*Bahal Table: 12 noon, Meadowlark*
Cafeteria.
Russian Table: 12.30 p.m., Meadowcliff
Cafeteria
The dog, in the habit of dragging home odd items from its wanderings, recently returned carrying a brown paper sac. The owner found a small plastic bag in her pocket with marijuana inside the sac.
Muslim Students: 12:45 p.m., Room 299.
Master Planning Committee: 1 p.m.
Governors Room.
Varsity Baseball: 1:30 p.m., Quirkley.
Baseball: 1:30 p.m. Quigley Field.
Latin American Studies: 2 p.m.
Lafay American Studies: 2 p.m.
Regional Room.
Berkshire: 3 p.m. International
legalist Room.
EPPC of College: 3 p.m., International
Room.
ROOM
K.U. Folk Dance Club - Instruction: 7
p.m. Room 172 Robinson.
BARRER, Barbara, Films: 3, 2 and 10
China Slides—East Asian Studies: 3:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room. India Club Rehearsal: 7 p.m., Forum
Sigma Delha Ch. 7 (p.m.), Big B Room.
VCF) 7 p.m., International Room.
"Rosecrantz and Galdenstein Are
Dead"; 8 p.m., University Theatre.
Southern Paints. 7 and 9.30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom.
Sigma Delta Chi. 7 p.m., Big 8 Room.
Dead! 8 p.m., University Theatre.
Faculty Recital—Robert Ward, piano; 8
p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall.
Lloyd Pappan, a detective, said he marjujana was "one of the few people who were unable to question the finder the affair was marked" "K
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.
SUNDAY, APRIL 2
SUA Bridge: 1:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room.
SUA Chest: 2 p.m., Room 305, Kansas
MAY, APRIL
Varsity Baseball
Quigley Fince
"Hammer," 8 p.m. I.S.M. Theater.
A
Union, Inc., Revenues and Golddatenet. Are
Dearest, 2.30 p.m. University Theatre
But Wednesday, the case was reopened when the dog arrived home with another bag, identical first and filled with marijuana
Clogs!
International Film: 7:30 p.m., Union Ballroom.
Hamlet (Abbeysville Theatre
SUNDAY)
SUBA Bridge 1:30 p.m. Jawhawk Roa
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Billboard
DECEMBER 19, 1972
BREWER & SHIPLET
BROTHERS, BELLOW FOREST, N.J.
1934. ROBERT J.
RADIO TELEGRAPHY OF THE WESTERN NORTHWEST FROM OCEAN TO WEST COAST.
1935. RICHARD L.
A VOLUME OF MUSIC FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST BY A COLLECTOR.
1936. RAYMOND D.
AN ESSENTIAL COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1937. RANDY C.
A MONOCHROMATIC TRANSFER TO NEW YORK.
1938. RALPH H.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1939. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1940. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1941. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1942. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1943. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1944. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1945. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1946. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1947. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1948. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1949. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1950. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1951. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1952. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1953. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1954. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1955. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1956. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1957. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1958. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1959. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1960. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1961. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1962. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1963. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1964. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1965. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1966. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1967. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1968. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1969. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1970. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1971. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1972. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1973. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1974. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1975. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1976. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1977. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1978. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1979. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1980. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1981. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1982. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1983. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1984. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1985. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1986. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1987. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1988. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1989. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1990. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1991. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1992. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1993. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1994. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1995. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1996. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1997. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1998. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
1999. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2000. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2001. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2002. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2003. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2004. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2005. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2006. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2007. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2008. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2009. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2010. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2011. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2012. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2013. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2014. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2015. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2016. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2017. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2018. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2019. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2020. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2021. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2022. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2023. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2024. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2025. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2026. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2027. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2028. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2029. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2030. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2031. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2032. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2033. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2034. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2035. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2036. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2037. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2038. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2039. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2040. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2041. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2042. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2043. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2044. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2045. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2046. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2047. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2048. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2049. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2050. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2051. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2052. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2053. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2054. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2055. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2056. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2057. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2058. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2059. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2060. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2061. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2062. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2063. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2064. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2065. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2066. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2067. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2068. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2069. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2070. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2071. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2072. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2073. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2074. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2075. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2076. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2077. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2078. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2079. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2080. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2081. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2082. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2083. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2084. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2085. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2086. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2087. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2088. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2089. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2090. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2091. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2092. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2093. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2094. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2095. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2096. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2097. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2098. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2099. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2000. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2001. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2002. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2003. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2004. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2005. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2006. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2007. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2008. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2009. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2010. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2011. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2012. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2013. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2014. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2015. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2016. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2017. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2018. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2019. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2020. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2021. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2022. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2023. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2024. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2025. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2026. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2027. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2028. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2029. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2030. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2031. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2032. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2033. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2034. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2035. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2036. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2037. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2038. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2039. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2040. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2041. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2042. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2043. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2044. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2045. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2046. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2047. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2048. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2049. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2050. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2051. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2052. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2053. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2054. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2055. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2056. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2057. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2058. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2059. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2060. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2061. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2062. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2063. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2064. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2065. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2066. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2067. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2068. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2069. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2070. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2071. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2072. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2073. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2074. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2075. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2076. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2077. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2078. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2079. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2080. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2081. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2082. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2083. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2084. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2085. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2086. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2087. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2088. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2089. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2090. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2091. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2092. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2093. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2094. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2095. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2096. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2097. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2098. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2099. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2000. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2001. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2002. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2003. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2004. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2005. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2006. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2007. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2008. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2009. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2010. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2011. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2012. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2013. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2014. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2015. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2016. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2017. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2018. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2019. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2020. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2021. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2022. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2023. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2024. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2025. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2026. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2027. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2028. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2032. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2033. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2034. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2035. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2036. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2037. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2038. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2039. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2040. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2041. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2042. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2043. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2044. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2045. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2046. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2047. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2048. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2049. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2050. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2051. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2052. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2053. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2054. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2055. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2056. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2057. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2058. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2059. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2060. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2061. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2062. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2063. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2064. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2065. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2066. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2067. RALPH S.
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2068. RALPH S.
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2070. RALPH S.
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A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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2078. RALPH S.
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2083. RALPH S.
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2085. RALPH S.
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2086. RALPH S.
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2087. RALPH S.
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2088. RALPH S.
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2089. RALPH S.
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2090. RALPH S.
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2091. RALPH S.
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2094. RALPH S.
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2095. RALPH S.
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2096. RALPH S.
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2097. RALPH S.
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2098. RALPH S.
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2099. RALPH S.
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2010. RALPH S.
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2011. RALPH S.
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2012. RALPH S.
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2013. RALPH S.
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2014. RALPH S.
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2015. RALPH S.
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2016. RALPH S.
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2017. RALPH S.
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2018. RALPH S.
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2019. RALPH S.
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2020. RALPH S.
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2021. RALPH S.
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2022. RALPH S.
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2023. RALPH S.
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2024. RALPH S.
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2026. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2027. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2028. RALPH S.
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2029. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2030. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2032. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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2041. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
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A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2043. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2044. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2045. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2046. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2047. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2048. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2049. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2050. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE SOUTH AND NORTHWEST.
2051. RALPH S.
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2052. RALPH S.
A COLLECTION OF PICTURES FROM THE
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FEB. 14, 1972
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University Daily Kansan
Fridav. March 31, 1972
7
Old Man Winter Keeps on Comin'
By GINNIE MICKE
Sansan Staff Writer
Even though it is called spring semester, it usually includes enough snow, sleet and cold wind to discourage even the student with good intentions from going outside. During spring semester MTS2 is no exception.
Doming wool hats, scarves,
mittens, flannel shirts and long
underwear consumes time when
the warm weather already slept
through the alarm.
Transportation also presents a problem. If a car gets started, the driver is likely to find himself in an intersection or, stranded on campus.
Bus service is available for less-daring souls, but whether a student gets to ride depends on the bus driver's place in line at the bus stop.
Dougle Ogle, Lawrence Bus Co-
manager, said recently that on a
weekend the bus company reached
38 degrees, bus fares amounted to about $2,500. On Monday, it said staff would to complicate the 8- degree high, the bus fares total almost
Going back and forth between classes is perhaps the most painful experience.
One student complained that, "You spend the 10 minutes they were talking to you up. You get there 10 minutes late, and then spend another 10 minutes."
Another student said that trying to light a cigarette with mittens on is her "biggest hassle."
Sliding on the ice with sketch pads, T-square, tackle box and assorted notebooks presented problems for one art student.
Frozen cheeks, numb hands and the sniffles were other common complaints.
While Lawrence citizens suffered temperatures below 10 degrees this winter Miami registered 80 degrees, San Francisco posted a warm weather, and even New York City averaged above freezing.
Several students found themselves thinking about "spring fever," "California." or "swimming pools" and sunsults.
When asked about his reaction to the recent drastic temperatures, one student said, "Well, that's Kansas for you."
A. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
100
M. RICHARD MAYER
Kansan Staff Photos
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ATTENTION
THEY ARE
HERE
1970
---
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Friday, March 31, 1972
University Daily Kansan
---
Science Fiction Goes to College
By JOE ZANATTA
Science fiction has become part of the college course, James Gunn, KU lecturer in English, said Monday.
"A few years ago you could count the number of science fiction courses in the country on one hand," Gunn said. "Now at least 150 courses have been reported in a recent sur-
Gunn not only teaches a course on science fiction but is also a successful science fiction writer. He was also a contributing Fiction Writers of America. He is in the process of finishing a film series on science fiction writers
"IT IS the literature of alternatives," he said, "for those dissatisfied with the answers implies there is another way."
"It doesn't really matter if the answers science fiction provides are the right answers. Its purpose is to dramatize the problems.
James Gunn
"Nobody is going to come up with the final answers, but an awful thing that happens is that the conscious of a different kind of world, that's what a scientist calls the *unconscious*.
were presented as radio dramas and his story "The Cave of Night" was presented on television as a short film or Ortiz on the Dessin Playhouse.
KU Pep Club Discloses Sharp Membership Fall
The KU Pep Club has suffered a bursage in this ownership this year, Gall Gordon, Prairie Village senior and president of the club, said.
During the last three years the membership has ranged from 200 to 265 girls, not including the 50 to 75 girls who usually dropped out between the football and basketball teams. This year, from an approximate membership of 100, the club dwindled to 70 girls.
Gordon said she was uncertain about the cause of the decline in the club's membership.
Debra Harvey, a Lawrence junior who has belonged to the pep club for three years, suggested that girls felt that as club members they were no different from other spectators.
Gunn has been writing science fiction since 1948. He had had 10 novels and over 50 stories published. Four of his stories
"If we can give the girls something different such as
The Pep Club has undergone organizational changes within the last two years, Gordon said.
different routines or chants, then would be a possible increase in Pep Club interest," Harvey said.
In the past, the club consisted of two groups, the freshman girls known as Frost Hawks and the upper-classmen known as Jay. Both groups seemed to know what the other group was doing. Gordon said.
The Jay James were disbanded in 1869-70, but four members decided to continue the division in the Pep Club. Now, although the Forsh Hawks and upper-class girls elect their office, they function as a unified group.
Besides cheering at athlete events the club helped with the Big Blue campaign last guided supportive athletic recruits around campus and reupholstered the Lashback mosaic.
Senators-Elect to Study Duties, Rules at Retreat
Bailey said the workshop would consist of informal group exercises designed to facilitate interaction and present factual information.
He said the workshop would also offer an opportunity for the new senators to get to know each other informally.
Saturday afternoon there will be presentations by Chancellor E Laurence Chalmer Jr.; Dr. Michael Hodgson for student affairs; and Professor Heiler, vice chancellor for academic affairs, he said.
financed by Student Senate filing fees.
HIS BOOK "The Immortals"
was the basis for the television movie and weekly series "The Immortal."
According to legislation passed this year, the Student Senate workshop will be an annual activity for newly-elected senators.
Gunn's latest book, "The Burning," is about a rebellion against the government by its mutualists by the community. It is set in Lawrence, Kansas City and Leavenworth, burning of the University of Kansas.
The idea for the book, Gunn said, came from the Joe McCarthy era.
"It was an anti-intellectual era," said Gunn, "when faculty members were accused of being sexist." The students supported. "Anti-intellectualism in the American public was reappearing in a dangerous form."
"I SPECULATED why man is
scientist. Scientists can do
and understand things other men
will not be able to no matter how
he thinks."
About 50 newly-elected student senators are expected to attend a workshop this weekend at AllendaleCamp, near Jingo, R.I. Bailey, Ackleshon students and tutors of the workshop, said Thursday.
"the laymen have a good reason to be suspicious. Warfare and the atomic bomb put the enemy out of the reach of the layman."
In "The Burning" the laymen or "lowbrows" rebel and kill the scientists in an attempt to regain control of their destinies.
Most of Gunn's stories are set in this area, especially in Lawrence and Kansas City. The book was that it was easier to write about something you knew about. GUNN'S BACKGROUND is one of general science. He has a B.S. degree in journalism and an M.A. in psychology.
Five students in civil
engineering are elected to
the student chapter of
the American Society of Civil
Engineers for the spring
Bailey said the workshop was
Chapter Elects Five Officers
"When I need to know something, I need research. I know how to find it and that's a good fiction writer needs to know."
They are Dan Higgins,
Jason M. McFarlane,
Mark Lesh, vice-president,
Topkea sophomore; Bill Thomas,
recordess secretary, Eudora
secretral, and corresponding secretary,
Rick freshman, and Rick Henderson,
treasurer. Prairie Village junior
graduate program will include the
organization will include the
design and building of an exhibit
and engineering Exposition in April.
"My stories are not very technical," he said. "Techniques are not what I'm interested in. What I am interested in questions are what I deal with.
Bailey said that the purpose of the workshop was to make information available to the new legislators and to regulate the regulations of the Senate, parliamentary procedure and the nature of their office.
Gunn's idea for an earlier novel, "The Joy Makers" came from his research on "feeling" in an encyclopedia, he said. The type
happiness, "want what you get," that brought about the book that is built around a world with a workable concept of happiness.
"EVERYTHING IS a source of ideas," Gunn said, "if you are looking for them. A science fiction writer is under the obligation to come up with new ideas or, at least, a twist on an old
"The Listeners" a novel scheduled for release next February. It was stimulated by Sullivan's "We Are Not Alone."
The book is about scientists who listen for communications from the environment that could take over 100 years for a response, and indicate, and obtain funds for in a democratic society because of the length of time they can listen.
"What I was mainly interested
All University of Kansas students participating in the spring 2012 commencement ceremony on April 6, and gowns from Monday, April 3 to Friday, April 21 at the Office of the Kansas Union.
Cap and Gown Rental to Start
Cost of the regalia must be paid at the time of ordering.
A late ordering penalty fee of $0 will be assessed to those who order April 21 and until May 1. After May 1, a $5.00 penalty fee will be charged.
Students who ordered graduation announcements, college classes and cards from Joosten's may pick their orders up Wednesday and Thursday in the Kansas Union Building with presentation of their receipt.
in doing," he said, "was using the theme of communication in people' lives, both interpersonal and interhuman communication.
A Josten representative will
be available to bookstore and
Bookstore to sell extra an-
nouncements and momento
booklets to students who failed to
complete their requirements.
TWO OTHER books by Gunn and this is a scheduled reading. This is a collection of his stories that have previously appeared in
"The History of Science Fiction" by Gunn is a textbook for science fiction classes. It follows the growth of science fiction from its early writing of Homer, Vergil and Plato, through H. G. Wells and Jules Verne, and up to the now popular "new wave" science fiction class. Gunn has been one of the most avid fans for his science fiction class.
Gunn said he did most of his writing during the summer, which he always reserved for this purpose. A little written can also help with other tasks, he said. He was given a sabbatical leave by the University last fall and used the time to finish "The Listeners"
GUNN IS also completing work on a series of films he has produced for KU's Extramural Independence movement or called "The Adventures of Joseph."
In the series he interviews celebrities of the science fiction world. Completed parts of the series include people such as author Isaac Asimov; John W. Campbell II, Jr., editor of The Nature Stars magazine and Forest Ackerman, science fiction historian.
Gunn said there was much student interest in science fiction. "I don't want to read literature," said Gunn, "that no serious scholarship paid any attention to. But now literary fiction is the new science fiction, and science fiction writers are breaking into the new maturity in science fiction."
"It is a way of getting to reality or that mainstream fiction cannot, 'Gunn said, 'by asking questions like 'Where are we going? Where are we going? Do anything about it?' or 'Can we create a better world?'"
KU to Present Film Festival
The 1972 Ann Arbor Film Festival will be presented today and Saturday in Woodruff Auditorium.
The art department of the university of Michigan selects the films which will be included and sponsors the festival each year.
38 underground experimental films lasting an average of 15 minutes each.
This year's festival consists of
The festival has been brought to the city of Kansas by the department of design, a museum, sculpture and the department of design. There is no admission.
henrys
HEAD FOR HENRY'S (FOR FAST COURTEOUS SERVICE)
843-2139
4 BIG DAY SPECIAL MINI CHICKEN DINNER
or
49¢
- MINI FISH & CHIPS DINNER
6th & Missouri
Your Choice Only
Offer Good: Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun. March 30 - April 2
SPECIAL
OPENING
BLUE JEAN BELLS $3.00
BOOBAH
THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
JIM'S STEAK HOUSE "Dine Out At Eating Out Prices"
COOKING HOUSE
Take your date or family to Jim's for Easter weekend.
Open 4-11 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
12-8 p.m. Sunday
Closed Tuesdays
1011 F. 23 Call 842 975
1101 E.23 Call 843-9753
THE BALLAD OF CABLE HOOGE
TECHNICOLOR *
From WARNER BROS R
A man and a woman bathing in a barrel.
MARCH 31 & APRIL 1
7:00 & 9:30 p.m.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
60 $ ^{\circ} $
Red
Baron
presents
JOINT
SESSION
FRIDAY
and
SATURDAY
NIGHTS
813 Mass. St.
V1 3-2091
1234567890
shoes
H
ALL LEAGUER
• Multi-Clear All Sports shoe
• Baseball
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• One piece non-marking outside
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$695
MEN'S SIZES 6½ to 12
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A NEW CONCEPT IN DECORATING
NOW AT THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE!
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Special Group Decoration.
ALL GREEK DESIGNS AVAILABLE
T-Shirts, Jerseys, Jackets, Tank Tops.
All Colors and all Sizes.
(All shirts include one Free Design.)
kansas union BOOKSTORE
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.
You shell out $130, and get a Student-Ralipass.
All you need is the bread and something to show you're a bengali girl.
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 months. So with low air fares and Student-Railpass you've got Europe made.
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. You can obtain the coupon for the coupon for a free folder, complete with railroad map.
STUDENT-RAILPASS The way to see Fu
Eurailpass is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.
Eurailpass, Box 90, Lindenhurst, New York 11757.
Eurailpass. Box 10, LINCOLN, NY 10014
Please send me your free Eurailpass folder with railroad map. □ Or your Student-Railpass folder order form. □
City.
Street
192A
State
7in
State Zip
---
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 31, 1972
9
KU Prof Promotes Fair Use of Gyms
By an aggressive campaign business and economies, has secured a position on the Athletic Board. He was elected by a mail vote.
Sierling said that his major concern during the campaign had been the lack of competition between varsity and nonvarsity athletes in all sports. He said he had received complaints from his team, including that Robinson Gynasium was unavailable to the average student because of varsity swim teams.
Even before the official pre-season basketball practice sessions began, Sterling said, the varsity team used the Robinson courts for unofficial workouts, and the varsity was available to non- varsity students.
Sterling said the same situation existed with the tumbling of a shot on a defended fact, he said, six courts courts were torn up and replaced by two courts.
A bequest of $43,000 from the estate of Dr. Elwood A. Sharp, Grosse Pointe, Mich., has been received by the Kansas University Endowment Association. Sharp died Jan. 2.
KU Receives $43,000 Fund
Income from the fund,
established in memory of his
parents, will be used beginning
scholarships to medical students.
A native of Council Grove,
Sharp received his Bachelor of
Arts degree from KU in 1913. He
wrote a memoir at the University
from the university in 1915.
After serving 13 years in the medical corps of the U.S. Navy, Sharp began working for Parke, which is an internationally recognized for his discovery of Ventriculine, which treats pain from pernicious anemia
Sharp also directed the first attempts to use the antibiotic chromocytin on man, which later became a cure for tvibus.
Among the awards Sharp received in Distinguished Service Citation from KU in 1952, and an honorary D.S. degree from the University of Chicago.
He was one of the few Americans to become an affiliate of Britain's Royal Society of Medicine.
The initial Elswol and Mamie S. Sharp Scholarships in Medicine will be awarded for the 1972-73 academic year.
Faculty Elect 12 Colleagues To Councils
more than 2000 tennis players on
campus, he said, and as far as he
knew, only two hammer-throw
players.
Twelve faculty members have been elected to 3-year terms on the University and Faculty Councils. All Faculty Council members are on the University Council. Thirty-nine instructors are on the Councils and approximately one-third are elected each year.
The new members are William Albrecht, dean of the graduate school, Darwin Daicoff, professor of biology, medical center representative, William L. Kelly, registrar, Jacob Kleinberg, professor of chemistry Jerry Lewis, dean of the department, Liberal Arts and Sciences, Gerald McSheffery, professor of architecture, Joseph Pichler, associate professor of business, Daniel Shorter, professor of social welfare, Barbara Bhabar, medical center representative, Evelyn Swartz, associate professor of education, Michael Warriner, professor of sociology
He has written letters and calls to leaders who are in effort to determine who actually has the power to make allocation decisions so heavily in favor of his side.
The new council will meet Tuesday for the first time. The university will introduce student representatives in addition to the Faculty Council. The students will be chosen Wednesday to the Student Senate meeting.
"I've talked to Chancellor Chaimers, Wade Stinson and Charlie Oldfather, and it seems that no one, not even the Athletic Board, has made these decisions, and they have been made." Sterling said.
Red Baron
"If no one makes these decisions now, we should make someone responsible and amenable for the decisions," he cait
Sterling said he was not certain whether he would have the power to rectify the situation as a member of the Athletic Board. He had he'dn't "heard of having the Athletic Board has done."
Sterling said another of his concerns was the possible use of his new games. He emphasized that he had no definitive information about such activity, only rumors of students. He said he would investigate the matter and look into its use and its effects on players.
African Club OK's Charter Projects Aims
The African Student Association met last night and ratified their constitution, officially forming, their organization. The organization was formerly known as the African Club.
The aims and objectives of the association, as stated in their 1997 vision, are to culture of African life to American students and other foreign students on the KU campus, to use music, and cultural presentations.
Other functions of the association, will be to present a better understanding of the challenges nations, help new students from Africa adapt to life at KU, and publish a bulletin to keep the African students at KU informed about what they are doing on
The officers of the association are Kefale Teegone, president, from Ethiopia, Guinea Amag, from Mali, Burundi, Darlan, chairman of social affairs, Central Republic, Adelaide, Adelaide, treasurer, from Nigeria.
Membership of the organization is not limited to just two students, but all students on the KU campus. Faculty members can be awarded honorary status, and the student may hold their own membership in their own right.
FOREIGN STUDENTS and Foreign Wives LEARNING POTENTIALS
Offers
A learning skills course designed for you
How to listen for meaning
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
How to read for details
How to take notes from readings
How to remember what you read.
How to enlarge vocabulary
How to study for examinations
Meets 1½ hours twice a week for 5 weeks Call today for details
How to spell correctly
THE FIRST LESSON IS FREE. If you decide to continue, the remaining 9 lessons cost only $35.
Small, informal groups; lots of individual attention.
LEARNING POTENTIALS
925 Iowa
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute
Hillcrest Shopping Center
RANEY Drug Stores Honor BLUE CROSS - BLUE SHIELD On all prescriptions. rescriptions Quickly and Expertly Filled
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PLAZA CENTER
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Plaza 1800 Mass. V13-0684
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836 Kansas Topeka
Springtime is Ringtime
A Person Is Known by the Company He Keeps
DRIVE A DATSUN!
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN!
500 E. 23rd
842-0444
Carol Lee
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
Sandwiches
5 a.m. 12 p.m. Satur. Sat.
5-5 Sun.
5-9 Mon.
5-9 Mon.
1720 St.,
842-3644
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
One day
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaanan are offered free of charge. Crested, or national ornament
FOR SALE
rightest price paid for used cars. G.I.
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 "come at a disadvantage"
SCUBA EQUIPMENT-Fina, Mask,
Snorkel, $2.95 Tank, Regulator,
Ski Boot, Super Sport, $9.95
Hawk Kite and Vest, $9.95
Spear $2.95 See us for your diving
needs; largest snorkel, best buys, all
repairs. Repair Inst. Inc 800 Hammery
Rd. 816-763-5283 City, Mo. 810-763-410
4-10
Saeph Equipment - Pione Mask Sweeper
La Trona Gear Guarantees $1,000. Wet Soil Sweepers
Lefetime Guarantee $4,950. Wet Soil Sweepers
Vaccine $3,750. Swim Spa $7,750.
& Vaccine $8,750. Swim Spa $7,750.
For all your diving needs, nautical
Dive Equipment & Repair Service, DC
Dive Equipment & Repair Service, DC
64134 | 1-816-752-4135 | 4-13
you're at a disadvantage
other way it comes to the same
new Analysis of Western
Tiltatellah Campus Madhouse,
Vast 14th.
1964 WK -NEW PAINT WITH RE-
LUENT EXCELLENCE-EXCELENT
GORE GOS TO HIGHEST
JOWA-B 10A-W CALL 82-
8112
NORTHISLE COUNTRY SHOP, 707
Bridges Avenue, used furniture,
bridges antique, used furniture,
collections items, aid wood cooking and
cooking utensils, stove pots, fireplace wood,
stoves, bicycles, firewood, fireplace wood,
of other useful items, open 9 to 5
seven days. Herb Albernande, 842-
368 Broadway.
Penney's has bikes for all. Women's 3-speed touring bike $79.98. Women's 3-speed touring bike $69.98. And women’s 3-speed touring bike $89.98.
Penney's 800 Mascot $30.98. 3-31
ITEBEO DISCOUNT. Now you can get the ITEBEO plus 10 at RAY AUDIO-Only this Mirror Discount House in New York City. Tea, Coffee & Consulting services.
1953 Mercury Monterey 4-D, AT-
76,000 miles. Needs repairs, water
pump and heater. Selling cheap. Call
842-658-618 6 P.M.
Double bed, mattress, box springs,
bedroom; $30. 843-2860 afternoons
and evenings. 3-31
4 inch chrome Sonar "pancake" snare drum, including stand; 29" Zildjai afteroom.
71 Yamaha 90 Enduro, perfect condition. $350. 842-9671. 4-3
1985 Dodge pick-up with taper; 189 V, 8-3 speed, low mileage, good condition. A bargain at $500 Call 864-6262 3-31
250 Souki Savage Trail Bike. Less than 2,000 actual miles. Call 842-9350 evenings. Excellent condition. 4-4
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
25 words of fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
VW Bus. '62. Runs good—must sell
842-9738 3-31
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
VOLKSWAGEN. 1967 Bug new brakes, stereo, $825. Cheap, Tim, 842-7125.
Chevy II Nova 70 for sale. SS 396-
Coupe 180- Buckets seat. Power-disc
brakes . 350 HP. Call Aranzag, 843-
5487, 2-5 M on MW
MONOCULAR MICROSCOPE, 4 objectives, 2 eyelids, mechanical stage, 12 lenses. Contact C. Place, Box 210 B1, 912-365-8700 City, Kansas, Kansas 65119 912-365-8700
MOTORIGA A 8-track stereo tape system, wood enclosed 8 inch speakers, wood mounted 4 inch lock mounts allow music enjoyment in car home. Fred Puckett, 843-815-815
Dell M-800 Photo Enlarger (new)
Mini-Dell M-1200 Photo Enlarger (new)
Viewer (manual) with sales $15
Viewer (manual) with sales $19
wanted gift, with sharpener $20
gift, with sharpener $20
scales, aluminum Acmuth, $13
scales, aluminum Acmuth, $13
If you have, or have a typewriter skip this贴巾, if not, call us. Manuals. IBM Standards and Securities. For students. Phone 848-644-44 and save.
THE LATTEST IN STREEO--Must sell
their phone. The Latest in
stereo tape player. Play communication
al-¢8 tachs also. Use only a tach.
If you want to play an alarm,
al-¢8 tach, all under warranty, 24 wats.
or less. Must be in the U.S. or
Canada.
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Webster's Mobile Homes
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
Your Complete Service
Ample Park Spaces Available
3409 W. 6th 842-7700
Dealer
71 Datum 1200 Compaq, 10,000 miles
very clean, factory air, runs beautifully,
must sell. Call Gregg, 842-
3698.
1950 Chev. Panel Van. sedan model.
really good body, ok bed. best offer over $75. Clear title. Call Linda at 843-203-3131
3-33
Complete set of men's golf clubs, bib included. Four woods, all irons. For information call 841-68608 at 6:00 on weekdays and ask for Rick.
Panasonic stereo with AM-FM tuner,
$75, 10 speed Chlorda like new, floor
model, large screen TV: 842-1640 3-31
1965 WV danger-bus. Includes full camping equipment and AM-FM radar. Engine recent overhauled, runs great. $1,000 for Cull Fax. 843-6766.
66 Buick HT, 4 hr, AT, PB, PS, PW
Air conditioned. New tires Less than
last price Excellent condition $1,395
Call 841-1029 or 842-2024 4-55
RED RIDER — Leather Shop — custom bells, wallets, miscellaneous custom work — Reasonably priced
work — Monday thru Friday 1-4 PM or dayly — 2-8 P.M.
Electric Warlitzer piano—15" speaker with 2 10" aux speakers $150, 843, 1782. 4-4
Excellent used cassette tape recorder with 110 plug Volt-ip attachment included, $25 at Ray Stone store. More new models reduced also.
1970 Suzuki TC-90 Two range gearbox for street and trail Great condition, 4,000 miles $250 including insurance and helmet 842 355-45 4
Brand new MagnaVac Component
Speakers all in the carbon. Requires
Air Suspension. Acoustically beamed
Air Suspension. Made in Japan.
100, 90, 80, 70, 60, 50, 40, 30, 20,
1
Fredanger Jaguar with hard case boots 100 watts RMS combo amp; 2-12" and 3-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12" and 2-12"
Thermocellar T microphone with stand. Call
Minolta SR-T 101 camera like new.
$200 Call Mark, 842-6751 4-5
'95 Les Paul, Gibson, Curly maple
umburst, Humbucking pickles. Exc
cellent dill Sell or trade for accu-
sion Room 8. 842-9483, 1143 -4
Room 8.
1971 Kawasaki 125cc Enouro, 1400
miles, like new. $477. Phone 843-550d
or see at 2302 Princeton Bldg. 4-5
Oldmobile - 1965 - Delta 88 - Con-
air Condition - Air Conditioned - On
80,000 actual miles to - $350 Tue
up to 40,000 additional miles to
Complaint 83-4436. Steve.
1962 Volvo P1800 Red with black interior. The most expensive economy car in the world. Best offer over $700. Call 842-2800. 4-6
Need to sell 4-mono-lid Symphonic System. Include all-aliased state music from a variety of player tape players, and include a separate BSR full-size turntable. BSR 842-900-6180
**Tuxedo:** Leather & Sudde Jackets; Jeans jeans® - Overalls for kids ¥ 39.90 to tide down $49.90 in town? 209 new shirts $10 each; BIKONON, 819 Vermont, 11-6.4-6
BOOKS-Bargain basement book store
25,000 volumes at 25 each. Saturday's
10-5am. Book Store. Store 1221.
Grand. Kansas City. Mn. 3-31
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
Goya 12 string guitar - excellent condition $130. Also ARM 8 1k kit, headphones, speakers, tapes, all for $100 Dave Lee. 843-617-07
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
MUST SELL" 1969 BSA 626 Hornet clean and fast. test engine have 3,000 HP. 4x4. RWD. #2 or call 843-3533 inside P.O.M 4-7
Ladies' 10 speed bicycle, Schwinn super-sport, 9 mo old. Excellent Condition. Phone 864-1331. 4-6
Rose
Lawrence's first and only
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1553
Wkid A&C 5.20 Sunday 10.2
KAT Suzuki
OPEN NIGHTS
KEYBOARD STUDIOS
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
- Guitar
- Recorders
- Music
- Strings
634 Mass. 842-6966
- Accessories
REAL accessory store.
Rodgers 778X; 8-track Reel-Reel:
$300. 842-8610 4-6
Open
24 hrs.
per day
FOR RENT
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Right
now 1 two bed room and four four
one bedroom. Ten two bed rooms and four four
one bedroom. 141 4 one year old 1 bedroom apart-
ment. 135 4 one year old 2 bedroom apart-
ment. 130 4 all apartments clean and quiet with
competing, distractive, central
sitting areas. Bedrooms between 8:30 P.M. and 10:30
P.M. between 8:30 P.M. and 10:30 P.M.
Rockville Village Apartments, Limited
Rockville Village College, limited
students can have two bedroom
furnished apart. with all utilities paid
after payment. Call after 4:30
pm. 843-7731
Shaire nice big house with one-two others. Private room, 1x block from stadium. Cheap Also 3-speed bicycle for sale. 842-3584. 4-3
SUMMER RENTALS. All types and
prices, all near campus. Reserve
yours now. Merie Lynch. 1216 La
843-1601. 841-3321. 4-10
MUST SUBLEASE 2nd, bd. 2 bath.
UNFURNISHED Gabionite Kit Apt. Available
from the Mitsui Foods Corp.
peted, all-electric kitchen with dishwasher. Pool facilities this summer.
Price varies.
DUPLEX FOR BENT, 2714 Blade
City, $175 per mm., 2 bedroom,
refrigerator, dishwasher, dryer,
gas oven, washer/Dryer, microwave,
382-325. Available immediately 4-6
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWYER
LAWRENCE has the most attractive
tourism of Lawerence's most attractive
rates if you call Mrs Forrey 821-
564-2300 or Ms Grace Living in Roar Apartment 927 &
Missauya Apartments, 9th & 8th
Harvard can be economical and enlighten-
ing. At our surprisingly modest special
summer hotel, you'll experience this
summer a wonderful time to be in
SAHAIRA APTS - Must leave before semester ends, with lease from either lt or width of May 1 barm. Kielchen. Fax: 459-782-6300. Call B548 (fax or e-mail). ABDF (fax or e-mail).
Dried of trying to find that ideal apt or home for rent? We now have a variety of apartments in various locations and price ranges. McGrew Apartment 101 Kentucky 802-642-7393 McGrew Apartment 101 Kentucky 802-642-7393
APARTMENT FOR RENT One bed-
room, air conditioning Available
first at 1st at 19 West 14th Call 842-
9153 after 5
Avalon, 9th & Avalon; Harvard Square, Iowa and Harvee; Andro and Argos cost of living in one of these handsome apartments with spacious apartments and you will be surprised to learn that it costs no more than $40 A.C. heat and water infiltration paid.
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
MARK DUNLEVY, 82-2348, or 2107A Harvard
Lawrence, 842-2348, or 2107A Harvard
Lawrence, both built and loaded,
and currently working at the firm.
Room with cooking area in exchange for work for the summer term. 843-7862 4-4
TO SUILLET. Cute, cate. one-bed-
room apt., furnished, with A.C. on
large lint. Reasonable Call 841-2766
after 5. 4-4
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4.4444
For SUA Events
Tony's Service
Be Prepared!
Tune-ups
Kitchenware
Lawrenceburg 60144
BROOKLE, Kansas 60044
2434 Iowa VI 1-2008
THE CONCORD SHOP
- STRETCHER FRAMES
many in stock
—others on order
- ARTIST CANVAS REDUCED
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., pts. - qts. only
50% OFF
844 E. 13th St. 843-3877
Independent
COIN
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
COIN OP LAUNDRY
19th & LA.
843-9631
days per week
INX
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
PLANNING A TRIP??
Maupintour travel service
Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-117-
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
NICE, FURNISHED 3 BEDROOM
NICE, FURNISHED 2 BEDROOM
NICE, LIVING ROOM VIEW GREAT
TO CAMPUS, LAUNDRY. NEED TO
CAMPUS, LAUNDRY. NEED TO
845-4324 APPLE 5:00
NOTICE
COLLEGE HILL MANOR now show-
urned. In furnished and unfortun-
tured apartments, equipment
shares at 1230 Way to empor-
ship centers at 810 W. 17th St.
1 W. 19th W., Apt. 8B or call 841-596-
7000.
Barr Partired. Now available for the Apple Valley Farm in Lake Percy Apple Valley Farm in Lake Percy and cooks plenty of parking for your car. Call - 212-680-5794 or c
INFANT DAY-CARE Center. 824-7694.
Professional center for children
1 cm i - 12 cm. Miss or part-time.
McM. Specialized design.
5:33
BECAUSE meeting April 4 Also, please sign up for April Call 843- 962 for more information. 4-3
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American health & Life Insurance Co. John Wells, N25-5228 tf
LEARN SKYDIVING 1st jump course
provide pads for jumpers, place rails,
and girdled instruction frame each day.
provide instruction frame daily. Each
bump after first is $50 PDT and DAY
bumps after second is $75 PDT and DAY
New wide base F 10-7F first quality only $23 plus F 10-14F, F 10-18F, F 10-22F, F 10-26F, F 10-29F, G70-14-14S more. F90 more installation at Rocky Steakhouse. F-4-11
Magnavon, Custom Sturge System,
Hig. $159.90, row $100.00 at RAY
STONEBACK'S 4-5
Would you like to see some pretty
exotic people young lovers & a good
Republic of China? They would love
to hail Aus imports. 1029 Mass.
4-13
TYPING
We got buches into air clothes-
derm oil—so much air jacket-
sacks! We got jackets-jackets-jackets-Petition red bean hats IIIS
BOKONKO 80KONKO 80KONKO 84
Experienced in typing deserts, disaster-stricken gems, other types.typing systems and databases.typing type. Accurate and prompt presentational. Phone number 8435-6933. Mrs Wright. Phone number 8435-6933. Mrs Wright.
These, three paper types accurately and promptly. IBM Seymour, your owner of type styles. Also editing at home. Kindle, 842-595-4785 842-595-4805
Typing done on elite, electric typewriter. No Theses needed. Prompt attention. 843-0958 4-5
BLEVINS HONDA
Experienced typist will type thesis, manuscripts, themes, etc. Reasonable rates. Call 413-2107 4-4
Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service
1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks.
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
CSC TOYOTA ENLUMPH
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th T尔
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Experienced, typist will type, your term papers, paper or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work 841-2841. Man Ruxmkek
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt, reasonable rates. Please call 843-2695-4-55
Typing in my home, IBM Selectric,
Prompt accurate work. Experienced
Call 841-2556 5-9
WANTED
Instructor to teach Tai Chi. Phone 842-2040. 4-1
Kanba Key Press--Job printing from kaenba to posters, boards, booksheets and resume. 710 Mass, in back Zerol Open, in front of 5 days 842-463).
OVERSEAS JOBS, FOR STUDENTS,
TECHNICAL PROFESSIONALS:
All Professionals and occupations.
All Internships and overtime lightning free. Free information.
OVERSEAS JOB (507), San Diego CA
90155 6105
116 out of 133 can't too bad for a remedial teacher--too bad we can't all have links and brains! 3-31
BICASEA is a listening service 843-1052.
Sus. Trru Thurs. 8-12 P.M. Fri.
& Sat. 8 P.M.-6 A.M. 4-12
PERSONAL
WANTED. Someone with good arti-
talent and good lettering capabil-
ities. Phone 842-5248 after 1:00 P.M.
3:33
To Bobbing Legs & Curves, May All My Children, end up in "General Hospital." To Be Born With a World Turn Winds, I opt in Let's Make a Dish. Delire and relieve the monotone on my feet with a pair of new shoes.
To KGL. So you've finally reached 21! Happy Big Birthday. Stay in trouble but be good at it. Love you, old man Love and Lollipop Jam. Jam
LOST
One kitten, seven months old. White with one blue eye and one green eye. It has brown ears. New Haven, Roward-4-48 month old 5" Slimme, cat. Visually striking. Black background. Remainder light brown. Call 843-6120 or 844-6740, or bring him in.
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BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale—Sizes 8-10, up to 75" off. Fall and spring fabrics: Galerie Bridal 910 Kentucky
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LUDIOTRONICS
928 Mass
10
Friday, March 31, 1972
University Daily Kansan
THE CABIN AT THE LOCKHOLDER'S RESIDENCE
Kansas Staff Photo by BRIAN NORTON
Cottage Offers KU Guests Privacy
. Widow's bequest included former servants quarters
The small house was used by faculty members until 1952, when it was remodeled, landscaped, and guest residence of the University.
University Guest Cottage Houses History, Visitors
GUESTS WHO use the house included sitting lecturers, lectors and students according to a spokesman for KRS. Executive Secretary, Secretary of State, University of Michigan and D.S. Carr-Ross, from the University of Wisconsin, both speakers for Guest Series, were recent guests.
By BETSY MORGAN Kansan Staff Writer
CONCERTS
UNION GALLERY: An exhibit by students in the department of design. Opens today.
Hamlet Dramas to End
The cottage, built in 1925, was originally used as a garage and servant's quarters by Mrs. Tiffany. The University's benefactor who bequeathed her home as the chancellor's residence. Following her death in 1939, the university was rented to faculty members.
SEVEN EAST SEVENTH GALLERY: "Funk Art," an exhibit of paintings, prints and events today. The gallery's First Annual Watercolor Show opens Sunday. SPOONER ART MUSEUM: "Marsden Hartley: Lithographs and Related Works." Through
ART
The small stone house northeast of Cancellor Chalmer's home is often overlooked by passersby. Pew people realize houses a steady stream of visitors to the University of Kansas
SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: Faculty Recital by Robert Ward, assistant professor of piano, 8 p.m. tonight.
SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: Faculty Recital by the
University String Quartet. 8 p.m Monday.
FILMS
UNIVERSITY THEATRE:
Concert Choir concert. 8 p.m.
Wednesday.
WOODRUFF AUDIORIUM:
SUA POPULAR Film, "The Ballad of Cable Hogue" 7:30 and 9:15 p.m. tonight and Saturday.
Director Seamik Peckham's 1970 movie stars Jason Robards as a captain in the massive capitalist while the Old West gradually dives around him.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
International Films, "Simon of
Deer"
Ovidia, 7:30 p.m. Sunday
The first is Luis Bunuel's 1985
UNION BALLROOM: Film Society "Persona," 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Tuesday Ingmar Bergman's film is about a successful actress (Liv Ullman) who, overcome with the falseness in her life, retreats into absolute love and her nurse (Bibi Andersen) to take care of a young woman who turns the film into a virtual monologue.
story of a contemporary religious man who emulates Simeon the boy of the fifth-century saint who spent most of his life as a high pillar, praying and preaching to people below. The second in Bunnel's 1950 exercise book recounts the story of depraved and deprived adolescents in Mexico.
'Catonsville 9': Memorable
By BARBARASCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor
The United Ministries Center has been the site of some less-than-memorable plays in recent months. Remember the ecologically off-bear "Earth" play that we saw on Communist propaganda play "The Measures Taken." I barely do. But the Center's current offering, "The Trial of the Catsonville Nine," is not only memorable but also stimulating and reasonably well-handed.
On May 17, 1968, the "Jatonsville Nine" removed 37 inmates from a local draft board in Californië the Md., and set fire to them in a nearby parking lot. The trial of 16 inmates in October, 1968, when each defendant found guilty on three counts: destruction of U.S. property; possession of records and interference with the Selective Service Act of 1967
Among the defendants were Fathers Philip and Daniel Berrigan.
The version being presented in Lawrence is an adaptation of Berrigan's work. Although the law requires a literal, iterative, even witty, style, it manages to avoid his long-winded excitations. It offers Dan Berrigan as the narrator on the court against the defendant. With the help of Peggy Lang Baldwin's direction, the nine walk freely about the courthouse, avoiding the static of the witness and presenting presentation would involve, yet allowing both action and speeches to progress smoothly from defendant to defendant. The result is a move comfortably with direction.
THE COURTROOM they use is a stark, barren one containing only the essentials for proper training, and opposing lawsuits benches for the defendants and the jury, a high desk for the judge, thin wooden slats setting off the witness stand, and a typewriter keyboard. It allows flashback scene to the draft file burning. It provides a fairly empty stage although there is no stage, just an empty space in the courtroom where the characters and the issues to assume full importance.
Campus Briefs
Someone involved with the play had a very good idea: to use members of the audience, or members of the jury, or members of the jury. This serves as a smart trick to get viewers involved with the play during its crucial early moments as various people throughout the room are involved.
KUMC Broadcast
Lee G. Abod, professor of brain research and biochemistry at the University of Rochester, will speak Thursday, April 6, on "The University of Rochester: The Excitable Membrane" at the University of Kansas Medical Center where he will be televised at 4 a.m., April 10, to Room 203 Bailey Hall.
The Jayhawk Sports Car Club will sponsor an annual Easter Gymkhana this Sunday at the Malls Shopping Center. Registration will open at 11 a.m.; the first车 will start at noon. The event will be running all day. Interested people are invited to participate.
Sports Car Gymkhana
KU-Y Car Wash
The KU-Y will sponsor a car wash and bake sale from 1 to 6 p.m. Saturday in the Douglas County State Bank parking lot. The car wash will cost 75 cents and proceeds will go to the KU-Y.
The Lawrence chapter of the Vietnam Airmen Against the War will show a slide presentation, "The Air War," tonight in Dyche Center. The presentation will be presented at 8 and 9 p.m., and deals with the computerization and mechanization of the war in Indochina. Admission is free.
SDX Initiation
Vietnam Air War Slides
The KU chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism society, will hold initiation at 7 p.m. tonight in the Big Eight Room union. A party will follow the initiation and will be in the same room. Members who said new initiates should be in the Big Eight Room before 7 p.m.
BUT SOMEONE also had a loosy idea: to use a brief film of the original nine bungled the files from their first movie, baby blashed onto the wall during the play. This might have played, upon a bump, a mullet, multiple background the images are distorted and only serve to entertain.
The acting varies from superficially insincere on the part of a few cast members to strangely on the part of most. But Baldwin, Baldwin, campus minister, stands apart from the rest. His face shadowed by makeup to the extent that his eyes gift you if silt too close. Baldwin makes Berrian a semi-martyr. His are the eloquent speeches, and his ability to always with calm resstraint His speaking-from-the-pulpit style may not make for the best part of this particular play it is effective.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
SUA Science Fiction Film, "The Time Machine." 7:30 p.m.
Thursday. H.G. Wells novel has here been converted into a 1960 British film about an inventor (Rod Taylor) who manufactures explosives and is trapping him from century to century.
THE "CATONYSVILE NINE" never denied having burned the files. But to them, guilt under the issue. The issue. Their action was designed to point up the fact (and to them it was fact) that a number of countries can spend billions more on Vietnam than on poverty and disease at that, that can kill its inhabitants in an illegal war without question. This claim to be based on democratic principles while refusing its own people the right to be heard is of neither trust nor obedience.
The nine who sacrificed their freedom in 1968 had little effect on the war or anything else they thought American who considered actions or hears their words in Berrigan's play cannot help but be burdened by something of the same nature, a concern that made them act as they did. No matter what your opinion on the war or the fate of the Trial of the Catonsville Nine" is a play worth看。
GRANADA THEATRE: "Bedknobs and Broomsticks"
HILLCREST 1: "The Godfather."
HILLCREST 2; "200 Motels."
HILLCREST 3: "Claire's Knee."
VARSITY THEATRE: "The Cowbys."
THEATRE
UNITED MINISTRIES CENTER:
"Trial of the Catonsville Nine." 8:30 p.m. tonight
through Sunday.
Horst Rittle from the University of California at Berkeley, a visiting lecturer for the School of Architecture, and Thomas Larson, a guest of the department of political science, University, are also among those who have used the cottage this year.
Erich Segal, Jim Ryun Run In Lawrence
Erich Seigal, author of "Love Story," paid an unusual visit to Lawrence Thursday to "get together" with an old friend
Seal climbed out of bed early Thursday morning and donned his track shoes to run with record-miller Jim Ryun.
The cottage has been used more extensively this year, than in the past. Caretaker Steve Coffman, present resident, said, "We have been instructed to each department this year to inform them of the availability of the house for visitors. This year, however, in the month of February alone, the house was prepared 24 out of 29 days by guests.
Sealig and Ryun first met each other in 1967 when both were in New York City. They assigned to cover a story about Jim Ryun running in Hyde Park in London. The two became close friends that day and still remain
ABC Sports filmed the pair running through the Kansas countryside as Segal and Ryun held an impromptu conversation. The segment will be aired on the NBC Night Sights program at 7:40 p.m.
Segal said, "I have enormous admiration and affection for Jim Ryun. He's just a great guy."
Segal, a runner himself, said that ABC had asked him to do the segment since he had done some of the work. But he informal friendship with Rvun
"Being with Jim Ryun has inspired me to put on my track shoes again," said Segal.
S胶被辖 858 in a field of 300 on March 19 in the New York City Marathon. He will run again April 17 in the Boston Marathon.
The Kansas countryside pleased Sealig very much, but he was not well at morning to Yale University where he teaches Latin and
ORIGINALLY, TWO women
graduate studies in
veterinary care and
hostesses for the house. The
women lived in the basement of
the house.
Chancellor Chalmers instituted the idea of having a graduate couple care for the house, and presently Steve and Barb Coffman, graduate students in human life in the basement of the house.
The Coffmans were nominated for the position through the department of human relations. The couple then sent a letter of application and had a series of reviews before receiving the job.
The Coffman's responsibilities include preparing breakfast for guests, cleans the house after each guest leaves and acting as host and hostess to visitors. In exchange for their work, the Coffmans do not have to pay rent University pays their tuition.
THE COFFMANS have lived in the guest house since school began in the fall. Their initial contract is for 1½ years and can be renewed. Coffman said he and his wife have enjoyed their work together, and it was a great opportunity for them to meet interesting people.
The Coffmans have one large room in the basement and use the kitchen on the upper floor.
Chicago-Paris
Paris Chicago
stan kenton and his orchestra
The Creative
world
of Stan Kenton
RED DOG Lawrence, Ks.
Today's Most Exciting Sound in Mus
SUNDAY April 2
Adm. $2.50 per person
4 WAYS TO EUROPE
Adv. Tickets
RANEY DRUGS
O'DELL MUSIC
8:00 p.m.
Chicago-Paris Paris-Chicago
IN CONCERT
May 30, 1972 $299
Aug. 1, 1972
May 30, 1972 $299
Aug. 17, 1972
cottage is air-conditioned and the upper floor has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a small living room, in addition to the kitchen. For the furniture for the house, it was purchased by Spooner Art Museum and was brought to the house after its remodeling in 1952.
NYC-Luxembourg May 23, 1972 $210
Luxembourg-NYC July 24, 1972
Kansas Senator Topic of Book
NYC-Luxembourg May 21, 1972 $210
Luxembourg-NYC Aug. 16, 1972
Seats still available— But hurry!
The first full-length objective study of John James Ingalls, U.S. Senator from Kansas from 1873 to 1926. It was published by the University Press of Kansas. The book is titled "Senator John James Ingalls" or "Kansas 'Iridescent Republican."
CONTACT
SUA
864-3477
Full Payment
Due April 17th
P.R.VOLDENG 706 MASS.
Burton J. Williams, chairman
of the department of
Education at Washington,
State College, is the author of the book.
Williams received his P.D. from
Arizona State University.
P.R.VOLDENG
706 MASS.
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United States Air Force
WHAT'S YOUR SCENE FOR THE SUMMER OF 72?
Will you have a degree and no place to go?
Make the Air Force Scene as an Officer and Pilot.
Check Now on Our "No Obligation" Testing - Physical - Application Procedure.
For the whole 9 yards, rap with Your Air Force Representative at the Student Union, 5 & 6 April; or call 843-3000, anytime.
Let Us Show You Where It's At!
NO OBLIGATION—DIG?
CHINA TODAY
Professor Graham Johnson of the University of British Columbia will give a talk with slides entitled "Some Observations on a Recent Visit to Four Chinese People's Communes," on Friday, March 31, at 3:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Prof. Johnson visited the People's Republic of China last November.
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