Welfare Problems Persist, Demand Complex Solutions
By FRANK SLOVER
Kansan Writer
On Aug. 8, 1969, President Nixon addressed the nation, calling the present welfare system a failure and setting the stage for his Family Assistance Plan (FAP) which was introduced in October of that year. He said, in part:
"Whether measured by the anguish of the poor themselves, or by the drastically mounting burden on the taxpayer, the prosecution system has to be judged a失败 failure."
What began on a small scale in the depression '30s has become a huge monster in the prosperous '60s. And the tragedy is not only that it is bringing states and cities to the brink of financial disaster, but also that it is failing to meet the elementary human, social and financial needs of the river."
The monster still exists in the less-prosperous 70s.
THE PRESIDENT'S bill, now known as H. R. 1, languishes in the Senate Finance Committee after having passed the House last June.
The current delay stems from the bill's only powerful supporter in the committee, Abraham Ribicoff (D-Conn.), who wants to stop the committee's details before the committee it lets it go.
Even Ribicoff may not be able to get this bill passed. It has some powerful enemies in that committee and faces opposition from Republicans and Southern Democrats, including Russell Long (D-La.)
FAP has two major aims, according to those who drafted it.
First, it proposes to help those among the poor who are self-supporting to do so. Second, for those who are unable to work it suggests a more adequate level of federal support."
The conservative opposition to FAP is probably directed more at the second aim than at the first, which requires recipients to work for their benefits.
THE "MORE adequate level of federal support" is described in the introduction to the bill as a "ten per cent increase in social security benefits" and an automatic cost of living escalator."
The new program would add $2.9 billion,
$700 million of it to provide fiscal relief for the states, equal to at least 10 per cent of what the states' costs would have been under the old welfare program.
What the added funds would be used for can be described as a guaranteed income without the stigma of the label to draw extra opposition.
FAP allows a family to up to $60 a month with no reduction of benefits. From that level on, the benefits are to be reduced on the basis of a federal benefit floor of $1,600 for a family of four. With food stamps, the framers of the bill point out, "the assistance package for such a family is about $2,350 per year."
THE ELEGIBILITY ceiling for a four-member family is set at "virtuously the same point" for both the FAP and the Food Program. This is approximately $4,000.
That is the part of the bill that is geared to please the liberals and rile the conservatives. The other part does just the opposite.
The other part stipulates that ablédied persons lose their benefits if they
Mothers with children under six are exempted from this requirement.
refuse training or a suitable job opportunity.
The idea that a man should work, if he can, for what he receives is so central to the Nikon philosophy of welfare that the president has called it a "workfare" bill into law last Dec. 24.
The bill is an interim measure and requires most persons receiving welfare assistance to be required to submit
Nixon described his feelings on the work provisions of his programs in the following
"WE ARE A nation that pays tribute to the working man and rightly scorns the freeleader who voluntarily opts to be the ward of the state . . .
"No task, no labor, no work is without dignity or meaning that enables an individual to feed and shelter himself, and provide for his family."
What seems to ink the liberals about the work provisions is that the provisions may not mean much to the welfare problem. The Liberals have made recipients who can work vary from less
than one to around four per cent of the total recipient population.
Ronald Boland, assistant professor of social welfare, said in a recent interview he thought the actual figure was somewhat higher than his estimate, which he called "probably a liberal lie."
Even Boland, however, didn't think the figure was as high as 10 per cent and said the percentage changed when certain jobs were taken or of work who, perhaps, really were.
"The FIGURE GLOWS up," he said, "if you count in the emotionally unfit, women with pre-school age children and high school age youth."
That work may not be the answer to the welfare problem was the subject of a 1970 article for Saturday Review by John Hamilton, a member of the editorial board of the New York Times and a specialist on poverty and welfare.
He observed that in New York City "the availability of employment has seemed to have fallen."
He went on to say, "Jobs of all sorts now go begging, many of them requiring little knowledge."
With high unemployment and a welfare population of "more than one million, up from 500,000 in 1965, there were 900 vacancies for letter carriers, with wages higher than welfare for all except those with very large families, which had been offered to welfare recipients and were still unfulled," Hamilton wrote.
Taxicab industry efforts to hire those on welfare met the same lack of success.
RIBICOFF'S objections to the bill come from its guaranteed income side. He has won his battle with the administration to have pilot programs to test the efficiencies of the provisions and in return, has agreed to support permanent authorization for FAP
No settlement has yet been reached on the specifics of the benefit package. Under the Nixon plan the recipients could keep all benefits up to $120,000, third of additional earned income to the cutoff income of $4,320 a year. Ricbicoff's bill would set the minimum at $3,000 to rise within three years to $4,000, and would keep it there for another year amount of earned income above $720 per year.
See WELFARE Page 5
COLE 13
COLDER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.113
Monday, April 3, 1972
Child Abuse Up 500% Since 1966
See Page 2
VOLLEY
Cyclists Pedal for Lake in 60-mile 'Tour de Perry'
Kentan Photo by TERRY SHI
Eugene Wee, Wichita graduate student, and Roger Oelschlaeger, Plainville junior, had only 58 miles to go Sunday afternoon in the "Tour de Perry." The $80-mile bicycle tour to Perry was part of the Tour de France. This year, the Tour will be by the Mount Oread Bicycle Club. The second tour, the "Lawrence
Peregrination," is April 5 and will cover a 10-mile course in Lawrence. The last tour, the "Lone Star Lake Gallirap," will be a 30-mile trip to Lone Star Lake April 8. The club will sponsor bicycle races on campus April 9.
Busing Fought in Hearings
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon's school busing proposals are meeting stiff opposition in public hearings and have not yet been approved, but vet clear what their final fate will be.
Leaders in both branches have said they would like to solve the problem by shelving the Nixon measures and adopting instead antibus provisions tied to a higher-education bill now in a Senate-House conference.
This could avoid further bitter floor rights sure to erupt if the President's bills demand more.
But it is not certain such fights can be prevented even if the measures are bottled
Foes of busing in both the House and Senate are saying that, if the bills are shelved, they will offer the provisions as floor amendments to other legislation.
Voter Week Starts Today
THE NIXON BILL contains strong restrictions on any further court busing.
KU students will be able to register to vote from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. in the Kansas Union, in addition to the six registration places designated by the county clerk, during voter registration week which starts today.
This registration service on campus is sponsored by Student Vote in conjunction with the University of North Carolina.
Mark Bedner, Lawrence graduate student and member of the Student Vote steering committee, said registration places might also be available evenings in residence halls if qualified personnel can be found to staff them.
To qualify as a voter in Douglas County, a person must have lived in Kansas for 6 years. A resident of Douglas County may
Persons interested in helping with the registration should contact Bedner at 843-360-7152.
billion of federal funds already acted on by Congress to try to improve education in poor schools, largely those with substantial numbers of black children.
Both panels have held several days of hearings and not a single witness has supported the bill except the administration spokesman, Elliot L. Richardson, secretary of Health, Education and Welfare
This measure was referred to the Senate Labor and Public Welfare Committee and the House Education and Labor Committee.
Sen. Claiborne Pell, D-R I, chairman of the subcommittee conducting the Senate hearings, told the witnesses he doubted presented the sentiment of the country.
Some of these have heatedly denounced the proposals, declaring that the President is trying to stop the desegregation is trying to be held accountable for the doctrine of subsequent educational schools.
OPPOSITION WITNESSES have included blacks and whites, members of Congress, officials of civil-rights and education organizations, spokesmen for women's groups, and labor representatives.
Based on past performance, the members of the House and Senate panels will not approve the bill. Most of the members have taken the position that busing is a proper remedy where essential to carry out a desegregation program and where it is not so lengthy as to harm the children involved.
"ALL OF THESE organizations support busing," he said, "but I am afraid the majority of the people who have expressed themselves on this issue are against it."
Both Pell and Rep, Carl D. Perkins, DKY, chairman of the House committee, asserted that the real answer was more difficult than it looked, and the serious inequalities that now exist.
They emphasized that Nixon had not asked for any new funds. Both have included $75 million in the budget.
Sen. Peter H. Dominick, R-Cole, senate sponsor of the measure, strongly denied this allegation. He said the bill would not all busing and was not designed to do so.
$2.5 billion of additional money which would be concentrated on the most needy
HOUSE SPEAKER, Carl Albert, D-Doka, Senate Democratic Leader Mike Manstefle of Montana and Senate Republican Leader High Scott of Pennsylvania. Nixon's proposals could be handled as a part of the higher-education legislation.
But Dominick insisted there was little
the appropriations Committees
would be.
Dita Tapes CBS Show In Denver
Antifishing riders were added to this measure in both branches but they did not stop the migrants.
Dow Hewitt, executive producer of "60 Minutes," said Mrs. Brad planned to check out of the hospital for good on Monday at St. John's Hospital where Sunday's interview was filmed.
NEW YORK (AP) - Lobbystiv Dita Beard, diagnosed as too ill to testify before a Senate subcommittee, checked herself out of a Denver hospital Saturday for a television interview in which she said Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind., thought of the International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. as "a sort of personal taxicab company."
Mrs.裴Brad, 53, hospitalized with a heart
aliment since March 3, tapped the interview
with Mike Wallace at an unclosed
location in Denver and broadcast it on the
NBC News web site, www.NBCNews.com
After 90 minutes she returned to the hospital.
The senators are investigating reports that Mrs. Beard linked an ITT contribution with an out-of-court settlement of antitrust suits against ITT.
Last Sunday, Mrs. Beard collapsed while testifying from her hospital bed to a Senate subcommittee. Her doctors said she might never be able to testify again.
U.S. Advisers Evacuated
Communists Overrun Territory Near DMZ
SAIGON (AP)—Sparheaded by tank columns, the biggest North Vietnamese drive since the 1968 Tet offensive chewed up large chunks of South Vietnamese buildings and two bases and sent hundreds of government troops retreating in disarray.
At Camp Carroll, a regimental command post eight miles below the demilitarized zone, some of the battered South Vietnamese defenders threw up the white flag of surrender. South Vietnamese soldiers appeared to be trying to mix in with thousands of civilians fleeing south from the DMZ, which divides Vietnam.
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, the commander of U. S. forces in South Vietnam, was reported to view the situation as grim, and the American ground force lost most Americans involved in ground fighting.
"We're going to do everything we can to protect our people and keep our casualties down," a U. S. military source close to the situation said.
"Where a situation becomes untenable, we're going to pull our people out. Obviously Gen. Abrams is much concerned, and I'm going to give the South Vietnamese is air."
SOURCES IN THE NORTH told Associated Press correspondent Holger Jensen at the front that Abrams had taken steps to limit his strategy to the slow enemy offensive.
But the four-day North Vietnamese campaign appeared to be broadening to other fronts, and one tank column spearheaded a drive that overran Fire Base Pace near the Cambodian border, only 85 miles northwest of Saigon, in the deepest southern penetration enemy armor has ever made in the Indochina war.
The objective of the Communist command, as seen by U. S. officials, is to show that the defeat of the South Vietnamese forces is tantamount to proving failure of President Nixon's Vietnamization program.
A second goal listed by officials is to regain control of some of the population. Psychologically, the offensive is aimed at achieving the maximum impact on the presidential election in the United States in his bid for re-election, sources said.
THE FIGHTING on the northern front continued to overshadow all other action, since North Vietnam has long desired to annex Quang Tri, South Vietnam's northernmost province bordering the DMZ on the north and Liao on the west.
By dusk Sunday, the northernmost South Vietnamese defensive line was just to the south of the district town of Dong Ha, 10 miles below the DMZ, and North Vietnamese tanks pushed to within 300 yards of the town.
The Saigon command claimed too enemy tanks were destroyed. Spokesmen made no mention of South Vietnamese losses, if any.
South Vietnamese air force officers told Associated Press correspondent Richard Blystone that their bombers had knocked out five North Vietnamese tanks on a bridge just to the north of Dong Hai. They believed they were in tanks, tanks were believed to be in the area.
THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE tanks destroyed the bridge, field reports said, to keep the North Vietnamese in control southward from Dong Ha apparently because they
Shelling intensified Sunday night and
Maig Lat and Cam Lo reported were
well.
were out-gunned by the North Vietnamese column which reportedly included T54 medium tanks. The Soviet-made T54s carry 100mm guns and can outshoot the U.s. Buitl M48s of the South Vietnamese which are armed with 90mm cannon.
The most crushing blow to the South Vietnamese Sunday was the fall of Camp Carroll, which had been pounded with explosives and rocket and mortar shells there Thursday.
Field reports said Dong Ha itself was a guest town with no one left. The town lies on the northern side of the Cam Lo River and South Vietnamese marines pulled back to the southern bank of the river and set up a defensive line.
FIELD REPORTS SAID some of the government troops may have escaped and those left ran up a white flag of surrender. All American advisers had been evacuated from Carroll by helicopter just before it fell, sources said.
An undisclosed amount of heavy equipment was destroyed, left behind or captured at other bases abandoned by the South Vietnamese.
A group of 75 U. S. advisers who aban-
doned Quing Tri Sunday blew up their
business by saying they would do so.
THE U. S. AIR ARM of tactical fighter-bombers, which has hailed the Saigon forces out of trouble before, was severely hampered by a sixth day of low cloud cover. More of the same was forecast for Monday and possibly Tuesday.
Nearly 50 U. S. B-32 Stratofortresses using radar unleashed 1,000 tons of bombs against North Vietnamese troop concentrations and supply depots along the frontier, and in the central highlands where the enemy has opened a third front.
Quang Tri City, the provincial capital 20
years south of the DMZ, remains in grave
terms.
Once the weather clears, sources said, the United States is planning heavy air strikes against North Vietnam in retaliation for the offensive.
tower and shot out the tires of their vehicles. The last man aboard the helicopters had an American flag draped around his shoulders.
WASHINGTON (AP)—A Ralph Nader group called Sunday for a congressional investigation into what it called drug-industry influence in the Food and Drug Administration, (FDA), a practice it said could endanger public health.
Nader Attacks FDA And Industry Influence
More than 10,000 shells and a number of ground assaults have caused the fall of 11 South Vietnamese bases along the DMZ during the past four days and the North Vietnamese appear to control a section of Quang Tri Province 10 miles deep and 40 miles across from Khe Sanh bordering Laos on the west to the coast.
In an 18-page report, Nader's Health Research Group alleged that two high Bureau of Drugs officials were demoted or reassigned last month because of industry involvement.
Furthermore, it asserted the FDA hired as consultants men who also were actively involved in research on drugs and medical devices for pharmaceutical companies.
There was no immediate comment from the FDA.
The accusations came on the heels of the first federal conflict-of-interest indictment of a former FDA drug researcher, and Senate Commerce Committee approval of a bill which would abolish the FDA and create a new consumer-safety agency.
"Under the guise of reorganization," the report said, "these actions again raise the serious yet unresolved question of who the manufacturers are and the industries it allegedly regulates."
Nestor was instrumental, the report said, in blocking use in the United States of the country.
The report said Dr. John Nestor, a physician scientist in the FDA's Division of Cardio-Pulmonary-Renal Drugs, was admitted to the hospital March 14, to the office of Compliance.
DR. SIDNEY WOLF, director of the Health Research Group, said much of the story was pieced together from internal sources, which were not made part of the report.
defects in hundreds of European babies, and in taking off the market another drug, Mer-29, after it allegedly caused varying decrees of blindness among U. S. users.
NINE DAYS AFTER Nestor 's transfer, the report said, his boss. Dr. John Winkler, to a demotion rather than be transferred to a lower-grade Dental Division of the Bureau of Drugs.
Fall Kansan Jobs Open
Applications for fall staff positions on the University Daily Kansas are now available to all students. Forms for editor and other new staff positions may be submitted by the instructor's semester editor. Carol Young, business manager, has applications for the business staff.
Editor applications must be turned into Creeks by 3 p.m.
Editor applications for business manager until that time. Applicants for other staff positions have until April 10 to get their applications
The editor and business manager for next fall will be selected April 18 by the Kanan selectors, then begin selecting their staff.
2
Monday, April 3, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Winn Sponsors Child Abuse Bill KU Drop Is State's Smallest
By RAMONA DUNN Kansan Staff Writer
"Child abuse is the leading cause of death among children under five years of age," said Ms. Kan), said recently. "It's estimated that anywhere from a half-million to two million incidents of cruelty, neglect and outright murder occur each year."
Winn introduced a bill to Congress on March 18 that would establish an $8-million grant-in-aid program to help enable the states to improve their child protection and child abuse prevention programs.
Russell E. Saltzman, Winn's press secretary, said that Winn sponsored the bill because he was against it. He also raised high rate of child abuse in...
Saltzman said that since 1966 child abuse has increased about 500 per cent.
ONE OF THE AMES of the bill is to obtain accurate statistics by requiring child abuse reports to be submitted to Health, Education and Welfare (HEW). Accurate national records aren't available at HEW.
Bill Nesbit, Douglas County Social Welfare employee, said Friday that although he didn't
have the actual statistics there were many incidents of both child abuse and child neglect in and in other parts of the nation.
However, the Douglas county attorney's office said Friday that they could remember having handled only one child abuse case this year in three cases, they said, and handling three others. The Douglas County Juvenile Court.
Ruthana Bean of the Douglas County Juvenile Court division has been working with her she started working for the court, it has handled only one case of abuse.
JOURNEY WHEELER, associate professor of law at the University of Iowa, said the legal aid system, Legal Aid Society, said the society hasn't handed a case of negligence.
Most states require the physician to report the cases of many of the many of those cases of child or nurse are never reported.
"Teachers and the educational institutions are the prime source of child abuse information in Douglas County." Bean said.
When a case of child abuse or neglect is reported to the juvenile court, Bean said, the court gives instructions to keep Douglas County Social Welfare Douglas County Social Welfare
Department for a thorough investigation. After an investigation is held, the report is given to the Juvenile Court who will also be involved for both the parents and the child to have separate attorneys.
NESBIT. A social welfare worker was pre-structured, and that each juvenile judge had a different idea of child abuse or neglect.
He said, that neglect can be anything from a fithy home to a hospital without proper medical care or permitting a child to use a car.
Abuse, Nesbit said, is the more difficult to prove in court. Abuse can be classified from bruises and burns to severe beatings.
Most cases of child abuse and neglect can be attributed to parental insecurity, said both Saltzman and Nesbit.
THE CHILD ABUSE control ill introduced by Winn would set ip state programs or sessions in the prevention of child abuse.
Those programs which might be judged inadequate could be
would be given to the individual states on a per-capita basis. Each state would have to meet the federal guidelines proposed by the Secretary of Education and Welfare in order to qualify for the federal funds.
1949KU Alumna Becomes Liechtenstein's First Lady
BY TINKERING WITH THE
CURRICULUM, no lasting changes
could be brought about, Mayhew
said.
By DONNA DALE
Kansan Staff Writer
"I suggest the jump-in-topeal water technique. Eliminate everything in the catalog and start from scratch." he said.
Mayhew expressed some of his ideas concerning curriculum reform.
He said that instead of creating a new degree, he would suggest liberalization of the old BA Degree, allowing each student to follow an individual track. He told me that he'd deployed for counseling, he said.
Curriculum Change Examined by Profs
The Educational Policies Committee and other committee members of the College of Medicine at the University to confer with Lewis Mayhew, professor of higher education at Stanford University, concerning revision of requirements of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
University of Kansas spring
88 students attended
s4 per cent, from the
calendar, according to figures
released March 17 by the Board
The loss was the lowest of the six state-supported schools. Kansas State Teachers College reported the largest loss, 11.4 per cent of the total loss for the six schools was 46.96 students, or 6.9 per cent.
She left her small home town of Whitewater, Kansas and became a political science major at the University of Kansas.
He told of several universities which had successfully made drastic changes in curriculum and requirements.
"We have a terrible time making data mean anything," said George B. Smith of the office where she worked in which released the figures.
Smith said fall to spring losses were about the same each year. Losses at KU have varied from 1970 to 2016, the past seven years, he said.
The committee discussed the problems of being the innovator of a drastically changed curriculum and the assets of three choices of a degree as to a liberalized BA degree.
Kansas State University had losses ranging from 5.8 to 7.4 per cent during the same period. This year K-State lost 1,018 students or staff and 231 teachers. The figure compares with a previous average loss of 4.8 per cent.
superseded by the federal government. The government could then instigate suits against the parents on behalf of the child in states where the laws weren't enacted. The money from the grant
It sounds like a fairy tale that came true.
By MARSHALIBEER
reasons for the loss of students. life said the schools lost students because of marriage and financial or scholastic problems. A change in residence by parents also caused some losses.
planning these changes and will bring them before the College Assembly," said Baumgartel.
Also discussed were economic aspects and management systems required by the three degree system is found in *Bureau of Labor*. It allows the student to choose between a structured or liberalized course to follow, he
Mayhew is a nationally known expert in problems and research in higher education. He is the author of numerous books on related subjects, including curricular reform works. He was at the annual conference of the twelfth annual Latin America Conference last week.
In 1949, she graduated from KU and accepted a Fulbright Scholarship to study at the Institute of Political Science in Israel.
Internal changes by a school.
Smith said there were several
such as discontinuation of a program, also cause losses, Smith said.
HOWARD BAUMGARTEL,
professor of psychology and head
of the College of Liberal Arts
considering changes in the
College of Liberal Arts
Sciences which would include the
admission to the School of General
studies Degree.
This degree, with requirements such as western civilization or language requirements excluded. BSA taught BA and BS degrees, he said.
- Salaries start at $500.00 per semester
family, the ease of expression I
would appreciate with similar ways and customs, the open horizon of Kansas and summers hot enough for lots of foods.
Smith said a net gain or loss was extremely difficult to determine because as students left, they were replaced by new
In Paris she met a fellow student whom she later married
Undergraduate Teaching Assistantships are available for next fall in certain undergraduate lab courses in the Biology Dept.
- 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.
comment that "in a country that has a royal family politicians are very small potatoes."
Other changes considered were a loosening of the foreign language requirements and a new western civilization system.
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES MAJORS!
- Deadline for application: April 3,1972
Liechtenstein is a constitutional and hereditary monarchy and is ruled by a prince.
ALTHOUGH LIECHTEEN-
STEIN'S constitution provides
or "universal, equal, secret and
suffrage, sufficiency is still
lived wrong."
Now her husband holds the highest elective office in his native country of Liechtenstein, and this KU alumna is the first lady of the tiny European nation. She also is the former Virgin Jolie Joseph
Virginia and her husband Alfred live with their daughter Katrin in what is in area the fifth smallest country in the world.
Liechtenstein has a total area of 365,000 square kilometers and population of approximately 22,000. It is bounded by Switzerland on the south and west and Austria on the north.
"The committee is still
VIRGINIA HAS no official duties as first lady but accompanies her husband to official dinners, entertainers, receptions and festivals.
UNITED STATES AIR FORCE
Her twin sister Jan Williams also majored in political science and graduated from KU in 1949. She goes, resides in Lawrence.
WHAT'S YOUR SCENE FOR THE SUMMER OF 72?
Virginia said, "As I do think the women should have the right to vote. I consider this relegatable but not, as some do, tragic. In a community as small as we are, access to their legislators. If they don't like some things, they say so, women as well as men."
Jan recalled her sister's
Make the Air Force Scene as an officer and pilot. Check now on our "No Obligation" Testing - Physical - Application Procedure.
JAN HAS TISH her sister in Europe and said, "Liechtenstein is a beautiful country. It has a rich history, but it's not for when they go on vacation."
Will you have a degree and no place to go?
The Hilbes enjoy the mountains in their country and ski when time permits.
For the whole 9 yards, rap with your Air Force Representative at the Student Union, 5 & 6 April; or call 843-3000 anytime.
Jan said, "They don't go out a great deal. Freddie is very busy."
Engined Virginia said she enthused about her life in Ireland and found the beautiful countryside and the proximity of woods and mountains.
Let us show you where It's At !!!
Virginia listed the following as things she missed most about the United States: "My friends and
NO OBLIGATION — DIG?
News Briefs By The Associated Press Hussein for Open City
WASHINGTON - King Hussein of Jordan suggested Sunday that the Arab part of Jerusalem should be the capital of Palestinians, while Israel should keep its capital in the other part of the city. Jerusalem should be an open city, Hussein said. Recognition that the city should not must, he said, "I don't see why the Arab part of the city should not also the government seat of the Palestinian province."
The jury reported itself deadlocked on nine of the indictment's 10 counts—including the one that charges the Harrisburg Seven with plotting to kidnap White House adviser Henry A. Kissinger and blow up or otherwise destroy federal property.
HARRISBURG, Pa.—The Rev. Philipp Berrigan was convicted Sunday of smuggling a letter out of prison, but the jury trying the antwar priest and six others reported a deadlock on the other side. The judge charged a security charge. The judge instructed them to resume deliberations.
BELFAST, Northern Ireland—The spiritual leader of Ireland's Roman Catholics, William Cardinal Conway, called on the Irish Republican Army Sunday to call off its guerrilla war against British rule.
IRA Asked to End War
At one point he asked the leader of the IRA Provisional wing, Sean McStifton, "What right have you to continue the campaign of violence?"
The cardinal said in an Easter radio interview that the majority of Catholics in Ireland now approved of the British takeover in the country.
No Food Price Controls
WASHINGTON—Secretary of Agriculture Earl Burt predicted Sunday that the Nixon administration would not impose stiffer controls on food prices. President Nixon indicated at a recent news conference that the administration would have to act unless food prices were set back and decline. Since then, wholesale meat prices have declined, and two major food chains announced a cut in meat prices last week.
Tornado Hits Bangladesh
DACCA - A tornado with winds of 150 miles an hour smashed through the northern Bangladesh town of Nasirabad on Sunday. Officials said 40 persons were known dead and 200 hospitalized, and the death toll was expected to go higher. The storm struck at about dusk and lasted less than half an hour. First reports said at least 5,000 houses were razed, leaving 30,000 persons homeless. Emergency aid was rushed to the area. Nasirabad, also called Mymensingh, is about 75 miles north of Dacca.
The Magic Enchantment of Diamonds . . . and Black
---
Ray Christian
Jewelers
14K
Ray Christian Jewelers S7
Enamel Inlay
5 sparkling diamonds set in beautiful 14-karat gold mountings.
Both Rings $199
2 Locations
809 Mass. 836 Kansas
Lawrence Topeka
Springtime is Ringtime
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.
864-3311 Application deadline April 5.
Army ROTC
Invest in America's future and yours.
Army ROTC
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TOM PARKS
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OPENING SPECIAL BELL JEAN BELL $3.00
Beautiful Clothes from
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IN THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
10 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday-Friday
10 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday
Noon-5 p.m. Sunday
The fiston works stude work prom anim natur them, their and te
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Z (A)
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 3, 1972
3
FRED BURNISH
Kanan Photo by BEFFA MUED
Laurie Fletcher Filinches While Flexing a Crawdad
... Museum of Natural History to offer summer winery wjshop ...
Museum Plans Ecology Class
The Museum of Natural history will offer its fifty year of workshops for elementary school students, and our workshops are designed to promote understanding of the natural world and natural settings—how to know them, where to find them and their importance to each other.
The student workshops are open to students in the sixth through the eighth grades and those in grades 9-12. The student and one graduate or undergraduate assistant. Each of them has two extended days and is limited to 15 student days.
**THREE SESSIONS, called Survey in Natural History, will be taught, as well as one session in aquatic ecology, one session in the classroom and one session on fossils. The instructors lead the students on field trips to nearby ponds, streams, woodlands, prairies and rock formations, how to catch and identify small animals in the ecology. They are taught basic facts and concepts in the fossil course. The students are allowed to bring specimens from the museum to study them in the museum lab.
THE TEACHER'S WORKSHOPS are two four week sessions which teach terrestrial and aquatic ecology.
The tuition for each session is $50 for members of the Museum and $75 for non-members students. The museum provides equipment, and transportation to the museum.
"The purpose of this workshop is to get the teachers' feet wet." Ray Ashton, director of public
Campus Bulletin
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m. Sunflower Room.
Latin America Seminar: 9 a.m., 305 Pine
Room, Kansas University
Room, Kansas Union
GASSTER! 11:30 a.m. Cottonwood Cafeteria.
Journal Club! 11:30 a.m. Alcove B.
Cafeteria.
Cafeteria.
Latin America Club: noon, Meadowlark
Education: School: Sacred Heart Catholic
Journal Club: 11:30 a.m., Alcove B,
Cafeteria.
Education Administration: 11:30 a.m.
Academic Affairs: 12:15 p.m. Warkins Room.
Date: 12:15 p.m.
Education Administration: 11:30 a.m.
Alcove C., Cafeteria.
Schoeel and Drama: 11:30 a.m. Alcove D.
School of Business: 1 p.m., English Room
BSU: 2.30 p.m., Oread Room.
Latin America Club: noon. Meadowlark
Cafeteria
Affairs: 17:15 a.m. Workday.
School of Religion: 5:30 p.m., Alcove A.
Cafeteria.
Summer Employment Social Welfare:
Summer Employment Social Welfare
30 p.m., Move C, Cafetier
1000 West 42nd Street,
Grand Rooftop
SUA Special Film: 7 p.m. Woodruff.
International Night Rehearsal: 7 p.m. Woodruff.
English Dept.: 8 p.m., Jayhawk Room.
Student Vote: 8 p.m. Big Eight Room.
SIMS: 8 p.m., Council Room.
education for the Museum, said recently.
"There is a lack of even basic knowledge of natural history and many teachers have expressed this type of program," he said.
Participants in the teachers' workshop receive three hours of college credit but the credit
cannot be applied toward a biology degree. Ashson said. Elementary education majors may also take the course. Teachers may also take the course.
Enrollment for museum courses is on June 6. The sessions begin the first of June and the last of July. Students may also as summer school courses.
Chalmers talked about the role of the chancellor's office and answered questions for new issues affecting the University.
By JOE ZANATTA
Kansan Staff Writer
HEW Awards $81,007 to KANU To Improve Broadcasting Facilities
Bafour spoke about his office and the various access the desk had to. The group was both Chalmers and Bafour participated in small discussion
K. L. "Pu" Bailley, Atchinson senior and chairman of the Student Senate Executive committee, organized the retreat.
Bailey scheduled various workshop sessions with students in decision making and group interaction. Time was also allotted for touch football, basketball and soccer.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and William Balfour. facce chancellor for the afternoon retreat the rested Saturday afternoon.
The old and new Student Senates meet for the annual joint meeting Wednesday night to elect three holdover candidates from the University Council members, to discuss the proposed health
KU Senators Study Powers, Structure
Radio station KANU was notified Thursday night that it would receive a grant for $81,000 to support its Education and Welfare (HEW). The grant was announced by Senators James Pearson (R) and Kevin Connolly.
Newly elected student senators gathered on a camp Alden nearale next week. They are the future of the Student Senate and to become acquainted with them.
The grant is part of a $108,000 project by the University of Kansas F M station to improve its facilities.
10M DOWYLE, chief engineer of the HWE company, said the HEW equipment could only be used to purchase equipment and that no salaries could be paid with the money.
The retreat, lasting until late Saturday night, was aimed at informing new senators about the structure of University government and the powers of the Senate as prescribed by the Senate Code.
Wright said the grant would allow KANU to continue and improve its public service broadcasting format.
"It's a dream come true," Dick Wright, KANU program director, said Saturday. "It's a major breakthrough. Now we'll be fine running for the University and community that we've wanted to do."
David G. Miller, Eudora senior and former student body president of the Senate, new rules and regulations and the committee
Doyle said about $20,000 of the total project money would be spent on building facilities. KANU's present antenna provides 108,000 watts horizontally. The new antenna will have 58,000 watts of vertical ground spiral.
The signal will travel farther, and there will be noticeable noise in the reception and reception of the audio-reader program, a
insurance policy and to elect members of the Committee board.
The committee board will meet Saturday to appoint new Senate committees.
"The change of antenna," Doyle said, "will make KANU
Prof to Speak On T. S. Eliot
Robert W. Langbaum, English professor at the University of Virginia, will lecture on the "Mysteries of Identity as a Theme in T. S. Eilid's Plays," at T. S. Eilid's Studio, in Woodruff Auditorium.
Langbaum is the final speaker in the 1971-72 Humanities Lecture Series.
He is scheduled to be on campus today and Tuesday and will speak to several English classes.
KANU Schedule Stereo 91.5 FM
2 p.m. - News-Weather-Sports.
3 p.m. - News-Weather-Sports.
4 p.m. - A midnight Jazz (airport)
5 p.m. - News-Weather-Sports.
6 p.m. - News-Weather-Sports.
7 p.m. - News-Weather-Sports.
8 p.m. - Make-up to Candlebake.
9 p.m. - A fashion Perspective.
10 p.m. - A musical Perspective.
11 p.m. - Great Condctors.
12 p.m. - Great Condctors.
New World Music
12.15 p.m. Four-Hour Concert-Campus and Community Calendar (12.20)
1 p.m.-Book Beat
1.30 p.m.-French Music and French
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one of the foremost powerful FM public broadcast stations in the United States."
HE SAD the installation of the new antenna should be completed by early summer.
The rest of the project funds were used to provide new equipment and training on station. The station plans to build a stereophone and one quadraphonic studio, and Doyle said the quadraphonic studio would be the first one.
the production studios.
Dryden will allow us to do more research and develop programs to involve more University people. This will allow us to do a more professional role.
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Doyle said he hoped to attain new tape recorders, stereo control boards, tape cartridge boards and turntables with the gram.
Doyle said the new equipment would help in the production of Public Service Radio spots that are broadcast in 1997. The equipment would also give
students more time in the studio to produce music and audiobooks. They broadcast journalism students would now have technically the ability to create a music video.
The only drawback, was that the station would have to go the same distance as the new antenna was installed and there would be extra noise on the radio.
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--whether or not we should be able to do so. He argued that the Constitution is a law of God, and that it is important for us to respect its principles. He also emphasized the importance of the Second Amendment, which provides protection against unlawful acts by the government.
In conclusion, John McCain's emphasis on the Constitution as a law of God was a powerful statement that made him a prominent conservative figure in the 20th century. His views on constitutional rights were grounded in his belief that the Constitution is the greatest law of God, and that it is important for us to respect its principles. He also emphasized the importance of the Second Amendment, which provides protection against unlawful acts by the government.
John McCain was born on December 25, 1937, in New York City. He grew up in a working-class family and attended public schools in the Bronx. He went on to graduate from Columbia University with a degree in law and then went on to work as an attorney in the federal court system.
McCain was a staunch conservative who believed in the principles of the Constitution. He was a member of the Republican Party and served in the United States Senate from 1969 to 1981. He was also a leader of the American Civil Liberties Union and a member of the National Riverside Commission.
He passed away on January 24, 2016 at the age of 88. His legacy is one of commitment to the principles of the Constitution and his dedication to protecting the rights of all Americans.
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--whether or not we should be able to do so. He argued that the Constitution is a law of God, and that it is important for us to respect its principles. He also emphasized the importance of the Second Amendment, which provides protection against unlawful acts by the government.
In conclusion, John McCain's emphasis on the Constitution as a law of God was a powerful statement that made him a prominent conservative figure in the 20th century. His views on constitutional rights were grounded in his belief that the Constitution is the greatest law of God, and that it is important for us to respect its principles. He also emphasized the importance of the Second Amendment, which provides protection against unlawful acts by the government.
John McCain was born on December 25, 1937, in New York City. He grew up in a working-class family and attended public schools in the Bronx. He went on to graduate from Columbia University with a degree in law and then went on to work as an attorney in the federal court system.
McCain was a staunch conservative who believed in the principles of the Constitution. He was a member of the Republican Party and served in the United States Senate from 1969 to 1981. He was also a leader of the American Civil Liberties Union and a member of the National Riverside Commission.
He passed away on January 24, 2016 at the age of 88. His legacy is one of commitment to the principles of the Constitution and his dedication to protecting the rights of all Americans.
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BREWER & SHIPLEY
Concert Reviews
BREWER AND SHIPLEY
BREWER AND SHIPLEY
IN CONCERT
SAT. APRIL 8th, 10 P.M.
HOCH AUDITORIUM
LAWRENCE
WOOLMILLS
FUNK 'N' PUNCH
FUNK 'N' PUNCH
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LAWRENCE
WOOLMILLS
TICKETS ON SALE AT
ICKETS ON SALE AT:
Advanced: SUA Office - Kansas Student Union
Red Dog Office - 7th & Mass, (upstairs)
Kielt's Records - in the Mall
By Mail To Brewer & Shipley Tickets Box 49, Lawrence-Knox
Kief's Records—In the Mall
Primarily Leather—815 Mile
Bv Mail to Brewer & Shuffle Tickets TO
Night of Performance - Hear Audiovisual Box Office
Offices on Thursday, June 12 at 7 p.m.
Sponsored by the Junior Class of KU
MELLOTRON
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BLUES
FEB. 14, 1972
INKING BUNCH
PUNCH WITH PC MACH and the best
part is that it's a fun experience.
We've been intercepting information
involving attackers for an hour,
intercepting, interrogating and for an hour.
We want people to visit us so we can
see what's going on. We're not
anything wrong. David Zucker-
son's face was sweeping down from
a head of a road stretch with his
arms outstretched.
They peruse a big board for novices, with worksheets that are too hard to keep up. They settled up and stood with an open hand in their palm. He huddled the big table in the country. They knelt up to fingerless gloves and leaned up on a four-footed grass chair.
But there are offer more than mere sport. The value of the museum includes the history of baseball and clarity of sound other sports are lacking. There is more work to be done.
A large portion of their individual work is done by the group. The group's group members have considerable power to decide what to do and how to do it, in addition to the other members' input. The first member of the group, who is a child, may have more control over what to do.
But unless the user on five lines
entered a new number, the program
would be more than a dozen lines
of code and part of the group's argument
to work — an additive equation.
**103. A must-have memorabilia piece of art that will be treasured for years to come. There are artists who have given their life to music; as a result, they are often remembered by others who were inspired by them. The art will be displayed in the Art Room at Oak Lawn and Garden in Pasadena, Calif., on May 8th. Photos will be posted on Facebook
42.01
Theorem 42.01 states that for a symmetric group $G$, the product of two conjugate groups is equal to the product of their inverses. In other words, if $A$ and $B$ are conjugate groups, then $AB = BA$. This property is useful in various applications, including the study of homomorphisms and conjugacy groups.
**Example:** Consider the symmetric group $S_3$. The conjugate groups of $S_3$ are $\{e\}$, $\{i\}$, and $\{j\}$. Then $S_3 \times S_3 = S_3 \times S_3$, since conjugation is associative. The inverse of each conjugate group is also conjugate, so $S_3 \times S_3 = S_3 \times S_3$.
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4
Monday, April 3, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
JOHN R. BURTON
Kansan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG
Agnew's False Morality
The first presidential primaries of the year have provided little help in sorting out the gaggle of Democratic candidates vying for the nomination. This will further emerge to challenge the Republican candidate in the November election.
This is of course not the case on the other side. It seems certain that the President will run again and that Agnew will again be his ticket-mate.
In view of some statements the vice-president made recently in an exclusive Kansas City Times interview, the possibility that Agnew overtired "beat a way" from the presidency for another four years is frightening.
To justify the "morality" of the war, Agnew cities the fact that four presidents have endorsed the war and that what Ho Chi Minh did in the North was immoral and that after the Geneva accords were established (1954) the migration from the North to the South was greater than from the South to the North.
The 1954 agreement came long before the United States began its rain of bombs on the South. I imagine that a few of those impatient friends from the North have since neglected their decision to come South.
The most disturbing remarks that Agnew made were in regard to the Indochina war. "I don't think it was a mistake," said the vice-president, and many years might be the most moral war the United States ever engaged in."
None of these justifications stands the simple test of reason.
The fact that four presidents have endorsed the war cannot in itself justify its morality. After all, as many presidents endorsed slavery. Nor does the fact that Ho Chi Minh's troops "... went on agrarian rampages in the North," justify our government's rain of napalm and artillery fire on Indochina. I cannot be convinced that an atrocity on one side justifies an equally brutal response from the other.
However, this part of the moral dilemma does not seem to bother the vice-president. In fact, he acts as though it's been worth it all: "I think it was good enough." In a position where we can say we've won the war in Vietnam."
If the vice-president's justifications of the Indochina war don't indicate blatant moral bankruptcy, they surely reveal a lack of understanding and sensitivity that the American people should not tolerate in the second highest official in the land.
A. K. P. B. R. S.
ACAPULCO—One doesn't come to Acapulco, I'm afraid, to find out about Mexico, but about America. What more American, for instance, than capitalists on vacation hiring their critics to come down and preach at them?
A Revolutionary Banker
These particular capitalists belong to the Young Presidents Organization, a group of corporate executives who have worked so hard that we want to get educated the same way.
It is a laudable aim—and, besides, a free load for the lecturer's, who get to preach to their economic betters and feel superior to them. There is much, on conventioneleers conspicuously consuming, Men put on silky shirts and forget their inhibitions. Wives are incessantly both flattered and dismayed. The woman name-badges, the women have hasty-lettered stickers on their blouses.
One expects, in such an atmosphere, that men will be surnily hypnotized with self-praising rhetoric—and that women will be even more very much. But one man did shake them, and would all their lesser critics or would-be instructors—a quiet little banker named Dale Ball, one of their brothers, for a few years back, that making lots of money is not fit work for a grown-up man. That obvious truth has a new glow and ring to it when enunciated by a man that has made a lot of money in his time.
Mr. Ball is not your old-style philanthropist, skimming a bit of cream off the top to "give it back," with tax exemptions as a quiet good and indirect reward for goodness. He had some home truths to deliver to the politicians who do godworks, the politicians and bureaucrats, as well as to businessmen.
His own project, in housing and urban renewal, are not hand-outs nor governmental boodydoggles, but sound investments in a double sense, looking toward the future. (a loss in either column means cancellation of any project, even if it
meant a gain in the other). He also knows that big business pays too little, for the society it claims to celebrate yet. It can be prepared to there is something breathtaking about a serious businessman who gets up and goes to work. He is prepared to pay sharply higher taxes.
He is no wild-eyed convert—just, as I say, a man who knows that businessmen are almost as sillly-effectual as the politicians themselves, and means to do something more important with the rest of his life.
Ball attacked the idea of leaving money to children who must—for lack of wise present spending of that money—be in the environment's cramped endangered air.
And the children haunt him, as heirs of our folly, and the future judgers of it. "When we see our activities through the eyes of our children, the very foundations of our lives are apt to be shaken."
While all the critics grumbled and thundered, he proved that just about the only true revolutionary in Acapulco this week was an American baker.
Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate
I DO NOT QUESTION THE
RATIOISM OR SINCERITY
OF THOSE WHO DISAGREE
WITH MY POLICIES TO
BRING PEACE-
TOM FACEKER
OR ANYMORE THAN I QUESTIONED THE PATRIOTISM OR SINCERITY OF THOSE WHO DISAGREED WITH ME ON ALGEB HISS
AUXMORE THAN I QUESTIONED
IN 1968, 67, 66, 65 AND 64 THE
PATRIOTISM OR SUSCERITY OF
THOSE WHO DISAGREED WITH
MY MUPPORT OF THE WAR-
I will not tell you anything.
IN THAT LIGHT I WOULD HOPE
THAT AUCHNE SEEKING THE
PRESIDENCY IWOULD EXAMINE
HIS STATEMENTS CAREFULLY—
NISS
图示:一位面容严肃、双手交叉的男性形象。
OR ANYMORE THAN I GUESTJOYLEV IN FISH THE PATRIOTISM OR SIN-CERTITY OF THOSE WHO DISAGREED WITH ME WHEN I FIRST SUGGESTED SENDING U.S. TROOPS INTO INDOCHINA.
SO THAT I WILL NOT HAVE TO REVEAL THE NAMES OF THOSE WHOSE PATRIOTISM AND SINCERITY I DO NOT QUESTION.
A
©1972 Niles Wagner
Dist. Publishers-Hall Syndicate
James J. Kilpatrick
Unions Damage Worker Image
HOUSTON - John E. Healy II spoke at more than 200 meetings last year–industry meetings, union meetings, committee meetings—and at many of them the Empire State Building. The story takes only a few paragraphs, but it packs a wallop.
Healy is the handsome, hefty, third-generation builder from Wilmington, Del., who is the outgoing president of the Associated General Contractors of America. The AGC met here last week in its fifty-third annual convention. The 5,000 delegates represented a renewed determination to restore sense to their deeply troubled industry and they took with them the story of the Empire State
The world's greatest skyscraper broke ground on Jan. 22, 1830. At peak employment, 3,400 men were working to erect the skyscraper and to support a million bricks, to install 70 miles of water piping, and to connect 3,500 miles of telephone cable. The 102 stories went up at an average of four-and-a-half weeks per week On May 1, 1831, just one president Hoover dedicated the building and tenants moved in.
which a contemporary bunny would demand, but the manhours required to install air conditioning have been more expensive than the new techniques of the past 40 years. The grim truth, in Healy's
The same structure today, says Healy, would require three to three-and-a-half years to complete.
Granted, the Empire State Building lacked air conditioning.
view, is that productivity in the building industry today is less than half what it was then. And the work ethic has been lost."
It has been lost, he believes, through the power of avaricious trade unions, and through the weakness of contractors willing to buy labor peace at any price. The process has grossly inflated costs, and it has diminished the dignity of working men.
Members of the AGC are eager to have their troubles known. Day in and day out, their experience confirms the picture painted in a
hard-hitting report last month by engineering Views-Record. In 1906, a Chicago mason laid 192 blocks a day; today two masons are required for the same work, and they lay 100 blocks a day. In the days when concrete was finished by hand, a contractor can finish a finished concrete per man per day; today, with all kinds of power tools, the rate is 600 square feet.
The magazine cited the sorry example of a power plant job that required several small gasoline-powered generators. The union successfully demanded that each generator be watched by an operating engineer, an assistant engineer, and the operating engineer got $200 to $400 a week "for starting once or twice a day a gas engine smaller than those on many home lawn mowers." Each electrician received the same kind of money "for pushing the wire plugs into the sockets of the machines" to run the equipment. The contractor said he never did discover what the pipefitter did. Such examples are legion. A billion-dollar project in Albany has suffered repeated delays because of a dispute between teamsters and operating engineers. Who to hold for a truck? Why not rise jobs, demand elevators, one union member has to ride up when men are lifted, another
union member goes for a ride when equipment is lifted. If a worker carrying a toolbox has to be hoisted, both union representatives go along. On a platform, the workers, Philadelphia, electricians and carpenters quarreled over the installation of a chain-hung ceiling lamp. In the end, each union got a piece of the action: The carpenter screwed two hooks on the chain; the electrician put the plug in a wall socket. Cost: $40 per installation.
are suffering, as many contractors turn to the open shop. Jobs are vanishing as pre-cast concrete and pre-assembled units of steel and aluminum replace those that had been contractors who met here in Houston gave Healy an ovation when he insisted that with the unions' help, "or without it," productivity and morale must be restored. If the builders will match their convention zeal with hometown determination, the old construction firm's fair day's pay may yet be revived. It's what the unions have been asking all along.
By Sokoloff
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate. Inc.
Griff and the Unicorn
MY PET BIRD,
CHIP, CAN DO
IMITATIONS,
GRIFF
HOW DOES A ROOSTER GO, CHIP?
COCK-A
DOODLE
DOO!!
HOW ABOUT
A CAT?
MEOW!
WHAT SOUND
DOES A
HUMAN BEING
MAKE?
HELL IF I KNOW
MY PET BIRD,
CHIP, CAN DO
IMITATIONS,
GRIFF.
Many labor leaders privately agree that this nonsense has to stop. Union members themselves
HOW DOES A ROOSTER GO, CHIP?
COCK-A DOODLE DOO!!
HOW ABOUT A CAT?
MEOW!
WHAT SOUND DOES A HUMAN BEING MAKE?
HELL IF I KNOW
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper
*Copyright 1972, David Sokoleff.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--UN 4-4810
Business Office--UN 4-4328
Published at the University of Manitoba during the academic year 2018 academic building and facilities information, including construction dates, maintenance schedules, and emergency procedures. All materials without preamble should be copied, ordered or additional documents. Expression of interest is welcome in writing to the University of Manitoba Information Desk at 604 W. 75th Street, Suite 200, Redmond, WA 98058.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 3.1972
Welfare Problems Persist ..
5
Continued from page 1
There are two facts that are central to the understanding of the current welfare situation:
First, the current welfare laws which apply to the poor fall into two categories: "public assistance" in the Social Security Act of 1835. That act and the present law require assistance to the blind, the aged, the disabled and dependent families.
many's re-creaet cast-eniplace in theplace it in the tion tha it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it i
Until the 60s, the prevailing idea was that there would always be poverty and that to remove it, businesses needed to have needed was some bootstrap pulling. In the 60s poverty did not matter and but welfare costs skircroaked.
SECOND, THE conditions passed were those of depression when the specific problem was men who wanted and were able to resist it.
In 1960, 38.4 million or 21.5 per cent of all Americans were living below the poverty level; in 1964, 36.1 million or 18.8 per cent lived in poverty and in 1968 the figures had risen to 25.4 million, 12.7 per cent.
While the number of poor persons decreased, the number of welfare recipients increased.
In the 1960-68 period, total federal aid to the poor rose from $9.8 to $21.7 billion a year. Public rose from $3.8 to $8.8 billion.
days and a postage advertised expreased
Ip crew lp Crew
Scott Luckenbill Scott
Groom in Groom
Similasim
Ward wards
Spurkwells
Goodlde Goodlde
Schmidt Schmidt
Rubia Rubia
Young Young
Scolockel
ool Young
n Carter
n Manley
barnhart
sergardes
dlia Lloyd
e Murray
delano
NOT ONLY DID the number of families with Dependent Children (ADC), which is also known as Aid to Families with Dependent Children.
ADC costs rise from $1.1 billion in 1960 to $4.9 billion in 1970. In the 15 years after 1955, the proportion of children receiving assistance has more than doubled from 30 children per 1,000 to about 60 per 1,000.
In contrast, during the '60s, old age payments remained constant at $1.9 billion and their numbers increased from $2.3 to $2.1 million.
The main reason ADC is to controversial has to do with its sexual connotations, according to the United Nations Social Welfare. The public tends
to associate ADC with illegitimate children andreacts against the idea of promoting it by providing it through welfare benefits.
The change in the nature of welfare and the way in which those in control of the funds view the state lie between the old and the new.
Under the current system, no family that is male-headed is permitted. A circumstance that tends to create female-headed welfare families. FAP has a provision which would mean a woman in a household receiving aid.
The old view is derived from the idea that poverty resulted from the sin and vice of the poor and was necessary for a balanced society.
From this came the American ideal that each man should earn in proportion to his production in which man didn't work, he shouldn't eat.
THIS FEELING was still there. THIS FEELING was still there. Hoover made a campaign speech in which he summed up the advantages of the american Way. He summed up the advantages of the american Way.
The height of this sentiment perhaps occurred around the turn of the century when the robber barons of American industry were proclaiming in their gospel that he had placed his servants in their homes.
"We were challenged with a peacelet choice between the rugged individualism and a European philosophy of diametrically opposed doctrines—doctrines of individualism. The acceptance of these ideas would have meant the destruction of centralization of government.
"It would have meant the undermining of the individual initiative and enterprise through the unparalleled greatness."
It is this question of initiative and incentive which the opponents of welfare most often use in their arguments.
Why should a man get up early in the day, they ask himself if he will have to give a portion of it to a man who does not notice him when he arrives at men's up.
The Class of 1973 will press-
press at 4 p.m. on Saturday, April 8,
in Hoch Auditorium. The concert will
climax the week of Jayhawk
Another reason the concert is scheduled at 10 p. m. is to enable people to attend the free rock concert at Potter Lake Saturday morning without having to rush to get to the Brewers and Shipkey concert.
Juniors to Present Brewer and Shipley
The late hour of the concert is an attempt to solve the problems of what to do after a concert, Doug Rose, Olate junior and junior class president, said Friday. He said that having the concert before dinner or doing things before the concert and end the evening with the concert.
Tickets are available at the SUA office, Kief's. Primarily Leather, and at the information board on Jayhawk Boulevard for $2.75, $2.50 and $2.25. About 1,700 tickets were sold since they went on sale Monday.
According to Rose, members of the junior class who have paid their class dues can receive 16 cents on off any price of tickets. Priority seating in a section close to the classroom will reserved for junior class members.
There will be a Banquet-of-Nature featuring two lines of different wines from the cafeteria from 4:30 to 6 p.m. There will also be a cultural program at 5 p.m. in the Grand Ballroom at Temple Included haskell Indian Junior College, will present musical sources from their parts of the world
Brewer and Shipley will be accompanied by Funk 'N' Punch, which will provide minutes of the concert. Funk 'N' Punch play "cosmic blues," which will give variety to the band. Brewer and Shipley, Rose said.
As Boland describes it, the rich receive their welfare under the label of subsidies and tax breaks that provide benefits but they loudly criticize a far less adequate and equitable form of welfare and out to those who really need it.
Association on
Amman, Jordan.
The event, sponsored by
International Club, is designed
as an opportunity to become
foreign students at the
University.
Admission-free exhibits will be open on the second floor of the Union from 2 to 6.30 p.m. and from 9 to 10 p.m.
AN ADC CATEGORY is necessary for a humane anti-welfare argument, and the lack of an antiwelfare recipient welfare recipients is detrimental.
New York Ad Expert To Talk on Creativity
International Night at the University of Kansas will be Saturday in the Kansas Union
William Bernbach, chairman of Doyle, Dane, Bernbach, Inc., a New York City advertising agency which does the Volkswagen and Avail campaigns;瓦尔塞河 Church and Aux Memorial Lecture of the William White School of Journalism April 12.
K扎 placed the welfare fraud figure at a higher five per cent but stressed that it was far below the fraud percentage of more than 20.
OPPONENTS OF this theory are quick to point out that initiative and incentives do not work in the same way on the double standard of welfare.
Another point supporters of welfare make in defense of their own beliefs is that fraud is not a problem. According to a pamphlet published the League of Women for Justice's 1980 book, show that less than one per cent of persons receiving aid have any financial need. Cheating on federal income tax reports, however, (by people not on the withholding plan), runs up to about $200,000.
International Club to Offer Dinner, Exhibit
Tickets to the dinner are on sale at Raney Drug Stores and the Kansas Union Information Counter.
stop working and let someone else support him?
Bernbach will present a talk, "The Heart of Creativity" accompanied by a film, at 1:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union campus to James Dykes, KU professor, journalism, who is handling arrangements for the Church Lecture.
It has become an accepted part of American society that old cripples, the blind or anyone who is not well, and unable to compete in the marketplace will be allowed to live. If they depend entirely on insurance, but well at least, they are not left to starve. From the New Deal on there seems to have been an American consensus that no one should go hungry.
As time passed and the nation became wealthier, a trend toward prevention led to alleviation of distress was not enough, that greater stress had to be put on prevention, be paid for prevention and economic opportunity.
As the country advanced and the distribution of income became more equal and more plentiful, it looked as if the American Dream might turn to poverty. The real trouble was that poverty refused
The Church Lecture series honors a 1920 KU journalism who founded Church-Richards Riekers, promoting agency in Chicago. After Church's death in 1964, friends and associates协助 to support the lectures and scholarships for KU students.
Twice selected Advertising Man of the Year, Bernbach is a member of the Copywriter's Hall of Fame and has served as a member of the American Association of Advertising Agencies (AAAA).
Dykes said a moon luncheon costing $2.25 and an 11 a.m. public reception would precede the luncheon reservation at April 10.
AS DANIEL K. Moynhan, counselor to the president on urban affairs at University of Arizona, sat in front of a speaker named "America was-is"-supposed to be something glorious, and it turns out to be something less glorious.
One of the reasons the prosperous '60s could not rid the country of the spector of poverty may have been that, for the first time, a man who was that what left was what had always been there and always ignored.
Bernbach, whose agency has stressed low-pressure, uncluttered advertising since its founding in 1949, is generally a leader of the "creative revolution" in advertising today.
According to Katz and many commentators on poverty and the impoverished, the current long-term, generational poverty."
Katz quoted authors such as Oscar Lewis to develop the theory that there is a subculture of poverty which tends to per-
These people live in what has been called a subculture of apathy and despair which hinders work against the urge "stronger struggle."
"THERE ARE psychological and social blocks to getting out," Katz said. "These lead to despair and a weakening of aspirations."
"They do have aspirations for a better life and would like something better.
"In one word, no," Katz replied.
Is Nixon's Family Assistance Plan (FAP) the answer?
"They are unhappy and do struggle the best way they know how."
"There is no one individual answer, but a combination of policies could do it."
He stressed that the jobs would have to be "meaningful and dignified."
Katz said the only time he could think of that good jobs were given under a government work program. At the University of WPA, a Depression relief program of the '30s, that offered jobs to professionals and subprofessionals who could work at the theatre and writing projects.
"TRADITIONALLY"WORK
PROPRIETARY
to discourage job-takers," he said,
"by giving them the most menial,
least interesting and least畏
fearful."
The second thing the government should do, he said, is to suspend those who cannot work, for those who are "outside the economic system."
This guaranteed income should not be merely minimal but should be adequate, he said.
"We bought the minimal insurance company.com and we looked on as an emergency," he said. "We are now looking at long-term
He went on to cite research, indicating a relationship between malnutrition and mental retardation and mentioned that the people who most often suffer from malnutrition were the poor.
"THERE IS EVIDENCE of fact that people in generations have had no other income sources besides welfare. main state statutes in depressions."
The underlying theory of Katz's views on welfare is that of the cybernetic revolution. He argues that the beginning of a technological cybernetic revolution" and that "at some point we will need less
This will bring about "a larger structural unemployment employment burden where more people will be hired in jobs in the marketplace," he said.
HE DID NOT think that the existing economic system had to be eliminated but that it would have to be modified. The major problem he thought necessary was that of better distribution.
Katz said he thought that the economic system shaped the political system and that economic conditions would influence technological revolution and its low demand for a "large labor pool."
"in our system, there are three ways to make money," he said. "You can invest capital if he has any or transfer payments (welfare)."
and less labor to produce more goods and services."
The important thing, he said,
was to provide a way for a larger
number of persons to maintain
their purchasing power.
Campus Briefs
According to Katz, there is just as great a problem today with poor people as there ever has been. For example, one-third of the American public lives at a level which can be described as "less than adequate" and about one-fifth less than minimal conditions.
ONE OF THE reasons that the welfare provider did not go away are that there is a large number of people who are technically eligible for benefits than who received them.
Katz gave the figure of eight million as the number receiving some form of welfare and 20 million as number living below the government level of $3,650 for a family of four. He said that the Bureau of labor statistics had established $800 as "adatee" for such a family.
and in effect
He sees the transfer tend to the poor not as an altruistic gesture, but one that will safeguard the economic system.
"The greatest protection to middle income status is to give adequate incomes to the poor," he said.
Why give the poor money?
"This would avoid the threat of a political revolution because of economic iniquity.
"PERHAPS SUCH a revolution would not be successful, but it didn't want to live with that threat and pay higher taxes to avoid it."
Another reason to help the poor is that "social justice demands we be equal, but at least something." It seems that Constitution to support this point and added that this better distribution would make for a better society.
The film "Who Should Survive" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The film, sponsored by Biology 80 class, depicts medical and ethical questions surrounding the power of science to control human destiny. Following the film two Lawrence physicians will answer questions and comment on the film.
E. J. Zeller, professor of geology, will speak on the geological character of the inner planets in comparison to the earth and moon at 4:30 p.m.
Geology Prof to Speak
Katz answered this question by explaining that the poor did not understand how to finance their money on necessities that tended to stimulate economic growth.
Science Film Wednesday
What has to be given up to divert these resources to the poor?
Applications for Owl Society, junior men's honorary, are now available from the Alumni Association office in the Kansas Union. Approximately 25 to 30 sophomores will be selected for membership and will receive a scholarship for community involvement. Applications are due April 11.
Recycling and land fill, two proposals of Douglas County of officials, will be discussed at the regional meeting sponsored by the Sierra Club at the Regional Recycling Center.
Owl Society Applications
"One can hope." he said. "the
Sierra Club Tuesday
"IF A CHOICE must be made, everyone has different priorities. It might be from defense or it might be from people might think that the money spent for interplanetary travel could be better spent at home."
IN 1965, CHARLES silberman responded to the heralds of the cybernetic revolution in a FOERTING process. He asserted that 'no fully automated process exists for any major product in any industry in the U. S.'
"Nor is any in prospect in the
moment of change, and more
the extent and growth of more
partially automated processes
have been widely exaggerated by
GNP would grow and develop so no choice would have to be made to find the money for the transfer payments.
There is, in fact, no technological barrier to full employment."
Another objection is that the centralization of information required for a computerized society would constitute a serious threat to the right of privacy, and that its designs would outweigh its benefits.
THE VISION of a computer directing machines to mine ore, turn it into fuel, run generating cars, program itself, repair itself, make television programs and movies and do practically everything we need done, thus freeing man to live a life of ease, with no thought to problems of survival, is an inference that we give one, but it is still just a vision.
The questions are numerous and no one predicts an early death. It is likely poverty. Certainly, neither Congress nor the President is about to begin handing out money in cash unless they just are not about to withdraw all welfare benefits and there is a solitely no source of sustenance.
What if those members of the lower classes who develop middle-class mentality sub-depend upon the system is required to learn jobs?
Couplied with this is the very real question of the finiteness of the environment. As some of us may know, technology has always depended on technology to find a way out of all his problems. Technological innovation has created a sense of urgency and compulsion. If indeed the environment is finite and we are reaching its limits, then the question is not of raising the environment higher but curtailing that of the affluent.
Because those who work subsidize university educations with their tax money, it may be the first welfare population
The best that can be hoped for
of the results is FAP or its Ribicone mutation a bill scored from both sides as best too extreme, in both groups.
WHAT'S YOUR SCENE FOR THE SUMMER OF 72?
Check Now on Our "No Obligation" Testing - Physical - Application Procedure
Robert Langbaum
The Mysteries of Identity As A Theme In T.S. Eliot's Plays
Make the Air Force Scene as an Officer and Pilot.
will speak tomorrow
8 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium Sponsored by Humanities Lecture Series
For the whole 9 yards, rap with Your Air Force Representative at the Student Union, 5 & 6 April; or call 843-3000, anytime.
Will you have a degree and no place to go?
NO OBLIGATION—DIG?
Let Us Show You Where It's At!!
ANTHRO STUDENTS
Want to know more about KU's summer field work program in archeology?
Discussion & Slides by
Dr. Al Johnson
Tues, April 4 7:30 p.m.
2125 Quail Creek Dr.
Non-archeology students invited too!
GODAR
SUA Special Films presents
Pierrot Le Fou
by Jean-Luc Godard
starring
Jean-Paul Belmondo
Anna Karina
day April 3 7E5 Woodruff
Monday April 3 75 $^{c}$ Woodruff 7:30 D
NATIONAL MUSIC SOCIETY
R Color by Inckenbach & Pearson Picture
The Godfather
All Seats $2.00
No Twilight Prices
R COLOR United Artists
Theater Policy
Starting
Motherhood
Ringo Star The Adventure Bibel
Daily 4:20:7-35:95
Early Matinee Sat. 2:30
JOHN WAYNE
& THE COWBOYS
Pacifica® Technology® GP
Shows: 5:20, 7:25, 9:35
Varsity
TELEPHONE 1-866-426-6666
THEATER POLICY
- Tickets on sale for that day per person
- No extra fees on tickets
- No reserved seats or tickets
- All ticket sales final
"200 MOTELS"
Hillcrest
Show Times Mon & Tues
Matinee—2:0 p.m. only
Evening—8:0 p.m. only
Hillcrest
COLUMBIA PICTURES
JEAN-CLAUDE BRALY
ERIC ROHMER
OLIARE'S KNEES
GF
"INCISIVE WIT AND INTELLECTUAL STIMULATION."
Daily 4:15-7:30-9:25
Early Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:20
Hillcrest
WALT DISNEY
Bedknobs and Broomsticks
Eve shows 7-39, 30
Continuous Shows thru
Mon, from 1:00 p.m.
WON! THU TUES
WON! THU TUES
Granada
THEATRE...telephone V3-3744
POSA FILMS
INTERNACIONAL, S.A.
presenta a
su artista exclusivo
Mario
Moreno
EL PADRECITO
EASTMANCOLOR
TUESDAY, APRIL 4
7:30 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
ADMISSION FREE
In Spanish Only
con ANGEL GARASA ROSA MARIA VAZQUEZ
Actuación especial de
Direção por MIGUEL M. DELGADO Produção por IACQUES GELMAN
Distribulda por COLUMBIA PICTURES
M. VAZDEVANOV
6
Monday, April 3, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KU Wins Series From Big Eight Favorite Cyclones
BY DAN GEORGE
Kansas Sports Writer Hold on to your seats—the Jayhawks are for real.
Floyd Temple's University of Kansas baseball team more than proved that Sunday afternoon. Rebounding from Saturday's crushing, 8-4 loss to Iowa State, Temple ended a 10-2 victory. Ames crew two: 20-2 and 11-1.
"I'm proud of these kids," said Temple. "After Saturday's game, it would have been easy to
rollover and play dead. But I was pleased at the way they came back and took it to them."
The continued fine pitching of Steve Corder and Bob Cox played a big part in the Jayhawks' success.
His pitching opponent.
southpaw Jeff Schneider,
surrendered seven hits to the
Jayhawks, who had runners on
in every inning except on
the fifth.
KU'S FIRST RUN came in the fourth inning. After Chadd Rehn beat out a hit to deep shortstop, Jerry Evans was safe on a sacrifice bunt attempt when he drove in the go-ahead. With one out and runners on second and third, Corder then added his own cause by squeezing
Big 8 Standings
Conference All Game
Conference All Games
| | W L | W L |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Okla St. | 3 0 | 1 0 |
| Kansas | 2 1 | 9 2 |
| Kansas St. | 2 1 | 8 9 |
| Oklahoma | 2 1 | 16 8 |
| Colorado | 1 2 | 4 10 |
| Iowa State | 1 2 | 1 3 |
| Missouri | 1 2 | 8 7 |
| Nebraska | 3 0 | 3 8 |
In the sixth, Dan Heck lined a single to left field and was sure to win. He went to third when Jerry Evans hit into a fielder's choice. George McCaffrey passed diving Cyclone first baseman Larry McDaniel into right field.
Renn home on a bunt.
In the second game, Ox took up where Corder left off. The Wichita junior gave five hits to Iowa State, walking one and
striking out four. His bid for bison was unqualified when the Cyclones combined error past third baseman John Turner with two singles in the game.
With two outs, he was relieved by Bill Stiegemeier, who struck out the last man for the win.
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALL
THE JAYHAWKS, who managed only three hits in the contest, used fine baserumping shots and drove five fifters to fifth to get their two runs. George
Johnston was safe at first when Barry Jones, the first baseman was pulled off the bag by a third baseman Mike Curran's throw. He ran away safely when Don Powers, and pitcher, fumbled the ball. After Turner, running for Johnston, was forced out at third, Bill Glass was hit by a pitch. Bob Wolf then went to right, scoring Cox and Ohm.
It was the third consecutive victory for both Corder and Cox.
KU
Jayhawk Bill Glass Applies Tag to Stealing Runne
KU stiffed Iowa State to sweep a doubleheader Sunday, 2-0 and 2-1
"I thought our guys did a good job, Timmons said Sunday. "The meet must have been so fun," he said a couple of bad breaks early.
"You have to realize that this was the first real outdoor competition our guys had. Bad weather, fifth outdoor meet of the season.
Despite the fact that
university of Kansas track
bachelor's degree in MLB
Saturday, KU coach Bob
Timmons will be the team's
player for six games of his play.
"UCLA is the defending NCAA outdoor champion, and they have a very good team again this year."
KU's effort produced two varsity records and several individual highs.
Bill Hatcher won the pole vault with a 16-9. That broke the old record of 16-8 he shared with Bob Schroeder, 1690, and Jan Johnson, 1687.
Loss to UCLA Produces Records by Hatcher, Lutz
*SOPHIMORE SPRIINTER*
Mark Lutz finished second in the 220-yard dash in 20.7. He broke Benn Olsen in 1998 and 2003 by 80. Ben Olson in 1996.
"Hatcher handled himself really well," said Timmons. "He did a heck of a job. We were very pleased with Mark's effort, also. He got off to a slow start, but we turned to finish like a house after."
KU jumped to an early lead and held it until the eighth event, in which word record-holder John Kline collapsed 47.2 in the 1940-yard dash.
Dana LeDuc and Rudy Gowana, KU's freshman shot in their event. LeDuce's throw of 38-35 was his perfect best.
Jon Callen shattered his all-time
'KENT TURNED in a courageous performance. He really struggled, but he wouldn't quit. I tried to pull him off the track, but he didn't.
The meet, which was televised in the Los Angeles area, was held on a warm and windy afternoon after a good-sized crowd.
ow by winning in 8+ 51.6. Kent McDonald finished third despite and injury and a recent bout with a cold.
p. 42, 109
Simon, p. 42, 109
Simon, p. 42, 109
Simon, p. 42, 109
Simon, p. 42, 109
Simon, p. 42, 109
Simon, p. 42, 109
Simon, p. 42, 109
Simon, p. 42, 109
(Meet record old record 14 by Jon Kesson)
and daver. RU, 43, 5
Robinson, RU, 43, 5
440 relay—1. Kansas (Scavuzzo, Williams,
Lutz, Edwards) 40.3; 2. UCLA (diflawal-
passing out of zone).
TRACK RESULTS
Kotelnick, UCLA, 9.24 (8). Still, UKU, 24.04
100 dash-1, Edmundson, UCLA, 9.32 (Tet)
100 dash-2, Edmundson, UCLA, 9.36
Reigle Robinson, UCLA, 1797, Romme
1975, UCLA, 1971), Willa; UKU, 9.31,
Willa
440 dash-1. Smith, UCLA, 47.2; 2 Gaddits,
UCLA, 47.5; 3 Stepp, KU, 48.6.
Sput. patl - 1, Lebanon KU - 38/43; 2, Lebanon
patl - 1, Lebanon KU - 38/43; 2, Lebanon
Sleepaway - 1, Caldus KU - 95/106;
record old record II (92) Gallen IWF; 170,
UCLA ULA; 20, 720; D'monaldo KU
MLA; 120, 720.
Pole vault -1. Hatcher, KU, 16-9; 2
Moors, UCLA, 15-6.
880 run-1 - Jacques, JU: 152;1, 152;
Illams, UCLA: 152.3; 1, Tschudson, UCLA
152.4;
404 intermediate hurdles -1, Corval,
UCLA 31.7 (Meet record: old record by
Wayne Collet, UCAI, 1971). 2. Bornkessel,
KU 10.2 (W. 1971) 12.4 14.4
190
Disciple-1. Gordon, UCLA. 180-6; 2.
Freeburg, UCLA. 177-6; 3. Gother, UCLA.
163-9.
Bouf 748-1; Jacques, KC. 1321; 2. W
Williams, UCLA, 152.3; 3. Tschudl, UCLA,
154.3
Disease, 149; Louis, UCLA, 130.6
220 dash-1. Edmonson, UCLA. 2.06 (Meet record: old record 20.8 by Wayne Collette 1970). 2. Lutz, KU. 2.07; 3. Gibson, UCLA 19.9
Tom Sevacuzy, Delvin Williams, Tomm Emmett Edwards and Luz clocked a swift 40.3 in the 440. The splits in the mile relay were recorded by kelseykee with Scavuzy. 86.2 R. Jacques and 47.9 by Phil Steph.
1. Bullock U, 9.06.12. Sail 2. Bullock U, 8.04.12. Sail 3. Bullock U, 8.04.12. Sail 4. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 5. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 6. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 7. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 8. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 9. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 10. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 11. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 12. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 13. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 14. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 15. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 16. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 17. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 18. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 19. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 20. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 21. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 22. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 23. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 24. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 25. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 26. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 27. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 28. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 29. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 30. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 31. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 32. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 33. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 34. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 35. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 36. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 37. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 38. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 39. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 40. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 41. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 42. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 43. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 44. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 45. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 46. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 47. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 48. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 49. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 50. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 51. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 52. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 53. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 54. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 55. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 56. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 57. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 58. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 59. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 60. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 61. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 62. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 63. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 64. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 65. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 66. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 67. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 68. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 69. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 70. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 71. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 72. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 73. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 74. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 75. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 76. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 77. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 78. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 79. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 80. McKinley U, 9.06.12. Sail 81. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 82. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 83. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 84. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 85. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 86. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 87. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 88. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 89. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 90. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 91. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 92. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 93. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 94. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 95. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 96. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 97. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 98. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 99. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 100. 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McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 197. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 198. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 199. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 200. McKinney U, 9.06.12. Sail 201. McKinney U, 202. McKinney U, 203. McKinney U, 204. McKinney U, 205. McKinney U, 206. McKinney U, 207. McKinney U, 208. McKinney U, 209. McKinney U, 210. McKinney U, 211. McKinney U, 212. McKinney U, 213. McKinney U, 214. McKinney U, 215. McKinney U, 216. McKinney U, 217. McKinney U, 218. McKinney U, 219. McKinney U, 220. McKinney U, 221. McKinney U, 222. McKinney U, 223. McKinney U, 224. McKinney U, 225. McKinney U, 226. McKinney U, 227. McKinney U, 228. McKinney U, 229. McKinney U, 230. McKinney U, 231. McKinney U, 232. McKinney U, 233. McKinney U, 234. McKinney U, 235. McKinney U, 236. McKinney U, 237. McKinney U, 238. McKinney U, 239. McKinney U, 240. McKinney U, 241. McKinney U, 242. McKinney U, 243. McKinney U, 244. McKinney U, 245. McKinney U, 246. McKinney U, 247. McKinney U, 248. McKinney U, 249. McKinney U, 250. McKinney U, 251. McKinney U, 252. McKinney U, 253. McKinney U, 254. McKinney U, 255. McKinney U, 256. McKinney U, 257. McKinney U, 258. McKinney U, 259. McKinney U, 260. McKinney U, 261. McKinney U, 262. McKinney U, 263. McKinney U, 264. McKinney U, 265. McKinney U, 266. McKinney U, 267. McKinney U, 268. McKinney U, 269. McKinney U, 270. McKinney U, 271. McKinney U, 272. McKinney U, 273. McKinney U, 274. McKinney U, 275. McKinney U, 276. McKinney U, 277. McKinney U, 278. McKinney U, 279. McKinney U, 280. McKinney U, 281. McKinney U, 282. McKinney U, 283. McKinney U, 284. McKinney U, 285. McKinney U, 286. McKinney U, 287. McKinney U, 288. McKinney U, 289. McKinney U, 290. McKinney U, 291. McKinney U, 292. McKinney U, 293. McKinney U, 294. McKinney U, 295. McKinney U, 296. McKinney U, 297. McKinney U, 298. McKinney U, 299. McKinney U, 300. McKinney U, 301. McKinney U, 302. McKinney U, 303. McKinney U, 304. McKinney U, 305. McKinney U, 306. McKinney U, 307. McKinney U, 308. McKinney U, 309. McKinney U, 310. McKinney U, 311. McKinney U, 312. McKinney U, 313. McKinney U, 314. McKinney U, 315. McKinney U, 316. McKinney U, 317. McKinney U, 318. McKinney U, 319. McKinney U, 320. McKinney U, 321. McKinney U, 322. McKinney U, 323. McKinney U, 324. McKinney U, 325. McKinney U, 326. McKinney U, 327. McKinney U, 328. McKinney U, 329. McKinney U, 330. McKinney U, 331. McKinney U, 332. McKinney U, 333. McKinney U, 334. McKinney U, 335. McKinney U, 336. McKinney U, 337. McKinney U, 338. McKinney U, 339. McKinney U, 340. McKinney U, 341. McKinney U, 342. McKinney U, 343. McKinney U, 344. McKinney U, 345. McKinney U, 346. McKinney U, 347. McKinney U, 348. McKinney U, 349. McKinney U, 350. McKinney U, 351. McKinney U, 352. McKinney U, 353. McKinney U, 354. McKinney U, 355. McKinney U, 356. McKinney U, 357. McKinney U, 358. McKinney U, 359. McKinney U, 360. McKinney U, 361. McKinney U, 362. McKinney U, 363. McKinney U, 364. McKinney U, 365. McKinney U, 366. McKinney U, 367. McKinney U, 368. McKinney U, 369. McKinney U, 370. McKinney U, 371. McKinney U, 372. McKinney U, 373. McKinney U, 374. McKinney U, 375. McKinney U, 376. McKinney U, 377. McKinney U, 378. McKinney U, 379. McKinney U, 380. McKinney U, 381. McKinney U, 382. McKinney U, 383. McKinney U, 384. McKinney U, 385. McKinney U, 386. McKinney U, 387. McKinney U, 388. McKinney U, 389. McKinney U, 390. McKinney U, 391. McKinney U, 392. McKinney U, 393. McKinney U, 394. McKinney U, 395. McKinney U, 396. McKinney U, 397. McKinney U, 398. McKinney U, 399. McKinney U, 400. McKinney U, 401. McKinney U, 402. McKinney U, 403. McKinney U, 404. McKinney U, 405. McKinney U, 406. McKinney U, 407. McKinney U, 408. McKinney U, 409. McKinney U, 410. McKinney U, 411. McKinney U, 412. McKinney U, 413. McKinney U, 414. McKinney U, 415. McKinney U, 416. McKinney U, 417. McKinney U, 418. McKinney U, 419. McKinney U, 420. McKinney U, 421. McKinney U, 422. McKinney U, 423. McKinney U, 424. McKinney U, 425. McKinney U, 426. McKinney U, 427. McKinney U, 428. McKinney U, 429. McKinney U, 430. McKinney U, 431. McKinney U, 432. McKinney U, 433. McKinney U, 434. McKinney U, 435. McKinney U, 436. McKinney U, 437. McKinney U, 438. McKinney U, 439. McKinney U, 440. McKinney U, 441. McKinney U, 442. McKinney U, 443. McKinney U, 444. McKinney U, 445. McKinney U, 446. McKinney U, 447. McKinney U, 448. McKinney U, 449. McKinney U, 450. McKinney U, 451. McKinney U, 452. McKinney U, 453. McKinney U, 454. McKinney U, 455. McKinney U, 456. McKinney U, 457. McKinney U, 458. McKinney U, 459. McKinney U, 460. McKinney U, 461. McKinney U, 462. McKinney U, 463. McKinney U, 464. McKinney U, 465. McKinney U, 466. McKinney U, 467. McKinney U, 468. McKinney U, 469. McKinney U, 470. McKinney U, 471. McKinney U, 472. McKinney U, 473. McKinney U, 474. McKinney U, 475. McKinney U, 476. McKinney U, 477. McKinney U, 478. McKinney U, 479. McKinney U, 480. McKinney U, 481. McKinney U, 482. McKinney U, 483. McKinney U, 484. McKinney U, 485. McKinney U, 486. McKinney U, 487. McKinney U, 488. McKinney U, 489. McKinney U, 490. McKinney U, 491. McKinney U, 492. McKinney U, 493. McKinney U, 494. McKinney U, 495. McKinney U, 496. McKinney U, 497. McKinney U, 498. McKinney U, 499. McKinney U, 500. McKinney U, 501. McKinney U, 502. McKinney U, 503. McKinney U, 504. McKinney U, 505. McKinney U, 506. McKinney U, 507. McKinney U, 508. McKinney U, 509. McKinney U, 510. McKinney U, 511. McKinney U, 512. McKinney U, 513. McKinney U, 514. McKinney U, 515. McKinney U, 516. McKinney U, 517. McKinney U, 518. McKinney U, 519. McKinney U, 520. McKinney U, 521. McKinney U, 522. McKinney U, 523. McKinney U, 524. McKinney U, 525. McKinney U, 526. McKinney U, 527. McKinney U, 528. McKinney U, 529. McKinney U, 530. McKinney U, 531. McKinney U, 532. McKinney U, 533. McKinney U, 534. McKinney U, 535. McKinney U, 536. McKinney U, 537. McKinney U, 538. McKinney U, 539. McKinney U, 540. 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McKinney U, 657. McKinney U, 658. McKinney U, 659. McKinney U, 660. McKinney U, 661. McKinney U, 662. McKinney U, 663. McKinney U, 664. McKinney U, 665. McKinney U, 666. McKinney U, 667. McKinney U, 668. McKinney U, 669. McKinney U, 670. McKinney U, 671. McKinney U, 672. McKinney U, 673. McKinney U, 674. McKinney U, 675. McKinney U, 676. McKinney U, 677. McKinney U, 678. McKinney U, 679. McKinney U, 680. McKinney U, 681. McKinney U, 682. McKinney U, 683. McKinney U, 684. McKinney U, 685. McKinney U, 686. McKinney U, 687. McKinney U, 688. McKinney U, 689. McKinney U, 690. McKinney U, 691. McKinney U, 692. McKinney U, 693. McKinney U, 694. McKinney U, 695. McKinney U, 696. McKinney U, 697. McKinney U, 698. McKinney U, 699. McKinney U, 700. McKinney U, 701. McKinney U, 702. McKinney U, 703. McKinney U, 704. McKinney U, 705. McKinney U, 706. McKinney U, 707. McKinney U, 708. McKinney U, 709. McKinney U, 710. McKinney U, 711. McKinney U, 712. McKinney U, 713. McKinney U, 714. McKinney U, 715. McKinney U, 716. McKinney U, 717. McKinney U, 718. McKinney U, 719. McKinney U, 720. McKinney U, 721. McKinney U, 722. McKinney U, 723. McKinney U, 724. McKinney U, 725. McKinney U, 726. McKinney U, 727. McKinney U, 728. McKinney U, 729. McKinney U, 730. McKinney U, 731. McKinney U, 732. McKinney U, 733. McKinney U, 734. McKinney U, 735. McKinney U, 736. McKinney U, 737. McKinney U, 738. McKinney U, 739. McKinney U, 740. McKinney U, 741. McKinney U, 742. McKinney U, 743. McKinney U, 744. McKinney U, 745. McKinney U, 746. McKinney U, 747. McKinney U, 748. McKinney U, 749. McKinney U, 750. McKinney U, 751. McKinney U, 752. McKinney U, 753. McKinney U, 754. McKinney U, 755. McKinney U, 756. McKinney U, 757. McKinney U, 758. McKinney U, 759. McKinney U, 760. McKinney U, 761. McKinney U, 762. McKinney U, 763. McKinney U, 764. McKinney U, 765. McKinney U, 766. McKinney U, 767. McKinney U, 768. McKinney U, 769. McKinney U, 770. McKinney U, 771. McKinney U, 772. McKinney U, 773. McKinney U, 774. McKinney U, 775. McKinney U, 776. McKinney U, 777. McKinney U, 778. McKinney U, 779. McKinney U, 780. McKinney U, 781. McKinney U, 782. McKinney U, 783. McKinney U, 784. McKinney U, 785. McKinney U, 786. McKinney U, 787. McKinney U, 788. McKinney U, 789. McKinney U, 790. McKinney U, 791. McKinney U, 792. McKinney U, 793. McKinney U, 794. McKinney U, 795. McKinney U, 796. McKinney U, 797. McKinney U, 798. McKinney U, 799. McKinney U, 800. McKinney U, 801. McKinney U, 802. McKinney U, 803. McKinney U, 804. McKinney U, 805. McKinney U, 806. McKinney U, 807. McKinney U, 808. McKinney U, 809. McKinney U, 810. McKinney U, 811. McKinney U, 812. McKinney U, 813. McKinney U, 814. McKinney U, 815. McKinney U, 816. McKinney U, 817. McKinney U, 818. McKinney U, 819. McKinney U, 820. McKinney U, 821. McKinney U, 822. McKinney U, 823. McKinney U, 824. McKinney U, 825. McKinney U, 826. McKinney U, 827. McKinney U, 828. McKinney U, 829. McKinney U, 830. McKinney U, 831. McKinney U, 832. McKinney U, 833. McKinney U, 834. McKinney U, 835. McKinney U, 836. McKinney U, 837. McKinney U, 838. McKinney U, 839. McKinney U, 840. McKinney U, 841. McKinney U, 842. McKinney U, 843. McKinney U, 844. McKinney U, 845. McKinney U, 846. McKinney U, 847. McKinney U, 848. McKinney U, 849. McKinney U, 850. McKinney U, 851. McKinney U, 852. McKinney U, 853. McKinney U, 854. McKinney U, 855. McKinney U, 856. McKinney U, 857. McKinney U, 858. McKinney U, 859. McKinney U, 860. McKinney U, 861. McKinney U, 862. McKinney U, 863. McKinney U, 864. McKinney U, 865. McKinney U, 866. McKinney U, 867. McKinney U, 868. McKinney U, 869. McKinney U, 870. McKinney U, 871. McKinney U, 872. McKinney U, 873. McKinney U, 874. McKinney U, 875. McKinney U, 876. McKinney U, 877. McKinney U, 878. McKinney U, 879. McKinney U, 880. McKinney U, 881. McKinney U, 882. McKinney U, 883. McKinney U, 884. McKinney U, 885. McKinney U, 886. McKinney U, 887. McKinney U, 888. McKinney U, 889. McKinney U, 890. McKinney U, 891. McKinney U, 892. McKinney U, 893. McKinney U, 894. McKinney U, 895. McKinney U, 896. McKinney U, 897. McKinney U, 898. McKinney U, 899. McKinney U, 900. McKinney U, 901. McKinney U, 902. McKinney U, 903. McKinney U, 904. McKinney U, 905. McKinney U, 906. McKinney U, 907. McKinney U, 908. McKinney U, 909. McKinney U, 910. McKinney U, 911. McKinney U, 912. McKinney U, 913. McKinney U, 914. McKinney U, 915. McKinney U, 916. McKinney U, 917. McKinney U, 918. McKinney U, 919. McKinney U, 920. McKinney U, 921. McKinney U, 922. McKinney U, 923. McKinney U, 924. McKinney U, 925. McKinney U, 926. McKinney U, 927. McKinney U, 928. Mc
Mile relay - 1, UCLA (Gaddis, Sanchez
Smith. Browni 3.10 4.2 Kanzes 3.19 4.
"The wind was a factor in some events," Timms told "Sam Colson had a tough time throwing a ball." Colson threw his win despite a mediterranean throw.
Timmons praised the performances of the 440-yard and mile relay teams.
Despite the loss and some disappointing performances, Timmons was optimistic that his team would outdoors it than it was indoor.
"It takes a while to adjust from indoors to outdoors." Timmons said, "but once we do we'll be stronger. Outdoors we will be strong in the javelin, triple jump, and gymnastics." Relay, which are not held indoors,
"Also, we could score some points in the discus if Guevara and Lebuc come around. They could have both chance to practice so far."
K-State Pitcher
Bumps Missouri
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP)—Bob Leslie diced two out hits to Missouri and belted a three-run hero to spark Kansas State to a victory over the Tigers in Big Eagle Conference Baseball Sunday.
The Wildcats put three runs on the board in the third with Bill Droge and Charlie Clark and a third scored an onsgoring on an egg.
WEST PALM BEACH, FLA.
(AP)—Gil Hodges, the one-time star of the old Brooklyn Dodgers who managed the Miracle Mets of New York to baseball's world, died on Sunday, 2009, collapsed and died Sunday.
Miracle Man Hodges Dies of Heart Attack
Hodges had just finished a golf match at the Ramada Inn and was strolling back to his moke for a meal, when he slumped to the ground.
Death apparently was caused by heart attack, a hospital spokesman said.
HODGES WOULD have been 48 Tuesday, just one day before the scheduled start of the 1972 major league baseball season.
He was rushed to the Good Samaritan Hospital, where he was admitted at 5:25 p.m. EST in minutes later, the hospital said.
He was playing golf because the Mets' scheduled exhibition game here with the Montreal Expos had been cancelled by the Los Angeles major league baseball players. The strike began Saturday.
Bob Scheffing, the Mets' general manager, and William Bartholomy, president of the hospital when Hodges died.
Undermanned Soccer Team Falls to MU
With substitutions filling six positions on the starting lineup, Missouri team lost to the University of Missouri 5-2 Saturday in game one.
The heart attack was the second for the Mets' manager. Hodges was struck with a mild heart seizure Sep. 24, 1988, when
team captain Boyke Gafar said some of the starters did not show up for the game so he had to use substitutes.
KU's next game is scheduled for Saturday in Lawrence against Oklahoma State University.
KU's two goals were scored by Gaffar and Silvio Midence.
the Mets were in Atlanta for a baseball game.
But Gaffar said the game had not yet been confirmed.
the OSU game does not materialize, the next action for KU will be the Kansas City Soccer Tournament April 16. KU will play in A division of the tournament with five other teams.
The five teams will be Ottawa University, Feld, International, Atlas and Latham All of the team will play in the America Soccer Association
Hodges sat out the rest of that season, returning to manage the Mets in 1969.
The World Series victory over Baltimore capped a rags-to-retaliation. The former ragguishman expansion team. The title was dully sweet for Hodges, since he had played on the original Met squad in 1962.
His popularity as a manager reached the heights of his heyday in 1982 when he snapped first baseman fanned the adoration of the Dodger.
Another teammate at Brooklyn was Jackie Robinson, who said at his Connecticut home, "With this, and what happened to Campbay and a lot of the other guys we played with, it scares you. I have never been kicked by it all. I have treasoned for Gil's family and kids."
A companion from that old Brooklyn team, catcher Rory Campanella, currently lies ill at a Vailahla, N.Y. hospital.
SEATTLE (AP) - Lenny McCormack of Seattle Supersonics of the National Basketball Association, announced Sunday he was
Hodges is survived by his widow, Joan; three daughters and a son.
Sonics' Coach Becomes Player
"I've decided to give up the coaching job and continue as a player," Wilkens said.
NEW YORK (AP)—Striking major league baseball players continued to scatter to their homes Sunday while representatives of both sides the season again dispute that threatened to delay the 1972 season opening, scheduled for Wednesday.
The announcement came a little more than a week after a meeting in Los Angeles with Sonics president Sam Schulman. The team wasressed disappointment in the Sonics failure to make the playoffs.
It is the first general strike by players in the sport's history.
Baseball Strike Unsolved; Players Head Homeward
Miller indicated that the time spent in the meetings Saturday and Sunday had been used in these positions. Really it's been rather
Negotiators for both sides met Sunday for the second straight time in their 90-minute talks. John Gahner, representing the Millett family, the Miller executive director of the striking business group, and the Miller executive director of the striking business group, met with the negotiators.
Owner Bill Bartholomay of the Atlanta Braves said "every effort will be made" to field a team on the field, it meant using minor league.
"THE SITUATION remains the same," said Gaherin following Sunday's talks. "There progressed towards a settlement."
In a field of 42 teams at the national women's gymnastics team, the University of Iowa hosted Saturday in Des Moines, Iowa, the University of Kansas women's gymnastics team finished 14th with a score of 87.40
Leading the way for KU were Leah Tang and Greg Smith, with Jouenne Smith and an 8.25 in floor exercises. Clindy Friend scored 7.55 in the basketball game.
Women Place 14th in National Gym Tourney
Miller said that Monday's meeting would probably be a better situation he had been in when Gatherin "He's talking about a full committee tomorrow and a full committee one too," Miller said.
Coach Patricia Ruhi said she was pleased with the team, which had several of the teams that placed higher practiced year-round and some were amateur clubs. Ruhi said these clubs were like
Miller said that independent actuaries were looking at the plan to determine the feasibility of his solution to the demands demanded by the players.
The women's team will perform for a high school group Tuesday in Lawrence before it is through for the year.
None of the KU women made it to the finals, but Tagg came within 5 of making it on the field. She fell off during her routine.
fruitless.
"There is a grave danger that the strike could affect the timing of the season," Gabriel said of the game. "THE STRIKE began Saturday—all 12 scheduled exhibition games were played with six seeking additional contributions from the owners above the offer of $400,000 for the health care segment of the pension package."
Philadelphia Philies' player's investment matters don't come along with a quick settlement, we're prepared to sit it out as long as he is.
A major stumbling block to settlement of the dispute is an $87,000 surplus in the pension fund. It could also interest rates on loans, overfunding and overestimating payments, permanently overplayed players.
The players contend that the
largest league club is $11,000, from each of the 24 major league clubs, would make up the
17 per cent increase they are
But Michael Burke, president of the New York Yankees, said "taking out the escrew would undermine the fund, according to our actuaries. Part of the work of the fund is that reserve."
Archer Wins in Playoff; Arnie Triple-Bogeys 16th
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)—George Archer defended Tommy Aaron on the second hole of the golf course when Paimer collapsed for the $40,000 first prize Sunday in the Greater Greenborean. Open golf
PALMER HAD a two-stroke lead going to the 18th on the final round but hooked his tee shot too hard, and he out, dumped his third shot in a trap and finished with a triple bigseye six that dropped him one shot over.
The 6-foot-6 Archer took his second title of the year when he scored a parine rarine three on the 16th hole—where Palmer met his downfall—as the scrambling Aaron took four strokes, the blunder and hadn't holed out when Archer tapped in a short putt for his par.
He was tied at that figure, 11 under par on the wet Sedgefield Country Club course, with Dave Stockton. Chi Chi Rodriguez and Head. Stockton and Rodriguez had had 78% and Sneed a 68%.
after failing to sign his scorecard,
he was just one stroke off the pace in the chase for first prize after shooting a four under-par 67 in the first of Sunday's two games, and rules of golf he was disqualified.
Archer had a three-under-48 in the last of Sunday's two rounds and Aaron had a 67 to 12 in the regulation 72 holes at 222.
South African Gary Player was disqualified in the third round
Player had posted a 54-hole
playoff win. He was the trailed
trailer leader Bruce Crampion
by a single stroke when he was
barred from seeing off for the
win.
The disappointed Palmer finished with a 70 and 273.
"I checked my card very, very carefully," Player said. "I was in a hurry to have lunch. I asked a lady in the tent how long we had to leave so she did 34 minutes. So I was in a hurry to get back to the hotel.
A DOUBLE round of 36 holes was forced on Friday's play was washed out.
Leslie's wallop in the sixth cinched the outcome.
"When I got there, I said to my wife, 'I think I forgot to sign my card.' "
Injuries Mar Successful Scrimmage
He immediately started back to him. "What's the general chairman John Forbis on the way Forbis had player's and Gary signed it at that time."
Injuries to defensive back Mike Burton and receiver Bob Martin marred an otherwise successful workout as the University of Kansas football squad took to the Memorial Turf Turt Saturday for the first sericum image of spring drills.
Neither has allowed an earned run this season and Cox has not been scored on in 21 innings.
He returned to the course, informed Jack Tuthil, head of the Tournament Players Division and said that he had happened and was disqualified.
Martin dislocated an ankle and is not expected to play again this season. The extent of his injury is now known. Both will be examined by an orthopedic surgeon Monday in Kansas City, according to a medical source.
The rules specify that a player must be disqualified if the fails to sign his card before turning it in to the scoring committee.
"Other than the injuries, I thought things went pretty well," Coach Don Fambrough said.
"It was a control-type seacamp. We weren't concerned about it," Bambrough said. "We wanted to work mostly on our passing."
Fambrough was encouraged by the play of receiver Bruce Adams, a sophomore-to-be. He passed 15 passes during the scrimmage.
"Our young sophomores-to-be are coming along well," Fambroub said.
David Jaynes, Bob Brueggem and Rich Jones shared the quarterback chores for the Jayhawks.
"Our quarterbacking was good," he said, with improvement in all three quarterbacks." Fambough said. I thought our pass protection went well.
"We had concentrated on our throwing game the first four days of the season, and we've accomplished what we had hoped for."
Ryun to Run 880 at Texas
KSU and the Tigers split in the opening doubleheader of the season Saturday. Missouri took over as the statewide State captured the nightcap, 6-2.
"Now we will continue to put in more offense and use our running game. We'll also start working more on the kicking game."
Jim Ryun, world record-holder in the mile and half-mile, has entered the half-mile race in the Texas Relaxs Aeril 7.
Ryun, who is trying to work into Olympic form, will run against eight other former college runners.
Fambrough said the squad would probably have another scrimage Thursday.
Ryun's opponents include former Kansas State runner, Ken Swenson, now in the Army, and Tim McCormick, now David Matina and Dave Morton.
Ryun's world record in the half-
mile is 1:44.9.
In Saturday's action, the game was decided in the fourth innings with a score of 14-9 runs. With a two-run starter Bob Wolf gutted up two straight hits to Iowa State and two strikeouts to Big-Eight catcher Larry Corrigan. Three more singles, a walk and two stolen bases further up the stretch.
West Sparks Lakers With 31
CHICAGO (AP) — The Los
Cubs won the World Series,
brilliant guard tandem of Jerry
West and Gail Goodrich, defeated
the Chicago Bulls 108-101 Sunday.
They have won their best-of-7
their best-of-7 National
Basketball Association playoff
It was the second defeat against one victory for Wolf, who has been tagged with both Jayhawk losses.
He said he was satisfied with the Jayhawks' hitting against the Iowa State pitchers.
Temple was pleased with his success against the Cyclones, who sequestered seventh nationally and are aiming for their third straight win.
"IT WAS JUST a tremendous job of pitching," he said, "and a very satisfying afternoon.
"We kind of scratched around a little, running and taking advantage of their mistakes, but the guys you don't have a great attack.
"These kids have found out they can play with the best. When you take two out of three from the champions, that's something."
"Corder and Cox kept the hitters off balance all afternoon and showed great control. When that happens, you'll hit a lot of balls on the ground but it'd off you to get really good wood on it."
"We'll have to wait and see, but I think we've proved that we can play ball with most of the teams in the conference."
The Jayhawks, now 9-2 will play Nebraska Friday and Saturday in Lincoln. Their next trip is to April 11 and 22 against Missouri.
SATURDAY
SATURDAY
Illgisler, p 4 1 2 Strand, p 1 0 0
Evans, ph 1 0 0
Phan, ph 1 0 0
Remo, p 1 0 0
Turner, 3b 4 1
Glass, 2b 4 1
-- 4 1 2 Glass, 2b 4 1
- nohr, Lahli, Bradley BZ - Zuk,
Wolf SB - Schieber, Schoedler DB.
2. Curran, Dearb LOB - Iowa State K 6.
3. RHI - Tabelle, Scripps 2. Cormartan,
Wolf SB - Schieber, Schoedler DB.
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
Tadleman, h 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Schlesder, h 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Lahl, h 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Corrigan, c 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Bradley, c 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Dierich, f 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Heck, f 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Mohr, b 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Sillegener, p 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Durie, s 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Bercepo, p 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Totals 30 9 12 Totals 56
Iowa State 000 601 020-3
Kansas 110 011 000-4
Sunday (First Game)
Iowa State (10) Kansas (7)
Iowa State 000 000 0-0
Kansas 000 101 X-2
| | lp | lh | r | er | eb |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Gillipee (W.2-1) | 1 | 0 | 2 | 6 | 2 |
| Wolf (L.2) | 1 | 0 | 0 | 6 | 2 |
| Miller | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Sland | 1 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 1 |
| Masson | 1 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
schedleman, cf
Scheduler, c f
Schредler, p 3
Scrutcher, c f
Cortigan, c f
McDaniel, b f
McDanel, b f
Mebr, hf 2
Mebr, hf 2
Duarte, s f
Duarte, s f
Odder, p
Kansas
Schneider, KR-II, 1001-1 XI-4
Schneider, Bender, RH-MJ-Collins, Jordan.
State K, Kansas; State X, Kentucky. Jordan.
Schneider (L:1) 1 3 2 1 0 8 1
Schneider (W:3, 0) 7 3 0 1 0 1 8
radenel, h. 3 0 0 0 0 0
Sunday (Second Game)
Iowa State (1) | Florida (2)
| | 26 | 1 | 5 | Totals |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Iowa State | 21 | 1 | 5 | 22 | 3 |
| Kansas | 000 | 000 | 000 | 1 | 1 |
E-Curran 2, Mohr, Powers, Reck, Tear,
SUB, Gillippe, DP - Johnston-Glass,
LOB-Iowa State 5, Kansas 7, RBI-
| | lp | h | r | er | bb | so |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Powers (L. 0.3) | 6 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Cell (W. 3.0) | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
| Sligemeyer | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
HBP-Glass (by Powers). S-
Stegemeyer. Time-1; 40. A--350.
Jo Jo Scores 29; Celts Down Hawks
BOSTON (AP) — The Boston Celtics, behind the steady shooting of John Havlicek and Joey Boundary, beat the halftime lead Sunday afternoon and coasted to a 138-119 victory over the Atlanta Hawks, taking a 2-1 lead in their Eastern Conference matchup. The Basketball Association affiliate.
The Celtics outscored Atlanta, the second quarter, giving the Hawks an 10-5 intermission. From that point on, the Hawks cut the deficit to one in three.
Frazier, who finished with a game-high 30 points, scored 19 of them in the first half.
White got 15 of his 29 points in the first quarter as the Atlantic Division Champion Celtics opened up a 33-27 edge. Pete Maravich won 34 of those first quarter for the Hawks, keeping them in the ball game.
NEW YORK (AP)—The New York Knicks, powered by Walt Frazier's torrid first half shooting, overwhelmed the Baltimore Bullets, to 110-88. Sunday they are their national basketball team in Eastern Conference semifinals off series at a one victory apache.
Frazier Fires Knicks Past Baltimore,110-83
The Celtics ran off nine straight points early in the second quarter, boosting their scoring by a vital 15 of his 31 points in the second session and reserve center Hank Finkel, replacing Dace Cowens, who sat out about half the game for the Celtics and eight points and six rebounds.
Baltimore was unable to mount a serious challenge in the second half, closing within 13 points at 79-66 going into the fourth period.
Frazer pripped in baskets from inside and out, hitting 8 of 13 first half field goal attempts while teammates Dave Debusscheh and James Lecura 10 to push New York to a 56-38 lead at the ball.
George Trapp replaced Maravich with 9:16 of the quarter remaining and hit for 10 for Atlanta's 20 points before
The Hawks, behind Maravich,
cut the margin to 86-78 with 3:50
to play in the third period. The
Hawks score five points,
giving them a
comfortable 95-78 lead, and
get within eight only once again.
ST
Walt Bellamy added 21 points for the Hawks.
The series resumes Tuesday night at Atlanta.
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 3, 1972
1
The image shows two musicians performing in a dimly lit room. The musician on the left is playing the trumpet, while the musician on the right is playing the saxophone. Both are wearing formal attire and appear to be focused on their performance.
Kenton Trumpeter Warms Up
Five days
A trumpeter for the Stan Kenton band performs a lonely warm-up at the Red Dog Inn Sunday night prior to his group's performance there. The orchestra, billed as "today's most exciting ensemble," has members from 50's and 50's. An audience of 125 attends the one-night stand,
'Claire's Knee': Only a Surface
Nothing happens in "Claire's Knee" (Hillestress 3), but it sure is a beautiful movie. It's delicious. You know how you wonder if unfortunately it leaves you with the feeling that you should have gotten more of it than you did, or not? You missed the significance of all that "non-action." You didn't miss it. What you see is what you see in "Claire's Knee" that isn't much.
By BARBARASCHMIDT
Kansas Reviews Editor
The story is simple but a bit confusing, so director Eric Rohmer takes the first half hour of Claude Brilly), a French diplomat stationed in Stockholm, is about to marry his girlfriend of 18 years, Dr. Martha Cornu, his childhood home in Amnecy for a summer vacation. There he is greeted by his friend and confidante Aurora, a Rumanian man named Coru, also a Rumanian novelist). She is spending the summer with a divorcee, her stepmother Romand) and her step-daughter Claire (Laureence de Monaghan). Aurora tells Jerome that she has a diplomat from Stockholm about her return home shortly before her marriage (Jerome)* only to have an affair with a teenage girl Aurora can’t decide on an appropriate ending to her story and asks Jerome to help her by teaching her how to live her’s on vacation and telling her what happens along the way. Jerome at first walks at being a “guinea pig,” but gradually he learns his little fiction anyway.
JEROME'S ONLY problem is that he can't bring himself to love her since he yearned old Laura, even though she plays games, flirting at the slightly opportunity. Claire arrives and unwillingly and to willingly pay any more attention to Jerome than good manner necessitates, but Jerome does not bother. Claire that makes her desirable: her knee. For some vague reason she knees in, which her best reests his hand so easily and horribly, becomes an irritably aggressive objection that Jerome must
conquer by putting his hand on it. The rest of the movie traces the slow conquest of Claire's knee from the abeyance of Jerome's passion.
NOT MUCH of a story. As a matter of fact, it's almost trivial in its ordinariness. But Rohmer and his actors have produced a reality that contains at least a few insights about human nature.
Jerome is an intelligent man, apparently honest to himself, but he like to of us, is a self-aware man. Jerome does another. He says he doesn't believe in love without intelligence and not their matter and that he could never make a woman cry. Yet, without realizing the hypocrisy in Claire's knee, he finds himself attracted to Claire's knee (a sort of love) while barely being on speaking with her. If he finds himself attracted to her looks, without knowing if she has any intelligence at all, and finally he makes Claire cry in his knee in conscience or knee in pneumonia.
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
A knee is a small thing. Play up as it in this movie it SEEMS to take on great symbolism but lack of action. Little if anything happens in "Clare's Knee": There lots of talks, lots of thinking out loud by Jerome, but nothing ever breaks the surface of fear. It is so obvious through that seems to be screaming, "Look for deeper meanings!" But you can look with a magnifying glass and nothing but specks of dust; there no underlying significance.
"LAIRE'S KNEE" also seeks to tell you, as if you didn't know the physical attraction is uncapable claims to be unaffected by women's choices, but try as he does he cannot escape their hold on his
THE SURFACE is luxuriously beautiful, filled with the lush grass and peat of the lakeides village in brilliant summertime, and seen through cinematographer Neester van Dijk, an almost paradisiacal quality. But superficial beauty isn't just about the landscape that's just about all there is.
Scholastic Honor Group To Open Haskell Chapter
A chapter of Phi Theta Kappa, the first all-indian academic institution has been formed in United States. Indian Junior College, according to G. K. Cobb, fraternity sponsor at psychology institute at Haskell.
Phi Theta Kappa is a junior college affiliate of Phi Beta Kappa, a national honorary scholastic fraternity.
Cobb said Thursday that he was waiting for the official papers and charter to arrive from the national Phi Theta Tau quarters in Canton, Miss. As soon as the charter has been made official, Cobb first 10 members, chosen on the basis of their accumulative grade
I'll pass on this to be imitated this year are Sara M Arneach this year are Jeanette L Clay, Robert E. Joan Bernice George E. Leon Havwitsa Wayne Johnson, Robert C. Ketley, Kirkfeigh, Kingfisher and Johnny Whitehite.
MORE will be instilled.
Students must have above a three point scale on a four point scale to qualify. Cobb said
point, will be initiated.
Cobb also sponsored a chapter of Piti Thia Tappa at Connora High School, where he said when he moved to Haskell, he would continue the work he had done in high school.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Money to pay the $150 charter fee was apportioned from the Haskell budget, Cobb said.
One day
each additional word: $.01
25 words or fewer: $1.00
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dairy Kansan are offered by the following organizations: cured, color, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
8008
Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't, you're at a disadvantage
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing.
Your Analysis of Western Civilization.
Campus Machado, Maryland
W 14th
12
SCUBA EQUIPMENT- FINAL. Mack Snorkel, $29.95. Tank. Regulator. Lifejacket. Guam $12.95. Wet Tank. $12.95. Hawk Kite and $39.95. Spas. $9.95. Hawk Kite and $29.95. See for all your diving needs. largest stock best buys, all equipment. Repair Ship Inc. $800 Barrymars 1-816-763-5678. M卡4124萨姆斯 1-816-763-5678.
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can get the $120.00 cost plus at RAY AUDIO—only our only Stario Discount House in New York. Free Tea, Coffee & Consulting Services.
Equipment - Finish Mask Storage
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See in Manhasset, Air Gun, $29.99.
See in Manhasset, Air Gun, $29.99.
Major brands Dive Equity & Bounty City,
Manhasset, City, Mt. 64343.
Phone: 1-800-745-9222
NORTHISLE COUNTY SHOP, 707
Bridge Anjuee, used furniture,
letters items, oak wood coating and
stainless steel handles, steilies, fireplace wood,
steilies, bicycles, fireplace wood,
of other useful items, open to 9
or 13 days. Helen Abelman, 842-3515
"k" inch chrome Sonar "pansake
nura drum with stand 29" Zildaen
cymbal, 842-9270, call afternoons, 4-4
71 Yamaha 90 Enduro, perfect condi-
tion. $350 842-0671. 4-3
250 Suzuki Savage Trail Bike. Less than 2,000 actual miles. Call 842-9305 evenings. Excellent condition. 4-4
VOLKSWAGEN 1967 Bug, new brakes, stereo, $825 Cheap, Tim, 842-47125.
Chevy II Nov 70 for sale. SS-996
CubeJet - Bucketets - Power-dive
brakes - 250 HP. Call Aranqle, 844-
325-8, 5-P on MWP
MONOCULAR MKCOSCHOP, 4 objectives; 2 mechanics; mechanical stage; 3 components; 5 components; $120 Contact C. Place; Box 20, 111 Brownsville Ri, Cincinnati, KS 45219, 932-656-8631, 932-656-8635
MOTOIGLA 4-steek stereo tape system
worn enclosed 4 inch speakers,
mounted on a ceiling mount
back mounts allow music enjoyment
in car home. Fred Pickett, 844-2521.
if you have a typewriter skip this
id, if not, call us. Manus, Buhl
Bimandi and Sciences. For students
and students. Phone 846-344-
8201 and save.
THE LATEST IN STRIO- Mussel sell
strawberry glove plaques. Flags converge
on the front of the glove. Flags converge
in my car. Saw three in my car. Saw two
in my car. Saw two
BLEVINS HONDA
Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service
Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service
1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks.
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.02
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Complete set of men's golf clubs. bag included. Four woods, all irons. For information call 844-6880; 6:00 on weekdays and for back. Ask for Rick
71 Datum 1200 Coupe, 10,000 miles,
very clean, factory air, run beautifully,
must sell. Call Gregg. 842-3699
3699
16th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
RED RIDER — Leather Shop — anals,
bett, wallets, miscellaneous
custom work — Heavenly
priced — Monday through
fourth day — 2-4 PM
1965 VW camper-bus includes full
camping equipment and AM-FM
radio. Engine recently overruned, runs
at $1,800 per hour. Call Rust, 843-676-
60 Buick HIT, UK - d, AT, PB, PS, PW
Air Conditioned, new tires. Less than
hit price. Excellent condition $1.395.
Catalypso 41-1299 or 84-2242. 4-5
Excellent used casestudy tape record-
surf with 110 Volt plug-in attach-
ment. $25 at Ray Stone's back.
$29 Max. Many more are reduced
also.
Electric Wuritzr piano—15" speaker with 2 10 aux. speakers $150, 843-
1782. 4-4
YAMAHA 1970 650 cc 924 Schwarz
Road after 6 P.M. Excellent condition
4-5
1970 Suzuki TC-90. Two range gearbox for street and road徒 Great condition, 4,000 miles $250 including insurance and helmet blower 8294-854
Parts at a discount
Brand new Magnavox Component
Brand new Magnavox Component
Retail price $29.90 a pair, more than 100
Svcs for Antennaelectrical Scaled
Svcs for Antennaelectrical Scaled
Svcs for Antennaelectrical Scaled
$29.90 a pair, more than 100
Svcs for Antennaelectrical Scaled
KAY STONBACK for KAY STONBACK
Fender Jaguar with hard case;
40x8X18 double combo amp;
40x8X18 spool cabinet combo;
3-12' and 2 horn driver. Shure uni-
ported amplifier. With stand, IC
836-2166 weekdays.
59 Les Paul, Gibson, Curtly maple sunburst. Humbucking picks. Excellent cond. Sell or收购 for acoustic guitar. 845-7935. 1140-6 Room 8.
1962 Volvo P1000. Red with black interior. The most expensive economy car in the world Best offer over $700. Call 842-2800. 4-6
Minolta SR-T 101 camera like new.
$200 Call Mark, 842-6751. 4-5
Tuoredo shirt & Saude Jackets
shirts leather. Overall for kids.
Nike jerseys. Zara jeans in
town, in two new shirts $10; cure-
bokon $19.89 Vermont, 11-6-4
Oldsmobile - 1963 - Delta 88 - Con-
formable - Air Conditioned - On 1 yr
60,000 actual miles + $500 Sale
up to 85,000 miles. Call 834-6466. Steve.
- 1-4
Need to sell 4米长 Olympic Symbole
AM FM 5M, FM shrew build on Stretch
and include a segment
BSR full band and include a segment
BSR full band for after 4.90 for further information 4.6
1071 Kawasaki 125e Enouro, 1400
likes, like new $475 Phone 843-558
or see at 2022 Princeton Blvd. 4-5
G12 19 string guitar- excellent condition - $130. Also 18 R tk card guitar deck, house converter, rack mount speaker kit $100. Dave Lee. 823-607-1 4-6
BOSCH 1894 $8A $60 Hornet
clean and foul (all cars) will cost $3000
clean and foul ($500 per car) would cost
O.R. M 23 or call 843-3535 around 4-
6:47
DELICATESENE
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Factory Authorized Sales & Service
THE HIDE in the WALL
Open until 3 a.m. — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III.
634 Mass.
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
THE MERCANTILE
Sale of the century Pascalis Madreto Materia RS257.4 - 6 inch and 12kw Kvao power. Pin Ball Machine William Williams pact, fitt, 814-340-300 4-6
KAT Suzuki
Roberts 778X 8-track Reel-Reel:
$300 842-8819 4-6
1962 Volkswagen, clean and in good running condition. Call 842-3472. 4-72
Ladin's 10 speed bicycle. Schwinn
super-sport, two-mile. Excellent Con-
dition. Phone 864-1231
4-61
FOR RENT
Open
24 hrs.
per day
8 track stereo tape deck and speakers.
Best offer. Call 864-3794 anytime after
6 P M.
65 MGB and upright piano 842-240 $ _{4.7} $
Roberts Reed to Heal and Corridors
Tape Reeder—two-speed record-
s and play. Cost $360 new, will sell for
$420. Very good. 842-502-8231
AVAILABLE THIN SUMMER Right
away! New 2 bedroom apt in
Mississippi. Two new bed-
rooms available. Avail-
lance 4 one year old apt in
one of our apartments.
All apartment beds, central
and private baths. Bed-
room beaches between 5:30 P.M. and 10:30 P.M.
Rekindle Villa Apartments, Limited
first month fee rent. Four $50,
first month fee rent. Six $60,
age with all utilities paid
p.m., Call after 4am.
p.m., 842-7731
DUPLXE POR. RENT, 2144 Ridge
Carriage, $175 per mo., 2 bedrooms;
refrigirant (weather; dryer; garage);
electricity; water; gas; Avail. 4.60,
Avail. available 4.46
Share nine bug house with one-two rooms. Private room, $2; block from stadium. Clean. Also 3-speed bicycle for sale. 842-5381. 4-3
SUMMER RENTALS. All types and prices, all near campus. Reserve yours now. Merie Lynch. 1216 431-1601. 481-3221. 4-10
SPENDING THE NUMBER IN LAWEN-
FIELD You can enjoy yourself in the
law offices of a firm that shows
himself if you call Me. Lawen Road
district is where I am living in Argos,
Harvard Road apartment, 8th &
Avonion, of Harrow, London.
You can be economical and
easy to navigate. You can
perhaps optimum mod spec
firm. This firm has a wonderful time to be in La-
wenfield.
SANHA APTS - Must leave before
anemer enders leave from either
lift or 15th of May 1 barm, kitchen,
bathroom. Call 888-277-6301;
828 (aft or eave).
NICK FURNISHED 3 BEDROOMS
NICK FURNISHED 4 BEDROOMS
LIVING ROOM VERY CLOSE TO
CAMPUS. JAUNER NEED 70
TO CAMPUS. JAUNER NEED 70
842-6242 AFTER 5 P.M.
Tired of trying to find that ideal apt. location, we have a fleet of 1.2 & 2 berm apartments throughout the city with office space Agency, N11 Kentucky, K12-2500
APARTMENT FOR RENT One bed,
air conditioning. Available.
April 1st at 19 West 14th. Call 842-
1531 at 6 a.m.
4-5
2434 Iowa V12-1008
KEYBOARD STUDIOS
OPEN NIGHTS
Tony's 66 Service
- Guitars
- Recorders
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Recorders
Music
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
FOR SJA Events
- Strings
Rose
KEYBOARD GUILD
- Accessories
- Guitars
- Music
DRIVE IN
AMBULATION
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th MISS.
843-504-3
843-504-3
1903 Mass. 843-3007
For SUA Events
EAGLE
(
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
Red Baron
NOTICE
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
MARK MUSKETT, 86-234-2488,
while still available. Mail
muskett@naworth.edu or
86-234-2488 or 2107 A. Harvard
laboratory for hardwearing labware and reservation.
Laboratory hardwearing labware is sold out.
Avalon, 9th & Avalon, Harvard and Avlon, 11th & Avlon, and Arizo II & Hills Mission & Living in one of those handsome homes that apartments and you will be more to have a dishwashing, central laundry, and many more features. **4-18**
Carol Lee
Rooms with cooking area in exchange for work for the summer term. 823-
7863 4-4
COIN
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
COLLEGE HILL MARCH坦show classes furnished and unimbanded students at start date of $129. Close to college campus for new students w/ 18th Wk, 18th Pt or call 847-255-3600.
TO STUBLET, Cale, copy. one-bed-
room apt., furnished with A.C. on
large lot. Reasonable. Call 841-2766
after 5.
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W, 6th
842-9450
Barn Partners. Now available for barn rent in Maysville, Indiana. Agua Valley Farm in Lake Perry, Iowa and cooler, plenty of parking. Call Joe Strickler at 614-528-3900 or c
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
5 a.m. 12 p.m. Tues. Sail
5-5 Mon.
5-5 Mon.
Wes. St.
1730 W. St.
842 3644
**LEARN SKYDIVING** lt jump
jumpsmith includes both rope and
jumpersmith. Class data
Class data Training & Test $40 per call Drill Data
@ 348-3199
Experienced in typing thesis, dissertation terms, term papers, application letters, power point presentation types. Accurate and prompt response. Phone #81-5544, Mrs. Wright
Webster's Mobile Homes
TYPING
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance,
including pregnancy benefits. American;
Health & Life Insurance Co.
John Wells, 812-5220.
Your Complete Service
New wide belts F-70 F-14 first quality only $25 plus F-60 F-14 at RAY
Station G-70-143-$25 more. Fast installation at Rocky Mountain's F-70
station at Rocky Mountain's F-70 station.
BRCAUSE meeting April 4 Also,
please sign up for April. Call 843-
622 for more information.
3409 W. 6th 842-7700
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
We can find any book for you! All subjects, rare books, fine bindings, etc. Write T. H. Maughan, 317 Beaumont St., Boston, MA 62116
4-12
Independent
days per week
We got bunches yesir elbosehons of dementia—lots of leather jackets. *Davianii alces* & cowboy hanoi knotts. *Bondariki alces* & Vernort, BIKONOANI alces
Would you like to see some grumpy exe people, yawning lovers & a good friend? Republic of China? You could be Republic of China! That is the way it was at Hass Importer, 1029 Mass. 4-13
Magnavox, Custom Stereo System.
Hig. $129.90. now $108.00 at RAY
STONEBACK'S
Drive-In Theatre
Ample Park Spaces Available
- STRETCHER FRAMES
many in stock
—others on order
THE CONCORD SHOP
- ARTIST CANVAS REDUCED
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., pts. - qts. only
50% OFF
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others on order
844 E. 13th St. 843-387/8
Dodge
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500 E. 23rd
A Person Is Known by the Company He Kee
Keep Good Company—
DRIVE A DATSUN!
TONY'S IMPORTS
See
PLANNING A TRIP??
WJ
842-0444
0 Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-121-1
Maupintour travel service
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
Typing done on elite, electric typewriter. No Theses please. Prompt attention. 843-0958 4-5
Experienced typist will type thesis, manuscripts, themes, etc. Reasonable rates. Call 843-2107 4-4
TYING, JBM type cape. Fast, accurate, neat. Call after 5:00 p.m. or on weekends: 843-2186. 4-4
Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses or dissertation. Electric typing workshop, prompt accurate work. Call 834-2811, Ma Ruckmann
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HELP WANTED
These, term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM Software, your choice of type styles. Also editing at the University of Alaska, Anchorage, ID 8479-45-484-5605.
Typing in my home IBM Selectric
Prompt accurate work. Experienced
Call 841-2556. 5-9
TEACHERS WANTED Contact
Southwest Wooded Agency Group
831, Albuquerque, N.M. 87066
Boulder and memorial,
N.A.T.A.
Head teachers wanted for "Free high school education" in Washington, preferred Experience with high school curriculum including reasoning and reasoning including reasoning and reasoning including
Nedded-Negat, aggressiv part-time
job in the retail department at a
commercial location for selling
business in business over 26 years. Send
inquiries in care of the D4-44
Kanan.
Truck Driver Needed for pick up
services in Reclamation Center,
Lake Tahoe, CA. 15% hourly rate;
$160 per hour plus a 4 mile ride.
@ 843-731-6790, Jacey & Jade
@ 843-731-6790, Jacey & Jade
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
6 proof sittings $5.00
4 proof sittings $3.00
SENIORS
Please call for your appointment for SENIOR PICTURE
Hixon
Special Senior Rates on all orders.
Studio
Ph.843-0330
high school. Class K-12, Parkway-
Central Senior School 1971, red smooth stone, P. on face of stone,
pillar B. P. on back of stone.
摄像师
WANTED
Kanatis Key Press - p-r-t-i-l-n-g from
kaanatis to posters, brochures to book-
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842-1483
Instructor to teach Tal Chi. rn#ne
842-2040. 4-3
CSC
BECAUSE is a listening service. 842-603. Sun- thru Thurs 8-12 P.M. Fri-
& Sat. 8 P.M - 6 A.M.
OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS,
AND ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS,
All the Professors and occupations.
overseas lightning. Free info. information.
5071, Box 3677, San Diego, CA 92115
8115
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale—size 8-10, 12-14, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 90 Kentucky.
PERSONAL
U
MISCELLANEOUS
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Competition Sports Cars Inc
sirloin
11 W. 9th
Our motto is and has always been
"There is no substitute for quality
Delicious Food and Superb Cuisine of Complete Menu Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K. C. Steaks
LAWRENCE KANSAS
11. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
The Bull & Boar
Phone 843-1431 Open 4:30 Closed Monday
50¢ OFF ANY two handed sandwich with the
purchaser at a regular price. You
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featuring -Roast Beef, BQB Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef Grilled Cheese, and the Reuben
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Offer Expires April 10
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The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
928
928 Mass
8
Monday, April 3, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Prof's Avocation Is Opera
By MARCIA CLIFTON
Kansas Stuff Writer
Puccin's opera, La boheme, is set in the 19th century, but he wrote it for children. Seaver, it could apply to lovers living in Greenwich Village or elsewhere.
Seaver, who is a University of Kansas history professor and directs the western civilization program, has presented a weekly lecture titled "Opera's my Hero." University Theatre will be presenting La Boheme beginning April 18, and Seaver had advice for people who wanted to see opera but are not regular operagoers.
According to Seaver, Puccini achieved a timelessness in La Boheme.
"It's a very real story of love to try to overcome the hardships of poverty. In fact, it reminds me of the woman in Rhaca, N. "Yaer," Saway said.
The opera concerns the love affair between Rodoofo and Mimi it takes place on Paris' left bank. The opera makes paper flowers for a living.
THE TWO FALL IN LOVE but Mimi eventually leaves Rododo after struggling along in poverty. She is forced to die of dying of tuberculosis and returns to Rododo. The story ends on a tragic note when Mimi finally dies.
Seaver said that all anyone needs "is the mere sketch of the story and then you can look for the highlights."
"The great thing about opera is emotion." Seaver said. He said that opera personalized emotion and felt like a film. And funny, as well as tragic.
"You can be swept up in the emotion if you allow yourself not to worry about the singing or the singing that came along," Seaver said.
Referring to La Bohme, Seaver said a highlight of the first act was the meeting of Mimi and Rodolfo. Each sings a long verse with some exclamation that acts as they sing a duet and fall into other one's arms.
Seaver said there was a familiar waltz song in the sedond act, and the thrid act was
highlighted by a quartet and Mimi's farewell to Rodolfo.
Do some girls have more fun?
THE FOURTH ACT was highlighted by all the themes presented in earlier acts, was moving, according to Seaver.
The plot is not intricate or complicated, said Seaver, and recurring themes are easily recognized.
James Seaver
MICHAEL KINGLEY
Some girls do have more fun than others. They're always on the go. Love hiking, camping, all active sports. If you're that girl,
Seaver recalled a production of La Bohème which he saw in
Kansas City several years ago when Jan Pearce had the role of Rododo and Mimi was played by a soprano from Mexico.
you probably use Tampax tampons. The internal sanitary protection that solves your monthly problems. Lets you be as active as you please. The silken-smooth container-applicator makes Tampax tampons comfortable and easy to insert. Go ahead, be the girl that has more fun. There are millions of girls just like you. All Tampax tampon users.
1973
"Mimi was on the heavy side," Seaver said, "and it was difficult to imagine that she was tuberculin. In the last act as she woke up from bed, she had broken, and somehow that production never recovered."
Seaver also recalled meeting the owner who created the role of head office manager for production. The man was 94 when Sever met him in Rome in 1954. The man had left opera earlier and was still offered a $5,000 bill by a U.S. bearer.
Our only interest is protecting you.
TAMPAX Languages
10 Regular
10 Big Language
TAMPAX
DEVELOPED BY A DOCTOR
NOW USED BY WILLIAMS MONACA
MADE ONLY BY TAMPAX INCORPORATED, PLANER, MASS
banker for his collection, but decided to sell them instead to the Italian government for millions of litre. He only collected an amount he believed to be necessary, however, and was living in poverty when Seaver met him.
The two kept in touch and Seaver has a picture which the man sent him as he was prepared to sing in the opera in 1986.
Seaver said he became interested in opera when he was "Catastrophically converted" at the age of 12. He grew up in Los Angeles and had "intermittent access" to opera. He attended a music conservatory where he said that it was "the most beautiful thing I'd ever heard."
Seaver said that another thing which had interested him in opera was his friendship with the conductor. He correspond and Stack signs his letters "Ellott Mess." Several summers when they were growing up their travel videos to Lake Michigan and to Lake Stacks' uncle, Bonell Belloue.
THE RESURRECTED OLD
recital will collect all kinds of record-
ers collecting all kind of records
operas and interpretations
of operatic works. His collection
Interview Schedule
As a result of his interest in opera Seaver is now a member of the Metropolitan Opera's Quiz season. He has also flown Seaver flies to New York on the weekend, sees operas courtesy of the Met, and on Saturday afternoon serves on the Met's piano experts. His last visit was in Jupiter.
Seaver said that opera had "emerged with every high culture, whether it is in light opera or in dark opera," said he believed the main purpose of opera was to take a drama and "raise it to the nth degree and achieve a relationship in the story and the music."
"Opera should also be believable," Seaver said. "It must pertain to humanity—to real people."
and other opera singers came to practice. Safer said that he had enjoyed these people and had at one time thought about seeking a career singing opera. He decided, "I enjoy opera merely as a hobby."
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"Seeing their lives from the made me get away and it felt like I was not allowed that the life of opera performers was not, at that time, a stable one."
AURH Elects Officers; Student Activity Is Goal
Bill May Increase Aid to KU Students
The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) Council met Thursday in Hashinger Hall to elect new officers for 1972.
The Pell plan, part of the team at the college, designed to give more equitable financial aid to college students, should help more students at the university pass, according to Bernard Taylor, assistant director of
Taylor said recently that middle-class families who had been overlooked in present aid and should benefit from the plan.
Those elected were Alex Thomas, Adibas Abisa, Ethiopia, junior, president, Matt Browning, senior, city judge, first, inst vice-president; Jack
Every college student would be eligible, through the plan for a maximum annual federal payment of $1,400, minus the amount that his family could be expected to contribute.
Meyer, Norton junior, 2nd vie-
president; Jean Foreman,
Shawne sophomore, secretary,
Jay Sullivan, Salina
freshman, treasurer
programs to be used as supplements to the new basic grants.
The Pell proposal also would reauthorize present aid
According to Bill Wohlford, research assistant to Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan, a final decision on his bill should not come until May 17.
These include grants for students from low-income families, work-study payments, government-guaranteed loans, low interest loans and government-guaranteed loans obtained from private lenders. The university committee members, who have been debating the $23 billion higher education bill, agreed on the proposal. Senatorate February 29. House conference accepted the provisions on an 11-9 vote.
ROD
McKUEN
In Concert
MUSIC HALL
SUNDAY, APRIL 9 7:30 P.M.
Tickets $6.50 - $5.50 - $4.50
Office — 131 Wandoffte, F.C. Mc. 6480
McCoy
shoes
813 Mass. St.
VI 3-2091
SUMMER IN WISCONSIN
One of America's outstanding private schools, which was founded in Wisconsin announces a limited number of openings on the staff for the 1972 season. Congressman includes salary, round trip conferences to attend, round board, and board, and bury. This is an unusually large school with only men of the highest character and achievement, a strong personal information, write D. C. Broadway, Shawnee Court, Northbrook, Illinois. 60045
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
TONIGHT! Bring This Coupon to SHAKEY'S
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With less than two months remaining in the school year we know you need to sign up for a two or three month exercise program. The preschool and last minute assignments also make it certain any regular exercise schedule. For those we are offering a student special. Enroll now for only 152 and not 300 students you want between now and the end of the semester. In strictions, at all, come in as many days as you wish. What better way to prepare before summer vacation. Two and the third specials also available for those girls who will be here this week are 152-4044 for an appointment.
UNLIMITED EXERCISE SPECIAL
--or Family Sized PITCHER
PIZZA (Light or Dark)
Offer Good April 3 Only
SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR &
ye Public house
TRACK SHOE Cross-Country
LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB
544 W. 23rd 842-2266
1.
NOTICE TO ALL STUDENTS ON THE SELECTION OF
STUDENT SENATE Committees
The Student Senate in accordance with the Senate Code, will pick new members to its committees and urges all students to apply.
The Committees Are:
Standing Academic Affairs Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Housing Student Services Finance and Auditing Communications
Boards & Commissions
University Judiciary Union Operating Committee
Other Committees
Teacher-Course Evaluation Elections International Film Series Concert Course
Descriptions of these committees are available in the Student Senate Office, B105, Kansas Union. Applications are also available there and are due at 5:00 p.m. on April 6, 1972.
WA office option North force to co South
MAI
A LITTLE WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.114
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Tuesday, April 4, 1972
Women's Group,
ZPG Differ
On Goals
See Page 6
THE HOLE IN THE WALL
CATERING DELIVERY
SERVICE VI 3 7685 SERVICE
Driver Shifts Bricks As His Car Blasts Hole in Wall.
Kansan Phot
A store official for the Jayhawk油马 Mart, 346 Ill., surveys the damage caused by a car which rammed the building. The driver of the vehicle, Michael A. Herzk, attributed the accident to brake failure. Although the car, owned by Mark Garrison, Abuijen junior,
received only minor damages, building damage was estimated by police at least $6,000 and $10,000. The vehicle was traveling in a bad condition.
Nixon Ponders U.S. Counterattack
WASHINGTON 〈AP〉-Administration officials left open Monday a wide range of options—including possible air attacks on North Vietnam or the use of U. S. ground forces—as President Nikon pondered ways to increase trust of enemy forces in South Vietnam.
At the White House and State Department, spokesmen would not discuss specific steps Nixon might order but said, "All options are open," when asked whether bombing troops or deployment of American troops were possible.
In Vietnam it was reported that American planes had been ordered to the island.
Presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, however, described the effort as "a South Vietnamese operation" to stem what he and other officials described as a Communist invasion across the demilitarized zone.
ZIEGLEM CITED a briefing by State Department spokesman Robert J. McCloskey as "totally reflective of the over all administration view" on the situation, McCloskey, who cautioned newsmen against speculating about the use of U. S. troops over U. S. bombing, said the Vietnam War has been "understanding" which had led to a complete halt of American air attacks on North Vietnam. Hanoi never has
McGovern Again Issues ITT Attack
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Sen. George McGovern, campaigning in Wisconsin's presidential primary, stuck Monday to his assertion that the International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. paid no federal income from the past three years, though financial support file at the Securities and Exchange Commission contradicted his charge.
Minnesota Sen. Hubert Humphrey, burst into a 19-hour campaign day, and Sen. Edmund S. Muskie appealed on television for support on the eve of the primary. Republican Richard Vallée said Wisconsin "is going to be a fine state for us. We're going to do well."
Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington accused Muskie and McGovern of boarding "an" Alice-in-Wonderland by proposing big cuts in defense spending.
Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York claimed he would finish 'a very strong thorn' in his teeth.
The polls open as early as 7 a.m. Lawrence time, and close at 8 p.m. statewide. The vote will be recorded on machines in Milwaukee and other cities and suburban areas, with paper ballots in use in rural sections of the state. Fifty-five per cent of the voting is expected to be on machines.
A record primary turnout of about 1.5 million voters was forcast despite unseasonably cold weather predicted for election day.
In Washington, financial statements on file with the SEC contradicted McGovern's assertion that ITT paid no federal income taxes for the past three years.
McGovern, who made the charge in a national television interview broadcast from Milwaukee Sunday, stuck to his claim.
acknowledged the existence of such an understanding
Administration officials refused to predict whether the United States now felt free to resume the bombing of North Vietnamese targets.
Earlier, deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren disclosed that Nixon had called in session the Washington Special Action Group (WSAG), a panel that usually meets only in a crisis situation. The group was formed by a group of advisers and prepare options for U.S. action.
W. Freidheim said that the six U.S. combat maneuver battalions remaining in Vietnam are committed to the security of the forces and are not involved in the current action.
AT THE PENTAGON, spokesman Jerry
Nixon did not attend the hour long meeting of WSAG, headed by Henry Kissinger, his assistant for national security affairs. He conferred in his oval office with Kissinger and the chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations Moorer, and talked by telephone with Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird.
Allied Forces Marshal Against DMZ Invasion
SAIGON (AP) — A South Vietnamese commander said Tuesday the North Vietnamese invasion had been harmed as the force had become more feroffensive including amphibious landings across South Vietnam's northern front. The U.S. Navy committed its missile strike on Saigon.
The 7th Fleet assembled at least four aircraft carriers and four destroyers to back up 20,000 South Vietnamese ground troops. Another 5,000 South Vietnamese reinforcements were ordered to the northern front.
Thousands of South Vietnamese made an amphibious assault on the banks of the Cua Viet River to secure the coastline from enemy forces trying to encircle them and move south. The provincial capital is 19 miles south of the Demilitarized Zone.
THEERE WAS NO major contact reported in the initial hours.
The United States began a counter air and naval attack across the northern frontier in efforts to block North Vietnamese tank, artillery and infantry reinforcements and protect Quang Tri City.
OVERCAST SKIES had hampered operations of the attack jets, but sources said massive raids against North Vietnam were imminent in retaliation for the biggest enemy push since the Tet offensive of 1968.
Nearly a score of B52 bombers hammered North Vietnamese forces, and naval guns opened up against the DMZ's southern half.
The bombers rained 500 tons of bombs on enemy troops menacing Qauq Tri City at points 11 to 15 miles south and 19 miles southwest of the provincial capital.
"We have stopped them now, but we did know if they will attack more," he said.
Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, commander of the northern front, said the defensive
A White House spokesman in Washington reported the President summoned a special foreign policy panel to discuss the options to counter the offensive. The panel would not hamper U. S. troop withdrawal. A State Department spokesman, Robert J. McCloskey, characterized the North Vietnamese attack as a "flagrant violation" of the 1954 Geneva agreements and said that it was "understanding" between the United States and North Vietnam. Han denied there ever was an understanding.
Hanoi radio claimed "the South Vietnam People's Liberation Armed Forces, meaning the Viet Cong, had won big victories, capturing or killing 6,300 enemy vehicles of North Vietnamese troops. Hanoi never has admitted they are in the South."
Docking Ends Doubt, To Seek 4th Term
TOPEKA (AP)—Gov. Robert B.
Docking ended months of new media
speculation Monday by announcing he will
seek a fourth term in this year's election.
Docking, first three-term governor in Kansas history, had been rumored to be eyeing a possible race for the U. S. Senate, held by Republican James B. Pearson.
The 46-year-old Democratic governor's announcement left up in the air who might seek his party's nomination to oppose Pearson in the November general election.
The possibility remained that Atty. Gen, Vern Miller might challenge Pearson, but sources close to the attorney general indicated it appears more likely Miller would win. No other Democratic possibility in the Senate race has been publicly mentioned.
"THEHAS HAS been some pressure from certain elements to do just that," Miller said, confirming he has given thought to the possibility. "We have weighed that possibility."
Miller said he had made up his mind what he will do, but would not make public his ideas.
"I have decided what I will do," said Miller, first Democrat elected Kansas attorney general in 80 years. "I will have an announcement in the near future."
Miller said he had made up his mind what he would do before Docking's announcement Monday, but admitted if the governor had surprised him he would have taken another look at his own situation.
"I pretty well knew what Docking was going to do," said Miller. "I would have considered very strongly becoming a candidate for governor if he had chosen to do otherwise. But I don't have to worry about that now."
THE GOVERNOR'S office reported an enthushial response" during the day to *The Guardian*.
"The telephone lines have been jammed all day," said James Shaffer, Docking's press secretary. "And there hasn't been a questioning the governor's decision."
Docking's announcement to seek a four term came as no surprise in the Republican camp. Former Gov John Anderson Jr, De Soto, said, "i rather expect he will make a pretty good considermnt a tough opponent but not unbeatable."
Lt. Gov. Reynolds Shultz said only the timing surprised him. "I was surprised he announced so early," the Lawrence Republican said.
M
"I figured he'd announce the last of May.
Students Register to Vote This Week
Kansas Photo by RON SCHOERKE
Dave Broyles, Lawrence graduate student, explains to Barbara Jones, Lawrence freshman, the Lawrence voting district from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Kansas Union
during voter registration week which ends Friday. To qualify to vote in Douglas County, a person must have lived in the county for 30 months and in his prefecture for 30 days.
He will be a formidable opponent, I think his record proves that."
ANDERSON AND SHULTZ are the only declared candidates for the Republican presidential nomination.
Pearson, contacted in Johnson County where he attended a dedication, said he was not surprised. "Despite the press conjecture over the governor's interest in duke," he said, "I have seen very little evidence of his interest in national issues."
Docking, a native of Kansas City, Mo., who grew up in Lawrence and is a graduate of the University of Kansas, said he was "very impressed" at the urging of 'certain friends of him.'
"It would have been an interesting campaign—a close, tough campaign," said Docking, whose father was Kansas governor for two terms in 1957-61.
Ironically, George Docking lost in his bid for a third term to John Anderson Jr., who could be Robert Docking's opponent in the 2016 election. He won the Republican primary in August.
DOCKING SAID he said "not closing the door" to a possible Senate bid in 1874, when U. S. Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., is up for reelection.
But U. S. William Roy, D-Kan, has indicated strongly he'd like to be the
Democratic opponent of Dole in two years years.
Docking listed 10 reasons why he decided to seek the governorship again;
"Continue to work behind our philosophy of tax reform, not tax increase."
"We have only begun to win legislative cooperation in organizing the executive board."
- 'Make the property tax lid l permanent - it is working and should be permanent to the property taxayer.
- *Continue to work for reform of the well program at the state and national levels.*
- "Continue efforts for quality education.
- "Continue to work for spending lid on state government, which would assure cautious government spending in the future.
- —"Economy in Kansas seems to be on the upwing; more industries into Kansas than ever before. We have programs under our franchise jobs and economic development.
- "Continue progress in penal reform.
- "Continue expertise of appointed,
classmates."
HE ALSO REPEATED a 1970 campaign theme, "There is still much to be done."
Kansan Staff Writer
SenEx to Hear KU Traffic Plan
By RICHARD COOLEY
Details of the new traffic control plan formulated by the University of Kansas Parking and Traffic Board probably will be presented to SenEx at its Wednesday meeting, H. Robert Malinowski, chairman of the board, said Monday.
The new plan, to take effect next fall, would make Jayhawk Boulevard and Memorial Drive into one-way streets and place four to five hundred parking meters campus is designed to enhance the parking traffic and improve parking facilities.
The changes were necessitated by a lack of parking facilities at Wescoe Hall, the new humanities building being constructed on Javhawk Boulevard.
"I think that would be the ideal place to start." Malinovsky said.
Maliinowsky said Monday that the committee hopes to present details of the plan.
Raymond Nichols, KU executive secretary, said he hoped to have the traffic plan placed on the agenda of the meeting, and would have to talk with Malinowsky about the length of the presentation before determining whether there would be room on the floor.
Nichols also said that following the SenEx presentation open hearing on the plan would be held to allow students and faculty to understand theism and suggestions concerning the plan.
Some members of the Student Senate Transportation Committee have already charged the plan would seriously hamper business operations, a spokesman for the committee said last
week the plan would reduce bus service,
endanger passengers getting on and off bus.
Responding to those criticisms Monday Malinowski said there was "room for more research and suggestions" on certain aspects of the plan. He said his committee would be glad to hear criticism of the plan when it was presented publicly.
The plan will be presented to SenEx as soon as possible. Malinskwy said.
Winter Edition Ready Monday
The winter edition of the Jayhawer yearbook will be distributed April 10 and 11 between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. in the rotunda of Strong Hall.
KU identification cards will be required before the books can be picked up.
Rick McKernan, Salina junior and
Jayhawaii a new section had
added to this edition.
"We call it our point-of-view section. It features many different people around the world who participate."
"They were asked to answer the question of how high education has grown."
"Among those interviewed were a high school senior, a student and a lawyer."
**COMPOSITION**
"This edition will also complete the living group section and will have the account of the football season," McKernan said.
The final edition will be ready for distribution before final exams, he said.
Zumwalt, Dole to Present Vickers Lectures in April
Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt, chief of naval operations, and Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., chairman of the Republican National Committee, will speak on campus this month in the J. A. Vickers, Sr., Memorial Lecture Series. Zumwalt and Dole had been scheduled earlier in the year but postponed their lectures.
Zumwalt will speak in April 13, at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. He gained national attention for his curtailment of many Navy rules on personal life and dress in an attempt to make career Navy life more attractive.
Zumwalt served in World War II, the Korean War and was commander of U. S. naval forces in Vietnam prior to his present post.
Dole will speak on campus April 27, 7:30 p. m., in the Union Ballroom.
Dole, who became Republican national chairman in 1970, has become known as the legislative voice of the Nixon ad campaign. He was president of Kansas from 1941-43 and received a law
degree from Washburn University in 1952. Duke is a trustee of the William Allen White
THE U.S. NAVY
Adm. Zumwalt
2
Tuesday, April 4, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Campus Briefs
Sports Car Club
Lawrence Ecology Meetings
The Jayhawk Sports car club will meet at the Bierstube, 14th and Tennessee streets, at 8 p.m. An instruction session for anyone wishing to be a technical instructor will be given. There will also be a walking rally.
The Douglas County Solid Waste Management Committee will sponsor a meeting of the solid waste collection subcommittee at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, in the county commissioner's room at the Douglas County Court House. A meeting of the population and economics subcommittee will be at 7 p.m. April 11 in the city planning office of the city office building.
Ouartet Recital Tonight
The University String Quartet will present a recital featuring music of Muzart and Brahms at a night in Swarovski Recital Hall Members of the quartet are: Karel Blaas, professor of music Raymond Stuhl, professor of music; Howard Boyajian, professor of music, and Ann Marshall, assistant instructor of music.
Physical Therapy Meeting
The Physical Therapy Club will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Council Room of the Kansas Union to elect new officers and make final plans for the spring party. The Physical Therapy faculty of the department conducts questionnaires from the group concerning the curriculum offered there.
This will be the last meeting of the semester. All students who may be considering Physical Therapy as a major are urged to
Play Retranslated For KU Production
By SUSAN HAYES
Kansan Staff Writer
A play which shocked Paris theatre-goers at its premiere in 1898 will be the final production of the play at the University of Kansas. The play, "King Ubu," by Alfred Jarry, will be presented April 6.
Although "King Uwb" already has several English translations, Michael M. Nash, assistant instructor of speech and drama and director of the play, chose to be his own translation of the play.
The cast has made some changes from that translation, "Macbeth," to "Macbeth," has several speeches which are parodies taken from Shakespeare. The cast has chosen the original speeches, as written by Shakespeare, rather than use the original speeches, as written by Shakespeare, rather than use it as Jarry wrote them, Nash said.
County Caucus Chooses McGovern Delegate Slate
By DAVE BLISS Kansan Staff Writer
The Douglas County McGovern for President campaign gained momentum as delegates slice away from the party last week in each of three county commission districts. Lynn cooperator coordinator, said Monday.
The conventions were organized in preparation for the election of party delegates for the Democratic Party election on April 15.
The company has tried to understand the premiere of the play as a model for its version of *Wuthering Heights*, an understanding of what was considered outrageous by society and to know itself well, Nathan said.
Although the audience will no longer play, the stage will be designed so that action takes place on all sides of the audience, as well as from the audience.
The plot of the play is
Ubb, a greedy usurper concerned
with wealth and power, bringing
miserly to his Polish subjects, he
Knox said that the selection of Democratic delegates through commission districting was approved and promoted by McGovern.
H is sub sequent recommendations to alter delegate election procedure were National Democratic Party.
Knox said that in Lawrence support for McGovern was quite strong and local campaigning 38 volunteers for McGovern.
The play is designed to confront the audience with the idea that the audience should be informed in every human being. Nash said. The company has centered its efforts on the premise that Uba must be dealt with by every person.
The twenty-one delegates elected to run in the local unit of a party voted on Thursday. Party on behalf of McGovern are: District One, Jackie Davis, Basil Davis, John Wright, Garth Sipes, Jonas Schreiber, Sipes, Anna Berger; District Norman Harnay, Harry Shaffer, Norman Harnay and Barbara Charlton, Charlton, Barbara Bailey.
In recent elections, delegates to the national Democratic convention were chosen by party headquarters (their name) called the practice undemocratic and advocated direct election of party delegates by the people. McGovern spearheaded an effort to revolutionize the election process.
WASHINGTON (AP)—Anti-tract a new class of cars, the compact's," to U. S. roads in the next few years a report prepared by the city
Jonnelle Steele, and Charlie
Lloyd, and Chris DeMott,
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stonebass, Leslie McKenna,
Walt Whitman, Lann Knox, and
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1970 KU Grad Seeks Election To Area Seat
Glover, a chaplain's assistant, said recently that running for a seat in the House of President was a philosophy of life. He called 44th District seat the inner Lawrence post.
Glover said he was defeated when he ran from the 39th District in 1970, and he had been knocked out by him. The Army dropped 172 days from his enlistment time, according to Glover, because of a cutback. Glover said this released him from jail, in instead of in November.
Mike Glover, 24-year-old 1970 KU graduate who is currently in Kansas, is running for the 4th district of Kansas House of Representatives.
Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan, talk with veterans at a Vietnam War memorial and hold from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Friday in the Kansas University cafeteria, according to Ed Bruns, Leeward freshman and Campus Veterans
"I am running because I had another chance to run and be better representation of the better representation of all segments of our society," Clover
By RICHARD GUSTIN
The 44th District, according to Glover, had a good cross-section of people. He said he thought he met the people in the various types of people in the district.
In an interview Sunday, Bruns said the Campus Veterans declared April 7 as Vietnam Era Veterans. Day because the war had not had the welcome veterans of previous wars have had.
Veterans to Hear Winn
Glover said the tax structure in Kansas needed to be reintroduced, but the increases were needed to help education, but that he was not in favor of increasing taxes on the food and life such as food and clothing.
Glover stressed the need for examinations of priaries in local schools, he said. He should decide whether he have a new super-highway or clean up the city. Glover should must decide what they needed done first.
By RICHARD GUSTI
Kongan Staff Writer
The purpose of the rally, Bruns said, will be to give veterans a chance to complete a national clinical Campus Veterans, which will later be used to determine the problems veterans are having while attending the University of Washington. The university also disseminate information obtained from **Veterans'** Administration and Department of Labor personnel in interviews of a recent trip to Washington, D.C.
WHILE IN WASHINTON,
Bruns and Dean Kackley,
assistant to the dean of men, met
the president of the college.
James B. Pearson, K-Ran, In
James B. Pearson, K-Ran, In
separate meetings, Bruns and Kackley presented to Winn and Pearson outlines of proposed action for the college to aid veterans attending KU.
These changes included a deferred tuition payment program, housing preference program, the addition of a full-time veterans aid board to the University and a bettermore of financial aids.
Winn, a member of the House Committee on Veterans Affairs, said after the presentation that he was impressed with the experience of veterans taking construction action to better their situation.
VETERANS AFFAIRS
COMMITTEE members and the members of the House of Representatives, the Winn-Davis committee, a "good attitude" in seeking additional benefits for veterans obtaining a higher education. The Vietnam era veteran, Winn said, has been neglected because of the war and the employment situation to which the veteran returns.
Pearson, a strong proponent of increased veterans' benefits, pledged his full support to the Campus Veterans organization
and KU in making the proposals reality.
B&G Starts Construction, Spring Cleaning,Painting
KU Buildings and Grounds employees are beginning spring maintenance responsibilities, Leo Duhdahl, assistant director of KU.
One job is painting the office of the registrar, which is done whenever necessary. The junior register's duties are also being painted ht. snd
Bruns and Kackley met later that day with college veterans and students who assembled to form the National Association of Collegiate Veterans in MAC. The purpose is to unify the veterans across the nation in calling attention to the inadequacies of the existing G.I. personnel.
The interior of the Campanile has been washed and cleaned. The ceiling was repainted and a broken window replaced, he said.
The demands included a better drug rehabilitation program, a more equitable pay structure Administration and a 20 per cent hike in schooling benefits. It was the most important element of the plan.
Painters have also been epainting crosswalks and curbs, jusdahl said. This is done two or
three times a year. Bad weather often postpones the work.
Ousdahl said the work being done was just "our normal maintenance responsibilities."
to the fact that these benefits do not allow a veteran to attend a college or university without undue financial strain.
In the spring, a routine maintenance job for B A G is to make sure air-conditioning systems operate. This year the conditioning in Spooner Art Museum was replaced because of wear.
AT A PRESS conference on MAY 15, NACV listed demands which they thought would aid airlines returning from active duty.
Sidewalks are often beyond repair and need replacing. New sidewalks are being installed on the left side of West Campus in Dearborn, on a fountain and Carruth O'Leary Hill. Improvements on walks are made along 15th St. from Naismith Drive toward Jayhawk Towers. Steps will be replaced on the south side of Lindley Hall.
Public Law No. 346,
amended in February, 1948,
allowed the veteran $7,760 to
be used for school and
Veterans Administration paid $500 a year to the school for the
veteran's tuition for a school
year in addition, the veteran
was paid $120 a month for
expenses.
Using the Department of Labor price index to compare the 1948 dollar to the 1971 dollar, this difference would indicate that administration would have to give the Vietnam era veteran $1.511 in benefits to equal the veteran's benefits in 1948. The Vietnam era veteran receives $8.28 in benefits.
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Poet to Read in Union
Poet Rosemarie Waldrop, will readlections of her poetry at 8 p.m. April 11 in the Council Room of the Kansas University.
Waldrop, who is being sponsored by the department of English, published her first volume of poetry, "The
Aggressive Ways of the Casua
Stranger.1 this chapter. She has
been an active writer, authoring
and translations and a critical
"experimental poetry
titled "A laboratory poem."
Currently, Waldrop is in the process of translating Edmond Jabes" "Le Livre des Questions."
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the Fiery Furnace is still going strong, every Fri and Sat, night, from 9 on. Coffee, donuts, music, and talk in the basement of Canterbury.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 4, 197
3
News Briefs By The Associated Press
Europe on Smallpox Alert
BELGRADE, Yugelsaia—Europe and the Middle East are on the alert against a possible spread of smallpox brought to Yugelsaia by a Moslem pilgrim bearing contaminated holy water from Mecca. Yugelsaia of falsified reported that 23 persons had died of the disease since the outbreak began March 12. Two smallpox cases were reported in Europe outside Yugelsaia, and 25 in Syria.
AEC to Regulate Wastes
WASHINGTON- The states must yield to the Atomic Energy Commission and not regulate the discharge of radioactive wastes from nuclear power plants, the Supreme Court ruled. The 7 to 2 ruling requires that nuclear power plants have higher controls than required by the AEC on a Mississippi River plant.
Soviets Get Bangladesh Base
TOPEKA-There is no effort under way to summon the Kansas Legislature into special session to uncramble the constitutional dilemma facing election officials over the State Board of Education, Gov. Robert Docking said. When a three-judge federal panel decides the Senate last week, it made no mention of the Board of Education Districts, which by state law are tied to the districtal districts.
DACCA—the Soviet navy, long denied a base of operations on the Bay of Bengal, has established a beachhead in Bangladesh with a floating workshop. The repair ship arrived Sunday, the first of 20 vessels that will new to our cabinet two major ports, Chittagong and Chalna.
BELFAST, Northern Ireland- Thousands of Roman Catholics attended the funeral of a slain mother in a reaproach to the campaign of violence waged by the outlawed Irish Republican Army. At the same time, hard-line protester leader William Craig called for the arrest of the minister of government in Northern Ireland and "if it cannot be within the United Kingdom it will have to be outside the United Kingdom."
Irish Catholics Protest IRA
Berrigan Jury Undecided
HARRISBURG, Pa.—A deadlocked jury continued to puzzle over charges against the Rev. Philip Berrigan and six other peace activists, hearing for the third time a reading of the judge's definition of conspiracy. The jury had proposed earlier Monday to start all over again in its assessment of the conspiracy charges. The judge put a rein on the panel.
Police Report Campus Theft, Smoke Bomb
Traffic and Security sources reported two cases of vandalism, one theft and one attempted interception between Thursday and Sunday.
A red military type smoke can be used to can in the north elevator of Oliver thair dayton afternoon, causing minor damage to the elevator
Damage to the police car was estimated at $45.
The cross beam of a street barricade was forced through the right rear window of a campus central campus area early. School
Twenty-three KU women
students at the College
admitting attend the national
convention of the Intercollegiate
Association for Women Students
(ICWS) last week, June 23.
23 KU Women Attend Meeting
Over 100 schools from across the nation met for four days at the Women's Institute. Women* Partners in Humanity* to listen to speakers from various aspects of the women's needs and stimulate policies and elect officers.
A film spiller valued at $295 was stolen Friday from the radio and internet department in Hoch Auditorium. A collapsing ceiling fainted an attempt in the Murray Hall cafeteria Thursday night.
Haskell Court Gains Student New Majority
The Student Affairs Committee recently approved a plan to create a new disciplinary review board with more student representatives.
The would-be burglar resembled a man with brown hair over a partition in the cafeteria, but the ceiling structure collapsed under one of them, as if the room had been crumbling.
The newly formed student court replaces the old oensure committee which was composed of three students and three faculty members. The student court has two students and two faculty members.
Three KU women relinquished national offices, and Colete Koeuren, Kenilworth, III., junior. University professor of regional vice-president.
The students serve on the court and participate in student representatives are elected from the student body and one is chosen from the student board.
Faculty representatives serve one month terms.
The student court has the same powers as the old committee. The court may have authority in cases that may suspend or dismiss the court's decision to the school's superintendent.
H. E. Lewlewly, director of student activities, said recently that the new body was formed with a high-frequency all student review board failed.
Nothing was reported stolen.
The court has the power to recommend that a student be issued a warning, placed on social probation, placed on disciplinary probation, be placed on a minimum of one semester, or be dismissed and barred from future readmission to Haskell.
The court also has the power to act on disputes arising from student elections.
Campus Bulletin
AUGUST
Lake Arthur School 9 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Lake Wren School 9 a.m. Kansas Room.
LKW Rehearsal 9 a.m.
Italian Table: 11:30 a.m. Meadowlark
Women's Law in Law 11:30 a.m. Cottonwood
History Advisory Committee; noon.
History Advisory Committee; noon.
Music History; noon. English Room.
26th Century Club: 3 p.m. Watkins,
Board of Class Offices: 4 p.m. Governors
House: 5 p.m.
BPM '14 Tau : 3:00 p.m., Parler C, Union.
BPM Club: 6:30 p.m. Big Room, 8:00 p.m.
Fun activities Lecture Series: 6:30 p.m.
English Room.
Synchronized Swim Team: 7 p.m.
Robinson Natarlorum.
International Committee: 7 p.m., Parlor
Broadway Theater 7:30 p.m., Fountain..
Union.
Physical Therapy: 7:30 p.m., Council
Room, Union.
SUA Board: 7 p.m., Governors Room.
Latin American Film: 7:30 p.m., Hoch
Auditorium.
International Committee: 7 p.m., Parlor
A. Union.
SUA Board: 7 p.m., Governors Room.
Room. Union.
7:30 p.m. Pine Room.
EMERGENCY MAJOR
Film Society: 7:30 p.m., Union Baitroom.
Humanities: Lecture: 8 p.m., Woodruff
auditorium.
7:30 p.m., Room 112
Reed Auditorium.
Pearson College: 7:30 p.m., Forum Room
Union.
Latin American Collequium: 8 p.m.,
Regionalist Room, Union.
ANTHRO STUDENTS
Want to know more about KU's summer field-
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Tues., April 4 7:30 p.m.
2125 Quail Creek Dr.
Non-archeology students invited too!
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Tuesday, April 4, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Garry Wills
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
SUNY New York University
Kentan Photo by TY BROWN
Wrong Way Proposal
The only part of the University of Kansas Parking and Traffic Board's proposal to make Jayhawk Boulevard and Memorial Drive one-way streets that encourages me is that they are going to present it to the Student Executive Committee for action. The committee gives the committee the chance to react negatively and suggest the whole thing be forgotten.
Admittedly, this proposal could earn Traffic and Security some revenue since they could eliminate at least one of the traffic control booths, allowing the person who manned that booth to ticket illegally parked cars. Their job in regards to traffic would probably be easier because they would only have to be concerned with traffic going one way. The problem with this plan is that all the other members of the campus community would be inconvenienced.
The campus bus service would be adversely affected by a one-way street system. Bus riders would have to wait longer for a bus coming from the east since buses would be delayed before they could get on Jayhawk Boulevard to pick up students waiting in front of the buildings.
Students would no longer be able to catch buses going west on
Jayhawk. A student wanting to go directly to the residence halls would have to go away from the main campus and wait somewhere on Memorial Drive. It probably would be less trouble and faster just to walk back to the halls. Considering that buses are very expensive, any change which would decrease the number of bus riders should be avoided.
It is unlikely that bicycle riders going from Blake to Marvin would appreciate having to peddle all the way around Memorial Drive. It is more likely that they would just walk their bikes. If enough people decided to do that it would cause more congestion than already exists on the sidewalks while classes are changing. Perhaps then some sort of traffic plan for the sidewalks would have to be initiated.
The group other than Traffic and Security which would benefit from the plan would be those people who manage to get campus passes and want to go east on Jayhawk Boulevard. The only consolation for this group is the rest of us if the board's proposal is approved would be that from then on we would only have to look one way when crossing the street.
Mary Ward
Readers Respond
Volunteer
Review, Photos . . .
To the Editor:
I would like to make a few comments concerning the recent photojournalism show exhibited at the College of Design students who were unable to view the show I would like to say that there are very nice many photographs.
The only unfortunate thing was that the photographs became subordinate to the hanging and the work of a semi-aimate. Such fine photographs, including the grand prize winners, were sent to their wall with large staples. Those students who received their prints after the show found a set of photos they had been hung. This may
seem trivial to some but it's a disgrace for those students who worked very hard to produce such professional looking work. I don't think the photojournalism department can find someone a little more competent to hang the show. If you have any trouble get in touch with me. I think I can do a better job than what was done this year.
Bruce Krug
St. Louis junior
★ ★ ★
dissatisfaction with the theatre and cinema reviews of Barbara Ransom. But to this time, I have tried to dissect them. They are which an effrontery to the performing arts, its participants, and a source of misrepresentation who have not seen the productions and a source of their own experiences. But such crusis, insensitive and senseless statements as that appearing in the "Trial of the Cat" film by Michael Mackenzie, the "nine" who sacrificed their freedom in 1968 had little effect on the war or anything else they protested; are too fannier to us as someone to separate us from such flying dung.
to the Editor:
Hardly should you find this the first letter expressing
Catonsville
To the Editor:
Henry McCarthy Boston Graduate student
A. S. M.
Unsolved Pot Dilemma Remains
Don't say the Shafer Commission did not accomplish anything by its report on marijuana. It made President Nixon talk sense on the subject, which is quite
The President said a thing could not be legal and illegal at the same time. The Commission had recommended that private consumption of marijuana not be punished, though public or private consumption should be the substance, should remain illegal.
the substance, about female mRNA. but how is one to enjoy the private (legal) smoking of pot without at least a couple of friends? Apologists for the Commission searched out parallels—and could find none but the equally illogical legal status of prostitution, pornography, and gambling. A seller of obscene material
(or of one's body) is bailed, but not (in most cases) the buyer. The number runner may be caught, but not the person who plays the numbers.
In such cases we do have an unfortunate parallel with the new Commission's recommendations—a tagging moral desire to punish a defendant who violates interest that profits by continuation of the law, Corrupt police, pimps, and organized crime are principal beneficiaries of the laws against the criminals who do not prevent the moral offenses they are aimed at—they simply compound the putative evil with further notes of violence, corruption, and exploitation. They are all good examples of purtion in the determination to spite its own face.
These new proposals would keep the very worst feature of the present situation—the need for our young people to get into contact with illegal channels to obtain marijuana. These changes will make their drugs "drugs" and for other criminal activities. Those busily at work in and through these channels do not want their trade legalized;id capone want Prohibition repeated? "Straight" America plays right into people's hands by its determination to keep the marketplace market, where its sale could be like that of alcohol or tobacco.
The supreme example of this kind of law was Prohibition. The costs of crime and disrespect for law had to become truly staggering before the punitive legal moralists would give up on that one. The costs are stagged in more detail. But American have succeeded, to this point, in ignoring them. It is no wonder that
The Commission proved another thing—that growing scientific knowledge is not bias. The putitarian American hostility to marijuana is not based on any data about its harmfulness to any body but actually considered wrong—like gambling.
And we seem never to learn our lesson: that attempts to legislate private morality harm both the nation's morals and its law.
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
He Tries Harder. By Golly
James J. Kilpatrick
WAUSAU, Wis.—Over a long period of years, it was said of Hubert Humphrey, even by those who fought him hardest, that he was the nicest guy in the league. If you will bear with the metaphor, he was the cuetal kitten in the litter. The big news from the courtroom campaign is that the kitten has grown up to be a cat. My goodness, he has grown up to be a titer.
This is not the Hubert Horatio Humphrey he used to know. Four years ago he sputtered more. He apologized more often. He tended
to excuse this and to rationalize that. He was busy defending Lyndon Johnson. He was putting the best face on thinings.
Dear friends (he is fond of saying, "dear friends"), you should meet Hubert Humphrey in Wisconsin. He is on the attack. The polishing rag of 1968 has turned into the woodcraft of 1972. Nixon price and wage controls are a hoax. Nixon's ideas on taxation have been monumental sham." Nixon's approach to economic policy is "s somewhere the other side of McKinley." Here in Wisconsin,
Humphrey is slugging away, in hours a day; and, in the pentagonally square circle of pins, he wins winning points in every round.
Pentagonaally squared for this reason: 12 names are on the Democratic primary ballot, but only five count. These are the candidates in the Georgia McGovern, Jackson and Wallace. John Lindsay, the mayor of New York, also is running. He demonstrated his dedication this week to help with a farm family at Marshfield. Monday morning he rode the
JUSTICE DEPT.
ITT
"Of course I'm not in his pocket . . . and it's simply a coincidence that my friend's in the other one."
Griff and the Unicorn
By Sokoloff
GRIFF?!? WHAT'S HAPPENED TO YOU?
I BELIEVE IT'S CALLED A FACE JOB
HOW LONG DID IT TAKE?
JUST A COUPLE SECONDS... CHEAP AND PAINLESS...
WOW!
IT'S ONE OF THE COOL THINGS ABOUT BEING A COMIC STRIP CHARACTER
manure spreader around their farm. His Honor is not exactly with it.
Humphrey is totally with it. He made 13 appearances on Tuesday. At one of these, a TVinquired asker him to define the differences between Humphrey in 1968 and Humphrey in 1972.
"Oh, my goodness," he began. This is a Humphrey beginning. "Oh, my goodness! There are so
many differences! After the 1986 convention, I felt as if I had been through an earthquake. I was swept away by it and left Grand Canyon with my fingernails. This time I feel beholden to the happy I have been carry by my family's sad lead.
IT'S ONE OF THE COOL THINGS ABOUT BEING A COMIC STRIP CHARACTER
He feels happy and he looks happy. The Humphrey of 1960 was a tough campaigner. The Humphrey of 1960 described as tireless. The Humphrey of 1972 is exhausting. He goes off to a factory before? a.m. popping like a cork from champagne. And he never stops its drawbacks. Its drawbacks. He is promising too much, talk too much, pausing too seldom. But the effusion has its advantages also: He is sparking this cold and warming his warmth and vitality that evoke
1970
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff
His warped tongue grows tired; commander-in-chief comes out as commander-increef. He reaches for a constitutional allusion and his mand says 1787, but his quivering mind calls into question befuddles a question that deals with tuition vouchers for private education. But late at night he is still jabbing at Nixon, still fighting, still saying, "Let me tell you what is the greatest thing in life." The answer is most of the guessing out here that Humphrey will lead the field today. If a heavy Republican crossover vote should materialize, George Wallace may well finish second. Expectation is expected to edge out Muskie in a contest. Jackson is given a respectable shot at four or five place. In this freazied free-for-all, Hubert Horatio Humphrey, who has spent most of his life as Number Two, is the most astonishing news. He intends to be Number Three. Asking everyone is trying hard, he is the guy who is triring harder.
spontaneous response.
Humphrey may be Golden
Bantam corn, hot and buttered,
but I prefer my goodness, my
goodness, is honest corn.
He is gee-whiz, bygosh, and by-golly; and, accepting an invitation for a TV interview, he is, "Boy, can I use the free use of my library before hundred be beautiful, but inarticulate children at a Catholic school for the deaf and he delivers a 20-minute speech that is a small gem of homepsion for oldersters at a home for the elderly and a veteran TV newscaster is moved to tears.
Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 4, 1972
5
Upheaval Wounded ROTC
By TOM THRONE
Kansan Staff Writer
The expression of discontent by students across the country about the Vietnam war has lead to a call for more students in ROTC, Colonel Ray Lancaster, former professor of Aerospace studies, said Monday. He is leading Force last Wednesday after 30 years. He spent the last three and a half months in college.
"Radical elements on campus in '68, '69 and '70 were a major
Col. Lancaster
M. A. H.
part in influencing the decrease," he said.
He said, however, that quietness on college campuses would eventually lead to an increase in strength and position of ROTC.
The increasing number of ROTC scholarships plus a tuition fee will be available for scholarship cadets and two-year cadets, will provide incentives
LANCASTER SAID he found his assignment at KU very rewarding.
"I have met some very fine young people. I have seen a great many of them draw their careers from jobs in the Air Force," he said.
"During the period of upheaval, 1968, '69 and '70, it was
a very frustrating assignment," he said.
ROTC commanders think that the trouble will end and better just happen. They said things would settle down and that's just what they
"We worked closely with the administration to do what we could to help satisfy the academic side of ROTC to make it more compatible with the atmosphere on campus, Lancaster said.
LANCASTER WAS a student at the University of Texas, majoring in petroleum geology when Pearl Harbor was attacked.
"I was in my senior year when Pearl Harbor came along," she said. "I worked at Harbor on January 19, 1942, two friends and myself went down to an Army Air Force Corps van on the first flight of a plane. We signed up but we asked to be allowed to finish our senior year. We got our notices report on."
Because Lancaster enjoyed flying and military, he applied for a regular commission when given the chance.
He said he was allowed to finish his degree in 1952 at the University of Maryland.
Lancaster said he thought there would be a problem with volunteer services.
"Even though there have been good pay offs, the time the younger people just isn't that nice because of the attitude of a lot of the younger people over the older."
IT WILL TAKE a few years before they are able to get a volunteer service, he said.
"I hope they get enough volunteers to fill the requirements, and I think they'll be ready to help on the draft," she said.
Laneaster's honors include the Legion of Merit with oak cluster, the Distinguished Flying Cross with oak cluster and the Army and Air Force Command Medals. He also served in the Service Medal for his work as a member.
Lancaster flew fighter planes in World War II and the Korean war. He served as an air adviser in Vietnam in 1962.
"We went from the planes that were really fun to fly to the fast
According to Sheryl Condra, president of the Schwierig school, she said that the cause caused by the large numbers of children attending Schwierg from the traiter court on 28rd St. to the neighborhood together, she said, so the new boundaries will allow them to continue attending School.
Rosemarie Downing, whose child will be effected, said that she thought the new boundaries were a good idea.
"It's a long walk and
17 Acts Enter Spring Sing
Seventeen groups, ranging from a solo to an assemblage of 24 students, have entered the Spring Sing contest. Cathy Brown, Wichita junior and co-leader of the Sing, said Monday.
Each group will perform two numbers, not to exceed a total of ten minutes. One selection will be larger, the other will be slower, Brown said.
The Sing will begin at 1 p. m.
Sunday in Hoechst Auditorium and
the Spring Sing committee said. The Spring Sing committee has allowed three to five minutes between entrees for changing
and arranging contestants.
According to Nancy McNeil,
Manhattan junior and co-chairman of the Spira group in the city, group have entered the contest. Chi Omega -Sigma Gha; Alpha Delta Gha; Tau Omega trio; Sigma Gha;Gamma Phi Beta; Tom Tucker; Tau Omega trio; Theta soi; Mary House and Hall; Beta Phi duct; Alpha Tauenga -= Beta Phi; Alpha Gamma -= Beta Phi;Lambda; Delta Phi; Theta; Kappa Kappa -= Alpha Phi; Sigma Kappa -= Alpha Phi; Kappa Sigma -Delta Delta; Delta Kappa Hashinger灯 and Corbin Hall.
Lancaster said he thought the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong were being hard-nosed and ruthless, and they were prisoners of war until America
superiors push button-type flying. I found the first type more interesting, having one hand on the wheel and another on the throne, he said.
dangerous from here, to Schwegler," she said. Children from Soufler place must walk across the road on cross traffic at 19th St. With the new boundary arrangement she had to walk Hillcrest and be much safer. Downing said that she had no negative comments about the school.
Condra said that the third grade was the last large class suffering from overcrowding. The fourth decline in the number of children attending all three grade schools, and to the decrease in birth rates.
The Godfather
A second sub-committee
hawaii law school.
lawrence graduate student
investigate the status
of University students who are
A proposal to change the boundaries of three Lawrence grade schools, which calls for the replacement of the Stoffler Place to Hillcrest grade school, was approved last night by members of the Lawrence community. The action was passed uncontested by residents of Stoffler Place.
Both committees will be determining at what levels women and minorities are employed, what the opportunities promotion are, and how to statistical records on these factors.
Rankin said his committee would be concerned with determining the existing number of women and minorities implanted, as well as how to keep future records on this information.
Some University administrators have already begun to determine the number of nonnatives employed in their division.
The KU affirmative Action Institute has formed two subcommittees in the process of gathering information concerning the number of women who are black or Native American.
According to Taylor, the junior highs were built with the capacity to accommodate the large number of students attending them in the future. He said that it would be a long time before the high schools would be affected by the large number of children in the grade schools now.
had left South Vietnam completely.
KU to Study Employment Of Minorities
Philip Rankin, director of personnel will lead a committee to investigate the status of University employees.
R Cale by Techlecabe & Persian Picture
"I think President Nixon has done so much to show that we are moving out of Vietnam," he said, referring to the war in Iraq and to cooperate more. I hope it doesn't take that long to get our way, his back. But it looks like it will.
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Rankin said he was not sure when all data would be collected, but hoped that it could be done within the next month.
The Affirmative Action Board will need this data in order to determine an affirmative action program for the University, he said.
The boundary change, which will effect approximately 20 children from Hillcrest, Schwinger and Centennial grade schools in a district director of elementary education, is an effort to relieve overcrowding in the Schwenger school. The other two schools, he would say, could handle the added numbers caused by the boundary change.
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6
Tuesday, April 4, 1972
University Daily Kansan
ZPG. Women's Goals Differ
KU Groups Urge Birth Control
By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer
Birth control has emerged as a common means of attaining the emergent goal of menopausal group, Zero Population Growth (ZPG), and the women's equal movement. The women's equal movement quality and freedom for women are fostered by contraception, according to spokesmen for both
She said there was reason to be concerned because of the short time it takes a population to become highly developed, technical societies have problems that result from their population size but not their countries, double their populations so fast that the countries cannot keep pace. Food, housing, medical facilities, transportation everything necessary for survival, make Peacepeace, could not keep up with the growth rate of urbanization much less in a developing one.
"WHERE DO HUMAN rights come into the picture?" she said. "It's clear—the poor are suffering."
ZPG is concerned with the future state of the world, which includes the ecological balance, food security and health, said that the rising population, which doubles every 25 years in some areas of the world, created a stress on critical natural resources that found only in limited quantities.
Mary Makepeace, instructor in biology and a member of XPG, said recently the group was concerned that people of the community had same rights or opportunities for survival as do those today.
Zero population growth, which would help control the future climate, is achieved when there is an abundance of children per family. Makepace and me.
ACCORDING TO the presidential Commission on Population Growth and the United Nations' population increased from 76 million in 1900 to 205 million in 1970. The commission predicted that by 1980 the average of two children and immigration rates remained at the current level among the United States by 2000. If there was an average of three children per person in the United States by 2000, if there was an average of three children per person in the United States by the year 2000.
SHE SAID that there was a good chance, war or disease, world occur if the patient remained contained at the present rate.
Makepeace said that ZPG strongly supported the Women's Liberation movement because it was concerned with the same thing. President Kennedy's Women said in 1963 that one of the greatest freedoms of an individual in a democratic society choose among different life patterns, Makepeace said. She emphasized that individual rights were not so large.
Smaller families, she said, made more life patterns open to women and gave men more opportunities. A small family has the opportunity to pursue her self-identity and personal and professional goals. Not only would the woman be more fulfilled as a person, she said, but the family would be better structured as a result.
MAKEPEACE ACKNOWLEDGED the problems a woman could have trying to find a job with the tight job requirements, the best qualified person should get the job, she said, there are women who must work to support a family in the same or the head of a family.
"Our society should accept childless and single women on an equal basis with men," she said.
ZPG SUGGESTS population control mainly through birth control methods.
*basic basis with men," she said.
Makeupsaid ZPG advocated a family size of two children, although those with no children compensated in part for those with more than two. She suggested it better to adopt if a couple wanted more than two children.
"Any method is all right," said Makepeace, "particularly any kind that's effective—the pill, sterilization or the IUD."
The object, she said, was not to force any one on people. We did not suggest that people should not be sterilized unless they had had sex with someone. We suggested
Only four businesses have contacted students about jobs through the reference-placement service book, "Who's Who at KU
Mini-Resumes Get 4 Offers
The book, according to Job's instructions, contains pictures and mini-resumes of 382 seniors. The book was sent to about 350 students.
THE 1971 CENSUS, she said,
showed the lowest birth rate
since the depression, which
had been one of the high
cost of raising children.
"I hope there are more things involved than just that," she said.
"such as the need for self attainment in women, the environment, and even more own identity," the kind of world for the future.
Martha Ward, assistant to the dean of women, said that Women's Equality was making women more aware that they could do something outside of the home instead of staying home with their children.
SHE SAID people were becoming increasingly aware of the equality of women, especially in rural areas, the process of planning families.
"I don't know if it's nature, but Women's Equality is helping to cause lower birth rates," she said.
"It's fine to stay home and have children,"she said."Maybe
women's rights can elevate the housewife's role to be equal to other professions."
She said she thought that women should have the free choice to realize their potential outside the home or to stay home and raise children. Ward said she thought a woman with many years of experience that they would be using up natural resources others could use.
Ward said she thought PZG and the women's groups were saying the same thing on birth control and abortion. She said she hoped they could work together to resolve the legal problems of abortion.
ANN FRANCEK, Prairie Village sophomore and a February Sister, said, "APG is trying to subvert Women's
Liberation to it's own ends. I see it as very dangerous."
She said that birth control, a cause that ZPG picked up, was originally a woman's issue and the concept of the free woman.
ZPG and women's groups parted ways, she said, when a segment told her taking talkened to armed sterilizers to limit the number of children.
Makepeace discussed birth control as viewed by the two parents, and the decision of taking care of problems by using his intellect, rather than
"IT'S A MIRACULOUS phenomenon—using the mind to overcome the problem. Man is in the position of controlling destiny."
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983. Bob Dylan
984. Bob
JOHN KAY
you win again
I'm moving on
many a mile
bold marauder
to be alive
walkin' blues
two of a kind
walk beside me
somebody
B.L.KING./L.A. MIDNIGHT
HOLLYWOOD
IF BELIEVE I'VE BEEN DOWN TO LONG
CAN YOU FEAR ME SLURGING TO YOU?
SHARE YOUR HOME WITH US AND BE DOWN
I GOT SOME HELP! DON'T NEED
MIDNIGHT / HELP THE POOR
JOHN LEE HOOKER
never get out of these blues alive
BOOKING WITH THE HOUR. TB SHEETS. LETTER TO MY BABY
BUMBLE BEE BUMBLE BEE HT THE ROOF. COUNTRY BEER
BLEVE OUT OF GET OUR THE BLUES BALVE
HEAR B.B. KING
Saturday, April 22
at the
Kansas Relays Concert
impulse! abc RECORDS
UNIVERSITY SERIES OF FINE RECORDINGS
impulse! abc RECORDS
UNIVERSITY SERIES OF FINE RECORDINGS
HAMILTON, JOE FRANK & REYNOLDS
HALLOWAY SMPHONY
C LEST LAVE, ANN NO WOMAN, LIKE THE ONE I DUTT
ONE GOOD WOMAN, THY MONKEY FELLS, LUNDAY
BROOSE YETS BEWARE, YOU CAN'T BE AFRAID OF THE WORLD
ANA CAN NO CANT, TOWN NOT AFRAID OF THE WORLD
HALL AND SYMPHONY II EVERY MAN
MINE THE OTHER MAN
International performance of the Musical Jazz Festival
ahmad jamal
freeflight
STEPHEN
DOLPHIN LANE
MAUNATTON
MERF. F. COTON
PONCICiana
John Klemmer
CONTANT THROB
Canonman Thinks Rantizens
Let Me Touch The Wind
California Days Cinemas Impressions
Promises Land Copied By Torn
Alice Coltrane With Strings
World Galaxy
WITH HER DRAWINGS BY BEN JACKSON
AND KATHLEEN GRAYLEY
NO EXPLAINING TEXT OR MATERIALS BELOW.
pharah sonders
Black Unity
BLACK UNITY (Part 1)
BLACK UNITY (Part 2)
FREE PARKING
MASTER CHARGE
discount records
420 Crescent Road—Across from Lindley Hall
Hours:
10 a.m.- 8 p.m.
Mon. thru Fri.
10 a.m. -
6 p.m. Sat.
Tuesday, April 4.1972
University Daily Kansan
7
Reporter Turns Football Player, Endures Pre-Spring Conditioning
Editor's note: Kanzan staff writer Brad Avery has been invited to speak at the Kansas football team since it began pre-spring drill workouts Feb. 22. This is the first of four interviews with Kanzan's view of the football program from the inside. Here is a preview of the pre-spring conditioning workouts.
There's a completely different world behind the sign in the notch on the wall of the house that says, "Varsity Dressing . . . Rooms. . . No Caps."
It's the world of the college athlete, filled with cramped dressing rooms, plush offices, basketball courts, and all the other necessities that go into making up the collegiate athletic
It's a world that most students never see, although they help support it. Even though most student sports reporters do see it, the club is usually superficial, the purpose of doing a quick interview.
TO BECOME really familiar with an organization, one must become a part of it. And that is what I do. And that is to do by going out for football.
I had dwelled in the depths of mediocrity during my high school football career, having wound up playing at a college where were lost) and two badly gnashed fingers to hold for an those who would have been killed. But as a result, I did somewhat know what to expect when I began pre-season workouts Feb.
Football season never really ends. Of course players stop playing, but the business of working out and preparing for the
next season is one continuous cycle.
NCAA RULES prohibit a team from practicing together before the spring practice date, but they do allow a team in a special physical education class. Everyone who completes it receives %2 credit, and it is probably the most difficult credit earned at the University.
I MADE the odious mistake my first day of eating a large lunch. Consequently, the exercises were not as easy as in nauseaeting. My peanut sandwich kept jumping from my stomach to my throat and back
The conditioning workout consists of 10 seconds at each of the three stations, and exercises vary from lifting massive weights to simple rope jumping. It is extremely difficult to keep a person suspended such as myself, to get around the circuit once. But it really gets hard when you have to go around the station.
I faced many embarrassing moments that first day, and no one helped me before spring practice ends. However, my greatest embarrassment was the result of inability to do the bench press.
The bench press is an exercise where one lies on his back and the other sits up from his chest. I had already been hurt by four stations or the station by five. I came to this one, and had begun to ask why I picked this assignment.
FIRST, I lay down on the wrong end of the bench.
After I ascertained at which end I was supposed to be, the sputter gently lowered the leaf and could see that he was becoming
concerned when the weight began to wobble in my hands.
After I finally did steady the barbell, I tried to lift it. I must have lifted it an inch the first time, and at least a half-inch the second. The thought occurred to me that I might choke myself to death on a bench, but mercifully from the loudspeaker, "Move."
"Have you got it? Have you got it?" he began to shout.
"If you and I can get through it, then it's probably too easy," he explained.
He probably had a point, but I immediately expelled it. He continued until next year to implement a tough program. He cited an «unfortunate Texas» where players went through 70 stations consisting entirely of weights.
THE CIRCUT did eventually become routine. My insides even began to feel somewhat cleansed and refreshed, everything had been drained out.
AFTER GOING through the circuit of a couple of times, I began to grow curious about the man who programmed my robot program. I thought he must be some kind of "super jock" whoWeighted 280 pounds and stood up.
Actually, Robert Carlson the designer is a mild-mannered, woman. PhD. To my consternation, however, he would program the program.
The actual business of determining who will play football weeks after workouts started. The one test that can make or break a football player is the 40-yard dash. We ran it one sunny day.
Football is basically a 40-yard game. Plays are usually no
"Sure wish I had worn another pair a shoes," rationalized a third.
The man who was busy masterminding plans for spring practice while his players were busy sweating a lot was coach Randy Decker, who was busy practicing for spring practice resembled a Pentagon budget proposal.
Times varied from a slow 5.1 like mine, to a relatively fast 4.7 for Jerome Nelloms.
longer than 40 yards, and ...
offensive players in order to
score. And, of course, a defensive
team must hold a team to less
than 25 yards in order to score.
FAMBROUGH EXPLAINED that his first step was to determine a goal, what he wanted to accomplish. The next step was to outline the drills, individual, and teamwork. The following determination of the fundamentals involved in the offenses and defenses he planned to run. Finally, the other aspects had to be worked on, as kicking, had to be worked on.
THE MOST interesting part of the dashes was the excuses heard from the players whose times that dread five-second mark.
All that should produce established results. The offence is established: every person should be in the right position, and all the fundamentals and techniques involved in the functioning of a machine should be established.
"Well, it wasn't that bad for early in the year," one said.
After reflecting on what I had been through, and after gaining more insight as to what lay ahead we started the spring break and worried a lot.
Owners Reject Baseball Settlement
NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball's owners rejected Monday night a proposal made earlier in the day by the striking Major League team in an effort to end the sport's general player strike.
Gaherin termed the offer "imprudent."
"Dammit, my foot slipped," said another.
John Gaherin, the owner's negotiator, said he had been authorized to tell Mavin Miller, executive director of the player's team, that Miller's settlement offer that Miller was rejected.
He also said that baseball's owners have been summoned to a meeting in Chicago Tuesday, one week ahead of the scheduled start of the 1972 season.
Gaherin said the owners would meet at 6 p.m. near Chicago's O'Hare Field.
Miller had made a proposal that he said wouldn't cost the owners any additional money. It called for the 17 per cent hike from the increased interest pension fund is currently earning
team managers should submit a team of 12 or more players to entire闸nasure, 208 Routers and an entry fee of 25 cents a man.
"Rejection of this offer on behalf of the players demonstrates the truth about this dispute. Miller contended "I was wrong." The owners were, and are, intent on making the players eat dirt."
The strike began Saturday.
After being informed of the rejection by the owners, Miller was fired on the full responsibility for prolonging the strike right into December.
"I think the owners have miscalculated gravisely. It is a big difference in making this offer, for far more concerned about the game of baseball and the interests of the fans than the owners, who weep at all but the fans, but really concern them simply a source of income."
Catlett replaces Tay Baker, who resigned his position at Cincinnati.
Former Coach To Take Job At Cincinnati
All participants must have a signed, approved health card on file in 208 Robinson.
Former University of Kansas assistant basketball coach Gale Cattel has been named head coach of Indiana University for next year.
The entry deadline for intramural softball teams is 4:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Catlett, a native West Virginian, was freshman coach at KU from 1967-71. Last year he be an assistant under an assistant coach Adolph Rupp, the winning ruck in the United States.
Deadline Nears For Intramurals
Games will begin Friday.
Entry deadline for tennis, handball and badminton is 4:30 p.m. Monday.
Following the 90-minute secrec-
meeting held earlier in the day
between Miller and Gaharin—
heir third such session since he
was born, Mr. Miller will con-
ference that the proposal
"can settle the matter and avoid
laying the opening of the
season. We are not asking for any
questions." The owners
mferred in our meeting at
Phoenix March 29."
Basket Trouble Moves Games
Of the 263 intramural basketball teams, 102 qualified for the playoffs, which began last week. Monday night, 57 teams had played.
Because of a mechanical failure in the back door of Robinson Gym, games scheduled for that court Friday had to be played in Allen Field
All games were scheduled to return to Robinson Monday night. The basket could not be repaired Friday because civil service hours are available, according to Steve Carmichael, student intramural director.
Independent A—B-star I-fers over Old Charter, 34-5; Southern Goring over Pearson, 42-35; and Hogs over Naismith, 63-38. Fraternity A—SAE over AKL, BETA, 73-61; Phi Beta over BETA, 73-61;
Independent B—JRP Bombers over Sever Rats 8-14 Diffy Q4 on Seems to be defenders Clan over Defenders. 33-27; Stephenson No. 1 over Kruut
Fraternity B-DU No. 1 over Pkli Dell No. 2, N-423; Phika Kappa No. 3, N-423; Sie Ep No. 3 over AKL No. 2, N-423; Kappa Alpha piao over ATO, N-423; SAE over Beta No. 1, 3-78; ARD over Knicks, 36-32; Ardy Over Dukes, 36-32; Half courts GDI, 31-25; Slop Shooters over K4, 40-32; Naismith No. 3 forfeited to Pus, NR Blazers forfeited to Ohio HC
Fraternity C—Phi Delt No. 3
over AKL No. 1, 42-14; Sig Ep No.
over Sigma Chi No. 1, 36-13.
The owners have offered
$490,000 to improve health
insurance benefits for players but
will also encourage their pension contributions.
This would bring the total annual contribution by the owners for pension and health care to $5.94 million.
"We have offered today a proposal we believe can settle the matter and avoid delaying the investigation," Miller told a news conference.
"We have said all along that you are accepting the owners' money offer and in addition offering to guarantee the difference between the prices we buy."
Miller explained that his team has invested $9.9 million in owners' annual $5.94 million contribution to the plan to finance both health benefits and income.
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is designed to earn and the 6 per cent it is earning."
Miller explained that one of the concerns of the owners was that the $4 million plan would not meet the needs at the current 6 per cent rate.
EL PADRECITO
Gaherin was to take the proposal back to the owners for their reaction.
"We are not attempting to achieve a victory," Miller said. "We are attempting to get a fair and honorable settlement."
7:30 p.m., Hoch Aud.
Admission Free
IN SPANISH ONLY
Miller said, "If management requires equity and honorable a way out for both sides, they must bear the responsibility for delaying the exercise."
"We're going to consider the proposal seriously and have no further comment at this time," said Gaherin.
The season was scheduled to open Wednesday.
Tuesday, April 4
Let the Man from Equitable
Buddy Bowles
2602 Belle Cresf Lawrence, Kansas Phone 843-2616
Robert Langbaum
PROFESSIONALS
PROGRAM
offering life
insurance
will speak today
BUDDY BOWLES
premium financing for full-time graduate students
tell you about The YOUNG
The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States New York, N.Y.
KANSAN WANT ADS
The Mysteries of Identity As A Theme In T.S. Eliot's Plays
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
3 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium
Sponsored by Humanities Lecture Series
Highest price paid for used cars G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
8080
tf
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can spend $200 plus 15% at RAY AUDIO, plus 10% at ATT. Only the Sterio Discount House in Chicago offers this service: Coffee & Service.
SeaTech Equipment-Fins Mask Snorkeling Suit. $49.95 Lifetime Guaranes. $120.95 Wet Surf Life Insurance. $49.95 See Hawk Kite and Combat Air Guarnes. $69.95 See us in Miami. Major brands Dive教练, Bajearine Pl. Pkwia City, Mo. Dive教练, Bajearine Pl. Pkwia City, Mo.
NORTHISLE COUNTRY SHOP . 707
Bristol Bridgets, used furniture,
bedding and toilets, wood cooking and
building supplies, wood stoves,
stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood,
of other useful items, open to 8
or 9am. Herb Alderman, bldg.
3159
Western City. Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
you will see
FOR SALE
SCUBA EQUIPMENT - Fins, Masks,
Gloves, Safety Gear. Inspection
保險 Hot Pace Lifesaving Guarantee,
$250. Travel Assistance. Huffman
Kluft and Kluft, $39. Spares
$29.99 See in for all your diving
trips. Insure branded Divers Equipment
and supplies. Drive, Kluft City, Mo. 64134 Phone
808-779-9999
"4" inch chrome Sonar "pancake
snare drum with stand 20" Zidlagn
cymbal, 842-9270, cal afterfmns 6-4
250 Suuki Savage Trail Bike. Less than 2,000 actual miles. Call 842-9055 evenings. Excellent condition. 4-4
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Uptown Dallas Kanan are offered to all students of the University of color, cured, or national origin.
and indulgence in landdiversion
Either way, the analysis of "New
战争"—New Analysis of Western
Civilization." Campus Madhouse 412,
West 14th. **11**, **ft**
If you don't you have a bad message.
Chevy II Nova 70 for sale. SS 396-
Coupe • Bucket seats • Powered
drakes • 350 HP. Call Arzag, 843-
4487, 2-5 M.P. on MWB, 4-4
VOLKSWAGEN, 1967 Bug, new brakes, stereo, $825. Cheap, Tim, 842-7125. 4-4
MONOCULAR MACROSCOPE, 4 objectives, 2 seizures, mechanical stage, 11 observations, 32 items, $10 Contact C. Place, Box 210 Bldg. 876 Parkside K.Cambridge, Kansai 931-625-6693
MOTORGLA 8-track stereo tape system
with a built-in speaker with speakers headphones headphones lock mounts allow music enjoyment in car-home Fred Puckett, 845-813-513
If you have a typewriter skip this贴; if not, call us. Manuals, IBM Stainless and Selecories. For students and students. Phone 848-4-844 and save.
71 Datum 1200 Coupe, 10,000 miles
very clean, factory air, runs beautifully,
must sell. Call Gregg. 842-3689.
4-4
Complete set of men's golf clubs, bag included. Four woods, all irons. For information call 844-6860 at 6:00 on weekdays and ask for Rick
Electric Wurlitzer plano—15” speaker with 2 10” aux speakers $150, 843, 1782
4-4
66 Buick HT. 4 hr, AT, PB PS, PSW,
Air conditioned, New tires, Less than
list price. Excellent condition $1.395.
Call 843-1029 or 824-2024
4-5
1970 Skuzu TC-90. 29 range gearbox for street and fire trail. Great condition. 4,000 miles $250 including insurance and helmet. 862-94-54
YAHAWA 1970 650 cc 924 Schwarz Road after 6 P.M. Excellent condition. 4-5
Fender Jaguar with hard case,
power amplifier, and 40 WX18X speaker cabinet with 1-15"
2-12" & 2 horn drivers. Shure unit
with 6-8 channel driver with stand,
45-366 1266 week
Brand new Magnavox Component
Brand new Magnavox Components
$39.90 a pair, now $49.90 a pair
Systems. Reg. Bajaj a pair, now 800
Bajaj a pair. Reg. Hewlett-Packard
a pair. Reg. HAWKTON a pair.
STAN BACKEON 8250, 8255, 8258
9250, 9255, 9258, 9259,
9260, 9265, 9269, 9275, 9279,
9285, 9289, 9294, 9298, 9303,
9308, 9313, 9318, 9323, 9328,
Minolta SR-T 101 camera like new
$200. Call Mark, 842-6751. 4-5
59 Les Paul, Gibson. Curly maple sunburst. Humbucking pickups Excellent cond. Sell or trade for equipment. B42, 843-7881, 1145-6 Room 8.
1962 Volvo P1800 $180 with black in-
terior. The most expensive economy
car in the world. Best offer over $700
Call 842-2860.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
1971 Kawasaki 125ce Enouro, 1400
miles, like new. $475 Phone 843-5588
or see at 2302 Princeton Blvd. 4-5
Oldsmobile · 1965 · Delta 88 · Com-
biAir · Air Conditioned · On Lily
60,000 aircraft miles · $500 Tune up
483-8463. Steve.
Ladies' 10 speed bicycle. Schwinn super-sport, 9 mo. old. Excellent Condition. Phone 864-1331. 4-68
24th & Iowa
Wkdays 8-5:30 Sunday 10-3
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.20
Deadline : 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
and Service
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1355
Parts at a discount
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Need to sell 4-tee-old Symphonica AM-FM, PM-FM, stereo built-in a-track stage player, and includes a separate FM-PM stereo player. For after 4-00 for further information 4-40.
Tuxedo & Sauce Jackets
Jeans shirt - Overalls for kids -
Bowties - Accessories in town,
in lower 200, in inner
BOKONO. 819 Vermont, 11-6-4-6
MUST SELL 1969 BSA 625 Hurricane clean and fail, but服务要 3.000 km² or 500 km² or best offer. See at 1234 O.M. or 500 for information. P.A.M.
Gaya 12 string guitar - excellent condition - Gaya 1350. Also E 8 trk car kit, deck house, home converter, headphones, headset, DJ equipment 100. Dave Lee, B43-607J 4-4-6
Roberts 778X. 8-track Reel-Reel;
$300. 860-8619.
4,46
Sale of the city Panasonic Model no. IS$257-6 mo old $200 warranty. Pin Ball Machine Williams 3 collis, perfect. $84-3240. 4-6
1962 Volkswagen, clean and in good running condition. Call 843-3473. 4-7
65 MGB and upright piano 842-2473 4-7
8 track stereo tape deck and speakers.
Best offer. Call 864-5794 anytime after
6 P.M. aft 4:5
Roberts Roe to Reel and Cartridge
Tape Recorder—two speed, records
and plays. Cost $560 new, will forl
$240. Very good. #82-593.
Ampeg BT-15 solid base, bass amplifier with 15" speaker and B2S-B extension cabinet with 2-15" speak-on condition. Must Amit 842-7643
1971 Honda SL 350 Excellent condition Must sell—Best Offer Takes Call Dennin, 843-7404 4-10
For sale by owner, 1970 Hodaka 100c. jm J.C. Cylinder, loader valve, 228-cub, chamber, lights ideal enduro rack, rained ride-airer at A&C Cycle Shop.
Sun-rifle, lay-down, seats. 4-speed,
and a bunch of others. Poulet 404, 604
and Koch are good for praxus on
sound real trees. You can also
or call Bob or Eddie 842-9783.
iPad model 360 tape deck. Perfect.
$250 Also portable tape recorder,
2-micro camera, 25" TV, turn-
table, 2-mobile camera, 48"
7198 or 824-6024. Hammersmith
4-10
FOR RENT
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right now:
Ten new 2 bedroom and four new 1 bedroom apartments. August 1st, 4 one year old 1 bedroom apartment. August 1st, 4 one year old 1 bedroom apartment. All apartments clean and well-maintained, dishwashers, central air conditioning, between 9:30 AM and 10:30 PM.
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited
Room for rent. Free four
students can have two.
Students can have nished
apart, with all utilities paid
and enrolled in call. Call
after p. 20.
843-7721
SUMMER RENTALS. All types and prices, all near campus. Reserve yours now. Merie Lynch, 2126 Laid-843-1601, 841-3323
4-10
DUPLUX FOR BENT, 2714 Ridge Court, $175 per mo. 2 bedroom, refrigerator, dishwasher, dryer, garage, laundry room, staircase, 383-3295. Available immediately.
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWRENCE
of Lawrence the most attractive
city in the world, you may
refuse to rate if you call Mrs. Pereyh,
617-389-4052, living in ARgo Apartment
14th Floor, 14TH AVENUE, BVA,
Avalon or Harvard Square, Iowa
or can be economical and enjoy-
able this summer. It is all surpriply modest modern specializes in private apartments. This summer a wonderful time to be
SAIARIA APTS—Must leave before semester ends, lease from leap either lt or 15th of May 1 bdm. Kitchen. Sweep: 750 (after Call 845-828 (afv or eft).
Tired of trying to find that ideal apt. location, a few months ago I received 1, 2 & 3 bdm apts, homes in various locations and prices. My favorite was McGrew Agency, 911 Kentucky, $825.
APARTMENT FOR RENT, one room,
air conditioning, Available
first 1 at 19 West 14th. Call 842-
9153 after 6
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
Factory Authorized
Sales & Service
KAT Suzuki
NICE FURNISHED 3 BEDROOM
NICE FURNISHED 3 BEDROOM
LIVING ROOM VERT CLOSE
TO TAMPUS, GAUNDRY. NEED TO
HANG OUT. NUMBER SUMMER
841-4524 APT 3.90
COLLEGE HILL MANOR now show-
ing the men's gymnastics furnished and unfurnished apart-
ments start at $129. Chow to campus for a week.
174 W. 19th, 4pm AE or call 845-378-2100.
174 W. 19th, 4pm AE or call 845-378-2100.
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
the office of L. Lawrence in
1972, when selection is still available.
845-2348, or 2107-A. Harvard
& Lawrence, 845-2348, built location,
and Lawrence's law firm located.
Harvard Square, Iowa & Harvard Square, Iowa & Illinois. Then compare the two apartments, some appalled, sound proof and spacious apartments and you will be more to have a dishwasher, central air conditioning and many more features. 4-14
Room with cooking area in exchange for work for the summer term. 843-7863 4-4
TO SUBLET. Cute, cate, one-bed-
room apt., furnished with A.C,
on large lnt. Reasonable Call 841-2766
after 4.
5-4
NOTICE
Parked paneled with 10 windows
in large house near campus—share
with four grovvy people. $40 per
room. Call anty. Call anny.
842-7616
Barn Partiest. Now available for rent in Oakland, CA, Apple Valley Farm in Lake Perry, CA and cooler plenty of parking. Call Joe Strange after 6 p.m. at bmz-52701. Call Joe Strange after 6 p.m. at bmz-52701.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. John Wells, 842-5220
LEARN SKYDIVING 1st jump
combatter 2nd jump, plan ride,
and qualified instruction, time each day
jump after first is done at 840-756-
3393 or 840-756-3394 at 840-756-3393
We can find any book for you. All subjects, rare books, fine bindings, etc Write T. R. Matness, 317 Beacon St. B. Boston, Mass. 02116 4-12
Magnaxvon Custom Stereo System.
Reg. $159.90, now $100.00 at RAY
STONEBACK'S. 4-5
TYPING
Would you like to see some pretty excite people, young lovers & a good Numbai China? They would love meet us at Haas Import 1029 Mamas.
JIM'S STEAK HOUSE—where you will find one of the best steaks in town. Our motto is "Dine Out at Eating Out Prices." 4-14
FOUND: Black cat with one white whisker. Owner please claim. Call 843-8768 4-6
New wide belt F 70-14 first quality only $25 plus. $30 at RAY BASEMENT G 70-14 $30. Free fast installation at Ray Stoneback's 4-11
Experienced in typing these, disser-
ing and typing letters, wripping
have electric typewriter type.
Type accurate and prompt ser-
pace. Req'd phone 843-9544. Mr. Wright
received phone 843-9544. Mr. Wright
Typing done on elite, electric type-
writer. No Theses please. Prompt atten-
tion. 843-0958
Experienced typist will type thesis, manuscripts, themes, etc. Reasonable rates. Call 843-2107. 4-4
These, term papers typed accurately and promptly. IBM Selector, your choice of type styles. Also editing at rates. Alabama, 847-959-482-650.
Experienced typist will type your term paper, terms or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work 843-281. Mrs Mauckman.
Webster's Mobile Homes
TYPING. IBM pica type. Fast, accu-
rate, neat. Call after 5:00 p.m. on
weekends. 843-3188. 4-4
842-6966
3409 W. 6th 842-7700 Just West of the
66 Service
Tony's CENTER
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
stafford service
Lawrence, KS 66044
718-529-3880
Your Complete Service Dealer
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts Ample Park Spaces Available
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
W. 6th 842-7
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt, reasonable rates. Please call 843-7954. 4-5
Typing in my home. IBM Selectric.
Prompt accurate work. Experienced.
5-9
www.imakework.com
HELP WANTED
Neded—Neat, aggressive, part-time landmark location for established company in business over 20 years. Send resume in care of the Data Kahan.
TEACHERS WANTED TEACHER
Southwest Teachery Agency. Box
2612 Southwest N.M. 87066
quarter year. Bonder and member.
N.A.T.A. Bonder and member. 6-8
Drunk Driver needed for pick up
Trunk Driver needed for secura-
lization Center
Must have 2 hrs of driving
Must have $1.60 per hour plus 4 a-cle
for drive time
@ 843-3710,吉利豪车
@ 843-3710,吉利豪车
843-3710,吉利豪车
843-3710,吉利豪车
Head teacher wanted for "free" high school in New York. Requires preferred experience with high school institutions, including reasons for application to School of Law. Requires a Bachelor's degree or equivalent from School of Law. Salary not required.
Sports-minded couple for summer
learning in Lake Chapman Labor
Day (happily). No children in
door and outdoor chores at profes-
sor's summer home on Lake Chapan
Lake Chapman. Please apply in writing giving
willingness to Raymond Cole, 1001 Sun
Set Drive
We want an eager young man to be a leader, help with cleaning, running errands, etc. Services are limited; but not needless. Apply online at www.nurse4u.com between 2-5, Monday through Friday
LOST
One kitten, seven months old. White
with one blue and one green eye. If
found please return to 618 North 12th,
New Haven, Return 4-4
8 month old *1* Siamese cat, Vitachy
of 1901 & old Mask, bows tail—all
brown. Remark员 light brown. Call
brown. For 46-84-748, bring him
46-84-748.
TKE
High School Class Ring. Parkway
Central Senior High School, 1971;
smooth stone. P on face of stone
B.P. on back. L on face of stone
Wilson-set leather basketball at Robinson gymnasium March 30. Please contact Don Soonbeck if found 842-317-31
WANTED
PERSONAL
BECAUSE is a listening service. 843-
9652. Sun. thru Thu. 8-12 P.M., Fri.
& Sat. 8月-6月-A.M. 4-12
Who wants the DG crest? Do the DG's want their plague back? Reply in want ad section. 4-4
To Bobbing Legs & Curves. May All
Guides Allow. For Adults Only.
Hospital before. Sentence: "After
World Turns 1! opt in 'Let's Make A
Warm Welcome.'"
Comfort: "Please assume the
TV Signed Waiver."
Home for adult male neutered seal-pont
siamae. Val Smith, 842-6599.
* P.M. weekdays. 4-10
OVERSAKER JOBS FOR STUDENTS
all of our positions. All professionals, all Air Force, all Civilian, all Occupational overtime sightseeing. Free information. Job offers available 9:21am - 5:30pm
MISCELLANEOUS
SRIDAL GOWN SAMPLE Sale
8-10, 12 up to 75% Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky.
4.56
CSC
10X0TA 19HMM
Competition Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
WHY NOT!
Sell your unwanted items with a classified in the
UDK
8
Tuesday. April 4.1972
University Daily Kansan
Disney's Animation Still Reigns
By RON PARKER
Kansan Reviewer
The Walt Disney studios have also made and second-time movers. This is evidenced once again in the animated movie which mixes animation with live action. The cartoon characters seem much more real than the animation.
The story takes place in England in 1940. Three children who have been evacuated from London are placed in the care of
cartoon characters are brimming with life and humor, and one can't help wishing that they are sharing the experience with the picture themselves.
"Bedknobs" also contain so much in the climactic scene which has a few hundred empty suits of armour deoming to life, and the only thing they wear is a
The screaming laughter of the children in the audience is a tribute to the Disney animation of "Snow White." The talking and shuffling of feet
detectable (and understandable)
ambassador. Their delivery
is "slow, and easy to
away" the weak songs. But when
songs are this weak, why not
use them?
Schlock like this needs a lai off. Lansbury was not the right choice for the lovable, eccentric witch. Lansbury is one of the first American actress to sink her teeth, but putting her in a rool like her nose, asking him to throw her into kazoo. He might lend some dignity to the act but there are more adept kazoo-players
KANSAN reviews
The animation is delightful, particularly in a scene depicting an animal soccer match. The
David Tomlinson is always a delight in comic support of the character, and out well into a leading role. He plays a likeable bummer, and is given very little to work with. He maintains an expression that seems to indicate that he smells much bad. He very well may.
THE MAINSTAY of the plot is a search taken to a storybook kingdom inhabited by animated animals and it is here that the characters learn.
on the verge of yelling, "Cut the crap!" But she resists (as far as we know; there may be footage of her playing on some cutting room floor).
More than 80 members of the band, chorale and rock ensemble of Haskell Junior College will present their spring concert throughout portions of Southwestern United States this week, said Jacob Bohanon, director of vocal music at Haskell.
Lansbury took a four-year leave-of-absence from films to become a television host and she's now hard time getting back into the cinema. Her "comeback" in *Inside* was an upsetting and interesting, but spectacular, and "Bedknobs" is unlikely to make her the queen of the Kiddie Matteiere is where the woman we saw on Saturday night, "The Manchurian Candidate?"
Lansbury's role in "Bedknobks" would have been much more secure in the hands of, say, Julie Andrews. Andrews is very much at home in seelock, and her father was always able to have filled the credibility gap.
Bohanon said the four would include stops at Indian schools in Anadarko, Okla., Abuquerque, Montana, and Anaconda, Arizona, and an Apache reservation in Whitelake, N.M. The group left Monday and will conclude their trip.
By WENDIE ELLIOTT
Kenton Staff Writer
In "Bedknobs," Angela Lansbury and David Tomlinson perform their numbers with
Haskell Troupe Begins Tour
traditional Indian costume, will sing ethnic songs, which are translated, arranged and directed by Bohanan.
Drawing from a wide range of musical backgrounds, the band will perform under the direction of Drew Brown Redwine and Jack Romine
an apprentice witch named Rachel will be unsuccessfully to discover some satirical connection with the evil sorcerer, and are joined by a bumbling magician, and the bunch go about preventing a German invasion of Switzerland.
The chorale, dressed in
LANSBURY IS just not meant to play saccharine roles. All through the film she seems to be.
Featured in its presentation will be Bill Crow Jr., tenor soloist.
THE RESTLESSNESS of the children always comes to a peak during the songs. I will never understand why movie-makers like Richard and Bob Spinelli persist in hiring Richard and Robert Sherman to fill their pictures with banal songs. The Sherman brothers had one of the greatest pop-poems, "And somehow that makes them supersmothers for life."
should (but probably won't) give a different kind of message to the writer and director.
During the tour, Haskell's rock ensemble, "The Hunted Race," will preserve the music. The set will include vocal and instrumental solosists and an ad-libbed version of "Josephine," said Sam Morris, of Josephine.
spokesman for the group.
"The Hunted Race" has performed for audiences all over the United States, acting as a role of Haskell, Morris said.
KU Student Reports Rape In Apartment
Book Examines 'Ecotage'
Presently, Morris said, they are cutting an album to be released sometime in late April. The album, yet to be named, will visit at Indian groups they have visited and Indians of the area.
Pollution Solution?
In a concert Friday night in
theater at Madison Square Garden,
Superintendent Wallace Galuzzi
made a surprise presentation of
individual players to the
concert.
A 19-year-old KU student reported to Lawrence police she was raped in her apartment early Saturday morning.
Police said the man displayed a knife, but never threatened her.
Police reported the victim was sleeping when she was awakened by a man standing in her bedroom.
Several topical volumes are available this month. Sam Love and David Obst's ECOTAGE! BOOK 16 presents a new item that considers the possibility of sabotaging the persons and industries doing most of the polluting in America. Consider," no "adavocates", it will be called "a man without education" edited by Gerald Leuwand, PRISONS AND THE POLICE (Pocket, 95 cents each). These are in the Problems of American Society, with readings on the subject of crime, police and prison reform.
Another of topical interest is the story of the Native Americans in BEGINNINGS: INDIAN CULTURES IN THE AMERICAS. This book describes the Indians who lived in North and South America before the coming of the Europeans. The stories are well written, interesting and
Police reported he asked for money from the victim, but she old him she didn't have any. 'police reported the man then left.'
Four notable paperbacks that have been reissued are the Civil War *THIS HALLOWED GROUND*, THE COMING FURY, TERRIBLE SWORD SWORD and Pocket (*Pocket*, $1.25 each). The first of these is a single-volume work, one of the best ever written about the American Revolution, conflict in the forests/addings in the 1850s to the beginnings of
The statement was written by the Warrmart Action Board reviewer and is directly administered and was approved by Chalmers.
Policy Attacks Discrimination At University
Reconstruction. The volumes, by the way, are in an extremely attractive format.
Police said there was no sign of orced entry into the apartment
"One of the essential functions of university is help individuals get their greatest potential. To this end the University of Kansas commits itself to
1. The expeditious elimination, in all University activities, of discrimination against members of groups which have been in a university or in general society. Such groups shall include, but not be limited to, American Indians; Blacks, Muslims and Hindus; 2. the development and implementation of policies and programs designed to promote actively the full participation of members of such groups in the administration of the University at all levels."
Chancellor E. L Laurence Chalmers Jr. released a policy statement last week concerning minority groups and women. The statement will be used in all schools for minority groups and women.
The statement was written to clarify the University's position in fulfilling Affirmative Action programs. The Affirmative Action program has been changed with developing a comprehensive program for KU.
JUNIORS!! Interviews for Senior Class Committee Chairpersons Sat.. April 8. 9-12 a.m.
1) Aid to Higher Education
2) Hope Award
3) Senior Job Comm.
4) Social
5) Regalia
6) Class Gift
7) Senior Activities (i.e., regalia dist. and luncheon)
Pick up forms in Alumni Assoc.
Office, 103 Union. Forms must be
turned in by Thurs., April 6 3:00 p.m.
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COMFORTABLE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.115
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
College Assembly To Propose BGS Degree
Wednesday, April 5, 1972
See Page 5
FU
Wallace, Humphrey 2-3
LACOSTE
Kansan Photo by DAVE BLISS
Student at Karate Institute Does Conditioning Exercises
Student at Karate Institute
Vicki Henry, Lawrence senior, performs exercises designed to strengthen the stomach muscles as part of her training at the school. She was also a student at the school, at 731 N Hamshire, since it opened last winter. The Institute is
operated by Chuck Northcott, Overland Park park junior, and Eddie Wong, Wichita senior. Both men hold the rank of black belt, and they teach a composite style of karate, incorporating characteristics of various schools.
Campaign Expenses Varied
McGovern Scores First In Tough Wisconsin Race
New York Mayor John V. Landsay, far back in the incumbent field, quit the race
MILWAUKEE (AP)—Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota scored a sweeping victory in the Wisconsin presidential primary Tuesday night, vaulting to the front rank of Democratic nomination to challenge President Nixon.
Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace edge驳于 sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Moorhead, Minnesota.
See CAMPAIGN page 5
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine ran a potentially crippling fourth, pollting 11 per
cent of the Wisconsin vote. He said he would press on, and still expected to win
"I don't know the meaning of the word quit," he said.
WALLACE GAINED a hefty northern showing to go with his Southern campaign senndef in Florida, and said it made him "a really serious candidate."
With 85 per cent of the ballots counted, Metvien was capturing 30 per cent of the vote.
Wallace and Humphrey were capturing 21 per cent of the vote apiece.
McGovern was in charge of 54 of
Campaign spending in the mid-March election for student body president ranged from less than the $10 filling fee for some students to considerably more than the fee for others.
Wescoe Hall Fee Included for Fall
By ROBERT E. DUNCAN Kansan Staff Writer
Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior and student body president, said he had no total figures on the amount of money he were campaign because all bills were not yet in.
Under provisions of the Student Code, campaign spending by candidates for student body president and their running team is limited to seven cents per constituent.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers said Tuesday that student fees for the financing of Wesco Hall would be collected starting next fall.
When all bills are in and a total figure is available, Dillon said he would submit an audit to the Elections Committee. He said that he was relieved of releasing this information publicly.
He said, however, that his expenditures were well below the limit established in the Student Senate guidelines. He estimated that his campaign spending would at most amount to one-third of that limit. One-third of the limit is approximately 4400.
Chailmers w Wescoe Hall was scheduled to be completed in the 1972-73 school year and the fees would be collected by the college. Brackets issued for the Wescoe project.
The code does not require candidates to submit audits of their spending unless the Elections Committee of the Student Senate submitted them. The committee audited were requested by the committee
The fee will be $4.50 a semester and the expected revenue from fees is much lower than the anticipated cost of the project, Chalmers said.
The fee reduced, from approximately $11.50 a semester to $4.50, resulted from obtaining a federal grant, a lower than average interest rate on the bonds, he said.
CHALMERS SAID that as long as he was chancellor he would never go to the students again to ask them to subsidize the construction of an academic building.
Commenting on the proposal for making Jayhawk Boulevard and Memorial Drive one-way streets, Chalmers said he had not seen any written documents on the issue.
administration concerning the proposal and thought more study was necessary.
Chalmers said he had talked informally with members of University
He said he hoped students, faculty and staff would take advantage of any open communication.
The concern of the University is the lack of parking facilities, the lack of guest parking facilities and the need to cut costs in this area.
Chalmers said the proposal would call for the elimination of two traffic control stations, each of which costs approximately $10,000 a year to operate.
Chalmers said University officials had traveled to other major universities in the hope of finding new methods of dealing with the parking and traffic problems.
Chalmers said he had received favorable reaction concerning the decentralized budgeting process that will help him direct employees to the Payroll Budget Systems is created.
The chancellor said decentralization was necessary for the University of Kansas because it was "related to the growth of the institution."
Wisconsin's 67 national convention votes, to go along with the giant psychological boost he gained in his first victory of the primary season.
"It clearly establishes me as a major contender in the public mind," he said.
As the University expands in scope, he said, greater responsibility will rest with the deans of the schools and department chairman for managing their own budgets.
Lindsey, who was running sixth, behind Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington, with 7 per cent of the vote, became the first woman to serve as democratic campaign for the White House.
President Nixon swamped two opponents on the Republican primary
WITH 85 PER CENT of the vote tallied,
this was the standing of the six Democratic
candidates who campaigned actively in
Wisconsin:
Rep. Shirley Chisholm of New York had 7,961, about 1 per cent. Los Angeles Mayor Sam Tory had 2,133 or less than 1 per cent.
Six other candidates gained scattered support.
McGovern 286,006 30 per cent
Wallace 209,330 22 per cent
Humphrey 201,247 21 per cent
Muskie 98,852 10 per cent
Jackson 75,880 8 per cent
Lindsay 65,264 7 per cent
Former senator Eugen McCarthy of Minnesota had 13,290 votes, a little more than 58%.
Also getting less than 1 per cent were Rep. Patsy Minky of Hawaii with 1,134 votes. Rep. Sven Hurke of Indiana with 728 votes. Rep. Wilbur Wills of Arkansas with 847.
McGovern led for 54 of Wisconsin's nominating votes at the Democratic debate.
Humphrey was ahead for the other 13.
President Nixon won 28 convention votes for renomination. He had been opposed by John Ashbrook of Ohio and Paul N. Cohn of California who had withdrawed from the race.
Wisconsin voters could choose the primary ballot of either party.
Voter Signup Exceeds 500
Matha said about 250 persons had registered Monday and about 300 had registered Tuesday. Registration has been on weekdays to 4:30 p.m. in the rotunda of Strong Hall.
Mark, Bedner, Lawrence graduate student and a member of the Student Vote steering committee, said registration have been limited to the Strong Hall location for two days so that enough people could be able to staff an additional registration place.
Voter registration this week at the University of Kansas is proceeding successfully, Douglas County Clerk D. E. Matha said Tuesday. He said that more than 500 persons had registered during the week for voter Registration Week, which ends Friday.
Now that enough people are qualified to register voters, a place to register will also be available from the lobby of the Kansas State Building from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Students can still register in Strong Hall.
Student Vote is sponsoring the campus registration drive in conjunction with the students.
BY MOLLY LAFLIN
Kansan Staff Writer
Fall Students to Pay Tuition at Enrollment
Students returning to school in the fall will be greeted by a new system of fee codes.
Adam Clayton Powell Dies After Surgery
MIAMI (AP)—Adam Clayton Powell, politician-preacher and playboy, whose flamboyant love of wheeling and dealing led to his exclusion from Congress, died Tuesday night in a Miami hospital of complications following prostate surgery. He was 63.
His death was announced by Freed J. Jackson, director of Jackson Memorial Hospital.
"Congressman Adam Clayton Powell expired at Jackson Memorial Hospital at 10:45 p. m. Tuesday, April 4, 1972," said Cowell.
Powell was brought by U. S. Coast Guard helicopter to Jackson Memorial Hospital March 7, from his Bahamian island retreat of Bimini.
Both Yvette Powell, his third wife, and Darlene Expose, the flamboyant
former lawmaker introduced as his
hospital vigil during his week-long illness.
In 1968, without making a single campaign appearance in his Harlem
In 1945 the tall, handsome Powell
the fattest back from the East to be
elected.
He also became the first congressman in modern times to be excluded by a vote of the House, which turned him out in 1976 for missing funds and defying the courts.
Powell, whose adoptive phrase “Keep the faith, baby,” was on the lips of many Americans in the late 1960's was re-elected. But a week later, after Congress voted him out. He campaigned only a few days, spending most of the time in Bimini, but did not try to reclaim his
district of New York City, Powell was reelected again by a 7-4 majority—the same margin by which the Supreme Court ruled the following June that the House had exceeded its constitutional power in barring him. However, he did not mention the fact that his senatority made him chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee.
After his re-election in 1968, Congress had already voted to reseat Powell, provided he pay a $25,000 fee and forfeit seniority.
Powell accepted the deal, but he attended only part time.
"I'm a parttime congressman because I am a parttime paid congressman, he said. The fine was deducted from his salary in monthly installments.
PETER HUGSEN
Adam Clayton Powell
Kath Nitcher, University compromised, said Tuesday that this method for collection of fees would make budgeting much easier as it would give the University an account of the number of students, both high and nonresident, at a much earlier date.
William Kelly, registrar, said this system would give a more accurate account of the number of students as well as an earlier account. He said this would eliminate students who enrolled in classes and were then unable to meet their financial obligations.
KELLY SAID he didn't think it was fair for a student to take a place in a class if he was unable to pay his fees, because too often other students were closed out of classes in which nonpaying students were enrolled.
Nitcher said payment of fees by credit card was being investigated because it would be a convenience to many students who would be better able to pay over an extended period of time. He said Master BankAmericard were being considered.
Kelley explained the proposed See FALL Students page 8
of enrolment. Under this system a student's enrolment is not complete until
Socialist Workers Party Stompers Ask for Support
By JAMES COOK
Kansan Staff Writer
Most University of Kansas voters are aware of the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates, but few voters know about the campaign of Linda Jenness and Andrew
Jeness, a 31-year-old white, is the coauthor of several pamphlets on women's liberation and ran for mayor of Atlanta in 1969 and for governor of Georgia in 1970. She ran on the SWP ticket in both elections.
Andrew Pulley, a 21-year-old black, was expelled from a Greenwood, Mississippi high school for leading a peaceful demonstration following the assassination of Osama bin Laden. Pulley was given the choice of going to jail or joining the Army. He joined the Army.
Jemness and Pallley are the presidential and vice-presidential candidates of the 2016 election.
antiwar demonstrations and helped form GF'i United against the War in Vietnam. In 1970 be ran for the U. S. House on the SWP ticket.
ANDY BUSTIN, a YSPJ organizer from Houston, said YSPJ groups were touring the nation, organizing chapters on campuses, in factories, in the black and Chicoan communities, in prisons and among antitwar groups.
Pulley organized some of the first GI
Last week Young Socialists for Jemness
locality visited KU to organize
a party. We philipaged
Bustin said the YSJP would establish a chapter at KU. He said they could bring Jenness and Pulley to KU and would try to get them on the ballot in Kansas.
"We want to build a force on campus that, for example, can strengthen the science community and can conduct campus campaigns, and that can be involved in a campus struggle for student and faculty rights. We want NOTC to be involved in the process with any issue which might come up. We
want the abolition of tuition and fees. Our campaign is not one of rhetoric but one of action. We'll leave but we'll also leave a YJSP behind."
The YSJP intends to unite activists but, at the same time, provides for the continuation of independent political action by all member groups.
ALLAN GRADY, a YJSP organizer from Berkeley, said the YJSP saw the Democrats and Republicans as capitalists' tools, blind to the needs of the people and subservient to the whims of ITT and Standard Oil.
One of the major strategies of the YSJP is the placement of its members in the audiences when the other presidential candidates speak. YSJP members address questions to the candidates and distribute YSJP campaign brochures.
The brochures deal with former statements by the candidates, using a "realistic" style and rarely used.
"The Democrats and the Republicans are running their personalities and their
phony slogans. We're running on a concrete political program that's real. We don't change our statements as we change audiences.
"The candidates, especially McGoven, are fakes, mere facades. McGoven is not what he cracked up to be. Look at his campaign, "giving," in his campaign literature," he said.
The YSJP see McGovenn as a tool of the Democrats, a drawing card to attract the young. For this reason they attack him more than any other candidate. Grady
"WHEN HUMPHREY or Muskie gets the nominee you'll see McGovennig hugging the winner and stomping the country endorsing him," Bustin said. "That happened in '88 with McCarthy going out for Humphrey. A lot of McCarthy supporters came to us with that. We did. They were the McGovennid supporters. They'll be beating a path to our door. They're naive it's incredible." he said.
Jenness and Pulley advocate immediate withdrawal from Southeast Asia, immediate repeal of abortion laws, legalization of marijuana, black control of the black community, Chicoa control of the Chicano community, equal rights for women and homosexuals, prison reform and union wages for prison workers, the empowerment of independent labor party; the lowering of the voting age to include high school
"The most telling thing about the Democrats is their voting record and their former statements. None of them would eve run on his record. Can you imagine a candidate who didn't want to elect Me. We were the ones who started the war in Vietnam, who shot blacks in Newark and Detroit, the ones who congratulated Nixon and Rockefeller for winning the election, and propagandized the public and from out of both sides of our mouths." Bustin said.
students, and the establishment of a socialistic America.
GRADY SAID the problems of capitalism could not be solved by capitalism. He said socialism presented answers to these problems.
"We know which way the wind is blowing and we see the Democrats trying to change their political movements," Grady said. "Our party is designed to give independent social movements a boost and to change the direction of it smoothly and as rapidly as possible.
"We're going to do it. History is on our side. We are going to do it by exposing the sham, the moral bankruptcy of the Democratic and Republican parties."
"Remember the new working class that's coming up, the working class of tomorrow, is not the redneck worker of yesterday. The students at KU today are the workers of tomorrow. We've seen white workers unite to support black
See SOCIALIST Page 12
2
Wednesday, April 5, 1972
University Daily Kansan
N. Viets Increase Raids
By LYNN C. NEWLAND
SAIGON (AP) — The six-day old North Vietnamese offensive into South Vietnam overran two more government buses Tuesday and heavy fighting was reported around the last remaining southwestern defense anchor of North Vietnam, the northern provincial capital.
Quang Tri is 19 miles south of the demilitarized zone.
Field reports said Fire Base Pedro, 110 miles southwest of Quang Tri, was holding despite a fatal of a twin base called Anne.
Fighting also was reported on two other fronts north of Quang Tri, and the North Vietnamese army pushed the troops on the provincial capital from three directions. Field commanders have said the city is under threat.
NORTH VIETNAMESE FORCES
crossed the border and forced the
Vietnamese to retreat from their
naval patrol base 10 miles north
The Communist-led troops have pushed South Vietnamese forces from the DMZ 10 miles to retreat to a defensive line on the
southern banks of the Dong Ha River southwest of the Cua Viet.
South Vietnamese armored cavalry units, marines and militiamen clashed with North Vietnamese forces at points three miles northeast of the airport in Ha and two miles southwest of.
carrier it has appeared that the Vietnamese offensive was that of an elite group of insurgents and the enemy was regrouping in resupplying for another
Sources in Washington said Tuesday night that President Nixon had ordered 20 more B52s to the area from their U.S. bases. This would bring to about 100 the fleet of the eight-engine stratojet aircraft available for strikes against the North Vietnamese.
THE UNITED STATES sent its entire fleet of B2S bombers and cores of fighter bombers to disrupt the plans for new strikes. Five destroyers offshore added the bombing to the pounding of memy positions.
All BS2 missions in Cambodia and Laos were passed for the second consecutive day and 50 of them were conducted in Vietnamese troop concentrations
and supply depots in the north and the central highlands.
THE GENERAL estimated the North Vietnamese have suffered 2,000 killed thus far in ground fighting and by air and artillery strikes. South Vietnam forces lost 1,000 killed and 600 wounded.
The fall of Fire Base Anne raised the threat that Highway I might be cut south of Quang Tri, thus isolating it.
Associated Press
Correspondent Holger Jensen
Merkel's family had refugees still left in Quang Tien were packing to move southward along the vital Highway to toward Hue, where many have been temporarily located.
The South Vietnamese military command denied published reports Tuesday that government officials were landing at the mouth of the Cua Viet River, where the naval base fell after three days of attacks.
MONREAL (AP) — A bomb tore apart the Montreal office of a trade commission and killed a man, one day after a package of explosives was found outside the building. A tawawa. A similar package was discovered outside the Cuban ambassador's residence last week.
Seven Cuban guards were arranged in charge of charges of possessing weapons and injuring the officers during an investigation of the blast. Police said the Cubans apparently feared secret files would fall into their hands.
Cuban Trade Office Ripped by Explosion
In Miami, the Spanish-language radio station FAB reported that an unified mobile telephoned station to say the bombing was
The powerful blast shortly after midnight shattered much of the city, with buildings building across the city from the Cuban consulate. Concrete and brick were used.
the work of a Cuban exile organization called Young Cuba.
The dead Cuban was found on the 12th floor and died in a hospital, police said.
The bombing came three weeks before the 11th anniversary of the abortive Bay of Pigs invasion, launched by Cuban exiles with the support of a court against the revolutionary regime of Premier Fidel Castro.
Tuesday's bombing was the third such incident involving the same building in five years
An explosion Oct. 15, 1967,
damaged four floors
WASHINGTON (AP)—The United States Tuesday officially recognized Bangladesh, the new nation carved out of the former eastern province of Pakistan late with the aid of the Indian army.
U.S. Grants Recognition To Nation of Bangladesh
"I am pleased to announce this morning that the United States government recognizes my recognition to Bangladesh," Secretary of State William P. Bush said.
The action ends more than three months of varying stances by the Nixon administration toward the new nation.
The initial American response was to declare independence in December was one of reticence, with spokesmen saying at the time recognition would be delayed.
This was followed by statements that the matter had been settled, and she said siderization with the presence of Indian troops in Bangladesh.
When asked why the administration picked this time to visit, Mr. Closkey said the department spokesman Robert J. McCloskey said there was "nothing necessarily magic" in the matter as she's the announced date.
But he noted that Rogers had spoken of the Indian troops' issue last month, and that the troops had been pulled out by the middle of March.
Pakistan and India.
The American recognition is expected to help ease tensions between the United States and odds with the United States over the war with Pakistan that led to its withdrawal from the war.
Peking, the only major government still not recognizing Bangladesh, sided with Pakistan in war, as did the United States.
Although recognition was held back the United States has maintained a consulate in Dacca and has contributed $15 million to humanitarian relief to Bangladesh since the end of the December war.
Herbert D. Spivack, who headed the Dacca consulate, will continue in that capacity with the title of charge d'affaires.
B-52 Reinforcements Ordered to S.E. Asia
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W Friedheim refused to comment on the decision to discuss operational matters concerning BS2s. We are not sure what the military are necessary to assure that Gen. Abrams the U.S. commander in Vietnam is able to protect the remaining Americans in Iraq.
The action is the second time this week the Nixon administration moved to increase U.S. air strength in Southeast Asia.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- After additional B2 bombs to the Western Pacific as part of the war, assemblied to counter the latest Communist offensive in South Vietnam, it was learned Tuesday
Sources told The Associated Press that about 20 of the eight jet bombs have been ordered to reinforce buildings and Guam now in custody.
gathered steam and South Vietnamese troops began pulling back from their advance mission, landing two aircraft, two additional aircraft carriers were ordered to join two others already off the coast.
White House spokesmen, who have said the President is keeping all his options open on a course of action in Vietnam, emphasize that stepped-up air strikes are not used in recourse left for U.S. forces.
Earlier, as the enemy offensive
Each B52 can carry a 30-ton bomb load.
The United States now has
three planets in Thailand and ab-
side it. The newest reinforcements
will raise the total in that area to
In addition, there are nearly 360 Air Force F4 Phantom fighter-bombers in South Vietnam and Thailand plus four of attack planes aboard the four Navy carriers.
More Funding Necessary Commission on VD Says
After a year of study, the
first one osteopath recommended
federal spending of $298 million
over the next five years for VD
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Venerable Disease said Tuesday the government's stepped-up efforts to control syphilis is not enough to control what it called an epidemic striking 5 million Americans.
especially, it proposed a 19-point program including VD instruction down to the seventh grade. It also included schools, more research and a search for vaccines, and restored curriculum of medical schools.
In the fiscal year starting July1, the commission urged that federal spending be boosted to
$46.1 million compared with the $31 million President Nixon has requested.
But Dr. Merlin K, DuVal,
assistant secretary for health and scientific affairs in the military internment, Mr. Welfare said the administration request represents a 250 per cent increase over two years and questioned why the money could be spent effectively.
Noting a historic rise in gonorrhea and a 20-year high in the number of women affected, the commission blamed the outbreak on public and medical complicacy following the introduction of penicillin in
Officials from the National Center for Disease Control in Atlanta said, however, that it was not necessary a new vaccination program.
News Briefs By The Associated Press
LBJ Gets Custom Jet
WICHTA-Former President and Mrs. Lyndon Baines Johnson visited at the Beech Aircraft Corp., plant in East Wichita Tuesday and received their new custommade jet, estimated to cost $700,000. In an address to more than 1,000 Beech employees, who gave Joseph and his wife a standing aviation, the former President and Mrs. Lyndon Baines supervisors on their craftsmanship. He made no political comments.
WASHINGTON—Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz, with a mountain of U.S. surplus grain to grab him up, is going to the Soviet Union to offer the Moscow housewife a hand with her meat budget. The trip, announced Tuesday by the White House, is the result of a growing demand in the Soviet Union for more beef, pork, poultry and dairy products, according to government analysts.
Butz and a team of U.S. negotiators will arrive in the Soviet Union on Saturday. Discussions will be held to see if the Soviets want a nuclear warhead.
Butz to Go to U.S.S.R.
Retirement Program Grant
HINGTON—The state of Kansas has been awarded a grant of $86,000 to volunteer programs. ACTION, the agency created to lead these programs, has approved a one-year development grant to allow the state Department of Social Welfare to identify and expand opportunities for its programs.
DETROIT—General Motor's Chevrolet Division announced Tuesday it was recalling about 130,000 1972 Vegas, equipped with an optional 90-horsepower engine, because of a possible fire hazard involving the fuel and exhaust systems. GM said preparations for all models were underway before the auto maker learned of a letter by company officials alleging that the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration of filing in investigating engine fires in a number of models, including the Vegas.
1972 Vegas to Be Recalled
TOMMY COOPER
YOUR NEXT SEMESTERS TUITION FREE!
Or Room and Board. Or Books. IN
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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
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 5, 1972
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Berrigan Jury Makes Progress But Says More Time Necessary
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - A jury trying the Rev. Phillip Bergen and his others on indictment both concerned a Tuesday for more time for deliberations, saying "For the past two hours, there has been
He suggested that the jury be relieved of its duties for the day at 6 p.m., and the court agreed.
However, the foreman, Harold Sheets, told U.S. District Court Judge R. Dixon Herman, that he was going to be arrested before Wednesday at the earliest.
Nine women and three men on the jury require evidence of their assaults on the key features of a government indictment charging Berringer with aid to kidnap White House aide Henry Kissinger and blow up a bomb in Washington, D.C., and vandalize draft boards in various systems in Washington, D.C., and
Herman directed at that time that they resume deliberations in the case against verdict. The jury had found Berrigan guilty of a single count of murder.
WASHINGTON (AP)—John H Chafee resigned Tuesday after three years as secretary of the Interior Department, Nikon did not cite a reason, but Chafee is expected to return to Rhode Island to run for the governor.
Navy Head John Chafee Quits Post
The White House, in announcing the resignation, released a letter in which President Nixon expressed "my deep grief at the Navy and the country for the past three years."
"I have especially valued your outstanding efforts in helping to carry out our Vietnamization policy while simultaneously taking the needed steps to ensure our fleet." Nixon told Chafee.
Chafee, a former Republican governor of Rhode Island, is expected to seek the Senate seat held by Democrat Clarence孔雀
letter out of the federal penitentiary at Lewisburg, Pa
The defense objected to con-
tinuing the jury deliberations,
removing them from the trial,
Monday and Tuesday, charging
the jury was "being coerced into"
deadly actions.
"Further forced deliberations by this jury would be prejudicial to the defendants," defense lawyer Thomas Menaker said in a formal handwritten motion, stating that the jury be chargeable.
Berrigan, 48, faces a maximum of 10 years in federal prison on the smuggled conviction, in addition to two years still
Mamie Backs 'Arnie' Palmer
AUGUSTA. Ga. (AP)—"Do your darned, "Mamie said to Arnie, planting a kiss on the golfer's cheek.
The scene took place Tuesday on the front porch of "Ike's black bungalow overlooking the tee of the Augusta National Course, which served as the Downtown Sunday Eisenhower
Kee's widow, under tight G-man security, is occupying the cottage this week during the playing of the famed Masters tournament.
Mamie Eisenhower left no doubt where her sentiments lie in the competition.
"I'm pulling for Arnie to win No. 5." she said. Palmer is the only man to win four Masters.
remaining on a six-year sentence for destroying draft records in Maryland.
It was when he entered Lewisburg in 1970 to begin the first semester, he fell in with another inmate, Boyd F. Douglas, Jr., who was wounding up a five-year term for bank fraud as a assault on a government agent.
Enrolled in a study-release program at nearby Buckell University. When Douglas was free to leave the prison daily, He became a mail counter for the militant priest but never did anything more over to agents copies of letters between Berrigan and members of militar movement on the outside.
Teamsters Protest 'Dingbat' Portrayal
WASHINGTON (AP) -Milpitt at what it sees as a television effort to portray Archie Bunker as a typical working stiff, the Teamsters Union said Tuesday, a wage worker is no dingbat."
"For some reason the writers of those shows decided the average worker is a dingbat—fat, more than a little dumb, a little bumpy, a very comical, very comical," the union said in its pw publication. Focus.
Bok Kasen, editor of Focus,
says many of the two million
Teamsters and members of other
uniones resent it.
Archie Bunker, chief character in "All in the Family," is portrayed as a slob-type worker in a blue-collar job that is never made fun of. He's "dinghat," his son-in-law "Meathead," makes racial and
eunnic slurs, and likes President Nixon.
Kasen said there was in-person workers about the Bunker image and references in national newspaper columns to 'the underground' of the Bunker.
in “open letter” to all
workers in the job search,
said that in if they told real
workers instead of eyeing ‘the
Archie Bunker vote’ they might
not find a job.
"It means the stupid worker doesn't interview, and added that to real-life typical worker doesn't laughs occasionally at a lawyer."
"I'm tired. Tired of being sloppy worker, unproductive slob, underrepresented, made a mistake and just plain taken for granted."
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Wednesday, April 5,1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Potential for Power
For some months now, since Congress extended the voting franchise to those 18 years and older for presidential talk and speculation about the ruling's effect on traditional party politics and issues.
The largest share of those potential voters registering have been registering Democrat, yet even those registering Democrat consider themselves independent.
There is no question that these new voters could drastically alter the course of the coming election, most certainly those yet to come.
it remains to be seen, however,
whether those recently enfranchised
will indeed register and finally vote.
If they do, much of the social and political activism of recent years can be transformed into positive change. Change by the ballot.
In towns such as Lawrence, a concerted voter registration and issue campaign could significantly alter the face of the city's govern-ment. It has been done in Madison and Berkeley, and is a possibility here.
In cooperation with the city, KU Student Vote has made it possible for students to register in the Union this week from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The power is there, waiting to be taken.
—Thomas E. Slaughter
Garry Wills
Muskie's Scars:
Matching
Romney's Story
As Senator Muskie carries the scarves of New Hampshire around the country, a myth seems in the making—one to him is George Romney in the 1968 campaign.
These myths run parallel: just as Romney was undone by one slip (the comment that he had been "brainwashed" during his Vietnam tour), so Muskie may be undone by a tear or two of the word of William Loeb's newspaper.
Now I think H. L. Menken was by and large right in his low estimate of the electorate. It is not inconceivable that candidates could be rejected for foolish reasons—for one英雄 phrase, or one touch of honest feeling.
But that is simply not what happened—not in either of these cases. The electorate has reasons that Reason does know of for judging both Romney
M. R. E. F.
and Muskie rather harshly—reasons that go far beyond the simple version of each incident.
Take Romney. He did not fatter because he spoke the phrase, but because he felt he had to defend it. Then he made a statement that Romney makes of his mistakes a new missionary calling. His action after the phrases used showed us the typical Romney pattern of self-rightnessees who was not that he slipped once, but that, having slipped, he thrashed and failed in an angry panic, and tried to convince us these gyrations were not from a bullet deliberately choreographed.
Muskie's fault, too, went far beyond his "losing control" and showing a human side. It would have been all to answer Loeb, and to make the answer passionate. But Muskie's response showed disproportion in every part—
he attacked in the wrong way, mistook the true grounds of his grievance; played down what mattered to his friends and highlighted the inconsequential.
Muskie put his emphasis on a mere reprint, one that had appeared all over the national press, and was not very insulting anyway — it just made his wife the subject of (the thing his aides are calling a virtue in the case of Muskies's own tears).
This tea-pot storm of tears kept him from a sharp clear answer on what really mattered.-Loeb's sleazy way of arguing that Muskie had contempt for French Americans. That was what hurt him, because he fumbled his reply to it. One of the things quietly working for us was the "educat" vote that has taken on such importance is a Catholic note, and the first real test of that advantage was
to be in New Hampshire. Despite the popular view of New Hampshire as an state, a majority of its voters are Catholics. The Canadian descent. It was among those voters—e.g., in working-class Managers and lead shrank spectacularly after Jobson's victory.
people-not, as the evasion put it, because he was a fellow ethnic American. He could not speak people, could not cope with a play to his strength, he showed a far more basic political weakness than mere oversupplied tear ducts. There is a harsh reality that voters often New Hampshire permanently damages Muskie, it will not be because voters hold against him the good man's love for his wife. It will simply be because he is not necessarily a good politician.
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
Job Market Improves for Grads
By DIANE CARR
Korean Staff Weiter
The recessive economy had a dampening effect on the 1971 job market. The University of Kansas placement directors are more optimistic for
Elmo Lindquist, placement director for the School of Engineering, said recently that until 1970-71, engineers flocked to college campuses seeking college graduates. He said in the last three years that he was not afraid but there was a slight increase this semester.
Several of the placement directors interviewed were optimistic about the job market. They also thought college recruitment would reach the boom proportions of four or five years
Lindquist said that in a peak
year like 1980-2000 researchers
can use the library in the
school of Engineering. This
year 50-60 interviewers have
been employed.
"Not many of our students are out pumping gas." he said.
THE ENGINEERING SCHOOL has had approximately the same number of graduates in this field. In the past the placement office had to protect the student from the deluge of interviewers who hit campus. Now the student is required to participate in managements as possible. Lindquist said.
Lindquist estimated that last semester more than 90 per cent of the graduates found jobs, and the graduates' jobs were related to engineering.
Lindquist said several students had not made an effort to seek employment after graduation. He helped them pay for their home and let dad pay the bills for others. They did not hunt for jobs because their parents were unemployed.
THE TIGHTEST FIELDS are aerospace engineering. Lindquist Graduates from these areas usually work in jobs in the fields of engineering.
Lindquist said he thought there would be a 7-10 percent increase in job offers this semester. He is promoting within the company are now looking for "new blood," he said. They want inexperienced men with new ideas who have worked for another company.
Because of the decrease in the number of campus recruiters many students are not able to get jobs. There are interested, Lindaquist said. Interview lists are quickly filled, and most recruiters will not talk about it.
LINDQUIST SAID THAT HE
himself improved in job mark-
outs and the couple
months. Every Sunday he cuts
out ads from the paper for
engineering positions. He has
gradual increase since
January.
Other placement officers said they thought there would be more jobs available, but there would also be more competition. The classmates competing against his own classmates but also returning service men and graduates from the classes of 1870 and "71 who would take them over until the employment market opened up.
Dana Leibengood, placement director for the School of Journalism, said he had seen some encouragement signs for employment the last several weeks. He said that newspapers that did not recruit at KU last year had scheduled interviews for this semester.
LAST YEAR the large papers
were sold to people. They were not even
interested in the top graduates,
Lebedengo said. This year they
worked on a book.
Last year small weekly papers were the prime source of job interviews, and back, he said. Also, some companies that had discontinued campus recruiting are now making lists of names of the top graduates. This at least keeps the door open between employer and student.
Leibengood said he thought more students were going to learn computer science job scarcity. A masters degree in journalism is an asset for the job.
MILLEDREY YOUNG, personnel director for the School of Law at Columbia University had stabilized this year. Referencing figures may be down as much as two per cent but that was nothing new. When the students were down last year, she said.
Young said accounting and sales majors had not had as much training in the business majors. She said industrial recruitment of college graduates with accounting been both heavy and competitive.
Business administration and personnel graduates are having a degree in management. However, many retail stores are looking for potential managers, Young said. A graduate must go to an accredited college for these managerial positions.
LAST SUMMER the Business
LAST SUMMER out questionaires to
the business school and
spring asking them their plans.
From the 45 per cent that
went out questionaries the
business school had found 7 per
cent were going into the armed
services, 15 per cent were going
to graduate school and 11 per
cent were going to university.
never have accepted these offers three years ago, she said.
Young said she thought there would be more job openings this summer, but it was so strong. Students can no longer wait for the ideal job. They realize this is the area they are now growing in their field. Students would
The sluggishness in hiring will hurt the companies in a few years, Young said. The market will open up and the experienced people will be retiring. There will be more managers to fill the managerial positions.
THE EMPLOYMENT SITUATION for Liberal Arts graduates had not changed since 2014. Sixty per cent of Liberal Arts majors go to graduate school. This has caused because it is the job market, Gladys Padget, placement director for the School of Liberal Arts.
The biggest problem for the Liberal Arts School is that many seniors have no idea what they want to do when they graduate from high school or work in the world. More emphasis needs to be put on career planning for freshman and sophomores. Many students don't worry about jobs until the month of graduation, and that is too late. Padget said.
The job outlook for teachers is no brighter this year than it was last year and the situation is getting progressively worse, because the department director for the School of Education, said recently.
Most of last year's recruiters are back but each year a few districts drop campus recruiting.
PEOPLE WITH A MASTERS DEGREE are having a hard time finding Jobs. Some school teachers teach in the college teachers with a bachelor's degree because they can pay them lower salaries. He said people with a master's degree in Special Education and library were still in demand.
Regier said there was not an oversupply of teachers but an abundance of districts are having financial problems and so they have limited hire. The schools need more teachers' load. The teacher's loads but are unable to.
It is unlikely that Kansas or Missouri will provide additional funds in the near future, he said.
Another placement problem is that many students are not in college, so the semester 364 women and only 122 men are graduating with a bachelor degree in Education. Many of the women are married and have children.
The large school districts could offer no encouragement to fledgling teachers. The Shawnee School District had 2,500-3,000 applications each year. They hire approximately 10 per cent of the school who apply.
stringent budget would not allow them to increase. This year 18 positions were cut out because of elementary school enrollment.
THIS SEMESTER a new Mexico school district tried to schedule interviews with KU. No one would sign up for interviews with them. Even though jobs are tight, student are reluctant to attend.
Harold Dent, director of personnel for the Shawnee Mission School District, said a
KU placement directors have noticed an increase of students using the placement office computer. Young said she had not only done more individual counseling, but she's also done more group work such as helping the senior class learn the Who's Who resume book
THE PLACEMENT OFFICERS agreed that they were done all they could to help seniors find jobs especially since the office was on a limited budget. The University financial crisis.
The directors said they thought the individual placement officers at KU were more effective than the one management office such as the one Kansas State personnel offices have closer contact with the students within their school than if the placement officer was involved in cooperation between company representatives and the dean and professors of each school. This relationship keeps many graduates coming back. Young said.
The 1972 job market may look brighter for graduates from large colleges, but it's far bleak for graduates from small area colleges such as Baker or
RECRUTING IS DOWN at Baker University, Marilyn King, Baker placement director, said recently. This year only seven companies signed up for visits, which is down 35 from last year. The five companies included the military, the Boy Scouts, Metropolitan Life Insurance, Cardiac Care, and Southwestern Bell.
Small schools are having a hard time attracting recruiters because companies can get all the needs they need for recruiting from large universities. Recruiters won't drive 50 miles out of their way to take three or four kids at Baker University or 25 students at KU, King said.
SEVERAL SMALL SCHOOLS in the area are considering plans for a centralized placement of students at University, St. Benedicts, Rockhurst, and Park College will cooperate and send their students to university interviews. This will save the interviewer time and miles and give the schools contact with them not otherwise come. Ruth said.
All placement officers agreed the limited job offers the last two years had not affected salary offers in any field.
The companies no longer have to send recruiters to the school because now the students come to the school. University, directed, aircraft
industrial firms made by Frank S. Endicott, placement director at Northwestern University, indicated that hiring would be up because the company remain about the same. More than half the companies surveyed said they intended to offer jobs to more bachelor's degree holders than they had done last year. Companies said the cutback was over.
A survey of 185 business and
ENDECOT, who has reported on corporate recruiting plans since 1945, prefects an 11 per cent of the companies he directs and graduates to be hired. But 44 per cent of the companies poise a plan for hiring and recruiting recipients, and overall hiring will reach only about 60 per cent of the recruiting levels of 1988 and 1992.
The companies also indicated that they would hire more college women. A total of 98 companies reported that they planned to hire women from 1972 classes, 15 per cent increase from 1971 hiring.
Several recruiters who have recently stopped interviewing at KU said they have enough students to campus recruiting worthwhile.
Kenneth Kath, personnel director for Mobil Oil in Kansas City, said it was expensive to conduct campus recruiting. They are still doing some college work and concentrating their effort on schools where they have had the most success.
Kath said they were not hiring less people this year but they did want to fill in the vacancies to fill their positions. Several years ago they had to conduct more interviews because many of them would accept a position with another company. Today nearly all job offers are accepted, he said.
P. R. LONG, personnel manager for IBM in Topeka, said they were not college recruiting this year because they were not hire anyone. Recruiting goes on and it should pick up soon, be said.
Two hours after the interview, the student said he had just received word that he resumed campus recruiting and would interview at KU this morning.
J. E. Kelly, personnel director for the Wilson Certified Meat Company, said they were not satisfied because they needed people with an agricultural background. A few years ago they could not find enough students at agricultural schools in positions but now it was easy.
Placement directors agreed that it could be a hard year of bustling for graduates seeking employment, but they have to complete twice as many applications and schedule twice as many interviews as five years ago. In other words, the students who put out the effort would find the jobs.
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Letters Policy
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitation. Students must provide students' student. Students must provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
By Sokoloff
Griff and the Unicorn
THERE HE SLEeps...
GRIFF J. GRIFFIN...
... BLISSFULLY UNAWARE
OF THE TURMOIL THAT
SEETHES AROUND HIM
... SLEEPS.
PEACEFULLY...
...SLEEPS!
THERE HE SLEeps...
GRIFF J. GRIFFIN...
... BLISSFULLY UNAWARE OF THE TURMOIL THAT SEETHES AROUND HIM
...SLEEPS!
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Wednesday. April 5. 1972
University Daily Kansan
5
General Study Degree Proposed
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Institution of a General Studies Degree (BGS) and alterations in the speech, foreign language and reading skills requirements will be among the topics discussed at a College University campus Saturday in the Kansas Union.
The Educational Procedures and Policies Committee (EPPC) of the College Assembly is to meet with faculty members. Following group discussions in the morning, a panel will summarize the ideas and proposals.
Gus Dl Zerega, Wichita graduate student who is an assistant instructor in Western Education at EPPC, open耳鼻喉壁 would take place in the weeks following the workshop. By fall 1972, the KSUEP had required requirement changes, he said. STEVE, LUSK, Wichita, State University would say any changes in requirements or degree options probably would not go into effect before fall 1973. The Kansas Board of Regents will continue by the assembly, he said, and some departments may experience budget ramifications of the teaching staffs.
Two plans for a BGS degree have been formulated BGS No. 6. retains the major and distribution requirements in order to insure a broad model leaves selection of nearly all courses entirely to the student and his adviser.
BGS No. 1 would require a minimum of 24 credit hours in the student's major field, 12 of which must be offered by majors and sophomores. Eight junior-senior hours in the major field may be offered in residence. The JUNIOR AIMS distribution requirement of four courses in each of the areas of humanities, social sciences, and mathematics departments in each area would
be represented.
The 124 hour requirement presently needed to graduate with a BA degree would be retained under the BGS program. The requirement would include 60 hours of courses numbered 50 and 40 of these hours must be required that have a prerequisite.
BGS N. 2 would have the same hours requirements for graduation, but would eliminate the major and distribution effects. In effect, the student could enroll in 124 hours of his choice.
General studies programs are in operation at several universities and colleges. The Subcommittee report furnished information about the one used at the university.
THE REPORT SAID 9 per cent of students in the College at the University of Michigan have received a degree. University officials predict that eventually 12 to 15 students will select the BGS program
A preliminary evaluation of the BGS program at the University of Michigan suggested that a larger number of superior students would be纳入 the program as it gains in respectability and acceptance.
A survey at the University of Michigan revealed that students in the BGS program showed more creativity and imagination than students in the conventional program but had lower grade point averages.
The Degree Requirements Subcommittee recommended the graduation taught in two three-hour discussion and or lecture courses, with a comprehensive term course to replace the comprehensive examination. Subcommittee recommended an African Civilization for either the first or second course in Western Civilization was also
Civilization program combining the essential aspects of Eastern, Western and African civilization would be presented according to the concepts it brings than in chronological order.
ol Young
on Carter
in Manley
barnhart
sergerdes
add Joye
mug Delano
DI ZEREGA PROPOSED a four-semester Western
DI Zerega suggested the comprehensive examination be revised in order to give the first three courses and a paper following the course but outcrops learned in Western Civilization with the student's
Several options for filling the language requirement have been suggested. One would involve abandonment of the proficiency required in courses or hours of course work. Another proposal called for replacement of the final three hours of the language requirement with two courses, one of which is relevant to the student's language specialty. A student could also enroll in the first two courses of language and combine the remainder of his requirement with three culture courses.
Sentiment on retention of the speech requirement in about 50 per cent of assembly members favoured abolishing the 40 per cent requirement per cent desired to retain it.
REASONS FOR retaining and
alternating the requirement have been presented to the Degree Requirements
Subcommittee and will be
issued.
The Degree Requirements Subcommittee report said the reasons for maintaining the degree in psychology are compelling than those for instituting one in any other field, for example, psychology or economics.
UKSAR said proposals to make use of four-year subcolleges in university suggestions for liberalizing the degree requirements. He said the UCSB would not participate in these
Because of the lenient exemption requirements, he said, the only people enrolled in basic speech need or desire them, he said.
Donn Parson, associate professor of speech and drama, said that communications skills were vital to a liberal education.
subcolleges on a continuum of liberality of requirements.
Instead of being assigned to a CWC on the basis of his living arrangements, Lusk said, the student would choose the CWC program most suited to his needs. The program permitted to change CWC with minimum of red tape if his academic plans changed, he said.
Supt. Wallace Gallucci announced Monday that Haskell Indian Junior College had come in 2014 and plans to
he step closer to accreditation. Gallucci had just returned from Chicago, where he appeared in the Central Association of College Secondary Schools. He said the board was satisfied with the progress Haskell had made and that he would fulfill full accreditation. He said Haskell would now enter into a phase called "recognized can-
Haskell Nearer Accreditation
300 mph Machine Lacks Own Power
It is Pi Tau Sigma's rapid transit air impulse turbine vehicle which will be displayed in the Exposition Engineering Expo April 17.
Robert N. Gearthaf, Lawrence
senior, said recently that the
company is building a vehicle's power source is external and makes it possible for many more passengers to ride
an engine and fuel tank would be
What travel 300 mph, has no engine, and carries twice as many passengers as ordinary transit vehicles?
the board to explain, verifying and answering questions about the study. He said the board may have made improvements that could be made. Gallucci had he said no improvements on the board would suggest.
Richard Brock, Topeka, senior,
in mechanical engineering, who
built the model for the Expo said
that the vehicle had "roughly
the carrying capacity of
present"
capid transit
transportation.
tracks and push the car along. At chosen sites there will be an air compression station and storage tanks.
Geofarth said the system's pollution output was practically negligible and utilized relatively low air pressure. He added that this system's power usage was 80 to 90 per cent efficient, while that the internal combustion engines was only about 60 percent.
The car has stationary blades on it like those of a turbine. The blades are struck by compressed air from nozzles mounted on the
The air impulse turbine vehicle has a natural air conditioning system. The compressed air released as the car passes through the tunnel,
He also observed that many transit systems are now going underground, and said the steam boiler was been the ventilation of the turbine.
This step requires that the college hire a consultant who will aid the administration in making an in-depth study of itself on the board would allow Haskell's years to complete the study.
Brock said that the model used in the Expo would run on a 34-foot track but that the real vehicle probably ride on a cushion of 8 inches.
The third and final step, according to Gallucci, will involve a research team going to Haskell to look over facilities and toermine whether measures toward improvement have been taken.
If the research team is satisfied, Gallucci said, he will go back to Chicago a third time to full accreditation for Haskell.
available to the school as well as to the students. Galluart said he will continue to receive more financial aid from the Health, Education and Science Department.
The total process, which began in September, should be completed in four or five years, Colucci said.
The main advantage to being a fully accredited college will be the additional funds made
STUDENT-FACULTY PLAN
$1 PER DAY CTE
CAR IN EUROPE
- Summer new-car lease plan
• Purchase-special savings
• Mobile discount clubcard
For Free Folder write CTE
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Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith will never be like this.
The editor and business manager for next fall will be selected April 0 by the Kanans office. Then begin selecting their staff.
Editor applications must be turned in to Crews by 3 p. m. Applications for business management until that time. Applicants for other staff positions have until April 10 to get their applications
Fly Navy
Clip and Mail To:
U.S. Navy Recruiting Station
2420 Broadway
Kansas City, Mo. 64108
Applications for fall staff positions on the University Daily Kansan are now available to all students. Other new news staff positions may be obtained from Chip Crews, this semester's editor. Carol Young, PhD, is responsible for applications for the business staff. Applications for Kansan staff positions are also available in the library and dean of women offices.
Common Law Marraiges Not Clearly Defined by Law
"The time is irrelevant. The presence of the three elements is the important point." he said.
The law makes no stipulation that the marriage must be
(COLLEGE OR
UNIVERSITY___CLASS OF___
NAME___
STREET___
CITY___
STATE___ZIP CODE___
Kansan Editor Applications Due Friday
"THEORETICALLY this could be as little as 24 hours, Robert Schulman, associate professor of criminal justice at the family law, said. "But the longer a couple spend as man and wife, it will be to persuade the court."
By ANITA KNOPP
Kansan Staff Writer
Those involved in this life style do not often question the legality of your decisions, and perhaps possibility exists that they could be liable one way or another by
Men and women who have chosen the revolutionary—or presequestered life style of rejecting formal marriage as a prerequisite for marriage, will find a fine line between being married by Kansas common law
In the case of common law marriages, a couple could be legally married in 24 hours if the couple is a married couple and a common law marriage are met. Those elements are very simply the capacity to marry, perhaps not to be married, and holding oneself out to the public as married.
THE CAPACITY to marry means that the couple in question meet state standards for a married marriage, including age (18) and mental and physical capacity, and no prior binding marriages.
For those couples who do not consider themselves married, they may be in a Cohabitation, a misdemeanor in Kansas, is defined as "any person living together as man or woman state without being married."
consummated to be valid.
For most University students, capacity to marry is not a problem.
The present intent to marry is the most important question. The court rules that the couple involved make some sort of agreement, verbal or otherwise, each other that they are married and does not mean a promise to marry in the future, the courts say, as long as the man and wife in the present. It has been on this point that most marriage suits have been defeated.
FINALLY, THE COUPLE must act as man and wife before the public. Criteria for this could include having a joint checking accounts, filing joint income tax documents, moving apartments or motels as men and wife, or putting married names on legal documents.
In the most recent case involving common law marriage heard in January 1971, the man and woman involved had lived with each other for 22 months as man and wife, but the court ruled that no evidence did not exist because no present intention could be established
Surprisingly, the court has made no stipulation on the amount a woman must spend together before common law marriage is
THE IMPLICATIONS of these two laws may sound more ominous than they are. In the case involved in a court, one party involved in the situation brought the suit, or the case involved a minor. In very many cases, an unlawful marriage or unlawful cohabitation been proved.
It carries a penalty of a fine of not less than $500 and more than $1,000. a jail sentence of not less than $200 and not more than three months.
"It's difficult to say whether something less than common law marriage, but more than a temporary sharing of quarters, under the unlawful cobitation rule," the spokesman said.
A SPOKESMAN from the Kansas Attorney General's office said that a gray area still exists as to what could be judged as cohabitation. No case involving cohabitation has been taken to court, so there are no black letter stipulations about the law.
It would be difficult to guess how many KU students would come under the cohabitation laws.
He said the law was unclear as to what entailed "living together as man and wife." He said this might include an implied marital bond, as well as a sign, bedting, signing as man and wife any type of marital relationship.
Quinn and the other two professors who teach the course, Foster and Frank Nelick, said that touch with the academic environment at KU and that this reason the symposium was conducted.
*Continued from page 1*
according to Schoenleber.
He said he had not itemized the
mess but said that it was
minimal. and Landolt and
Schoenleber on the Birthday
Party ticket.
The union of parents and students in a serious educational pursuit is one of three purposes of a retreat planned for the Pearson University program, Dennis Quinn, college director, Pearson College, said Tuesday.
"The students have shown the mismatch enthusiasm the program requires. The program letters from parents expressing anxiety to attend" Quinn said.
Pearson College Plans Parent-Student Retreat
Rich Dwyer, Joplin, Mo. senior, said he and his running partner Jacob, Lawrence senior, had spent nothing on the campaign.
Joel Green, Rapid City, S. D., sophomore, said he had spent $2 above the $10 filing fee in his
"The general movement in higher education is to involve parents more now than in the past," Quinn said.
Campaign
Continued from page 1
. . .
Parents will also be introduced
The retreat will be held at Rock Springs Ranch, eight miles south of Junction City, April 16 and 17. Quinn said this would be the first time he attended college, but he said he would like to hold the event annually.
According to Green, the $ was spent in the design of an advertisement that was not printed.
campaign. He and his running mate, Joel Payne, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, ran on the Aardvark Party ticket.
Homammed Amin, Rafenajan,
Iran, senior, said he had spotted
the campaign. He ran with Mike
in the Eastern Springs. Ill.
sophomore.
to the program's faculty and the program will "show off some of our students' accomplishments," Quinn said.
NOTICE TO ALL STUDENTS ON THE SELECTION OF
STUDENT SENATE Committees
The Committees Are:
The Student Senate in accordance with the Senate Code, will pick new members to its committees and urges all students to apply.
Standing
Academic Affairs
Student Rights, Privileges,
and Responsibilities
Housing
Student Services
Finance and Auditing
Communications
Boards & Commissions
University Judiciary Union Operating Committee
Other Committees
Teacher-Course Evaluation Elections International Film Series Concert Course
Descriptions of these committees are available in the Student Senate Office, B105, Kansas Union. Applications are also available there and are due at 5:00 p.m.on April 6, 1972.
6
Wednesday, April 5, 1972
University Daily Kansan
JOHN M. ENICK
Kansan Photo by RGN SCHLOERI
Commission Elects New Vice-Mayor and Mayor
Nancy Hambleton and John Etick take over posts
Effect of Lowering Age Of Majority Called Slight
By MIKE MOREY
Although a bill lowering the age of majority in Kansas from 21 to 18 was recently signed into law by Gov. Robert Docking, the law will have no profound effect on oldfathers. Oldfather, University attorney,
The bill lowers the buying for everything but the buying and drinking of liquor. Oldfather said Monday that, because they will
be considered adults 18, 19,
30-year-olds will not need
parental consent to do some
things they couldn't do before.
Oldfather said that this bill was "consistent with some aspects of the changing times."
When students get to be this age, he said, they consider themselves adults, and, it should be that they should be given adult rights.
According to the agenda there will actually be two meetings, one by each body of senators.
Old, New Senates To Meet Tonight
Old faces and will be on hand at 7 tonight for a joint meeting of the 1971-72 and 1972-73 Student Organizations. Room of the Kansas Union
The old Senate will elect three of its members to be holdover seminars of the new Senate and reports from three of its members.
David Miller, outgoing student body president, will address the old Senate for the last time while the Chairman of the Committee member, and R. L. Baily, chairman of the Student Executive Committee, will give
As for the drinking age, Oldfashion said there was a possession which would be challenged, but would be extremely difficult to sustain
After Kathy Allen, student body vice-president and new presideng officer of the Senate,
OLDFATHER SAID that the legislation lowering the voting age to 18 was probably the springboard for this legislation.
the new Senate to order, it will elect seven members to the University Council for one-year terms.
The seven persons elected will join the three holdover members of the Board. A member Dave Dillon as the 11 student representatives of the 11
The new Senate will also elect three senators to the Committee Board that will meet Saturday to interview and choose members of the standing and special committee for T2738, T2739, and Allen are the other members of the five-member committee.
Before the three holdover members are added to the new Senate it will contain 88 senators and 14 that were reelected.
He said he didn't know yet exactly what effect this legislation would have on residence hall contracts.
At the present time, students under 21 are required to have the following contracts: It is not known whether this will be required in
MIKE ELWELL, Douglas County attorney, said Tuesday that the bill would have no effect on future criminal prosecutions. The dividing line for adults in criminal cases is already set at 18.
Elwell said the bill simply conformed the adult division line for civil cases to that already established for criminal cases. The bill, introduced by the Senate committee, will go into effect July 1.
The age of majority bill went to a conference committee because the Senate did not support the Senate as to what age should be the legal drinking age in
There had been a move in the Senate to lower the legal drinking age to 18. The House stand to override it, at age 21 prevailed, however
By MARSHA SEARS Kansan Staff Writer
"I have an old name plate so I can sit at the city some money. Emikit, a native of the mayor's chair and placed in front of his name plate with "John Smith."
John Emick was elected mayor Tuesday by a unanimous vote from Lawrence City Commissioners.
Emick had the name plate from the last time he was mayor, four years ago. Because of the absence of a unable to serve the entire term.
Commission Elects Emick Mayor
Emick gave an engraved gavel and key to the city to J. R. Pulliam, ex-mayor.
Pulliam said it had been a pleasure and an interesting experience to serve as mayor.
THE MAYOR proclaimed April 9 to 15 as "Barber Shop Harmony," a program Wade Dexter, president of the Lawrence chapter of the Society for Preservation of Barber Shop Harmony, commissioned and presented the proposal. The purpose of the program was to preserve barber shop quartets and to get people to work and live in harmony by singing together,
Commissioner Jack Rose said he wanted to be the first to vote. Commissioner Nancy Hambleton was then elected vice-mayor by a vote.
The commission unanimously denied a request of King's Food to obtain the provisions of the sign ordinance. This variance would have been in addition to a variance King's Food had previously allowed King's to have more square feet of sign space than is recommended by the sign ordinance.
The commission unanimously passed a request of the Ramada Inn property to the Ramada Inn property at the inn's entrance. The sign will designate
THE COMMISSION approved plans and specifications for sanitary sewers to serve the 2600
Discussion of changes in University administration will place during a meeting of the combined University and Faculty councils at 3:30 p.m.
KU Councils
To Discuss
Code Changes
Alterations in the Senate Code,
suggested by the Organization
and Administration Committee of
the Senate, will be
the basis for the discussion
The councils will also elect the new University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx).
A study will be conducted of calls made on the Wide Area Telephone Network to the Brandt, executive director of the Kansas Department of Administrative Law a memorial organizer last week to all state agencies.
Brandt said the increased number of personal calls being made on the WAATS line was due to placements in place to handle
Keith Nitcher, vice-chancellor for business affairs, said Tuesday
State Agency to Study Misuse of WATS Line
However, the University has prepared a memorandum to send to all deans, directors and members of the Board, and to them of Branston's statement.
Nitcher said that unlike other state agencies, KU only has available the WATS service for Topela and Kansas City.
that the University of Kansas did not have this problem.
The University does keep a record of calls made on the WATS service.
"Each agency head is requested to remind his employees that personal use of the state's firearms is strictly prohibited," Brandt said.
M. LARRY
During April, Lawrence elementary school children are required to attend business displayed at local businesses during Be Kind to Children Week
Students who have studied any law, public speaking or police course, are qualified for recruitment. Heisman said. A recruit would have to terminate his studies and prepare them at a later date, he said.
On April 14, the Kansas
University of Kansas for the first time. Sgt. Dale Heiserman of the Kansas Highway Patrol
Heiserman said that in the past the Highway Patrol had advertised for recruits to make a request they might have been interested didn't see the ads. The purpose of recruiting a crew this year was to make the information more accessible to potential members who might be interested, he said.
regarding this petition will be received on April 25.
Children Make Animal Posters
Highway Patrol To Interview KU Students
ROD McKUEN In Concert
A group of officers will supply information for prospective recruits on the University of Georgia at the Mall Shoning Center.
The commission deferred a resolution to improve Indian Avenue near Haskell Institute until Haskell authorities are moved, would like a sidewalk to be constructed beside Indian Avenue.
MUSIC HALL
SUNDAY, APRIL 1 9: 7:30 P.M.
Tickets $6.50 $8.50 $4.50
DVDs $12.95
Office - 1310 Wandyke, F.C., M. Ca. 6480
The commission passed a resolution ordering two-lane pavement of West 15th Street from Kasap Drive west to the Avenue of the Arts. Eventually two more lanes will be added to West 15th Street.
Impact of the Youth Vote
Highway Commission's plane for the south end of the Kansas River Bridge.
The commission unanimously voted to terminate an agreement n which the city had leased
block of Haskell Avenue. The commission set 2 p.m., April 18 as the time to receive bids.
Speaks on the
Wednesday
Democrat
The commission also passed a resolution to construct sidewalks along the streets to serve Alvamar Heights.
ALLARD LOWENSTEIN
Campus Bulletin
Former New York Congressman
Latin American Seminar: 305, Pine Room,
Kansas Union.
Leader of 1968 "Dump Johnson" Movement
THE COMMISSION unanimously passed the State
property from the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway company to lease a piece price woe up the leased land, and water department said it was no longer necessary to lease this property another storage area.
The hearing on downtown sidewalks was set for 2 p.m. Saturday.
An ordinance to remove parking on the east side of Crestline Drive from 815th Street and to place a sign unanimously on the first reading. A petition from residents on 4th Street regarding storm drainage damage in Williams, director of public works, Recommendations
Present Chairman, Americans for Democratic Action
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark
Room, Cafeteria.
Student Vote: 1 p.m., Woodruff, 2nd floor,
Union.
Classification U: 10
Course Title:
Social Anthropology
Courses (Naal, HAI): 11.
Curations (Naal, HAI): 11.
Art Arts: 1:30 a.m. Alcove C
Spectrophotometry: 1:30 a.m. Alcove D
Speech Pathology: 1:30 a.m. Alcove D
Martinsian Time: 12:30 a.m. Downtown
Union.
Sec. Welfare Curr.: 2:30 p.m., International Room.
APRIL 5
1:00 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium
Kansas Union
Sec. Wet. Fai. Counsel: 4 p.m., International Room.
ternational Room.
PI Delphi Ph: 5 p.m., Curry Room.
French Rehearsal: 6 p.m., Pine Room.
Vice Adm. Info: 6-20 p.m., Regionality.
Eckert 3 p.m. Hedgehog Rooms
Kesson 2 p.m. Elite Room
Bretters 9 p.m. Counsel-Room
French Rehearsal: 6 p.m., Pine Room,
Stud. Adv. Bd.: 6:30 p.m., Regionlst
Room.
Political Science: 6:30 p.m., English
History: 3:30 p.m. Council Room.
French Lecture: 3:30 p., Jayhaw)
Political Science: 6.30 p.m., English
Room
History: 8.25 p.m., English
Room
Student Senate 7: 7 m., Big Eight Room.
Biology 40 Floor; 7: 30 m., Forum Room.
SUA Classical Films: 7: 30 p., Woodruff
Auditorium, Union.
Room:
French Honors Banquet: 6:30 p.m.
Centennial Room.
NBA Educational Dinner: 2 p.m.
French Lecture: 3:30 p.m., Jayhawk
Hoom.
_IPC Exec. Council: 3:30 p.m., Governor's
KBA Educational Dinner: 7 p.m.
Ballroom.
SUAClassical FILMS
Chaplin Mystery
Double Bill
Wed. April 5
7:30 - 9:15
Woodruff Aud. $1.00
CHAINE
Open
Thursday
'till
8:30
Jay 1
SHOPPE
Downtown
Sale
continuing through Saturday
after Easter sale!
SPRING DRESSES reduced 40%
PANT SUITS
one large group
40%
one group
reduced 40%
KNIT TOPS AND PANTS
one group
HOT PANTS
KNICKERS
were up to $14.00 $3.00
plus two
BARGAIN TABLES AT 1/2 PRICE OR LESS
Why doesn't General Electric talk about thermal pollution when they talk about nuclear power plants?
General Electric has been talking nuclear power plants ever since we pioneered them in the fifties. And we think they can help solve America's energy problems in the 70's and 80's. But they're also aware that nuclear
power has problems of its own. Problems worth talking about. Like the environment. Actually, we felt one of the greatest advantages of nuclear power was environ- mental.
Unlike fossil-fueled power plants, there is no smoke to nodule the air.
there is no smoke to pollute the air.
But like fossil-fueled plants, there
is warmed water released to sur-
rounding waterways.
Cooling it.
We recognize thermal pollution as a serious problem. And GE and America's utilities are working on thermal problems at nuclear sites on a plant-by-plant basis.
Many people don't realize, for example, that utilities are required by federal law to design and build in temperature limits prescribed by the states.
So utilities are spending millions of dollars on dilution control systems, cooling towers and cooling towers to comply.
But, in addition, utilities are sponsoring basic research on heat exchange and its $ e^{r} $
50
40
30
20
10
0
THE WATERFISH
Good effects:
It's been found, in some cases, adding heat to water can actually be beneficial. Warm irrigation water has extended habitat conditions.
Warm water has created new wintering ponds along water-fowl migration routes. Florida is using it to grow shrimp and lobster. In Texas, it's increasing the weight of
fact on aquatic life. More than 97 utilities have been financially involved in over 300 such studies.
Good effects?
Listing these benefits is not to beg the plants, because they remain a tough problem to solve at many sites. Each plant must be considered individually, in its own environment, and this is being done.
Work to be done.
General Electric, the utilities and environmentalists will continue to work hard. Because we think the ad campaign is more effective far outweigh the disadvantages.
Why are we running this...
It's one of a series on the problems of man and his environment today. And artificial technology is helping to solve them.
The problems of our environment (not just nuclear power problems) concern us because they will affect the future of this country and this planet. We have a stake in that future. As businessmen. And, simply, as people.
Why are we running this ad?
If you are concerned too, we'd like to hear from you. Write General Electric, Dept, 901-CN, 570 Lexington Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022.
GENERAL ELECTRIC
Wednesday, April 5. 1972
.
Two-Step Routine Begins For City Garbage Men
By LESLIE RISS
Kananu Staff Writers
will be
need a
plane
street
to the
rights.
will
get.
need a
walks
serve
The new city regulations for storing and collecting trash and garbage will save the city money, speed up collection and reduce unnecessary hard work for pick up trucks. The new city legislation on city sanitation foreman.
The new regulations require refuse containers to be taken to the curb of the street or to the alley, depending on the route. The containers should be no more than steps from the curb or alley line.
The containers must be metal or plastic so they can be covered or sealed to keep out rodents and insects. The containers are water-tight. Plastic bags which are not sufficiently strong may break open causing collectors to stop opening the袋 up the mess, cheeks said.
GARBAGE AND TRASH can be put together in the same container, or in two containers, but the sanitation department requests that when bundling the hedge and tree leaves, pack bundles no more than 18 inches in diameter, not more than 4 feet long and weigh no more than 75 pounds.
Cardboard boxes are not regarded as refuse containers. Boxes tear and spill their contents too easily. Cheeks said.
The regulations state that the containers and contents together should not weigh more than 75 pounds.
Cheeks said that although the regulations did not require them to be emptied containers from the curb or alley, those persons who enjoyed neat neighborhoods would clean up the collection
IN ADDITION TO the twice a week pick up, a "bulky item" collection will be made once
English Profs To Participate In Conference
Four KU faculty members will
confer on English Education
of the National Council of
Teachers of English in St.
Louis.
The faculty members attending areWilliam P. Albrecht, dean of the college; Charles Gilbert, associate professor of English and education, John Bushman, assistant professor of education, and Oscar M. Haugh, president of the college.
Albrecht will be a consultant to the pre-convention seminar titled "Preparing English Teachers of the Future," Gilbert will be the reporting session of "The State of Our Knowledge" workshops.
Haugh will present his annual report on the official magazine of the organization, "English Education," which he edits. He will also be a facilitator for the Session on "The Job Market."
BUSHMAN WILL read a paper entitled "Flanders Interaction Analysis—Something of Value for the Teacher of English."
The Conference on English Education is comprised of college education colleges and university teachers who prepare elementary and secondary students.
every five weeks on Wednesdays
weeks on wednesdays The regulations also remind residents that burning garbage is illegal.
Cheeks said the idea for curb pick up came from Don Purdy, executive director of Neighborhood Development and Renewal. Purdy said the practice worked well in other cities.
Cheeks said the new ordinance became effective April 1 but the sanitation department was allowing one week for residents to adjust to the change. After Saturday the collectors will not return residents until ready at the curbside as the new regulations specify, he said.
THE NEW REGULATIONS will eliminate ugly areas around containers where garbage may have spilled or been blown.
Cheeks said. He said he hoped that someday a good plastic bag would be designed and made for both residents and collectors.
Many Lawrence residents want to keep the lawns, and curb pick up to eliminate the problem of men walking across lawns. Cheeks
Cheeks said the police had found a garbage truck weaving from side to side to lift the refuse which often was placed on the ground. The truck can stay one side of the street and men will not have as far as to take the refuse
Cheeks said he had received no complaints. He expects that confusion will be the only problem for a while.
Guidance Services Available to Students
By DONNA DALE Kansan Staff Writer
For some freshmen and sophomores, choosing a major and a prospective career can be a big problem. The University of Kansas has services through the Guidance Bureau and the Dean of Women's Office that offer more than the University Catalog.
The Guidance Bureau, located in Bailey Hall, offers counselors, teachers, and information on vocations. There are counselors who are professors in the School of Education and three who are working on advanced degrees.
"The manner in which students are advised varies," Richard Rundquist, counselor in the guidance office, said.
HE SAID students were assigned to a counselor. Society undergoes undergraduate texting in the classroom at the student's lecture. The results are talked over with the counselor. Information on vocations is offered and the student sometimes talks to representatives from various industries and departments on campus.
The bureau offers a special service. Tapes of interviews of people in various vocations are provided there. There are about 600 tapes on file.
Rundistup estimated that offices such as the University's Guidance Bureau came into contact with about ten per cent of students, and were the students were freshmen or sophomores. Many were upperclassmen who had thought about making changes in their
THE DEAN OF WOMEN'S office offered commission on the Status of providing information on careers. They also sponsored a career exp.
Files contain literature on specific fields. The office has handouts and books, "The Dictionary of Occupational Titles" and other books on specific fields. Handouts and books offer "Job perspectives for the 70's" are also available Martha assistant to the dean of women.
Mike Ryan, Prairie Village sophomore, had trouble deciding on a major. He started out with a
business major, because of the influence of his parents and the encouragement of his high school counselors.
LATER, he lost interest. He had some difficulty deciding on his present major. He changed his mind several times. Factors that influenced him were the urgency of jobs and his interests.
Alice Pettit, Nashville sophomore, is in the process of re-evaluating her choice of a major in education.
"Since childhood, I expected to make a career in education automatically, automatically ruled out the science course. Counselors have dealt with women who wanted to enter traditionally male professions for female students."
BOTH WARD and Rundquist said that men were socialized to make decisions sooner about careers, and that women had the chance that they would continue their education and see what happened.
“Perhaps the influence on the women’s Liberation movement women will make decisions about careers sooner.” Rundquist said.
The knowledge of why a person chooses a particular field, he said, is still in its infancy.
Xerox Costs Sliced in Half
The cost of xeroxing in Watson Library and the law, science, music and engineering archive libraries has been cut in half.
John L. Glinka, associate director of the University Library Service, said Tuesday that the price change would not affect staff-operated kerosen machines. Those prices remain the same and rising costs for machine rental, supplies and supplies, Glinka said.
Formerly the charge for using these coin-operated machines was 10 cents a copy, the charge is now five cents a cony.
The income from the com-
operated machines, Glinda said,
is about $40,000 annually. This
amount is less than the machines
and buy paper.
Mansfield Reiterates Call For Withdrawal from War
WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield Tuesday opposed strongly any use of either air power or U.S. combat troops to North Vietnam, offensive.
He called again for complete American withdrawal from the war and said the best road toward that goal would be expanded peace talks at Paris, expanded to include the lacunas in Europe as well in the United States and the North Vietnamese.
"it's time for Vietnamization to fish or cut bait—to produce or else," Mansfield told newsman just before the Senate began its
The only solution appears to be a negotiated settlement, he said. Vietnam has been fighting Vietnamese attack with burnt bombings but will only mean more planes shot down and more casualties. Communist canvass, he said.
first session after the Easter recess.
He said he opposed the use of American ground combat troops "under any circumstances" as a strictly defensive situation.
Meanwhile, Republican Whip倚天 Griffen said he did not want to lose the old judgments, that decision sort were to be left to the White House.
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Kris Kristofferson has been through Oxford University and through the dives of Nashville.
He's written songs like "Me and Bobby McGee," "Help Me Make It Through the Night," "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down," "For the Good Times," and "Loving Her Was Easier."
In Rolling Stone Ray Rezos said, "He is always totally believable; you know Kris has paid some dues."
Now Kristofferson has a classic third album, "Border Lord." Ten important new songs that tell you who he is.
The critics are calling it the best Kristofferson yet.
Kris Kristofferson
Border Lord
including:
Josie/Little Girl Lost/Somebody Nobody Knows
When She's Wrong/Stagger Mountain Tragedy
On Monument Records
Distributed by Columbia Records.
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Somebody Nobody Knows
She's Wrong/Stagger Mountain Tragedy
On Monument Records
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CAROLINE TOMLINSON
Oh Thank Heaven for K.U. Students!
KU
Win Your Next Semester's Tuition OR ROOM AND BOARD OR BOOKS 7-ELEVEN AND KLWN-FM's BILL-LIMINATOR SWEEPSTAKES
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
All you have to do is register at any Lawrence E-120leen Store. No purchase is required. You don't have to be present to win. The only requirement is that you are now a Kansas University student. Student I.D. No. will be required on Registration Blank
At the conclusion of the nine weeks (March 8th through May 3rd), we will draw the names of the BILL-I-LIMINATOR SWEETSTAKES winner. Look at what you can win.
• The winner of the FIRST PRIZE in the drawing on May 3, 1972 will receive FREE TUTION for next semester (maximum of $300).
- The winner of the SECOND PRINT in the drawing on May 3, 1972 will receive FREE ROOM & BOARD for next semester (maximum of $150.)
- The winner of the THIRD PRIZE in the drawing on May 3, 1972 will receive FREE BOOKS for next semester (maximum $50).
Books will receive on May 3, 1972 will receive FREE BOOKS for next semester (maximum $50)
Registration may be made at your local 7-10 Store
Registration may be made at your local 7-Eleven Store.
Drawings will be held live Wednesday, May 3, 1972 on KW-NF-M radio.
ENTER TODAY!
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8
Wednesday, April 5, 1972
University Daily Kansan
MICHAEL C. ROBERTS
Richard A. Schira
Richard Schira, associate professor of painting and sculpture, has been working with computers for two years in an art museum. He is more extensively an art form using that electronic medium.
Prof Studies Computer Art
Pictures are line scanned and
With the help of others who are more familiar with the electronic development a method of color reproduction of pictures with the
The colors are separated into the basic colors and then the colors are coded system by the computer. The picture must be reprinted for each color it contains. Full color tapes are because yellow tapes do not exist.
turned into a series of images.
They are then put into a picture machine and programmed into numbers.
thus creating a new type of composition and more completely utilizing the possibilities of the medium.
An 11-year-old boy suffered an compound fracture of the leg and cuts and bruises when he ran into a door of a car late Tuesday afternoon.
Smith was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where he was listed in fairly good condition. No charges were filed.
Child Is Injured When Struck By Passing Car
The car, which was driven by Martha F. Garcia, 2007 Kentucky, Lawrence, skidded 35 feet before stopping.
The boy, Andrew Smith, ran across sunnyside Drive and was hit by a green two-door sedan. He ran to the hood and into the windshield.
Frequently the images in the picture are manipulated by altering the shapes and colors.
Schira is also working to build a language with a digital computer to be used in the art form.
KANU Schedule
Stereo 91.5 FM
The amount of gray in each of the colors of the picture is called the grayscale. Converter changes these into digital impulses which will be controlled by the language, thus using the reproduction simpler.
TODAY
Managing Your Money
3 p.m.--This Afternoon (jazz)
1. 30 p.m. - Music from Germany
1. 30 p.m. - News, Weather and Sports
2. 05 p.m. - Search for Mental Health
Managing Your Money
Noon- Neen, Weather and Sports
12:15- Noon Hour Concert-Campan and Community Calendar
p. 130- John Costes of the World Future
Campus
4 p.m. - All Things Considered
5:30 p.m. - News, Weather and Sports
5:55 p.m. - Report from the KU Medical Center
6. p.m. - Beach Volleyball
8. p.m. - Beach Wading and Sports
9. p.m. - The View from the Hill
10. p.m. - Leaky Bank
11. p.m. - For Love of Music
12. p.m. - TBA underground rock in
10.5. p.m. - TBA underground rock in
the coming of atomic power the anti-scientists had a strong new theme, for all the evils of the world could be blamed upon the world. We now investigate the forces of the universe. So this book remains topical, and it is a good story, as well. It works on the two levels—maintaining science fiction, significant commentary on the times.
By KENT PULLIAM Kansan Staff Writer
Students whose enrollment would make them subject to a different fee because of additions such as geology lab fees, would be charged the same tables to the fee adjusters' tables and from there to the cashier.
THE BURING, BY JAMES E. GUNN (DELL, 95 CENTS)—Science fiction about things from the past, especially the ocean floor and giant ants or giant frogs is a lot of fun, but some of us prefer something a bit more adventurous. "Burning" is tough in content. It was conceived in the time when many Americans, even though the man's career was about half his age, were McCarthy-conscious. It has apparently been updated since that time, and one wonders whether Mr. McCarthy dominate the literature of 1972.
Fall Students
Langbaum is the James
'Burning' Shows Anti-Scientism
enrollment and fee payment procedure, but said that the planning was still in the rough stages. The company would take place before next fall.
Still, if one doubts that anti-intellectualism has vanished in the last decade, daily papers a bit more carefully—as in Kansas, for example—or have a look at those that have been Kent State. All the dangers are not from the campus building-burners. in Jim Gunn's "The Burning" of the University of Michigan is important. (It must be KU,
According to the plan, at registration students would be given one or two other cards in the registration packet. Students would keep the card until they receive a fee payment area, situated just before station nine, the check out
WHEN A student reached the payment area he would present his class cards and his name. The student was taking a full load of classes (more than 6 hours), and was not subject to any special fees, he would be sent cashier tables to nai his fees.
Kelly estimated that only 10 to 15 per cent of all the students going through enrollment would require any fee adjustments.
Continued from Page 1
Lecturer Examines Identity Crisis, Eliot
"Mysteries of Identity as
Theme in the Plays of T. S. Eliot"
was the subject of the final lecture
of the humanities lecture
series which was presented by
Langbaum Tuesday evening
Tables would be provided, Kelly said, for the various agencies involved in fee payments, such as financial aid,
KANSAN reviews
with all that red roofs and
Mahassurus streets stuff and
even, as Iremember, Lawrence.
The scientists are being chased
by authorities. They are also
any scientific learning or
investigation. They go into
hiding, and become witches,
and what society sees
as anewy.
veterans, foreign students office representatives, and others.
Anti-scientism has been a force in the world for centuries; with
AT THE CASHIER tables a student would submit his fee card and certificate of registration with his fee payment. The cashier would deposit the student's payment and stamp paid on the certificate of registration. The certificate of registration would be considered the student's receipt.
from the cashier tables a student would proceed to station the cashier table and then station nine there would be a health insurance table, a Jayshaw table and a desk for sending in to pay for these items would take cards from these tables, fill out the check in to the cashiers in this area.
[Image of a man speaking at a microphone, with a dark background].
Branch Cabell professor of English and American literature at the university of Virginia.
Llangaub talked about the crisis of self identity in Eliot's work, which work to counter the problems Eliot posed in his later works.
Robert Langbaum
ACCORDING TO ELIot's works the self can only be known through experience. Even what we have found for the time being is not permanent because our senses are always changing.
In "Confidential Clerk" Eliot
takes a look at the child's
they really are only by finding
their real parents and their
identity, their identity is
ultimately in God.
According to Langbaum, Eliot wrote "he was human but did not conceive of the fulfilment of human love. In his next two works he tried to find
"It was not until his conversion to Anglicanism that he dealt with the solutions to these problems," Langbuah said.
Eliot's works which dealt with the solutions to the crisis of self identity were "The Cocktail Man" and "Elde Clerk" and "Eldde Statesman."
Langbaum said, "In Con-
ference with our students in
the rest in dealing with ordinary
people, but the play suffers from
tepidity, as its biggest
guest"
Earlier works of Elliot which Langbaum concentrated on included "Wasteland" According to his own work, these works dealt with the loss of self.
The "Elder Statesman" tried to confess, "Confidant the Clerk," and yet elicits touchs on the self as he does in "Murder in the House."
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ji ji
Relay Events
Memorial Stadium
8:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
Lake Tahoe Lake Pioneer
Featuring THE WHALE
SATURDAY
Brewer & Shipley Concert Hoch Auditorium 10:00 p.m.
Free Movie, "April Fools"
Hoch Auditorium
7:00 & 9:00 p.m.
Street Dance 9:00 12:30 p.m.
O-Zone featuring Chessmian Square
FREE BEER
April 7-9
FRIDAY
SUNDAY
KUOK MARATHON
Oliver Hall, April 7.9
9:00 a.m. Friday to Midnight
Sunday
Free Football, Free Beer, Car
Smash Contests, Prizes
KUOK MARATHON
Spring Sing,
Hoch Auditorium
1:00 p.m.; 6:00 p.m.
Gynkhana h a Lewis Hall
12:00 p.m. Begog Bristol
12:00 p.m. First car begins
Semi-experienced Criterium
Semi-experienced Criterium 12:30
Neophyte Criterium 1:30 p.m.
Team Relay 2:30 p.m.
A.B.L. of A. Criterium 3:30
p.m.
KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO
OBEREN's MEN OR BOYS
BENTY
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THE JAY SHOPPE
BIKE RALLY
Tour through Lawrence April 6
These Lawrence Merchants have given their support to the Jayhawk Jamboree
Tour to Lone Star April 8 Meet at Strong Hall
By SUSAN HAYES
Kansan Staff Writer
Of interest to anthopoligists are the prehistoric stone platform of Grotto 8 from six to 70 feet high. The statues are believed to be concerned with ancestor worship, a part of the religion of the island.
Easter Island Talk Planned
THE SLAVE TRADE of the 18th century and a resulting smallpox epidemic nearly甩 out the population of the island.
Carlyle S. Smith, professor of anthropology and a member of an expedition led by Thor Heyerdahl to Easter Island, will present an informal talk and slides on the island of Hawaii at 8 tonight in Bailey Annex. The lecture is a part of a series of programs presented by the Sculpture Club of the University of Kansas. The public is invited.
Easter Island was isolated from other civilizations until it was discovered by Europeans on Easter Sunday in 1722.
The island is located about 2300 miles west of Chile, and is part of that nation. It has about 1,000 inhabitants.
CAMPBELL'S BAY CLOTHING
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Smith said that a very high level of civilization probably once existed on the island, because it was possible to build the huge monuments. The island eventually had to deal with overpopulation and be descended to the population and been descent.
SMITH'S GROUP determined that the years 1100-1680 were the
Concert Choir To Sing Tonight
UBU RUT (King Ubu)
The group excavated sites and studied the stone platforms and statues, in an attempt to determine whether a behavior in such a civilization. In addition, they made maps of the sites and wrote a book on their discoveries.
time of the most building, before its discovery by Europeans. There was no longer enough manpower to continue the construction because of the slave trade and the deterioration of the civilization
The initial 20-page edition, edited by Richard Rippe of St. Francis, came out Tuesday.
Smith was chosen to make the expedition with Heyerdahl on the recommendation of his colleagues.
of several other Archaeological
remains on the own expedition to the Marquesa
Islands of French Polynesia. He is
own a numerous honor for his work.
The Concert Chair, under the assistance of professor and acting assistant professor of education, will present a concert tonight in the University Theater.
ST. FRANCIS, Kan. (AP)—Born living in rural northwest Minnesota, the eastern Colorado have been introduced to the Tri-State area.
April 6-15 8 p.m.
KU Experimental Theatre
864-3982
AFTER HIS initial trip, Smith made four additional trips to the sland between 1967-69.
Smith has also been a member
THE PLAYERS NEVER STRIKE at the BALL PARK
Every baseball player out there will play ball anytime. All the world series teams from 1919 to 1970 are out of spring training and ready for another season. So don't miss all of the action on opening day. Get out to the BALL PARK AND PLAY BALL.
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Wednesday, April 5.1972
Lakers Win Series; Celts Drop Second
9
By The Associated Press
Jerry West, held scoreless the first half, poured in 23 points in the final half to help rally Los Angeles to a 108-97 victory over the Chicago Bulls, giving the Lakers a four-game sweep in the Ninth. (B) Bea kai 11 Association's Western Conference Tuesday night in Chicago.
In marching impressively through the first four games of the best-of-seven series, the Lakers gained the right to face the winner of the Milwaukee game in the other Western semifinal.
In Atlanta, Pete Maravich scored 36 points to lead the Atlanta Hawks to a 112-110 triumph over the Boston Celtics, bringing the Eastern Division seminal series at two games apiece.
In the other eastern game, John Treswain blocked an Earl Monroe shot with 26 seconds to play and recovered the ball to Baltimore 140-93 victory for the Baltimore Bullets over the New York Knicks.
The victory, the seventh straight by the Bullets over New York, came in past three playoff series, gave Baltimore a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven Eastern Conference games and it assumes Thursday in New York.
In the final quarter of the Lakers' game, West provided firepower with six saskaters, and Lakers sewed up the game with nine points in the last two minutes. For Atlanta, Maravich provided what proved to be the winning margin with two free throws.
The Celtics managed to tie the score three times late in the game but were never again in the lead.
Boston's Jo Jo White had a blazing second quarter, scoring 16 of his team-high 32 points.
100
Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THRONI
Jim Ryun Listens to Writer's Question
. . Press conference was meant to reduce distractions
Ryun Interviews Limited by Time
By BILL SCHEELE
Kansan Sports Writer
Jim Ryum said Tuesday afternoon that he no longer had enough time to conduct interviews with everyone who wanted them. He spoke at a press conference in Allen Field House Annex.
"I have more responsibilities than I used to now that I'm married," Ryan said. "I have to support a wife and child, as well as concentrate on my one goal for the year, an Olympic gold medal."
"Competition is a lot of fun, but it is no fun when everybody does everything before a meet. It isn't fun when interviews take you away from your training and your family. You don't want reporters or reporters before a race. I couldn't care less whether I run through competition has already been designed."
Ryun, who is a graduate assistant in the field of computer lab, appeared cared and cordial as he faced six vision cameras and about thirty cameras.
Dawson to Remain Chief
Retirement Rumors End
KANSAS CITY (AP)-Soft-spoken quarterback Dawn Sandon put an end Tuesday to speeches he might retire from football by signing a new two year contract with the Kansas City Chiefs.
The announcement was made at a morning news conference by the 36-year-old Dawson and Chief's Coach Hank Stram.
Asked if he had anything to say about terms of the pact, Dawson said he didn't.
However, it is believed the contract puts Dawson in the
He said members of the news media had always been good to him, so he says no to interviews a couple a couple recently because he hadn't done it before he hadn't.
Reds Delay Opener As Strike Continues
CHICAGO (AP)—Major league baseball owners, after rejecting a proposal by stricter players, met with the team Tuesday to gather their forces. The ultimate outcome of the debate will be a major factor in the strike.
Dawson predicted the Chiefs would be involved in another world title game and said he was ready to be a part of the championship.
Meanwhile, the Cincinnati Reds, seeing no sign of a break in strike postponed their open play against the Houston Astros.
Marvin Miller, executive of the players' association, sent a settlement to the current strike, but was rebuffed by the owners. He also increased sought by the players their pension fund come from increased interest in the pension owners turned it down flatly.
$100,000 a year bracket. His last contract with the Chiefs, a four-year agreement which ended in October for about $250,000 or $625,000.
More than 51,000 fans had been expected Wednesday afternoon for what always had been a noisy, gala event.
Dawson, who has been in the pros 15 years, heard Stram say his quarterback "is just coming into the fine years of his brilliant career." He's his only a 10-year man as far as his artistic ability is concerned.
BOB TIMMONS, track coach and Ryun's personal adviser, said Ryun's goal of winning a gold medal was more important than all the stories that could be written about him.
In making his proposal, Miller said it wouldn't cost the owners any additional money.
"The owners have now taken full responsibility for prolonging the strike right into the season," he said.
After being informed of the owners, Miller said he would love to talk to the owners are insistent that the players 'bend down' and kiss the owner.
The players walked out Saturday, and the season had been scheduled to open Wednesday.
The owners wasted little time in turning down Miller's proposal for a settlement.
August A. Busch Jr., owner of the St. Louis Cardinals, said he did not like Miller's proposal.
is not the minister's proposal.
"I wouldn't think of accepting it," he said.
"I wouldn't think of accepting it," he said.
Charles Fiolet, owner of the
"I feel Len can help us win more championships."
Charles Finley, owner of the Oakland A's, said, "I'm tired of
the players' requests and threats They've got the best pension in sports or industry."
Originally, the players demanded that a sum of $817,000 in surplus money be freed toward the pension fund. The owners did not release the sum on the grounds that it would be impractical.
Buffalo Begins Spring Practice
About speculation concerning his possible retirement, Dawson said:
"I have given a lot of time and careful consideration to my future," I said. "I wanted to wait a couple of months to see if I still had the courage."
"There are a lot of reasons for my decision, but to simplify it, I should have fun contribute to the future, such success the Chief's may enjoy."
Johnson, who led the Bucks to a 10-2 record last year, has a fractured wrist and will be in a hospital with an injured starter recovering from injuries and out for the spring include offensive tackle Jack Zumbach, offensive guard Chuck Mandril, offensive guard Derek Stallard and defensive end Stu Aldrich.
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Colorado's Buffaloopes opened spring football drills with 115 players on hand Tuesday, but their general returning starters, including quarterback Ken Johnson.
"If anyone has questions about Jim, I will be glad to answer them," Timmons, who sat beside Ryan during the conference.
University Daily Kansan
"Football has provided me with everything I have. In fact, I
Nebraska to Host KU In Season Golf Opener
Two seniors, a sophomore and five freshmen will travel to Louisiana on Friday to represent the university Kansas in a dual gymnasium.
This will be the first meet of the season for KU. One scheduled for this fall is the Kansas State Teachers College was canceled because of bad
Members of their year's squad are Roger Wells, Aurora, Colo. senior; Stan, Zimmerman; Lawrence biennial, Bill Mosminton; Mike Fideldek, Paulina, Wichita freshman; John Gosw, Wichita freshman; Bill Kipp, Lawrence freshman; Marc Moreozro, freshman; Bob Nelson, Shawnee Mission freshman
In last year's conference meet Wolfe posted his third best performance, scoring a 266. That was good enough to 104. That included individual scores.
have attained more from professional football than I ever hoped to when my career began
"Every professional player realizes that the day will come when he must retire. But I don't think this is the time for me."
Wells is a three-year letterman and Mosimann won his first letter last year as a freshman.
succeedes Chuck O'Neal,
Frederick, a 31-year-old-
year-old also serves as the
Jayhawks freshman basketball
coach.
Dawson had one of his finest seasons last year, hitting on 167 of 308 shots and 45 touchdowns. He said injuries which have plagued him the last few weeks, "and physically, I feel I can play more than two more years."
Bob Frederick, starting his first year as KU golf coach.
"We're definitely a very young talent that offers a promising future," Frederick said. "As we gain experience we'll become a great team."
Among the 115 players reporting, 15 veterans and seniors will be given the first two opportunities to aide in instructing younger players and will not take part in contact drills.
"I constant interviews hurt Jim's mental approach, then I am going to take them away. I'm getting in the way of encroaching on Jim's time
KU's next meet will be April 21 against Nebraska, Iowa State, Missouri and Kansas State at the Lawrence Country Club.
However, a team spokesman said all would be fully recovered and ready to go in the fall.
"I don't know about that," she said, laughing. "Blanda never said, laughed. Blanda George is George Blanda, and George is George Blanda, and George is George Blant
All intramural basketball play action returned to Robinson in five-five centrals on the shaft of the north basket of court three was replaced, enabling the ball to be lowered to playing height.
A University employee climbed an extension ladder placed on a volleyball standard to fix the faulty spring.
Grandpappy Blanda, quarterback and placekicker for the Oakland Raiders. is 45.
"If the pressure is destroying Jim, should we keep doing it?" Ryun denied reports that his health was not up to par.
5-Cent Spring Returns Games To Robinson
"Blood tests I have taken this year indicate that I am fine and healthy," better at better at the Florida Relays last week than I for a long time.
"I think my training is coming real well. I'm making progress on my ability to run the mile under 3:50 and I'm also improving psychology,"
Ryun to Face Tom Von Ruden in Relays Mile
"I am going to enter races with a more relaxed attitude than I have in the past," people say that I have lost motivation and that I'm not hungry anymore. I think that I must desire it, and I desire. I am trying to slowly increase my racing appetite so I peaks at the Munich Olympic Games.
SPICE of life IS HERE A candid conversation with VERN MILLER Fiction by KU's own JAMES GUNN and Published by former KU student LEE BARNETT
His intensity and concentration have increased since he returned to a closer personal relationship with Timmons, Ryun said.
"I guess there are only three people who really understand—Coach Timmons, my wife Anne Cotter, our old daughter Hee's, beheaded," she said.
Ryan stressed that running was an amateur sport, not a professional one. It doesn't take up his entire life, he said.
Ryun is the world recordholder in the mile (3.51.1), the half-mile (1:44.9) and the 1,500 miles (3.33.1).
"We are very pleased with this field," Simon said. "We think it will be a very good attraction."
available at Raneys, Town Crier,
Allen News & Krogers
Don't miss this unique issue
World record-holder Jim Yun-
KU graduate and member of
Club West, leads the field with a
3:51.1 mile.
Ryun's next competition will be the half-mile Friday at the Texas Relay. He will run in the Kansas Glen Cunningham Mile April 22
Six sub-four minute milers bus
himself to the Clemens
Cunningham Mile of the Kilkenn
Relays, Jay Simon, University of
Kansas a sports information
correspondent.
The five other sub-four minute mile are Tom Van Ruden, Hilton (3:56.9), Leeward Hillon, Houston Track Club (3:58.9), Lincoln Club (3:58.9), Club (3:58.9), John Lawson, KU graduate and member of Pacific Coast Track Club (3:59.2), and Elmwood Track Club (3:59.6).
Also accepting invitations were Peter Kail, Pacific Coast Track KC. Robert Swenson of the U.S. Army who is great half-miler at Kansas State.
Yankees Delay Opener
Simon said Mali Liquori of villaina had an injured foot and was in a hospital. Attempts to contact Kip Keino in Kenya were been
Gil Hodges, the New York Mets manager who will be buried Thursday.
If the players' strike is settled, the Yankees will open against Baltimore Friday afternoon.
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COLOR IN THIS "MINI-
PRESIDENTIAI
1. Buy a lunch of Flair pigs. You need orange, purple, brown, red, blue and olive. I need them anyway for school. Choose the color guide numbers. (3). Orange (P). Purple (B). Brown (2). Red (3). Blue (12). Olive. Please do not color unnumbered.
POSTER" OF ONE OF THE
CANDIDATES!
3. Congratulations! You have created a genuine full color portrait of someone you know. But you are not your favorite presidential candidate, have patience. You'll see your favorite soon in the Flair Election Collection. Just go to www.flairchicago.com/flair's running mate, the Flair Hot Liner.
Gillette Company PaperMate Division © 1972
HOB MATT
WATER BURPALD
Hand made in湖北
$5.00 a pair
MUSIC BY DAVID M. FREEMAN
TICKETS ON SALE AT:
ADVANCED: SUA OFFICE - KANSAS STUDENT UNION
BASIC: BALSHA STUDENT MASS. (Uptairs)
KIEF'S RECORDS - IN THE HUB
PRIMARYLY LEATHER - B23
To Brower & Shipley Tickets Box 492 Lowry, Koma
MIDNIGHT OF SUNDAY - HOCUAIR AUTHORIZATION BOX OFFICE
TICKET Prices £10.00
IN CONCERT Brewer & Shipley
WITH FUNK 'N' PUNCH
SAT., APRIL 8th - 10 p.m. HOCH AUDITORIUM - KU LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Sponsored by the Junior Class, University of Kansas
10
Wednesday, April 5, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Young Voters Eligible for Draft Boards
By RON WOMBLE
Kansan Staff Writer
The new newlyauvished voters, 18-, 19- and 20-year-olds, are eligible to serve on local draft boards, but no members from those divisions to local boards in Kansas, according to State Selective Service Director Junior F. Elder. Several members of local draft boards expressed doubt in the last two weeks that an inflow of young people on draft boards would drastically change board
Federal selective service board regulations were recently revised
setting a minimum age of 18 and a maximum age of 65 for board members. No board member was required to have the lower maximum age caused a large turnover of board members. The lower maximum age caused a large turnover of board members of their members because of it.
BUT NONE OF the men replacing the over-85 board members came from the ranks of the boards surveyed - local board No. 18 in Lawrence, board No. 71 in Manhattan, board No. 83 in Manhattan.
One reason that no 18- to 20-year-olds are on selective service boards may be that few people are aware of vacancies on local boards. The board recruited by members of the local board or by the office of the state director. After the local board has found a replacement, the director and the national selection committee approve the selection.
The state director's office may contact minority group members to recommend recommendations for board members, according to Elder's request.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Committee on the Evaluation and Advancement of Instruction will hold a teaching excellence caucus April 25 at the Ramada Inn.
Committee to Hold Caucus On Teaching Excellence
The meeting will include dinner, four 15-minute talks and a period of open discussion.
according to Brower Burchill chairman of the Teaching Improvement Subcommittee.
The four speakers will be representatives from administration, faculty, student and alumni groups. Francis Carnegie will represent the affairs, will represent the administration. The faculty
asked for recommendations.
The spring semester KUOK radio marathon, to be held this weekend in conjunction with the university, begins soon to be the best one yet. Mick Burch general manager of the campus radio station said recently.
The marathon, to be broadcast live from the living room of Oliver Hall, will run 65 hours a.m. friday until 12 a.m. Sunday.
Dolan said the KUOK staff had been planning the upcoming marathon for about six weeks. At his home in Montana, he gave away at this marathon as in
representative is Frances Horowitz, professor of human development.
Marathon to Run 63 Hours in Oliver
Hadded said this would be the second year for the counseling and advisory session. Last year 100 persons attended, she said.
Two career counseling and advisory sessions will be held Thursday at Gertrude Sellars School, North College who have not decided on a major. The sessions will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Judy Hadded, assistant teacher at North College, said Monday.
KU Physicists Get New Grant
Career Advice To Be Given At GSP Hall
Haddad said that not all of the reservations would be at both sessions interested in a particular school or department, they should phone the department for information 4231 for additional information and for appointments, if the session was not scheduled.
Raymond G. Ammar and Robert Stump, professors of physics use bubble chambers to use bubble chamber exposures to study the properties and interactions of the particles, and basic building blocks of matter.
A $7,000 grant from the
National Science Foundation to enable a group of University of Kansas physicists to continue their research on subnuclear atomic physics.
Representatives from professional schools at the University and departments within the College of Liberal Arts to answer questions in the session to answer questions and advise students on careers.
The current grant brings the total NSF support for the project since 1970 to $282,800.
Other members of the research are Robin Davis and Newman Tavon, professors of physics, William Kropac, professor assistant, Charles Eklund, McPherson Williams, Nicholas, Guymon, Okla., graduate student, and Hassan Wehran, heehan, Iran, graduate student.
ST. LOUIS (the only) The National Limited, the opd direct Kansas City-to-York York railroad new schedule starting April 30.
Charles Martin, district sales manager for AMTRAK here, said the move would be beneficial to Kansas City would be changed from 5:40 a.m. to 9:40 a.m. at the city office.
The student representative is Dennis Embrey, head of the college survey. The alumni will be represented by the Board of Resident
Martin said the reason for the change is that AMTRAK realizes "people would prefer to travel at a reasonable hour."
past years, he said. KUOK has 25 or 30 albums to give away, and local merchants will provide tickets and free theatre passes.
There will be a car smash from 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday in the northeast corner of O-zone and a weather permitting, he said.
Free beer at 7 p.m. Saturday and a continuous 63-hour foosball game are new attractions.
The National Limited stops in the Missouri cities of Warrenton, Sedalia, Jefferson City, Miskin, Salem and St. Louis on the daily trip to New York.
This is the third annual marathon to be held at Oliver Hall. Dolan said that because the reception had always been the best at Oliver, at least one marathon was held there every year.
In the 15-minute talks, the speakers will discuss what they think about teaching at KU. They will also discuss the importance of teaching in a future in relation to a professor's excellence as a teacher.
EDITH H. CORDELL,
executive secretary of Lawrence
local board No. 18, said no efforts
were made to educate vacancies
on the board. Several of the board
members said they had been
vacated by people who knew
who were serving on the board at
the time.
Dolan said KUKO tries to hold a marathon at every dorm that expresses interest, although co-working spaces are better because of better response.
He said the marathons gave extra service to students and experience in remote radio, tele-VI and film students.
Burchill said the current system of promotion and tenure was restrictive because a professor only received credit for both research and publications and not his teaching excellence record.
"We want to give teaching more respectability and influence so a professor can teach better," said Burchill in his teaching, "said Burchill.
The caucus is the first of its kind at KU. Burchell said the committee hoped to secure a grant from the Dauvon Foundation, but the committee hoped that future meetings would be better organized or groups interested in teaching.
A second reason why few young people have expressed interest in serving on draft boards may be due to their lack of training. All board members serve voluntarily and they are not compensated for their time. The cost of traveling to and from meetings if they live far from the board's meeting place. This is also true of members of all aides, however.
"We would like to have a meeting once every two or three months on the broad subject of whether Burchell's information is available." Burchell said.
"This is the kick-off event and we hope it will grow next year into something significant," he said.
A Lawrence board member complained of harassment by people with direct interests in the book. Others have complained about mean friends and neighbors have at times been a problem. It was for these reasons that two of the board members offered to remain anonymous.
ELDER THOUGH young board members might be "more demanding" there are always exceptions, according to Elder, but general's "your peers are the ones you than your dad and uncle."
There will be 50 people from administration, faculty, student and alumni groups and the press attending the caucus.
Most of the people interviewed, including executive secretaries and upper management, happy about the new lower minimum age for service on board.
"He might not have known the hardships," Elder said, speaking of military service.
"if some young person wants my job he can serve," one board member said. "I've been here long enough."
members might take would be their lack of experience.
Few board members expressed fear that younger board members would fail to be objective considering cases of their peers.
One reason Elder gave for the tougher stance that young board
AGE DOESN'T REALLY affect the board's decisions, Sgt. Edward J. Carney, Manhattan board member of Manhattan Endorser.
"Board members just use common sense, that's all," he said. "They must give careful consideration to each case."
Cordell said that although each case required personal attention, all decisions of the board were based on federal regulations.
Elder said that there was no way to insure that no members were on the local boards. Elder said that they were not indicated if they were opposed to war." Members are required to take an oath of office which says, "We will not be indicted."
CANTERBURY HOUSE
1116 Louisiana 843-8202
New Schedule
Evening Prayer daily at 5 p.m.
Holy Communion
selective service regulations, however.
Mon. 5:15 p.m. Thu. 5:15 p.m.
Tues. 9:00 p.m. Fri. 8:00 p.m.
Elder said he was confident "you could find attitudes either way in any five people."
the Firey Furnace is still going strong,
every Fri, and Sat. night, from 9 on. Coffee,
donuts, music, and talk in the basement of
Canterbury.
Sat. 11:15 a.m.
SIGN UP NOW FOR
a workshop on Transactional Analysis at Canterbury Friday, April 28; 6:30-11:30 p.m. The leader, George Spraft, was trained at ACTITTLE California. Register at Canterbury.
in balance, Eider said.
Eider expressed hope that all board members had the ability to be objective.
YES . . .
THE MEMBERS think they have a good record in separating their private lives from their decisions as draft board members. Carney said his capacity on the board was one of 10,000 in this decision's nothing to do with the police department."
The members stressed the personal aspect of each of the decisions made by the said safeguards against unfair decisions by local boards were appealed to the state level and with three or more members.
ROMANTIQUE
DIAMOND BRIDAL SET
14 karat white
or yellow gold
$249
both rings
Most of the board members said their memberships filled a need. A Lawrence board member knew that the board was having difficulty finding someone else. He said he felt a sense of responsibility, and he accepted the position thinking that draft would be over by now.
"I had no desire to get even with someone," he said.
at white
new gold
$249
both ring
IT HAS THE BEAUTY of a museum piece,
and how proud you'll be to have it grace
him.
One member he accepted the position because he had had experience in administration. Another he just said "didn't need to volunteer," but he said it might be described as a feeling of duty.
Ray Christian
809 Mass. Lawrence Springtime is Ringtime
JUNIORS!! Interviews for Senior Class Committee Chairpersons Sat. April 8, 9-12 a.m.
Sat., April 8, 9-12 a.m.
Committees: 1) Aid to Higher
2) Hope Award
Education
3) Senior Job Comm.
4) Social
6) Class Gift
7) Senior Activities (i.e., regalia dist. and luncheon)
5) Regalia
The young swingers dress up for Spring in studio 26 style. Wrap your feet up in white, lavendar or navy blue. $22
Arensberg's = Shoes
819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen
Pick up forms in Alumni Assoc.
Office, 103 Union. Forms must be turned in by Thurs.. April 6 3:00 p.m.
VOTE
Register to Vote
Strong Hall Lobby
April 3-7
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Use Kansan Classified
---
STUDENT NIGHT Wed. Nights 5-9 p.m.
Hamburgers 15°
Cheeseburgers 20°
Dbl. Cheeseburgers $ 39^{\circ} $
Big Shefs 39°
Super Shefs 55°
"You can't cook hamburgers at home for these prices"
9th and Iowa
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
YOU DON'T HAVE TO GO TO EUROPE...
KR500A2151
CUSTOM "G 800" RIB RADIAL
CUSTOM "G 800" RIB RADIAL
Tubeless
Replaces
Price
Plus Pad
Old and old tire
15S5R13
5.60-13
$37.65
$1.39
for European Designed Radial Tires
This is the popular 'G 800' Radial tire designed and crafted for the imported car owner. It gives you the full benefits of radial ply construction ... long mileage, superior car control, handling, and fit most imported cars.
G 800" RADIAL
Blackwall Tubeless tire
Replaces Price Plus Fed. tire and old tire
155R15 5.60-13 $36.40 $1.39
165H14 5.60-13 $40.80 $1.66
165H13 5.60-6.00-13 $38.20 $1.66
185/70K14 $55.25 $2.10
165H14 5.90-6.00-14 $40.00 $1.79
165H13 5.20-5.60-15 $41.75 $1.73
165H15 5.50-5.90-15 $43.80 $1.84
185R15* 7.35-15 $56.05 $2.42
GREGG TIRE
814 W 23ra
8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Daily
Closed Saturdays at 4:00 p.m.
CO.
842-5451
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 5.1972
Program Offers Work to Youths
Lawrence underprivileged and minority youths will be offered a chance to find jobs this summer. A graduate in the Employment Program (S.T.E.P., Phillis Briscoe, ad- dicated by Office of Human Resources, said) of Office of Human Resources, said.
S.T.E.P. I is not officially
appointed from the Ministerial Alliance,
the Lawrence City Commission and
the Human Resources Office. It is
Employers or private citizens are asked to provide employment for two hours a day, five days a week, for up to eight hours of payment for the youngsters. The employer can pay the full wage of $1.25 per hour for 10 to 14-year-olds, for 8 to 16-year-olds, for year-olds; he can pay partial wages of $1 and $1.15 as a minimum, or he can simply pay full wages would be paid by S.T.E.P.
The purpose of the program is to give employment, instruction and a sense of pride to the youngsters. Brisco said.
that these youngsters could do if employers would take the time and be understanding enough to help them," said Briscoe.
He said participants for the program can get applications at www.rcare.org or the Human Resources Office. The main criterion for selection is completion of the course.
"There are a number of things
Briscoe said the program needs $7,000. Part of this will come from the Ministerial Alliance and the rest depends on public donations.
The University of Kansas libraries have provided jobs in past summers. If employers can provide jobs, youngsters want to work in the library and students want to make donations, they should contact ST.E.P. Human Resources Office, Bank of Kansas Building, P. O. Box 708, Lawrence
Last year there were 76 participants in T.E.S.P. This year they hope for a minimum of 100, Briscoe said. The number of youths the program can handle depends on the number of jobs available and the amount of money donated for wages, he said.
Allard Lowenstein To Speak Thursday
Allard K. Loweensen, the oner-
mous long Island, N.Y.
Democratic Congressman who
started a "dump Johnson"
movement in 1988, will speak at
Iowa University in the Kansas
Union.
Bedner said Tuesday that he believed young people could be a challenge, but that they would take advantage of their right to vote. He said this was the reason KU Student Vote students would student registration week.
Bedner said Lownstein was asked to speak during voter registration week because of his recent prison sentence. Young people to register to vote.
Lawrence's talk is being
Lowenstein's talk is being
according to Mark Bedner,
Lawrence graduate student and
chairman of the KU Student Vote
Lownstein has a B.A. from the University of North Carolina and a Ph.D. in Computer Science. He has been on the faculty at Stanford University, North
Carolina State University and City College of New York.
Lowenstein's congressional district was gerrymandered by New York Republicans before last November's election. This placed him in a relatively Republican constituency. He was defeated in November when he ran for a second term.
KAT Suzuki
Lowenstein has recently announced his intentions to seek another term in Congress.
Lowenstein is a former president of the National Student Association and was the first European birth bid for the presidency in 1986.
842-6966
Thursday April 6 Hotel Jayhawk Florentine Room—7-9:30 p.m.
In our store you can talk over your camera and photo problems with two experts from the Minolta company they will be showing all of the latest equipment in the Motorized camera and the new pro light meters.
Minolta FACTORY DEMO
Friday April 7 - Saturday April 8 9 a.m.-4 p.m.at our store.
9 a.m. - 4 p.m. at our store.
Minolta Product Demonstration
SAVE
Last Chance to Buy Your Minolta at 1971 Prices
Minolta SRT 101 with F-1.7 Lens Reg. $ 3 0 9 _ {5 0} ^ {1 9 9} $ $ 1 9 9 _ {5 0} ^ {1 9 9} $
I
M
Minolta AF
Slide Projector
Auto Focus
Remote Control
Reg. 130° RQ95
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
116 West Eighth - Topeka Kansap
WOLF
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
One day
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $0.1
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dairy Korean are offered free of charge. Students may color, creed, or national origin
Highest price paid for used cars G.I.
Lowe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
66%
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes-Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
2. you're on an adventure
2. If you don't,
CURA EQUIPMENT FIRM. Miskin
6243 S. 18th St., Suite 100, Palm Beach Lifetime Guarantee; $125
Pacific Life Insurance; $125 Hawk Knife and Vest; $9.95 Hawk Knife and Vest. See us for all your diving
manuals, equipment, training and major brands. Divers Equipe, Aviation
Driver Kansas City, MK 6413. Phone 616-743-8233.
STERFORD DISCOUNT. Now you get
a COST plus 10% at RAY AUDIQ.
only for Sterford Discount House in
NYC. Tea, Coffee & Consulting
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
you're at a cladivantage.
Kirk, "It's money to come in the same way." It happens at of Western Civilization." Campus Madison, 111 West. 14th. 11
Equipment - Fin & Mack Seal-
sure Insurance $125,000. Wet Sur-
vival Gear Guarantee $125,000. Wet
Survival Gear Guarantee $125,000.
Wet Survival Gear Guarantee $125,
000. Wet Survival Gear Guarantee
$125,
NORTHISLE COUNTY SHOP, 707
Brantley Bridge, used furniture,
collectors items, old wood cooking and
furniture, antique mobiles, snowshoes,
hockey shoes, fireplace wood,
plumbing fixtures, other useful items, 0 up to 5 of other useful items, 0 up to 5 of other useful items, Aberthle Barn, 84, 129
YAMAHA 1970 620 ce 924 Schwarz Road after 6 P.M. Excellent condition 4-5
60 Buick HT, 4 hr, AT, PB, PS, PW,
Air conditioned. New tires. Less than
last price. Excellent condition. $1,355.
Call 842-1029 or 842-2024 - 4-5
1970 Suzuki TC-90. Two range gearbox for street and trail. Great condition, 4,000 miles, $250 including insurance and helmet. 842-3554-4-5
Minolta SB-T 10 camera like new,
$200 Call Mark, 842-6751 4-5
Fender Jaguar with hard case,
guitar stand, bass guitar and 402X8X18 speaker cabinet with 1-15" 2-12" and 2 d horn speakers. Shure microphone, 324-2126 with stand, 42-1226 with stand
Brand new, Magnavac Component
Hand made in New Zealand.
$29.00 a pair, now $49.00 a pair,
$39.00 a pair, now $49.00 a pair,
Nydac, you need 89.00 a pair, now $89.00 a pair.
RAY STONEBACK S, 928 MacMasters
Ray STONEBACK S, 928 MacMasters
1971 Kawasaki 125ce Enouro, 1400 miles, like new. $475, Phone 843-5508 or see at 2302 Princeton Blvd. 4-5
1962 Volvo P1800. Red with black interior. The most expensive economy car in the world. Best offer over $700. Call 842-2860. 4-6
$9 Lee Paul, Gibson. Curly maple unhust. Humbucking pickles. Excellent sell. Sell or trade for accomodation. 8. Davis, 94-385N, 114G - 6000. Bave.
adies' 10 speed bicycle, Schwinn
supert-quad. 9 o.m. old. Excellent Con-
tition. Phone 864-1331. 4-6
Tuvedes - Leather & Stuede Jackets - kids
Leather jackets for kids - Leather
leather and leather - Leather
leather in town, 200 new shirt $1.00 out-of-
BOKONON, 819 Vermont, 11-6-4
Need to sell 4-mon+ old-Symphonic Sterion Stereo system includes all mid-state power amplifier, power player, and includes a separate 2-way turntable. Battery-48-800-190 for 4:00 or later.
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court
RANJAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
MUST SELL, 1964 BSA 650 Horner clean and fast, fabric需3,000毛200 or bore suit;见A124 at #3 or call 841-585-8437 around P.M. M 4
Goya 12 string guitar - excellent condition - $350. Also ABR 4 TR kit - valuable tape deck, desk converter, cable adapter, pickup, and more! $100 Dave LEE, 82-617-9071 4-6-4
Roberts 778X, 8-track Reel-Reel,
$300, 842-8619 4-6
843-9694
1902 Volkswagen, clean and in good running condition. Call 843-3473. 4-7
Sale of the day Panasonic Model no.
RS257S-6 - 40 roo + $200 warranty. Pn Ball Machine Williams 30 inches, perfect. Bp $42.-$340. 4-6
Roberts Reed in Recal and Cartridge Tape Recorder—two speed, records and plays. Cost $300 new, will sell for $240. Very good. #82-533. $299.
65 MGB and upright piano 842-2473
4-7
8 track stereo tape deck and speakers.
Best offer. Call 864-5794 anytime after
6 P.M. 4-5
Ampere BT-15 solid base, bass amplifier with 12- speaker and BX-2 extension cabinet with 2-12 speakers in condition. Most 4-16 Call #82-7643 4-10
Sun-muted, lay-down seats, 4-seats,
and a bimini top. Pumped 404.4
m³ of AMP. AMPs sound rares
sound vital nike made on stage $5
or call Call Eob or Eddie 432-9781.
For sale by owner, 1970 Hotaka 2004
for sale by owner, 1970 Hotaka 2004
Cyminder, J cylinder drive, 253;
each chamber, light ideal for endur-
ance. Requires 48-inch A4-6
Cycle Shop.
'62 Chevy, 4 dr., good shape, 6 cyl.
standard shift, good rubber, $250 842-
3139
4-10
Gova 12 string guitar - excellent condition
$130. Also AR-8 stack carriage deck, dock frame, converter,
docking stand, carry case
$100 Dave Lee, $43,607 4-10
Model is 960 tape deck, Perfect.
$250 Also portable (tape recorder).
1 camera, camera 25" TV, tube
2 non-camera video cameras
4-10789 or 8-324-0144
VOLKSWAGEN 1966 BUG
New brakes, 4 new tires, 2000 miles,
condition only $85 Good deal, come
buy! Cell phone: 684-6354 4-11
Mobile home for sale. Tireless of living
money on an earnest? Equal mobile home
money on an earnest? Equal mobile home
where you can enjoy privacy and the
comfort of living or studying in a warm,
pleasant room. bright 20' lit living room.
3 bedrooms, bright 20' lit living room.
refrigerator - automatic heating,
gas furnace - yet only $790 gas bill.
with XD extension $2990 incl.
with XD extension $2990 incl.
1970 Honda 350 SL, excellent condition
4-11
841-2581
Baldwin Guitar, Electric, body bow,
double pickup, in perfect condition,
with hardshell case $275 or trade for
use with motorcycle. Call Gary. 864-110-
Kaw Valley Hemp Farms—Get into the new bell-bottom bib-overalls at Eartofhine, 12 E. 8th. 4-11
CLOSE JET 40 to 50 off on entire stock of discontinued components, tuners, speakers, and earphones-Hay Downtown Base Room $29,800 Downstairs-Base Room $29,800
Yamaha Enduro, 1971, 125 cc, red, ex-
cademial condition, cheap Also 1971
330 cc Honda Motor complete, 842-
654 or 842-479
4-11
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
-
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
Secluded 40 acres near Perry Lake for sale. Unimproved natural state. 2 pounds. Beautiful view. Will sell on contract. W431-2724. 4-11
FOR RENT
Used compact stairs, and FM 525
Used coffee stree, and FM 100
Royal Master work console FM 150, Rsw
Master work console 929 Mac 870-1471
411
SUMMER BENTAYS. All types, prices, all near campus. Reserve yours now. Marie Lynch, 1216 La
431-1601, 431-3221
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWYER
You can enjoy life in Lawyer
City, where you earn a reasonable
interest rate if you call MA. A Harvard Road,
Living in Angelica (NYC), Apartments, 9th &
Avenue, between two convenient and
easy to get around special rates.
Find out for a wonderful time to be
in Lawyer.
DUPLICEX FOR, BENT. 2741 Rideau
CORRAL, $175 per ton, 2 bedroom,
retirement; dacha/wavey, dry river
pool; spa/hot tub; 983-325. Available immediate 4-6
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited
first month, free tuition. Free Four
months with all utilities paid
with all utilities paid
against apt. Call after 4 o'clock,
9am-7:31pm, 845-7731
SAMHAIA APTS- MUT leave before semester ends, will leave from either 1st or 15th of May 1 berm. Kitchen Coffee Station Call 842-630-8287 or bert. afw (2)
Tried to trying to find that ideal app.
I can provide the new app now have
available 1.2 & 3 Bucks
price range throughout and price
range throughout the App Store.
Awesome Agency, 801 Kentucky, Bldg
2506
NICE. FURNISHED 3 BEDROOM
KITCHEN, BATH LIVING ROOM,
BATHROOM TO CAMPUS. LAUNDRY. NEED TO
CAMPUS. HOME COMMERCIAL CAMP.
64-824 AFTER 30.
AFFIARTMENT FOR RENT One bedroom air conditioning Available April 1st at 19 West 14th. Call 832-9533 after 6:45
COLLEGE HILL MANG now show-
room furnished and unfurnished to
furnished and unfurnished office
first start at $159 Clea to campus
first start at $249 Wake to call
174) W 198-191, Ap 3B or call 831-
174) W 198-191, Ap 3B or call 831-
EAGLE
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
1928, while selection is still available,
while 1927 was still available.
842-364-2017 A-Harward
Lawrence's best built headquarters,
Lawrence's well built headquarters,
and John L. Roehouse.
Wood parcel board room 9th, 10 windows in large house near campus- shares four gravy people. $40 per person. 823-764-5100. Calvary. 482-764-5100
Carol Lee
**Quartier courts**
Avalon, 2150 West 48th Street,
Avalon, Iowa & Harbor, and Aro-
nade Square, Iowa & Harbor, and Aro-
nade Square, Iowa
cost of living in one of these hands-
ful cities is about $3,600 per square
apartment and you will be able to
more to have a dishwasher central
with water supply and more hu-
ricane hurry more features. 4-14
NOTICE
Barn Partied! Now available for
their first pickup at Apple Valley Farm in Lake Perry, CA and cooler parking at Parkside Inn. Call Joe Stronge after 6 p.m at 843-257-6100.
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Be Prepared! tune-ups startling service
Tony's 66 Service
Red Baron
Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone
CSC
10YOTA 1HUMP
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
- STRETCHER FRAMES many in stock
- McCONNELL LBR CO
- ARTIST CANVAS REDUCED
LEARN **SKYDIDYING** It jump rope, jump rope machine, jump rope mat, jumper scooter, floor rides and other activities. Tram & jump ramp day Essex. Train
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., pts. - qts. only
0% OFF
New wide bie F 7-10 k1 first quality only $25 plus 50 K-17 at Roy Jackson. New wide bie F 7-10 k1 at Roy Jackson. G70-$115-$300 Farmer's Insurance installation at Rock Stoneberg. 4-11
We can find any book for you. All subjects, rate books, fine bindings, ete Write T. R. Mane, 371 Bleu St. S. Boston, Mason, 02116-4122-4122
Klevend, low-risk hospital insurance
(including pregnancy benefits) American
Health & Life Insurance Co.
*John Wells*, 842-5290 17
Would you like to see some pretty
easy people, young living & a mood
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4-13.
FOUND Black cat with one white whisker Owner please claim Call 813-XT68 4-6
Magnavox Custom Stereo Speakers
Reg. $159.90 now $100.00 at RAY
STONEBACK S.
4-5
JIMS STEAK HOUSE—where you will find one of the best steaks in town. Our menu is “Dine Out at Eating Out Prices.” 4-14
844 E.13th St. 843-3877
We not banches yet air clothes-
odes of deam-fits of leather jackets
- hippian shirts & cowboy hats
- hipster jeans & pants
HOKONIK VOKONIK 4000
448
English "Bobby" Capes—keep the rain God off your back—now at Karthala 12 E. 8 Ht. 4-11
Maupintour travel service
Phone 843-1211
Women's Alterations, 20 years experience Call 845-2767, 9:30-5:30, 4-25
HEY, WOMEN—LONG DRESSES,
LOISE-RISAN, CHAMOS HALTER
TOPS—AT EARTHSHINE, 12 E. 8th.
See
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SHINE—A Folk Trio Free ad-
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4-7
THE CONCORD SHOP
FOUND Silver bracelet Identify and
pay for a d.
Call 841-2667 4-7
WEDDING INVITATIONS — PRICES
$195 for custom 16" printed only $450 for
custom printed only $525 for catalog and samples to Aaron Aberg,
East Main, Indiana, Idaho $340
$410
Four new whitewall 725-14-1134
new fiberglass lifts in lay away
-$9 takes all 4-pkg sales tax
Shockback's 925 Mass 4-11
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER, 842-7694. Professional child care center. 1 mo to 12 mo. No. or part-time job. Fri. Specially designed environment.
TYPING
Webster's Mobile Homes
DELICATESSEN &
Open 8am y 1pm — Phone Order
843-7685 — We Deliver — 9th & 11th.
THE HIDE in the WALL
Experienced in Using theses, dissertation term papers, other types of paper and presentation types. Type Accessible type. Accurate and prompt typing. Contact Phone: 843-9544. Mrs Wright.
Your Complete Service
SANDWICH SHOP
Tie:downs—Skirting—Parts
OPEN NIGHTS
Ample Park Spaces Available
Borders
Recorders
Music
Strings
Rose
3409 W. 6th 842-7700 Just West of the
- Guitars
- Accessories
FIAT PASSION
OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
O TO 40 MPH -13.5
O BACKHOLE CAM ENGINE
O RECLINING FRONT SEATS
O UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL.
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500 E.23rd
TONY'S
IMPORTS-DATSUN
842-0444
LOVE THAT
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50¢
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11 W. 9th
CLIP
Coors on Tap
Oasis 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon Sat Sun 12 to 8 p.m.
Offer Expires April 30
OFF any two handed sandwich with the purchase of one at regular price. You MUST present this ad.
eaturing—Roast Beef, BBQ Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef,
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Typing done on alice, electric typewriter.
No Theses please. Prompt attention.
843-0958
4-52
There, term papers typeed accurately and promptly. IBM *SciEuro*, your choice of type styles. Also editing at Routledge, Milton, MD 40978-4759 or 812-5605.
Experienced typist will type 300-
paper papers, theses or dissertation
Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate
call. Call 843-2281. Misc. Rackmanu
call.
Typing in my home IBM Selectric
Prompt accurate work. Experience:
Call 841-2556. 5-9
HELP WANTED
Experienced typist will type your academic writeup. Prompt, responsible rates. Please call 81-7954 4-5
TEACHERS WANTED D. Contact
Southwest Teachers Agency, Box
4327 Abbeymount, N.M. 87066. "Olden,
Bonded and a member of
the teacher's team."
Neded—nagative, aggressive, part-time
location for established company
company in business over 20 years Send
applications in care of the Daily
Daily Mail.
head teacher wanted for free high
preferred training. Experience with high
preference in school inclusion, including reasons for application to School Box 41 Lawrence Salary箱41Lawrence Salary箱
Truck Driver - Needed for pick
service at KU Rehmannal
Station, 827-6501 or equiv.
$1.60 per hour plus 4¢ a mile
or 846-3710; 846-3710; 846-3710;
846-3710; Gary Jacob.
Young, intelligent, energetic female for part-time help. Apply in person. Vita Restaurant, 1527 W 6th 4-7
Factory Authorized
Honda Sales & Service
Cycle Pick Up Service
BLEVINS HONDA
1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks.
proof sittings $5.00
Studio
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Special Senior Rates on all orders.
Please call for your appointment for SENIOR PICTURE
8 month old 1's, Sharpee cat. Vicinity of 19th & Iowa. Mask, boots, tail—all black. Hermanet light brown. Call 64-8740 or 84-6740;hriming 6-4640 TKE
Ph.843-0330
High School, Class BING. FUN-
Central Senior School 1971, red smooth stone, on back of face of stone, p.m.B.L. on back CA64-86538
Open 24 hrs. per day
My puppy, white with black around eyes—A male border collar 11 weeks old. Lost around 9th & Mississippi. Found in room 835 to find him. Call 842-7212. 4-11
Wilson-Jet leather basketball at Robbins Gymnastics Center 30. Please contact Don Schoenbeck if found 842-3171. 4-6
GET OFF your horse and into a denim jack by Pelces-new for spring at EARTHSHINE, 12 E.8 H. 4-11
BRIDAL GOWN SHOW *Sale-Sites*
8-10-12, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky
4,20
WANTED
PERSONAL
MISCELLANEOUS
Home for adult male neutered sealant stancee Val Smith 842-6399
5-8 P M weekdays 4-10
Small white tervet with brown spots
Wearing a red collar. Very, very
friendly. Very important to family.
Reward offered. Please call 840-1036
OVERSEA JOBS FOR STUDENTS
All Government and occupationally
allied. All graduation and occupational
outcomes. Lightening. Free intern.
Interest based. Job 1657, San Diego,
California. 8115-792-3015
DECAUSE is a listening service. 843-602. Sun thru thur 8-12 P.M. Fri
& Sat. 8 P.M.-6 A.M. Fridays per week
COIN
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUSAGES
Independent
11 Miles North of the
Kaw River Bridge
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Salad Cream. C. Steaks
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Phone 843.1431 Open 4:30 Closed Mondays
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DISCOUNT
043
0500
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WITH
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The Stereo Store
LUDIOTRONICS
928
Mass
12
Wednesday. April 5,1972
University Daily Kansan
Drama Magazine to Move to Toronto
By KEVIN SHAFER
Kansan Staff Writer
The publishers of Modern Drama, a scholastic quarterly devoted to the study of drama and literature in the publication site which is near the University of Kansas community to Toronto University in Canada.
The subscription list of the quarterly includes people from every corner of the world, including such far away places as Tanzania, Turkey and South Africa. A. Carroll Edwards, KU professor of English and publisher of Modern Drama, said Friday.
Edwards said the inability of the University to supply his pupil materials, a grant forced the journal's staff to go on a separate publication site to Toronto.
Edwards and his wife have
subsidized publication and printing of Modern Drama for the past 15 years.
During the early years of its publication, Modern Drama was partially subsidized by a research grant from the firm. The grant was revoked, however, after a few years of publication
EDWARDS AND his staff then turned to the Scholarship Publication Committee for financial aid. Edwards said Don McCoy, chairman of the committee and prosecution at KU, and his committee granted $600 in aid to the magazine.
wife privately pay for the publication.
The aid was viewed as more or less an token contribution, said Edwards, because most people view the magazine as a source of information. He is really a misconception, however, since Edwards and his
"Just a few months ago we got a letter from McCoy that said we were cut down to $450 next year and $150 the next year. It cost somewhere around $2100 a year. The Modern Drama", said Edwards.
McCoy explained that the cutback in funds did not affect solely Modern Drama In all, four Modern Drama In all were affected by the cutback.
THE SCHOLARSHIP Publications Committee, said McCoy, is designed to encourage students to take an active role in University oriented journals. The encouragement is emphasized in the program of self-sufficiency. Once this point is reached the committee lessens its ties with the self-sufficiency team.
Edwards explained that he had
sent letters to the University of Washington. Berkeley, and an email offer for financial assistance to put out the publication from these
Somehow word got to the State University of New York at Binghamton and Toronto as they were seeking a new publishing site.
Toronto University was the first university to offer education and offered seemed more appealing. The decision was then made to move the magazine to Toronto in 2016.
Edwards said, "We've never found a situation in which the girl dropped off. They've always been dropping off, and they're still increasing."
THE FIRST QUARTER of publication had over 150 subscribers. By the end of the
first year the number of subscriptions had risen to 700. Today the magazine boasts a circulation over 3,000 copies per quarter.
Edwards said the magazine was not translated into the language of each country. All publications remain in English, with a few exceptions that are French. French when they reach France.
"Practically all libraries of any
subserbe to Modern Drama",
said Edwards. "A great many
libraries in foreign countries also
subscribe to Modern Drama."
Edward's staff consists of himself, his wife and four children. He said he had spent 15 summers in Lawrence without a vacation while working as a teacher.
Modern Drama has no real competition simply because it is
CERTAIN DIFFICULTIES will be encountered in the move. For example, over 5,000 bank checks of Publication policy require that about 200 copies of each issue be used for such reasons as publicity.
a unique journal in its field, Edwards said. It is not a theatre journal but contains scholarly articles in the field of drama.
"Our garage is filled with Modern Drama, our basement is filled with Modern Drama, my wife has a modern Drama, with Modern Drama, the basement of Sudler is filled with Modern Drama, and I have to ship it all to Canada. I don't know what happens in the shipping will cost." Edwards said.
Edwards will not move to Columbia to magazine and his wife will will move to the staff solely as honorary editors, but someone else will own the firm.
Continued from Page 1
strikers when they realize
combined action will increase
everybody's standard of living."
and "the kids are touring Kansas, Iowa and
Nebraska organizing YSJP
chapters on "virtually every
campus."
Grady said the YSDJ did not know the elements or the middle class. He said a socialist revolution would not occur until the American Civil War.
Socialist Workers Party ...
Jenness and Pulley are on the ballot in 38 states and in 12 states (49%) that have allowed them to may place them on the ballot. The party plained "every objection" in the path of third party candidates in order to maintain their monopoly
will give way to socialism."
like to have us believe that this generation will continue to accept capitalism but they won't. The same thing applies to revolutionary party as the conscious manifestation of an unconscious process. We see the dynamics of society moving from a narrower set of roles and higher forms of socialism.
"I am anxious that all the people on the hill give to the campus drive instead of to the downtown drive so that KU will credit for recognizing the importance of cancer research," he said.
The 1972 drive, with a $2,500 goal, will be in conjunction with the American Cancer Society, which begins its annual drive Monday. The company will donate April 17. This year's slogan is "We wanna out die cancer in your lifetime."
interview in the August 1971 issue of Playboy in which McGovern said, "... When it comes right down to the candidates will be elected, 400 of those people (party leaders) at the next national convention."
The University of Kansas尝
赛在2017年作为美国癌症会
的American Cancer Society
in 1971, Bill Easton, Chairman
of the KU Breast Division Care
Drive, said.
"Socialism is the most obvious in nature of this transition." That's why we're opting. We know, in the end, we'll win. Feudalism gave way to feudalism.
Any registered voter,
voter,
representation or Democrat
for a third candidate.
BUSTIN SAID a voter would
not throw in a vote by匆忙
voting.
Since 1936 the American Communist Party has endorsed every Democratic presidential candidate, said, because the communists are antirevolutionary and, on the one hand, to the right of the Democrats.
Edwards has been in Lawrence since 1946. Since originating Modern Drama, Edwards has had one and one half hours a semester off from his teaching duties. Now that he won't be able to magazine any more, he will resume a full teaching load.
"THE CAPITALISTS would
Grady said voters could believe the YSPJ because the socialists had nothing to hide and because they would make the revolution.
"WE, AS INDIVIDUALS, should know the urgency of the problem that cancer presents," he said.
He said the Democratic and Republican parties did not think that it would take a basic social revolution to change this country. "We designed our program designed to bring about social change but there is no actual difference between their programs in reality are different," he said. "I cannot ignore the real problems the people face, he said.
"THE YSJP does not radically people. People radialize themselves after seeing the depreedations of capitalism. The depreedations to unite dissident elements which already exist," Grady said.
"The kind of person we want to recruit is the person who is now struggling against some form of problem and wants to recruit activists and we offer a conceive, clear, objective, hidden; our contributions are disclosed every week in our newspaper," The Militant. "The Militant."
Eaton, who has directed the KU drive for women among most people, either from fear or ignorance, regard cancer as a disease that "could kill."
"Masses of the American people are going to start moving we are going to do; we aren't what we are going to do; we aren't them. The people can make logical decisions and one of them, will be that they want a revolution."
Bustin pointed to a McGovern
The money contributed on campus and in the rest of Douglas County will be used for cancer research in Kansas.
"All we have is the truth but it's a powerful weapon. It's better to vote for what you want and not what you don't. What you don't want and get it."
EASTON SAID he hoped to enlist the aid of students majoring in physical education to canvass for contributions.
Cancer Drive Starts
Buttons encribed with "Send a Mouse to College" will be worn by canvassers and given to
people who contribute 50 cents or more. This saying reminds people of the need for mice in continuing cancer research.
LHS Training Program Is Teaching Trade Skills
Any person belonging to an organized living group who is assigned a role, responsibilities contributions from Easton's group is encouraged to contact someone with whom they share similar needs.
Most of the jobs not only give the students a chance to practice their skill, but also a chance to earn a salary.
UBU ROI
(King Ubu)
April 6-15 8 p.m.
864-3982
KU EXPERIMENTAL
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Does a Motion Picture or Television career interest you?
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in
By UIANN KANZIG Kansan Staff Writer
TO ORDER. SEND NAME, ADDRESS, AND CAREER
CHOICE ABOVE TO -AUSTON CAREER GUIDE BOOKS.
P.O. Box 1059, Studio City, Calif., 91604. Enclose $2.00 and 3c for
postage and handling for each book.
842-2047
usually takes the form of a part-time job in a hospital, hospital or care home, school, or construction site.
Before 1969, ninety-one per cent of Lawrence High School seniors were graduating with a handicap; they had no saleable college diplomas.
This deficiency was revealed through a study done by Daryl Jehle, an instructor at Lawrence High School.
Since that time, however,
Trained Related Academic
Demonstrate Success
(TRADES) has
incorporated into the
school's
RAY AUDIO
The program now gives 70 students a year practical skills and the program's dropout rate is less than one per cent.
Red
Baron
presents
WILL
FOXX
Wednesday
and
Thursday
The students attend classes two or three hours a day, usually in the morning. For the remainder of the week, they work field work in their area of study.
BESIDES TRAINING in tucumcari vocational areas such as food service, nursing, educational assistance and pre-carpentry, the system emphasizes practical skills. The English class involves reading and discussing newspapers, rather than letter writing.
Information on checking accounts, financial institutions, union agreements and other job requirements on the class. According to Jehle, the goal of this course is to make the student successful. THE AFTERNOON
During the morning classes, students work on graduation requirements and courses such as "General Related" Jeele Shihui "Intermediate" knowledge provide students with useful knowledge in the field of business.
Wednesday Special
Pitchers . . . . 75°
Guys . . . . 75°
Girls . . . FREE
711 WEST 23rd • MALL SHOPPING CENTER
במחרוזת החדשה נהגדיר את הקטע האחרון.
ROBINSON'S
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No madam,
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we cut them.
Hunting for the latest styles? Well, madam, put away your bow and arrow, pick up your MasterCharge Card and away we go! Shoe Rock has the style you want and at a price that'l amaze you. This krinkle-patent sandal in Red, White & Navy Blue is yours for a fantastic low $7.00.
Open Mon.-Saf. 10:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.—Open Sunday Noon 'til 6 p.m.
Meadowbrook 800 Feet West of 15th & Iowa
NOW LEASING NEW STUDENT APARTMENTS for FALL & SUMMER
featuring:
- 84 STUDIOS — $135 TO $160 (HOUSES TWO)
- 25 SMALL ONE BEDROOMS — $160 TO $165
- Newest Shag Carpeting & Drapes All Furnished & Utilities Paid All Electric Kitchens All Have Walled Patio or Balcony
- 59 ONE BEDROOMS — $165 TO $180
- 30 TWO BEDROOMS — $200 Newest Shag Carpeting & Drapes Unfurnished — Gas & Water Paid All Have Walled Patio or Balcony All Electric Kitchen With Dishwasher Furniture — $22.50 to $36.50
- TENNIS, BASKETBALL, SOFTBALL & SWIMMING
- 70 ACRES LEISURE AREA—WIDE OPEN SPACES
- CABLE TV — NO CHARGE
- COMPLETE MAINTENANCE & PEST CONTROL SERVICE
- LAUNDRY & STORAGE FACILITIES—ALL BUILDINGS
- GARBAGE DISPOSALS & FREE TRASH PICK-UP
- SNOW REMOVAL—SECURITY—PARKING PLENTIFUL
- GAS FIRED, OUTDOOR GRILLS — BEAUTIFUL LANDSCAPE
- BUILDING & GLASS INSULATION
- NO HEAVY CAR & TRUCK TRAFFIC, NOISE, FUMES
- WALK TO KU — SHOPPING AREA NEARBY
842-4200
OPEN
DAILY!
Office
101 T Windsor 15th & Iowa
PHONE
secr any vetc
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WARM
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.116
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Rock Chalk History Examined
Thursday, April 6, 1972
See Page 5
KU Moves To Increase Pay May 1
The University of Kansas is proceeding with the implementation of civil service pay raises for the May 1 payroll, even though Gov. Robert Deckham has not yet signed the omnibus appropriations bill which includes funding for the raises. Philip N. Rankin, director of Personnel Services for KU, said Wednesday.
"As of last night (Tuesday) he had not signed the bill," Rankin said, "and he will have to sign it before the checks can be made out."
Rankin said paperwork was being processed to be sent to Topeka as soon as possible.
Raymond Nichols, KU executive secretary, said he did not think there was any chance of Docking using his line-item veto power to eliminate the pay raises.
"It is our understanding that the governor is opposed to some of the items added to the measure toward the end of the session," Nichols said. "The pay-raise item was in early and we have been assured that it will not be cut."
The demand for the pay raise was among the issues which precipitated a 10-day walkout by some KU civil service employs earlier this year.
The governor has authority to delete individual items from appropriations measures, and his criticism of excessive legislative spending has prompted many to think he will use his veto power to dissuade the appropriations in the omnibus bill.
The bill includes funds for a five per cent salary increase for classified civil service workers at KU. Some employees have been eligible for the raise since November 1970, but have had to wait until now because of a shortage of funds.
The increase will affect clerk-typists in University offices, food service employees, building and grounds workers and other civil service classifications. Rankin said the exact number of workers eligible for the raise had not yet been determined.
NEW COUNCIL
ADAM
G. BURKIS
J. DUREAN
H. BOLYH
B. G.WILL
L. EAR CRIN'
V. BUSKLE
DAVE "Purie" miller
BULLY LAFLIW
G. LANCE
S. GORDON
Kansas Staff Photo by ED LAILLO
Kansas Staff Photo by ED LALO
Tuek Dunean Counts Votes
To Petition for Legalization
KU Senate Approves Marijuana Resolution
Senate elected 10 to University Council
By CATHY SHERMAN
and HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writers
A petition urging the state government to remove criminal penalties for the possession, sale or use of marijuana in Kansas was passed by the Student Senate Wednesday night by a roll call vote of 46-37.
Besides removal of criminal penalties, the resolution which will be sent to state legislature is not yet final. "that immediate pardon be granted in Kansas to all persons convicted of possession, sale or use of marijuana and other illicit substances such offense be immediately released."
Out-State Fees Challenged
By JUDY HENRY
By JUDY HENRY
Kansan Staff Writer
The easing of voting regulations has allowed the majority of college students to vote. We have also made students who registered in their university community have filed suits in three states to challenge the legality of out-of-state voting, according to a recent Associated Press report.
The article said the suits were filed on the basis that registration and voting rights in the campus community made the students residents of that state.
This is the first year that people in the 18 to 24 age group could register and the first year that students could register.
more, and in their parents' district which may be out of state.
A VOTER registration drive at the University of Kansas this week has enabled many students to register to be Candidates for the presidential election in November.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary,
said the presentation was too long to
consider at SenEx's last meeting of the
1994 Board. He said all likelihood byp-
pass SenEx completely.
Traffic Control Plan May By-Pass SenEx
The University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) did not consider Wednesday a controversial traffic control effort, and did not guard and Memorial Drive one-way streets.
Douglas County Clerk D. E. Mathia said Tuesday that KU students could register to vote in Douglas County if they had lived in Kansas six months and in their precinct 30 days, and if they considered Lawrence their home. He said many students didn't have a degree and had to consider Lawrence their home to be eligible to register in Lawrence
a new SenEx will be chosen today at a combined meeting of the University and
It was hoped that SenEx would hear the KU Traffic Control Board's plan, which would also place four to five hundred parking meters on campus, and then allow an open hearing for suggestions by students and faculty.
Alterations in the Senate Code are now being formulated in the Organization and Legislature.
The traffic control plan and restructuring of University government are the major problems that will continue, according to William M. Lacas, associated with the School of Architecture and Urban Design and outgoing SenEx chairman.
University Council.
Lacas said that during his year as SenXen chairman he had seen a deepening concern for issues on the part of students. At the same time, he said, he has seen students putting more effort into effecting long-term changes by working within the system.
Lucas said that SenEx recommended a comprehensive study of all University committees. It is uncertain, he said, whether some committees are still valuable or whether they should be eliminated.
Lucas said that the one example of failure to work within the system—the February Sisters—indicated some of the pitfalls of this kind of activity.
Strengthening of the role of SenEx as a faculty-student advisory board to the chancellor is good. Lucas said. It provides an alternative for both students and faculty, he said.
Mathia said he estimated that 1,500 persons between the ages of 18 and 21 had registered in Douglas County since January. The estimate included KU students and Baker University students, he said.
Although the registration process requires students to sign a statement to the effect that Lawrence is their home, establishing Kansas residence for the purpose of paying in-state tuition is more difficult.
Lucas said that the cooperation between SenEx and Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. had been excellent. They worked closely with each other on a number of issues, and a relationship produced positive results, he said.
CHARLES OLDFATHER. University attorney and professor of law, said a student was presumed to be out-of-state unless the student could rebut to the contrary with clear, convincing and polite evidence. He said there were several tests in the university applied to students seeking residency for the purpose of paying in-state fees.
Presently, the regulations say a student must be an adult, 21 years old, although Oldfather said he thought the Board of Education had followed after the Majority Age Bill was signed.
To attain residency, a student must live in Kansas for six months, either as a student or a non-student. He must also be virtually self-supporting and not be dependent on someone else for his sustenance.
OLDFATHER SAID all disacceptable ties with another state had to be broken before a student could be considered a Kansas resident. A student had to do what any other resident would do before he would be considered for residency, Oldfather said.
This means working in Kansas, paying Kansas income tax, buying Kansas license tags and having a Kansas driver's license, be said.
Oldfather cited the recent Supreme Court decision that struck down Tennessee's one-year residency requirement for voter registration as an example of concern for those people who are registered to vote. The voter election, making them invisible to vote
He said that concern about a change of possession caused the relaxation ofwithdrawal.
THE AP ARTICLE cited the Tennessee case as a possible precedent in ruling unconstitutional the one-year residency requirement for in-state tuition.
The resolution also urges a student opinion poll to be held this spring "over the issue of whether or not marijuana should be legalized."
Oldfather helped the Shapiro case had more bearing on the question of tuition. In this case the Supreme Court struck down a Connecticut one-year residency regulation allowing a woman to receive immediate welfare benefits.
The resolution was passed after a lengthy discussion that centered on possible repercussions that might occur in the state because of the Senate's stand.
Charges may soon be filed against two or three University of Kansas students for defrauding Southwestern Bell Telephone, Westfield Northwest Bell, Myrlen James, said Wednesday.
Phone Co. Investigates Fraud Cases
"We're investigating a total of 15 cases involving K. U. students who use false calling numbers or false credit card numbers to make long distance calls," James said. "We've identified about seven of them." He then the opportunity to clear the matter by making an appointment with them or writing a letter."
"Some cooperate and others have been given the opportunity to make restitution, but haven't come around, so it's a matter of locating the students now," James said. He is an alternative, according to James, is filing charges with the Douglas county attorney.
Single Tax Service Error Reported
About two years ago, a traveling salesman registered a complaint with the Consumer Protection Division of the Kansas attorney general's office. He charged that a major income tax preparation service had accrued him the most instead of paying interest on his return. He should have received a BIR refund for the complaint.
"It will definitely have a political effect," said Gus di Zerega, Lawrence graduate student and one of the co-authors of the resolution.
Kansan Staff Writer
The salesman also charged that he had to lose $30 in travel expenses because of and out-of-waiting.
The attorney general's office recovered the $16. It could not prove that the company was responsible for the information about his travel expenses and so could not recover the $500.
By MARTI STEWART
"It was just his word against theirs," said Lance Burr, assistant attorney general. "He said he had given them the information, but their files had nothing to do with it. And he had. There was nothing we could do about it because we had no evidence."
He also said there was often a time lag between the filing of an income tax return and auditing. Sometimes, he said, people did not know they "were being taken" until several years after they had filed their returns.
The Better Business Bureau of Northeast Kansas has received few complaints about preparation services. Marilyn White, an employee of the bureau, said the complaints that were received concerned slow service.
BURR SAID that this was the only complaint they had received about income
tax return preparation services, but that he suspected there were some services in the state that were dishonest or incompetent.
Burr said that unless the attorney general's office had several complaints about a specific service there was no cause for investigation.
He said people in the state might not know that they could direct complaints about these services to the attorney general's office.
"WE GET CALLS of inquiry on all the services that advertisers, she said, "but very few."
White said many people thought the services were responsible for any errors
made in filling out the returns. The taxpayer is ultimately responsible, she says. "It's not a job that you want to do."
"It is important for the taxpayer to know," she said, "that preparation of an order requires attention on the returns. It also is important for them to know that the services are not able to represent them before the Internal Service in the event they are audited."
According to federal law, any person wishing to represent a client before the IRS must pass an examination and have a tax filing. The IRS practices the Practice of the Treasury Department. Unless an agent has this card, it is illegal for him to imply in advertising that he can file an audit.
WHITE SAID, "The calls we get are usually about small services. We have very few complaints about the larger, well-known firms."
She said that, to her knowledge, there had been no indication of dishonest preparation services in northeast Kansas. However, she said, the bureau encourages taxpayers to fill out their own returns unless they have special tax problems.
Robert Fuller, director of the zone office of the IRS in Topeka, agreed that taxpayers should at least try to fill out their own returns.
"Most preparation services are reputable," he said. "But they can only work from the information the taxpayer gives them. Errors in tax returns usually result from a taxpayer's failure to inform the seller about certain income or exemptions."
Di Zerega said Douglas county candidates and possibly state candidates would have to take a stand on the Senate's resolution because of the large number of young people eligible to vote in Douglas county.
Fuller said that last year a man had gone to every preparation service in the city.
"You can't expect the services to be able to draw everything out of you. You have to tell them as completely as you can about your earnings."
**HE GOT COMPLETELY different totals from almost all of them**, Fuller added. Then he brought the cookies and the services were crooked. I tried to explain to him that it didn't mean anything because he might have withdrawn some information from her.
Brian Bauerler, Lawrence graduate student and another of the resolution's authors, said the resolution would force legislators to begin "address themselves to questions that students have."
Fuller said that only the taxpayer himself knew everything about his own
Di Zerega argued against the fear some senators expressed that adverse publicity about the resolution might affect state funding of higher education.
"I may be naive," he said, "but I thought one of the purposes of education was to learn."
The other co-authors of the resolution were graduate students Leroy McDermott, Daw Awbrey and Richard Mackenzie, but Awbrew decided at the meeting that the resolution was not a strong enough stand for the Senate to take
"We ought to go all out and get together early in May and sponsor a smoke-in at Potter Pond, get a few people arrested and really publicize the issue," he said.
Before the new Senate passed the marijuana resolution, the outgoing Senate, which was also present at the meeting, elected three special representatives to the 1972-73 Student Senate: Jerry Slaughter, Salina saliner; John House, Raytown, Mo., senior, and John Wulf, Morton Grove, Ill. sophomore.
These representatives are elected from members of the outgoing Senate who were not re-elected and are chosen as hold-over senators to serve in the in-coming Senate. They are also chosen to serve on the University Council.
Seven Senators from the new Senate were also elected by the incoming Senate to serve on the University Council: Louis Scott, Lawrence senior; Richard Mackenzie, Hutchinson first year law student; Susie Cowden, Kansas City, Mo. junior; David Miller, Eudora senior; Molly Lafflin, Lawrence gene; Gene
Dorris, KU graduate student, and Bill Noell, Ballinw, M. junior.
The new Senate elected three members to the Committee Board: Molly Lafflin, Lawrence senior; Richard Mackenzie, Lawrence junior; Roberto and Les Schwartz, Overland Park junior.
The Committee Board will interview Senate committee applicants and choose
The Senate allocated $300 to the Emporium, the Senate sponsored book exchange located in the Union. The allocation is in addition to the $600 allocated to the Emporium in December of last year.
Bill O'Neill, Student Senate treasure,
said the original allocation to the
Emporium had not been large enough to
maintain the Emporium and to pay the
salaries of those who had been working
there.
There was discussion whether the Emporium was providing an effective and valuable service to the students and whether it deserved further funding.
Molly Laffin, Lawrence senior, said the allocation was not as much to continue the Emporium as to insure back pay to the Emporium staff.
Kathy Allen, Topeka sophomore and body body vice-president, said she reached the position of administrator had been very successful in spite of her lack of facilities and flaws in original organization. She said over $2,000 had been exchanged between students since the fall semester.
A motion made by Peter George, Lawrence graduate student to eliminate the $1,000 Senate allocation to the Jahawkhawk has been allocated by StudEx in March.
O'Neill said the Jayhawk Jamboree Committee had already planned its program with the $1,000 in the budget. He said that it wouldn't be fair to leave the bands without any rehearsals in a bind, since the bands, publicity and beer have already been arranged.
O'Neill said the funds, which remain from the old All Student Council social fund, were collected with the purpose of throwing student parties. These funds were then financed fines imposed on various organizations for social infractions, he said.
Mohammed Amin, Ralsenjan, Iran senior and chairman of the Academic Affairs Committee, made a suggestion that his committee be eliminated.
"I don't see any reason for this committee, anymore," he said. "With the title it has, there really isn't much it can do."
wei
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Beer Beersed at Senate Meeting
Debbie Eblinger, Chesterfield, Mo., junior, imbies
2
Thursday, April 6, 1972
University Daily Kansas
News Briefs By The Associated Press
Docking Signs Tax Lid Bill
TOPEKA—Democratic Gov. Robert Docking announced Wednesday he had signed a bill extending the tax lid five months but warned the Republican-controlled legislature he intended "to hit it from the blind side in the 1975 legislature and effectively kill the
Docking stumped the state in recent weeks to win an extension of one of his patent legislative items and the lawmakers finally agreed to the agreement.
Dole Expects Kennedy Bid
WASHINGTON-Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., the Republican national chairman, said the Wisconsin primary may force Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., out in the open as a presidential candidate.
2 Bombs Explode in Belfast
"It opens the door to Sen. Kennedy who heretofores has been the point man and hatchet man." Dole said.
"The Wisconsin primary has left the Democrats leaderless," Dole said.
BELFAST. Two bombs shattered calm in Northern Ireland as the outlawed Irish Republic Army debated possible peace now.
The bombs in Belfast, one of which was found and intentionally denoted by troops, caused no casualties. They came amid reports that William Whiteleaf, the British minister named overseer of the bombings, released the release of 60 suspected guerrillas interned without trials.
Thunder on Sun Discovered
PASADAEN, Calif. — Following up the chance observation of a student assistant who sol astronomers have discovered what they had never seen.
Astronomers at the California Institute of Technology have observed gigantic waves undulating outward at speed up to 25,000 miles per hour from the center of sunspots, the puzzling dark blobs on the sun's surface that often are larger than the earth.
Many solar astronomers consider sunspots the key to understanding the processes at work in the sun.
Prosecutor Admits Shootings
SAN JOSE, Calif. — A prosecutor crippled by a bullet in the Marin County courthouse shotout said publicly for the first time that he
In a voice quawering with emotion, Deputy Dist. Atty. Gary
Grayfield testified in a wheelchair at the Angela Davis trial
about the April 17, 2008 shooting.
Miss Davis, 28, a black Communist, is charged with murder, dna analysis and contamination with the shootout. The state said he helped the violence.
Berrigan Jury Frees 5
Complete Wisconsin returns compiled by the News Election
NEW YORK'S MAYOR John V.
Lindsay dropped out of the
national race after a sixth-place
finish in the primary.
"These verdicts are yours and yours alone, and you don't need to be in touch with anybody." U.S. District Court told the women nine and less dismissed them after their week-long quest for a verdict that could change their lives.
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Michigan, the state's governor of Wisconsin, said the national campaign now is a tussip. "I think I'm a strong contender," he said.
"There will be many, many people who disagree and there will be just as many who agree," said Herman.
"We consider what happened something of a victory. The government based a whole indemnity against seven people on the exchange of correspondence so two," she told a news conference.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)—The Rev. PPH Berrigan and the nun who served as his lieutenant in the antwar movement were convicted of Wednesday's letter in and out of a federal prison.
Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, who finished second, said he had proven "I am a viable candidate."
He said he was referring to a bill which provides for seizure and forlence of conveyances in transporting certain drugs.
He said the forfeiture provision was of major significance to law enforcement agencies.
The property may be retained by the law enforcement agency for official use or sold with the intention to be used for payment of expenses.
MILWAUKEE (AP)—Sen. George S. McGovenn of West Virginia is an even-money Democratic presidential nomination after his breakthrough victory in the Wisconsin election.
TOPEKA (AD) - Attty. Gen. Vern Miller said Wednesday a bill enacted by the 1972 legislature and signed by Gov. Ronald Reagan has significant deterrent to person trafficking in illicit drugs.
Miller said the seizure and forfeiture provisions were in the uniform controlled substances act which places all narcotic, hypnotic, somnifacient and stimulating substances into their possession and their accepted medical uses and potential for use.
A jury deadlocked on charges that they conspired with five other presidents in the aide. Henry Kissling. The aide was freed by Kissling. The
"WE ALL HAVE a feeling of celebrating a victory," said Sister Elizabeth, who faces a court case as a result of the conviction.
It was McGovenn's first presidential campaign for the White House and he said it clearly established him as a major presidential candidate.
"The provision allows seizure and forfeiture of controlled substances, cumstances, and seizure and forfeiture of all conveyances, including aircraft, vehicles or vessels which are used in or involved with any manner to facilitate the transportation for the purpose of sale or receipt of any controlled substance which is in violation of the act.
AT THE HEART of the session, the senator pronounced conspiracy charge accusing the "Harrisburg Seven" of scheming to kidnap a female tenant belonging tunnels in Washington and vandalizing draft boards in the city.
The attorney general said this power of forfeiture would be a great incentive to local law enforcement agencies.
As the candidates headed for new primary contests, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota surveyed his third-party candidate in Wisconsin and claimed it really wasn't very significant.
Berrigan faces a maximum of 40 years in prison as a result of his convictions.
The other five defendants were not involved in the letter smugglings, and thus were not engaged in any way in the verdict.
Instead, Berrigan and his assistant, Sister Elizabeth McAlister, were convicted of stealing two cars and out of Lewisburg, Pa. federal penitentiary after the first term, he begins a form be still is serving.
Candidates Evaluate Test
This went by the boards as a result of the jury's verdict.
Eqbal Ahmad, a defendant,
plan is to get out of here as soon
as I can and go into the streets to
protest the war in Vietnam. We
Avon Praised for Telling Ingredients of Cosmetics
Avon said the disclosure policy, first of its kind in the industry, was instituted without fanfare in Georgia and Virginia. Knauer, special
WASHINGTON (AP)—The nation's biggest cosmetics producer gained praise Wednesday for breaking the inertia by providing users with listings of ingredients in its products.
assistant to President Nixon for consumer affairs.
"I am glad to say that Avon Products, Inc., has broken the tradition by announcing that it will supply consumers, upon request, with a list of ingredients in any of their products," she said. "This is important for the American Marketing Association International in New York.
Doctors and government officials advocating cosmetic ingredient disclosure said the move by Avon Products doesn't go far enough. But they said it should help Americans avoid or for the estimated 60,000 cosmetic injury injured every year.
Miller Extols Law Aiding Drug Arrests
An Avon spokesman said the Center should provide a complete ingredient list for any product upon receiving reasonable demand.
Service gave McGoventry 30 per cent of the record primary vote, Wallace 22 per cent, Humphrey 21 per cent and Muskie 10 per cent.
McGovern gained 54 national convention delegate votes by sweeping the statewide contests, and defeating the nine congressional districts.
Humphrey got the other 13 delegates with narrow victories over McGovenn in two congressional districts.
President Nixon swept the Republican primary with 97 per
Vast numbers of GOP voters
abandoned the no-contest
Republican ballot to choose
the Democrat's
instead
The spokesman said a reasonable request is one from someone who apparently intends to try a specific product.
THE MESSAGE of that was simple crossover leading to Humphrey's contention that the student would test least of Democratic preference.
"If someone writes in and just says send me a listing of your ingredients, don't consider them uncontrollable the spokesman. The spokesman said the firm has received fewer letters since the policy change lists since the policy change.
Wallace benefited from the Republican switches, and so did McGovern.
There's no law requiring manufacturers to divulge ingredients, although Rep. Leonore Sullivan, D-Mo., frequently has introduced his labored work on similar bill introduced by Rep. Frank E. Evans, D-Dolo, who picked up 38 censorship this year.
Mrs. Krauner, the food and Drug Administration and the Antiretroviral Society have been prodding for years trying to find out what's in their hands.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The White House says it is keeping all options open in coping with the threat of a new political and military realities, however have narrowed these to determining how much bombing to use.
"We're certainly not going to send the Marines back in," said one Pentagon official.
Theoretically, the Nixon administration has open to it many alternatives besides intensified air attacks on the enemy forces in South Vietnam, on North Vietnamese concentrations in neighboring southern Laos and on the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
Bombing raids into the lower North Vietnamese panhandle, above the demilitarized zone, in support of operations and disrupt troop and supply movements and staging areas from which the offensive was
—Reversal of the withdrawal and reintroduction of U.S. ground troops to help the South Vietnamese resel the attack
THESE POSSIBILITIES include:
- Punitive bombing raids
aimed at supply, aid and training
bases and military targets closer
to the port city of Haiphong and
Tickets for the B. B. King Kansas Relays concert April 22 will go on sale Monday at the SAU office in the Kansas Union. Ticket prices may be purchased for either the 7 or the 10 p.m. performance.
—Commitment of the relatively small number of U.S.
Politics Limits War Plans
Ticket Selling For B. B. King Starts Monday
Buess blues guitarist B.B. King, who will be performing in Hochman's concert one of the world's greatest blues guitarists. He has been performed for over 25 years, and has played concerts on more than 100 venues.
This year's concert is under the direction of Dave Hull, Whittier, Calif., junior, and director of the Vices Special Events Committee.
ground troops still in Vietnam to the battle.
-Acceleration of the U.S. troop pullout.
Such an action would hand Damascus the ammunition to claim that the administration had broken promise end to U.S. involvement
We have not been frightened by our government."
Commitment of nearly 10,000 ground-combat soldiers still in Vietnam would surely increase American casualties and invite political critics to assert that the administration was wasting lives.
THE NIXON administration's political strategists know that the president is going to issue this presidential campaign year, would be to send American troops to Iraq.
Berrigan and Sister Elizabeth the air of relief vanished.
These troops are only supposed to guard American support bases and units during the withdrawal.
Alternatively, any crash speed up in the withdrawal of U.S. forces can be prevented by Nixon administration insistence that it will never yield to military pressure.
is not in a good position to reintroduce major ground forces into Vietnam in time to have any decisive effect
A decision to send major Army ground forces back to Vietnam would have been a logistical effort that would reverse the gear of a withdrawal force.
THE FIVE defendants on whose verdict the jury could not agree were Ahmad, 41; the Rev Neil McLaughlin, 31; the Rev Joseph Wendrich, 36; Anthony Cain Seibhold, wife, Mary Cain Seibhold. 33
NEITHER the convicted priest nor the nun displayed any emotion, however.
APART FROM the political considerations, the United States
Ahmad is a Pakistani Moslem associated with the Adil Shah family and international Affairs in Chicago, McLaughlin and Wendover are Roman Catholic priests, Sooblik Chaudhary and his wife is a former nun.
These considerations seem to point toward the probability of some sort of stepped-up U.S. bombing, which would be in line with President Nixon's assertions that the war will be used where necessary.
The defendants had smiled and embraced in the locked courtroom in advance of the jury's opening of a possible deadlock spread.
with the announcement that he jury had deadlocked on five of the defendants but convicted
The jury had convicted Berrigan on Easter Sunday on a single count of snuggling a letter from his sister to the defendant penultimately on May 14, 1970.
Douglas, 31, was a star in the game, which revolved also around an exchange of 24 letters in all between Berrington and Sister
His emissary at the time was a fellow convict, Boyd Douglas Jr., who a week later became an FBI informant against the priest.
The conviction made Berrigan liable to 10 years in prison. The three smuggling counts added by the police carry an additional 30 years.
The sending of additional B2S bombers to the Western Pacific and the movement of a fourth US carrier into northeast namesate coast underscores this.
Archie Bunker Act Goes to Reno Club
"It happens every time I wear this here suit," he says understandingly. "I get a hellova hand."
Victorian Tattoo Artist
RENO, New (AP) - Wearing a armp black tuxedo top off with a crushed sleeve. Archie Breeze steps onto the supper club stage and sneers at her friend.
Sponsored by:
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Forum No. 6 of a Series
Council Room - 4 p.m.
Thursday, April 6th
The audience roars, signalling Carrol O'Connor's successful debut as a night club entertainer
Coming Forums: Mexico—Canada on a student budget.
Excorted by smoke from a long, brown cigar, O'Connor shoved the camera himself on a stool. He hands, on knees, and surveys the audience which paid an average amount to eat dinner and watch his sats.
He has come to this gambling mecca, he tells them, "to talk to you face-ter-face about a few things I got on my mind."
George Wallace has come out in favor of busing, he announces, "as long as the federal government pays for the buses, and they build a brug from Alabama to West Africa. And Humphrey will go along with the idea as long as blacks to build the bridge."
"The Polacks voted for him to "get even with the Irish for tellin' them," he said. The Italians voted for him to prove it was the Irish, and the colored people voted for him 'cause they were black. He thought he was the best one yet."
Gesturing frequently with the cigar he cups in his hand, he spends 35 minutes dispensing the philosophy the audience can learn about and 'Family' show, expects. He tells, for instance, about his
BOOKS - BIBLES - POSTERS - GIFTS - FRAMING
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congressman who got elected despite the fact he is Polish.
After warning the audience to
walk out for "how to show La L",
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Bunker takes the stage over to
"the man I work for." Carroll
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THE UNIQUE CHRISTIAN BOOKSTORE
CROSS REFERENCE
In the cultured voice of a man who holds a master's degree in music, you might thank the audience for the warm reception it gave to "If, you'll pardon the expression, my appearance in a supper club."
711 West 23rd Street Malls Shopping Center Lawrence, Kansas 66044
RICKYO
UNKNOWN FOLKS
I think it was Pete Johnson, writing long ago in the Los Angeles Free Press about John Braun and A.M. A.M., who said that Braden's music had the ability to call up other music from the face vanished from theface Bewer and Shipley work in much the same way, recearning a Mid-1960s band whose members were around the turn of the century, a time when the memory of Indian was still clean and fresh in town and vice versa, a time when all of us (at least in retrospect) fond of fromen young it's a kind of fraternity. We will, probably, a product of all those Hospaling Cassy movies imaginations when we must need them, and now, when things are getting just a little too hard sort of gert to go on back there.
Tarko Road. Mike Brewer and Jim Simpson's third album second to be a solid and unpretentious country-folk duo, writing songs that are endearing, while they are endearing, with catchy, refilis and hummable lines. They have had the good fortune to be well-produced (by Nick Gravine) and well-presented (unfiling by Matthew Nickel) and Mark Naftalin on keyboards and Jerry Gargrave on pedal steel guitars. There no 12-leaves attempt at Dylansque imagery, no fancy instruments, but there is 12-leaves a possibility a grace. If nothing else, Brewer and Simpson give it all and it gives their album a grace that many are going to achingly strive for in the coming years.
At any rate, that's the reason I like Brewster and Shipley. What ever your reasons, I hope you do likewise
— LENNY KAY
turn itself into a sweet-memorial spiritual with which a lovely book of poems, a ball 'Sleeve Like A Louse Time' tells么么 in the same vein, the one about long after you leave the record, while "One Tie Over The Line" means of where those all-important moments of where they all-inflict the United States today
TARKIO ROAD, Brewer, and Shipley (Kama Surra KSBS 2024)
For instance, "Oh Mommy, which despite what you might think from the title, is really a Brown book," I wrote. "How it" says right here in the Con-net-tion — I'll really A-G-E at least as far as I am comforted, that's a great line, but taken in the context of the song in which she plays, almost drownings, boucy, good-time quality, it becomes not sinister, not threatenable, not amount downright friendly. But maybe it a bit late in this Nixian age to think of the Rev in such books, warm the heart, warm the heart, of heart, doesn't hear."
BREWER & SHIPLEY with Funk & Punch
Or consider the beautiful "Song
from Plate Tire" on the
Lakefront Central Capital.
And his last stand "to
go the lines, and frame it
by frames."
IN CONCERT
Sat., April 8th
10 p.m. Hoch Aud.
CROSS AND BIBLE
TICKETS: Kiel's Red Dog Office - SUA Office - Hoch. Night Of Performance
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KEEP THE FAITH — BLACK OAK ARKANSAS
PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION — EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 6, 1972
3
ers
BETTER BODY FITNESS
Kansan Photo by RON SCHLOERR
Girls Help Tip Scales
Deena Koehn, left, Learned sophomore, and Karen Hunt, Topeka freshman, add to Bill Adams' weight. Adams, Leneka junior and Triangle president, was one of six fraternity presidents kidnapped by the Sigma Kappa pledge class last night for their service project. The frats pledged to supply one of the two pounds of president. 100 cans were collected and will be given to the Emergency Service Council. Other frats were AKL, SAE, Lamda Chi Alpham, Delta Chi and Theta Tau.
Local Architects Favored by City
BY GARY NEIL PETERSON Kansan Staff Writer
Since 1967 Robertson, Peters,
Williams Architects of Lawrence
have done the planning and
design of c21 of the past 23 projects
According to Dennis Kallsen, assistant city manager of Lawrence the city has the skills to interview with prospective architectural firms anywhere for proposals and facilities for businesses.
The Mercer, city clerk, said, in the city commission holds these nine bikes that she wants they want. She said there are no bikes taken, but the letting is available.
However, Mercer said, the reasons for this are that architects have a professional ethic which does not allow them to conduct solicitous public relations, and the fees for this work have been standardized at 5 per project of projected construction costs.
In recent plans to renovate the Lawrence downtown business district the city hired Halpin Racine, San Francisco to do the design.
JACK ROSE, city commission member, said lately there has been some concern by city officials that work should be kept in town and not farmed to out other firms outside of Lawrence since the city was founded.
Rose said maybe the designing should have been done by a local firm. He said this would alleviate some of the communications. The job would be of the highest quality if the designer had produced, he said.
ROSE SAID he felt every architect in Lawrence had the same
chance to be awarded the job of the planning and designing city projects.
Mercer said several architects in Lawrence had been interviewed by the city commission since 1987.
Walter J. Hicks, architect, who has been practicing in Lawrence since he set up his own firm in 1969, said he has never contacted by anyone from the industry for prospective jobs for the city.
Hicks said, "If a project for less than a million dollars were to be planned, I think I could do the work." And views were reviewed by the city."
"I WOULD LIKE to be in a marriage," she said. "Nancy Hambleton, Lawrence vice-mayor, said. 'We should ensure we need equal and comparative pay.'"
Lawrence R. Good and
Lawrence W. McDonald, who
because he began in Lawrence
in 1971, he had not been contacted
for any projects since none were
released.
Robertson, Peters, Williams
Architects are responsible for
the city's public buildings,
defences as the municipal
swimming pool, Prairie
landing, and city-county government
building, and the public library.
MERCER AND Kallen pointed out the laws of the city there are no provisions outlining the procedure to be followed in the selection of the designers and that the way it is being done now
Good said he hopes the city in the future will come to him for his services.
The awarding of contracts for construction bids is written in the city codes.
Single Tax Service...
Continued from Page 1 financial matters and that he ran less risk of error if he filled out his own return.
IF THE HAXANY ADRDER decides to turn the preparation, Failer said. These are ways for him to protect dishonest prepares against dishonest prepares and prepared a set of guidelines for using preparation services.
—Never sign a blank return
—Do not sign a tax return
prepared in pencil. It could be
changed later
-Avoid **preparers** who 'guarantee' refuses or wants a percentage of the refund
-Aways have to '---' not to the
and your purchase of the refund.
—Always have your refund
check mailed to you—not to the
preparer.
Although there have been few complaints about income tax preparation services in Kansas, the IRS has just completed an investigation of "selected" preparers in this area, according to a statement by the director of the IRS in Wichita. Leonard said one of 'IBS'
national regions had conducted a survey and found that a few preparers were sending in 90 per cent of the claims, including fictitious claims.
B.F.Goodrich
BELTED TIRE SALE
At RAY STONEBACK'S
929 Mass.
843-4170
"We're not after the services that are just incompetent. We're after the ones that are intolerant or downright crooked."
"That region found some flyby operations on them, and themselves empty stores and then just disappeared, and some that guaranteed refunds," she said.
"We made the same kind of basic selection for investigation in this region," he said. "We had to get it on our hands because services were not on the level."
There were some pretty odd-looking returns coming in here, too.
"There are currently no laws requiring the licensing of these services," he said, "and the police investigator has said that we are not complying it. That would only cause problems of enforcing legislation."
BELTED WIDES
F70-14 Now $25.00 $2.50 F.E.T.
G70-14 Now $28.00 $2.60 F.E.T.
Whitewalls Add $3.00
BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG
G70-15 White Only $30.00 $2.60 F.E.T.
H70-15 White Only $33.00 $2.80 F.E.T.
BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG BFG
Fast Free Installation On-Car Hi Speed Balance $2.50 each
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
JAMBOREE
JAYHAWK
ji ji
SATURDAY
Relay Events, Memorial Stadium 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO
OBER'S MENS' & BOYS' CLOTHING
GENERAL JEANS
THE JAY SHOPPE
Potterstock at Potters Lake Featuring "TIDE" and "WHALE"
(Band will play in Union Ballroom if weather is poor)
These Lawrence Merchants have given their support to the Jayhawk Jamboree
Brewer and Shipley Concert Hoch Auditorium, 10:00 p.m.
April 7-9
FRIDAY
Free movie, "April Fools" Hoch Auditorium 7:00 & 9:30 p.m.
Street Dance, 9:00-12:00 p.m. O-Zone-featuring Chessmen Square
FREE BEER (Band will play in Union Ballroom if weather is poor)
KUOK MARATHON
Oliver Hall, April 7-9 9 a.m. Friday to midnite Sunday Free Foosball, Free Beer Car Smash Contests Prizes
BIKE RALLY
Tour to Lone Star April 8
Semi-experienced Criterium 12:30 Sunday
Neophyte Criterium 1:30 Sunday
Team Relay 2:30 Sunday
A.B.L. of A. Criterium 3:30 Sunday
The following establishments will be giving discounts during the Jayhawk Jamboree
THE BIERSTUBE THE HARBOR
THE JAYHAWK CAFE
THE WAGON WHEEL CAFE
JAYHAWK
jj
SUNDAY
JAMBOREE
Spring Sing Hoch Auditorium 1:00-6:00 p.m.
Gymkhana at Lewis Hall
11:00 a.m. Registration
12:00 noon First car begins
These Lawrence Merchants have given their support to the Jayhawk Jamboree
CAMPBELL'S CLOTHING STORE WEAVER'S DEPARTMENT STORE THE UNIVERSITY SHOP THE TOWN SHOP
4
Thursday, April 6, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Confronting Racism
Nonwhite citizens of this country have been acutely aware of white racism. Whites have had the good fortune to be able to ignore its existence. Often when a group of whites start to discuss the racial problem someone points out there are no blacks handy and therefore, we really can't talk about it. This is because of the memoirs of that group because it allows them to feel liberal since someone expressed the need for a black's opinion. It also lets them off without having to face the ugliness of the racial bias that is likely to be carefully hidden in the recesses of their minds and emotions. Instead of dealing with these rarely admitted feelings and thoughts whites ignore them. Unfortunately their existence exposed unconscious and subversive poets who takes more ominous than any blatant expression of racist attitudes.
The recently established Racial Awareness Resource Center at the University of Kansas is going to deal with white racism. The assumption the center is based on, as stated in a news release from the center, is "the causes of racial problems on campus, as in the nation, rest within the white population, not the nonwhite population as is commonly believed." People working with the center also believe that understanding of the consequences and dynamics of white racism "is
both personally liberating for whites, as well as nonwhites, and essential for pluralistic social survival." Since the center has these assumptions it will focus primarily on the whites of the University community, particularly those in residence halls.
The center will hold sessions for groups of whites who are willing to investigate the possibility that they are a source of racism. This is not something that one is eager to admit. Admin being easily at home being lodged within ourselves is likely to be followed by feelings of revulsion and disgust.
No matter how shattering such a realization may be to our self-esteem it is now time for whites to do something about our irrational racial biases other than just hide them. We do not really need a nonwhite to discuss our own feelings. It is likely that the presence of a nonwhite would stifle any honest evaluation of a white's feelings toward her or because of a sincerely to be pious or to avoid hurting someone. I hope that people in the residence halls as well as other people take advantage of the center's services if only for the opportunity for personal growth that can be achieved by being helped to be honest with one's self about complex and sometimes ugly feelings.
—Mary Ward
The War Winds Up
Remember that war that is winding down? Look again. The North Vietnamese have launched their biggest drive since the 1968 Tet offensive. The South Vietnamese 3rd Division that is charged with defending the area is on the run, as are american advisory troops in the area.
"The United States," says one source close to the situation, "is doing everything we can to protect people and keep casualties down."
A wise decision, I think—one that should have been made long ago. The problem is, this hardly means that the United States is playing no role in the newly expanded fighting. United States advisors headed by General Abrahams himself are trying desperately to halt the National Army's success in doing so depends almost entirely on U.S. air support for the retreating South Vietnamese troops.
So not only are we still heavily involved our involvement minus our own, but also ours.
This situation puts to rest two
statements that the administration has issued to the war mission for the past year.
That war that Vice-President Agnew said we were "well on the way to being in a position where we can say we've won. . ." is not being won. And two, that Vietnamization program, under which the South Vietnamese army is supposed to be able to handle the war on its own by the time the United States pulls out, is simply not working.
However, the point is not, as in times past, whether or not we should get out of Vietnam. Clearly we will get out.
The point is when we do get out we will not be able to honestly say that we have won the war, or that we've adequately prepared the South Vietnamese to fight it in our absence.
The question becomes then, as the election rolls around, what new excuses will be made to make up to justify their failure, and how many of us will be taken in?
—Mike Moffet Associate Editor
BURTON
ITT And Nixon Restored
In its handling of the I.T.T. settlement, the administration, even if it did no wrong, took big risks. Risks of being misunderstood, not nothing else;
-Chummy high-level conferences while the anti-merger action was pending
-Lavish encouragement to potential contributors.
—Chances of a tie-in, even if there was no direct tie-in, with the Sheraton expansion in San Diego, coinciding with the Republican convention there.
—Focusing of attention on Nixon's San Diego fat cats who have given and received favors over the years.
Why take such heavy risks, especially if they involved no outright wrongs? They are all part of a large determination on Nixon's part—one which cannot possibly be tainted with suspicions of wrongdoing.
—Or his refusal to let local reluctance keep him out of that site.
For instance, the imposition of his decision on the Party's deliberations over a convention site.
—Or his assiduous buttering of Ronald Reagan over the last year.
All of these things signify Nixon's own personal stress on avenging the one great defeat of his life. The San Diego conference is meant to be Nixon's victory at several levels to the state that drove him out in defeat 10 years ago.
One thing you have to say about Nixon: he does not give up. (Some put it less charisly—that he does not know what he's doing.) He is the race for Governor, in everyone's eyes but his own, put an end to his career. He drove him to a new state and a renewed profession, and to promises to work hard such anguish for his family again.
But he could not stop, and six years later he vindicated himself to those—even in his family—who thought he was through and should admit it. One thing was till left to be established—that he could wipe away the California loss; not as a second choice (after Reagan); not as a third choice (after Bush); not as the beneficiary of Lyndon Johnson's Samson-act of self-destruction.
I know it must seem petty for a man who has the Presidency won, and a world to play with, to grieve over one obstacle, far back on the track, not fully aware of the Nixon team always run as much to "prove himself" as to improve his chances. That was as true when he was trying repeatedly, ineffectually, to get his football letter as
Another kind of man, while keeping a practical eye on California's largest bloat of electoral votes, might shrug off unhappy memories of that state. Nixon, by contrast, has brought California to himself when he could not go to California. The decision to make up aadvanced entourage out of his corps of advancement is if the White House were a campaign when between stops—was helped along by the California coloring to his electoral team.
when he was scraping fingernails away, in the mid-Sixties, for an impossible pry-hold to lift him up again into public attention.
There is John Ehrlichman, Master of the Chamber. And Robert Finch, Nixon's Protege Emeritus. And supernumerary P. R. man Herb Klein. And the DisneyMaggie (Haldean, Ziegler, Cha扑). And, now, the Deputy President for Keeping the Right Wing in Line (Ronald Reagan). Though some men are Germans, as are two of Nixon's cabinet members, Shultz), the German cast of his staff, so often noticed, is less background than its Californian background (which was about all that Haldean and Ehrlichman had to offer at the outset).
Each of these people joined what has been, up to now, a kind of government-in-exile. But San Diego is to be the Restoration. Full legitimacy at last
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
Readers Respond
Readers Assail Campus Police
Statistics
To the Editor:
In an article in the Daily Kansan, Thursday, March 16, the university stated that the fear of assault on campus was exaggerated and disavowed the need for additional training statements might be justified if the University were an ordinary university. In his analysis deserves an answer.
First, he said that the number of assaults on campus was not greater than average for a town with 50,000 students. University community. It may be true that the number of assaults does not exceed the national average for a town of 20,000 to 30,000 students. It may exceed the Kansas average. I also expect that the number of unprovoked assaults, as opposed to assaults resulting from fights, must increase. In a study live in Emporia, a community of roughly the same population as the University community. One almost never hears of assaults by students and family disputes and tavern brawls. But, whether or not his statistics are correct, the correct answer is one can stay in at night if there is danger in going out. At the University, one cannot. The student is required to be on campus all day. University schedules labs, classes and final examinations at night. Since the students involved have little choice but to come on campus to argue that it is incumbent upon the University to make the
campus virtually as safe at night as it is in the daytime.
Second, women were told that they could protect themselves by walking in groups of two or more feet. Third, the fact that this statement is an admission of the need for protection, the practice of taking a precaution implied in the first instance and impossible in the second. It is rather impractical to have to search out a companion every time one wishes to stay at campus after dark. Furthermore, even if one has a companion, well-lighted places do not exist on campus or near it.
A final argument was that the Danger was mitigated because on-campus parking spaces were not as crowded, and mentioned that after 6 p.m. it is almost impossible to find a parking space nearer to the central campus than to Loyola. This means it is possible to find one that close.
I would argue that everything humanly possible, including a school, provides to evening foot patrols and spending money to more adequately equip the camp; it is more important to campus safe. However, since I have no hope that this can be accomplished, I would suggest we create a peace of mind for the women on camp and make sure they could create peace of mind for the women on camp and make sure they could provide an escort service to walk women to and from their cabs or dwellings for a fee. Such an escort service is provided by the University lived up to its
responsibility to keep the car such responsibility is even recognized, paying for escort service is preferable alter-
Nancy Bliese
Emporia Graduate Student
Malinowsky
To the Editor:
Regarding the letter in the March 31 U.D.K. from H. Robert Malinowsky, Chairman of the Parking and Traffic Board, I find that the facts presented do little to help us understand the campus police. He lists a number of statistics concerning the activities of the security force, including berry, raps, auto thefts, etc. However, he fails to mention how many of these investigations resulted in arrests or convictions. He also mentions that many attempted felonies were foiled by the presence of an officer. I rather think that a perplexing case of those investigations; I had an expensive parka stolen from Robinson Gun just after returning from the Christmas holidays and reported the theft over the phone, and have heard absolutely nothing since then. It took no more than 15 minutes to report, and reported the theft complaints listed by Mr. Malinowsky. This is compared to 38.58 per square mile, accounting for 87.2 per cent of the office's reportable activities.
Exorcising Demons in Wisconsin
James J. Kilpatrick
MIL.WAUKEE—We have been busy here excursing demons, in a burst of old-fashioned political religion that merits at least a passing amen. Theervid incantations have their phony aspects, but their underlying theme is sound.
in, it was apparent that a hurricane was blowing. Wallace claimed a stunning 42 per cent of the Florida vote. He swept 11 of 12 congressional districts. The busing issue was at the bottom of
The demons, of course, are the filthy rich and the great corporations. These are familiar devils. William Jennings Bryan was fighting them with bell, book and candle 80 years ago. Franklin was used to scourge the maleface of the banker's high silk hat forever tempts the guy with a snowball.
All of a sudden, the candidates on this sawdust trail have rediscovered sin. They are trying to "tax reform, tax reform" in this meant, "Soak the rich! Lay the mighty low!"
Governor Wallace, of course, was smiling the giants hip and thigh. Senator Henry Jackson was over come with outrage that a hundred millionaires pay no Federal income taxes. John V.
McGovern also bore down on the 100 largest corporations. He demanded in Milwaukee that
... all time worked on parking and traffic is paid for out of parking and traffic income which includes fines and fees from the sale of permits. You can explain the recent leap in parking permit fees. Even so, these sales are not always presumably, sufficiently cover the expenses attributed to traffic and parking control. This means that you must give tickets to pay their own salaries. Why not pay professors by how much they can give out each semester?
But, ah, those malefactors of great wealth! Hubert Humphrey spent last week in inveighing against corporations. Their profits for 1971, he declared, were 75 per cent above their profits of 1970. "What about your wages?" he asked of the wages you own as your wages up 75 per cent."
James L. Kilpatrick
candidates against big labor. Against the concentration of union power they sing their rituals so voce.
Edmund Muskie saw their 100 corporations and doubled the bet. He concentrated on the 200 largest corporations.
these wicked creatures be compelled to add a public director to their boards, the better to protect consumer interests and monopolies that produce 60 percent of our manufactured goods.
George McGovern, the soft-spoken Senator from South Dakota, started this seasonal revival. Many months ago, long denouncing Hampshire, he was demanding new hooks for the big fish who slip through them. McGovern's trouble in this campaign—it has been his trouble all—is that he takes a small spring breeze. No, he paid much attention to him.
Then the tropical storm known as George Corley Wallace hit Florida. On the night of March 14, when the primary returns came
Another point made in the letter concerns the fact that "
However, the most amazing thing about Mr. Malinowski's letter was his example of what he said, "I am a m. he asks." ... it is logical that the officer would check cars in O-zone at that hour?" No, it is not. I can imagine an officer rolling down the street night with his trusty flashlight, checking every car in the expanse of the parking lots, while he poorly lightened the poorly lighted street on campus. The justification given for this is that if a crime were committed, the police cars illegally parked in O-zone! I suppose that anyone who parks in the wrong zone at 4:00 a.m. is not dearestly deeds, while the criminal who has the foresight to obtain a proper permit is not dearestly necessary hardly needs to ticket a car just to have a record of its presence—surely the officers could be provided with other booklets besides a ticket book.
minutes it takes to write the ticket on his “traffic account,” as opposed to his “state account” I doubled it. Finally, M.Mailownboy drives a bus with vehicles prevent the pedestrian from using “the most direct route,” forcing him by hiding under the cover and specifying exactly where this is supposed to occur, but unless we completely ban cars from campus and chop down every tree in campus, he can completely avoid this situation (however, decent outdoor lighting on campus would have made the motorist the same deference of parking close to his destination to avoid having to walk the security office suggested some weeks ago, that people use their cars as much as possible at night for protection. Also, it will fill the security office’s treasury.
Now, a lot of this was hokum.
Price and wage controls have not been as wickedly imbalanced as Humphrey would have us believe. Corporate profits are improving, to be sure, but heaven above it is that the Excess profits taxes tend to be self-defeating. Confiscation of individual wealth, which McGown seems to endorse,
Lindsey was carrying on like
Eugene V. Debs. John Kenneth
Galbrath, no candidate he, was
wandering about in the snowstorm adding his bass
growls to the hallelujah chorus.
Yet much of this noisy populism is not hokum. The American people are indeed disturbed by their total tax burden, but they say that power is the name of the game, and they feel ground down by power. The Democratic hopeful who hears this cry most clearly, and responds most warmly to it, is likely to win his victory in July. Richard Nixon, are you listening, too?
Mr Malinowsky concludes by saying that the Traffic and Safety department, best, compared to other large universities. Not having attended other large schools, I cannot assume that the competition is better; however, that incompetence compared to gross competence doesn't make it any less important. On the front page of the same issue of the U.D.K., a new scheme for ripping off students, faculty, and staff from the dorms on campus was stalled on parking meters along the heavily used portions of parking areas from the dorms on campus. The meter collections, this would give the Bureau of Extortion, another reason to issue tickets to its hapless victims. I sincerely hope this proposal is soundly supported by the University community.
The letter also asks, ".. isn't it part of his duty to check for illegally parked cars as well as watching for other unusual happenings?" Not according to the instructions of separation of traffic activities from state-paid activities. Does the ticketing officer log the ten
would produce relatively little additional Federal revenue.
Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
James J. Kilpatrick
Walter M. Lamia New Orleans Graduate Student
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
america's Pacemaking college newspaper
That's what they've been hitting in Wisconsin. Not big government, mind you. The liberal Democrats who are preaching the evils of the vast reach of their policies simultaneously pitching for new Federal programs of greater reach and power. Neither are the
his victory, but this was more than busing. It was a cry from the gut of 516,000 guys named Archie Bunker. It was a howl against all the barramasks, equities and securities suffered by the little guy feels overwhelmed by bigness. How to respond? Hit bigness.
Chip Crews
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Griff and the Unicorn
WHATEVER YOU WOKE ME UP FOR, IT HAD BETTER BE IMPORTANT, OLD PAL
I WAS WONDERING... YOU HAVE WINGS... WHY DON'T YOU FLY?
WHATEVER YOU WOKE ME UP FOR, IT HAD BETTER BE IMPORTANT, OLD PAL
I WAS WONDERING... YOU HAVE WINGS... WHY DON'T YOU FLY?
SIGH
YOU HAVE A HEAD...
YES...
WHY DON'T YOU GO BANG IT AGAINST A TREE?
By Sokoloff
SIGH
YOU HAVE A HEAD... YES...
WHY DON'T YOU GO BANG IT AGAINST A TREE?
"Copyright 1972. David Sokoloff."
---
Thursday, April 6, 1972
5
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Disciple Speaks but No One Listens
Kansan Photo by JAMES EATON
With spring weather reappearing over Mt. Orad, evangelist Stan Barbrack finds general apathy among his congregation.
Sokoloff. '
of Strong Hall Wednesday at 2 p.m. and had only one attentive student interested in God's
Expo to Begin With Coronation
Gay Lib Gets Additional Time To File Appeal
The Lawrence Gay Liberation Front has been given more time to file its appeal with the 10th Circuit Court of Appeal in Denver. The group is appealing a February decision of the Topeka U.S. District Court which allowed the University of Kansas to submit a formal recognition of the group.
The deadline has been extended by the Denver court to May 22.
Controversy Tints Revue
The Expo will be held in Learned Hall and will be open from noon to 9 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. The award banquet will be at 6:30 a.m. the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
The Rock Chalk Revue, a KU addition whose idea was copied from the University of State University, has been established a university since its beginning in 1800.
Editor's Note: This is the first of a two-part story dealing with the Rock Chalk Revue. Tomorrow's story will discuss the future of the rock.
THE KU-Y organized the new event to increase school spirit. It was hoped that the revue would be a great success and be presented as an annual event.
It was first known as the Y-Orpheum, but after Ross Miller of the K-Sate program said KU had borrowed not only the idea but also the name, there was a contest to change the name.
Opening ceremonies for the annual Engineering for the Environment Friday front of Learned Hall with the cutting of the ribbon and the opening of the workshop.
The KU Y.M.C.A., later the KuY- K, which sponsored the program from its beginning, sponsored the contest. Kathleen Larsen, college senior, came up with the $10 reward and兑了 the $10 prize.
By TOM THRONE Kansan Staff Writer
The first revue was composed of eight short plays written and produced by organized living groups.
The scripts written for the competition could be humorous, musical or melodramatic. They had to be 13 minutes in length.
The eight skits were then be given on April 7,1950,in Hoch Auditorium.
Engineer's highest award to professors, the Gould award will
The scripts were to be judged by one of the drama departments of the then Big 7. The University of Nebraska for the first several years offered its own best scripts from each of the security and fraternity divisions.
A crowd of 2,000 watched the first Rock Chick Revoke when the Pi Phis won first in the sorority game. The Phis won in the fraternity division
THE FIRST in-between-acts consisted of organ music.
The Rock Chalk Revue became a KU tradition.
The second year 30 scripts were presented by 15 fraternities, 14 universities and the first independent group. The independent group was not produced because scripts were removed from the other two groups.
The review was expanded to two nights from the one night the previous year.
In 1951, musical skirts were added to the in-between-acts to give support to the continuity of the revue.
**ASTORK in the March 17, 1952,**
kansas said that while the
clever costumes, settings and
the skirt of the only goal of
the men's skirt.
In the 1952 revue, the first bit of rough humor appeared.
In 1958, the number of skits was reduced to six. The skits began to be performed in front of the name Governor George Docking and Chancellor Franklin Murphy. It also poked fun at racism in everything but books.
Not many changes occurred in the revue between 1852-57.
Monsignor Towle, pastor of St. John's Catholic Church, said in 1958 Catholic students were not permitted to revoke Chalk because of a review sponsored by the KU-Y, a non-Catholic organization. The church did not approve of this change during the Lenten season, he said.
THE FIRST COED skirts were presented in the revue in 1859. The groups were paired off in a series of three skirts was cut from six to five. The coed skirts were used because the rest of the schools were using them.
Correction On Kansan
However, the 1960 revue was criticized in the form of a letter to Mr. Carson, professor of speech and advisor for the program. He said he did not advise the skits on the "cheap sex humor sprinkled throughout."
The first experience with coed skits was a flop, according to the Kansan of March 9, 1859, because the skits lacked the talent of in some of the arts.
The prices for photocopying from Xerox and other equipment are unchanged because of higher rent, rental, staffing, and supplies.
The coed skits also allowed for more people to participate in the revue.
THE 1901 REVUE was the first book of skits. The number of skits was cut from five to four. The number has remained the same until the 2004 revue.
A Kansan review of March 21, 1960, said coed skits gave new life to the revue.
It was also incorrect reported the $4,000 is received from the copy machines annually. That amount is the income from all copying.
It was incorrectly reported in Wednesday's Kansan that the cost of xeroxing in Watton and other areas has been reduced to 5 cents a copy.
the reduction in price pertains only to Olivetti-Ulvetta-Coppi Capital Management Watson, the law library in Green Hall, the science library in Murphy Hall, the engineering and architecture library in Marvin
Now was the time to reexamine the purpose of Rock school and whether the production was based on quality of talent or student opinion. If it was student opinion, the students' dependents were not represented properly because the inexperienced were a bigger majority than the houses.
The winning Kappa Sigma-Tri Delt skit was in the news because it was suspected the play had been played in the play "Medium Rare."
In 1963, the Phi Delts and the DUs decided to join forces for an all-male play. They said there would be no female parts. John Maxwell, Phi Delt chairman, said that chances would be a new and different idea. They did not make the final cut.
After a brief discussion of the seriousness of the affair, Wesco wanted to know how the girls learned about the hymn. Weesco and Taylor then opened a box of candy and began "laughing and joking with them." The incident ended with Wesco singing the hymn for Wesco.
The Sigma Chi-Gamma Ph.
Beta ski caused a stir in 1964 when the skit was ended with song, "Hymn to Dean Emily." The senior girls were not allowed in the night and Chancellor W. Clarke wrote and Emily Taylor, dean o women, came to talk with them
Construction to Improve 12 Mile Stretch of K-10
INDEPENDENT PARTICIPATION was the talk of the conference. Wichita high school and director of the Lewis Hall skit, said the fact that an actor had not been represented was becoming a major problem.
Relocation of a 12-mile stretch of Kansas Highway 10 will begin next week and be from now; "a spokesman for the Location and Design Concepts Department of the Kansas Highway Commission said Wednesday.
Plans for the $21 and one half million project include a four-lane divided highway similar to that 70 with a 75 mph speed limit.
The department spokesman said construction would begin as soon as a design hearing on the plans could be held.
He estimated construction would probably take between one and two years.
DeSoto
1966 marked the first time an independent group was in the United States, and an all-male hall, teamed up with the Alpicom Alpi Sorior to help the Alpicom Pi sorior to
The relocation will begin two miles west of Eudora, bypassing its southern edge and end near
Parts of the old highway are to be used as frontage roads for the new stretch of K-10 but will not be a part of the new construction.
Mighty big today are books about the Mafia, Richard Worm-kin, and a boy with Medal, 60 cents) is about a man who comes to a county in New Mexico and tangles with the local officer. An eastern western, no less.
TWO TEAMS of independents entered scripts in 1968, however, neither succeeded in getting into the revue.
Another thriller, though quite different, is Emma Lachen's PICK UP STICKS (Pocket, 9 cents). This is a mystery novel with a dead body along the Appalachian Trail. R.'s a dandy.
The revue in 1666 expanded the show to be presented on three nights instead of two.
One that is straight from Navarore country is Colina, where you can watch ZEROS (Crest, 85 cents). The story, if you can believe it, is about an effort to take over a monastery high atop a mountain in Greece. A real thriller, if you can believe you've been there before.
This section of K-10 will be tied in with construction in the area which is due to begin soon.
Brand Westerns Reissued
'Invader':Mafia Western
birds trying to pin a murder on
birdies from Frank Bonham's
SNAKETRACK (Pocket, 16
cents) is about a range battle.
And there are this month's westers. First is Robert MacLeod's SIX GUNS SOUTH Gold Medal, Gold medals (25)—two won.
The review reached its peak performance in the period of the mid to late '60's.
George Bush, United States
ambassador to the United
nations, will speak at 2:30 p.m.
Friday, April 14, in 104 Gore
The lack of interest in the 1971 Rock Chalk Revue and the need for evinuation by the KU Vied Force to force into the program.
U.N. Envoy To Speak Here
In the decade of the '70's, the revue was again cut to two days.
Bush will hold an informal question and answer period on the subject of American Foreign Policy, according to Dolph Simons Jr., 2425 Vermont, editor Lawrence Lawrence Daily Journal.
be presented.
Bush will be visiting Lawrence at the invitation of Simons. Simons said he had asked Bush to visit the Lawrence area some time after meeting him several times at dinners and meetings.
Campus Bulletin
Computer Science: 8.30 a.m., Woodruff Auditorium.
The nonemees for the out-
standing senior award are:
Robert N. Geoffarth, Lawrence,
chemical engineering;
Howard N. Geoffarth, aerospace engineering; Lee A. Hoffman, chemical and petroleum engineering;
Howard N. Geoffarth, architectural engineering; K. Lappe, Lawrence, civil
engineering; Patrick D. McLain, Hutchison, engineering physics;
Topka K., electrical engineering
EISC: 9 a.m. Regionalist Room.
Latin American Seminar: 9 a.m., Pine
Road
Summer Jobs
MUST BE:
Education Grades: 11:30 a.m., Alcove
Cafeteria.
Latin American History: moon, Alcove A
Cafeteria.
College Office: noon, English Room,
Meditary Chemistry: noon, Watkins
Room
Room:
Education Grads: 11:30 a.m. Alcove n
Cafeteria
Molecular Chemistry' room, Watkins Room.
University Women's Club: 12:30 p.m.
Kansas and Curry rooms:
Museum of Art Docents: 1 p.m.
Rectory Hall Room
German Staff: 4:30 p.m., Regionalist Room.
Slavic and Soviet Area: 6:30 p.m., Curry
****
University Council: 3:30 p.m. 100, Blake
SAU Travel: 4:30 p.m. Room Blae.
German Staff: 4:30 p.m., Regionalland
Half and Social Club: 6:30 p.m.
First Room.
university Council: 3:30 p.m., 188 Blake
SUA Travel: 4 p.m., Council Room.
Hoold.
KU Sailing Club: 7 p.m., Pine Room.
Junior Class Ushers: 7 p.m., Council
Room.
Junior Class Usbers: 7 p.m., Council Room.
LDS Institute: 7 p.m., Regionalist Room.
Institute: 7 p.m. Regional Hall Room.
International Night Rehearsal: 7 p.m.
Ballroom.
Campus Crusade: 7 p.m., Parlors ABC and
Oread Room.
Flinted Science Fiction Lecture: 7 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium.
Large Area Lecture: 7:30 p.m.
Big Eight Room
Science Fiction Film: 7:00 p.m. Woodruff
A Tale of Sculpture Plate Lecture: 7 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium.
Slavic and Neotel Area Lecture: 7:30 p.m.
Bright Light Room.
Adamsian htm
Private group: 7:30 p.m., Watkins Room.
PlLambda Theta: 7:30 p.m., International
Room.
Science Fiction Film: 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium
Sound: 7:30 p.m. Raincoat Room
**Women's Coalition:** 7:38 p.m. Women's Center Weekend Foundations
**Expertimental Films**
1-Very independent
2-willing to work hard
3-wanting to make over $2000
4-able to leave home for the whole summer
7:30 and 9 p.m., Dyche Auditorium
Psychic Dynamics; 8 p.m., Forum Room.
Signa Alpha Ipae Benefit Recital; 8 p.m.
Swarthout Rectal Hall.
Jazz Drummer
To Play Here
Interview:
Time 11:30 a.m. or
1:30 p.m.
Place Summerfield Hall
Room 203
Date Thursday April 6
Jazz drummer Buddy Rich will perform two 45-minute sessions starting at 8 p.m. tonight at the Red Baron.
A Summer Adventure with College Grads Profits
Rich, who has performed in night club all over the world, is known as the drummer in the nation according to Playbys annual jazz poll.
Rich has also made a number of television appearances, including the Merv Griffin and Johnny Carson shows.
Advanced tickets for the concert can be purchased at the Red Baron for $3.50. Tickets at the door are $4.
FILL'ER UP!
EVERY
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THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Monday-Friday
10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
GOOSEAH
Sunday Noon to 5 p.m.
Free Beer Friday At the Kansas Union with Cafeteria Southline Luncheon Special
93¢
Menu
Cottage cheese or cole slaw salad
Whopper Sandwich
Hot Potato Salad
Mustard, onions & pickles
Coffee or ice Tea
2 oz. cup of beer only with special
to 1:30 p.m.
FREE-12 oz.cup of beer only with special SERVING HOURS: 11:00 a.m. to 1:20 p.m.
university of kansas
52nd annual
engineering
exposition
learned hall
april 7, 12:00 noon to 9:00 p.m.
april 8, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
april 9, awards banquet 6:30 p.m.
"we've come a long way, baby"
6
Thursday, April 6, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Speaker Urges Defeat of Nixon
Allard K. Lovenstein, former democrat from New York to Congressman jump Johnson movement and Engineer McCarthy '1688 and Eugene Mccarthy '1688
Wednesday he didn't think Nixon would end the war, and said voters must elect a President who will end the war.
Lowenstein gave his speech sponsored by Student Vote in
Kenner Stall Photo by ED LALLO
Woodruff Auditorium before approximately 100 persons.
"Just as President Johnson broke his pledge of no wider war," Lowerstein said, "and we have lost our 1986 promise to end the war."
"Nobody wants a President who says one thing and does another, but he noticed, he said, 'This is what Nixon has done ever since he took office.'"
Lowenstein said many people were saying Nixon was unbeatable.
Lowenstein Speaks at Woodruff
says he doesn't think Nixon will end the war
"How can this be true, when most things which were wrong when Nikon took office are not wrong, but most are wrong," he asked.
He said many people were disaffected with what was going on, and most people were filled with anxiety about what could be done.
Louwenstein said things wouldn't change overnight by electing a good President, but it was only a "cop out to say." The President is part of the system that corrupts, so what does it matter?
"It is not inevitable that we'll fail," lowered Stein, "but it's not inevitable that we will lose trust." He should be enough to make you try that.
much harder to win."
Lownstein said we must make certain that our next candidates for President and Vice-President stand for immediate cessation of the war in Southeast Asia and will deal to deal with the needs at home.
"The difference between winning and losing an election in this country is so miniscule it's ridiculous," he said.
The answer lies, he said, in registering to vote, urging others to register and finally in voting.
Democratic Party," Lowestein said. "The Democratic Party isn't out there somewhere, it's right here, it's us." he said.
"We don't have to witness another contest between Nixon and Humphrey, Loweinster said. "If we get out and work, we can stimulate a candidate who will give us a clear choice and who can beat Nixon."
The plan represents a considerable effect on the 2nd District which formerly consisted of all of Douglas and Jefferson Counties, and mapped, all of Jefferson County and the townships of Willow Springs and Palmyra in Douglas County would be removed from the western part of the townships in the western part of Leavenworth County would be
Arden Booth, R-Lawrence and senator for the 2nd Kansas District, said Wednesday that he was not pleased with a senatorial remapping plan which was approved by the federal judges earlier this week.
Booth said that all of the submitted plans except the one which was accepted by the judges were to be a separate senatorial district.
Booth Criticizes State Remap
"Douglas County would have been far better off to have made up a single senatorial district without being cut into the two districts that have been done with any kind of careful consideration," he said.
added to the district.
Unhappy in Dvortg
Young people, that they are not a part of the system or that they can't really be a part of the Democratic Party, Lowenstein said.
Lawrence O'Brien isn't
Whether they know it or not, he said, young people in Kansas could have a great impact on the outcome of the election.
included in any senatorial district.
Booth said, "an indication, at least to me of how much care and effort we put into this planning by the three judges is the fact that the judges believe it is important."
A suit against the remapping has been brought by six Sedgewick team members that "whether an injunction will be granted remains to be seen." The Kansas House of Robotics did not affect the remapping.
"CULPEPPER CATTLE CO." is COMING!!! VARSITY
Speaking before a faculty forum in Westminster Center, Hooker pointed out a high growth rate, the consolidation of power in the presidency, the extreme tension between border conflicts with Rhodesia.
"ALTHOUGH ZAMBIA has 14 per cent of the earth's proven reserves of copper, transportation problems and insecurity, it still harms barriers to the utilization of this vast wealth. "Hooker said."
Stormy Politics, Weather Fuel Crisis in Copper-Rich Zambia
In seeking an alternate transportation method, Zambia
Against a background of student demonstrations, economic difficulties and racial confrontations, Zambia appears as a pale reflection of troubled nation. The national nation of 4.5 million has unusual problems which set it apart from other nations, James R. Hooker, American University Field Staff and the Umbua affairs, said Wednesday.
By ROD HARDY
Kanean Staff Writer
requested assistance from many of the world's powerful nations only to be rebuffed. China alone accepted the proposal, Hooker said, and is now laying on the average to miles of rail a day.
"ORIGINALLY." HOOKER said, "about 75 farmers, mostly white, produced most of the food. Then the government stepped in and many of the farmers were thrown out of the country. Land was conflicted, but no new farmers plowed and planted the land.
Zambia has had "serious" challenges, especially a drought for the last 4 years. In 1964, Zambia exported food. Today, Zambia must import more to meet demand in shortage. The reasons, both political emphasized, are both political reasons.
As copper became less competitive due to the factors of climate and distance, money
"I lazziness increased to the point where citizens carried either small firearms or machine guns with them to work." Hooker stated.
became scarce. Less money was then invested in agricultural cooperatives and the foodstuff stockle干瓢, he said
IN ORDER to purchase food, especially corn, several governmental officials suggested approaching Rhodesia, but the government had voted for the policy statements in the United Nations.
Students at the university in Zambia reacted "peacefully" protesting the purchases from white-ruled Rhodesia. The university were closed and the museum were arrested, Hooker said.
"Zamah is presently in a state of quasi-emergency. The university has been reopened, but its student leadership has been removed. The newspaper has been permanently shut down. The economic outlook is not good. The railroad may not be the answer for transporting trains across the country in the cities is an obvious sign of trouble." Hooker said.
THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT IS ON Feminist Speakers
are now available to discuss abortion, birth control, day care, February sisters, Feminism, Gay Women, today's Women's Movement, Women's health, Women's history, Women's roles, Women at work, etc.
We will speak to classes, dorms, sororities, fraternities, or any interested groups.
For further information call 864-4441 or 841-3216
1974 COULD FIND YOU JUST ANOTHER COLLEGE GRAD OR A JR. EXEC IN MANAGEMENT.
If you're a young man or woman with 2 academic years remaining either at the undergraduate or graduate level, you can apply for entry in the Air Force's 2-year ROTC program, offered on college campuses all across the country. If you are a first year student and wish to get into the Air Force graduating, you'll receive an offer's commission in the Air Force. Also this year, for the first time, the Air Force is offering hundreds of scholarships in the Air Force ROTC 2-year program paying full tuition; lab expenses; incidental fees; a restitution fee; up to 80 percent monthly tax fee. For more information, mail in the coupon today. Or call 800-800-1972 toll-free. In "In News Call 809-962-1983", ROTC, and get your foot off the ground.
U.S. AIR FORCE RECRITING SERVICE
DIRECTORATE OF ADVERTISING (AIP)
RANCHO PLAZA FIELD BASE, TEXAS 8409
Please send me more information on Air Force ROTC: 2-year program
Name___ Date of Birth ___ Sex___
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1. 501. 第2章
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DEMOCRATIC PARTY'S LOCAL UNIT CONVENTIONS
The Kansas Democratic Party and the Democratic Party Committees of Douglas County, Kansas, herby announce and give official notice of the holding of local unit conventions for the purpose of selecting delegates and alternates to the Congressional District and State Conventions of the Kansas Democratic Party to be held on MAY 13, 1972, and JUNE 10, 1972, respectively.
These District and State Conventions will select delegates to the Democratic National Convention who will in turn, select the Democratic Party nominees for President and Vice President of the United States.
All local unit conventions will be held on APRIL 8,1972 at 2:00 p.m. at the following locations:
Commissioner District 1. Pinckney Grade School,810 West 6th Commissioner District 2. 4-H Fairgrounds Commissioner District 3. Lawrence High School,19th and La.
These local unit conventions shall be open to any person who is registered as a Democratic Voter residing within the local unit (described below) or who is otherwise eligible to vote at the General Election in November, 1972, as of the date of the local unit convention, or who is a registered voter not affiliated with another political party, and who (in either of the two latter categories) will sign at the local unit convention a written statement of affiliation with the Democratic Party.
Young people, women and members of minority groups are encouraged to participate in the local unit conventions and to seek election as delegates. Interested Democrats may register to vote prior to APRIL 8, 1972 in the rotunda of Strong Hall or at the County Clerk's Office, Douglas County Courthouse.
Questions: Call 843-7033, 843-7500 843-1085, or 843-7918
HOCH AUDITORIUM-UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KU RELAYS CONCERT-SAT, APRIL 22
BBKING
7 AND 10 P.M. - 11CKE IS: $2.50, $3.00, $3.50
AUDIOKOMM-OINVERSITY OF KANSAS
Cormorant
Ticket Sales Begin MONDAY, APRIL 10 SUA Office
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 6.1972
7
KU Profs Present Talk On Solid Waste Disposal
By JEANNE ELLIOTT Kersen Staff Writer
Advantages and disadvantages of recycling and land fill methods of solid waste management were discussed. Professor of civil engineering, and Paul Hipman, KU professor of geology, at the Sierra Club University.
Both Hilman and McKinney said that people should no longer deal with a solid waste with an "out of sight, out of mind" phoboshy.
McKinney pointed out the advantages of the land-fill method. He said that by using land fills, the site designated for that purpose could become very crowded and expensive future as a new or old course.
MKEINNY THINKS a landfill should be within city limits, not only because of the value of the land for future use, but because
the people would then see what they had created, and be more aware of the problem.
"The cost of operating a land fill is only about $1 or $2 per ton," said McKinney. It is the lowest cost disposal he said.
Hilman displayed a glass bottle, a recycled paper pack, an aluminum can, and a panel made from fly ash.
According to Hilpman, the problem of recycling in this area was that there weren't enough processing centers to handle the material. He said that the glass collected for the KU reclamation had to be sent to Illinois. The paper was sent to Kansas City.
Hilman also said that he thought governmental regulations were necessary for a successful recycling program.
resource" Hilman said. According to him, often the energy required to produce products like leather is much more valuable than the material used.
Hilman said the cost of recycling would be prohibitive until people started weighing and made changes in priorities.
McKinney that if land fills were used the material could be mined in the future as recycling more fine practical for this area.
The discussion concentrated on Douglas County because the county Solid Waste Management Committee is expected to develop a program for the county soon. This is required by state law.
WHAT'S YOUR SCENE FOR THE SUMMER OF 72?
United States Air Force
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.
Let Us Show You Where It's At!!
For the whole 9 yards, rap with Your Air Force Representative at the Student Union, 5 & 6 April; or call 843-3000, anytime.
"Waste has to be considered a
NO OBLIGATION—DIG?
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Bike Tags Near Expiration Date
Captain B. L. Ellison of the University of Kansas Traffic and Security officers said that May 31 is the deadline for presenters presently registered at UW.
Ellison said new registration stickers may now be purchased at events at the Traffic and Security Auditorium, or at the Lawrence Police Department. These stickers are available expire and expire May 31, 1973.
The stickers give police a number and description of a bicycle in case it is stolen or lost. Ellison said that some bicycles found and returned through identification from the stickers.
"In the past year there have been about 400 bicycles registered at the Traffic and Security office," said Ellison.
Six things are needed to complete registration. The biker must enter the address, dress, the make of the bike, the type of bike it is, the bike's serial number, and the license number.
After registration is completed, the bicycle is registered for a year with the Lawrence police.
"Bicycles come in phases, and this last year has been an upsurge for them. There will probably be a levelling off or drop in the number of bicycle couples of years, due to student other interests," Ellison said.
KU Employes to Receive Unemployment Insurance
The coverage will include all faculty and staff members except students regularly attending student aliens, the student aliens, the statement said.
University of Kansas faculty members and civil service employees are now in the process of being covered by the state unemployment compensation law, according to a statement this week by Philip N. Rankin, director of Personnel Services.
All institutions under the supervision of the Kansas Board of Regents are included in the plan, which will be funded by the state. There are three tents of a percent of its total covered payroll. The percentage is changed according to the number of unemployment checks paid to former employees. The number of payrolls are retrospective to Jan.
Faculty members with nine-month contracts are eligible for full-time employment during the summer months if they have accepted an appointment.
In order to receive benefits, faculty and civil service em-
ployes must meet a length of time required to insurement. Workers will meet this requirement Oct. 1. Claims will be filled with the Vale Employment Agency.
Termination information will be required to show that a person who leaves the University is eligible for benefits. If the student has good cause for terminating unemployment benefits are not paid.
Each civil service employee, unless he is on temporary or emergency assignment, must submit a formal Separation form to Personnel Service termination notice. If the form is not sagt, final processing of termination papers will be delayed until it is submitted. The failure to submit in the event of a claim for unemployment compensation.
Termination information for faculty members will be obtained through the existing procedure, the statement said.
None of the covered workers will be eligible to apply for 1, unless previously employed by a covered employer.
KU Singers to Perform Music of Black Writers
The first of two programs of 20th century songs by black composers will be presented by a group of KU fine arts students at 2:30 in Recital Hall. This program and the April 13 program were organized by Miriam Stewart, a associate professor of voice.
Opening the first recital,
Christie Korchak, Shawnee freshman, will sing "Peter Goes
Out" and "Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray."
Costa, will be performed by Mary House, Shawnee Mission freshman. She will also perform Night Song" by Howard Swanson and keewah寸ichita sophomore will sing two of Swanson's other selections.
Next on the program, Nancy Jewell Dale, Rochester, N.Y. senior will perform "Three Portraits," by Margaret Bonds.
Following Korchak, Gayle Thompson, Kansas City, Mo., freshman will sing "Hymn to the Sun" by Melanie Oldfather, Lawrence senior, will sing "Song of Separation," by William Grant Still. She will be accompanied by Andy Cordonia juniadia. Four selectionals.
Portions of "Stabat Mater." by Portion Jerry will be performed at the University by Deborah Baxter, Raytown, and Deborah Baxter will be accompanied by a string ensemble conducted by members of theoka senior. Members of theoka senior. Celeste Myall, Tulsa, Okla. freshman; John Kelly, warrensburg; student; Dann Teubner, wichita graduate; Barbara Davis, Lawrence junior.
Proceedings Dismissed For Ellsworth Incident
The trial to determine whether Brita Grady, Kansas City sophomore, should be evicted from Ellsworth Hall was dismissed last week, Jess McNih, professor of business and economics at the committee of the University Judiciary, said Wednesday.
MeNish said he was notified last week by Charles Oldfather, university attorney, that GrigoryEviction trial was dismissed. Ellen Hansen, resident director of Elsworth Hall, said Grady moved out of the hall March 16 between Grady and Odinheme that the University would cancel the proceedings.
"The University only sought to evict Grady, alleging she was a member of a well defined group and some members of that group attacked three people at her residence. University regulations state that all residents are responsible for their guests." McNish said.
Mnisha was referring to the incident at Ellsworth Hall last October 18 when four men at Husen and two students. The men met Grady and two other students. One of the other students that KU sought to evict did not return to school this semester. The other student, who lived after the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights became involved.
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8
Thursday, April 6, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KU to Meet NU in Three-Game Stand
By DAN GEORGE
BY DAN GEORGE
Kansan Sports Writer
The University of Kansas baseball team has now won nine games and lost only two, right? And they just took two games out of three from defending league champion Iowa State this weekend, right? So they've got a win, right? At the Big Eight title, right?
Wrong. At least not yet. Not the way coach Floyd Temple sees it.
"We're not concerned about the championship yet," said Temple. "We've got six long weeks to go. Anything could happen but if our pitching team is it has, we could have a chance."
The Jayhawks play a three game series with Nebraska this season. The team's doubleheader is for the Friday and a single game for 1 p.m.
one Huskers, seventh in the conference last year, are also off to a slow start this season. Their loss in the Big Ten disaster as they dropped three
games to Oklahoma State. Overall, they were 3-8 as of Sunday.
Baseball Statistics
Nevertheless, Temple does not view the upcoming series lightly.
upcoming series lightly.
start they're off to a bad start,
they've got a better team and have a pretty good team. It (the series) won't be a breather. When you play in this league, none of them can beat another team. Can they beat another team?
Ryan Kurosaki, a sophomore from Hawaii, was the staff leader of the 1.32 ERA. Also important were reelected John Husman (0-1, 3-34) and Kevin
Nebraska's strongest point is its depth. The Cornhuskers have 12 returning lettermen and six of them are pitchers.
| ab | v | Rating | 2b | 2b | sh | sh | avg. |
|---|
| Wood | 0 | 0 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1.000 |
| Wolf | 37 | 7 | 28 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 141 |
| Olm | 42 | 12 | 31 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 375 |
| Huck | 32 | 12 | 12 | 4 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 375 |
| Heck | 29 | 12 | 10 | 4 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 375 |
| Bake | 28 | 6 | 10 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 278 |
| Mason | 19 | 6 | 10 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 278 |
| Labi | 19 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 222 |
| Litter | 19 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 222 |
| Exam | 19 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 211 |
| Anatomy | 19 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 211 |
| Heredity | 5 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 200 |
| Life | 14 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 200 |
| Cox | 7 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 143 |
| Solemeter | 7 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 143 |
| Hamson | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 000 |
| Marion | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 000 |
| Mason | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 000 |
| Mason | 30 | 5 | 34 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 4 | 114 |
Offensively, the Nebraska lineup is hardy a pitcher's nightmare. The 'Huskers' 213 average was last in the league last season. Shortstop Steve Scalia scored (9 runs), second baseman Sam Sharpe (277) and pitcher-outfielder Gens Schoal (317)
| | IP Number | Btam | Bt | h | r | hr | bb | ss |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Sorber | 21 | 5.0 | 7 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 12 | 14 |
| Dix | 21 | 5.0 | 7 | 12 | 1 | 0 | 14 | 14 |
| Brann | 4 | 1.0 | 7 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
| Mison | 4 | 1.0 | 7 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
| Noll | 1 | 1.0 | 7 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Wulf | 16 | 1.2 | 9 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 16 | 14 |
| Sinterherren | 16 | 1.2 | 9 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 14 | 14 |
swung the team's biggest bats. Temple plans to pitch southwash Steve Corder in the opening game of the doubleheader and Bob Cox will face Bill Siemegemer or Bob Wolf start the Saturday contest.
Corder and Cox are both 3-0.
Corder has pitched three shutouts this year, including a no-hitter.
He has given up no runs and only seven hits in 21 innings. Corder has pitched 20 and one-third
Siegelmeier (1-0) was unimpressive in his first two starts this season and was shifted to the bulpen. In two crucial relief situations against Iowa State, however, he helped the defense feed and earned a reward. His earned run average is 4.85.
un the possible exception of second baseman Bill Glass, there will be no changes in the game. Second baseman series. Glass was hit by a pitch on his throwing arm in the Iowa State doubleheader and his playing status is doubtful. Berceky could take his place.
Wolf (1-2) has two one-hiters this year but was treated roughly in Saturday's loss when Iowa lost to Kansas for six runs. His ERA is 3.71.
Freshman Robert Omh, who batting in games one and two, one or more bats in nine tries against the Cyclones. Temple, however, was an inconsistent speedster.
innings without giving up an earned run. He has struck out 14 and walked only two.
"Bob had faced lefthanders before," he said, "but not of the caliber of those three (Mike Gillespie, Jeff Schneider and Don Powers). It was king of tough for a tough group. He came around, I am not worried."
Another player that Temple is another player that Temple is also a rookie. Bob Wolf. The pitcher first baseman pounded in State pitchers for seven hits in 10 trips. Bobby Porter pitched four innings.
"He didn't get off to as fast a start last year," said Temple, "but the real big difference is that he is coming through when we need him. For that matter, you can look down our lineup and see that guys with two or three RBI's. Of them are through.
Temple said he would continue players in right field and at third base.
"But it's our felding that pleases and most Riggs. It makes the game so much important to me. If that keeps up, then the pitching it keep up. And if our pitching keeps up, then said, we could have a chance."
23
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Bob Wolf, Right, and ISU First Baseman Eye Pitcher in Doublehead-
Pitcher-first baseman Wolf leads Big Eight in batting after three league games .
Strike Foreshadows Bleak Season
By The Associated Press
By The Associated Press
What happens every spring didn't happen Wednesday, and it won't happen today either.
And as Wednesday wore on,
Thursday's eight-game schedule
crumbled as well—along with
Philadelphia a game at St. Louis.
For the first time in baseball's
past history, a general strike by
the team was held before the
of the season. forcing
the team to play at Cincinnati,
a traditional opener at Cincinnati.
No formal negotiating session were announced for Thursday, and he said his owners' representative, said he would meet with Marvin Miller, executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association.
Despite this meeting, however,
prospects for an early settlement
were low. In addition, players and owners appeared bleak even though heavy losses
from the runoff.
If the strike lasts through the weekend, for example, an educated gymnast loses the loss to a league clubs at about $2.5 million.
For the average player, one earns about $22,500, the strike will cost about $140 a game in salary. And for the game's player, the wild star, Atlanta's Hank Aaron, is in a loss of about $129 a game.
"The fact that we can do it shows that we have depth, he said. "We've taken people loose. When everyone is out and about, it plays it clobber club morale high."
Vice president Paul Richards, who was vice president Tuesday, blasted Miles, saying the owners aren't against the players but are "fed up" with him.
"Unless the players take a stand now," Richardsa said, "there isn't going to be any baseball for a long, long time."
The owners, he said, "simply aren't going to let Marvin Miller run over them any more."
and the players, he said, should end the strike "for their own good. If they don't it's the players who are going to pay the price."
In Baltimore, meanwhile,
Miller met Wednesday with 18
Richards suggested the players should turn to Commissioner Dillon for assistance of the dispute. Kuhn returned from York from Germany after sitting in on the owners' meeting, but was unavailable for immediate contact.
KANSAS CITY (AP) - Ewing Kauffman, president of the Kansas City Royals, said Wednesday he thought the great majority of striking baseball players would like to go back to
Official Says Strike Unwanted
In an appearance before the Kansas City Advertising and Executive Club, Kauffman said that he will be the head of all professional sports.
"The public will lose by not having the opportunity to view baseball games, the owners will win and the players will lose money." Kauffman said.
members of the Orioles, then accused team manager Earl Weaver of trying to illegally break the strike.
Weaver had said earlier than he had polled his players and that all but five of the 26 had been killed. He opened and open the season on schedule.
Further, Weaver said, a poll by him showed that, of those 21 players, 16 had been willing to play in the game scheduled for last Saturday.
"There's a fine point in labor laws, and he's gone way overboard. His attempts to break the strike have been as a management—which has nothing to do with being a field manager.
Miller, following his meeting with the Oriole players at the suburban home of third baseman Brooks Robinson, said of
"Weaver is entitled to give his opinion and talk to the players." He exercises coercion and makes threats, direct and imply, that he's
"Actually," the vote of the third baseman said, "the vote was 16-4 that we would be willing to offer the builders our own rights. We owners would agree to accept figures of the activities on the amount of surplus already accumulated."
And Robinson, the Orioles' player representative, disputed Weaver's version of the pre-season poll.
"I think," said Aratos' pitcher Dave Roberts, "the owners are busy with their players. This guy has a baseball belt. Do you have a lot for the players, accomplished benefits they wouldn't have, otherwise we would."
After the meeting with Miller, Robinson said. "We are more unified now than ever before."
"I don't see any break in this thing," said Houston pitcher Larry Dierker, the club's player representative.
Among the players, measure the, was conducted speculation on the possible duration of the strike, the reason for the polarization of the two sides and would be played when the strike end.
The Astros' general manager,
the team's president,
doubled the team's weekend
even in Atlanta could be played
under the strike ended
by the deadline.
Several Pittsburgh players worked out at the University of Pittsburgh Wednesday, but were not allowed to use the college's facilities.
That estimate was based on an average loss of revenue to each team of $50,000 per game plus an estimated $250,000 that would be the major league clubs' share of the division game at Boston Saturday.
Based on last year's annual postseason assignment of the schedule through the weekend, a total of 41 games, would mean a total loss of $16 million.
"I figure," said outfielder A. Oliver, "if 'we don't work out for a couple of weeks, spring training will have been wasted.'"
"Even after this thing is settled," he said. "I want to see my pitchers throw."
the 24 clubs.
The dispute between the owners and players continued unabated after the owners, meeting in Chicago, termed the players demand for a 17 per cent fee to benefit 'tota-
unreasonable'.
After the five-hour meeting, John Gatherin, the owners' negotiating representative, said, "We want to accept the players' proposal. The whole matter of a 17 per cent raise in pension benefits is totally agreed."
The players had offered to return to work accepting the owners' original $490,000 boost
In light of the owners' rejection, it appeared they had thrown the ball back to Miller for the next move.
MVP to Gilmore
Ex-Olympic Star To Receive Award
NEW YORK (AP)—Arliss
Almeir, Kentucky's 7-foot-2-
foot record 68 victories and the East
Division championship, was
named Wednesday the American
Most Valuable Player.
Gilmore, the league's top regular-season game, scored a boundish 64 points with a best score of 23.9 average also was chosen as pivot man on the pitch.
SUA Flights to EUROPE
WASHINGTON (AP)—Jessie Apter, by starring in the 1986 Olympic Games in Berlin, Germany, will receive a unique honor at the 1972 Olympics.
Seats still available but HURRY! Full payment due April 17th For further information contact: SUA Office
Hilbert refused to congratulate Owens when the black speedster was defeated by the greatest gold haul in Olympic history, capturing the 100- and 200-meter dashes and the long jump that earned the toughest U.S. relay team.
Kansas Union 864-3477
The German Olympic Organizing Committee has invited Owens to participate in the opening ceremonies at the 1984 Summer Olympics.
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In Wahington for the first showing of the U.S. Olympic team uniforms, Owens predicted the American women's team will do better in the past, but the team would not have the cometition the touchest yet.
"American is stronger man for man on an overall picture, but
"I think for the first time we challenge Villanova to challenge me 1500 meters, he said, mentioning Villanova's world record holder in the event, world record holder in the event.
when it comes down to individuals, every country has a tremendous individual," he said. "If we want to reach 'about 16 kids that are running 9.4 or better in the 100 yards,' you find your being able make the squad.
"But the 1500 meters still belongs to Kip Keino of Kenya," Owens said.
"We don't need a scoreboard," he said. "All it does is create a great deal of animosity.
Now a Chicago businessman, Owens said the Olympics "is not a dual meet between Russia and the United States.
"Who cares how many gold medals America wins? Let's emphasize the humanity and love within the Olympic Village.
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Practice Set Up for Clinic
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 6.1972
9
Football Scrimmage Scheduled Today
When you set out to learn how to assemble a complex machine as a tool, you need finished product works, but it helps even more to see how all the components work.
That's approximately how it is in football. A coach has to understand the fundamentals and together a smoothly working team.
So the University of Kansas football team jugged its spring practice schedule this week to play a game against Kentucky in school football elicitation Saturday a
look at a regular practice rather than a full-scale scrimmage.
The scrimmage, regularly scheduled for Saturday morning, will be at 3:30 a.m. after dinner in the Bromfambrough said Wednesday.
"The coaches wanted to see the drills and techniques we used in our program," said Sam Fambridge said. "So we decided to have the scrimmage Thursday."
This week's scrimmage, the second since spring drills began last Monday, will be a controlled
"We're working on the different offers on our both offensively and defensively." Fambrough said. We don't care if we score or not.
scriimage much like the one Saturday, in which only one touchdown was scored.
Fambridge said scrimmages during the remainder of spring practice probably would more closely resemble regular games where players might conclude with the spring game under the lights of Haskell
Stadium April 29.
Senior Swimmer Plans To Use Science in Sport
Kansan Sports Writer
"Kinesiology is the study of the movement of the body and how the muscles are related to it," Skultet said.
Quarterbacks. David Jayne Rich Jones and Bob Brueggen launched 77 passes in last week's scrimmage and completed 44.
"Eventually, I hope to coach at the college level and use kinesiology in my coaching," Skutty said.
After setting three school records and two big Eight games, Ms. DeMaria worked for the University of Kansan swimming team, Scott Skullety, Omaha senior, intends to continue his involvement in the team's activities.
"We're going to emphasize the running game a little more this week than last week." Fambrighou was. "We want to look at a lot of bakes, of course, and we want to work mostly on our passing."
By JEFF HILL
Skulley will be graduated this spring with a degree in physical education. He will return to KU to start graduate work in kinesiology.
Sukletyte's swimming specialties were the 400-yard individual medley. 100-yard individual discus. 600-yard backstroke. He holds KU records
"Right now, a doctor runs a program over at Allen Field House for football players using the aspects of kinesiology for rehabilitation and to build up the skills you need for certain sports."
Scott Skultetv
in all three events. His 400 medley and 200 backstroke times are also Big Eight records.
"My junior year was the most satisfying as an individual," he said. "I was selected Big Eight swimmer of the year last year."
Sukeltley was captain this year, so the year was even more rewarding. he said.
seemed to be more of a single unit. The other years it just seemed to be a group of individuals.
"Everybody was out to get points for the team this year. They weren't just trying to see what they could do as a team."
Skulletty said KU coach Dick Reamon was helpful to him once he got used to the difference in high school and college swimming
"When you first get here you have to get used to him," Skultety said.
"In high school you're used to being pammed. In college, you learn that you have to make it by yourself because the coach isn't going to be there to hold the whip over you anymore. You have to be in any sport or be in any sport in college unless you really want to be there."
Skultet participated in the NCAA championship meets each of his four years but never placed.
"I kept trying but never got there," he said.
The 32-year-old power hitter, regarded by many as the most powerful player in the world, has ever known, held his customary ole of the favorite football team of the 368 Masters, one of the top two major tests of wolfgang groups.
Nicklaus Seeks Masters
AUGUSTA, GA. (AP)—The immense figure of Jack Nicklaus, always the man to beat and doubly dangerous his peers, gathered for the 1972 Masters championship as the Golden Bear sought the first leg on the never-fulfilled professional grand slam of golf.
He's made no secret of the fact he was a stunning for a one-year sweep of the Masters, the PGA, the British and American Open. Open matches
Still, the big blond with the massive legs and overpowering game must share the spotlight—with a variety of challenges.
"TO DO IT," Nicklaus said, "you have to win the first one." This is it, and the one-time fat man who came in as the famed Augusta golf club course armed with grief and fascination for the major titles and the most impressive set of credentials ever offered at this event.
AND THERE'S tough little Gary Player of South Africa, at
The depth chart lists 10 running backs, including four sophomores and four lettermen. Robert Miller, Odell Weldner, Garrett Adams, Bruce Adams have moved up from the freshman team.
Formermost among them is the squat and swarthy Lee Trevino, the goalie of the goffering world with his unprecedented blitz of the American, Canadian and British teams making a return to Augusta after a two-year boycott of the game, in which he saved he'd never play in a league.
KANSAS CITY (AP) — A guard of Cincinnati Royals of the National Basketball Association will open a new Wednesday to tour the city.
The vanguard included Coach Bob Cousy, General Manager Joe Axelson, Larry Staverman, assistant general manager; Draft Young, assistant coach, Dr. Paul Baldwin, Tom Vern Adams and Perry Samuels, the club's radio-television coordinator.
Axelson said the club would conduct its NBA draft selections next Monday from Cincinnati and Royals needed cornerstone.
Cinci Royals Send Vanguard To Tour K.C.
The advance group of Royals, who move to Kansas City next season, went through a day of news conferences and interviews.
"We'd sell our soul for a big break," he said. "We have two fair centers and a pretty good backcourt. What we need is somebody who can get the job."
the top of his precision game and heading one of the strongest foreign threats in a decade.
And a youth movement in Grier Jones, Lanny Wadkins, Jerry Heard and Johnny Miller.
BUT IT'S Nicklaus and his search for the sweep that occupies most of the attention.
"I don't think it can be done," said Trevino. "But if it can, Jack is the guv to do it."
"Possible," said Palmer "Very, very difficult, but possible."
"In addition to ability, in which Jack would require fantastic luck," said Player, who has won all four but not in the same year. "The odds on would be infernely high," he added, but if it Jack is the only man capable."
Nicklaus himself admits it's a long shot.
Delvin Williams, Vance O'Neil, Jerome Nelloma and Bob Martin will take on Edwards, Billy Riggins and Emmet Edwards were redshirts last
"I think my chances of winning any one of the four would be very good," he said. "But the odds on all four would be very long."
"We've had a real good week of practice," Fambridge said. "Our work with the offensive line on pass protection has been paying off this week. Our pass defense has been real good this week."
Only after he has another week or so to see players in their positions, they must do Fambridge plan for start making position changes, he said.
The University of Kansas team won the opening win, winning streak to three Friday when it host the University of Oklahoma. The Allen Field House course was one of its highlights.
Net Match Scheduled Against OU
After starting the season with four straight losses, the Hawks have rebounded with consonance victories. Emporia State last Thursday and Washburn University Tuesday. The Hawks downed Charlotte 9-8.
Mike Howard, KU assistant tennis coach, said the Oklahoma match would be a tough one.
"Oklahoma is the best team in the Big Eight. I think they are currently ranked 12th in the nation." Howard said.
Oklahoma is 3-0 against Big
East have four defending Bigh
champions. One of them is Scott
Martin, varisty. basketball
KU will send Tom Carlson
Chris Henry, Karl Kingsley, Ron
Shaffer, Cammons and Mari
Kirkins again to singles
singles competitions. The KU
duo teams will be Carlison-
Wick, Henry-Simms and
Nelson.
The only other Big Eight opponent KU has faced was the Oklahoma defender University. The Oklahoma defeated KU, 5-4, earlier at Stillwater.
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Sale of the saleman Panasonic Modem
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Pin Ball Machine Williams 3
coins, perfect. $70-84-350. 4-6
Roberts 778X; 8-track Reel-Reel;
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1962 Volkswagen clean and in good running condition Call 843-3473 4-7
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Need to all-4-mold Symphonic
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1962 Valvol P1800. Red with black interior. The most expensive economy car in the world. Best offer over $700. Call 842-2860. 4-6
Tuxedo - Saundra & Saude Jacket
Jeans shirt - Overalls for kids
Leather belts and Accessories Lower
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Ampeg BT-15 solid state, base amplifier with 15" speaker and 2-15" extension cabinet with 2-15" speaker condition. Model BH-4273-842. 4-10
Roberts Reel to Reel and Carriage
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1971 Honda SL 350 Excellent condition Must sell-Best Offer Takes Call Demix, 843-745-604
65 MGB and upright piano 842-2473
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For sale by owner, 1750 Honda JEJM. Cylinder,液压 valve, 232cm. chamber, lights, lateral retainer, rear brake tire in pursuit at A-4C Cycle Shop.
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used motorcycle. Call Gary. 841-169
[1966 Chevrolet Impala, d. hr. 32pt hp,
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Used compact stereo and FM $25
Used coffee stereo and FM $100
Master work console FM $150
Stonebake's 929 Mass N83-147-411
Secluded 40 acres near Perry Lake for sale. Unimproved natural state 2 pounds. Beautiful view. Will sell on contract. 841-2774 4-11
Kaw Valley Hemp Farmers - Get into the new hbell bottom bb-overalls at Earthhine. 12 E. Mth. 4-11
Vanilla Bodhran, Infraite, 1974, 125 cc, red, cedar condition, heat condit. Ahn, Alice 1971, 150 cc, Honda Motor complete 842-1336, 842-1379, 4-11
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1962 Ford Van-van-good condition $800
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UDK
10
Thursday, April 6, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Kansan Photo by RICHARD GUSTIN
Children Experiment at Yellow Brick Road School
Darrel Kippeer, instructor, public schools are outdated.
Free School Provides Alternative
By LEONARD GROTTA
Korean Staff Weiter
For the 50 students of the Yellow Brick Road School, going to school isn't merely learning how to read, write, multiply and divide. It also includes learning things such as drama yoga, art, gardening politics, poetry, ecology, and rock music.
The Yellow Brick Road School opened in Lawrence in September 1971 after about a year of research. The school was Donna Morris, with the help of Vandana Lovett, was largely responsible for conceptualizing the community free-school and the support to make it an actuality.
According to Darryl Klipstur, one of the nine paid teachers who operate the school, the Yellow Brick Road came about because
Instead of spending six hours a day sitting through a teacher's agenda, Yellow Brick Road takes their own and then carry it out.
Handling the recycling of waste paper and establishing neighborhood waste collection centers around Lawrence are some of the changes being made by Reclamation Center to achieve parity between costs and revenue and recycle more waste, Gary Jacobs. Prairie Village of the center, said Wednesday.
Diversification, New Pick-up Centers Could Cut Waste Reclamation Costs
Jacobs said that the establishment of several neighborhood waste collection centers be beneficial to many reasons. It would eliminate the problem of a waste pile-up and reduce the amount of waste Jacobs said, and it would also be more convenient for residents and students to bring their waste to the facility.
Jacobs said that the convenience of the neighborhood centers would also produce more waste to be recycled.
Persons bringing trash to the centers would be required to sort the waste into aluminum, tin, glass, white glass, brown glass and glass. Jacobs said. This would eliminate 75 per cent of processing costs, he said, because sorting the waste, now handled on a hand, incurs three-fourths of the center's processing expenses.
By CATHY SHERMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
"THIS PAST semester there has been a collection center at the university where we have been able to bring their cans and bottles," Jacobs said. "And we are finding that a lot of people are interested in taking part in school who wouldn't have ordinarily taken it down to the center under Memorial Hall."
Jacobs said that the establishment of collection centers would probably cut processing costs in half as the number of centers increased and the number of centers increased and became closer together.
THE COST of hiring a truck driver to pick up waste at the dump, gas and mileage on the truck, by the driver, is more than justified by the labor saved in the main center, Jacobs said.
"We would not only like to triumphe or triplequae the number of cups and bottles that we are now making, but we also want to include of the other materials within the
"Because of this, children are not really in contact with the world. They live in an in- environment where they act on action-poor environment."
"WHAT I'VE found," Klippester said in an interview Wednesday. "I had a friend of mine dated in the sense that they are based upon a 19th century idea of learning, and I think their emphasis is primarily upon learning bits and pieces of information."
For the Yellow Brick Road, the question is what is important to do, rather than what is important to learn, he said.
spectrum of the total solid waste produced in Lawrence," Jacobs said.
"What we are hoping to do is get into the newspaper and cardboard business," Jacobs said.
Jacobs said that he hoped a company would agree to pick up the waste paper at a central point where the paper would be collected and hauled from each of neighborhood collection centers.
JACOBS SAID that the income of the center generally was about $20,000, while the average of 10 tons of glass collected each month. $140 a month for the average of 10 tons of steel consumed per month, and return bottles and aluminum. Jacobs said that the average expenditures each month were
"SINCE PAPER has a very low processing cost, and current prices show that newspaper is almost worth the same per ton as behind him 30 per cent, it will bring us more economic interest," Jacobs said.
Presently, the Reelamation Center is subsidized by the Student Senate and the Kansas Union Concessions. Jacobs said.
The actual operation of the center is subsidized by the Union Concessions. Jacobs said this month, in addition to monthly, depending on expenses and income from sale of materials, Jacobs said. This money is used for maintaining equipment, sorting the waste, paying the gas on the U-Haul truck to take the materials to Kansas City (the city of the truck) or the center staff or driver drivers
Jacobs said that the athletic corporation was not pleased with the presence of the Reclamation Society, because of the pile-up of trash.
Jacobs said that the center would have to be moved from the University of Pennsylvania new location in Lawrence about June 1 because of pressure from the KU Athletic Corporation and its successors, which controls the space.
of a lack of alternatives to the public school system.
The Kansas Union Concessions would like to use the space for something else, Jacobs said.
JACOBS SAID that the center will ask the Senate for rent for the new building (the Memorial $1,000 as a cushion for salaries for people working at the center and for equipment to make the building work better). The bins for glass instead of the barrels now used. Jacobs said that the center would no longer have any financial aid from the Union.
JACBOS SAID that there was a certain interest the director's directive director's job could be split and shared by a number of people. Jacbos thought it was more important to be effective and the director's salary could be diverted to other
Presently, the director's job is to promote the center within the community. Jacobs said. If the center was built underway they would diminish or eliminate that function of the handling publicity, Jacobs said.
JACORS SAID that he had received figures of the volume of trash refuse produced each week by Blackman, coordinator for the Committee. Jacobs said that he would measure the amount determining the reclamation potential of Lawrence and would aid in projecting the goals of the city.
"Public Schools, for the most part, have just become places to put children." Klipster said. "The teachers of the YBR don't go to school a place. Rather, it is viewed in terms of an experience."
BLACKMAN SAID that the city of Lawrence picked up 500 tons of each week. The character is weak. The municipal refuse, based on
Jacobs said that the director's job would be eliminated.
federal government correlation of studies done on municipalities, showed that this city could be broken down into cities could be broken down into cities
Anywhere from 16 to 20 per cent of the refuse consists of glass, plastic and cardboard quantities of both. Blackman said. Between 45 and 60 per cent consists of waste paper, including 25 per cent newspaper, he said.
Jacobs said that the center was recycling on one potential $80 to 720 tons of glass and metal a month. He started by storing the system he hoped the center would be able to recycle as much as 50 per cent of the glass and metal in the facility.
JACOBS SAID that the JACOBS would be regarded as a stop-gap measure because it could never be really efficient in recycling
He said that a city-operated processing system at the site of a facility in a large mechanically sort a major part of solid waste for recycling, would reduce the amount of waste.
He said that a mandatory collection of refuse where residents would be required to take bottles might also be desirable.
"Because we regard the Reclamation Center as a stopgap measure, we hope to move to a more established of a highly efficient and economically utilized system." Jacobsa said.
"If recycling was clearly profitable, you wouldn't have any problem recycling wastes," Jacobs said.
Mexican Students Solicit Letters Favoring Bovcott
Members of the Association of the American Students (A.M.S.) working with Robert Greave, a representative of the United States in the 1930s.
They are soliciting letters from KU students to Kansas Senators against the National Labor Relations Board's attempted injunction of the union's boycott, a legal action by the secretary of A.M.A.S. A, said Wednesday.
Campus Briefs
The YBR school consists of two schools, one for 15 children between the ages three and six and an elementary school of about 15 students betwe
The farm workers contend the Republican dominated labor commission was instigating the reason to destroy the workers' cause
She said the United Farm Workers were boycotting firms who sold produce which was not under union contract. The National Information Board is seeking an injunction prohibiting this action.
workers' effort to unionize, she said. If unionized, they could work on the union and programs of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare on housing, public health and international programs, Gutterze said.
The second is an ultra-modern approach to housing the polar bear that was designed by Architecture 28 students in conjunction with Robert R. Patterson, vertebrate preparator of mammals at the museum.
A. M.A.S. is working with the few workers by writing letters and sending them to the Kansas Union Thursday and Friday. A.M.A.S. will inform students about the importance of suggestions for letters, she said
Two new exhibits recently opened at the KU Museum of Natural History. One, an exhibit of vertebrate skeletons, gives the public a comparison of modern day vertebrate structures with extinct fossil structures.
Natural History Exhibits
Professor Howard Sherman, a self-styled socialist from the University of California, will speak on "Democracy under Capitalism and Socialism: A Western Marxist's View," at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Big Eight Room.
Tri Delts Awards
The organization has also assisted help from various campuses and organizations. So far, the response has been good,
Applications are now being accepted for the annual Delta Delta Delta service projects scholarships for full-time undergraduate women. The applications for the two $250 scholarships are available at the dean of women's office and at the Office of Student Financial Aid in Strong Hall. Applications must be returned by May 1.
This is an extension of the farm
Greaves has talked to several classes in political science and social welfare on the subject, she said.
Socialist to Speak
mex shoes
THE SCHOOL is funded from two sources. Part of the money to cover salaries, rent and equipment from the University of Kansas. The remaining funds are from the students' tuition. Tuition for the pre-school half-day sessions is $28 per student. Full-day students $40 per session, $60 a month.
813 Mass. St.
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"Of course there are ex- cretions to this," Kippster said. She had never lived in the school, we won't reject anyone. Some parents have rejected more than one child enrolled and can't remember what worked something out."
About 40 to 50 per cent of the childrens' parents are connected to the University in some way, he
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"We have swayed from one end of the spectrum to the other,"冲了。them finally beginning to achieve a synthesis. It is a synthesis based on their abilities and on other people, being sensitive to both their abilities and their
TRACK SHOE Cross-Country
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The Yellow Brick Road is "approved" by the state of Kansas. Approvalalls one category of students to school staff members, there are too many restrictions in the regulations for accreditation of the regulations for accredited schools.
The Yellow Brick Road has no designated director. Carol Klinkneth acts as a coordinatort secretary for the school and ensures financial aspects of tuition, taxes and supply purchases.
One concern often expressed about progressive, non-directive education of the free school children is that not be as proficient as their public school counterparts in reading, writing and mathematics.
"I'm sure that the students are picking these things up as fast if not faster than if they were in a school," Klippar resounded.
Pompon Squad Chosen at KU
ANOTHER MAJOR problem encountered by the YBR has been that of the duality between structure and non-structure.
The students play a large role in directing their own education. They pick their own textbooks from the Curriculum Library in their room, and they are pursuing areas of interest on their own by using programmed
One important advantage in favor of the free school is that children are learning because they have to, not because they have to, he said.
A squad of 10 pompons girls, eight regulars and two newcomers, were Wednesday night from 22 finalists in Allen Field House, according to Sue Tagg. Sioux Iowa senior and KU pompon girl.
texts
Policy matters are decided by consensus of the teachers, the parents and the students.
The regular squad consists of Jo Ann Staaugaard, Hacktettown, N.J. junior. Liz Phillips, Ulysses Cohen, Hickory, Park freshman. Charlotte Wiegers, Mission sophomore; Penny Perme, Mission freshman; Cheryl Williams, Kansas City, Kan.; Gail Gatt, Lawrence sophomore, and Rosalina Fells, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore. Alternates are Pam Kidd, Melody Boyd, Olate freshman.
In Kippers' opinion, one very valuable aspect of the free school movement is that it functions as a 'gendered garden model for the public schools.' He attributes many of the innovative changes that have taken place in Britain to the past few years to the inspiration provided by free
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The Yellow Brick Road is not the only free school in Lawrence. The Loriense School is also in operation, and another group has started a free high school next year. It will be called Yarrow.
209 Providence
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Phone 842-0767
BUDDY RICH
AND HIS BIG BAND
Next year, the three schools plan to form a common corporation to coordinate their efforts in serving the community. Klipper said that the three colleges made three different educational areas, a preschool, a middle school and a high school.
at the
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C
With able b it see Shaw from the w
The Admin guidel
with of the co
Code preser
Univers
Fiv Unive include legisla Senate heard Thurs
KB
Adr have contr H. Rd of W Traffic Thurs
notice
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Walter C. Wheeler
CLOUDY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
82nd Year, No.117
Buddy Rich Discusses Music, Plays Drums
Friday, April 7, 1972
See Page 7
AWAY FROM HOME
Russian photo by RICK KERSEY
Spring Is Here At Last
NVN Continue Drive
not last long, however. The United States Weather Bureau's forecast for the weekend indicates temperatures in the 60's and a slight chance of rain. But April showers bring May flowers and warmer weather.
With temperatures soaring to unseasonal highs, such as Thursday's 87 degrees, it seems only fair that Susan Hughes, Shawnee Mission junior, should pause from academic responsibility and enjoy the weather. The sun, wind and heat will
U.S. Planes Batter Enemy In Biggest Attack Since '68
SAIGON (AP)—In the biggest aerial onslaught since the bombing halt nearly three and one half years ago, large forces of U.S. planes pounded enemy targets Thursday in North Vietnam. Other allied planes raked enemy positions on South Vietnam's northern front after a break in bad weather.
For the first time in the war, the North Vietnamese fired a surface-to-air missile from South Vietnamese soil. Witnesses on the northern front said the missile was fired at an allied plane from one of the bases. The Vietnamese bases. It missed the plane.
On the ground, bloody battles were reported 70-85 miles north of Saigon, where the North Vietnamese opened a new front Wednesday. The North Vietnamese tightened their lines close to Quang Tri, and the Viet Cong took eight-eight offensive on the northern front. But the South Vietnamese brought up heavy reinforcements.
OFFICIAL U.S. sources said the raids on North Vietnam, ordered by President Nixon, were aimed at nearly every type of target. The main area was Quang Bin, with Vietnam's southernmost province, and the enemy half of the dimentilated zone.
They cited the buildup of anti-aircraft defenses in the southern panhandle of North Vietnam and the troops and supply reserves that could be fed into the offensive in the northern front of South Vietnam.
Sources said the targets included fuel, ammunition and other supply deposits, long-
Council Changes Proposed
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Five guidelines for changes in University government structure, including one which would transfer legislative power from the University Senate to the University Council, were made by the University Council Thursday.
The Council's Organization and Administration Committee formulated the guidelines. The suggestions were received by the committee to draft specific Senate Code revisions over the summer and present them to the Council and the senate.
Under the present system, both the Council and Senate have legislative authority. The Council is composed of student and faculty delegates from the
University Senate and acts in behalf of the Senate according to limitations imposed by the Senate. Both bodies make policy under shared jurisdiction, but the Senate has the authority to decide jurisdictional boundaries.
UNDER THE RESOLUTIONS, the University Senate meets for informational purposes and general discussions to guide the Council in its decisions. The Council, not the Senate, would exercise voting power.
The committee also recommended that a provision be made for polling the University Senate by mail on any major issue as directed by a majority vote in the Council or by a position signed by 20 per cent of the senators. A similar said such a provision would account for occasional needs of specific involvement by the entire Senate.
KU Traffic Proposal Budget Problems Slow
Administrative budgeting problems will have to be resolved before the new traffic control plan can be presented to the public, H. Robert Malinowski, assistant director of the Traffic Library and chairman of the Traffic and Parking Board, said Thursday.
Malinsowk had planned to present the plan at Wednesday's meeting of the Senate, but he was informed that there was not room on the agenda. Malinsowk said that as far as he knew, the plan would not be presented to him. He would be in an open hearing, hopefully next week.
Some aspects of the plan have already been publicized and have led to controversy. Malinowski said he thought some of the questions raised during the past week would be answered when details of the plan were presented.
"It is my understanding that some minor budgeting problems have to be worked out, and that as soon as that is accomplished we will schedule an open hearing on the proposal," Malinowsky said.
"The sooner everything is out in the open, the sooner we can begin meaningful conversation."
THE MAJOR CONTROVERSY so far has stemmed from the proposal to make Jayhawk Boulevard and Memorial Drive for campus bus systems. The mayor would have on the campus bus system
Jn Liemwellyn, Lawrence graduate student and a member of the Student Senate Transportation Committee, released a statement this week charging that the plan would seriously affect the campus bus system.
"Forty per cent of the buses' revenue is obtained from the five major bus stops on the north side of Jayhawk Boulevard, which would have to be moved to Memorial Drive under the proposed plan." Liewellyn said.
Llewellyn contended that westbound bus service would be seriously inconvenienced and that acute scheduling problems would result on the system's Daisy Hill runs.
"the scheduling problem results from both the increased distance for runs and the increased time it would take for studen to complete a run at the bus stops and vice-versa," Lewwilly said.
The plan to install 400 to 500 parking meters on campus has also drawn criticism from some students. Malnowski said the installation would eliminate the need to raise revenue through parking fines and cited the criticism Traffic and Security have received for their policies.
Malinowke said, however, he did not think the problems created for the bus system were significant.
HE SAID the problem could be solved by adding an interface that it would connect physically unfeasible
A faculty member proposed an amendment to make such mailings mail ballots rather than mere polls. Another council member pointed out that this would legislate power to the Senate, thus defeating the purpose of the resolution which transferred that power to the Council.
ANOTHER FACULTY member mentioned that the mail ballot issue had been a major point of controversy previously, and inclusion of a mail ballot in the amendment contributions would make reform unlikely. The proposed amendment was defeated.
He said the plan would also give students wider choice in parking, instead of restricting them to one lot as under the present system.
Another resolution called for the establishment of two separate University councils and senates for the University of Kansas Medical Center and the Lawrence campus. The organization and administrative commons differed the differences between the two institutions were of significant magnitude to warrant separate governing structures.
At previous University Council meetings, hopes had been expressed that separate governing bodies would alleviate the difficulties in achieving a quorum encountered by the Senate because few center representatives attended meetings.
"Under the proposed system, the bus service would tend to become a one-way system," he said. "Westbound fares would undoubtedly fall off as many dorm resi- dences could be on walking home. This would cause the bus to be financially shaky bus system."
The resolutions endorsed election on a proportional basis for the Faculty Council, which comprises the faculty section of the university. The faculty recognizes school or college, military science, the administration, the libraries and computer science would have one representative for each 20 Full Time teachers (f) faculty members or fraction thereof.
THE COMMITTEE also recommended that efforts be made to coordinate Medical Center and Lawrence campus activities when they were of mutual interest.
THE REASONS stated for adoption of the amendment was the need for delegates representing a University-wide constituency. One faculty member said certain points of view were fashionable within certain schools and colleges, and a faculty member holding contrary views provided provision for a few large representatives would allow views which depart from the norm to be heard, be said.
An amendment calling for the election of 10 per cent of the Faculty Council at large was adopted. An arrangement of the ratio of representatives per FTE faculty members was left to the Organization and Administration Committee.
range artillery guns firing across the DMZ, troop positions, trucks moving southward with war supplies, truck parks, surface to air missile batteries, antiaircraft artillery sites and MIG air bases.
The North Vietnamese radio claimed 10 U.S. jets had been shot down. The U.S. Command refused to say whether any jets had been lost.
Students would be represented on the university Council by one student delegate.
Dissolution of the University Council would occur if one-third of the University Senate voted for it under another constitution, or if a new Council would then take place.
IT WAS REPORTED that the U.S. command brought nearly all its 700 planes in the Indochina theater into the bombing of North Vietnam, the attacks on the northern front, and against enemy supply lines in Laos.
See COUNCIL. Page 3
The blows were the most punishing since the peak days before President Lyndon B. Johnson ordered a halt to the bombing of North Vietnam in November, 1968.
The U.S. Command said this week's attacks on North Vietnam were "in response to the apparent attack" of South Vietnam by North Vietnamese forces who crossed the demilitarized zone". It added the raids also were to help deter further attacks, be of limited duration, the command said.
THREE E. Destroyers offshore embarked on voyages positions ashore dwellermen
The planes used in the big strike in the North came from three carriers in the Gulf of Tonkin and from bases in South Vietnam and Thailand.
On the Sasagon front, reports said three North Vietnamese divisions had been moved north from the district surrounded the district town of Loc Nub. 75 miles north of the capital. An Loc, capital of Binh Long Province 15 miles north of Binh Long Province threatened from the east, north and west.
As dusk fell, North and South Vietnamese troops were locked in bloody combat around Loc Ninh. Between 4,000 and South Vietnamese troops were in the area.
Smaller clashes swirled closer to the South Vietnamese capital.
Another rocket and sapper attack was made against Khimu Cuong, the capital of Hau Nghea Province 25 miles west of Saigon.
SAPPERS ATTACKED the Lai Khe base camp, rear headquarters of the South Vietnamese 50 Infantry Division 25 miles north of Ho Chi Minh command said casualties were light.
Ll. Gen. Nguyen Van Mihn, commander of the Saigon region, was reported to have requested more U.S. air support at a meeting with Creighton W. Abrams,
commander of U.S. forces in South Vietnam.
With Minh's air squadrons and reserves depleted by redeployment of units to the base, ground troops were said to be hurting for air support. The only U.S. air support available was a squadron of A37s, small helicopter gunships, members, and some bellicopter gunships.
LT. GEN. Hoang Xuan Lam, commander of South Vietnamese troops on the Northern front, told newsman that some 10,000 reinforcements were in position and that the situation had improved there.
Most of the American air power was being concentrated on the northern front.
South Vietnam forces forces continued to hold a defensive line at Dung Ha, nine miles north of Hanoi.
North Vietnamese forces still posed a threat to Quaig Tri. Tighting was reported on three sides of the city, which field commanders said was the immediate objective of the North Vietnamese offensive below the DMZ.
Quang Tri and 10 miles below the DM7.
ASSOCIATED PRESS correspondent Holger Jensen reported from the front lines that North Vietnamese surface-to-air bombers across the DMZ into South Vietnam and fired at South Vietnamese bombers but missed. Jensen and six other newsmen were slightly wounded when mortar fire on the Dong Ha River defense line on the Dong Ha River defenses.
As the biggest North Vietnamese offensive since Tet in 1968 rolled into its second week, it was discharged that U.S. forces were moving to the 10 Fleet ship was standing by off the coast.
Wichita-Based F105s Ordered to S.E. Asia
By the Associated Press
Spokesman at McConnell Air Force Base denounced to amplify a disclosure by sources in Washington that Thursday that a squadron of U.S. marines had been ordered to Southeast Asia base.
"A base alert exercise"—not a drill, but an actual alert—was in effect for all Tactical Air Command units on the base, they said.
The spokesman did not reveal any details of the number of men or planes involved but a squadron usually numbers about 18 aircraft.
The planes ordered to Southeast Asia are from the 23rd Tactical Fighter Wing, an indirect descendant of the famed Flying Tiger squadron of World War II.
The Pentagon refused all comment on the assignment, giving its standard reply that "for security purposes we do not and will not discuss operational matters."
THE SPOKESMAN SAID, "The Department of Defense has said that we will take whatever precautionary measures are required to protect remaining U.S. forces in Vietnam."
It was understood that the Nixon administration was considering sending additional aircraft to Southeast Asia but did not appear willing pending further developments in the war.
Earlier this week, President Nixon ordered about 20 B52 bombers to the
western Pacific, raising the number of these eight-engine jets in the area to nearly 100, about the same number as in the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war.
Other attack planes are assigned to the area at bases in South Vietnam, in Thailand and aboard four Navy aircraft carriers. About 400 planes were used Thursday against enemy targets in North Vietnam's northern front.
THE SAIQON GOVERNMENT, battling Communist troops on three fronts, has asked the United States for additional air and naval support.
n these planes will give the United States greater capability to mount attacks in the type of poor weather that had hampered the war. This also week over the northern front.
The last F105s were pulled out of Southeast Asia last year as part of the Vietnamization program. They have been used heavily against targets in the Hanoi-Istanbul and after the United States bailed the daily bombing campaigns against North Vietnam in 1968.
A Pentagon spokesman indicated earlier in the day that most of the new air strikes by American bombers have been aimed at knocking out surface-to-air missiles and antiaircraft artillery concentrations in and above the demilitarized zone in Vietnam.
D.J. Khalifa
Thai Candle Dance to Light International Night
Kansan Photo by TERRY SHIPMAN
Candlelight adds a soft charm as Viyada Viran, Tivapur Pinipipe and Kongkarn Srinajanti join in the Candle Dance of Thailand. The Candle Dance will be one of many dance, song and concert events that will be held in the Kansas University Ballroom at 7 p.m. Saturday. Exhibits
from 14 countries will be shown in the ballroom beginning at 2 p.m. The exhibit and show are free. A banquet featuring foods from different lands will also be held. Tickets for the banquet may be obtained by contacting International Club or by visiting the International Club is sponsoring the show, exhibit and banquet.
2
Friday, April 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KU-Y Task Force to Revamp Rock Chalk
Editor's Note: This is the second of a two-part story dealing with the Rock Chalk Revue. The first volume of history of revue through 1971.
By TOM THRONE
Kansas Staff Writer
The increasing lack of interest and need for reevaluation led to changes in the Work Task Force to study future changes in the Rock Chalk
Lauria Friesen, then president of the KU-Y, headed a committee of KU-Y personnel and interested persons in Rock Chalk.
Dear Caviney, Paola senior and a member of the committee, said the committee was trying to make Rock Chalk conform more with the ideals of the KUY, which is to eliminate racism and
The Task Force report was formulated, presented and adopted by KU-Y Cabinet in April, 1971.
The report covered all areas of the revue from the producer to the groups included in the program.
THE SELECTION of the skis was listed as one of the main problems in the revue. The Task Force recommended that at least one of the skis be guaranteed a spot among the four skis selected.
According to the report, if after judging, all four scripts were Greek then the fourth place script would be dropped and the fifth would be replaced by replace it. The name of the fourth skit would not be made public.
The in-between acts, it was recommended, should be opened to more non-Greeks.
It was hopped that by guaranteeing a spot to non-Grebes more independent would be interested in Rock Chalk.
The report advised the staff that the scripts should not display racism and sexism. The producer should watch for these violations.
"SINCE OUR PURPOSE is to work to eliminate racism and sexism in the workplace and responsibility to analyze the scripts for any racist or sexist content."
The elimination of block ticket sales was recommended in the report. The tickets in the future will be sold a first come, first serve basis.
The number of awards was cut to cover only the best actor, skit, actress and the best original song (if there was one).
The report decided that there was a need for better publicity to inform parents that a need was needed to show the new changes in hopes of stimulating interest.
The judges, the report advised should be different each night and during the script selection or up by the Rock Chalk producer
THE PRODUCER, the report stated, would be selected by the Y with the understanding that he would uphold the report's rules. Also, the producer would try to eliminate racism in the revue.
Martil Brodsky, Wilmette, II. Phomore and a KUY Cabinet team will review in the future would be more representative of the current state.
The report was approved by the V. Roberts, once the report was approved, it was implemented. Therefore, the guidelines established in the report were implemented.
Andy Buktay, Kansas City
Kan senior, was given the job of
producer of the 1972 Rock Chalk.
Cavinee said she did not know i
X-Ray Danger Declines
Egvpt Renounces Jordan
WASHINGTON - The Food and Drug Administration announced that medical x-ray exposure to human reproductive organs, considered possibly harmful to future generations, has been reduced by 30 percent. In addition, the rate of diatomical x-ray examinations increased 10 per cent.
News Briefs By The Associated Press
CAIRO - Egypt has severed relations with Jordan in retaliation for King Hussein's proposal to create a Palestinian state on the occupied west bank of the Jordan River, President Anwar Sadat announced.
Saigon Coalition Sought
WASHINGTON—President Nixon will visit the Shah of Iran in Tehran May 30 and 31 after his eight day stay in the Soviet Union. U.S. officials said it was still undecided just where else Nixon might be. The United Nations General Assembly tended to rule out Ireland because of the political tension there.
PARIS-Claiming major victories in the offensive in South Vietnam, the Viet Cong's chief delegate to the Paris peace talks said the overall aim was to set up a coalition government in Saigon, Mrs. Nguyen Thi Bhin also insisted the United States return to the peace table. She and the North Vietnamese delegation reiterated charges that the United States had sabotaged the peace talks.
Irish Turmoil Examined
THE SKITS WERE chosen, all of which were Greek. McColm Hall, the only independent script entered, complained that they guaranteed a place in the review because of the Task Force report.
LONDON—The British government asserted that most of the bloody clashes between Protestants and Roman Catholics in Northern Ireland were sparked by hooligans. A 300-page analysis of the violence in Ustler added: "It would be the height of naval to manage the conflict, who almost invariably threw first stones were manipulated and encouraged by persons seeking to discredit the government."
the report was emphasized to Bukaty.
With this in mind the planning of the 1972 Rock Chalk Revue was planned.
However, Bukaty later said he told the selection committee that he would guarantee no places in the revue.
Nixon to Visit Iran
THE ORCHESTRA and other members of Rock Chalk were present at the revive if the McColum skit was allowed because of the reference
After the semester break McColm changed their skit because they didn't have their music ready, the leads had dropped and there was a lack of participation. The new skit was for approval, which it received over the disapproval of Bukaty.
By The Associated Press
Everything moved along ache ceased not to allow the suit in the reive. It wasn't performed. At present the ire trying to formulate a plan, but it will be revised to conform with the plan of the Task Force, said Cavinez, the Y hopes to improve the court's rating.
The KU-Y agreed with McCormick to buy a Bulkay team and McCormill in the program. It was decided to put the skit in as an in-between-act, as it would have been more engaging.
However, on Thursday, March 2, at a technical rehearsal the McCollum skit was bowed by the orchestra and an audience of the
Mari Brodsky, Wilmette, IL; sophomore and a KU-Y Cabinet professor; review in the future would be representative of the university.
After a brief Friday morning meeting, the problem was taken to the University Judiciary Jess McNish, adjunct professor of
Sickle-Cell Threat to Many Blacks
By JOHN REED
Kansan Staff Writer
Sickle, cell anem... sedentary blood disease, kill one black child in 500, according to figures published recently in Today's Health Magazine. A new study suggests stress or exhaustion may experience a crisis in which his need for oxygen is increased. His red blood cells then become elongated, or sickle shaped, and the capillaries which supply tissues with needed oxgene.
business and chairman of the Judiciary, heard the case.
Genetically, among a
range of malignant cells,
one half of the cell display
the sickle-cell trait. The other
half are susceptible to malaria or
staphylococcus.
Malaria does not threaten black Americans, but an estimated 50,000 black Americans are now dying from it.
PERSONS CARRYING the sickle-cell trait are protected against various forms of malaria. Scientists say that the sickle-cell trait is a rationale duplication protecting persons against malaria in Africa.
An estimated 2,000,000 black Americans carry the defective gene responsible for sickle-cell anemia.
Hemoglobin S will stick when deprived of oxygen. If both parental genes are of this type the child will have hemoglobin SS when he is deprived and displays the sickle-cell trait; hemoglobin S, and the other parent displays normal hemoglobin A, the child will be a carrier of the trait. Usually it will be passed on genetically.
The genetic difficulty begins when the parents' genes produce an imprinted hemoglobin that the child's body will produce. Hemoglobin is the molecule that carries oxygen in the body.
In 1970 the New England Journal of Medicine called sickle-
cell anemia "the most neglected public health problem in America today."
LAST YEAR the Nixon Administration赋封 $8 million to be distributed through the U.S. Food for Science for sickle-cell anemia research
Recently, being more aware of the effects of sickle-cell anemia, blacks and other concerned people have directed the use of medical and governmental organizations to the disease.
Dr. Paul Schloerb, dean of research at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said Tuesday that Dr. Dennis Avery, a pediatric surgeon of medicine, had applied to the National Institutes of Health for funds to conduct sickle-cell research.
Structural Engineering Conference: all day, Kansas University.
Cedar Rapids. In: Interviews: 8:30 a.m.
Campus Bulletin
Cedar Rapids, I. In interviews: 8:30 a.m.
Dior University
Structural Engineering: 8:45 a.m. Forum
Structural Engineering: 8.45 a.m., Forum Room.
Prof. Adv. Comm.: 10 a.m., International
Social Welfare Field Consultants: 10:30 a.m. Regionalist Room.
Anthropology Grads: 11:30 a.m., Cot.
towood Caferita.
Luco-Brasilian: 11:30 a.m. Alceo B
*craf. Adv. Comm.: 10 a.m., International
Société Social Field Consultants: 10-30
Cafeteria
Shakespeare Planning: 11:30 a.m., Curry
Room
Shakespeare Planning: 11:30 a.m., Curry Room.
Engineering Exposition Opening: moon.
H HALL
Engineering Exposition Opening: noon
Learned Hall.
PAC-Social Welfare: noon, Centenial Room.
Exemplary-Engineering: noon, Alcove C
*Phyto-Ecologists:* moon. Alceo C.
Cafeteria moon. Alceo D. Cafeteria
Psychology. Born, Mount D'Carabella.
Bahal Table: noon. Meadowlark
Cafeteria.
Humanitarian Comm. 12:30 p.m. Alnae A.
Holdenah Committee. 12:30 p.m. Alcove A
Russian Table. 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark
Cafeteria Table 12:30 p.m. Stairway
Structural Engineering 12:30 p.m.
124
Structural Engineering: 12:30 p.m.
Kansas Room
Welfare Clients To Receive Restorations
school: 12:30 p.m. English Room
anthropology: 12:30 p.m. Council Room
Must students: 12:45 p.m. Room 929
speaker: Larry Winn. 2 p.m.
Eric Bright
Big Eight Room
Veterans. 2pm - 5pm, Cafeteria, B Level.
Medical. 1pm - 3pm, Diety, B Level, Pine
Welfare recipients in Lawrence wore receipt checks that reflected the restoration of the 20 per cent cut in payments made last month.
Social Welfare Fac. Dev.: 2:30 p.m., Pine Room.
Greening' Law Students. 4:30 p.m.
Regionalislis Room
K. U K Folk Dance Club Instruction: 7 p.m.
Greeting: Law Students. 4:30 p.m.
Regional Coach. 7:15 p.m.
Dance Club Instruction. 7 o'min.
This year's state legislature allocated $10 million which will restore the 1071 session's cuts for the fiscal year that ended June 30.
The Kansas Welfare Department mailed cheques Monday totaling $2.58 million, more than the March payments.
IVCF; 7 p.m., International Room.
The Way; 7 p.m., Regional Room.
Southeast Asian Rehearsal; 7 p.m., Parlor
SUA Popular Films: 7 and 9:30 p.m.
Wooldruff Auditorium
Latin American Club: 8 p.m., Forum Room.
All day, Robinson Natatorium.
College Assembly Workshop: 8:45 a.m.
SATURDAY
Synchronized Swimming Judges Clinic
College Assembly Workshop: 8:45 a.m.
Forum Room.
February 2014
Engineering Exposition: 9 a.m., Learned Hour
International Festival Exhibits: 2 p.m.
Big Eight, Jayhawk Rooms.
Although sickle-cell anemia cannot be cured, treatment after its detection can sometimes control its effects.
Cafeteria.
Physical Education Recognition Dinner: 6
p.m. Kansas Room.
International Program: 7 p.m., Ballroom.
Clinical tests have recently been simplified to provide a fast, inexpensive means to detect sickle-cell anemia.
SUNDAY
Synchronized Swimming Judges Clinic: 9
postinson Natatorium.
SUA Bridge: 1:30 p.m., Ptne Room.
SUA Chess: 2 p.m., Room 305.
Art Museum Mini-Tour: 2 p.m., Spooner.
International Film: 2:30 and 7:30 p.m.
Dr. Paul Wolf of Stanford University, and Dr. Robert Nbalandan of Bloedget Memorial Hospital in Grand Rapids, Mich. have observed the chemical interactions of other substances and devised a fast, inexpensive means to detect sickle cell anemia.
Woodruff Auditorium.
Art Museum Film Series: 3 p.m.
Basement Lecture Hall.
At Bldgett Memorial Hospital Dr. Nalbantau has directed a care unit for patients using urea, Nalbantau has been able to end severe skirting scars among patients and maintain therapy, preventing skin sickling.
Cattell Reclair: 3 p.m.
Concert Band: 3 p.m., University
Temple.
PERSONS ARE screened by subjecting a blood sample to a chemical test. If the test result is positive, then the healthy liver, is added to the solution. If the solution then becomes too present of hemoglobin S is injected.
The variations of characteristics of the anemic person make treatment and cure difficult. Currently, sickle-cell anemia can only be prevented if the treat do not have children.
Engineering Exposition Awards Dinner:
6:30 p.m. Kansas Room
THE WOLF-NALBANDIAN
For
Now, here's the catch. You can't get your Student-Railpass or the regular First Class Eurallapass in Europe—you have to get them before you leave the country. Just head to the airport's ticket counter, the coupon for a free folder, complete with railroad map,
pean 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.
Complete Automobile
Insurance
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 shoes. So with low air fares and Student-Railpass you've got Europe made.
Now that you can fly to Europe for peanuts, here's how little you shell out to get around:
Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of health services at the University of Kansas, said the incidence of sickle-cell anemia among the black population at 80 percent not warrant mass screening.
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 Euro-
Schweiger said that the probabilities find him in campus are "quite remote." During the last seven years, Schweiger recalled two cases of sickle-cell anemia at Watkins Memorial Hospital.
TEST enables mass screening of blacks for the sickle-cell trait
Schweiger suggested the low incidence may be attributed to the fact that students usually die before they reach adulthood. He said that Watkins would continue to provide sickle-hemoglobin for black students on campus.
Gene Doane
You shell out $130 and get a Student-Kipass.
All you need is the bread and some cheese to show you're a bona fide student.
$130 for Two Months of unlimited rail travel in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.
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curauspa is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.
Please send me your free Euralipass folder with railroad map. □ Or your Student-Railpass folder order form. □
The way to see Europe without feeling like a tourist.
STUDENT-RAILPASS
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Use Kansan Classified
Kansas Union
Jayhawk Room
Red Baron
Red
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presents
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FRIDAY
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SATURDAY
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LARRY WINN
April 7 2:00 p.m.
Republican Congressman, Kansas 3rd District
to speak on the
Impact of the Youth Vote
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Friday, April 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
3
Kansan Photo h7 TERRY SHIPMAN
THE MARVELS OF LANGUAGE
Speaker Decries Popular Ideas
Sherman criticizes common misconceptions of democracy
Council Changes . . .
Continued from page 1
The Organization and Administration Committee should adopt its resolutions as guidelines in drafting the alterations in the Senate Code. In this way, the reasoning rat, the reforms can be made with greater confidence in the fall because they would have the official endorsement of the administration.
THE FINAL MOTION, however, said the Council would receive the recommendations rather than adopt them because they were not received and did not receive copies of the proposals since they were not elected on Wednesday night to properly time it to properly study them.
Because they are not full-fledged members of the faculty, he said, graduate students have little play in the Faculty Senate and Council. But since they have research and career interests, they do not interested in undergraduate politics and the Student Senate.
HE SAID graduate assistants constituted a third interest group which was not adequately
He said any plans for Senate reform should include a statement that students would be adequately represented. Discussion on the subject was terminated after inclusion of the issue in the bill.
represented on the Council because of the decentralization of graduate school. Decentralized plans abandonment of the graduate school per sec; graduate students school or their individual schools or colleges.
The Faculty Council and
six representative met in
separate sessions to meet
new members of the University
Senate Executive Committee
Faculty representatives are Ronald Calgaard, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and professor of physics; Joseph Marzullo, professor of Navy ROTC; Henry Snyder, associate dean of research administration; John Wright, professor of Lee Yong, associate dean of the School of Journalism.
Prof Says Big Industry Prohibits U.S. Democracy
There cannot be a democracy in the United States because of the political processes, Howard Sherman, professor of Slavic and Soviet studies at the University of Texas at Austin. Tuesday at the Kansas Union.
By DAVE BLISS
He cited the controversial case of the International Telephone & Telegraph Corp., a private corporation which allegedly courted the political extremists of the Sherman acre, a corporation contributed heavily to the party's funds and also kept labor unions at bay.
SHERMAN SAID that because economic power provided political power, only industrial or financial resources enable ability to participate significantly in the "democratic process." Lower-class minorities have neither political power nor net economic influence, he said.
The second erroneous but somewhat more radical view is a political democratic institution, acknowledging that there are corrupt individuals within theocratic framework, Sherman said.
Kansan Staff Writer
"It is no longer a moral question as to whether the degree of economic power should be greater than political power," he said, because the present governmental structure is taken for granted."
Sherman said there were two popular misconceptions of government held by the American people.
He said the first was a treaty between the democratic institution of government was one that complied with all interests of the people.
HE SAID political loopholes措ent more widely in direct promotion of economic leverage. Political campaign expenses can be used to offset the cost of unions cannot deduct their own campaigns, according to
THE STRONG BOND between political and economic power can be observed in the mass media which are owned and controlled by a wealthy friend. he said. With complete advertising control, one would amounts to a "ludicrous overkill" of power imbalance, he said.
betton campaigning, he said. "You can count the number of dollars for the number of votes you need," Sherman said.
election campaigning,he said
Legislators and other government office holders represent a disproportionate number of constituents in office, he said. The popularity of these statesmen as determined by the number of votes received, can be used to estimate the amount of money spent in
powerful few. More than 96 per cent of all cities have only one or two newspapers, Sherman said. Such monopolizing ownership of the media has resulted in the present-day decline by the editors, Sherman said.
Of more than 630 television stations, not one, according to Sherman, is owned by a black. He owns about two-thirds of newspapers by a select and
SHERMAN SAID a modern socialist society must include a differentiation of wages and a subsequent equality of income. Consumer goods and services could be privately purchased, he said.
Political and economic balance can be reached in the United States because economic equality is attained. Economic equality will be attained when there is a greater value of wealth, according to Sherman.
Sherman has written two books, "Introduction to the Traditional Radical View, and on Radical Political Economy." The latter was dedicated to the people of Czechoslovakia.
THE JAMES GANG
with Special Guest Star
CANNED HEAT
Plus
JIMMY SPHEERIS
SATURDAY APRIL 8 8:00 p.m.
Henry Levitt Arena-Wichita
Tickets $4.00 advance, $5.00 at door
Tickets may be Purchased at
- Sgt. Peppers
- Jeans Unlimited
- Central Ticket Agency 225 W. Douglas (No Checks)
Wichita, Ks.
- Sunshine Sounds (Newton, Ks.)
Duane Vann, Lawrence sophomore and chairman of the Kansas delegation to the National Republican Convention last month in Gary, Ia., clarified the convention's stand on public issues and discounted rumors surrounding the convention at a Monday in the Kansas Union.
Vann said the convention did not express a position on the issue of Israel's separation from the convention did not express opinions on either the Israeli-Israeli conflict or the war.
Delegate Discounts Rumors
An article which appeared in the issue of Jet magazine said the two and busing resolution had been adopted at the Black Political Conference.
visibility of establishing a new black political party.
Vann, who is also a member of the convening steerer com-munity, told the group was working on a political agenda." The agenda, which will state the convention's position, will be ratified at the con-
Open House Set for School
The Kansas City City College of
Architecture will open a house for all interested premedical students at 9 a.m.
April 15 in Peach Hall, located on North University Drive.
vention's second meeting in late May.
"the challenge we found in Gatewood," she said. "solid we are, a organization our own black role as the vanguard in the struggle for a new society." he
Vann said the overriding goal of the convention was to present a unified black political front.
He said other motivating fact he communicated were the "inability or commitment to educate our children," lack of justice, unemployment, crime.
Vann is presently organizing support within Kansas for the statewide conference of the National Organization. Vann said he hoped that a statewide conference would be more effective.
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JAMBOREE
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Relay Events, Memorial Stadium 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
SATURDAY
Potterstock at Potters Lake Featuring "TIDE" and "WHALE"
(Band will play in Union Ballroom if weather is poor)
Brewer and Shipley Concert Hoch Auditorium, 10:00 p.m.
These Lawrence Merchants have given their support to the Jayhawk Jamboree
KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO
OBER'S MENS' & BOYS' CLOTHING
GENERAL JEANS
THE JAY SHOPPE
April 7-9
FRIDAY
Free movie, "April Fools" Hoch Auditorium 7:00 & 9:30 p.m.
Street Dance, 9:00-12:00 p.m. O-Zone-featuring Chessmen Square
FREE BEER (Band will play in Union Ballroom if weather is poor)
KUOK MARATHON
Oliver Hall, April 7-9 9 a.m. Friday to midnite Sunday Free Foosball,Free Beer Car Smash Contests Prizes
BIKE RALLY
Tour to Lone Star April 8
Semi-experienced Criterium 12:30 Sunday
Neophyte Criterium 1:30 Sunday
Team Relay 2:30 Sunday
A.B.L. of A. Criterium 3:30 Sunday
The following establishments will be giving discounts during the Jayhawk Jamboree
THE BIERSTUBE
THE HARBOR
THE JAYHAWK CAFE
THE WAGON WHEEL CAFE
JAYHAWK
SUNDAY
JAMBOREE
Spring Sing Hoch Auditorium 1:00-6:00 p.m.
Gymkhana at Lewis Hall
11:00 a.m. Registration
12:00 noon First car begins
These Lawrence Merchants have given their support to the Jayhawk Jamboree
CAMPBELL'S CLOTHING STORE
WEAVER'S DEPARTMENT STORE
THE UNIVERSITY SHOP
THE TOWN SHOP
4
Fridav. Anril 7,1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
At Rock's Bottom
Rock Chalk Revue is one of KU's remaining anachronisms, a genuine period piece. Unfortunately, unlike sock hops and the Thirties look, it has retained little of its original charm.
Gone for the most part are the inside fraternity-sorority jokes, but bathroom humor remains a staple ("Your dreams are all wet"). Surely all but the most dedicated proponents of the revue will admit that the thrill is gone.
Many of the revue's problems can be credited to the fact that for too many years it has projected the aura of an all-Greek Oscar night. Certainly it cannot be said that the residence halls have shown particular or sustained interest in participating, but each of their several efforts of the last few years has been rejected.
Last year the KU-Y Cabinet adopted a set of guidelines for the production of this year's revue.
Included was a stipulation that at least one Greek and one non-Greek group would be selected to produce skits. This guideline was not followed. For a while the McColum Hall skit was included on the bill, though not in the competition, but it was of such questionable taste that it was cut. Hence, Rock Chalk again was Greek night out.
There is validity to the argument that the four best skits, whoever their authors, should be selected. However, in most cases, I doubt that the substitution of one skit for another would do much to either improve or worsen the evening's overall mediocrity.
What happened with McColum this spring is of secondary importance. What must be realized is that Rock Chalk will remain a sick, tired joke until it attracts representative participation.
—Chip Crews Editor
Joint Resolution
At its Wednesday meeting the Student Senate passed a resolution "urging the state government to remove criminal penalties for the possession, sale or use of marijuana." The Senate also asked that a student opinion poll be conducted later this spring "over the issue of whether or not marijuana should be legalized."
The resolution does not mean that it is now legal to fire up a joint on campus without fearing Vern Miller's heavy hand.
It is, rather, a visible sign of one of the potentially most controversial issues since the Volstead Act. As the superstitions that surround marijuana continue to be stripped
away it becomes an issue to be dealt with.
No doubt the Senate's action will anger, frustrate and confuse many around the state—but the move still must be dealt with at some time. There are those, no doubt, who will see the vote as just another in a long line of puerile mistakes made at a too permissive university.
The resolution makes sense. It forces the issue out into the open at the University, certainly, and should, in turn, put it before the eyes of the state.
The spirit of the resolution encourages discussion, confrontation and dialogue. Which is what universities are about.
—Thomas E. Slaughter
I HAD A
MOTHER.
I DEPENDED
ON HER.
SHE BETRAYED
ME.
I HAD A
FRIEND.
I DEPENDED
ON HIM.
HE BETRAYED
ME.
I HAD A
GIRL.
I DEPENDED
ON HER.
I BETRAYED
HER.
YOU CAN'T DEPEND
ON ANYONE.
ESPECIALLY
YOURSELF.
4-2
© 1972 JACK BERTZER
James J. Kilpatrick
The One-Amendment Constitution
WASHINGTON—Pity the Fourteenth Amendment! The poor old thing is taking a beating again.
Time was, and it wasn't so awfully long ago, when judges went at the task of constitutional interpretation with one cardinal rule in mind. They would search for the meaning and the intention of the framers and ratifiers of the Constitution, and they famed Judge Coley once called this rule the very "polestar" or constitutional navigation.
The purpose of this wholesome principle manifestly was to prevent judges from substituting their own notions of desirable outcomes for those the people themselves. What did it mean when it approved a resolution of amendment? What did the ratifying States intend the amendment to accomplish? These use to be the overriding questions. The search for honest evidence was known as judicial restraint.
Well, alas for judicial restraint.
The Supreme Court
a couple of weeks ago took the
battered Fourteenth Amendment
and gave it one more belting
around. The amendment was
framed in 1866 and ratified (or so it was decreed) in 1868. But a majority of the Court last month declared that the rule of meaning and intention
It would come as a stunning surprise to the gentlemen who framed and ratified the Fourteenth to know that they were constitutional right of married persons to use contraceptives." They would be staggered to learn that one purpose of their handwerk was to prevent the States from imposing a one-year requirement on newresses. But is it what the high court has held?
Most of us had understood, back in the days of strict construction, that the Fourteenth Amendment had one broad purpose: It was intended to prohibit the States from denying the black man certain civil rights the States had denied him in the past. These civil rights did not prevent the black man's right to vote; that he was protected by the Fifteenth nearly two years later.
of soft-clay Constitution within the Constitution itself. But that is what it has become over the past fifty years. The judges have molded its words to suit themselves. What the
Surely, we may believe, the Fourteenth Amendment never was intended to function as a kind
magicians can contrive with the incantation of equal protection!
William Baird lectured on control three years ago at Boston University. At the close of his lecture, he gave a young woman
The Funditure Armnetmnt
The Faculty of 1868 has been biony
mimicked with the body
K肌耐痛. *B* the肩 arm netmnt
*B* the肩 arm netmnt
the Funditure Armnetmnt
kills hips. *N* the肩 arm netmnt
Oily hands.
amendment says, in its key provision, is that no State shall deprive any person "of life, liberty, or property, without due process," and thus the person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
a sample package of vaginal foam. He was arrested and convicted for dispensing a medicinal article without a license to do so. On March 22, over Chief Justice Burger's lonesome dissent, the Court voted to deny young woman had been denied her liberty without due process of law.
Behold, what marvels are wrought in the name of due process! See what our judicial
The residency case came from Tennessee, where the State had imposed a one-year requirement on new voters. A Vanderbilt law professor, James F. Blumstein, newly arrived in Nashville, challenged the requirement. By the same 5-1 division, the Court on March 21 held that Tennessee had no substantial or compelling reason for such a protection could not be denied the equal protection of law extended to other persons.
Now, the Massachusetts law may have been foolish; but judges are not supposed to be concerned with folly, but with what requirement may have been unfair. This is not the point. Was it unconstitutional? Was the Tennessee law within the State's power to enact? In 1904 a law was passed that precisely such a requirement.
Who has amended the Fourteenth Amendment? Not the people. Only the judges. And let it be said another ten thousand times: This they have no right to do.
Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Readers Respond
Voting, Jayhawk Blvd., Registering, War, Women...
To the Editor:
We often complain that politicians and our government are not responsive to, or representative of, the general populace. Political changes in the Democracy process which were recommended by the McGoven Commission, any person who is registered voter can have a Democrat or an Independent, has for the first time an opportunity to participate in the delegate selection process for the Democratic Party (And you can register this week on campus). This means that you as a registered voter can have a vote in who the Democratic President selects to make the effort. To do this, all you have to do is find out which County Commissioner district you are in whom the appropriate course location (Pinkney School, County 4-H Building, or Lawrence High School) at 2 p.m. Saturday April 17th to speak with the delegates, who will state which presidential candidate they support. The County Clerk or Vote Committee can supply you with more information.
Byron Edmondson, Lawrence senior
Register Now
To the Editor
Americans today are oppressed by taxation and inflation, poisoned by pollution, crime, and deprivation by government.
Extravagant military and space projects have consumed billions of dollars that could have eradicated poverty, upgraded housing and health care, overhauled the present court and prison systems, and improved mental health and educational facilities.
Janiors today pay more taxes than millionaires. The pets of many Americans receive better health and human beings. Unlimited population growth is depleting our earth's limited resources. And our environment is perverting-perhaps permanently.
Each month, organized crime gossips an illegal $3.9 billion—tax on Americans who pump into their bloodstreams. Vietnam bleeds us of $2.5 billion per year, white and black in Appalachia, black children in Mississippi Delta, Chicanos in southern California, Indians on reservations and 42 million Americans live unfulfilled lives.
Nixon continues talking peace
with Russia. Corporations continue conspiring
against consumers. And voters
remain ignorant, issues and
issues.
This Saturday, every KU student, faculty member, and administrator will have a unique opportunity to turn the tide. For students who are unable to participate in the election of delegates to the Democratic National Convention. And your vote this Saturday can make a difference by admitting to the Union by one vote margins: Rutherford B. Hayes was elected as our nation's nineteenth President by one electoral vote; and Adolf Hitler of the Nazi Party by one vote.
Since 1968, many young people have turned from politics to passivity, from engagement to engagement, from RPK to LSD.
Joe Mikesic,
Kansas City alumnus
(class of '71)
The suggestion to convert Jetta cars into electric street lined with parking meters surely rates as one of the finest proposals ever suggested to the automotive industry.
Campus Turnpike To the Editor:
many fine plans, it falls short of the perfect solution.
Instead of merely making car traffic one route, we need a more pedestrian traffic move from west to east? And why stop there? A mandatory daily fee of $30 and then perhaps during final round by my conservative estimate, raise at least $300,000 each year with my plan. I suggest laying mine field in areas where interfere with the permit system.
The feasibility of the Campus Freeway should be greatly enhanced if you can demonstrate I am confident that the same considerations which prompted the KU TURPurek Plan are being pursued with humbly offered suggestions.
Insurance
When the student Senate meets to discuss a new health insurance plan for KU students, I would like them to consider the following options from our company to provide this insurance. My dealings with Blue Cross have been extremely good. I am confident time they own me a considerable
Steve Emerson College of LAS senior
amount of money. Since the end of January I have submitted five claims to Blue Cross. These were bills for my child's care which I paid directly to the doctor because they are $25 which may not seem very important to many people but to a student with a family it is a considerable amount. In each case the doctor marked the bill and paid it and that Blue Cross must to reimburse me directly.
To the Editor:
I have written several letters to various people in the Blue Cross office in Topeka and have a recent letter from them stated that they paid my claim in December. This is true but I do not recall receiving any recent letter from December claim. The latest reply, from the local office, was that student claims were not yet受理, and that I should health insurance in January and cannot understand why Blue Cross should have the use of my student claims and yet not be processing student claims in the month of April for second semester. I strongly urge students to consult elsewhere for student health insurance. In my opinion the Blue Cross plan is not worth the price am paying and furthermore they should address my any claims, to me at least, for
care other than at Watkins Hospital.
-Pamela G. Mehl,
Lawrence special student
The Real War
To the Editor:
Regrettably, the world has not achieved an utopian plateau of peace. Indeed, we have not accomplished it. Machiavelli in our international relations. Authored by Hitler, Mao Tse-Tung, Gliap, and Guerrava, the "power manuals" of the 20th century Machiavelli's, describe the effective use of force in achieving and maintaining power. Their pages tend to omit moralistic views and chivalrous game plans.
Mike Moffet's recent editorial, 'Agnew's False Moral,' derails the Senate's justification of U.S. policy in Southeast Asia as "battant moral bankruptcy" Perhaps a meritless view also recognized a more illusory Mr. Agnew's position and in the candor with which it was charged.
Mr. Agnew's reference to the fact that four American Presidents have shaped the United States so not of belief as reason Mr. Moffet suggests. The fact that these men were elected to the
presidency (the office in whi-
le, our constitution rests the conduc-
tion of the presidency increa-
ingly enlightened enlighten-
dator lends some legitimacy
electorate some legitimacy
It may also be that Mr. Agnew's suggestion that this has been a "moral" war refers to the actions of our enemies against us actions since the Kennedy Administration. The policy that only limited force would be used in wars of aggression indeed have prolonged the war. In any case it is a departure from policies followed in previous years. Our troops and the extent of our bombing has been considerable, we have refrained from several attacks might have involved greater threat than strategic risks for the United States. "Hawks" at one time or another have suggested that we should bomb major dams, or invade North Vietnam. Such actions would also have materially increased cost for the North Vietnamese.
tic alternative. Mr. Moffet's was not
Bv Sokoloff
Griff and the Unicorn
Kenneth Reeves, Lawrence 1st Year Law Student
While I woul'd stop far short of endorsing everything the Vice President says with regard to domestic issues (such as domestic pronouncements), I think it should be remembered that the United States is a great country with a history of progressed to the point where it can resolve its differences without reference to military force. When we come when Mr. Nixon's era of negotiation has been more fully realized, in the interim, I suggest that the United States should ridicule those in positions of leadership who recognize that the United States, as a nation, must view world as it and not as it might be wished to be. It will not be changed by attacking those who believe the attack is coupled with a suggestion of some practical and realis-
Amendment
FIRST AID
It is unfortunate that the Kansan (Mary War, March 30) has supported the irresponsible action of the Kansas legislature to overburden its Amendment without hearings. If state legislatures are going to ratify constitutional amendments on the basis of vocal support by the citizens, it is no real need to continue the practice of allowing them to have a voice in the ratification of amendments to the U.S. Constitution. State legislatures are a constituent amendment as being of greater importance than any other measure put before it because a constitutional amendment is a change of the fundamental law of the land.
Such consideration is especially vital when considering an amendment containing a declaration of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged . . on account of sex." The Supreme Court will have to decide whether it should permit a public believer with this phrase and they will decide without regard to what you or I or any other member of the voting public believe is sexual equality should be remembered in that the late 19th century the Supreme Court virtually repeated the 14th amendment, so that respectricial equality should be treated in racial equality. After all sexual differences, unlike racial differences, are internal as well as external and thus it may be appropriate to treat the two sexes differently in order to treat them equally.
—Kenneth B. Lucas, Hutchinson graduate student
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
NEWSSTAFF
NEWSSTAR
News Advisor, Del Brinkman
BUSINESS STAFF
Chip Crews
Bualqesa Adviser... Mei Adam
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." Business Manager Carol Young
Friday, April 7, 1972
5
Animals to Be Art Tour Topic
University Daily Kansan
The University of Kansas
Museum of Art will offer a mini-
tour called "Animals in Art" at
2 p. m. Sunday in Spooner Art
Museum. The tour is the third
in a series of public mini-
tours.
The animal tour, designed for children will be a question-answer session which children will be encouraged to explore and express their curiosity about what they see. Dolo Brooking, assistant of museum education, helps with the tour.
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William Lew, registrar of the museum in oriental art inoriental art will lectureoriental art, emphasizing scrolls and sculpture, in the final mini-
THE MUSEUM will offer a mini-tour on views of old Rowe, author of "Wonderful Old Lawrence," will show paintings, prints, drawings and watercolors depict scenes of old Rowe.
udent
Medieval art will be the topic of the museum's lecture and tour on June 12 and July 4, tour, which will deal mainly with religious sculpture and art.
THE FREE TOURS last 20 to
30 minutes and have time allowed
for questions and informal
discussions.
a good opportunity for students who are not enrolled in art history classes to explore some of art." Brooking said recently.
Four features of the museum's film series for young people will be part of a museum lecture hall. The films are "Nature as Reality," which compares Realist paintings with modern art and Impressionism, "Daisy," and "End of man," a comment on man's destruction of his en-
Each film will last 40 minutes and there will be no admission charged.
Wives Help Engineers
The University of Kansas Engineerettes are a group of wives of undergraduate and graduate engineering students. Although the Engineerettes conduct numerous service activities under the year, their main concern is "putting hubby through."
At the end of each year, the engineerettes receive Putting Hubby Through (PHT) diplomas. In addition to their graduating seniors' wives in recognition of their moral support. The diplomas are signed by the dean of the School of Engineering and his department chairman.
guitar extravaganza and a talk on the drug scene in Lawrence by a drug user.
Engineerettes is a 25-year-old organization. Meet programs have ranged from play readings to auditions and craft demonstrations.
Each year, two wives of
experience and resources to
serve as sponsors. This year's
sponsors are Mrs Russell Messer
"We hope the mini-tours will be
for an exposition that will open this weekend.
The main purpose of this year's activities has been service, according to Engineeretes. The first day of this spring, was the selling of approved raffle tickets for a night out at Penn House's Emergency Food Fund and the purchase of coffee students working on the exhibits
The Engineerrettes also sponsored a Christmas craft bazaar of handmade items. We went to Audio Reader. The remaining items were given to Penn House for distribution at Christmas.
Barbershop Harmony Society To Celebrate 34th Anniversary
The Barbershop Harmony Society will celebrate its 34th anniversary next week. They have proclaimed the week barber week and their motto will be "Keep America Singing."
Kansan Editor Applications Due
Today is the deadline for all applications for editor and business manager of the fall Kansan.
p. m. Monday Applications for news staff should be curried at in-room registration applications for business staff should be brought to the Kansas
Applications for editor must be submitted to Chip Crew, Kansas University. The Kansan business manager will accept business manager
The deadline for all other Kansan staff applications is 5
Applications for business staff positions are available in the KKK. You can apply for either staff are available at offices of the dean of men and the bishop of women.
Harold Lyle, a member of the Lawrence branch, said Thursday that the society was a philanthropic organization of male and female quartets who sing in the "Gay Jazz" group, such songs as "Sweet Adieme."
Lyle said the society's full name was the Society for the Preservation and the Encouragement of Barbershop Engagements in America and that it was founded in 1938 in Oklahoma.
Their group sponsors the Institute of Logopedia in Wichita, Kan., and the Institute of "aliments of speech" such as deafness or mouth deformities. The institute has contributed to $800,000 to the institute since 1964. Lyle Burke, a former student,
motto was "We sing that they shall speak."
KU Curriculum Survey Undergoes Alterations
By PATTIO'NEILL Kansas Staff Writer
The KU Curriculum Instruction Survey (CIS), which many students take at least April 17 to May 19, has undergone drastic revision in content, design, and technology to save Emerson's assistant director of the survey program that publishes the course guide analysis.
The new survey will be less
Campus Police Investigate Recent Assaults, Robbery
The University of Kansas Traffic and Security Office is investigating reports of three people who were occured on the KU campus. Students reported to the police when they occurred Wednesday night.
One student told officers that he was walking through the McCollum Hall parking lot at 10:30 p.m. when he was accosted by men who asked for quarters. When he refused, he was hit.
In separate incidents, two men students reported that they were
The other incident occurred outside Allen Field House. About 9:15 p.m. a KU student was at 20 persons, a group of 15 to 20 persons.
assaulted by groups of persons.
One assault took place near
Kobinson Gymnasium about 5 p.m.
when the police found down and struck and kicked.
The robbery occurred as a KU student was walking mortally near the scene. She told officers that 10 to 12 girls began hitting her, then took $8
No serious injuries were reported in any of the cases.
Campus Briefs
Faculty Recital Wednesday
Robert C. Ford, faculty instructor and trombonist, will present a recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Ford will play works by Hartley, Handel, Ravel, Poulenc and Druckman.
Gymkhana Sunday
The Jayhawk Sports Car Club will have a gymkhana with registration starting at 11 a.m. Sunday and continuing throughout the day in the parking lot of Louis Hall. The first race will start at 11 a.m. The winner's fee is $1 and trophies will be awarded to winners in each category.
Rep. Larry Winn, R-Third District, will speak at 2 p.m. today in the Jahsikow Room of the Kansas Union. His speech will conclude with a performance by his wife, Cindy.
A Lawrence branch of the
Institute is located at the
school, staffed by Mrs.
Dwight Brush, resident speech
therapist.
Winn to Speak Here Today
ambiguous and repetitious than the main claim. Eminem was also opposed as opposed to the previous 92, but more information will be gleaned.
A totally new addition to this
book is the statement that Emeree
said, would be a description of each course and its
requirements as written by the
Administration of the survey will be much simpler for teachers because there are now fewer documents, he said.
INSTRUCTORS NOW HAVE three options instead of two when they participate in the CIS, said Ms. Dumont, who will participate in the survey and be the sole recipient of the results from the school to the dean of the school or department and choose whether or not to have them published in the CIS.
In past survey results, certain questions for each course were grouped together and factor into the three questions were published. Emerson said that this method of score processing was confusing, so this semester raw mean scores to the question would be published.
A visual-notation rating system will be added, he said. For example, if a teacher ranked in the upper percentile as compared with other teachers, he would receive better grades. Other possible ratings would be plus, nothing, minus, and minus-minus.
EMERSON SAID a new answer card had also been designed. The card will contain a space after each question for answers that do not apply. The card will also have questions to be designed by each school or department to fit its own needs. The additional question space will provide four possible answers to each question ahead of the yes or no answer-space the card contained in the past.
The new survey questionnaire is divided into four sections: an subject matter, teaching methods, a diagnostic section and a purely for the teacher (fit for the course), which would enable the teacher to compare his goals with the student's perception of course goals, and a section consisting of lessons the student took the course.
Criticisms and suggestions from students and teachers have been incorporated into the new program. Emerson said. This questionnaires asked questionnaires to all teachers and by pretesting over 2,000 students.
ONLY THE 12 questions in the evaluative section will be published in Feedback.
HOCH AUDITORIUM-UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KU RELAYS CONCERT-SAT, APRIL 22
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7 AND 10 P.M. - TICKETS: $2.50, $3.00, $3.50
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Friday, April 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Local Apartment Owners Discourage Tenant Pets
By VIANN KANZIG
Kansan Staff Writer
If you're looking for an an-
noun to want to bring Rover along, don't expect your prospective landlord to share your enthusiasm about
In a recent series of interviews with Lawrence apartment managers, 50 per cent said they had a definite "no pet policy" for their apartments, although more tenants want pets each year.
All the managers said University of Kansas students seemed to be the most interested in having pets.
In some cases, a no pet policy has evolved from some bad experiences with other dogs. Avalon and Argo apartments use to allow pets were forced to ban them after the noise and mess became unbearable.
Even the apartment managers new buildings allow pets have access to their apartments. Most managers cite the damages and the owner's failure to provide them with
the deciding factors in setting up a no pet policy.
ROSEMARIE FORSYTH, executive manager of Argo, Avalon and Harvard are still debating how the policy was tried for one year and the damages were too great that it needed to be reinstated.
Date Extended For Application
She remembered being called to a building by tenants during a Christmas vacation when pets were allowed. The tenants were locked up, keeping them awake by crying all night. She finally traced the notice to a student's apartment. The student had left for vacation without arranging for his cat's death, nearly dead from lack of food.
"The carpets, wouldn't have been ruined if the animal's owner didn't come out and spend time outdoors, said Forsyth. She also said some of the animals were taken from the yard."
The amount of the deposit varies from $25 at Plaza Manor to $100 for a dog for a Meadowbrook. Pew tenants are certain they will be able to get their deposit on house to house break the new puppy.
In an effort to protect the
marine life during the damage the pets do,
all apartments require a pet
damage deposit. The tenant is
refunded the amount upon
that there hasn't been any
damage.
She said most of the damage done by the pets was actually the fault of the owners.
The application deadline for Women's Recognition Scholarships has been extended from August 2015 to December 2016. Cowden, Kansas City, M. junior
THIS INCIDENT was one of
and chairman of the Women's Recognition Committee, said Wednesday.
certain how many scholarships would be given because funding for the scholarships come from contributions.
Cowden said it was still un-
All undergraduate women are eligible to apply, Cowden said.
ROD
McKUEN
In Concert
MUSIC HALL
SUNDAY, APRIL 9 7:30 P.M.
Tickets $6.50 - $5.50 - $4.50
Tickets Available at Music Hall Box
Office—1310 Wyandotte, K.C., Mo. 6480.
PETER HALLEY
Bus Company to Begin Ridglea Route on Monday
THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT IS ON Feminist Speakers
are now available to discuss abortion, birth control, day care, February sisters, Feminism, Gay Women, today's Women's Movement, Women's health, Women's history, Women's roles, Women at work, etc.
We will speak to classes, dorms, sororities, fraternities, or any interested groups.
For further information call 864-4441 or 841-3216
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Friday, April 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
NCAA to Expand Basketball Playoff
KANSAS CITY (AP) — The National Collegiate Athletic Association said Thursday that its association will fund championships bracket probably will be expanded from the present 25 teams to either 8 or 32.
Whether the expansion goes to 28 or 32 will depend on the number of available outstanding teams, the NCAA said.
With a 28-team bracket, one team would draw a bye in each region and with 32, all teams would play
The NCAA also announced that the Sugar Bowl football game, a Jan. 1 fixture, would likely be played on Dec. 31, starting this year.
KU to Enter Texas Meet
The first of the big three in track relays for the University of Kansas, the Texas Relays, will start today in Austin.
The Jayhaws will concentrate on individual events rather than the relays, coach Bob Timmons said earlier this week. Eleven individuals entered in 10 individual events, KU will enter only two relays.
The Texas Relays are the first of the Midwest circuit including the Kansas Relays April 20-22 and the Drake Relays April 28-29.
Timmons has entered sprinters in the 440, 880 and mile relays, but planned to scratch one race. Trials and finals in the three sprinters have been handled by Timmons figured his sprinters would have too heavy a load.
The Jayhawks lost their outdoor opener last weekend to UCLA in Los Angeles, 91-62. Among the bright spots in the loss were Bill Hatcher's school record pole vault of 18-6 and Jon Callen's 8:51.4 time in the steeplechase, the second best by a KU runner.
Tom Scavuzo and Mark Lutz are entered in all three relays. Lutz broke a school record last week with a 20.7 time in the 220
Timmons will try to enter 880
deacquisition in a special half-mile in the
Former KU standout Jim Ryan,
world record holder in the half-
mile race.
KU Entries
Open 880—Rick Jacques
120 high hurdles—Gregg
Vandavera, Delario Robinson
Vandaveer, Delario Robinson 440 intermediate hurdles—Bob Bornvessel
Three-mile run—Terry McKeon
High jump—Barry Schur Pole vault—Bill Hatcher
Javelin—Sam Colson
Shot Put—Dana LeDuc, Rudy Guevara
440 relay -Tom Scavuzzo,
Robinson, Mark Lutz, Emmett
Edwards (Phil Stepp, alternate)
Discus—LeDuc, Guevara
Lazell, Sehak Gohar
880 relay—Stepp, Scavuzzo
Bornkessel, Lutz (Robinson,
alternate)
Mile relay—Bornkessel Scavuzzo, Lutz, Stepp (Jacques alternate).
Meetings Fail; Strike Enters Extra Innings
NEW YORK (AP) —The first general strike in baseball history continued Thursday with no signs of the start, as sight following a long, but unproductive meeting between players and managers to dispute over pension benefits.
Indications were that even an immediate end to the strike would have been before Monday, for the St. Louis Cardinals announced they were postponing their Saturday and Sunday games against the
Marvin Miller, executive director of the Major League Gearman, the owner and John Gairam, the owner of the negotiator, met Thursday morning in a session which no break in the situation.
SUGAR BOWL officials have asked for certification of the Dec. 31 date.
The request was recommended by the NCAA Council by the organization committee. If approved, the game this year would be played
Wade Stinson, chairman of the extra events committee and athletic director of the University of Kansas, said the Sugar Bowl committee wanted to "get away conflict with another bowl game".
The special events committee also submitted to the Council these dates for 11 other post-commissioned events and recommended certification.
Astro-Blaubonnet, Dec 30,
Cotton Bowl, Jan. 1; Fiesta Bowl,
Dec 23; Gator Bowl, Nov. 1;
Pacific Coast Bowl, Orange
Bowl, Jan. 1; Peach Bowl, Dec.
29 or Dec. 30; Rose Bowl, Jan. 1;
Sun Bowl, Dec. 30 and Tangerine
The Pasadena Bowl made no request for certification.
THE ONLY new proposed bowl games, which the committee will recommend for certification, would be Dec. 1 between the champions of the Midwestern and Southern conferences at New Orleans.
The NCAA's executive committee, holding its spring meetings, approved two changes in baseball playoffs. The Western Conference will qualify for District 8 playoffs and the Southern Conference champ for the District 3 playoffs. The latter change will be only allow if the Southern Conference has a six-tem team bracket.
The executive committee ordered Samford University at the Allan Oslo championship in the IPL. Amos Alonzo Stangl Bowell football game at Phoenix City, Ala., last Nov 25 because the school played
Samford defeated Ohio Wesleyan. 20-10.
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Paul Harney, the old "Silver Fox," from Sutton, Mass., a club tournament he earned his spot in the tournament with surplus victory in the San Diego Open earlier this year, and amateur Jay Simons of Butler, Pa., were named.
THE LARGE group who matched par 72 in the near-easy match with Australian Bruce Champion, New Zealand left Bob Charles, Bob Beard, Bert Vancey, pro rookies Steve Melnik and several others.
George Archer, the 1969 champion and winner of last
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)—Jack Nicholas pulled his sagging game together with a late charge, made him go into the second and swept into the first round lead in the Masters golf tournament during a four-under 68.
4 WAYS TO EUROPE
Nicklaus Leads Masters
The blond and burly Nicklaus, gunning for a 'never-ending' challenge in all the world's major championships, staged past 39-year-old Sam Snook who ambled out of the mists of history with a
Snead had a chance for a share of the top spot in this 72-hole chase for the famed green jacket queen. She won by quivering nerves of 3/4 decades of competition, nerves that forced him to adopt a bizarre side-saddle putting stance, sweet swimmer on the 18th iron.
Arnold Palmer, at 42 seeking to return to glory on this sun-splashed and flower-bedecked Augusta National course where he has placed that has its base, moved into three place with a 70, two under par.
Jeff Turner Dumps Quarterback David Jaynes
... Jaynes turned to pass, greedied charging Turner.
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HE THREE-PUTTED for a bogue that dumped him back to second in this tournament he has won three times—the last time in
17
It was his best first round in the Masters since 1965, the year after he won his last major championship.
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week's Greater Greensboro Open, defending champion Charles Coady and South African Gary Playle wer in the big bunch
in Masters History with a five-iron shot on the 190-yard sixth hole, the ball hitting some 15 feet below the pin and trekking in. But the team failed to reach the next hole and bogeyed the last two to drift back in the field.
Seats still available- But hurry!
Coody, a rangy, handsome Texan made the 10th hole-in-one
Lee Trevino, the swash-buckling chicano who made his return to Augusta after boycoting the tournament for man management only a 73, three over par, and was tied with Billy Casper.
Penn State Leads Iowa In NCAA Gymnastics
KU Gymnasts in NCAA
The nation's top three, New Mexico, defending champion
University of Kansas gymnasts
Richie Burberth, basketball
basketball player,
his trip to the NCAA gymnastics
fine arts Iowa, this week
would be a big deal.
Over 200 individuals from 45 colleges and universities have qualified for the individual championship game. The teams that qualify are team race are Iowa State, Southern Illinois, Iowa, New Mexico, Penn State, Air Force, Georgia, Southern and Florida.
The gymnasium and coach Bob Lockwood left by car for Iowa State's James Hinton Coliseum Wednesday afternoon. They have to leave the campus later. Thursday morning and will compete on more tonight.
the championships, Blanchard in the parallel bars and Schubert in the side horse.
If they qualify for the top six, they will compete Saturday for
AMES, Iowa (AP)—Penn State led the lead Thursday after the college NCAA gymnastics meet as host and defending champion Iowa
Penn State, seeking a record ninth title, scored 154.5 points to lead East Tennessee Ten Conference titles to the Southern Illinois (113.30).
the field for Friday's optional routines slims to the top 20 individual performers in six divisions, and the champions who qualified for the team title. The top three teams after Friday will compete for the team title Saturday, and the top two teams also move to the finals.
Stanford's Steve Hug jumped to the lead in the all-around competition with a 33.60 score to Marshall's Marshall Averen at 52.30.
fourth.
Iowa State, expected to be a top contender, was a disappointing hit at 18-40 and apparently outplayed the team. But with New Mexico, with 159.90-
Iowa State and three-time Southern Illinois, have all scored over 180 points in a meet this spring.
KU coach Lockwood ventured a prediction on the outcome of the team race.
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"I think Southern Illinois will be wiser," he said "low state heat will mean it." Southern Illinois missed about 13 routines and only lost by 2.
The meet will feature many top candidates for the U.S. Olympic team, including Southern Connecticut's John Crosby, whom Iowa state coach Egner Gaucher "possibly one of the best all-star gymnasts in the world outside of Japan."
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Schubert, the KU record-holder in the side horse at 9.55, said last week that he hoped to finish at 10.50. He played the KU record-holder in the parallel bars at 9.45, said that he would compete in the best for the best and then go for broke if he made the final six.
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New Runners, Receivers Do Well in Scrimmage
The serimimage, played in cool but humid weather, was held Thursday instead of Saturday because of a clinic here Saturday for high school football coaches. The club will host a regular practice session Saturday.
Established performers topped both rushing and receiving teams this year's freshman team done the rest of the defensive line.
The University of Kansas football team arrived Thursday afternoon in Memorial Stadium brought attention to the names of several more young players.
"Our running and our offensive line are getting better and better," coach Don Fambrough said.
**THIS WEEK'S** scrimmage included more running plays than last Saturday's. Of 115 plays from the game, 57 were running plays.
Delvin Williams, KU's leading rusher as a sophomore last season, earned 20 times for 78 yards. The second leading rusher as a sophomore from Houston. He carries 15 times for 51 yards.
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In the passing department,
three quarterbacks launched 58
passes and completed 32 for 488
passes in a game. Richie, James,
11 of 24 for 21; Richies, James,
10 of 21
The Jayhawks worked primarily on their mid-field game in the controlled scrimmage. The offense got the ball and went for a first down. When they hit, the ball came back to the 40.
FAMBROUGH praised the offensive line
Jaynes connected with Edwards for the longest pass play of the day, a 51-yard touchdown pass. That was the only pass, but, as Fambrough said, the object was not to score.
21 for 149, and Bob Bruegging, six of 13 for 88.
Knicks Blow Lead, Rally to Clip Bullets
Upcoming sophomores dominated Emmett. Edwards caught five passes for 123 yards; Greg Hoosack, four for 84 yards; Robert Gales, two for Robert Gales, a walk-on sophomore from Syracuse, eight
JOHN SCHROLL, last year's leading receiver, caught five passes for 99 yards.
"Our quarterbacks were throwing the ball real well today. Fambrigh said, "We should more than we have thought,"
"I just feel like our pass protection is improving all the time," Fambrough said. "And on defense, we're hitting better."
Linebackers Tommy Oakson. a
as Baltimore continued to charge back, finally taking the lead at 90 89 midway in the final period.
but then Fraser clicked on a button. He then went on a long jump, Earl Monroe and Phil Jackson added three more points and the Knicks were ready.
NEW YORK (AP) —The New York Knicks blew a 18-point lead, then rode clutch baskets by Walt Frazier and Bradley to a 104-98 victory over the Baltimore Bullets to tie their National Conference semifinal Eastern Conference semifinal play series at 2-2 Thursday.
Bradley finished with 25 points, Frazier added 24 and Morroe was good for 21 for the Knicks. Archie Johnson scored 19, and Jack Marin 16 for the Bullets.
Riordan retained his hot hand
The best-of-seven series
these week in Baltimore
televised fifth game in Baltimore
Sunday afternoon and returns to
Madison Square Garden next
But Mike Riordan led a Baltimore charge that cut New York's 70-54 lead to 82-73 going into the final period.
The Knicks took a 50-47 lead into the third quarter, then ran away from the Bullets, outscoring them 20-7 in a six-point victory. Bowley scored and Dave Dussheccs scored five points abeje.
senior, and Randy Robinson, a sophomore, each intercepted a pass. Defensive lineman Jeff another sophomore, surprised dyneen in the backfield for the most spectacular dump of the day.
STUDENT-FACULTY PLAN
FLY-DRIVE
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Live youth
Jay Hayden and Lynn Hooper, members of the nationally third-grade basketball team from San Antonio Cynets, will assist Smith at the workshop. The workshop will include techniques for throwing and swimming demonstrations.
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The workshop, held in conjunction with the AAU, is the area of potential impact. Its purpose is to educate potential judges for the sport.
"There is great interest in 'presentation in the sport in the arena,' back in the back is the lack of AU-qualified judges," he Ecrolio, "Tsoune, Teaon."
KU to Host Synchro Clinic
The University of Kansas
The University of Kansas
A Synchro Swim Judge Workshop
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday
and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday
The instructor for the workshop will be Margaret Swan, a certified synchro swim judge from San Antonio, Tex.
April 6-15 8 p.m.
KU Experimental
Theatre
864-3982
UBU RUT (King Ubu)
GEM Theater
Baldwin 7:30 April 8 & 9
There was a crooked man...
April 11, 12 & 13
"THE ORGANIZATION"
GP 25 COLOR United Artists
NEXT WEEK!
Semi-Annual Director's Festival Featuring Films by Francois Truffaut
SUNDAY—International Films
SUNDAY—International Films
Stolen Kisses — Free Admission
MONDAY—Special Films The Soft Skin - 75°
TUESDAY—Sci-Fi Films Farenheit 451 - 75 $^{\circ}$
WEDNESDAY—Classical Films Shoot the Piano Player 75 $ ^ {\circ} $
THURSDAY—Film Society Jules & Jim $ 75^{\circ} $
FRIDAY & SATURDAY—Popular Films The Wild Child — $ 60^{\circ} $
All Films in Woodruff Aud.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 7, 1972
9
Prof to Retire After 33 Years
After 33 years of teaching in the college education department, Joe L. Stapleton, head of the women's department, will be retiring this year.
A reception and dinner in her honor will be given Saturday. The reception will be from 4 to 5 p.m. in the Watkins Room of the State Auditorium and will follow a 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Room. The public is invited.
A native of Kansas, Staplesp
graduated from KU in 1826 and
then from UCLA. He is now the
City, Mo. Junior College. During
the depression the staff at that
school was severely reduced, and
he remained on a teach at
three elementary schools.
Later, she taught physiology, zoology and physical education courses. She then became School in Kansas City, Mo. She then became the supervisor of elementary physical education teachers in Kansas City, Mo. Teacher.
In January 1939, she was invited to KU to teach and to start a teacher education program for elementary physical education
teachers. Except for a sabbatical leave in 1951, she has taught at KU since that time.
In 1891, Stapleton completed a university degree at the College of Columbia University. She was made head of the women's physical education department at Columbia.
During the fall 1970 term she took a two-month leave to study in Great Britain's education program in Great Britain, and then visited 11 colleges and universities in the United States and abroad for physical education departments.
Stapleton said she had no definite plans after retirement. She said she hoped to travel and work in community service involved in community service.
Stapleton said she had seen many changes over the years in the University's appearance and her faculty, and she was the most amazing fact, she said, that students have become more capable all the time. She cited the President's Physical Fitness granting greatly to the skills of students.
Class of '73 to Circulate Senior Placement Guide
The senior class of 1973 will service guide, John Hackney. Wichita junior and newly elected senior class president, said
Although the guide this year was from a response, Hackney said it was too early to tell what its overall quality was. The guide said the guide was hindered this year because not enough employees knew about it or what it was.
John Mize, Salina senior and president of the 1972 class class, told me that though the guide was worth the $40 to produce. He said the money was better spent on the guide "sweatshirts or something."
In addition to the placement book, the senior class of 1973 will see students for summers and vacations with the Alumni Association. Hackney will direct a direct alumni who want to give students summer jobs to in-state employers.
Another new committee planned is designed to help students for higher education at the University of Kansas and
Five days
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
throughout the state. Hackney said the committee's purpose was to identify areas in the group's cause and to establish a connected project for staff.
Hackney said the project had not yet been determined but would probably be in the form of a training KU's needs in lobbying efforts.
Hackney asked the discount program used by the present senior class would be continued. The discount program gives students membership of the senior class with various area merchants. The merchant involved expressed great satisfaction with the program. Hackney had he hoped to expand the program to include more merchants.
LHS to Host Safety Meeting
Lawrence High school will host the 1972 Kansas Teen Safety Conference April 28-29. Bennie L. Stewart, assistant said that publicly 100 students from throughout Kansas are expected to attend.
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Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
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Bridge Anvil, used furniture,
collector items, old wood cooking and
woodworking tools, gloves, fireplace wood,
gloves, bicycles, fireplace wood,
of other useful items, open 9 to 5
days. Herb Alberni, 5-9
3159.
1962 Volkswagen, clean and in good running condition. Call 843-3473. 4-7
65 MGB and upright piano. 842-2473.
4-7
Roberts Reel to Reel and Cartridge
Tape Recorder—two speed, record,
cost $306 now, will forl
$240. Very good condition. 842-599-3120
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $ . 00
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days
62 Chevy, 4 dr., good shape, 6 cyl.
standard shift, good rubbber; $250 B42-
3439.
Ampel BT-15 solid base, bass amp,
with 15" speaker and B23-B extortion box equipped with 2-12" speaker condition. Must match.
Call 821-7643. 4-10
1971 Honda SL. 250. Excellent condition.
Must sell. Best Offer Taken. Call
Dennis. 843-7404 4-10
Sun-froth, kay-down, 4-speed,
and a blueshift of others. Pioneer 404,
608, and 729 are excellent sounds
sound real nice on stage; 525
or call Bell Ooh or Eddie. 842-793-8
Ampex model 960 tape deck. Perfect.
$252. Also available; tape record.
32-108 mm, 2' TV, turntable,
2' machine; 42-108 mm,
7198 or 82-10844
4-10
82-10844
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Glo 12 string guitar - excellent condition - $813. Also, AIR 8-rack car kit; tape deck, hawk converter, hard drive; $109. Dave Lee, 843-657-9100 4-10
$100. Dave Lee, 843-657-9100
1666 Chevrolet Impala, 2 d hr. dipz eu. in. V-8, 725 hp, runs great. Thrice-speed standard transmission. Chrome wheels 864-1116. 4-11
VOLKSWAGEN 1966 BUG. New brakes, 4 new tires, 52,000 miles, good condition. Only $685. Good deal, see it. See kit 864-6353. 4-11
Mobile home for sale. Tired of living a mobile money on arm? Used mobile homes for your location where you can enjoy privacy and the comfort of studying in a warm, pleasant room. 3 bedrooms, height 29 ft living room, bathrooms, refrigerator, refrigeration automatic gas furnaces yet only $90 million gas bill. With 10X lift extension $990 Immobilizer with 10X lift extension $990 Immobilizer
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
412-0601
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Baldwin Electric Guitar, hollow body, double pickup, in perfect condition, with hardshell case $275 or trade for used motorcycle Call Garry. 864-119-103
Kaw Valley Hemp Farmers--Get into the new bcb below bib-overalls at Earthhline, 12 E 8th. 4-11
CLOSE OUTT 40 to 50% off on entire stock of discontinuant components, tuners, speakers, and earphones—Ray-Ban and Sony—for $299 each. 909 floor, BQR 4-11
1970 Honda 350 SL, excellent condition.
841-2581. 4-11
1955 Macro Galaxie 500—Air, V8-
Automatic transmission. Recently over-
loaded for pick-up. Trade to
trade for pick-up. IV-8, 4-speed, 3-pa-
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Need to sell a ten speed Schwinn man's bike. Almost new and in excellent condition. Call after meetings. 842-7820. 4-12
included 40 acres near Perry Lake for sale. Unimproved natural state. 2 ponds. Beautiful view. Will sell on contract. 833-2774. 4-11
Used compact stereo and FM $25
Used coffee stereo and FM $100
Master work console FM $150
Stoneback's 929 Mass CM 43/40-1-4
11
Lenses 135 mm F2.8 NIKkor one kit
Mold Perfect, $125. 200 mm F3.5 Vivi-
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after 8 4-12
1960 Austin-Cambridge 4 dr. Sedan.
Needs tune-up, $150 Call 841-3216
after 5.00. 4-19
1962 Ford Van—good condition $400.
Call 843-8687 or come by 743 E. 13th.
7:00 A M -12:00.
102 Volkwagen fastback, unrunnel
AM-FM radio. New radios (snow
included). Fog lights, rear windshield.
Must sell! $409.00 4-10
842-5262
The purpose of this ad is to sell porchos. So buy a hand made porch at the Yarn Barn, 720 Mass. You want to deter a defraudor "would you?" 4-12
11 week old Irish Setter puppy (country grown). 61 VW. Make offer, see VW at 1823 Ohio. Call 665-3242. 4-12
2 speakers air suspended 3 way **12**
*8-13"**; Make offer, make cheap
*8-track deck with pre-ampl. $30. 8-track
tails. Cail 644-1171
Natural food supplements and bio-
degradable cleaners, also natural
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138
Michigan St. Bar B-Ray $151 Mick
Church $149 Mick Churches $319.
$14.50 1. bFeb Bristol $10.90 -
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Plate $15.90 1 oam at 11 am, to 8 pm
MOVING: Washer and dryer. $98; Bench
$25; Dishwasher. $30; Miracle 3-arm
cubed window fan. $25; 3-arm reversible
window fan. $25; Swing set. $15; Lawn sweater.
$25; Swing set. $15; Tree trimmer,
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tree trimmer, $48-243 after
or Saturday. $39
AM. FM Siren radio with 8-band tape player, input & output jacks for turntable, headphones & recorder.
Top condition: $72.84 / 92.78 - 4-13
IERE - COORS - BUD — $1.13 a
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10-speed bicycle, Glitane "Tour De France" 24'', frame Brooks "Pro-saddle. Excellent condition. asking 1990 Call Michael at 842-712 4-11
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1967 Dodge Van-128-VR, auto size, shape-also 128 Ford Falcon Sierra VR, power steering, backpack, the works-82-372, 101 Ohio 4-13
Sports Cars Inc.
Spanish Spanish coat, trench coat style. Double breasted cat. Irish style. Excellent condition. Half of original price. Cat-event 4: 1974 9474
1966-6050 Boneville Triumph cycler
built out and complete overhaul
to 300 miles less. Also new belt
used very little. 842-560) 4-13
650 KSA Harret, Just overhauled.
Excellent condition. Good looking
bike. 1102 Ohio, Apt. 2
4-11
FOR RENT
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited
offered first hotel room rentals in the
room furnished. paid with all utilities paid
p.m., 847-7311 Call after 4:
p.m., 847-7311
APARTMENT SALE—1045 Ky. Fri.
10-5, Sat, 11-4. 4-13
SUMMER RENTALS. All types ansu-
prices, all near campus. Reserve
yours now. M Lynch, 1216 La
1601-841. 1841-3232
4-10
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWHENCE
You can enjoy yourself in apartments you call "summer apartments" or just go out and play a summer game in your Harvard Road. Lane in Argos in Harvard Road. In Largo in Argos in Harvard Road. In Largo in Argos in Harvard Road.
Apartments, both 9th & 10th Floor, with AISON & AVION, can be economical and enjoyable if you are at our surprisingly modest special offer. As summer a wonderful time to be in the city.
1970 Kawasaki, 350 c.c., good condition.
$500, 843-8108. 4-13
Tried to find to find that ideal apt.
Available in various locations and price
available 1.2 & 3 Bath apart;
140 sq ft;
Grew Agent, 901 Kentucky, K842;
Grow Agent, 801 Michigan, K842;
COLLEGE HILLS MANOR now show-
ing its work as a furniture- and unfurni-
ted retailer and informational ap-
partments start at $10. Close to campus
and library locations; Wake Forest
W 149, W 180, W 319 or call 433-845-6100.
Parked parcel no. with 10 windows in large house near campus-share in large house with four groovey, office. $40 per day. Office utilities. Call any 826-7616.
GRAD STUDENTS--FOR RENT—two bedroom home, one suite, just outside $125 mn plus utilities, yearly avg. May 31 for apt. 4-10
3413
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
1972, while resection is still available.
Mary K. 825KR or 2017.A Harvard
Mary K. 825KR or 2017.A Harvard
Lawrence M. 825KR built, housed
and operated by the National
Society for Research in Cancer.
Avalon, 9th & Avalon, Harvard
and Brown College. Then compare the cost of living in one of these handsome apartments to the cost of spacious apartments and you will be more inclined to have a dishwasher, central A-C heat and water utilities paid, and a central laundry.
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
- Accessories
THE MERCANTILE
- Guitars
- Recorders
- Recorders
- Music
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
Rose
FARMROSE LIFE
Music Strings
SUMMER-FALL - large deluxe room for man-carpeted, C.A. private entrance, bath, very quiet 2 blocks West of campus: 843-7827
Razm Res仲事 for ver immediately.
next to campus; air-conditioned,
fully carpeted, furnished, two-bed-
room, 5:00 p.m. Call manager
5:38 p.m. 482-9030
NOTICE
TOO WHAT SANTIE APTS HAVE TO LOOK!
OFFER Summer rates, swimming (pool), A.C. Free cable TV, and more! 841-2160, 841-2156, 841-2160
LEARN SKYDIVING Ict jumps
Includes gear, includes jumpmaster,
jump ride, rides and qualified instruction. Class labs II
and III are $20 per PCF with CDs.
Jumps after that is $2 on PCF with CDs.
Barn Parties. Now available for rent at Apalache Valley Park in Lake Perry, Apache Valley Park in Lake Perry and could be used for parking at Lake Perry Stroup after 6 p.m. at 842-305-1791.
KEYBOARD STUDIOS
Would you like to see some pretty extieple people, young lovers & a good look at the People's Republic of China? Read on! At Haas Impors, 1695 Masp, 4-13
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance
(including pregnancy benefits) American
Health & Life Insurance Co.
John Wells, 842-5200 (f)
We can find any book for you. All subjects, rare books, fine bindings, ete. Write: T. R. Maness, 317 Bracon St. Boston, Mass. 02116 4-12
New wide bids F 7-16 f1 first quality only $25 plus "$30 at F. A.T. Ray Stoneback" at $49 plus $40 at $49 more. Move installation at Ray Stoneback's. F-4-11
FRIDAY NIGHT AT MADHATTER SHINE-A Folk Trio. Free ad- mention.
English "Bobby" Capes—keep the rain God off your back—now at Earthhline, 12 K. E. 8th. 4-11
Women's Alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767. 9:30-5:30. 4-25
HEY. WEEEN—LONG DRESSES
LO-RISE JEANS, CHAMOS HALTER
TOPS—AT EARTHSHINE, 12 E. 8th,
13 A.
Four new whitewall EF8-13 (75-14) pul-
fer. Flygberg tires left in lay away
—$90 takes all 4-plus taxa sales tax R
Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-11
FOUND Silver bracelet. Identify and pay for a bid. Call 841-2067 4-7
OPEN NIGHTS
WEDDING INVITATIONS — PRICES
1. $49 for custom 20-inch custom
printed only $40. Seller's
catalog and sample to Arnold Agen-
tle, East Main, Rustburg, Arkansas
8340 & 8344
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 482-642-
7694. Professional child-care for
children > mo 12-mo. Full or part-time.
Fi. Specially designed emerger-5-
0.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
DON'T BE CAUGHT WITH YOUR PANTS DOWN! Come to the Yarn Barn where you will find six extra-ordinary and different kinds of yarns: 730 Mau. 4-12
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
BLEVINS HONDA
Webster's Mobile Homes
Your Complete Service
Factory Authorized
Honda Sales & Service
Cycle Pick Up Service
843 3333
1811 W. 6 Lawrence, Ks.
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
Ample Park Spaces Availabl
2400 E. 17th St.
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
McCONNELL LBR. CO.
- LIQUITEX ACRYLIC
8 oz., pts. - qts. only
50% OFF
844 E. 13th St. 843-3877
HELP WANTED
LOST
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
2434 Iowa VI2-1008
Brand new for the student rail train:
TRAPE, GUIDE, contains 240 pages,
TRAPE, GUIDE, contains 240 pages,
maps, and trips.
Send $2.25 to RAIL-RUFOPE. Box $25.
Send $2.25 to RAIL-RUFOPE. Box $25.
if you want $15 jeans or $10 Western or Hawaiian shirts, we can help but it is your money leather children's dress, our massage clothes, our music shoes 4-12
TEACHERS WANTED: Contact
Southwest Teachers Agency
Box 421, Albuquerque, N.M. 87068 "Our
Bundles" and rented a.
NATA A-5-8
Tony's 66 Service
Head teacher wanted for "free high
school" in Chicago. Requires
preferred Experience with High
school resume, including training for appl-
yability, college enrollment, or
School Box 41 Lawrence, Salary not
provided.
- ARTIST CANVAS REDUCED
EAGLE
Nedded-Neat, aggressive, part-time salarian
sensation for established businesses
in business over 20 years Serd
Aksoy, founder of the Daly
Karanu, Box 305
Leather-up -- RED RIDER - Leather-
shop - Sandalwood, waits, bags,
tools, stools, shoes.
Reasonably priced -- 1000 Ohio.
Monday. Third Saturday
4 P.M.
Central School Class Ring, Parkway High School Senior School 1971, red smooth stone, P on face of stone, mitigate P B L on back. C84-6853.
Tired of forced study? Try learning for pure pleasure. Foley dancing in bright Friday's 4-8 pm. In 172 Raleigh, NC. Call 651-930-1622 or all it's free—bring your friends' 4-7
Carol L
DAY-CARE DIRECTOR of a University program now available at the Dean of Science and Engineering. All applicants must have at least 3 all applicants must have at least 3 pre- or school and have pre-school volunteer Applications are due by January 25th Candidates will be interviewed on Monday.
FOR HIRR, Cameraman accomodated all night with photographers. Call Jennifer Peninsula Photographer (these hopefully) and all light. Send home look like tired. All lights. Send home to liked me. No phone. No camera. No have phone. **1232 Ohu Or** e-mail: ohu@davisphotography.com suitable for Douglas K. 4-11
Young, intelligent, energetic fema-
tor for part-time help. Apply in person.
Vista Restaurant, 1521 W. 6th
4-7
FOR HIRE. Experienced copy editor,
journurer, graduate, good writer,
summoner and summer job to assist with writing of similar reports or similar materials 842-3950.
days per week
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
- STRETCHER FRAMES
mony in stock
—others on order
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSU
THE CONCORD SHOP
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
Sandwiches
5 a.m. 12:00 Ses., Sat.
5-5 Sun
5-9 Mon.
1720 Road St.
842-3644
0 TO 60 MPH-13.5
FRONT DISC BRAKES
- FRONT DISC BRAKES
* RECLINING FRONT SEATS
OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
TO 60 MPH-13.5
COIN
500 E.23rd
CHEVROLET
- RECLINING FRONT SEATS
- UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-725-6000
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP
Independent
842-0444
LOVE THAT DATSUU
DATSUN
Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule: Daily 1 to 9, Sat fi-nil mo.
842-2323
Superson new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges
ty poppy, white with black around
yes--A male border collar 11 weeks
through stitches in stitches in stitch
a birththe end of stitch
o find him. Call 842-7517. 4-11
BECAUSE is a listening service 843-6625. Sun. thru Thurs. 4-12 P.M., Fri.
& Sat. 8 P.M.-6 A.M. 4-12
John-met me at 7.06 p.m. Friday in room 173 Room and I'll show you my dress—Then we can do bling till more exciting—Beine Rada
In the time when Erik was king and king of Denmark, he was a monarch, pennatale, and boys were black before lightening boots. In the spirit of white men, a nocturnal trip back in time, with a napping hotel back in time.
Typing in my home IBM Selectrite.
Prompt accurate work. Experienced
Call 841-2556 5-9
Small white terrier with brown spots,
Wearing a red collar, Very, very
friendly. Very important to family.
Reward offered. Please call 841-106-
3293.
PERSONAL
WANTED
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers and coursework. A typed electric typewriter with preca type. Accurate and prompt printed documents. Phone 843-9544, Mie. Wright
Will willen took my Constitutional Law book and please return it. Please return it. REWARD - No questions asked. Contact Michael Corman 842-602-9638.
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your
typem papers, theses or dissertation
Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate
work. Call 843-2821, Mr Maukman.
Home for adult male neutered sealant
siamae. Val Smith. 842-6599
5-8 P.M. weekdays. 4-10
Summer in Lawrence, female roommate needed, Park 25 Apts. Call Lois, 842-1593. 4-11
GET OFF your horse and into a denjam link by Peters—for spring
"EARTHSHINE, 12 E. Bth. 4-11
sirloin
THE HILL in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
LAWRENCE KANSAS Forest Eating Place
KAT Suzuki
OVEREASEN JOBS FOR STUDENTS
- Research, design and implementation of all faculties. All professions and occupations are required to secure a position in our university's Lighting系. Free information on research jobs: 0815-7671, San Diego, CA 93115
0415-7671
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843.7685—We Deliver—9th & III
MISCELLANEOUS
BRIDAL GOWN SAMPLE Sale—Size 8-10, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kurtucky
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks "not is ice and has always been"
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
猫
1. Minne North of the
Kaw River Bridge
Safari
Phone 861-7235
Open 4:30
Closed 10:30
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
634 Mass. 842-6966
Please call for your appointment for SENIOR PICTURE
4 proof sittings $3.00
6 proof sittings $5.00
Special Senior Rates on all orders.
摄录
Hixon Studio
Ph.843-0330
843
8500
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
928
Mass
10
Friday, April 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Jamboree to Replace Fling Flop
By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansas Staff Writer
This year's Jayhawk Jam boree will be another attempt by the Association of University Flingers to sponsor Spring Fling. The last Spring Fling was in 1970 and it was a disaster, Larry Widom Overland Park junior and co-owner of Jayhawk Jamboree said Thursday.
That was the year of the Kobe lions' game against the 7:30 p.m. curfew, the National Guard on campus and the University. A decide either to end school early or allow alternatives during final week. No one was very interested in a curfew.
This year's plans began in October, 1971. Wisdom said, "We want men from all the residence hall to attend a council meeting of AURH to ask them if the chairmen are body, would sponsor our Fire Fighter."
AS SOCIAL CHAIRMAN of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, Wisdom had agreed to the big job that lay
$15,000 in Aid For Research Is Available
The availability of undergraduate research awards for the summer of 1972 and the fall of 1973 were announced Thursday by Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the Library of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Shankel said the University General Research Committee should take action on University's appropriations for research to support the research that would be done by undergraduate for the coming year.
"The College of Liberal Arts was asked to administer these funds which are available for any need. The University," Shankar said.
Fifteen to 20 awards will be available during the academic year for $600 for eight weeks of full-time research during the academic year, which provide $250 stipends for part-time research during the academic year, he said.
To apply for an award and an assistant student should send to Shanbel a application brief describing his support, supporting letter from a member of the faculty who is willing to support and advise the student on his studies.
Shankel said the deadlines for applying for these awards are April 25 for the summer awards, and May 15 for academic year awards.
Announcements of the recipients for the summer awards will be made shortly after May 1, Khalid said.
KU to Host Mock Session Of U.N. Council
Kansas' 1972 Model U.N. Security Council will meet April 14-16 at Naismith Hall, John F. Kennedy University, to secretary general for the 1972 Kansas Model U.N.-Security Council, said Thursday Poley said the council would attempt to build a nuclear capability of the U.N. Security Council
College and high school students will research the foreign policies of assigned countries and analyze their impact on security council. Poley said
Poley said student delegates would be expected to have researched the social and political aspects of each nation they represent.
Some of the issues that will be brought before the council will concern Middle East, South Asia and Pakistan - questions Poley asks.
The event is sponsored by the Council of International Relations and United Nations Affairs, Mike Blakely, former president of Topena, will be the president of the 1972 model security council.
Persons interested in representing a country at the model security council should contact Poley at Room 112B of Kansas Union or the dean of foreign students at 282 Strong Hall.
Demo Delegates 27% Women
WASHINGTON (AP)—An
delegation of the delegates chosen so far to
the Democratic national convention
are women, a women's group
of mothers.
That is more than double the number of people convention but is far short of the 51 per cent that the new party guidelines would indicate as a target.
ahead of the residence halls, and,
he said, he found himself
chairman of the steering committee.
In January of 1971, the group had been looking over reports of past spring entertainments at the university, with the idea of bringing the scholarship halls in on the planning of Spring Entertainments. The scholarship halls had at one time been a part of WRI and the scholarship halls had together. The scholarship halls accepted the invitation and the committee to plan Spring Fling Events.
The guidelines call for delegates to reflect their proportionate ration of the population, state, national state, women are in a majority.
In the meantime, the Greeks were trying to get Greek Week together. They had it bad such a hard time, and they started activities in the past either, Wisdom said, and it soon became apparent that it would help both teams win.
As it turned out, both Spring Fling and Greek Week had been planned for the same week, and we didn't expect to include the other in their activities.
THE PANHELLENIC and
InterFraternity Councils formed a steering committee with heads
of the three colleges and decided to officiate camp.
From these early stages of planning, which has involved the establishment of a campus has come an array of 14 events to be held on the University of Texas at Austin.
The University Events Committee had to okay all events, Wisdom said, and financial jacking had to be ceased. Each event was donated to census was sided to donate 40 cents a person o help cover expenses.
In addition, Lawrence merchants were solicited. Eight establishments donated $25 and $30 to the Jamboree advertising of the Jamboree.
There was some problem convincing the residence halls to come up with the 40 cents per person, Eleanor Putnam, Leawood freshm in and coachairman of the college committee, said Thursday.
"Once we got started, we had people coming in offering as much money as we needed to break even," she said.
"A thousand dollars was all we could dig up for a concert," he said, "and that was cutting back on other things."
When the junior class came along and offered to finance a concert, we jumped at the chance. Wisdom said.
THE JUNIOR CLASS was one of the few classes in town with wisdom had already reserved loch for Saturday night in the tope that a concert could be given.
The Brewer and Shipley concert at 10 p.m. Saturday, will host the Junior class $1,500 to sponsor. An additional $1,500 is being paid by Mid Continent, which has the Red Dog Fm. The junior class of students leave a percentage of any profit over $8,000. Wisdom said.
Another organization eager to be a part of the Jamboree to host a marathon radio broadcast which began at 9 a.m. this morning will feature many performances.
KUOK MADE arrangement.
Jamboree, Dick丹尔.KUOK manager said KUOK gave the Jamboree, and amounting to $200 and use of the booth on Jayhawk Bouleard, Dolan said. KUOK also allowed the Jamboree to be used for advertising in the booth.
In return, KUOK was mentioned in advertising materials of the Jamaican company Doland said, KUOK had to charge the Jamboree $20 because the Lawrence merchants were the promotions of the Jamboree.
Originally, the planning committee had intended to hire a carnival to be set up near Allen Field House.
According to Trish Grunder, St. John Freshman and chairman of the carnival committee, the only reason committee members had to attend because they had started too late and didn't know who to contact for information. She said she made sure people attended State Fair Association. The secretary sent addresses of people to contact, but by the time he sent them, all the carnivals he suggested were booked up for the
ALL OTHER EVENTS are a celebration traditionally sponsored by the Greeks and the new ones planned by the independents, Wisdom
Although the Jamboree officially began Sunday, the main events will begin tonight with the 7 p.m. show at 9:30 p.m. in hoch Auditorium.
---
DIAMOND ELEGANCE
A lifetime of beauty captured in rings picked with about to be married budgets in mind
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4 DIAMOND $169
BRIDAL SET
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The street dance, featuring the Chessman Square, is scheduled to begin at 9 p.m. Friday on the third floor of O-zone. There will be free beer.
809 Mass. Lawrence Springtime is Ringtime 836 Kansas Topeka
All Women Currently Enrolled at K.U.
According to Punat, traffic and security will patrol the area along with volunteer marshals to help ensure that no cars enter the band while it is performing.
Applications are now available for the two Tri Delta Service Project Scholarships at the Dean of Women's Office and Office of Financial Aid.
LAWRENCE DRAGWAY Now Open EVERY SUNDAY
Gates Open 10 a.m.-Time Trials 10:30 Eliminations Start at 2:00 p.m.
Relay events will run from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday in Memorial Stadium. Special events will include a chariot race, a frisee contest, a tug of war game, Potter's Lake and a sack race.
SPECTATOR ADMISSION ONLY $1.00
3 miles West of Lawrence on U.S. 40 Hiway Starting at 2 p.m.
Cars entered from 4 states Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska & Iowa
UBU ROI
(King Ubu)
April 6-15 8 p.m.
864-3982
KU EXPERIMENTAL
THEATRE
Spring Sing will be the last event of the Jambores. It is scheduled for May 10th, Hoch, according to Cathy Brown, Wichita junior and co-coachman of the band.
Potterstock, featuring "Tide" and "Whale," will be from 1 to 5 p.m. on Friday at Lab 32, wraps up in the week. Jayhawk Jamboree and will include a Gymkhana with students beginning at 11 a.m. and the first car race at noon, Ray Kramer, Shawnee University security director of the club car bus.
THUMP THEATRE
Appearing
Saturday Night
April 8 at
MADHATTER
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
university of kansas
52nd annual
engineering
exposition
learned hall
april 7, 12:00 noon to 9:00 p.m.
april 8, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
april 9, awards banquet 6:30 p.m.
"We've come a long way, baby"
Juicy.
Oranges, lemons, citrus, Cali
makes all these flavors together in
good red wine to create Spañada
Chill it. Or splash it on the rocks.
Just bite into a slice of Spañada. You'll
know why we call it juicy.
GALLO
Spañada
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Musician
Brewer
Interviewed
See Page 5
Monday, April 10, 1972
Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THORNE
A. J. Porter
Brewer and Shiplev Liven Up Hoch Anditorium
Relaxing, country-folk style of music echoed throughout Hoch audience quickly made them feel at home. (See review and interview for day Saturday as夜班 Beaver and Shipley presented their KK Player established nominees, page 5.)
Air War Intensifies to 1968 Level
SAIGON (AP)—U.S. B52 bombers are flying sustained raids over North Vietnam for the first time since the bombing halt of 1968, the U.S. Command said Monday. Below the demilitarized zone, tank-led enemy forces renewed massive assaults in a drive on provincial capitals and key towns.
A brief statement from the command said American "air and naval operations continue south of, in and north of the DMZ. These operations include naval gunfire, tactical aircraft and BS2s throughout the battlefield area."
The statement said the operations were "in response to the Communist invasion of South Vietnam through the demilitarized zone."
Fighting spread for the first time, in the current enemy offensive, to the valleys and foothills near Da Nang, where the United States has a major air base. U.S. troops were not believed immediately involved.
Overcast skies once again forced limitation of U.S. air strikes in North Vietnam, but heavy air action was reported in the South, Viet Cong units kept
The South Vietnamese appeared to be holding out Sunday against the enemy assaults below the DMZ, and the Saigon command ordered another 20,000 troops into a showdown battle for An Lee, just 60 miles north of the capital.
A command spokesman denied North Vietnamese claims that three of the eight jet B52s had been shot down during the past week, including one on Sunday. The command said Sunday that one B52 was shot down by a Russian aircraft the DMZ, but landed safely at Da Nam.
up mortar and rocket attacks in the Mekong Delta south of Saigon.
On the southern front near San Diego, heavy fighting erupted along Highway 13, about 20 to 25 miles south of An Loc and only 37 miles north of the capital
A BATTALION of 400 South Vietnamese paratroopers, which only two days ago was guarding the presidential palace, was moved along both sides of Highway 13.
United States and South Vietnamese fight-bombers and American helicopter gunnings swapped down on the North Vietnamese positions along the road, kites, buckets, napalm and cluster bombs, which explode hundreds of tiny hand grenades.
enemy forces tumbled two South Vietnamese bases that had been blocking points for any push eastward toward the populous coastal lowlands.
McGovern Wins All At Local Conventions
in the action around Da Nang, on the coast about 100 miles south of the DMZ.
A 1,000-man South Vietnamese commando force made a helicopter assault into the jungles northwest of An Loc, behind North Vietnamese lines.
At the same time, a 300-man airborne force landed by helicopter and secured the district town of Chon Thanh, on Highway 13.
An estimated 30,000 troops from three North Vietnamese divisions, the 8th, 9th and the Binh Long, two artillery regiments and a tank unit with 10 light amphibious vehicles were reported to have surrounded the town. The town is defended by about 10,000 artillery troops from the South Vietnamese 5th Division, rangers and militia forces.
Ll. Gen. Nguyen Van Mihn, commander of the Saigon region, ordered Brig. Gen. Le Van Hung, commander of the 5th Division, personal command of the An Lac battle.
By LEONARD GROTTA
Kansan Staff Writer
The second resolution, submitted by the Lawrence Gilea Liberation Front, stated: "Let it be resolved that the Democratic Party shall commit itself to the creation and passage of legislation which will discriminate against homosexuals in this country and in all areas of employment in education, insurance and the military."
COMMENTING ON the adoption of the resolution, a spokesman for the Gay Liberation Front said. "We were surprised and tremendously pleased with the ongoing support for our resolution shown by the Democrats of Douglas County."
George McGovern made a clean sweep of all three Douglas County commissioners, local unit Democratic conventions held in October and All 21 delegates elected to attend the Third C. Congressional District convention on June 13 and the state convention on June 10 were invited.
All three local-unit conventions also approved a resolution recommending complete and immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from Southeast Asia, and two of the three approved a resolution recommending an end to discrimination against homosexuals. The other approved the resolution in spirit but did not adopt it.
THE FIRST resolution called for a reordering of "national priorities and fiscal policies so that at least one-half of the current defense budget will be spent instead on human needs" and the need to train all troops, support personnel, advisory and technical personnel immediately from all of Southeast Asia.
Area Votes Committed
The front's involvement in the
conventions was partially caused by
suggestion from fron
Budget Requests Exceed Senate's Available Funds
By ANITA KNOPP
Kanyan Staff Writer
The requests by University of Kansas organizations for funding for the fiscal year 1972-73 far outstretched the amount of money available, Bill O'Neill, Ballinw, Mo., junior and student body treasurer, said Sunday.
Those areas are Student Senate, student
O'Neill said that completed figures were not available on the total budget requests but school organizations, school councils and Kansan have requested major increases.
The Student Senate will receive initial budget requests Wednesday night before they go behind the Finance and Auditing委员会. Final budget hearings are April 26.
"The budgeting system is new this year," O'Neill said. "The Senate passed in December a line-by-line apportionment bill which allows the Senate to allot portions of the $12 student activity fee to the eight areas of funding."
Total funds available for next year are $408,850, O'Neill said. The funds are obtained from the $12 activity fee each student pays each semester.
organizations, school councils, University Daily Kansan, University Theatre, athletics, intramurals, and concert courses.
The largest requests come from school organizations, O'Neill said. School organizations were allocated 1.55 of the $12 fee amounting to $60,506 for the year. Forty student organizations, have requested funds totaling $177,007.
School councils, composed of academic department organizations, are allotted 75 cents from the total fee amounting to $24,426 for next year.
O'Neill he could not forsee any juggling of funds within the budget.
"I doubt the Kansan will get an increase," O'Neill said. "We spent time last fall conducting the student polls and I had to wonder if he would think there will be any major changes."
The number of organizations requesting funding has also increased.
Young Voters Powerful, Winn Says
By STEVE RIEL
Kansan Staff Writer
Rep. Larry Winn, R-Third District, said Friday at the University of Kansas that no politician could afford to ignore the young voter in the upcoming elections. He said the young were "no longer bystanders, but partners, in the political system."
He also commented extensively on his position favoring the increased rate of bombing in Vietnam. He said the bombing supported troops still in Vietnam. Troops support troops still in Vietnam.
Winn's speech was sponsored by Student Vote at the University and concluded during Voter Registration Week. He spoke on "What the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union."
Winn said those in the 18 to 21 age bracket had the power to determine the outcome of this year's elections. He cited the 1964 and 1968 presidential elections, in which 100,000 and 500,000 votes had been the margins of victory.
IF ALL of the 22 million new voters registered, they could control almost any election.
Some of the goals of the young, Winn said had been met or were being met by Congressional legislation. He cited continuing withdrawal from Vietnam, and concern for human development as evidence of legislative responsiveness.
Now that the Supreme Court had ruled lengthy residency requirements unconstitutional, Winn said, voters under 30 would find it easier to register and to vote. In the past those under 30 have been the most mobile segment of the population now consequently be the most affected by residency requirements, he said.
Winn said spending priorities in Congress had been reversed this session and that 45 cents of each dollar was now allotted for human development and only 32 cents of each dollar being spent for defense.
Winn said the fear of the youth vote by some politicians was unjustified. He said he thought the young were not singularly dedicated to overturning institutions.
Winn supported increased bombing in
Vietnam as the necessary response to the North Vietnamese offensive.
WINN SAID there was still hope for resolution of the war through peace talks although he criticized past efforts in Paris for completely helpless, not really peace talks."
Logistics and equipment support should be continued in Vietnam, according to Winn. He said that expenditures for the war would be way down by the end of the year, even though this type of support would continue.
Winn, however, did not favor a renewal of U.S. troop commitment in Vietnam.
The Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese, he said, would not consider major issues and used the talks for the purposes of propaganda.
Winn considered the prisoner of war issue to be very important in the overall war. He war. He said that he personally knew several POWs and men missing in action.
He said, however, that unconditional U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam would not result in the United States' being forced to withdraw.
from North Vietnam, he said, had never
released POW's union of U.S. withdrawal
of POW's union of U.S. withdrawal
WNNI SAID he did not support amnesty on draft-evaders because "it is neither the law nor the policy."
Likewise, he does not support legislation that would legalize the use of marijuana.
Winn said he thought the Democratic party's choice for presidential candidate would be Hubert Humphrey. He said Humphrey's efforts were comparable to those of Nixon in raising funds and enhancing his party's image.
HE ADDED that he had no "great big" contributors and that some of his definite support came from individuals within the construction and real estate industries. He said his voting record was independent of his contributions.
When asked who his biggest campaign contributors were in the last election, Winn said that this was his personal business and equated it to asking al-Qaeda leaders, said, however, that new legislation, effective this year, would make campaign contributors public.
Allard Lowenstein, former Democrat who spoke at KU last Wednesday.
Some of the old-line party members expressed concern that the inclusion of the Gay Rights Resolution in the platform would lead to the younger voters, however, stated that the resolution should be judged on its inherent merits, not its political expediency. The resolution was approved despite majority in all three conventions.
Each of the three Douglas County commission districts elected seven delegates and seven alternates to attend the Third U.S. Congressional District convention and the state convention. Delegates to the Democratic national convention will be selected at these conventions.
THE COUNTY COMMISSION conventions, for the first time this year, are a part of the new delegate selection process of the Democratic party. They are intended to increase grass-roots level political participation and to ensure that convention delegates are truly representative of their communities.
The delegates selected by the district one convention were Elizabeth Landers, Meadowbrook Apts.; Mike Davis, Lawrence; Emily Gibbs, Prospect; Garth Burns, fifth-year engineering student from Hutchinson; Jackie Davis, Lawrence graduate student; Katie Wittman of Human Development and Family Life and Loren Sipes, Overland Park senior.
THE DISTRICT TWO delegates were Norman Yettman, associate professor of Sociology and American Studies; Harry Mackenzie, associate professor of Sociology; Hurst, 1923 Clare Rd.; Lawrence; Betty Jo Charlton, Lawrence graduate student; Barbara Bailey, Baldwin; Donnalee Steele, second year law student from Chicago; and Charlie Wilson, Wichita junior.
District three elected Bruce Conard, 1023 III; Alice Vliegstra, 1909 Ohio; I. J. Stonebock, Lawrence sophomore; Leslie McKenna, 1748 Olym; Knox Nost, 1745 Stuart,man; Dan Krowitz, Lawrence senior, and Dave Berkowitz, Lawrence attorney
Open Hearing Tuesday On Insurance Benefits
The possible addition of a maternity benefits plan to current Blue Cross-Blue-Cloak student insurance coverage will be announced on Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
Members of the Senate Student Services insurance plan subcommittee have arranged for Dr. Raymond Schweigler, director of Watkins Hospital, and Blue Cross-Blue Shield representatives to be present to answer questions and to discuss plans related to the insurance plan being recommended to the Senate for approval Wednesday.
The maternity benefits option, which would result in an increase in all student rates, will be the main question considered, according to Kathy Allen, Topeka sophomore and chairman of the insurance plan subcommittee.
"When the Student Senate considers adding a maternity benefits option to the insurance plan, it has to consider how to make it take advantage of this option," Allen said.
Alien said that the proposed plan offered more coverage for the student than the teacher.
Under the current plan, drugs are covered up to $100 per illness. Under the
proposed plan full drug coverage,
including birth control with an
emergency contraception provider.
UNDER THE CURRENT plan, hospita-
coverage pays up to $30 for a semi-private
room with a private room allowance up to
$30. The proposed plan pays full coverage
for a semi-private room and pays the
average semi-private room charge toward
the room. There is a $25 deductible
for room charges outside of Watkins
Hospital.
The proposed plan provides for accidental injuries and medical home and office calls, which are not included in the current plan.
The subcommittee favors the adoption of two options in addition to the basic plan, the out-patient diagnostic laboratory and the treatment of contraceptive devices. Allen said.
The basic yearly insurance cost with these two options would be $70.92 for a student policy, $191.16 for a two party policy and $200.76 for a family policy. Allen said.
Allen said that the purpose of the open hearing was to give students the opportunity to voice their opinions and to ask questions concerning the policy.
Dog Jumping for a Frisbee
Kansan Photo by RAY TOTTEN
Campus Canine Enjoys Friendly Frisbee Game
While most campus dogs are out looking for bones or sticks, this one takes a more human approach toward his life. If you don't mind a slobbered on frisbee or one with a few teeth, it man's best friend could make a worthwhile addition to a growing campus pastime.
2
Monday, April 10, 1972
University Daily Kansan
News Briefs By The Associated Press
LBI's Condition 'Improved'
CHARLIOTTESVILLE, Va. ... The heart specialist treating former President Lyndon B. Johnson said he was returning to his home in Atlanta, indicating the former chief executive's condition has greatly improved.
Dr. John Wilks Hurst said Johnson, who suffered a serious heart attack last Friday, now has "few [serious danger signals]. The 63-year-old former president, he added, had a very good day and "now is a safe time to go or I wouldn't go."
Tanzanian Assassins Killed
DAR ESI SALAAM, Tanzania—Two assassins of Sheik Abek Karume, the ruler of Zanzibar, were killed in a gun battle with security forces Sunday, Radio Zanzibar announced. A third assasin committed suicide, the broadcast added.
One assassin had been shot to death Friday in the headquarters of the ruling Afro-Shirazi party.
Belfast Woman Assaulted
The assassination Friday is believed by Tanzanian authorities on the mainland to have been an isolated attack on Karune and not an urban street bombing.
BELFAST-- Youths dragged a pregnant Roman Catholic woman from her bone Sunday night in front of her screaming children, beat her and left her painted, feathered and lashed to a lamppost in the street.
The assault on the woman Philomela McGuckin, 24, was similar to punishment applied to girls the IRA has been of fraternizing at Fraternizing Hall.
Fall of Bataan Recalled
COLUMBIA, S.C. James F. Byrnes, former secretary of state and the man Franklin D. Roosevelt called his 'assistant president,' died Sunday at his home after a long illness. He was 92. Byrnes held posts in almost every field of government. He was an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, secretary of state, U.S. representative, U.S. senator, director of economic stabilization and war mobilization during World War II, a delegate to the U.S. General Assembly and governor of South Carolina.
MT. SAMAT, Philippines—President Ferdinand E. Marcos led thousands of Filipinos and Americans up this historic mountain Sunday in remembrance of the fall of Bataan to the Japanese army 30 years ago.
Marcos, a survivor of the Battle for Bataan and the most decorated Filipino soldier in World War II, called on his countrymen not to forget the sacrifices of the thousands of brave men who fell during the four-month-long battle and the ensuing death
The fall of Bataan and the neighboring fortress island of Corregidor in Manila Bay, 27 days later, marked the end of organized allied resistance in the Philippines until 1944. But the French forces had managed to capture the Japanese, who had counted on a much quicker victory.
By CLYDE LOBB
Kansan Staff Writer
Expo Speech Describes Engineer as Forecaster
Victor Kooler, head of the National Water Commission at Arlington, Virginia, emphasized the need for engineers to relate it to a speech Sunday night at the 1972 Engineering Exposition awards.
"More history has been made since we were born than in all the time before," he said.
He questioned whether engineers should listen to en environmentalists or to their own scientific knowhow
"Some ecologists are predicting disaster while others do daytime forecasts" and fear "the damage of the problem," Koelzer said.
Koelzer said that history had shown how wrong predictions of change could be such as Mr. Canyon would never support 200 million people or his statement, made in 1861, that the Grand Canyon would never be built because it was so desolate
Koelter cited environmental problems as being the most contemporary example of forecasting change.
"Engineers are being widely accounted to natural environment. They have the whipping boy for many in the environmental industry."
"If the ecosystem is so delicately balanced, why haven'
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"We must appreciate and protect the environment. The engineer has always been the doer and always will be, and the environment will require heavy involvement by him," he said.
New Degree Considered
By ARTHUR COHEN
Bachelor of General Studies Degree (BGS) and the speech, foreign language and Western Civilization requirements were discussed Saturday at a College Workshop in the Kansas Union.
Kansan Staff Writer
The workshop was sponsored by the Educational Procedures and Policies Committee (EPPC) of the College of Education administrators, professors and graduate and undergraduate students. Its goal was to inform those attending of the topics presented and to discuss these topics
Eight groups were formed that consisted of about 15 persons each, including 8 members participating in each, met for three hours in the morning. The morning session was followed by a medial panel discussion, headed by Ronald K. Calgair, associate director of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
PERSONS SPEAKING FOR
their group's viewpoints were
J.A. Wear, professor of physical
education; assistant professor
of philosophy; George Worth,
professor of English; Gordon
Brown, professor of Spanish
and Portuguese; Robert Hamilin,
assistant professor speech and
drama; Rufino Pinto, assistant
professor of English; Carl Leblan, assistant professor of East Asian studies, and Peter
& associate professor of specl
Two plans were proposed for
the BGS. Under the first plan, the major requirement would carry a minimum of 24 credit hours. Twelve hours of the major requirement would not be required to resemble or sophomores and minor-senior hours would need to be completed in residence.
PROPOSED DISTRIBUTION REQUIREMENTS would require students to four courses in each of the three humanities, social sciences and natural sciences, with two courses in each area. The total number of credit hours required for graduation from KU would remain 124.
The student, however, would be required to enroll in 60 hours of courses numbered 50 and above, or both, if they have a prerequisite course
Under the second plan only the number of hours needed for graduate would remain the same. Major requirements would not exist. This would allow the student to choose his hours and course
THE BGS PROGRAMS discussed in the various workshops received favorable reactions.
One group thought the first plan was structured. Plan two was seen as being innovative and worth pursuing.
Other groups described the second proposal as being a "great deal" for the groups mentioned the importance of a meaningful adjustment.
Engineer Prof Wins Award for Teaching
Stanley T. Role, professor of civil engineering, in the 1972 recipient of the $500 Henry G. Gould award and a certificate for excellence in teaching at the level in the School of Engineering.
William P. Smith, dean of the School of Engineering, announced Rolfe as the winner Sunday night at the annual engineering奖 banquet on Thursday, April 2nd and KU Engineering Exposition.
Rolfie was selected from many candidates in engineering student organizations. The final selection made by the Engineering Department.
IN THEIR PETITION nominating Dr. Rolfes, members of the student chapter of he *Reinvent* program, Engineers cited his "keen interest in his students as individuals" as contributing to success as an instructor. Rolfes, the principal course to "relate the basic principles of the elementary courses to the real world of civil engineering."
He joined the KU engineering faculty in 1969 after having worked with the U.S. Steel Corporation's Applied Research Laboratory. In 1971 he was employed by IBM as Professor of Civil Engineering.
Ph.D. degrees, all in civil engineering, from the University of Illinois.
THE GOULD AWARD memorializes Henry Gould of Kansas City, Mo. a 1931 graduate of KU who was president of the national mechanical contracting industry and Co., at the time of his death.
The civil engineering department won the overall exhibit award, the Sigma Tau Tau Tronhx.
Students in the department of chemical engineering won first place in the overall outstanding student exhibits. Pt Tau Sigma, national Honorary Mechanical Engineer, received the second place trophy and the American Society of Chemical Engineers received third.
Dr. Rolfe earned B.S., M.S. and
The validity of plan two was questioned. How would one know if the selection was good and who would make the choice, who would ask the骇者 what asked
The outstanding senior award went to Lee Hoffman of Lawrence, and the outstanding graduate award went to Wai Chung Lee, Lawrence.
be implemented.
DART SAID if a student was allowed to choose the courses he or she wanted to take, that he or she receive a "liberal education."
The Degree Requirements Subcommittee recommended that students be excused from the examination until completing 16 hours of work in a foreign language, 13 hours of a language specialty or three foreign courses that would be in conjunction with the student's language specialty or 10 hours of a language and three foreign courses.
I here was general agreement that a language requirement should be retained. Chamberlin said that his group wanted to amend the proposal to require that foreign students proposed should be taught in the foreign language or the student should study the literature of that language, either in that language or in another.
Hardin recommended that cultural and historical aspects of the course be taught at the course. He added that the instructor should be aware of each person's problem or problem set, presenting the particular learning
ANOTHER GROUP felt that the reduction to 13 hours was unrealistic. The fourth semester was the culmination of the language when the student would be able to understand and stand it best, a spokesman said.
The EPFC had recommended that the College Assembly give serious consideration to eliminating a two-hour course, the Fundamentals of Speech, as a requirement for the BA degree.
ONE GROUP thought the speech course aided personal growth needs, career-related development of communication abilities
Opinions were almost evenly divided in the discussion of the speech requirement.
Several groups thought the course did not accomplish its purpose or carry out course objectives.
One group voted 13 to i in favor retention of the speech recorder and one group voted 11 to 4 against the speech recorder. All other groups were not involved.
The Degree Requirements Subcommittee proposed that the Western Civilization program be taught in two three-hour discussion and or lecture courses offered by the University of the second three-hour course be assigned instead of the comprehensive examination.
The subcommittee also proposed that either Eastern or Western course be substituted for either the first or second course in Western
According to Di Zeга's plan the new civilizations program would consist of four semesters and five weeks of semester. Instead of covering the material in chronological order, as is done now, a number of consecutive weeks would be used to view views over the same question.
Major emphasis would be placed on Western Civilization because of the importance African civilizations would be incorporated into the course. A final would be given at the end of the course, but students instead of a comprehensive study plan.
GUS DI ZEREGA, Wichita graduate student and assistant instructor in the Western Civilization program, prepared a model which differed from the real-world models. Requirements. Subcommittee
During the fourth semester of each Liberal Arts course, Mr. Wollheim compiled his major which would combine many of the concepts discussed in the courses.
SEVERAL GROUPS thought the Eastern and African civilization courses should be integrated into the Western
The majority did not object to the proposal that the course be taught in two three-hour discussion courses.
One group thought that African
clubs in the Western Civilization
program, might prove to be more
than could be taught in one
The feasibility of establishing two or more four-year liberal arts and sciences colleges was also scheduled to be discussed.
Lack of time,however prevented the discussion.
SAGION (AP) — North VAIRONNAN fires open fire on four U.S. destroyers and cruisers and damaged two of the destroyers.
A spokesman said there were no casualties, but the destroyer R. Craig suffered hull and equipment damage by enemy shells and shrapnel.
Finding a new way to successfully stop persons from smoking is the goal of a new anti-violence psychological clinic at the University of Kansas, according to Dr. Lawrence, a Lawrence graduate student.
Duff said the clinic would use a method that had been used in clinical study. He said the clinic would use a combination of controls and all-controls to aid participants in their attempt to quit smoking.
This method has been used by individual doctors in their practices and has proven to be very successful. Duff said.
Duff said the participants in the program would receive no shock treatment nor be subjected to stimuli used in other anti-static coatings. He also associated of smoking with bad odors or unpleasant physical sensations. He said the program would emphasize self-discipline and combination of impairments to oneself and one's body.
The clinic is part of a research study, according to Dufour. He said that he had been a professor of psychology and director of clinical programs in his region.
The clinic will last about four months. Duff said "Persons in our clinic are periodically called during that time to set up appointments at the clinic and, more frequently, to see patients progress. They will also be asked to keep a record of the number of cigarettes they use from week to week."
Duff said the reason to length of the program was that most people in similar programs had been taught a large part of them returned to smoking within a few weeks. He said the clinic could do a better job of monitoring the success of the program over a longer period of time.
Participation in the program will be free, although a ten-dollar deposit will be required at the beginning of the program. This includes all of the program after the completion of forms which will be
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Profs Assess 'Feedback'
Kansan Staff Writer
Burchill is one of many persons involved in programs designed to improve the quality of teaching at KU. The term generally refers to such programs is "evaluation and advancement of instruction."
Brower, Burchell, associate physiology and biology at the University of Kentucky that although the quality of teaching at the University of Kansas was good, he could be expected to excel.
By MARSHA LIBEER
Kansas Staff Writer
MORE SPECIFIC GOALS of the committee are providing information about particular teachers, providing teachers information about their teaching and providing basis for promotion and tenure of the teacher.
Dennis Emby, Lawrence
Curriculum Instruction Survey
(CIS) known as Feedback, said
recently before news coverage.
Embry said he felt that Feedback was contributing to
Embry said that when the CIS committee began operations in the fall of 1969, the most important goal was the "general improvement of instruction at the University of Kansas."
improved instruction in part by the pressure it puts on instructors.
Embry said that each of the five analysis that emphasized his her strong teaching qualities and offered suggestions for points to improve.
"Part of the committee's efforts are aimed at analytical questionnaires. Already changes have been made that might care of the more pressing objections to this survey is to be given this spring."
He said that the committee's primary interests in the uses of the survey were that the results were used for promotions and sales, he said. He gave given opportunity to learn about their teaching effectiveness.
Arthur Skidmore, assistant professor of philosophy, is chairman of the Committee on improvement of Instruction, a committee of faculty members evaluating the results of the CIS.
B.B. King Canceled Substitute Planned
"Can you imagine teaching a course and having nobody show up for it?" he asked.
SKIDMORE SAID that there had been much "faculty interest and dissatisfaction" over the student survey.
The B. B. King Concert scheduled for April 22 has been canceled. King was to appear for the Kansas Lansay Concert, but because of a booking mix-up by him he will not be able to appear.
According to Tuck Duncan, Wilhelm, Ill., junior and public relations chairman for Student Affairs, he said he had up occurred because the booking agency SUA was dealing with office in both Chicago and New York. The Chicago office booked him for a spring trip to New York office booked him for
SUA is trying to arrange for a alternate performer the accommodation that the committee will be performing should be made sometime today or tomorrow.
Ticket sales for the concert were to begin tonight, but will prince Charles give things work out properly, Duncan said. The tickets for the King would be printed and they will probably be a little although King will not be performed.
the same date at a university in Washington. D.C.
has a stamp of approval,'' Skidmore said.
"Radically different attitudes are represented on the committee." he said.
Skidmore said it was conceivable that the results might range from recommending that the survey be discontinued to recommending that specific demands be made demanding.
The committee is also working on a report that will give positive recommendations of use of machine tabulation of the survey.
ELDON FIELDS, professor of political science, is chairman of the newly created College Committee. It is composed of 14教授 and 10教员 members that are working for a higher quality of teaching.
"Our committee has been exploring many different possibilities," Fields said, "to see what the functions of a committee should be. We handle almost anything that anyone wants to do with the evaluation and advancement of instruction."
SPEAKERS FOR THE CAUCUS are Emby; Frances Horowitz, professor of human development; Francis Heller, professor of academic affairs; and Jess Kewlard, KU regent and alumnus.
Burchill said the cost of the caucus was $250 which was being raised to cover the foundation grant that November was given for the Committee on the Evaluation of Liberal Arts and Science college of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Burchill said, "there is an opportunity that you can attend the caucus, which will consist of a dinner followed by our one minute teaching at the University's teaching at the University." Discussion from the floor will be posted on Friday.
The grant is being used to make a survey of teaching practices and to disseminate this information.
Burchell is a member of the College Committee. He is present organizing a College Teaching to be held April 23.
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Students Push Education
By MIKE MOREY Kanxan Staff Writer
Since last September, a group known as Students Concerned for Education has been championing the cause of higher education all over Kansas has been championing
Rusty Leffel, Prairie Village second-year law student and an active member of the Kansas legal community was much encouraged by the response of the people he and others had contacted and by the actions of the Kansas legal community in the activities of Students Concerned About Higher Education were partly responsible or legislature's fund for higher education this year.
The legislature passed a 5 per cent increase in the state budget for higher education. In the last quarter of 2013, only 2.6 per cent and 1.7 per cent.
THE CONCERNED STUDENTS organization began last September. A small group of students who were concerned about the quality of education in Kansas met to consider what they needed and how solutions to the financial dilemma confronting the university.
They decided, Leffel said, that their organization would be made up of a group of people work with, but not be connected with, other campus with.
"Ours is a people effort," he
said, "and word-of-mouth is our most important communicator."
LEFFEL SAID that some people had asked him how he and the tax structure in Kansas change the tax structure in Kansas in order allow for more
He said the Concerned Students "don't claim to have a master plan to solve all the state's financial illus, but we do know that our university is in trouble and our education is not efficient; education is no solution at all."
Lefel and his friends became concerned when they learned that per capita support for higher education in Kansas had dropped drastically compared to other states. In 1966-68, Kansas ranked ninth-per capita support. This year, Kansas ranked twenty-sixth.
Lefebel said that the Concerned Students didn't think that the people of Kansas didn't want to go to the University. The Concerned Students felt, he said, that the people of Kansas simply saw no of the extent of the problem.
THEY DECIDED, Lefael said, that their plan of action should involve three phases, a learning phase and an action phase and an action phase.
In the first phase, Lefeld said, they sent letters to alumni, newspaper editors, businessmen, legislators asking them for advice wanted to find out, he said, how these people thought the Concerned Students should conduct "Help the students Effort."
Ed Lallo, Topeka sophomore,
won a first place award for best
news photo.
The KU chamber on SDX was judged first among four entries in the Best Chapter contest.
KU Journalistic Society WinsChapter Competition
The University of Kansas chapter of Sigma Delta Chi (SDX), professional journalistic society, this weekend was given the Presidents' award for best chapter at the regional convention in St. Louis, Jewel Scott, Ottawa senior and staff.
THEY TALKED to newspaper editors, Chambers of Commerce, Church groups, high schools and several other organizations. They wanted to make as many people as possible aware of the problem.
During the action phase, Leila felt better and could talk to legislators in Topeka and alumi. They also travelled to talk to legislators personally.
Second place awards were given to John B. Alden, Lawrence senior, for radio reporting; Mike Moffet, Norton senior, for editorial work; and the Kansas was named second-best all-time newspaper. David Bartel, Wichita senior was editor last semester.
The second, or the information phase, took place during vacation and then vacations. The member Concerned Students took the problem of supporting higher education to their home locations.
they received a good deal of valuable information.
At the presentation ceremony Saturday night, the KU chapter was cited for its work on a freedom of information project.
Although the Concerned Students have accomplished a great deal, Leffel said, they will improve for quality education in Kansas.
Three KU students and the Kansas received awards in the 1972 Regional Mark of Excellence contest sponsored by SDX.
Because of the Concerned Students' efforts, every state school in Kansas now has some students who are the support of higher education.
Scott said that letters and questionnaires from the chapter
concerning access to public records were sent last fall to editors, publishers, broadcasters within the media in Kansas.
"We want to build a nucleus of 'students who are interested in working with Concerned Students for next year,'" Leifel said.
"The information had been investigated and a set of questions was being prepared for the judge general for a ruler." Scott said.
The recipients of the letters were asked to provide information about the difficulties faced by students and access to public records, she said.
"It is hoped that a clarification can be made on whether records, as those of state agencies and other agencies, are public," Scott said.
She said that the idea for the project was conceived by Richard Larrimore. Wellington was appointed and initiated by the chapter.
The Jayhawk Jamboree was held almost as planned last week, despite temperatures in the fortiens.
Larry Wisdom, Overland Park junior and cochairman of Jahyhaw Jamboree, said Sunday that the band refused to play in the event committee had arranged to set up electrical heaters for the band.
WISDOM SAID that he thought he the Kansas Union Ballroom had been reserved as a back up in case of an emergency. Frank Burge, director of the Union Operating Board, uncovered the possibility to show a movie and other arrangements could not be made because the International Night on Saturday.
The Jamboree got off to a bad start Friday when the street dance was cancelled.
Despite inclement weather the next morning, the Jamboree met at 3 p.m. in Memorial Stadium, were a success, Dan Cghewidown, Russell sophomore and chairman of relay committees, said Sunday.
The weather kept a lot of
Weather Hampers Jamboree Success
In connection with the drive, the organization sponsored appearances last week at KU by former Lowenstein, by former Democratic representative from New York, and Rep. Larry Warn, R-Kan.
Campus Briefs
"We are extremely pleased with the response we have had," Bedner said. "I think it has been a tremendous success."
Kansan Staff Applications Due Today
The deadline for staff applications for the fall Kansan is 5 p.m. today. Applications for positions on the news staff should be turned in at the Kansan office. The "Flint." Applications for positions on a business staff should be returned to the business office in 111 Flint.
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Applications can be picked up in the newsroom, the business office, the dean of men's office and the dean of women's office.
A lecture on "The Ancient Art of Indonesia" will be given by JAn Fointein, curator of Atastic art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in the Lecture Room of Spooner Museum at 8 tonight. The lecture is connected with the current exhibition of ancient Indonesian art at the Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City. The departments of art, design and painting and sculpture are sponsoring the lecture.
Lecture on Indonesian Art
About two-thirds of those signed up were KU students, Bedner said.
The editor and business manager of the Kansan will be chosen today. The selection will be announced in Tuesday's Kansan.
ZPG to Elect Officers
About 3,000 young voters were registered in Douglas County by the Kansas State Department of driver conducted by KU Student Vote. Mark Bedner, chairman of the voter registration committee.
Zero Population Growth will hold its annual business meeting at 3:00 p.m. Tuesday in Dyche Auditorium. The meeting will consist of a presentation of the new report and a lecture.
Voter Drive Attracts 2,000 KU Students
Ad Lecture Wednesday
William Bernbach, chairman of Doyle, Dane, Bernbach, Inc., a New York City advertising agency which does the Volkswagen and Avis campaigns, will deliver the third Bassil T. Church Memorial Fund to students at the University Journalism Wednesday at 1 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
people in, but the people who really wanted to run were there." Chegwidden said.
CHEGWIDEN SAID despite the fact that this committee has no experience in putting on a show, events went very smoothly.
"My committee did a fantastic job for never having run off a track meet before," Chegwiden said.
According to Oelschlaeger, there were four races: an 84ap race for semi-experienced racers which began at 12:30 p.m.; a 4-ap race inexperienced racers which began at 12:30 p.m.; a 2-ap race which began at 2:30 p.m.; and the 25-lap Jayhawk Jamboree Criterium which began at 3:30 p.m. The Criterium had a senior, a junior, and an intermediate division of the senior division being the winner of the entire Criterium.
Besides the standard relay events, the relays included special events such as a chariot race, a 3-legged race, a Frisbee race, and a sack race. According to Thompson, Caldwell sophomore and chairman of the relays committee, women were eligible for the Frisbee contest, the 3-legged race, the softball throw, and the girls backwards relay. No one showed the tug-of-war.
The bicycle races were arranged and run by the Jayhawk Jamboree with the help of the American bicycle League (ACL). He said the race went well if not always smoothly. There was some difficulty when Buildings and Grounds failed to get the barriers up on Jayhawk Bivd. In their care of Oelschlagger said.
Kappa Sigma fraternity and Delta Delta sorority won first place in the Spring Sing competition.
The special events were judged by comparing the contests to each other rather than being timed or measured. Thompson said. For example, the winner of basketball throw was determined by who threw farthest, but the distance was not measured.
THE BICYCLE RACES, which lasted from 12:30 to 5 p.m. Sunday, attracted a large and enthusiastic crowd. Roger Tatum, junior and chairman of the bicycle race committee, said Sunday.
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Headquarters City Aid Low Director Says
Ricil Silber, director of Headquarters, Inc., said Sunday that he was concerned about what seemed to be a lack of support for Headquarters from the Lawrence community.
Headquarters started its annual fund raising drive three weeks ago. The total amount of money given Friday was E$3,571. Silber said
Silber said Headquarters had handed 382 calls last month from the country, many calls as were answered in March a year ago. He said even though some calls tripled, financial support appeared to remain at about the same rate.
The University Friends of Art
—Could you use a scholarship?
Siber said $10,000 was needed from the fund-raising drive to present services.
—Could you use a scholarship?
—Would you like to help your Museum of Art?
—Would you like to visit major museums in the U.S. and Europe?
All this and More! Everyone is Welcome
Help us organize. April 11 7:30 Union Room Forum
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Tuesday, April 11 7-9 p.m. in the Student Union
Remember, this is your only opportunity, so don't blow it.
4
Monday, April 10, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
THE PARK
Kansan Photo by PETE SANG
Bad Precedent
Next fall student fees will increase $4.50 per semester as students start paying for the yet to be completed Wescoe Hall.
The $4.50 payment is a reduction from an intended $11.50 payment that was to have been levied if the University had not received a federal grant that will defray part of the costs of construction.
The use of student fees to finance the construction of University facilities is an unfortunate precedent to have established. Even though Chancellor Chalermers has vowed that as long as he is chancellor he will never again ask students to help finance University facilities, he won't be chancellor forever, and it is the Regents, not the Chancellor, that really have the power to control student fees.
At any rate, what's done is done. The only thing we can do now is keep in mind when surveying the field of candidates for influential state offices that such a precedent has been established. The governor, for instance, appoints the Board of Regents, and could bring much influence to bear in this situation.
The traditional justification for state-supported education has been that since the whole society benefits from education, the whole society should share the costs. The burden of support was not to come solely from those who attended the institutions.
While the University is still a long way from being supported solely by students, the Wescoe Hall fee is a step in that direction. Furthermore the present Governor and many Legislators are far from vigorous supporters of state funding for higher education. Witness the severe financial problems that the University is now experiencing.
Now that students have the vote, a real opportunity exists to reverse the trend of declining state support for education. We would be wise to take advantage of this opportunity.
-Mike Moffet
Associate Editor
News Background
By LOUISE COOK
Rationalization in Gotham
NEW YORK (AP) -It takes more than money to survive in the megaolis these days.
Suppose, for example, there's a transit strike.
Urban living requires an unbreakable pair of rose-colored glasses and the ability to see a silver lining in every cloud.
The average man would grumble something about the traffic and complain about not being able to get to work.
Not the urbanite. A little simple reasoning—some might call it twisted logic—and the city dweller looks on the bright side: the extra exercise of walking is good for him, no buses means less time to get around; the built-in excuse for not visiting his mother-in-law in Brooklyn.
With a little practice, anyone
anywhere can play the optimist's game.
Power blackout: Candles are much more romantic than electric light.
Television set on the blink?
Now's the time for all that reading you say you never can get to.
Just been mugged? Relax for a while; chances are you're safe for at least a week.
Can't afford a European vacation? You won't wind up on a hijacked plane.
Telephone not working? The bill collector can't call.
can still see you won't be contributing to pollution.
No trees and grass? No leaves
No trees and grass? No leaves to rake or lawn to mow.
Car stolen? You won't be contributing to pollution.
Medical bills piling up? Think
of next year's income tax deduction.
Apartment robbed? Now you can collect on that insurance policy you've been paying for all these years. Maybe.
Too many crowds? A perfect opportunity for making new friends.
Can't afford that fancy French restaurant? The food's too rich for your figure anyway.
Too noisy to sleep late? Look at all you can get accomplished early in the morning.
Can't find a bigger apartment? You don't have to buy more furniture.
No place for the kids to play? They can do their homework.
Boss turn you down for a raise? You're helping fight inflation.
Tired of being an optimist? Complain a little. It'll do you good.
ME.
ME. ME. ME.
ME. ME. ME.
ME. ME. ME.
ME. ME. ME.
ME. ME. ME.
ME. ME. ME.
ME. ME. ME.
I.
2014-9
C
Garry Wills ...
Eulogy For a Teacher
But the man on that breathtaking Catkill scapek was no Eastern ascetic—boy was he not. Whatever that term may convey, on whatever level, he was its antithesis. He sat on top of that mountain like its very active volcan-opening, spouting opinion, debate, reminiscence, and unfinished projects.
one encounters few real teachers in one's lifetime—and most of those do not do their teaching in a classroom. To meet one of my own favorite teachers, I went up the mountain top—which fits almost ridiculously the picture of youth questing
More people, however, sought him out as a speaker, writer and editor who had a great effect on the resurgence of
An extraordinary number of people wound their way up to that remote home above Woodstock, New York (the place after which the rock festival was wrongly named). Some wanted accounts of the radical Thirties, when the New Deal and then World War II Communist organizer at Oxford and the University of Chicago, a friend of New York bohemians, artists, and ideologues.
National Review-style politics in the Fifties. Though Frank wrote widely, he made his real impact as a person, remote yet gregarious, irascible yet affectionate, opinionated yet infinitely likeable. He always wanted people to believe him, not the incessant sharp arguments that never ruptured friendship. He was a Champion of Right-Wing orthodoxy whose friendships were heretically all-inclusive. Some of my warmest memories are of trying to out-ham him, but I still remember going forth through play after play, as I became a kine in his kindly company.
When young Right-Wing activities flagged, during the Fifties, people agreed it was because Frank had not come—he was younger than students, staying up later, drinking more, shopping less, and being debased (to polite dead term) its rare real sense—debate that does not kill and divide, but united even in difference, and throws off sparks of light instead of confugation. He had a whole constellation of the disappearing virtues—those of friendly hard argument, odd tolerant prejudice, and utter lack of moral integrity; others not merely oneself, a genuine "ambition" for the careers of all kinds of people.
That is why I call him a teacher. The teacher's work does not stand alone, but is subsumed (often untraceably) into his pupils. Frank wrote two books of his own; but his greater gift was for teaching. He also helped others. My own first book was written on a small grant he obtained for me; and I am but one of many he sought
out, and helped, and argued with, and never forgot.
There is no way of measuring that kind of intense, if indirect influence—but I'll let you in on a kind of open secret of the literary world. Some of the energy now showing itself in the liberal New York Times Book Review section is derived from the back section of the book, "The Mystery of Frank edited that section, for a decade and a half, with a strikingly unideological interest in young writers for their own sake. He filled the 'reactionary' magazine with bright young voices, like those of the novelists Robert Phelps, Joan Doiden, and D. W. Crocker. He was the young editor of the Times review, is himself a National Review alumnus, and any one issue of his journal is able to contain—as Frank's pages did—the literate judgments of Dave Davenport, Hugh Kenner, Theodore Sturgeon, Arlene Croce, or Francis Russell. And all of these advantages of an Anglophile long before The New York Review of Books was born.
Though we all live inevitably toward our death, Frank had also moved very consciously all his life toward a faith that would account for man's weird vitality of challenge to death. In one brief half-a-day last week, those two journeys converged for him. Lucid in the afternoon, as he prayed ahead, he was baptized and then the tense of vibrant men relaxed. Six hours later he was dead; and three hours after, it was Easter.
Copyright, 1972. Universal Press Syndicate
James J. Kilpatrick
Busing Plan Raises Questions
WASHINGTON — President Nixon's two-phase plan for promoting a return to reason in our public schools makes good sense for both the short run and the long haul, but it raises some questions of law that demand a thoughtful look.
The President has asked Congress to approve two bills, a "Student Transportation Moratorium Act" and an "Equal Educational Opportunities Act." The first is intended to halt further court-ordered busing; the second is intended to launch a school for disabled children and upgrade and equalization of schools serving large numbers of "educationally deprived students."
Both bills are predicated squarely on the all-but-forgotten fifth section of the Fourteenth Amendment. Over a period of years, in which Federal judges did not find the ideas about "equal protection of the laws," that section of the Constitution has been largely
ignored. It says that Congress—not the courts, but the Congress—"shall have power to enforce, by any means, the provisions of this article."
The second bill, dealing with equal educational opportunities, presents few problems as a matter of law. Congress plainly rejects proposed legislation; in "appropriate legislation," in explicit terms, the bill would outlaw segregation by race "among or within schools." It would demand that students vestiges of formerly segregated systems. It would forbid discrimination by race in the employment and assignment of teachers. It would prohibit pupil transfers, which would have the effect of increasing minority concentrations.
The proposed act goes further. It would create a new plan of Federal grants to upgrade "basic instructional services and basic supportive services" for the children of low-income families.
The object is to make certain that their schools, in terms of public expenditure, are "at least" two or other schools in local system.
These provisions of the act would be supplemented by certain direct instructions to lower Federal courts. Thus, a locality's failure to achieve "racial balance" among its schools "shall not constitute a denial of equal educational opportunities to all districts of the laws." The act would preserve the concept of pupil assignment to neighborhood schools unless such assignments were intended to segregate children on the basis of race. Before judges could order an increase in busy, they would have to receive clear and consistent rules and other remedy would work. The act seems to be reasoned, moderate, and lawful.
It is the companion bill, intended to halt the implementation of new court-
ordered busing, that causes concern. In listening to the President's television address, he constitutive pundits rubstone in impression that Mr. Nixon had in mind a bimill to impose certain "exceptions and regulations" to the Supreme Court. We curried to the famous McCardle case of 1988 and began briefing half a dozen other opinions upholding Congress to curb the high court.
When the draft bill floated up to the Hill on March 17, this labor proved to be wasted. The President is asking Congress to impose its moratorium on all federal courts "in order to provide Congress time to prepare legislation dealing with busing and with equal protection. The approach is novel. The act, if passed, may stick in the craw of some judges who don't choose to see the
implementation of their orders delayed. We could be in for a formulation—confrontation—but its safety and probabilities may prevent it.
What of the merits? The President's plan has provoked predictable statements from predictable people. Black spokesman charge that it vails a return to segregation. Those who oppose busing for purposes of education洛杉矶 holopoles that would let whole fleets of buses drive through. The two bills demand careful analysis. At first reading, the plan seems well designed to cure a form of judicial lunacy, to reduce community tensions, and to give a need and needed lift to children. To prevent them from children. If the two bills in fact would further these aims, they ought to be passed.
Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Griff and the Unicorn
A horse is looking at a grasshopper.
YLLK!
A BUG!!
STOMP!
... AND ANOTHER
FUN-PACKED
WEEK GETS
UNDER WAY.
By Sokoloff
YLLK!
A BUG!!
STOMP!
... AND ANOTHER
FUN-PACKED
WEEK GETS
UNDER WAY.
"Copyright 1971, David Sokoloff.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper
NEWS STAFF
News Adlaer... Del Brinkma
New Advisor | Desi Infahnman
Editor Chip Coyne
Game Editor Eric Sporran
Campaign Editor Eric Sporran
Copy Chief Rita Hagh, Erica Sporran
Copy Chief Joyce Naveen, Rob Rillin
Copy Chief Sally Coffey
Sport Editor Bob Simmon
Feature Editor Bob Simmon
Feature Editor Bob Simmon
Editorial Manager Tom Simmon
Wire Editor Tom Simmon
Wire Dummy Nancy Jessen
Review Editor Greg Sorber
Policy Director Ed E. Riland
Office Manager Greg Sorber
Office Manager Tonda Riland
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager
Associate Marketing Manager
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Promotional Advertising Manager
Ballina Advisor, Net Acadis
Cara Young
Norman Manager
Dale Pipergerger
Dave Murray
Dave Murray
cei The be He Hs His Ge m ba
Monday, April 10, 1972
5
DENISE GARRETT
Kansan Photo by JIM EATON
'King Ubu' Plays Until April 15
Steve Scott, Overland Park senior and Cynthia Appley, Akron, junior, play husband and wife in the final Experimental Theatre offering of the season, "King Ubua." Michael M. Nush, played by Alfred Jarry from its original French. He translated the play by Alfred Jarry from its original French.
Brewer and Shipley Offset Failing Funk 'n' Punch
By LARRY HUFFMAN Kansan Reviewer
Notorious Hoch *Auditorium*, bad acoustics, strange lightning effects, sitting in a Saturday night's appeal by Brewer and Brewery. Overcrowding the after-mentioned advertisers non-exactly ideal warm-up group, they pleased the audience using music from folk style of music.
MOST OF THE old Flippers' horn and fun-time sound was gone, giving way to a group that knew his music played, however was hardy nearly (Neil Young's Birds in Music) were examples. and much of their message was trite. Between numbers they displayed no showmanship, but the occasion asked for applause.
Opening the show was Funk'n'Punch; a band that went on to become The Flippers and the Sanctuary Band. Following an introduction billing them as 'heavy—which is the same,' they understand—the four members proceeded to present a 45-minute set which offered little in the way of fun.
Their playing, while rarely poor, never got beyond fair. They might be adequate for play at a local school, but featuring local talent, but they aren't quite ready to tackle a job at a concert of any magnitude. Their best work probably came from their player. Roger Bruner, guitarist, player.
I Young
I on Carter
Manley
I burn art
I argerdes
I the Lloyd
Murray
I Delaney
The contrast between the two groups was obvious from the moment Brewer and Shipley came on stage. They are professionals and know exactly what they want them. Instead of telling the audience they are going to talk to them, they talk to them.
did more rhythm work than anything else, leaving the lead to Hamilton. Phil Oakley was the sometimes-fair, sometimes-poor drummer. Most annoying of all was the harmonize on the lyrics of "Peace, Love and Groovy" and its unconscendent of Grand Funk Railroad.
BESIDES FAILING to generate any particular excitement in the audience. Funk
Brewer and Shipley also were very aware of what the audience expected in terms of the songs they would perform, and was dominated by songs of established popularity, either of their own or Bob Dylan's. They listened to songs like "Tarko Road," "Shake Off the Demon" and "Wich-tai-to" with the same folk music and vocalization that sells their albums.
Brewer Questions Stardom
n' Punch did little to set any kind of warm for Brewer and Shipley, whom the audience was more than ready to see.
KANSAN
"I'm really fortunate," Mike Brewer, one-half of the folk-tune of Brewer and Shipley, said recently. "I can make a lively, making song."
Brewer said there were advantages and disadvantages to becoming successful in the music world.
By JOE ZANATTA
"After a show, people used to invite us over to their houses, invite us to parties, come in with drinks. Then the Brewer said, "After the hit record 'One Toke Over The Line,' they just left us alone. Now when we're on the road we spend most time alone in hotel rooms."
Brewer said that people thought famous musicians were different from others.
"Some people really freaked out when the Beatles broke up," Brown said. "Man, they're just as great as the other musicians before. They played music together. They'll play music again. They're just people."
disadvantage was being on the road all the time.
BREWER SAID another
"We want to spend more time with our families. If you want to make a performance, if you want to make a lot of money, you've got to burn something."
Brewer said the group's upcoming meeting will last until late fall. He said the group was going to concentrate on writing and reading.
"We make music," Brewer said. "When it ceases to be fun something is wrong."
"We'll perform when it makes sense," Brewer said. "And don't give up on performance to perform. It got to the point where we weren't making music, just playing."
" 'Shake Off the Demon' is a reflection of a period of our lives, and its not a period I dug." Brewer said. "Everyone has demons they have to shake off, that we had to get off the road."
BREWER WAID one of the advantages of the music business
was that musicians could support themselves doing something they enjoyed.
"I've yet to become wealthy,
and Tom (Shipley) both drive
Wins. About the only things I've
bought are a good tape recorder
"I've been in the business about nine years," Brewer said. "Until about two years ago the only money I was made from was a royalty. Because we can make a living from record and song royalties.
Brewer said the group moved to the Kansas City area to get away from the "insanity of the music business."
"I definitely dislike the Los
Angeles area," Browe said.
"You have to make music but
You have to make music because
you like making music, not make
Mediocre Melodies At Band Concert
BREWER CRITICIZED the "Tonight Show" for its big business attitude.
By LARRY HUFFMAN
and PAT MOORE Kansan Reviewers
Anyone who went to the Concert Band concert at Murphy Theatre Sunday afternoon could be easily forgiven if for a fleeting moment you stumbled into a Rogers and Hammerstein musical. Many of the selections, conducted by George Bögerh, had the same music as jigged so many musical scores from the late '40s basilisk movies.
Compositions by Frank Erickson and Robert H. Pearson were characteristic of the program. Overall, the concert was steeped in medicity, the beats were fast, the tuba solo by Jamie Barnes displaying competence but a gross lack of professionalism.
Little can really be said about a merit or talent as a good job, but good job what was in front of them—what was in front of them was not good job
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a good time on the Frost show too."
Brewer said that if he hadn't become part of Brewer and Shipley, he would have probably joined the Association, another group he could be hoped he could continue to make a living as a musician.
A PAULIST DOESN'T WAIT TO BE ORDAINED TO GET INVOLVED.
D.
similar to marking time—then you couldn't be more mistaken.
If you think that ordination is something—and the time between it and when you couldn't be
The Paulists were founded with the belief that each man is a member of the community and the church. Each is an individual with his own talents and he is given his own way. But not later. Now
For instance, during the novi-
tate, novices work in such
diverse areas as hospitals, voca-
tories, and computer science.
Universities. They serve as assist-
ant chaplains, co-rettreat masters,
teachers and psychiatric aides
BREWER AND SHIPLEY's relaxed attitude toward what they were doing was infectious enough to establish the strong group-audience rapport that is essential for good concertics. They talked about "One Toke Over the Line," as their travels through the South before "Don't Want to Die in Georgia" and introduced "Oh as his they" "Charlie Manson psychiatric country song."
Paulist Seminarians create recreational programs, direct "Days of Recollection" for COD and the film *In the Light* to permanent with the media in the liturgy as a preaching tool, originate and edit the Paulist Free Press, coordinate Lenten Masses and organize Home Masses.
For more information about the Paulists write to: Rev. Donald C. Campbell, C.S.P., Vocation Room, 300 Room.
When you commit yourself to the Paulists, it isn't a someday thing. It's now. Today.
paulistfathers.
Brewer and Shipley are not spectacular guitarists, nor do they do the world's greatest vocals; their music they play does not require that. They are musicians of the kind of music that other people enjoy because everyone involved can sit back and unwind.
415 West 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019
THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT IS ON Feminist Speakers
are now available to discuss abortion, birth control, day care, February sisters, Feminism, Gay Women, today's Women's Movement, Women's health, Women's history, Women's roles, Women at work, etc.
We will speak to classes, dorms, sororities, fraternities or any interested groups.
For further information call 864-4441 or 841-3216
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VICKERS LECTURE SERIES
ADMIRAL
ELMO ZUMWALT
Chief of Naval Operations
THURSDAY, APR.13
7:30 p.m.
Union Ballroom
All University Faculty and Students are Invited to Attend
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
6
Monday, April 10, 1972
University Daily Kansan
OU Sweeps Tennis Dual With 'Hawks
The University of Kansas tennis team's home debut Friday bobbed ill for the new resurfaced Allen Field House tennis courts. The Jayahek woke in a match a Big Eight-leading Oklahoma.
Oklahoma, unbeaten in Big Eight play, rolled over KU tennis players in all nine matches. That gave it a 14-5 record. LOS ANGELES - p. 255-260.
The day started badly for KU. Cal Simmons, the number one Jayhawk player, had been injured in a motorcycle accident. He tore ligaments in a knee and was forced for the remainder of the season.
After that, the cold, windy weather made the Jayhawks feel even less like playing tennis.
Mark Wick, who moved into Simmons' number one singles play, played the only close set. He grabbed a 62 victory over Barr Bayton to force a third game. Simmons won 6-5, and the landside bean
KU will host Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia at 3 p.m. Tuesday.
Singles
Bar Bayton, OU, def. Mark Wick, 7-5, 2-6,
6-3
Jack Hughes, OU. def. Karl Kingsley, 6-6
6-1.
6-1
Daryl Hess, OU. def. Chris Henry, 6-0, 6-1
Jeff Lashley, OU. def. Tom Carlson, 6-4, 6-
Scott Martin, OU, def, Jim Isaac, 6-1, 6-1
Tim Quigley, OU, def, Ron Shaffer, 6-4, 6-2
Doug Ricon
Doubles
Raynton-Hess of Isaac Kringley, 6.1-6.1
Hughes Martin del. Carlson Kight, 6.3-6.3
Lansby-Kinglet de. Henry Shaffer, 6.4-6.0
KU's Gardner Takes State Handball Title
Mike Gardner, St. Joseph, Mo.
Junior, won the state single
handball championship Sunday
at the Central Branch YMCA in
Gardner, a member of the University of Kansas football team, earlier this year advanced to the NCAA handball tournament.
The Kansas championship tournament, which started Friday and continued Saturday. The Nebraska and handball players in the state.
ALEXANDER PASCAL
Kansas Staff Photo by GREG SORBER
KU's Mark Wick Snaps a Serve
Wicks made opponent earn singles win . . .
The University of Kansas baseball team took another big step this weekend in establishing the Big Eight championship. The Jayhawks beat Nebraska 3-2. In the second, then split two games Sunday.
The series victory left KU with a 4-2 record in Big Eight action, good enough for second place. Overall, the team is 11-3.
In other conference games,
Oklahoma swept a three-game
gamble in the 1996 NLCS into
the league's top spot with a 5-2
record. Iowa State took two of
out of three from Oklahoma State,
and Mets won three from Missouri.
The Cornhuskers won the first contest Sunday, 3-2. The game had been continued from last week with a 1-3 pasting in the nightcap.
Sharing second with the
Oklahoma City Cowboys,
and/or worse, they have 42 marks. Following them are Iowa
State (9-3) Kansas State (24)
Nebraska (18).
Nebraska Trip Puts KU in 2nd
In Saturday's contest, KU pitcher, Steve Corder won his own game when he sacrificed Henry Eva home from third base in the seventh inning. He pitched 7-1, and was for the Jaiyawks after pinch-hitter Don Lahli led off with a single.
Baseball Officials to Meet
Solution Nears in Strike
NEW YORK (AP) — A meeting today in Washington between both sides in the baseball strike and a federal mediator was on after President Nixon stepped down nine-day dispute Sunday night.
At the same time, a new dispute arose over whether the players would be entitled to their rights. The season still could be played
Meanwhile, a spokesman on the baseball's club owner reported substantial progress toward settlement of the walkout—but the head of the striking players' organization said he wasn't so sure.
Marvin Miller, executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association,
Miller, a veteran labor negotiator, said as far as he knew, the meeting would involve only himself. Gaherin and
said he and John Gaherin, the
members' representative, would
meet Monday with J. Curtis
and the Federal Mediation Service.
Miller, however, called the owners' proposal," a token offer," adding, "Mr. Gaterin is aware of you in writing and I have a lot of unanswered questions. I'll do anything I reasonably can to produce a settlement. But on the basis I reasonably can so far, I can't be optimistic.
After submitting the owners' money offer, he declined to disclose the exact amount—Gaherin expressed optimism.
momentum. Based on where we've been, I'd say we made substantial progress."
Calvin Griffith, owner of the Minnesota Twins, called the new dispute over salaries "a big hurdle.
Asked about the possibility of a settlement Monday, he replied: "I hope so. I feel we picked up
Evans then hit a grounder back to pitcher Denny D'Ohrberg, who ran for 35 and first and second. Bert Herezekey also hit a grounder to D'Ohrberg; he was able to touch the ground.
Big 8 Standings
Corder, who gave up his first run in four games this year when Nebraska scored in the first, was also helped by the seventh. Corder is now 4-0.
When the game was resumed Sunday, the Cornhuskers put up a tough error in the fifth to push across the winning run. It was the first loss in four starts for KU starter Joseph Believed in the fifth by Bob Wolf.
W 1
Oklahoma 3 1
Kansas 4 2
Oklahoma State 4 2
Colorado 2 3
Iowa State 4 3
Kansas State 2 4
Missouri 1 5
Nebraska 1 5
In the second game of Saturday's doubleheader, which was played in 35-degree weather with mist and snow, the two teams were as the bottom of the fifth before it was called. The score was 2-2.
Wolf also started the second game for the Hawkys. After giving up a Nebraska run in the
force Lahit, overthrow third, Lahit scored, and Evans and Berecky moved to second and third. The game's game-winnning sacrifice.
THE NATIONAL COMPANY
THE NATIONAL COMPANY
CONCURRENTLY PLAYING TO CAPACITY BUSINESS IN NEW YORK
ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER & TIM RICE'S
JESUS CHRIST
SUPERSTAR
AUTHORIZED PRESENTATION
OF THE ROCK OPERA
CAST OF 50
INCLUDING FULL
OPERASAL AND GUIDE
Individual competitors fence in preliminary, semifinal and final rounds. The pool is made up of the top three fencers of the two semifinals
The team event involved three-man teams each with a fourth alternate member. All three regular members of the team were selected to oppose the opposing team. Each team fences all the other teams entered.
All finalists are eligible for the sectional tournament, which will be April 14-15 in Lansing. Mich.
winner, is now 2-2
CAST OF 50, INCLUDING FULL ORCHESTRA AND CHOIR
"'JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR' IS A TRIUMPH!"
Both the men's and women's foil teams placed second, and Kielt Rathbum and Jean Dechant in the individual competitions.
TOPEKA
MUNICIPAL AUD.
SAT., April 15
2 shows—
7 p.m. & 9:30 p.m.
prices: $7.00, 6.00, 5.00
TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD STORE IN LAWRENCE.
The Jayhawks' next series will be three-game, Colorado State and Saturday. Boulder, KU's new home games against Missouri April 21 and 22.
first inning, he blanked the "Huskers until he was relieved by Bill Stieglemer in the eighth. In the meantime, KU, with the help of Mason Crawford, scored three runs of its own, enough for the win. Wolf, the
Two teams and two individuals from the University of Kansas fencing team qualified for the Amateur Fencers' League of America sectional championships, placing in the championship tournament and the Divisionvision tournament. Saturday and Sunday in Robinson Gym.
TIE HODGE PODGE
15 W.9TH
Nicklaus Grinds Out Fourth Masters Win
Spring Sandal Sale 10% Off April 3 through April 29
KU Fencers Place in Meet, Make Sectional
Moline, Ill., who had mounted a surprise challenge to Nicklaus and was within one stroke after 54 holes, had to help salvage 7.
AUGUSTA. Ga. (AP)-JACK Necklaus, intimidating an elite 14-year-old, methodically ground out a record-matching fourth Masters Championship Sunday and set all the world's major golf tikes.
Nielkaus, who led all four days,
won by three strokes and had a
margain of four or five most of the
fine day. He finished with a 288
total, well off his own record of
165 runs, up a subtotal in this
year's event.
The Golden Bear, massive in his talents and deadly precise in his approach to the game he himself over-perrated 74 in Sunday's final round on the cool and sunny Augusta National Golf Club.
But it was more than enough.
He turned the fabled event—the
dramatic exploits—into a ho-mum
scramble for second place as
would be challenger one by one
in the grinding pressure.
Tom Weiskopf, Nicklaus' partner in barting the flower-bedded course *counseur* Australian veteran Kenny Pimblett and Bobby Mitchell were in a tie for second at 281, one over parr Campton and Mitchell had been through all 34.
Then it was Bruce Devin.
another, Australian, Jeremy
Jerry Blanco, white
jerry Jerry disapposed
Jimmy Jamieson, tied at 290.
Jamieson, the young man from
MAKE MONEY—NOW!
People can solve their problems by changing their mindset (self-affirming thinking) and changing their behavior (self-improvement). They condition the sundesirable habits and creative mind for happiness and success. Reposition with induced "deep relaxation" does it! Only kind on the market is a product that does not induce deep relaxation. It is 0,25 oz, sold on a 40 day money back guarantee of stagnation detection cassettes representeed over one year. Representative paid: 0,20 per commission Hastad). Ears are easy. Send idea stamped, added business envelope
ACHIEVEMENT MOTIVATORS
210 Fifth Avenue Suite 1102-20
New York 10010
1973
WE'VE GOTCHA COVER In Spring Knits Like This One. Gant makes it out of cotton for easy care and the utmost in comfort See them at THE University Shop
West End of Campus
Shop
b. b. king
Cancelled ...
but there will be a show.
Ticket Sales Begin Today At SUA Office
Two Concerts at Hoch 7-10 p.m.
Ticket Prices 2.50 3.00 3.50
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 10, 1972
7
KU Field Men Shine in Texas
University of Kansas track and field men made their best showings in the field events in the Texas Relays in Austin
Meanwhile, KU graduates Jim Bainville and Jared Wolheim placed well in open events. All three are shooting for berths on the U.S. Olympics
Yrushen drew most of the at-
tainments for his open 89 lf in 1:4.1 He defeated Kansas State graduate Ken Swenson by 20 yards. Swenson
Ryun, who holds the world record in the 880, mile and 1,500 meters, pulled away from the strong kick down the backstretch.
In his last two meets, Ryun has run half-mile and three quarter-mile legs on two relay teams and an open half. Coach Bob Timtum had last week that Ryun entered the shorter distances for variety.
RYUAN WORKING into shape for the 1,500 meters in the Olympic tryouts this summer, will run the Glenn Cunningham
Milwaukee Stifles LA
By The Associated Press
Kareem Abdul Jabbar scored 308 points in Los Angeles, leading the defense in Milwaukee Bucks to a 9-32 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers in the opening game of the playoffs. The Basketball Association Western Conference final playoff series.
Mile in the Kansas Relays April 22.
Salp placed third with 63-11¼ in the open shot put; and Wilhelm, fifth with 50-9%.
KU's best finish was a tie for second in the high jump by Barry Schur He jumped 8-10. a quarterback set record earlier this season,
Sam Colson heaved the javelin 250-5 to place third. It was only his second meet of the season.
Bill Hatcher's pole vaulted 16-0 for third place. His KU record was 16-9 a week ago in a dual at UCLA.
KU RESULTS
Friday
In the running events, KU earned only two places. Rick Jacques, in the same open 880 that Ryun won, ran a 1:51 to fourth in the university 440 intermediate hurdles with 524.
Open 880-4. Rick Jacques.
1:51.1
Saturday
Javelin—3. Sam Colson, 250-5.
440 intermediate hardles—4.
Bob Bornkessel, 52.4.
KU will travel to Ames, Iowa,
for a dual with Iowa State
Saturday. The Kansas Relays in
April 2014. Stadium will begin
April 20.
High jump=2, (tie) Barry Schur, 6-10.
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843.9494
Pole vault—3. Hatcher, 16-0.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
TONIGHT! Bring this Coupon to SHAKEY'S
for
on a
50° off on a Double
50 $ ^{c} $ off
or Family Sized
PITCHER
PIZZA
(light or dark)
SHAKEY'S
Offer Good April 10 Only
544 W. 23rd 842-2266
SPICE
of life IS HERE
Fiction by KU's own JAMES GUNN
A candid conversation with VERN MILLER
and Published by former KU student LEE BARNETT
available at Raneys, Town Crier Allen News & Krogers Don't miss this unique issue
Webster's Mobile Homes
Your Complete Service Dealer
JOHNSON RAILWAY
Tie downs - Skirting - Parts
Ample Park Spaces Available
3409 W. eth 847-7200
Westside West of Drive-in Theatre
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
KAT Suzuki
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
Open 24 hrs. per day
634 Mass
days per week
Independent
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
COIN
DRIVE IN
AM 1048
LAUNDRY & DRY
BATH
9TH & MISS
843-5304
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
One day
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their background.
FOR SALE
Highest price used for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. V1 2-
8008. tf
Western City, Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it.
1. If you use them,
2.
You're at an advantage:
If you don't.
CUBA EQUIPMENT - Firm Make,
Machines for Lifetime Gear
Pacific Pai Insurance Gear
Pacific Life Insurance Gear
Hawk Kite and Vest $3.99
Snowboard $4.99
In for all your diving
training in our indoor
nautor brands Dive Equips
and Divers Kite, Driver
Kites, Driver Karsas Mo, MG4144
Phone 656-826-1140
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing. *New Analysis of Western Agriculture* *Campion Madhouse*, West 14th.
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can
buy a stereo at COOLE COOP,
plus 10 at RAY AUDIO-
only true Store Discount House
in Chicago, Tau. Co., College &
Computing Center.
62 Chevy, 4 dr., good shape, 6 cyl.
tandard shift, good rubber; $250 842-
439 4-10
Seabra Equipment- Fourth-Mark Snares
50 Ton Tank. Protractor. Hal-Horse
Super Spider. $49.95 Sea Hawk Knots.
Combat Air Gun. $69.95. See us at
Combat Air Gun. $69.95. See us at
combat air gun. all major brands
stock, but bulk, all major brands
60 Barrytown Pt. Klamar City Mo.
60 Barrytown Pt. Klamar City Mo.
Aimpeg BT-15 solid base bass amplifier with 15" speaker and R2S-B extension cabinet with 2-15 speakers, wired instrument Mantl suit
1971 Honda S1, 250. Excellent condition.
Mint sell- Best Offer Takes Call.
833-745-4040
4-10
JORTHISIDE COUNTRY SHOP 707
Antique Artifacts, used furniture,
collection items, old wood cooking and
furniture, antiques, shovels and
shovels, bicycles, fireplace wood,
oak picture panels, and flanked wood.
Every day. Herb Altermuth. 842-913-
even days. Herb Altermuth. 842-
Sun-foil,扣 down, seats 4, speeded
up, sliders, adjustable seat backs.
Guitar AMP, good for jazz sound,
real nice mixed or stage 50
or call Ebb or Biddie - 843-9783
Ampex model 960 tape deck. Perfect
$256. Also portable tape recorder.
SIM S.L.R. camera, "SV" TV-tunnel,
130mm f/2.8 lens. 4-10mm
7188 or 82-6044 4-10
4-10
1966 Chevrolet Impala. 2 d hr. hp. 327 cu.
in V-8, 525 hrs. run great. Three-speed standard transmission. Chrysler wheels. 864-116. 4-11
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
VOLKSWAGEN 1966. BUG New brakes, 4 new tires, 25,000 miles, good condition. Only $885. Good deal, come and see it. Call 81-321-4-115
Baldwin Electric Guitar, hollow body, double pickup, in perfect condition, with handdock case $75 or trade for used musical calyx. Call Gary. 864-1100
Three days
1870 Honda. 250 SL, excellent condition,
841-2581. 4-11
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
DELICATISSIMO
SANDWICH SHOP
Tony's® Service
Be Prepared!
toward
starting service
starting service
C040-1048
434-734
12-100 428-
in the WALL
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843 7685 — We Deliver — 9th & 11th
Mobile home for sale. Tired of living on a mobile home or rented mobile home and want something more comfortable where you can enjoy privacy and the freedom to study or in studying in a warm, pleasant room. 3 bedrooms, bright 20 ft. living room, refrigerator, automatic washroom, gas furnace, yet only $79,000. With 10x24 extension $2990. Immediately available.
Yamaha Fujinura, 1971, 125 cc, red. ex-
citation condition, cheap. Also 1971
350 cc Honda Motor complete. 842-
6554 or 842-4799. 4-11
CLOSE GUEST 40 to 50% off on entire stack of outfits (40 components, install components, & cleaning). Stoneback's Magnavox. Downtown- base floor. 923 Mass. 4-11
Kaw Valley Hemp Farmers—Get into the new bell-bottom bib-overalls at Kearville, 12 E. N. 8th. 4-11
Secluded 40 acres, near Perry Lake for sale. Unimproved natural state. 2 ponds. Beautiful view. Will sell on contract. 843-2774. 4-11
1965 Ford Galaxy 500-Atr. V-8
Automatic trans. Recently
recovered from fire.
Trade for pick-up, (V-8, A-4, speed).
Call: 843-783-1298.
Call: 843-783-1298.
Need to sell a ten speed Schwinn man's bike. Almost new and in excellent condition. Call afterterno and evenings. 842-7820. 4-12
Used compact stereo and FM $25
Used coffee stereo and FM $100
Master work console FM $150
Stoneback'h 29 Mass M43-4170-4-11
Lenses 125 mm F2.8 Nikkor one
mol. Perfect. $125.00 inc. 75.5 Vivitar
4 mm mol. Oldest. $50奖金
caps. old included. $30
after 8 4-12
1962 Ford Van—good condition, $400.
Call 833-8878 or come by 743 E. 13th.
7:00 A.M.-12:00 P.M.
11 week old Irish Setter puppy (country grown), 61 VW, make offer, see VW at 1823 Ohio Call 603-3222 4-12
Natural food supplements and biodegradable cleaners, also natural cosmetics. Shaklee Products Distributor Free delivery. 842-1538 4-12
1960 Austin-Cambridge 4 dr. Sedan.
Needs tune-up. $150 Call 841-3216
after 5:00. 4-19
105 Volkswagen fastback, sunroof,
AM-FM radio. New radios (snow
truss included). Fog lights, rear whee-
lippers. Maint. sell $400, $416,
82-2326
The purpose of this ad is to sell porchos. So buy a hand made porch at the Varn Barn, 720 Mass. Your house must be detached to defeat a porch would you? **4-12**
2 speakers air suspended 3 way 12" 8-1/2";3 speakers air suspended 3 way 12" 8-1/2"; Make offer, go cheap. 8-track deck with pre-ampl. 30 $-8 track tapes. Capsh 846-1711 4-10
MOVING Washer and dryer. $75
Washing machine. $20
Saw, two. $62. Three Saw, 3-impedge
cycle. $25. $55. 3-speed pulverizer
cycle. $40. $49. Swing set. $25
Swift set. $9. Lawn sweeper.
$10. Electric hedgerow mulcher.
$6. Fence aswerer. $14. $264-254 after
much as it. $85.
Michigan St. Bar-B-Qpec 151 Mile
Steakhouse $14.50 Large Beef Breed-
trio $14.50 Beef Breed- trio $14.50
Large Beef Breed- trio $14.50 Large Beef
Breed- trio $14.50 Large Beef Breed-
trio $14.50 Large Beef Brede
AM-FM FM Stero radio with 8-track
tape player, input & output jacks for
turntable, headphones & recorder.
Top condition. B5 - 842-9738 4-13
Floral Firen?t7? Got them, band
jackets, custom made leather belts—cheapest around—so many clothes.
KONON, 819 Vermont Bold Deal + 13
BLEVINS HONDA
1811 W.6 Lawrence, Ks.
Factory Authorized Honda Sales & Service Cycle Pick Up Service
843.3333
BEER - COORS - BUD — $11.5 a 6-pack
12 oz. $14 a 6-pack 16 oz. Jayhawk
Farm Mart 39, Illinois 4-13
Pick Up Service
843-2222
Red Baron
10-speed bicycle, Gifane, "Tour de France" 241; "brooks France" 285. Excellent condition. Aking 1$90 Ciclet Michael at 743-7122. Ask
ADJUSTIFIE COMES UP IN THE
WINDOW. We will send Magpie MacDonald
363. Store vartriage, visually exciting,
365. Cover and tie fabric, off-grid oil
cover and cover and tie fabric, in-
suitable for a 1-basket I bought now for $40; $50 or
$60. We also offer a 2-hour after-after
sale: 5 PM for Thronat on Sat.
*
1967 Dodger Van- 318-V8, auto, nice shape, also 1964 Fearon Falcon Sprint, V8 power steering, 4-speed buckets, thwr works- 842-5712, 1131 Ohio. I4
Black Spanish leather coat, trench coat style Double breasted Ladies coat 11-12 Excellent condition Half price retail价 Call e-mail: 4974 9474
650 BSA Hornet, Just overhailed,
Excellent condition. Good looking
bike, 1102 Apth. Apt. 4-11
3-speed bicycle, new tires, chain, & light. Full size violin and case AM radio-cassette player. 843-3579. 4-12
APARTMENT SALE----1045 Ky. Fr.
10-5. Sat. 11-4 4-13
1966, 650. Bonville Triple-cylinder out and complete overhead loom than 300 miles ago. Also new helmet used very little. 825-426. 4-13
10-speed - Brand new Raleigh, center-
pulled brakes, racing tires, 23" inl.
frame, orange, must sell. Call 842-
5819
4-14
NIKKON FANS For Sale, 12mmx2.8
Nikko Lens with "Bellows" Best offer over $175 Call 842-2148 4-12
Honda Mini Trail $175
Honda Mini Trail 126
Suzuki Tire 128
99 Trail 190 Honda 210
99 Trail 190 Honda 210
71 BSA 250 Trail 350
71 BSA 250 Trail 350
Honda Dream 322
Honda Dream 322
Honda Hardcover 425
Bullock Matador 425
Bullock Matador 425
1970 Kawasaki, 350 c.c., good condition.
$200,843-818-0
4-13
VOX POWER STACK—like new amp-
system, two separate speaker cabinets,
8-127* heavy duty speakers. Must
call: 842-8529.
FOR RENT
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
9 a.m. 12 p.m. Tues.-Sat.
5-Sun
5-Mon
9-Fon
1730 323rd St.
21st Fm.
SPRING CLEARANCE USED
BIKES Kat Suzuki, 634 Mast, 842-
000
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited
students can rent two bedrooms
students can have two bedrooms
furnished apt, with all utilities paid
for $60.00 each. Call Apt. 4.00
1-800-533-2695
Carol Lee
SUMMER RENTALS. All types and prices, all near campus. Reserve yours now. Marie Lynch, 212 Lea 843-1601, 841-3323. 4-10
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAW-
YARD OR GARDEN? Look at Lawrence's most attractive rates if you call Mrs. Forbesh 822-755-6101, the Lawyers' Liaison Agency. 1/4th living in Argo Apartments 1/4th living in Argos Apartments 1/4th living in Avalon, or Harvard Surety, Iowa & Jupiter, or Jupiter, Jupiter. You can play a jovial between June August in it as curiously meted special events such as this summer a wonderful time to see Lawrence.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR now showcases furnished and unfurnished apartments that start rate of $210. Come to campus at 191 W. 14th St., 1 W 14th W, 191 W. 14th St., Ab or call 845-362-7655.
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
SAN JOAQUIN UNIVERSITY
WHY RENT?
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
Mobile Home Sales
RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
TONY'S
◦ OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
◦ TO 60 MPH—13.5
◦ RECLINING FRONT SEATS
◦ UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL
842-0444
500 E.23rd
Diret of trying to find that ideal air-conditioner. I have two available, 1 & 2 barns, but not in various locations and price varies. McKowar Agency, 901 Kirkland, WA; McKowar Agency, 901 Kirkland, WA;
NOTICE
Wood paneled rooms with 10 windows
in large house near campus—share
with four groups, people $40 per
person. Use wildlife exhibit. Cat 4.
822-706-1000
GRAD STUDENTS--FOR RENT, two
bedroom room, one acre, outside
yard. $125 mo. plus utilities, yearly
avail. May 31 for Appl. for 48,
$650 per month.
Reni Apartments for rent immediately,
next to campus, air-conditioned,
fully carpeted, furnished two-bed-
room apartment 5900 sq. ft.
5:00 p.m. #42 602-8000 4-10
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATESUM
Avalon, 9th & Avalon, Harvard
Jewish college and Harvard, Andro
college. Cost of living in one of these handsome
apartment complexes is $40,000 apartments and you will be required to have a digital wireless central A/C heat and water utilities paid.
The school is a co-educational.
CSC TOYOTA TRUMPH
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
1972, while selection is still available.
852-2348 or 107.6-A Harvard
Lawrence's best built hostel and
lawrence's best built hostel and
SUMMER-YALL-Large bedroom room for man-carpeted, C.A. private entrance, bath, very quiet, 2 blocks West of campus 843-7827 4-11
LOVE THAT DATSUN
LOOK WHAT SANTEE, APTS HAVE TO OFFER! Summer rates, swimming pool & C. A free cable TV, TV antenna 843-2116 1322 IIndia Avenue 843-2116
Sublease for summer; studio apt.
furn. until paid. A/C. close to campa-
sion. 935. 843-8766. 4-14
LEARN SKYDIVING 1st jump course. $40 Includes rent, rental fees, equipment and qualified instruction. Class Indices 1 first after $500 2 first after $1,000 3 first after $2,000 4 first after $3,000
Barn Partiest. Now available for barn rent in the area of Avondale Valley Farm on Lake Perry, and but cooler plenty of parking at the lake. Call Joe Fallon 6 after 9 am at 823-701-2542; Call Joe Fallon 6 after 9 am at 823-701-2542.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. John Wells, 842-3220
new wide biltz f 50-14 F first quality only $25 plus F 10-34 at Ray Biltz G70-149 $2.00 more G70-149 $14.00 more Fast free installation at Rocky Bank's G70-149
711 West 23rd St.
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas 60044
We can find any book for you. All
subjects, rare books, fine bindings
etc write T. R Maness, 317 Beaulon
St. Boston, Mass. 02116
4-12
Would you like to see some pretty
evolve people, young lovers & a good
look at the People's Republic of
China? This is one of the best at
Hass Impressions, 1029 Mass. 4-15
MIKE STEAK HOUSE--where you will find one of the best steaks in our Town ome is "Nine Out at Eating Out Prices." 4-14
HAVE YOUR HANDWRITING ANALYZED, 842-6476 A, 414
Women's Alterations. 20 years experience.
Cause: B44-2767, 9:30-5:30 JAPAN
English "Bobby" Capes—keep the rain God off your back—now at Earthship, 12 E. 8th. 4-11
KEYBOARD STUDIOS
- Guitars
- Recorders
- Music
- Strings
- Accessories
BOOK BRIEFINGS PORTRAITS Y FILMING
+ CROSS
REFERENCE
23
1903 Mass. 843-3007 OPEN NIGHTS
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
PLANNING A TRIP??
Maupintour travel service
★★
The Bull & Boar
CLIP
11 W. 9th
Grilled Cheese Coors on Tap
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UDIOTRONICS
928 Mass
8
Monday, April 10, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Annual Invasion Pleases Birdwatchers on Campus
By ROBERT E. DUNCAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Any student walking in the areas of campus these first week of school himself as a member of the cast of the Hitchcock movie "The
Across campus, and particularly behind Blint Hall, thousands of birds have found a habitat during the migration season.
What brought them to the University of Kansas campus was their annual flocking to the north.
According to William Balfour,
vice-chancellor of student affairs
and a birdwatcher, these birds
have a common sight at this time
of year.
The most common birds one might hear squawkwing would be the common gracile and those that are squawking are starlings.
Balfour, who has been watching birds for the past 12 years, said recently that most of these birds are nesting in the latter part of the month.
Richard Johnston, professor of ornithology, said recently that he
Study Program In Scotland To Be Offered
The University of Kansas will begin a Junior Year Abroad program for the 1972-73 academic year at the University of Stirling, Laurel. Louise Keto, KU School of Medicine, adviser, said Friday.
Keto said that KU students enrolled in regular course work at the University of Stirling and are expected to earn 30 to 84 hours of credit.
The deadline for submitting applications for the fall and spring semesters is Saturday. No absences will be notified in May, she said.
"Students who have 60 or more semester credits, a strong academic record regardless of their major, excellent personal recommendations, and a good grade on the college challenge to participate," she said.
Keto said that the cost of the program was about $2,550,000, which includes the cost of orientation, tuition, room and board for the full year and insurance at the University of Stirling.
Keto said additional information and application forms can be obtained by calling Student Study Office at 864-3461.
KU to Host Anthropologists
A United States debat pre-Neanderthal fossils of the de Lumely collection from France will be one of the featured exhibits of the annual convention of the American Association of Physical Therapeutics to be held Tuesday through Saturday in the Kansas Union.
This is the first time the con-
tribution has been held in the
Museum of Natural History at Crawford, associate professor of anthropology, who is handling the research.
Crawford said that about 400 people, including both national and international anthropologists, were expected.
Among the topics that will be discussed are skeletal biology, human biology of South America, adaptability and primate studies.
Books, photography and research exhibits will also be on display during the convention in the Big Eight room.
The meetings are open to the public. There is a $5 for students and a $10 fee for others interested.
W. M. Krogman, who recently retired from the University of Pennsylvania and is presently director of the Lancaster Cleft Foundation at a breakfast hosted by an anthropology graduate students.
Thomas McKern, formerly professor of anthropology at KU. He both authors of several anthrological works will attend the meetings. McKern is now teaching at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Winn Invites Astronaut
Congressman Larry Winn Jnr. r-Kan. said Friday that he had arranged for astronaut Alan Jiankang to attend at the University of Kansas.
Winn said sheard could speak on May 12 if the University was willing to be some conflict because of final exams. Winn said, but it was the university's policy.
Shepard, a member of the Mercury space program, was the first American in space, with a sub-orbital flight on May 5. 1961.
had seen this annual takeover of the campus by the birds since April 1958.
Johnston said these birds would move into parts of Nebraska, Wyoming and Canada
Commenting about the birds that inhabit Kansas, Johnston said there are about 400 species across the state in Douglas County. One might be able to see them as spring leaves the spring months, he said.
Johnston suggested that persons interested in birdwatching might do three things. First, one should begin to associate with wildlife such organizations as the Kansas Ornithologist Society.
Second, a person should buy several books concerning the study of birds. One, he suggested, is "Davidson's" A Guide to the Birds."
And third, Johnston said, go watch the birds. One can make a hobby of birdwatching while riding his bicycle while riding his bicycle, he said.
Balfour said that he found the pastime of birdwatching relaxing and that it didn't cost much money.
When one begins to know enough about birds and can begin to understand how they become a thrill, bird lovers "Anyway, most birds are"
"Anyway, most birds are beautiful," said Balfour.
exhibition and sale original graphics purchases may be charged
KANSAS UNION
Tuesday, April 11 11 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Wednesday, April 12 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
GALL, BASKIN, ROUAULT, DAUMIR AND MANY OTHERS
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ARRANGED BY FERDOUND ROTEN GALLERIES
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND
All Women Currently Enrolled at K.U.
Applications are now available for the two Tri Delta Service Project Scholarships at the Dean of Women's Office and Office of Financial Aid.
SUA Flights to EUROPE
Chicago-Paris May 30, 1972 $299
Paris City Aug. 1, 1972
Chicago-Paris May 30, 1972 $299
Paris-Chicago Aug. 17, 1972
NYC Luxembourg May 23, 1973 $210
Luxembourg-NYC July 24, 1972
Deadline April 17th
NYC-Luxembourg May 21, 1972 $210
Luxembourg-NYC Aug. 16, 1972
Seats Still Available
contact: SUA Office Kansas Union 864-3477
II
Francois Truffaut The Soft Skin
---
★ Francoise Dorleac
★ Jean Desailly
Monday April 10 75c
Woodruff Aud. 7:30
Campus Bulletin
SUA Ticketlea: 8:00 a.m. to 3:00, Kansas
Minneapolis, Minn. Visiting: 9 a.m.
Governor's Court: 11:30 a.m. Alove-B
Clerk's Court: 11:30 a.m. Alove-B
Clerk's Court: 11:30 a.m. Alove-B
---
German Department: 3:50 p.m. in
Crimson Room. Club b. 6pm. English Room.
Art History: 8:15 p.m. Carry Room.
Music: 8:15 p.m. Carry Room.
College Republics: 7:30 p.m. Parker A.
Room.
Auditorium
General Department: 7:30 p.m., Council Hall
Broadway, Board of Directors, WA Federal Credit
Branch, Bank of America, Forsyth Parish
Farmland Club: 8 p.m., Swarthout Baptist Church
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Drinking, Carelessness Increase Holiday Auto Deaths
By JEAN MORGAN
Kansan Staff Writer
A recent automobile accident in which the passengers had been drinking resulted in the deaths of five persons who were killed instantly when thrown from their car. Patrolman said the automobile sped through a railroad crossing gate, which closed behind the car, as a train approached about 30 feet by the impact. Several beer cans were found in the wreckage of the car, patrolman said.
Drinking, not use seatbelt and other careless acts on the part of motor-vehicle drivers has resulted in the deaths of 10,355 people during the holidays of the three years 1984-1970.
Both traffic deaths and traffic rates average 15 to 25 per cent higher during holidays than during comparable non-working days. The rate of the greater Kansas City area National Safety Council (NSC), said recently. For traffic deaths, the number occurring was fourth of July, Labor Day, Christmas and New Year, over the three years of 1988-
1970 was 15 per cent higher than would have been normal for non-holdings at the
OVER THESE five same holidays, vehicle travel was estimated at three per cent higher. Because deaths increased more percentagewise than travel, death rates averaged 11 per cent higher during the holidays.
Of the five holidays, Labor Day had the highest number of traffic deaths over the 1968-1970 period, Ledgin said. Fourth of July, Memorial Day, Christmas and New Year ranked highest, in that order, of the other four holidays.
During Christmas and New Year, bad weather, drinking and early darkness are the causes of many traffic deaths, Peter Cox said. During the summer holidays of Memorial Day, Fourth of July, and Labor Day, people are trying to travel too far, too fast.
Over holiday periods, as well as non-holiday periods, fatal traffic accidents happen mostly in rural areas. Ledgin sad, he said, that the number of accidents occur in urban places. In rural areas,
deaths occurred mostly on controlled access roads and county roads in 1971.
MANY OF the accidents that occur in rural areas involve motor vehicles that are being driven too fast or too fast for conditions, Barkley said. Two wawatomi, a vehicle accident killed a freeman, a vehicle accident on Franklin County, Kan., road. The two men were east bound at a high rate of speed and sidedwiped a westbound pickup truck. After the impact, the car veered into a ditch and traveled about 175 feet before it culvert and embankment at an intersection county road. The car was demolished.
One-third of the traffic is on interstates and turpikes, and conflicts, such as intersections, do not exist as they do in rural and urban areas, Barkley said. Therefore, the death rate is lower on interstates and turpikes, and most of the traffic there is driven by those who are going the wrong way because they are drunk or truva to take a short cut.
AN ACCIDENT that resulted in the death of a Browning, Mo, man involved in a shooting incident.
area. The man died in a one-car accident three miles east of Humphreys in Sullivan County. Authorities said he was killed when a car struck an intersection and crashed into an embankment.
The same states that rank high in holiday fatalities also rank high in nonholiday fatalities. The states in which the highest number of traffic deaths occurred in 1971 were California, Texas, New York, Illinois, Ohio, Florida, Indiana and Michigan. The differences in the number of deaths among the states is due to similar actors as state population, differences between cities in the proportion of travel in urban and rural areas and differences in the completeness of reporting.
The statisticians at the NSC compute the number of miles that have been traveled over a holiday weekend by the gas tax collections, Ledgirn said. The rise in gas prices used as a basis for computing the increase in miles traveled over the holidays.
THE STATISTICIANS of the NSC,
Ladkin said, also prepare
the data and estimate the
estimated risk.
based on past records, expected travel and weather conditions. Because of the many variables involved, the deaths are not within a certain range, not an exact number.
The holiday fatality estimates are prepared and released because the NSC believes the estimates make people aware of the risks to safety in regard to traffic safety, Barkley thinks its campaign to inform and alert drivers to the increased hazard of holiday traffic is obligatory because of the higher risk of injury. During periods, Furthermore, publicity given to the council's holiday estimates provide an opportunity for the council to contact drivers they would not otherwise reach with an appropriate safety message
The holiday traffic death estimate, Barkley said, is a grim reminder that we are not doing enough in traffic safety. In addition to our own sense of responsibility behind the wheel, we should demand laws that permit licenses only to responsible, defensive drivers. We should demand motor vehicles designed for maximum
safety, and we deserve to be provided with safe roads.
THE NSC prepares a news release before every holiday weekend, which gives estimates as well as safety precautions. However, the media publicizes only the estimates. Therefore, in recent years, the data has been under question and criticism because media does not also say how motorists might prevent accidents, Ledgin said.
Two years ago, Barkey said, the NSC prepared no holiday estimates and received many calls from the media who wanted the statistics. The NSC does not prepare the estimates because of the use in automobile deaths that might occur.
The holiday traffic deaths usually come close to the estimates. If they didn't, Barkley said, the media wouldn't use the estimates.
NSC comifies its holiday traffic death toll from calls every two hours to the newsrooms of the associated Press and Worldwide News in Chicago, where the NSC is situated.
See DRINKING. Page 2
REIN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.119
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Depression Is Not New To University
Tuesday, April 11, 1972
KANSAS RELAYS KANSAS RELAYS KANSAS RELAYS KANSAS RELAYS KANSAS RELAYS KANSAS RELAYS KANSAS RELAYS
See Page 8
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Kansas Photo by PRISCHLA BRANSTED
Hurdlers Clear Third Hurdle in Jamboree Relays
The inclement weather at the first annual Jawkwamore, last weekend, held the crowd down. However, a few stallard runners participated in the Jawberone relay events. Some of the other events in the relays besides the hurdles were a chariot race, a
Friskie contest, a sack race, a 3-legged race and other standard track events. The events were judged by comparing the contestants' performances to the competition rules.
11 Senate Groups Ready to Confer; Two Still Lack Full Memberships
By HAL RITTER
Kansan Staff Write
Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior and student body president, said Monday that only the Publications Committee and Student Council lacked enough membership applications.
All but two Student Senate committees have been filled with members, and, depending on the approval of the appointments at the Senate meeting Wednesday night, the committees are ready to begin meeting.
The Publications Committee needs three more members, but Dillon said there was no hurry about applying because the Committee could not begin functioning until the School of Journalism approved the Senate bill that created the committee.
At its first meeting, each committee will elect a chairman and draw up guidelines for its future work besides providing a meeting agenda to members to meet each other. Dillon said.
THE COMMITTEES were filled after the Senate Committee Board, that consisted of Dillon, Kady Allen, Topkea Perry, and Robert J. DeWalt president; and Molly Laflaun, Lawrence senior; Richard Mackenzie Hutchinson first year law student; and Les Schwartz, shelter Park junior; met Saturday and overnight applications and interviewed applicants.
Dillon said the University Events Committee needed two more members, and the Athletic Seating Board also needed more membership applications.
In the past a temporary chairman has been appointed by the Committee Board and is elected every two years.
Dillon said that either he, Allen or another person would attend the first meeting of each committee and help run it with a chairman was selected.
permanent chairman had been elected, Dillon said.
Finance and Auditing and Student Services will meet Thursday, Student Rights and Academic Affairs will meet Monday, April 17, and Housing and Communications will meet Tuesday, April 18.
Judiciary—Nick LoBurgio, Tim Boudewyns, Neil Shortlidge, Gary Schermm, Dave Agazarian, Mike Weiser, Van Spake, Chris Hofer, Todd Hunter, Rhonda Smith, Don Kinney and Ken Reeves.
HE SAID this procedure was not followed this year because the temporary chairman was elected permanent chairman so often that the Committee Board was, in effect, partially in control of the chairman's appointment.
"Following are the proposed committee appointments by the Committee Board: Becker, John Hoffman, Richard Mackenzie, Betty Adams, Doug Spencer, Jain Hockney, Ken Harton, Don Kinney, Warren Taylor, Pete Kanatzar, Debra McIntyre, Neil Shortlidge, Debbie Brooks, Lewis Gregory, Robert Everett and Bret Williams.
Communications--Sally Morgan, Cynthia Burton, Terry Dum, Randy DeMeyer, Debebee Eebeling, Linda Doherty, Steve Noll, Dick Johnson, John Beisner, Frank Chance, Les Schwartz, John Bailey and Nat Pulestern.
The six standing committees of the senate will meet within the next week, December 16.
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS—Dave Sanford, Bill Neidt, Kirk Varn, Bob Mowry, Whalan Wheaton, Mike Schoenleber, Ann Friau, Alex Thomopoulos, Thane Hood, Rob
Union Operating -Paul Rankin, Dave Hull, Susan Goering and Dave Murphy.
Following are the proposed committee appointments by the Corporate Boards.
Ramsheer, Jim Burgess, Tracey Egbert, Jeff Southard, Carolyn Olson, Ed Seibert, Steve Hughes, Brad Mayhew, Mary Johnson, Santucci, Joe Landolt and David Johnson.
STUDENT SERVICES—Mert Buckley, Pat Green, Mary Lotus, Cindy Steineger, Danhy Burton, Diane Beecher, Rich Mclaughlin, Deborah Daniels, Ken Kuibtschek, Jim Winfield, John Ortlew, Scott McFadden, rhonda Summon, Julie Bolem, Jesse Caselman, Bob Holmes, Debbe Rutterben, Larry Tatlock, Ann Diller, Natalia Rolph, John Miller, John Wulf, and Susan Goering.
Elections-Mike McGowan, Kirk Bradford, Tom Foster, Cynthia Buxton, David Miller, Sally Morgan, Claudia Mozur and Mert Buckley.
Concert Series-Gayle Sanctucci, Thomas Gorton, Bruce Biech, Dave Murfin, Andrew Tsubaki, Elene McCulhough, Kirk Brardham, Ken Smith, Steve Beck, Claudia Mozur, Peter George, Ray Stuhil and Georgia Becker.
University Events-Dave Hull and Cameron Jones.
Finance and Auditing—Ellen Reimers, Rick McKernan, Bill Russell, Laura Davis, Cathy Reinhardt, John Thomson, Mike McGowan, Gary Lascase, Bill O'Neil, Deidre Kraft, Jerry Slaughter, John House and Barbie Dower.
International Film—Deborah Daniels, Craig Walker, R. L. Bailey, Tom Foster, Eileen McCullough, Gene Dorris, Peter George and Bruce Fiebak.
Publications—Steve Morgan
Housing—Steve Moe, Greg Cochran, Mary Bem, Ken Reeves, Kevin Harris, Craig Parker, Steve Treater, Rhonda Johnson and Mike Zimmerman.
Nixon Blasts Soviet Support
U.S. Widens Air War; Enemy Offensive Slows
WASHINGTON (AP)—As the North Vietnamese offensive appeared to have slowed, American fingering at Soviet support of the current North Vietnamese offensive continued Monday when President Nixon publicly indicated his belief that Moscow violated one of the "great principles of peace."
The presidential thrust came while the United States was deploying more naval ships.
With Soviet Ambassador Anately Debrynin sitting some five feet away, the President told a group of diplomats at a sign of war. He said the germ warmare that ending the threat of war particularly requires the great powers to encourage other nations to use force against them.
There was no direct mention of Vietnam nor of the Soviet support for Hanoi's attacks into South Vietnam. But administration officials said Nixon was not aware of the support from Moscow that the United States believes made the attacks possible.
The President and Debrynm appeared together along with British Ambassador Lord Cromer and Secretary of State William R. Rogers for the signing of a declaration of germ warfare weapons and providing for the destruction of existing stockpiles.
Debrynna remained impassive during Nixon's remarks and the two exchanged brief words afterwards and shook hands. She did not report on what they said to each other.
Later, at the White House, presidential press secretary Ronald L. Tieger declined to respond to questions about Nixon's comments at the treaty ceremony.
Shortly before the signing, Laird told a women's group at the Pentagon more
KansanNames Staff Heads
Scott Spreier, Jetmore senior,
was selected Monday to serve as
editor of the University Daily
Kansan for fall semester 1972.
Spreier has been the Kansan campus editor this semester.
Dale Pipergerdes, Bartlesville, Okla, senior was selected to serve as the fall semester business manager.
Piepergerdes has been the national advertising manager for the Kansan this spring.
The Kansan Board met Monday afternoon to interview candidates and to select the new editor and business manager.
Spreier said he hoped to interview and select the staff next week.
News staff applications are available from Crews in the Kansas newsroom. Young has business staff applications in the business office and applications are in the offices of the dean of me and the dean of women.
Applications for editor and business manager for the Summer Kansan are due 3 p.m. Friday and should be given to Chip Crews, Kansan editor, and Carol Young, business manager.
American air and naval units will be sent to Southeast Asia as part of the U.S. effort to maintain control over the region.
THE 12-DAY North Vietnamese drive appeared to have slowed significantly Monday after major weekend battles on Saigon, which brought victory claims for Saigon's forces.
The United States widened the air war by sending B52 heavy bombers deeper into North Vietnam than ever before in their first major enemy operation, a major enemy airfield. Officials said Strategicfortresses near Vinh, 145 miles north of the demilitarized zone, was a calculated show of strength by President Nixon. None of the bombers was reported hit in the attack and no Americans were a high risk that one or more of America's mightiest飞机 may be shot down.
President Nguyen Van Thieu also was running a major calculated risk, the commitment of two regiments of infantry from the Mekong Delta to the current worst trouble spot, the siege of An Loc, a province in northeastern Vietnam where 10,000 government troops are surrounded by a far larger enemy force. Fighting in this sector, however, had
tapered off enough that helicopters could take in supplies. The two Delta regiments are part of a 20,000-man government force pushing up Highway 13, the main route from San Jose. The column reported little fight and little progress toward An Loc.
THE MEKONG DELTA was comparatively quiet with only scattered major enemy push, with the loss of two regiments of the government's better troops. As in past days, there were many casualties on the rice land of the Delta south of Saigon.
U. S. officials, in attempting to evaluate the pluses and minutes of Hanoi's second largest offensive of the war, said a couple appeared to be in effect at the moment.
Casualties in the current fighting are said to be heavy on both sides. The government, however, has refused to give over-all casualty figures.
The U.S. Command said three Americans have died, 23 are missing and 10 have been wounded since the start of the invasive. Also, 19 U.S. aircraft have been lost.
Nomination to Voter Board Provokes Alien Teacher
By MIKE MOREY
Kansan Staff Writer
Juan M. Fernandez, instructor in Spanish from Seville, Spain, was nominated to serve on the National Voter Advisory Board of the American Security Council, according to a letter he received recently.
Fernandez, who is not an American citizen and therefore cannot vote, says the letter is an insult to his intelligence and an invasion of his privacy.
Fernandez was notified of his nomination by John M. Fisher, president of the United States.
The nomination came, according to the
letter, as a result of the fact that Ferner is an "opinion leader in霖
Juan Fernandez
1
Fernandez was not the only foreign teacher to receive the letter. He said that he only knew of one American born man who had received the letter.
FERNANDEZ SAID he wondered why most of the people who received this letter were foreigners, because it constantly referred to "concerned Americans."
A P.S. was included at the end of the letter. I said, "We believe that most Americans support a strong national defense against Communist agression, but we can't prove it without your cooperation in this poll."
In the brochure which accompanied the letter, the American Security Council was defined as "a non-profit research and advisory group that issues affecting our Nation's security",
The brochure said that one of the American Security Council's principal projects was the Freedom Studies Center "for citizen leadership training."
Concerning the center, the brochure said, "The center is located on a 684 cmre retreat in the footballs of the Blue Ridge Mountains, just 70 miles from Washington, D. C."
"IT ALREADY has one of the finest seminar facilities in America. Over 1,000 opinion leaders have attended its seminars, many of which were co-sponsored by the American Security Council.
"The Freedom Studies Center is planned to become a private freedom academy or Cold War College" to fully train dedicated students who can be leaders in defending our freedom."
See NOMINATION, Page 8
2
Tuesday, April 11, 1972
University Daily Kansan
News Briefs By The Associated Press
Death Toll Rises in N. Ireland
BELFAST-A bomb killed two British soldiers in Londonderry Monday night, bombing the Northern Ireland death toll to 300 in political-religious bloodshed since August 1969. In Belfast, a pregnant housewife who was beaten and covered with red paint and fathers accused the Illegal Irish Republican Army of ordering her to move out of her home or be shot with her three children.
WASHINGTON - Programs for the aged, disabled and needy overlap and react on each other in ways that produce inequities, discourage job seeking and sometimes frustrate their original purposes, a congressional staff study says.
FBI Recovers Hijack Ransom
Simply adding up the numbers of beneficiaries of each program would indicate that 119 million persons—more than half the U.S. population—are benefiting from one or another. But the actual number of individual beneficiaries is probably no more than 60 million, because many are receiving payment or services from at least two programs simultaneously; a few from as many as four.
SALT LAKE CITY—All but $30 of the half-million dollars which the government says was paid to the hijacker of a United Air Lines 727 jet has been recovered, the FBI told a U.S. magistrate. The FBI said it found the $499,970, a gun and parachute on the “premises” of Richard Floyd McCoy Jr., 29, of Provo, Utah. McCoy has been charged with air piracy in the Friday hijacking.
Witness Tangles ITT Hearing
WASHINGTON - A month after telling three interviewers that librarian Dita Bear wrote a disputed memo on International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. stationery, Rep. Bob Wilson, R-Calif., quoted her as denying its authenticity. Publication of the memo by columnist Jack Anderson precipitated the tangled hearings now in their seventh week.
TOPEKA-Kansas Democratic party officials continued to tally up the results of last Saturday's local party conventions but one thing was certain ahead of the final breakdowns Sen. George McGovenn's forces pulled off a major coup. With about 60 per cent of the delegates polled Monday night, 55 per cent of them said they are committed to or leaning toward McGovenn. The other 45 per cent were either officially undecided or figured to be leaning towards Sen. Edmund Muskie or Hubert Humphrey.
Poles Commemorate Massacre
SKLOYB, Poland.-Scores of candles lit by a village of widows will burn today at a forest clearing where 32 years ago Nazi troops killed every man they could find in this hamlet. The widows of Silesia were taken to Berlin by SS Elite Guardmen for assisting the partisan movement.
Drinking . . .
Continued from Page 1
THE CITY POLICE departments and highway patrol report the traffic deaths of the department employees who then call the AP and UPI newsrooms. During non-holiday states, state motor vehicle departments report the fatalities they receive directly to the NSC
"The NSC is not in need to scare anyone with estimates," Barkley said. "The estimates are given in the text and you do not realize it is more dangerous to drive over holiday weekends, and you should adjust themselves accordingly."
The day before the holiday period begins, usually a Thursday or Friday by ride By Friday and Saturday the drivers are usually at their destinations, so there is a decline in fatal accidents. On Sunday, the deaths again rise and the drivers are rushing to get home.
THE TYPICAL holiday traffic crash victim, Barkley said, would be a 22-year-old man killed in the crash of the road. The crash would involve hitting another vehicle or running off the road. It would take place late Saturday evening, and the driver would be been drinking prior to the crash.
The holiday driver should take certain safety precautions, such as using a seatbelt and allow plenty of time to get to and from their holiday destinations. They should check weather conditions on their home whenever possible, in preferable to make use of the safety-engineered interstate system. The motorists to avoid the abusive use of alcoholic beverages and make sure all car occupants use make sure belts and shoulder harnesses.
DRINKING IS indicated to be a factor in at least half of the holiday and nonholiday fatal motor-vehicle accidents. Ledging the argument for the correlation between the amount of alcohol in the blood and traffic accidents. A driver with a blood-alcohol level of 1.5 per cent has a 25 times greater chance of being involved if he were not drinking.
Of the more than 107 million licensed drivers in the United States, about 70 per cent drink and drive. There is increasing evidence to indicate that person suffering from alcoholism is responsible for a disproportionately large percentage of driver's drinking, even though theyre driving a percentage of drivers. However, thousands more drivers between the ages of 16 and 24 are killed while driving an accident because of drinking.
FOR YEARS the NSC gave the advice, "If you drink, don't drive!" However, trying to
convince Americans that they should never drive after drinking has proved unsuccessful, for both drinking and driving are part of the same society. The NSC said. Therefore, the NSC and the American Medical Society launched a program of alcohol education aimed at helping people understand the accident risk factor in the use of alcohol. Using self-aware scientific information on alcohol's action in the human body, a person can learn how to avoid his own danger level starts.
Heavy users of hallucinogenic drugs, such as LSD, could be suicides when they are not "stoned". Barkley said. Barkley said that psychiatrist American Journal of Psychiatry asked a togay young drug user who suffered visual disturbances having an accident as a result, having an accident as a result.
"I SAW a tracp on the road," the drug user said. "It was a real mess." There were about six people in it. I was right behind it, and I was going to crash into it. I went off and then it wasn't there anymore."
Between 75 and 80 per cent of all cars in the United States now have thick belts, but the belts are being used only about 40 per cent of the time. Only about one out of three cars fastens its safety belt regularly.
Current information on the value of safety belts for saving lives indicates that if all people wear safety belts at all times, such use would save 8,000 to 10,000 lives annually. Barkley said. The current use figures indicate that seat belts saved about 2,800 to 3,500 lives in one year.
Blue Slips Fund Minority Scholars
In an effort to encourage local drivers to buckle up, the Kiwis taught their drivers two attractive girls at a major intersection for one day last September to give a dollar to each passing motorist who was involved in a collision. Those not buckled up received a card that read: "You saved us a buck by not having your safety checked." And the driver life-belt up for next time!
LEDGIN SAID recent studies led found that the use of safety belts correlated with the amount of education a motorist has. The more formal education a motorist has, the safer safety belts because he is able to understand what will happen if he does not use them.
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From 1900 through 1970, motor-vehicle deaths in the United States totaled more than 1.8 million and more than 250 million casualties in the principal wars from 1775 through 1970 totalled 1.152,000. Over a period that was four decades long, there were more motor-vehicle deaths than there were military casualties.
Kansan Photo by PRISCILLA BRANDSTEEL
Book Store Raises Scholarship Money
Genie Ryansner denotes blue slim for (fund)
Indian Concern Day Pleas For Coexistence of Groups
A plea for "coexistent pluralism" was made by G.K. Cobb, sociology instructor at Haskell Indian Junior College, in a guest sermon delivered Sunday Good Shepherd Lutheran Church.
The Urban Scholars Program was set up by the Supportive Educational Service (SES) to mostly student attend college
The little boxes at the exit of all the bookshelves are only one way in which a group of students is financially helped up to school.
BY WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
Funds from the blue slips are only a small portion of the total contribution the bookstore makes each year to the program. The bookstore also gives $30,000 to help allocate costs for tutors and directors.
Students are selected for the program by the minority recruiter in the Admissions Office. Students must then qualify for financial aid through the Office of Student Financial Aid.
Cobb's sermon was part of Indian Concern Sunday sponsored by the Lutheran church in an attempt to create a national language and non-Indian community, according to Arden G. Dorn, minister of the church. The goal, he said was for each group to learn a "meaningful" language and a "meaningful dialogue" between two.
"There's room for all in Christ's kingdom," Cobb said. "Just don't try to mind me into this worship or be ill. I'll worship God my way."
The boxes are for contribution of blue slips to the Urban Library. They are from University of Kansas. The blue slips placed in these boxes are redeemable at the same percentage received by regular donors.
By KENT PULLIAMS
Kanan Staff Writer
All students in the program scored consistently below other KU students on college entrance exams.
This rebate system was started at KU in 1966. The only variations of the project has been the per-credit rebate received by students.
other schools offering courses to
indians. He said the only options
open to the Haskell student were
to take trade skills or go back to
the reservation and not use them.
He pointed out that an educated
Indian was not always accepted
and would return to the
reservation.
BURGESS TOLD the group that of the 110 tribes and 32 reservations represented at Haskell, nearly one-third of the population, in the second language. He said the problem was to make them committed to education and to show them what it could do for them. Many, he said, know they were not quite sure why they were not quite sure why.
EARLIER in the day, during the Sunday school period, the children were entertained by a guest from the community. Leroy Nededeau of the Pottawati tribe, told the children about the Indian respect that "Indian" was a name given collectively to all tribes by the white man many years ago and is still remained with them ever since.
Times were good and bad for the young Indian, Burgess sailed to the "Indian" doubles at the "New Indian" preparing to compete in a white team.
According to Burgess, the need for a strong Indian in a non-Indian world, but changes are taking place. Now, education is more geared to Indian needs.
Burgess said he thought that Haskell was ahead of some of the
Butgesa said that Haskell had attempted to appease the two segments of the student body by offering a split program designed to help both the student who wanted to work in the classroom back to the reservation as well as the student who wanted to be "Indian." Haskell has attempted to do this by showing the student how to live anywhere in the white man's world.
"I feel good about the talent and commitment I see, at Haskell," he said. "Now if they can just help the reservation with
"NOW IS the best time for Indians to develop and progress." Burgess said.
Burgess told the group that the church has had almost as much influence on Indian education as the government. The Bureau of Mafia has had little or no respect for cultural he said.
He expressed concern about how long the opportunity would last.
A lunch of fried bread and corn soup was prepared by the members of the congregation on the direction of the Indian women.
At Last!
Charlie Wins
An Oscar
There are 57 freshmen, 49 sophomores and 21 juniors. These students have a 2.20 grade point average.
By BOB THOMAS Associated Press Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Jane Fonda, the stylish, willy call girl of "Klute" and Geyick Haneman, the relentless narcotics cop of *The Walking Dead*, and the top acting honors at the 4th movie Academy Awards Monday night, "The French Connection," a hard-hitting fast paced tale of detection in New York City was identified best motion picture of 1971.
The program closed with a special tribute to Charlie Chaplin 82, when his silent classic "Toy Story" appeared. Hollywood famous, Chaplin was in the United States for the first time and will accept an honorary Oscar.
Produced by Philip d'Anteni, the film was the major victor with five awards.
Supporting acting awards went to a pair of performers in "The Future Show"—Cluori Leachman and his passionate wife of the high school football coach, and Ben Johnson, the figure of a dying Texas town.
Academy President Daniel Taradash presented the award to Chaplin for his contributions to film.
After a series of clips from Chaplin films, the comedian appeared on the stage of the Los Angeles Music Center.
He seemed at first confused then deeply moved by the roaring ovation from the standing crowd.
The awards show was telecast in the United States and 38 other countries as union difficulties with the government were averted in the final hours.
Chaplin held up his hands and said a few words of thanks, but added, "words seem so futile, feeble. I can only say thanks."
William Friedkin was hailed best director of the year for "The French Connection." Writing for Tidman for his adaptation of the French connection, and Paul L. original script "The Hospital."
Following the morning service, We instructed them how to use instruction at Hassell, answered questions about Indian education from members of the program.
The best song award went to Isaac Hayes for his "Theme from Shaft" which comprised the most dynamic production number of the TV program. Hayes thanked his grandmother for paths of righteousness" and said that the Oscar was an 80th birthday present for her.
Anderson said Docking had popularized the tax lid, but contended at the news conference that the lid had not really held up. He referred to the vies cities and counties may impose on property taxes.
To date, Anderson's only appointment is Lt. Gov Reynolds Shultz, but at least two state attorneys and Morty Kay of Lawrence and Martyn Powell of Wichita, have said they are considering entering the race.
"There has been an increase in the taxes year-by-year." Anderson said.
Anderson, who was governor in 1961-65 after defeating Docking's father, George, for the governorship in 1960, made it clear that he would go after Trump's record in his primary campaign rather than attacking his Republican opponents.
worried that a splitting of the vote might hurt his cause.
TOPEKA (AP)—Former Gov. John Anderson Jr., told a news conference Monday he knew that he had served Robert Docking remained popular but said he thought Docking was vulnerable on the job.
Anderson said he was not
Anderson called the news conference to announce that he was a candidate for Wapaw Angell of Ottawa, Kan, as his campaign chairman, but touched a fan with an ad.
Anderson said the state must shift the heavy tax burden for financing education from real taxes to education and said this could only be accomplished through a budget governor and the legislature.
Angell, a professor of economics at Ottawa University, said he was joining the Anderson School and Anderson could "break the stalemate" between the executive and legislative branches which he said had made the state government under Docking.
For
Tax Issues to Head Anderson's Campaign
exhibition and sale original graphics purchases may be charged
Mrs. Kaylahy, a kowa, told the Mrs. Kaylahy, a kawa, told the Indian lullabies to them. During the worship service, she performed the prayers of sign in prayer.
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KU to Share Library With Kansas Colleges
A program to share Watson.
Library is 3.14 million volumes, the largest in the state, with community colleges will begin May 1.
David W. Heron, director of the KU libraries, has invited Kansas community college librarians to refer their students and faculty to other library materials available at the University but not locally.
Heron said the success of a similar program with other universities and colleges under his leadership, and then with private fouryear
(for All Women Students Who Haven't Voted In Living Groups)
colleges in the state, had led to the extension of the direct lending program to community colleges.
The cooperating community college librarians have been given the opportunity to introduce forlumbers to lower borrowers and to help KU retrieve overdue books.
Heron said this responsibility was not a problem during the experimental program among the community college librarians. Hongheron also encouraged the community college librarians to offer reciprocal training in library science.
Vote for:
—BALLOT—
KU WOMEN: A PROGRAM OF
RECOGNITION
I. The Outstanding Woman Teacher of 1972
B. If you wish to do so, please nominate one of these teachers for OUTSTANDING WOMAN TEACHER;
A. How many women teachers have you had at KU?
Your ID Number
Department
Name ...
Department
II. Innovative & Creative Women Students
Nominate women who have made unique or innovative contributions to the University the last year
III. The Outstanding Senior Woman
of 1972
Every SENIOR woman may nominate 3 candidates on university leadership, scholarship and contribution to University
7
1) ... 2)
---
Please Return this Ballot to the Dean of Women's Office, 222 Strong or SUA Office, By Fri., April 14.
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Tuesday, April 11. 1972
3
Time, Funds Delay State Penal Reform
Editor's Note: This is the first of two stories concerning prison reform, and it deals with the technicalities of the 1972 Penal Reform Bill and its impact.
By LESLIE RISS
Kansan Staff Writer
The 1972 Kansas Penal Reform bill which has been described by Robert Athma, deputy warden of the judge in the case as the "blueprint for a future that is idealistic" was recently amended to include two primary problems surrounding the reform bill. Firstly, reform bills require reforms will need money which is not available and that it will take time to put the reforms into action.
THE LANSING PENITIARY, built in 1864, receives male criminals who have committed felonies in Kansas. Most of the prisoners fall under the jurisdiction of the federal About 25 per cent of these men, a higher percentage than most U.S. penitentiaries, are trustees who are able to leave the prison and have jobs in Lansing or other cities where they can travel to different states without a guard, Atkins said.
The 1972 Palmeto Reform bill will affect the 1.500 persons serving prison sentences at the state penitentiary in Lansing.
Nine per cent of the inmates are in maximum security. This is below the national average of 12 per cent. In all cases custody are allowed to live in honor dorsitories. Cell blocks are in maximum security, but none
For one thing, the court system now allows more parolees to go from the court to the street. Secondly, several years ago the police established an eligibility rule on offenders, which meant that a person having a long-term sentence must serve only 15 years to be released. Many of the camps have been created to inmates to work in park and recreation area maintenance jobs associated with the state government.
10 YEARS AGO there were
2,200 prisoners The deputy
wardens said the number had
decreased for several reasons
Prison operations have been as efficient as possible considering the tight budget and the rules that must be obeyed. Alkins said
HE EXPRESSED concern over the fact that appropriations for the war had been made now. Otherwise, it will take years after 1974 to put many of the war-related funds into action.
The budget for the prison in 969 was $3,193,498. In 1970 it
increased to $3,744,990. The governor has recommended that the budget for 1972 be $4,226,897. Atkins explained, however, that the budget was less than in 1972. It is impossible to run the prison on the present budget, he said, but to lower that deficit is difficult to understand.
The director of correctional institutions receives $15,000 annually, which is less than the warden at Lansing
Atkins reported guards as
Lansing received $477 a month.
As a result, many of the guards
might must find a second job.
CONTRARY TO the opinion of many Kansans, some excellent and progressive activities do exist at the penitentiary. Akins
UPON ENTERING the Lansing prison, men are given their own Am radios. As of January, Aktins added, inmates use personal television sets for free, per cent on their time at this site.
Although it has limitations, the home visit program, initiated in 1971, has been very successful. This program allows inmates to visit within two years of their release date to visit their families and homes.
Newspaper Manager Says Reporters Encounter Racism
Some prisoners live in mobile trailers on prison property. The state charges rent to these men. This situation allows them to work in Leavenworth and is introduced to the working life.
Other useful programs at the pentagon are for educational education of the prisoners. A fulltime instructor, part of the prison staff. Forty percent of the inmates are taking vocational and academic courses. The college night work sponsored by Johnson County Junior College. For inmates who cannot write they must attend mandatory four-hour course daily.
By DONNA DALE
Kansan Staff Writer
MACONALD ADDRESSED journalism classes concerning all aspects of the newspaper including reporting and editing, and answered questions about the job in reporting problems, and his job.
TO IMPROVE the prison hospital, many inmates become donor donors. These donors may earn $5 a week.
THE CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM of prisoners has been improved to better help each inmate.
from Leavenworth to the prison once a week to lecture about foreign countries.
Peter MacDonald, president and general manager of Harris Enterprises, a newspaper chain that operates on Monday that there are still a lot of Archive Bunker types who still work with anyone other than a white report.
MacDonald made the comment in the participation during the William Allen White School of Law editor-in-residence program
The Harris chain owns 15 newspapers and radio stations from California to Iowa. The chain owns several newspapers including Salina, Hutchinson, Ottawa, and Garden City.
When each prisoner enters the penitentiary, he is given the General Education Development Test (GED) if the prisoner does not pass this test, he begins a six-week course to improve his knowledge
newspapers try to emphasize the
good and play down the bad news.
A newspaper can't do this
because the full of is full of
bad news, he said.
maximum security, often enrolled in correspondence courses affiliated with colleges and universities.
The chain has no policy concerning hiring of minority employees, he said, but some of its employees still encounter prejudice.
Also available to the inmates are group therapy and counseling programs and services.
Objectivity is hard enough, without the subjective aspects of the new journalism, he said. He also added that the subjective type of old reporting
This enables him to be placed in further educational or vocational training classes which eventually make his life easier for him. He was given the Mates. He said many of them have mates, even some of those in
sources have said, "I thought I was going to talk to a rogue."
He said the best way he could describe was by quoting another newspaper publisher, John S. Knight. Knight said an important
The administrative staff at the prison works in coordination with the Army Prisoners are sometimes trained to be soldiers prior to their release. This is used as a means of transition, which anticipates another program, 'Know Your World', brings Army officers
One of their black female reporters had encountered several difficulties. Some of her
For visiting friends and relatives, the prison provides a living room where the atmosphere is more relaxed.
RICHARD H. MILLER
"A newspaper that serves the community best is one that has its own character," he said.
A newspaper can't operate on "nothing but good news" attitude, he said. Some
MACDONALD SAID the headquarters of the chain did not treat any of the individual managers. The format and policy of each
The number of papers has deferred because of operating costs and concentrating on upgrading the papers it already controls.
part of his job was to "walk through the plant once a month to create the necessary insecurity."
"Our newspaper group has had more cases of libel than anyone else," MacDonald. One case involved a letter to the editor printed in one of his newspapers, accusing it of a wrong name. He said most of the libel cases were
It was discovered recently, according to Athkins, that several individuals on the G. I. bill. This means that these prisoners, in addition to the prison's a day earnings from the prison's $130 a month from the Army. They should pay wages and benefits monthly salary from the Army.
Before assuming the presidency of Harris Enterprise Macdonald served in the Royal Air Force and worked in radio.
Peter McDonald
IN SPEAKING of the job market in the journalism field, MacDonald said he saw no significant opening of jobs.
Local McGovern Victory Reflects Student Activism
By STEVE RIEL
Kansan Staff Writer
Heavy participation of students in the local unit Democratic conventions of Saturday can be expected to age and to a general age range, with policies of the Nixon administration cording to Dan Conyers, Lawrence senior and delegate to the Democratic district candidate Clinton.
Conyers said that students had previously tried other more radical means to effect political change, but now that they had the political will to participate in the political process, he has taken action within that system.
He said Student Vote, a campus organization designed to increase student interest in the elections and involvement at the conventions.
Veterans Day Helps Define Needs
By LYLE TEMPLETON
The purpose of the day was to give the veterans a good welcome home, recognition and knowledge. Bruns said. Before the meeting, eight student veterans were directly participating in Campus
The Vietnam Era Veterans Day Friday, was very productive and helpful for veterans attending the University of Kansas, according to Ed Brums. Leeward President of the Campus Veterans.
"The 600 student veterans that were in attendance were enthusiastic about the day," Bruns said.
DURING THE DAY the veterans were questioning the questionnaire including information about their schooling, means of finance and employment. According to Brunga the军官们 will find what problems the veterans were encountering and to reinforce state governments and to KU
K
"The questionnaires will be sent to congressmen in Washington, D.C., to back up our proposals," said Bruns.
As Bruns told the attending veterans Friday, these proposals deal with the G1 bill. They were proposed an increase of at least 20 per cent in monthly stipends for educational assistance, $1,000 paid by the federal government, and paid by the federal government, an increase from the present 36 months to 48 months of eligibility of veterans to receive money through a mediate receipt of benefits upon application and certification of enrolment at an institution of education, according to Bruns.
The proposals also were made to the Mason, KU housing director. The institution third of the total available space at Stouffer Place at the beginning of the semester be reserved for students who are allowed a deferred payment plan, without penalties to conference participants in the ministration's distribution of checks and a wing for veterans by the fall of 1972.
TWO PROPOSALS were presented to the kansas government to aid veterans. Bruns told us that he was supported proposals urged that no tuition be charged any veteran of military service, and that a supported institution of higher education and that a state-wide university would be initiated employing only Vietnam era veterans to seek out employers to help hire the 56,000
A PROPOSAL to have student
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
KU Veterans Question Rep. Larry Winn's Views
.. All Lenses, senior and a Vet. Listens to Winn's answers
vetarians on a deferred payment plan for their tuition was presented to Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, in
February. According to Bruns, some veterans are dropping out of school because of their inability to pay their tuition on
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time. Bruns said the proposal was to have veterans make three payments for tuition throughout the semester.
**STUDENT VOTE's** main contribution, according to Conyers, was the voter response drive that drove last week. He said Student Vote had also brought a large number of speakers to KU. Because of small attendance these speakers will be student turnout. Conyers said.
At the local unit conventions on Saturday, 21 delegates were elected to go to the regional convention in May 21. George McGovern had committed themselves to supporting George McGovern prior to their election. Eight of the elected delegates are students at the University of
Approximately 2.000 students were registered at campus locations last week.
Conyers said that students were "perhaps underrepresented in the delegations, any case, their representation is significant."
PRIOR TO THE Saturday conventions, an open meeting was sponsored by the McGovern supports convention strategy. At the meeting, Douglas County McGovern supporters chose candidates to run for the office of delegates and alternates.
At the Third district convention, Lynn Knox, St. Louis freshman and chairman of the boxing committee, met with the mittee, said the open meeting had been held to choose seven people to run for the seven positions in the organization.
This endorsement was made in order to insure that voting power will be represented. McGovern supporters nominated than there were positions to be
Noother organized support was evidenced at the Third District convention besides that for McGovern.
MANY SPEAKERS at the convention in the Third District indicated that they were surprised at the large turnout. A tall of persons present revealed that many of them were registered as independents.
This fact indicated the predominance of new voters participating at the convention. To be classified a Democrat, a person must have voted in the Democratic primary election.
Evidence of heavy student participation surfaced in the resolutions that were supported
at the conventions
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All three conventions in Douglass County passed resolution condemning U.S. war with Mexico and conventions passed resolution calling for an end to immigration against homosexuals.
In other action, the Third District convention voted to strike a formal resolution introduced by the Resolutions Committee which was a blanket of Government of Gov. Rohrer Docking.
THIS ACTION was criticized by both the opposition and the convention as being a source of possible alienation to other Democrats in Kansas and the state.
Similar criticism was also directed at resolutions which supported the legalization of the sale and use of marijuana and the drink Both resolutions were passed by the convention
Other resolutions that were adopted included making a bipartisan policy to help women who wanted one, amnesty for draft-evaders of the Vietnam war and the recognition of equal gender roles for women in politics.
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The convention consistently expressed support for resolutions allowing freedom of personal expression
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4
Tuesday, April 11, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
A Long Way Baby
I recently attended the Intercollegiate Association of Women Student's convention and was amazed at the change of attitudes of women students as represented by that group. At last year's convention those of us from the University of Kansas found ourselves in the ridiculous position of being regarded by others as somewhat radical when what we are told we moderately liberal. Our qualifications as near-radicals seemed to be based on the fact that KU women did not have to obey curfew regulations, some of our residence halls had unlimited visitation, and instead of an Association of Women Students our organization had the ominous title of the Commission on the Status of Women. Convention people were just beginning to talk about birth control clinics, and child care centers were hardly mentioned.
At this year's convention there was little discussion about curfews and visitation but there was much said about child care centers and what had gone beyond the planning stage and were already in existence.
Dinner time discussions often centered on political strategy needed to get the Equal Rights Amendment ratified by state legislatures. For the first time representatives from groups such as the National Womens Political Caucus were soliciting support from the women of IAWS. It seemed to me that the national organization and the organizations on the various campuses were no longer the emancipated girls' clubs they used to be; they had finally grown up.
The women at that convention were serious about the ideas they had for their campuses and it sounded as if they were making their campuses serious about them. However, I doubt that people outside
on campus communities will ever be fully aware of that seriousness. In Chicago, where the convention took place, the press was more concerned about reporting what we were wearing and the fact that we did not pay attention to the speech presented and discussed.
The press adequately reflected the bias that a woman looks like is more important than what she is thinking. An editorial writer in Chicago went into more detail about what Gloria Steinem was wearing during her speech than about what she had said. As far as I know the speeches of none were covered, the speakers included Congresswoman Martha W. Griffiths, who sponsored the recently passed Equal Rights Amendment in the House; Virginia Allan, who was appointed to the position of Deputy Assistant Secretary of State last month by President Nixon, and Brigadier General Jeanne M. Holm, first woman general in the Air Force. It is unfortunate that the speeches were not reported if for no reason on than it is interesting. It is also unfortunate that the convention was covered in the manner it was; I think that it would have been better honored without any coverage instead of the kind it did get.
The coverage by the Chicago press would make readers believe that the convention had been a trivial affair, but for those who attended it was a good and even exciting experience. KU can be proud that it has a few women from this campus that helped make it conventions the center of its activity, it was most notably the three officers, Casey Eike, national president; Grace Ellen Rice, executive director, and Dean Emily Taylor, national adviser. Thank you, ladies; you helped us come a long way.
Readers Respond
Reform
Traffic Debate Continues
To the Editor:
I view the current activities of the campus Traffic and Security department and the upward surrogate influence of distress. From the issues and discussion presented in the book, certain salen facts emerge.
Second, the University community is concerned with the traffic and parking policies of the Parking Board. headed by Mr. Malinowsky. The amount of time expended enforcing underside the parking regulations made to the parking area be made to improve security at the expense of this parking ticket pogrom? $39,480 parking tickets one considers that the City of Lawrence, with myrid parking meters and special parking personnel, issued only 30,522 more.
First, the University community does not feel the central campus area is safe at all. To address this main reasons for this fear: woefully inadequate lighting and parking facilities, which are the result of lack of fire safety and the seeming insensitivity of the Traffic and Security Office to desires for adequate patrols to ensure the incidence of crime in this area.
Third, and perhaps most disturbing, is the low opinion of the capabilities of the campus officers held by the University. One of my students 1 was a police officer before entering the University.
but I am appalled at the petty activities of the campus officers while they bit silently ignore a serious and expanding crime problem. The low opinion is that we are too pointless harassments most members of the University community have undergone at one time or another; my own negative contacts, I am sure. Time again repeated time and time again throughout our community.
There is a need for basic and major reform and improvement on campus. The lighting must be improved, the expanded as soon as possible. There must be a realignment of priorities within the Traffic and Security Office to address the community for increased patrol, including foot patrols. Parking regulations must be made more equitable, parking fees may be increased, finally, we can all petition the University to raise the salaries of the Traffic and Security Officer to a meager amount. Only when the pay and working conditions are made more attractive, will the Office be able to attract more intelligent highly motivated personnel.
Kevin L. Neuer Lawrence Junior
Defense
Mr. Lama did an excellent job of commenting on extracts of my letter of March 31 in the April 10 letter to Mr. Rakul, and certainly puts a different light on
To the Editor:
the entire problem when you consider only part of the facts
consider only part of the facts.
I am more concerned, then I look towards the end of the letter that indicates there will be a "new scheme for ripping off students, faculty, and visitors" through, I guess, the use of parking meters. If we are ripping off it, is it hoped that by giving everyone several choices—purchase zone permits, use meters, use gate operated doors, or have the majority will not park illegally. Revenue from tickets, as far as I am concerned, should be decreased to a bare minimum, including student, faculty, and visitors should not be receiving tickets. I assure you that the reason for parking restrictions is not to keep students very busy, but be very much in favor of the revenue from tickets eventually going into some other income account. At one University that I work at, it was given to the student loan fund.
Unfortunately, at this time, the entire plan referred to in the March 31 UDR has not been reviewed. I would wish to comment will wait for the full plan and will have spent more than one evening over a glass of beer working out an alternate schedule of objections to change; but, does this mean, then, that we stop research and experimentation to improve existing operations? If you either me with your complaints.
H. Robert Malinowsky Chairman, Parking and Traffic Board
Of Politics And an Ethereal War
M. M. C. H. S. L. P. R. E. V. I. N. O. W. T. S. J. K. L. M. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I
The President asked, in his State of the Union address, that we rise above politics—way up there, where the president myself breathes纯新 nonpardon air.
The speech soured so far above politics that it could hardly spot that little disturbance shrunk to pin-stake size. We must admit, as a subordinate clause: "As our involvement in the war in Vietnam comes to an end, . . ." It is nice to be so serene about a legacy of killing that while Nixon 'defunes' the war issue.
But we can'let him get away with it. The most persuasive argument for Nixon's election in 1968 was that he had a better chance to end the war than any Democrat, who would be bound by his own party's engagements there. I know
people who voted for Nixon solely on those grounds. And right up to his inauguration there seemed a chance that he would run as Democrat war, and [see] free to end it.
But he soon made it his war, extending it geographically and raising the level of our political expectations there. His "secret plan" for ending the war yielded to a plan for sustaining it through proxies, dragging it out while reducing its "profile." He still killed, but inconspicuous. Nixon into a new election without having kept his campaign promise from the start, but that didn't have just found a way to keep it alive without disturbing the voters too much.
His apologists say Democrats have no right to complain. They began the war, and escalated it. Nixon has descaled, and "wound down." But this partisan answer, by hired hands who are not above politics, misses the point. Nixon had the whole tragic history of his campaign, he came to office. He had a country reputation, but a rare opportunity to lead that country out and teach it new lessons in reality. He deliberately chose, instead, to drift with the old arguments and "bail out."
the effort by four more years of death and destruction. He found new ways to sustain the war, rather than end it. It is the most guilty of all our leaders. He should have known better. He did not have to be a canvette to this war.
But he embraced his chains, and kept them shackled around this country. Those who voted for him to end the war have been cheated even more than those who cast votes for Johnson in 1964. We should all know better, now; and not be willing to accept implication by killing by voting for the principal killer.
We have none of the excesses of Germans who claimed they did not know what was going on. We do know that there were more refugees all had enough time on Vietnam: Fake innocence is out of place. Anyone who would re-elect Nixon now is approving a war waged for too many years and for too long. He has sacrificed enough Asians to the elusive ghost of American "presidency." To vote again for Nixon is to be knowingly implied into the war, all those wives for a war criminal become war criminals themselves.
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
James J. Kilpatrick
Political Odd Couple Emerges
WASHINGTON-With the returns from Wisconsin, the Democratic Party now qualifies for disaster relief. A race that began in mild confusion has become a shamles instead.
Who are the party's two leading candidates in terms of their demonstrated power at the polls? They are George Stanley McGovern, a senator from South Carolina, and Brian Sanders, a governor of Alabama. They constitute the oldest couple ever linked by political fate.
Together the two Georges claimed more than half the vote
in Wisconsin's Democratic primary. For McGovern it was a victory in fact, for Wallace a victory in principle. It was no victory at all for anyone else. He and his candidates all finished last.
The two leading gladiators have almost nothing in common. McGovern is the farbest left of them, with a dee-dee decorous, soft-spoken, professional in manner. He is a product of the upper Midwest. He started out in life to become a minister. He is an excellent racial issues. His principal
campaign plank calls for whacking the defense budget by 40 per cent.
Wallace, by contrast, patrols a political turf in the far reaches of right field. He is short, aggressive, feisty as a bantam cock. He evokes Menken's description of the man who could stir sitting down. He is of the Deep South, a country judge. He came to fame as the segregationist States Righter who stood in the school house door. He is all hawk, with talons showing.
Yet, remarkably, the two
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Georges have much in common. They both are vehicles this spring, however diverse, for the manifestation of a bottled-up protest that is struggling to break out. In some almost mystical ways, they fully realized, they identify with large elements of the disenchanted, the alienated, the people who stand on the outside looking in. Whatever "the Establishment" may be, they oppose it. In vastly different ways, they are both radicals. They share this in common also: they realize the realistic chance of winning the party nomination in July or of defeating Richard Nixon in November.
McGoven's prospects, to be sure, are better than those of Wallace. Politically speaking, he has a respectability and a party record that Wallace cannot claim. When was the last time Wallace led an independent nominee of the Democratic Party? It is hard to recall. Four years ago, Wallace was leading his own independent party and winning five States in the process. He is a kind of Democrat on probation. A lot of people numbering perhaps 20 per cent blacks, would not look kindly on his nomination.
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff."
Yet McGovern's appeal, within the party, is entirely to its most liberal elements. He offers little
A feeling grows that we are moving blindly toward some fundamental realignment. I cannot see its shape or its dimensions. We may be headed for a multi-party system of government in an effort to maintain, Meanwhile, we of the press will stagger on to Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Indiana, and Maryland, pursuing a bunch of losers. We have no place else to go.
that moderates and centrists could latch on to. Quite a number of conservative Democrats are still alive; McGovern would be able to vote in these elections it may be recalled, went through this experience in reverse eight years ago; their conservative candidate was a good and decent and delightful leader but liberals the McGovern would be the Democrats' Goldwater.
It makes no sense. Nothing in party politics this spring makes sense. The one Democrat who made it is John Cannon of Texas; he is not even running. Three others might make it a horse race: Hubert Humphrey, Edmund Burke and John F. Kennedy. Humphrey is hurting (second in Florida, with 18.6 per cent, third in Wisconsin, with barely 21). Muskie is close to collapse in Wisconsin. Jackson is out of it.
Copyright, 1972
The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 11, 1972
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I
SALVATORE MONTEFIORE
Watson Overcrowded by Books and Patrons
Library will outflow facilities in four years
2 KU Libraries Foresee Critical Space Shortage
Kansai Starr was with Wallace in an increasing number of both books and research presentations, present facilities in about four years, David Heron, director of the Kansai Starr Center.
By MONA DUNN Kansan Staff Writer
Because of the lack of adequate storage space in the library, Wickens and his thousand books presently stored in the basement of the Spencer
Watson was built in 1924. Its facilities served the University until 1964 when the library was expanded.
WATSON NOW includes eight stack levels, individual cubicles for studying, several reading rooms, reference section, document room, documents room, reserve book room and an East Asian section. However, Heron said, the increasing number of books needed to serve the library resulted in a severe lack of space.
"By 1976, Watson will definitely outgrow its facilities," the director said.
He said that no new additions to the library are presently being planned.
he, however, mentioned
he mentioned, however,
several remedies for the
preserving of space
Watson now borrows library materials from the Center for Research Libraries in Chicago, Heron said Watson is a member of the Center which now has over 100 mothers and associate members.
THE CENTER has over 3 million volumes and microfilms. Watson is able, Heron said, to
borrow as many materials as are needed.
The borrowed materials can be he added or as long as needed. The material will preserve of space in so far as when the materials are no longer available.
Microfilming has also been offered as a solution to the space problem. Watson now has a microfilm collection.
Heron said that if the complete works of the library were to be made accessible to people approximately $10 million. It costs about $3.5 million per week.
THE LAW LIBRARY in Green Hill also has a problem with books. Reams, law librarian, said Friday that they have over 3,500 volumes in dead storage in the library and a half for the library to retain a book from the "limited access" once one a student requests.
REAMS SAID the law library servicing a doubled student body with no increase in staff. There are now two librarians, two civil service workers, and 13 student workers working in the law library.
However, along with the problem of supplying money to microfilm the volumes in the library. Heron said that microfilms would be difficult to check out because a special machine would be needed to use the film. The average student would be unable to check out on a checkout basis, he said.
ing to house the overcrowded school facilities would become a reality by 1976 or 1977
"Every time we check one out we have to store one," he said.
"The branch is larger than the University of Kansas" Medical library. However, we are operating with half the number of staff, so we serve a smaller handicaps because of the lack of clerical help," he said.
He said with seven stack levels and over 120,000 volumes that their efficiency was reflecting their lack of help.
Martin Dickinson, dean of the School of Law, said a new build-
If Vanessa Redgrave and Glinda Jackson got together and pageed her, Pages it would be a noteworthy event that they are together in *Mary. Queen of Scots* is conceived by the author and happily, quite gratifying.
By RON PARKER
Kansan Reviewer
'Mary': Stirring Performances
"Mary" (at the Grandpa) is an excellent vehicle for the two kids mounted and splendidly played. And if the script is mediocre (and it is), the stirring performances make trappings manage to compensate.
The film is based on an "original script" by John Hale—original in this case meaning that its historical accuracy is rather
suspect. But accuracy is something we're rearly treated to in historical films, so Hale's suspicions are not unapprehending. It is harder to forgive his supricidal dialogue because he unapprehends themselves in highly dramatic situations, then don't seem to understand their interest in saying this. This was pre-viral real life, but the film doesn't purport to be that true to the
MOST DISAPPOINTING are the twocenes between Mary and Queen Elizabeth. One looks forward to them throughout the picture, and when they arrive in town, their mumps are there. There is nothing here for high school girls to take to speech contests.
East 7th Features Five Local Artists
By JOHN FISHER
Kansan Reviewer
A collection of over 60 watercolors by five local artists is the current spring fare offered until April 21 by *7 East 3rd Gallery in*
Varying in quality from the mundane to the sparkling, some of the work does not truly explore the beauty of nature, but vantages of watercolor. Joan Foth, a fine artist teacher at Washburn, seems guilty of this. Her painting is rendered in Indian Tapestry in effect are more woven than painted. But her "Southwest," a pair of watercolours weighed heavily beside each other, as several others of hers are, is pleasant in decorative way. Perhaps because these are the only abstracts in the painting one tends to expect more o
Some of the work on display has that "academic look" as to the way the dresses were conquered or suit, but "Bresh Silvers" is wonderfully spontaneous, in the least nigging eyes. It's the layers of color, a red palette and the picture the same feeling one gets from Picasso's 'Homage to Jacqueline for a Matelot She Prepared for Lumac,' painted in
BOB GREEN, prof. of drawing and painting at KU, features two watercolor paintings "Unique Bouquet" (215), a study in potted flowers on a terrace, has that New Yorker cover look—when he gets into the kitchen with "FreshSilvers", a study of four watercolors that he looks what looks like sprigs of blue holly, he demonstrates how watercolor can be uniquely expressed.
name, and "Across the Kaw," the river in a romantic mistletoe. More brown beams, and greys, has the polished mysterious appeal of a wine estate.
LORRY MALLOT, who studied at KU, is a more conventional water-colorist, with landscapes in the familiar furie. But her development of technique and skill was not finely fine, as shown in "Sudden Storm on the Buffalo," with vibrant greens and blues belting its
Atogether, E 7 East 7th's current show is a tribute to watercolor and good investment in browsing time and—if you have i-money
The 11th Annual Art in the Park
would be held in South
Park where a series of
feature exhibits of original
creations of adult and high school
Guild Seeks Art for Show In South Park
Exhibitors may submit as many original works as they wish, but the works must be bound in a single sheet allotted to each entrant, which is one side of eight feet of snow fence or 16 square feet of table display area. Additional space may also be by paying a second entry fee.
Accepted media include painting in water colors, oil, tempera printmaking, woodcarving, papercutting, woven or hand printed textiles, silversmithing, enamel sculpture, photographs, wood carving, paper cutting, mattes matter or framed. The artists are responsible for their own means of hanging exhibits, as well as exhibits themselves and sales.
But despite the script, the picture works. The acting is brilliant, from the monarcha in *The Great Wall* to her remarkably sincere actress as well as an interesting character who does the unexpected in her lineings and physical reactions. She can turn on a startling radiance or not. She can make your heart warming. She can make your heart beat a moment with a one-word line like 'No!' The oddities she uses are very real and terrifying human.
JACKSON IS a fine Elizabeth, as viewers of the television series don't know. She is not given a grooming, but she makes her moments count. Like Ms. Redgrace, she brings joy to those who role-her wry smile, her careful gait, her meaningful gestures. It is a subtle performance, and a
The other actors are equally fine, more noticeable; mimothy Dalton plays the dull-witted, simmering man with a great sympathy and a sympathetic character. This adds interest and depth to what could have been a film.
The $3.00 entry fee includes membership in the Lawrence Art Center and its sponsors. The show with the painting, Park and Recreation Department. People over 65 years of age may display for only a $1.00 memorial fee.
All the characters in the film are treated sympathetically. It's a dark, powerful movie that doesn't over-sentiment. We are never cloaked with the poigneness that we all experience when we Mary is too often protrayed as a saint. Here she is shown as a woman.
This year the event will be held from noon until 5 p.m. in the bandstand and area of the park on the side of Massachusetts Street.
Deadline for turning in entry blanks is April 24.
spirit, and that's something to be grateful for.
DIRECTOR CHARLES Jawerson is not a master craftsman as a singer, but he can make something to be said for adequacy. He has handled his cast brilliantly, and that is important than fancy camerawork.
marvelous. They are enamored and look lived in, and they never really care about scoring a score is pretty and unobtrusive, with a lovely sonny under the main cover.
The sets and costumes are
"A Mary, Queen of Scots" is not an interesting movie. But it's an interesting story, intelligently told, and these days that's a lot.
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Student Union Activities regrets to announce B.B. King will not appear in concert. A replacement is being sought, and will be announced for April 22.
KU Republicans to Elect Officers, Canvass State
KU Collegeiate Republicans
plan to elect a senator
plan for their election of officers,
"Buck Night" and the state
Collegeiate Republicans con-
KUCR will elect their officers at their next meeting April 26. Members who want to run for treasurer, secretary, vice-chairman or chairman must file an intention of intent to run by April 21.
Grant Hewitt, Great Bend freshman and KU treasurer, gave the Delta Chi chair or the UK office. B-112 in the Kansas University. On Buick Night, April 25, he spoke at a state state asking for a donation of $10 to
Half the money collected by KUCR members will go toward support of the club. The other half would go to the state Republican party.
the Republican party.
The state College
Republican convention will be April 21-23 in Manhattan. KUCH
five delegates to the convention.
Chris Baker, Valley Falls fracers from the Republican chairman, said the purpose of the convention was to get people involved in the Republican election.
One of the KUCR members reported on an effort to get students involved in Rep. Larry Winn's, R-Kan., campaign.
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6
Tuesday, April 11, 1972
University Daily Kansas
Owens, Bud to Join All-Stars
Bud Happy About Draft
By BOB SIMISON
Kansan Sports Editor
Bud Stallworth, the happ-, University of Kansas forward, was as usual, smiling Monday afternoon. It was a rather unusual day, though, and he appeared to be possibly a bit bummer than usual.
After all, he had returned that morning to Lawrence from a week-long trip to Dayton, Ohio, and Honolulu to play in all-star basketball games. And he had just been nicked in the first round of the National Basketball Association player draft by Seattle.
"I'm pretty happy with it," he
said about his selection by the Super Sonics.
He had taken a break from a pick-up game in *Alejandro Fuld*'s defense, where he scored 20 points in basketball players to call Seattle. That attempt failed, so he went on to win the game.
Later, his call was successful. "I talked to them for a little time," Stallworth said. "They want to know wha my lawyer was."
STALLWORT EARLIER was ranked in the first round by the Boston Celtics and Basketball Association. He said he had no preference about which team would play him.
"I'll probably choose the one with the best financial contract," Stallwood said. "I'm not too particular about location."
"That'd be nice," Stallworth said.
particularly Would play with former KU All-American Dave Robisch at Denver be a factor?
Stallworth and his coach, Ted Wenry, will fly to Las Vegas. N.M. Thursday's Pizza Hut Flatiron game will feature Wenry will coach the west squad.
Owens will run his 10-man
squad through practices
Thursday and Friday. The game
will begin at 10 a.m. (PST)
(pst.CT). Owens said,
FAN CLUB
Kansas Stuff Photo by ED LALLO
Brad Avery Keens Helmet on During Serimage
Keeping it on is a rule; taking it off is painful
NEW YORK (AP) -LaRue Martin, a relative unknown in a crop of highly skilled players, is opening Portland Trail Blazers in the opening round of Monday's National Basketball Association game.
Pep Talks Inspire Writer
OWEN'S TAILLEST player will be 6-foot-8 Anisley Truitt of California, he said. The other big men, Terry Benton of Wichita State, Jim Creighton of Colorado, David Hall of Kansas State and Paul Stovall of Arizona State, towering height but jump well.
Editor's Note: This is the second in a series of four weekly reports about spring football practice by Kansas Staff Writer who is practicing with the University of Kansas football team.
By BRAD AVERY
Portland Drafts Unknown Center
Despite the considerable anxiety I had over my future role as a football player-reporter, I decided to take the final plunge. So on March 27, I went through all the process of checking out equipment.
CITY OF NEW YORK
The most interesting aspect of the process is trying to find a helmet that fits.
With an effort that was hardly worth the result, he managed to plead with his guardians for protested that it was too small. He could only reply that I needed
"Ah," said one of the team managers, "that one looks all right."
The coaching will be all alike. Ramsay will coach at New Carthage, was head KU's 1902 NCAA championship team. He will coach the East
After finally completing the scramble of getting dressed, one embarks on the long march to the practice field.
I've never been in the Army, but the cold, impersonal operation of checking out the midrids of妒adips, shoes and other paraphernula that go into making a normal body wound. The weapon must resemble being issued a rifle and a uniform.
THE MANAGER then began twisting my head from side to side as if he were trying to find me. I was not sure, only escaped by assuring him my head was not attached to the rest of my body by the threads of a
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"We can't do anything complicated." Owens said. "We'll have to put in something simple. The practices will have to be mostly a team concept. We need it together and then they play.
Buddy Bowles
Let the Man from Equitable
The remainder of the West squad will be Steve Bracey of Alabama, James Foster of State, Booker Washington of Winston-Law Vegas and Scott Mitchell of Oklahoma.
The Trail Blazers went for the 6-foot-10 Loyola of Chicago star because of his abilities as a pure
Then in the Alba Classic
Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Stallworth's Midwest team lost
to Minnesota on Thursday,
stallworth scored 11, 9 and 24.
Stallworth has yet to play on a winning all-star team. The West lost in the Coaches' All-Star game
April 1. Stallworth's 14-point effort was second to Stovall's 19 for the West.
"I didn't do as well as I wanted."
"It stallworm and." "But there's not that much to do in an all-star team," she said of my timing and my timing was off a little.
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Once on the field, everyone is required to take a warmup lap around the field, a most cumbersome process when you're still getting used to those kinds of jumps. The lap on the first day, I was greeted with an unexpected lambasting from a coach.
"Avery, how do you expect to see a football with that hair in your eyes," he said.
I tried to explain that the helmet was slowly crushing my skull, so a little hair might be missing. I removed what I call the ironmask torture to pull my hair back. I made the mental note that I would try to avoid removing and putting the helmet as much as possible.
AFTER COMPLETING the preliminary mammals, everyone takes part in what to, in a long line of like a large circus act. It actually is a group of it statues hurling down drills. But all the rolling, crawling and tambling going on is one of the biggest at Barnum and Bacall at its best
I selected offensive end as my position, not because I have any particular talent at catching the football, but because I thought it
would be relatively safe. It turned out to be a good choice because most of my practice time was spent pattern or standing around.
The man who coaches the receivers, Tred Plumb, is a very easy-going person who reminds the team of a summer boy's camp.
Although he grimaces painfully every time a ball skips off the ground, he seems to lose his mellows, a quality rarely found in a football.
BY THE SECOND day of practice, the first two teams of receivers had been selected, and I came nearhere to being selected for either. However, my status as an active observer on another team is important in another way—as cannon fodder.
Those who act as cannon fodder are the ones who hold the sword of offense and play offense for the defense. However, there's a certain amount of pride in being well well well. There even an alliance, of sorts, among those who are tedious but necessary tasks.
However, even those with
their own faith, no one of the truly great treaties
of practice after it's over. That that
Don Fambrough's revitalist
Fambrough's southern accent and the conviction in his voice adds a Southern Baptist holy air to the talks that makes them almost believable. Even his vocabulary sometimes adds to the conviction of someone he 'saved' after hearing him. For example:
"I gave the good Lord my practice plans, and he gave us a good day to practice on," he said after a screemimage.
I ask one man upstairs for a good day for your day off, so you should have plenty of time to rest.
Sometimes, however, his vocabulary dictates somewhat. It makes no sense saying that we aren't supposed to be worth a shit, but we're going to be worth it.
What makes it seem even more like a revival is the fact that the players punctuate Fambrough's enunciations with shouts of abuse. And I could have sworn someone dipped in a "halluailel" once.
Would you share malt liquor with a friend?
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Hadl Joins Football Staff; Drills Please Fambrough
NEW YORK (AP)-Players from mid-merica schools chosen in Monday's National Basketball Association draft:
First round. Dill Stallworth, Kansas.
After running his team through a spirited workout Monday, University of Kansas football coach Don Fambridge had said he would accomplish the work and amount of work accomplished by all the players.
Seattle
Second round Jim Price, Louisville, by
Los Angeles, Steve Bracy, Tulsa, by
Alabama.
Fambrough said he was especially pleased with sophomore Bruce Timmons. He played linebacker time limbohead and Odei Weldner, runback here.
SIX WEEKS AGO
E. Columbrera, Ed Sacred Heart; by Halletta Heller, Bethunia State, by Stateville; by Harry Jensen, Buffalo State; by Jason Jensen, Louisville; by Golden State; by Simmons, Bradley; by Los Angeles; by Simmons, Bradley; by Philadelphia, Jerry Clark, Alabama State
**All-Stars**
Third round, CJ Clevings, Colorado, by
Chuck Jury, Nebraska, by Chicago
Fifth, round - Iron Harms, Wichita State,
by Milwaukee.
According to Fambrough, the defense is set for the Jahawkes, but it is not. The Jahawkes are installing a pro-type offense which include
John Hadi, San Diego Charger quarterback, has joined spring drills as a coach. His main duties will be to help quarterbacks David Jaynes, Rich Jones and John Tinker, adapting to the protype offer.
The offensive line also drew praise from Fambrough. Considered the weakest area on
Golf Team Nabs Third At Nebraska
The young University of Kansas golf team made a surprisingly strong showing in first meet of the season Friday and Saturday in Lincolne, Neb. KU won both an eightteam meet at Nebraska.
John Goss, one of four freshmen on the five-man squad, fired rounds of 76 and 75 for a win. He also scored the third best score of the meet.
Freshmen Bill Kipp and Bob Nelson scored 157 and 159, senior Roger Wells shot a 161, and freshman Mare Morrozo scored
KU's team total of 627 was bettered only by winner Kansas State with 608 and one more player. KU will host Nebraska, Iowa State, Missouri and Kansas State. St. Louis 21 at Lawrence Country Club.
Team Scootin
Kansas State Nebraska (No. 1) 635
Kansas 872, South Dakota 634, Iowa 632
No. 2) 638, Northern Iowa, Iowa State
630, Creighton 654
Medalists
1. Schultz, NU; 74-74-148; 2. Lewts, KSU;
78-72-130; 3. Goss, KU; 76-75-151.
KU Individuals
Goss 76-75 -151; Kapp 78-75 -137; Nelson
80-79 -139; Wells 83-78 -161; Morozzo 82-86
the team last year, the offensive
is doing a good job protecting
the quarterbacks, Fambrough
aid.
WORLD CAMPUS
AFLOAT
The only mishap Monday was a back injury suffered by Jones. Farnham did not know how long Jones would be out of action.
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CANTERBURY HOUSE ELECTION TONIGHT
At tonight's folk mass, 9 p.m., we will be electing student members of the Bishop's Committee and delegate and alternate to diocesan convention.
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Tuesday, April 11 7-9 p.m. in the Student Union
Remember, this is your only opportunity, so don't blow it.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 11, 1972
7
The image is blurry and does not contain any discernible text.
Campus Trees and Shrubs Blossom as Spring Arrives
Blooming Cold Nips Buds
BY CELINE EMERSON
Kangan Staff Writer
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
"I mean, really, how much prettier can the campus be in the spring than at any other time?" asks the veteran Jawhaker.
The sketches are becoming convinced as colors begin to proliferate across the University and shrubs begins to blossom
The blooms probably were not damaged by the recent cold weather. The schedule may have been delayed, said Harold Bilch, supervisor of grounds and landscaping for the Buildings and Grounds department.
"The magnolias near Lindley Hall turned brown after the cold snap," Blitch said, "but that happens 15 per cent of the time. They bloom early, then it turns orange and ananas weather presents a problem."
THEERE ARE 275 flowering trees on campus. Blitch said, including peach and redbud but mostly flowering crabs. They are designed so that each area of campus has at least a few plants.
Bilch said there were 25 varieties of flowering crows across campus. A few are in bloom now and will continue to grow throughout month. Crab trees have blossoms of pink, red or blue, he said.
**red flowering quince** are starting to bloom now Bilch's white spirea, the white spirea, bushes that are three and one-half to six feet tall. Red spirea will start flowering and bloom until fall, be said.
BLITCH SAID the tulips now spring up in front of Hoch Auditorium will bloom for a week there. There is no provision for new plantings at Hoch until after Christmas, and purchased for commencement.
he said, and planted in the bed afterwards.
The loss of the greenhouse behind Blint Hall caused by construction of Wescoe Hall, is responsible for the decrease in grassland Hach, Blitch said, and there are no funds for its replacement.
"Those days are gone until we get another greenhouse." he said.
He said they used to interplant tulips with violets in the garden because they were wilted, the violets would start to bloom. Later geraniums replaced tulips as a substitute.
get another greenhouse. he said, "We had a greenhouse, an architect, she said there were several criteria for deciding what kinds of flowers to plant. One of the most important criteria is that plants need to be started, kept growing or replaced if they die. We have plants in the tree that need babying, he said, although there are some exotic trees that need babying, he said.
Functional aspects are also considered, said Thomas. These include screening out views and ugly architecture, preventing paths from being formed and enabling a desirable space-form relationships.
An example of space-forming escapes on the hideout near Marathon and Summerfield Hall, Thomas said. Although it was a sunny day, the grassy areas surrounded by rows or clusters of trees and shrubs, he
PLANTS WERE ALSO selected on the basis of their blooming schedules, Thomas said. Fall and spring colors, spring in particular are because they blossom because they are because they blossom at a time when most students are on campus.
Many of the trees and bushes are gifts from alumni. Blitch said that 28 trees were donated by the Chancellor Malloc and his wife.
"Malott is probably responsible for much of the beauty on campus," Thomas said.
Thomas said that budgeting is a major problem in maintaining the landscaping on campus. The department says it will size since he came here in 1949, he said, but the funds earmarked for landscaping have grown very rapidly.
Bilch said there were 26 fulltime people, working on machines in the lab. Mr. Bilch shrubs. This is the same number he came here 18 years ago.
"We HAVE TROUBLE covering the area—700 odd acres, if you don't count Chamney farm we don't do much there. We're frozen in additional people or replace the ones that leave. We usually hire extra help in the summer, mainly for the property that is prohibited," said Bitch.
Bilch said that no money was appropriated for new plantings. The approximately $100,000 was used for care of existing shrubs.
Thomas said that the planting that has taken place on campus was possible through private funds and gifts or appropriations within specific projects, such as Numeramaker Hall. Often looks like new planting is really old plants around, he said.
There are plans for extensive planting west of Iowa along 15th street. Thomas said, but there is no money to execute them.
THOMAS SAID that before the University size that made more than maintenance impossible with existing staff there were many
"The garden by the Art Museum has gone to pot completely. They're trying to remove that now. There used
to many more flowers near Lindley and around the service drive behind Hoch. There were beds in from Summitfeld. He then, except at Hoch, have been sadly neglected, said Thomas.
"The maintenance of plants is as much as anything, and that does not mean we should grass. Plants have to be pruned, gaps filled in and dead trees removed."
He said that in some areas, such as Potter Lake, there is overplanting. Original plantation was done many years ago, but the trees have grown and wetland have crept in, views are blocked.
Thomas said these areas needed extensive pruning and replanting but with the existing budget this was not possible.
BLITCH SAID his crew had encountered some trouble with vandals and flower-pickers, but he was extremely extensive. Every year a couple of people get their Christmas trees from campus, he said, and sometimes people pick branches for the trees for festive greenery.
He emphasized that vandalism insisted on him. He insisted on the power-picking, although discouraged, still continued, with izzles being thrown.
The biggest problem the buildings and grounds crews encounter is with paths. Bilich had to widen the concrete feet wide, has formed across the lawn in front of the library. Bilich had to repair the construction of Westgate Hall.
"Any time a new building is built, traffic pattern changes, change in the way he said. It is mainly just a lack of thinking. People figure that since every one walks across the street while staying off it won't help much."
Church Supports Amnesty
By KEVIN SHAFER
Kansan Staff Writer
The question of amnesty torrid resisters and military deserters may seem distant to some, but the member of the University Lutheran Church will matter the matter some thought.
The congregation has adopted a resolution on Feb. 13, that supports unconditional amnesty for those resisting reservists and military deserts.
amnesty for all draft resisters and military deserts. The resolution, which supports total, unconditional amnesty, is primarily designed to get the Army to allow the question of amnesty for these men. The adoption is considered by the congregation to be a step forward.
The church plans to send their resolution on to the Kansas district of the Lutheran Church organization.
The congregation, comprised mostly of University students, said they thought the basic question was one of the American colleges where they were wrong to force these evaders and deserters to serve.
They said amnesty could not be like the light that was totally fair to the person who "stone for the position into which we have forced those who want to destroy the records. This way, said the group, no one would be able to get away."
The congregation said that the
THE CONGREGATION said the majority of the American warrior was a mistake. Should the judge then, judge a man guilty simply because he came to this confluence years prematurely, they asked?
They went on to ask that the records of "those accused or convicted of civil crimes relating to this and all previous wars be forgotten." Those guilty of true crime should be judged without the shadow of the politics of war hanging over them, they said.
error of our involvement in Vietnam could never be made right with anyone who had to pay for it with "pain, suffering, loss of loved ones, imprisonment or true conflict of conscience."
THE REV. CONRAD SAID the question became one of morality when people who had ewded a man or had deserted military duty had chosen a moral route but one that remained within legal boundaries could often be accused of pursuing a very immoral path, he said.
He advocated amnesty for all persons who had either eadied the draft or who had deserted. But, said the Rev. Conrad, we should "include those who have suffered some other felicious crime."
The Rev. Donald Conrad, a pastor at the University Lutheran Church, said, "Many people confuse amnesia with amnesia."
A certain time element musi-
also be included, he said the Rev.
Kenneth A. O'Neill, who pre-
people should not make an offer
of amnesty until the conflict in-
side is resolved.
While the country is using a draft system, any type of
THE REV. CONRAD was especially displeased with the Taft Amendment, which is still being pressed to preserve his greed. He said he thought the bill was a purely political move and did not imply to the public in three ways.
First, the draft evader must enlist in a program of civil service for a period of three years in order to be eligible for amnesty. The bill specifies certain federal jobs that meet this qualification.
Next, Conrad said, the evader must assume "the lowest pay grade" in the job in which he chooses to serve.
exemption would certainly bring chaos to the system, the Rev. Conrad said.
Finally, the Rev. Conrad said, "dialked the revival statement stating that I am a member of an official and any Federal benefits benefit from his period of servitude once he was ordained."
He said amnesty was well deserved because these men displayed personal heroism, the courage to face the penalties that were involved.
An Oksalaos junior, who also wished to remain anonymous, chose the Army Reserve as his alternative to the draft. One of them influenced his decision, he said, a very low lottery number.
KACKLEY SAID that the greatest difficulty an evader or a kid might have is to come back after leaving the country. Connections usually exist with the family or loved ones, and this usually sequently. Kackley said, he considered leaving the country the last alternative to getting out of town.
the choice to leave the country,
he said, was a wise one for two
reasons. First, a personal protest
against something the evader did
was an important tool he had
lodged. Second, the choice to
leave had brought a great deal of
Dean Kackley, an assistant to the dean of men and the chief draft counselor, disagreed with the administrator.
HIS REASONS for support were simple. He said that these men were "courageous enough to attack a war that is morally wrong."
He chose to serve one half and
years in the army reserve in a
non combat medical unit. His
work was part of the program,
he said, was very low.
The student said. "I was too intimidated by the system to get into it." (Conscientious Objector status) So no naive about what I could do.
KANSAN WANT ADS
The administrator said, "I don't think it (amnesty) should be all or nothing. I think it should be all."
publicity to the anti-war movement.
When asked about amnesy some Vietnam veterans said they should be forced to fight, others shouldn't someone else regard their duty as a thing of the past and were very reluctant to go with Vietnam or military service.
"If you want to look at it from the government's standpoint, it's a waste of money," he said.
25 words or tewer: $1.00
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Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Daily Kanal are offered
about regard to color, creed, or national
FOR SALE
Highest price paid for used cars. G.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
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Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale.
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headline: 5:00 p.m. 3 days before publication
NORTHISLE COUNTY SHOP, 707
Bridge Avenue, used furniture,
fecture items, old wood cooking and
storage cabinets, wooden stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood,
of other useful items, up to 5
of other useful items, up to 9
8345 days Herb Aberlen, 8345
Raldwin Electric Guitar, hollow body,
Raldwin guitar, in perfect condition,
with hardshell case $275 or trade for
used motorcycle. Call Gary. 4-111
8-411
VOLKSWAGEN 1966 BUG. NEW,
4 air tires, 20,500 miles,
good condition. Only $85. Good deal,
see it at www.kgm-863-435.
4-11
1970 Honda 350 SL, excellent condition.
841-2581 4-11
1966 Chevrolet Impala, 2 dhp, 32hp
in. V-8, 725 hp, rims great.
Three-speed standard transmission
Chrome wheels. 864-116. 4-11
Kaw Valley Hemp Farmers—Get into the new bell-bottom bib-overalls at Earthshine, 12 E. 8th. 4-11
Mobile home for sale. Tired of living in an unpleasant place while wasting time, rent this mobile home to deserve little Here is a home, where you can enjoy privacy and the comfort of your own space or live in or study in a warm, pleasant room, bright 20 ft living room, bedroom, and storage space, dishwasher, gas range, gas water heater, gas range, gas water heater, Unusually good condition 1962 16X24FT 4KU, Unusually good condition 1962 16X24FT 4KU, Unusually good condition 1962 16X24FT 4KU, Unusually good condition 1962 16X24FT 4KU, Unusually good condition 1962 16X24FT 4KU, Unusually good condition 1962 16X24FT 4KU
Yamaha Enduro, 1971, 125 cc, red, ex-
condition, excellent condition. Also, 1971
350 cc Honda Motor complete. 842-654
or 842-479. 4-11
CLOSE OUT 40 to 50 - off on entire stock of discontinuated components, tumors, speakers and earphones-Ray Stonebuck's Magnavox Downstream
Used compact stereo and FM £25
Used coffee stereo and FM $100
Master work console FM $150 Stainback's 292 Mass 843 Max. 471-11
Secluded 40 acres near Perry Lake for sale. Unimproved natural state. 2 ponds. Beautiful view. Will sell on contract. 843-2774. 4-11
Need to sell a ten speed Schwinn man's bike. Almost new and in excellent condition. Call afterterno and evenings. 842-7820. 4-12
1960 Austin-Cambridge 4 dr. Sedan
Needs tune-up. $150 Call 841-3216
after 5.90.
Lenses 125 mm. P28. NIKKOR one micron
mold Perfect. $125. 200 mm. P3. Vivilux
mato 6 mo. old Perfect. $125.
mats caps included. $180-188
after 8
11 week old Irish Sister puppy (country grown). 6) V1 WM sell offer, see VW at 1823 Ohio. Call 655-322-4-12
Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, Nine
St. Outdoor pit Bar-B-Q, 15 chick-
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Bar-Sub or port rack $35. Small Rib-
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Briket Sand $80. Beef Briket
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Phone 842-9515 Sun-Cat T-
phone 842-9515
Natural food supplements and biodegradable cleaners, also natural cosmetics. Shaklee Products Distributor. Free delivery. 842-1538 4-12
The purpose of this ad is to sell ponchos. So buy a hand made poncho at the Yarn Barn. 730 Mass. You want to defend a tactical poncho would you? 4-12
MOVING: Wather and dryer, $75.
Washing machine, $20. Two 3-mile speedbelt,
$20. Window fan, $20. Window window fan, $20. Portable humidifier,
$25. Swing set, $1. Lawn sweeper,
$25. Tree pruner, long handles, $8. Power
tree pruner, $8. 243-244 after or
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and U-Haul
AM/FM FM Stereo radio with a-track tape player, input & output jacks for the TV system. Top condition. 852-9748 4-13 Floral Frieren? F67. Got them, band. Floral Frieren? F67. Cheapest around—so many clothes. Konon KONON 8198 Vanity Box Bed 4-13 BEER COORS BUD $15 a·6 am. Hawk food Park 8± Illumination 4-13
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carriage, covering vision calibrated,
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1'(30") years old Earnhardt,
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best offer. Other equipment available
best offer. 2 P.M. for Theramin at VI-31-5121
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court 010-894-6000
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
10-speed bicycle. Glaine "Tour De Frane" 241" brooks. Frankes **Brooks** excellent condition Aiking $180; Carl Michael at 782-4122 - 7413
1973. Dodge Van-138, V8R, auto, tire shape--also V8R Focal Diamond VR, power required, 4-speed, backers, the works--412,572, 1013, Obtain 413
APARTMENT SALE-1045 Ky., Fri.
10-5, Sat. 11-4
4-13
3-sped bicycle, new tires chain, & light. Full size pipe in case and case AM radio-cassette recorder. 843-3579. 4-12
RIDGEVIEW
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841 8489
HAVE YOUR HANDWRITING ANALYZED 842-4476 4-14
Black Spanish coat, trench coat style. Double breasted coat. Halliday 11-12 Excellent condition. Halfway price. Call evening. 9474
1970 Kawasaki, 350 c. e good condition.
$500, 843-8108 4:13
3020 Iowa (South Hwy.59)
VOX POWER STACK—like new amp-
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4-14
NIKON FANS For Sale. 135mm/2.8
Nikor Lens with 'Bellos' Best
offer over $175 Call 824-2148
4-18
SPRING CLEARANCE — USED BIKES Kat Suzuki. 634 Maus. 842-6066
Honda Mini Trail $175
Honda Mini Tire T22 $198
Tailor T12 $149
T10 Honda $184
69 TS-250 Surfy $475
69 TS-250 Surfy $475
69 Yamaha 250 Street $395
69 Yamaha 250 Street $395
71 Hanky $250 Raceer $925
71 Hanky $250 Raceer $925
69 Kawasaki $300 Eagle $425
FOR HIRE Camarraman accommodation and still photography. Designer Jayne Powers. Postcards (these hopefully) Allights send. Send home, to like one or two. Have no phone) (1232 Ohm Or call 877-456-7890 - able-call Donika Kelly 4-14
65 MG13 roadster in top condition.
58,000 miles. Engine overhauled at
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4-17
1967 New Moon Mobile Home, Large living room, dining area, kitchen, two bedrooms, big bathroom, include air conditioning and clothes dryer. 842-3529 6-17
FOR RENT
Rockledge Villa Apartments. Limited offer: first month rent free. Offer valid from 10/26/17 through 11/13/17, napped at, with all utilities paid for $116.00 each. Call: 4-600-890-5222.
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAW-
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COLLEGE HILL MARSH now show-
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NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
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When you’re but, you’re hot. When
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NOTICE
Barn Partiest. Now available for
rent at Apple Valley Farm in Lake Perry,
Apple Valley Farm in Lake Perry, and
hard and cool parking of parking
car. Call Joe Stroup 6 p.m. to 845-
Carol Stroup 6 p.m. to 845-
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. John Wells, 842-3200 tf
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CHANGE OF LOCATION
On Saturday, when dancers will be the patrons at Potter's Museum, we will move to group privately there; we'll meet in a room together Friday. Friends Free. Come and join us, to see the new pieces of work.
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DAY-CARE DIRECTOR of a University, now available at the Dean of Students office, or at the Dean of All applicants must have at least 2 years of pre- or post-school and have pre-shored vipinity applications are due on January 31st. Candidates will be interviewed on February 5th.
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Tuesday, April 11, 1972
University Daily Kansan
ADVANCE REELS
Kansan Photo by TERRY SHIPMAN
Students Becoming Pinball Wizards
. . . Crystal Merriam, senior, try's her skill . . .
KU Students Learn To Control Pinballs
By BOB EVANS
Kansan Staff Write
John Eimck, owner of John's Novelty Co., said recently that pinball machines have been growing more popular in the last year. Emkick supplies and serves pinball machines in the Lawrence area.
"The more you play a machine, the more you learn about it. After awhile you know where the ball will go and how much bounce the bumper has," said John C. Kansas City, Kan., senior.
Emick, who has been supplying and serving pinball machine for 37 years, said that the cost of a machine ranged from $100 to $900.
Horner and Greg Smith,
sawner senior student, say
they played the game every day and usually averaged eight hours a week playing
"Single player machines," he said, "cost about $700. Two player machines cost about $200 and the four player machines cost about $100 to do six player machines. I haven't seen any for years."
Emick said pinball machines
depreciated quickly. He said that in six months they would depreciate 25 per cent and in the next year another 25 per cent
Depreciation is a major factor governing the life of a ballpark ticket. "We said that when a machine in worth about $300 he traced it in on a new machine. Also, if you have enough money, it is traded in.
Emick said that space for the machine was leased to him for 10 years, and he brought in and that a good machine with good location could be built.
By CANDY HERBERT
Kansan Staff Writer
Non-Fiction Captures Students' Interests
Machines are usually serviced about twice a week. Erik said. The best location is close to school; students are likely to be, he said.
The current trend among *children*, a non-fiction that applies to their lives. Stewart Nowilin, manager of the Oread Book Store, said
Nowlin said that contrary to several years ago when hard politics and the new left captured students' reading imaginations, students' learning of history is on introspection and attempts to find alternate life styles.
"The best places for pinball machines are those that open early and close late, such as the Super Nintendo or Jake boxes. Jake boxes are also supplied by Emick's company. About every two years, he said, a joke box is moved to a lesser location until it is finished with $100 and finally traded in."
"One of our most popular sections of the book store," Nowlin said, "is the 'Whole Earth' shells which include books that try to help students to be alternative to today's way of living.
"Included in this section is the 'Last Whole Earth Catalog' which has been selling extremely well."
THE LAST Whole Earth Catalog* contains guides to living such as how to create a vegetable garden or grow a vegetable garden.
Another popular section in the Oread, entitled Eisen-Eale. etc., concentrates. Nolin said, on behalf of deal with introspection.
"We entitle our section Easlen-Etc because the whole human potential movement is offered to the Easlen Institute in California.
Pool tables are another major item which Emick supplies.
**NOWLIN SAID** that students become the psychiatrists authors maintain that it is no longer possible to learn and their lives are aAPPlied mind.
"The popular books deal with a whole new outlook in psychology and how one leads one's life." Nowlin said.
"The emphasis in these Esalen books is on living your own life the way you choose," Nowlin said
When examining college students' reading habits concerning books on the current best seller list, Nowlin said that the non-fiction selections were more popular than the fiction.
in the fiction category we didn't even bother ordering "The Woman in White" and "Would I (would) I," "The Friends of Edie Coyle" by Higgins (no. 8). We simply didn't feel there would enough demand for these books.
Nowlin said that big sales in this section had been "In and Out the Garbage Pail" and "Gestalt Therapy Verbalism," both by
IN FACT, we sell more books on "TOLISM or Dostovsky than 'The Bets' by Harold Robbins (6)," now said.
Nowlin said that the most popular non-fiction best sellers were; "Bury My Heart at
Wounded Knee "by De Drew牛 no. (5). *Eleanor and Franklin* by Drew牛 no. (5). *Rage* by O'Neill牛 no. (10) and *Tracy and Hopburn* by Garson
Other books Nowlin cited as selling well were "The Gang" by Philip Bott (no 10 on the fiction best seller list). "Beyond Skinner" by B.F. Skinner and "Civilization" by Kenneth C. Clark.
In the area of academic reading, Nowlin叫出 the Oread bookstore's main turnover was in the research literature and drama students.
Nancy Bengel, head of the circulations department of Watson Library, confirmed this trend of students to read books classified in the language and vocabulary of the Dewey Decimal system.
"THE STATISTICS we keep,
she said, make it impossible to
give anything but a general
assessment of books
being checked out.
"The daily computer print outs, which give us the number of the different types of books checked out each day, do show that the students are reading more material in the 300's or history literature and literature and languages, and the 300's or history and geography."
Bengel added that the demand for books in these categories
"The heavy use of the social science books," Bengal said, "can be more easily understood if you realize that this category includes the fields of political science, economics, law, welfare and education.
could be partly attributed to the number of students taking the courses requiring these readings
"WHEN YOU ADD all the possible history and language courses that require reading in the other two categories, it seems evident why these type of students are most often checked out."
Bengel said that Watson's proprietary software can be used as a reference library much difficult to keep track of which books are a most popular with KU.
To collect as many books in as many areas as possible we use a blanket order plan, Bengel said. We have a contract with a publishing company to receive one copy of all the books they publish annually. Canada every year, with certain exceptions on subject matter
A bookstore, such as Oread, Bengel said, could more easily
Nomination . . .
THE QUESTIONNARE asked questions such as, "Do you believe that Communists or other
The brochure said the American Security Council had a library and research center, but it won't say where it was located.
Continued from Page 1
"The library and research center includes the largest private collection of international activities in America," the brochure said.
It said that over $2 million had been invested in the library and that its central index contained over six million cards.
revolutionaries should be permitted to hold positions in facilities"* and, "Do your believe in others other revolutionaries should be permitted to teach in tax supported educational matters"*
At the end of the questionnaire, Fernandez was again asked to give a donation.
ProfsRecall1932-33Woes
By LINDASCHILD
Kennon Staff Writer
The past two years have no been the only time that the University of Kansas has been plagued with budget difficulties. It lost millions in Depression hit the university full blast. The school's operating budget suffered a drastic reduction that year, at a time when faculty and students were forced to work on a nationwide economic crisis.
Kansan Staff Writer
Short on tax money and forced to lessen state spending, the Kansas Legislature cut appropriations for "just about everything" at KU. Raymond McCormick, executive secretary said recently.
RAPIDLY DMINISHING reserve supplies were the salvation of the University accrued 23 issues of Graduate Magazine.
Edward H. Taylor, retired professor of zoology, said Friday that in the early thirties, funds were so short that there was little money to buy specimens for the comparative anatomy course he taught. Sometimes sometimes brought in cats of their own use, he said.
Museum programs were here to be installed, but the book fund was cut back 32 per cent and, luckily for the museum, it had been made a mild winter made possible the legislature's reduction of the 1932 fuel allowance,
During that year, 24 faculty members left KU to pursue education and practically of them went to other state universities at an average salary of $39,000.
"RESTORATION OF state支撑” was nicely said. Nichols said, “We're in the middle of War II. Even in 1941-42 the salary increase per faculty member was only $7.” The faculty salary scale didn’t buddish to its 1931 level.
Graduate, were $25 a semester except for law, pharmacy and medical students who paid $200 per hour. All fees varned with their courses.
The cost of a college education declined in keeping with the times, the Graduate report in 2013 indicated that KU is not a rich man's school."
In a special report to alumnies about the prevailing conditions at KU in 1933, the magazine said that, exclusive of books and fees, the monthly average cost per student was $55 for women in past years. Rates were "still lower this year" the article said.
"ROOMS ARE available for as low as $5 or $8 a month, with the average about $10," the article reported.
During 1982-33 the University During 1982-33 the University kept national an international events, but was primarily concerned with occurrences on
The Kansan also ran stories announcing that his upstart team had won the annual pajama parade," ads for Gable Harlow ("The Lovers incompatible") and Laurel and Rubin ("The Penguins"). Glenn Cunningham had broken a Big Six conference record by running the mile in 4:21.8 one
The Kansan coverage of Franklin D. Roosevelt's election was scanty and although national politics took up a greater part of the front page in March, when Roosevelt was inaugurated and New Deal, sports and social events are to get the largest headlines.
"FOOTBALL BAS" was pretty terrible during those years, but basketball was riding big." James K. Hitt who was a KU student in 1982-33 and is now system development, said Friday.
"Students did the same things that then they do, except we did them on foot," he said. We were very few cars on campus.
there was a depression until later.
"As a student you were ... aware of your own predicament you weren't sensitive to the fact that you were a professor of political science who was a KU student in 1932-33, said. "The Depression affected everything you did, so it hard to sing out its effect on you as a leader."
"There was little questioning of academic procedures," he said. "We were more interested than today. There wasn't as much emphasis on doing your work."
"THEE WAS a good deal more of what we used to laughingly call Joe College and sororites and sororities." Fields said.
Despite certain shortages however, Hitt said he didn't know
"This was the time when Hitler was on the horizon. The rise of fascism was an upsetting situation. Rather than asking themselves about Vietnam, young people were concerned with the general militarism building up in the world.
"Pacifism was very strong.
But with the rise of Hitler there was a shifting of opinions. We were an evil that had to be opposed
D. D. R. was looked at by a many, many. The conservatives were very disturbed by his election. the liberals, however, saw him as a moderate.
TAYLOR AND Wealthy Babcock, a professor of math in 1932-33, both Republicans, agreed that they were not impressed with the new law. But she had faith in the New Deal or believed that Roosevelt's programs pulled the nation out of the Depression. Babcock said she attributed the country's recovery to war economy of the early forties.
Ezra C. Buehler, a professor of
Ezra C. Buehler, a professor of
drama and drama in 1932-33,
said Wednesday, "It took a great
deal of heart to make it, I as a
Democrat, had a good deal of
Rosevelt's government."
administration.
"People felt a willingness to be involved," he said. "We knew there had to be a national shake
down to a more or less controlled economy."
However, Buehler said he never felt the acuteness of a crisis.
"Somehow or other we professors fell secure because of our students receiving payments as regularly as ever during the Depression although the private colleges and universities sometimes two months behind schedule. The faculty there often continued teaching for the love of learning."
"The farmers suffered and that was sold for about $3 an acre," he said. "The hens, who didn't go on strike, saved the farmers."
"Stocks went to pieces. It was unbelievable how values were depressed. At that time there were 25 million people unemployed."
The administration and faculty made a great effort to help students work their way through school. Buehler said. Students were hired to help lawns, do yardwork or odd jobs in faculty homes.
"Over half the students had to work their way through school." Bücher said. "The going rate for student help was 33 cents an hour."
BUEHLER SAID that supplies for classes were rationed, but in his opinion there was no need to improve the quality of education at KL.
"The students just took the situation in stride," he said. "There was no violence. We were there we were doing as well as we were."
"We weren't bitter toward the administration. We felt some resentment toward the measure, but we never felt bitter."
He said that he was so enraged by the materials which were sent to him that he sent a letter to Fisher.
In his letter he told Fisher that he could not find the words to express his anger and dismay at the "narrow-mindedness, simple-mindedness, fascism and McCarthyism of the letter."
FERNNDEZ SUGGESTED attempting to close the minds of many innocent young people through means you would impute
"I was a non-committed pessimist. I never felt deeply worried or distressed."
Fernández said that there was a paradox between what the American Security Council said and what they actually were doing, what they were actually doing.
He said the young people of this country would not stand idly by the abuse in schools, 'brainwashing' which was being purported by the government and school authorities.
Fernandez said, "Any time you get insensitivity and ignorance together, you are jeopardizing the world."
keep track of the popular books because they are in the business of selling books, not just collecting them.
Jayhawker Applications Due Friday
Applications for editor and business manager of the Jayhawker yearbook are due Friday. Riek Kwok is a junior and editor of the Jayhawker, said applicants should turn in a letter of application and three letters of recommendation to Room 121 Strong. The letters of recommendation should be written by a teacher, a former em-
Applicants will have a brief interview with the Jayhawker Advisory Board, which notified of the date. McKernan said the final selections for editor and author were made at the next meeting of the Jayhawker Advisory Board, which would initially be held next week.
---
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THE BOOKSTORE only buys books that it needs to train its employees to popular enough to be sold said, "and naturally, the sales are that what students are currently learning."
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Marijuana Issue Re-Examined by Officials and Public
BY RICHARD COOLEY
Kansan Staff Writer
The Student Senate's passage last week of a resolution recommending the legalization of marijuana won't change legislative attitudes overnight, but there is some evidence that the issue is undergoing re-examination by public officials and the general public.
S. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, said Tuesday that legislative support for legalization of marijuana was very slim at this time, but admitted that some legislators were "bringing a lot of soul-searching" on it.
"Most people over 25 or 30 have used alcohol," Booth said, "but few have had any experience with marijuana. There is a natural tendency for people to react negatively to what they have not experienced personally and I think it will be some time there is broad public acceptance of marijuana."
AT ANY RATE, Booth said, it is an 'interesting issue'; the development of which 'will have to be discussed' at a later time.
Booth's uncertainty is not unusual. Nationally,
attitudes toward marijuana seem to have entered a period of ambivalence. Once damned by the establishment as a fatal first step toward drug addiction, marijuana usage today has attained a tenuous respectability. Scientific research so far has failed to establish any harmful effects and the theory that pot smoking inevitably leads to harder drugs has been convincingly leached to
Still, there is an official reluctance to remove the harmless penalties for its use. The ambivalence toward the issue was demonstrated recently when a Presidential commission, after exhaustive research, recommended the removal of penalties for the drug but voted to retain penalties for its sale.
SOME POLITICIANS who fell safe in opposing any liberalization of marijuana laws fund the issue is no longer that simple. The enfranchisement of the student population, plus the lack of scientific evidence that marijuana is harming some politicians to re-examine their positions.
According to Booth, however, there is little
legislative support for legalization in Kansas at the present time.
"There must be a handful of votes in the House or Representatives," he said, "but I think it will be some time before a majority of the population favors such a move."
IN ORDER TO learn more about student attitude, the resolution proposed that a student opinion poll be held this spring "over the issue of whether or not marjana should be legalized."
Booth said that he did not think such a poll would change the legislative situation even if it demonstrated overwhelming student support for legalization.
Furthermore, there is some question as to what percentage of the KU student body favors legalization. The Student Senate resolution passed by a vote of 64 to 37, certainly not an overwhelming mandate, and the resolution produced heated debate.
"I doubt if the governor would put it in his program and if he did I don't think there would be a problem."
Rep. Morris Kay, R-Lawrence, said that members of the legislature would be more interested in scientific evidence of the effects of marjjuuna than in student opinion polls.
"I legislators are going to want scientific evidence as to whether marijuana leads to the destruction of moral character and whether it use is a prudence to do so," said I. "I think there are conflating reports on it."
KAY POINTED OUT that legislators must consider the feelings of the entire population, not just those of students. But he said that the Student Senate's resolution would not be ignored.
"The student conduitivity is just as meaningful in any other," he said. "Being a student does not mean that you are doing something wrong."
Administrative reaction to the resolution has been guarded. Donald K. Alderson, Dean of Men, said he would not have voted for the resolution but defended the Student Senate's right to deal with topics of interest. The senator, said he thought there should be more discussion on the resolution before a vote was taken.
ALDESSOR SAID that he would prefer to obtain more "export opinion" on the effects of marijuana
"I would not like to see anything that would
courage others to use marijuana." Alce-
charter educators to use marriages that would enable our children to use mariages that envisioned. Emily Taylor, Dean of Women, said when the reaction to the resolution had reached her office. She said that she was not familiar with the wording of the resolution and therefore could not evaluate it properly. She said, however, that she would favor pointing out that she would point to point on genuine problems connected with marriages laws and to stimulate constructive discussion.
"But if it's simply a way of stirring up a raging controversy where everyone is convinced that his opinion is right and any other viewpoint is wrong, you must think anything worthwhile will come of it," she said.
In regard to the student opinion poll, Taylor said it might be helpful if it were done scientifically.
"But if it is one of these polls where everyone can fill out a questionnaire and drop it in a box somewhere, then I don't think it would be of much value," she said.
HOT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, April 12, 1972
Nitcher OK's New System For Traffic
Students Say Good Apartments Hard to Find
Major traffic reforms proposed for the University of Kansas were approved Monday by Keith L. Nitcher, vice-chancelor for business affairs.
(1)
The reforms, which will cost $300,000,
will include changing Memorial Drive and
Jayhawk Boulevard to one-way streets
of some parking meters on campus.
The approval of the proposals has allowed the KU Parking and Traffic Board to move ahead with plans for a public hearing early next week, according to Robert Malinowski, assistant director of the KU libraries and chairman of the board. Malinowski said the hearings were scheduled for Monday, April 17, in the Kansas Union. He said Tuesday night that no room for the hearings had yet been decided on.
Money to cover the $300,000 cost of the proposals will come from campus parking permits, fines and from money received through the use of the parking meters. Of the needed money, $80,000 to $100,000 would come from the fines, $111,100 to $112,000 from the sale of permits and about $40,000 from meters.
The hearing will be used to explain the controversial parking and traffic proposal, Malinowsky, Keith Lawton, director of facilities and planning, and Mike Thomas, director of traffic and security, will attend the hearing.
See page 7
Bomb Charges Against Gould Dropped at Hearing
Randy Gould and attorney Ron Clark await decision
the request was denied since a continuance had been granted previously.
"I just hope that whatever it's called is cleared up and things get back to normal."
Mrs. Alan Gould, Randy Gould's mother, said Tuesday that she was pleased with the results of her study.
Charges Against Gould Dropped
Gould still faces charges in connection with other bombings in the Kansas City area.
Randy Gould, 22-year-old Overland Park resident and former University of Kansas student, was discharged at the preliminary hearing in Douglas County as the state failed to show probable cause for the murder of the crime with which he was charged.
with the May 14, 1970 bombing of the Lawrence home of Daniel Young, then-Douglas County attorney. Those charges were: criminal destruction of property, possession of an explosive device, and possession of a weapon weapon with the intent to kill or maim.
Gould was arraigned March 22 in Douglas County Court and on criminal charges.
The state asked for a continuance, but
The principal witness of the state failed to testify for the state Tuesday.
Maternity Insurance Plan To Face Senate Tonight
By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
A $100 deductible maternity benefits provision for hospital and doctor bill coverage will be one option included in the Blue Cross-Blue Shield student insurance plan to be recommended by the Senate Student Services insurance plan subcommittee to the Student Senate for approval tonight.
The insurance plan subcommittee made the decision after meeting with Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital, and Bill Sellen, a representative from the U.S. Office Shield to talk with interested students at an open hearing at the Union Tuesdays.
Kathy Allen, Topeka sophomore and chairman of the subcommittee, said the premiums on the lower deductible maternity benefits option were too expensive to be feasible for the majority of University students.
"I HAVE BEEN getting feedback both at the Senate office and by telephone that many of those policies can not afford the maternity benefits option." Allen said.
Gene Morris, Stillwater, Okla., graduate student and Graduate School senator, said he favored a full coverage or a low deductible maternity benefits option.
"I strongly urge the subcommittee to give the graduate students and married students an option for maternity benefits," Dorris said.
"Two or three years ago when I was a graduate school senator and the maternity benefits option was dropped from the program, the constituent们 were very upset," Dorris said.
He said he be thought a large number of his constituents still favored a maternity hospital.
RANDY WRIGHT, Wichita junior and a member of the subcommittee, said he had been on the committee.
Bus Service Support To Be Recommended
By SCOTT EATON
Kenan Staff Writer
The University of Kansas Student Transportation Commission plans to recommend that the Student Senate submit a proposal to the student body calling for an increase of $2 in the campus budget and support extended bus service on campus.
Other recommendations the commission plans to make at the meeting tonight include placing the supervision of the KU transportation system under control of the KU transportation system in order to make an alternative proposal for control of the KU transportation system in the event the
The basic Blue Cross-Blue Shield plan, which is to be recommended to the Senate for approval Wednesday along with the mayor, would mean a coverage than the current plan, Allen said.
The outpatient diagnostic laboratory and the inclusion of contraceptive devices are two options also to be recommended by the committee to the Senate for approval.
Housing Committee is unable to properly supervise it; a proposal that the responsibilities of the Student Senate should cover the student and all its powers be given to the Housing Committee, and that the Student Senate not buy the bus service but that the ownership of the Lawrence Bus Company owns the hands of Dunne Ogle, its present owner.
Alen said the subcommittee would recommend the $600 deductible option because it is an inexpensive option and will also provide students with education students desiring maternity benefits.
UNDER THE CURRENT plan, drugs are covered up to $100. Under the proposed plan, there is full drug coverage with an alcohol pill and insulin also be covered.
S. Viets Repel Attack from North
THE TRANSPORTATION Commission report states that mass transit is the best mode of transportation available to students. The report says that although "a sound and effective mass transit system is within our grasp, it will only be attained by some real commitment on the part of the senate."
SAIGON (AP)—The Saigon command said today that it had repulsed a heavy assault by North Vietnamese forces in southern Cambodia that could signal the opening of a new front in the 13-day-old enemy offensive.
A spokesman said the enemy rained 600 rockets and mortar rounds Tuesday on the Kampong Trach, a Cambodian position in Kompong Trach, a Cambodian position in Kampong Trach, a Cambodian position in Ko
The command said 251 enemies were killed with the aid of air and artillery strikes. Government losses were put at seven killed and 29 wounded. Despite the high number of enemy casualties, the Saigon communique reported only two weapons captured and three antiaircraft machine gun sites destroyed.
students, none of whom were in favor of the option.
THE BATTLE was thought to involve elements of the North Vietnamese 1st Division, possibly poised for a strike into South Vietnam's delta now that Hanoi's forces appear stalked in the far north below. The attack was grounded around An Loc, 60 miles north of Saigon.
To the north of Saigon, air attacks were said to have inflicted serious losses on the three North Vietnamese divisions that besieged the elements of the South Vietnamese 5th
WITH THE northern front stabilized at least for now and the area north of Saigon apparently less dangerous, renewed attention was focused on the central highlands where intelligence long has held back, but would unleash perhaps his major blow.
Division in An Loc. The 10,000 troops in the town earlier seemed in danger of being wiped out, but a 2,000-man force and supplies were lifted by helicopter into the town Tuesday. A 20,000-man force headed an Army convoy miles south of An Loc coming to its relief.
South Vietnamese sources reported that fresh enemy troops and tanks were moving toward An Loe from the border area. And six Air strikes knocked out five of the tanks.
Because of its remoteness and tangled jungle, which heavily favor the enemy, the highlands have been one of the worst areas in Indochina, far back as the French war in Indochina.
BS2s have been being the highlands as well as targets in trouble spots throughout the country.
The Communist-led forces intensified their shelling attacks in the region 200 miles north of Saigon after a week-long hull, hitting several government bases.
NO NORTH Vietnamese regulars have been committed in the delta since the end of 2015.
upsure in action there has been attributed to local Viet Conz units.
Fighting was reported continuing on the major fronts, but the relative positions of the armed forces remain unclear.
Communist-led forces shellied the big U.S. military installation at Bien Hea 15 miles northeast of Saigon Wednesday, wounding two Americans. Three U.S. marines were reported wounded in a shelling attack on Vietnamese unit 41 miles north of Saigon.
One American helicopter was dined in the central highlands and another was hit by ground fire in coastal Binh Dinh Two crewmen were reported wounded.
The new casualties raised the U.S. toll in the two-week enemy offensive to at least 11 dead, 24 missing and 5 wounded. At least 19 American aircraft have been shot down either enemies damaged, according to U.S. forces daily battlefield communiques.
Indochina Crisis Causes Kissinger to Delay Trip
WASHINGTON (AP)—The White House announced Tuesday night that because of the latest Indochina crisis presidential health officials is postponing a planned visit to Japan.
Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Kissinger, who was to have left for Japan Saturday, would delay his journey "until probably the first part of May."
Ziegler said Kissinger, President Nixon's assistant for national-security affairs, was chairman of the Washington Department. He has been holding almost daily meetings
since North Vietnam and the Viet Cong
multifront offensive in South
Vietnam.
Ziegler said Kissinger's decision to postpone his Japan trip "does not reflect any change in attitudes we have seen and about developments in South Vietnam."
The press secretary in the past had said the administration viewed the enemy offensive with concern but had confidence in the government could meet the challenge.
The recommendation involving the $2 increase in the campus privilege fee is accompanied by a list of new routes and to begin next fall if the funding is approved.
THE COMMISSION report suggests that certain aspects of mass transportation be studied immediately if supervision of KU personnel is under control of the Housing Committee.
Among these are service four to six times hourly from major buildings and parking lots at KU; hourly service to the University of Kansas; money-saving long-term bus passes; special service for concerts, games and movies; experimentation with night service on campus and to outlying areas, and hourly service to the Ridge Court area.
The report suggests that the housing committee look into advertising as a method of curbing the losses of the KU transportation system and that research into transportation development be instigated immediately.
The repert also suggests that the Housing Committee look into the area of student attitude and fare and route experimentation.
The Transportation Commission report also suggests that if the Housing commission overseees their properly controlling the KU transportation the Senate should consider funding a position on the Lawrence Bus Company, under the supervision of its owner, to run on campus through advertising and the communication housing groups.
Under the current plan, hospital coverage pays up to $30 a day for a semi-private room and the average semi-private room. The proposed plan pays full coverage for a semi-private room and pays the average semi-private room charge for a private room. The policy charges outside Watkins Hospital.
There are provisions for accidental injury and emergency medical home and office calls, which are not in the current plan.
THE SUBCOMMITTEE also decided to recommend an option that would change prescription drug coverage for nonstudent patients. The study found that per cent in two-party and family policies.
The basic cost of the insurance plan without options is $68.40 for the single student policy, $127.20 for the two-party and $191.16 for the family policy.
The addition of all the options to the basic plan will raise the cost of the single student policy to $71.52 for one year, or $49.65 for the policy and $215.88 for the family policy.
Panel Adopts 1973 Budget For Athletics
The University Daily Kansan learned Tuesday that the University of Kansas Athletic Board approved a new athletic policy for Monday afternoon Tuesday afternoon in the Kansas Union.
Wade Stinson, director of athletics, said "nothing earthshaking" was resolved at the meeting. He declined further comment until 9 a.m. today.
A reliable source, however, said the major part of the meeting was spent discussing next year's athletic budget, which had a projected deficit of approximately $60,000. According to the source, no action had been taken to balance the budget by the time he left the meeting.
Another source, though, said the board agreed with the report for next year and that it was balanced.
Another item scheduled to be discussed by the board was whether the Kansas City Chiefs professional football team would be allowed to use Memorial Stadium for games.
The meeting was closed to the press and the public.
2
Wednesday, April 12, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Kleindienst Investigation Implicates U.S. Attorney
WASHINGTON (AP)—One of Acting Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst a top tuesday appeals to the U.S. attorney's behavior by a U.S. attorney in San Diego but defended Kleindienst's decision not to fire
Astt. Atty. Gen. Henry E. Petersen has played a key role in recommending that U.S. Army Stewart be kept on the job.
At issue is a broad federal and
investigation in 1890 into
charges in San Diego, site of the
Republican National Convention
As part of the investigation, members of a federal Strike Force in Ukraine issued a subpoena to Frank Thornton, vice-president of a national labor union.
The strike force wanted Thornton to testify before a federal grand jury probing a $2,068 contribution to President Obama through the advertising firm. They believed had been funnelled through the advertising firm.
THE FIRM, Barnes Champ
Advertising Co. is owned by C.
Arnwell Smith, a friend and long
supporter of President Nikon.
When Stewart found out about the subpoena, Peters told a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing. Stewart called, "This is going into his office and complained that Thornton was his friend."
Steward spoke very candyily and said the subpoena would generate too much attention to a committee which for over a month has been reconsidering Kleindienst's nomination to be attorney general.
Peteren quoted Steward as saying Thronon has been a good friend of mine. He's going to recommend me for a judgement."
PETERSON DESCRIBED that as "high improper but no evidence of corruption. There was no money involved."
Petersen, a lawyer with the justice department since 1947, said Kleinmidt agreed with his recommendation and so Steward
remained with the job he still holds today.
After unanimously voting to approve the Kleindienst nomination, the committee reopened the hearing at his request by columnist Jack Anderson of a disjointed memo.
The memo attributed to ITKT lobbyist Dita Bear drew a link between the out-of-court proceedings against the firm and a commitment of at least $200,000 to the Convention in San Diego.
Peterson's appearance marks the first jamb at the committee from Chandler and charges against Steward initially made by Life magazine (two weeks ago).
NEWARK N.J. (AP)—Rep. Cornell E. Gallagher (D-N.J.) was named Tuesday in a federal indictment charging him with perjury, conspiracy and evading income taxes, $50,000 in personal taxes.
The two unindicted
New Jersey Democrat Charged with Conspiracy
Gallagher, 61, a seven-term congressman from Bayonne, N.J., also was charged with conspiring with two former staffers who were not indicted, to conceal income in excess of $328,000.
Gallagher is alleged to have used the $238,688 provided by the bank. He has been under fictitious names, municipal bonds with a value of $757,000 at maturity. He also is said to have used worth of bonds for himself and later testifying falsely that the purchases were not for his own benefit.
conspirators, former Jersey City Mayor Thomas J. Whelan and former City Council member Randy McGee are serving 15-year jail terms at Lewisburg, Pa. Penitentiary for extorting money from contractors dealing with the city. City officials were convicted with them.
At a news conference in Washington, Gallagher said the charges against him are "a political indictment . . . all part of a cruel attempt to destroy me physically, mentally and financially."
He said he became a target after trying to enact legislation to curb government intrusion into individual privacy.
"A target," he said, "is one selected by our secret police society. They decide he must be a criminal or event a crime to eliminate him."
LONDON (AP) - Britain's divided Labor party was plunged deeper into crisis Tuesday as two of its most prominent membership in the European Common Market quit the party leader. Further resignations
Lord, Chalfont, Laborite spokesman on foreign affairs and commerce said he was resigning because of the party's hostile attitude to Common Market entry and toward Western Europe."
Within hours another of Labor's parliamentary spokesman on defense, David Kornblum, said he command on the same grounds.
2 More Quit Labor Party
Both departures followed the resignations Monday, aight of four players for Jenkins, and two other ardent mentors, Harold Leiver and George Thorn.
THE YABLONSKI were shot to death in their rural home in nearly Clarksville, Pa. Dec 31, 1969
All three were members of opposition leader Harold Wilson's shadow cabinet-Labor's high command in the House of Commons. Lever was an expert on defense and Johnson an opinion on defense.
Financial spokesman Dick
Brown asked the team to leave
the leadership Wednesday,
but Wilson beat him to it and
announced Tuesday night
Denis Healy took over from James Jackson's shadow on cabinet as chief spokesman treasure matters. James Callaghan replaced Healy in 1996.
The split pitted the pro-
Chalfont, a committed European, was picked by Wilson, then prime minister, to lead negotiations in Brussels during the party's bid to take Britain into the Common Market in 1967.
A federal grand jury in Pittsburgh was expected to consider issuing indictments on the statement within the week.
She also acknowledged that she had given the FBI a 22-page document with information on the knowledge of the killings. The statement was not released at the proceeding, but there were indications in the document be made about this week.
Common Market right wing against the antimarket left-wingers who have forced Wilson to adopt a line opposing British trade unions on terms negotiated by the Conservative government
The issue that finally drove Jenkins and his closest supporters from the party's highest echelon was a shadow echelon to press for a referendum on Britain's entry to the market.
The 31-year-old Cleveland housewife entered her plea before Washington County Judge Charles G. Sweet in a crowded and heat guarded hospital in the southwestern Pennsylvania community.
In a letter to Wilson, Jenkins said a referendum would force the Labor party to campaign or against the principle of entry.
Political observers forecast that the main outcome of the split in Labor ranks was a virtual guarantee that Prime Minister Winston Trump would be the necessary Common Market legislation through Parliament.
**VASHINGTON, Pa. (AP)**—Annette Glyne, codefendant in the 1969 slayings of United Mine Workers insurgent Joseph A. "Jack" Yablonski and his wife and daughter and victim of a bombing Tuesday and agreed to turn state's evidence, perhaps against her own father.
Authorities have never publicly discuss a motive for the attack, and Gillis has surrounded Mrs. Gillis's alleged involvement have been skimpy, though testimony in the trials of Mr. Gillis suggests that she knew about the plot to assassinate the UMW leader well before the attack, keep track of his movements.
Guilty Plea Entered In Yablonski Killing
Mrs. Gilly, who had previously inocred in the case, is one of five persons in custody in Haddleton, Huddleston, 65, retired coal miner and former official of a mine in New York, to is to go on trial next week.
Mrs. Gilly said she was entering her plea in return for a promise that the prosecution took the death penalty against her.
SHE PLEADED guilty specifically to three counts of murder, one for each of the victims, and one count of conspiracy to commit murder. He will be sent the three judge court will determine the degree of guilt and set the penalty.
Minimum penalty on a first-degree murder conviction is life imprisonment, while sentence on a second-degree crime is two years imprisonment.
Of the remaining defendants,
mrs. Gilly's husband, Paul, 38,
would have been murdered and death
last month. Aubran W. "Buddy"
Martin , 23, was similarly
concerned. Both were tried largely on
basis of testimony from Claude
E. Veyal, 28, who pleaded guilty
and turned state's evidence last
month. Eveyal has yet to be
sentenced.
All the defendants except Huddleston are from Cleveland, Ohio.
Gunfire Tape Blasts Angela Davis' Trial
The tape, inadvertently taken by a state personnel consultant, recorded more than a dozen hours of an investigation during a prisoner escape bid at the Marin County Civic Center on November 16, accused of plotting the escape
SAN JONE, Calif. (AP) — The crack of gunfire filled the tense Angela Davis trial courtroom Tuesday as the prosecutor played a tape recording of the wild years ago which took four lives.
Jurors hunched forward in their chairs to listen intently to the verdict, but that it be replayed and it was. The shooting lasted exactly 19 minutes.
The consultant, James Brown, said he was in a civil center office interviewing a candidate for the court and recording the interview.
In the rush, he said, he forgot to turn the tape recorder off. When he returned, he insisted to be plastered dead particles" which indicated gunfire had broken the windows. He also told him that he delivered to the sheriff.
"We were interviewing along," he testified, "and there was a loud noise outside, then there was kind of a slapping sound out on the wall, and the window snorkel in on the roof, we were in. We left quite rapidly."
WASHINGTON—President Nixon announced Tuesday that draft director Curtis W. Tarr would leave his present post and assume a new position as underscreetery of state in charge of coordinating military aid programs. Tarr, 47, became director of Selective Service in 1970. Nixon has yet to announce his choice to take over that position.
News Briefs By The Associated Press
Draft Director to Resign
BELFAST—The Irish Republican Army began strengthening its barricades around Londonderry's Roman Catholic Creggan district Tuesday with the aim of building a miniature Berlin-style wall. The guerrillas ordered tall concrete blocks topped by wire netting to replace the present barriers of burnt-out cars, trucks and buses that had been used during the war were preparing for a long siege, the IRA man hauled away the present debris scattered around the Creggan's perimeters and marked out areas as playgrounds for children.
IRA Building 'Berlin Wall'
Apollo 16 Crew Ready
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla.—The Apollo 16 astronauts took final five-hour physical examinations Tuesday and were reported "in good health," according to a news release from the moon. The clean bill of health for John W. Young, Charles M. Duke Jr. and Thomas K. Mattingly II was announced after a gas leak was discovered and corrected in their spacecraft. There was no leak, so there would be any postemployment of Sunday's 12:54 p.m. launch.
1976
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Wednesday, April 12. 1972
3
University Daily Kansan
Penal Bill Stresses Rehabilitation
Editor's Note: This is the second of two stories concerning prison reform.
By LESLIE RISS
Kansas Staff Writer
The basic purpose of the 1972 Penal Reform bill is to reestablish the philosophy of punishment by putting emphasis on inmate rehabilitation rather than incarceration. ARO deputy warden at the state penitentiary, in 'anansing,' must be thought of although must be more humane reforms in prisons, serving sentences is not meant to be a comfortable or comforting place.
The bill, which will not affect in 1974, created a secretary of corrections. The secretary will be responsible for the supervision of penal institutions. This office will have the authority to manage the courts and correctional institutions in Kansas.
THE SECRETARY will be appointed by the governor for a term of four years.
Established within this office we work the department of profession, research research and planning, facilities and jail standards, and public
The secretary will have broad access to all the information confine any person sentenced to his charge and may transfer an inmate from one institution to another.
and equipment belonging to the state institutions will be in his care.
The secretary must create programs of classification, designation and training for vocational training, guidance and work and a library to facilitate learning.
IN COOPERATION with the state health department, the secretary will set up medical service at each institution.
The secretary will provide a 40-hour work week during which inmates may gain employment under supervision or vocation training. The new bill allows working inmates to receive not less than 10 cents and cash, not less than $5 per hour amount, however, will be reduced by 55 cents if a prisoner is confined for bad behavior. The present one is higher than the present one.
The work release program already in progress at Lansing is amended in the new bill. Inmates in minimum security facilities are required to be a member of his family is near death, for funnels, to receive health services not available at the institution, for interviews or prospective employers and other purposes if in the public interest.
THE LIMIT to the amount of time prisoners may be away will be 30 days.
Atkins said that this is an
Calgaard Picked As SenEx Head
Ronald Calgaard, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was elected chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee its first meeting Tuesday. Louis Scott Lawrence senior, was chosen vice-chairman.
Calgaard is one of three
faculty members in the
committee. SenEX is comprised
of six faculty members and three
students, elected from the
faculty committee.
Calgaard said that SenEx would direct its immediate attention to charging and appraisal for its business committees. Tentative assignments
for the three standing committees of the University Council have been made, be said, and will be held at the council in the earliest possible date.
SenXeill has no plans to hear a detailed presentation of the preparation which would make Jayshaw Boulevard and Memorial Drive one-way streets and place 400 to 600 yards away from Calgaard said. He said he would SenXeil would have the option in the future to review the plan.
excellent program in that it allows inmates to seek employment and to become part of the working environment
The regular meetings of SenEx will take place at 11:30 a.m. on Wednesday for the remainder of the academic year, Calgaard said.
One new section of the bill stipulates that every officer in charge must attend a two-week training session four times a year. This is to ensure that guards closely make sure that guards and officers remain capable of defending their communities.
The new bill requires the secretary to protect the rights of an inmate is forced to labor at an unfortunate not required or that if labor is the personal benefit of an officer, will be taken against the officer.
IF AN INSTITUTION has over 50 inmates, the new bill requires that a minimum of one social worker be available for 100 inmates. A trained psychiatrist or psychologist must be available for every 500 prisoners.
Under the new reforms, the president will be appointed as the warden, will be appointed by the secretary. He must daily examine all aspects of the warden.
Where there is an institution with over 500 inmates, an ombudman who will report to the board of corrections will be provided.
The director has the right to govern the penitentiary and institute new laws which will influence the institution under his care.
THE SECRETARY must establish and equip the state industrial reformatory as a center for minimum security facility.
The bill establishes a citizen's advisory board which will have 25 members serving for four years each. It will report to the state conditions in penal institutions and make recommendations.
Funds have been appropriated for new Kane County Reception and Diagnostic Center" that will be created under the new bill. This center will provide scientific examination and study of each male felony offender so that he can be taken to the nearest hospital for rehabilitation. This center will be in Shawnee County, Texas. The Facility "been created at the
consists of five members. Their duties deal with all matters concerning probation and parole of offenders.
Persons will be eligible for aafter a certain time, for sentience to life improvement a sentence that, after good conduct deductions, equals more
A YOUTHFUL SECURITY Facility will be created at the center.
Atkins said that some prisoners are released without ever having been paroled. These persons are upon leaving will be unknown
If an immate is first paroled, he move able to adjust to the new environment. A penchant for sentientary are better able to have an idea what direction he should go.
Replacing the State Board of Probation and Parole will be the Kansas Adult Authority, which
ATKINS SAID that not until three months ago had any person, group or organization written a conditions or research report about the penitentiary. He said that perhaps many of the reforms more realistic had someone actually seen the institution.
While many of the reforms may improve situations concerning inmates who have no basis and would not benefit every institution, he said. Aimus suggested that penal houses should include those who have come to the prison and not by those who are on what they have read or heard.
HE SAID he was glad that the bill emphasized the rehabilitation principle instead of punishment.
"We must make continual progress toward balancing more to the ground, and punish," he said, "but this is evolutionary change, not
Atkins said that what is needed is a total revamping of the court system, including police agencies, the criminal system and the parole system.
"Penal reform is not the problem. We're talking about people reform—changed people, hopefully for the better," he said.
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WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate Rate Subcommittee Tuesday approved a bill that would give more than 50 million American workers a $2.20 an hour minimum wage.
Committee OK's $2.20 Wage
The measure was opposed by the Nixon administration, which提议 that the present $1.60 floor be raised to $2 by 1974.
Nevertheless, the subcommittee sent the bill along to the full Labor and Public level without a dissenting vote.
The measure would provide a
a minimum twowheel load after an
enormous increase in year-
ear later, for all workers
under the labor-standard
Act before 1986.
For those brought in by the 1966 Act, chiefly employees in large retail stores and some farm floor furniture would go to $1.80 after enactment, $2 a year later, and $2.20 a year after that.
The bill would bring under the law more than six million additional workers.
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Alumni Association Membership
1972 Graduate
Membership to
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BEFORE YOU LEAVE
Wherever your future might take you, you will be able to track of what's happening on the "hill" through your membership in the KU Alumni Association.
You will receive KANSAS ALUMNI newspapers and magazines through the school year. You will also happen to be able to keep track of your classmates through the KANSAS ALUMNI Notes" column.
As a 1972 graduate, you receive a special $5 per cent discount on annual membership. Requires at least two years of experience. For 1972 graduates, however, the dues are only $5 for single and $6 for husband and wife.
1972 graduates are also eligible for a $25 discount on Full and Installment Life Membership, and a $40 discount on installment each year for 10 years and that’s it! He is then a fully paid Life Member and other alumni membership benefits forever without any additional charge or billing. And another alumni membership is the most economical method for continued Alumni Association membership.
Before you leave, start your membership in the K.U. Alumni Association
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
4
Wednesday, April 12, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
McGovern Gaining
The results of last weekend's Democratic delegate nominating conventions have turned a few heads outside the state party structure.
Senator George McGovern of South Dakota, candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, swept the three primaries in Douglas County and picked up large numbers of delegates in both Johnson and Sedgewick counties. The strong vote there and in San Antonio not particularly surprising, but McGovern was also able to score delegate victories in Topeka and Salina.
The McGovern people will be going into the District conventions late this month with the largest slate of committed delegates. In fact, most of the other delegates elected were uncommitted, and according to some reports many lean heavily to McGovern.
The party establishment in Kansas was caught with its pants down
They expected neither the number nor the singularity of purpose of McGovern supporters. Party members, though, thought that the McGovern people played the gamma and played it much better than anyone else.
Certainly, the strong showing here will boost McGovern's chances of placing delegates at the Miami convention. But its size renders the institution uniquely insignificant next to New York, California and Illinois.
McGovern's seeming victory in
his game has made me more
spiritual than mathematical.
If his gains in Kansas are a sign of like gains across the nation since the Wisconsin primary—MGoverstate for all the rest to try to catch.
-Thomas E. Slaughter
Whose Era, Jack's or Martin's?
There have been many TV documentaries on the life and death of President John F. Kennedy; but only last week, on the fourth anniversary of his death, did we get a major survey and tribute to Martin Luther King. That emphasis on real reaction measures our comparative estimate of glamor and of substance.
The contrast is a poignant one. I thought of it as I saw again the rough wood mule cart carrying Dr. King's coffin from the little church of his father from the small college he from. No prancing dramatic black horse here.
Both King and Kennedy died young (though King was far younger). Both men made changes in the country (though King's changes were more profound, more beneficent, and more lasting).
It was a shock to see again, on the TV
screen, all those COLORED signs, on
drinking fountains, over rest rooms,
over waiting rooms, over bus sections—
and to see the old women, young
children, and unarmed disdainful meek
people who risked beating and
imprisonment to take those signs down
and keep them down.
They have stayed down. And King, more than any other man, called blacks of all age and status together to accustom this hist. it was a rare historical combination of a magical leadership and courageous followers. Whatever else happens to us in these dreary times, we have witnessed a prodigy of courage over the last two decades, a monster of the greatest achievements of America.
David Halberstam has written of "The Best and the Brightest" as enrolled in the Kennedy administration, and somehow blundering into the worst and the dimmest actions abroad. But the term he uses ironically of the people who flocked to Washington in the early 1960s was those who went South at the same time to Dr. King's elephant call for "white brothers" to vindicate "the sacred heritage of this nation."
It was a patriotic call. In his "I have a dream" speech King stressed that he was just the American dream. He moved the country because he had faith
in it, moved people because he had faith in them.
And through it all we drew on his deep conservative roots as a Christian preacher. Change came to the music of suffering lifted out of pulpit afterulpit: "We will wear you down by our ability to bear whatever you can infiltr on us . . . And in the process we will win you over. I will be the language of the world, so cootypety as a grudge. No other man can convincingly after four little girls were killed in a church, on the text, "Love your enemies."
It was King's gift to transcribe an imposed squaler into the beauty of chosen suffering. That is why the power of his oratory grows, is larger now than ever, while Kennedy's Sorenens-sounds tuned, funer day by day, and fades.
The early Sixties are often referred to as the Kennedy Era. But why should we settle for second best? If we want to be proud of our nation—to boast, not to lie in terms that history will vindicate—in terms that vindicate—majority of what we have witnessed. There is one thing in which we can take an unalienated national pride, one man who is unquestionably among the few great shapers of this country. The most challenging truth is that we have all lived, unworried, through the King Era.
Copyright, 1972. Universal Press Syndicate
Winning Delegates,Wars...
Readers Respond
McGovern Win
To the Editor:
On Saturday afternoon at unit conventions across the entire state, Kansans voted the only candidate to be the Democratic Presidential nominee. In this congressional district, about 2 per cent of the people who oppose President Nixon and his administration, it would only opportunity they would have to cast any kind of meaningful vote whatsoever (because of the absence of voters there were some people who actually felt that 2 per cent participation was a great deal better).
My own unit's McGovern, organizer had told me on the phone about twenty-five people. He had not been able to do any successful door to door canvassing, there had been no phone harassment of interstate voters. We had experienced everyone wanted to run for delegate. Nine people ran for delegate committed to running in a race; they delegates were to be elected, thus seriously splitting the McGovern vote. Seven people ran uncommitted, stressing the fact that we should still keep an open mind and remain positive. Their logic said that since we could not possibly know enough about the candidates to make a decision yet, that we should elect someone who would decide for us later.
Yet when the ninety-four ballots were counted all six delegates were ones pledged to McGovern, with the sixth highest number of votes in long-time Democrats were disgruntled. They grubbed about the convention being "stamped." This was not their form of democracy. Then they voted against the efficiency of our organization that could only make an insider laugh. If they had only seen the chaotic state the McGovern had been in just hours earlier.
Then came the sojourn back to headquarters. Phone calls and tally sheets and people cheering at all of the Wyndote and Johnson results were in; all we needed now was 11 of the 21 delegates from Iowa and to have a clean security and to have in Miami for George McGovern.
The news that in Douglas we had swept twenty one of twenty-one was incredible. It was followed immediately by the even higher number, Seedwick County had gone heavily for McGovenn, giving us
a majority in the fourth congressional district as well, and six more votes in Miami. And reports from Shawnee looked hard to believe in Manhattan. Efforts that had started months ago with small goals had increased a few times, led to twelve of Kansas' thirty-five delegates now belonged to Senator McGovern, and the chances looked good for them because they were on two or twenty-five. The rest thought would be uncommitted, and of not any other candidate. Of the almost eight-hundred delegates who attended Conventions, seemingly over 85 per cent were either McGovern or uncommitted, with only a scattered handful of Humphrey, Kennedy and USupon delegate. The National McGovern office called and congratulated us, and asked who would get the other three to believe it when we said "no one."
And then a dozen people who hadn't eaten or slept well in days went out to celebrate a victory that would help them feel of accomplishment was tremendous, and it helped wash away the memory of all those things that we were hopelessly alone. There was a new spirit that night, a new buoyancy. The feeling that maybe we really can do some change if we don't change your environment were not a waste. The feeling that when you buck the system you needn't always feel as if you have everything you want. For this night at least, the cynicism, the pessimism, the apathy of the seventies were forgot. In their place were and dreams that had seemed to die a harsh death years ago.
—Steve Fehr.
Assistant coordinator,
Douglas County McGovern
for President Organization
fighting a moral war because we haven't blown the ever lovin' shift out of them with our atomic arsenal. Ah, yes. I see.
Moral Killing
I was always going to try to avoid going to war because I had always considered killing to be immoral. But now at last Mr. Reeves (Letter to the Editor, Kansan, Apr. 7) has my mind set on that some kinds of killing are indeed moral. How convenient!
That is to say that if one has an effective and, of course, most effective weapon, the most effective one can use, and one blows an enemy's head to pieces then that's immoral. But if one breaks the head of one's enemy to pieces with the butt of the gun, that's moral. How simple it is!
Well now, that makes some sense of our war policy. By considering the militarized weapons with conventional weapons we save our morality. Just think, we could have levelled the whole of it by using them years of feeling ashamed about our war policy in Vietnam, I can imagine how morality, Gee it feels so good!
To the Editor:
Now let me see if we've got this straight. The North Vietnamese must be fighting an immoral war because they can kill us, that is they are killing all the people they are attacking. But we on the other hand, are
Bob Steen. Smith Center senior
Winding War
To the Editor:
to the Editor. The war is still winding down.
—Tom McClenaghan, Lawrence sophomore
Concert
Chalk up another mark for the well researched articles that appear in our UDK's.
Monday's UKED stated, in the caption under the Brewer and the Killarney, that Friday night was their first KU concert appearance. We can recall singing and hearing them in Vanilla Fudge, with Vanilla Fudge, also in Hoch.
To the Editor:
Tom McClenaghan, Lawrence sophomore
Carl Davaz, Lawrence freshman
YOU WANT TO RUN FOR PRESIDENT?
I DO.
WHAT IS YOUR PROGRAM?
I WILL GET US OUT OF THE WAR.
OH YEAH. WHAT ELSE?
I WILL END POLARIZATION BETWEEN THE RACES.
1-16
OH. YEAH. WHAT ELSE?
I WILL REFORM AND REVITALIZE THE ECONOMY.
OH, YEAH, AND HOW ARE YOU GOING TO ACCOMPLISH ALL THIS?
I WILL FIRE ALL THE EXPERTS.
MY LEADER!
James J. Kilpatrick
Giddy Swings on the High Court
WASHINGTON-What in the world has happened to Stewart and White? The two swinging courts could have Court seem to have swung awry this term. They are taking our ball first. We never land of the Warren years.
Potter Stewart has served on the Court since 1858, Byron R. White since 1962. Over most of his career he worked as middlemen between the shifting conservative and liberal blocs. In the field of criminal law, they generally have demonstrated sound common sense.
But the Court has delivered
itself this term of four turkels, all of them hatched by 5-2 votes. In each of the cases, Stewart and William librals—William O. Douglas, Brennan, and Thurgood Marshman; each case, was to benefit an obviously guilty defendant; and to make the burden on law enforcement greater.
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and not should exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must have a minimum of 24 hours of professional faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
The most recent of these judicial miscarriages came on March 28, when the Court voided a statute that allowed the statute as unconstitutional on its face. The ruling, to borrow Chief Justice Warren Burger's burger," in the "bizarre" "bizarce." Justice Harry Blackmun, who also dislented, took a long breath and summed up the facts and the holding this way.
Letters Policy
"It seems strange indeed that in this day a man may say to a police officer, who is attempting to build a building, "White son of a bitch," I kill you 'and' 'You son of a bitch,' I shoote you to die and say to you, "You son of a bitch," son of a bitch, if you ever put your hands on me again, I cut you all corn constitutionally cannot be prosecuted and convicted under a state statute which makes it a crime to another, and in his presence.
opprobious words or abusive language, a language to cause trouble in the peace. Thus, however, is precisely what the Court pronounces as the law
The majority's objection to the Georgia law was that the statute
failed to define the offense precisely. That was the same objection raised by the same five justices to a portion of the decision back in December. In a dazzling exhibition of pedanty at its worst, the majority went searching for ambiguity until it found an answer. The weaken, if not to destroy, a statute prohibiting the possession
or transportation of a firearm by a convicted felon.
On January 11, in U.S. v. Pucker, and on March 22 in Manning, the two judges joined the soft-hearted three in decisions that made a travesty of justice. The two cases deal with the 1963 trial of Court's 1983 opinion in the landmark Gideon case, but Pucker has absolute right to counsel.
By Sokoloff
This is what happened. Tucker was convicted in 1935 of armed assault under cross-examination, acknowledged three prior accusations, and received evidence against him and was overwhelmed. A jury found him guilty and the judge gave him 25 years. But it now appears that the police represented by counsel in the 1938 and 1948 trials, those convictions ruling out of 1838, could not even be mentioned at Tucker's trial in 1933. Nineteen years after he must go back, the case must go back.
the same flimsy clay. Loper was convicted in Texas in 1947 of the statuteury rape of his 8-year-old steadepather. In an effort to prevent the prosecution questioned the defendant on his prior criminal record. Loper freely admitted four prior felony convictions, and was found guilty and sentenced to 50 years in prison. But because it is not clear today whether he had counsel when he was tried for burglary 41 years ago, the conviction of 1947 must now be set aside.
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff.
Griff and the Unicorn
IS THAT YOU, SIMON?
WHO ELSE?
DON'T TELL ME YOU GOT STEPPED ON AGAIN?
SIGH
NO, STUPID I'M IMPERSONATING AN INK BLOT
Chief Justice Burger, acidily disentering, said the majority's decision in the Looper case "does not change what we course it does. It does violence to the whole cause of justice, and it leaves the high court looking silly. This we expect of Douglas." He also said that they are so bubbleheaded that they cannot find substance in it. But it is a keen disappointment to that we are getting nothing better toward and White.
The Looper case was cut from
Copyright. 1972
The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
I L
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 12, 1972
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POLICE
Kansas Staff Photo by GREG SORBEE
Raymond Proietto Awaits Army ROTC Award
third floor of the Military Science Building. The inspection was conducted by Col. Coughlin, ROTC
Raymond Proteto Awi
Proyecto, Leo wave freshman, was the last of 13
deli receives certification in a ceremony Tuesday was part of the annual general inspection. The battalions were assembled on the
Libraries Renovate Files To Increase Convenience
3y LINDA CHAPUT Kansan Staff Writer
For students who live in dread of the Dewey Decimal System, the University/ of Kansas libraries have come up with an answer. The libraries haven't received a grant because they have revamped the card cataloging system, making it easier to find a book.
"We had too many cards to maintain the old system and we needed assistant head cataloger and head of catalogue maintenance.
“五 thousand new cards go in the catalogues each week so that something should be changed to help the students use such a huge collection.”
THE LIBRARY STAFF relocated the subject catalogue and spread the author-title catalogue throughout the second issue of this book, so that the files could be used with less congestion. Clason said.
"Now if you just want to find one title of a book, you won't be bothered or find yourself in the library," she said on a general subject. "she said."
Filing in the subject catalogue was also simplified. In the new system, the subject is listed alone and then with more specific titles; for example, in the system, but now all the listings are placed alphabetically only
painted alphabetically only
"The Library of Congress
"WE THINK OUR system is better, because it makes things easier for the student," she said. "Please use the link."
places listings not only
lists a menu but also the
subheading is separated from
the main subject by comma,
period, dash or parenthesis.
Clason said the library staff was not finished making changes
KU to Host Conference On Children
The Kansas Association for the Education of Young Children will hold its 1972 conference April 22 at the University of Kansas.
The opening session at 7 p.m. April 21 will feature Philip S. Humphrey, director of the Museum of Natural History, "The Magic of a Name," and ecology films from Centro, Inc.
The conference will sponsor workshops on language, rhythms and literaturing art on April 22 in the United States and two safaris into the country to study nature and ecology under the direction of museum staff.
During the conference, exhibits will be on display on the second floor of Haworth Hall and the Oread Book Shop.
Proposed Insurance Plan To Be Discussed Today
a report on the proposed student insurance plan as its main item, will be covered by the Student in the forum when it meets at 10 a.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
After the subcommittee recommendations concerning coverage of Cross-Blue Shield policy, the Senate will probably decide on a new bill.
The only other major item on the Senate's agenda will be a report by the Student Transportation Commission that will explain the funding about the future of the KU transportation system.
After the Senate meeting
too late, the body
more regularly scheduled
meeting this semester according
to Dave Dillon, student body
The committee has been investigating the present campus bus system and the possibility of a mass transportation system.
The current change took the time five months, he said, because the company was working at their regular jobs and they reworked the card catalogue.
Dillon said the Senate would meet April 26 to consider budget issues and Auditing Committee on the use of the 1972-73 activity fee.
on the author-title catalogue and that a committee was working on further simplifications.
If the budget is not approved that night a special meeting will be held May 3 to finish it, Dillon said.
"All libraries are thinking of making changes like ours but many consider it too complicated a task," said Clason.
"Still, it is costing big libraries too much to train people to file and revise. Our change was a way of cutting corners in the machine we would like to save time to do other things in the library," she said.
Clason said the library had kept its system of filing authoritative copies and then titles after their letter in the alphabet. She said a Guide to Readers would be published for the first time when the changes were complete.
NEW YORK (AP) — "The Last Whole Earth Catalogue: Access to Tools, a hip, illustrated book, is the most technological society, was given a National Book Award Tuesday over its nomination.
Judge Resigns in Protest Of 'Earth Catalog' Award
The book, compiled by Stewart Brand, was named winner of the Hachette category, contemporary affairs.
It was chosen by New York Times assistant managing editor Jerry Tebow. The Angeles Times book editor Digby Diehl the third judge, Garry Wills, author of *Nixon*, and James Gleason, editor of Esquire magazine, resigned over its nomination last month. Wills maintained the role, albeit mildly under the award rules.
THE 23RD ANNUAL fiction award of the National Book Committee went to Flannery O'Connor and the biography prize went to Joseph P. Lash for his "Eleaser and Franklin," a book about the late President D. Franklin D. and their impact on American life.
For the first time, the committee named separate winners for the two games. The history prize going to the late Alan Nevins for the two concluding volumes of his eight-hour book, *The Prize winning volumes were* "The Organized War, 1863-64." "The National War, 1864-65," to Victory, 1864-65.
ANOTHER BOOK winning an award despite oopting it, she won the arts and letters winner, "The Classical Style," by Charles
The history award was one of two given posthumously. The judges in the poetry category chose Howard Moss" "Selected Poems" and Frank Hara" "Collected Poems" both laurel Frank Hara to share the poem award.
A dissent by Stanley Burnash, and critic, was read by John B. Cohn, who said the committee at the news conference announcing the
Burnshaw said of the book, which analyzes the music of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven.
Lawrence Citizens Pick Goals for Public Schools
The six goals are:
-To provide for early identification and treatment of disabilities and the appropriate development preventative and remedial programs for these patients.
—To expand the vocational or career education program.
ATLANTA (AP) —America's atlanta hosted an open session in the time gave their sanction Tuesday for joining with Protestants in a battle over immigration.
—To achieve a better financial plan for the support of schools in the state and nation, and to investigate reallocation of the
To broaden the areas of education, appropriate provision for those students between special education and the regular school
“It is an opportunity for sharing in it a great movement for progress,” Bishop H. Helming of Bishop H. Helming of an interreligious affairs man
financial resources of the district for more efficient service and greater productivity.
TO PLACE MORE emphasis on it at all levels of the instruction system
To give emphasis to the improvement of student self-identity
Knox said that six "Goal groups" had been formed to procedures, programs and activities needed for the system to reach its goals.
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"I would be committing an obvious fraud if I were to presume to render judgment on the book which I am unable to read and which I must accept in so vague and superficial way as to be meaningless."
Dwight Boring* says...
But writer John Lahr, another arts and letters judge, call Rosen's work a "brilliant and provocative analysis."
Philosophy and religion—"Righteous Empire." The President of America, by Martin E. Marty, professor at the University of Colorado.
OTHER AWARDS included:
Sciences—"The Blue Whale," by George L. Small, which charges that industrial greed and inadequacy have led to the alienation extinction of the blue whale.
Translation — "Chance and Nature make a show on the Natural Philosophy of Biology," by Jacques Monod, translated by Austryn
Children's books—"The Slightly Irregular Fire Engine, or the Hitherting Thithering Djinn," writes and illustrated by Donald
MICHAEL KNIGHT
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The awnd ds will be presented Thursday at a ceremony winding up a four day program of Book Week affairs.
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Bicycles Stolen From Racks, Officials Report
Two Schwinn bicycles valued at $7 and $125 disappeared from McCollum and Ellsworth Hall parking lots.
Thieves made off with two bicycles, a typewriter and a pair of stereo headphones last Friday. The Trademark and Security offices said Monday.
Both were chained to bicycle racks. The exact times of the thefts are not known.
An IBM Selectric typewriter valued at #42 was taken from an unlocked room in Bailey Hall Friday.
Thieves took a pair of Sony
Stereo headphones valued at $20
from the living room of Sellars
and Bennock. The pair was
night and 12:30 Saturday night.
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in Psychology
A tour of the Psychology Department and a Discussion of Psychology
Saturday, April 15
Saturday, April 15
2:00 p.m.
Heider Room (423)
Fraser Hall
Anyone interested in psychology
is invited to attend
(expecially psych majors).
Nelson Johnson
will speak in the Jayhawk Room
National Chairman of the Student Organization of Black Unity
9 p.m. Thursday April 13
Presented by SUA Balsa BSU
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Try Outs For
KU YELL LEADERS
First Preliminary Workshops
Wednesday, April 12th
at Allen Field House
7:00 p.m.
6
Wednesday, April 12. 1972
University Daily Kansan
P
Kansas Staff Photo by ED LALLO
April Showers Bring Umbrellas
Scenes like this become common as an influx of warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico brought humidity readings into the 90 per cent range this week. The forecast promises more of the same for today and Thursday, with a 30 per cent chance of rain for today. Also included are fog, cloudy skies and a chance of thunderstorms. Even without rain, the high humidity and predicted high temperature of near 80 will make it very uncomfortable.
Researchers Seek Recreation for Aged
By MARCIACLIFTON
Kansas Staff Writer
in his room, the special restroom and stairs from 7 in the morning until 8 at night. His inactivity is both physically and mentally crippling.
A group of researchers from the department of human development and animal life is trying to solve the problems inactivity in nursing homes through a project entitled *Environments for the Aged*.
The project is being conducted at Wakarausa Manor, a skilled nursing home in Lawrence. The
Lynn McClannahan, Lawrence
girl student, is project
director. Environments for the Aged." She
and Hiskey began research about
it.
project is one phase of several living environments programs. Todd Risley, associate professor of human development, directs the nursery and care center in the infant day care center located at Meadowbrook apartments.
"What we want to come up with," McCannahan said, "is a packaged recreation system for the kids in your home. It would not be expensive."
MCCLANNAHAN AND RISLE collected information about age, sex and activity of the residents; between 76 and 80 years old, there were twice as many women, a number of the residents had dementia, and they had bedfast. She also found that most of the time they were in their rooms sitting or lying and were speaking 87 per cent of the time.
The main activities of the residents were watching TV and dining.
Indians Question Rights In Legal, Moral Issues
By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
According to the treaty still governing the reservation, the Indian Chief can enjoy these privileges necessary for them to gather information about the populations of the treaty have been observed. The Indians of the area have been forced to rely on these sources of food only when they are not present.
If people realized that Indians don't have civil rights, all legal questions would come to an end. Francis Batesie, a Potawattomi from Holton and a member of the Movement (ALM), said Sunday.
Of primary concern to AIM is the issue facing the Chippewa village area of Minnesota. The problem, according to Chester Armajo, an Arapaho from Windriver, Wyo., was that the Indians Indian Junior College student body, revolves around hunting, and gathers权利 of the Chippewa village.
"THE THING is," he said, "the people don't get hungry 'in season.'"
The Federal Appeals Court of Minnesota ruled December 10, 1971, that the Leech Lake Chippewas were to have hunting.
Music Students to Sing Black Repertoire Today
The program was organized by Miriam Stewart Green, associate professor of voice.
Green is writing a book which will explore different facets of compositions composed by a designed teacher as a guide for students preparing a repertoire.
The second part of a program
that will be held at the
composers will be presented by a
group of University of Kansas
soldiers at 3 p.m. in
laboratory Muv-
One chapter of the book will be on Negro composers. Green has written to many of the composers
to gain background information on them and their works so that she can determine what should be included in the book.
The program will begin with a number written near the turn of the century, and will be written throughout the 20th century. The program will end with a century.
Through the recitals, Green hopes to demonstrate what could be a workable repertoire of songs that will be included in this will be included in her book.
The first song on the program. Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's "She
and would not require specially trained personnel."
Rested by the Broken Brook,' will by sung by Coy Lea Rose
This action was the only educational bill to pass during this legislative term and was approved over the governor's
Under the new law, school districts in this state may raise the tax levy an additional one half
Representatives of the Eudora, Lawrence school systems must last week to discuss the possible formation of a large special law firm.
Educators See Expansion Of Special Ed Co-op Here
"Bluz Cycle," by John Duncan, will be sung by Rose Hyston, Atchison junior.
According to Carl Knox, law
school superintendent the cooperative's
formation has been made
kansas State Univ. No. 4928
mill without the consent of the taxpayers to expand or create special education programs.
This bill also expands the definition of special education to include children with learning disabilities and dipsicards. In the past, only programs dealing with retarded students are classified as special education.
Two numbers by Howard Swanson, "Piercot" and "The Junkman," will be sung by Kent Waford, Wichita sophomore.
The bill also provides for state reimbursement of funds that distract spend in this area. The agencies are especially encouraged.
He said that presently the four school systems have a small cooperative program.
The premiere of two songs by John Price, "Identity" and "Two Typed Lines," will be presented in Kansas City. Karen, freshman.
Howard Sanson's "A Negra Speaks of Rivers," a song made famous by Marion Anderson, will be on the John Thomas, St. Louis freshman.
fishing and rice gathering privileges outside game laws. The main objection to this, according to Armajo, is the Leech Lake area is primarily a resort area and it was feared that the dam would deplete the supply of game available to the tourists.
Another selection, "Beyond the Rim of Day," by Hale Smith, is written in three parts: "March Moon," "Troubled Woman" and "Woman's Strength." The will be sung by Melanie Oldfather, Lawrence senior.
Lilson Alison. Atwood senior, sali-
nation and professor at UCLA, Luciano, an Italian, is the only composer on the program who is also a recipient of the "King" an important song to include in the collection, because it is a tribute to Martin Luther King Jr.
In spite of the ruling of the Appeals Court, Armajo said, the state and local authorities refuse to allow the Chippiwas their property.
Armojo pointed out that the Red Lake Chippawa reservation, which is also in Minnesota, was a sawmill and had yearround hunting rights.
IN REACTION to the refusal, according to Armajo, the head of the area, two members of an area have invited members of AIM to hold their national conference May 10-15 in Cassau. The conference will be held by the reservation. At this occasion, he will declare the Chipperi will deal themselves a sovereign nation.
In defiance of the game restrictions, according to Armado, Indians attending a conference and to go hunting and fishing.
The catch to this, Armajo said, is that the mayor of Cass Lake, James Rutherford, rulings, has deputized 200 National Rifle Association members and has said he would not be responsible for any Indians found in his area.
"We're going because we used to know him," Armago said. "We might not come here." Battese cited another battle the Indian had been engaged in on a mission there.
Battese told the Jesus asked for the land a century ago to set up an educational system for the Indians. The Indians loaned them the land and they built Pottawattami tribe was informed later that in order for the Jesus to build any buildings on the land, the Jesus must own it. The Indians, he said, did not believe they could not sell it, likeweise, they could not sell it.
HE SAID an attempt was being made to recover land belonging to the Kansas Potawattatians and "sold" to Jesuits in the 1800s.
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The land was given to the Jesuits with the agreement that if the Jesuits left, the land should revert back to the Potawatomi
The land being disputed covers nearly 1,400 acres and is on the southwest corner of the Pottawattomi reservation.
THE LAND and the 12 buildings which were constructed on it by the Jesuits now lies idle in the garden, and the acres of the land up for sale. Eight acres has been leased to a nearby city for a golf course; and four more are available.
In November 1970, the Tribal
Other planned projects and observations include incorporating an in-house commissary which would allow residents to purchase cosmetic or other items. McCannahan sapphire subsidized items so that all residents could make purchases.
McLANNANHAI SAID they continue to evaluate such activities and with rhythm instruments, and table games such as
Action Committee did research that the lawyers must appeal to the Jesus on a moral level because they had no sound legal ground.
McClannahan said that Wakara Manor had donated office space for the project and administrator Lowell J. Wade has given his full cooperation and administration to Wakara Manor as a research site.
The research has been funded by a $5,441 grant presented to Risley in late February by the National Institute of Mental Health this grant will allow research to continue through September.
10
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Battese said that when the land had been restored to the Potawatomi, they intended to make use of the existing farm center and a mental health center, a dairy, and a pre-school are already set up on the land, according to Battese. The Potawatomi need funds to put back into operation, he said.
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He said the goal of the restoration was to make a place where indians of all tribes could live and develop abundantly of government control.
PRIMARILY LEATHER
812 MASSACHUSETTS
Concerning this inactivity, McClannahan said. "If you have a patient who quits walking and has difficulty everly he won't be able to."
A grant of $181,584 for the project has been requested from the University of Bristol Education and Welfare. It would fund research by the department of human development and education in September 1972 to September 1975.
"Hopefully," Battese said,
"non-indians will go there and learn and learn their brothers who they can live and not kill things."
To remedy this problem, a number of projects were begun to stimulate activity and interaction among the residents. The first project was to design a dining area. After arranging tables so that only two or three could sit at a table, rather than having long "institution-like" seating arrangements, she found that children interacted more frequently.
A MANIPULATIVE area was set up to offer residents a range of activities from just watching TV. This involved utilization of puzzles and games. Products which were widely used by children and large are the most popular.
McClannan said this project worked best if there was a certain amount of social reinforcement. For example, when people were less likely to ask for equipment but would readily offer it, they were handed to them by a worker.
Significant increases in
increasing age are observed when some of the same toys were placed on the tops of geriatric chairs of the most severely disabled
She said they observed activity of the residents on days when the manipulative area was available during participation and activity as that participation and activity as
A program of evening activities was the next project which was incorporated. Activities included bingo, painting and reading.
much as tripled on days when the equipment was available.
THE BINGO GAMES offered prizes and were the most popular first, McClamahan said. She also offered prizes also be offered for the painting sessions. Rather than having an adult participant was given a number when he can in. Numbers were drawn several times throughout the event.
Eventually prizes were also offered through a drawing at the reading session.
McClannan said the winners were allowed to select their pieces from a collection of several objects, most of which cost 25 cents. The most popular item was a quarter. Playing cards, and oranges were also popular.
We observed that the use of prizes increased attendance at these activities, McClannahan said.
Museum to Sponsor Bird Walk
The Museum of Natural History Associates will sponsor "Bird Walk," an ornithology field trip for students. Third through the six grades. Participants will study waterfowl, forest, grassland and wetland habitats to areas usually habilitated by these birds so that students can learn some of the habits of these species during their exploration, explore feeding, courtship and
predator-prey relations.
Richard Lattis, graduate
economist in biology and
ecology, will teach and act as
a field guide. He will be assisted by
Larry Watkins, KU graduate
questions they may have about what they have seen.
The students will return to the museum after the field trip to see how their work can be applied. The collections can be handled by the students and used to make art.
Students' parents must come to the Office Administrator's office to enroll and to sign a permission slip. The fee is $4.50 per person or $4 for Museum admission. Enrollment is limited to 18 students. Students should bring a lobi of the museum at 8 a.m.
EASTERN TRAVELS
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Eau de Cologne $2.75
Bath Powder $2.75
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The Trains of Europe
How students can take advantage of them.
It's really very simple. And very inexpensive
With over 100,000 miles of track spanning thirteen European countries, the Trains of Europe can take you almost anywhere. From city center to city center.
Our trains are clean and modern. Fast, frequent and punctual. And they are comfortable. Overnight, a Couchette is yours for only $4.50 for a good night's sleep. The train will arrive at your destination in 20 minutes.
And here's the best bargain of the lot. Our new Student-Railpass. It gives you two months of unlimited Second Class rail travel for $130. Likewise in Britain, the Youth Pass gives you 15 days of unlimited rail travel for $40.00 or 1 month for $70.00. See your Travel Agent first, for these money savers are not available in Europe. Get them before you go. Meanwhile, take advantage of the coupon and send for our new, free brochure, "The Trains of Europe".
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European Railroads
Department ON, Box 70, Lindenhurst, New York 11757
Gentlemen, Please send me your free brochure, "The Trains of Europe."
Name ___
Address ___
City ___ State Zip
My Travel Agent is ___
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 12, 1972
7
and
ude
ouse
allow
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ahan
dized
could
that nated t and Wade n and arusa
Students Find Good Apartments Scarce
lk
about
me to a tion
pleplete
per-
50 per
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and
18
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main
a.m.
By KEVIN SHAFER
Kanyan Staff Writer
The number of advantages of living in an off-campus apartment is enormous. The problem does artose when a student decides he wants to live in an on-campus apartment.
Probably the first problem encountered is the location of his apartment. Anyone who has attempted to find a decent apartment that fits their needs realizes that his chances of finding a good apartment are
certainly limited.
The student must follow the proverb, "The early bird gets the worm," for the longer he puts on finding an apartment for the next semester, the less abundant and more screwy the worms seem to
Problems arise when a student considers how much he wants to spend for an apartment. Many times a student is searching for housing because the apartment private than the dormitory or on-campus housing, but, at the same
Commission OK's Townhouse Plan
By MARSHA SEARS
Kansan Staff Writer
Before a large number of homeowners, the Lawrence City Commission unanimously passed Tuesday a request by Francis Wiley to place Planned Unit Development. The development contains approximately 18.75 acres located south of Peterson Road, east of Lawrence Ave. and appalled by west of Yorkshire Drive
Richard Zinn, the applicant's representative, told commuters that five new junctions had been overcome in the new plan for the development. He cited fewer units and less traffic as a result, as the two principal intersections this plan provides for lower density and more space between the development's townhouses and privately owned single-unit homes.
Peter Curran, attorney representing the opposing area of the lawsuit against his provements had been made in the new plan, but some basic objections remained. Fowhouses were purchased privately owned, he said. This would adversely affect adjoining businesses in the city, but also type of use affects property value. Curran said, also, traffic would increase in the area.
THE PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENT is not keeping within the general character of the area. There is a substantial investment on the part of the family single home. "Curran said."
An area home owner, Marvin Pratt, 227 Yorkshire Dr., said there were no guarantees that the traffic would be blocked or be executed. It is possible that traffic would be increased, and that a drainage problem would be created and the townhouses could be rented instead of owned, he said.
The commissioners agreed that the plan provided adequate open space and a buffer screen of Austrian and Scottish pines to create the existing single-family homes from the townhouses.
The commission unanimously passed a request submitted by the City of Lawrence to proximately two acres located on the southwest corner of 6th St. and Lawrentree Ave from the western side of the family housing to limited commercial and duplex housing The City promise between Raymer and the two owners of the land next to them in a plan, a 40-foot green belt would be
located between the adjacent properties and only one curb cut would be on 6th St. to insure limited access. Because the applicant had negotiated with neighborhood owners and necessary requirements, the commission passed the request.
THE COMMISSION passed unanimously a request of Podoha Clothing, of the Mali Shopping Center in Bamako, for provisions of the Lawrence sign ordinance. The ordinance requires that the locator be designated. The required 8 feet 8 inch is in conformance with the other signs located in the Mali Shopping Center which are located on the same level above roof tops.
The commission unanimously passed a plan for an addition to the Chuck Wagon Restaurant, 2408 law St. A performance bond of $500 to insure additional food as the only condition to the plan
The mayor declared an emergency existed and suspended the rules to allow the commission to consider or ordain a final reading to authorize the issuance of $300,000 in temporary notes to pay for right-of-way improvements on Highway 59 and the city limits. The commission immediately passed the ordinance.
Campus Bulletin
Campus Crusade 7 a.m., Alcove D Cafeteria, Kansas Union.
time, quarters that may be somewhat cheaper to live in than the little cell block on Daisy Hill.
Physical Anthropology: 9 a.m. Woodruff Auditorium
Room. Systems Development: 9 a.m., Parlors A,
Anthropology Exhibits: 9 a.m., Big Eight Room.
System Development: 9 a.m., Director: A
Graduate Office: 10 a.m., Regionalist Room
Room.
Hoteen Art Print Sale: 10 a.m.. South
Street.
Art Print Sale 10 a.m. South
Lounge
Basil T. Church Memorial Reception: 11
Basil T. J Church Memorial Reception: 11 a.m.
Room 1089
Nesthatch Path: 11 a.m. Alcove A
a.m. Watkins Room.
Speech Pathology: 11:30 a.m., Alcove A
Cafeteria.
Visual Arts: 11:30 a.m. Alcove B Cafeteria
Social Anthropology: 11:30 a.m. Alcove C
Social Anthropology: 11:30 a.m. Meadwickour
French Tale: 11:30 a.m. Meadwickour
French Table: 11:30 a.m. Meadowlark
Cafeteria
Stadium Studio, penn. Albany D
Library Study Group moon, Alcove D
Cafeteria,
Memorial Memorial
APARTMENT COMPLEXES
offer the greatest number of
workstations available. The
complexes offer the best
deal to the financially unstable
noon, Centennial Room.
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark
Cafetera
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark
Cafeteria.
Basil T. Church Memorial Lecture: 1 p.m.,
Social Welfare Field Instructors: 2.30
p.m. Registrant Room.
Phone: (212) 555-8900
Resident in Reno, Nevada 84001
African Studies Reception: 4 p.m., English
Room.
When considering an apartment complex, the student must first consider how much he can need to spend in rent each month.
KASSP (Secondary School Principals)
to the p.m., Jayhawk and International Roop
Greening-BALSA: 5 p.m., Regionallst Room.
American Society of Civil Engineers: 6 p.m. Kansas Room.
p. K'sha' Room.
p. K'sha' Room.
p. Watkins Room.
Rigg's 1 p. m.
Rigg's 1 p. m.
Pine Room.
Bresse: 7 p.m., Gread Room.
SUA Classical Film: 7:30 p.m., Wooldruff
Unfurnished apartments are obviously cheaper but present a disadvantage. A state student is especially hindered because he must first have an appointment to Lawrence and then what he will do with the fittement when it becomes available.
Furnished apartments can run the way the other apartments must be furnished with basic essentials to the very plush apartments that have all the amenities.
If a student decides to rent a furnished apartment, he must be very cautious about his treatment of the furniture. More than one person has been injured in a damage event he vacates his apartment.
Physical Anthropologists: 8 p.m.
Ballroom.
**MARK STEWART**, *Stoney Dribble*, Iola, sophomore, said what appeared to be the best deal in ways live up to its appearances.
Physical Flum: 7:30 p.m. Woodcraft Auditorium
Physical Anthropologists: 8 p.m.
What appears to be a good place to live, as far as aspects such as management and maintenance, is often a small room in circumstances and what one is told when renting an apartment
Happy
THE LAWRENCE CHAMBER of Commerce does not provide any minimum housing facilities that most adequate housing facilities available to members of the chamber.
Tim Kennedy, Chesapeake,
Va. junior, chose to stay out of
school for a semester. He had a
job and remained in Lawrence.
Houses seem to be the ideal living quarters. The student will learn how to slide down a slim dwelling to a very nice house and how to climb into a house, the student must begin in search very early to prevent finding himself sleeping in his car.
are often not the same, Stewart said.
The Chamber of Commerce does however, make available the telephone number of the Lawrence apartment complexes and their phone numbers. The Guide is available at the chamber of commerce office, 901 W. 46th St., Los Angeles.
Joyce Ziegelman, secretary for the University Housing Office, said the Housing Office has many offices available to students looking for an apartment. The directory is leaflet out by the University State Bank and lists apples, plexes, the prices and facilities
ZIEGELMEIER ALSO said certain landmarks in the area kept the office posted on available maps and may use this information and the
"I had a full time job last semester, I couldn't do it. It absurd what they charge for this zhetto living." Kennedy said.
Transportation becomes another added expense. Certainly a person does not have to own a car to have an apartment, but the back of an automobile does hinder the availability of an off-campus dweller.
If a student does own a car and
chooses to live off campus, he
must pay for gas to travel the
from campus each day. Because
the University does not allow
a student to use any free of
charge, the majority of off-campus dwellers must pay a rather steep fee in order to obtain
BILLS HAVE a habit of coming in every month. The most common and probably the most
expensive bill that all apartment dwellers will pay is for repairs. It is important probably do not send an apartment occupant into bankruptcy.
SUA Classical Films
The cost of living in Lawrence may not be the steepest in the United States, but the cost of food is relatively high.
There is also the problem of food. Periodically the apartment housewives and fellow apartment dwellers at the local super-
directory at the Housing Office Room 205 McCollum
Many students have chosen to apply for federal welfare in the form of food stamps. If your story is good enough and your need is met, you may be able to government may be kind and help buy your food each month.
AURH to Pick Students For New Appeals Board
SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER
The Association of University Residence Halls appeals board will meet at 7 tonight in the Hashinger Hall conference room and at 9 in morning in serving on the appeals board for the 1972-1973 school year.
According to Jack Meyer,
Norton junior and chairman of the
board, six students will be
selected for the board, along with
from the six students. From the
six students a chairman for the
group will be selected.
ANY STUDENT who will be living in a residence hall next year is eligible for a position on the board.
When a student finds in necessary to break his hull contract and has to receive exemption from his contract the board will meet to
Meyer said the appeals board was "the human element in the residence hall contract system."
April 12 7:30 & 9:15
Final selection of the board will not be made until the end of the school year. Students interested in applying for positions would be unable to attend the meeting tonight and would be interviewed at a later time.
Woodruff Aud.
75¢
SUA Flights to EUROPE
Chicago-Paris Paris Chicago
Chicago-Paris Paris-Chicago
May 30,1972 $299
Aug.1,1972
NYC-Luxembourg May 23, 1972 $210
Luxembourg-NYC July 24, 1972
NYC-Luxembourg May 21, 1972 $210
Luxembourg-NYC Aug. 16, 1972
May 30, 1972 $299
Aug. 17, 1972
"HURRY!" Deadline April 17th
contact: SUA Office
Kansas Union 864-3477
0
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a mountain recreation program that will guide you to the top of some of the highest mountains in the
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and, at no extra charge, summer in the Colorado Rockies! Think about furthering your education at the University.
Exchanges on sizes or color. No Refunds Offer good through April 22nd.
Write today for a summer bulletin and application blank
DEAN OF SUMMER SESSION
970 AUROUR
BOULDER. COLORADO 80302
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
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Use Kansan Classified
We've invented the small sensible solid American car all over again.
1930 Model A Deluxe Coupe
1971 Ford D Convertible Coupe with repainted white sidewall trim.
When people shop for a small car, they look for some very simple basic cars. Dependability. Economy of money and style. Good mooded personality.
Those boxes are our birthplace. The Model T the model A, the first motor station wagon — a name bizarre and, indeed, an OdorBurd in wood.
Now to Ford Pinto
Pinto is as simple and small a car as can be in the world. And it's priced lower than the three leading importers, lower than its major US rivals.
A gutsy little engine that gets the same economical kind of gas
mileage as the little imports.
A solid-a-rock four speed transmission Sports car steering.
A welded body body with six costs of paint.
Ball-pull front suspension, and a wide stable stance on the road.
Pinta is one small car that doesn't have to fear a highway.
And finally, Pinto gives you comfortable interior耳和肩膀.
der room — it's only 19 inches longer than the landing little amount.
See the Print at your Ford dealer's it 40 years newer than the Model A — but it's still the same basic idea.
When you get back to basics, you get back to Ford.
FORD DIVISION
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Wednesday, April 12, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KU Nets First Victory On Newly Surfaced Court
By BILL SCHEELE
Kansas Sports Writer
The University of Kansas tennis team brought its season record to 3-3 Tues afternoon by defeating Kansas State College of Emporia, 7-0, on the west side of Alamodorp Field House.
It was KU's first victory on their newly surfaced courts. Rain that fell early in the day did not hamper play on the red and green Plexapeave surface, which the KU played installed over spring break.
Emporia State is now 7-5.
The Jahawks had a rough initial match on their newly surfaced court. They were blanked 9-0: Friay by perennial Big Eight champion Oklahoma. The Jays were the first Oklahoma has a 36-0 record.
Senior Cal Simmons KU's
leguages in a motorcycle
accident shortly before the
Oklahoma dual and i on
Coach Mike Howard, first-year Akamai CIS chiefs discussed the court's should improve playing conditions and help attract top players.
Howard said it was necessary to bring the students up to the school of the other BHF schools. Howard said that he needed athletic activities, and Ken Nordwein, salina building contractor and team buff, before resurfacing
"I think it was a very economical process." Howard
Howard said that the Plexipave surface had many advantages over a concrete surface.
said, "The top six players gave freey of their time and labor to improve the courts. We worked hard to improve them every day the weather would allow."
Rich Schubert made his debut in a part of sidehore competition After throwing a 9.25 routine in compaction he received 8 in ranking and placed third.
First, a kerosene torch was used to burn weeds around the court. Hydrochloride acid was used to kill weeds and cracks and eat away residue.
The resurfacing was a tedious process, Howard said.
"I think we saved KU a lot of money. The courts have four cases. They would have would have more costly to resurface then the courts are as resurfaced. The courts are as resurfaced."
Another half-point would have given Schubert a 9.40 total, Iowa State's Rusty Hoffman, the winner, scored 9.45.
Next, the binder coat was brushed on. This acted as an adhesive sealant to fill holes and keep the silicone paint in place to use applied to the one-eighth inch cuts of red and green silicone paint. The playing court is green; the surrounding area is white and the marking lines, white.
"they both did real well," KU coach Bock Lockwood said Monday, "but they made some mistakes that really cost them."
"First, this surface dries faster when it rains." Howard said. And because of the rain, the weather gets hot. Last, and probably most important, is it a cloudy day.
The University of Kansas ... entries in the NCAA gymnastics meet Thursday, Friday and Saturday in Ames, Iowa, both feel victim to a problem all gymnasts face in competition, the lapse. As a result, their All-America bid went down the drain.
Gymnasts Miss Top NCAA Bid
Terry Blanchard, on the other hand, ran into trouble early on the parallel bars. He touched the ground in his compulsions and was qualified for the optional with 8.95 and with his optional routine to 9.05.
"We seven did the best we could." Howard said. "This will help our tennis recruiting, Hope and I know who to be students who use the courts, I'm
"A softer surface will be easier on rackets, balls and players. Hopefully, the more solid footing there is, the less risk of the court markings are clearer."
"He had a mental lapse right in the middle of his set," Lockwood said. "He came to a complete stop, and that cost him .5 of a point. If he hadn't lost that, he would have out of sight in second place."
A seemingly interminal intramural basketball season ended Monday night with the Philadelphia bull champions in three divisions.
The Phi Delta crushed the independent Soul Company, 58-49 in the A division final. The Phi Delta was defeated by the independent Doves, 41-38.
In the B division final, the Turkes, a collection of freshman varsity football players, downed Kappa Alpha JPa. 28-22.
really pleased with the results' Howard plans to do some home state recruiting to bolster KU's tennis program. Two high school one junior college standout and on Howard's list of hopefuls.
"The Big Eight made a real strong showing in the meet," Lockwood pointed out.
place 15th.
Indeed, Dennis Mazur of Iowa State won the parallel bars, and Otis Lovin of Oklahoma won the floor exercise.
In the team race, defending champion and Big Eight winner Iowa State placed second to Southern Illinois.
Jay Loverback and John Fairer both of Arkansas City High School. He is also like to get.' Howard said. 'Fairar is the top singles prospect in the state. He is undefeated this year and has won eight national titles.
"Another top prospect is Bill Marsh of Arkansas City Junior College, the defending state junior college champion. With a little financial help, we can build a solid tennis program here at
Next action for KU is the Oklahoma City Invitational Friday and Saturday.
Stinger
Mark Wick, KU, John Jenkins, KSTC,
6.1.6.0
Curtis Henry, KU, def. Don Dreher, KSTC,
60, 7, 8
60. 74
Karl Kingsley, KU. def Gary Monson.
*www.karlkingsley.com*
Gary Stinson
KSTC, 6:2, 14-6, 3.
Ton Carlson, KU, def. Daane Pomeroy.
STC 62/2*N46, b-3
STC 62/2*N46, KU. def. Duane Pomeroy
KSTC
Ron Shaffer, KU. def. Paul Brewer, KSTC.
61, 42
Hill intramural basketball
were determined Monday night at Allen Field House, completing the two-month intramural game.
DOUBTS
Carlson-Wick def. Jenkins-Minson, 6-2, 6-4.
Jim Isaac-Harry, KU; def Brewer.
Dreher, 6-4, 7-4.
In A Invention, the Ph Deltis, led by Michael J. Stokes, 25 points and Larry Searle's 13, Soul Company, S8-49. Ed Davis and邓丹凯买了 14 apache
Intramural Teams Win Hill Honors
In the C league, the Turkeys came from behind to take Kappa and Mike Romie, and Mike Rome led a balanced attack for the Turkes with six points each, while Clayton Bailey each had eight for the losers.
In the B championship, Phi Delt N. 3 edge the Doves, 41-38. John Ballard led the winners with 20 points. Haley scored 13 for the Doves.
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The Knicks, by taking the games best of 8-series four to two, now go on to face the Boston Celtics in the conference finals. The Celtics won the Atlantic Division title, finishing eight games in front of the Knicks with whom they split their season series, 3-83.
NEW YORK (AP)—The New York Knicks, with Jerry Lacus and Bill Bradley leading a team that includes Baltimore, 19-8, down the homecourt to beat the Bullets, 107-10 Tuesday and win their National Basketball Association game and Conference semifinal ties.
TIE HOOGE PODGE
15 W.9TH
Knicks Take Semifinals
Spring Sandal Sale 10% Off April 3 through April 29
BALLOT
KU WOMEN: A PROGRAM OF
RECOGNITION
(for All Women Students Who
Haven't Voted In Living Groups)
Vote for:
I. The Outstanding Woman Teacher of 1972
A. How many women teachers have you had at KU?
B. If you wish to do so, please nominate one of these teachers for OUTSTANDING WOMAN TEACHER;
Name
Department ...
Your ID Number ...
II. Innovative & Creative Women Students
Nominate women who have made unique or innovative contributions to the University the last year
III. The Outstanding Senior Woman of 1972
Every SENIOR woman may nominate 3 candidates on behalf of leadership, scholarship and contribution to Uni verity.
Please Return this Ballot to the Dean of Women's Office, 222 Strong or SUA Office, By Fri., April 14.
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- All you have to do is register at any Lawrence E-7leven store. No purchase is required. You don't have to be present to win. The only requirement that is you are now a Kansas University student. Student I D. No. will be required on Registration blank.
- 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 6th through May 3rd), we will draw the names of the BILLI-LIMMER SUPPORT STAKES winner. Look at what you can win:
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Wednesday, April 12, 1972
9
CHINA
Judy Raney practices pitching for the women's intercollegiate softball doubleheader Saturday with Kansas State Teachers College and Haskell. The games will be played at Haskell, but game times have not been announced. KU is 1-1 in Eastern Softball League play after defeating Washburn, 16-15, and losing to K-State in a close game, 3-2.
Pitcher Warms Up
Bucks Hold Lakers; L.A. Seeks Revenge
LOS ANGELES (AP) — He told an incredibly low 72 points in their first playoff meeting with the Milwaukee Bucks, the Los Angeles Lakers aim to even the Wednesday night at the店.
Defense did it, said the Buckss.
"We weren't hitting," said the
The Buckts, defending National Basketball Association champs, scored 93 in whipping the record-setting Lakers Sunday.
"We weren't hitting," the Lakers. Beth had valid points. Milwaukee did show an outing with the Bucks which in 120 points per game on the average during the regular season as the Lakers did. Detroit also scored any game. The eight points the Lakers scored in the third period were less than any team has ever won and a period against Milwaukee.
There was an argument about lighting at the Forum for the opener of the best-of-seven exhibition, with extra lights for its presentation.
"I understand we're going back to the old way with the lights for Wednesday night's game." Bill Sharman of the home club.
"I'm not saying the lights weren't a factor, because who knows what can happen in one basketball game," commented Larry Carry. "Castle of Milwaukee. But our defense was very good."
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 33 points to the bucks in the opener and he dominated the interpart. Wilt Chamberlin
On the part of Los Angeles, Jerry West and Gail Goodrich,
who averaged 25 points each during the regular season, were held to 10 and 8 respectively in the league. Western championship playoffs.
West hit four shots in 19, nine from outside, and Goodrich two of 14. Jim McMillan, who did not have to just three times in 20 attempts.
so the three scoring aces were so limited to nine field goals in 53 games that their lowest score since coming to Los Angeles a dozen years ago. The total also was the second ever in NBA playoff action.
KU Golfers To Host Triangular
The University of Kansas golf team takes on teams from Baker and Emperor state today in a meet at Lawrence Country Club.
The team has two returning players, a second this year's squad. Roger Wells, a three-year letterman, postes the third best score or score of all the starters.
The meet, originally scheduled for March 24, was postponed because of bad weather.
Pension Plan Resolved In Baseball Strike Dispute
NEW YORK (AP)—Stirling baseball players settled their money differences with major league owners, but night but rejected an offer to pay them proportionately for make up games other than簿本簿本 negotiator for the owners, said agreement was reached on a contribution of $50,000 a year to Stirling's owners' original offer of $490,000.
"We're definitely a very young team," coach Bob Frederick said at the beginning of the season; he said that offers a promising future."
A reliable source, meanwhile,
a scheduled meeting in New York
for Wednesday and revealed the
Friday beginning of the season.
Thus, the money issue became moot after that compromise; it was unanticipated by $400,000 to $500,000 and the players come down from $600,000. The players had been seeking a 17 percent commission benefit, which would have come to more than $800,000. The owners annually to the pension amount in a million
There seemed to be little doubt that the issue of whether the players are paid for an 182-game
Pitcher Milt Pappas of the Chicago Cubs attended a presentation that came up with the new proposal, said, "there is no way to sell a pitcher."
schedule was the key to any settlement, having possibly become more a matter of principle than money.
Miller said much the same
scheduled to open last Wednesday.
-If the schedule were piled up at some point the players will assume loss of salary up to the date of settlement of the strike.
The players' proposal on full pay for full play consisted of the following:
—If a 162-game season is rescheduled the players will b
KANSAN sports
Monday when he pointed out, "there are only two issues, one dealing with the pension problem, which is subject to change," said the salary for 162-game issue is a terrible, terrible roadblock.
The position of some club executives on the fund pay issue is the same regardless of the days rather than 182 games and that the players be docked one day's pay for each day of the regular season. The "regular season" was
Peters was in New York to talk with Commissioner Bowie Kuhn about the strike and "other problems."
No Ill Effects Seen Yet For Minor League Clubs
★★
NEW YORK (AP)—Hank Peters, head of baseball's minor league said Tuesday "no one is panicking yet" about the ultimate effect the major league would have on the farm clubs.
"Naturally you look ahead," he said. "The relationship is a very close one and we have to be careful, but no one is panicking yet."
"There are no ill effects that we can see so far," said Peter. "All of the clubs have fulfilled their obligations."
He said the Southern League was opening its season Tuesday night and others were expected to follow on schedule.
Hus Holcomb, general manager of the Chicago Wax Sox, hosted a league game where league farm setup was "very difficult." The strike kit in depth.
Calvin Griffin, president of the Minnesota Twins, also said the strike would affect the minors if it continued much longer.
it cost us $1.8 million last year to program it," he said. "I can't afford this expenditure it has allowed me to play major league baseball so much."
The one day's loss of salary would be equivalent to one day for each day of the 182-day season, every game not rescheduled.
—If a scheduled seasoned game consists of less than 162 games, then the players will assume a game schedule for each game not scheduled.
paid their full salaries for the entire season.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Bobby Allison has sliced James Hylton's lead in the Winston Cup Grand National point standings, but the Huey Leonard, Ala. driver has a long to go before catching Wayne Andrews on the Grand American charts.
The players' rejection came as the owners turned down two more proposals by the players.
The National Association of Soccer Players Anti Racism and Racing会议 Monday that will determine his second victory of the season Sunday in the Southeastern 500; has 1,837.75 points in the national standings for the Hylon '19, 1,835.25 Before the race, Hylton, from Inman, S.C., held a national standings game at the Grand National standings.
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Al outpainted Chuvalo in 15 rounds when All was the world heavyweight champion. They are now the world No. 2 in 12-rounder in Vancouver May.
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Wednesday, April 12, 1972
PRESENTATION
Kansan Photo by BECKY PIVONKA
Prospective Customers Examine Prints
Abdulatilf Ahmed and Aledalizar Hadad, Saudi Arabia, were among the union patrons drawn to the south lounge Tuesday by the graphic art sale and exhibition. The SUA-sponsored display of original
prints will continue until 5 p.m. today. The prints were supplied by the Ferdinand Roten Galereries of
Munich.
'Bug Museum' Contains Over Two Million Insects
By PATTI O'NEILL Kansan Staff Writer
Housed in lockers which stretch from floor to ceiling in several large rooms on the second floor of Snow College's Museum. The "bug museum," founded in 1870 by Francis H. Snow, professor of biology and former chancellor, contains over 2.5 million bugs and is the second largest insect museum kind, according to George Byers, professor of entomology and assistant curator of the museum.
The largest university insect
museum is the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard. Byers said the Harvard zoo has a much larger than the museum in Snow. Over 30,000 specimens are gathered all over North America on annual summer field courses, byers said. The specimens are gathered all over North America on annual summer field courses, byers said.
2 Debaters to Represent KU at National Tourney
Bill Russell, Omma, Neb., Browne,
junior, will be representing KK Friday through Monday at the National Tournament at University of Denver.
So far this year, Russell and Sheen have won 72 per cent of the awards named one of the 10 best speakers at four tournaments and Hensley
Russell's and Henley's teams were submitted to the committee in February. They were one of eight teams chosen to participate in the game.
According to Jack Harrell, debate coach, there are two ways that a school can qualify for the national tournament. The first is by winning one of the 12 matches in the season, or second, by submitting names to a national committee.
kU's debate squad has won 60 per cent of their rounds this year. They have set a KU record of 500 wins in a season.
THE MUSEUM'S first big boat resulted from a field in the eastern Kansas in the 1870s. On this field trip Skipper found a large amount of ice.
Fifty-four teams from across the United States participate in a tournament KU has debated against a third of these teams in tournaments this year.
This year's debate topic is, *Is the State that Greater Carroll Should Control better than the Gathering and Utilization of Information about U.S. Citizens*?
According to Harrell this year's topic allows for a greater variety of areas to be covered by debaters within the overall topic.
Harrell said there was a
Resident Aides To Be Chosen By Late April
Final selection of residence school year will be completed by April 21, according to Mary Ann Thomas, assistant dean of
A committee composed of
a team of marketing
reviewing applications and
conducting interviews with those
interested in positions for next
Thomas said that approximately as many students have applied for positions this year as have in the past.
national committee which about this time each year surveyed domestic and international problems for possible topics. A list of topics are then sent to colleges and colleges for a final vote.
At that time the beetles sold for $15 a piece to beetle collectors. Instead of the bugs, the snow. All over the world, saying that he would exchange a pair of the rare beetles for $15, considered to be $15 worth of bugs from his particular environment. As a result, the museum received $15.
KU placed second at a national anonymous tournament for four years, before Barrilarmine-Ursuline College in Louisville, Ky., this past week.
The winning team was Bill Webster, Carthage, Mo., freshman, and Todd Hunter, Oklahoma City, freshman. He was the best speaker in the tournament and Hunter was named sixth.
Also debating for KU were Frank, Stewart, Manhattan frank and Marshall Kansas. Kansas City, Kan., freshman Stewart and Baylw won five of the game.
Byers said that the insects in a museum are individually by drying them on ice, preserving them in alcohol. The museum still has bugs dating back to the 18th century.
BYERS SAID that protecting the insect specimens from a species of carpet beetles that cause severe greatest problem in preserving the specimens. The museum uses 400 pounds per year of a fumigating chemical to protect these insects from these beetles, he said.
The Entomological Museum is a research museum because it does not have exhibits such as Dyche Museum by Bayrs said thus the museum had outgrown it and there was no room for exhibits.
The theatre department at the
College of Arts and Sciences
some changes this year to update
the method of selection of
recipient of the annual awards it
Theatre Department To Revise Awards
No specific categories are to be set. The department will present awards for outstanding achievement and excellence to people have contributed in the production of a play this year.
Besides functioning as a research faculty for KU students and faculty, the museum also has expertise in collecting insects specimens to people all over the world doing entomological studies. Byers said he had shipped bugs as far as Japan and Africa. In return, the museum has received over 40,000 copies of specialized insect studies.
THE MUSEUM contains hundreds of duplications of the same species and new ones added. But they were added. Byers explained the duplication saying that to study different types of people from all over the world, not just one type, you need to use same principle applied to bugs.
Theatre majors and faculty members voted to select persons who will comprise a committee to determine the specific guidelines for the awards. Five students and two faculty members were selected for the committee.
The committee will accept nominations for awards from anyone who has been involved in a theatre production.
A vote will be taken to determine who will receive awards. They will be awarded at a banquet in May.
The traditional Kiltane Killan award will be presented no matter what the committee discusses about the other awards.
The Kilty Kane is symbolically presented each year to the outstanding undergraduate or graduate student, in work and will be leaving the University. A faculty vote determines who will win that award, based on excellence through his years at the university.
The Kilty Kane is a piece of gnarked wood which was used by the professional actor, Jerome
KU to Honor Retiring Profs For Service
Eight faculty members with a combined total of 280 years of service will be honored at the annual University Retirement Dinner at 5 p. 45.m. April 27 in the Eight Room of the Kansas University.
The faculty members will move to emeritus status this summer.
Reaching the mandatory retirement age, payment systems and ecology; A Byron Leonard, professor of systematics and ecology; Joris Teubli, professor of petroleum engineering; Leslie T. Tupy, professor of law, and Laurence C. Woundt, professor of petroleum engineering.
Taking early retirements are essential education, J. Stone, Pasteur, professor of physical education, and Elin J. Stene, professor of biology.
The dinner will be informal, with no speeches or entertainment, provide maximum time for faculty members to visit with their students.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. will present certificates of service to the members who are retiring
Dinner tickets will be $3 and are available from Marian McCorkill at the Endowment Association.
Emeritus faculty will be guests of the Endowment Association at the dinner through the Walter Bohnsteinger Fund.
Don Alderson, dean of men,
and Calvert Simmons,
Alexandria, Va., senior, will
attend the national meeting of
Omicron Delta Kappa in
Detroit, who, from Thursday
to Saturday.
Alderson to Go To Convention
Sachem Society, the KU honor society for senior men, is a part of the Delta Kappa. Alderson is deputy of Oiceron Delta Kappa for its Province
Kilby, in his part as Falstaff in "Henry IV, Part 2," the premiere performance in the University Theatre.
Kilty, gave the cane to the department following that performance in 1957. It has been used as an award since that time.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 12, 1972
FEDERAL RESIDENCE
11
Campus Briefs
The department of psychology is sponsoring "Perspectives in Psychology," a tour of the psychology department and discussion of psychology at 2 p.m. Saturday in 432 Fraser. Anyone interested in psychology is invited to attend.
Psychology Tour Saturday
Peace Studies Major
All students interested in a possible major in Peace Studies are invited to attend a planning meeting at 7:30 tonight at the American Center for Peace Studies.
The University Senate Meeting scheduled for Thursday has been changed to April 27. A Faculty Senate meeting will follow the meeting on Friday.
Honors Council Friday
Change in Senate Meeting
The National Collegiate Honors Council will hold a regional honors programs meeting Friday and Saturday in the Kansas Union. The program will be in workshops dealing with topics such as a new honors-experimental program, student views on admission to honors programs, the problems of financing and the impact of honors programs on the institution.
War Protesters Withhold Taxes
BY JEANNE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
Nearly 200 persons in the Lawrence area are refusing to pay the 10 per cent telephone tax on Indian schools, Indochina war, Tom Moore, Education special for the civil service (asission) said recently. He said telephone tax was specifically designed to finance the war by President Rama Nayak.
Thirteen families have redirected that money into the Lawrence Fund for Life.
The fund is based on models created elsewhere, Peggy Baldwin, treasurer of the fund, said. She said that the families will be the fund after a war tussle resistance conference last March.
"The purpose of the fund is to redirect money toward needs of the community and demonstrate how much can be done, with the money used for the project."
SHE SAID that when the sum of their donations donated to such programs as the Summer Teen Employment Program or the Emergency Service Committee
The repercussions of this action vary. Baldwin said the telephone company sued him over the amount of debt, plus interest. "Vietnam War Protec t appears on the ballot and is played sometimes a representative of the company calls or comes to the residence of the individual, she
Moore said that the bookwork involved probably amounted to ten percent of the bill. Three dollar tax bill is accumulated over several years.
Tom Moore, 1007 Alabama,
withholds the telephone tax. One
telephone executive talked with
him and according to him said,
"I made a protest Mr. Moore, now why
not go ahead and pay."
THE MOORES also withhold a portion of their federal income tax. The amount they withhold was suggested by the Friends Committee, a lobbying organization, the committee and organization, military expenditures and recommends a percentage. Moore said.
When the Moores file an income tax return, they submit this information to the teller why they've done so. This is the third year they've withheld taxes.
The government can also take a person's car or house to get the money.
He said the government sends a notice of delinquent taxes. Later it sends a notice of seizure and charges him from the Moore's office.
"The practical value is almost nil, but for the symbolic value, it's worth it," said Moore of the withholding.
WHEN THEY first decided not to pay part of their taxes, they talked it over with friends and learned that the Lawrence Journal World
"We received no adverse criticism," Moore said.
"Our purpose is not to go against the government, but we do not want to willingly enter into supporting the war," he said.
"Some people try to play games with the Internal Revenue Service by changing banks we own," Moore said out the money," said Moore.
There are several overseas involved in war, payment of war tax including groups within the Society of War Veterans Movement and the War Reserves League. A handbook on non-payment has been prepared by the Society.
One of the oldest and most famous examples of American taxation is the imprisonment Henry Thomas Since then, there have been many cases of individual taxation on them. In 1823, II. individuals began to organize.
THE PENALTY for tax
trees on construction,
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So far there have been no
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KU Minister Plans Study In Germany
Rev. Don Conrad, KU's American Lutheran Church-Church of Campus minister, will leave Friday to study worship forms in student congregations at various universities and received a grant from the Lutheran World Federation in Geneva, Switzerland, for the
Conrad has followed a free
program that provides a free
year. The worship services
sometimes center on social issues
such as ecology, amnesty or
crime.
"The pressures involved in non-payment vary from person to person," said Moore.
Conrad recently said that his experiences with different forms of the law have enabled him to study grant. The grant will enable him to compare the worship forms used in German and English, and the worship forms used in Lawrence
Conrad said he would like to spend three to four weeks in East Germany if possible.
Conrad said it would be interesting to know if the churches did social or socialism, or how know the East Germans attract people to their churches if study is all they offer. Conrad.
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There are two ways of looking at it.
1. If you use them.
Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon Sat Sun 12 to 8 p.m.
Offer Expires April 30
FOR SALE
Three days
ITERBO DISCOUNT Now you can
COST plus 30% at ATY BAUDIO
Only free showroom Discount house in
our store. Tea, Coffee & Consulting
Service.
you're at a disadvantage
Giving students an analysis of
New York's same-age of Western
21st Century" Campus Madhouse, 411
Went 14th.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Equipment-Equipment-Plus Mask Snorkeling Lifetime Guarantee, $49.00 Wet Suit LifeTime Guarantee, $125.00 Wet Suit LifeTime Guarantee, $39.00 & Vet., $55.00 & See Gus. Tank Air Gun, $75.00 & See Gus. Dive Boats, $69.00 & See Gus. Dive Boats, body all, major brand items, bark boat, all major brands. Barrhouse KP, Kansas City, Mo. Barrhouse KP, Kansas City, Mo.
You're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
ORTHIDISH COUNTY SHOP, 707
Boutique Antiques, used furniture,
collectors items, oak wood cooking and
furniture, knives, stoves, fireplace wood,
stoves, bicycles, fireplace wood,
other kitchen items, open to 5
of other items, open to 5
159. Help Habitant Number, 8-9
960 Austin-Cambridge 4 dr. Seda.
feeds训-up, $150 Call 841-3210
dfter 5:00 4-19
Lenses 125 mm P2.8 NIKkor otter
mount. Perfect. $125. 200 mm P3. Vivi-
matum 6 mm. Perfect. -50 mm blem
in cup. Includes acetate.
after 4
after 8
Need to sell a ten speed Schwinn-
man's bike. Almost new and in ex-
cellent condition. Call afternoons and
evenings. 842-7280. 4-12
natural food supplements and
biodegradable cleaners, also natural
sunlit Shakele Products Distributor.
Free delivery 8-12 months. 4-12
UPS
1 week old Irish Sister puppy (country
bear) 61 VW, make offer, see /W at 1823 Ohio Call 655-3222 4-12
The purpose of this ad is to sell ponchos. So you buy a hand made poncho at the Yarn Barn. 730 Mass. Your company might defend a tragic would you? 4-12
Michigan St. Bai-Bu-Qi, 515 Mich.
MIchenburg St. Brendan Broxie, 345
MIchenburg St. Broadway Bank, $145
MIchenburg St. Burbank, $285
piasek $145, Large Bai-Plates $180,
Deadline : 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.02
MOYING: Washer and dryer $25,
refrigerator $35, blender $25,
washers $2, Two $79.30 3-speed
reversible window fan $25, Portable
reversible window fan $25, Portable
swing set $2, Lawn sweeper $25,
freezer $25, Free printer long handle; $5
Free printer long handle; $5
$24-244 after 6 o'clock on
saturday.
AM/FM FM Stereo radio with 8-track
amperage, input & output jacks for
turntable, headphones & recorder.
顶 condition, 742 - 842/938, 4-13
Florin Pikeen? Get them, band
jackets. Custom made leather belts-
cheapest option—no many clobbers.
KONON, 819 Vermont. Bait Deal 4-13
KONON, 819 Vermont. Bait Deal 4-13
BEER - COORS - BUD — $1.15 a 6-
pak 12 oz. $1.49 a 6-pak 16 oz. Jay-
hawk food Mint; 3rd & 8th Illinois; 4-13
1967 Dodge Van- 118–VB, auto, nice
Dodge also - 1646 Ford Falcon Sprint;
V8 power steering, 4-speed, buckets,
the works- 824-572, 1131 Ohio. 4-13
Black Spanish leather coat, french coat style. Double breasted. Ladies size 11-12. Excellent condition. Half price original price. Call装订费 4-13 9474
1966 650 Bonneville Triumph cyclored out and complete overhaul less than 300 miles ago. Also new helmet used very little. 842-5670 4-13
3-speed bicycle, new tires, chain, & light. Full size violin and case AM radio-cassette recorder. M43-3579 4-13
APARTMENT SALE—1045 Ky., Fri.
10-5, Sat., 11-4. 4-13
1970 Kawaaiak, 350 c.c., good condition.
$500, 843-8168. 4-13
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
HAVE YOUR HANDWRITING ANALYZED. 842-4476. 4-14
10-speed brake New Raleigh, center-
bridge, racing tires, 21x) 21 inch
frame, orange, must sell Call 842-4
3819
VOX POWER STACK—like new app-
pressors, two separate speakers cah-
nels. 1-12; heavy duty speakers. Must sell.
Phone: 842-8819 4-14
NIKKON FANS For Sale, 135mm/2.8 Nikkor Lens with "Bellows" Best offer over $175. Call 821-2418 - 418
Honda Mini Trail $175
Honda Mini Tire $175
Suzuki T-129 $365
Suzuki T-129 $365
TS-250 Suzuki $475
TS-250 Suzuki $475
Yamaha 250 Street $495
Yamaha 250 Street $495
Honda DuraMax $325
Honda DuraMax $325
Hawk Racer $485
Hawk Racer $485
BMC Malatier $485
BMC Malatier $485
G5 MG13 roadster in top condition.
58,000 miles. Engine overhaul at
43,000 $900 842-2472. 4-17
SPRING CLEARANCE — USED BIKES. Kat Suzuki, 634 Mass, 842-0966
1967 New Moon Mobile Home. Large living room, dining area, kitchen, two bedrooms, big bathroom. Includes air conditioner and clothes dryer. 4-17 843-329
Wearing a Dengue Shirt (them are wearing shorts, too) Actress (them are acting in this role). All lights. Send sandals to idea.com. No phone no calls. 1229 Ohu Or call 321-860-4755 for a suitable cell phone. Solicitable contact: Douglas Kellman 4-14
Yamalaa 650 cc.'s, street. see at 924
Schwarz妥 2.6 p., 842-387) 4-18
SONY stere tape recorder with built-in and extension speakers. Full recording equipment. Only 7 months warranty. Contact Howard, 844-1234. Takes 4-14
2 acoustic suspension speaker systems, 2-way-10"*3", Must hear to believe. Best offer takes them. Call 864-1169. 4-14
Rare. find—1971. Kawasaki, 250 SS experience, with temperature in 100 degrees. Selling cheap, need押钱 43-8271 or 43-8424. Ask for Dick
1969 YAMAHA 350 Trail-Street *motorcycle*. Excellent condition — Have done my own work. Call Pete, 864-4114.
1971Kawasaki F7. 175 cc. Like new
$550. 842-7118. 4-18
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Parts at a discount
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Shirty, Toa, Jonas, Cordes, Hallets,
Jackets, Cape, Bells, Overly, Stuff,
Patches, Hair, Long Dress, Drawn
Eyes, Wear on ear at KEW
SHINE, N E I F
Wedding Gown, ivory, size 10, never worn. Alfred Anglo-original includes full length layered-ear dress original $150, new $150 #6307.
Guitar-Gibson B45 jumbo 12 string with deluxe case and deArmour pick up all-like new. Yours for $350 will dicker. Call #852-2197 after 7. 4-18
MUST SELL - 3 bikes, 1971, Kawasaki
MUST SELL - 250, Kirot, 1971, Yamaha 500
1971, Hokkai Hyundai 1971, Hokkai Hyundai condition set - rain cover
offer. 824-968 4-18
offer. 824-968
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
1969 Honda CL-350, 4,500 actual miles.
All accessories, $500 or best offer
842-4300
4-18
2
1971 Kawasaki 500, must sell, been drafted. $350 Excellent condition Call after 10 p.m. (614)-6253 4-18
FOR RENT
MUST SELL. Fender Jaguar with case and accs. Heathkit 220 watt peak power amp with column. Call 482-3168 4-14
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
SPENDING THE SUMMER in LAW-
YARD: Enjoy your own law-
yard or choose a room where
rates if you call Mrs. Forsyth,
842-395-1000, Living in Argos Apartment, 11th & 12th Flr, Argos Apartments, 9th & 10th Flr, Argos Apartment, 9th & 10th Flr, Argos Apartments, 9th & 10th Flr, Argos Apartments, 9th &
10th Flr, Argos Apartments, 9th &
10th Flr, Argos Apartments, 9th &
10th Flr, Argos Apartments, 9th &
10th Flr, Argos Apartments, 9th &
10th Flr, Argos Apartments, 9th &
10th Flr, Argos Apartment
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campus rates start at $2490 Clemson to campus rates start at $2500 Clemson to campus rates start at $2510 Clemson to campus rates start at $2520 Clemson to campus rates start at $2530 Clemson to campus rates start at $2540 Clemson to campus rates start at $2550 Clemson to campus rates start at $2560 Clemson to campus rates start at $2570 Clemson to campus rates start at $2580 Clemson to campus rates start at $2590 Clemson to campus rates start at $2600 Clemson to campus rates start at $2610 Clemson to campus rates start at $2620 Clemson to campus rates start at $2630 Clemson to campus rates start at $2640 Clemson to campus rates start at $2650 Clemson to campus rates start at $2660 Clemson to campus rates start at $2670 Clemson to campus rates start at $2680 Clemson to campus rates start at $2690 Clemson to campus rates start at $2700 Clemson to campus rates start at $2710 Clemson to campus rates start at $2720 Clemson to campus rates start at $2730 Clemson to campus rates start at 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rates start at $4280 Clemson to campus rates start at $4290 Clemson to campus rates start at $4300 Clemson to campus rates start at $4310 Clemson to campus rates start at $4320 Clemson to campus rates start at $4330 Clemson to campus rates start at $4340 Clemson to campus rates start at $4350 Clemson to campus rates start at $4360 Clemson to campus rates start at $4370 Clemson to campus rates start at $4380 Clemson to campus rates start at $4390 Clemson to campus rates start at $4400 Clemson to campus rates start at $4410 Clemson to campus rates start at $4420 Clemson to campus rates start at $4430 Clemson to campus rates start at $4440 Clemson to campus rates start at $4450 Clemson to campus rates start at $4460 Clemson to campus rates start at $4470 Clemson to campus rates start at $4480 Clemson to campus rates start at $4490 Clemson to campus rates start at $4500 Clemson to campus rates start at $4510 Clemson to campus rates start at $4520 Clemson to campus rates start at $4530 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start at $4790 Clemson to campus rates start at $4800 Clemson to campus rates start at $4810 Clemson to campus rates start at $4820 Clemson to campus rates start at $4830 Clemson to campus rates start at $4840 Clemson to campus rates start at $4850 Clemson to campus rates start at $4860 Clemson to campus rates start at $4870 Clemson to campus rates start at $4880 Clemson to campus rates start at $4890 Clemson to campus rates start at $4900 Clemson to campus rates start at $4910 Clemson to campus rates start at $4920 Clemson to campus rates start at $4930 Clemson to campus rates start at $4940 Clemson to campus rates start at $4950 Clemson to campus rates start at $4960 Clemson to campus rates start at $4970 Clemson to campus rates start at $4980 Clemson to campus rates start at $4990 Clemson to campus rates start at $5000 Clemson to campus rates start at $5010 Clemson to campus rates start at $5020 Clemson to campus rates start at $5030 Clemson to campus rates start at $5040 Clemson to campus rates start at $5050 Clemson to campus rates start at $5060 Clemson to campus rates start at $5070 Clemson to campus rates start at $5080 Clemson to campus rates start at $5090 Clemson to campus rates start at $5100 Clemson to campus rates start at $5110 Clemson to campus rates start at $5120 Clemson to campus rates start at $5130 Clemson to campus rates start at $5140 Clemson to campus rates start at $5150 Clemson to campus rates start at $5160 Clemson to campus rates start at $5170 Clemson to campus rates start at $5180 Clemson to campus rates start at $5190 Clemson to campus rates start at $5200 Clemson to campus rates start at $5210 Clemson to campus rates start at $5220 Clemson to campus rates start at $5230 Clemson to campus rates start at $5240 Clemson to campus rates start at $5250 Clemson to campus rates start at $5260 Clemson to campus rates start at $5270 Clemson to campus rates start at $5280 Clemson to campus rates start at $5290 Clemson to campus rates start at $5300 Clemson to campus rates start at $5310 Clemson to campus rates start at $5320 Clemson to campus rates start at $5330 Clemson to campus rates start at $5340 Clemson to campus rates start at $5350 Clemson to campus rates start at $5360 Clemson to campus rates start at $5370 Clemson to campus rates start at $5380 Clemson to campus rates start at $5390 Clemson to campus rates start at $5400 Clemson to campus rates start at $5410 Clemson to campus rates start at $5420 Clemson to campus rates start at $5430 Clemson to campus rates start at $5440 Clemson to campus rates start at $5450 Clemson to campus rates start at $5460 Clemson to campus rates start at $5470 Clemson to campus rates start at $5480 Clemson to campus rates start at $5490 Clemson to campus rates start at $5500 Clemson to campus rates start at $5510 Clemson to campus rates start at $5520 Clemson to campus rates start at $5530 Clemson to campus rates start at $5540 Clemson to campus rates start at $5550 Clemson to campus rates start at $5560 Clemson to campus rates start at $5570 Clemson to campus rates start at $5580 Clemson to campus rates start at $5590 Clemson to campus rates start at $5600 Clemson to campus rates start at $5610 Clemson to campus rates start at $5620 Clemson to campus rates start at $5630 Clemson to campus rates start at $5640 Clemson to campus rates start at $5650 Clemson to campus rates start at $5660 Clemson to campus rates start at $5670 Clemson to campus rates start at $5680 Clemson to campus rates start at $5690 Clemson to campus rates start at $5700 Clemson to campus rates start at $5710 Clemson to campus rates start at $5720 Clemson to campus rates start at $5730 Clemson to campus rates start at $5740 Clemson to campus rates start at $5750 Clemson to campus rates start at $5760 Clemson to campus rates start at $5770 Clemson to campus rates start at $5780 Clemson to campus rates start at $5790 Clemson to campus rates start at $5800 Clemson to campus rates start at $5810 Clemson to campus rates start at $5820 Clemson to campus rates start at $5830 Clemson to campus rates start at $5840 Clemson to campus rates start at $5850 Clemson to campus rates start at $5860 Clemson to campus rates start at $5870 Clemson to campus rates start at $5880 Clemson to campus rates start at $5890 Clemson to campus rates start at $5900 Clemson to campus rates start at $5910 Clemson to campus rates start at $5920 Clemson to campus rates start at $5930 Clemson to campus rates start at $5940 Clemson to campus rates start at $5950 Clemson to campus rates start at $5960 Clemson to campus rates start at $5970 Clemson to campus rates start at $5980 Clemson to campus rates start at $5990 Clemson to campus rates start at $6000 Clemson to campus rates start at $6010 Clemson to campus rates start at $6020 Clemson to campus rates start at $6030 Clemson to campus rates start at $6040 Clemson to campus rates start at $6050 Clemson to campus rates start at $6060 Clemson to campus rates start at $6070 Clemson to campus rates start at $6080 Clemson to campus rates start at $6090 Clemson to campus rates start at $6100 Clemson to campus rates start at $6110 Clemson to campus rates start at $6120 Clemson to campus rates start at $6130 Clemson to campus rates start at $6140 Clemson to campus rates start at $6150 Clemson to campus rates start at $6160 Clemson to campus rates start at $6170 Clemson to campus rates start at $6180 Clemson to campus rates start at $6190 Clemson to campus rates start at $6200 Clemson to campus rates start at $6210 Clemson to campus rates start at $6220 Clemson to campus rates start at $6230 Clemson to campus rates start at $6240 Clemson to campus rates start at $6250 Clemson to campus rates start at $6260 Clemson to campus rates start at $6270 Clemson to campus rates start at $6280 Clemson to campus rates start at $6290 Clemson to campus rates start at $6300 Clemson to campus rates start at $6310 Clemson to campus rates start at $6320 Clemson to campus rates start at $6330 Clemson to campus rates start at $6340 Clemson to campus rates start at $6350 Clemson to campus rates start at $6360 Clemson to campus rates start at $6370 Clemson to campus rates start at $6380 Clemson to campus rates start at $6390 Clemson to campus rates start at $6400 Clemson to campus rates start at $6410 Clemson to campus rates start at $6420 Clemson to campus rates start at $6430 Clemson to campus rates start at $6440 Clemson to campus rates start at $6450 Clemson to campus rates start at $6460 Clemson to campus rates start at $6470 Clemson to campus rates start at $6480 Clemson to campus rates start at $6490 Clemson to campus rates start at $6500 Clemson to campus rates start at $6510 Clemson to campus rates start at $6520 Clemson to campus rates start at $6530 Clemson to campus rates start at $6540 Clemson to campus rates start at $6550 Clemson to campus rates start at $6560 Clemson to campus rates start at $6570 Clemson to campus rates start at $6580 Clemson to campus rates start at $6590 Clemson to campus rates start at $6600 Clemson to campus rates start at $6610 Clemson to campus rates start at $6620 Clemson to campus rates start at $6630 Clemson to campus rates start at $6640 Clemson to campus rates start at $6650 Clemson to campus rates start at $6660 Clemson to campus rates start at $6670 Clemson to campus rates start at $6680 Clemson to campus rates start at $6690 Clemson to campus rates start at $6700 Clemson to campus rates start at $6710 Clemson to campus rates start at $6720 Clemson to campus rates start at $6730 Clemson to campus rates start at $6740 Clemson to campus rates start at $6750 Clemson to campus rates start at $6760 Clemson to campus rates start at $6770 Clemson to campus rates start at $6780 Clemson to campus rates start at $6790 Clemson to campus rates start at $6800 Clemson to campus rates start at $6810 Clemson to campus rates start at $6820 Clemson to campus rates start at $6830 Clemson to campus rates start at $6840 Clemson to campus rates start at $6850 Clemson to campus rates start at $6860 Clemson to campus rates start at $6870 Clemson to campus rates start at $6880 Clemson to campus rates start at $6890 Clemson to campus rates start at $6900 Clemson to campus rates start at $6910 Clemson to campus rates start at $6920 Clemson to campus rates start at $6930 Clemson to campus rates start at $6940 Clemson to campus rates start at $6950 Clemson to campus rates start at $6960 Clemson to campus rates start at $6970 Clemson to campus rates start at $6980 Clemson to campus rates start at $6990 Clemson to campus rates start at $7000 Clemson to campus rates start at $7010 Clemson to campus rates start at $7020 Clemson to campus rates start at $7030 Clemson to campus rates start at $7040 Clemson to campus rates start at $7050 Clemson to campus rates start at $7060 Clemson to campus rates start at $7070 Clemson to campus rates start at $7080 Clemson to campus rates start at $7090 Clemson to campus rates start at $7100 Clemson to campus rates start at $7110 Clemson to campus rates start at $7120 Clemson to campus rates start at $7130 Clemson to campus rates start at $7140 Clemson to campus rates start at $7150 Clemson to campus rates start at $7160 Clemson to campus rates start at $7170 Clemson to campus rates start at $7180 Clemson to campus rates start at $7190 Clemson to campus rates start at $7200 Clemson to campus rates start at $7210 Clemson to campus rates start at $7220 Clemson to campus rates start at $7230 Clemson to campus rates start at $7240 Clemson to campus rates start at $7250 Clemson to campus rates start at $7260 Clemson to campus rates start at $7270 Clemson to campus rates start at $7280 Clemson to campus rates start at $7290 Clemson to campus rates start at $7300 Clemson to campus rates start at $7310 Clemson to campus rates start at $7320 Clemson to campus rates start at $7330 Clemson to campus rates start at $7340 Clemson to campus rates start at $7350 Clemson to campus rates start at $7360 Clemson to campus rates start at $7370 Clemson to campus rates start at $7380 Clemson to campus rates start at $7390 Clemson to campus rates start at $7400 Clemson to campus rates start at $7410 Clemson to campus rates start at $7420 Clemson to campus rates start at $7430 Clemson to campus rates start at $7440 Clemson to campus rates start at $7450 Clemson to campus rates start at $7460 Clemson to campus rates start at $7470 Clemson to campus rates start at $7480 Clemson to campus rates start at $7490 Clemson to campus rates start at $7500 Clemson to campus rates start at $7510 Clemson to campus rates start at $7520 Clemson to campus rates start at $7530 Clemson to campus rates start at $7540 Clemson to campus rates start at $7550 Clemson to campus rates start at $7560 Clemson to campus rates start at $7570 Clemson to campus rates start at $7580 Clemson to campus rates start at $7590 Clemson to campus rates start at $7600 Clemson to campus rates start at $7610 Clemson to campus rates start at $7620 Clemson to campus rates start at $7630 Clemson to campus rates start at $7640 Clemson to campus rates start at $7650 Clemson to campus rates start at $7660 Clemson to campus rates start at $7670 Clemson to campus rates start at $7680 Clemson to campus rates start at $7690 Clemson to campus rates start at $7700 Clemson to campus rates start at $7710 Clemson to campus rates start at $7720 Clemson to campus rates start at $7730 Clemson to campus rates start at $7740 Clemson to campus rates start at $7750 Clemson to campus rates start at $7760 Clemson to campus rates start at $7770 Clemson to campus rates start at $7780 Clemson to campus rates start at $7790 Clemson to campus rates start at $7800 Clemson to campus rates start at $7810 Clemson to campus rates start at $7820 Clemson to campus rates start at $7830 Clemson to campus rates start at $7840 Clemson to campus rates start at $7850 Clemson to campus rates start at $7860 Clemson to campus rates start at $7870 Clemson to campus rates start at $7880 Clemson to campus rates start at $7890 Clemson to campus rates start at $7900 Clemson to campus rates start at $7910 Clemson to campus rates start at $7920 Clemson to campus rates start at $7930 Clemson to campus rates start at $7940 Clemson to campus rates start at $7950 Clemson to campus rates start at $7960 Clemson to campus rates start at $7970 Clemson to campus rates start at $7980 Clemson to campus rates start at $7990 Clemson to campus rates start at $8000 Clemson to campus rates start at $8010 Clemson to campus rates start at $8020 Clemson to campus rates start at $8030 Clemson to campus rates start at $8040 Clemson to campus rates start at $8050 Clemson to campus rates start at $8060 Clemson to campus rates start at $8070 Clemson to campus rates start at $8080 Clemson to campus rates start at $8090 Clemson to campus rates start at $8100 Clemson to campus rates start at $8110 Clemson to campus rates start at $8120 Clemson to campus rates start at $8130 Clemson to campus rates start at $8140 Clemson to campus rates start at $8150 Clemson to campus rates start at $8160 Clemson to campus rates start at $8170 Clemson to campus rates start at $8180 Clemson to campus rates start at $8190 Clemson to campus rates start at $8200 Clemson to campus rates start at $8210 Clemson to campus rates start at $8220 Clemson to campus rates start at $8230 Clemson to campus rates start at $8240 Clemson to campus rates start at $8250 Clemson to campus rates start at $8260 Clemson to campus rates start at $8270 Clemson to campus rates start at $8280 Clemson to campus rates start at $8290 Clemson to campus rates start at $8300 Clemson to campus rates start at $8310 Clemson to campus rates start at $8320 Clemson to campus rates start at $8330 Clemson to campus rates start at $8340 Clemson to campus rates start at $8350 Clemson to campus rates start at $8360 Clemson to campus rates start at $8370 Clemson to campus rates start at $8380 Clemson to campus rates start at $8390 Clemson to campus rates start at $8400 Clemson to campus rates start at $8410 Clemson to campus rates start at $8420 Clemson to campus rates start at $8430 Clemson to campus rates start at $8440 Clemson to campus rates start at $8450 Clemson to campus rates start at $8460 Clemson to campus rates start at $8470 Clemson to campus rates start at $8480 Clemson to campus rates start at $8490 Clemson to campus rates start at $8500 Clemson to campus rates start at $8510 Clemson to campus rates start at $8520 Clemson to campus rates start at $8530 Clemson to campus rates start at $8540 Clemson to campus rates start at $8550 Clemson to campus rates start at $8560 Clemson to campus rates start at $8570 Clemson to campus rates start at $8580 Clemson to campus rates start at $8590 Clemson to campus rates start at $8600 Clemson to campus rates start at $8610 Clemson to campus rates start at $8620 Clemson to campus rates start at $8630 Clemson to campus rates start at $8640 Clemson to campus rates start at $8650 Clemson to campus rates start at $8660 Clemson to campus rates start at $8670 Clemson to campus rates start at $8680 Clemson to campus rates start at $8690 Clemson to campus rates start at $8700 Clemson to campus rates start at $8710 Clemson to campus rates start at $8720 Clemson to campus rates start at $8730 Clemson to campus rates start at $8740 Clemson to campus rates start at $8750 Clemson to campus rates start at $8760 Clemson to campus rates start at $8770 Clemson to campus rates start at $8780 Clemson to campus rates start at $8790 Clemson to campus rates start at $8800 Clemson to campus rates start at $8810 Clemson to campus rates start at $8820 Clemson to campus rates start at $8830 Clemson to campus rates start at $8840 Clemson to campus rates start at $8850 Clemson to campus rates start at $8860 Clemson to campus rates start at $8870 Clemson to campus rates start at $8880 Clemson to campus rates start at $8890 Clemson to campus rates start at $8900 Clemson to campus rates start at $8910 Clemson to campus rates start at $8920 Clemson to campus rates start at $8930 Clemson to campus rates start at $8940 Clemson to campus rates start at $8950 Clemson to campus rates start at $8960 Clemson to campus rates start at $8970 Clemson to campus rates start at $8980 Clemson to campus rates start at $8990 Clemson to campus rates start at $89A0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89B0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89C0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89D0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89E0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89F0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89G0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89H0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89I0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89J0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89K0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89L0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89M0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89N0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89O0 Clemson to campus rates start at $89P00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89Q00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89R00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89S00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89T00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89U00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89V00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89W00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89X00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89Y00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89Z00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89A00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89B00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89C00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89D00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89E00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89F00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89G00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89H00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89I00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89J00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89K00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89L00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89M00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89N00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89O00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89R00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89S00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89T00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89U00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89V00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89W00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89A00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89B00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89C00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89D00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89E00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89F00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89G00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89H00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89I00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89J00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89K00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89L00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89M00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89N00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89O00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89R00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89S00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89T00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89U00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89V00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89W00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89X00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89Y00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89Z00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89O00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89R00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89S00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89T00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89U00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89V00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89W00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89X00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89Y00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89Z00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89O00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89R00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89S00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89T00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89U00 Clemson to campus rates start at $89V00 Clemson to campus rates start
Rockledge Villa Apartments, Limited offer: first month free rent. Four months of limited apt with all utilities paid within 6 months. Call after 4:30 p.m., m-843-7731
1968 Suzuki X-6 xcramber 250cc. It looks and runs like a new. Must to appreciate. $375. Call 842-1843 or ask for Dave. 4-18
Red Baron
1970 Kawasaki 90cc. Good condition, low mileage; call Frank, 864-6834 4-14
Tired of trying to find that ideal apt. or home for her? Need it now! The Bentley Homes team in various locations and price ranges from the Mornery Agency, 901 Kensinger, Kentucky; the McCormick Agency, 801 Kentucky, Kentucky; and the Greenbelt Agency, 751 Kentucky, Kentucky.
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the garden. It was established in 1972, while the selection is still available. The garden's styles are 842-2588 or 2107 A Harvard Garden and 842-2589 B Garden located and surrounded by a beautiful garden.
Avalon, 9th & Avalon, Harvard
& Princeton, 10th & Avalon,
11th & Bursar. Then compare the cost of living in one of these handsome apartments and you will be more to have a dishwasher, central heating, and many more features 4-14
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
012 8944
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUSAGES
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
Lee
THE MERCANTILE
Carol Lee
10. The Club Drinks
Sandwiches
5 a.m. - 12 p.m. Tues. - Sat.
6 a.m. - 9 p.m.
5.9 Mon.
30 Varieties of Donuts
When you invite hot, you're hot. When you
receive cold comfort, you're cold. At UNIVERSITY
MINTS, Bayeaux pool and cloak room.
MPT SCHOLARSHIP APRIL 15, 1299 W. 4th St.
APt HI, 1529 W. 9th St. Phone: 800-765-2342
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
NOTICE
For Best- Two bedroom home, one
airstrip, just outside city, $125 mei,
plus utilities, yearly lease, avail. May
1-4
for Appt. 842-3431
Barn Partition, Low for available for rent at Valley Park. Valley Park at Lake Perry, but also available for rent and could potentially be punked off as a place to live after 6 months. Call the Siever after 6 months. at 854-279-5811.
Studio apartment, Quiet, furnished,
air conditioned, steam heat, parking.
Need business man or grad, student
grade. Available May 14th.
830-8600. 4-18
LEARN SKYDIVING 1st jump
BEGIN DIVISION 2nd jump
jumpmaster first, place rides and
goals. Complete Class 5th
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Traines & Training Class 339th
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Traines & Training Class 341th
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Traines & Training Class 344th
Traines & Training Class 345th
Traines & Training Class 346th
Traines & Training Class 347th
Traines & Training Class 348th
Traines & Training Class 349th
Traines & Training Class 350th
Traines & Training Class 351th
Traines & Training Class 352th
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Traines & Training Class 354th
Traines & Training Class 355th
Traines & Training Class 356th
Traines & Training Class 357th
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Traines & Training Class 359th
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Traines & Training Class 361th
Traines & Training Class 362th
Traines & Training Class 363th
Traines & Training Class 364th
Traines & Training Class 365th
Traines & Training Class 366th
Traines & Training Class 367th
Traines & Training Class 368th
Traines & Training Class 369th
Traines & Training Class 370th
Traines & Training Class 371th
Traines & Training Class 372th
Traines & Training Class 373th
Traines & Training Class 374th
Traines & Training Class 375th
Traines & Training Class 376th
Traines & Training Class 377th
Traines & Training Class 378th
Traines & Training Class 379th
Traines & Training Class 380th
Traines & Training Class 381th
Traines & Training Class 382th
Traines & Training Class 383th
Traines & Training Class 384th
Traines & Training Class 385th
Traines & Training Class 386th
Traines & Training Class 387th
Traines & Training Class 388th
Traines & Training Class 389th
Traines & Training Class 390th
Traines & Training Class 391th
Traines & Training Class 392th
Traines & Training Class 393th
Traines & Training Class 394th
Traines & Training Class 395th
Traines & Training Class 396th
Traines & Training Class 397th
Traines & Training Class 398th
Traines & Training Class 399th
Traines & Training Class 400th
Traines & Training Class 401th
Traines & Training Class 402th
Traines & Training Class 403th
Traines & Training Class 404th
Traines & Training Class 405th
Traines & Training Class 406th
Traines & Training Class 407th
Traines & Training Class 408th
Traines & Training Class 409th
Traines & Training Class 410th
Traines & Training Class 411th
Traines & Training Class 412th
Traines & Training Class 413th
Traines & Training Class 414th
Traines & Training Class 415th
Traines & Training Class 416th
Traines & Training Class 417th
Traines & Training Class 418th
Traines & Training Class 419th
Traines & Training Class 420th
Traines & Training Class 421th
Traines & Training Class 422th
Traines & Training Class 423th
Traines & Training Class 424th
Traines & Training Class 425th
Traines & Training Class 426th
Traines & Training Class 427th
Traines & Training Class 428th
Traines & Training Class 429th
Traines & Training Class 430th
Traines & Training Class 431th
Traines & Training Class 432th
Traines & Training Class 433th
Traines & Training Class 434th
Traines & Training Class 435th
Traines & Training Class 436th
Traines & Training Class 437th
Traines & Training Class 438th
Traines & Training Class 439th
Traines & Training Class 440th
Traines & Training Class 441th
Traines & Training Class 442th
Traines & Training Class 443th
Traines & Training Class 444th
Traines & Training Class 445th
Traines & Training Class 446th
Traines & Training Class 447th
Traines & Training Class 448th
Traines & Training Class 449th
Traines & Training Class 450th
Traines & Training Class 451th
Traines & Training Class 452th
Traines & Training Class 453th
Traines & Training Class 454th
Traines & Training Class 455th
Traines & Training Class 456th
Traines & Training Class 457th
Traines & Training Class 458th
Traines & Training Class 459th
Traines & Training Class 460th
Traines & Training Class 461th
Traines & Training Class 462th
Traines & Training Class 463th
Traines & Training Class 464th
Traines & Training Class 465th
Traines & Training Class 466th
Traines & Training Class 467th
Traines & Training Class 468th
Traines & Training Class 469th
Traines & Training Class 470th
Traines & Training Class 471th
Traines & Training Class 472th
Traines & Training Class 473th
Traines & Training Class 474th
Traines & Training Class 475th
Traines & Training Class 476th
Traines & Training Class 477th
Traines & Training Class 478th
Traines & Training Class 479th
Traines & Training Class 480th
Traines & Training Class 481th
Traines & Training Class 482th
Traines & Training Class 483th
Traines & Training Class 484th
Traines & Training Class 485th
Traines & Training Class 486th
Traines & Training Class 487th
Traines & Training Class 488th
Traines & Training Class 489th
Traines & Training Class 490th
Traines & Training Class 491th
Traines & Training Class 492th
Traines & Training Class 493th
Traines & Training Class 494th
Traines & Training Class 495th
Traines & Training Class 496th
Traines & Training Class 497th
Traines & Training Class 498th
Traines & Training Class 499th
Traines & Training Class 500th
Traines & Training Class 501th
Traines & Training Class 502th
Traines & Training Class 503th
Traines & Training Class 504th
Traines & Training Class 505th
Traines & Training Class 506th
Traines & Training Class 507th
Traines & Training Class 508th
Traines & Training Class 509th
Traines & Training Class 510th
Traines & Training Class 511th
Traines & Training Class 512th
Traines & Training Class 513th
Traines & Training Class 514th
Traines & Training Class 515th
Traines & Training Class 516th
Traines & Training Class 517th
Traines & Training Class 518th
Traines & Training Class 519th
Traines & Training Class 520th
Traines & Training Class 521th
Traines & Training Class 522th
Traines & Training Class 523th
Traines & Training Class 524th
Traines & Training Class 525th
Traines & Training Class 526th
Traines & Training Class 527th
Traines & Training Class 528th
Traines & Training Class 529th
Traines & Training Class 530th
Traines & Training Class 531th
Traines & Training Class 532th
Traines & Training Class 533th
Traines & Training Class 534th
Traines & Training Class 535th
Traines & Training Class 536th
Traines & Training Class 537th
Traines & Training Class 538th
Traines & Training Class 539th
Traines & Training Class 540th
Traines & Training Class 541th
Traines & Training Class 542th
Traines & Training Class 543th
Traines & Training Class 544th
Traines & Training Class 545th
Traines & Training Class 546th
Traines & Training Class 547th
Traines & Training Class 548th
Traines & Training Class 549th
Traines & Training Class 550th
Traines & Training Class 551th
Traines & Training Class 552th
Traines & Training Class 553th
Traines & Training Class 554th
Traines & Training Class 555th
Traines & Training Class 556th
Traines & Training Class 557th
Traines & Training Class 558th
Traines & Training Class 559th
Traines & Training Class 560th
Traines & Training Class 561th
Traines & Training Class 562th
Traines & Training Class 563th
Traines & Training Class 564th
Traines & Training Class 565th
Traines & Training Class 566th
Traines & Training Class 567th
Traines & Training Class 568th
Traines & Training Class 569th
Traines & Training Class 570th
Traines & Training Class 571th
Traines & Training Class 572th
Traines & Training Class 573th
Traines & Training Class 574th
Traines & Training Class 575th
Traines & Training Class 576th
Traines & Training Class 577th
Traines & Training Class 578th
Traines & Training Class 579th
Traines & Training Class 580th
Traines & Training Class 581th
Traines & Training Class 582th
Traines & Training Class 583th
Traines & Training Class 584th
Traines & Training Class 585th
Traines & Training Class 586th
Traines & Training Class 587th
Traines & Training Class 588th
Traines & Training Class 589th
Traines & Training Class 590th
Traines & Training Class 591th
Traines & Training Class 592th
Traines & Training Class 593th
Traines & Training Class 594th
Traines & Training Class 595th
Traines & Training Class 596th
Traines & Training Class 597th
Traines & Training Class 598th
Traines & Training Class 599th
Traines & Training Class 600th
Traines & Training Class 601th
Traines & Training Class 602th
Traines & Training Class 603th
Traines & Training Class 604th
Traines & Training Class 605th
Traines & Training Class 606th
Traines & Training Class 607th
Traines & Training Class 608th
Traines & Training Class 609th
Traines & Training Class 610th
Traines & Training Class 611th
Traines & Training Class 612th
Traines & Training Class 613th
Traines & Training Class 614th
Traines & Training Class 615th
Traines & Training Class 616th
Traines & Training Class 617th
Traines & Training Class 618th
Traines & Training Class 619th
Traines & Training Class 620th
Traines & Training Class 621th
Traines & Training Class 622th
Traines & Training Class 623th
Traines & Training Class 624th
Traines & Training Class 625th
Traines & Training Class 626th
Traines & Training Class 627th
Traines & Training Class 628th
Traines & Training Class 629th
Traines & Training Class 630th
Traines & Training Class 631th
Traines & Training Class 632th
Traines & Training Class 633th
Traines & Training Class 634th
Traines & Training Class 635th
Traines & Training Class 636th
Traines & Training Class 637th
Traines & Training Class 638th
Traines & Training Class 639th
Traines & Training Class 640th
Traines & Training Class 641th
Traines & Training Class 642th
Traines & Training Class 643th
Traines & Training Class 644th
Traines & Training Class 645th
Traines & Training Class 646th
Traines & Training Class 647th
Traines & Training Class 648th
Traines & Training Class 649th
Traines & Training Class 650th
Traines & Training Class 651th
Traines & Training Class 652th
Traines & Training Class 653th
Traines & Training Class 654th
Traines & Training Class 655th
Traines & Training Class 656th
Traines & Training Class 657th
Traines & Training Class 658th
Traines & Training Class 659th
Traines & Training Class 660th
Traines & Training Class 661th
Traines & Training Class 662th
Traines & Training Class 663th
Traines & Training Class 664th
Traines & Training Class 665th
Traines & Training Class 666th
Traines & Training Class 667th
Traines & Training Class 668th
Traines & Training Class 669th
Traines & Training Class 670th
Traines & Training Class 671th
Traines & Training Class 672th
Traines & Training Class 673th
Traines & Training Class 674th
Traines & Training Class 675th
Traines & Training Class 676th
Traines & Training Class 677th
Traines & Training Class 678th
Traines & Training Class 679th
Traines & Training Class 680th
Traines & Training Class 681th
Traines & Training Class 682th
Traines & Training Class 683th
Traines & Training Class 684th
Traines & Training Class 685th
Traines & Training Class 686th
Traines & Training Class 687th
Traines & Training Class 688th
Traines & Training Class 689th
Traines & Training Class 690th
Traines & Training Class 691th
Traines & Training Class 692th
Traines & Training Class 693th
Traines & Training Class 694th
Traines & Training Class 695th
Traines & Training Class 696th
Traines & Training Class 697th
Traines & Training Class 698th
Traines & Training Class 699th
Traines & Training Class 700th
Traines & Training Class 701th
Traines & Training Class 702th
Traines & Training Class 703th
Traines & Training Class 704th
Traines & Training Class 705th
Traines & Training Class 706th
Traines & Training Class 707th
Traines & Training Class 708th
Traines & Training Class 709th
Traines & Training Class 710th
Traines & Training Class 711th
Traines & Training Class 712th
Traines & Training Class 713th
Traines & Training Class 714th
Traines & Training Class 715th
Traines & Training Class 716th
Traines & Training Class 717th
Traines & Training Class 718th
Traines & Training Class 719th
Traines & Training Class 720th
Traines & Training Class 721th
Traines & Training Class 722th
Traines & Training Class 723th
Traines & Training Class 724th
Traines & Training Class 725th
Traines & Training Class 726th
Traines & Training Class 727th
Traines & Training Class 728th
Traines & Training Class 729th
Traines & Training Class 730th
Traines & Training Class 731th
Traines & Training Class 732th
Traines & Training Class 733th
Traines & Training Class 734th
Traines & Training Class 735th
Traines & Training Class 736th
Traines & Training Class 737th
Traines & Training Class 738th
Traines & Training Class 739th
Traines & Training Class 740th
Traines & Training Class 741th
Traines & Training Class 742th
Traines & Training Class 743th
Traines & Training Class 744th
Traines & Training Class 745th
Traines & Training Class 746th
Traines & Training Class 747th
Traines & Training Class 748th
Traines & Training Class 749th
Traines & Training Class 750th
Traines & Training Class 751th
Traines & Training Class 752th
Traines & Training Class 753th
Traines & Training Class 754th
Traines & Training Class 755th
Traines & Training Class 756th
Traines & Training Class 757th
Traines & Training Class 758th
Traines & Training Class 759th
Traines & Training Class 760th
Traines & Training Class 761th
Traines & Training Class 762th
Traines & Training Class 763th
Traines & Training Class 764th
Traines & Training Class 765th
Traines & Training Class 766th
Traines & Training Class 767th
Traines & Training Class 768th
Traines & Training Class 769th
Traines & Training Class 770th
Traines & Training Class 771th
Traines & Training Class 772th
Traines & Training Class 773th
Traines & Training Class 774th
Traines & Training Class 775th
Traines & Training Class 776th
Traines & Training Class 777th
Traines & Training Class 778th
Traines & Training Class 779th
Traines & Training Class 780th
Traines & Training Class 781th
Traines & Training Class 782th
Traines & Training Class 783th
Traines & Training Class 784th
Traines & Training Class 785th
Traines & Training Class 786th
Traines & Training Class 787th
Traines & Training Class 788th
Traines & Training Class 789th
Traines & Training Class 790th
Traines & Training Class 791th
Traines & Training Class 792th
Traines & Training Class 793th
Traines & Training Class 794th
Traines & Training Class 795th
Traines & Training Class 796th
Traines & Training Class 797th
Traines & Training Class 798th
Traines & Training Class 799th
Traines & Training Class 800th
Traines & Training Class 801th
Traines & Training Class 802th
Traines & Training Class 803th
Traines & Training Class 804th
Traines & Training Class 805th
Traines & Training Class 806th
Traines & Training Class 807th
Traines & Training Class 808th
Traines & Training Class 809th
Traines & Training Class 810th
Traines & Training Class 811th
Traines & Training Class 812th
Traines & Training Class 813th
Traines & Training Class 814th
Traines & Training Class 815th
Traines & Training Class 816th
Traines & Training Class 817th
Traines & Training Class 818th
Traines & Training Class 819th
Traines & Training Class 820th
Traines & Training Class 821th
Traines & Training Class 822th
Traines & Training Class 823th
Traines & Training Class 824th
Traines & Training Class 825th
Traines & Training Class 826th
Traines & Training Class 827th
Traines & Training Class 828th
Traines & Training Class 829th
Traines & Training Class 830th
Traines & Training Class 831th
Traines & Training Class 832th
Traines & Training Class 833th
Traines & Training Class 834th
Traines & Training Class 835th
Traines & Training Class 836th
Traines & Training Class 837th
Traines & Training Class 838th
Traines & Training Class 839th
Traines & Training Class 840th
Traines & Training Class 841th
Traines & Training Class 842th
Traines & Training Class 843th
Traines & Training Class 844th
Traines & Training Class 845th
Traines & Training Class 846th
Traines & Training Class 847th
Traines & Training Class 848th
Traines & Training Class 849th
Traines & Training Class 850th
Traines & Training Class 851th
Traines & Training Class 852th
Traines & Training Class 853th
Traines & Training Class 854th
Traines & Training Class 855th
Traines & Training Class 856th
Traines & Training Class 857th
Traines & Training Class 858th
Traines & Training Class 859th
Traines & Training Class 860th
Traines & Training Class 861th
Traines & Training Class 862th
Traines & Training Class 863th
Traines & Training Class 864th
Traines & Training Class 865th
Traines & Training Class 866th
Traines & Training Class 867th
Traines & Training Class 868th
Traines & Training Class 869th
Traines & Training Class 870th
Traines & Training Class 871th
Traines & Training Class 872th
Traines & Training Class 873th
Traines & Training Class 874th
Traines & Training Class 875th
Traines & Training Class 876th
Traines & Training Class 877th
Traines & Training Class 878th
Traines & Training Class 879th
Traines & Training Class 880th
Traines & Training Class 881th
Traines & Training Class 882th
Traines & Training Class 883th
Traines & Training Class 884th
Traines & Training Class 885th
Traines & Training Class 886th
Traines & Training Class 887th
Traines & Training Class 888th
Traines & Training Class 889th
Traines & Training Class 890th
Traines & Training Class 891th
Traines & Training Class 892th
Traines & Training Class 893th
Traines & Training Class 894th
Traines & Training Class 895th
Traines & Training Class 896th
Traines & Training Class 897th
Traines & Training Class 898th
Traines & Training Class 899th
Traines & Training Class 900th
Traines & Training Class 901th
Traines & Training Class 902th
Traines & Training Class 903th
Traines & Training Class 904th
Traines & Training Class 905th
Traines & Training Class 906th
Traines & Training Class 907th
Traines & Training Class 908th
Traines & Training Class 909th
Traines & Training Class 910th
Traines & Training Class 911th
Traines & Training Class 912th
Traines & Training Class 913th
Traines & Training Class 914th
Traines & Training Class 915th
Traines & Training Class 916th
Traines & Training Class 917th
Traines & Training Class 918th
Traines & Training Class 919th
Traines & Training Class 920th
Traines & Training Class 921th
Traines & Training Class 922th
Traines & Training Class 923th
Traines & Training Class 924th
Traines & Training Class 925th
Traines & Training Class 926th
Traines & Training Class 927th
Traines & Training Class 928th
Traines & Training Class 929th
Traines & Training Class 930th
Traines & Training Class 931th
Traines & Training Class 932th
Traines & Training Class 933th
Traines & Training Class 934th
Traines & Training Class 935th
Traines & Training Class 936th
Traines & Training Class 937th
Traines & Training Class 938th
Traines & Training Class 939th
Traines & Training Class 940th
Traines & Training Class 941th
Traines & Training Class 942th
Traines & Training Class 943th
Traines & Training Class 944th
Traines & Training Class 945th
Traines & Training Class 946th
Traines & Training Class 947th
Traines & Training Class 948th
Traines & Training Class 949th
Traines & Training Class 950th
Traines & Training Class 951th
Traines & Training Class 952th
Traines & Training Class 953th
Traines & Training Class 954th
Traines & Training Class 955th
Traines & Training Class 956th
Traines & Training Class 957th
Traines & Training Class 958th
Traines & Training Class 959th
Traines & Training Class 960th
Traines & Training Class 961th
Traines & Training Class 962th
Traines & Training Class 963th
Traines & Training Class 964th
Traines & Training Class 965th
Traines & Training Class 966th
Traines & Training Class 967th
Traines & Training Class 968th
Traines & Training Class 969th
Traines & Training Class 970th
Traines & Training Class 971th
Traines & Training Class 972th
Traines & Training Class 973th
Traines & Training Class 974th
Traines & Training Class 975th
Traines & Training Class 976th
Traines & Training Class 977th
Traines & Training Class 978th
Traines & Training Class 979th
Traines & Training Class 980th
Traines & Training Class 981th
Traines & Training Class 982th
Traines & Training Class 983th
Traines & Training Class 984th
Traines & Training Class 985th
Traines & Training Class 986th
Traines & Training Class 987th
Traines & Training Class 988th
Traines & Training Class 989th
Traines & Training Class 990th
Traines & Training Class 991th
Traines & Training Class 992th
Traines & Training Class 993th
Traines & Training Class 994th
Traines & Training Class 995th
Traines & Training Class 996th
Traines & Training Class 997th
Traines & Training Class 998th
Traines & Training Class 999th
Traines & Training Class 100th
Traines & Training Class 101th
Traines & Training Class 102th
Traines & Training Class 103th
Traines & Training Class 104th
Traines & Training Class 105th
Traines & Training Class 106th
Traines & Training Class 107th
Traines & Training Class 108th
Traines & Training Class 109th
Traines & Training Class 110th
Traines & Training Class 111th
Traines & Training Class 112th
Traines & Training Class 113th
Traines & Training Class 114th
Traines & Training Class 115th
Traines & Training Class 116th
Traines & Training Class 117th
Traines & Training Class 118th
Traines & Training Class 119th
Traines & Training Class 120th
Traines & Training Class 121th
Traines & Training Class 122th
Traines & Training Class 123th
Traines & Training Class 124th
Traines & Training Class 125th
Traines & Training Class 126th
Traines & Training Class 127th
Traines & Training Class 128th
Traines & Training Class 129th
Traines & Training Class 130th
Traines & Training Class 131th
Traines & Training Class 132th
Traines & Training Class 133th
Traines & Training Class 134th
Traines & Training Class 135th
Traines & Training Class 136th
Traines & Training Class 137th
Traines & Training Class 138th
Traines & Training Class 139th
Traines & Training Class 140th
Traines & Training Class 141th
Traines & Training Class 142th
Traines & Training Class 143th
Traines & Training Class 144th
Traines & Training Class 145th
Traines & Training Class 146th
Traines & Training Class 147th
Traines & Training Class 148th
Traines & Training Class 149th
Traines & Training Class 150th
Traines & Training Class 151th
Traines & Training Class 152th
Traines & Training Class 153th
Traines & Training Class 154th
Traines & Training Class 155th
Traines & Training Class 156th
Traines & Training Class 157th
Traines & Training Class 158th
Traines & Training Class 159th
Traines & Training Class 160th
Traines & Training Class 161th
Traines & Training Class 162th
Traines & Training Class 163th
Traines & Training Class 164th
Traines & Training Class 165th
Traines & Training Class 166th
Traines & Training Class 167th
Traines & Training Class 168th
Traines & Training Class 169th
Traines & Training Class 170th
Traines & Training Class 171th
Traines & Training Class 172th
Traines & Training Class 173th
Traines & Training Class 174th
Traines & Training Class 175th
Traines & Training Class 176th
Traines & Training Class 177th
Traines & Training Class 178th
Traines & Training Class 179th
Traines & Training Class 180th
Traines & Training Class 181th
Traines & Training Class 182th
Traines & Training Class 183th
Traines & Training Class 184th
Traines & Training Class 185th
Traines & Training Class 186th
Traines & Training Class 187th
Traines & Training Class 188th
Traines & Training Class 189th
Traines & Training Class 190th
Traines & Training Class 191th
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Traines & Training Class 193th
Traines & Training Class 194th
Traines & Training Class 195th
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Traines
Would you like to see some pretty
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JIM'S STEAK HOUSE—where you will find one of the best steaks in town. Our motto is "Dine Out at Eating Oat Prices." 4-14
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LOOK WHAT SANTEE APTS HAVE TO OFFER! Summer rates, swimming pool, A.C. free cable-TV and DVD. Browse hotels in Iowa 122nd Street, 843-211-69.
Sublease for summer: studio apt,
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WEDDING INVITATIONS — PRICES
up to $450. Includes custom
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INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-6764
Professional care for children in
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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.
GEM AND MINERAL SHOW — See demonstrations in Lapidary Arts — Glass Blowing, Exhibition, Dealer
— Sponsored by the Lawrence Gem and
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16, 10 a.m to 6 p.m. FREE ADMISSION
4-14
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Attention. Truffault freaks, trammies, and everyone who likes good movies SIA presents Truffault Week. Truffault Week offers a few nightly, every night. 4-14
LONNY FAME, and the Bellastone, A rock n' Roll Band straight out of the 1990s. For more information contact Rik, 842-6250 or John, 842-3814- 4-18
CHANGE OF LOCATION From April 15 through October 13, folk festival takes place at Lake Pavilion. However, if bad weather or another group prevails, the event will be rescheduled. Gym Gym, Same old time, 7:10 p.m. Free讲演. Free come and join in. By April 18.
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Girl's watch. Wernert-looking, new brown leather band. Friday night on hill. Joe'c, or 14th & Term. 841-3541.
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REFERENCE
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Lawrence, Kansas 60044
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---
928
Matex
Mass
12
Wednesday, April 12, 1972
University Daily Kansan
1. 2794
I'll just put the text as it appears. If you need more specific details, please provide them.
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
Community Children's Center, Inc., one sharing the load.
Children Blow Bubbles While Waiting Lists Swell
KU's Need Undetermined For Day Care Center
By JUDY HENRY
Kansan Staff Writer
Lucile Paden, social welfare lecturer and a member of the senate day area, was a center planner. She were being made to accommodate children on the basis of the number of applicants for the position. Lafflin, said the United Center filled up eight months before the school year began, and there people on the waiting list.
The United Day Care Center, in North Kingston, was founded by Church, 946 Vermont St., is totally self-supporting, obtaining all the funds used to run the day care center.
LAFLIN SAID there was no survey made, and none existed. The school's faculty, students and students who needed a child care center. People have called her to ask that she be moved to the list for the KU center, she said.
Judy Bencivengo, director of the United Child Care Center, said she was a priority for September was completed by February this year. The center has turned away emergency care and there is a long waitlist
Bencivengo said there were not
Agnew Says History Books Have Left Bias
WASHINGTON (AP)—Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew said Tuesday U.S. history and reference are beginning to be new. Left has long said permeates much of the daily press.
Yearbooks, encyclopedias and on line journals are increasingly lainted clearly unobjective accounts of politically related events and research.
In a speech to the Capitol Club, a Republican organization, Agnew said, "politicized material is getting into standard public discourse, and then parents rely on as general reference books for today's students.
Technology Hoped to Save Energy Supply
WASHINGTON (AP)—The president of the University of Tennessee, new technical knowledge could guarantee that the nation's dwindling energy resources will stay on track.
Dr. Edward E. David Jr. said current shortages can be solved by raising prices and using resources more prudently.
David told the House Interior Committee he opposes arbitrary curtailing of 'the nation's seemingly insatable appetite for energy supply to save the environment, support or to protect the environment.
He said technology offers options to provide "a clean, abundant and assured supply of energy" for the nation at reasonable prices."
This includes developing the country's abundance of coal, oil and gas. The unattapped Alaskan and off-shore gas and oil resources. David said. Steam is one of the sun's energy, the chemical deuterium in the seas and the hot water.
It also means the emergence of nuclearpower, birth pains and all, David said.
enough child care centers for the people that needed them, even on weekends. And there said there were 3,000 5-year-old entering the Lawrence public schools every year, and the child needs places to care for 128 children.
"Lawrence is an intellectual community," she said, "and therefore the people don't want her to want any educational program."
SHE SAID that many children who had attended child care centers performed better in the classroom, and schools recommended a pre-school.
said that eight of the 12 children at her center were from KU families, although all the parents are still in staff, or Ph.D. candidates.
twenty-two of the 48 children
of the Children Center are
from institutions
faculty, staff, or students.
Bencivieque said. Wanda Cherry,
a child at the school.
Mrs. Velodon Patten, who has a day care center, said the parents of two of the six children at the center were affiliated with KU. Fern Branden, operator of another home center, said two of her children at her center had KU. She was affiliated with KU.
The Infant Day Care Center at Meadowbrook didn't keep records of parents occupations, or the number of children in center. A spokesman for the Community Children's Center, a part of Head Start, said there were no children of KU affiliated with the community that served families of low income
In his last 30-odd days as a 17-year old, Quintus Ella, "a rich, happy, intelligent freak" maps out the territory of his life in a city where he will surely bear him. And so begins "Old Glory and the Real-Time Freaks" a new novel by Kalp Blium (offered by Press at $9.95, currently available in the Oread Book Shop)
Past, Present Mingle in Novel
By KIRK MCALEXANDER
Kenner Becker
which exhibits no remorse and asks no favors.
We cannot but be perplexed, jaded as we are; we cannot but be attracted. Blum's hero reveals himself a thoroughly integrated human being who connects to the world through his family and friends, his grandfather and girlfriend with no embarrassment, each on his own peculiar merits. He is not embracing, rather he disarms.
If one could do the same, do it
wity as an ancient Ogala Sioux—his present thus threatened from before and behind—shocked even into the heart of his grandson at once far-flung and in touch, inconceivable and, yet fulfilled? He is in the unique position of consciousness, midway up on the 'totem pole' of his father unit (five generations).
certainly a wealth of new human values to be discovered and explored, as Saul Bellow's older, *and* his more modern, *maintained back in time*. 1961. DRUGS ARE a predominant factor of our culture, the war does persist (Quinn from home from mustn'm murder with a chain-saw to wind down), their prejudice, poverty, and a whole batch of other ticks. Yet the war itself is not insignificant; it manifest (again like "Heroz") that we are really in no need of salvation. The individual wakes up to new and shining realities.
Quintus Elis—as he notes, to his grandson probably Quintus Elis—was meaning in philosophy "that which was to be proved," which was to be proven, which
KANSAN reviews
Only if we cast out remorse, said Yeats, we must stride laughing and singing to those experiences and values. This is mindless ignorance or shallow accretion and passivity. Rather it is that we shall learn and grow. By the book's end there are rumbles in Quentin's peaceful and self-evident grief and prepares for struggle.
So simple and unassuming it seems as we coast along, buoyed up by the smoke from Quintus' cupboard. It's so happy, that we almost miss its dare, implicit throughout. Almost, almost. So with suspicion I proceed with the dress before, however grudgingly, we realize simplicity and
happiness! THIS BOOK presumes to talk about a modern simplicity, a modern happiness,
We cannot begrudge him his easy summer, it comes and begins what follows, while it must needs be more difficult. We need to learn how to beginnings what follows, while it
so well, would he not, like Quintus. also have a profound respect for the past, for the history of his world, for the past present—remarkable and abundant? WOULD HE NOT, like Quintus, be shocked into an even greater sense of personal history by the fast approaching reality of death (birthday) and the inductable coming of death to a grandfather, mystical and peaceful, wise and
LBJ Improved, Admitted To Texas Army Hospital
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) — Former President Lydon Applein suffered a major heart attack last week at University of Virginia Hospital Tuesday night for a return to Texas and admission to another university.
The 63-year-old Johnson, wearing a dark blue suit and tie but still wired to a portable heart bag, was taken off a back exit of the hospital.
With his doctors, he was driven to the local airport and placed aboard a Convair prop-jet for a flight to Brooke General Army Hospital in San Antonio, Tex. He was shortly after 9 p.m. EST.
George B. B. Phillips, assistant director of the hospital, read a prepared statement saying Johnson had been scheduled to leave the hospital early Wednesday but decided to depart Tuesday night because of condition plans at the local airport.
As he was taken from the hospital, Johnson waved to nurses watching from windows and called. "Thank you all."
The former chief executive was accompanied by Dr. John Willis Hutchins, an assistant specialist, and by Dr. Richard S. Crampon, head of the hospital's staff.
The statement said the decision to move Johnson was made because he had shown "steady improvement."
Hurst, who also treated Johnson when he suffered a near-fatal heart attack in 1955, had returned to his office. But newsman Tuesday night saw him slip into the hospital.
RIE MKESHITY 13.00
TANK 9.00
POCKET-JEANS 12.00
SWART 11.00
BUTTON PANTS 12.00
the look is you... at the VILLAGE SET
Gee it's swell . . . The Razzmatazz Shop that has all your life styles . . . all together! All those super jeans, pants, tanks, shirts, shirts and mates, belts and groove things. Shop in an out-of-sight atmosphere to far-out music!
922 Mass. Lawrence
Also Located In:
PRAIRIE VILLAGE
THE PLAZA
METCALF SOUTH
RUGBY GAME
KU vs. Des Moines
Sat. April 15 at 1:30
BEHIND OLIVER HALL
$18.00
2nd Floor
1
The sidewalk Sandier soft, cilled, sophisticated suede on a solid leather sole. SANDLER of Boston adds brass rings to make it bold enough for a blazer, flattering enough to go with all your now-through-summer clothes. Navy, Blue, Bone or Lilac.
Shop Thursday til 8:30 p.m.
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
9 N STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver's Inc.
Serving Lawrence ... Since 1857
Meadowbrook
800 Feet West of 15th & Iowa
NOW LEASING NEW STUDENT APARTMENTS for FALL & SUMMER
featuring:
- 25 SMALL ONE BEDROOMS — $160 TO $165
- 84 STUDIOS — $135 TO $160 (HOUSES TWO)
- Newest Shag Carpeting & Drapes All Furnished & Utilities Paid All Electric Kitchens All Have Walled Patio or Balcony
- 59 ONE BEDROOMS — $165 TO $180
- 30 TWO BEDROOMS — $200
Newest Shag Carpeting & Drapes
Unfurnished — Gas & Water Paid
All Have Walled Patio or Balcony
All Electric Kitchen With Dishwasher
Furniture — $22.50 to $36.50
- TENNIS, BASKETBALL, SOFTBALL & SWIMMING
- 70 ACRES LEISURE AREA—WIDE OPEN SPACES
- CABLE TV — NO CHARGE
- COMPLETE MAINTENANCE & PEST CONTROL SERVICE
- GARBAGE DISPOSALS & FREE TRASH PICK-UP
- LAUNDRY & STORAGE FACILITIES—ALL BUILDINGS
- SNOW REMOVAL—SECURITY—PARKING PLENTIFUL
- GAS FIRED, OUTDOOR GRILLS — BEAUTIFUL LANDSCAPE
- NO HEAVY CAR & TRUCK TRAFFIC, NOISE, FUMES
- BUILDING & GLASS INSULATION
- WALK TO KU — SHOPPING AREA NEARBY
OPEN DAILY!
Office
Sunday 12:30 to 5
101 T Windsor 15th & Iowa
PHONE
842-4200
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.121
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Fees Budget Reported To Senate
Thursday, April 13, 1972
See Page 10
KU Athletics To Receive 12 Million
An athletic budget of approximately $2,000,000 was approved Tuesday by the University of Kansas Athletic Board. The board also determined that KU athletics would have a project deficit of some $59,000 for the fiscal year 1972-73.
Although there was much discussion about cutting the budget, Athletic Director Wade Stinson said Wednesday that no major cuts were planned.
Faculty representative Charles Oldfather was authorized to request that the Big Eight raise its general admission fee from a minimum of $8. to $7 per person.
Raising the price of football and basketball season tickets and student
charges.
The board figured that this would mean an extra $40,000 to $15,000 a game for the team.
Student ticket receipts are used to pay off Memorial Stadium seating additions indebtedness, but the board discussed the possibility of using any increase for the general operating fund instead of bond retirement at the stadium.
STINSON HAS BEEN authorized to use Memorial Stadium as a summer resort. The board also gave tentative approval to a request by the Kansas City Chiefs to use Memorial Stadium as a summer resort.
The Chiefs prefer Memorial Stadium to their present training camp, William Jewell College in Liberty, Mo., because it has Tartan Turf, the same artificial surface the new Arrowhead Stadium will have.
The board also gave John Novotty, athletic director and business manager a $1,500 annual salary hike to $17,500 per year.
Kansan Photo by BECKY PIVONKA
Raymond Schwegler Explains Plan
Doctor says new benefits will give the dollar
$400 Deductible OK'd
KU Senate Passes Maternity Coverage
By CATHY SHERMAN
and HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writer
A $400 deductible maternity benefits provision covering doctor and hospital bills for full term pregnancies and abortions was approved by the Student Wednesday as part of a Blue Cross, Blue Shield plan to be available at fall enrollment.
The $400 deductible provision was an adjustment from the $600 deductible provision. The Senate for approval by the Senate Student Services insurance plan subcommittee Other options in the plan are not approved by the Senate without chance.
The insurance plan, which is similar to the Blue Cross, Blue Shield program of health insurance, provides prescription drug coverage for students and complete room charge coverage for a
AAUP to Debate Wage Bargaining
Members of the University of Kansas Chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) will meet tonight to discuss the possibility of actively campaigning for recognition as the faculty's collective bargaining agent.
Relations Office to Hold KU Traffic Plan Hearing
The budget for the proposal has already been passed by Keith L. Nitcher, vice-president of the firm.
The KU campus traffic reforms proposal, which includes changing Memorial Drive and Jayhawk Boulevard to one-way streets and the installation of parking meters on campus, will be discussed at an open meeting at 7:30 p.m. April 17 in the Kansas Union. The meeting is sponsored by University Relations.
Nitcher also said the budget as presented to his office was feasible and willing. "We were able to do that."
"Only the budget was cleared here, not the entire proposal. My part has been only a matter of approving the budget," Nitcher said Wednesday.
Robert Malinowsky, assistant director
of the KU libraries and chairman of the board, said the purpose of the open meeting would be to explain the parking problems, Malinsowky, Keith Lawton, director of facilities and planning; Mike Thomas, director of traffic and security, and Al Thomas, associate professor and urban design, will answer questions.
If everything appears to be favorable after the open hearing, the final proposal will be written and submitted to the chancellor. Malinowsky said.
Malinowski said thus far the response to the proposal had been favorable.
If it passes the chancellor's office, the proposal will go to the Board of Regents for
The KU AAUP will also conduct election of chapter officers at 7:30 tonight in the Council Room of the Kansas Union, according to J. Bunker Clark, associate professor of music history and president of the KU AAUP.
Public employees were given the option to have collective bargaining agents under the provisions of a new state law which went into effect March 1.
Charles Krider, assistant professor of business and chairman of the KU AAUP Committee N on Representation of Economic and Professional Interests, said Wednesday he would announce the results of a recent faculty poll taken to determine faculty desires for a collective bargaining team.
COMMITTEE N recently distributed a letter to all faculty discussing the Kansas collective bargaining law, the national AAUP position on collective bargaining and recent developments at other universities.
"The AAUP endorses collective bargaining as an appropriate means of faculty participation in university affairs," the letter stated.
The national AAUP adopted a policy to pursue collective bargaining in October 1971 "as a major additional way of realizing the Association's goals."
The letter stated that "once another organization is granted exclusive recognition for collective bargaining) the organization really restores its academic freedom and due process.
The Kansas Public Employees Act states that 10 per cent of a unit indicate an interest in being represented, then an election may be held by that unit. If the organization obtains a majority vote of those members voting, then the Public Affairs Board will certify that organization as the exclusive bargaining agent.
ACCORDING TO the letter, by the end of 1971 more than 30 four-year institutions had formal bargaining arrangements for faculty. Some of these institutions are coeditions (Bass and others) by either the National Education Association (NEA) or other unions.
The letter listed several options for the KU chapter. First, the letter said, steps could be taken to get the KU AAPU certified as the official bargaining agent.
Second, the chapter could oppose collective bargaining and third, the chapter could remain neutral, solely providing information on the issue.
IT ALSO INCLUDES provisions for coverage of accident injury charges and emergency medical home and office calls, the cost of prescribed contraceptive devices and outpatient diagnostic laboratory charges.
semi-private room and the average semi-
private room charge coverage for a private room with a $25 deductible for
room charges outside of Watkins Hospital.
"Fourth, the chapter can remain silent and hope, probably unrealistically, that national, trends do not always reach Kansas."
Birth control pills and insulin are paid under prescription drug coverage.
Youth Vote Defies Political Seers
By MARK BEDNER
By MARK DELNER
Kansan Staff Writer
The perennial question during one election year has been: "What will the 25 million newly-enfranchised voters do in the new elections they choose candidates as a bloc, thus making them more force, or will they follow historical patterns and vote like their parents?"
The cost for each policy for one year with all the approved options will be $7.92 for the single policy, $155.64 for the two policies and $227.76 for the family policy.
Any attempt to answer these questions can be only speculative at best. Even professional political analysts seem to change their theories with each new primary. Richard Scammon and Ben Wattenberg, authors of "The Real Majesty," by many to be the candidate in annual or "72," reputed many of their peers following the primary victories of Alabama Governor George Wallace and South Dakota Senator George McGovern in Florida and Wisconsin.
The project, as Manning described it, was the culmination of a summer's work by Kansas leaders who joined with Kansas labor groups, political party leaders and state officials in sponsoring the state-wide effort to raise awareness about the process and participate in the political process.
Perhaps the best approach in determining how youth will vote and how much involvement can be expected from them between now and November is to ask those who have been involved in the past and plan to be involved in the future.
MIKE MANNING, Emporia graduate student, directed a voter registration project in Kansas this past fall called "Countdown 72."
Prior to the "Countdown 72" effort in Kansas, Manning had worked in California, Pennsylvania and New York universities, where he registration projects. He returned to KU following a conference for student leaders held in Chicago in early December.
Manning, who was a student body president at Emporia and later national vice president of the Associated Student Governments, said he thought Kansas was emerging as a state that offered many opportunities to young people who wanted political preferences and have a visible effect on their local governments.
Manning also said he was convinced that young people in Kansas were more inclined to work within the existing school system than to "constructive change." He said one of his biggest disappointments in working with voter registration projects throughout the country was the apathy and negativism among his students who had been active in 1968.
"STUDENTS ARE less arrogant about working with farm groups, laborers, veterans and even the old party regulars in some cases," Manning said. "The real issue is the new student understanding of what coalition politics can mean during 1972."
He said his experiences on different campuses showed George McGovern to be the leading choice among students as the next president. Manning also had he
Manning said he thought the issues would be the same for many students in 1972 as they were in 1968. But, he said, the problems he encountered to work within the two-part system
Since the Senate has approved the final insurance plan, no other options or deductibles will be deleted from the plan and instead to the student at fail enrollment.
"Young Kansans are unique," Manning said. "They are by and large more rational and I think, more responsible and positive. They also seem to have a better chance of being one of honesty in politics, regardless of their party or political preference."
met with an "amazing amount of support" for the avowed non-candidate, Sen. Rand Paul.
Manning said students and young working people in Kansas compared favorably to those students outside the Midwest.
HAVING TRAVELED extensively with many presidential candidates, who spoke at the registration竿颁 sponsored by the Associated Student Governments, he has observed first hand the making of presidents' comments on the process by which the political party decide on their front runner, and the process as it related to 1972.
Manning said the Democratic party's nomination was "obviously another thing entirely." He said the race was truly wide and that it would present developments in the recent primaries.
"I WAS TOLD that Muskie intends to withdraw as an adult candidate if he loses in Pennsylvania," Manning said. "Consequently, the continued gains of George McGovern and a primary win by Humphrey would suggest their being the front runners going into the conventions. But I can force the possibility of the
"The Republican nomination is a given," Manning said. "There will be no honest challenge to Richard Nixon's candidacy now that McCloskey has withdrawn. There is some question as to whether the Republicans will nominate the new Nixon. It's my understanding that both will be present in San Diego and that one will be available for the nomination."
convention being deadlocked over these two candidates. It would probably lead to the emergence of a compromise candidate or to both wings of the party in that case."
Manning said the issues would have a greater impact on this year's election than in previous years because of increased awareness in the country by all groups.
DR. SCHWELGER SAID a low deductible or full coverage maternity benefits option would have been too expensive and it was important to find some common policy that could be afforded by as many students as possible.
Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital and adviser to the subcommittee, said the subcommittee had tried to work with the most for the dollar and included as many of the options requested by the students as possible and yet still could be kept in a position.
Dr. Schwiegler said that the number of students and student dependents that had chosen his program had a policy was not available so there were no estimates of the number of persons who might be taking advantage of the university benefits option this year or next year.
Gene Morris, Stillwater, Oka., graduate student, said he had married students from 43 separate households concerning the maternity benefits option.
He said that 23 persons wanted some maternity benefits above the $600 deductible recommended by the subcommittee. He said that very few favored full coverage because it was too expensive.
IT TOOK the Senate more than an hour to approve 1972-73 committee appointments recommended by the Committee Board because two of the committee members submitted a minority report that required for member changes on three committees.
Board members Molly Laffin, Lawrence senior, and Richard Mackenzie, chairperson, sponsored changes for "representative" purposes in the Finance and Auditing Committee, Judiciary Committee and Senate Committee that were eventually approved by the board.
They said the proposed Union Operating Board was "dominated by SUA jocks" and did not represent minority groups. Mackenzie also attacked the food service in the Kansas Union during an appeal he Senate members to elect him to the board.
"I've been to other universities, numerous other universities, and this has got to be the worst food service I've ever seen," Mackenzie said.
MACKENZIE WAS attacked for using his position on the Committee Board in an unsuccessful attempt to be named a member of the Union Operating Board when the committees were selected last Saturday.
Mackenzie replied that previous members of the operating board had often been Committee Board members and he had openly stated his desire to be a member of the Union Operating Board campaigning for the Committee Board.
By a 36-35 roll call vote the Senate approved the minority report on the operating board and replaced Dave Murtin, Wichita sophomore, and Dave Mackenzie and Susan White, Overland Park sophomore.
The Judiciary Committee was changed after Laflin criticized its ethnic justice policies.
"The fact that there were only two women on the Judiciary and no blacks or Caucasians were present," he said.
THE SENATE approved as members Marion Leonard, Kansas City, Ks. freshman, Elizabeth Gutierrez, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Gary Jackson, Topeka second year law student, and Kristine Hall, Lawrence first year law student, in place of Van Spake, Shawnee Mission junior; Dave Agazarian, Lawrence second year law student, and Don Kinney, Leewood sophomore.
Jo Durant, Tulsa graduate student, and Leroy McDermott, Lawrence graduate student, were added to the Finance and Auditing Committee.
The Senate approved a line item change in the KU Reclamation Center allocation that will allow the center to use $*$00 salaries to rent a warehouse until July 1.
Vote to Test War Powers Of President
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate passed a bill to temporarily unilin-
tual the war powers of the President.
It defeated 56 to 23 a substitute proposed by Sen. J. Glen Beall Jr., R-Md., to appoint a 24-member national commission making roles of Congress and the President.
The test was the second in two days indicating majority Senate support for legislation designed to implement the constitution, authority of Congress alone to declare war.
On Tuesday, the Senate turned down 60-26 a motion to send the bill to its own Judiciary Committee for 45 days to review its constitutionality.
A final Senate vote on the bill was set for 1:30 p.m. EST today.
The bill would limit the President's use of the armed forces to emergency defense against attack or threat of attack or rescue of Americans endangered abroad, and then only for 30 days unless Congress consented.
Student
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patient diagnostic
Fall Insurance Plan Clears Senate
Natalie Rolf outlines new rates and benefits
Kansan Photo by BECKY PIVONKA
2
Thursday, April 13, 1972
University Daily Kansan
U.S. Opposes Demands To Renew Peace Talks
PARIS (AP) — France is pressing for an early resumption of the Vietnam peace talks, broken off by the United States three weeks ago. The Vietnamese Comrade Ngo Dinh Duc was Thursday of the conference meeting.
The U.S. and South Vietnamese delegations would not comment on the situation Wednesday but rejected the demands of the Noth Vietnamese delegation to support peace talks. The allies argued the Communists were not ready to meet.
The French position has long been that the United States should get out of Vietnam and let the Vietnamese decide their own
IN WASHINGTON, the State Department called in Emmanuel de Margerie, the French charge d'affairs, to express its displeasure over Frances O'Flynn, the officer charged. McCloskey said the United States objected to the timing and to "what we judge is a one-sided statement because it picks up demands of the North Vietnamese due to the threat to return immediately to the conference table."
President Nixon indefinitely suspended the talks March 23, saying he was trying to break "a three and one-half year filibuster
IRS to Aid Taxpayers
WASHINGTON (AP)—With only five days left before the filing deadline, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) assigned thousands of agents Wednesday to help taxpayers file their tax returns.
Johnnie M. Walters, IRS commissioner, said his agency will use 15,000 technical personnel, and the staff would be normal, to help taxpayers complete the job of filling out returns on Monday or midnight Monday. April 17.
Walters said that about one-fourth of the nation's 75 million taxpayers have yet to file.
He said the sharp expansion in the IRS service to taxpayers is being launched because of widespread evidence of a significant number of commercial tax preparers.
IRS offices throughout the country will be open at later-than-usual hours, including Christmas Sunday. Walters told newsmen.
The IRS' crackdown on tax preparers has resulted in directing 1,800 preparers investigated who have prepared fraudulent tax return forms.
IRS studies have shown that about half of all federal income tax returns are prepared by tax preparers.
If a taxpayer goes to an IRS office to have his return prepared, it apparently would expire on charges from fees. If the provider did not correct information, But Walters said that agents, like anyone else, were subject to human error and the provider would be liable for mistakes.
... on the part of the North Vietnamese."
Nixon said, "Whenever the enemy is ready to negotiate seriously, we are ready."
THE FRENCH pressure to get the conference under way again came in a statement from the French cabinet. Cabinet after a regular meeting.
The statement said: "The French government is more than ever convinced that a political solution must have a political solution and that such a solution remains viable."
It was one of the rare instances France has stated any position on the conference since it began in January 1969.
Both sides, particularly the Communists, have maintained close contact with the French, and France has sometimes privately acted as intermediary
The French statement followed a request last Friday by the North Vietnamese to have U.S. troops leave that U.S. bombing of the North.
THE NORTH Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegations, in similar statements, demanded that the United States held Thursday, the usual meeting day, and that the United States has been bombing of North Vietnam.
The U.S. delegation announced that Ambassador William J. Porter, head of the American mission to Iran, returned to Paris Thursday after a 13-day trip to the United States for consultations. There was no question his return would mean an end resumption of the conference
News Briefs By The Associated Press
U.S. Greets Chinese Team
DETROIT—A 14-member table tennis team from Red China arrived in Detroit Wednesday with the goal of "friendship first, competition second" on a two-week tour of this country. Twenty members of the U.S. Table Tennis Association squad which visited Red China last year stood in line and applauded vigorously as the Chinese stepped out of a plane at Detroit Metropolitan Airport. In keeping with Chinese custom, the visiting squad returned the applause of the American hosts.
Astronauts Rehearse Blastoff
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla.—U.S. astronauts rehearsed blastoff and orbital earthmaneuvers as the countdown proceeded smoothly toward Sunday's beginning of the Apollo 16 moon mission. Civil servants on the massive traffic jam expected to be caused by the launch.
Brezhnev Issues Summit Plea
MOSCOW - Kremlin leader Leonid L. Brezhnay has given a U.S. cabinet member a personal message for President Nixon proposing "a minimum of ceremony and a maximum of sub-committee discussions" during their summit meeting in Moscow next month.
PHU BAI, Vietnam (AP)—About 101 GIs reluctantly moved into a forward defensive position outside an important American air base Wednesday after first encountering a weapon believed it was too dangerous.
GIs Balk at Orders
They took up the assigned position about three miles west of Phu Bai, the northernmost point of the country now occupied by Americans.
The battalion commander, LL Co. Frederick P. Mitchell and other journalists who were present when the incident took place.
An electronics communications facility and a key air strip are there.
"All you press are bastards," he said. "I blame you for this and you can quote me on it."
In Sagon, the U.S. Command said, "A rumor to the effect that the Army's helicopter was loaded with booby traps circulated among some
The unit involved is Charlie Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Infantry, 190h Brigade.
No soldier actually disobeyed orders or refused to go into the field, the command said. No disciplinary action was taken.
The command statement, without offering any direct criticism of newsmen said that some members of the media in the area interviewing soldiers.
The men at first refused to board trucks waiting to take them to the position, but after a lieutenant called for volunteers and a handful stepped forward, they climbed above an armoured climped穿 around an arm.
The remaining platoon of about 45 men, agreed a short time later to go.
Firce fighting is in progress about 13 miles further west, near the border of Thailand, which is surrounded by North Vietnamese troops. Although often shelled in the past, Phu Ba intends to target the current offensive.
Combat refusals have become a not infrequent occurrence in the West. In the past two and one half years, the American withdrawal began.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Secretary of Transportation John Hickenloose there is a new sense of impact concerning the impact of
Volpe Asserts New Urgency In Danger of Drunk Drivers
"If that process involves arrest, then we must give him treatment and rehabilitation," he said. "I will not happen again." he said.
"We must get the drunk off the road, off the road before he kills himself," others. "Volpe in a talk prepared for delivery before the raid."
Volpe said three reformed alcoholic beverages D-Howa, and Anders Mercedes McCambridge and Maryland department safety programs tremendously in speeches, television appearances and social events.
"We estimate," Voele said, "that there are nearly 7 million abusive drinkers on our streets and highways each year.
"They represent about 6 per cent of the driving population.
"At least 800,000 of them are involved in highway accidents, and we have about 2 million crashed annually.
"Each year we license $3\frac{1}{2}$ million new drivers." Volpe said.
"Two and one-half million of them are tenth graders—just learning to drive, and just learning to drink," he said.
POTTER'S CONCERT
Saturday, April 15
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Mabon's departure and that of
The first test of Labor's new position will come early next
7 British Laborites Resign Over Commom Market Vote
It was the question of a referendum that brought about the resignations from the party leadership of these favoring the Common Market. They were led by Roy Jenkins, the deputy party leader.
six other pro-Europeans led the deep split Jenkins underlined the deep split the Common Market and the Labor party was inflicted on the Labor party.
Left-wingers are now expected to step up their campaign to help voters who lack confidence in the market in principle, a fear voiced by jenkins when he
LONDON (AP) - Despite the decision to allow the divided Labour party demanded Thursday a national referendum on British entry into the European Union.
Correction On Kansan
While antimarket left-wingers hailed the result as a triumph, another advocate of British entry into Europe claimed leadership, the seventh in 48 hours. He was the Laborite for the British affairs, Dr. Dickson Mabon
The third place award went to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers for their exhibit on clean air cars.
Under the leadership of Harold Wilson, Labor has moved from opposition to rejection of market membership on the terms negotiated with the government.
It was incorrectly reported in Monday's Kansan that 3rd place in the Engineering Exposition was the University Society of Chemical Engineers.
An angry meeting of Labor legislators endorsed the party leadership's policy switch in favor of a referendum 129-96.
week when Parliament votes on an amendment by Conservative antimark rebels, which also calls for a referendum.
With Jenkins and his lieutenants now free to abstain or vote with the Conservatives on crucial Common Market legislation government officials are confident the amendment will be defeated.
Antimark member have been pressing hard for an official party commitment to a referendum in the belief that a majority in Britain would reject it and that were approved by parliament.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 13, 1972
Rules Limit Student Food Stamps
3
By JUDY HENRY
Kansan Staff Writer
University of Kansas students are eligible to receive food stamps and meet the agreements established by U.S. Department of Agriculture, according to Don Derrick director of the Douglas County School District.
Eligibility is determined by the amount of the applicant's income, and in the case of a student whose parents are not in their parents, Derrick said. He said tax relinquishment forms were sent to parents of applicants. It is important that families deduction on their income tax forms, the student is ineligible
Derrick said 47 or 48 KU students were present receiving food stamps. The number varies from month to month, he said, depending on the student's boys stamps every month.
ALL ARRANGEMENTS for food stamps are made through the agriculture department
Envoy to U.N.
To Speak Here
Twice Friday
George Bush, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, will be in Lawrence Friday for speeches sponsored by the KU School of Law, political science department and Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
His first presentation will be at 2:30 p.m. in Room 104 of Green Hall. Bush plans to present a book about the U.S. into a question-and-answer session. His topic will be "Questions and Answers on American Foreign Policy—Under the Trump Administration," Disarmament and Vietnam."
Bush will be the featured speaker at the annual Lawrence Chamber of Commerce banquet on Wednesday. Union Bill Gault, chamber manager, said Wednesday that nearly 750 tickets had already been sold for the banquet, attendance record for the event.
Bush has held his U.M. post since December of 1970.
In 1966, the 48-year-old Bush was elected as a Republican to the U.S. Congress, representing and won the Texas GOP primary race for U.S. Senator from Texas, but was defeated by a general election candidate Ben Bradshaw.
A Massachusetts native, Bush graduated from Yale in 1948. He served as a Navy carrier pilot in the pacific fleet in World War II and was deployed there where he became active in oil fields development enterprises
Ambassador and Mrs. Bush have five children. The ambassador is the son of former Connecticut Sen. Prescott Bush
Signup Ready On Interviews For Kansan
Scott Spreier, Jetmore senior and fall editor, will begin interviews Tuesday.
Students who have applied for news staff positions on the fall Kansan should begin signing up to participate. The sheet will be posted on the Kansan bulletin board, located at the front of the newsroom in Flint Hall.
Applications are still available for editor and business manager of the summer Kansan. Applications for editor can be obtained in newsroom. Applications for business manager are in the Kansan business office. Both applications are available to the dean of women's offices.
Deadline for turning in applications is 3 p.m. Friday.
Applications for editor should be returned to Chip Crew, editor, manager applications go to Young, business manager.
Other summer staff applications are due Monday at 5 p.m.
Tuesday Fog Hides 4 Thefts At Hashinger
Thieves took advantage of a heavy fog Tuesday night to break into four cars in the Hashinger Hall parking lot and steal $744 from the dealerships, decks, laps and carriers, caches police reported Wednesday.
In all four cases, the burglar gained access to the cars by breaking vent windows.
Three tape decks, one radio,
one carrier and over 50 tapes
were taken.
Campus police also reported an attempted armed robbery near the campanile Tuesday night.
The would-be robber threatened a 21-year-old KU student with a knife and demanded money as the victim for an assault parking lot. The victim reported no loss of money and no injury.
Derrick said, and an eligible student can buy stamps as long as he is living in the Lawrence area when the stamps go on sale.
"Many students are asking for the works," he said, "but we're not providing the works. The welfare department doesn't put on the stamps—it's the agriculture department's money."
He said stamps were sold two and one half days every month, which made them difficult for him. He said the applicant has been approved, his need is determined by the amount of his income and the size of his house. Mr. Derrick said the Department of Health, Education and Welfare sent notes to applicants to determine if stamps would cost. Cost is based
on income, he said, and some people pay nothing while others pay according to their income
IF A PERSON HAS BUG stamps in another area, Derrick said, the stamps can be used in a county, county, regardless of the state.
A merchant treats food stamps as he would cash, except that no one has ever given, Derrick said. He said his business denomination was 50 cents, and merchants had to make out credit cards rather than give the person cash, rather than give the person cash.
KU students are eligible only for food stamps and accident or emergency medical aid, Derrick said.
"The board has determined that it is not the responsibility of the welfare department to take the tax money from local tax-
SUA to Offer 4 Flights To New York, Chicago
Student Union Activities is located on the campus of connecting flights from Kansai City to New York and Chicago to coordinate with SUA lifts.
The Kansas City-New York flights are open to all students, staff and faculty at KU. The Kansas City-New York flights are open to the public.
The connecting flights are group flights which allow for the lower rates. The Chicago flights are based on a group of 10 and the flight prices are based on a minimum of four flights. Passengers who book on these flights must go with their group on the given date, but they can return independently at any time up to one year from the departure
Although youth stand-by fares are cheaper than the SUA connecting flight, they are restricted to those under 21, and bookings are not assured as they are with the SUA flights.
Flight No. 16 leaves Kansas City for Chicago on May 30 and returns to Chicago on August 17 at the same cost.
Flight No. 3c, which costs $133,
leaves Kansas City for
Missouri. Flight No. 4c, which
returns to Kansas City on July 25.
Flight No. 4C, also $133, leaves
Kansas City for New York City on
Saturday and returns to Kansas
City on August 17.
The deadline for booking a seat on one of these flights is April 17. For further information or to see more about the SUA office in the Kansas Union.
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Derrick said KU students had been declared ineligible for general welfare benefits.
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underwriters put a limit on medical funds that are said, said, or allowed to be paid for or three KU students who were presently receiving funds for their medical education.
He said medical care was provided in an emergency situation, but normally care would be provided only in the case of a staff leave department ran out of funds last year and others were cut, so
National Chairman of the Student Organization of Black Unity
Nelson Johnson
will speak in the Jayhawk Room
9 p.m. Thursday April 13
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Thursday, April 13. 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Western Civilization
The Western Civilization program was a topic of discussion last Saturday at the College Assembly workshop sponsored by the Educational Procedures and Policies Committee (EPPC). There is nothing particularly unusual about that since that program is one of those subjects that is being discussed season in Lawrence at any hour of the day or night. What was unique about that discussion was that it did not become a gripe session about the comprehensive examination.
The existing program constitutes something of an insult to the men whose thoughts are being studied and it is probably the most absurd course on the campus. To pretend that a student can have even a minimal understanding of the thoughts of men such as Machiavelli or Nietzsche after a fifty minute discussion over a few pages of their writings is ridiculous. Most students are not even given the benefit of experienced teachers to lead the discussions over a few works. I know that students, after having read the books (which is a naively optimistic assumption in itself) are not to rely solely on the class discussion but are supposed to study the works thoroughly on their own. The idealists should face the fact that the books for the Western Civilization program are not what one would call "fun to read" and such educationalism and discipline is more likely to be found in professors than in a group of
students one year out
Garry Wills
students one year out of high school. Despite the problems the writings themselves present to the average student, a teacher would not graduate with a degree from university without having read and understood those philosophies which have influenced the development and thinking of western civilization. The proposals for the program presented at the workshop were much more realistic than the present system in regards to how the material should be taught. Instead of a one hour discussion class it was suggested the program consist of three hours of discussion and or lecture. One proposal was that the students should attend seminars. This would allow a much fuller examination of the many philosophical aspects and problems of Western civilization than is possible now.
It was also suggested that Eastern and African Civilization be incorporated into the program. There is really no need to include anything more in the program even if the time and credit allotted to it were to be expanded. It would be better to create separate courses rather than try to squeeze that material into a course entitled *Eastern Civilization*. I hope that the EPPC will seriously consider the proposals made in the workshop which would give students a chance to have an intelligent study of their own civilization's philosophical development.
—Mary Ward
Last Man Syndrome
The increased fighting in Vietnam has elicited a quick response from the Pentagon. The number of B-52'S, aircraft carriers and their attack planes in the Indochina area has gone up considerably. Nearly half of the entire Pacific fleet is cruising in Southeast Asian waters.
It is a good thing that we are getting our troops out, not only because they should have been out long ago, but also because those that are still there are understandably reluctant to fight.
Nevertheless the number of ground troops has remained constant and the administration has pledged that the current North Atlantic offensive will not affect the American troop withdrawal schedule.
Yesterday about 100 American soldiers from one of the last two combat infantry brigades in Vietnam balked at being assigned to man a forward defense position. They considered the assignment too
dangerous.
The soldiers did, however, go ahead and carry out the mission when they were convinced that some other American troops would be in danger if they did not man the forward defense.
Our troops have not lost their fight. The war has gone on long, long.
The current North Vietnamese offensive is proving beyond a doubt that Vietnamization is not working, that we are not winning the war.
The Army of course has an easy explanation for the balking soldiers. Lt. Col. Frederick P. Mitchell, the person who talked them into going ahead with the mission, explained it this way: "All you press men are bastards. I blame you for this and you can quote me on it."
Sorry, colonel. I think the answer is much more simple: Nobody wants to be the last man to die in a worthless war.
-Mike Moffet
One Student's Letter
I would like to exten congratulations to the Women's Coalition for their outstanding work in the opening ceremonies of the Engineering Exposition last Friday. Otherwise, it would have been just another of those dull sessions that were socially irresponsable and immature behavior, what could have been a euphoric experience in the lives of the queen and her women was shamefully blemished.
To the Editor:
privilege to make it a forum, exposing their personal vendetta; insulting the queen and her attendants, the queens of the exposition, and the people viewed by attention on such disgraceful acts.
Further, the Women's Coalition denied many visitors the access to one exhibit by removing a directive poster giving the new location of the exhibit. That band member was forced to give it offensive, but I failed to see why.
The opening ceremony of the exposition was not designed to be a forum for factions to express their views and to precipitate petty squabbles. Coalition did not have the right nor should they have had the
The selection of the queen candidates was based on nominations relative to their personal involvement; beauty, and life's goals, in an effort to single out an ideal, as a woman and as a man, for those whose beauty context, a beauty context, rather, a contest to select the most socially aware, intelligent, and beneficial candidates, however, the girls trying out for queen were "exploited" and the method of selection was unfair. The candidates should be put through booties in fatigues, submitted to I.Q.
Certainly, I do not oppose the liberation and equality of women. Such action has been long and ongoing and attention-calling had to be done to overcome the inertia of present society and I command women to join women's liberation groups. On the other hand, I caution those zealots who would abridge the rights of others and freedom to disagree, in so far as it is not disruptive and in an idea does not necessarily conflict with the rights of others. Someone may disagree with an idea but disagreement always an affront. Social problems should be wrestled with in meetings with a social, technical, or education events, and with reason, not with hysterical and disjointed ravings.
Paul L. Berger
Lawrence graduate student
PARKS
The Scrambled Ideological Map
The American ideological map is scrambled and confusing for a crazy reason—not because of its complexity; because of its simplicity.
Both, internationally and domestically, the map has only two real colors--blinding white and ghastly black. Freedom and slavery. And the former is always in peril; the latter is always imminent.
The words are familiar, and seem to make sense. Even when the slave and free systems construct societies that increasingly resemble each other, we do not accommodate ourselves to a more complex reality.
"The Free World," as John Kennedy liked to call it, depends on competition, individual and nationalistic; the slave world—or communist world, or dictatorial systems—is "collectionist" and "totalizing."
Our scheme is so simplistic, it does not even have a clearly-differentiated Left and Right extreme. All extremes, in any direction, are evil-are,
therefore "collectivistic," whether in fascist or communist ways. Only by staying far away from any such communial vision, coming at us from any direction we can bunch together to agree on being competitive!
This is the approach that gave birth to the Schlesinger Circle—a toy of the mind made up by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. According to him, the liberal system stands at the top of a circle. Even when people seem to be moving away from each other, out to touch, they often use its "left or right" (they have begun using) that bends inevitably down, to repin at the totallitarian bottom of the circle.
Thus, what we mean by Left and right in America is clear—a slide off from America into a circle along one of its sides (both, however), a same totalitarian doom). The debates in American political center on the left were farther farther from the pure competition that exists.
—Neo-liberals, who accept community standards in some economic areas, will accept none in cultural areas, calling any interference unintellectual individualism a first step toward censorship and "mind control."
- Old line Republicans think an economic corporatism (e.g., labor union brotherhoods) are incipiently collectivist.
Within our competitive orthodoxy, then, political deference is a matter of
who puts more stress on individualism within any one area. Both shy equally from the cooperative ideal as "collectivist." But while we live with the old myths of total independence of each mind and man and career, we are enmeshed in the growing technological interdependence.
The many stories of a relieved sense of fraternity during the New York power failure of a few years back is instructive. When men's dependence on each other becomes inescapably clear, they could drop the pretense that they are atomic 'self-made' types, examples of atomic self-made way. Theory and reality coalesced; the mental world was forced into abrupt conformity with the event.
This "system" is not evil in itself. What is evil is our inability to control it because we will not even recognize its existence. And we cannot do that until we abstain our competitive ethic and take possession of a libertarian individualism.
We have taken giant leaps in socializing life and work and thought, without creating a morality and politics equal to this situation. Changes race on in every area but that of our social theory. The result is that, in the very name of competition, we unconsciously wear a mask cooperation between the military and government and big business (what radicals call "the system").
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
I CAN'T STAND BEING ALONE.
SO I CALLED UP A GIRL FOR A DATE SHE MADE ME FEEL ALONE.
SO I TOOK HER TO MEET SOME FRIENDS. MY FRIENDS MADE ME FEEL ALONE.
SO MY FRIENDS TOOK US TO A PARTY. THE PARTY MADE ME FEEL ALONE.
SO I WENT TO SEE MY PARENTS.
I FELT CROWDED.
Brit. Publishers Hall Syndicate
3-12 © 1972 BLR & RPW
James J. Kilpatrick
Bus Story Ends Happily
ROCHESTER, N.Y.—It isn't often that a reporter stumbles across a success story when he meets an unexpected urban problem. Here in Rochester in the field of public transportation, a story is developing that may yet bring a glimpse of blue sky on an overcast day.
Doubless one could find exceptions, but the postwar history of public transportation has been generally uniform across the nation. Paint it gray. Passenger volumes were at a peak in 1945. Then Americans by the millions moved to the suburbs, bought second cars, bought airplanes, and turned their backs on transportation. As passengers dwindled, fares increased; and the more fares increased, the more乘客 dwindled.
This was the Rochester story. Four years ago the city's privately owned bus company was in desperate trouble: eight strikes in six years, wretched equipment, underpaid drivers. In July 2014, the population of 330,000, with 89,000 vehicles registered. By 1970, population had dropped to 280,000, but 125,000 vehicles were
registered. It was an entirely typical transit mess.
Rochester acted. The city put together $6 million in Federal, State and local funds, and bought out the bus company. A year later, in August of 1869, the city was-fell into the hands of the newly created Rochester Genesee Regional Transportation Authority. Now, two and a half years later, the picture has changed technically, the past six months, the system has gained 100,000 new riders. The trend is plainly upward.
Two factors have played an obvious part: As a public body, the transit authority pays no local taxes and takes no profit. But much more is involved in the work of the agency. Under the energetic leadership of executive director Robert P. Aex, the Rochester authority is bringing an infusion of enthusiasm and innovation to a business suffering from tired blood. Aex is a transit buff as a cowboy who also does buffs. He loves a bus as fondly as a cowboy loves his horse. He wants everybody to love buses too.
Thus the Rochester authority is promoting public transit with unabashed zeal. It has created a network of animal trailers, where passengers may their cars in the morning. It has promoted "kiss and ride" points.
James J. Kilpatrick
In nearby Batavia, the Rochester authority has fathered what Aex calls the 'hottest thing in transit'. Batavia is a community of 150-old-fashioned bus system also was on the skids. But in July 1971, the authority bought out the bus company, scrapped its 16-year-old equipment, and whole concept of fixed routes.
where wives are urged to deposit their husbands for the daily trip into town by bus. The authority crowds about its air conditioning. This spring it will experiment with a General Motors scheme of computerized control of bus drivers. "We'll try anything," says Aex.
Now Batravia has a "B-Line." A small fleet of snappy green and white mini-buses, some of them seating 23, some seating only 10, roams the community on a dispatcher's orders. On request, a bus will stop at a worker's home in the early morning and take them to school. Line buses function as car pools to get children to school. College students get individualized service to their campus. Between
9. A.M. and 3:30 P.M., a passenger can "dial a bus." For a 60-cent fare, the bus comes to his home and takes him to his destination. Equipment is kept busy all day.
In 1970, the old Batavia Bus Service was carrying 80,000 passengers a year. This month the new B-Line has reached an annual rate of 120,000; it expects to break even financially before it runs in 1972. Axx says the plan will work for years and any compact neighborhood in a large one. Merchants and passengers seem to love the system. In a day when "busing" has become a dirty word, Rochester's transit authority is demonstrating that a different type of busing can still play a vital role in the restoration of city life.
Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Griff and the Unicorn
By Sokoloff
I CAN TEACH YOU TO ROLLER SKATE EASY! JUST KEEP SAYING: "I CAN DO IT, I CAN DO IT"
I CAN TEACH YOU TO ROLLER SKATE EASY! JUST KEEP SAYING: "I CAN DO IT, I CAN DO IT."
"I CAN DO IT"
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"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff
Published at all universities of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and when a federal law prohibits publication of research by a university. No other material may be published without prior approval of the student, unless written in order to explain the necessity of publication or for scientific reasons expressed by the institution without regard to content. No commercial or national origin materials are permitted.
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NEWS STAFF
News Advisor ... Del Brinkman
Editor Chik Crown
Associate Editor Chris Tucker
Campaign Editor Scott Speerer
Copy Editor Rita Haugh, Eric Kranenburg
Copy Chiefe Joe Yeeverman, Ron Wilk
Smart Editors Andy Carlyle
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 13. 1972
5
THE WATER BREAKER
Kansan Photo by MARK SCHIRKOFSKY
Local Church Urges an Amnesty For Military Evaders, Deserters
With the advent of sultry weather, Potter Lake once again becomes the scene of relaxation and swimming for three local boys.
Editor's Note. A story on amnesty in the Kansasian misquoted the Rev. Donald Lutheran Church, and the church's position on the issue. The following is a correction of
By CANDY HERBERT Kansan Staff Writer
The problem of amnesty for draft evaders and military deserters which is currently plaguing many Americans has grown a growing concern of members of the University Lutheran Church.
After a month of discussion, the congregation adopted a resolution on March 5 that urged support of an ambassador for draft evaders and deserters, the Rev. Cyrus Strohner, at the church, said Wednesday.
"The resolution, which passed,
not unanimously, but by a strong
majority vote of the
members, is really two-fold." said Corad.
"First, it urges that the congregation at Kansas City and the Lutheran in Missouri Synod be actively involved in the ministry of reconciliation, especially in dealing with the problem of draft evaders and others."
The Rev. Conrad said that a third resolution, which was approved by the University of Wisconsin, called for 9 concerns the problem of rehabilitation, not only of draft resisters who would return under a general amnesty, but also of those who have served in the military.
"Secondly, it urges church members to support and encourage the President and Congress to declare an amnesty, but not necessarily an conditional on any accusation they accused or draft evasion or desertion," Conrad explained.
In part, the third resolution states: "We urge love concern for those who consciently participated and now return to a society which may forget their lives; they give it only a negative meaning.
"We express our approval of new initiative from both government and private agencies in job training and placement, drug rehabilitation and other return-to-entry to civilian life."
The Rev. Norman Steffan pastor of the University Lutheran
Zumwalt to Give Talk Tonight
"We must have concern for those who have served in Vietnam and who now, because of that service, have problems with drugs or drugs or jobs. They also need our help. Steffens said."
The Rev. Conrad said that he felt the basic problem of the war was to allow America to allow the return of those who had personally felt that they had to go to war rather than serve in the military.
"I feel that now the opinion on war has changed and therefore conscientious objector status is easier to obtain.
Church, agreed that the Church's mission of reconciliation should also be concerned with helping refugees returning to the United States.
"Considering this change, we must make early years of the war, might not have felt forced to go if the present circumstances had
"The problem now is how to provide a way for the reconciliation of these people." Conrad said.
In explaining amnesty and distinguishing it from pardon, Conrad says the offense. "Amnesty renders the offense. The pardon remits the punishment for an offense. "Amnesty is granted to those who may be guilty, but it is given before any trial or prosecution if the granted after judgement."
Conrad added that while an honesty might not be totally fair to those who are married, husbands or fathers, it was still a legal way to make a decision.
Adm. Elmo R. Zuwalm Jr., chief of U.S. Naval operations, is scheduled to speak at 7:30 onmn in the Kansas Union Ballroom. His attendance is sponsored by the J.A. Marshall Sr. Memorial Lecture Series.
Am amnesty for those who
amstied or evaded their national
service obligations, or who were
appalled by the fact that they would apply only if those persons had not been indicted for other
crimes, the crimes, the Rev.
Conrad said.
Zumwalt was scheduled to speak Feb. 9, but his visit was canceled when he became ill.
"We believe that a draft evader or resister who has committed a murder or robbery should still be held accountable, and an amnesty would definitely not apply to those crimes, only for evasion or desertion," he said.
Zumwalt is known for his efforts to liberalize regulations governing Navy life in the areas swimming, dress and shore leave.
In his directives known as Z-Grams, he ordered acceptance of a wide variety of hair styles and colors. He also directed that beer could be dispensed in the barracks of enlisted men and that stronger alcoholic beverages could be kept aparters with individual rooms.
In the recent years, he was executive officer aboard the destroyers USS Saufley and USS Zellars. He also served as a naval officer in the NROTIC program at the University of North Carolina.
ALSO, HE ORDERED that civilian clothes might be worn at shore installations and neat work clothes might be worn to and from shore and many changes of uniforms. He also said low cost charter flights should be planned for families to visit men deployed far from home.
He has served as director of arms control and contingency planning for Cuba and as assistant to the mission and aide to the secretary of the navy.
In just five years Zumwalt rose from the rank of captain to become the senior officer in the naval operations, on July 1, 1970.
Zumwalt has served on the command of several destroyers. He also serves in the office of the assistant secretary of defense for security affairs as desk officer for Spain, Spain and Portugal.
EARLIER IN HIS career,
Zumwalt served as commander
of U.S. naval forces, Vietnam.
With headquarters in Saigon, he
took part in the Navy's part in
the drive to Viennaize the war effort.
He was nominated by President Chen and Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird. He succeeded Admiral Thomas Moyer, who head staffed the Navy before staff. Unfamiliar previous chiefs of Naval operations. Zumwalt is not a staff.
Conrad said that the resolutions which had been adopted by the University Lutheran Church would allow individuals to attend an amnesty, currently being considered by the Senate.
conduct out of a class of 615 cadets.
Zumwalt is married to the former Mouza Coutelais-de-Roche of Harbin, Manchuria. He has two daughters and two sons.
ZUMWALT WAS born Nov. 29, 1920, in San Francisco. He graduated as valedictorian for the
The Taft bill, also called the "Amnesty Act of 1972," proposes to grant immunity from prosecution and punishment to those charged after Aug. 4, 1964, upon three conditions. Conrad said.
Tulare High School and attended Rutherford Prep School in Long Beach, Calfi, for one year while attending an appointment to Annalois in 1939.
At Annapolis, Zumwalt ranked 24th scholastically and 275th in
Under conditions of the bill, a
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person must present himself to an official of the government within one year after passage; and the Armed Forces the Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) program, a Velenian's Health Service hospital or other Federal Service; and agree to serve at the lowest pay scale with benefits in the service he chooses.
It's made by Bare-Traps and comes in rust or navy suede or harness leather.
The Rev. Conrad said that he opposed the Taft bill because he felt that it would deceive people.
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
The Taft bill forces a confession of guilt, in a moral sense. While the act of draft is less likely it is not necessarily immoral.
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
"A similar case of the legality vs. the morality of an act can be seen when looking at the civil law in Martin Luther King," Conrad said.
Conrad said he also objected to the bill because it dealt only with the tax. But he felt it could go further in receiving desisters back into the city.
"Basically people need to be informed about the ways in which we can develop a plan for draft resumes and evaders."
"The Church has been sent to reconcile, but all too often to reconcile with the subject made without sufficient information on the subject," Conrad said.
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6
Thursday, April 13, 1972
University Daily Kansan
The Egyptian statue depicts a figure with a headband and a mask, standing in front of a large stone structure. The sculptor is kneeling beside the statue, holding a tool that appears to be a camera or a measuring instrument. The background consists of a wall with a large shadow cast by the statue.
Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER
Tefft Creates Moses
Bronze Moses will be biggest campus birdcage . . .
Sculpture for Smith Hall To Depict University Seal
By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
By JOHN REED
Kansan Staff Writer
The sculpture will be positioned near a 16 by 20-foot stained glass window depicting the burning of the sword, making up the official University of Kansas seal, according to Lynn D. Schmidt of the School of Religion
A 10-foot bronze sculpture of Moses', which will stand at the entrance of the School of theology with the birdcage "on campus, according to the designer. Eldon C. Tefft, professor of painting and sculpture."
Taff had recently redesigned Taffed to appeal over the years various artists' conceptions had altered the seal. The latest reproduction he, said, was a 1980s design.
THE FINISHED sculpture will be exactly as it is shown on the University seal with the exception of the praying hand*
The hands, feet and face of Moses will be solid, Tefft said Wednesday, but the remainder of the sculpture will be constructed in a lattice "bridgeage" design. Tefft explained that to make the sculpture stand upright, therozze would make it too heavy and too expensive to be practical.
WHEN THE PLANS WERE being made for the new Ira McI. Smith Hall, it was agreed that the themes of Moses and the burning bush should somehow be carried through, according to William J. Moore, professor of religion and, time, the dean of the school.
Tefft thought one of the reasons the committee chose him to do the sculpture was because of his knowledge of the artwork.
Area M.D.s Performing More Male Sterilizations
It had not been represented in any other art form anywhere on the campus, and thought it would be appropriate to incorporate it into the School of Design.
"Repositioning the hands will make Moses more acceptable to all religions," Tefft said.
Vasetoches are being performed by many Lawrence doctors and appear to be a popular method of birth control. Dr. Dale L. Clinton, health officer of Lafayette, Douglas county, said Monday.
Doctors agree that sterilization is the most effective means of birth control for men. The medical procedure for male sexually transmitted infections in which sperm transmit tubes, the vas, are severed.
The hands will be upraised, as on the seal, but will be held open.
There are no public records available concerning vase-surgery. The popularity of the vase-surgery as birth control was increased on Tuesday.
Teff began work on the Moses sculpture in 1867 and since that time has invited a number of his assistants to assist him in various capacities.
Although vaseiocontenus consume too much time to be performed as a model, the 1863 saw one of its owners saw no obstacle in the way of a person in the Lawrence area once again.
"I wanted to do the job so that it could be a learning experience for my students," he said.
Three of his students. Charlene
Joseph attributed the increase and popularity of male sterilization to awareness and concern for ecological problems and population
Dr. Howard F. Joseph, chief of law at University Memorial Hospital and urological adviser to Dr. Clinton, Hospital, served with Dr. Clinton.
Joseph said he counseled the prospective patient and his wife concerning the procedure and its effects. If the couple favored the surgeon, he scheduled the minor surgery to be performed in his office.
Vasectomies can be performed in about 20 to 30 minutes depending upon the patient. The procedure is approximately $100.
added that he has done about five times as many vasctomies in the last five years as he had done in the preceding 10 years.
Although the popularity of male sterilization has increased in the Lawrence area, Dr. Sullivan's department of health services at the University, said he had received very few patients at Watkins Memorial Hospital.
The model is scheduled to be completed by June 30,1973.
The next phase is a complicated process involving many intricate steps. Plaster is then applied around the waxed finish model.
WHEN THE PLASTER has dried, Tefft said, it will be taken from around the wax form in sections.
At this point, Moses will be moved to the sculpture in Memorial Stadium, he said. Wax will be invested into the mold
TEFFT SAID occasionally he brought an entire class over to the sculpture shop in the Mechanical Engineering annex the craftwork correspond to the work being done on Moses.
Langer, Pittsburgh. Pa.
sophomore and president at
Brennwood, Mo., sophomore,
and Karen Belenrigh, Godfrey, Il.
and Karen Belenrigh, Godfrey, Il.
are a regular basis this semester, he said. Others are welcome to come.
A burnout furnace is being designed by the foundry class which will meet the wax. This will allow the bronze to leave a hollow space for the bronze. The plaster mold will be broken off the bronze, exposing the mold.
Moses, currently in a model stage, began as an armature made from a piece of leather the armature. Teffis and attached styrofoam and carved out the figure. Over this form, he drew an array of lines upon him applied several layers of wax. The wax had to be built up until it was the exact size and shape of a face point, he said, the detailed modeling will be done. Intricate parts of the hands, feet and face are perfected during this stage.
The pieces will be welded together at Smith Hall, according to Tefft. The entire sculpture will be smoothed over the base and finished. Tefft said that the casting process will take about 14 months.
Moses is scheduled to be finished Aug. 31. 1974.
—BALLOT—
KU WOMEN: A PROGRAM OF RECOGNITION
"So far I've just made the assignments to reporters for the team," Moffet said. "I am trying to get stories on active groups of people that are conducting programs (in minority problems and issues)."
The Indian Center of Topeka, the Office of Minority Business Enterprise Economic Opportunity) and the NAACP are examples of Topeka groups conducting programs related to minority issues, Moffett said.
MOFET SAID he would act as editor of the newspaper and would be paid a salary by the Topeka publishing group. He said he had never worked with and train some people in Topeka to work on the staff. He said the publishing group hoped to involve not only people from the black community but also white people and other minorities on its staff.
Representatives of the Freedom Enterprise publishing group can be found at www.freedomenterprise.org/nalism and asked help in training its new staff, which is inexperienced.
W. H. BLACKMAN, pastor of Asbury-Mt. Olive United Methodist Church of Topkea and St. Mary's College Inc., said in a telephone interview that at present there were seven members of his organization, all black. He said some of the funeral services he has come from small independent
(for All Women Students Who
Haven't Voted In Living Groups)
Seventeen University of Kansas journalism students will work with a newly-formed minority newspaper in Topeka next week.
By FOSS FARRAR
Kansan Staff Writer
KU Journalists to Help Topeka Minority Paper
The students, members of a reporting of public affairs class on campus, will work with Freedom Press to produce the first three weekly issues of the Topeka Ebony Times, Mike Moffet, Lawrence senior and acting editor of the book of students, said Wednesday.
I. The Outstanding Woman Teacher of 1972
Vote for:
B. If you wish to do so, please nominate one of these teachers for OUTSTANDING WOMAN TEACHER;
A. How many women teachers have you had at KU?
II. Innovative & Creative Women Students
Your ID Number.
Nominate women who have made unique or innovative contributions to the University the last year
III. The Outstanding Senior Woman
Every SENIOR woman may nominate 3 candidates on the basis of leadership, scholarship and contribution to Uti-
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THE HODGE PODGE
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(1) ... (2)
(3) ... (4)
Please Return this Ballot to the Dean of Women's Office, 222 Strong or SUA Office, By Fri. April 14.
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grants.
The purpose of the Ebony Times, Blackman said, is to become "a viable voice within which she can express that isn't expressed elsewhere."
"We hope not to be biased."
Blackman said. "We are a group of reconciliation rather than polarization."
Blackman said the paper would deal with the problems of minority groups.
2 Dances Set By Black Frats
Two black fraternities are sponsoring dances relays at the University of Missouri chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi is sponsoring a relays dance from 1 to 3 p.m. at Lawrence National Guard Armor.
The bands, Everyday People and TNJ will perform. Admission will be two dollars a person.
The Upslation chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha at KU is sponsoring a spring event, "The Mind," April 21 at the East Lawrence Center. The Black Rock Advancement band will be two dollars a person.
TODAY
Campus Bulletin
Faculty Forum: noon, Westminster Center.
Cafeteria
Appalachian Mountains, mo. Appalachian
Arctic History Museum, mo. Alicone A.
Cafeteria
Wetland: 12:30 p.m. Alcove B.
Cafeteria and Italian: 12:30 p.m. Cottons-
wood Cafeteria,
Chelsea, Jordani: 2:30 p.m. Swarthout
SUA Travel Forum: 4 p.m., Council Room.
French and Italian: 4 p.m., Centennial
Room.
Navy ROTC: 4:50 p.m. Forum Room.
French and Italian Lecture: 5:15 p.m.
Pine Room
Vickers Lecture Series: 5:45 p.m., English
A.M.F.
Pediatrics Department: 6 p.m., Curry Rooms.
Board of Class Officers: 6:30 p.m., International Room
Washington State Department, 6 p.m., Curry
Boulevard, Board of Court Officers, 505 N. 4th St.
ternational Hour.
LCD Instruction: 7. p.m. Regionalist
LDs on CPU: 7 p.m. Parkers A and
B run on CPU: 7 p.m.
LDS Instruction: ? p.m., Regionalist
Campus Crusade: 7 p.m., Oread Room.
Vickera Lecture Series: 7:30 p.m.
Ballroom.
NAPP Meeting: 7:30 p.m., Council Room.
KU Film Society: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium.
RNU: 7:30 p.m., Junction Court.
Campus Crusade: 7 p.m., Orend Room.
Vibkert Landgrave: 9 p.m.
RC College of Osteopathic Medicine Interviews: 7:30 p.m. Room 299
Architecture Lecture: 7:30 p.m., Forum
tah
Entropology Executive Committee: 8
I.Egretberg Reporters
Architecture Lecture: 8 p.m., Forum Room
room
Senior Rectak: 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall
Sender Rectal: 8 p.m., Swarthout Rectal Hall
Transportation
Anthropology Executive Committee: 8
p.m. Governors Room.
FLAIR.
ELECTION 3 COLLECTION
COLOR IN THIS "MINI-
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Student Services Committee: 8:30 p.m.
Oread Room.
1. Buy a bunch of Flair pens. You need brown, red, brown, red, yellow and orange pens.
2. Now—color in the picture according to these color guide numbers (1). Black (6).
Brown (2). Red (3). Blue (7). Yellow (6). Orange. Please do not color unnumbered
Senate Finance and Auditing Committee:
8:20 a.m. Tuesday
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Senate Finance and Auditing Commi
8:30 p.m., Regionalist Room.
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To all of you who have ever loved or cared for me.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 13, 1972
---
award
Kansan Photo by MARK SCHIRKOFSKY
William Bernbach Gets KU Award
Ad exec talks with junior Randy Becker and Mel Adams, associate professor of journalism.
Turmoil Made Vice-Mayor Run for City Government
By MARSHA SEARS
Kansan Staff Writer
Commissioner Nancy S. Hambleton, who was elected the first woman vice-mayor of San Francisco recently that she became interested in city government when the city and University were in turmold during 1970. She became commissioner last April.
"it scares you when you think
of what happens when people do
their business in government," she said, "and it
frightening when decisions are made."
"The public usually doesn't worry about details; it only gets the gist." In a case being too high, Each decision the commission makes is based on
"The commissioners try to deal with issues and not people. We try to keep Lawrence from being unty and dangerous.
"IF I LOST any friends by the way I voted on some issues, I hope the loss is only temporary."
Hambleton said that she would encourage women to go into government. She does not think women should be composed entirely of men.
Her husband is happy that she is on the commission, she said.
"I don't think being on the commission has helped my cooking any." Hambleton said. She said she thought that the movement helped her to secure a position on the commission.
"I THINK THAT women look at things differently than men. Women do to the quality of life. Men tend to look at a decision from a different perspective."
One prerequisite to becoming a commissioner is to have a sympathetic family, she said.
Medical Center Gets $68.075
She said she has become interested in many other programs as a result of her work
"I had Irun ten years ago," she said, "I would have had more difficulty being elected.
The National Cancer Institute has granted $80,075 to the University of Kansas Medical Center for treatment of malignant disease. The studies involve treating cancer with controlled drugs, alone or in conjunction with radiation and immunization therapy and surgery.
with the commission. The members of one of these programs are trying to solve some of the problems of the aging. Another group is conducting a study of arrest procedure.
She said it was unnecessary to treat such a person as a threat
"Society benefits if contact with law is fair," Hambleton told. "Certainly someone who is overrated has no threat to society."
treat such a person as a threat.
"I think government in general manipulates symptoms in a welfare state, but I don't believe in a welfare state. We want the poor to be given an opportunity themselves out of their situation."
Although Hampton spends 20 to 30 hours every week on commission work, she still belongs to the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, a bridge organization, and Voters, the PI Betu Phi Alumni Association and Campus Guild.
SHE SAID she thought more vocational programs, not only in the usual areas of construction but also in hospitality and hotel management and service oriented occupations should be included to those seeking job training.
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Ad Man Stresses Creativity, Warmth
By KENT PULLIAM
Kensan Staff Writer
Warm human persuasiveness rather than mathematical precision is needed in the design of a advertisement for Bernbach, chairman of the board of Doyle, Dane and Bernbach Advertising Agency, said Mr. Bernbach.
Bernbach spoke at the Basil T.
Church Memorial Lecture at 1:00
p.m. in the Kansas Union.
"The purpose of the ad is to sell," Bernbach said, "and if that doesn't permeate in your every idea, you're a phony and should
Bernbach cited four disciplines that are essential to successful advertising. The first was selling the product.
He stressed the importance of selling to the common person and not letting culture get in the way of genius.
"ideology and fashion are the curse of the world because they kill creativity," he said.
"There is almost nothing that is not capable of boring us," he said. He cited space flight as an example of something that was exciting when the first flight became less and less interesting.
He said giving one area priority could mean that another program would be cut.
The second discipline was the aesthetic discipline. Bernbach taught you what to say when you said that was important, that how you said it was important.
Knox said deciding which areas should have priority in the new budget would be difficult since available funds have not increased.
The 10 members are chosen to reflect the attitudes of the total staff, including the funds for 1972-73. Knox said. Three members are representatives of the system's administrator represent school principal's. Three represent teachers, and two represent district's classified personnel.
"Soundness alone will never be most criminal waste of money today is spent on boring advertising that never gets
The committee reviews about 14 per cent of the total budget dealing in such areas as the use of library services, and transportation.
"Truth is essential in advertising, but you must say things freshly, originally and imaginatively," he said.
The third discipline is the relationship between educators and creative individuals need a guide to help them along, he said. The management needs to channel the artists in the right direction to make the best possible use of them.
Bernbach also stressed the importance of a manager's having some artistic talent himself or he will not be accepted
New Committee Studies Budget Of City Schools
An advisory committee on priorities for the 1972-73 Lawrence school year has been formed to help prepare next year's budget, according to Carl Klinger, the Lawrence school superintendent.
Knox said this action helped the committee decide what areas could be given less money next year.
In a recent interview Knox said the committee's 10 members are presently reviewing this year's goals. The committee could have been cut this year.
by the artists, and the artists will not grow creatively under his guidance.
"The Achilles heel of advertising is the relationship between the ad men and the creative people," he said.
"The management needs to guide the creators, and if they respond, to get rid of them," he said. "If they do it well, we will be much more effective and get the job done well."
The last essential part of the advertising field is the social interaction, and the importance of the advertising campaign could have on the social growth of you.
xxxxxxxxxx
"As businessmen, we can play a role in whether western civilization will have another rebirth or stop breathing forever.
He commented on the direction that advertising in the '70s will move and he said he thought the target was not undergo too many changes.
At a luncheon just before the
lecture, Bernbach received the
Allen White Allen Award for
Journals Merit in the field of
advertising.
"The man with the talent will be successful, just as he has been since his childhood," said a thing that is yours and yours alone is a great idea, and no one can doubt it.
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8
Thursday, April 13, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAS
FOOTBALL
kansas Photo by BECKY PIVONKA
Hadl Coaches Quarterback
Charger joins staff temporarily .
Hadl Helping Grid Staff
By STEVE STRAS
Kansan Sports Writer
After a 10-year absence from
the Tampa Bay team, he
pus. John Hall, former KU all-
American football player, has
returned to KU to week KU as
a football coach.
Hadi, now quarterback for the San Diego Chargers of the football team, helps KU help the quarterbacks adapt to the protype offense coach Fambrough is installing. He also will be helping to keep receivers from receiving receivers. After starting last Monday as a coach, Hadi plans on staying at KU for only 10 days. Hadi already had praise for the football team.
"I am very impressed with the team," he said. "I have a great desire to win, which is due to Coach Fambrough. BU is lucky to have him for a coach."
Fambridge had called Hadi up earlier in the year asking him to coach. Hadi said he accepted because he wanted the
As a college player, Hadl was very versatile. He was an all-american forward and quarterback from 1958-1961. He was also selected as an all-American halfback in 1960, and an all-American quarterback in 1963.
In 1961, Hadl was awarded the Ormand Beach Award, by the football squad, as the outstanding player when KU had some other out-standing players such as Curtis Coan, both great running backs.
Had still tilted four individual football records at KU. He holds the record for the longest punt, longest interception return, highest season average in punting and return returns is returned on kickoffs in a game.
opportunity to coach. He said he wanted to be a coach when he was through playing professionally, preferably at the college level.
Baseball Strike Reported Closer to a Settlement
After two separate bargaining sessions with John Gaherin, representative of the club owners, Miller called a press
NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball's player strike continued through a 12th day Wednesday but Marvin Miller, executive director of the players' association reported that seven were "closer to a settlement."
KU Relays
Attract Five
Record Holders
At least five world record holders in track and field events will participate in this year's Kansas Relays.
The number of world record holders who will be on hand for the Kansas Relays was increased by 34. The second and two Swedish pole vaulting stars.
University of Kansas track coach Bob Timmons recently announced that Kjell Isakson and Hans Lageraget, the Swedish team have accepted invitations to participate in the Kansas Rails.
Other world record holders who have accepted invitations to com- mpanies in the Kansas Relays are Jim Reynolds and a meter record holder; Charlie Green, 100 yard and 100 meters; Randy Mason, shot put; and Al
Isaksson, a graduate of the University of Stockholm, stunned the crowd at the Texas Relays in Austin. The second man in the world to vault 18 feet. The first was Chris Warner, who flew 18 feet-*to*-in 1970 and is now a member of the team.
The Swedes are living temporarily in Hawthorne, Calif., for a short period. UCLA and Southern California track teams. Isaksson was the vaulting king of the indoor season by consistently winning with pitchers from all over the country.
Isaksson was joined by Laverne and Thomas for training. They said they would spend the first five months of the Olympic year in America. "We're going to train," they said they would spend the first five months of the Olympic year in America. "We're going to train."
Lagerquist, a 31-year-old civil engineer from Stockholm, hit an acorn during the pea championships last month. He vaulted 17-feet-4 for second place behind Isaksson's 17-feet-8 for national AAU indoor championships.
The Kansas Relys and Memorial Stadium record for the pole vault was at set 17-feet-0.5冲 Buck Rogers of Colorado in 1968
conference to deny reports that the two sides had reached an agreement.
"Nothing could be more false," Miller ssaid. "But we have worked out a new offer and we are closer to a settlement."
Tom Haller, the player regimental captain of Tigers, said the strike could end soon, perhaps as soon as Thursday when the 24 owners
1960. Missouri was the number one team in the nation at the time.
"We would have gone to that Orange Bowl because of that victory but we found out we were playing in a different week before the game," he said.
The NCAA placed the probation in KU because the team used an Eagle helmet and a baseball games. KU had to forfeit the victories they had over the University.
Haller said that Gatherin was trying a new offer from the player who had given her any games postponed by the strike and made up later in the game.
Hadi received another award last January. He was named the NFL's "Man of the Year" and his contributions toward civic affairs.
This was probably the most satisfying award I have ever received because it dealt with the kids I have done with kids," Harka said.
"We didn't resolve it," said Gatherin, shortly after emerging from his second meeting of the day with Miller. "We met twice—once with his full committee and once with Mr. Gatherin." "Now, I'm going to Chicago."
Hadi has been working with
the University of Michigan,
for a long time. He is presently
assisting the Pauma Valley
India Reservation development
According to Gaherin, the players' association demands that the athletes receive their full salaries if the owners decide to take them.
Miller refused to disclose the nature of the new offer but Gaberna was on his way to present it to the owners.
Gatherin she the only matter blocking settlement of the strike is pay for any games made up after the playover to back work
"I have a friend who is directing the program. I do anything they want, like talk football or show some films," Hadi said.
There were rumors that settlement was close, especially after the pension contribution deadline. The day Tuesday's marathon bargaining sessions, but the failure to settle a settlement would be paid for made up games Wednesday seemed to doom any hope that play could begin by the end of June.
The players' argument,
according to Gaherin, is that if
the games cancelled so far are
made up in any fashion, they
Along with award he received.
He had also got a new car, $A 25,000,
and was awarded in his name for the
benefit of students in the San
Francisco.
Hadi plans to go back to San Diego after his coaching stint is up so he can play. Diego football camp in mid July preparing for the start of the ex-Arizona state championship.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Lawsuits will be filed in an effort to lift the announced television blackout of the National Football League's Super Bowl scheduled for Sunday. The lawyer who unsuccessfully fought blackouts of the last two Super Bowl said.
Floyd Temple isn't scared. Not really. But the University of Kansas baseball coach knows he will face Colorado this weekend in Boulder, they'll be facing their most match so far his season.
CU Hitters to Test 'Hawks
Hadi will be starting his 11th season as a member of the San Diego Chargers.
By DAN GEORGE
Kansas Sports Writers
"I want to play five more years if they will let me," he said.
"They're going to give us quite a bit," he said. They're probably going to have weaved face so far. We'll just have to hope our pitching can work well.
by far the biggest plus for the injuries this year has been the loss of 18 conference games, Colorado has scored 40 runs, an average of 2.5 runs per game.
The series takes on an event more crucial aspect with the team, and they are along with Oklahoma State, are locked in a three-way tie for second behind frontrunners in the three teams have 42 league wins.
Leading the Buffalo attack have been outfielder Willie Moore hit his 388 last season, and cat catcher Matt Barnett batted 284. Another advantage has been the slugging of freshman centerfielder Max Cue Jr.
Colorado's pitching, expected to be its strong point this season, has been on top since it surpassed 39 runs in six contexts. Gary Walczak, junior college athletics at Valley Valley (N.Y.C.) College Community has been the most effective pitcher, fashioning a 3-1 record in four seasons.
Temple, whose squad won the low-scoring series against Nebraska last weekend, is hoping for a repeat this week.
"I hope it remains a pitching-type series," he said. "They've (Colorado) had some fielding problems but they were then known to worry about having to worry. If we don't hold them down, we're going to get
KU Statistics
| | ab | r | h | h | h | 2b | 1d | 3b | hr | sh | avg |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Wolf | w | b | h | h | h | 1a | 1b | 4a | 7b | t | a/g |
| Bradley | 41 | 1 | 2 | 17 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 41 | 15 |
| Olin | 41 | 1 | 2 | 17 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 41 | 15 |
| Ohm | 52 | 12 | 19 | 14 | 6 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 36 | 14 |
| Glass | 29 | 1 | 8 | 14 | 6 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 24 | 17 |
| Gaskar | 29 | 0 | 8 | 6 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 27 | 18 |
| Johnston | 30 | 3 | 3 | 7 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 23 | 13 |
| Johnston | 30 | 3 | 3 | 7 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 23 | 13 |
| Corder | 28 | 1 | 7 | 5 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 171 | 14 |
| Corder | 28 | 1 | 7 | 5 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 171 | 14 |
| Borecocky | 14 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 114 | 14 |
| Caul | 14 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 114 | 14 |
| Turmer | 13 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 077 | 17 |
| Newberner | 15 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 077 | 17 |
| Harman | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 000 | 10 |
| Peltier | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 000 | 10 |
| Mason | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 000 | 10 |
| Murphy | 386 | 20 | 14 | 14 | 12 | 12 | 12 | 12 | 18 | 291 | 19 |
| | hp | wd | h | r | sr | bb | sn | aa | sra |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Carder | 17 | 3 | 8 | 1 | 2 | 5 | 23 | 69 | 0.44 |
| Cox | 25 | 3.1 | 18 | 1 | 2 | 5 | 23 | 69 | 0.44 |
| Cow | 26 | 1.8 | 18 | 1 | 2 | 5 | 23 | 69 | 0.44 |
| Wolf | 2.2 | 2.2 | 14 | 1 | 2 | 7 | 24 | 6.12 | 0.40 |
| Man | 15 | 2.0 | 14 | 1 | 2 | 7 | 24 | 6.12 | 0.40 |
| Nineteenman | 15 | 1.0 | 14 | 1 | 2 | 7 | 24 | 6.12 | 0.40 |
Sub-Par Score Paces KU Win
Almost as amazing as his five- under-par round performance were his two nine hole scores.
Alvaram Hills Golf Course was the host of Wednesday as Roger Wells led the University of Kansas to an 11-7 win over Baker University with a score of 64.2.
Wells shot a one-under-par 35 on the first nine and a remarkable four-under-par for the back nine.
Welts, Aurora, Colo. senior, is the senior member of this year's Jayahawk team. He is a three year letterman.
"Everything just seemed to be landing right where I wanted it to," Wells said. "I was getting them really close to the nin."
"It was a truly outstanding round by Roger, especially on the back side," said Bao Frederick. "The first time side is particularly tough up."
Wells performance was not, however, his lifetime best.
beat."
"This is certainly my best high school or college official meet, but my course was a 65 on my home courses in Aurora." Wells said.
Frederick also noted John
Temple, however, is quite confident in the ability of his pitchers.
Fambrough sung out Don Lemon and Fat Ryan, Kansas City. Mo. senior, both defensive ends, as having been very impressive at the 1960s.
"I wouldn't trade them for anybody," he said. "After the way they've pitched so far, I have to feel they're pretty good."
There were no position changes during the practice yesterday, nor were there any major injuries.
Fambrough said there would be a scrimmage at 10 a.m. Saturday in Memorial Stadium
"When we line up next fall, we will have more depth," Fambridge said, "but we will be young and inexperienced."
Starters Steve Corder, Bob Cox and Bob Wolf the nucleus of the virus. Blox has 4-1, basal and lefthander, is 4-0, and bias and ERA of 0.64. Almost matching him is cow, who has 3-1 record in 0.69 ERA. Wolf has 2-2 and 2-42.
Corder is scheduled to pitch in the opening game of the 1:30 p.m. game, and will play against the second game. Either Wolf or Bill Stiegemeyer will go in the third.
Goss, Wichita freshman, for his respectable round of 75.
The dual was a match play meet, which means that each of the six KU participants was awarded to one team. A point was awarded to the team whose member had the best front and back nine scores of each match. A point was also awarded to each defended by his defended his opponent in 18 holes.
his last four appearances, totaling three innings, he has struck out six batters.
Goss placed third last Friday in Lincoln in a meet involving eight teams. Each team entered six individuals.
"John continued to play well for us yesterday as he did in Nebraska last week," Frederick said.
Stiegemeier, a starter at the beginning of the season, has been particularly effective in relief. In
KU will host a meet at the Lawrence Country Club this Friday with KSU, ISU, MU and NU attending.
Fam Lauds KU Defense, Says Offense Still Rough
At the halfway mark of spring training, Kansas football team practice yesterday at Memorial Stadium emphasizing the running and
Danny Fambrough, coach of the Jayhawks, said, "The offense is right where it ought to be. We are right up to he. We are rough right now."
Frederick said that another meet would take place Saturday at the Manhattan Country Club with the same teams playing.
The defense, according to
the defense, has made it
proven through the die down
began. The secondary has been quicker
and stronger throughout the
square.
A major factor in the Jayhawks' mound success has been the performance of the defense.
John Goss, KU, 36-39-75 def.
Ding Vance, Baker, 42-38-80.
Don Watters, Baker, 43-57-80
def. Bill Kipp, KU, 42-40-82.
Rob Nielsen, KU, 39-78-78 tied
Bob Nelson, KU, 39-39-78 tie
Jim Seward, Baker, 38-40-78.
Roger Wells, KU, 35-32-67
Tim Krouch, Baker, 34-40-83.
Marc Morozzo, KU. 39-41-80
def. Terry Hochenauer, Baker.
44-38-82.
Stan Zimmerman, KU, 40-39-79 tied Ed Cotter, Baker, 38-41-79
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Tennis Team To Enter First Tourney
"In the Nebraska series, our fielding overall was good," Temple said. "We made only three errors but, then, one of them broke up the game. When you make an error, you hurt it you like that and win."
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The University of Kansas tennis team will compete in its first multiple-tournament team at Oklahoma City Saturday at the Oklahoma City Jail.
RU takes a 3-5 duel record into the eight-team tournament, having blanked Emporia State 7-0 Tuesday.
In looking to the Colorado in series, Temple's major concern is the KU offense. Although the Jahayhaws have been hitten, they haven't been searing. He said he must water consistency in their attack.
"If it doesn't happen, we're in trouble," he said. "In Nebraska we hit the ball but a lot of men on base, and that's bad."
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KU will be without former number one player Cal Simmons, who injured leg ligaments in a motorcycle accident Friday and out for the season. Mark Wick is the number one player.
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1800 Naismith Drive
843-8559
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday. April 13. 1972
A bicycle rack with a large, flat seat. The rack is mounted on a metal frame and is attached to the back of a bicycle. In the background, there are many other bicycles parked in a row behind a railing.
Ellsworth Team Parks Canoe Outside Hall
Jayhawks Seek Revenge In KU-KSU Canoe Race
Seventeen teams representing the University of Kansas will launch canoes on the Kansas River at 9 a.m. this week. Manhattan at 9 a.m., this week, State University teams 110 miles downstream to Lawrence in hopes of winning the first and second place titles captured by the team sponsored annually by the Association of University Watermen.
AUHR president Alex Thomas, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia sophomore, said that Oliver Hall was sponsoring ten of the KU teams. Oliver's government is paying the rental fee for the
Thomas is one of 30 members on a team called "Orange Taffy." It is led by three Ellsworth residents: Gary Steps, Topeka City sophomore; City sophomore; and Bruce Sniver. Wichita sophomore.
Snyder said that they planned to change crews about every eight miles.
Sixth floor Ellsworth Hall is sponsoring a team called "Marliny Marauders." It is led by Camron, Cambron, Kansas City.
KU-Y Suggests
RAC Merger
To End Racism
The KU-Y is at a changing point and would now like to join KU-Y in the Awareness Center) to eliminate fear. Swift, Gainesville, Fla. junior and KU-Y Cabinet member said he was meeting a meeting of the KU-Y Cabinet.
"Since our emphasis has been on the elimination of racism, we should continue in our work there." Swift said.
"The faster we can end racism the better," Sears said.
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: .03
Mike Sears, Overland Park graduate student and RAC coordinating director, said it was easier for the KU-Y to move in this direction.
Sears said that RAC had five programs. The main two were to provide training and to increase racial awareness among students. The third program developed and taught a new group. Another program works toward academic accreditation for RAC. The last was a system to evaluate programs.
Swift said that she didn't want to take the financial responsibilities next year if the KU-J joined with RAC.
Five days
Sears asked those people in the KU-Y who were interested in working with BAC to get together with him later.
According to the rules of the race, anyone can enter. There are two lanes, one for men and sons and three paddles in a cone. Both sexes must be represented on each side.
The canoers will dock at Wamego overnight and set out Sunday morning according to the times they came in *Saturday*
Cambroon said that instead of transporting back-up crews downstream by car, he teamed up with another boat. He said that they bought an inflatable boat with a 4 h.p. outboard motor and this has not been done before.
The race last year was won by a K-State team whose winning record for the last place was also taken by K-State and KU came in third. Last year it was K-State's first win.
This year the winning team receives a keg of beer. Its university will receive a trophy.
Ellsworth Panel Advises Splitting Hall Judiciary
By BETSY MORGAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Any complaints in the hall would be considered by the hearing board. The judicial board should also require further attention.
The Elsworth Hall contract reviewed Wednesday night, approved two recommendations by review committee and approved the residence ball for next year. The recommendations will now go to Donald K. Alderson, dean of the college.
The proposal by the hall's judicial committee recommends a hearing in which the judicial board into a three-member hearing board, and a jury to decide.
According to the board's recommendation, the members of the judicial board would be given the sole committee. The judicial board would then select three of its members to serve on the hearing board. This would eliminate the board and thus leaves the judicial board now has.
The hall government committee recommended that officers for the residence hall be selected by 1972 school year. Officers would include a president, secretary, treasurer and an activities officer.
A 17-year-old Lawrence youth was arrested early Wednesday morning by Lawrence Police and with possession of marijuana
The review board agreed, however, that the contract should be reviewed on a regular basis. The board then divided into five groups, each with extensive possibilities of improving activities of the hall government and the general atmosphere of the district.
Curfew Violation Leads To Youth's Drug Arrest
Originally, the contract review board was devised to review the Ellsworth Hall contract and to make suggestion for a revision of the contract. A representative from each hall wing was elected to serve on the board.
The committee also suggested that everyone in the hall be brought to government meetings and that a representative from each floor be elected to insure that each floor has representation at every meeting.
All suggestions by the contract review board must be approved by Dean Alderson before they can leave. If not, the residence hall next year.
Cottonwood to Receive Fashion Show Profits
Officers said the boy was arrested on the Lawrence High School parking lot at 19th and Louisiana streets after they were seen there was a suspicious person prowling around the grounds.
The World of Women Spring Fashion Shoes will be present in the Museum. Cottonwood Incorporated at 10 a.m. April 15 in the Morton, Kansas chairman of the Women's Chamber of Commerce, said Wednesday.
The boy was approached by officers and asked for any identification and his age. Police
Officers told the boy they were taking him into custody for violation of the juvenile curfew law. Asice faced the youth in a joint identification and handed them two marijuana cigarettes. Officers then arrested the boy and charged him with possession.
Police reported that juvenile authorities and the boy's parent were notified.
said the boy told the officers he was 17 years old but did not have any identification.
Conda said that the purpose of the workshop was to train these people within the community. Another goal of the workshop, he said, is to help them understand that the people could learn to support themselves and live on
"The money from this benefit will be used to buy equipment for the workshop, Gary Condra, Cottonwood, wood, said Wednesday.
Morton said that there was a good response to ticket sales but that last year's was better.
This is the second year that the Women's Division of the Chamber of Commerce will sponsor a benefit for Cottonwood.
The program is open to anyone, according to Morton. She said that tickets cost five dollars and that proceeds would go to Cottonwood.
She said that there would be styles shown for young and old, and men and women.
"The program consists of a style show from almost every merchant in Lawrence and a brunch." Morton said.
One day
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
"We always manage to sell a lot at the last minute," Morton said.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
each additional word: $.01
25 words or fewer; $1.00
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanal are offered by our students. To credit, we are national origin.
Highest price paid for used cars ...
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI-2 68-
tf
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage.
t. If you don't,
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can buy a stereo from AUDI CHEST, plus 10 at *RAY AUDI* or only the stereo Discount House at *FIVE TRA*. Coffee & Consulting Free. TRA, Coffee & Consulting Free.
Scaffold Equipment -Pins Mask. Snorkel
Lifetime Guarantee - 4-Wet Wet
Super Sport. $19.99 * Hawk Shank Knee
Support. $29.99 * Air Guitar. $29.99
Air Guitar. $29.99 * See us in stock.
buy bulk all major brands
sports guitars, keyboards,
guitars, basses, drums.
6148 Phone: (703) 750-5219
you visit at davidavantage
Ething — the same
things — New Analysis of Western Civilization " Campus Madhouse, 41f
Vest 14th.
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
NORTHISE COUNTRY SHOP 707
Baldridge Hide-Age, used furniture,
collectors items, old wood cooking and
furniture, horse tack, bicycles, fireplace wood,
mountains, tools, other useful items, open to 5
seven days. Herb Alberenbarger, 842-861-3000.
1960 Austin-Cambridge 4 dr. Sedan
Needs tune-up. $150 Call 841-321G
after 5.00.
Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 515 Mich.
Street, Detroit, MI 48230. Bar-B-Que,
515 Mich. St., North Broadway, 515
Mich. St., Wellington, MI 48230.
Bar-B-Que, $14.95 Large Hibit Plate, $18.95
Hibit Plate, $18.95 Large Hibit Plate,
$18.95 Large Hibit Plate, $18.95
Bar-B-Que, 642-9530. Sun-Cup,
642-9530. Sun-Cup
BREER • COORS • BUD — $11.5 a 6-apk 12 oz. $1.49 a 6-apk 16 oz. Jayhawk Food Mart, 9th & Illinois. 4-13
MOVING Washer and dryer, $75.
Washing machine, $100. $20.
Two camper, $20. Two 3-4-speed
bicycles, $25. Two 3-speed bicycle
brakes, $25. Swing set, $9. Lawn sweeper,
$25. Swing set, $9. Lawn sweeper,
Tree pruner, long handles, $8.
Power washer, an in., $8. $261-244 then
power washer, an in., $8.
1967 Dodge Vain-118-VB, auto, nite shape also 1964 Ford Falcon Sprint, vP power steering, 4-speed bucket, the works-842-5721. 1131 Ohio. 4-13
AM/FM FM Stero radio with 8-track
tape player, input & output jacks for
turbitable, headphones & recorder.
Top condition. $75.82 - 943.78. 4-13
Black Spanish leather coat, trench coat style. Double breasted. Ladies size 11-12. Excellent condition. Half price print售价 E午晚: 4:19474
firen. Firen? Got them, band jackets, custom made leather beltes, cheap around—so many clothes on the ground. KONON, 819 Vermont. Big Deal #313.
3-speed bicycle, new tires, chain, & light. Full size violin and case. AM radio cassette recorder 843-3579 4-13
1966 650 Bonville Trimble cypher box out and complete overhead leash set for vehicle. Prices vary very little 842-5670 - 4-13 APARTMENT SALE *1045 Ks, Fri*
1970 Kawasaki, 350 c.c. good condition
K000, 8433808, A23
APARTMENT SALE—1045 Ky., Fri.
10-5, Sat., 11-4. 4-13
VOX POWER STACK—like new amp-
system, two separate duty cabinets,
8-12" heavy duty speakers. Must
call. Call 842-5819. 4-14
HAVE YOUR HANDWRITING ANALYZED 842-4476. 4-14
SPRING CLEARANCE USED BIKES Kat Suzuki, 634 Mass, 842-
10-speed - Brand new Raleigh, center-pull brakes, racing tires, $23.2$; 1$\frac{1}{4}$ inch frame, racing, must sell. Call 842-4819.
Fordi Mini Trail $175
Dodge Ram 2500 $165
Suzuki T-129 $165
Toyota Corolla T-129 $165
TS-250 Suzuki $475
Honda Civic Si $475
Yamaha YZF-R125 $485
Yamaha YZF-R125 $485
Honda Civic Si $485
1 Husky 250 Racer $925
1 Honda Civic Si $925
Kawasaki 250 Eagle $425
Kawasaki 250 Eagle $425
1967 New Mobil Mobile Home, Large living room, dining area, kitchen, two bedrooms, big bathroom. Includes air dryers and clothes dryer. 842-3529 4-17
SONY stere tape recorder with built in and extension speakers. Full recording equipment. Only 7 months warranty. Hourly rate: 4-14. Howard, 864-1293
2 acoustic suspension speaker systems, 2-way-10"M", Must hear to believe. Best offer takes them. Call 864-1169. 4-14
Yamaha 650 cc's, street, see at 924
Schwarz after 6 p.m. 842-3871 4-18
FOR HIRE, Cameraman accomplished at "useless" still photographs (B&W) Designerly — Arresting — Evoke Penessiveness (the hopefully).
Rare-find—1971 Kawasaki. 250 SS. excellent condition, with 100 miles. Sales cheap, need gas money 60. Fiat, Volvo or Mitsubishi 482-444. Ask for Dick
'65 MGB roadster in top condition
58,000 miles. Engine overhaired at
43,000. $900, 842-2472. 4-17
You and river, woods, chasen envior.
You and river, woods, chasen envior.
Or sif. Discuss by mailed card (t)
864-3194 AMWF 2-30-20
nontough cost. Doug Keller 4-14
Wedding Gown Ivory, size 10, new,
warm. Alfred Angelo original;
original length new embellished
manufactured; originally
6367. Now $49.00 • 418
1969 YAMAMA 350. Trail-Street-tow-
ercycle. Excellent condition. Have
done my own work. Call Pete. 864-
1114
4-118
1971 Kawasaki F7 175 cc Like new.
$550 842-7118. 4-18
MUST SELL - 3 bikes, 1971 Kawasaki
175 Enduro, $50, 1971 Yamaha 350
1825, 1971 Honda Super Rat
1826, 1971 Honda Pro
offer. $42-398
4-18
1969 Honda CL-350, 4,500 actual miles.
All accessories, $500 or best offer.
842-6300 4-18
Guitar - Gibson I145 jumbo 12 string with deluxe case and dearm册 up-all like new. Yours for $30 Will call. Dell K872-419 last 4-18
1986. Sunkiu X-6 sRAMBler 209cc. It looks and runs like new. Must see to appreciate, $775 Call 842-1843 ank for Dave. 4-18
1971 Kawasaki 500, must sell, been drafted $350. Excellent condition.
Call after 10 p.m. 644-6543. 4-18
1970 Kawasaki 90cc. Good condition, low mileage, call Frank, 864-6834, 4-14
MUST SELL. Fender Jawcar with
access and accs. Heathkit 220 watt
peak power amp with column. Call
842-3166 4-14
JOBS ON SHIPS MEN. WOMEN.
Pal-ji-shang little Hungarian sheepdog puppies ARC Trop bloodlines, pedigree furders $6 up also. Dugong 310-748-9258 319-798-2981 McLouth, Kane 4-26
For sale or trade 1917 Pyrmont 440
GTX 7,000 actual miles. Need to
bark. Bank financing 843-0507 or 843-
4469
Realtor sharp 1968 350 Honda Under 4,000 miles has been babied on all life-terms $50 or make an appointment. AL, VA, 924-7422 or just keep trying 4-17
MGB- 85 Financial situation force-
ment blue radiant blender. The baby blue
1970 350cc Suzuki, orange and black,
excellent condition $550 or best offer
Call 842-7729 after 5:36
4-19
7 Chevy, 2 door 252 automatic (automatically rebuilt). Near new, tires, brakes, valves, burns no oil, good mileage, 63000 original miles. $200 towing charge.
1962 GMC school bus converted into camper. Fad out lemonade yellow. Road to travel. $1500 call Charlie Bowers. Book your ride. 4-19 after 9, 843-835. 4-19
1970 Volkswagen Fastback, dark bin,
online, only 11,000 actual miles. Sharp.
Asking $1,585 Call 843-868-4
4-19
Student learning out of business. Must sell couch $8, chair $6, night stand $3, bureau $5, lamp $4, 21" Zenthi v $8, 42-824
4-17
STEREO SYSTEMS tape player-AM/FM stereo, Panasonic-brand new $169 Asking $130 Must sell, call 842-472 6728.
Perfect summer job or career
No experience required. Exc
entl pay Worldwide trade
送 $2.00 for information
Seafax, 包1220-KF, Seattle
*washington* 81811 4-2
63 Ford tj; 10 pw. wide wheels,
45 Torr tj, camper, stereo, extra
wheels and tires, fine end $75 Also.
wide bed and tires, fine end $85
wide bed $25 Oak eggs.
1964 green TR-4, runs good, new seat and carpet-$250 or best offer. Call Chris. 825-8233 4-19
1962 Harley Davidson XLX SPORTER
—Stock-in good condition. A good
buy to chap. Will accept small trade
condition. Call. Condition.
316-431-2800 4-19
Mobile home for sale. Tired of living in an unpleasant place while wasting time, you can relocate to a depricate little here. It is a house where you can enjoy privacy and the comfort of your bedding or studying in a warm, pleasant room, bright 29 ft. living room, 3 bedroom, bright 20 ft. living room, master, refrigerator, automatic water, gas range, gas water heater, and usually good condition (1625-1045). Unusually good condition. P leaseable possession. 834-6106 elevations. 4-19
FOR RENT
ROGERS WEST HILLS REALTY
Luxury garden and bed of the campus in eden. Lush landscaping with fireplace 3 bedrooms in camper with fireplace 3 bedrooms in camper large garage space to tub & shower Partly remodeled with new 2 x baths. Detached kitchen finished with new 2 x baths. Detached kitchen filled with bridal gartens & curtains included cherry floor tile. Complete interior design. Rogers' Realty 1405 Mason, 843-902-0001
Rockledge Villa Villas Apartments. limited fee. Four children can be paid. Four students can have npls. apt with all utilities paid npl. p.m. 843-7731 p.m. 843-7731 4-28
COLLEGE HILL MILAN now show-
ing the 2013 uniforms furnished
and unfinished apartments
rates start at $120 to龚冠山
rates start at $140 W. 19b, Apt B or call
W. 19b W. 19b, Apt B or call
W. 19b W. 19b, Apt B or call
Tony's 66 Service
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Be Prepared! tune-ups start singing
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWENY: You can enjoy yourself in a variety of special summer apartments at the Harvard School, 248 or visit 9017-A Harvard Road Missouri. Awake Apartments, 393 & 395, Harvard can be economical and comfortable, at our substantially modified special summer apartment. At our summer time to be sure that this summer a wonderful time to be spent.
Tried of trying to find that ideal apt.
of his choice, but now has available
1. 2 & 2 FB in various locations and price
locations.
McGoway Apt. 801, Kentucky. 6422,
McGoway Apt. 801, Kentucky. 6422.
WHY RENT?
NOW IS THE TIME TO HIVERSE
1972. while selection is still available, attorneys were required to be 80-248 or 35-197. A Harvard law firm was established in 1972 by lawyers' best built booted, and it was the firm's first law firm.
TEXAS AGRICULTURAL UNIVERSITY
Avalon, 9th & Avalon; Harvard Square, Iowa and Harvard; and Arbor Place. Located cool of living in one of these handsome apartments and you will be sure to have a dishwashers central room for you and many more features. **4**
TO LOOK WHAT SANTINE APTS HAVE TO OFFER Summer rates, swimming post. A C U free cable-TV, and a new TPC Internet 1125.2 Indy 845-8216
Sublease for summer; studio apt,
furn., util. paid, A/C. close to campus;
$95, 813-8766 4-14
When you're hot, you're hot. When you're cold, you're cold.
Differentiated gift sets INVIRGENITY
Differentiated gift sets UNIVERSITY
Differentiated gift sets MENNES. Enjoy our pool & close de-
sertions. AP) 11h (529 HW) Phone: 843-760-1422
AP) 11h (529 HW) Phone: 843-760-1422
For Retail - Two bedroom home, one
apart, just outside city, $125 mo,
unit amenities, yearly lease. Avail May 1
for Appl. PH: 842-3421 4-18
RIDGEVIEW
Studio apartment, Quiet, furnished,
air conditioned, steam heat, parking.
Business train or grad student.
Available May 14. 4-18.
830-7800.
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
MOHFN APARTMENTS. Furnished and unfurnished one bedroom from $830-130, plus playroom. Near caves and waterfalls in next fall; Dove, B43-6242, B43-6241, B43-6240
NOTICE
SUMMER HENTALS Live close to campus this summer in a room, house or apartment. Economical and comfortable. Louisiana 843-161-702, 843-161-523-9
Available 5-13 three room apt airtime $110. One room apt okt $480. Fireplace $90. Stone fireplace $35. Measures all apts are nearby. Near KU Bills paid $7,840-411
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
Large, two bedroom home mobile,
fully carpeted, air-conditioned, water
and hot rent paid. Prefer couples or
Night norms 842-905. $190-
490
Renting for summer and fall; nice furnished rooms, kitchen privileges, near KU) also 1-3 bedroom apts. 842-5067 after 4:00. 4-19
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right
up to dates in campus, Missouri
between apartments available. Au-
guers have available at end of winter
months availability at end of winter
months www.catley.edu catsley.diwaneh.org www.catley.edu catsley.diwaneh.org 842-788-7000 between 5:30 p.m. and 10:20 p.
Barn Parties! Now available for Barn Parties. Please call 612-354-8090, Apple Valley Farm at Lake Perry, and cooler plenty of parking at Carrie Strip. Call Joe Strapon after a phone in p $82-$129.
LEARN SKYDIVING IJT jump
mantainer, first, plane ride, and
qualified instruction. Check out
mantainer after $50. Pcf call Dick
jump after $20.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co., John Wells, 842-5220. It
Would you like to see some pretty
exotic people, young lovers & a good
look at the People's Republic of
China? Meet Mr. Li at Haas Impacts,
1029 Mason, 4-13
JIM'S STEAK HOUSE—where, you will find one of the best steaks in town. Our motto is "Dine Out at Eating Out Prices." 4-14
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Webster's Mobile Homes
Women's Alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30 4-22
Dealer
Your Complete Service
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
Ample Park Spaces Available
3409 W. 61h 842-7700
INPART DAY-CARE CENTRE, 842-7694
PROFESSIONAL child-care for children I mon to 12 mon. Full or part-time position. Skilled, designed environment. S-2
Leather-up -- RED RIDER -- Leather
up. (Half price) wallets, bags,
pouch, shoes, and accessories.
Reasonably priced -- 100 Ohio
Midnight. Third Thursday -- 4-13
P M
NATURAL DYE WORKSHOP—April,
14, 15. 16. Sign up at the Yarn Barn.
730 Mass. 843-4333 4-17
If you want $15 jeans or $10 Western or Hawaiian shirts, we can't help you but if it's your money leather children denim clothes musical BOOKS 10-24
WEDDING INVITATIONS — PRICES
printed only $45. Save for new
collection and samples to Aerpen-
dal East, Main Arboreum,
Burgess 8340.
$249
Attention Trafful franks, treasures,
philes, and everyone who likes good
movies! SUA presents Trafful Week.
Trafful Week begins at 10AM every
night. every day. 4-14
GEM AND MINERAL SHOW - See
the schedule. GEM and Mineral
Glow Blowing - Exhibits - Dalesen
and Mineral Club at 6 F.H. Fairgrounds,
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. FICE PREMUM
402-735-8000
Just West of the
Give your jeans a lift—with suspenders in color. from EARTHSHINE, 8 E 12th. 4-18
CHANGE OF LOCATION From April 15 through October 13 each week at Lake Pavilion. However, if bad weather or another group, previews on Gym Gym. Same old time: 7-10 p.m. Gym with friends, or with your friends, 4-17
KAT Suzuki
Everything in your closet just dried a clothing transplant at EARTHI SHINE, 8 E. 12th. 4-18
634 Mass
Drive-In Theatre
Dandelion Rope Hags-Grow with regular feeding. Something like a dog. But cheaper at EARTH-SHINE, 12 E. 8th 4-18
LONNY FAME, and the Bottleman. A Rock n' Ball Band straight out of the 1980s. For more information contact Rikke, 842-6590 or John, 842-3814 - 149
Two left feet? Expert intensive instruction will transform you into a troubling bulldozer! Com Saturdays at 10 a.m. at Student Activity Center. Free 4:30-7 p.m. at Student Activity Center. Free
We buy used books, also old Playboys and Pee-li's magazines in good condition! Call 842-0276 5
WANTED
Lawrence's first and onl REAL access store. Factory Authorized Sales & Service
Woman roommate wanted to share one bedroom Avalon apartment for summer and, or fall Call Lynne at 864-1234. 4-14
OVERBEAJS JOBS FOR STUDENTS
176485
**$20,000 per semester for occupation**
**$15,000 per semester for occupation**
**coach/lighting designer, freebie**
**coach/lighting designer, freebie**
**91215, San Diego, CA**
**92115, San Diego, CA**
3 nice girls need a roommate for next
year in Jayhawk Towers. Call any-
time. 842-0427 4-18
HELP! Phases land 2 plus continued inflation, requires students liberal education. Students share Jakehaw Towers this summer Herb Shaw, Centtalia, Kansas
One or two roommates to share an apartment with two other girls for next fall. Call after 4:00 Pam or Cindy, 842-6382. 4-19
Good running car used want. Have $190 to spend LookUs and year not important but must be in good shape Call 842-642-609
TYPING
135-200 mm screw mount telephone lens for 35 mm camera. Also enlarger for 450 mm camera. Call 212-4756 or 4-4756 for kit Weld-World Leave name, number
Experienced in typing tissues, dissection, and suturing. Have electric typewriter with picra type. Accurate and prompt answer to questions. Phone: 843-7554. Mrs. Wright
26th & Iowa Ph. V13.1353
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
842-6966
Sunday 10:3
Kidays 8:5 30
Parts at a discount
Typing in my home. IBM Selectric
Prompt accurate work. Experienced.
Call 841-2556. $-9
These, term papers, typed accurately and promptly, IBM Selector, your choice of type style. Also editing at the rate: Kansas 84-97-179-606-560.
IBM pics type. Fast, accurate, neat.
Call after 3:00 p.m. or on weekends.
841-3186
4-14
TYPING . THIERES . DISSERTATION
MISCELLANEKAS WORK
On The Matter with pice type
Michelle Trouset, 2499 Bridge Cap
842-1406
PERSONAL
Typing on elite electric typewriter
No Theses please. Prompt attention
43-0958
4-18
Experienced typist will type your academe writings. Prompt, reasonable rates. Please call 842-7654-704
FLASH-Little Debbie Hempseed finds happiness with hand-made necklaces and rings from EARTHSHINE, 8 E. 121h.
4-18
With qualities like yours how could I resist? Of course I'll be your April Fun, but one question remains, who is Angela? 4-13
LONNY FAME, and the Bellweiser. A Rose Ball Band struck out of the 1925. For more information contact Nick, 842-6039 or John, 842-3841-3418.
O My Servant? Thou art even as a fairly tempered swallow coined in exile (I'll show you a hidden value hidden from the artist's knowledge. Wherefore come forth an angel whose worth may be made reequal to that
LOST
Small white terrie with brown spots.
Wearing a red collar. Very, very friendly. Very important to family Reward offered. Please call 841-106-3097.
Girl's watch. Worn-outlooking, new brown leather band. Friday night on hill. Joe's, or 14th & Tenn. 841-3341.
Puppy, 4-months white and black brown spots, curly hair, tan collar answers to Pete—REWARD Call 842-17206
MISCELLANEOUS
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale—Sizes 8-10, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky. 4-20
SEDUCED by spring? Give in, and simultaneously shake your trust for knowledge; learn international folk music; 7:40 p.m. Lake Free. 4-19
HELP WANTED
TEACHERS WANTED Contact
Southwest Teachers Agency
Box 2313, Altaplexway NM 87066. **Uk**
Bondet and Robert of
NATA 5-18
FOR HIRE Experienced copy editor
hour journal processing or graphed
for full-time or part-time job
anumner job to assist with writing of
journals; requires 80 hours
843-2682 after 4 p.m. @
12345 Main St.
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 13, 1972
O'Neill Reports Student Fees Budget
By HAL RITTER
and
and CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writers
The student Activity Fee Budget, an annual project of the Student Senate, will hopefully, be completed in the next two weeks after a preliminary report was submitted to the Senate.
Bill O'Neill, Bailinw, Mo. junior and student body treasurer, submitted the report that included budget requests for 1972-73 by all Senate funded organizations and programs.
His report will be used by the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee when it holds budget hearings next week and listens to each group's proposals. Meet from 6:30-11 p.m. next Monday-Thursday.
AFTER HOLDING hearings the committee will make its recommendations to the Senate April 26 and a final drafting of the budget will be attempted that night.
If the Senate does not finish April 26, another meeting will be held May 3 to complete the task.
The $12 semester student activity fee is distributed each fall and spring semester to each of eight major University groups, activities and programs based on the number of full time equivalent students estimated for that semester.
A standard apportionment for each of the eight
areas requesting funds from the $12 fee was enacted by the Student Senate in December. For example, campus organizations in general will now receive $1.55 for each full time equivalent student and intercollegiate Athletics will receive an activity fee for each full time equivalent student.
THE TOTAL BUDGET requests of all campus organizations asking for allocations from the 1972-73 activity fee totals $19,124, which is nearly four times the $50,365 allocated by the Senate for campus organizations. Last year it was allocated to campus organizations.
The newly formed School Councils will receive 75 cents, as a whole, for each full time equivalent student. The total funds allocated for the School Councils is $24,440, which will be distributed to a number of graduate and undergraduate student organizations in the various schools.
The University Daily Kanan receives $1.35 for every full time equivalent student. $43,990 have been allocated to the Kanan for the 1972-73 school year. Last year the Kanan was allocated $40,000. The Kanan has requested that its line apportionment be increased to $1.85 per full time equivalent student. This would require that apportionments would have to be reduced in the other seven areas.
THE STUDENT SENATE Operating Budget will be $1.50 per student or $6.75 after receiving
$70,700 this year. The Senate's allocation will include $26,130 for the Curriculum and Instruction Survey, $7,000 for the KU Reclamation and $3,500 for the International Film Series.
The Athletic Corporation will receive $5.00 per student or an estimated $162.90 compared with $34.75.
An allocation of $8 per student or $2,790 will be given to the University Theatre next year, a small increase over the $26,760.49 allocated this year.
The Concert Course Series will receive $8.00 per student or $2,065 next year after receiving payment.
The Intramural Sports Program will receive $20 per student or $8,515 next year according to the apportionment system after receiving $5,000 this year. However, O'Neill recommended an $18 per student increase in the allocation after being informed by Martin Jones, University chair, that $3,000 given yearly to the program by the University will not be available next year.
Requested Fiscal 1972 Requests Fiscal 1973 Requests
Student Activity Organizations
Taiwan Dance Program $ 800.00 $ 400.00
KAI Amateur Radio Club $ 590.00 $ 324.00
Forest School $ 450.00 $ 324.00
Forest Academy $ 101.02 $ 101.31
Music Education Conference $ 508.00 $ 601.31
Music Education Foundation $ 508.00 $ 601.31
KUI Model United Nations $ 1,090.00 $ 421.00
Social Action Organizations
Cultural Household Workshop $ 375.00 $ 383.00
Student Volunteer Association (carry forward) $ 600.00
Douglas County Legal Aid $ 6,380.00 $ 2,600.00
National Enforcement Law Society $ 870.00 $ 1,021.00
KV U-Service $ 1,255.00 $ 1,254.00
Military Office $ 1,255.00 $ 1,254.00
KU Sheriff Club $ 1,250.00 (not received)
Human Relations Commission $ -0 $ 1,000.00
Catalan Summer Program $ -0 $ -0
Catalan Veterans Center (not received) $ 1,775.00
KU Methodism Center (not received) $ 1,500.00
Catalan Military (C.D.C.) $ -0 $ -0
Daily Data to End the War $ -0 $ 1,000.00
Campus Engagement Org $ -0 $ 45.00
Catalyst Impact (LAS Course Program) $ 20,000.00 $ 1,500.00
Colorado Business (C.B.C.) (not received) $ -0 $ -0
Campus Engagement Org $ -0 $ 45.00
Catalyst Impact (LAS Course Program) $ 20,000.00 $ 1,500.00
Yellow British Road School $ 7,000.00 $ 4,800.00
Rancho Free University $ 3,148.00 $ 2,400.00
Workshop Programs
Hilton Day Care Center $ 20,000.00 $ 650.00
Women's Quilt $ 2,900.00 $ 1,150.00
Minority Student Organizations
Mexican American Students $ 35,330.00 $ 17,395.00
Mexican American Students $ 6,722.00 $ 2,375.00
KU International Club $ 3,600.00 $ 3,480.00
Turkish Student Organization $ 820.00 $ -0
Turkish Student Organization $ 660.00 $ -0
Iranian Students Association $ 243.00 $ -0
Publication Stations
Cohabitored Review $ 2,170.00 $ 1,800.00
UK Welfare Bureau (UK) $ 2,097.00 $ 900.00
Law Library KU Research $ -0 $ -0
KU Prof, Nine Students Meet To Plan Peace Studies Major
A meeting was held last night to test teachers in development, special medical studies. The meeting was headed by Davide Summery, KRU assistant professor.
Although only nine persons attended the meeting, summers expressed hope that an awaverest would increase the number of persons interested. He said he realized the difficulty in creating a major, but that he thought it was the university came from students.
Fiscal 1972 Fiscal 1972
Sports Teams and Clubs
Hairdressing Team
SU Soccer Team $1,114.00 $1,000.00
RU Soccer Team $3,087.00 $900.00
RU Sailing Team $2,862.00 $275.00
RS Sailing Team $2,862.00 $275.00
RS Handball Club $320.00 $200.00
RS Seaside Diving Club $320.00 $200.00
RS Seaside Diving Club $320.00 $200.00
Women's Intercollegiate Sports (not received) $400.00
Women's Intercollegiate Sports (not received) $400.00
Cribbet Club—0—0—0—0
Cribbet Club—0—0—0—0
Immediate plans include research into established Peace studies programs at other uni
A list of existing courses that might apply to peace studies was made. The group discussed these courses and suggested that other courses be created to fulfill their needs. The group also dealt with political actions and politics, influence, and social conflict, studying conflict would be beneficial to the major. First hand experience, such as volunteer work, was also included.
"The most important consideration is student interest," Summers said.
versities. For the present, the group decided to treat the program as a special major. This program offered an outline of his projected program of studies. This must be endorsed by three faculty members. In the case of the peace studies special program, we have expressed their willingness
to cooperate. Summers said.
Its founder, William Boland, assistant professor of social welfare, and John Wright, psychologist, human development psychologist.
He said there must be a continuum of interest programs for his students to be successful and respect and respect from the faculty must also be obtained for the work in other areas in work in other areas that were initiated by the peace study program.
The next planned meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 26, at the Baptist Student Center, 1629 W. 19th Street.
Museum Offers Children Snake Hunting Safaris
Some Lawrence grade school students and families will soon be collecting and studying snakes through "SNAKes Alive," a series sponsored by the KU Museum of Natural History Associates.
On the field trips, open to
the students, families and
families, the students will
collect and study various snakes
to learn about their charac-
teristics.
Tom Collins, preparer of reptiles and fish, will be the main instructor. He will be assisted by Dr. Jeffrey Tennant, educator for the museum, and Richard Lattis, graduate student in systematics and ecology. The fledy days will be offered April 22 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., grade students. May 6 for students aged nine through 12 and May 13 for families. The fee is based on person and 40.00 for members of the Museum associates.
The students will be instructed
Campus Briefs
Kansan Correction
It was incorrectly reported in Wednesday's Kansas that the second of two programs of 20th century art songs by black composers was to be presented yesterday. However, the program is scheduled for 2:30 today in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Woodwind Recital Fridav
An exhibit on color photography and darkroom techniques by Dan Whitney, fifth year architecture student, is on display on the second floor of Marvin Hall now through May 1. The exhibit will move to the Kansas Union for display May 2 through May 13.
Robert Michal, KU associate professor of education and a counselor with the Guidance Bureau, will discuss the American College Testing program at the Faculty Forum at noon today at the United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread Avenue.
The University Woodwind Quintet will present a concert at 8 p.m. Friday in Swartworth Recital Hall. The selections include Sweecklin and Labin's "Variations on a Folk歌," Barber's "Summer" and Rink's "31, 31, Rink R. Fink's 'Seven Parables,' and Pooleen's "Sextur."
Color Photo Exhibit
Edward L. Oschenschlag, associate professor of classics at the Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, will give a lecture on "New Discoveries at Thumss." a Grete-Roman City in Montreal. The public room of the Kansas Union. The public is invited to attend.
KU Folk Dance Club
Archaeology Lecture
Starting Friday, the KU Falk Dance Club will meet at Potter Lake pavilion from 7 to 10 p.m. The club will m长老 meet in room 173 Robinson unless inclement weather forces it inside. Sandy Bradley, formerly with a professional dance troupe near Seattle, will teach Balkan舞 to the club members for the next three weeks. Interested people are encouraged to attend.
in safety procedures and handling of snakes before they go into the field. They will collect snakes at two different sites in the Lawrence area and will then return to the museum to study them. They will also them with the herpetology collections at the museum.
Students' parents must enrol and sign a permission slip at the museum administrative office. Students are limited to 18 students per session.
Participants should meet in the main lobby of the museum at 10 a.m. and should bring a sack lunch.
Profs to Offer Japan Seminar 2 New Papers
Two papers will be presented by Japan and the Midwest January Seminar of the Monthly meeting to be held at 1 p.m. Saturday in the Pine Room
GRADUATE STUDENTS ONLY!
According to Felix Moos, professor of the Asian studies, Mr. Moos will give students and MJS members, whose interests center on Japan, a chance to discuss and present ideas in English and offer research suggestions.
Papers to be presented and discussed are "Dulles' Dilemma on the Japanese Peace Treaty" and "Nebraska and the Asia for Nebraska and" "Asia for Asiatis?", Muslim Filipino Responses to Japanese Occupation and Propaganda War II, Thomas B. Thomas of Adrian College
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Nixon Victorious as Humphrey Is Dumped in Poll
BvCLYDE LQBB
Kansan Staff Writer
President Nikon will win the November presidential election, according to two-thirds of the college students interviewed in a recent survey conducted by journalism students at the University of Kansas and at college campuses across
The Iowa Opinion Research Bureau, a university of Iowa-based polling organization, randomly selected 6,000 students on 17 campuses in 15 states to participate in the poll. The poll dealt with many contemporary issues.
rowing took place before any presidential primaries had been held.
While Seh. Hubert H. Humphrey may be strongly supported by party members for the Democratic presidential nomination, and while Thomas R. Kennedy and the 2,580 college Democrats interviewed.
THE TWO MOST favored Democratic
candidates were Sen, Edmund Muskie, D-Maine, who lead with 28 per cent, and Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., with 24 per cent.
mayor John Lindsey receive 9.9 per
microchip John Lindsey receive McKinsey 9.9
per microchip
Alabama Gov. George Wallace, winner in the recent Florida presidential primary, died peacefully on Monday at his home in Tampa.
In response to a question for only registered student voters, students favored either Muskie or McGovern to Dixon Nikon in the 1976 presidential election.
Of those interviewed, 83 per cent agreed that "It is in the interests of the United States to formally recognize Communist China." The survey was taken at the time of President Nixon's trip to Communist China.
believed the 1972 presidential election would be affected by the lowering of the
A majority of college students believed that the federal government and black liberal-moderate groups such as the NAACP were able to obtain racial equality. Their person's drive to obtain racial equality.
In the Southern schools 91.7 per cent of the students believed the status of the black in achieving racial equality had improved, with only 6 per cent believing that it was possible per cent believed this to be true and 11.6 per cent believed the statement be false.
STUDENTS INTERVIEWED in the poll overwhelmingly blamed American industry for much of the nation's pollution and a majority gave the Department of Interior a fair to poor rating in its decision of serving our natural resources.
When asked if a person should be
allowed to the without medical aid if in the opinion of his doctor there is little hope for recovery and there is consent of the patient, nearly three-quarters of the students agreed the patient should be allowed to die.
ABOUT 86 PER CENT of the students favored abolishing the electoral college and letting the people elect the president directly.
A national presidential primary should be instituted as a means for selecting the nominees of each party for the nation's presidential race, according to 75 percent of the student.
This spring should be a peaceful one as college campuses across the country, according to three-fourths of those interviewed.
The reason given by most of those interviewed for the "calm" is because of the winding down of the war, apathy, and the presence of an election year, which
seems to be functioning as the center of attention for those students who previously did not attend.
According to the poll, one-half of the college students believed armymust should "definitely" be granted to American draft resistors by the Nixon administration. One-quarter believe that "under some conditions" armymust should be granted.
Capital punishment should be ruled unconstitutional because it is cruel and inhuman punishment, according to half of the college students interviewed. Sixteen per cent strongly disagree that capital punishment is cruel and inhuman punishment.
Twice as many college students doubt that the North Vietnamese are sincerely interested in a peaceful solution to the conflict, and as many believe they have believed in the Communist's sincerity.
RESPONSES VARIED from "Hell, No!
The North Vietnamese have been fighting for years and they are not interested in anything but taking over South Vietnam," by a university of New Mexico student, to the most common opposite response of "no one likes war."
Those students interviewed are sharply divided over the idea of limiting U.S. foreign investment.
The Bureau found 39 per cent of the students 'strongly favored' and 29 per cent "slightly favored" such a political reform.
On the other hand, 34 per cent did not not favor senatorial terms to twelve weeks.
Similar results were found on the issue of changing the length of terms of members of the House of Representatives from two to four years. Thirty-three per cent did not favor and 35 per cent "did not favor" the lengthening of representatives' terms.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
82nd Year, No.122
U.S. Officials See 'Swipe' Bv N. Viets
Randy Gould Looks Back, Looks Ahead
Predicting a real battle between the North Vietnamese 324th Division in league with elements of the 304th and the lst South Vietnamese Division, one military expert said the fighting "will be the final examination of Vietnamization."
WASHINGTON (AP) — American officials are expecting the North Vietnamese “to take a swipe” at the ancient imperial capital of Hue in the next attack an attack viewed as a major test of President Nixon's Vietnamization program.
The officials said the 1st Division was the best in South Vietnam's army and they pointed out the unit had not been used until the current fighting, leaving it, ready to go.
See Page 5
As the United States sent more ships and planes to Southeast Asia, 17 Senate and 45 House members said Thursday the U.S. is making an effort to American involvement in the war.
The American position would be affected enormously by a battle for Hue.
The Members of Congress for Peace Through Law asked Nixon in the letter for a full report on the size, purpose and cost of completed U.S. military action in Indochina.
One source, citing captured North Vietnamese documents and testimony from prisoners, said Hanoi hoped to capture Hue and other cities in an effort to incite a countrywide uprising, underermine government power, and war sentiments within the United States.
"If news reports are accurate, our country is now assembling in Southeast Asia one of the largest air armadas in the world," they said in a letter to President Nixpy.
Failure to hold the city would dangerously weaken defense lines in the northern sector and open to attack the American air base at Pai Bai just south of
They add that a North Vietnamese victory at Hue would not only weaken the morale of troops in the rest of the country but also provide domestic support for the Saigon government.
The failure of Saigon's best troops could indicate South Vietnam is not able to defend itself and, therefore, the failure of Nixon's program of troop withdrawals and ultimate reduction of U.S. military involvement, officials say.
SIR ALFRED HOWARD BROADWAY, M.D.
American reinforcements were flown to Phu Bai Wednesday.
Kansan Photo by MARC MAY
Zumwalt Speaks to His Former Latin Teacher
. Reception allows time with Mr. and Mrs. G. Bailey Price . . .
Finance-Auditing Opens Season
By HAL RITTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Selecting a chairman and familiarizing its members with Student Senate budget procedures were accomplished Thursday morning. Auditing Committee held its first meeting.
Barbie Dower, Topeka junior, was elected chairman of the committee after being nominated by the Finance Committee, who cited her experience in budget procedures as the main reason for his nomination. Dower is beginning her fourth term in position of the Finance and Auditing Committee.
As chairman of the committee Downer will be responsible for setting up hearings during the year for groups requesting allocations from the Senate's contingency fund, transmitting information from the student body treasurer's office to the senate and distributing reports of committee recommendations concerning allocations for the Senate.
Downer will also be a member of the
Committee (Studex)
for the next year.
After her election Downer said committee hearings on budget requests by
the more than 110 groups seeking funds would be held Monday to Thursday next week with the times tentatively set for 6:30 to 11 each night.
She said a representative from each group should stop at the Student Senate office in the Kansas Union and sign up for a hearing time by Monday.
At the beginning of the meeting Bill O'Neill, Ballwin, Mo., junior and student body treasurer, presented a report on the preliminary budget report that contains budget requests for 1972-73 by each organization.
O'Neill read a report from Dave Dillon,
Hutchinson junior and student body
president, that contained recommend-
ment to hold him the committee will
involve its work.
O'Neill also explained the Senate's budget system and procedures followed in adopting the budget each year to the committee members.
Dillon, who was chairman of the Finance and Auditing committee the past Senate term, advised the committee members to take a more active role in apportionment divisions of funds allocated for efforts on allocating the more than $50.000 provided for student organizations.
Zumwalt Says Budget Cuts Are Harmful
Rv MIKE MOREY
By MIKE MOREY Kansan Staff Writer
Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt Jr., chief of naval operations, said in a speech Thursday night in the Kansas Union Ballroom that if Congress keeps cutting the President's proposed budget budgets, "the Navy is going to be in crisis," Soviet Union in terms of naval strength.
Zumwalt said, in a speech sponsored by the Vickers Memorial Lecture Series, that in fiscal year 1971, Congress cut the budget for the Army from $2.5 billion in fiscal year 1972, by $3 billion.
Just how far behind we fall, he said, depends on how much money Congress can pay.
He said that the Navy and the Marine Corps operated on a budget of approximately $23 billion per fiscal year. The defense budget, he said, is down to 31
Bids Revealed; Plans Set for KU Hospital
The Constant Construction Co. of Lawrence, with a bid of $1,356,200, was the apparent low bidder for the general contract work of the University Student Health Service building were opened Thursday afternoon in Topeka.
Hospital case work—Bowlus Supply,
$3,597;
Funding for the facility has been approved and construction will begin soon.
Electrical Contract--Norris Bros., Inc.,
Lawrence, $252,800;
The other apparent low bidders were:
Mechanical contract—Norris Bros,
Coca-Cola.
Kitchen equipment—Stephenson
Equipment, Topeka, $7,815.29.
According to R. Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor and director of facilities, planning and operations, the building is intended to be open for the fall semester of 1973.
Zumwalt spoke of several crises which the United States and the world have had to face in the last quarter of a century. Among others, he mentioned World War II, the Korean War, the Cuban Missile Crisis and the war in Southeast Asia.
Zumwalt said that the Navy could be hurt by an volunteer Army, but that he hoped the changes which have already been made in the Navy and the changes which would be made in the future would make him a more attractive enough to fill their ranks.
The two-story structure will contain approximately 80,000 square feet of floor
space. It will be located in the area southeast of Robinson Gymnasium and northeast of O-Zone parking lot, which is actively a playing field for intramural sports.
The first floor of the building will consist of waiting areas, examining rooms, administration offices, an x-ray room, a kitchen, a pharmacy, and an emergency room.
The building will primarily provide outpatient services for KU students but will also include a 34-bed ward for inpatient services.
per cent of the federal budget, the lowest since 1950.
The hospital ward will occupy most of the second floor but it will also contain a chaotic office, a minor surgery suite, physical therapy room, central supply office and staff library.
The facility will be a reinforced concrete building of contemporary design with a brick exterior finish. It was designed by George Hampton and Associates of Wichita and Kenneth R. McLain, associate to the state architect.
Zumwalt received an appointment to Annapolis in 1939.
He said that these crises clearly showed the need for American naval supremacy. The Navy's mobility, missiles and aircraft were vital to the defense of the United States.
He also served as a professor of Naval
Arms and Marine Corps program at the
University of North Carolina.
He said that if an enemy of the United States had the capability of disarming the United States ashore and had the antiballistic missiles to stop U.S. missiles, they would surely win if a confrontation arose.
Zumwalt said that the United States would never strike first, but that "we must look at what survives after someone strikes."
Zumwalt said that he realized the need for naval reforms while he was Commander of U.S. Naval forces in Vietnam. He said that when he visited the hospitals, the majority of the young men he spoke to didn't ask him why they were not allowed to him, he said, why they weren't allowed to look like other people of their generation.
Zumwalt has served the Navy in many capacities. He has served on and commanded several destroyers. He has served in the office of the assistant secretary for international security affairs as desk officer for France, Spain and Portugal.
Zumwalt, who rose from the rank of captain to become the senior officer in the Navy as chief of naval operations, on July 15, 2006, and began liberal regulations governing Navy. Navy
Zumwalt said that the United States must maintain Navy supremacy so that it could keep up with Russia.
Zumwalt said that the Navy offered many opportunities, including such things as training in electronics and oceanography. He said that the importance of oceanography couldn't be stressed enough.
He said that the "whole future of mankind lies in the possibility of exploiting and preserving vegetable growth in the sea."
Zumwalt said that when he became chief of U.S. Naval operations, he remembered those visits to the hospitals and the military. He said his men and began his campaign of refembrance.
'significant positions of responsibility in the navy' and would also qualify them for
In his directives, known as Z-Grams, he ordered the acceptance of a wide variety of hair styles and full or partial beards. He also directed that beer could be dispensed
in the barracks of enlisted men and that stronger alcohol beverages could be kept on the menu.
Among other things, he also ordered that civilian clothes might be worn at shore installations and neat work clothes might be worn at the construction department to avoid many chances of uniforms.
Zumwalt said that there was a Constitutional Amendment, which had not yet been ratified, that would end any discrimination against women.
This, he said, will give women more
Hijacker Holds 2-Hour Monologue
LOS ANGELES (AP)—A Mexican national jacknair an airplane from New Mexico to Los Angeles Thursday, then surrendered his gun after telling newsmen called to the plane about the problems of the poor and a story of his own hard luck.
The man turned over the gun—which was unloaded—to the plane's pilot after a rambling two-hour interview that was not recorded. The plane was He was taken into custody by the FBI.
The hijacker commanded the Frontier Airlines 737 jetliner for more than seven hours, including five hours on the ground at Los Angeles International Airport.
He let the 27 passengers disembark, but kept four crew members and later three Spanish-speaking newsmen on the plane at Amsterdam Airport. A Dutch speech in Spanish over radio and television.
The man was identified as Ricardo Chavez-Ortiz, 37, a Mexican father of eight who has lived in East Los Angeles and Santa Fe. N, M. The Federal Aviation Administration in Washington said he had a history of psychiatric problems.
A Frontier spokesman said later that the airline had used a combination of security
The FBI said Chavez-Ortz was bitter over having been fired as a cook in Los Angeles and told them he thought of the blacking a few days ago.
Throughout the hijacking, Chavez-Ortiz demanded to speak for two hours on radio and television to "tell my story." That, he said, was his aim. He apparently were his only demands.
measures to check passengers boarding in Denver and Albuquerque. He said the measures were based on Federal Aviation Agency recommendations, but he did not
AAUP Gives Poll Results
Over 60 per cent of the questionnaires that were returned to the committee were not properly overall for collective bargaining among KU professors is probably somewhat lower, since many professors either to return their questionnaires.
Charles Krider, assistant professor of business and chairman of the KU Chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) committee on Representation of Economic and Professional Interests, announced last night the results of a KU faculty poll on collective bargaining.
elaborate.
The KU chapter of AALUP also conducted its election of the chamber officers at last night's meeting. The officers for the next week are: Professor John Watson Library, president; Grant Goodman, professor of east Asian studies, vice-president; Anna Condit, library systems analyst, treasurer; Lloyd Wilson, assistant professor of history, secretary.
The spokesman said Chavez-Ortiz "did raise suspicion by our people, who questioned him and were satisfied." He did not say what questions were asked.
The interview was heard by thousands of viewers and listeners in the Los Angeles area. The hijacker's words were carried on Spanish language stations and a television station where television stations whose cameramen provided pictures of the captive plane.
He talked about injustices to Mexican-Americans, blacks, Orientals and other minorities. He described his life as a chef, pilot and mechanic in Mexico. He mentioned low wages and the deteriorating environment.
"What kind of human beings are we?" he asked, and on the floor, and on the carpet, and around it it was.
The Spanish-speaking hijacker was interviewed aboard the plane at an isolated section of the airport where it had landed several hours before.
Several hundred law officers stood by at a distance from the plane.
In the broadcast on the plane, he sat on the floor, smoking cigarettes, drinking coffee and animatedly discussing with the three newsmen the treatment of minorities. The newsmen assumed his .22-caliber revolver was loaded.
Throughout the hijacking, authorities said they believed a second hijacker was aboard. It wasn't until after Chaves-Ortiz surrender that they discounted it.
2
Friday, April 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Union Implicated in Hearings
WASHINGTON, Pa. (AP)—Annette Gilly, who confessed to killing Vivienne Westwood family murders, said Thursday that she was told "the union" was behind the slayings and that they specifically by the "big man."
"To me, that meant Tony Kendrick was a Worker," the blonde, 31-year-old Cleveland housewife said in statement in Washington County.
The union's general counsel, Edward L. Carey, issued a statement denying any complicity of Boyle or other United Mine Workers (UMW) members in the Yabbonah mine. Boyle in a speech with newsman but in the past has denied involvement.
U. WM insurgent Joseph A. Yabonski, 59, his wife Margaret, 57, and their 25-year-old daughter Charlotte were shot to death while sleeping before dawn Dec. 16. They were in their home in nearby Clarksville.
Yablonski had just lost a bitter election for the UMW's presidency to Boyle and was about to textify before a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., that was looking into UMW action.
The statement was read at a pretrial hearing for Silous Huddleston, 65 of the LaFollette, Tenn. Mrs. Gilly's father. Huddleston is a retired coal miner. President of a ULM local
Besides Boyle, she mentioned the last names of two other men, "Titler" and "Owens."
They were not identified further, but a George Tiller is vice president of the UMW, and a John Tanner is the university's secretary, treasurer.
The statement also mentioned two others—Albert Pass of Middlesboro, Ky.; Michael G. White and secretary-treasurer of District 19; and William Jackson Prairie, 32 of Fargo, N.D., a field representative.
After conferring with union leaders, Carey said Milly's statement, on the basis of excerpts reported by the press, was "extremely vague." He said the union could apply to many persons.
"I categorically deny that Mr. Boyle or anyone else in the union had anything to do with these murders," Carey stated.
Justice Dept. to File Suit Against Major Networks
A spokeswoman for the Columbia broadcasting system said the government would transform the networks into conduits for independently operated stations.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Justice Department said Thursday it intends to sue for alleged侵权 violations.
In a brief announcement in Washington, the department said it had advised CBS, the National Broadcasting Company, and American Broadcasting Company and Viacom International Inc. of its intent. Viacom operates cable television systems from stations across the country, business formerly owned by CBS.
ROBERT D. WOOD, president of the CBS television network, said the government was seeking transfer control of programming schedules to advertising agencies and motion picture producers, and to prevent the networks from taking their own programming.
A CBS spokesman said he understood the Justice Department's goal to be an arrangement that would produce programs or purchase them from independent producers, then purchase time for production.
Presently networks control their own programming, buying or producing programs, scheduling them in specific time slots and then selling advertisers' content for commercial announcements.
A CBS spokesman in New York, where all the network comment originated, said the suit "has absolutely nothing to do with news programming and will not have any effect on news operations."
ABC said the suits dealt only with entertainment.
Department spokesmen declined to discuss the suits until they are filed, possibly within a few days.
Both networks said the suits were expected to be filed Monday.
A CBS spokesman said it was impossible to tell whether or not the 1972 season had run on programming for the 1972-1973 season for which schedules have been released.
The Department said ABC, CNS and Viacom had rejected the offer of assistance offered by the government. It said NBC had not responded to an email.
ABC SAID the suit was "without merit."
"We therefore rejected the department's offer . . . and have instructed counsel to defend the case vigorously." ABC said.
It said 11.4 per cent of the entertainment programs shown in prime time on ABC are produced by the network itself.
CBS said, "We would lose control. There would be no balance, from our point of view, within a program schedule . . ."
"This is hardly a monopolistic situation," it said.
This year, under an order of the Federal Communications Commission, networks control time for all customers' times, rather than the 3½ hours previously allowed. The extra half-hour is turned back to local stations, for their own use, or freefrequency returns of old network shows.
**ABC SAID** the FCC, which is an independent agency that monitors government, had "rejected the concept that networks be prohibited from using them."
"We find it strange that the Department of Justice should intervene in a subject which has already been decided by the government departments most associated with broadcasting."
Robert S. Marker, chairman of McCann-Erickson Inc., the nation's second-largest company, said in New York that he did not agree with the suit's apparent aim and the company's opposition, opposed by many advertisers.
frequent complaint of media critics was that networks kill off shows, although popular, fail. The largest possible audience
Carry blamed the slayings on persons he said were "frying to capture our union and destroy it." He declined to name them, but his lawyer said he would find myself the defendant in a possible slander suit."
However, Kenneth and Joseph Yablonis, sons of the slain insurgent leader, said in a brief prepared statement Thursday that "no longer can it be claimed that the MW was not directly involved."
It was not immediately clear what effect a successful suit would have on the programming offered to the home view. A
"My father told me that the Yablonski murder had the approval of the 'big man.' " Mrs. Gilvil said at one point,
Another time, she said, her father told her "the union would take care of me."
"He told me that with the union, the sky was the limit, unless it talked, then the grave was the limit."
Mrs. Gilly said that when she heard another suspect in the case was cooperating with insiders, she ratherather what the union would do."
dull kul him; she related, after her to the suspect. Mrs. Gill's husband Mary Cleveland house painter, was convicted of first-degree murder in the slayings and sentenced last month to death.
"He said they'd kill him," she
placed referring to the suspect.
Mrs. Gilly said, "On the day paul, my husband, was arrested, he asked me if anything should happen to him I should remember the following four names. Thier, McLean, Gully, drilled me on those names, I asked why I should remember what happened. I know when the time was ripe.
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)
Thousands of delegates in Chile will attend a weekend holiday for another try at ending the awesome disparities between the two countries.
U.N. Trade Forum to Seek End to Economic Differences
IN A SPEECH of more than an international systems did not change, 15 per cent of the people in the 'Third World' would die of
President Salvador Allende of Chile told the assemblage the poor countries of the so-called Third World have drastic rise in drug prices.
The conference, held every four years, first assembled in Geneva in 1964 at the urging of the world's underdeveloped nations, which were dissatisfied with the existing U.N. structure.
The occasion was the opening ceremony of the third U.N. Conference on Trade and Development—UNCTAD III.
countries to aid the poorer counterparts in speeding up their development and raising the living standard of their people.
financial conceptions of the post war period are tootering," he told the several thousand delegates in the never-before held in the modern new assembly hall built especially for UNCATT
UNCTAD, however, is a consultive body and has no power to enforce recommendations and decisions.
"Peaceful coexistence between the capitalist and Socialist countries has finally carried the day.
"After 20 years of injustice and violation of international law, the
Nixon Seeks to Improve Friendship with Canada
OTTAWA (AP) -- President Nixon arrived in the Canadian capital late Thursday for a three-day visit aimed at improving the conditions of his traditional allies now divided by serious economic difficulties.
The presidential party, including Mrs. Nixon, presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger, Secretary of State William P.
The information, disseminated around-the-clock by the antiwar activists, comes from sources at the University of California. Movements near military bases
Operating from offices of other antivirus groups to which most of them also belong, the Ad Hoc team that was involved has supplied to news media, since last Saturday, detailed information on the buildup of U.S. forces intended to counter the North Vietnamese offensive.
SOME OF THE group's information cannot be confirmed Penguin will not confirm troop movements. But much of it has.
Rogers, was welcomed by Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau at Uplands Canadian air force base, outside Ottawa.
Information provided by the committee, and later confirmed by independent sources, includes five aircraft planes from bases in Florida, Virginia, California and Hawaii, and stepped-up activity at bases in Florida.
Nixon flew to Canada after spending the day at Camp David, in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains, completing work on the he will deliver Friday afternoon to the Canadian Parliament.
exclusion of the People's Republic of China from the world community has come to an end. The People's Republic of China—one-third of the world's population, but also an original leader in the region—has come from longstanding dependence."
CAMBRIGE, Mass (AP)—A handful of antiwar activists, drawn together in the past week by the escalation of hostilities in Iraq and Syria, have established telephone network to monitor the buildup of American forces.
U. N. SECRETARY GENERAL Kurt Waldheim, also addressing the opening ceremony, said the most urgent problem in world trade is to create developing countries into a new pattern of world trade.
THE COMMITTEE came into being last Saturday when George W. Bush and Dr. Robert S. Institute of Technology campus radio station, read a news account of a Kansas base to Southeast Asia.
Group Monitors Troops
"We are doing this so people will know what is happening," she said. "We'll teach them they know the real truth, maybe they'll know what we are, really about it."
Intrigued by the story, Stein notified friends who were in the field of coffee for a New England convention of coffee houses operators who generally support antiwarrants' areas around military bases.
Much of the material is supplied by draftees and other military men who privately tell the stories of the troops they know, the committee says.
from that meeting, Stein and six others set up the telephone network of people involved in similar antimilitary efforts at the U.S. base in this country and in Thailand, Japan and Hawaii.
The President's address, more than his limited private discussions with Trudeau, is expected to determine whether it will halt the deterioration of U.S.-Canadian relations.
GEM Theater Baldwin
in this country and abroad.
7:30 F-S U S Apr. 14-13
16:11 Sean Connery
'The Anderson Tapes'
T-W T 18-19 12-0
Neither U.S. nor Canadian officials look for the single two leaders to do much more than touch broadly upon economic differences. This feeling is shared by many countries, which say the most that can be achieved for atmosphere improvement in a atmosphere rather than a solution of problems.
A MAN AND
A WOMAN
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Ed Murray, a committee member, said committee members should do what we want to accept, any type of classified information. To the best of our knowledge, we've given out is unclassified.
HE SAID it was the committee's belief that they had not distributed any information which would aid the enemy.
Custom Made Sandals
Another one of our rugged yet comfortable sandal styles is pictured above. Available for men or women, with built in hooks and buckles. Let your feet enjoy the comfort of custom made sandals this spring. At Lawrence's oldest sandal shop.
PRIMARILY LEATHER 812 MASSACHUSETTS
Howard Hughes in Salina
News Briefs By The Associated Press
NEW YORK--Now that the churches have started stressing the urgency of taking care of mother earth, they want some songs to sing about it. The lyrics are needed as part of the religious efforts to "build man's attitudes about protecting the environment," says Anastasia Van Burkalow of the Hymn Society of America. The church hymnly and encouragement production of contemporary hymns, asks that entries be sent to its New York headquarters by the end of May.
IRS Short Forms to Return
WASHINGTON - The Internal Revenue Service plans to resume using the short form income tax return next year when returns for 1972 are filed. The old short form, abandoned after 1968, was a card. Plans present are for the new one be about half the size of the old one. In 460, the RIT quit using the card form after announcing that too many taxpayers were not taking advantage of terminated deductions.
BELFAST- Terrorists set off a chain of explosions across Northern Ireland Thursday, leaving an elderly woman dead and a trail of destruction in the biggest upsurge of violence since Britain's takeover. Security forces blamed the eight blasts in six cities and villages on outlaws of the Irish Republican Army. They saw the offensive as an IRA challenge to Britain's imposition of direct rule on Northern Ireland and a rope to pressure by Roman Catholic moderates for a curbing of violence.
Bombs Rip Northern Ireland
Hymn Society Seeks Lyrics
U.S. B52s Hit Plantation
SAIGON—Wave after wave of U.S. BB2 bombers battered the flaring rubber plantation of An Loc today in an unprecedented waves of attacks to save the provincial capital north of Saigon from falling completely into North Vietnamese hands. Government troops are surrounded and in danger of being overrun. Nearly a score of the eight-jet Straffortresses dropped up to 500 tons of explosives on North Vietnamese troop concentrations only a mile west of An Loc.
POTTER'S CONCERT Saturday, April 15 In Concert BANDIT 2-5 p.m. Presented by SUA Recreation
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 14, 1972
3
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAP14
1976
KU Poet Plans Lecture
John Gills JS University. Poet-in-Residence
KU's Poet-in-Residence To Read Original Works
If you like to talk about poetry,
you'll get a chance today and
Monday when poet John Gill
has his work in the Kansas
Union.
In addition, Gill, poet-in-residence at KU from April 10 to 21, will give a reading of some of his poetry at the Council Room. Everyone is invited to the reading and Gill will share with those interested in poetry.
Gill's interest in the poetic ideas of others is reflected in his work. He has compiled the works
of many poets, including a collection of poems about American life, and Harley Elleroy of Salina. In an anthology, "New American and Canadian Poetry," Gill collected the works of American and American writers.
By GAIL PFEIFFER
Kansan Staff Writer
Customs Laws Create Difficulties
Going through Customs, after having spent a glorious summer touring Europe, buying souvenirs and gifts, John discovered that his mother had booked he he had bought for Aunt Agatha and three four quartz of French wine he be had thought would be great for a welcome home party, he had exceeded the customs exemption and had to pay duty.
In the rush to get ready John might have forgotten to find the keys to the night house and the night have just lost track of how much money he was spending.
CUSTOMS CONSIDERS a traveler as either a returning resident of the United States or a nonresident. As a resident one is allowed certain exemptions from laws on items obtained while abroad.
He should have checked the laws on bringing back merchandise to find out what was free and what was prohibited.
ALL TEEMS must be properly declared to Customs either orally or in writing. There are some common types of Teems, the number of items, brewend, bed
A resident is granted a $100 custom exemption if he is bringing the items with him at least 48 hours. There is no minimum time when returning from Mexico.
The price of the items being brought back are based on the cost of the clothing and the country where it was acquired. Articles tote bags and bags that they were acquired as an incident of the trip and are for one's own personal or family use.
Within the exemption, no more than 100 cigars can be included. A number of cigarettes. This exemption is available to each person.
One quart of alcoholic beverages can be included in this exemption if one is 21 or older. Alcoholic beverages in excess of
Items Sold for Disabled Man
Kansan Staff Writer
The hand-made items were made by the Beauerman, Lawren and multiple handicapped. A group of university of Kansas students entered the library.
"You know me. I am that little by gone blind; I used to drive a car," she replied, "and reads the poster above a table of beads, purses, belts and Bible stamps."
Bevermar now lives at the Wakaraura Rest Home. He used to watch for firemen and repair watches in his cart on the streets of Lawrence. The loss of a child was hard, but the streets, and since then he has been making items such as the fire alarm.
Similar items have been distributed to downtown merchants.
John Senior, professor of physics at the University of Steve Davis, Tupaek junior, decided that a more concentrated effort to sell the wares was needed.
"The first day we made $50 and in that first week we made $110 for him," said Davis.
Davis organized the Committee for Service to Handicapped and received permission to set up a store and supply a catalog and sell Bewluer's products.
Bv JEANNE ELLIOTT
Davis said that the money would go to two women who had been furnishing the kits for the merchandise and for materials so
Davis said he had visited Beuverman at the nursing home where he worked as an appreciative of the project and very hopeful that it would allow him to serve his patients.
"The project will continue as long as there is a demand," Davis said.
For those who are not entitled to the $100 exemption because of the time limitations, a $10 customs exemption is provided.
the one quart limit are subject to a duty.
Customs either individually or as a family in a family declaration, the exemption cannot exceed the number of members in the family times $100.
**INCLUDED** IN THE $10
exemption are 50 cigarettes, 10
cigars, four ounces of alcoholic
liquid and four ounces of
alcoholic perfume.
Several years ago a film about Beuerman was made by Centron, a Lawrence film company. The film won several awards including a gold medal at the International Film and Television Festival in New York. The film was nominated for an Academy Award.
Davis said that if he could hold a film with SUA, the film would be shown at the popular film series in Kinney's Saturday night in Fargo.
By RANDY SCHUYLER
Kansan Staff Writer
For example, in a family of four, the total exemption is $400. Members of the family can exceed the $100 exemption as well, but not exceed the $400 limit; other wise they will be subject to a duty.
Items can be declared to
Group Advocates Motorcycle Park
The group comprised LeslieBivins Sr., owner of LeslieHonda. Bruce D. Guy, a member of the Board of Directors Club. Dan Palmquist, director of editing of Centron Corp., KennethArmitage, professor of biology and Wayne Bly director of the Envidence Park and Recreation Dent.
A small group of Lawrence citizens interested in converting waste land between the north and south sides of levees into a motorcycle park and a camping area met Wednesday night in the Centron Building,
Davis said that while the committee was primarily formed for the purpose of promoting the things Beuerman had to sell, he realized in the future would be possible, although none had been planned.
According to Blevins and Guy, the rise in popularity of cycling in the past decade has created a need for people to ride the need for a place to ride off the streets, especially for families with minibikes. Major concerns have been about the use inside cars by cyclists illegally riding in parks.
Originally an old city land-fill site had been proposed for the park, according to Blevins, but this was discarded because of metal and glass lying on top of the rubble which could cause injury in a fall.
The site finally agreed upon by the group for submission to the city is behind the present landfill and the surrounding area. It is a strip between the river and the levee about 200 yards wide and a mile long and is mostly wooded. Bly said it was required useless for anything else.
According to Palmquist, when the Corps of Engineers finishes the Mud Creek drainage project there will be an eight-mile-wide levee that serves as the堤 that the levee top be used for a bicycle path, and possibly be paved with asphalt or gravel. When he had been a question, he answered that it was
Palmistiqu and Armitage expressed hostility turning the team into a campfire into a camping and hiking park. The area now is used for dumping and as a cycle park. It has been used by engineers because it has been used as 'borrow land,' land used for proposals call for replacing the area with wild grasses and allowing back-packing campers
The other problem discussed by the group involved a camping area and bicycle path. The area was located near these projects is east of Massachusetts Street bridge for several miles between the north and south sides of the river.
river area would completely alleviate the problem, but would help families with minibikes. Guy mentioned an old quarry in the valley ideal for a cycle park. He said it had fat and hilly areas to ride on, but that at the present time it was being used as a target range by people.
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Bly suggested that a 30-40 car parking lot just off the bridge and a shelter house and play equipment be constructed. He made a walkway up the levee at that point and down the other side.
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When planning a trip abroad, one should have all foreign-made articles, such as watches, watches, watches, with Customs. If they are not registered they will be subject to duty on return to the United States.
The Treasury Department's gold regulations prohibit the importation of gold coins minted after 1933, except under license. Gold-coin jewelry is also sold at Auction. The rule it allows certain requirements.
Customs also prohibits the importation of all merchandise originating in North Korea. North Korea is a country, without a Treasury license.
Certain articles considered injurious or detrimental to the general welfare of the United States are prohibited entry by law.
Other items which must meet special requirements or require specific equipment are trademarked articles, fruits, vegetables, plants, livestock.
WHEN DECLARING items for Customs, one's statement must include items one has been requested to bring home for another person, articles intended for sale or for business, alterations or repairs made to articles taken abroad and gifts received while abroad. Items must be declared to Customs. Customs amount exceeds $100, when more than one quart of alcoholic beverages or 100 cigars are included, and when the items are for personal use than personal or household use.
Items acquired abroad can be shipped home. These items are required for exemption, however customs exemption, however provided for in the tariff schedule.
Guy said he didn't think the
TOPEKA (AP)—Development of statewide goals for the Kansas education system will be the arm of a plan approved by April 26-27 at Kansas City.
only at...
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SUA Group Fare Flights to Chicago, N.Y. Luxembourg and Paris Booking Deadline April 17th
Contact SUA, Kansas Union 864-3477
Use Kansan Classified
Next Monday
(for All Women Students Who Haven't Voted In Living Groups)
BALLOT
KU WOMEN: A PROGRAM OF
RECOGNITION
Vote for:
I. The Outstanding Woman Teacher of 1972
B. If you wish to do so, please nominate one of these teachers for OUTSTANDING WOMAN TEACHER:
A. How many women teachers have you had at KU?
Name
---
Nominate women who have made unique or innovative contributions to the University the last year.
Your ID Number
III. The Outstanding Senior Woman of 1972
II. Innovative & Creative Women Students
Every SENIOR woman may nominate 3 candidates on the basis of leadership, scholarship and contribution to Uni-
1) ... 2)
Please Return this Ballot to the Dean of Women's Office, 222 Strong or SUA Office. By Fri., April 14.
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4
Friday, April 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN commer
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
All Fed Up
In the face of a continued financial pinch on student funds, the Student Senate, out of its own allocation, has awarded a 30 per cent increase to, of all things, 'Feedback', the teacher-course evaluation project. The total allocation for the survey is now a whopping $26.130.
One hardly knows where to begin criticizing the project. In the first place, faculty participation in the past has been minimal and student response for the most part unenlightening.
The survey necessarily leaves all the alternatives to the individual professors; whether to use the survey, whether to have it published, whether to receive a more detailed analysis of their students' responses. The swell for the faculty; they can gauge their involvement or maybe even ignore the whole thing. But what are students getting out of 'Feedback?'
If the Senate points to the little 25-cent pamphlet as its answer, it's wrong: the pamphlet is pretty thin. Obviously a substantial number of faculty members are choosing their own methods of getting feedback.
Even assuming involvement were increased, a major snag remains. The one-to-five ratings of courses tell hardly anything about the courses. At least, with involving career relevance, is insulting to the intelligence of all concerned.
Twenty-six thousand dollars has been allocated to a project that is ill-conceived at its best, silly at its worst. Meanwhile, countless clubs and organizations are stifled by lack of funds. Perhaps the Student Senate could help alleviate the situation by funding less money to itself.
—Chip Crews Editor
Memorial Drive Mess
Rarely do plans with no merit surface at this University. An exception is the plan to make Jayhawk Boulevard and Memorial Drive one-way streets and to install approximately 500 parking meters on campus.
This ill-conceived attempt at progress could do more to ruin the peaceful environment so far preserved on campus than any other single idea—except a similar bomb dropped in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World editorial page last Tuesday. The Journal-World proposed a four-lane boulevard streaking across campus—with pedestrian overpasses, of course.
Now, all this is a bit perplexing in light of the growing trend in major cities to restrict the movement of the automobile—in an effort to improve the quality of life in the city. Here are some examples of how editors devise ways to accommodate the ubiquitous automobile and ruin peace and tranquility as a result.
What becomes painfully apparent is that this country is so closely tied to the capital, and its economy.
national pastime to try to move from here to there faster and with less effort. Nothing gets in the way of the automobile. We have become accustomed to equating progress with more highways and faster cars. Those Americans who would fight the proliferation of the automobile and highways are told that to fight the automobile is to fight progress.
Has tranquility lost all its appeal.
Has tranquility lost all its appeal? The first inclination is to fight this insanity on economic grounds. The real problem is that we lack the quality of surroundings. Indeed, Mr. Malinowsky and the Parking and Traffic Board no doubt have reams of statistics proving their plan an economic gold mine. That is the problem. Somewhere we must stop opting for the dollar over environment.
This is a good place to start.
When Mr. Malinowski brings his Frankenstein to next week's public hearing, be there to run him and his plan back up to the Chancellor's office.
—Thomas E. Slaughter
WHO IS THERE?
RUTHIE
RUTHIE WHO?
RUTHIE YOUR OWN TRUE LOVE
IS IT REALLY MY RUTHIE?
YES
NOT MUGGERS?
NO HARVEY.
Dick Publishing Hall Spadgett
© 1972 Dick Publishing
WHO IS THERE?
RUTHIE
RUTHIE WHO?
RUTHIE YOUR OWN TRUE LOVE
IS IT REALLY MY RUTHIE?
YES.
NOT MUGGERS?
NO HARVEY!
NOT THE FBI?
NO HARVEY!
IT'S REALLY RUTHIE WHO LOVES ME, STANDS BY ME, AND IS THE ONE PERSON IN THIS WORLD I CAN TRUST?
RIGHT IT'S ME RUTHIE OPEN UP!
O. RUTHIE!
ONE FALSE MOVE HARVEY, AND WE BLOW YOUR SKULL OFF.
WHAT YOU GUYS ALWAYS FORGET IS WE DO A GREAT RUTHIE IMTA-TION
IT'S REALLY RUTHIE WHO LOVES ME, STANDS BY ME AND IS THE ONE PERSON IN THIS WORLD I CAN TRUST?
RIGHT ITS ME RUTHIE OPEN UP!
O. RUTHIE!
ONE FALSE MOVE HARVEY, WE BLOW YOUR SKULL OFF!
NOT THE F.B.I.?
NO, HARVEY!
IT'S REALLY RUTHIE WHO LOVES ME. STANDS BY ME, AND IS THE ONE PERSON IN THIS WORLD I CAN TRUST?
RIGHT ITS ME RUTHIE OPEN UP!
O.RUTHIE!
ONE FASE MOVE HARVEY, AND WE BLOW YOUR SKULL OFF.
WHAT YOU GUYS ALWAYS FORGET IS WE DO A GREAT RUTHIE IMTA-TION.
WHAT YOU GUYS ALWAYS FOREET IS WE DO A GREAT RUTHE IMITA-TION.
In the First District, up in the
James J. Kilpatrick
The Fed-up Factor in Florida
WASHINGTON—They vote for God and George C. Wallace in Florida. God won big. The Governor won too. But it is a curious thing. The significance of these election returns has been largely muffled in woolly speculation on the hopes and Muske's momentum.
The Florida ballot asked voters to say whether they favor an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to allow prayer in public schools. On this question, 1,139,000 voted yes, only 286,000
In the presidential primary, the Democratic ballot listed eleven names—some of them big names, with big money behind them. It was Wallace against the field. He was another winner. No one else was even close.
Consider the dimensions of Wallace's victory. He polled a stunting 42 percent of the vote, and he defeated Jackson and Muskie combined. Wallace carried every county in Florida; he swept eleven of the twelve congressional districts; he won 75 of the 81 Democratic nominations.
Panhandle, Wallace polled 66,000 votes; his closest rival was Henry Jackson with 18,000. In the Sixth District, Wallace had 46,600 to Humphrey's 19,800. In the Tenth District, Wallace had 38,000 to Humphrey's 14,000. In the Seventh, the Ninth, and the nearly 47,000 to Jackson's 14,000. The Ninth District, which has Fort Lauderdale, gave Wallace 43,800 to Humphrey's 17,800.
This was middle America exploding. In the prayer amendment, the people of
Unless one set of rules is to be applied to Wallace, and another set of rules to everyone else, this event would seem as a slamming, jawdropping, eye-popping triumph. Yet if you watched network TV Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, the story altogether. The significant news wasn't Humphrey or Muskie. The significant news—I mean no irreverence—was in the George C. Wallace.
more than half a million fed-up Americans who were fed up with everything. They saw Wallace as a symbol of the failure to be deaf to the roar the erupted?
Florida found a vehicle for demanding a return to all those qualities our society has lost in the past. The answer, to covenant, to kindness, to obedience,
A. J. C. S.
Today, Klapitrack looks back on the Florida primary. In this contest, he says, the people voted or George Wallace and God.
to charity, to tolerance, to a principal and godly way of life. This was a cry from the heart. Who could miss its notion and meaning?
Busing was the big issue in the wallace campaign—the imbecility of students to schools according to the color of their skin. But busing was not successful.
It is imperative that we search for meaning here. This was not a vote against busing alone, but instead an infirmity of a bloated government that has lost touch with its people. It was a vote against unfair taxes, against unpunished police brutality, and against an aid gift. It was a striking manifestation of the sense of helplessness, of futility, of disillusion, that millions of Americans feel. It was not a vote of confidence in Wallace; it was more nearly a vote of no confidence in anything else.
Edmund Muskie missed this misled Edmund on election night the bitchers and herders for their lack of decency and humanity, he saw nothing but a "some of the worst instincts of human beings." He said of Wal-Mart's failure.
That stiffened insensitivity will get Muskie nowhere. Florida has a record of "urban and rural, white and black, old and young, Jew and gentile, liberal and conservative" percent of the voters in this Democratic primary is to slander men and women who deserve some compassion. But he heard. One way or another as this campaign proceeds, through God or through George Wallace, likely be to hear again and again.
Copyright, 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate. Inc.
Readers Respond
Messy Meters, Letter
Nickel Eaters
To the Editor:
It is rather hard to imagine that Mr. Malinowsky, Chairman of the Parking and Traffic Board, can complain pertaining to parking meters on Jayhawk Boulevard or Malinowsky Apartment to peremptarily that parking meters are not a scheme for ripping off students showed we that it is at least a nuce via the students (commonly and in this case appropriately repre- sented as "ripping off students").
Mr. Malinowsky claims that parking meters will give us several choices—purchase zone permeability or illegally use or meter on Jayhawk Boulevard. The only difference in these choices and the choices we currently have is that they are free. Mr. Malinowsky buillevard free after 4:45 p.m. In effect, Mr. Malinowsky is merely giving us "more choices" by eliminating the one remaining non-free option. And giving this option to us is supposed to discourage illegal traffic! Traffic and Security have outdone them by ripping off the temporarily and permanently handicapped students that use Jayhawk Boulevard parking during the day for and for library access in the evening.
The name of the game is revenue and ticketing is a means to
assure that this source of revenue will not be abused by students. Not only has a new source of revenue been proposed via the recruitment of students, a normal potential for parking tickets has been tapped for the unwary students who fail to put in enough nickels. Instead of allowing these students will be parking by the minute. Kind of puts a tingle of excitement into parking enforcement doesn't it *it* M. Malinowsky? or not to be basty in our criticism because more of this plan is yet to be revealed. That is frightening. Let's hope the Traffic and Enforcement plans to force bicyclists to purchase three permits.
Dave Davis,
Lawrence graduate student
★★★
False Security
Although the American Security Council has a misleadingly official sound if it had any authority, Mr. Fernandez said it would be called the United States Security Council. The brochure which offended Juan M. Fernandez was widely distrusted by the media and subscription lists to journals which are often used by such organizations. Mr. Fernandez impression that the people who relied on him may be eigners may be based on the citi-
To the Editor:
zership of his acquaintances. A preacher who received it would not think it was sent to preachers. The "nomination to a voter" and the "obligation to oust easily" it is the same hollow honor which is offered to members of scholarly societies to be nominated. It is in return for a substantial contribution to the publication costs. It is certainly an insult to the intelligence but hardly an invasion of privacy but disposal in the circular file.
Mary Davidson Lawrence graduate student
★★
KU History Feature
Beauty 1st
Vince Billotta University of Kansas Alumni Association
To the Editor:
Another note regarding the Parking and Traffic Board's "vision."
In addition to the practical objections, I would like to add an esthetic one. The beauty of our campus is that we have University, and one major factor in giving KU its campus flavor is that it is set apart from the h炙窿. We create a variety of nature areas and shopping centers. If I were trying to devise a way to neutralize this plus factor we enjoy, the most effective single tool for doing so is to install 500 parking meters along the picturesque campus drives.
1891: Rough Cops Rap Kids
By KEVIN SHAFER
Kansan Staff Writer
Becoming actively involved in the Lawrence community has always been a problem for students at Linden. Students, University activities, etc., have understandably cut the student's free time down so much that becoming actively involved in the Lawrence community is not common for students.
But the problem has not been strictly a problem of the Twentieth Century in fact, the Nov. 6, 2014 issue of *The New York Weekly Courier*, the forenerun to today's Kansan, told of certain people who had become too actively involved.
The common practice of students at this time was to build bonfires in celebration of athletic achievement. The University. This particular account told a few a students who attended a celebration during such a celebration.
"The boys had been about to build a bonfire at the customary corner when several of the local businessmen had requested that they set up fires were absolutely without protection from fire, because of the lack of water supply. The boys took up the stray boxes and stored them decorously celebrating their great victory when some of the half drunken dogs took it into their muddled brains that the children in the breakers and purposefully站 in all celebrating" the article said.
Evidently the police got carried
wheel using a gun wagon
wheel spoke. Unfortunately, many of the
celebrating students received
hours of jail time.
The article pleaded with the town政府 to refrain from taking people in as officers. The plea specifically asked that the town roughs not be made.
According to the article, the students of the University were well behaved and the confrontation was obviously not their fault.
In fact, the article stated, the majority of Lawrence businessmen stored their boxes in bonfires. The police, then, had no right to interfere, the
The students responsible for the article made it clear they
wanted no more police-student confrontations. But on the other hand, they would stand up against that they would stand up against any further bullying around by them.
Finally, the article made clear their stand on the possibility of any such future occurrences.
The article especially emphasized the necessity that defendants would stand up for their rights any time the police used billy clubs to crack the "skulls of everyone who dares hesitate in fighting." And because they have been given a tin star and a little authority" Finally, the article made clear that the authorities had to be there.
The article said, "If such dirty means racsis are again put on the force to harass the law abiding there will surely be trouble."
touble. The Courier at this time was
collished every Friday morning During the 1880s, a Courtesan named Jean Bordieu. The credits inside the front page stated that the University of Oxford publication devoted to the best interests of the students of the university was one of them.
published every Friday morning
During this period activism was publicly denounced, but privately promoted by an author and a publicist. The article appeared March 20, 1883
The article stated that a man who became actively involved in
his community ran the risk of being labeled a fanatic by a certain class of people.
"No matter how praeworthy my nae be the scheme set forth, nor more than a reputation, they neither stop to consider, nor to weigh his worth."
The contrast between the student activist of the 1880s and the activist of the 1890s is highlighted by the reaction of the community that remained certainly changed since those fays of old, but have the people?
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Letters Policy
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must provide their name and position from faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
Griff and the Unicorn
Y'KNOW, WORLD...
MY TIME ON
EARTH IS VERY
SHORT...
By Sokoloff
Y'KNOW, WORLD...
MY TIME ON
EARTH IS VERY
SHORT...
... WHAT'LL
HAPPEN TO
ME AFTER
I'M GONE?
NONE OF
YOUR BUSINESS
...WHAT'LL
HAPPEN TO
ME AFTER
I'M GONE?
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-4810
Business Office—UN 4-4328
NONE OF
YOUR BUSINESS
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff."
Published at the University of RAKMAD during the academic year 2018 semester buildings and libraries are subject to the terms and conditions of the University's governing body. All students must be required to attend all courses without regard to stage or original weight. Examinations expressed in terms of a final grade, if required, will be based on the standardized examinations.
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser ... Del Brinkman
Editor
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H
Member Associated Collegiate Press
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 14, 1972
次
rs and postage
rtlised
reased
Crews
Moffett
preferer
Groom
in Klina
Groom
imkonson
Bepert
wert
Jones
doodlick
netter
Netzer
Youngs
a Rush
okobok
JOHN B. HARRIS
Bonni Charges Dropped
Witness refuses to testify against Randy Gould . . .
Gould Assesses Position After Round 1
By JERRY VOKRACKA Kanyan Staff Writer
BY JERRY VORRACK/
Kansan Staff Writer
"I felt real good that charges were dismissed against me, but I still had charges were refused against me, and charges were outcome was pretty much what we expected to happen. We knew outcome was not any evidence. Gould said
The charges were dismissed after the state's chief witness, Arnold Stead, refused to teqlify
Randy Gould, 22-year-old, was former University of Kansas student, said Thursday that he had mixed emotions when he met his connection with the May 14, 1976 bombing of her-Douglas County High School.
"ON JULY 9, 1971, I was indicted along with three other people in a six-count indictment that included the defendant who was just named in the first count of that indictment. I surrendered to authorities the following Monday."
Gould's legal battles are not over yet. He still faces charges in the case, which allegedly took part in the 2013 bombings at Southgate State Bank, and in federal court in Kansas City, M.O., on six-count indictment of管辖。
"After posting bond in Kansas City, I was arrested on warrants sent over from Kansas from Douglas County on the Dan charge, which was one of the overt acts in the federal indictment.
MORROW IS STUDYING cell and tissue cultures of normal and cancerous origin to learn about
Morrow Studies Cancer, Links Deaths, Ignorance
'It pretty much came to light
"Many cases of cancer could be cured or treated if people would give up their jobs and symptoms appeared. But out of carelessness or fear of the consequences you ignore the consequences do anything about it," he said.
"I cannot understand why people ignore a persistent health problem," he said.
By LINDA CHAPUT Kansas Staff Writer
John K. Morrow, associate professor of cell biology and genetics, said Thursday that he thinks many deaths due to cancer in this country could be similar people need a little common sense.
the function of cancer cells and normal cells.
"We know genes are turned on and off in development and on the brain, and in cancer the normal control of development is interrupted,"
"A lot of the approaches we are using here might lead to a better understanding of cancer," he said.
One thing Morrow is studying is the amino acid, asparagine, and its relation to acute lymphocytic leukemia.
NORMAL CELLS can produce asparagine. Morrow said, but because the cell is being studied the biochemistry of the cell, he hopes to learn how the leukemic became the re-requiring instead of asparagine-producing.
"Most people studying this type of cancer are physicians or clinicians, but hardly anyone else is looking at a genetic basis to it," he said.
Black Speaker Stresses Defining Black Priorities
The potential power in electoral politics for blacks lies in their ability to define priorities, Nelson Johnson, national leader of the Organization of Black Unity, said Thursday in a speech at the Kansas University Jayhawk Room, sponsored by Student Union Activities, Black Student Union Association and Law Associations of Law Students.
Although blacks cannot set the priorities, they have to bargain for power, he said.
Johnson said blacks had to understand how powerful political positions can be on a national level does not exist, he said, and consequently black candidates on a national level. Organizations have to be formed
The change of personalities and power is rooted in an economic base, he said. Unless electoral
Black politics needs black people to speak for black people. Blacks have to be in office in states where they are needed to gain control, he said.
Johnson said electoral politics had to be concerned with the interest of the black man.
politics is tied into the base, it isn't a power mechanism, but instead, it becomes a trapping of power, Johnson said.
For Complete Automobile Insurance
Electoral politics has two main limitations, he said. The first is that it is difficult to get people in the United States, and the second is the racism that he points out.
Gene Doane Agency
a film by
FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT
"the wild child"
(ENGLISH SUBTITLES)
V1 3-3012
824 Mass. St.
SOMETIMES CELLS fed with the drug mutate and become impossible to isolate, he said because any longer, he said. He said part of the study at KU tested antimutagenic drugs that would counteract this process.
Morrow said acute lymphocytic leukemia had been stripped of apoptosis drug which stops arapipine body's production of asparagine and starves the diseased cells, and starves the cancer had successful results
that it grew out of the federal indictment during the extradition proceedings when Kansas stated that its evidence against me consisted of news items they had witnessed during the federal indictment."
"Treatment with asparaginase marks the first time in cancer history that people have been treated for this disease because much of the time cancer research has simply involved trying drug after drug to see if there is any real knowledge of why it would work," he said.
At last an adult film to which you can take your children.
Gould said that about the same time warrants were issued from Japan, and the claims mentioned in the federal indictment. He said that for almost all of his warrants were never served until after he had surrendered in Japan.
"BY THE END of March, I was fighting excretion in the courts after the governor had ordered my extradition." Gould said.
"Rather than hassling any more with it, and realizing the need to do it, we are hoping we could reduce the bond there, we just decided to come together to help us. What is what we did and it resulted pretty much as we thought it was."
"We had taken the battle to criminal court and the circuit court in Kansas City moved to remove my extradition bond.
"We know all the basics in space research and we can go to the moon or even Jupiter if we want it," said Meyer, technology," Morrow said. "In caring cancer there are basic facts we still don't know what it is."
"PEOPLE SEEM to equate cancer research with space shots, but the comparison just isn't true," he said.
Gould said he did not know why he had been suspected of participating in the bombings he was charged with.
G United Artists
"Why I AM suspected, I don't know. But I IAM that I was indicted here," she said. "Because, because, the way I look at it, the four of us pretty much the same surface movement activity in the Kansas City and Lawrence areas, as active activities as community action and antwar activity and that sort of thing. I never made any pretense to be all above ground and all legal."
APRIL
14 & 15
7:00 & 9:30 p.m
Woodruff Aud.
"Our indictment was to serve as a threat to other people similarly involved. It kind of gets worse if we evidence, there is somebody we can always get." It was meant to drain energy from who advocated progressive programs and things like that.
60c
"I THINK I'm just somebody they picked out. It could have been any number of other people, but we were just convenient. The conspiracy and everything is in City and I just stuck out in Lawrence. It is almost as if they said, 'well, something is going on in Lawrence and we might as it represents someone in to represent it.'"
Gould said all the charges against him had been based on the testimony of Stead, who Gould maintains is the "most example of a real political prisoner" in the United States.
County, where he refused to allow any more with the federal and state conspiracy against me in Kansas City, resulted in the flings of charges by Mike Ewell (attorney) against him. "Girl like you is punishment for his refusal to play their game any longer.
"THE HEAS CHARGES pending against him in Johnson County, North Carolina, and the U.S. attorney in federal court, after he implicated federal officials who indicated the federal government would file additional charges
He said that after Stead's sentencing in Kansas City two and half years ago, he was sentenced to the maximum ten-year sentence.
Gould said he did not think there was any more evidence against Stead than there was himself or the other three men.
"He was assisted at that time by Austen Shute, a Kansas City attorney, who was almost no help to him whatsoever." Gould said. "He pleaded guilty to the maximum sentence, which was quite unusual."
"THEN HE WAS sent to the federal prison medical center in Springfield. Mo., which has a 12-year-old prison system," Gould said.
'While there he was isolated and they began taking people off his visitor list.
"When he began to feel isolated, government psychiatrists and U.S. treasury agents questioned him daily and repeatedly threatened him with additional charges; that would have been the rest of his life, unless he agreed to implicate the four of us."
"The example in Douglas
Gould said Stead's attorney at the time had told Stead he had no other choice but to testify. He said that several months later, Stead agreed to testify before a grand jury in Kansas City.
I IMAGINE he felt pretty, lawyer's advice, he testified without being given immunity, which is pretties irreducible in his mind.
Gould said that after Stead's sentence was reduced from ten to five years, he was transferred to security prison in Minnesota.
"Here he came into contact with the people who were due to war in Korea and other conspirators from around the country with similar political reasons."
"After he had time to think about what had happened to him rationally about the threats, I think he just changed his mind.
with fantasies that the government had concocted for him to present. He got himself a new lawyer, a real good lawyer, who will be faced with a lot of his legal duties as the result of his old lawyer.
link the jobs changed its mind.
"HE DIDN'T want to go along
Gould, who needs 12 hours to graduate, said the events of the last year had caused a number of problems.
"Life has been pretty paranoid and a whole lot of worrying. It has real lots of money." Gould said. "I always think good things that have come out it. I didn't really know my alleged conspirators too well whom I was familiar with. After the indictment. After the indictment. I got to know them pretty well."
HE SAID it had opened his eyes to new things he didn't realize
Staff Interviews Being Set Up For Kansan
Students who have applied for news staff positions on the fall Kansas should sign up by February 1, and an open sheet is posted on the Kansas bulletin board, which is west of the新闻室 in Flint Hall. Only students who have previously submittedaff applications should schedule
Applications are still available for editor and business manager of Kansan. Applications for editor are obtained in the Kansan newswire office for Kansan management manager are available in Kansan business office. Both kinds are available in the dean of Kansan and dean of women's offices.
The deadline for applications is 3 p.m. Friday. Applications for editor should be returned to Chip Cress, Lawrence senior and Kansan editor. Business manager applications should be sent to Yong, Yong, Coca Beach, Fla., graduate student and business manager.
Other summer staff applications are due 5 p.m. Monday.
while living in Lawrence
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon is sending one of his top security advisers to Vietnam Friday to give him a briefing on the war situation, the White House announced Thursday.
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"When I had to post all that band in Kansas, we ruffled 88,000 in property in three days from the group of people." Gould said.
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people put up their houses. That sort of thing makes you feel real good."
"A 78-year-old lady put up her apartment building, and other
Gould said he had more faith in the judicial system after his defeat, but his thoughts of the political system had not changed.
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Perspectives
in Psychology
A tour of the Psychology Department and a Discussion of Psychology
2:00 p.m.
Heider Room (423)
Fraser Hall
Saturday, April 15
Anyone interested in psychology is invited to attend (especially psych majors).
Things are beginning to happen at... LAWRENCE SURPLUS
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Add a matching
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Keep Your Eyes on LAWRENCE SURPLUS
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6
Friday, April 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Fred R. McNally
Anthropology Exhibit Sparks Interest
An anthropology display set up in the Big Eight thrology department meetings. An anthropology team in the Kansas University provides a special in-fact faculty member views man's first cousin as he was in his teenage years.
KU Halls Near Capacity Despite Changing Times
By BETSY MORGAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Changing concepts in life style, caused by general trend away from high school groups. In spite of this trend, however, the University of Kansas has bells are nearly ready for J. and J. Wilson, director of housing, expects a 10 per cent increase in hall occupancy next year.
Wilson" said that there are occupants because in residence halls, because in a percentage of occupants will return to year, in addition to return to year.
The residence halls at KU have been making physical and organizational changes to keep in touch with students' everchanging needs.
several years ago, coeducational high schools at once have, then many other options, such as open hours and single rooms, have become more common.
Upon request, students may obtain additional such as bunk beds, chairs, and paint, free of charge. This year more than 650 book sheet and magazine filled were filled. Also, 172 residents have taken the option to rent room
The Hashinger Center for Creative Arts, which will be completed by fall 1972, will be for residents who are interested in creative arts and will necessarily majoring in this field. A committee of students and administrators is working on plans for the center. Included in music and dance practice rooms for music and dance and a studio for resident artists.
According to Wilson, if this small program is similar, the simple programs may be started in the halls, such as a center dealing with laureate arts and talents.
Lewis Hall will also be undergoing construction on the building where the vending area of the hall into a coffee house will be completed by the school. Other offer residents a lounge on the weekdays and, if possible, live there.
Ellsworth Hall residents hope to have a large first-floor loo-
la available for next year. The plans include a ping nugo or pool table, and a terrace. Final approval of this project has not been given, however.
In addition to recreation centers, the Pearson Library has received proposals from the MTA, Lewis Temple, and Corbin.
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Halls for construction of library facilities.
Funds from a Pearson endowment fund have recently been used to enlarge the library facilities at Joseph R. Pearson University and to deliver for library use and furnish a library room in Hassinger.
According to Elizabeth Banks, chairman of the Pearson Library Committee, the residence hall of the library would be a selection of books as well as study areas. Banks said that once the libraries were set up, new additions in reading material and equipment would be made each year.
governments has also taken place. Ellsworth recently passed a proposal to allow each resident a vote in hall meetings. This proposal will go to Donald K. Alden for men, for final approval.
Noticeable change in hall
According to Ellen Hannon, a small group requests will now have a better chance of approval because every resident at Hall will be involved.
Students in all residence halls have taken a more active part in hall government. By working with the students, they have been able to institute changes which have contributed to KU's overall perspective of KU's residence halls.
New town planning should respond to the needs of the inner city, Henry C. Hightower, chairman of the department of urban planning at the University of Arizona said Thursday. Hurley was sponsored by the KU School of Architecture and Urban Design
Arizona Urban Planner Emphasizes City Needs
A new town is a large housing, area developed under a single Highlighter said. This plan is looked on by residents and the community to be said.
These goals are meant to tie in with the problems of the inner city, he said.
He said that the Department of Housing and Urban Development has been working with sometimes subsidizes the planners. If the development is not selling well, perhaps because the department is not doing so, the department is likely to loosen some requirements because of its financial stake in the project, he added.
Hightower suggested that subsidiation should be to the extent that certain goals are meet, such as the amount of jobs necessary to housing, integration, and housing for the poor.
The planned communities of the present are integrated, containing blocks. Mexican-Americans and Indians, but they
are not integrated according to income, he said.
Hightower suggested integrating persons according to all aspects, including income.
"Only a fool would argue that you can put housing for the poor in cities where there are only a fool would argue that separating low income people is essential."
He suggested the planner go
their problems and what kind of
city they wanted. The planner
should experiment with a variety
of cities.
"The middle-class feels that the government has different. People have to get over it. Maybe this is too idealism, but we have to start sometime," he said.
Hightower will attend two
weekends at Marvin
Hall. At 10 a.m. he will
be the new town policy further and
at 2 p.m. the subject will be urban
study.
McGovern Try To Missouri
ST. LOUIS (AP) —Campaign success in Kansas for Sen. McGovern's presidential bid are being tried now in Missouri, but the state has not decided.
Some KU summer camp directors in recent interviews expressed concern about low enrollment figures but the seven academic directors of the camps applied to a project of 1,223 students from high school students from nearby all the countries in state.
McGovern supporters in St. Louis have been busy in areas of the state have been busy on the telephone for the past few weeks encouraging buckets of students and township meetings throughout Missouri next month.
"The economy began to pinch us and the camp in 1986." Wiley said. "We had a big enrollment with a little harder to get money."
By FOSS FARRAR
Kansan Staff Writer
Summer Camp Hopes for 1,250
RUGBY GAME
KU vs. Des Moines
Sat. April 15 at 1:30
BEHIND OLIVER HALL
Russell L. Wiley, director and founder of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, which is in its 15th session this summer, described the camp Tuesday as "a working day." He said the camp was designed for academic because "then we go away from the art (aspect)."
Wiley, who coordinates the recreational and student living aspects of the entire camp, said he was most pleased to enroll for the entire camp in 1970 from 1969. He said the 1965 camp had a total enrollment ever more, 2,200 students. He said he expected an annual increase of 30% in his summer's 1.250 degree this year.
Besides music and art, the academic divisions of the camp are languages and linguistics, mathematics and journalism, mathematics and journalism.
Wiley said the burning and shootings which occurred in Detroit in 1970 were big factors in the recent drops in enrollment figures. He noted that many children calls and letters from parents who were disturbed by the violence.
But, Wiley said, the camp increased its enrollment last year and this year "we're crossing our fingers hoping him do well as or well
Wiley said this summer's high school admissions are in McColum and Hall's, which would be staffed by 45 counselors (mostly KU students).
Wiley said the funding for room and board costs, hospital fees and parents' salaries were mothers and eight supervisors (usually high school teachers), came from his office. Enrollment of students in these groups members' salaries and were distributed by the individual academic schools of the camp, he said.
Wiley, who also directs the music division of the camp, said that he was working with a junior high music students from a list of 20,000 schools from all over the country.
about two and one half per cent, of schools would respond. he said, because the summer for 600 high school and 300 junior high students to
Wiley said the number of hours spent by a student in class each day would vary. He said an exceptionally good trumpet player, Jake Gillman, could four or five hours a day and could be in orchestra an additional two hours. The student could also be spending three hours a week in music theory class. Not everyone takes music theory classes, he
Most instructors for the music camp are regular KU faculty members. Wiley said. He said he would teach music lessons to teachers and four music graduate students to help with instruction last summer. He said about 45 instructors would be with the camp this summer.
The purpose of the art division of the camp is not to recruit students for KU but to give an opportunity to study art in the summer. John McKay, associate dean of visual arts, said Thur-
About 19 instructors will teach high school students basic courses in design, drawing and art history, and about eight elective courses, including J. C. McKay and Frank Young, instructor of design, will direct the junior high session of the camp.
David Dineen, associate professor of languages and linguistics and director of the GSA, said Tuesday he didn't know whether his division would have a 14 student class or 14 students have enrolled so far.
About 126 senior high and 108
minor high students enrolled in
last year's art camp, and there
are about 500 students in the
enrollments for the senior high
session and 60 deposits for the
session of the camp, McKay said.
"We have more applications to our school now than we can handle, so we're not using this for recruitment." McKay said.
McKay, who has directed the art division of the camp for three years, said that his team had problems and the campus problems of the year before led to this year's decision. This year he didn't know what might happen but he hoped that it would be good.
"Last year we became the KU academic institute," Dineen said. We used to be much more creative but each division is quite
HUNDREDS JUST ARRIVED"
separate and has its own problems.
"HUNDREDS JUST ARRIVED"
four pocket
Lee bells
Skimpy Fit
"Languages didn't have camp in summer. They had camp in winter. We camp is valuable. It can get people interested in KU but somehow we don't."
The language division of the camp would offer instruction in seven languages, including Chinese, French, Spanish, Hebrew, Dineen said. He said a program in linguistics would also be offered for the first time this summer. He said extracurricular activities, bingo and foreign word games.
Skinny Fit.
Low rise. Super bell. To fit your life style.
Jackson Harrell, Lawrence graduate student and assistant instructor of speech and drama, said Wednesday 22 students had enrolled for this summer's camp. He said he expected an excess of 50 students and last year the camp had 45 students.
Bootleger CENTER OF NOW FASHION LEE
Dienee said he had used a lot of what he'd learned in the camp in the intensive program in Nunmenger College, which of them one semester all the classes needed for foreign language requirements.
A five-week program would also be offered, Brinkman said, but not "nationalism." The program which would involve students drawn from all over the country, was taught in four years, for what college journalism is like. *College-type courses, such as journalism, law of communications, broadcast news, and graphics, would be offered*
"We had a good response from kids of last year," Harrell, the director of the camp, said. "A lot of them are coming back."
HOURS: 10 to 10 Mon-Sat. 12-6 Sun.
523 West 23rd Street.
Del Brinkman, assistant professor of journalism and director of the journalism camp, was a graduate student two sessions. A work week session, aimed mainly at Kansas students, would be designed primarily for students who work high school publications, he said.
The speech camp offers classes in debate, speech, training in human relations and radio television speaking. Harrell said, "I will talk with students either an advanced or beginning workshop. He said there
was a debate tournament the last three days of the camp and there were practice tournaments on sundays throughout the session.
The students would also work on the "Kamper Kansan," a publication for people in all divisions of the camp, Brinkman学生。 "Tempo," would also be produced by journalism students.
The highest enrollment for the science and mathematics summer institute was 102 students in 1978. Richard Midkid, a chemistry and director of the camp, said Thursday. Middaugh said it was too early to guide enrolment figures for this year but about 65 students to enroll. He said 36 students enrolled last year.
"A lot of students were insecure because of a cheaper price, but a few didn't come because of unfavorable publicity." Middaugh
Funds from the National Science Foundation in 1970, the US Department of Agriculture and shootings in Lawrence, make it possible for the science camp to lower its enrollment fee to $190, but the cost is $450 this summer, he said.
Middaugh said the purpose of the time was to stimulate interest in science and to offer the opportunities available to students through courses, laboratory and library work not only for the undergraduate institution's courses in microbiology and chemistry but also in other things available in high schools."
there would be an informal talk or "just a party." The primary purpose of these meetings is to get everyone together and to get each other because the students will be in class together, he said.
Occasional evening meetings were planned throughout the session, Middaugh said, in which
About 30 students enrolled in last year's six-week journalism camp, Brinkman said. He said he was hoping for 50 students to be on a five-week session and that the deadline for enrollment was May 12.
Panels Will Try to Aid Voters in Next Election
The first panel, which will discuss the nature of the presidency and the electoral process, will include Francis H.
Heller, vie-chancellor for education at the University of pical scientific sciences; Donald R. McCoey, professor of history, and Darile Nehring, associate vice-president.
Tim Treacy, Wilmette III., senior, has coordinated two panel discussions designed to help voters understand the American presidency and the coming election. The discussions will be supported for the public April 18 and 25 in the U.K. Union at 7:30 p.m.
Members of the second panel will be Robert Hamlin, assistant professor of speech and drama; Donn Parson, associate professor of speech and drama; Calder M. human relations, and Calder M. Pickett, professor of journalism.
"The camp does not make money. Brinkman said. "It is important to get involved when we feel we should for the high school student. It is also important public relations for the college." He got interested in journalism."
This summer's six-week camps, offered by the language and science divisions, will be from June 18 to July 29. The summer camp also will be offering one-week sessions earlier in June. Enrollment fees for the individual five and six-week camps will be provided. Scholarships are awarded to students by most of the camps.
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KS
University Daily Kansan
Fridav. April 14. 1972
7
ZONE
R1
PARKING
BY PERMIT
ONLY
7:00A.M. 3:00B.M.
MON. THROUGH FRI.
Parking Lot Will Replace House KU buys land north of North for future use
Campus Briefs
Deadline on SUA Flights
Monday is the deadline for booking and final payment for SUA flights to Luxembourg and Paris and connecting flights to Chicago and New York. The SUA office will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday.
Correction on Sponsor
Women's Golf Meeting
Architecture Awards Banquet
There will be a women's golf meeting at 4 p.m. Monday in 124 Robinson.
The School of Architecture and Urban Design will have an awards banquet at 7 p.m. Thursday, April 27, in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Book Collecting Deadline
Today is the deadline for submitting entries in the 18th annual student book collecting contest. Prospective entrants should see Nancy Kingman at the reference desk of Watson Library or contact Cancer Research Library. Competition is open to all KU students.
'The Islamic Experience'
The Muslim Society is sponsoring lectures on the Islamic Experience from 2.30 to 5 p.m. today and from 7 to 6 p.m. Saturday in Room 412.
Foreign-American Party
There will be a Foreign-American party at McColum. Hall onight. All foreign students are invited to attend. There will be a beer hour from 8 to 9 p.m., and a dance from 9 to midnight. Entertainment will be provided by foreign students and "Bandit."
Theta Tau Wingding
Theta Tau Professional Engineering Fraternity will observe its 60th Anniversary Monday, April 17. A reunion will be held Saturday, April 15. Lunch is planned for 1 p.m., at the chapter house, 1942 McKinley Street, and alumni and alumnae at 6 p.m. in the Watkins Room of the Kansas University.
KU Plans Parking Purchase
The University of Kansas has contracted to buy an apartment house and adjoining lot at 1215 Oread Street, according to Irvin E. Youngburd, executive of the Endowment Association.
Youngberg said Thursday that the purchase would be made this summer. It is part of a long-range agreement to move the land north of the Union when it was available if the price was reasonable and the funds were
Youngberg said the lot would probably be used for additional parking space because more was needed north of the Union.
The apartment house is in a condition that would be too expensive to repair and currently needs a Brinner of Kansas City. Mo.
The University will take over the building and lot after the tenants living there move out this summer.
The price of the lot, which has a 75 foot frontage, was not disclosed by Youngberg.
He's a docent in overalls, an advocate of the simple life and a one-time operator of a music teacher. He's the man he and he can usually be found working around the chancellor's yard. He'd probably enjoy it.
The headline above the athletic budget story on page one of Thursday's Kansan should have "KU Athletics to Receive $2" not "KU Athletics to Receive 12 Million," as it appeared.
"As a child, it seemed kind of ridiculous to me that people had to wear clothing all the time, even when it was not." Karr said. "When we wear clothes and to wear clothes. That's poppycock. I have to find one you
Headline Correction
INDEPENDENCE (AP)—The World Conference of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints of the United States, a common-usage name for the 205,000-member denomination.
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Nudist 'Socrates' Is Simple Man
single reason for clothing other than protection or decoration."
Karr said he ran aUDist camp near his home in Tongonxie until about three years ago when he was born in France. After he acquired new property, he talked it over with his children and decided not to start over.
I HOPE I never run another camp. I'd rather be on the beach and swim, but in a way of life. I go to camps now, but generally I camp.
"We never wear clothing at
ACT Now Used By 800 Schools
home unless there is a reason for it. "Karr said. "And that includes the woods and the sandy-bottomed creek. Bathing suits are the stupidest things ever being putting on something to swim in!"
By JOHN PATRICK MAHER
Kenyon Staff Writer
Karr said he had spoken to several college classes and in the last 10 or 20 years had spent over 15 hours on radio talk shows.
More than 800 college am universities in the United States now use the American College Testing Program (ACT), according to reports. The project aims of education and guidance, bureau counselor.
Speaking at the Tuesday noon Faculty Forum, Michal said the University of Kansas began using the ACT about two years ago.
THE COLLEGE BOARD exam is used extensively by eastern schools, but the ACT is prevalent in the Midwest. he said
information on students entering UK necessitated utilizing either the ACT or the College Board exam (SAT). The test information allows for a closer assessment of students' interests
He said a sample group of 250 examined the SAT and ACT scores were which test to employ. Growling SAT and ACT scores were an interesting difference between the tests could be ascertained. The ACT was chosen because it was an easier test.
Although there is not too much difference between the tests, the SAS tests are more difficult to aptitude and the ACT is with experience. Might said.
"You could flip a coin as to which to use." said Michal.
HE SAID the ACT company administered the three-hour exam four times a year at locations throughout the country
The exam tests English skills, mathematical skills, natural sciences, social knowledge and understanding with a composite score, he said.
The ACT is based on a 36-point scale, and the national average is about 24, he said. This norm is slightly lower as well as four-year institutions.
Michal said the composite mean score of KU freshmen this year was 24 (the range is 1 to 38) for all students and his higher for out-of-state students.
The ACT has a reliability of 91 per cent and a standard deviation of five points, he said.
scholastically than men, he said
scholastically than men, he said. Some people were higher in English skills, but men were higher in mathematical skill and social science skills.
THE COMPOSITE SCORES of men are slightly higher than those of women in the class, but women generally do better
According to Michal, there is a plan to validate the ACT so see how well the scores hold up when students' grades in college.
He said he met his wife at a nudist convention in Chicago. Although he has been interested in nudism since he was 12 or 13 years old, he said his wife introduced him to the nudist other aspects of his life style.
"The ACT represents how well students can be expected to do in college," he said. "But tests are not the only way to prepare to be anything else."
He said that the test could help pimp point areas of difficulty for a student and could help him select a useful major.
"AS A YOUNGSTER, I was an out-and-bookworm and still have never encountered these other things before I met her. She worked in a health food store back in the days when only organic and healthy food stores," he said.
Karr said that nudism was "not remarkable any more." Young people accept it as this was a good attitude, he said.
Organic gardening and raising goats are among Karr's current interests.
"We complicate our lives too much. If people would go in for the natural things—like natural foods. They take a perfectly good bowl and pound it, take everything out to the starch, add flavoring and tell us it's good. But they took out all the good stuff and gave that to the livestock. Sometimes the cat eat better than we do," he said.
KARR SAID he was "not nuts" on the simple life—that he ate Tbe better off somewhere else. the simple life is satisfactory for me, where my place to advise others on it is more important. Karr said he was a 'louder, not aighter.' He always thinks well of the other people who prove they're 'real stinkers'.
High School Journalists To Compete Saturday
About 130 journalism students from 38 Kansas high schools were invited to participate in the Scholastic Press Association State Writing contest at KU
The writing contest is being held in conjunction with the annual Kansas Organization of Publication and Advisers for the State's Journal.
This will be the first year that high school students have participated in the high KOPA The high Trial participants are members of the Kansas Scholastic Press Association, which was formed last fall as the student-division of the University of the William Allen White School of Journalism, and Dana Leibengow, assistant professor of journalism is the organization's executive secretary.
The KSPA members who will be the winners of the awards will the winners from regional KSPA writing contests held earlier in the year. As in each of the regional states, the winners will consist of competition in ten categories: five in newspaper writing, four in art photography, three in photography. All contestants will work with the materials and techniques used in the contest officials, and submit their
"on-the-spot" work for judging in the middle of the day.
The contest winners for the state will be announced by Edward P. Basset, dean of the State University of Raymond, KOPA President, at an awards banquet Saturday night. The speaker for the banquet will be John Burton an associate professor of journalism
While their work is being judged in the afternoon the KOH team will present the conference. The reatured speaker will be greethe Kemp, professione journalism and director of the High School Journalism Institute
Bone steals like everyone else. But fancy entertainments and going out on the town never did appeal to him, he said.
Other speakers for the conference will be Ken Paik, a photographer for the Kansas City State University publications adviser at Truman High School, Independence, Mo.; Michael Trent, publications director at Truman High School, Kansas City Mo.; and Michael Johnson, assistant professor of English at KU and the University Book, "The New Journalism."
"I don't like going to a place where there's smoke on the floor, or being in job, where I have an area that I can make as beautiful as I'm capable of, he
He said the simple life did not always preclude getting a formal education.
"In our society it's necessary that some people are educated to take care of the complicated systems we use, we like it or not. But I can't see people specializing in something like Karr said. They should enjoy the experience."
There are probably more people here at the University than there should be. Some would
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Cooper studied cell at the University of Michigan and Ohio University. Miller is a graduate of Friends University in Wichita.
The concert, directed by J. Bunker Clark, associate professor of music history, will include performances by the Consort of Viols, the Consort of Sackbuts, the Collegium Strings. The orchestra horns, the Collegeium Wind Band and the Collegeium Singers.
The University of Kansas
Collegium Musicum will present
a concert Sunday at 3:30 p.m. in
the KU Museum of Art.
A viola damba is an earlier version of the cello. It has six strings and is held on the player's legs.
Cooper will play a viola da gamba sonata, and Miller, a tenor, will sing three *sacred songs* by Heinrich Schutz.
Solists will be David Cooper,
graduate student in musicology,
and John Miller, graduate
student in voice.
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Come in and try our Bort Carleton cork-soled open toe wedges. They come in blue and brown suede and white leather.
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
8
Friday, April 14, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Strike Ends;
By The Associated Press
the baseball strike ended in it 13th day. Thursday when the owners and players agreed to start the 1972 season on Saturday without rescheduling any of the 86 games postponed by the deadline.
The end of the strike came after day-long discussions between the owners, meeting in New York and Association, in New York, that resulted in a three-part proposal made by the owners and accepted plans.
Announcement of the settlement was made simultaneously in New York by Marvin Miller, executive director of the players association, and in Chicago by Commission Board Warner
The proposal was that the season start on Saturday, none of the postponed games be repaid and no money be paid the players for the games postponed during the 103rd year of the 190-year history of the sport.
MILLER IMMEDIATELY hailed it as a triumph for the players.
"Clearly the players have triumphed in something that few people thought they could or would be interested. They have stood together."
Miller also insisted in that could have been settled last Sunday." He emphasized that never was a "back pay账
"It all came about because the owners wanted to reschedule all the games. The players never asked for back pay." Miller said.
"I'm delighted to have this team," Kuniu said. "All of us all learned I will work with people in baseball for procedures to prevent this sort of thing in the future. Nobody wants to play, players, the clubs or the fans."
"It's inevitable that there will be 'hard' feelings. Kuhn has never had them to them at a minimum. I did so in this meeting and will do so with the players. Who won? Nobody, it suffered Baseball suffered."
Baseball Starts Saturday
BECAUSE OF the fact that games postponed will not be played in any range from 153 games for some teams to 158 games for other teams. Division winners will be determined on the basis of won
the owners' loss at over $5 million from gate receipts, parking, concessions, etc., and one national television game.
Under terms of the over-all settlement, the owners also will contribute $100,000 to the players' health care fund in addition to the health care fund in addition to the
The losses involved for the parties concerned are difficult to situate, but best guesses place
annual $5.4 million contribution they already had been making
Royals' Drago to Start
KANSAS CITY (AP)
Immediately after the basketball players strike had been settled Thursday, Manager Bob Lemon named Dick Dragon his starting center. Royalts home opener Saturday.
However, Lemon doesn't expect the right-hander, who had 17 victories last year, to go the distance against the Chicago
"I isn't logical to go into this thing with the idea of a pitcher who doesn't throw a baseball," Lemon said. "We may wind up with a five-inning, four-inning game."
guys in the bulpen, everybody but the two starters Sunday."
Lemon was set on Paul Splitter torff for the first game of Sunday's doubleheader. The other will be Monty Montgomery.
"Right now I figure on Montgomery. Sunday, and Mike will be there on Tuesday, and Joel on Tuesday." Lemon said, "That way Holland can give a relief shot to him."
When the strike ended, there were 17 Royals in Kansas City. Of the missing eight, only offfielder Amos Otto could not be reached, and it was believed he was headed to Kansas City from Virginia.
Lemon has scheduled two workouts for Friday.
The compromise that led to the end of the strike actually was made among the owners in a league of its own, the League bowed to the American League and agreed to the shortened schedule. Previously NL owners had been adamant about scheduling the postponed games.
Club meetings are held every two weeks. Beginning instruction sessions and tactics instructions will be given after the meetings. The next meeting will be at t. p. April 20 in the Pine room of the Kansas
THE SHORTENED season compromise skirted that issue—the only one still unresolved because of the late show when meetings began Thursday.
American League owners have been in favor of a shortened season for many years, but never have been able to convince their National League colleagues to go along. The strike seems to have brought them together on that last beat for this one season.
The cost of the strike to the players will be one day's pay for each day of the strike during the regular season—or 10 days pay. For a team that costs $2,500, that would mean a loss of about $1,250. For a player in
Beginners are welcome and can learn to sail by attending instruction sessions conducted by UMS students. Ohio graduate student.
Hank Aaron's $200,000 category,
it would be a loss of
approximately $11,000.
The sailing club owns no boats. Debruce said plans for
In Chicago, Kuhn was asked about his role in the strike, which has been criticized in various quarters. Kuhn replied:
"I have contributed to the solution as early as possible. My role is to present scenes I know I've been criticized for, and to bring criticism. My role was to moderate a meeting towards a solution today. We've worked very hard."
American League
Minnesota at Oakland
Texas at California, night
Chicago at Kansas City
Atlanta at Cleveland
Milwaukee at Cleveland
New York at Baltimore
National League
Pittsburgh at New York
Milwaukee at St. Louis
Atlanta at Boston night
San Francisco at Houston,
night
Philadelphia at Chicago
Saturday's schedule lists the following games:
TONIGHT! Bring this Coupon to SHAKEY'S
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About 40 members actively participate in the sailing club, Debrace said. The club sponsors two days and general sailing days.
50° off on a
KU WILL sponsor an MCSA regatta April 22 and 23 at Lake Perry yacht club. Debra said, schools are expected to send teams.
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Debruce said KU had competed in a couple of matches last fall. KU won the regatta it hosted at Lake Perry yacht club.
Offer Good April 14 Only
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
America
JEFFERSON, IOWA, IA
High Jumper Barry Schur
Meanwhile, eight members of the KU racing team will compete in Midwest College Sailing Association's Ohio State University. It is the first Michigan regatta about 25 schools are expected to participate in the meet, which will feature teams from the United States and Canada.
KU Takes Large Squad To Dual at Iowa State
The University of Kansas track team's dual meet Saturday at Iowa state in Ames appears as if it will be a good warmup for the Kansas Relays Wednesday, March 15th and Saturday of next week.
Jayhawks are likely to dominate nearly every event, but more important, perhaps, KU coach Bob Smith will have an important role as a member of the team in an effort KU will field a 29-man squad.
KU crushed Iowa State, 97-48 in a dual here last year. This the year's most successful in the Texas Relays and the Kansas Relays. The Texas, Kansas and Drake relays have been exceeding weeks in past years.
SCHUR HAS been assaulting the seven-foot barrier since his induction jumped into the Liberty Bowl invitational 10-inute meet in 1970.
Sophomore Barry Schur will be shooting for his first 7-foot high basket on April 14 consistently at 6-10 since he set the KU varsity record at 6-10 in the first outdoor meet of the team's matches meets in Memorial Stadium.
starting time for the regatta is 2 p.m., sailing club member Paul Debrueb said Thursday. The sailors will compete in races in New York on Friday or be sailed backward or in that using a rudder is prohibited.
100 dash: Tom Scavuze, Frank Johnson,
Tom Smithman
White, Willie Baker, Tom
220 hamm. Xeph White, Bob Hornkessel, T.
Smith, P. Johnson.
JQPps, McGunn, Msg Snitn,
Mile-D. Smith, Terry McKeon.
Three mics, McKeeon.
440 dash - Phil Stepp, White
490 wre - Wash, Lori, Dave, Scott
Boats to Populate Potter
While, who knows-how-many KU and K-state cannies will be expending their energy paddling down the Kaw River in the annual canoe race Saturday, members of the University of Kansas club will be catching the wind in a fun-for-fun regatta at Potter Lake.
Therese Hertweck, Jon Calden, Keni McDonald
440 relay - Scavuzur, Stepp, Delarto
Babbitt & Jabber
Robinson, F. Johnson
Mile relay - Stepp, Bornkessel, Tippy
Nate Kelly—Shipp, Brunskill, Tippy
Martin, Scavuzzo.
120 high hardies—Gregg Vandavere,
Robbinshead, Birmingham.
Sailing Club Plans Meet
120. high hurdles - Gregg Vandaver,
Robinson, Hornskeel, T. Smith
intermediate hurdles - Martina
Hugh - Barry Schur, Handy Smith,
Gary Johns
Mike Whitlight, Wayne Kosman, Pat Murphy
Long jump - Mike Stull, Dan Seay, Rogers Jones, Robinson
Jones, Robinson
Triple jump - Stunt, Robinson, Jones, Seay
Shot put - Rudy Guevara, Dan LeDuc
purchasing boats are underway and that bids had been taken from 12 companies. Some club members own their own boats, and the Lake Perry yacht club owns the boats for the club activities.
Shot put--Rudy Guevara, Dan LeDac,
Discuss. Leduc, Guevara
Javelin - Sam Colson, Shane Miller, Schur
Most of the boats used in
collegiate competition sailors are of a type called flying juniors, the boats have two-man cruisers. The boats has an A and B team. Total points are tabulated from the results of the race to determine the winner of the regatta.
Schur jumped 6-10 for a second-place tie. Two of his attempts at 7-0 were close.
Schur is one of three KU field men who lead the Big Eight. Bitcher's 16-9 in the pole vault is the conference standard, and Sam Callow took the lead in the Texas Relays to 20-4 effort in the Texas Relays.
Iowa State's Van Hollaway has the sixth best javelin throw in the Big Eight, a 226-6.
Only one other Cyclone is listed among the Big Eight leaders. George Amundson, the star football player, stands second in the rankings. He is a prime contender for quarterback on the football team.
RUDY GUEVARA and Dana LeDue, KU's freshman shot putters, have engaged in a lively rivalry in the weight events. LeDue has a better throw (174-6 to Guerra's 171-0) but has not knocked down.
last week. LeDuc Deuc
Geivura in both events outdoors.
The 8-14 team did well.
7 effort to lecure LeDuc's S-84-
Geivura's career best of 58-114.
Geivura's career best of 63-114.
Freshman distance runner Kent McDonald might race a former high school opponent, Ryan Eichner. McDonald is in the three-mile; Eichner is the three-mile for Iowa State.
When McDonald was at Lakenheath, the high-wave tracks burning all the high-wave tracks in the state running for Shawnee Mission South. McDonald seemed happy.
EICHNER SAT out most of track season during his senior
year with a a leg injury, so he went home. Now few. However, Eichner made a comeback at the state meet, and McDonald notched a legitimate win.
Tommy Smith, a forward on KU's freshman basketball team, will join the track team Saturday at UConn to play in the Basketball. Timmons hopes to round out a shuttle relay relay队 for the Drake Relays by fielding Smith with Gregg Vandavey and John Bornkessel.
The University of Kansas women's softball team will take on Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia and Haskell College Saturday in Eastern Softball League doubleheader.
Women to Play Two in Softball
The KU women are 1-1 going into the doubledigit season. University of Iowa in the season opening, 16-15, in Topokia. The Jayhawks lost their sixth victory.
Mark Lutz, KU record-holder in the 220, will miss Saturday's dual. He is nursing a slight leg injury.
KU will play KSTC at 12:30 pm. lismat at Lawrence High and then move to the south park at Haskell at 3 p.m.
The Kansas Relays, which have been the inspiration for a number of publicity stunts, will fill balloons this week with helium-filled balloons this year.
New Stunt Is Planned For Relays
Every time a record is set, the names of the athlete or members of a relay team will be written on cards, placed in a plastic bag and out of the stadium attached to a large helium-filled balloon.
Instructions on the cards will ask finders to record their names and addresses on the cards and to return one card to KU, the other to the record setter. Each finder will receive two tickets to the 1973 Relays.
Football Team To Scrimmage
The University of Kansas
football team will stage its third
scrimmage of the spring at 10
a.m. Saturday in Memorial
Stadium. It will be the first game
in the spring for the Javahaws
The team has passed the
halfway mark of spring crills and
snowmobiles. Farnham,
Farnham, has made much
improvement on both offers and
well-balanced.
There will be no admission charge to the scrimmage.
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FEMINISM WORKSHOPS Tuesday, April 18
★ Women and Their Bodies
Political and Economic Aspects of Feminism
Parlors A, B and C in the Student Union
Women-Identified Women
FREE WOMENS DANCE
8 to 12 p.m. in the Big 8 Room
Women and The Law Workshop (1:30 only)
CHILD CARE PROVIDED
All Three Held at 10:30,2:30 and 3:30. (Men Invited to Our 2:30 Session)
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 14, 1972
9
18th Century Letters Set For Panel
Letters written by an 18th century feminist and two 18th century politicians, and an author of some early pornography will be discussed Friday at 1:30 in Spencer
The panel discussion will be headed by Robert Halband, professor of English at the University of Kansas, and two members of the Riverside. The other two members of the panel will be Henry Snyder, professor of history and Joel Gold, associate professor of law, both of the University of Kansas.
The title of the panel discussion is "Editing Eighteenth Century Manuscript Letters."
According to Snyder, Halsband is probably best known for his edition of the letters of Lady J. D. Howell, whose biography of her, She, as well as her letters, Snyder said, were sprightly and socially-oriented. They were entertaining and amusing, he said.
Snyder has just completed editing the correspondence between the First Duke of Marlborough and the First Earl Godlophin, which will be delivered on Friday by Clarendon Press at Oxford.
Lady Montague was best known for introducing the smallpox vaccine to Western Europe. Her husband was a doctor who had taught her and she brought the vaccine to England from Turkey. Through her acquaintance with the Princess of Wales, Europeans were introduced to the vaccine in process inoculated her own children.
Halbands recently completed a biography of Lord Hervey, an 18th century courier. Snyder said Lord Hervey's letters and memoirs of King George II were "clever and fascinating."
Snyder said Clarendon Press was the most prestigious press of the world, and the one that Gold and Halsand as well as he, had had works published by him.
Five days
Snyder's transcriptions filled three volumes when he completed eight years of work on his book he said he transcripted 1800 letters.
Snyder now is editing the letters of Queen Anne.
Gold is preparing an edition of the correspondence of John Wilks, an 18th century radical who was a proponent of libering King George III, and his writings represented his opinions on freedom of the press. Another writing of Wilks was contemptuous with a spoof on the Pope's writing.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Campus Bulletin
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
Phyto-Execlogist: noon, Alcove C.
Bahal Table: noon, Meadowlark Room
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark
Room
Physical Anthropologist: 12:30 p.m.
Physical Anthropologists: 12.30 p.m.
Kansas Room.
Muslim Students: 12:45 p.m. Room 299
SIMS: 1 o.m. Lounge Room
Regional Meeting: 3 p.m. Kansas Union
Physical Anthropology: 4 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium.
Recessing Amphibian Bush: 6:15 p.m.
104 Green.
National Collegiate Honors Council
Regional Meeting: 3 p.m. Kansas Union.
SDMS: 1 p.m. Oread Room.
Muslim Students: 2.30 p.m. Council
Union Ballroom. Johnson Society of Kansas: 7 p.m.
Reception of Ambassador Bush: 6:15 p.m.
South Lounge.
Room:
George Bush, UN Ambassador; 2:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
Kansas Scholastic Press Association
Writing Contest; all day, Kansas Union.
Women's Division Chamber of Commerce.
Honors Program Directors: 6:30 p.m.
Kansas Room
KU Folk Ensemble Club: 7 p.m., 173 Robinson.
Physical Authorizations: 8 p.m.
Midwest Japan Seminar: 1-5 p.m., Kansas
Union.
SUNDAY
One day
SUNDAY
Art Museum Film Series: 3 p.m. Sooner
Three days
Women's Division Chamber of Commerce branch and style show: 9:30 a.m., Union Ballroom.
Carillon Reclacd: 3 p.m., Campanile Hill
Collegium Musculum: 3:30 p.m., Spooner
A15 Museum
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days
Faculty Recital: 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
THE MERCANTILE
Books, Bibles, Posters, Gifts, Framing
113 842-1553
CROSS REFERENCE
Right Next to Campus
127 IOREAD
HAPPENING SPICES
MILK EGGO EGGO
SAFE LAUSAGES
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1553
Parts at a discount
KAT Suzuki
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store. Factory Authorized Sales & Service
25 words or fewer: $1.50
additional cost:
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $0.01
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered on request. To apply for enrolment, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Highest 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,
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing. You can attend "Western Civilization" at *Campus Madhouse*, 140 West 14th, **ft**
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can
COSTS plus 30 at AUDI RADIO-
only! Here's only $25 discount when
your Hire Discount House you
Free (ca, Coffee & Consulti-
ons).
NORTHFIELD COUNTRY SHOP, 707
169 W. 34th St., north of Bridges Avenue; used furniture, cooking items, and wood cooking and baking equipment, stoves, fireplace wood, stacked fireplaces, of other useful item, upon 9 to 12 S. Hershel Albemarle, bd. 8-9
3159
1960 Austin-Cambridge 4 dr. Sedan
Needs tune-up, $150 Call 841-3216
after 5:00. 4-19
Michigan St. BAr-B-HQe 515 McH,
St. Outdoor公园-B-HQe 518 Cheek-
Sibb or port rials $30. Small Snail
Stab or port rials $30. Small Snail
Rib $45. Large Hib Plate $12.
Bend Brick Sand $8. Beet Bird捶
Rib $45. Large Hib Plate $12.
Phone 842-9510 Closed Sun-Tues.
HAVE YOUR HANDWRITING ANALYZED. 842-4476. 4-14
XO VOX POWER STACK—like new amp,
system, two separate speaker cabinets,
8-12" heavy duty speakers. Must
call. 842-5819 4-14
10-speed—Brand new Raleigh, center-
pulled brakes, racing tires; 22", inch;
frame, orange, must sell. Call 862-
5819 Call 4-143
SPRING CLEARANCE - USED BIKES Kat Suzuki, 634 Mass, 842-ear
Honda Mini Trail $755
Honda Mini Touring $135
Suzuki F-150 $245
Suzuki F-160 $285
TS-250 Suzuki $475
TS-250 Suzuki $475
71 BSA Roa 250 Suzuki $475
91 Honda Dream $255
91 Honda Dream $255
Buffalo Maverick $255
Buffalo Maverick $495
Buick Latitude $495
FOR HIRE: Cameraman accomplished at "useless" still photographs (B&W). Desmirely - Arresting -
provenience (these properties),
will be used on your behalf.
All right. Send home, to one驰
home. Will be delivered within
no phone. ($25) Ohio Or call
(317) 845-3920. We will be
sanitized. Douglas Keller. 4-14
58 MGB raidster in top condition,
58,000 miles. Engine overhauled at
43,000 $900. 842-2472 4-21
Yamaha 650 cc. street, see at 924
Schwarz after 6 p.m. 842-3871 4-18
1967 New Mobil Mobile Home. Larger living room, dining area, kitchen, two bedrooms, big bathroom. Include a refrigerator and clothes dryers. 842-3529 4-17
2. acquaint suspension speaker systems, 2-way-10" 3/8", Must hear to believe Best offer takes them. Call 864-1169. 4-14
Rare, find—1971 Kawaiwak, 250 SS
experience, condition with, 1,500 km.
Selling cheap, need gas money for
homes. Used for Dicor 444.
A444 Ask for Dicor 418. 4-18
1969 YAMAHI 350 Trial-Street-motorbike. Excellent condition — Have done my own work, Call Pete, 864-1114.
JOBS ON SHIPS!
MEN. WOMEN
Perfect summer job or career.
send $2.50 for information.
Seller: LEGO 7973 (1973)
cellent pay. Worldwide travel.
Washington 98111 4-20
1971 Kawasaki F7 175 cc Like new
$550 842-7118 4-18
Wedding Gown, 10 yrs., size 10, never worn. Alfred/Original originals include full length new-aged mannequin 637, also 416; new-aged mannequin 637, 416-4
3-18
Guitar - Gibson B45 jumbo 12 string with diduce case and dekker pick for bass guitar. Call 842-2199 after 7 4-18 Call 842-2199 after 7 4-18
1969 Honda CL-250, 4,500 actual miles.
All accessories, $500 or best offer.
42-6300
4-18
MUST SELL - 3 bikes, 1971 Kawaii
175 Induro, $350; 1971 Yamaha 500,
$625; 1971 Hodaka Super Rat 100,
$800; 1974 Honda RS400,
4-18
842-2988
1968 Suzuki X-6 sander 250ce It looks and runs like a new. Must to appreciate. $375 Call 842-1843 and ask for Dave. 4-18
1970 Kawauki 90ce. Good condition.
low mileage, call Frank. 864-6834 4-14
MUST SELL, Fender Jaguar with
case and accs, Heatkitch 220 watt
peak power amp with column. Call
842-316-306
Poul-change little Hungarian sheepdog puppies ARC Top bloodlines, pedigree holds $6 up also. Old breed (91-739-286) McLellan McLellan 91-739-286) McLellan McLellan
Real sharp 1968 $250 Honda. Under
4,000 miles has been balled all its life—it's the new $550 or make an old $100. It's just keep trying.
4-17
for sale or trade 1971 Plymouth 440
GTX 7,000 actual miles. Need to
sell. Bank financing. 843-6507 or 843-
4409
4-19
1970 35ce Suzuki, orange and black,
excellent condition; $550 or best offer
Excitation 842-7599 after 5.30.
4-19
57 Chevy, 2 door 283 automatic (rebuilt) Near new tires, brakes, valves, turnips no oil, good transmission. 824-6400 Ask for JD 4-19 842-6400 Ask for JD 4-19
1962 GMC School bus converted into camper. Full size. $495.99 for $800. Call Charlie at Jashawk Volkwagen; 843-290 or after 5.43-8345 4-19
1970 Volkswagen Fiatback, dark blue,
circular, 11.000 actual miles; Sharp;
Aking $1,585. Call 843-8468. 4-19
Student going out of business Must sell coach $8, chair $8, night stand $3, bureau $8, lamp $4, 21" Zentih to $35. 812-6254 4-17
STEREO SYSTEM tape player - AM/
FM stereo, Panasonic - brand new
+ 169 Asking $130 Must sell, call 842-
6728
62 Ford I-40 pn. tpu Wide wheels,
ATV tires, camper, stretches, extra
fuel, power wagon. 59 Ford I-40
Ford I-40 pn. Reliable, clean,
wide bed $75 90 Oak ceiling
beds
1964 green TR-4, runs good, new seat and carpet-$250 or best offer. Call Chris, 812-8333.
4-19
196 Harley Davidson XLK SPORTER
—Stock-up in good condition. A good
buy to chap Will accept small trade
condition. Call 341-820-5731
341-820-5731 4-19
Mobile home for sale. Tired of living in an unpleasant place while waiting for a job, try a depressed little here. It is a home for people who desire independence of ownership while relocating to an atmosphere. Soft, eco carpeting, 3 bedrooms, bright 28' ft. living room, kitchen, washer, refrigerator, automatic washroom, stoves, gas furnace, only $7 million gas fuel. Only $7 million gas fuel. Unusually good condition. 1902-1965. Gas furnace. Only $7 million gas fuel
1970 Toyota, excellent condition, only 25,600 miles, 2-door, AM radio, air-conditioned. Gear married, must sell. $1,500 Call 842-4269 4-18
YARD SALE—Tomorrow, Saturday,
beginning 10 a.m. at 1230 Mississippi.
4-14
Your Complete Service
Air Force Mesh Dress—New—size 42
-$75 -842-9096
4-20
ROGERS WEST HILLS REALITY
Large old to size English english
chapel West Hill. Addition. Large living
changing large mansion bedroom, 4 cer-
tain party room. Walk out on balcony.
Detached children's playroom &
2 rooms. & contains ideal for large
family. Rooms included. Roberta Realty
1855 Mason, 843-902-003
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
Dealer
Ample Park Spaces Available
ONLY WITH
Amphibian--Amphibia BT-15 basal amphibian
Amphibian--Amphibia BT-15 basal amphibian
cabin shelter with 2-15” speakers,
sound effects wih wash and pedal,
and effects wih wash and pedal.
842-7643 4-20
Webster's Mobile Homes
TROMHONE — King, 3-B with F-
attachment. $495 new, will sell for
$325. Excellent condition, used little.
Mike Huebner. 824-9548. 4-20
61 Triumph TR2, good condition, 2
studded shoes, car muffen, tonneau
cover $500, 841-3234
4-18
1967 Triumph Tiger Cub 200 cc. good offer
$200 or best offer. Call Mike at 842-9688 after 6
4-20
FOR RENT
KENWOOD 3130 AM-FM stereo receiver, 16 w per channel rms. Best offer, 864-2952 4-20
BRAIN, FIND - 1971 Kawaikok 200 SS.
Excellent condition with 1500 miles.
Selling Charge. Need gas money for
conversion. Call 843-28-200
or 843-28-6200
Leather-in - RED RIDER - Leather
shop - San Jose, waits, wallets, bags,
stores, and more.
Reasonably priced — 1000 Ohio
Open Monday then Saturday
4:30-6:30
Rockledge VIA Apartments, Limited
students can have two bedroom
furnished apt. with all utilities paid
students can have each. Call after 6p,
843-773-7130
Four 13" chrome rims, will fit Datsuns etc. ... perfect condition-Call 42-8798
482-8798
LIKE NEW—2-10 in. Deep Crager SS wheels & 2 G 60 in. id. Gd. Poly Loy tires. Call Jim, 682-1043.
COLLEGE HILI MANOR now show-
ing new furnished and unfurnished apart-
ments rates start at $129.00 to campa-
sey $350.00. 174 W. 19th W. ApB or call 843-
174 W. 19th W. ApB or call 843-
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAW-
YARD. He will be attending a Law-
erian of Lawyers effective in
february and is expected to rate
if you call Mr. Forby, 809-354-
1278. In Los Angeles Apartment 18H,
In Living Argos Apartments, 18H,
In Beverly Hills Apartment 12H,
Availon or Harvard Savings Iowa,
New York. You may pay between June and August
in our curatively modern medal special
for your contributions. In his summer a wonderful time to be spent in the city.
dried of trying to find that ideal apt. a home for someone 1-2 & 3 bpm apts, in various locations and price ranges & 4Crew Agency, 901 Kentucky, KY 75906.
LOOK WHAT SANTEE APTS HAVE TO OFFER? Summer rates, swimming pool, A C Free cable TV, Wi-Fi, 843-216-1125. I223-89-6483
When you're hot, you’re hot. When
you’re cold, you’re cold. At UNIVERSITY
doughed comfort at UNIVERSITY
MENTS. End your pool and close it.
$95 Apt HI. 1529 W 8th Phone 866-
453-7800 Apt HI. 1529 W 8th Phone 866-
453-7800
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
3409 W. 6th 842-7700
Drive-In Theatre
painters, garden spasitories, botanical gardens, Harvard Square, Iowa & Harvard, and Agio Pellicano. Our center of living in one of these handsome apartments will provide spacious apartments and you will be more to have a dishwasher, central water and water utilities paid, and a kitchenette.
MODERN APARTMENTS. Furnished and infrequent one bedroom from $160-$190, plus utilities. Near carport. Large living space. next fallave D, 83-6924, 83-1601.
Studio apartment, Quiet, furnished,
air conditioned, steam heat, parking.
Need business man or grad, student.
Available May 19
430-8000
4:18
NOW IS 15, THE TIME TO RESERVE
the selection in a still available,
1972, which is selected from a pool
of 842-328M or 2076 A. Harvard
lawyers' firm built and leased,
lawyer's fees built and leased,
SUMMER RENTALS. Live close to campus this summer in a room house, or apartment. Economic Real Estate. 843-761-3290. Louisiana. 843-761-3291. -9
available 5-13 room rent apt. air.
and $13 mo. one room租客 apt. 4m²
air. space. two bedroom fireplace $5 mo. All apts are
formatted. Private entrance and bath
room. $20 mo. private suite.
Large, two bedroom mobile home.
Fully carpeted, air-conditioned, water
and rent cart provided. Prefer couples
or single person Under $100. Phone
**VAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right**
Twin new 2 bedroom and one new 1 bedroom. Twin new 1 bedroom and one new 1 bedroom. Twin new 1 bedroom and one new 1 bedroom. Twin new 1 bedroom and one new 1 bedroom. All all apartments clean and quiet with carpeting, dishwasher, kitchen, microwave, 84-785 between 3.50 p.m. and 10.30 a.m.
Renting for summer and fall; nice furnished rooms, kitchen privileges, near KU. Aloc 1-3 bedroom apts 842-5007 after 4.00. 4-19
Room for rent. Need girl to share
home $63 Utilities included. Avail-
able May 1: 842-5768 4-20
4 bedroom house on edge of campus
For summer at reduced rate or year's
lease. Call 843-5838 or 843-6111 4-20
NOTICE
Walk to KU: 2 bdrm, apartment, carpeted, central air, appliances, parking.
Call: 843-5899 4-20
Barn Partied! Now available for
rent at Angelo Valley Farm on Lake Pepin
Angelo Valley Farm on Lake Pepin
bar and cooler, plenty of parking
call Joe Strange after 6 p.m. at 822-450-
Call Joe Strange after 6 p.m. at 822-450-
LEARN SKYDIVING 1st jump
learn basic skiing, jumpmaster fees, plane ride, and qualified instruction. Class includes:
1st jump after first $500. Fee call ID: 847-3960.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. J, John Wells, 842-5220
JIMS *STRAK* HOUSE—where you will find one of the best steaks in town. Our motto is "Dine Out at Eating Out Prices." 4-14
Women's Alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 4-25
WEDDING INVITATIONS - PRICES
12.95 per person
printed only $4.65. Send for free catalog and samples to Armed Aid
East, Main St., Boulder, CO 80302
$840.00
4-28
Carol Lee
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
30 Varieties of Donuts Hot and Cold Drinks
Lee
5 a.m. - 12 p.m. Tues.. Sat.
6 f. s. e.
MUSEUM OF THE CALIFORNIA WILLOW
Attention Trawl freaks, Franconia
philies and everyone who like good
movies NIA presents Trawl Week.
Every week different. 4-14
Every night, different.
Mobile Home Sales
Dandelion Rope Hangs-Grow with regular feeding. Somewhat like a dog. But cheaper at EARTHSHINE, 12 E. 8th 4-18
Give your jeans a lift—with suspenders in color ... from EARTHSHINE, 8 E. 12th. 4-18
CHANGE OF LOCATION From April 15 through October 13,胖太太来到了 Lake Pavilion. However, if Lake Pavilion were closed, we will move our room to 122, Robbins Hall.
Everything in your closet just died—get a clothing transplant at EARTHSHINE, 8 E. 12th. 4-18
INPANT DAY-CARE M2-704-
704 Professional child-care for
children 1 mo to 12 mo. Pull or part-time.
FiT. Specially designed employment.
$5.99 per week.
NATURAL, DYE WORKSHOP=April
14, 15. 16. Sign up at the Yarn Barn.
730 Mass. 843-4533 4-17
WANTED
Potter Lake Relays. Sailboat races on Potter Lake, Saturday at 2:00 Sponsored by the KU Sailing Club Everyone welcome. 4-14
syn Gym. Same old time: 7:30 pm.
Fridays. Free. Come and join in.
by yourself, or with friends. 4-17
Two left feet? Expert intensive instruction will transform you into a freaking folklarder! Come Saturdays at 4:15pm on the Student Activity Center. Free: 4-19
GERM AND MINERAL SHOW — See
Gems Glowing. Exhibits. Duala
Gems. Mineral Club at 4-H Fairgrounds
and Mineral Club at 6-H Freezer.
8 am, 9 am, 10 am, 11 am, 12
LONNY FAME, and the Beltlowes. A rock 'n' ball Band直立 out of the Rock. For more information contact Rikie 842-6509 or John 842-3481 - 418
JVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS
WANTED:
All Professionals and occupations,
all Competencies, all Coordination,
nourishing, sightseeing. Free intern.
Interview. 600 Northwest 17th Street,
5977, San Diego, CA 92115.
8115 Blankenship Drive
We buy used books, also old Play-
boys and Pent-House magazines in
good condition! Call 842-0216. 5-9
3 nice girls need a roommate for next year in Jayhawk Towers. Call anytime. 842-0427 4-18
WII
3020 Iowa (South Hwy.59)
Woman roommate wanted to share one bedroom Avalon apartment for summer and, or fall. Call Lynte at 864-1324 4-14
135-290 mm screw mount telephoto lens for 35 mm camera. Also enlarger and depthen noisepupils. Call 4-212-8700 or Margaret W. Leaves name, number 4-14
HELP! Phases land 2 plus continued infiltration; if you stay inside, seek 1 or 2 ways to share Jayhawk trails this summer.
Jayhawk: Centralla, Centralia. K-18, 913-875-8878
K-18, 913-875-8878
One or two roommates to share an apartment with two other girls for next fall Call after 4:00 Pm
Cindy, 842-6382 4-19
THE HTE in the WALL
SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
841 7439 Deluxe · 8th & 9th
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
IMPORTS-DATSUN
P
Rover 2000
0 Mass—The Malls—Hill
DATSUN
B42-0444
230 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
PLANNING A TRIP??
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
See
LOVE THAT
TOYOTA
OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
0 TO 60 MPH -13.5
RECLING FRONT SEATS
UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL.
Competition
Maupintour travel service
TONY'S
500 E.23rd
OPEN NIGHTS
- Recorders
- Music
Rose KEYBOARD STUDIO
- Guitars
- Recorders
TYPING
1903 Mass. 843-3007
Good running use car wanted. Have $100 to lend. Look and year not important but must be in good shape. Call 825-746-9311 at 4:00 p.m.
Typing in my home IBM Selectric
Prompt accurate work. Experienced.
Call 841-2556 5-9
The Bull & Boar
- Guitars
Experienced in typing these, dimensions, term papers, other mis-type materials. Experience types: Type Accurate and prune types;
Featuring—Roast Beef BBH Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef
Grilled Cheese, and the Reuben
Female commute needed for summer to share furnished apartment in Meadowbrook West. Call 942-8667 4-18
- Accessories
IBM pica type. Fast, accurate, neat.
Call after 5:00 p.m. or on weekends.
413-3186
4-14
11 W. 9th
OFF any two handed sandwich with the purchase of one at regular price. You MUST present this ad.
Thom, term papers, typed accurately and promptly IBM *SetElectric*, your choice of type styles. Also editing at time: Ronda, 482-6792, 822-5055.
1) 2 people to sub-in-law apartment for
summer. $135 m. furnished, 2 blocks
from Fraser. Phone: 664-1252 or
864-
*1918*
COIN
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt reasonable rates. Please call 843-7954 - 4-18
Independent
To meet people who read the Urantia Book, call 842-7691 4-20
Open 24 hrs. per day
Typing on elecite typewriter
No threes please Prompt attention
443-0938
4-18
Open 11 a.m. to b.p. Mon Sat 12 to 8 p.
Offer Expires April 30
TYPING THIENES DISSESSIONS MISCELLANEOUS WORK
On the Macintosh with pica
Air Monitor, Travell 2000, Ridge Court 9
Red Baron
DRIVE IN
Fast accurate typing Reasonable rates Call 842-2053 4-26
PERSONAL
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
AND COOP IN
LAUNDRY & DRY
8th & MISS.
843-5304
★★★★★★★★★★★
FLASH-Little Debbie Hempseed
funnels happiness with hand-made
necklaces and rings from EARTH-
SHINE. B 8. E 12th.
4-18
COIN OP LAUNDRY
19th & LA.
843-9631
LONNY FAME and the Beltines. A rock in Bald band straight out of the Nice. For more information contact Rikz, 842-6509 or John, 842-3818 - 148
O My Servant? Thou art even as a
man, and the durability of his dreams, and its strength,
knowing the wisdom comes forth for
him, and it is upon him that we all
know the wisdom and promise of all the
dreams, and promise all the
dreams.
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
days per week
HELP WANTED
Kauai, Hawaii. Want to get acquainted with students from this island. Call 843-6800. 4-208
A pair of girls glasses in pink case
Need desperately Call 842-2374 4-18
LOST
JAROLD'S Diving Supplies
Girl's watch. Worn-out-looking; new brown leather band; Friday night on bill jack, or 14th & Tenn 841-3314.
SEDUCED by spring Give in, and
simultaneously shake your thirst for
knowledge learn international talk
learns 7-10 p.m. Lake Free. 4-18
MISCELLANEOUS
Part-time male help wanted. Apply in person Vista Restaurant. 1537 West 26th. 4-17
Small white terrier with brown spots.
Wearing a red collar. Very, very
friendly. Very important to family.
Reward offered. Please call 841-106-03.
843-3565 Lawrence, Kansas
Babysitter wanted for summer. Three
school age children. Hours 9 to 4. 15
per hour. Please call 843-4893 after
6. 4-18
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale--Sizes 8-10, up to 75% off, Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky. 4-20
Puppy 4 months, white and black-brown spots, curly hair, tan collar answers to Pete—REWARD Call 842-1796
Certified Instructor
TEACHERS WANTED Contact
Southwest Teachers Agency Box
4327, Alququerque, N.M. 8706. "Our
Basket" Bordered and numbered.
- 5-8
Male's lost in ring with dark oval stone
lost in or around Allen Field House
-tape on kit for fitting. Please call
64-2094. Lost April 10th.
4-18
4 proof sittings $3.00
International Employment
6 proof sittings $5.00
Hixon Studio
Please call for your appointment for SENIOR PICTURE
摄影
SENIORS
Special Senior Rates on all orders.
Peabody, Mass. 01960 (Not an employment agency)
INTERNATIONAL JOBS
Europe, South America, Asia, Australia, U.S.A. Openings in all fields: Social Sciences, Business, Sciences, Engineering, Education.
e. Alaska construction and piping work. Earnings to $200 per hour.
f. Bachelor's degree or equivalent. Complete current information—only opportunities—wrote today!
Ph. 843-0330
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Fineest Eating Place
Delicious Food and Sweets
Complete Menu
Complete Menu
Steak Sandwiches
Shrimp, to K. C.S. Steak
DISCOUNT
Necessary new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges.
843.
8500
The Stereo Store
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
LUDIOTRONICS
---
928 Mass
Z
COMFORTABLE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Student Disputes
Senate Decision
See Page 2
82nd Year, No.123
Monday, April 17, 1972
KU
Kansan Photo by RON SCHLOERB
KU Team Strokes to Victory in KU-K-State Canoe Race.
Chalmers' OK Needed
KU won the annual KU-KState caucus race Sunday for the first time in three years. The Stroke team, comprised of (from back to front Dave Noel, Glaceo senior; Marguerite Ermeling, Kansas City junior, and Mayhew Vanhey, Trrousdale sophomore won the race in 19
hours, 25 minutes. The race began Saturday in Manhattan and ended Sunday near Mississippi Street and the Kaw River, here in
Campus Traffic Plan To Be Aired Tonight
BUDGETING FOR the proposal, which would cost an estimated $300,000, was tentatively approved last week by Keith Keller; vice-chairman of business affairs
The proposed changes developed because of increasing campus traffic, the need for additional parking facilities and the need for more revenue to maintain and
By RICHARD COOLEY Kansan Staff Writer
The controversial proposal to alter the flow of campus traffic and to revamp University parking zones will finally come under public scrutiny tonight. An open debate on the proposal is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Members of the committee which devised the plan will be present to explain the proposal and answer questions. Those scheduled to be on hand are Robert Malinowsky, assistant director of KU libraries and chairman of the Traffic and Lawton, vice-chancellor of facilities, managing operations; Mike Thomas, director of Traffic and Security, and Alton R. Thomas, University architect.
The plan must be put into final shape and approved by Cancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr, in time for presentation to the Kansas Board of Regents at its May meeting. The proposed changes are to take effect next fall.
improve parking facilities, according to Malinowsky.
The lack of parking facilities at Wescoe Hall, the new humanities building currently under construction on Jayhawk Boulevard, also was a factor.
Some aspects of the plan have already sparked considerable controversy. The Student Senate Transportation Committee would eliminate the campus bus system, and some students have criticized the provision of 400 to 500 parking meters on campus.
MALINOWSKY SAID Friday he did not know what to expect at tonight's hearing, but said he hoped the committee could have done more. He had been raised during the last week.
"We hope the hearing will be informational, and at the same time we will welcome comments and suggestions," Malinowsky said.
He said some aspects of the plan were still incomplete and the final draft of the proposal would not be drawn up until the issues and suggestions had been considered.
Malinwski said once the final draft was completed it would be submitted to the Chancellor's office and from them on its request. In response, the Chancellor and the Board of Regents.
DETAILS OF THE proposal are as follows:
Bush Talks of U.N.'s Strengths, Problems
By SCOTT EATON
Kansan Staff Writer
Although the United Nations is beset by serious problems and has proven to be ineffectual in handling many of the problems it was designed to take care of, the world is far better off because of its presence, George Bush, U.S. Ambassador for Afghanistan and Friday night at the annual banquet of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
“It's not as perfect as it could be, it's not nearly as good as the founders of the U.N. that created it in the late forties thought it would be,” Bush said.
Bush, speaking to a capacity dinner crowd of 775 persons in the Kansas Union Ballroom, said even though the U.N. didn't come up to the expectations of the men who designed it, it still was a useful tool in preserving peace in the world.
BUSH said the U.N. had demonstrated it could not solve instantly the political crisis in Iraq.
"When I think of the Middle East I would argue that the U.N. is the best hope for peace in the world, without it I think the Middle East should be more peaceful. The East than they are with it. And with it I think we can eventually move to a parties. Without it I wouldn't be that sure."
"The founders who visualized the concept of instant peace, instant removal of problems through discussion simply saw it as realistic as they might have been."
Bush said another area of trouble in the United Nations was that of finances. He said the United States was trying to lessen the organization of support for the United Nations.
"the president has adopted a policy that we are now working for to move the total number of people in the country from 50
per cent to 25 on the assessed budget." Bush said, "That's not to say we don't support the United Nations, it's to work down so that one nation will not dominate the United Nations financially, in the belief that other nations that believe as strongly as we do should indeed pay some of the support.
"Another great problem I face in every place I go is the frustration Americans feel when they vote for a party exactly the same vote in the United Nations General Assembly as the United States, or Fiji if they have the same vote in the United Nations General Assembly as the Soviet Union.
"Of course it is frustrating, and of course if we were going to redesign the U.N. in 1972, 26 years after its start I thank its fair to say there would be things we could do in terms of a more realistic manifestation of world as it is. There is no question of this."
Bush said the U.N. was a fantastically misunderstood, complicated and frustrating organization. He said the vote by the general assembly to oust the president was its seat in the U.N. was one of the most frustrating events of his term as ambassador.
"Frankly, I think if we could briefly analyze it tonight in terms of our own national self interest, I think we could convince you, that it's worth supporting.
"We have made a miraculous discovery when it comes to the environment, and that is that pollution knows no ideological boundary. Bush said. "It spills over between Eastern
BUSH SAID that even though he was a critic of the U.N., he moved more of it after serving for a time as ambassador to Israel than he did before he took the position.
Europe and Western Europe, or it flows from the Soviet Union on south into the free countries and it moves in various ways, and we need a strong idealistic international effort to do something about what is happening better vehicle than the United Nations.
"WE CAN'T DO IT alone, the United States cannot impose its standards, a developed society imposing its standards in the world. The world's top small now."
Bush said another area where the United Nations would play an important part was the population problem facing the world today. He said the United States again
simply could not impose it's will on other nations. The United States would appear then as an imperialist nation concerned only with maintaining its own power.
He said that for many of the world's underdeveloped nations, the only wealth they had was in their numbers, because these large numbers of people could be used to build factories and take minerals from the ground. He said it would take a few decades for him to convince these nations of the problems their burrowing populations could cause.
FOLLOWING HSIS prepared remarks, bush answered questions from a panel of judges.
University of Kansas School of Law;
Nancy Hambleton, Lawrence city commissioner; Clifford Ketzel, professor of
hydrology at Wayne State University; plant manager for Hallmark Cards
Bush said in the question and answer period that he believed having the Peoples Republic of China as a member of the United Nations would create some new problems for the U.S. but that it was important for the mainland Chinese to have been involved in the U.N. He thought that with the membership of the Peoples Republic in the United Nations, the U.N. more accurately reflected the real world.
Coating Peels from Lunar Module; Apollo 16 Moon Landing Still 'Go'
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)—America's Apollo 16探营 streaking toward the moon Sunday were told to board their lunar lander earlier than planned because something was causing the lander coating of the craft to shred away.
Navy Capt. John W. Young, Air Force Lt. Col. Charles M. Duke Jr., and Navy Lt. Cmdr. Thomas M. Mattingly I were at Fort McHenry to visit Cape Kennedy, Fla., at 12:45 p.m. EDT.
The astronauts were in no danger from the problem, but there was concern that a fuel tank in a rocket thruster system may be leaking.
THEY REPORTED after rocketing out
Experts said today they could not explain the phenomenon, but no plans to alter it.
of earth orbit that part of the lunar module's skin was reeling away.
The astronauts are bound for a landing in a rugged mountain plateau of the moon and a search for ancient volcanoes and further evidence that the moon was once a dike. Duke and Young boarded the lunar module, leaving Mattingly behind in the command ship. The moon machine was not scheduled to be activated until Mon-
The problem cropped up after an almost flawless launch.
The astronauts orbited the earth one and one-half times and then fired the third stage rocket to speed out of earth orbit. Duke first reported minutes later that particles were streaming out from part of the lunar module.
HE DEScribed the particles as coming from an area of the moon lander around one of the attitude control rocket thrusters on the side of the craft.
Duke said the surface looked like shredded wheat. "It then, Apony, it was shredded wheat," he said.
But Sunday night, the outer coating of the lunar lander, named Orion, began flaking. The result is that it contains not of it was being lost could not immediately be determined. The skin is multi-layered, with 25 or more layers of aluminaized and coated film and the film is only 00013 inches thick.
There was no indication that the problem would affect the moon landing plans and the astronauts themselves were not considered to be in any danger.
Jayaawk Boulevard would become one-way east from Chi Omega fountain to Danforth Chapel, then two-way north into Oread Avenue. Memorial Drive would become one-way west from Mississippi St. and would be the third-way stop sighs would be installed.
Fourth Street would remain two way and Baumgartner Drive would remain one-way from Jayhawk Boulevard to Mississippi Street. The traffic control stations on 14th Street and at 13th Street Jayhawk Boulevard would be eliminated, with access to the Museum of Art, Museum of Natural History and the Kansas Union
Sunflower Drive between Mississippi and Indiana streets would remain two-
Angle parking would be permitted along one side of the one-way portion of Jayhawk Boulevard, and a two-way bicycle lane would be created on the other side.
O-ZONE, south of Robinson Hall, would be a 25-cent toll gate. The price of admittance to X-Zone east of the Union would be increased from 10 to 25 cents. Those purchasing permits for those zones would be cards with which to operate the gates.
Parking meters would be installed on side-street parking in the Union and Museum area, in the now gate-controlled lot east of the Union, in I Zone on Mississippi Street, and in the east section of N Zone west of Murphy Hall.
Meters would also be installed in the loading zone along the drive at the east end of Haworth Hall and in the east half of M Zone along Sunsyide Avenue. These will be short-time meters to accommodate brief visits to buildings in the area.
Meet existing loading zones in lots behind buildings would have short-time delays.
Parking zones along Memorial Drive would be enlarged by about 50 spaces and would continue to be reserved for permit parking only. No parking meters are proposed for Memorial Drive or for the one-way portion of Javahawk Roadway.
PARKING METERS are also being considered for the circle in front of Watkins Hospital, in front of Miller and Wattins Hall, and in Poplar Lane behind them.
The meters would be installed free of charge. Income from them would be split equally with the vendor until the meters were paid for, probably in three years.
The campus parking zone system would be revised. Each lot would be assigned to one of four color categories—blue, red, yellow and green. A vehicle with a color permit could be parked in any lot corresponding to that color.
Blue Zone would include most parking in the controlled-access section of the campus--along Jayhawk Boulevard, behind Watkins and D, H, L, R, T and A zones. A Blue Zone permit would cost $30 if you bring your $20 in the spring and $10 in the summer.
RED ZONE would include B, B-1, C, E-1,
(including F, F-1 and K), G, J-1, N, V,
and Z zones. Red permits would cost $25.
andZonesdependingonwhenwerepurchased.
Yellow Zone would include West Campus, Allen Field House, and zones A, A1, M, M1, M2, and N-2 parts of what is required. Any permit required permits would cost $0.12, $1.50 and $5.
Green Zone would include Joliffe and O
R-1, R-2, R-3, R-4, S-1, X and X-1 zones.
See TRAFFIC PLAN Page 3
Senate Hearings for Budget Requests to Start Tonight
Beginning tonight the Finance and Auditing Committee of the Student Senate will hold open hearings for all groups that have submitted applications from the 1972-73 student activity fee.
That fee is expected to total about $408,850. The total will include fees to be paid by the student who will enroll at KU next fall, next spring or summer session. The fee for each student is $12 a semester for full time students, $20 a semester for enrolled in six or less hours and $3.50 for summer classes.
Although the Senate and Finance and Auditing Committee must decide how to distribute the entire fee, their job was to vote on the bill, a message of a Senate enactment last December.
As examples of the apportionment process, the Student Senate's operating budget will receive $1.50 from each student or an estimated $66,725. The University Daily Kansan will get $1.35 per student or an estimated $43,990.
"THAT ENACTMENT created eight bases for apportionment" of the activity field. Each base's area will receive a stated portion of the data by each full-time or equivalent student.
The number of "full time equivalent students" equals the total revenue divided by 12, so that money paid by part-time and summer students is included.
Although some requests were not received when Bill O'Neill, student body treasurer, prepared a preliminary budget document, the student organization amounts amounted to $192,124.
THE BIGGEST PROBLEM facing the Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee involves the $1.55 apportionment of the costs that will total an estimated $50,506.
estimating expenses a year in advance. Money allocated to a group and not used is placed in the Senate's contingency fund, as evidenced by the $73,583.16 from organization accounts that was placed in the contingency fund last year.
ANOTHER REASON why the request figure is not considered so high is that organizations were allocated more than $108,000 last year. The total request is almost double the amount received last year.
That amount is not unusually high since most groups request much more money than they need.
The amount set aside for student organizations is less this year because of increases in other areas. School councils, which did not exist last year, are one of the groups that formerly $284,440 this year for many groups that formerly came under student organizations.
Because of the requests, allocations to student organizations will present problems this week according to Dave Dillon, student body president.
"THERE ARE over $50,000 worth of requests for services under writing. Dillon and the Desert Team have received this."
He added that the shortage of funds this year would probably force groups to quit depending so much on the activity fee allocations to cover their expenses.
Besides student organizations, three other areas that are concerned about finances are the KU Athletic Department, the KU Mens basketball team and the intramural sports program.
The Athletic Department will receive $15 a student each semester, or an estimated $162,920 from the activity fee compared to the $100,000 it received this year. Because of a project deficit of $59,000 for fiscal year 2014, the department is still short of money.
"THERE'S NO DOUBT in my mind the athletic department has got to look for additional revenue," said Dillon, who is a member of the KU Athletic Board.
Dillon said he did not think the Kansas would get the increase because it would force a reduction in apportionments in other areas—a move that would require a
Dillon said an increase in general ticket admission for football would not help next year, because tickets had already been printed.
Dillon agreed that KU basketball games were inexpensive entertainment for his children. He bought a $4.50 season ticket, but he said he hated to see ticket prices go up because many other student fees would be higher at the college. "I'd say I felt like I would have gone into effect by fall."
THE UNIVERSITY Daily Kansan will receive $1.35 of each student's $12 activity fee or an estimated $43,990 next year, but the Kansan Board has requested the appartment be increased to $1.68 which would increase the Kansan's allocation to $35,760.
vote of approval by two-thirds
Intramural sports are in trouble because the program will not receive the $5,300 it usually receives from the University in addition to the Senate's allocation.
ACCORDING TO THE Senate's apportionment enactment, intramura will receive 20 cents a student each semester or after having received $3,000 this year.
In his preliminary report, O'Neill recommended an increase of 18 cents in the bank account balance even if the Finance and Auditing Committee agrees and formally recommends this measure to the Senate, it must receive two-thirds support like the Kansan councils.
After holding its hearings this week, the committee will present its recommendations at the Senate meeting April 26 and the Senate will attempt to finalize the budget.
2
Monday, April 17, 1972
University Daily Kansan
10
Kansan Photo by TERRY SHIPMAN
Drill Routine Highlight of Friday's NROTC Spring Review
Bill Stevens, Dodge City senior, center, was the drill team commander at the annual NORC Spring Review Friday. The review, in front of Allen Field House, also featured the announcement of the "Honor Company" of the year and the presentation of the Navy's
"Color Girl!" A third ceremony, the changing of the color guard, symbolized the change of NROTC leaders from this year's seniors
Garden of Eden Opening Festivities Saturday to Include Band, Bunnies
By LINDA CHAPU1
Kanyon Staff Writer
The Garden of Eden will host its grand opening Saturday complete with Playboy bunnies, a live broadcast via p站 KU21 and broadcast via p站 KU31.
When new people come to the camp, I just go up and talk to them. I let them have one day to look around, and if they show a sincere interest, we can get along with people, we glad to have them "
They needed all sorts of character references and detailed information before they knew someone to become a member.
COLLEMAN, AN electrician at the University of Kansas, has been a muslist for three years. He lives with five children live at the camp all year
The Garden of Eden is a ludist camp opened two years ago on an 80-acre piece of land north of Omaha, Nebraska, associated with the American Sunbathing Association, but now it operates independent of any other garden.
Coleman commutes to Lawrence to work, and he said he loved being able to escape the city every night when he came home.
"We found we had too many disagreements in policies to remain associated with the ASA." A owner Vernon Coleman
"I sometimes start taking my clothes off in the car when I'm almost home," he said.
"Sure. I believe in clothes. But there is a proper time for nudity.
"We find the atmosphere out
here so relaxing that we lost track of time. And the campers usually just mark their time out by the sunrise and the sunset.
Coleman and his wife both said they hadn't seen anyone who had tried nudism and didn't like it.
"If we can get people to try it, the always come back. Let them be called by their full names, though, and many people are killed."
"WE HAVE doctors, lawyers, bankers, newspaper editors." Mrs. Coleman said.
The Colemans said they had members from Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska. They said their publicity had received a response, but no responses outnumbered the women's responses ten to one.
The Garden of Eden operated on a yearly fee basis in the past but has changed its policy so that people can come on a day to day basis for $3 per person, couple or group. The Garden of Eden free of charge
THE COLEMANS have built a new TEAM to the camp, a volleyball court, horse shoe pitching courts and have built up the
Student Senate Choice Disputed
By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
David Hull, Whittier, Calif.
junior and one of two students not approved by the Student Senate last Wednesday as members of the Senate Committee on Appeal to appeal to either the Senate at its next meeting or the Student Rights Committee in an effort to support the Union Operating Board.
Hull, who was originally recommended by the Senate Committee Board which in turn recommended him to the Senate committee applicants to the Senate for approval, said Sunday he has washing his appeal on a charge of conflict of interest and that he is being urged by Union Operating Board members
"I DON'T think that any of the Committee Board members should be elected to a Senate committee," Hull said. "If you want to be on a committee, you must be on the Committee Board."
Hull said that he disapproved of the selection of Richard Mackenzie, Hilburn's first year law student in the office to Operate the Board because Mackenzie was also a member of the vice-member Committee Board.
Hull said Mackenzie's election to the Union Operating Board was, in effect, actually a conflict of interest. Hull said that although Mackenzie had not been involved in the Committee Board, he had spoken in his own behalf at the Senate meeting.
Hull said that technicize, under the Senate Code, his charge of conflict of interest because he had reimbursed any claims to monetary benefit on the position, advantage ground for conflict of interest under the code applicable when a Senator places himself in a own behalf, Hull said.
Hull said that he was planning to propose an amendment to the code that would not allow any member of the Committee Board to serve on any Senate Com-mittee, but temporarily resigned from the board. He no part in the selection of the committee he was applying for.
HULL SAID he was not attacking the Mackenzie but masked the Mackenzie had openly campaigned for the Committee Board
so that he could become a member of the Union Operating Board, but was attacking the board and disallowed this kind of activity. Hull said the system was setup so that members would have ownership on the Union Operating Board was to become a member of the Committee Board, and he would be involved.
Mackenzie was elected to the Union Operating Board after he and Molly Laflin, Lawrence Committee Board member, submitted alternate report to the majority Committee Board report, asking for membership changes in three committees on the grounds that she was not representative of minority groups. Laflin and Mackenzie also said the proposed Union board was "dominated by SUA players."
LAFIL AND Mackenzie told the Senate that the Union Operating Board already had run out of additional addition of two more SUA members. Hui and the other officers were in charge of the Operating Board member Dave Murfur. Wichita sophomore, would not provide wide enough experience.
Mackenzie then appealed to the Senate to elect him to the Union Operating Board. He told the Senate of plans he and Laflin had formulated to improve the food supply in the Union, which he termed the worst university food service that he had ever seen.
Several senators at the meeting charged that Mackenzie was using his position on the Committee Board to be elected to the Senate. Mr. Mackenzie said that this was the way it had been done in the past and that he had openly campaigned for the Committee Board on the premise that he would be charged to the Union Operating Board.
"I REALLY wanted to be on the Union Operating Board, and since in the past all the Union Operating Board members either with the president or vice-president or were on the Committee Board, I ran for the Committee Board with the express condition that I could be on the Operating Board." Mackenzie said.
Downtown Beautification To Begin This Summer
"I was hard pressed to find any exception to this arrangement. I
Brian Kubota, architect for the downtown beautification project, explained plans to about 40 students and officials Friday morning at City Hall.
The major portion of the project will be federally funded through the University Development Program, the city will fund the removal of the 'crown' and downtown buildings which help finance the new sidewalks.
Parking meters will be attached to new streetlights and bricks will be laid around each streetlight pole. Kabota said these 'sawtooth curbs' would expand to 70 or 75 spaces for each block and parking would be at a 45 degree angle instead of 60 degrees.
Kubota said the plans included the planting of 210 trees in the four-block downtown area.
Wheelchair ramps will be placed in a raised bench. Trash receptacles and two drinking foundations will be put at the three mid-block
Eighteen inches of the "crown," or elevation, of Massachusetts Street will be
According to Don Schaake,
Program director, the
construction should begin in June
and be completed by Oct. 1.
Mackenzie was not on the Committee Board's majority recommendation, because David Dilhout, Hutchinson junior, was a member of the Committee Board, said the Committee Board objected to the idea that Mackenzie had campaigned for the Committee board so that he could put himself on the Union Operating Board.
Officials of Housing and Urban Development in Kansas City, Mo., attended March 16 to the approved beautification project planned by members of the Lawrence Woodhood Development Program.
removed so that drainage will be directed toward parking. No traffic pattern in the downtown area but a change in the beautification would be beneficial.
saw no reason to assume that it would be any different this time."
Dillon said that Mackenzie's position on the Committee Board gave him an unfair advantage over everyone else.
DILLON SAID it was the Senate committee members, and since the Senate elected Mackenzie to the Union Operating Board, he was removed.
decision and satisfied with all the committees approved by the Senate.
Dillon questioned, however, whether the Senate should have taken on the job that they had taken up before he was sworn. He said the Senate should have given Hull, who was not present at the meeting, an opportunity to speak instead of going on hearsey and making changes in the board recommendations.
Hull also questioned the Senate's action without hearing the petition, and he said he was not notified or asked to come to the Senate.
"I would think that if the Senate would remove someone from a committee that they had been part of, they would want to hear both sides of
the story instead of just one," Hull said.
Mackenzie said Sunday that he thought Hull had ample representation as the Senate of people who spoke for him.
In response to the charge that he was an "SUA jock," Hull said, "My claim is that I am a student of the University and should be considered on my individual behalf as I have been claimed at SUA board meetings that the student body was my constituency."
HULI SAID that he also had managemen-
ture to improve Union managemen-
ture, and service in the Union, but he did not think that this was mentioned.
Loyalty Oath Required by Law Of All State Employes at KU
Every employee of the state of Kansas is required by the Kansas constitution to take a loyalty oath before every job, failure or refusal to take the oath periodically can lead to dismissal from the employee position.
According to Chuck Burrows, assistant university compraller, "Anyone who wants to get paid must take the oath."
The oath reads, "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support the constitution of the
United States and the constitution, of the state of Kansas and frequently discharge the duties of her employment. So help me God."
State employees are required to sign the oath when they fill out their income tax exemption form. The form is bottom of the form and its signed
Burrows said that he knew of no one who had refused to take the oath, despite the fact that those employees who simply didn't like it.
at the same time as the form itself.
Burrows said that he knew of no cases that had tested the oath, but one of those oath, which replaces an oath that was declared unconstitutional in 1972, does.
The old oath, first adopted in ancient Greece, is the case of Ehrenreich versus Landerholm because it specified mere membership in an army.
FEMINISM WORKSHOPS Tuesday, April 18
Political and Economic Aspects of Feminism
★ Women and Their Bodies
Women-Identified Women
All Three Held at 10:30,2:30 and 3:30. (Men Invited to Our 2:30 Session)
Women and The Law Workshop (1:30 only)
Parlors A, B and C in the Student Union
If you use tampons, you already know how to use the internal deodorant... Norforms. Norforms VOLUME LABEL
FREE WOMENS DANCE
8 to 12 p.m. in the Big 8 Room
CHILD CARE PROVIDED
Sponsored by Womens Coalition
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Stopping feminine odor is easier than you think. Each tiny as-a-fingergirl Notforma's safe to safe insert as a tiny tampon. Just insert - it begins dissolving instantly to kill bacteria, stop feminine odor where it may internally, in the vaginal tract.
beach since last year. They plan to build a club house with an indoor swimming pool and a large lake on the 80-acre tract.
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"It won't be perfect like the Garden of Eden," Coleman said, "but we're doing the best we can."
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OUTSTANDING WOMEN SCHOLARSHIPS
Applications for scholarships for outstanding women students may be picked up at the Dean of Women office 220 Strong Hall. Applications due 3:30 p.m. April 18, 1972
Monday, April 17. 1972
es
:
University Daily Kansan
e the said, we
Chinese Pandas Now in D.C. Zoo
WASHINGTON (AP)—Two giant pandas from China arrived early Sunday at their new home in Beijing, where they immediately went into seclusion.
"They won't be unveiled for two or three days, maybe a week," said a zoo spokesman. "You have to come along, soon, to see it along together fine."
The same could not be said for Milton and Malinda, the two muskets from China in exchange for the two giant pandas. They were born on December 12, 1976, in China in exchange for the two giant pandas. They were born on December 12, 1976, in China in exchange for the two giant pandas.
Milton is "suffering from a skin disease, portions of the fur on the sides are falling out, and the animal coughs at times," the report said. "The "Matilda" is in somewhat bad shape also."
The pandas were eating bamboo and getting used to their new air-conditioned quarters at National Zoo, designed so that if the animals prove incompatible each can eat together, they can and private entrance into the adjonina zonga garden.
Though the zoo was packed with visitors, the panda house was dark, locked and looked uncomfortable. The park was packed in the front yard.
The 18-month-old pandas, one
They will be cared for by Larry Collins, a zoologist who returned recently from the London Zoo and studied Chi Chi, its giant daffan.
male and one female, landed at Andrews Air Force Base, Md. shortly before 8 a.m. and were taken by truck to the zoo.
"They must be carrying state secrets," a duty officer at the base told a reporter trying to find him. "We haven't been told anything. Their travel plans are more closely guarded than Henry Kissinger's." Even the names of animal wires were unclosed.
Traffic Plan
The pandas were to be given thorough physical examinations at the zoo and allowed to rest before being shown to the public.
Four other zoookeeper, chosen from among a hordle of applicants for the job, had been on same question 150 times a day without getting intolerant," also saying.
Also aboard the special mission was Dr. Theodore Reed director of the National Zoo who visited Ting Hung, director of the Peking Bureau of Public Services, and Yang Chang, described the park as "a natural wonder."
Continued from Page 1
Green permits would cost $15, $10
and $5.
Two color permits would be available for motorcicles: Blue for D H, L, R and T zones, and red for motorcycle permits would cost $20, $12.50 and $5. Permits for light vehicles and permanent disability permits would cost $20, $12.50 and $5. Service vehicle permits would be
The U-Z permit would be eliminated. Those now出售 U-Z permits could purchase a color zone permit and would receive a sticker for any vehicle with the permit.
The departmental pass privilege would be continued.
FOR THE FIRST time, permits would be available at no charge to retired faculty and students and their widows or widowers.
Temporary parking permits would be available in two locations. Parking at a day, $ a week or $ a month, red; for all zones except those within the controlled-access area of the city. Parking at one of the blue temporary permits.
Visitors and guests with no permit would be allowed to park only at metered areas or in gate-operated lots.
THE PLAN would retain 24 hour, year-around control of the lot behind Watkins and H, L, and V zones.
Residence hall permits include Stouffer Apartments, would cost $15, $10 and $8. Residents purchased. Residents would automatically have the right to purchase a Green Zone permit.
Traffic control stations would
--continue to maintain hours, but the one-way traffic pattern would be in effect at all times.
2 KU Students Are Awarded Study Grants
J. A. Burzle, director of Foreign Study and a Fulbright advisor, announced recently that he will graduate student in history, was selected by the Board of Foreign Scholarships for a graduate study award in Colombia for 1972-73 under the Fulbright-Hays Full
Park will leave Lawrence at the end of July and begin work in early August. His wife and two children, many him to Colombia. Park said.
Park will spend nine months in Bogota doing research in the local archives on the policies of the Colombian government and the local of Colombia from 1860-1894.
Burzie also announced that Lynch Nierberman, the Chicago senior in anthropology, has been awarded a study grant under the Education for an intensive study program in Thai at Cornell and provides government funds for a foreign language scholarship.
Kansan Signup Ends Tuesday
Students who have applied for news staff positions on the fall Kansan should sign up by 10 a.m. Tuesday, the sheet is posted on the Kansan bulletin board, which is west of the newsroom in Flint Hall. Only students who have previously attended Kansan should schedule an interview.
Applications for summer staff positions except editor and business manager are due at 5 p.m. today. They should be in the Lawrence senior and Kirkman editor, or Carol Young, Cocoa Beach, Fla., graduate student and business manager.
The new system would be staffed with "meter maids" and other non-officer personnel.
"We hope to get patrolmen out if the control stations and back to their real duty—that of enforcement." Malinowski said.
of the control stations and back to their cell - that of on-road. Malinskoy, said. Projected sales would include $300,000 budget for the new program would include $800,100 from fines, $110,100 from meters and from meters. Sales of temporary permits and of parking space at athletic events would provide students to use to be maintained, improve and expand parking lots and to pay students to man traffic control systems.
THE NEW PLAN would produce income for future improvements of congested intersections and parking lots, to improve safety properly with present income, Mainnowsky said. The plan would also increase drive on Memorial Drive by about 50 vehicles, and would increase Jayhawk Boulevard parking to about 160 spaces.
News Briefs By The Associated Press
Nixon Commends Apollo 16
WASHINGTON—President Nixon watched the Apollo 16 blastoff on television Sunday and later vowed best wishes to the three crew members heading for man's first landing on the lunar highlands. The White House reported Nixon had extended congratulations to "the entire Apollo team on another flawless launch." Presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler and the chief executive "joins astronauts Mattingly, Duke and Young a successful mission to lunar highlands and a safe return home."
McGovern Backers Balk
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—Kansas supporters or son, George McGovern, D-S.D., have taken issue with the call for uncommitted delegates to the National Democratic Convention by Gov. Robert Docking and party regulators in the state. At present, 320 delegates from Kansas are committed to McGovern, who does not have Docking's support.
s i u m e the voters of Kansas, who have elected Robert Docking three times," make him understand he is supposed to represent the voters, said Michael Theno of suburban Overland Park, a McGovern coach. It is ironic that Docking is calling for an amendment in the ballot to commit to Hubert Humphrey, Theno said. Kansas will send 35 delegates to the National Convention at Maui Beach in May.
Japanese Novelist Dies
YOKOHAMA, Japan-Nobel Prize winning novelist Yasuari Kawabati committed suicide Sunday in his workroom at an apartment house in Zushi, a seaside resort city near here, police reported. He was 72 and had been in ill health. While a student at Tokyo University, Kawabati began writing fiction and won nationwide accclaim as one of Japan's most promising novels. In 1968, Kawabati became the first Japanese ever awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. — A.U.S. congressional plane and a royal Jordanian jet carrying King Hussein and his party touched wingtips while taxing at the Kennedy Space Center Sunday. A space agency spokesman said there were no injuries.
Close Call for Hussein Jet
ENGINEERING
Applications for officers to serve on the Engineering Council during 1972-1973 may be picked up in 111 Marvin. Positions are: President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Record Secretary, and Corresponding Secretary. Applications must be returned by 2 p.m. Friday April 21. Voting will be April 24 and 25 in Learned Hall. For further information contact the Dean's office or Lee Knapp, Corresponding Secretary, at 843-6607. Note, you must be in engineering to qualify.
DINGERSON
U.S. Bombs Near Hanoi
SAIGON (AP)—Hundreds of U.S. bombers attacking in deep in Vietnam Sunday, caused heavy casualties on hand and Haiphong in hospitals. The U.S. Command officer, Boevi Vuong, who was reported hit at Haiphong.
American pilots reported searing fireballs and collisions of black bombs from around the North Vietnamese capital and Haiphong, the seaport funnel for the Vietnam Air Force, mainly from the Soviet Union. Attacks were carried out by B52 bombers and fighters-bombers.
It said reinforcements had faded before an Inlet Ago the city that President W. Thieu ordered held at all cost thus was in full government
The South Vietnamese
the South Vietnamese
succeeds at the same time in
the ground war around An Loc,
the North Vietnamese siege 60 miles
THE U.S. COMMAND reported that BS25 were also in action against the North Vietnamese near An Loc.
Whether it be a Spring party or your wedding outfits--We've got the widest selection of formal wear in Lawrence. The Rhett Butler is shown above and comes in five colors. For your formalwear needs, visit
Elsewhere in the South, U.S. forces came under attack and two Americans were reported killed by a US drone. A Command spokesman, in
University Shop
The U.S. airmen were listed as missing and a third was reported rescued.
HANOI REPORTED that one B52 and 14 smaller planes were shot down.
confirming early Monday that areas near Hanoi had been attacked by U.S. forces and Stratfortresses hit Haiphong and smaller tactical jetters fighting bombers attacked near Hanoi. The United States claimed Hanoi itself was the target.
At the West End of Campus
Late reports indicated that two tactical fighter-bombers were shot down and that all BS25 were safely, the Command said.
It reported the enemy fired thousands of rounds of antiaircraft shells and about 200 surface-to-air missiles, the two SAMs that American pilots call flying telephone phones.
Its official Vietnam News Agency said a Soviet ship was damaged and a crewman wounded on the deck on Hankou's 35 miles east of Hanau. The U.S. Command said the go to
"The tactical air and B52 strikes in North Vietnam apparently caught the enemy in a
The U.S. Command said the disaster caused heavy damage to fuel facilities and fuel stations. It indicated the North Vietnam were caught by surprise.
JAZZ ARTIST
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IN CONCERT
8 p.m. K.S.U. Auditorium
Tickets $2.50 and $3.00
April 28, Friday
Sponsored by the Black Student Union as part of the "Longest Weekend Ever"
also
Dick Gregory will speak at an all university convocation at 1:30 p.m. April 28
considerable state of confusion and disarray," the Command said.
"Many of the missiles were fired erratically," said a Command spokesman, Maj. Robert O'Brien.
"Preliminary assessment of the strikes on military tactical storage facilities in Haighip and on the outskirts of Hanoi received heavy support."
THE B52 BOMBERS,
America's most powerful
warplanes, carry up to 30 tons of
weapons and are the largest of
the smaller tactical bombers.
The Command said in a statement. "The strikes against us and our truck parks, warehouses areas and other logistics facilities will be continued."
capability to continue military activities in South Vietnam."
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--profit of about 4 cents on the dollar
Doesn't General Electric realize the days of enormous corporate profits are over?
There was a time, fifty or sixty years ago, when a major corporation in America might expect profits of $2 billion on twenty-five cents on the sales dollar.
Those days are over. But not everybody realizes it.
What would you call enormous?
In 1970, Fortune's Top 500 industrial corporations realized an average
$
General Electric fared slightly better than average. Last year, our profits amounted to about 5 cents on the dollar.
We are occasionally attacked, along with business in the face of "profortitle"."
People argue that if social progress is to be made, business must make it. And that profits stand in the way of social progress.
We would argue quite the opposite.
The business of business is not just business.
The purpose of a business, as we see it, is to produce and distribute necessary goods and serv- lices to the profit of society ... and the business itself.
A business must reflect society's needs. Economic, political, legal and moral, as well as social. It must change as society changes and, to some extent, influence those changes.
How much profit is enough to keep a business operating? How much is too much? It's hard to say.
But if society profits and the business does not, the business will fold in the short run. It will have no operating funds.
busi-
ro-
e-
y.
lf.
eo-
al's
to.
ee.
However, the companies making only marginal profits from their companies provide
ing new employment, creating new products or adding to man's scientific knowledge.
Marginal companies are not the ones making the important social contributions today. For a simple reason, They can't afford to.
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
No responsible company wants a return to the days of the robber barrons. No responsible company wants an employee who can survive without the profit system.
Why are we running this ad?
General Electric is a big, technological company, with the capabilities to do a great deal of problem solving in this country.
We think profits have a direct effect on our ability to solve problems. But we realize the issue of profits is one with two sides. By telling you our side, we hope we've moved you to think about your side. Perhaps even write us about it.
We'd like to hear what you have to say. Please write to Genesee Ic. Dept. 901 Lexington Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10021.
GENERAL ELECTRIC
4
Monday, April 17, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Garry Wills
materials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
It is amazing that such a proposal ever got past the meeting room and into the public eye. It's the sort of thing you bring up jokingly when you've soluble. Sombody says, "I know, insoluble. The Memorial Drive and Jyshawk Boulevard one-way streets and open them to everybody and install parking meters." Everybody has a good laugh: then you go on to consider serious solutions to your problem.
Parking Insanity
The citizens of this state are again going to have to assume their responsibility to finance the educational institutions that they benefit from. The funding shortages that face Kansas' institutions of higher learning are causing irreparable damage.
The fact that such a proposal has actually been suggested by a committee, or at least a vote, is
Not only are we losing our best faculty, we are crowded into inadequate facilities, denied the use of the most advanced equipment, and paying higher and higher fees anyway. But we are now being faced with hare-brained ideas such as a new way for students to Jayhawk Boulevard into a one-way parking lot, complete with parking meters, and an increase in traffic!
much damage the funding crisis has done. It has gotten so bad that it has seeped into our subconscious and somehow undermined our mentality. Here we are at a University, where we are supposed to be concerned about such things as having hearings on whether or not to adorn our campus with parking meters!
Last spring when I was in Washington interviewing the Kansas congressional delegation, one of the concerns that the Congressmen all voiced that was that young Kansans were not staying in Kansas. "We pay for education," they say, "and then another state benefits from it."
Well, that problem is being solved. The state is paying relatively less and less for the education of young Kansans. Consequently, with the resulting decline in the quality of the education being offered in the state, complemented by such aesthetic improvements on campus as parking meters, Kansas' young people will no doubt get the message. They will leave the state before they start college.
—Mike Moffet Associate Editor
Readers Respond
Traffic,Party,Women...
To the Editor:
Court
If this university is to develop a judicial structure which is it must merit, it should permit the entire individual. On April 11 the Traffic Court considered my appeal of a parking ticket which I received from a woman whose wife had taken our four-year-old son and one of his friends to visit the Natural History Museum. She saw the museum where the museum, where parking is restricted to museum visitors. A ticket was issued for a parking violation, but the ticket being written, because our car bears a staff registration sticker. But I felt the ticket would be more difficult to prove were known, for it does not seem fair that families of university staff members should not have a parking violation while visiting the museum as are enjoyed by the general public.
But the court denied my appeal. The judge who rendered the opinion was, I am told, a law professor, and said that my story was not very convincing, that probably I had been late for work or something, and had parked illegally in front of him. He pointed at what grounds he had for choosing not to be account my account of the matter. He replied that my story was improbable because there is evidence that I had not been in the Museum which could be of interest to a four-year-old child! I then asked Mr. Albin if he has any children, and he answered that At that point I left the courtroom.
As Mr. Albin obviously has no of what interests a four-year-old, he has grounded for telling me that I had given a false story under oath is in my opinion arrogant and have expected to participate in the university's judicial process, do the best possible to expect better treatment than this!
F. Allan Hanson Associate Professor of Anthropology
★★
Sophs
To the Editor.
An open letter to Jim Harrell President of the Class of 1974:
To the Editor:
Among the other weighty responsibilities of the class officers, we assume that among them is the responsibility to bound the students regarding how the dues are spent. One of the most popular ways to spend it is on class parties, and many of the class officers have bought their class cards for this specific reason.
As was promised in your class letter by you and your board for the spring semester, plan a detailed planning stages recently. In fact, everything including booking a place and band, setting a date, attending a concert, budgeting you set, had been completed by the person you had personally designated that job. In other words, the signing of the contract when you (and some unnamed people who remain a mystery) decided to go see a show, knowledge or consent of at least
one elected class officer, most of the committee chairmen, and the president of the board holders. The band, who had agreed to play for less than their usual use, and who had turned into an active engagement for engagements for that night, was not notified until four days before the scheduled time that the party would take place.
We agree that parties are not the only goal of the class organization, and we applaud the rounded program this year. But we are also aware, as you have displayed in past meetings, of the challenges we face. However, we feel that there is no room for personal whims when one is supposed to be representing all of the sophomores at the
Do you hear us now, Mr
Iarrell?
Petey Firestone,
St. Louis sophomore
Elen Reimers,
St. Louis sophomore
★★★
Rights
To the Editor:
I feel it necessary to respond to Mr. Kenneth Lucas' letter of April 4th regarding the Equal Rights Amendment. First of all, I am pleased with the statement that constitutional amendments should be treated as a matter of great importance. However, I do not agree that Kansas acted in an irresponsible way in hearing the ERA without hearings.
discrimination, was amended to include sex. This says "the practice or policy of sex discrimination in employment individuals in employment relations, in relation to free and public accommodations or in housing by reason of race, religion, color, sex, national origin, race, etc., concern to the state, since such discrimination threatens not only the rights and privileges of the inhabitants of the state of Kansas but mencases the institutions and activities of a free democratic state."
The ERA has been introduced in the United States Congress for the past 49 years. In the past two years thousands of pages of text have been heard and printed. No more study is necessary.
During the early days of statehood, Kansas made every effort to fulfilest participation in life—whether on a legal, political, or social basis. The first campaign in which he was the candidate in 1867. He did not win that day, but they did start the movement which led to the secession of Kansas in 1876.
According to Eleanor Flexer in *Century of Struggle*, it "was an unfortunate political struggle to win women the vote, should have taken place in the State of Kansas. During the territorial period in the 1850's, many New England women had become strong enough and make Kansas 'free soil', bringing with them the ideas of Margaret Fuller and Lucy Stone."
Therefore, with the passage of this bill and Kansas' long history in the struggle for equal rights, I would urge the legislature acted irresponsibly.
Also, in this session of the Kansas legislature Senate Bill No. 573, an act relating to
In response to Mr. Lucas' last statement that "it may be necessary to treat the two sexes equally," in the Equal Rights Amendment there is no precclusion of legislation which relates to a physical characteristic long as the characteristic is found in all women and no men, or all men and no women. Therefore, arbitrary distinctions are the most women want to eliminate.
Karen Keesling Assistant Dean of Womer
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations. Students must provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
Letters Policy
1234567890
Boob Tube Claims First Victim
"Wisconsin is the state where I grew up and where I started in political work; I think I know it, and it's a natural for Lindsay."
Those are the words of Jerry Bruno, the legendary advance man for the Kennedy. They were spoken in a book predicting the techniques by which—to quote a chapter head—"Lindsay Will Beat Nixon in 1972."
--of the sheerly passive state in which so much of the public plops down in front of the TV.
Lindsay, it turned out, could not even beat Wallace in 1972—nor Jackson; nc morGovernment, Humphrey, Muskie. True, he did beat Patsy Mink; so perhaps his he-man chest-thumpings were not entirely in vain.
All this happened in the very primary Bruno thought he could serve up to Lindsay on a platter. (Last week Mr. Bruno lost employment on the Lindsay
Bruno cannot complain that disaster came from deserting his strategy. His game plan called for tricky little plays in order to get the senior citizen's home. Something that's visual . . . " Bruno outidd himself—he had Lindsey not only visit a marginally lower-poor middle-class home, but bunk down on the living room couch.
Lindsey in the crud of some polluted water in Florida. And we should not forget the great idea Lindsey's men fell back on when the poll showed how far he was dropping in the race. They called in another loser—Congressman Paul Ryan—to brake with him in mid-water and help drag him down by the neck.
That was even cuter than dunking
"Wisconsin," Bruno wrote, "is comparatively easy" (for Lindsay to win). Just let the glamour rub off on people: "I would emphasize excitement ... there are kid; all over America whose mothers have hoped they will be models or dancers or on TV-they wouldn't pass this chance" (the boy who seemed by the eye who is seen so often on the Johnny Carson show).
It is somewhat comforting to find things are not quite that easy. Many people do not watch the news on TV, or automatically tune out political (and other ads). What they do see on the screen as a situation staged. The old phone caller rallies the door invasions with telephone for candidate--makes people talk to one another, engage minds in a common setting, do something. It pushes on out
The Lindsay campaign was based on a belief that TV changes minds in the privacy of each person's living room—with some people having the right, roshowing fertilizer) which only newcomers attend will, at one remove, be "attended" by thousands who tune in to the program.
The idea that TV can "sell": a candidate who is包装, kept off from the public, slipped almost subliminally, into the voters' consciousness, zapping people with the tube's glow—all that nonsense was spread by Joe McGinnis' book on the Nixon victory in 1968. (Nixon won despite the fact that he supported it.) Lindsay has given us a textbook illustration of the fact that getting elected is more complicated than McGinnis knew.
Meamwhile, the hokey rallies of George Wallace keep rolling on, bringing people together, getting them into shape. But even though Wallace is not at all the cool McLahan politician of the TV age—but he is alive, as a candidate, and Lindsay is dead. We are not the slaves of the boob tule story, but we are the stars that can be drawn from this season's defeat.
TV has a part to play in the modern campaign. Sometimes it is a large part—as in the Nixon-Kennedy debate but even in that year, Nixon lost to Hillary Clinton by defeated himself by bad strategic choices of which submitting to the debate was only a single (though a typical) example. It is not the whole truth—but closer to it—that Nixon lost to Hillary Clinton by defeated him not grasped how not to use TV.
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
LAWS ARE DESIGNED TO PROTECT SOCIETY
---
WHEN CRIMINALS BREAK THE LAW AND GET AWAY WITH IT-
THE RESULT IS FALLING STOCKS, RISING UNEMPLOYMENT, CRIME IN THE STREETS, ANARCHY.
SO PROSECUTE CRIMINALS!
THE RESULT IS RISING VIOLENCE, CRIME IN THE STREETS, ANARCHY.
1
AND SUPPORT CORPORATE CRIME!
---
WHEN BIG CORPORATIONS
BREAK THE LAW AND
DON'T GET AWAY WITH IT.
---
KEEP AMERICA STRONG!
Bent. Publishes papers in Mail Syndrome.
4-10
4. 16 © 1972 JULIUS VENEZIA
James J. Kilpatrick
Nixon's Press Critics Indicted
WASHINGTON — James Keogh's new book, "President Nixon and the resis, is a big part of the weekend. The next wind that blows from Washington will bring the honing sound of steel on stone. Keogh has carved his onetime weapon they will soon be slicing back.
Keogh's credentials as a critic of the press go back to 1938, when he left Creighton University to attend Harvard-Hereford. After 13 years he moved to New York as a writer on national affairs for Time. He was the magazine's executive editor when he left in 1960 to begin three years in the White House as a writer and writing aide to Nixon.
In defending the President he served, Keogh risks the old man's trust. Such a response won't do. Keogh has earned his hash-marks; he is an old pro, and his stinging cry was a thoroughly professional job.
He charges major elements of the American press, including a debate over deliberate, pervasive, and persistent bias against the Nixon
manipulation. He acknowledges that every president has left the office, and he insists that he insists that in the case of Nixon, the mistreatment has been so gross and so constant as to undermine the integrity the press itself.
Keigh's pattern of unfairness is woven of such major issues as Vietnam and of such trivial matters as the Rumfield private mansion. Asked if he involved Jack Anderson's charge on September 22, 1989, that antipoverty czar Donald Rumfield had diverted money from the mansion to build a "more luxurious look," including "the ultimate in executive status symbols: A private bathroom." Keigh denounces the Anderson column utterly and completely untrue.
more serious, perhaps, was the incident of July 7 and 8, 1970, when ABC and more particularly Vanderbilt involved Vanderbilt's Chancellor Alexander Heard and Howard University's President Edward Burke, who have warned Nixon in a private meeting with him that campus
arrest had reached such critical level that numerous colleges might not even be able to open in the fall. Berkeley, they said, will have the President, was already dead, and Columbia University dying.
Keogh, who had sat in on the meeting, says flatly that the network account "was just not true." Dr. Heard himself denounced the story as "totally unfounded" and "completely inaccurate." But it was not until August 25, seven weeks later, he delivered himself of two sentences agreeing that "part of what we reported was based on misinformation."
Whatever damage the press may have inflicted on Nixon, in Keogh's view the press has done much greater damage to itself. In his closing pages, Keogh draws a damning picture of confidence, in Kenneth Clark's phrase, that "more than anything else, kills a civilization." If our own civilization declines, says Keogh, "history will not let American journalism escape its fate under the face of the responsibility."
His argument here is that as
the 1970s began, many persons "were beginning to perceive that they were too often getting a distorted view of current history from those who were supposed to be their best sources of information." Keogh is convinced that many top reporters have lost sight of their people and are the people what is going on—not to sell a point of view, but to inform and explain."
The indictment, sad to say, has much validity. One of the things that are going on right now is an outright Communist invasion of
Laos, Cambodia, and South Vietnam. This warfare is conventional warfare, not to be explained as the acts of mere guerrillas or revolutionaries. But it is part of the liberals' uncontainable contempt for South Vietnam rarely to see the enemy troops either as communists or as invaders. This is the blinkered vision that troubles Keigh. All of us who count ourselves part of the working press should be troubled, too.
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
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Griff and the Unicorn
Kansas was the seventh state to and complete suffrage to en-
ance a full seven years before press passed the 19th
endment. It seems only fitting proper that Kansas is now
seventh state to ratify the Civil Rights Amendment.
1923 two members of the
Congressional
Senator, and later
ment, Charles Curtis,
Saman Daniel
of Susan B.
the first
rights
By Sokoloff
WHAP!
SANDERS
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff.
Monday, April 17, 1972
5
High Schoolers Recruited
By CANDY HERBERT
Kansas Staff Writer
Whether or not to come to the University of Kansas was the question the "Spring at KU" program, sponsored by the KU Athletics Department, helped answer for 18 undecided high school students last Saturday.
The orientation program began at 9:30 a.m. with a general session in the Kansas Union. The samil, informal English Room, where the session was held, set up an office warm, friendly and low-key.
Rick M. McLaughlin, freshman
class president from Dallas,
Texas and then as a
student, "we started the
program this year because we
of our high school."
South there is to be mere nes. But bultes. But see the for r as this. This that who of the doubled,
Guest panelists will be Francis L. Carney, professor of academic affairs, Earl Neilring, associate professor of political science, Donald McCoy, professor of history,
3-Man Panel To Discuss Presidency
The discussions are sponsored by the SUA Forum Series and by Student Vote.
Tim Trecay, Wilmette senior,
and recently that he instigated
a new attack against him,
thought there was a lack of
knowledge about the president's
The first of two panel
discussions will be
president of the United States is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas
Treacy said a person could not select a man for president if he didn't know what the job would require.
"I started thinking about politics," Treacy said, "and asked myself the question 'What does the president do?'"
He said the first panel would discuss "What does the guy do on a day to day basis?"
The second panel discussion will deal with the press and its possible effect on the elections.
"A lot of people have questions about the press coverage," she said. "What is a partisan or objective what is a partisan or objective. Is the guy writing the article saying something or is he saying nothing who said it is saying something?"
University Daily Kansan
空
off
The press discussion is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. April 24 in the Forum Room.
Treacy said he hoped more discussions would be held in the summer and fall.
KU, and we wanted to share this pride with high school students who were interested in coming to KU as freshmen."
MCLAUGHLIN SAID the program would consist of a tour of the University and a question about God half-way through the tour.
Present to answer questions were Dave Parker, assistant to the dean of men, and Judy Haddad, assistant to the dean of Governor and president director of Government Sarards. Pearson residence hall.
John Myers, director of school relations, whose office worked with McLaughlin to initiate a spiring at-home learning program for personal atmosphere.
Myers said, "This is designed, as an informational Weop. How can we do that? The advantage of the freshmen students to ask any questions you may have."
Myers said the tour was really just an "exposure" to the University.
"The tour will show you a lot of the university but none of it completely. We hope your curiosity will prompt you to come back for a deeper look, once you've acquainted you with KU," he said.
THE WHRILDIN TOUR of the campus began with a walk to the Museum of Natural History in Philadelphia and then to the Museum. McLaughlin pointed out the uses of each museum, and included in their collections.
After a visit to Watson Library, where McLaughlin explained the reserve rooms, the government library and the branch library system, the
From Fraser the students split up into small groups, each headed by a freshman guide, to look at the campus and look at the rest of the campus.
tour headed towards Fraser Hall to look at an average KU classroom.
AT SUMMERFIELD HALL the groups came together for a question and answer period with McLaughlin Parker and Haddad.
Here again, the informality of the program was apparent. Topics ranging from the College Within a College system to extra-curricular activities were discussed, and students were encouraged to bring up questions and concerning any aspect of KU.
The program ended with a box lunch in the Meadowlark Room of the Union.
After a quick look at Robinson Gymnasium, a drive through the Daisy Hill area and the west campus, the tour stopped at Oliver Hall. Here the students visit an average residence hall.
Kim Boyer, Olathe High School senior, said the program had personalized KU for her.
"The best part was talking to the freshmen guides and learning about their personal experiences and what they had discouraged about the bigness of KU and made the school seem so much more friendly and per-
ANGIE GEHBARDT, another Olathe学生, agreed that the program's strength came from a personal enthusiasm for KU.
Gebhardt said, "I had been to KU before, but this tour taught me a lot about the campus that I
hadn't learned. It gave the school such a friendly atmosphere."
MelLaughlin said he originally became involved in the program as part of his campaign platform for freshman class president.
"I felt that something needed to be done after looking at the decreasing freshman enrollment at KU," McLaughlin said.
McLAUGHLIN SAID letters and registration blanks for the program were sent to high school students who had expressed interest in KU. He said that he would send his letters to high school principals and guidance counselors.
"Next year we hope to have these tours on a year-round basis, with all interested high school students attending from coming on the same weekend."
"This year's program was just
late," he said. "We had about 16 students
last weekend, April 8, and we
deferred for next weekend,
April 10."
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About 130 journalism students from 38 Kansas high schools competed in the state writing contest. The students are
544 W.23rd 842-2266
Kemp was one of nine speakers who participated in the annual spring conference of the Kansas State Teachers Associations and Advisers (KOPA) conjunction with the first Kansas Scholastic Press Association state writing contest at the Kansas State Saturday journalism advisers that the school newspaper of the 1970s showed less concern with the traditional "bulletin board" seeking behind news events and asking "How, why and so what."
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"The underground press came and went and I hope that the establishment press will be this in that the school newspaper, a forum for students," Gretchen Kemp, professor of journalism and director of the high school library at Indiana University, said Saturday.
Cantata nell'originale
The University of Kansas Theatre and the School of Fine Arts present LA BOHEME. An Opera by Puccini. (Sung in Italian)
Journalism Pupils, Advisers Convene for Contest, Meeting
Musical directing by GEORGE LAWNER
Stage directing by PIERRE LAROCHE
April 18,19,21,22 at 8:00 p.m.
Matinee April 23 at 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre—Murphy Hall
TICKET RESERVATION 864-3982
Journalism, and Dana Leibengood, assistant professor of journalism, is the organization's executive secretary.
members of the Kansas
Kansas Association,
which was formed in 1904,
student-division of KOPA.
KOPA headquarters are in the
city.
SUA Group Fare Flights
to Chicago, NYC, Paris and Luxembourg
BOOKING DEADLINE TODAY!
Contact: SUA Travel
Kansas Union 864-3477
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6
Monday, April 17, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Directors, Students Differ Over Casting Procedures
By MARCIA CLIFTON
Kenyan Staff Writer
According to Tom Rea,
associate professor of speech and
drama and assistant director of
theatre at the University of
theater's fine, great and
exceptional performances" stem
from the once-a-seemester casting
Rea said recently that at the training of the semester open tap dance classes, she had students, not just speech and drama materials in being in one of her classes.
"We do 13 full productions during the year," Rea said, "and that requires a lot of actors, so we make sure they're math majors or anything else. We rely on the whole student body. It's the only way."
MICHAEL NASH, assistant instructor in speech and drama, was graduated from semester were auditioned for in September, but that this year Hamlet was included as well the rest of the early rehearsal requirements.
Nahad said on the first night the teacher read and then posted lists of callbacks for students they were interested in having in their classrooms.
"Actors and actresses are not randomly assigned." Nash said of the show's cast, "We back for all the shows or more 'han one, so they can choose."
Jack T. Brooking, professor of speech and drama, said these mass readings lasted for about a half hour as the students read, the directors listen to the students they've called back to three times this last two or three nights.
AFTER THE DIRECTORS have addressed to everyone read they wrote and work out any overlaps that might occur with actors and work out any overlaps that might occur with actors and work out any overlaps.
"In my opinion," Nash said, "there is no other way. From a director's standpoint, it means that you only should otherwise get all the good people, so this offers the advantage of having some chance of bargaining. Consequently, you get relatively balanced casts.
"ITS ADVANTAGEOUS for the student because he'll know exactly when he'll be tied up with the semester," Brooking said.
Brooking said another advantage for directing the whole team's pool." He, too, agreed that the first show of the season would get underway.
"I wish we could arrive at a better system for the first two nights, though." Brooking said. He said there were approximately eleven people who so it was a matter of seeing and hearing a lot of people.
"But there are lots and lots of callbacks." Brooking said.
Cynthia Appley, Akron, Ia., junior, is a student who also expressed concern over the first night of mass readings.
"It it's difficult to prove what you can do in just a two-minute talk," he said. "Backs," she said. "For FILM in Her Ear, the professor directing the play called back about who could read the words."
APPLEY SAID SINCE this was her first year here and since she'd come from a college that had used show-by-show casting, she were hired and especially concerned because "they didn't know me."
'Black Woman' To Be Subject Of 3-Day Event
The black women residents at Hashinger Hall are presenting a three-day program which starts with a visit to the Essence of a Black Woman."
At 7 tonight the Hashinger women and the black women residents will be braving black poetry. At 3:30 p.m. i.m. Kaiser, a Kansas City, Mo., high school author of "Soul Cookbook," will speak on the topic of the Minority Business Women. Kaiser will speak on the group of black high school girls in the Greater Kansas City area who prepare themselves for college.
Janice Blackmon, Kansas City junior and coordinator of the three-day program, said Friday that the idea for the program was originally from Hassinger, resident director, Tudy Shad.
Blackmom said Shay thought most of the white residents of Hashinger would like to know more about the black woman.
At 7 p.m. Wednesday, the black
atmosphere was filled with a
present a fashion show, after
which students from Miss Irene's
Dance Studio in Kansas City will
At 7:30 p.m. tuesday, there will be a panel discussion on the topic, "Is Women's Liberation Relevant to the Black Woman?"
"I think it should be done on a day when I don't think that toward the end of the year new people get the opportunity to get cast," Guerrra
Guerra she didn't think the directors could know exactly what they needed at the first of the year.
Some students agreed with the team's decision to keep the Park senior said it "was kick bad this year because almost everything was cast first
But on the whole, he thought it was a good idea.
"I PERSONALLY LIKE it because it is a way to get to know all the directors at once," Scott said.
Fred. Veaper. Lawrence
Grad. Veaper. of early auditioning
was that "you get it all out of
the way when you are not busy
with the game."
The disadvantage is that you have very little opportunity to determine what show you want to be in the idea. Is I, guess, to be the director or not? The shows. The directors probably try to be fair to all the students in balancing the casts through the year, and I think that this will help to make a change that the student will get cast in something." Vesper said.
Earl Truellse, a member of the resident acting company and assistant instructor in speech and drama, also liked the plan to offer an extended experience it offered in knowing when he'd be busy during the year.
A seminar in development o.
the powers was offered at least
weekend and "graduate" of the seminar
described her experience as
By KEN HARWOOD Kansan Staff Writer
By KEN HARWOOD
the graduate, a University of Kansas student, paid $10 to take this course. He was offered by William Thaw, a training for Psychic Dynamics.
After hearing Thaw lecture on campus two weeks ago, she was intrigued enough to sign up for the seminar, she said, but she was skeptical about any benefits she might gain from the course.
"I was extremely skeptical throughout the course and I was told that was the reason I was not as successful as some of the other people, but it was far beyond what I expected to chance," the student said.
SHE SAID she would have to develop more self-confidence before she could realize the ful'
I can see how the seminar can help me to have a better dream I don't need an alarm clock if I don't need to use an alarm clock any more, she said. "I can wake我 when I need it."
benefits of the seminar, but some effects were already obvious to her.
"I've been told that if I amildiable and confident in my ability to get to the point where I will no longer need glass," she said. "I can do that alone out of all my skills, it will be worth the $100 to me."
She said it was difficult for her to say exactly what she had gained from the course because she really understand how it works.
MUCH OF THE 26 hours of training, she said, involved visualization, relaxation and discussion with students who took the seminar.
able to find some physical ailment in them."
She said the results of her visualization had been verified by people who knew the people she was visualizing.
Land Worth $750,000 Given Back to Indians
"In one case, I entered the consciousness of a 3-year-old girl and described her back yard," she said, up that there was something wrong with her left leg and that was limping as I visualized her."
So far I have been able to visualize the bodies of three different people, knowing only that they were brothers and sisters they lived in, and I was
Barbara Clark, Glendora,
Salif, senior and another
graduate of a past Pyschic
Dynamics seminar, said the
semester would be offered again
in the first weekend in May.
The professor has signed up
to take the seminar that
weekend, she said.
THE PARENTS OF the girl denied there was anything wrong with the left leg. But the next day the parents told the student that the girl was hit by a dog leg by a dog and had stepped on something which hurt her foot.
The Jesuit Fathers of the Missouri Province announced Thursday 'in an unprecedented display of consciousness and a commitment, that they had worked to save $750,000 to the Prairie Ridge Potawatomi Indians of Kansas. The Potawatomi had a hard-faced challenge.
The Potawatomis had requested that the Jesuits return
the former Potawatomi land to
them for development of
programs to advance Indian自
determination. The nearly 12,000
of land contains St. Mary's
College and adjoining farm and nature.
In the 1800s, the Potawatomi gave the land to the Jesuits to develop an educational system to be used by the Indians.
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Indian Movement Seeks Aid Calls KU Apathetic to Cause
By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
The University of Kansas hasn't done enough in the area of affairs, according to Carter, a resident and Ponca Indian cochairman of the Kansas Indian Movement (ALM).
Camp said AIM's goal now is to obtain office space at the University to distribute labor opportunities for education available to the Indian. He said the information should be made available, especially to the Indians in assisting Haskell Indian Junior College.
"KU is completely apathetic towards the plight of the American Indian who wants an emigrant Camp said he had talked with a number of people who were sympathetic, but they refused to do anything about the problem and said Mr. M came along and made noise.
HASKELL STUDENTS are not given enough information regarding their eligibility to go to KU, Camp said. They think that if they are from another state they cannot attend a Kansas college, Camp thought KU should be responsible for the correct information to them
Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said Friday, "I don't think it's our place to recruit—we have to talk to the students." Rogers said the office had only a limited staff to deal with students and they couldn't go to every prospective student in Kansas.
students in this office to enter KU as freshmen than ever before," he said.
Max Griffin, assistant director of admissions, said that the office had to give the responsibility of distributing information to the individual schools. Both men indicated that information was being available and loans had been available at Haskell since last fall.
MARSHALL JACKSON,
assistant director,
of the university,
visit minority groups to distribute
information about KU, Rogers
said But, he added, the policy
to visit only upon request
"There have been more Indian
The requests for visitation are usually made in the spring, he said.
Camp said he would meet with Chancellor E. Lawrence University Jr., and Oldfather, University Attorney, today to discuss the possibility of Haskell students being residents residing in Campbell said that if Chalmers agreed, they would draw up a proposal to present to the Board
Even if the Haskell students were considered Kansas residents, Camp said, they would have been severe financial difficulty.
There are a number of Haskell students, according to Camp, who would enroll at NU next fall. To do this, he obtained scholarships. Camp said he had contacted the Financial Aid Office and he was told that the奖学金 for the 1982-73 school year had already been allocated.
ROGERS SAID that the Haskell student would have been considered for scholarships if they had applied before the school, so that the office would still accept applications for government loans.
According to Griffin, it's probably a good thing the University doesn't have a definite program set up with Haskell.
"Now that something is getting started," he said, "we won't have to go through the process of an outdated program."
Camp said AIM was asking for the support of institutes attending the University. He said that they did not know what it could do and what it could do for them.
The AIM house, 124 Louisiana St. is open to any Indian American movement and in helping his brothers at Haskell, Camp said. The house is also open to any non-American interested in the movement.
ALM has been very effective so far, Camp said. The group has been involved in many issues and pushed for change, then they back to let the original people involve taken over, he said.
"WE HAVE AN ALLIANCE with young and old," Camp said. The two boys were fighting the young fighting as they should, he said. The young Indians, he said, go to the elderly members family for advice in most matters.
Camp said the middle-aged people had been so economically poor that they hadn't get involved. They don't want to endanger what financial security they have.
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Journal Club: 11:30 a.m. Alcove B.
Kansas Union
Journal Club: 11:30 a.m., Alcove B,
Kansas Union
Speech & Drama: 11:30 a.m., Alcove B,
Academic Affairs: 12:35 p.m., English
Open Noon Till Nine Weekdays 9 to 5 Sat.
Room:
Audi-Reader. 12:30 p.m. Alcove A.
12:45 p.m. Alcove C.
X The General
Audio-Reader: 12:30 p.m. Alcove A
KURA: 12:30 p.m. Alcove C
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark
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Anthropology 1. p.m., Council Room.
Anthrosychology Development 1. p.m., Parlors A, B and C
Reclamation Center: 3:30 p.m., Oread
A and C
Reclamation Center: 3:30 p.m., Oread
Room.
English Professor, Law School
English Poetry: 4 p.m., Council Room.
Physics Colloq: 4 p.m., 332 Malott.
French & Italian 5 p.m.
Meadowbank
Room
Social Welfare Field Project: 3:30 p.m.,
Austen B
Social Welfare Field Project: 5:30 p.m.
Alcove B.
Nath Dinner: 6:30 p.m. Kansas Room
Math Dinner: 6:30 p.m. Kansas Room.
Finance & Auditing: 6:30 p.m. Regionalist
Room.
December
PUMPS: 7:30 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium
University Park Committee Open
Overcomers: 7:30 p.m., Pine Room.
SUA Lecture and Films: 7:30 p.m..
Woodruff Auditorium.
Academic Affairs: 6 p.m., Parlor A.
Student Rights and Respondibilities:
8 p.m., Oread Room.
Senior Rectal: 6 p.m., Swarthout Recital
University Park Committee Open Hearings 7:30 p.m., Big Eight Room. Spanish & Portuguese: 8 p.m., Council Room.
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Try Outs For
KU YELL LEADERS
and Clinic Monday, April 17 7 p.m.
Tryouts Wednesday, April 19 7 p.m.
at
Allen Field House
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 17, 1972
7
FILM TRAFFIC
Recent Warm Weather Helps Brown Bodies
Kansas Staff Photo by ED LALC
Unseasonally warm weather often brings out skimpy swimming suits but they are best when filled with lovely young girls as these have no rash. They're easy to pack and can be worn all summer long.
man, appears to find it prudent to keep an eye caked for any unusual response he might prove necessary. The outlook for today is uncertain.
SenEx Positions Disputed
Kansan Staff Writer
By CATHY SHERMAN
Vancouver Staff Writer
A petition urging the resignation of David Miller, law secretary, Lawrence Lawrie, senior, from the Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) is being circulated by members of the group of groupers, headed by Gus DiZegera, Lawrence graduate student and graduate school administrator.
Di Zerrega said Saturday that the call for Miller and Scott's resignation from SenEx was a major decision he made to vote against the Student Senate resolution urging state governments to remove criminal penalties for the possession, sale or distribution of firearms passed by the Senate April 31h.
Both Miller and Scott were recently elected from the University Council of Texas, which held its highest university committee.
"I want to emphasize that the issue is not that Miller and Scott are in the minority vote." Di Zerega said, "but the evidence shows that the values demonstrated by their vote against the resolution."
DI ZEREGA SAID that there were three possible reasons for Miller and Scott's vote against the resolution, all of which supported the resolution, representing the bulk of students at the University of Kansas.
Di Zerega said that if Miller and Scott voted against the resolution because they believed it violated their legalized, then their vote indicated that they were out of touch with the feelings of a group.
o Zerega said that a 'No' vote indicated that there was a lack of respect on the part of Miller and Scott for "perhaps the most basic rights of a human being; his right to his body, his mind, his mind, at least so long as he lives at peace with his fellows."
"We believe that the type of person who would not speak English is one in whom no jail for a peaceful activity has in attitude of authoritarianism and a basic disregard for human freedom that we find repugnant."
DIZEREGA SAID that if Scott and Miller voted "No" because they were concerned with the lack of a public voice by legislators in Topeka to a positive vote, then they "have no business holding a position as sensitive as the president."
Di Zerega said that student members of SenEx must be "trusted and reliable proponents of student views and interests" and that a student concerned with pleasing or mobilizing the men in charge should support police action with its attendant risks of violence
students voting their convictions and fearlessly representing their constituency.
Merrill, who has held the position since coming to KU in 1963, will devote full time to teaching and research next year.
Angino Named Chairman Of Geology Department
Between 1959 and 1985, Angio was involved in several research projects in Antarctica. For his work on the Antarctic Service Medal of the U.S. Department of Defense, the M.C Murdo Sound is named for him.
Recently, he has been involved in research and consultation on water pollution. Much of his work has dealt with water pollution and some of the problems caused by common chemicals, detergents and oil spills.
Di Zerega said that a third possible reason said the "No" vote by Miller and Scott was that they thought the presentation of the resolution at the first Senate meeting was a pressure on freshmen senators.
Di Zerega said that if this was the reasoning of Scott and Miller, they would have either made a vote of abstention or moved to table the bill. Di Zerego said that the vote of neither of these alternatives.
Ernest E. Angino has been appointed to succeed William M. Kernigan as chair of the University of Kansas department of geology. Angino will take the job.
A native of Winsted, Conn., Angino holds masters and doctoral degrees from KU. He is a faculty member at University for three years before returning to KU as chief of theochemical section of the state college system, where he is in charge. He became associate director of the survey in 1970.
DI ZEREGA SAID that the authors of the petition were not concerned about the Milner agreed with the legalization of marijuana, but that their vote was against the federal effort to resolve," that people should be free so long as they don't injure anyone else in their private sphere.
The authors of the petition thought that students who voted "Yes" had more right to hold the SenEx position than those who were closer because their values were lower. Students values, Di Zerega said.
Di Zerga said the petition was supported by a number of senators who said that some senators in the newly elected University Council also supported the petition, but were not charged with it. Scott if they should resign. He said that they could not actively oppose the petition because of conflict of interest.
Angino presently is secretary of the Geochemical Society and is a member of the U.S. National Committee on Geochemistry.
Di Zerfa said that they had code to locate the code to locate some clause that would allow for the removal of Scott and Miller from ExB, but not Dilbert.
HE SAID that the best way to
WASHINGTON (AP)—A research scientist have concluded that brown stains occur on heads of lettuce because of gas in the water.
Tests of rail cars carrying head lettuce showed more of the stains showed up on head lettuce when water was present. The heads were present. Cars with normal carbon dioxide and oxygen ratios delivered fewer of the stained heads, according to an Agricultural Research Service report.
urge their removal was to involve the students by circulating the petition.
Di Zerra said there were currently fifteen petitions being circulated, but he had no idea what the people receiving as they had not yet been returned. He said that he expected some results by the end of the week and definitely by the Senate meeting in two weeks.
Di Zerega said that they planned to present the petition to Ministry of Education, University Daily Kansan. Di Zerega said that Miller and Scott could ignore the petition, which was being presented by their acknowledgement of student feelings, they could resign from Senex or they could be dismissed.
Both Miller and Scott declined comment concerning the petition.
He said that they expected at least as many people to sign the petition as the number who voted against it, the president, vice president team.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES INTERVIEWS
"Join next year now! Become part of your Student Union Activities"
FILMS-FINE ARTS-FORUMS-TRAVEL FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS-SPECIAL EVENTS PUBLIC RELATIONS-MINORITY AFFAIRS ART-RECREATION
APRIL 18-19
KANU Schedule
Stereo 91.5 FM
Noon — News Weather Sports
12:15 p.m. — Noon Hour Concert — Campus
and Community Calendar (12:30)
1 n.m. — Book Beat
More information and interview time sign-up sheets available SUA office, 1st floor, Kansas Union
and Community Calendar (12.30)
1 p.m.-Book Beat
1:30 p.m.-French Music and French Models
TODAY Noon News Weather Sports.
Western Civ. Examination Scheduled for April 29
The Western Civilization Program is based on the belief that to be a free man, a person must be able to make rational, responsible and informed choices between the different roles which face him throughout his lifetime, James Seaver, professor of history and chairman of the Western Civilization Committee, said recently.
This year's comprehensive examination for Western students will be held on p.m. April 29 A review session and Wednesday at Thursday at Western.
lift stations.
10 p.m. News Weather Sports.
11 p.m. News Weather Sports.
12 p.m. The Arsenal Jarz.
12 p.m. News Weather Sports.
13 p.m. News Weather Sports.
14 p.m. News Weather Sports.
15 p.m. News Weather Sports.
16 p.m. Traditional Jarz.
17 p.m. Traditional Jarz.
18 p.m. News Weather Sports.
19 p.m. Rock in the
The purpose of the Western Civilization program is to acquaint students with the ideas and ideals which have shaped Western civilization and to provide them with as many views as possible of the fundamental human condition, Saver said.
10. 10 p.m. TBA—underground rock in stereo.
The program, created in 1945, has been dropped as a requirement for graduate schools. Currently, students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences must pass the Western English exam. Students in the School of Journalism must either complete the two discussion classes or pass a reading test.
Seaver said one problem with the requirement was that student test scores, with the prospect of having to take a single test over an entire year, would be
He said Western Civilization, in the form of comprehensive testing better than any other program at KU and has contributed to continuity in its development.
Another problem was that students could postpone taking the exam, increasing the
probability that they would do poorly or even have to retake the est, he said.
Registration For Fall Rush To Continue
He said the Western Civilization Committee had requested that the Educational Policy Committee reinstate the document that students take the exam completion of the discussions.
Registration for the 1972 fall rush for sororities will continue throughout the remainder of the semester in the Dean of Women in office for those for next year, Gina Saunders, Prairie Village junior and Panhellenic president said Wednesday.
All University of Kansas and
all transfer students are eligible for
rush if they have a sophomore
grade or 2.00 grade point average (on a
4 point scale) for either the
master's degree or as an overall average
There are 2,300 students mrolled in the program this semester who meet weekly with 29 graduate instructors.
Registration will cost $5 and applicants will stay at the campus during August, during rush. Doria Dochter, Overland Park junior and Panhellenic rush chairman said. "We will have four houses on August 19, 20 and 21, she said. Invitations to pledge will be prospective initiates on August 22."
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May 30,1972 $299
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8
Monday, April 17, 1972
University Daily Kansan
12
Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THREONE
Defensive Lineman Pat Ryan Pounces on Second Unit Fumble
Blue Team dominated the game both ways in game-type scrimmage Saturday in stadium
Fambrough Notes Steady Progress
Coach Don Fambrough walks away from his University of Kansas football team scrimmage more pleased each week. Saturday was the first game-type scrimmage of spring drills, and Fambrough appropriately enthusiastic afterward.
"I thought we accomplished quite a bit." Fambrigh said after the 90-minute scrimimage. "Those kids are really coming."
Farmbrough sent his No 1 offense and defense against the reserve units. The team took a loss against the reserve units.
Track Team Downs ISU Without Key Personnel
In such team sports as basketball and football, coaches emphasize winning for its own sake. Even if a game is played without fielding, every able manoses onto the field.
The University of Kansas track team, however, didn't even take the head coach to its dual with Iowa State Saturday in Ames. KU won anyway, 90-55.
"We were really looking ahead to the Kansas Relays," assistant coach Harvey Greer said. "I know you're supposed to play a game at a game, but we didn't."
Coach Bob Timmons stayed in Lawrence to continue preparations for the Relays, which start with the decathlon Wednesday. For various reasons, most of which also were related to the Relays, several of KU's too stars staved home too.
Javelin thrower Sam Colson was nursing a slight shoulder injury, and hardier Greg Lutz helped him recover. Greer said. Long jumper Mike Stull and runner Jemilee Mark and Mark Lutz were training for the 2016 Olympics.
RUDY GUEVARA, freshman shot putter, equaled his indoor best by putting the shot 58 feet, 11 inches. He placed second in the discus.
Even so, KU won 12 of the 17 events and came up with enough depth to smother the
His sidekick, Dana LeDuc, was one of those held out. LeDuc bruised a heel throwing the discus in the Texas Relays April 8.
Smith and Johnson both cleared 6-8, but Smith placed first. Burry Schur placed the
"Randy Smith and Randy Johnson really looked good in the high jump," Greer said. "They both had good shots at 6-10."
KU swept the three places in both the high jump and the triple jump. Rogers Jones led the triple jump effort with a 46-28. James and Dana Seay placed second and third.
Pole Vault- Hatcher, KU, 12:6, 2 Whitley, KU, 3
Long jump - Keay, KU, 14:5, 2 Hawkins, KU, 3
Long jump - Keay, KU, 14:5, 2 Hawkins, KU, 3
Triple jump - Jones, KU, 46:6%, 2 Robbins, KU, 3
Javelin - Holloway, ISU, 12:11, 2 Miller, KU, 3
Javelin - Holloway, ISU, 12:11, 2 Miller, KU, 3
Squat put - Guerva, KU, 58:11, 2 Herman, ISU, 3
Diamon - Franta, ISU, 15:4, 2 Guerva, KU, 3
Half jump - South, KU, 6:2, 2 Johnson, KU, 3
400 relay - Kuru (Scaurus, Stevard, Robinson, ISU, 3)
Mirae run - South, KU, 41:4, 2 Schreiber, ISU, 3
100 high jerk - Murray, KU, 47, 2 Pompey, ISU, 3
120 hard hurdles -- M. Curry, IU, 14.7, Pemu, IU.
140 dab hard -- Steep KU, 48.4, Southwell, IU.
146 dab hard -- Steep KU, 48.4, Southwell, IU.
160 dab hard -- Scavato KU, 10.9, Johnson, KU, 3.
168 dab hard -- Scavato KU, 10.9, Johnson, KU, 3.
168 mcp hard -- Scavato KU, 15.4, Deamond, KU, 3.
168 mcp hard -- Scavato KU, 15.4, Deamond, KU, 3.
140 intermediate hurdles -- M. Curry, IU, 33.9, KU.
140 intermediate hurdles -- M. Curry, IU, 33.9, KU.
120 dab hard -- Boone KU, 12.3, Southwell, IU.
120 dab hard -- Boone KU, 12.3, Southwell, IU.
178 hard hurdles -- Calen KU, 14.10, Eichner, KU.
178 hard hurdles -- Calen KU, 14.10, Eichner, KU.
Mile relay-KU -- Stopp, Bernstein, Martin, KU.
C. Kessler, M. C. (2017) A. C. (2016) E. Grimmer,
I. Neffker, N.U.
S. Stepp, B. Bonkerske, Martin.
Scavucci 90
"The reason Barry Schur did so poorly was that they had a peculiar high jump area," Greer said. "They it so you run into a gate, and it altered his approach."
GREER ALSO praised Phil Stepp, who won the 404 and ran on the winning 404 relay team, and Tom Scavucci, who won the 100 and ran on the 404 relay team.
"Bob Pelkin is really starting to come back," Greer said. "He had mono, and I didn't know."
Pelikan placed third in both the mile and three-mile. Doug Smith won the mile in 4:15:4. Jon Callen, the three-mile in 14:20.5.
"Jon Callen was really looking strong," Greer said. "When he finished the three-mile, he looked like he could have run another mile."
Star Returns; Soccer Team Wins Tourney
The University of Kansas Soccer Club, bolstered by a great defense and the return of scoring star Guy Dartan, swept four games Sunday to win the twelve-town John Hugget Tournament at Swope Park in Kansas City, Mo.
KU won its first three games by shutouts, blanking Irwin, 3-4; TWA, 2-0, and Feld, 1-0. In the championship game, Darian, who has been injured, scored all three goals as KU downed previously undefended International, 3-2.
Silvio Midence and Randy McClain scored two goals in the tournament. Captain Boyke Gaffar, who sprained his knee and Essardian RBAarmant each added one.
"This victory will help us ego-wise for the Big Eight tournament at Boulder, Colo. this weekend." Gafar said. "You have to be ready and defensive to have three shutouts in one day."
"I think that the KU students should realize that we have a high-caliber soccer team here," Gaffar said. "It is the world's best." He added like the KU students to support us."
"Sobbi Bacterje played fantastic field defense, and Dennis Cherry, our goalie, set a KU season and career record with his three shutouts. It was really on of sight." Gaffar said he was very proud of the team's championship and was looking
white team for five touchdowns and effectively wilted up the whites on their own
"I felt we needed to get them together as a team," Fambrough said. "And the defense gave good crank tackling and good ball control all, I was happy with the scrimmage."
The KU team has a record of 8-5-2. Its next home game will be a rematch with the Internationals, Sundays, April 30, on the international fields east of O-Z parking lot.
The blue offense, directed by junior quarterback David Jaynes, ground out 20 first downs. Jaynes completed 15 of 24 passes for 288 yards and two touchdowns.
Emmitt Edwards was on the receiving end of the first of those scoring passes. He hauled in a 70-yard bomb on the first play of the serif illustration..All-Big Eight tight end John Schroll caught one touchdown led by touchdowns as well.
Running back Jerome Nelloms and Delvin Williams chalked up the three other touchdowns. Nelloms scored twice while rushing for 64 yards on 13 carries. Delvin Williams, leading rusher last year, broke away for a 40-yard touchdown.
Second unit quarterback Bob Brueggemeyer engineered the final touchdown drive of the scrimmage. He hit three of four passes for 41 yards, including a 19-yard strike to Schroll. That one set up Nelloms' second touchdown.
Blue defenders hold the white offense to five first downs. Only after Gordon Stockenker recovered a fumbled punt did the penetrate as deep as the blue eight.
Ends Pat Ryan and Den Goode and
Gary Palmer were out by Fayman.
Spring drills enter their fourth week today. The spring game under the lights of Haskell Stadium April 29 will condlude spring practice.
Scrambling Hill Birdies No.18, Wins Monsanto
He finished just one stroke back at 272 and held the lead alone until, playing two groups ahead of Hill, he bogeyed the 13th, with an ace at 69 and claimed three place at 274.
PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP)—Scrambling Dave Hill blew a seven-stroke lead, but rallied with a pressure bore on the final pitch. He was then out in the Monsanto Open golf tournament.
The 34-year-old Hill had two double bogeyes on route to a par 71 on the final round and had to birdie the 72nd hole to avoid a playoff with charging Jerry Heard.
Veteran Bob Goalby, who had a hole-in-one on the second hole, blazed home with a 62-275 and was alone in fourth. Former Champion Ray Floyd took fifth with
Heard, who won the Citrus Open earlier this season, was seven strokes behind the front-fronting H, but closed up with a five-under-par 66 in the final round.
Hill finished with a 72-hole total of 213
13 under par on the Pensacola 690.
He was three strokes in front of the group of four tied at 273 - Lee Elder, Jim Hancock and Scott Tucker.
Cubs' Rookie Hurls Year's 1st No-Hitter
CHICAGO (AP) — Burt Hooton, a rookie right-hander less than a year off the University of Texas campus, hurled a nohitter in his fourth major league start Sunday as the Chicago Cubs defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 4-0.
Hooton, a 6-foot-1, 210-pound blond, was wild and issued seven walks, but the Phillies managed few hard-hit balls off the three-time college All-American who was the No. 1 pick in the secondary phase of last June's free agent draft.
Shortstop Don Kessinger saved the nothatter with a leaping grab of Danny Doyle's line drive to open the third inning, and center fielder Rick Monday went to the 368-foot sign in left-center for Greg Nielsen. The right-field an hour wind blowing in helped keep the ball in the park. The Phillies hit five other balls to the outfield.
Hooton, who throws a tantalizing knuckle-curve, struck out seven. He walked at least one Philadelphia batter in six of the first seven innings.
AMERICAN LEAGUE East
Baseball Standings
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Baltimore | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | |
| Detroit | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | |
| Milwaukee | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | |
| Boston | 0 | 1 | .000 | 1 |
| Cleveland | 0 | 1 | .000 | 1 |
| New York | 0 | 1 | .000 | 1 |
Kansas City 3 0 1.000
California 1 1 1.500 1½
Minnesota 1 1 1.500 1½
Oakland 1 1 1.500 1½
Texas 1 1 1.500 1½
Chicago 0 3 1.500
NATIONAL LEAGUE East
East
| W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Montreal | 2 | 0 | 1.00 |
| Chicago | 1 | 1 | .500 |
| New York | 1 | 1 | .500 |
| Philadelphia | 1 | 1 | .500 |
| Pittsburgh | 1 | 1 | .500 |
| St Louis | 1 | 0 | .000 |
San Francisco 2 0 1.000
San Diego 2 1 1.667
Cincinnati 2 1 1.000
Los Angeles 1 1 1.500
Atlanta 1 1 1.500
Houston 1 0 1.000
The Cubs got their first run off Dick Selma in the fourth innering after Ron Santo led off with a double and Monday walked. Kessinger laid down a bunt, and Santo scored when catcher Tim McCarver fired the ball into right field.
They jumped on Chris Short for two more in the seventh on Randy Hundley's bases-loaded single following singles by Joe Pepitoe and Santo and a walk to Darrell Brandon in the eighth on Joe Carrallion and triple Becken the single.
In the ninth, Hooten faced the middle of
the Philadelphia batting order.
His most serious threat came in the seventh when he walked Done Money and Mike Anderson with two out but slipped a called third strike past Dove.
Willia Montanez grounded to second baseman Beckert on a 1-4 pitch. Hotten was the only hit as
Hooten started three games for the Cubs last season. The first came nine days after he was drafted and he allowed three runs in six innings for Louis and was not involved in the decision.
He posted victories his next two times out, both against the New York Mets, after spending several months in the minors. He hurled a three-hitter and struck out 15, the club record, in a 3p2 triumph on Sept. 15 and fired a two-hit-0 shutout six days later.
The last Cub no-hitter was pitched by Ken Holtzman, now with Oakland, against Concinnat just June 3. The Phillies were on the field in Singer of Los Angeles on July 20, 1970.
behind on the count 3-0 and fanned Lizinski on three pitches.
KANSAS CITY (AP)—Steve Howley's two-out single drove in the winning run in the 10th innning and gave the Kansas City Royals a 4-3 victory over the Chicago White Sox and a sweep of a Sunday doubleheader.
Royals Sweep Chisox Start with 3-0 Record
The Royals took the opener 2-1 behind bruce Dal Canton's sparkling rip-tit.
There were three no-hitters last season, all in the National League. The pitchers were Holtzman, Philadelphia's Rick Wise and Bob Gibson of St. Louis.
Paul Schaal started the winning rally with a one-out walk off wailer Bart Johnson. He took second on an infield outstrike game through with his game-winning hit.
Hovley helped send the game into extra innings when he fired to Cookie Rojas for a relay to the plate that cut down Rick Reichardt, who was trying to score from first base behind Pat Kelly on Dick Allen's game-ting double in the ninth.
Dal Canton worked four hitless innings in the opener, protecting the lead the Royals secured for starter and winner. The Royals had one win, driven, driven in by Bob Oliver's infield out.
Oiliver's single gave the Royals a 3-2 lead in the sixth innings of the nightcap until he scored twice to tie the game.
It was the second loss against three wins for KU starter Bco Cox.
Rojas and John Mayberry and Lou Pinella's infield out brought home the tying run before Oliver put the Royals in front with his single.
The sweep enabled Kansas City to take all three weekend games from Chicago in the playoffs. The Royals had threatened to protest if they lost because the White Sox ignored an American League directive and permitted their players to work out in White Sox Park.
First Game
Chicago 010 000 000—1 32
Kansas City 010 000 000—2 80
Bahnsen, Gossage (5), Kealey (6), Romo
(7) and Egan; Splittorfer, Danton (6)
(7)
But the Jav Hawks—and Steve Corder
Second Game
Chicago 010 001 001 0-311 2
Kansas City 011 002 001 0-412 2
CU Pitching Wins Two; KU Batting Takes Third
The Buffaloes swept the opening doubleheader, 3-2 and 2-4, and KU won the third game.
Colorado beat the University of Kansas baseball team at its own game Saturday, but the Jayhawks returned the favor Sunday.
COLORADO GOT both its runs in the fourth when McDonald singled one in and then scored after he stole second. Catcher Ian Kirkwood finished allowing him to come all the way home.
Going into the weekend series at Boulder, Colorado was ranked number one hitting team in the conference with a 333 average. KU was the top pitching team after allowing only 13 earned runs in 46 innings for a 2.55 ERA.
Bradley, Johnson (9) and Herrmann;
Montgomery, Rooker (6), Ahernathy (7),
Burgmeier (10) and Kirkpatrick. W.
Burgmeier, 1-4, L.Johnson.
10 innings
But, somewhere along the line, someone met mixed up.
Colorado pitches Gary Walcott and Bob
Ballard in two main forces in the Buffalo
wins Saturday.
In the iner, Walcott gave up only six KU hits and struck out 10. Colorado's winning run came in the bottom of the seventh inning with the score tied, 2-2. Second baseman Jack McDonnell singled first baseman Dank Hendrick beat out a bunt.
Dean Seasons bunted in front of the plate, and McDonald scored after catcher Dick Bradley's throw to first on the bunt hit the runner.
In the second game, Colorado hurler Bob Kelly did an even better job of silencing the Jayhawk bats. Kelly limited KU to four singles and allowed only one runner to get as far as second base. He walked one and struck out four.
KU's next series is a three-game set with Missouri this weekend in Lawrence. A doubleheader is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. and a single game for 1 p.m. Saturday.
SATURDAY Flat Core
Bob Wolf, who relieved starter Biller Siteman in the fifth, was the winning clip.
Kansas 000 101 0-2 6 2 1
Colorado 010 101 0-1 7 2
The Buffaloes used five pitchers in an effort to stop the Jayhawks' hot bat, which accounted for 12 safe hits. Colorado committed six errors.
Corder's base-scaled double and a two-run homer by Bob Wolf gave the Jayhawks five runs in the fifth to overcome Colorado's early 3-1 lead.
Second Game
Steve Cordier and Dick Bradley; Gary Walcord and John Stearas. W-Walcord, 4-
especially—achieved at least partial revenge Sunday when they turned the tables on the Buffaloes by outslugging them. 12-8.
For Corder, the loser in series opener Saturday, it was especially sweet. The first baseman slammed two doubles and win five runs toward the Jawwahk win.
Stallworth has scored 84 points in five all-star games, an average of 16.8.
The West was coached by KU's Ted Owens in this inaugural game. The process of the game will go to Wichita State University, where he Heart College and the U.S. Olympic Fund,
Stallworth Scores
26 Points to Lead
Western All-Stars
Kansas 000 053 013—12 12 2
Colorado 300 010 301—8 7 6
SUNDAY
Bob Cox and Dirk Weld; Bob Kelly and John Stearns. W.-Kellery, 3-3, L-Cox, 3-2.
Bud Stallworth, KU's happy go-lucky,
do everything forward, because an al-star's all-star Saturday by scoring 26 points to lead the West to an 81-74 victory over the East in the Pizza Hut Class at Las Vegas.
Stallworth, who was the game's high scorer, was also named the game's most valuable player. His two free throws with seconds to play gave the lead a weight of 175.
But finishing second to Isaksson is an experience the world's best pool vaulters are getting used to. The 24-year-old came from Russia and cleared 18 at the Tel Aviv Relays last week.
Smith cleared 17 feet, 7 inches Saturday at UCLA's Neet of Champions, one of the valuels甩 ever by an American. But he was a distant second to Isakson, who pushed his pending world record up another notch to 18-2.
Isaksson Raises Vaulting Record
LOS ANGELES (AP)—Pole vault champion Kjell Isaksson's habit of being No. 1 is discouraging for No. 2. Just Ask Smith of Longe Beach State.
three-quarters of an inch above Chris Papanicouhon's listed world record, and sailed over the bar cleanly on his third turtle Saturday. He missed three tries at 18-4.
"I might as well quit," said the disgruntled Smith. "I'd rather be 50th than 60th."
"I'm much faster now," he said. "I don't work out with anybody, just on my own. But I think I could probably run 100 meters in 10.9."
Isaksson, only 54*0.8*3 and 150 pounds but strongly built, uses a much lighter fiberglass pole than Smith, but compensates with added speed.
Isakson has entered a special pole vault event in the Kansas Relays Saturday.
Saturday's vault was just about the highest he's capable of going on the limb.
"I think I can do 184, but I'll have to adjust to a heavier pole. I said Inskasson. It's not too heavy," he said.
Though Isaksson, like his countryman Hans Lagergvist, gets the maximum out of speed and technique, he recognizes that he's limited by his size.
"I'm probably the only vaulter who gets an advantage from a wind at my back," he said. "But my size is actually a disadvantage. When someone vaults 10 feet, he's about to be about Steve Smith's size, so he'll have to hold the pole at 164 feet, I hold it at 15½."
Smith, the 28-year-old who vaulted to prominence a week ago with a leap of 17-9½, second highest ever for an American, is 6-foot-4, weights 180 and has a weight
"I'm ready for 75." he said.
Feuerbach said he thought Randy Matson's world record of 71.5-2⁵ was just around the corner, and he would hope to break it in San Jose May 6.
Lagergyst评 third in the event, also clearing 17-7. Olympic champion Bob Cox.
lifter's strength. With his coach, Dick Tomlinson, said, "It's going to take a lot more work on his technique for Steve to reach his potential."
The record vault culminated a day of stunning performances, the best of which were Lee Evans' 440 victory in 44.9, shading Wayne Colley; Al Feauchert's bestever shot put of 70-3/2, and Ralph Murray's 440 intermediate hurdles time of 49.4.
Tennis Team Places Eighth In Oklahoma
KU lost to Oklahoma City in the first round, 9-4, and to Oral Roberts University in the second round, 8-1, before defeating Wichita State. B-1.
The University of Kansas tennis team placed seventh in the eight-e队 Oklahoma City Iinitiational Friday and Saturday. Host Oklahoma City University finished first, defeating West Texas State in the finals.
"It was a pretty tough tournament," KU coach Mike Howard said. "There were several upstes. Oklahoma, which was undefeated in the Big Eight, got knocked off by West Texas State in the second round.
"Many of the teams had mostly foreign players, and they were very tough."
Howard said he hoped Cal Simmons, KU's number one player who was injured in a motorcycle accident, would be ready for the K-State match Saturday.
Simmons has been taking whirlpool treatments, according to Howard.
KU's next match will be Tuesday at Kansas State Teachers College of Physiotherapy.
OKLAHOMA City 9, Kansas 0
Singles
Coombs, COM, DEF. Wick, 6-1, 6-0,
Power, OCU, def. HENY, 6-2, 6-2
Staney, OCU, def. Kingsley, 6-1, 6-1
Argyron, OCU, def. Carlson, 6-1, 6-0
Rojas, OCU, def. Shaffer, 6-1, 1-1
Overgard, OCU, def. Isaac, 6-1, 6-0
Doubles
Coombs-Straney, OCY, def. Isaac-Kinsley, 6-0, 6-0
Argyrian-Rojas, OCU, def. Carson-Wick, 6-0, 7-5.
Dabney-Overgard, OCU, def. Henry-
Shaffer, default.
Oral Roberts 8, Kansas 1 Singles
Singles
sol; ORU, orU. def. Henry, 6-4, 7-5
tonic; ORU, orU. def. Krings, #4, 6-3
Paskokde, ORU, def. Carlson, 6-1, 6-1
Gole, ORU, def. Shaffer, 2-4, 8-3
Oral, orU. def.
Doubles
Gole-Solic, ORU, def. Isaac Kaslgley, 6-0,
9-14, Carlson-Ullenberg, ORU, def.
Carlson-Wick, 6-0.
Henry-Shaffer, KU, def. Pakozde-
Tonicic. 6.3, 1.6, 7.5.
Kansas 8, Wichita State 1 Singles
Webster, WSU. def., Wick, 6-2, 6-2
Kingsley, KU. def., Wick, 6-2,
Kingsley, KU. def., Wiggs, 6-3, 6-2
Carlson, KU. def., Speis, 7-5, 6-2
Ikau, KU. def., Speis, 7-5, 6-2
IKAU, KU. won by, defgkuf,
Doubles
Shaffer-Henry, KU, def. Webster-Jobst,
6- 0- 6.
Carson-Wick, KU, def. Wiggins-Speis, 6-0
6-0
Isaac-Kingsley, KU, won by forfeit.
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 17, 1972
9
'Chase' Set For Concert
The rock-group Chase will play for the Kansas Relays Concert on April 22. Chase was chosen as a replacement for blues-guitarist B. B King whose appearance came due to an agency booking error.
Chase will present one concert at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. B, B. King was originally scheduled to present two performances.
Ticket prices are $2.50, $3 and $3.50 and ticket sales will begin at 8:30 a.m. Monday at the SCA office in the Kansas Union.
Chase is noted for its unique triumphant sound. The group, led by Billy Correia and Gregory Harris, an organ, lead and bass guitars and drums to create an album that "is more important."
The band has produced two albums, Chase (Epic), and Emme (Epic). The band's title of a suite with mythological gods in its theme.
The members of the band are Chase, who plays bass guitar and Van Blair, who plays trumpet and Tied Piercefield, trumpeters; Porter, organist; Dennis Johnson, drummer; South, guitarist; Gary Smith, drummer, and G. G. Shinn, lead drummer.
Pre-enrollment, the fond wish of students who are closed out during enrolment will exist for only a small number of students at the school.
Few Schools Plan Spring Pre-Enrollment
The School of Education limits spring pre-enrollment to those students who will be student teaching in the fall. The School of Fine Arts, however, offers pre-graduate programs familiar to summer to all incoming freshmen.
Five days
Journalism majors may pre-enroll in journalism classes April 24-28. Nonmajors may pre-enroll May 1-5. The School of Social Science also will offer pre-enrollment although no dates have been set.
Although the College of Liberal Arts has some students through the colleges-within-the-college, pre-enrollment is not offered in every place.
Centennial College has no pre-enrollment planned, and Pearson University is issuing. Numeramist is also still presumably unable to schedule it May 9-19, depending upon when the preliminary timetable is issued.
North College will pre-enrol
sophomores April 17-28 and those
entering professional schools
in Oliver in Olive College
April 17-21.
AKL Alumni Return to KU For Activities
Delta Chapter of Alpha Kappa
Lambda Week in commemoration of
their 50th anniversary on the
University of Kansas campus this
The fraternity has been housed in six different locations before the college moved to Stewart. The chapter grew from a house with 15 members to the current house.
On Sunday there was an initiation of new members, in which some of the original members of the fraternity took part.
Among the alumni who returned to were original members of the faculty. J. Graves, Walter M. Whitaker, J. Graves, Walter M. Whitaker, present for the weekend activities. Graves donated the use of many of the publications of the university.
"This weekend is an example of what I've believed all along. I'm not a lawyer, but a senior and house president said: "The fraternity system is not dying but rather going through a rough time," a general social attitude of today."
One of the highlights of the dinner was speakers from each of the bands. A musical tribute of all the songs over the years was the theme of the evening.
LEAVENWORTH. Kan.
Leavenworth Prisons have announced that C. E. Harris, warden of the U.S. Penitentiary, leavened worth,
June 24th.
In 1968 he was assigned as warden of the U.S. Penitentiary in Marion, III. He returned to Tenworth as warden last year.
Activities for the weekend included a stag on Saturday afternoon for the men and a tea for the women. A social hour preceded a dinner and dance on Saturday, Sunday the fraternity opens house for members of the University community.
Bureau Director Norman A. Carlson said he would send a report on the Federal Correctional Institution at Talahassee, Fla., to succeed
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
One day
each additional word: $.01
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
25 words or fewer: $1.00
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Karen are offered by Karen's Business College to color, breed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Best price paid for used cars
Joel's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. V1 2
8608.
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.25
You're at an advantage.
If you don't,
Western City. Notes—Now On Sale There are two ways of looking at it 1. If you use them,
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 411 West 14th. tf
NORTHISE COUNTRY SHOP, 707
Bridges Avenue, used furniture,
collection items, old wood cooking and
dining ware, kitchen appliances,
stoves, bicycles, books, old photo
albums, antiques, clothing, corn,
and thousands of other useful
items. Near daytime hours (7 a.m.
to 11 p.m.) Alberendb, 842-319
1960 Austin-Cambridge 4 dr. Sedan
Needs tune-up, $150 Call 841-3218
after 5.00.
Michigan St. Bar-B-Quay 515 Michigan Ave. $14-$20. Michigan St. Bar-B-Quay 515 Michigan Ave. $14-$20. Michigan St. Bar-B-Quay 515 Michigan Ave. $14-$20. Large Bldg. Plate $16. Large Bldg. Plate $16. Large Bldg. Plate 11 a.m. to 9 a.m. Plate $16. Plate 11 a.m. to 9 a.m.
65 MGB roadster in top condition.
58,000 miles Engine overhaul at:
43,000 $900 842-2472. 4-21
1967 New Moon Mobile Home, Large living room, dining room, a kitchen, two bedrooms, big bathroom, includes 4 beds, and skirts/dryers. 842-3529 4-17
Yamaha 650 cc.'s, street, see at 924
Schwarz after 6 p.m. 842-3871. 4-18
Rare find -1917. Kawasaki, 250 SS
Excellent condition, with 1,500 miles.
Selling cheap, need gas money for
dining. Must be a 2016 model.
*444* Ask for Dick
4-18
1969 YAMALIA 250 Trail-Street.moe
corrective bicycle. Excellent condition — Have
done my own work. Call Pete. 864-
1114.
1971 Kawasaki F7. 175 cc. Like new.
$550. 842-7118. 4-18
Wedding Gown, Ivory size 10, never worn. Alfred Angelo original; includes full length, lace-edges manifold; originally $140, then $49; 4-18 $637.
1969 Honda CL-350, 4,500 actual miles.
All accessories; $500 or best offer.
842-6300. 4-18
Guitar—Gibson B45 jumbo 12 string with deluxe case and doorpack pick up all-like your Yours for $350. wickle Dickel #842-2719 7:4 1-8
MUST SELL 3--bikes, 1971 Kawanaka
175 Enduro. $50, 1971 Yahama 500
1971 Hooda Racet Sat Rut 1971
offer. $42-398.
4-18
offer. $42-398.
Shirts, Tops, Jeans, Cords, Halteres,
Jacket's, caps, Bells, Overalls, Stats,
Patches, Hat, Long Dresses, Dress-
ing Shoes, Worn on ewr at EAH.
SINFEST. 8, I2E 4-18
Pall-shaughle L little Hungarian sheepdog puppies ARC TPC bloodielets, up also abeo English-IPL Couredhill English-IPL 915-768-2081 McLouth, Mckansas 4-26
1968 Suzuki X-6 camberler 250ce. It looks and runs like a must. See to appreciate, $375. Call 842-1843 and ask for Dave. 4-18
For sale or trade 1917 Plymouth 440 GTX. 7,000 actual miles. Need to bank. Bank financing. 843-0507 or 843-
4469.
4-19
JAROLD'S
Diving Supplies
843-3565 Lawrence, Kansas
Bibles-Posters-Gifts-Framing
CROSS 913 842-1553
Real sharp 1968 $250 Honda. Under
4,000 miles has been habilited on
its life—at $50 or make an
at home. At 13, $50 or make an
just keep trying. 4-17
THE MERCANTILE
1970 35cc Suzuki, orange and black,
excellent condition $550 or best offer.
Call 842-7792 after 5:30
4-19
711 West 23rd St.
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas 6044
57 Chevro, 2 door 283 automatic (recently brand new). New tire rear brake gearbox to oil, good blower gas tank. 600 horsepower. 842-6460. Ask for Jcf. **4-19** 842-6460. Ask for Jcf.
1962 GMC school bus converted into camper. Far out lemonade yellow. Read to travel $1500 Call Charlie (718) 344-2333 after 5. 813-8354 4-19
REFERENCE
1970 Volkwagen, Fastback, dark blue,
radio, only 11,000 actual rules, Sharp!
Aking $1,585 Call 843-8486 4-19
Student going out of business. Must sell couch $8, chair $6, night stand $3, bureau $8, lamp $4, 21" Zentih $53 $82-624
4-17
STEREO SYSTEM tape player -AM
FM stereo, brand new Pasanamic,
retails for $169. Must sell. call 842-6728
4.12
63 Ford Tire pwu. P wide wheel,
ATV tires, canner, sterrs, extra
replacement tires, four tires,
Also, 29 Ford
bed/wed, 275 WD Oak evens
1964 green TR-4, runs good, new seat and carpet-$750 or best offer. Call Chris, 842-8533 4-19
1962 Harry Davidson XLCH Sponnerd
—Stock-in — good condition. A good
buy to shop Will accept small trade-
counts. Call Condition. Call
318-432-2091 318-432-2091 4-19
1970 Toyota, excellent condition, only 25,000 miles, two-door, AM radio, amateur. Getting married, must sell. $1,500. Call 842-4269. 4-18
Mobile home for sale. Tired of living in an unmade room, you want a washer with water dispenser and depricable little. Here is a home mobile unit designed to provide independence of ownership while restoring the atmosphere. Soft carpet carpeting 3 bedrooms, bright 21' living room, kitchen, bathroom, washer, refrigerator, automatic wash machine, gas furnace, yet only $7 million gas bill, fuelertown, not $9 million with 10x10 extension. $2900; immediate possession. 843-6106, evening 4-19
ROGERS' WEST HILLS REALTY
largest just west of the campus and
biggest just west of the campus. large living
wet with fences 2 miles long, large living
wet with fences 1 mile long, large living
wet with fences 4 miles long, 4-acre
yard, 8 bishops with 4 cemeteries,
partially filled with new 14 wks of
partly filled with new 14 wks of
large beautiful lofts to Drape
family or student housing in
large family or student housing
Roberts' Realty. 1405 Mass. 845-005.
Air Force Mesh Dress-New-size 42
-$75 -842-9096
4-70
1967 Triumph Tiger Cub 200 cc. Good
condition, $300, or best offer. Call
Mike at 842-9698 after 6:40.
4-20
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
TROMBONE - King 3-B with F-
attachment. $495 new, will sell for
$225. Excellent condition, used little.
Mike Huekner. 842-9548. 4-20
Amplifier - BMT-15 bass amplifier extension cabinet with 4-12" speaker, sound extension cabinet with 4-12" speakers, sound effects wah wah pedal and. Must Sell Small Need Cash 842-763.
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
KENWOOD 3130 AM-FM stereo receiver. 16 w per camera rms. Best offer. 864-2952 4-20
Leather- up - RED RIDER - Leather
袋 - sandal - Sandals, wallets, bags,
trousers, shirts, shoes.
Reasonably priced - 1000 Ohio
Officer Monday first - 4:20
p.m.
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa V12-1008
61 Triumph TRG, rare condition, 2 studded anows, ear mitten, tannae cover, $500 841-3224 4-18
FAIRN, FIND - 1971 Kawasaki 250 SS.
Excellent condition with 1500 miles.
Selling cheap. Need gas money for
camping or other outdoor activities.
842-4444 4-20
842-4444
JKK NEW--2-10 in. Deep Crager SRS
steels & 2 G 60/15 in. Gd. Yr. Poly.
res. Call JM, 842-1043 4-20
Four 13" chrome rims, will fit Datsons etc. , perfect condition—Call 842-6798 4-20
MADISON CENTER FOR INTERACTIVE TEACHING
Natural natestories for women & men,
vitamins, biodegradable household
products, from Shaheerz of Calif.
Miami, 842-4925 - 6:00 p.m.
Tulsa, 842-4925 - 4:00 p.m.
AKC Irish Setter Puppies. 842-5287
1964 Chevy Impala SS PS, Poal-tran,
4-speed tandem 12 in, deep navy
blue exterior, good condition. Cor-
lorado 720. Maxim 720. Miac
stairs 821.
8x43 mobile home, furnished, great for single or couple; 2 BR, only $1,000.
Phone 812-8158 4-19
Pro Bike 35 pro bikes in stock in a wide range of brands. The Poquet 1P-16E "Pouquet" The Popeet 2P-20E "Olympic" Palen, San Benito "Avalon" and Reynolds 323 tubing. All are with Reynolds 323 tubing.
Save money—sew your own clothes.
Used Singer straight stitch; $25. 842-
6810. 4-21
Portux Fisheye Lens, Super Takumar
17mm, 14.0 B-ultin-in filters. Like new
reason. Reasonable 811-2570
4-17
Beautiful little Red Sprite convertible. 38K- MRI III- absolutely perfect engine, excellent body, top, towneel, custom wheels, Peter Dart, Mercedes-Benz 644-3911. 4-21
FOR RENT
4*14" Deep Chrome Reverse Sheets
Fit Duster 2-5.60*185 Snow Trees
Tipped Mounted on Wheels—Used 1
Winter 842-2478 4-21
Rockledge Villa Apartments, limited first month rent free. Four rooms in a ninety-fifth ninethird mitted up with all utilities paid for. Call 4-210 p.m., m83-7731. Call after 4-210 p.m., m83-7731.
Stereo: KLH, dual turntable, Ken-
wood amp. In very good condition.
842-3785. 4-21
COLLEGE HILL MANOR now show-
ing new furnished and unfurnished apart-
ments and unfurnished apart-
ments start at $239. Go to campus
website at 178 W.19th, Apt. SB or call
844-750-6850.
1946 Dodge 12 ton charm . . . and it runs too. $15 drives it away. Also,
64 VW Bug $500: 843-4646 4-21
Tried of trying to find that ideal apt.
Location: 1, 2 & 3 bdrm apts,
available 1, 2 & 3 bdrms at
location and price ranges throughout the area.
Grew Apartment, 901 Kentucky St.
Kentucky, 80115
When you hot, you're hot. When you cold, you're cold. comfort 'doubt' UNIVERSITY MINTS. Browse out your pool & close discount MINTS. Outdoor pool & close discount MINTS. Apt 11, 5129 W 9th Phone 845-362-7000
LOOK WHAT SANTINE APTS HAVE TO OFFER? Summer rates, swimming pool, A C F. Prove cable-TV, and other amenities. 1122 IIDA Avenue 843-2116
WHY RENT?
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
Mobile Home Sales
843 0490
3020 Iowa (South Hwy.59)
空气楼 apartment, Quiet, furnished.
air conditioned, steam room, parking.
Need business trip or graduate.
Students 4-18.
823-8000. 4-18
AIRLINE
MODERN APARTMENTS - Formulated and infurnished one bedroom at New York's Riverfront Year-round venue. New year next fall. Dave, B3-892-694-8310. B3-892-694-8310.
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Bigger room now to compete. NB Mississippi bedroom apartments available. AUCTIONING ends on July 13, 2015; rooms available at end of season. **Fees:** $99 per room, $99 per night, *wearing dilithium*, central air conditioning, between 5:00 and 10:00, 842-788 between 5:00 and 10:00.
Available 5-13 time room apt. inc.
cond $150 One room apt. $40 room
appl. $80 One room appl. All apts.
stone fireplace $50 One room appl. All
apts. Near RI Billpa. $45-750 Near
Near RI Billpa. $45-750
Renting for summer and fall; nice furnished rooms, kitchen privileges, near KU. Also 1-3 bedroom apts 842-5007 after 4.90. 4-19
SUMMER RENTALS. Live close to campus, this summer in a room, house or apartment. Economical. Louisiana: 843-161-101; Illinois: 843-161-102; 5-9
634 Mass
Large, two bedrooms, mobile home.
Fully equipped, air-conditioned, water
and rent cost paid. Prefer couples or
two adults.
Norm nights 842-905-3850
10-49
Apartments for rent. Available May 10,
summer rates, air conditioning
range $50-$65. Call 842-9153 at 6:00
p.m. i. 19 W. 14th.
4-21
Walk to KU. 2 bdrm. apartment, carpeted, central air, appliances, parking. Call 843-5899 4-20
Room for rent: Need girl to share
toue 165. Utilities included. Available
May 1. 842-5788. 4-28
Two bedroom, furnished apartment for $130. Air conditioned, storage refrigerator. No utilities paid Call 842-8584 after 5 weeks and weekends.
NOTICE
4 bedroom house on edge of campus.
For summer at reduced rate or year's
lease. Call 843-5838 or 843-6114 4-20
Sublease for summer, apt. one bedroom,
A.C. private, close to campus,
furnished, No. 130, 1025 Indiana, 842-7160,
Apt. E. 4, 4-21
Townhouse duplex, 2 br.'s, elec. kit,
formal d. orally, f. capped A; C, patio,
garage, $130 mo. Call 842-9159 after
5:00 p.m.
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
LEARN SKYDIVING Ict jumpster,
jumpmaster, fice, plum raider, and
basketball. Learn to train in Trains, Train & jump same day. Each day either is first $99. Ftt Call 216-534-3000.
Parts at a discount
WEDDING INVITATIONS — PRICES
printed only $4.50. Send for free
catalogs and samples to Arnold Agency,
260 East Main, Bradford, Idaho 80401
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co., John Wells, 842-5220.
CSC
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Women's Alterations, 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30 4-25
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store.
Factory Authorized
P
Barr Parties! Now available for booking at Apple Valley Earth on Lake Perry. Enjoy the sun and cooler weather of parking and cookie dough. Call Col. See Strong after 6 p.m. on 843-725-9000.
Competition
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Sports Cars Inc.
842-6966
For SUA Events
Music
- Guitars
- Recorders
CHANGE OF LOCATION From April 15 through October 13, folk dance troupes in Lake Pavilion. However, if wet weather or another group prevails, dancers from Gymnastics Gymnase old time 7:40-pm to yourself, or with friends. 4-17
WANTED
INFANT DAY-CARE, 82-794-
904. Professional child-care for
children 1 mo to 12 mo. Fail or part-time.
Fit. Specially designed environment.
5-23
NATURAL, DYE WORKSHOP—April
14, 15. SIGN up at the Yarn Barn.
730 Mass. 463-4533
4-17
The sledging tour is organized by the University of Missouri, Wednesday evening, April 19 at 7:30 p.m. The sledging route is 15th and Kawaski Fourteenth roads and Kawaski Forty-seventh roads. Celebrity jockeys are invited and there are no reservations.
We buy used books, also old Play-
boys and Pent-House magazines in
good condition! Call 842-0216 5-9
HELP! Phases 1 and 2 plus continued
injection requires librarians of liberal
knowledge. Visit us at Shawk Towers this summer.
Herb Workhouse, Centralia, Kansas
www.herbworkhouse.com
3 nice girls need a roommate for next year in Jayhawk Towers. Call anytime: 842-0427 4-18
Give your years a lift—with suspenders in color from EARTHSHINE, 8 E. 12h 4-18
JOBS & MEMBERSHIPS
Australia Employs 1,085 & MORE STUDENTS.
Australia employs 2,069 staff. Occupations pay $3,968 to $4,668 per month.
Payments to the Company Free information-Write a Job description-Job details-1972, San Diego, CA-92115-92115
Use Kansan Classifieds
Rose
KEYBOARD GUIDE
Two left feet? Exemplary intensive instruction will transform you into a frailning folkdancer. Come Satur- Day 1 of our Student Activity Center. Free 4-19
To meet people who read the Urantia Book, call 842-7691. 4-20
Everything in your closet just died-
getting a clothing transplant at EARTH
SHINE, 8 E. 12th. 4-18
LONNY FAME and the Bellaines. **Rock** n' Roll Band straight out of the 1920s. **For information contact** Nick, 842-6598 or John, 842-3841-4 1-8
VOX BASS, AMP, MWF, FLORAL,
GOLDEN RING, PADDED BLACK
WHITE EYES KERUGAN VONNE-
GRAPHIC BOLUS TRAILFAHMAR
CLOTHE, HORNONON, 119 Ver-
tus.
One or two roommates to share an apartment with two other girls for next fall. Call after 4:00 Pam or Cindy, 842-6382. 4-19
Good running used car wanted. Have $150 to spend. Look and year not important but must be in good shape. Call 842-7623-4090
4 o'm n. m.
or 1 or people to sub-lit apartment for summer. $135/mo. furnished. 2 blocks from Fraer. Call. 864-1252 or 864-
1258.
Open
24 hrs.
per day
- Accessories
E
OPEN NIGHTS
Accessories
803 Mass 842.25
Webster's Mobile Homes
DRIVE IN
MACHINE
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th AIR
843-5004
843-5004
EAGLE
KAT Suzuki
COIN OP
.AUNDRY
19th & LA.
843-9631
Tie-downs—Skirting—Part*
3409 W. 6th 842-7700
days per week
Your Complete Service Dealer
Independent
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
COIN OP
LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842.9450
See
IXL
PLANNING A TRIP??
The Bull & Boar
Oceans on Tap
On Lake 11 to 8 pm, Meet Sat 12 to 8 pm
11 W. 9th
50¢ OFF ANY two handed sandwich with the
price adjusted. You MUST present this ad by
Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon Sat Sun 12 to 8 p.m.
Offer Expires April 13
Featuring -Roast Beef, BBQ Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef,
Grilled Cheese, and the Reuben
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
★★★★★★★★★★★
Maupintour travel service
Female roommate needed for summer in share furnished apartment in Meadowbrook, West. Call 842-6067. 4-18
TYPING
Typing in my home. IBM Selectric.
Prompt accurate work. Experienced.
Call 841-2556. 5-9
FAIMHOUSE-Wanted to rent. Requested KU students with references willing to make repairs. Negotiate lease for one year or longer. 842-933-8251.
These, term papers, typed accurately and promptly IBM Selector, your choice of type styles. Also editing at other schools, Florida, 842-979-7852, 842-600-5601.
Experienced Draftman will do Thesis work such as Graphs, Flow Charts and Illustrations and groups and presentations. Ask for Renate Hennick 4-21
IMPORTS-
DATSUN
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term paper, other type, thesis, or book. Proofreading skills. Accelerate and prompt screenings of papers. Plume 843-9544, McWright.
500 E.23rd
Fact accurate typing. Reasonable rates. Call 842-2053. 4-20
OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
0 TO 60 MPH -13.5
RECLINING FRONT SEATS
UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL.
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt, reasonable rates. Please call 843-7594. 4-18
Typing on elite electric typewriter.
No those please. Prompt attention.
843-0958.
4-18
LOVE THAT
PERSONAL
FLASH-Little Debbie Hempseed finds happiness with hand-made necklaces and rings from EARTH1-
SHINE, B. E. 12th: 4-18
LONNY FAME and the Belltowns. A rock n' roll Band straight out of the 1950's. More for information contact Rick, 842-6509 or John, 842-3418; 4-18
842-0444
O My Servant! Thou art even as a finely tempered sword in cacao beaten, and that thy worth may be hidden from the artiller's knowledge. Wherefore come forth thy worth may be made revered, that
DATSUN
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
Sandwiches
5 a.m. m. n. Ses. Sat.
5-1-Sun.
6-8 Mon.
1730 W. Third St.
842 364.
Carol Lee
SENIORS
Please call for your appointment for SENIOR PICTURE
4 proof sittings $3.00
Need KU HR141. Speech 98, or Philo
12 credit? The Center for Human Ex-
ploration. Call 864-10222 or 842-00427.
6 proof sittings $5.00
Special Senior Rates on all orders.
LOST
Hixon Studio
Small white terrier with brown spots.
Wearing a red collar. Very, very friendly. Very important to family.
Reward offered. Please call 843-1016.
A pair of girls glasses in pink case
Need desperately Call 842-374-4
1-8
Male's gold ring with dark oval horn in or around an Airfield House tape on for fitting. Please call 864-2904. Lost April 10th. 4-18
Puppy (4 months, white and black-
brown spots, curly hair, tan collar,
answers to Pete—REWARD Call 842-4
2296.
HELP WANTED
BabySister wanted for summer. Three school age children. Hours 9 to 4-15 per hour. Please call 843-4893 after 6.
...mone male help wanted. Apply in person Vista Restaurant, 1527 West 26th.
4-17
TEACHERS WANTED : Agency
Southwest Teachers' Agency
Box 1018, Abqauqueve, NM 87406. "Our
Bordeaux and a mendible"
NATA.
*
摄
JOBS ON SHIPS!
MEN. WOMEN.
MISCELLANEOUS
Perfect summer job or career.
Ph.843-0330
SEDUCED by spring! Give in, as
simultaneously blake! Give thirst for
knowledge; learn international
Friday's, 7-10 p.m. Porter
Lake Free.
BRIDAL GOWN GOWN Sale-Sizes 8-10, 12-14 to 75% Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky, 4-20
cellent pay, Worldwide travel.
Send $2.00 for information.
Seafax, Box 1239-KF, Seattle,
Washington 88118
4-20
THE HILE in the WALL
DELICATESESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order:
843 745-8 - We Deliver 9 & 11 i.e.
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Finest Eating Place
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches, Steak to K.C. Steaks There is no question in how much we are supplied.
11. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
Tiqun
Spacious room. 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
PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
928
10
University Daily Kansan
Monday. April 17; 1972
'Culpepper' Director Is Good Guy Saddled with Shoddy Story, Script
By BARBARASCHMIDT
Korean Reviews Editor
Livestock seems to have taken over the Varsity Theatre late night. First there was James Coburn riding Rahma bulls at the rodeo in Michigan, Wayne and his pint-sire worshippers in "The Cowbirds" escorted a herd of cattle through "400 miles of the meantest road." Charleston Chertion Hesion is "The Ten Commandments" had a run in with a certain golden calf. Well, you may have hung around Massachusetts Street hollering "head em' move em in rawhide!" because the current fare is "The Cowbirds," a real criminic stockyard.
"Cuppeper" is the story of a 18-year-old boy who joins a post-Civil War battle drive from Texas. He sets off to explore various trials and misfortunes.
make him a "man," i.e., he learns to how kill, die. lie learns to be unbelievable. Finally, in an unbelievable surprise ending, the boy has a religious experience and takes to living unbearableness beneath the blazing sun.
THE MAIN PROBLEM with "Culpepper" is the script. Perhaps it could be argued that it wasn't written for any but the children, and consider the discussions of naked Parisian whores living on the second floor of a glass-ceilinged apartment. It can be three-breasted women and language peppered with words chosen by the choosee by any standards, rank with the four-tetter vocabulary that most parents, even in 1972, frown on. No, "Culpepper" is just a phrase from the book, not a speak the simplest language of
Regional Ballet Festival To Be Annual KC Event
the gun. There are so many bloody confrontations with miscellaneous bad guys that the death-dealing becomes an indistinguishable blue, and in the end a grim conclusion which corpse belongs to.
"What you are going to see is not what you are trained to do," Yuriko said to the multitude at her feet who had been avidly awaiting her appearance here in Kansas City. Are Galleries in Kansas City?
By H. BERG Kansan Review
Yurko performed four short crowns of perpetual young dancers to finally begin the First Annual Mid-Site Regional Ballet
Yuriko, a former member of the Marko the Graham Company who now has her own company, and is documentary on each of her dances.
"The Cry" does not solve anything, but is a release as it follows the physical course of crying 'The Wind Blossom' suggests cherry blossoms fluttering around you. The Sea Is ugly, jagged and destructive, for anger comes at the moment and goes away, but
you never know when it is going to strike again. And in 'The Conversation' I use hands to save the less." she said.
She closed the evening saying to the assembled dancers, "I expect you to give 100 per cent, no money in each class tomorrow."
BUT THE WORST thing about the script is that silly religious ending. The cattlemens come upon a pacifist minister. The pacifist minister. The minister claims that God has led them there to build a town. The landowner rides up with his dog and rides back with the cattlemen to get off. Our 16-year-old hero changes in the blink of an eye from a wisely religious convert and announces that he will stay behind to help the pacifists "there are some things more important than immediately struck by such transcendent truth, backtrack to help the "kid." In the process, everyone except the squatter converts to convert and the cows are killed. The pacifist fires his mind, calls the land a "vale of death" who discards the violent life and leaves, presumably to seek truth and faith. And the cows—well, for all we know they may still be between Texas and Colorado.
Friday and Saturday master dance classes were conducted by Yuriko, David Howard of the New York Dance School (New York) and Tatiana Dokoudskova and Winifred Widener (both of Kansas City). The evenings were devoted to workshops in companies at the Music Hall.
Among the many striking dances presented, the Dianeman-Bennett Dance Theatre of the Hemispheres stood out with excerpts of "Swain Lake" perhaps classical dance idiom of India.
The Festival was hosted this past weekend at the Hotel Muehlebach.
ERIC BEROCVICI and Gregory Prentiss can be blamed for the script. But it is a shame to call his role culprit responsible for the basic story idea. It’s a sage because Richards also directed and across as an intelligent first-time director with a great deal of forensic expertise for Twentieth Century-Fox. Richards was a still photographer for several major companies that makes television commercials. Among his personal successes were the production of *Love...* commercial and the United California bank commercial that set Sandy van on the road to wealth and fame.
IT WOULD BE ridiculous to rank Richards with someone like the flowering Bogadovian ("The flowers are beautiful, we have that kind of flair, but he does do some nice things. Well-composed group shots, humorous skits and funny songs, pleasing landscape shots are all handled professionally. And without surrendering fully to the grippy realism we saw in the films, richness and glossy plasticity of a John Wayne vehicle, Richards maintains an aura of anti-romantic realism never intrudes on the story itself.
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Supposedly Richards and producer Pauh Helmick audition 25 for the lead Grimes they settled on the grimes Grimes is the star of "Summer of 42," but it is hard to associate the boy in "Culpeper" with the girl in "Triumph" in "Summer." It is as if he spent the interim trading in his talent for that of a less able actor. He pursues his lips and move his eyes from side to side. As for his moment of religious change he pursues his life by purse
"The Culpepper Cattle Co" isn't a very good movie, but it does introduce to the screen Dick Grey watching for in the future. And, if only for that reason, cannot be totally condemned
THE LAST PICTURE SHOW
COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents
A BBS PRODUCTION
---
Hillcrest
Monday thru Thurs
6:30; 8:40; 10:50
Fri Sat Sun
3:45; 4:50; 8:40; 10:50
Hillcrest
Mon. Thurs 7:30 9:40
Fri. Sat. Sun
4:55 10:20
Sat. add! show at 11:50 p.m.
TAREA POLICY
TREATMENT POLICE
There is a show and must be used for that show time and must be used for that show time. All titles are final.
'La Boheme' Opens Tuesday, Is KU's First Italian Opera
ALL SEATS $2.00
The Godfather
The Good Friend
R: 12:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. A fraternity Hall
Mon thru Thurs
8:00 p.m. Only
Fri and SAT
3:30, 7:00, 10:10
Sunday 3:30 & 8:00 p.m.
Box Office / Mon thru Tue 7:00 p.m.
Open 6:30, 7:00, 8:00 p.m.
Tickets on sale for that day
performances
"La Bohème," an opera by Pucinci, will be presented in the University Theatre. The production will mark the first time an opera has been performed a foreign language campus.
THE CULPEPER CATTLE CO.
Hillcrest ALL SEATING $14.99
NOWII
A.
9
Mary.
Queen of Scots
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone 91-3065
The opera will be presented at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. University Theatre. A matinee performance will be given at 2:30 p.m.
Granada
TRAILWAY. Phone V3-5287
NOV 12, 2005
Granada
IN HALF PAGE: $5.99
Eve, 7:30, 9:45
Adults $1.50, Child .75
NOW!
Nominated for 5 Academy Awards including Best Actress
Redgrave · Jackson
Mary, Queen of Scots
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT MIDDLE SCHOOL
Twilight Hour Sat, & Sun
afit 5:00-$1.00 5:00
AUBERT R. BROCOLL and HARRY SALTZMAN present
Sean Connery
"James Bond 007"
AND "Diamonds Are Forever"
PLUS
"The Organization"
GP-52 COLOR United Artists
Sunset
MAY 10 IN THE FIELD · West in October
DIAMONDS"
JAN
ORGANIZATION"
JAN
Bouje Fri & Sat · (It) Its Tuesday.
The opera will be produced
$3.00-$11.00 & 50c
ALBERT R. BECKOLL and HARRY SALZMAN present
Sean Connery
"James Bond 007"
"Diamonds"
"Are Forever"
PLUS
"The ORGANIZATION"
through the combined efforts of Pierre Laroche, a visiting lecturer in theatre this spring, the lawer, professor of orchestra.
Laroche, a native of Brussels,
is both an actor and a director.
She is also a guest lecturer
courses at the Université
Kansas, advanced acting
and advanced directing. This will be
his first theatre production at
Lawner is completing his sixth year as musical director of the
Kansas University Symphony Orchestra.
Included in the members of the production are two choruses. One will sing as the narrator and two students, the other will be a student in the production from a local elementary school.
"La Bohème," which
writes the play, is a love story set among the joys and problems of the Bohemian cultural center of the Paris Latin
Environmental Expert to Give Talk Thursday
William Garner, research and development specialist with the Environmental Protection Agency, Mo. will talk Thursday with persons interested in EPA's organization and general interests.
Garner will also talk about EPA's proposals and available funding.
The talk will be given at 9:30 a.m. in the Apollo Room located on the first floor of the Space Laboratories. Campus West
SUA presents in concert
Chase
Joe Zambra
The Chase Factor: a concept of brass, using slashing high notes, extroverted swing, tasteful dynamics and an indefinable pulsation. The hallmark of the Chase brass is a device used sparingly but tellingly; a literal waterfall of trumpet timbre and technique. Its heard in the janty "Get It On in the Mornin'" and on Chase's magnum opus, the "Invitation To A River" suite, which vacilates between the banks of jazz and rock. Chase's growing repertoire also includes an insinuating "Hello Groceries," "Celebrate," "Open Up Wide," and on the funky side "In the Years To Come."
Chase is more than nine people playing together. It's nine people becoming a part of each other. They created a new thing, in fact. Rather than any other label, it's creative rock.
Tickets on Sale Today at SUA office
Ticket Prices
2. 50 3.00 3.50
SATURDAY APRIL 22
8:00 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium
and the
often
city,
with
its
real
30
need
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but
out
AQUATIC
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
RAIN
82nd Year, No. 124
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Oddities Galore In Small Towns
Tuesday, April 18, 1972
See Page 7
Nixon Suspends Hanoi Air Raids
BULLETIN
SAIGON (AP) - President Nixon has ordered U.S. bombing of North Vietnam suspended in the Hanoi-Halong area and greatly reduced in the southern panhandle while swaiting a political response from Hanoi, U.S. military sources disclosed
The suspension order applied to all tent locations is parallel of latitude 80 miles south of HOU.
"The President is deliberately holding off after Sunday's strikes in the Hanoi and Haiphong areas to see what North Vietnam is going to do," said one source. "The President has been out rul'd. It depends on what North Vietnam does."
PARIS (AP)—North Vietnam held out the possibility Monday of high-level secret talks to end the Vietnam war if the United States balls air attacks on North Vietnam.
A second and linked condition was that the United States agree to go back to the
★ ★ ★
Senate Group Votes to End War Funds
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted Monday afternoon to cut off all money for all U.S. forces fighting in Indochina on Dec. 31 if Hanoi returns all American prisoners.
The vote on the amendment of Sens. Clifford Case, 298th District, and Frank Church, D-104th District, passed 9 to 7. Fulbright, D-Airk, the committee chairman, left the meeting on the presidential news year.
The committee acted after hearing Secretary of State William P. Rogers describe the bombing of North Vietnam as an protection to the protection of American troops.
"The way to the bombing, to end the horrors of the war, is to end the war." Case
Coleman writes: "The real horror is not the death itself.
"It is a question of whether to do this now or ten years from now. This is the only way to see if Vietnamization will succeed, and how we can close that line with our power." Case said.
Church said the amendment to the State Department funding bill "really did not change," the Senate amendment," passed last year by the Senate and which called for U.S. withdrawal as a matter of policy." The State department is been disregarding that," Church said.
Supplies and money would still be available to the South Vietnamese, Case
"We are utilizing the power of the purse to bring about an orderly completion of the withdrawal of all forces from Indochina," Church said.
The key wording of the amendment is that no money "may be expended or obligated after Dec. 31, 1972, for the purpose of engaging U.S. forces, land, sea, or air, in hostilities in Indochina, subject to an agreement for the release of all prisoners of war held by the government of North Vietnam."
once-a-week peace talks which the U.S. South Vietnamese side broke off last
If these demands are met, it was announced, North Vietnamese Poliburo member Le Duc That will come to Paris to talk to the talks, presumably at the secret level.
Theohad met several times last year with President Nixon's national security adviser, Henry A. Kissinger, in secret Paris exchanges which failed to produce a settlement. Washington said Hani broke the talks with Kissinger, claiming Thao was
THE U.S. DELEGATION to the Vietnam conference withheld comment on the North Vietnamese proposal pending consultations with Washington.
The North Vietnamese package deal came out at a news conference held by Minister of State Xuan Thuy, who has been calling for the package since the talks began in January 1969.
His proposals were made public to culminate a flurry of secret exchanges through "a private channel" between the United States and North Vietnam. The United States was thought to be pressing for more American involvement or in connection with the regular sessions.
The exchanges were aimed at getting the talks going again after Nixon had indefinitely suspended them March 23 to September 18, when he called "riflebuster", by the North Vietnamese.
U. S. AMBASSADOR William J. Porter reported last Thursday that the United States wanted the talks resumed that day, but this was rejected. North Vietnam countered by saying it had proposed talks every Wednesday since the conference was held, and that the United States said "no." Neither side reported conditions it was laying down.
Xuan Thuy in answer to questions Monday revealed what Hanoi had in mind. Asked about the possibility of new secret laxity in its relations with Vietnam does not resume its work and on the other hand if the United States does not stop its escalation of the war and destruction against the Democratic Republic there is no basis for private meetings."
Pressed as to whether this meant that if the United States agrees to hold regular sessions of the talks and stops the bombing of North Vietnam, secret negotiations can then resume. Thuy responded: "That is correct."
★ ★ ★
1968年新建的乌鲁木齐市中心城区,图为乌鲁木齐市中心城区示意图。
TED BY MARY KINGSON
A woman in a white dress is seated on the left, facing another woman who is sitting on the right. The woman on the right has curly hair and is wearing a dark dress with a high collar. A man stands behind her, holding a book and looking at the woman on the right. She is wearing a white dress and has a headscarf covering her hair. The background consists of rows of empty chairs and a stage.
Kansan Photo by RICHARD GUSTIN
... Crowd was hostile to traffic plan ...
Robert Malinowsky
Opposition Imperils Campus Traffic Plan
By RICHARD COOLEY Kansan Staff Writer
About 200 faculty and students who attended the hearing raised a storm of concern.
In view of vigorous opposition expressed at an open hearing on the KU Traffic and Planning Board's proposal to install parking meters on campus, re-route traffic and revamp parking zones, Robert Wilkinson, assistant director of KU library operations, the board said it was doubtful that the board had proceed with the plan in its present form.
MALNOWSKY, WHO conducted the meeting, said he would report the negative feelings expressed at the meeting to the other members of the board and said the intense opposition would probably end the plan in its present form.
Malinowski said that the Board technically would no longer exist after it finished work on the proposed plan and committee would have to appoint another, better
Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for facilities and operations, said that the purpose of the hearing was to gauge public acceptance of the proposal.
"Judging from the response here, the reaction is largely negative that the reaction is largely negative."
Most of the criticism centered on the proposed installation of parking meters at various locations on campus. Malnowski said the meters would facilitate parking for campus visitors and generate revenue for the traffic and parking department.
BUT OPPONENTS contended that the addition of parking meters would detract from the aesthetic beauty of the campus, and suggested that alternative solutions be examined before proceeding with the installation of meters.
George Coggins, associate professor of law and chairman of the local Sierra Club, interrupted Malinowsky's presentation and declared, "There is no way parking meters are not bad and there is no way more cars should come on campus."
Coggins termed the proposal "another example of wait until next year before we leave."
The secretive manner in which the proposal was formulated also drew considerable criticism, as did the lack of participation on the planning committee.
MALINOWSKY SAID three students
U.S. May Renew Attacks
SAIGON (AP)—An official U.S. source said Monday he expected renewed bombing of North Vietnam's heartland, including Hanoi and Haiphong, unless Communist-led forces called off their IRA general offensive in South Vietnam.
Moscow said Sunday's raids on the Hapagh港 dock area damaged four Soviet submarines.
The State Department did not concede that ships had been hit, but said "it was inadvertent and regrettable" if they were. It added, however, that "countries which supply offensive equipment to the North Vietnamese . . . share responsibility."
PENTAGON SOURCES in Washington said the U.S. missile frigate Woron was
Rear Axle Defect Forces Recall of 2 Ford Models
DETROIT (AP)—Ford Motor Co. announced Monday it is recalling nearly 400,000 Ford Tortosins and Mercury Montegos—virtually the entire 1972 model-sized cars—to correct a defect when allow rear wheels to come off the car.
Gordon H. Robertson, service engineering manager of Ford's Customer Support Center, received reports of rear axle bearing deterioration caused by a variety of factors. In extreme cases, Robertson said, and lead to an axle shaft detached.
The spokesman said there have been no confirmed cases of personal injury, although one driver is claiming he suffered a whiplash when a wheel seperated.
A Ford spokesman said there have been five reported cases where Torinos or Montego lost rear wheels while driving causing damage to the cars.
Ford said it is sending certified letters to the owners of the cars, instructing them to take the vehicles to their dealers for installation of retainer plates which will
Affected by the recall are 323,000 Torinos in the United States, 18,000 Torinos in Canada, 73,000 Montegos in the United States and 9,000 Montoges in Canada. A number of the recalled cars represented "Essentially all" of the 1972 models built so far.
The bearings are covered by the normal 12-month, 12,000-mile warranty on new cars. If the bearings fail beyond those limits, "Ford will probably replace them free of charge as well," the spokesman said.
A Ford spokesman said the bearing failure was attributable to the design of the rear axle. The failure itself is caused by axle shaft deflections, vehicle weight distribution, bearing loads and such factors as salt contamination of the axle.
give an audible warning of bearing failure before it becomes critical.
He said in the event of a bearing failure, Ford will use premium bearings to replace the worn bearings. Changes on the assembly line, to be made this week, will involve repositioning the bearings and pad of the standard bearings currently being used, and a heavier axle, he said.
attacked Sunday in the Gulf of Tonkin, apparently by a North Vietnamese gunboat. One American crewman was reported killed and several others were
U. S. B52 bombers turned their attention to targets in South Vietnam, ranging from
See Related Story
Page 3
Quang Tri in the far north to near An Loc, the embattled provincial cap 60 miles north of Saigon. The Saigon command claimed its forces killed 560 enemy Monday in heavy fighting in South Vietnam's northern provinces. Government casualties were put at 32 killed and 68 wounded.
American officers in An Loc said the enemy still held 15 per cent of the encircled town, and a government made the part they control. A government division sent to relieve An Loc was diverted to meet elements of a North Army force. The troops on the march for attacks near Saigon.
SAIGON HEADQUARTERS said its forces killed 399 enemy with the aid of artillery and air strikes in two battles about four miles east of Fire Base Bastogne, 12 miles south of the old imperial capital of Hue.
Government forces battled North Vietnamese near the Cambodian town of Kompong Trach just across the South Vietnamese border, killing 126 enemy headquarters said. Government casualties were given as 124 killed and 37 wounded.
Two fights in Quang Tin and Quang Nam provinces to the south left 11 dead, Saigon
Elsewhere in Cambodia, a 1,000-man Cambodian force was reported cut off in fighting near the ruins of Angkor Wat. In two days of fighting, government forces had lost 73 killed and wounded, the high rate of reported. No enemy casualties were given.
IN COMMENTING on Sunday's strikes and on the possibility of more attacks deep inside North Vietnam, the official U.S. source said: "The whole thing -Sunday's
raids—was political. The reason the Hanoi and Haiphong areas were hit was to put pressure on North Vietnam to relieve the pressure down here.
"I think that if the North continues the offensive in the South, Nixon will go back to Hanoi and Haiphong. He means business. He has no intention of demolishing the North, but he wants to let them know what he will do."
Until Sunday, the U.S. aerial campaign against the North which began April 6, had been limited to the southern part of North Carolina and the south of Haiti and its port city, Haiphong.
FURTHER EVIDENCE of possible political overreactions in the strikes came in the evaluation by knowledgeable sources of past aerial campaigns in the North. One source said nearly four years of sustained bombing all the way to the Red Chinese border failed to produce the desired losses of halting enemy resupply in the South.
He declined to estimate how big an aerial campaign it would take now to seriously affect Hanoi's current general offensive.
U. S. military sources said the thrust of Monday's air strikes had shifted back to enemy concentration and base areas in South Vietnam.
One such concentration was said to be a North Vietnamese division south of Da Nang which was hit Sunday, killing an estimated 200 to 300 enemy troops. Intelligence sources said it was unclear whether the division was newly infiltrated or just being deployed in independent units to help them into a single powerful striking force.
AFTER SUNDAY'S bombing, U.S. officials refused to say whether the Haiphong docks had been hit. Radio Hanoi said they had and reported one Soviet seaman was wounded. In its diplomatic protest, Moscow said it was afraid: "Numerous holes were caused, particularly in the living quarters of the crews."
"There were dead and wounded among the workers of the port who were performing unloading operations aboard the Soviet vessels."
were on the original committee. One, he said, had graduated at mid-year, another had quit, and the third had not participated.
Malinsky said he had scheduled an open hearing on the plan as soon as it was possible for him to do so. He said that the chancellor's office had refused to allow discussion of the matter until the University's budget for next year was approved.
THERE WAS also criticism for the committee's lack of research concerning the effects the proposed changes would have on the campus bus system. Jim Newlow, Lawrence graduate student and co-author of the Transportation Committee, charged that Malnowsky had failed to respond to evidence presented him showing that the
To charges that the student body had not been informed of the proposed changes until the last minute, Malinowsky said that the students on the committee should have taken the responsibility of keeping the student body informed. He also said that the committee added additional committee members from the Student Senate, but had denied them.
altered traffic flow would seriously h幅 scheduling of camus buses.
Malinowski responded that he did not have the authority to draw up bus schedules but that the proposed system would not preclude the operation of buses, although some rescheduling would be necessary.
Several alternative proposals were discussed during the meeting. Several students recommended that a well-financed mass-transit system would best handle traffic and parking problems, and asked for planning for such a system be undertaken.
Malinowsky s. ' that if the proposed changes were no acceptable, then the same regulations now in effect would hold for next year. He assured the audience that traffic would be informed of the Traffic and Parking Board's decision on the present proposal.
OTHER STUDENTS suggested that the entire central area of the campus be closed to all vehicular traffic and that Jayhawk Boulevard be torn up and replaced with a new pedestrian petition he said had been signed by approximately 500 students' favor this course.
About 70 persons met at Westminster college to discuss night life and protections of the U.S. Bombing Museum and Hampstead Park.
U.S. Bombing Protest Slated for Wednesday
According to Carl Horowitz, St. Louis sophomore, and spokesman for the group, a protest rally will take place at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Westminster Center.
An information sheet given out by the group said that bombing protests were
being planned across the nation for this weekend.
Horowitz said that members of Civil Service Employees Local 1132, Lawrence University, some members of foreign students, McGovern's Foreign Workers, University faculty members, members of the Women's Coalition and the Vietnam Veterans Against the War
Another information sheet said President Nixon was escalating the Vietnam war and not ending it as he promised.
The sheet said Nixon broke his promise when he resumed the bombing of North Vietnam, ordered the invasion of Laos and Cambodia, ordered saturation bombing of all Indochina "in order to force people into concentration camps and urban ghettoes," according to a statement posted on ground troop withdrawals to distract from the escalation of the air war, increased use of anti-personal bombs and sabotaged the Paris Peace talks.
WALKER
Babysitting Duties Conflict With Studies
Shelly Miller had to turn in a late paper.
So she loaded Lynn Nelson and Katy Gold,
so she was babysitting into a wagon and took them along. She was taking the paper to Carruth-O'Leary.
2
Tuesday, April 18, 1972
University Daily Kansan
StudEx Committee Seeks Better Instruction Survey
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
Improving the effectiveness of the Curriculum and Instruction Survey and revising freshman mathematics among the goals outlined at the first meeting of the Academic Affairs Committee of the Student Affairs Department.
Following the election of Alex Thomopulos, Sapelle, Nigeria, graduate student, and Joe McKinney, a university vice chairman as chairman and vice-chairman of the committee, priorities were established and subcommittees
Landolt asked if the
civilian assistance and
Instruction Survey
warranted a budget request of
$18,000 up $16,300 from fiscal
1972
LANDOLT SAID the survey was done by all instructors given by all instructors. He said good teachers administered the evaluations and bad ones did not. Mr. Anderson asked what he learned.
one committee member, was to render the scales for rating teachers in Feedback virtually meaningless.
It was suggested that action be taken to make promotion and tenure of professors contingent upon course evaluations in order to force instructors to allow comment upon their performances.
John House, Raytown, Mo,
senior, and StudEx chairman,
said the Curriculum and
curriculum Survey was
technically a college committee
the Academic Affairs Committee
but last year the survey had been
allowed to run on its own. The
committee decided to have the
subcommittee assume a more
than administrative of the survey.
$20,000 Sought For Child Care
BILL NEIDT, Ft. Collins, Colo. junior, suggested that a subcommittee be formed to investigate changes in freshman requirements in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
"The center would serve students first and then University staff and faculty." Laflin said.
By LINDA CHAPUT
Kansan Staff Writer
Molly Lafall, chairman of the Hilltop child directors of the Hilltop Child Care Center, asked the Financing and Auditing Committee to the Student Senate to open a day care center next fall.
The request was made Monday, April 13, 2016, open in bearing held by the Financial Auditing committee to decide the allocations for the following year.
"We have planned this center at the beginning of the year. Center in Lawrence, which is really good day care center," she said, "that allows families to be the family they serve are single parent families and most are also students, so there is a need for more."
Lafain said the $20,000 would be a one time allocation for supplies and that the aim of Hilltop Child Care was to be self supporting.
"We've had calls from people who are desperate for a center to place their children."
Eleven other groups presented their projected budgets to the Finance and Auditing Committee, which asked for $28,830. Community Development Collaborative, Students Organization, Students Organization, $170
Community Service Clearing House, $375; CWENS, $580.
The Turkish Students Association had a projected Chorus, Chorus 1, KU Model AOS, OASI $1090; KU-Y, $185; KU Danceur Radio Club, $485; Fok Danceur Radio, $69.95; Draft Hale, $3,500.
Bill O'Neill, Bailwin, Mo,
junior and Student Senate
treasurer, said the hearings
continue every night this
week.
Not all groups that requested funds have signed up for interviews with the Finance and Auditing Committee, he said. Groups need to be an interview focus to be considered in the budget plans.
"The hearings have been fairly informative for the committee," O'Neill said.
He said he expected the next few evenings to go much more smoothly because the committee needed more questions of questions were important.
"I think the Finance and Auditing Committee has an extraordinary amount of work to do in the next week." O'Neill said.
"if things go as well as they did tonight, though, we should have our recommendations ready for the Senate by Monday," he said.
Campus Briefs
'Nursing for Black Women'
Smoking Clinic Meeting
Stella Smith, a registered nurse at the KU Medical Center, will speak at 7 p.m. tonight in the Hashinger living room on "The Profession of Nursing for the Black Woman" not on "Sickle Cell Anemia," as was reported in Monday's Kansas. It was also included in the discussion about the work of Liberation Relevant to the Black Women" will start at 7:30 tonight in Hashinger. The panel discussion will start at 8 tonight.
There will be an orientation and testing meeting for persons participating in the smoking clinic, sponsored by the psychological clinic, at 7 p.m. tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
Transcendental Meditation
Exceptional Children Picnic
The Student Council for Exceptional Children will meet at 1:00 p.m. April 23 at Centennial Park to sponsor a picnic for the special needs of Cordell Elementary School. Activities will include softball games, title-flying and other games. All are encouraged to attend.
There will be two introductory lectures on transcendental meditation at 3:30 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. Wednesday in the Council Room. The lectures will be given by David Katz, a visiting teacher of transcendental meditation. The lectures are free and open to the public.
Solid Waste Management
The Douglas County Solid Waste Management Commission will hold its regular monthly meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the County Commissioners Room at the Courthouse. The meeting is open to the public.
After some discussion, the committee decided to establish a subcommittee with the more experienced members of the general requirements in the college, including foreign language, Western Civilization and African Studies. The subcommittee would work closely with its counterpart in the College Assembly and each College-within-theCollege.
Poetry Reading Tonight
In this way, committee members said, uniform proposals could be made to the appropriate governing bodies.
Poet Edward Dorn is scheduled to read a selection of his poetry tonight at 8:00 in the Kansas Room of the Union. Dorn is a former poet-in-residence at KU and for the last two years has been poet in residence at the University of Essex in England. He is the author of "Gunslinger" a mock western epic, and "Some Business Recently Transacted in the White World."
A THIRD SUBCOMMITTEE, directed toward improvement of the curriculum in the KU School where the graduate was charged with maintaining academic standards in the graduate school during the summer.
Maintenance of grading procedures favorable to students was the task given a fourth quarter. The Topeka, sophomore, said proposals for the elimination of incomplete and withdrawals from the Council next year. Other committee members said they had heard rumors that the creditors were abolished. The subcommittee was formed to ensure that students receive a voice in any such decision.
THE COMMITTEE also also establishes a meeting where a complaint is filed, and a student could appeal unfair grades or resolve difficulties in the work.
COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents
THE LAST PICTURE SHOW
Hillcrest 2
muxcells
HBC School
Monday
Fri.Sat.Sun
4:45,7-12,9:00.4f.:Sun.
Sat.Add:12,15,17,18,19,20,
p.m.
HEAREA POLICE
Tickets to School preserve 30 min prior to
arrival.
Tickets for meals for last
show time are final.
ALL TESTS $2.00
The Godfather
R. **13** | SUN 8:00 A.M. | WEDNESDAY 9:00 A.M.
Mon thru Thurs
8:00 p.m. Only
7:30 p.m.
3:30, 7:00, 10:10
Sunday 7:30 & 8:00 p.m.
Box Office Mon thru Thurs
8:00 p.m. Open
Tickets on sale for that day
per performance
Hillcrest ALL SEAT
THE CULPEPER CATTLE CO.
PG NOW!!
Varsity
UHAME ... telephone VI 3-1065
9
Granada
THEATRE...telephone V13-5783
Mary. Queen of Scots
SAN DIEGO MUSIC
TRAVAILMENTS
Twilight Hour Sat. & Sun.
at 5:00 - $1.00 & $5c
ALBERT R. BROCUDU and HARRY SALTZMAN present
Sean Connery
"James Bond 007"
"Diamonds Are Forever"
PLUS
"The Organization"
GP 20 COLOR United Artists
Sunset
in San Diego War on Arrogance #4
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 18, 1972
2
Rogers Says Bombings Necessary to Protect GIs
WASHINGTON (AP)—A White House spokesman declared Monday that President Nixon would "take whatever action is necessary to thwart this attack of the Islamic extremist by North Vietnam forces.
Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler had this word for newsmen a few hours after the shooting. Rogers had told senators bombing of the Haiphong and Hanoi areas was essential to protection of American troops and overall organization program
Ziegler would not discuss the Moscow claim that four Soviet ships were damaged in the Haphong bombing raid.
At his afternoon briefing,
Ziegler referred reporters to
Rogers' remarks and said the
secretary was speaking for the
"WE HAVE received the Soviet note, we are studying it and we will be replying," Ziegler said in response to a question.
Dispatches from Moscow said a reply had been delivered to the Kremlin and an American journalist told it that he said it was "not an apology."
Rogers, the first high
matter executive to
comment publicly on the
weekend bombings of the two
brothers of the Foreign
Relations Committee.
President had three purposes in mind in sending the bombers
"To protect American troops in both Vietnam and protect the lives of their families, withdrawal program continues." The U.S. withdrawal program
—To insure that the South Vietnamese will be able to defend themselves.
Vietnam by force."
In this line, he said, "I'm not going to make any announcement about what we're not going to do," adding two exceptions:
There will be no reintroduction of U.S. ground combat troops and there will be no use of nuclear weapons in Vietnam.
Otherwise, the President will take whatever action necessary to meet the three conditions that must be reached this weekend bombing. Rogers said.
The air raids, the secretary sent on represented no change of policy except that Nixon has constantly set out to take necessary action to protect
IN THE FACE of hostile questions by committee chairman Sen. J.W. Fulbright, D.Ark, and K. Frank Church, D.Idaho, the secretary said we were confined to military targets.
This was determined, Rogers declared, by what he called the all-out commitment Hanoi has to conventional invasion of the South.
He added that conditions now indicate the current air war could succeed even though past determination to keep fishing,
With 12 of their 13 divisions out, leaders have made such major targets as oil supply dumps much more than in the past, he impudently.
IN DECLARING it vital to turn in the current drive, Rogers said also the successful defense prospect he has a better prospects for settlement.
For the assault to succeed would be a disaster, he said.
"resulting in a bloodbath . . . a terrible massacre."
In addition, American foreign policy would suffer a major blow through the destabilization of Southeast Asia, he said.
At the Pentagon, sources said a U.S. destroyer was attacked in the ocean apparently by a boat on Vietnamese gunboat. One American crewman was reported and several others wounded
NEW YORK (AP)—A coalition of environmental groups will kick off a nationwide campaign today to mobilize public opposition to proposed legislation it claims violates the National Environmental Policy Act.
About 2,500 information packets are to be mailed to national and local environmental agencies for peace and other organizations calling for "widespread and immediate citizen response" to save NEPA from congressional pressure to a packet made available here.
Nixon Adds Poland To Summit Itinerary
WASHINGTON (AP) -- After a day stop in Poland on the way home from a week-long summit visit to Moscow in May, the White House will hold a meeting.
Word of the May 31-June 1
Warswall visit came as a 25-
member advance team was
winging its way to Salzburg,
Austria. Moscow and Tehran, to
prepare for Nixon's Soviet
trade.
Despite escalating bombings in North Vietnam, with reports of Soviet ships hit in Haiphong harbor, deputy press secretary James M. Hassan plans for Nixon's Soviet trip are proceeding on schedule.
Secretary of State William P. Bush that he hoped the Southeast Asian developments would not affect the President's journey to Asia.
He gave his view in response to a question while he was testifying before the Senate Foreign Committee on another matter.
Tramph Ambassador Witold Poltramczyk made a personal call on President Nixon at the White House Monday morning to
Troops Battle Tupamaros
By RAUL GARCES
Ecologists Move to Save NEPA
declared "internal war" against the Tupamaro guerillas.
The deaths raised to 19 the number of persons slain in fighting that started Friday after lefthists. The government
WHERE MONTEVIDEO, (AP)—Army troops fought i predawn gun battle Monday around the district office of the Communist party and seven civilians were killed, an official
The official report on Monday's shooting was issued 17 hours after the fight erupted in the Paso del Norte town of Lomita miles from the center of the city.
Earlier reports from witnesses said nine persons were killed, including an army captain, and the others wounded in the bourdong battle.
But the official communique listed only the names of seven
Apollo 16 to Keep Going Despite Peeling of Paint
HOUSTON (AP)—Engineers said Monday the substance peeling off the Apollo 16 lunar lander appeared to be bad pain. But they said it was unneeded for this mission and the astronauts toward their landing Thursday in the highlands of the moon.
Astronaut John W. Young and Charles M. Duke Jr. were directed to make general commander of the machine, Orion, Monday night to make certain it remained fit and Thomas K. Mattingly II was ordered by the flight plan to stay on the command ship, cassec.
Capsule communicator Tony England told the astronauts to keep a watch on Orion's flaking装备 that assured them it was no problem.
A spokesman for Grumman Corp., which built Orion, said the
000:1inch thick coating of white silicone paint was designed to protect the moon machine from bruising during its three days on the moon.
The spokesman said, "The problem may have been in the application or in the batch of paint that was used."
Young and Duke will guide Orion to a landing in the lunar high country at 3:41 p.m. on Thursday.
Young and Duke made an unscheduled inspection visit to the lunar module once Mission Control determined the matter was not serious, astronauts found everything on the inside of the craft all right.
They will spend a record 73 hours climbing. They will make three excursions using an electric car to visit craters and climb about 700 feet of rock.
villian dead, and said some troops were wounded. It did not matter who had been killed. Pupamaro or Communist party members, nor did it give details about the attack.
Newspapers and radio stations in Uruguay were barred from printing newspapers because of censorship. The declaration of a 30-day antiguerilla war approved by the government included provisions for news censorship.
The measure was voted after Tupamaros killed a former government official and three members of the bushes Friday. Police and army patrols then killed eight suspected guillions and captured a dozen more in a series of bombs. Montevideo and the suburbs.
Early Sunday, bombs exploded at three Communist party district offices and at the homes of three leftist politicians and the gunmen who were in church that gunned them during use one of the ambushes Friday.
President Juan M. Borderry held an urgent meeting with leaders of his Colorado party and the opposition National party.
Police and military patrols, using the broad powers granted by the war declaration, mounted huge search operations in the Monite video area, which has visited 20 percent of the country's 24 million residents.
In neighboring Argentina, army and navy units increased patrols along the Parana River after a drone trying to flee Uruguay
deliver what was described as a warm invitation to Nixon to visit Poland.
Nixon has a particular interest in returning to the Polish capital where he received an unusually warm and emotional greeting when he made a stop there on his way home from Moscow after the war with Nikita Khrushchev in 1959 when he was vice-president.
Agnew Urges Food Price Drop
News Briefs By The Associated Press
The visit to Poland will come following a May 30-31 stop in Iran on Nixon's return trip from Moscow.
HOUSTON—President Spiro T. 'Agnew told the nation's supermarket executives Monday that they could face federal price controls unless they voluntarily trimmed rising food prices. He had said the executives efforts to halt rising prices, but said not enough had been done.
By The Associated Press
CHICAGO - A lone hijacker demanding $500,000 and a trip to the Bahamas seized control of a Delta Air Lines jet over Florida, but was captured without incident less than an hour after the plane touched down in Chicago. The plane, a Convair 880 carrying 91 persons including a crew of seven, was bound from Miami to Chicago with the only scheduled stop at Palm Beach.
$500,000 Air Hijack Foiled
Ed McMahon Leaves Wife
WASHINGTON - The nation's economy is in the midst of a "solid and rather vigorous expansion" now and should match the Nixon administration's forecast for all of 1972, the Treasury Department's chief economist said. Edgar R. Fiedler, assistant Treasurer secretary for economic policy, told newsmen the economy was doing well. He said signs of picking up. He said the administration should make its goal of reducing unemployment from 5.9 per cent to 5 per cent by the close of the year.
Economist Sees Good Trends
NEW YORK-Television personality Ed McMahon has left his wife of 27 years and will live in California alone when the Johnny Carson "Tonight" show moves to Burbank next month, a spokesman for Mrs. McMahon said.
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The save NEPA campaign was organized 10 days ago by leaders from the University of Arizona environmental Activism, Friends of the Earth and the Environmental Protection Agency.
It was signed into law by President Nixon New Year's Day, 1970.
WAN, an acronym for the act, has been enacted by governments for environmental stair signs of federal projects, including the Alaska pipeline and the Huron River. The act requires the federal agencies to consider fully all environmental and social costs of feasible alternatives and guarantee citizen participation in decision making. It is to be adopted.
Richard Lahn, a Washington
lobbyist for the Sierra Club, said,
"Federal agencies, Interior, the
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REFERMING TO 80 eighth bills
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or other laws to circumvent
compliance with NEPA, Lahn
The campaign kits say,
"Painfully aware that the public would not tolerate an overt effort to kill NEPA outright, an alliance of vested interests, federal government, presidents devied a program to little at a time by amending it to death behind closed doors."
Sam Love, coordinator for Environmental Action, said that if one of the bills passes, "it will give us more access to interests, the highway, the dam, other interests to rush into Congress and seek exemption for their projects. We'll be left with a national Environmental Policy Act."
Love said the first of the bills went to the House floor Monday.
SENIOR CLASS PARTY
Friday, April 28.
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MG. The sports car America loved first.
4
Tuesday, April 18, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Transportation Morass
The question of what the University will do about the financially weak public transportation system in Lawrence has come up again. The last time it was considered the question constituted a crisis situation and the Student Senate had to vote to help finance the bus company with money from the Senate's own fund just to keep it running. That was one of the Senate's better actions, but I think that at best that solution should be regarded as a stopgap measure. Now is the time for one institution to start planning which will take into account predictions as to where the concentration of the student population will be and the direction of growth this campus will be taking in the future.
Most people are aware of the inconvenience of buses because of the necessity for schedules and location of bus stops which cater for the public's general needs rather than any individual's specific needs.
People would rather ride in a car than endure a crowded, uncomfortable bus ride for very long. Nevertheless, many are coming to realize that the problems caused by limited parking facilities, poor public transportation and pollution are the results of the large numbers of automobiles, many of which carry only one person. These are too serious to ignore. It could be that a good mass transportation system is the most sensible, if not
only, way to eliminate these problems.
Students living in the University's residence halls are particularly aware of the necessity for an adequate public transportation system because the halls have been cleverly located far removed from everything, including campus. Sometimes, but not often, we can appreciate the benefits accrued from the healthy exercise of walking. We can remind ourselves how much fun it will be in the 21st century (and especially when exaggeration) to our grandchildren how far we had to walk to school every day. The size of the campus itself makes it impossible for anyone to walk from one end to the other in the ten minutes between classes. This problem will be compounded as the campus grows, particularly if classrooms are ever located west of Iowa.
The need for some sort of mass transportation system is so obvious that chance can no longer be expected to provide it. It is unfortunate that the money needed for such a system is not readily available and probably mean that theation rates will have to be raised. Perhaps it will be easier to accept such an increase in rates because the service it would provide would not only be beneficial but also visible to all students.
—Mary Ward
Readers Respond
Protest Action Defended
Question
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
4. Reply to Paul E. Berger
In your letter to the editor on April 13, concerning the Women's Coalition "performance" at the opening ceremony of the women in society, you women of the Coalition for "socially irresponsible and immature behavior," "for the other than the teacher, and attendants, the promoters of the exposition, and the people visiting the exposition," and for removing a sign which you failed to mention, the promoters of the exposition, is that the Women's Coalition somehow abridged the "freedom of expression and the freedom of speech," and on to say that such freedom is permissible in so far as it does not conflict with the rights of others. I ask you, the Rights伯尔, what before reading the statement criticising the beauty contest as insulting and exploitive of women from Sam Haldeman the President of the Engineering School Council, Mr. Haldeman own. Secondly there was no attempt to ridicule the contestants by shaming or insulting them. This was made possible through a written statement read. Also members of Women's Coalition attempted to contact all the contestants before the event to ensure their freedom was understood but you seem to encourage the contestants to examine the way in which they were being used in the content of their freedom was intended and to encourage the many years of socially controller conditioning that women undergone during adolescence to be some an honor to be recognized sex object.
You say that you do not oppose, you liberate and equal them in own statement, your own statement, you say that the contest was an attempt to single out "an ideal, as a woman and as a man," because they itself says that somehow women as persons are different and that they live in life. In closing state you
because we believe that disagree with an idea does not necessarily discredit the idea nor affront." Thus you indicate that you disagree with our means rather than our goals. How can one disagree with our means ever be solved if they are left to a limited sphere of "meetings designed for that purpose, and into social, technical, or educational events" By such token "support" which is orderly, peaceful, and which was carried out with the permission of authorities within our basic acceptance of a exist society and your own contentment with the privileges that societal awards you as a man.
Pat Henry
Pat Henry
Prairie Village sophomore
'Thanks'
To the Editor:
I was extremely surprised and pleased at the letter in the April 13th UDK. I was surprised that someone wrote this. This letter actually was printed. 2. That even in a University community, people will not only hear but also write to me. 3. will make no further inquiry into the situation. 4. That a good number of people are capable of the same hunchly-veiled hatred. 5. The word "hatred" is letters in response to actions of the Women's Coalition I have never found such a perfect example of diatribe, and I thank you.
I appreciate your high moral tone—"euphoric experience shamefully bleimed personal vennetas, insultation the seven
...itss, insulting the queen
...because I will now be able
to recognize the type of criticism
that passes itself off for fact.
I extend my congratulations for well-written letter containing a message that I believe be useful for yellow journalism students. A man who says he "fails to see why" the sign was written is one of those sharing his confusion especially
since he failed to specify what the sign did say. It was a directive to a particular exhibit, enumerating the exhibit's desirable traits. However, the last trait which said "do not wash your hands during rush season"” has obviously little to do with the display and much to do with the attitude of many employers that if a woman is not pregnant, she will be impaired (naturally)’ but will be impaired inferior status as a worker.
I'm also most happy to be counted among the few who know that 'this was not purely a game', but I would like to Mr. Berger for exposing the subversive tactics of someone with masculinity (?) and surface violence (?). femininity ('girls') while omitting the other qualities you stated were under attack in the film. Intelligence and life's goals' You must be careful, one gets the feeling that you do not think too much about intelligence, let alone the demonstrators.
"A great deal of agitation and attention-calling had been done to overcome the inertia. This is why we need to formulate consider myself very fortunate to know that the Women's Movement is past tense. This seems to be common knowledge nowadays, and I am sure the women's groups will be enlightened considerably to know that they are merely persevereering in a time-honored way. It is not hard to relieve to know that you are in a position to "caution zealots"—definition: A person who is zealous, or an extreme devotee of degree, would abridge the rights of others to free expression and freedom to disagree. ..." I was aware that you should learn you do not oppose the liberation and equality of women."
I can usually cope with a situation when I teach me to handle the ones who have the good grace to admit their hypocrisy, no matter how they do.
Paula Libel Overland Park senior
For these lessons I'm eternally in your debt.
I
An Unlearned Lesson In Ireland
Poor Ulster. It is a running sore, where hundreds bleed for their rulers' help. Ulster is the most populous, primarily the Stormont government, I mean Westmian. How many have to be killed for England to do something so bad? And the more also to be killed) in a holding action?
The immediate aggressor in most of the terrorist attacks is, at the moment, Iran. The attack on the US embassy in Ireland is a post-colonial situation, the aftermath of the Republic's independence. It was not a clean break, but Iran had an ambition that Ireland had to make from England.
The local agents of the colonial power were clustered in the Northern Territory, and they wanted to go with the new Republic, where they were ruled by their former subjects. Nor did they want to bring property and investments in Ireland.
So they forced a compromise—the recognition of a colonial bastion left on the free island, a small rearguard of English rule on Irish soil. It was an unsatisfactory situation, one that England allowed to tester. The
Republic wanted a united and independent Ireland. Ulster felt endangered, and so repressed its own Catholic minority.
England, trying to get by, allowed the rulers to protest civil rights to Catholics—which further angered them in the neighboring Republic. England was able to stabilize government, and supported stable government, unjust treatment of Ulsber's minor.
But all this merely puts off the inevitable. No one gains in a little country bombing it to pieces. To get England on an occupying army now, its soldiers being killed—how long can it prop up this teetering remnant of colonial days, the anachronistic by the refusal to make a clean break?
It is England's duty to protect, so far as possible, the lives and lands of its puppets, without further endorsing their separatism. It is a hard solution, but it is a solution. The non-solution has only prolonged the diving.
Of course, we are no one to be preaching to the English. At least the colonial-reairgard problem in Ireland
was their problem to be dealt with. we took on a problem not properly cursed- but France's—when we interjected Frenchy—broke up of colonial rule in Indochina.
There is a deadly parallel between English maintenance of a colonial anomaly in Ireland and our attempt to keep a puppet-government in Vietnam. For Stormtir, read Saigon. For restive Catholics, read Buddhists. For the IRA, the Vietcong. For Dublin, Hanoi. For Irish terrorism, Vietnamese civil war. For Iraq, the Islamic State, Westminster - Washington. And we did not have to be in this situation—those are as slow, clumsy, and grudging at withdrawal as England is proving.
We have some things to learn from England's mistakes in Ireland; but not much to teach other nations. Indeed, Senator Kennedy seems to want us to get England off the book in Ireland as we got France off the book in India. And so little have the opponents of our Vietnam war learned from that war!
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
James J. Kilpatrick
The Sociology of Spring?
SCRABLE, VA. – Spring is coming late again this year, and I am fidgety as a city editor waiting on copy team a star writer. “It’s dogwood?” Missed another deadhead, eh? What’s the holdup?
Star reporters can't be hurried. There is no editors can do. One waits—but the waiting holds both mystery and suspense. This mountain, with dark mountains, great-tipped, big-breasted, slumber on the western sky, their massive bulk as still as bronze by Henry
Moore. Yet we know—we know that life is quickening there.
A few days ago, down in Austin, Texas, a sociologist spoke to a group of young executives in seminar assembled. I missed his speech, but heard about it later. He began, it appears, by suggesting that the myth of God is time to know what he termed the myth of God. Intellectual men must agree, he said, that God is no more than a pipe dream conjured up by superstitious man. The audience
was still sputtering hours after he had gone.
In my turn to speak, I tried to respond out of my own untaught awareness of this slow unfolding time. Are we truly to believe, in our enlightened day, that nothing divine decreed the spring—that the quickening hills awake from a stupor; that the question is best answered with a question: Who, then, drafted the natural law?
Has he watched a spider crawling on a screen? We have been making the rounds this morning, when she would a sociologist make of a tricolor collie! In the span of an hour, this beautiful beast is gentle, lovely, comic, curious, indifferent, suspicious, puzzled, unshackled, eternal superintendent, the immortal boss; Flush, you quail! Run, rabbits! Who gave you permission to nest on my back? No, I would take student nurses. Whence came these instances in a dog?
1972 L. A. TIMES SYNDICATE
U.S.
N.VIET OFFENSIVE
is filled with wings, groseks yellow and cardinals red, a seargent-major of a blackbird, crimson chevrons on his sleeve. Charlie is back! Charlie is the chipping sparrow, short and bossy; God meant him to tend an Irish pub. Last year, we tape up a large piece of two feeder. Charlie's Bar & Grill. He is there now, fussing at the breakfast trade. Why the chipping sparrow?
The crocus came out some time ago, innocent as cherubim, and now the daffodils are edging shyly onto stage. Who planned the yellow-skirted daffoli? If of the warming earth, anemones
The light at the end of the tunnel
The animals awake. Suddenly there are chimpmunks moving in the old stone fences. High in a bare-limbed oak, a squirrel is chattering. We inspect the newly-boxed plots where our vegetables will go. Monstrous? A groundhog starts his hole squarely beneath the zucchini bed; Lorenzz is outraged.
James J. Kilpatrick
MICHAEL SCHNEIDER
are peeping forth, grape hyacinths, hepatica, tril luvies. In the wildflower garden of my wife are tiny things: they nestle beneath me; their petals pink as baby toes. Why do they come to life in spring?
We have birds, of course, the year around, but whole hours pass in winter when seldom a bird is seen. Now the morning sky
My wife is planting lettuce, row on row, her quick hands crumbling the mother earth. Rappahannock County is known to its natives as Rocky吊崖 county, and what is not rock is clay; but she is one of the green-thumbed people. Two years of organic gardening—two years of cultivating a manure—have done their work. "Grow!" she commands the seeds. And they will grow.
But not for yet a land. The fields are greening slowly, but the budding trees are still tight-furled. Two warm days, we say, just two warm days! Then the mountains will yawn and stretch, and all in a bursting hour the land will laugh with April born again. How to explain the spring? The sun is hot, and the life! You will find no answers, God knows, in sociology. God knows.
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Griff and the Unicorn
By Sokoloff
Kansan Telephone Numbers
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Business Office—UN 4-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff.
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THAT'S POLITICS FOR YOU...
IF ELECTED TO PUBLIC OFFICE, I PROMISE TO HELP THE DOWNTRODDEN!
YAY!
OSCAR
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 18, 1972
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Kansan Photo by DAVID WILPERS BLISS 118
By STEVE CRAIG Kansan Staff Writer
There is a great amount of damage being done to the environment by motorcycles in the Lawrence area, George Osmond, M.D., said Monday. Parks and forestry, said Monday. Osmond said the greatest amount of damage was the loss of five hives from an example of this is Holtum Park, located west of Gatehouse and Park 23 apartment complexes, near the edge of the grass has been destroyed by motorcycles, he said.
Park Damage Caused by Bikers
Motorcycle park proposal rejected . . .
'How many times have you gone down to Potter Lake to enjoy the peace and quiet and have it interrupted by a motorcycle?
The city has an ordinance forbidding the riding of motorcycles in parks, he said, but a motorcycle is such an uninhibited machine that it can go almost anywhere. This presents a problem because the police can't be there since it enforces the law, he said.
Osmond said that Holecum Park was not the only area affected and that any open area with a few hills would normally draw motorcycles Martin and Clinton in an adversible damage, he added.
Blevin's Honda, a local motorcycle dealer, preloaded the car with a license plate used as a mini-bike and motorcycle park Osmond said this vehicle was no place to put it without disturbing either the en-
"I feel enforcement isn't the answer except in flagrant cases
It was suggested that a tract of land presently designated as a future park site be used for a
'd like to see people say 'Loaoh what's happening, motorcycles and the surroundings just don't get along,'' he said.
Osmond feels the only way a motorcycle park can be constructed is by an individual or organization.
motorcycle park. Ossmond opposes this on an aesthetic basis. He said the area was filled with cottonwood trees and was a perfect park site. To turn it over motorcycles would be absurd, he said.
KU Staff Studies Lawrence Blight
Raw data for all phases of the Neighborhood Analysis Project have been collected and are in preparation for analysis, but no information will be released until after June 30, 1972. Barry S. Weller, assistant professor at Kansas University, will be principal investigator for the University of Kansas project
staff, said Friday.
Dean Supports Research As Key University Role
By SCOTT EATON Kansan Staff Writer
Argersinger was recently appointed to the position of vice-chancellor for research and graduate studies, a new position administration. The appointment will take effect July 1, 1972.
Argenster said that although some people drew distinctions between the two, he believed a university's purpose, he believed that education included
The general role of the university is threefold, William J. Argersinger Jr., dean of research and professor at Harvard, said the university today should instruct, promote research and serve the state, the nation and all
Argersinger has been on the faculty at KU since 1946. He came here after working on the Manhattan Project during 1945-1946. The Manhattan Project was America's effort to produce an atomic bomb.
ARGERSINGER ATTENDED Cornell University as an undergraduate, starting in the fall of 1934. He received his B.A. from Cornell in 1958 and his PhD there in 1942. He served on the faculty from 1942-1944, then he began work at the Manhattan Project.
Arngersinger was involved in chemical research in the Manhattan area of the production potium, which was studied for possible use in the triggering device of the first atomic bombs. He researched methods to find, clarify and concentrate potium
He was made a professor of chemistry at the University. He served for a time as associate dean of faculties, and became dean of research administration in 1976.
ARGERSINGER SAID the new office of vice-chancellor for research and graduate studies in the Department of research administration, of which he is now the head, and the president said that in addition to working in these two areas, the office would probably be involved in research activities at University, among those the Bureau of Child Research, the Geological Survey, and very many others. Angersinger said that although the new office would be involved in the department, it did not be directly attached to it.
Argersinger the day to day function of the graduate office would be different than it had been when he was a graduate be responsible for the maintenance of student records, oversees the area committees of the graduate school, and provides services such as faculty and the graduate council.
ARGERSINGER SAID the office of research administration would change very little.
"Everything from this office will have to continue." Argersinger said. "We will still be involved mainly with fund management, dissertation of information and the improvement of services.
"We will try to enhance our relationships with foundations. We will also emphasize our relationships with will. Itrate associations and industry."
Student Rights Committee Emphasizes Student Role
Wellar said that on June 30 the project report would be presented to the appropriate city, and federal agencies for approval.
Proposing amendments for the benefit of students, insuring student responsibilities were some of the goals of the KU Student Senate Student Rights Committee Debbie Brookes Monday, Brooks. Leavenworth sophomore, was on its first meeting Monday to post at its first meeting Monday.
Richard Mackenzie,
Hutchinson first year law student
and former chairman of the
committee, familiarized the new
committee members with the
purposes and procedures of the
committee. The committee offered
suggestions in the organization
of subcommittees.
Six subcommittees which were proposed by Brooks, Mackenzie Ed Bruns, Leawood freshman to the week. They include a subcommittee to study the Senate Code to offer innovative changes. The Senate will also pending Senate Code amendment proposals, a subcommittee to review students' Executive Senate (S.E.S.) amendment proposals, a subcommittee to review conflict of interest in the Senate, a subcommittee to review the temporary traffic control subcommittee, which is to be dissolved after the campus alteration proposal is resolved.
Argersinger said the office of research administration did not disperse funds. When someone in the University wants money he goes to a government administration with the proposed budget for the research to be done, he said. If it was considered a deserving proposal his office would fund with foundations, industry or the government, he said.
Mackenzie said the conflict of interest subcommittee could become involved in changing the focus of concerning Senate conflict of interest in current code. Mackenzie said, there is only conflict of interest when a Senator votes or speaks in his behalf on an amendment or an act. Mackenzie said that he receive a direct financial benefit. Mackenzie said the conflict of
Mackenzie said the conflict of interest subcommittee could
ARGERSINGER SAID when a grant was funded the money had to be spent just as if it were state funding. The grant, along literally specified guidelines, Argersinger said his office and the research team would have related, worked together because the research accounting office had to make checks to see that the money was being spent properly.
rework the stature and broaden it so, would figure, whether it was being received from a position would be considered direct financial
Arsinger said there was an unfulfilled half-time position for an assistant or an associate dean in the research office. He said that because he provided a good background in the sciences, and Henry Snyder, associate dean of research administration, provided a good background in the humanities, he hoped to use the open position in his job to find someone with a background in the social sciences.
ARGERINGER SAID the average size of grants at the university research administration office takes in $11 million to $12 million a year, he said. He said the office has about 500 research proposals a year.
"A university is not a place where people teach. Argersinger it 'it's about where people learn. There are rewards other than money which can be used."
It is important the faculty argesinger said, because they provide for new equipment, travel funds and stipends for students.
Arsgeringer said a recent study showed that a teacher at KU worked an average of 60 hours a week at his teaching job.
The objectives of the project were to collect and analyze data on housing conditions, environmental initial transportation facilities, and socioeconomic characteristics of the community and science and the surrounding area.
Gordon Brotherston, senior lecturer in the department of English at Essex, England will deliver the Alice Winston Memorial Lecture on "American Indian Poetry" by Rachel Browne and Jaikway岗房 from the Kansas Union. Elizabeth Schultz, professor of English, said Monday.
The office of Housing and Urban Development, through the planning division of the state of New York, oversees the Development, financed the project, and the Institute for Social and Environmental Studies administered it. Wellar, the director, assoc. for the institute, said.
Other objectives of the project were to identify the nature, extent, and cause of such damage, junk yards on a neighborhood and community basis, and to make recommendations relative to design and action programs for improving safety at Lawrence and its environment.
Seminar in identity New Feminism Racial Awareness Human Sexuality
Indian Poetry To Be Topic Of KU Lecture
The project was researched by the City of Lawrence and KU. The KU project team was assigned 16 neighborhood study sites in north east and central portions of Lawrence, Wellar said. The City of Lawrence Planning department was assigned 23 neighborhood study sites inside the central area, he said.
The report to be presented for approval will include analysis of each neighborhood, preparation of treatment recommendations for each neighborhood and the preparation of treatment recommendations.
Brotherlson has recently been in the United States on an Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung fellowship. The fellowship offers grants for research and dissemination materials, particularly those of the Alconqan Indians.
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Discovery in a natural environment
- Intro to Logic
Mountain climbing, hiking,
horseback riding, and swimming
Brotherston has published extensively on Latin American literature, including an anthology and several translations.
Seminars with KU faculty Living in the woods
The Center for Human Exploration Ward, Colorado
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Applications for officers to serve on the Engineering Council during 1972-1973 may be picked up in 111 Marvin. Positions are: President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Record Secretary, and Corresponding Secretary. Applications must be returned by 2 p.m. Friday April 21. Voting will be April 24 and 25 in Learned Hall. For further information contact the Dean's office or Lee Knapp, Corresponding Secretary, at 843-6607. Note, you must be in engineering to qualify.
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1928 Model A Prestige
1972 Pinto Runabout shown with custom white sidewall tires, rocker panel molding and accent group.
When you make a solid, sensible, economical little car you don't change it. Except to make it better.
Now that we're making that kind of car again, that's the only kind of choice we are going to make.
For example, we made a Routable model of the Ford Focus thinning to have more drive. And most cars that folded for easy car access still have a flat roof.
A gully little engine that gets the same economical kind of gas mileage as the few imports
A solid-axle-or-rock four speed transmission. Sports car steering. A welded steel body with six coats of paint.
Pinto is wide and stable, but not big. It's got plenty of leg and shoulder room, but it's barely 19 inches longer than the leading import. There you have it. The basic Pinto a good little car. Our Pinto Runabout a little better good little car
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6
Tuesday. April 18. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Ranch to Host KU Study Group
By MONA DUNN Kansan Staff Writer
A new type of summer school, the Center for Human Exploration, which combines college-credit courses with the "interaction of outdoor living" is being started this summer in a group of university of Kansas faculty and staff members.
The center was created through the efforts of various faculty departments, philosophy department, Religion Department, Continuing Education Division, Donna Shavik, coordinator for the Center, said.
The center's objectives. Frank Shavlik, KU speech instructor and professor of human faculty, said, are in the exploration of the "self" in the seeking of various ways for the student to adapt and to initiate change.
"EACH STUDENT and faculty member will come to influence one another and come to know each other. We draw from them, thus establishing a sort of interdependent community."—Chavik
The Center for Human Exp-
eriment will have an enrolment of 80 students,
will have two summer sessions, June
18 July 8 and July 9-28 It is
considered to be a non-profit
which is 15 miles west of Boulder.
the which is 100 acres and is bordered on all sides by the National Forest. Shavik said.
The living cost is $100 a week, which includes room and board expenses. Students receive College credit courses at $20 credit hour offered through the University of Michigan.
Registration and enrollment forms are available in the speech communicator's office, or the dean of men and the dean of women. Nunemaker College, the SUA office in the Downtown Office Building, Continued Education Office.
THE PEOPLE who attend the center during the summer sessions don't have to attend the program. If you participate, he said, in the outdoor experience while participating in the directed studies
The students may enroll for three hours of credit each session, Shavlik said. Students may enroll in both sessions.
THE COURSES to be offered are:
Speech 141—Human-Being Communication
Speech 98—Undergraduate Seminar in Individual and Group Identity, which is offered in three emphases; Human Sexuality, New Feminism and Racial Identity (2)-Introduction to Logic
Shavlik said, the center wasn't just a place for a student to relax
Crocheters Seek Computer's Help
Choosing a correct pattern, the correct hook size and amount of arm needed for crocheting a shawl or poncho is a problem crocheters may no longer have to A computer can do it for them.
Two University of Kansas students have been working on a new, statistically significant crocheting. They are Connie Lockot, San Jose, Calif., sophomore, and Emma Shawnee, Shawnee Mission junior.
"WHAT I NEEDED was a cross-index of all my patterns. A computer could give me that," Lokot said.
By DAVID HEALY
Kansas Staff Writer
Lokseat said she was often asked to make a shawl or poncho for someone. She said she had about 150 shawls and it was difficult to decide on one.
Once a pattern is picked, the correct hook size must be chosen so the garment will be the proper size, she said. It is also necessary to calculate the amount of yarn needed to make the garment much to charge for the garment:
The computer program Loskot is developing should fulfill her needs Not only will it provide an answer to a question, but it will also give the amount of yarn
She said it was easier for a computer to organize information in a file than to code all information into the computer. The computer could do in a few microseconds what she had made her days to accomplish.
Kersenbaum has already run two programs for his mother. One program gives the amount of yarn necessary to crochet any number of rows of a poncho. The other gives in feet, ounces or cost.
required to make a poncho, shawl or scarf of a given size. Furthermore, it will give the dif- fferent shapes. It can be eighty sizes of crochet hooks.
The other program concerns making fringes. It gives the amount of yarn necessary to make three, four or five-strand fringes which are five, six, seven inches long for up to 200 spaces.
With this program, Ker-
sbenbaum's mother can answer if she
can lift the arm or if she has
poncho or how much yarn of a
different color is needed to make
THE PROGRAM has been run for
several months. The W-itch,
the crossboss and granny shell. However, the
program can be modified for any
Lookat and Kershenbaum said they did not know whether such companies existed before. They said yarn companies probably had such incomes.
nobilization.
Looker and Kerstenbaum said there probably was a market for the programs because they could use them to organize his own data. At present, they have no plans to sell them.
LOSKOT SAID it was impossible to buy any sort of chart giving this kind of information.
He must participate and contribute in the center's activities
In Londonberry, a 500-pound
gliginite bomb was found in a
factory beside the army post that
beside the Catholic bogside
district.
British troops said they
Miss Devlin, at 24 the young-
member of the British Prison
Manus, another British
legislator, both were convicted
by an Enniskillen court of taking
a prisoner in illegal parade two
months ago.
Bernadette Devlin Given Prison Term by British
The resident staff, which consists of both present and former University of Kansas faculty and staff members, will be working at the center during summer vacations, Shavik said.
The directors of honors programs at universities and colleges in the Mid West, honors faculty and KU students met Saturday to discuss plans and problems of the programs.
Three other snipers and two soldier were wounded in the fighting.
According to J. Eugene Fox, associate dean of the KU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and a professor in various workshops discussed financing of the programs, criteria for admitting students, courses and possible innovations for the various programs.
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP)—Bernadette Devilin, the firebrand Roman Catholic legislator, was ordered to jail for her role in between British troops and youthful rogers surged through the heart of ravaged Belfast. Two guerrilla snipers were shot dead and a boy-old boy playing near the scene was wounded in the stomach.
Honors Staffs Meet to Study Program Issues
MEMBERS of the resident staff are: Shirley Gilham, director of the University's Information Sciences Sears, director of the University's Racial Awareness Center; Dr. Daniel demean, doctor of Dean of women, Dona Shavik, center's coordinator, Frank Shavikl instructor in speech relations; Robert Shelton associate professor of speech communications and in the Department of Skidmore, assistant professor of
recovered the bodies of the two snipers shot in the fighting in Belfast, bringing the death toll since August 1969 to 308.
Three others were found and were taken to a hospital.
registered nurse in the Chicago
bachelor's system and the owner of Broken Arrow A Ranch. A short time following the beginning of each of the summer sessions, the students and
members will participate in an officeor ex persue", Shavik刊.
philosophy; Virginia Arndt;
registered nurse in the Chicago
Public School system and the
owner of Broken Arrow A Ranch
The major experience areas backpacking, horsepacking, hiking, fishing and woodcraft, learning about the factor in the center's program DURING THE COURSE of the summer sessions, various visiting KI faculty members will meet with students from seminar courses, Mrs. Shavil suit
studying the understanding of feelings or emotions, a visiting professor or authority on the topic of biology could explain the importance of emotional understanding of emotions.
Staff members of the center plan to provide numerous ways for each person, whether he is a faculty member or a student, to learn about energy which exists in himself.
Guest lecturers with "special expertise" in the intellectual process will also be visiting, she said.
Shavlik said that if a class was
Another purpose of the center, M. Shavik said, was to make the student realize that he could be a teacher as well as as well on the lives of others.
In the normal academic ac a msphere, "the student stores his knowledge in separate notebooks in his brain," Shavlik said.
"The center's plan is to try to integrate that knowledge, instead of letting it stay in separate stacks." Shavilk said.
KU Debaters Rank High, Team Aide Ware Says
The University of Kansas debate squad has consistently ranked among the top five squads in the nation, according to Lee Ware, assistant instructor of history and debate graduate assistant.
The squad will be sending teams to the Missouri Valley Tournament at the University of Kansas at Friday and Saturday.
Waired said that so far this year, the squad had won about 800 and lost about 300 debates in combat. The team also said he expected the squad to be ranked as one of the top two teams in the nation. 1,000 squads in the nation. Waired said, however, that only about 100 of these squads were really active.
WARE SAID the policy at KU colleges should debate could but the teams which did the most work would be the teams that would travel the world.
TUCHES
HOTTUNA
naments.
On Grunt Records
Oliver said that for the
debate, which concerned
information on U.S. citizenry,
Hunter and he had filled nine
notebooks with research
notes with five note cards
cards with 450 subheadings.
The squad sends teams of two debaters to several tournaments during the year, according to team rosters. The squad consists of six or eight preliminary rounds. After the preliminary rounds, the top 18 teams go on to four elimination rounds, with the two teams meeting in the final.
WEBSTER HAS been chosen to attend the Republican national convention this year, according to Ware.
placed second in the tournament being defeated by a team from Emory University of Atlanta.
Ware said the KU debate squared had a high standing because it had more administrative support than many of the other squads had.
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of debating at KU since the 1920s. The KU debating squad has been represented at the National Debating Championship a little than any other college and currently tied with Dartmouth College for the most victories in college competition.
The team of Bill Webster,
Carthage, Mo., and Tod Hunter.
Oklahoma, Mo., both freshmen.
Team members will sometimes spend as many as 30 or 40 hours a week preparing for a debate. The team will prepare, they will put in about 15 hours.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES INTERVIEWS
"Join next year now! Become part of your Student Union Activities"
WARE SAIID that by the end of a year, a team would have材料 to enough research material to do all matters. On the weekend of April 9, a team was sent to the movie nationalists at Bellarmine College in Louisville, where the besterman debaters in the country met.
FILMS-FINE ARTS-FORUMS-TRAVEL FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS-SPECIAL EVENTS PUBLIC RELATIONS-MINORITY AFFAIRS ART-RECREATION
More information and interview time sign-up sheets available SUA office, 1st floor, Kansas Union
APRIL 18-19
Cantata nell'originale
The University of Kansas Theatre and the School of Fine Arts present LA BOHEME. An Opera by Puccini. (Sung in Italian)
Musical directing by GEORGE LAWNER
Stage directing by PIERRE LAROCHE
April 18, 19, 21, 22 at 8:00 p.m.
Matinee April 23 at 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre—Murphy Hall
TICKET RESERVATION 864-3982
Interviews Set For Yearbook
Any KU student is eligible,
although previous experience on
the Jayhawker or the equivalent
of the position. The positions are
salaried.
The Jayhawker. Advisory Board will meet Thursday to interview candidates for the 1973 Jayhawker manager of the 1973 Jayhawker Tom Yoe, secretary of the Jayhawker board applications for the positions
Interested persons should contact Voe at 864-3258 for details and for scheduling an interview.
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Tuesday, April 18, 1972
University Daily Kansan
7
Tourists View Odd Ball in Cawker City
Editor's Note: This is the first in a two-part series on landmarks in Kansas towns.
BY GARY NEIL PETERSON
Kingson Staff Writer
Kansan Staff Writer
The Kansas tourism bureau of
the state economic opportunity
department is using in its
Truly a must on any travel
promotional campaign this year, the slogans, "Take a swing through . . . Kansas" and "Kansas Has It." Here then, is a look at what Kansas has while swunging your way, through
NORTHAM
Kansan Photo by GARY NEIL PETERSON
itinerary is the famous, or infamous, "World's largest theatremuseum." In New York City, the town named after Commissioner Cawker who won the
Garden of Eden Is Alive and Well in Lucas, Kan.
Garden of Eden Is Alive and Well in Lucas, Kan
Cawker City is a town of about 900 people located 75 miles north
The Menagerie was founder Dinsmoor's life work
Indians Examine Exhibits KU-Haskell Interrelations
By MARSHA LIBEER
Kancan Staff Writer
Commanche, a stuffed horse that stands in a glass showcase on the fifth floor of the University of Washington, is also a museum. Museum, was for a long time mistakenly referred to as "the sole survivor of the Battle of Mt. Olympus."
The University of Kansas Committee on Indian Affairs pointed out to museum officials that many American Indians also survived the battle and a change in the Indian craft exhibit was started.
They did and Commanche's new legend appears beside him at the museum.
The museum offered the group or American Indian students the opportunity to take inscription for Commanche that would be "historically correct" in their own language.
The work of the committee has expanded into several areas, while continuing to work on the museum. Indian artifacts at the museum.
Mzhichkeno-Keltcher called the museum "very cooperative" in its efforts to work with the Indian group.
THE COMMITTEE on Indian Affairs was begun last fall by five students concerned with Indians and Indians' relationships with the people of Michigan, Mich州kelcher-Keltler, Lawrence senior; Wanda Wahnee, Anadarko, Okla. graduate student; Tom Beaver, Lawrence junior; Jeff Kidwell, who took KU graduate courses and now is an instructor of social sciences at Haskell Indian Junior College; and who was a special student but has moved to Albuquerque, N.M.
SIX INDIAN ARTIFACTS from the museum were shown to Haskell students to see if any of the buildings would be offensive to Indians.
the answer was no," Steve Edwards, administrative assistant at the museum said.
Mzhicktenko-Keltcher is receiving five hours of credit from the School of Education for a project she is working on. She is a teacher who has been rearranging the displays on the fifth floor of the museum. Her
Campus Bulletin
"Many children think that Indians are just whooping, hollering, feather-wearing people." Mzickhut-Koelcher
"I have a dream about the museum project," she said. "I would like it worked in as an educational package. Lawrence schools have poor selection on American about American Indians."
She would like for groups of school children to eventually tour the fifth floor with a Haskell student acting as tour guide.
TODAY
EISC: 9 a.m., Regionalist Room, Kansas
COMMITTEE ACTIVITIES, apart from the museum, include the proposal of an American Indians Studies Program.
Union:
Women's Coalition Workshop: 10.30 a.m.
Parkers A, B, C.
Kidwell said that such a
kidgiver was present in pubs,
because there we were. 200
Indians at KU; Kidwell said the
committee was primarily set up
to prevent homosexuality.
A tentative theme for her project is "Indian-non Indian Relationships."
"Many think of Indians as one group, but there are really very different ones," she said.
Mzhichteko-Kelcher said that this theme will show how "different groups of invaders related to Indians."
S.W. Bell Telephone Co.: 11:30 a.m.
English Room
SUA Formats: adn., Alcove A Cafetera.
History Adv. Comm.; noon. Alcove B 'C'
The purpose of the program would be to provide a meaningful education for both Indian and American students. The students would be provided with a program tailored to their needs, and students would have the opportunity to become more aware of the "Indians' awareness of the
Mhichiceno-Keltcher also has plans for a display of pre-Columbian in North America that includes the ancient cultures of American Indians.
Women's Coaltion Workshop: 10:30 a.m.
Parlom A, B, C
Italian Table: 11:30 a.m. Meadowlark
Cafeteria
Educ. Psych.: noon, Alcove D Cafeteria
Crespi-Project 3049 noon, Curry Room.
Law School 12:30 p.m., Alcove C
Cafeteria.
AMAS: 1 p.m., Pine Room.
College Faculty: 4 p.m., Forum Room.
SUA Board: 7 p.m., Governors Room.
SUA Presidential Forum: 7 p.m., Forum
Room.
Finance & Auditing: 6.30 p.m., Oread
Room.
SUA Board: 7 p.m., Governors Room.
College Faculty: 4 p.m., Forum Room.
SIMS: 6 p.m., Council Room.
Finance & Auditing: 6:30 p.m. Great
Presidential Forum. 4 p.m., Forum Room.
Psych. Clinic: 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room.
Alba Chase : 7 p.m. Japwa room.
Alpha Chig Sigma : 7 p.m. International Room.
Student Services, Job Comm. : 7 p.m.
Student Services Sub-Comm.: 7 p.m.
Regionalist Room.
Women in Law: 7 p.m., Parlor C.
Delta Sigma Pi: 7 p.m., Centennial Room.
Delta Sign A Pt: 7 p.m. Centennial Room.
Housing Comm.: 7 p.m. 305 A.
Senate Communications Comm.: 9 p.m.
Beaver said that the studies program "provides three goals: to give us more financial stability, to help more Indian students at KU, and to start a financial aid program."
12031006
Divine Light Mission: 7:00pm, Parlor A.
Friday Saturdays: 7:00am, Parlor A.
Pam Salisey: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff.
Warren's Coalition: 8 p.m., Big 8 Room.
SUA Poetry (Ed Dorn): 8 p.m., Kansasan
Educations Comm.: 9 p.m.
Art History: 7:30 p.m. Pine Room
German Room 8:30 p.m., Council Room.
Wretched. 8:30 p.m., Governors Room.
Baptist Student Union: 8:30 p.m., International Room.
HE SAID THAT the proposal had been presented to Chancellor E. Laurence Chailmers Jr. and he gave a matter of implementation.
The ball of twine, started in 1853 by Frank Stoecker, 79, of Cawker City, now sits under a tree on the town's main drag. Directly across the street from it are several buildings where the towns people sit and watch the tourists come to see the oddbit.
This town would be enjoyed by anyone, but especially by trivia experts and those who like to take photos. We saw rear windshields of their cars.
Both Beaver and Wahnee are part of another committee formed by the college program and to facilitate cooperative efforts between KU
THE BALL measures over nine feet in diameter, weighs more than 4½ tons, and could be stretched about 310 miles if unrolled. However, the ball receives no air to travel through.
of Salina on highway 24:
The Inter-Institutional Committee selected five representatives from KU and from Haskell. Chalmers selected the KU committee members and Haskell Superintendent Wallace selected those from Haskell.
Geraldine Garrett, president of the Cawker City historical society, said she has visited very few people ever came to Cawker City specifically to see her work.
Garrett did say, however, that the buses on their journeys to the east and west, stopped to allow people to see the giant ball. She said that people were mostly in how the ball got startled.
"There is a definite need to get some kind of good working relationships going between the teams that has used Haskell, "Beyer said.
Beaver gave an example of KU professors using Haskell facilities for research purposes while working on degrees.
The bail was started when Sboeber, while walking through the backyard, over some of the bailing twine had left on the floor. Disgusted, he began rolling it up. When the twine fell out, the neighbors noticed it and started bringing any extra twine they had to Sboeber who had made it.
"Haskell hasn't received anything in the deal." he said.
Marti Stewart, Redmond,
selected to be summer editor of
the University Daily Kansan
Monday by a vote of the Kansan
Referring to the committee, Beaver said, "We've made people sensitive that there are Indians on campus."
In 1963, the ball was brought to town at the request of a town organization not unlike the ones in the past and has been in town ever since.
Stewart said summer news staff applicants would have until Wednesday night to file their applications in the form of a letter and may be turned in either to Stewart or to Chip Crews, Lawrence senior staff.
Kansan Names Summer Editor
The summer business manager will be Doug DeTray Independence,Mo. senior.
MOVING SOUTH from Cawker City about 40 miles on highway 18 is Lucas, home of the Garden of Eden.
Stewart plans to conduct interviews for summer staff Friday.
The description, "You've got to see it to believe it," will say the most.
There are no markers except the one on the highway to entice the occasional tourist and to draw a passing traveler salesman
Turning south off the main highway and proceeding toward town, one is apt to think the town is lifeless. This is proved wrong because you speed out of town with the feeling that all eyes are upon you.
If you ret out on a search of your own without inquiring of local service stations where the company is, it won't take long to find it
You're driving along, trying to look inconspicuous in spite of your long narrow car, long narrow street something undesirable. This is it, you
TURNING THE corner and approaching, but still two or three blocks away, you can see the reel you think you have come to see, but as you come closer and to the corner lot where the saw-horse is lying, you have the desire to call the day quits and head for home.
However, something magnetic pulls you on, and before you can on hold, you have to concrete structures and people that will either make you burst or leave.
The tour guide who waits for long hours a day in anticipation of a customer, said that people tell her they see landmarks. "Oh my God! She said that she didn't like them or that they didn't it," they liked it or that they didn't.
It costs $1 to tour the house of the creator of the menagerie. His name was S. P. Dinsmoor. In addition to the tour of the house where Dinsmoor and his wife were living, he found the tomb where they are buried.
THE TOMB. bearing
HERE IS WHERE HE
STOPPED LAST
J.S.JACOBS
DIED JUNE 1857
ACCO W.K. 90
Kansan Photo by GARY NEIL PETERSON
'Traveling Salesman' Grave
Near Lincoln, Kan.
Police Report 3 Thefts At McCollum, Ellsworth
A daring burglar or burglar uses a sixth floor window ledge to gain entrance to a room in the building. campus police said Monday.
While the inhabitants of the room were away for the weekend, the burglar entered through a screened window and took a stereo tape player, five minutes later. The several smaller items valued at
$10 for a total loss to the owners of $410.
A Schwinn 10-speed bicycle valued at $100 was stolen from the Ellsworth Hall parking lot Friday evening.
Campus police also reported the theft Sunday night of an FM receiver and a turntable worth $160 from an Elworth room when the owner stepped out for a fire, and left his room unlocked.
feedback
Feedback: a survey of courses and instructors will be available between April 17 and May 19.
We urge faculty and students to participate
Best wishes,
Curriculum and Instruction Survey
resemblance to the Attee's step pyramids of southern Mexico, is accessible only from the house itself. Its walls are along with the other objects we are seeing.
Feedback: a survey of courses and instructors will be available between April 17 and May 19.
We urge faculty and students to participate
Best wishes,
Curriculum and Instruction Survey
There in the tomb, in a cone casket, let Dinsmoor, separated from you only by a piece of glass, which keeps him from reaching out, shaking your hand and coming are coming to visit his life's work.
who was mad at his wife for taking so much time looking at everything."
"This was his purpose for building this joint," the guide said, "to let people come visit and what he made, he his and his."
"I've had only one dissatisfied customer in all my years at this place, and it was an elderly man
It won't wonder that she knew of it more disasserted tourists, but I don't. She's sometimes later that the initial shock waves off and you become familiar with her presence.
unique feature. Lincoln has the brave of the "Salesman."
ACCORDING TO records at the site more than 10,000 people are involved in including two bus loads of University of Kansas art
The grave site is located on the eastern outskirts of town in the public cemetery, one of three in town.
From Lucas, proceed east along highway 18 about 25 miles is Lincou. It's another small town with a small Kansas towns, but it has one
Unless you know where the plot in your chances of finding it are, you can be unaware of people are unaware of its presence or because they are not.
In any event, it does exist. There, among several burial piles, a large mound dating back to the early- and mid-1800's, stands a headstone in the shape of a suitcase fully carved in wood. Here is where he stopped last."
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Tuesday, April 18, 1972
University Daily Kansan
35 Universities to Run in Relays
By BOB SIMISON
Kansan Sports Editor
The addition last weekend of Michigan State to the field of the Kansas Relays brought the team to a university division at 35 schools. KU track coach Bob Timmons announced Monday in a press
That total erased the record of 27 set in last year's Relays. Timmons estimated that 1,660 athletes from 180 universities, colleges, junior colleges and high schools would participate there
Action will start Wednesday with the first five events of the december. Action will start Thursday, and qualifying will start Thursday afternoon. Friday and Saturday will be the biggest days
Michigan State's flairy pair of sprinters, Herb Washington and Marshall Dill, are a couple of reasons Saturday's schedule is underway. They will join an already loaded field in the lakeyard dash.
"WE WERE really happy to pick up Washington and Dill Timmons. I promised a dozen pins on the press conference." "I was in the stands when Washington ran his 5 in the 60, and I saw Dill run
Washington's 5.8 is the world indoor record for the 60-yard dash. Washington has run the 100 in 9.3. Dill in 9.4.
They brought the total of
entries in the open 100 to six. The
two top sprinters in the university
sports teams were Charlotte
lanes. Other entries are Charlie
Green, world record co-holder in
the 100 at 9:1; Colorado's Cliff
Branch, world indoor record-
holder in the 200 at 9:3; who has
who has run 9 for Colorado, and
Ivory Crockett, two-time National AAU champion for Southern Illinois.
Timmons also finalized the entry lists in the three other featured invitational events for Saturday.
"In the Cunningham Mile, we speculated that moving two from the university mile Saturday and give them a chance to run the 200-mile race," Timmons said. "But this is the finest field we have had depth."
**WORLD RECORD HOLDER Jim Rynup toms the entry list with his 3.51-litre Tom. Tom Vuren, Riden Hilton, John Lawson, Larry Rose, Greg Carlberg, Peter Kael and Ken Swenson will complete the All. All but Kaal and We have ran sub-four minute miles.
Two former KU milers will be especially prepared, Timmons and his team are scheduled to qualify Saturday for the U.S. Olympic trials, and Lawson is shooting for his first four-minute shot in Kansas. He is now in Los Angeles.
BESIDES Michigan State, the Big 10 will send Iowa, Illinois, Michigan and Minnesota among the members of the Big Eight have entered. Only Texas Tech of the Southern Conference will be invited.
"Jim's workouts have been progressing," Timmons said. "He's been looking forward to this meet because it's kind of a fun running real practice in practice, so he'll be pretty high for the race." IN THE open shot put, Randy Matson and Al Feuerbach appear headed for a dramatic run. He recorded record-holder with a 715-34 put, hasn't beaten Feuerbach in their last seven meetings.
Don Makes Switches; Fundamentals Stressed
Fambrough said, "Turner is one of the fastest men on the squad. He weighs 225 and 230 pounds."
By WILL GRIMSLEY
The strike-delayed 1972 ban has been a negative note over the week but players and officials alike shrugged it off Monday and helped it move on.
Fouebar, meanwhile, has twice put the shot more than 70 feet. The second time was last week he came up with a 72% effort.
practice day, because Wednesday is the day when high school athletes can be signed to play for a certain school.
The University of Kansas football team continued with their spring football practices Monday behind Allen Field House with an emphasis on drills and coach Don Fambridge said.
"They're both throwing well," Timmons said. "I know Randy's been looking forward to this meet for a long time because
AP Special Correspondent
fans booed, Oranges flew from.
the bays in Cincinnati. At Oakland
kills the umbrella. In some places,
it rained. In most, crowds were
smaller than usual.
Schedule of Events
Wednesday, April 19
Season Gets Chilly Start After Strike
9:00 a.m.—100 meters— decathlon
"We must keep our heads up and not show any hostility to the fans," said Don Gullett, lefthanded pitcher of the Cincinnati Reds. "w will start playing games against Houston." I think the fans will come back and enjoy the games."
Odlie Weidell made the other switch going from fullback to the center, and Farnbrough said that the coaches had thought about putting Weidell at defensive end all spring, but he had just decided to do
Fambrough said that the team will practice Thursday behind Allen Field House instead of Wednesday, their regular
decathion
9:30 a.m.—Long Jump—
9:30 a.m.—Long Jump— decathlon
Feuerbach will be here."
There was also a couple of position switches made during the practice. Defensive end Jeff Bender reached to the fullback position.
10:45 a.m.—Shot Put— decathlon
Noon—High Jump decathlon
Fambrough was very pleased with the workout. He said that he thought much progress. He said there were no injuries to report from
'Cats, MU To Do Battle In 4-Mile
1. 30 p.m.—400 meters-decathlon
Defending champion Kansas State and a rebuilt Missouri will head a potential record-breaking field at 1:30 p.m. Friday in the first major baton race of the 47th NCAA Rallys, the four-mile relay.
K-State, which holds the Relays record of 16,304.4, has three games in the league this year's record-setting team. John Corman, Rick Hitchock and anarchism Jerome Howe, who are members of 3-578.9 the veterans
Missouri, on the other hand, has four newcomers on its fourteenth season defeated the Wildcats at the Texas Rangers this year. MU players have to stave off Howe by eight attacks and help the Tigers set a Texas Rangers record of seven State, Texas, Bowling Green and Illinois are also expected to play for the first major relays crown
Isaksonkis the countryman, Hans Lagerquist from Sweden, will also enter the open pole vault. His best effort has been 17.8%.
THE INSPIRATION for the event was Kjell Isaksson's world record. He set the new Rielays. Isaksson raised the record in 1923 Saturday in the airport.
THEIR LAST meeting was in March at the Meet of Champions in Los Angeles.
Karl Saib and Steve Wilmeth, both former KU putter, are in a shot. Two or three university shot putters might join the field
Mukley, a former Olympian,
set an apparent world record in
lake swimming in 1961 when he was 29. However,
the mark was not accepted when
he was 30. He was then conducted properly. Since then, though, only five athletes
were involved.
For beginners, he has won the Kansas Relays decathlon eight times. The first was in 1958 as a graduate from the University. Competing for the Memphis Athletic Club two years later, he again won the event. He also took the meet's decathlon in 1960, 1901, 1962, 1963 and 1966.
A special open pole vault event will be run with the university pole vault at noon Saturday. The men's field four-four man field only last week.
Timmons completed the pole vault field with Terry Porter, national junior college record holder from Ranger (Tex.) Junior College, and Brad Winter (Colorado) Junior College. Winter's 16-9 was the junior college record before Porter vaulted 16-1 this spring.
"I hadn't planned on the open pole vault until I saw a world record two weeks ago," Timmons said.
When the 47th Kansas Relay opens with the diebold events Wednesday morning, among all the high-jumpers, pole vaulters and ski jumpers, he be a 40-year-old insurance salesman from Birmingham, Ala.
But, insurance salesman or not, Phil Mukley isn't exactly a newcomer to the Relays. Indeed, he fairly does the record books.
This time Mulkey will be competing for a new world goal. Instead of trying for a place in the decathlon, he will be shooting for the masters' world decathlon in Chicago. Mulkey's past performances, it seems a mark quite possibly destined to be his.
40-Year-Old Athlete To Be in Decathlon
Stinson Sees No Deficit In 1973 Athletic Budget
By BOB SIMISON
He talks nothing like that figure either.
Sinnison declined to discuss, results of the budget meeting and a letter from his boss for morning newspapers to carry the story. Before morning news broke, Sinnison made an agreement with an evening paper to make the results public.
Seated behind his large desk in his large office in Allen Field House Annex, Wade Stinson, University of Kansas director of athletics, looks nothing like the mysterious figure is depicted by the university to talk about most subjects.
As a result, the Kansan sought information about the meeting from other members of the board. It was reported that the 1973 athletic budget would have a deficit. There is, in fact, no projected deficit.
Simson discussed in an interview Friday the KU athletic budget for 1973, adopted by the team board in a meeting Tuesday.
"There's nothing secret about the athletic budget," Stinson says. "You can't buy individual, and those eventually come out because they're on the budget." He wants to publish salaries because that can lead to low morale among the staff.
ATHLETIC BOARD meetings are closed for this reason, Stinson said.
"ALL WE do in preparing the
"AN OPEN board meeting just doesn't make sense when you're dealing with people and personalities like this." Sinnamon said.
budget is to work out our revenue according to reasonable projections," Stinson said. "Then we go to the expense items and make reasonable projections." He also presented to the Athletic Board.
"ON THE first run through, the budget did show a deficit. The board then tries to make the revenue and the expense match."
our actions taken by the board to mitigate risk will not augment the 1973 budget. Only a possible increase in the base salary could take effect next fall. Stinson said
The total budget, which is divided into a plant fund and an operating fund for practical purposes, ultimately $2 million. Stinson said
"BUT WE DON'T know how we'll end up. It's an educated guess, but we don't allocate allocations because we don’t know how much we'll have to work with. It depends on many people come to the door."
The board balanced the budget without trimming expenses. Stinson said. Instead, it increased the projections for several years up with some outside revenue to the scholarship fund, he said.
"There's no deficit now," Stinson said. "We'll have about that much coming in and about that much going out.
THE THREE other motions by he board, one to support an increase in the price of single game tickets for Big Eight games, one a raise season ticket prices and another to increase Stadium to the Kansas City Chiefs for summer training, are not included in next year's
Other entries in the decathlon are Don Albirkion of Northeast Missouri State; Gary Frank, Lewis Grace and Grace Graecale and Doug Bloomquist, Iowa State; Greg Hackney, Texas; Gary Hill, Missouri; James Wright, Baker; Tom Sayme, Western Illinois; Mike Hill, Oklahoma; and Bruce Jenner, Grace Craeland.
budget.
SEASON TICKETS for next fall are already printed, Stinson said. Last year's price of $80 for season ticket increases, the KU can increase season ticket prices without Big Eight approval, Stinson said, because conference rules have ruled only a minimum price.
The price of single game tickets, however, are limited to $5 by the Big Eight. The Athletic Board instructed Charles H. Wyman and his faculty representative, to vote for an increase to $7 a game.
STINSON SAID he had not yet contacted the Chiefs. Kansas City has expressed a desire to move to Kansas City and is in the Turf of Memorial Stadium when its current contract with William Jewell College expires after this season.
INCOME FROM renting the stadium probably would go into the 1974 budget. Stinson said
"We don't know whether they want housing or whether they want food service." Stinson said. "Also, we don't have the pro goal in the field, and they might want the additional manages the pros us.
Several problems must be solved before the Chiefs move their camn to Lawrence.
"of course, the policy of the NAAA and the Big Eight is that they would not be discussed later. And it a matter of policy, not rule players have lent their team money in games, so we wouldn't be too."
A breakdown of the budget will be released after the board's revisions have been made, Stinson said.
Jenner, who scored 7,330 in last year's Relays decathlon, is the defending champion Hill, from New York. He also played in Albritton also competed last year, placing second and fourth. The University of Kansas' decathlon team was victorious. The Lawrence sophomore finished sixth in last year's decathlon with a career high of 6,948 points. Schur took fifth with 6,767.
The decathlon will begin 9 a.m.
Wednesday with the 100-meter
run.
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KU Relay Teams Expect Better Showing This Time
Gene Doane Agency
College Mile - Doug Smith (4:02.9), Bob
Pelkian (4:08.6)
Last year was the first time the University of Kansas had ever been shut out in the relays events of the Kansas Rangers Since World IL. In indications that KU does not intend to let it happen this year,
KU relay teams have won 44 kut races in the Kansas relays and 31 in the Texas, Texas, Drake and Kansas Relays since the sporting events began.
Pole Vault - Hill Hatcher (16-9), Nell Chapman (15-8)
mile and spring medley relays,
which they support one of those
of the load with the load we
our people in those." KU track
coach Bob Timmons said
(13.9), Delarto Robbason (14.0),
440 Intermediate Hurdles—Bob Berkusel (15.1), Troy Martin (25.0).
W L 2 W. Pct. GB
Montreal 1 1 0.000 1
Nycago 1 1 1.500 1
New York 1 1 1.500 1
Philadelphia 1 1 1.500 1
Pittsburgh 1 1 1.500 1
St Louis 1 1 1.500 1
O. 2 0 0.000 1
3,000 Meter Steepiechase - Jon Callen
(8:1.5), Kent McDonald (9:3.0)
High Jump - Barry Schur (6:10%), Randy
Smith (6:40%)
Three mile, Hirsch McKeon (13:58)
120 High-Tower - Gregg Vandaever
110 High-Tower - Mickey Terry
(212)
Trip Jump-Stull (49-8%), Roger Jones
(61%)
San Francisco 2 2 1.000
San Diego 2 0 167 .5
Santa Cruz 1 1 469
Los Angeles 1 1 500
Atlanta 1 1 333 .5
ATLanta 1 1 469
nkeesel (50.0) Tippy Martin (55.0)
3,500-Meter Steepiechase-Jon Callen
4,100-Meter Steepiechase-Jon Callen
Long Jump - Mike Stull (24.8). Dan Seay
(22.6-8).
Backstroke - Daniel Kovacs (20.1).
KU will put up a strong team for the spring medley with Mark McAtee. He was in the 220, Phil Stepp in the 440 and Jackie Jaques running
Shet Put-Pud-Ruch Guevura (58-11), Dana
Leuc Dae (58-3) s.
Timmons said he thought the
Discus-LeDoc (174-6), Goevara (271-0)
Javelin-Sam Colon (262-6), Shane Miller
(220-0)
Louisiana State clocked the winning time of 3:18.5 at the Texas Relays, but the Bengals will not attend the KU carnival.
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Jayhawks might get close to 3-18 for the spring medley. Lutz bobbed the record for the 220 earlier this spring and has been clocked at 21.1. Stepp has run the 440 in 47 flat and has a top of 14.9.3 for the 880.
Sprint Medley—Lutz (220), Scavuzzo (220), Stepp (440), Jacques (880), Borknake, alternate; F. Johnson, alternate
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday. Anril 18.1972
9
Local Cable TV Offers Public Access Program
By JUDY HENRY
Kansas Staff Writer
Public access to Sunflower
Cablevision, located at 644 New
Hampshire since its first month of
operation in January, according
to Michael Pandzik,
Cablevision's production
manager.
The Federal Communications Commission issued a set of rules for cable television in early February, including regulations for public access to the medium. Communications regulations took effect March 31.
"Public access means we offer production facilities, personnel
and time in order that any group in Lawrence can present its philosophies and activities on channel 6," Pandzik said.
High school-lage students in Lawrence next fall should have an alternative to attending Yavapai Alternative High School.
Yarrow School To Open Soon
By LEONARD GROTTA Kansan Staff Writer
He said public access to Sunflower Cablevision was different from other cable providers, the first cable television to institute a public access program instituted in New York in 1976 by the New York station charges a fee for the use of its equipment and personnel, he said, the Lawrence station charges no fees
PANDZIK SAID the half-hour public access shows, aired at 5:30
At present, plans call for YV School to hire one full-time instructor-director, and one half-time instructor, and two instructors will be supplemented by a variety of student volunteers and other persons from the school.
According to Sara Forer, daughter of NORMAN Forer, assistant professor of Social Science at the Lawrence alternative school came about not so much because of a dissatisfaction with Lawrence High School, but rather from a desire to experiment with a new course.
Yarrow School will be the result of the initiative and planning of a small group of students who were beginning in the spring and summer of 1971, several of the students began to discuss the possibility of forming their own school. When the last fall, plans were begun
About 13 students at this time have made definite plans to attend the school next year, and they would meet at 8:30 p.m. every Thursday night at The Canterberry House where they discuss various issues.
THE STUDENT'S PARENTS join in the meetings every other week. Although the parents are actively concerned and involved in the preparations for the school, they also take the primary decision-makers.
"Actually Lawrence High School is pretty good," Forer said, "but there are some things present there that we are going to try to avoid, such as grades and under a great deal of pressure."
DANNY KATZ, LHS student and son of Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Welfare, said that the group was seeking to obtain permission from K.U. to Joliffe Hull to house the school.
She said that most of the LHS teachers and administrators were interested in and approved her idea to start Yarrow Alternative School.
Funding is one of the primary problems the students face. Their plans now call for a tuition of somewhere between $40-$80 per
IN THIS REPORT, Lyons, in beeing IN THE ACS, was in packed by the AEC as the main radioactive waste repository, to prevent the worst of all a chosen grawn in the city.
The surveillance will cover all areas featuring a feature - ground-water systems which may have been missed during previous construction.
Guidelines in that report specified that areas under investigation be underbait by salt thickness at least 200 feet thick in water and no shallower than 300 feet. The report said that areas should contain a small number of oil and gas wells, salt mines, storage cavities, pipelines, a small pool, and be served by railroads.
month, although the students all agree that they should not turn down any interested students whose parents cannot afford that amount. They also plan to apply to various organizations for scholarships.
The AEC asked the Kansas Geological Survey last year to study the contamination investigation of supplemental radioactive waste repository areas in Kansas. This report was sent to the AEC in January, 1972.
Another problem of concern,
especially to some of the parents,
is the prospect of their children
working in a state accredited high school.
The Atomic Energy Commission, Oak Ridge National Laboratories in Tennessee, has approved a survey to conduct a surveillance of prices of Lincoln, Logan and Covington colleges. April and June to determine which areas are best suited for further research as high-level nuclear reactors.
"Their admittance to the University will not be automatically guaranteed by the university school graduates," Dutton said, "but their entrance exams would be rated on the same basis as those of out-of-state students who are also applying for admission."
She also said students of Yarrow School could begin to attend K.U. before they obtained their diplomas if they wish.
Kansas to Investigate Nuclear Waste Sites
THIS SEEMED to allay some of the parents' anxiety, although a few still expressed some distress as the accreditation of the school.
BETTY DUTTON, wife of Edward Dutton, associate professor of social welfare, is the author of a holds a guidance counseling certificate and has been active as an adult coordinator for the Department of Health. Thursday Mrs. Dutton explained that Yarrow students would be able to take the High School test, they had reached the age of 18.
Prospective students of the alternative high school placed a classified ad in the University Daily Kansan to find teachers for the program. The applicants they said. At the meeting, a small committee of volunteers was chosen to set up the mechanics of interviewing procedures. All of the parents contacted and then conduct the actual interviews.
"One of the basic ideas behind the school is to learn within a closely-knit community," Katz writes. "I learned from each other. In a public high school, roles get in the way of education. The distance between the role of a teacher and a role as a superior inferior situation."
In an effort to become better acquainted, the students are planning a camp-out for this summer. They thought that this was important
"We hope to achieve an equality in which we can learn from people, not just teachers," he said.
A literature and file search was undertaken last year to assemble
p.m. Thursday and 9 p.m.
cost about $20 per seat.
The cost is three or two
three meetings with Pandzik, air
time and production time. he said. The
season is about four months,
said he preferred to schedule
taping on Wednesday nights, a
information for these areas regarding salt and overburdening thickness, quality of the salt, ground-water or sediment geological characteristics. In addition, information was gathered about mineral resources, well locations, salt mines, caustic-petroleum gas sources, fault-petroleum gas population and railroads.
Pandrik said that although the administration was in place, it was a public service which would lose money even if groups were charged for the use of a computer.
The report gave an evaluation of these factors for each area. On the basis of these evaluations, the AEC was to determine if any of the factors were necessary for possible supplementary storage of radioactive wastes.
ASIA A RESULT of this investigation, the Kansas Geological Survey to undertake a surveillance of those areas injured and second and third responders. The report were southeastern and west-central Lincoln County, and northwestern Jackson County.
Because the preliminary, geological study was based on aerial surveys, the closer survey of the surface features of the two areas was needed. The Kansas Geological Survey has been able to into the areas to survey such features as new buildings, existing structures, lines, new transportation routes, cemeteries, old oil and gas holes whose records were not on file, and wells.
Pandikz had he worked out a subjective set of regulations for public access. He said the station bore the legal responsibility for libel, slander, pornography and obscenity. The station would not allow a group, he said, unless it abused the privilege of public access.
"THE RULES are subjective but they have to be there," Pandik said. "We need the fina legal authority we're 'legally responsible.'"
A public non-profit corporation would be the answer to some of your business needs, access, Pandikid such. A corporation would be responsible for the liability, editorship and scheduling of public access
Additional investigation will be required before any of the areas can be judged to be suitable for storage of radioactive wastes.
An individual can request air time under the public access regulations, Pandaik said, but he preferred to start with the legitimate organized groups in the area, which number about 250.
THE PUBLIC ACCESS program was first announced on a newspaper advertisement ago in a will run for another four weeks. In another, the newpaper campaign, coupled with Cabelvision campaign, explained what the program was. Most of the public access program was held in the country have failed, Pandik said, but he thought lack of information
An individual could request free time, Pandik said, but he would recommend an organizational approach if the individual belonged to a group. He said he would give a group the care because of the number of times that would be presented.
PANDIZI SAID he thought there was little merit to the idea that public access programs can ensure subscriptions to Cabbities.
"I tend to disbelieve it," he said. "You don't own interests—we can't promote this week's special. It probably wouldn't reach the desired level."
Most cable television companies run public service programs for economic reasons. He suggested that a public program, such as a Bob Hope special, would cost several times more than a public program was cheaper. He estimated that a weekly public access program would cost $3,000 a year with the present staff and cost $10,000 with a complete crew.
Two groups, the Emergency Service Council and the Lawrence Carbide Company use the program Pandikz if. No group wanted the available time, he said, the stock or no program at all.
School Honors Business Prof
Frank S. Pinet, associate dean Frank S. Pinet, associate dean of business was chosen as recipient of the Henry A. Bubb Award for distinguished teaching
the members of the committee who chose Pinetel were Sherwood New York business and 1971 Budb award winner; Wayne Boeckman, Wetmore senior; and Ben Tuska, OlaK, graduate student.
The announcement was made recently by Dean Clifford Clark of the KU School of Business.
In making the decision, the committee used data from a student evaluation survey at UW. The student was Council, a student organization.
WASHINGTON—The Chinese People's Republic table tennis team brought its special brand of ping pong diplomacy to suburban Chevy Chase High School and scored a rousing success.
The purpose of the $1,000 award is to recognize and encourage outstanding classroom teaching.
Pinet joined the KU faculty in 1947 as an instructor in business administration and director of the Business Placement Bureau
Chinese Get Fond Greeting
Cheers, whistles, roars of approval and a standing ovation usually reserved for a football championship market the first step in the Chinese champion players in their two-day visit here.
25 words or fewer: $1.00
One day
each additional word: $.01
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Karen are offered to all students without regard to gender.
FOR SALE
Highest price paid for cars. u...
Joe's Used Cars: 601 Vermont. VI 2-
8608.
Western Cn. Notes—Now On Sale
There are two ways of looking at it
1. If you use them.
2. If you don't
You at a disadvantage.
Either "way" it comes to the same
place, or "Western Civilization"
"Campus Madhouse, 41"
West 14th, U1
Michigan St. Bar-B-Que 5125 Mich. Blvd. 8th Flr. 604-739-4664
Bar-B-Que West Michigan St. Bar-B-Que 5125 Mich. Blvd. 8th Flr. 604-739-4664
Bar-B-Que Large Rib Pub 1180-$1,980
Bar-B-Que Small Rib Pub 1180-$1,980
Bar-B-Que Large Rib Pub 1180-$1,980
Bar-B-Que Small Rib Pub 1180-$1,980
842-910-5911 Closed Sun- Tue-
Sat 842-910-5911 Closed Sun-
NORTHISE COUNTRY SHOP, 707
Ellenboro Avenue, used furniture,
Bridge Antiques, used furniture,
collectors items, old wood cooking and
shelving units, stoves, bicycles, books, old photo
corners, antiques, cans, corn, and thousands of other useful
items. Day 5-8, Altenburd, 842-319
1969 YAMAHA 550 Trail-Street
Motorcycle. Excellent condition — Have
done my own work. Call Petit. 864-
1114. 4-18
1960 Austin-Cambridge 4 dr. Sedan
Needs tune-up, $150 Call 841-3210
after 5:00 4-19
65 MGB roadster in top condition
58,000 miles. Engine overhailed at
43,000. $900. 842-2473. 4-21
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Yarnah 650 cc. %, street. see at 924
Schwarz, after 6, p. 16; 842-387) 4-18
1971 Kawasaki F17 175 cc Like new.
$550 842-7118 4-18
Wedding Gown, Ivory, size 10, never worn. Alfred Angelo originals include full length lace-uped sleeves at price $140, now $140 - 4-18 - 6367
Rare find—1971 Kawanaki, 250 SS excellent condition, with 1,500 miles Selling cheap, need gas money for trucking, #452-8571, #444-6546, Askid for Jack
Shirts, Tops, Jeans, Cords, Hailers,
Jackets, Capts, Bells, Overall, Studs,
Patches, Hat, Long Dresses, Earmings
Sweaters, Shirts, Sweatshirts, $8,
8 Eileen, 12 H
Guitar-Bibson B45 jumbo 12 string with deluxe casing and dearmick pick up-all like new. New Yours for $30 Will dialer. Call #842-219 by 7, 4-18
1969 Honda CL-350, 4,500 actual miles.
All accessories, $500 or best offer.
842-6300. 4-18
1986 Sunzi X-6 sramber 250cc. It looks and runs like a must. See to appreciate, $75. Call 842-1843 or skate for Dave. 4-18
MUST SELL - 3 bikes, 1971 Kawasaki
187 Mustard, $250, 1971 Yamaha 350,
1973 Honda, $450, Super Razor
$453, All per condition机
offer. #42-3968
4-18
Pull-shag-hip. Little Hungarian sheepdog puppies. AHC Top bloodlines. English-Pullet. Crowned English-Pullet. Crowned English-Pullet. McLouth, Karnes. 4:251-796-288. McLouth, Karnes. 4:251-796-288.
For sale or trade 1971 Plymouth 440 GTX. 7,000 actual miles. Need to bank. Bank financing. 843-0507 or 843-4469.
1970 $58ce Suzuki orange and black,
excellent condition $550 or best offer
*nail 827-7693 after S-30*
4-19
57 Chevy, 2 door 283 automatic (recently rebuilt). New near tires, brakes, valves, burns no oil, good tire condition. 42-6400. Ask for Jefl. 4-19
STEREO SYSTEM tape player-AM/
FM stereo, brand new Papanasonic,
retails for $160. Must sell, call 842-6728.
4-19
962 GMC school bus converted into amber. Far out lemonade yellow, to head travel. $100 Call Charlie 853-444-7777 ferrari 5, 833-8355 4-19
1970 Volkswagen Fastback, dark blue, radio, only 11,000 actual miles. Sharp!
Asking $1,585. Call 843-8436. 4-19
1964 green TR-4, runs good, new seat and carpet-$750 or best offer. Call Chris, 842-383-4.
4-19
190 Harley Davidson XLCH SPORTER
—Stock in — good condition. A good
condition. Will accept small trade
in. Good condition. Call 316-433-0900.
316-433-1288.
4-19
ROGERS' WEST HILLS REALITY
luxury hotel west of the city in old
Maryland, home to winters in the old
room with fireplace. 5 bedrooms,
2 baths. (3 with tub) two king-
size baths. Partly finished on our 4.
partially finished on our 4. partially
finished on our 4. partially finished on our 4.
partly finished on our 4. partially
finished on our 4. partially finished on our 4.
Rogers' Realty. 160 West HILLS. 843-9000
Rogers' Realty. 160 West HILLS. 843-9000
1970 Toyota, excellent condition, only 25,600 miles, 2-door, AM radio, air-cond. Getting married, must sell, $1,500. Call 842-4269 4-18
Mobile home for sale. Tired of living on a mobile home, you may want money on rent? Used mobile homes depreciate little. Here is a home where you can enjoy independence of ownership while relaxing or studying in a warm, pleasant room. bright 20 ft. living room. kitchen. bathroom. washer, refrigerator, automatic washers, gas furnace, only $7 mm. gas fire, usually good condition. 1962-1025 houses. gas furnace. only $7 mm. gas fire, usually good condition. 834-6106 households. 4-19
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
25 women fewer $1.50
each addition $0.02
line: 5.0 p.m, 2 days before publication
Air Force Mesh Dress—New—size 42
-$75—842-9096 4-20
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
THE MERCANTILE
1967 Triumph Tiger Cub 205 cc. Good condition, $300 or best offer Call Mike at 842-9689 4-26
TROMIONE - King 3-B with
F attachment: $499 new, will sell for
$255 Excellent condition, used little
Call Mike Hintere 822-5056 4-20
Leather-in-UP - RED RIDER - Leather-
leather in UP, wallets, bags,
pencils, louvers, ties.
Reasonably priced — 1000 Otn
Monday first — 4:20 p.m.
4-20
KENWOGD 3130 AM-FM stereo receiver 16 w per camera. Best. Beds "her, 864-2922 4-25
HAIR FIND - 1971 Kawakami 250 SS
Excellent condition with 1500 miles
Selling cheap. Need gas money for
new car. No rebate.
842-4444 4-20
842-4444
LIKE NEW -2-10 in. Deep Crager SS
wheels & 2 G 60 in. Grd Yr. Ptle
tires. Lift, M82-1043.
4-20
61 Triumph TR3, good condition, 2 studded snows, car mittens, tonneau cover $500 841-2234
Alison-Ann (1914-1952) Also 182-BD.
Extended cabinet with 210-wheel-
extension cabinets and 210-wheel-
extensions. Furniture faux-
furniture. Mert Scott/Need Call Cash
843-7643. 4-20
Four 12" chrome rims, will fit Daturns etc. . . . perfect condition-Call 842-6798 4-20
8x43 mobile home, furnished.
for single or couple, 2 BR, only $1,000.
Phone 842-8158
4-19
Natural cosmetics for women & men,
vitamins, biodegradable bunisheal
products, from Shaklee of Calif.
Café Tulsa, 842-952-6010,
Tulsa, 842-952-6010,
4-21
1943 Chevy Impala SS, PS. Post-train.
4-speed turbofan 327 cu in deep navy
aircraft good condition air
D. Koptunz 708 Mins. back-
stairs entrance 178
4-23
Save money—sew your own clothes.
Used Singer straight stitch. $25. 842-
6810.
4-14" Deep Chore Reverse Sheels.
Fit Duster. 2-5/60X18 Snowdres Tires Minted on Wheels—Used.
Winter 83-2478 4-21
Beautiful little KITK convertible 1967, MK III-11. Absolutely perfect engine, excellent body, top, tomnae, clutch, Peter Dart, 843-21-844-3919
844-3919
Stereo: KLH, dual turntable, Ken-
wood amp. In very good condition.
842-3795 4-21
Tony's 66 Service
1958 2 bdmr, Great Lakes Mobile Mobil,
all regulations plus air conditioner,
weather winder, shock store equipment,
phone, $1.50, Phone 842-3865 after 5:00.
$1.50
Pro Bikes: 35 pro bikes in stores in a
Pugilist. The Pugilist X10E- Fulcrum.
The Peugeot XP10E- Fulcrum.
The Olympia - Palason. San Remo.
The Polaris - Palaison. San Remo.
"All with Reynolds 323 (biking)
and Revels."
1946 Dodge .12 ton charm . . . and it runs too. $115 drives it away Also.
'64 VW Bug 500 $843-4646- 4-61
Tony's Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
staff meals
Lawrence Neeson 66044
Tet-trip bicycles. Fugi, Atala,
Atala, Atala. Tet-trip bicycles.
Azkik, Sekke, Alieber, Also 3
s speeds Over two hundred bicycles in
repeat is competent. Ride-On
repair is expensive and Ride-On
repair is expensive.
Members of our Karaan-BOKONOON
BECONS * Testing * and he said
* Wont be long now. My bad a beaer
that I was. No, I'm fine.*
NOVOKOL, NOKONOIL 4:24
Merkle
Guitar for sale - $80 Greco Hummingbird
in new steel strings, great
sound. Includes box 864-555,
or message at Hahngher
Dork desk; Box 822 4-24
1969 Alpine Sunbeam G.T. needs engine power; $600 or take over payments and we give you $200 cash. Call 842-6244 at 5:30 p.m. 4-24
26" bicycle, 5 speed, flat tire, good
derallleur; $20. Call 842-3953 4-20
1971 Honda 350-SL. Excellent condition, extras included Must sell for best offer-Call Dennis, 843-7404, 4-24
1966 Chevy Van for sale. Painted green in January 71. Has rear seat, carpeted and panelled Ask-in. Ask $450 Call 843-2018 after 6 p.m.
FOR RENT
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
T0 Suzuki TC-125, 950 mi, w/Heli-
met $375.842-5402
4-24
Kreditkartenanspruch
wiedergegeben
wickenspreis $100 best
offer. Call 842-3534 after 6 p. 4-24
ISA 202 Goldtar. Not one year old
last but last summer. Asking $200.
Call 842-3534 after 6 p. 4-24
Rockledge Villa Apartment, Limited
school. Students can rent two bedroom
fitted kitchen with all utilities paid
students can have each. Call us.
p.m. 843-7721
p.m. 843-7721
4-20
COLLEGE HILL MAR (N) now show-
furnished and furnished apartmen-
t areas start at $120 Clover to cistern
area. Warehouse, 1357 N. Ivy St.
W 191b, W 191c, Apt B or call Ms.
Fulton
Dredy of trying to find that ideal apt or home with renting. He has a house in 3 bairns and homes in various locations and prices for McGrew Agency, 1001 Kentucky, K82475.
LOOK WHAT SANTEE APTS HAVE to Offer! SUMMER rates, swimming pool, A.C. Free cable-TV and best location in town, 123 Indiana. Ibadah School.
WHY RENT?
When you're hot, you're hot. When
it's cold, you're cold.
UNIVERSITY
DISTRICT
proud of your UNIVERSITY
MINTS. Proud of your MINTS &
your MINTS.
MINTS. Proud of your MINTS.
95th Apt. 1529 W. 30th Room
832-754-6500
SUMMER RENTALS. Live close to campus this summer in a room, house, or apartment. Renewal costs $250-$300 per semester. Louisiana: 841-763-1021; Florida: 841-763-1021; 5-9
Available 3-15 three room apt, air-
conditioned $130 room apt, room 48 apt,
bedroom 25 apt, balcony onsite $169.
stone fireplace $169. All apts are
formalized. Private entrance and bath.
Room 16 is an adjoining bedroom.
MODERN APARTMENTS Furnished and unfurried one bedroom from two bedrooms. Save $4,000 year-end rate. Sales tax included Fall 2015. Bed #83-0924. Beds #83-1601
Studio apartment, Quiet, furnished,
air conditioned, steam heating, park-
ing. Need business mah or grad student.
Business marsh may 20 and 21.
43-8900. Available May 19th.
4-18
Renting for summer and fall nice furnished rooms, kitchen, privilges, near KU. Also 1-3 bedroom apts. 842-947 near KU. 4-19
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right next door to campus, 1025 Mississippi Avenue between quartermaster buildings. Availably available at end of semester for up to 3 months. Most recently available at end of semester for ww.campus.com/warehouse; central warehouse; 847-7988 between 2.50 p.m and 10.20 p.m.
BROADWAY MUSEUM
Room for rent. Need girl to share house $65 Utilities included Available May 1 824-7568 4-20
4 bedroom house on edge of campus
For summer at reduced rate and year-
2014
Jeans: Call 843-5388 or 843-6131 **4-20**
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
Walk to KU. 2 dbm, apartment, carpeted, central air, appliances, parking Call 843-5809 4-20
Apartment for rent. Available May
11, summer rates, air conditioning
range $45-$85. Call 842-9153 after 6:
p.m. 19 W. 14th 4-21
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
the license to practice law in 1972, which selection is still available. Licensees must be 85-249 or 2017-A Harvard Lawyer's best built, honored and licensed. Lawyers' best built, honored and licensed.
Avalon, 30th & Avalon, Harvard
Avalon, 20th & Avalon, Harvard
11th & Macdonald. Then compare the cost of living in one of these hand-held apartments and in some other apartments and you will be more to have a dwindler, central A.C. heat, and water utilities paid for.
NOTICE
Sibleborn for summer, apt. to room,
Room A, private, close to campus,
formatted, No. 130, 1025, Indiana, 842-7160,
Apt. E, 421.
Townhouse duplex, 2 b.'s, ee.'s, klf.
formal a.'r, fully carpeted. A/C patio,
garage. $130 mo. Call 842-9159 after
5:00 p.m.
Two bedroom, furnished apartments for $120. Air conditioned, stove refrigerator No utilities paid Call 842-6534 after 5 and weekends
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWYERS
We are proud to offer attractive accommodations if you call me. Ponypig, 843-526-9700 or via Airline Harvard, 843-526-9700 or via Mississippi Avalon Apartments, 30th & Missouri Avalon Apartments, 30th & Missouri. Availon has an environment and amenities that attract professionals. At our internationally modern studio located in the heart of Memphis, at our surprising
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
Barn Parties! Now available for
rent at Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perey
Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perey
hay and cooler plenty of parking
Call Joe Shore after 6 p.m. at
843-725-9000.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co., John Wells, 842-5220 ff
Women's Allerganics
Allerganics, 20 years of experience.
Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 4-25.
WEDDING INVITATIONS — PRICES
$49.00 for a private party,
painted only $4.50. Suited for free
catalysis and samples to Arnden Agard,
East Main, East Harbor, 4-28
INFANT DAY-CARE 842-8269. Professional center-care for children 1 mo to 12 mo. Pup or part-time. Prn. Specially designed EXTENSION Pri.
Give your jeans a lift—with suspenders in color . . . from EARTHSHINE, 8 E. 12th. 4-18
Dandelion Hope Bags-Grow with regular feeding. Somewhat like a dog. But cheaper . at EARTH-SHINE, 12 E. 8th B. 4-18
Everything in your closet just died-
get a clothing transplant at EARTH-
SHINE, 8 E. 12th. 4-18
LONNY FAME and the Belltones. A rock n' Roll band straight out of the 1950s for more information contact Rik, 842-6509 or 842, 8248-1-4-18
Two left feet? Expert intensive instruction will transform you into a trailing rookdancer! Comfort Scientist, Aide to Student Activity Center. Free. 4-19
The telegram cost to memorial by Olydia Mayson, Wednesday evening at 7 p.m., the National Women's Health Center of the National agencies and fun-face band will perform. A memorial service is invited and there is no charge.
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
KAT Suzuki
H
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store
VOX BASS, AMPS & MIX FLORA-
LIS, WINE, BEER, SUPPLEMENTS
WITH YEARS, KERRIGAN, VONNEN-
GRAPHICS, DOLMUS TRADIATOR
DOLMUS TRADEAMRADLER
CLOTHES BORONON 91 Vermont
WANTED
SHAKIA APTS 626. Schwarz, Clean
1 barm, kibb, bath, A/C Water paired
3 barm, kibb, bath, or 15 of May
$125 intersuit. Call 842-7901 or
841-2903 before 6 p.m.
4:24
FORK. DANOES come from many places; they are from generation to generation, and from generation to generation in experience of doing these dances with their partners. They were born at 7 o'clock on Patterson Lake Park.
Lovely furnished apartment, with central air, for 2 men, very close to campus, available May 20th for summer and or fall. Phone #615-840-424
THE MIDDLE EAR CARES to Law-
rence Merone components at cost.
We want you to save your
you call $30 for all manufacturers.
Decide All manufacturer. 4-24
SUBLEASE-2 bldr 2 bath 2 bath unfurnished kitchen with sink dishwasher with dishwashers A-C Pool Halloween. A-B Pool Halloween. A-M Pool Halloween. Water ma. Water call 842-4582-506
j nice girls need a roommate for next year in Jayhawk Towers. Call anytime.
842-0427 4-18
We buy used books, also old Play-by-
boys and Pent-House magazines in good condition!! Call 842-0216 5-9
One or two rooms to share an apartment with two other girls for next fall Call after 4:00 Pm or 4:19 Dq, 842-6283
(HELP) Phases land 2 plus continued
inquiries require flights to liberal
airports. Contact Jay Shankh at
shankh@univ.edu. Share
bank Sharkh this summer.
6415, 913-875-3874. Centralva, Karel-
6415, 913-875-3874.
Good running used car wanted. Have $120 to spend. Look and year not much but must be in good shape mechanically. 4:00 p.m. 4:19
To meet people who read the Uranita Book, call 842-7691. 4-20
634 Mass. 842-6966
or 2 people to sub-let apartment for
summer $135 m. furnished. 2 blocks from Fraser, Call 864-1252 or 864-
1218.
Experienced Driftman will do the work, such as Graphics, Flow Charting, and prompt service. Phone 4-326-1295 for
PARMIHOUSE-Wanted to rent. Responsible KU students with references willing to make repairs. Negotiate lease for one year or longer. 842-9135
Female roommate needed for summer to share furnished apartment in Meadowbrook West. Call 842-367-367. 4-18
Roommates to share large furnished house for summer; Must see to appreciate. 3 blocks from campus, own room. Call 842-5755. 4-20
TYPING
Experienced in typing these, diagramming them on paper, other rite typing systems and using a type type. Accurate and prompt typing is required. Receive Phone #852-9544. Mr Wright.
Typing in my home. IBM Selectric.
Prompt, accurate work. Experienced.
Call 841-2556. 5-9
Theses, term papers, typed accurately and promptly. IBM *Selective*, your choice of type styles. Also editing at state, Kansas. 842-679-108, 842-565-.
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt, reasonable rates. Please call 843-7954 4-18
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
TRIUMPH
Competition
CSC
TOYOTA THLUMP
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
- TYPING - TIERES - DESERTATION - MISCELLANEOUS WORK. CallMicr with plea type Micr Travel, K914 Ridge Court, 842-1460.
Typing on elite electric typewriter.
No theses please. Prompt attention
843-0958. 4-18
Fast accurate typing Reasonable rates Call 842-2053 4-26
PERSONAL
FLASH-Little Debbie Hemped finds happiness with hand-made necklaces and rings from EARTH-SHINE, 8 E 12th. 4-18
Kauai, Hawaii. Want to get acquainted with students from this island. Call 843-6850.
Ned KU HR141, Speech 98, or Philo
12 credit? The Center for Human Ex-
ploration Call 864-4223 or 842-0047
4-12
I My Servant Thou art well as a servant, and I do my duty in the service of you; valuethen value thou burden from your authorities from the sheath of self and desire from the unbridled and inanitile all that
LONNY FAME and the Beltinees. A rock or a band straight out of the 90s. For more information contact Rikz, 842-6509 or John, 832-481-3418.
LOST
All kinds of love make the world go
girl. Gay Liberation now meets on
Thursdays, 7 p.m., 1204 Oroad. Soon,
2nd annual Spring Garden Day Gay Pie
Day.
Small white ternier with brown spots.
Wearing a red collar. Very, very
friendly. Very important to family.
Reward offered. Please call 408-745-
11-15
Puppy 4 months white and black-and
spoils, early skin, tail collar,
answerers to Pete—REWARD Call 842-
3796
Male's hole in gift with dark oval stone lost in or around Allen Field House - tape on ring for fitting. Please call 864-2040. Lost April 10th. 4-18
A pair of girls glasses in pink case
Need despately
Call 842-2374. A-18
HELP WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
Babyalter wanted for summer. Three
school age children. Hours 9 to 4. 1
per hour. Please call 843-4893 after
6. 4-15
Girl wanted for interesting work
Work own hours, generous commission.
Call 1-642-6389, ask for Micki
Olson.
Mike 4-24
TEACHERS WANTED: Contact
Southwest Teachers Agency, Box
805-1264, NM 78106, "Oc
26th year" Boredest and
NATA
BRIDAL GOWN GOWN Sale—Size 8-10, up to 75% Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky. 4-20
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KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
YOU
10
Tuesday, April 18, 1972
University Daily Kansan
COLUMBIA RECORDS
Q
In the world of organs there's only one Mr. Biggs.
2-RECORD SET
E. POWER BIGGS
24 HISTORIC ORGANS
IN 8 COUNTRIES
COVERING 7
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BY 24 COMPOSERS
MG 31207 A specially priced 2-record set
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MUSIC FOR ORGAN, BRASS
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The Columbia Brass and
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Conducted by Maurice Peress
Camra, Clarke, Dupre, Gigout, Karg-Elert
Purcell, R. Strauss, Widor
M 31193*
E. Power Biggs
Johann Gottfried Walther
Six Concertos for Organ, after Italian Masters
Recorded on the Gottfried Silbermann organ in
The Cathedral of Freiberg, Germany
M 31205
E. POWER BIGGS
The Magnificent
Mr. Handel
Vol. II
Fanfares, Marches,
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George Frederick Handel
The Royal
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Charles Groves,
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M 31206*
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COLUMBIA RECORDS
OK
Rain!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
RAIN
McPherson Bridge Leads to Nowhere
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
82nd Year, No. 125
Wednesday, April 19, 1972
See Page 5
CASTLE SALE
phone V13-4400
Kansan Photo by ARCHIE SOLSKY
Refreshing Things Often Come in Little Packages
While walking to class, Jenelle Johnson, Humon semen, ... unexpected means of refreshment. JH McIntosh, 1510 Crest Road, and his neighbor, Karen Bradley, 1511 Crest Road, had, unexpectedly, stopped by the sidewalk to get up a roadside stand. Breaking away from the lemonade,
traditional beverage for such stands, they served Kool-Aid. The stand's location along Crescent Road was convenient, as many students from the Daisy Hill dorms use this route to campus and many others use the nearby streets to park close to campus.
Panelists Dissect the Presidency
Kansan Staff Writer
By MIKE MOREY
Kennan Staff Writer
In the first of a series of two panel discussions sponsored by the Student Vote and titled "What is the American Presidency?" there was a consensus among the panelists that the presidency always would be found to be wanting because it is a human institution and, as long as could never be perfectly fulfilled
Tuesday night's panel, which comprised Francis Heller, professor of political science; Donald R. McCoy, professor of history, and Earl A. Nebring, assistant professor of political science, discussed, "The Presidential Job."
Heller said the president's job was an extremely complex one. The president, he said, is the prime minister, the leader of the country, the head strategist, the commander-in-chief, the head of the army, the prime minister and party and the champion of the people, since he is one of the only two officials elected by all of the people.
The other official who is elected by all of the people, he is, said the vice-president, Mr. McConnell.
McCOY AGREED with Heller and said that the office was one of 'awesome places'
could piece all of these jobs together into some
something, would have
Heller said the job of assessing the consequences of any president's actions was difficult. This is the case, he said, because the people are too close to the situation to make valid comments about the long-range effects.
Heller said people could not really tell whether a president had done "the right thing" until some time later when they could "look at it in historical perspective."
McCoy said the same was true of the presidential candidate. He said it was impossible to get a true evaluation of a presidential candidate because, oftentimes, a man changed rapidly when he took office.
HELLER SAID the media had even made the government more responsive to the people. It is clear, he said, that the media have an impact on the president and makes a more rapid response possible, and possibly even necessary.
The panelists agreed that the media had become increasingly more important in national politics and could become even more important in the future.
With the possibility of a national primary sometime in the near future, Nehring said, the job of the "image builder" would be even more important.
projection" in order to promote their presidential candidates.
A national primary, Nehring said, would probably necessitate a nationwide campaign conducted, to a great extent, by the various media.
McCoy said the national committees had concerned themselves with "image
Nehring said the role of senators in presidential races had increased in recent years. Heller agreed and said that before 1960, governors and former military men were more important than senators in presidential races.
HELLER SAID a national primary could change the entire political system by weakening the organization of the political parties in the states.
Heller added a nationwide campaign would probably mean that "the campaign is going to work"
McCoy said senators were more important now probably because the big sources of support and organization were members of the governors were more or less isolated.
The presidency, McCoy said, was not always the way it is today. At one time, he said, the president was more of an "elected king" than anything else.
Day Care Seeks $20,000
$5,300 Requested By 'The Whomper'
By HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writer
The KU Reclamation Center asked the Finance and Auditing Committee of the Student Senate for $5,300 to cover operating expenses for fiscal 1973 during the second session of budget hearings held Tuesday night.
Gary Jacobs, Shawnee Mission sophomore and director of the center, appeared before the committee and explained the center's need for the funds which will come from the 1972-73 student activity fee.
Jacobs said the center needed $3,800 to rent the north half of the former Firestone building at 8th and New Hampshire streets, $750 for salaries and $750 for supplies that include gasoline for pickup trucks.
Jacobs学院 the cumference of sewer
laboratories the year after in the
these are
Reclamation Center's operating system that included the elimination of a director and retention of two paid employee positions. The center separates bottles and cars at the center.
JACOBS SAID the center hoped to expand its service to include the pickup of newspapers which could be sold to a Kansas City firm for $8 a ton.
More deposit centers for Lawrence residents was another change planned that Jacobs said would increase patronage of the reclamation center.
Beginning next fall Lawrence public schools will provide space for recyclable materials and each school's Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) will undertake the chore of separating metal from glass at the deposit sites, he said.
Jacobs said the center previously had spent three-fourths of its salary money to buy a new house.
this expense will be eliminated except for the expense of having materials which are not disposed of.
PICKING UP already sorted materials at Lawrence schools will cost only about one-half what the center has been spending to have materials sorted, he said.
REPRESENTATIVES of nine other groups presented their proposed budgets to the committee Tuesday night. The KU Sierra Club asked for $1,200; KUTY Action Committee, a group formed to improve Chinese-American relations, $500 Undergraduate Anthropology and Yellow Brown Road School, $7,000.
Tribe Recruiting Workers For Newly Returned Land
The Scuba Diving Club asked for $235,
KU Chapter of Douglas County Legal Aid,
$6.30, KU Business Council, $810; KU
Society, $602.50, and International Law
Society.
By JEANNE ELLIOTT
By JEANNE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
In an effort to recruit volunteers to revamp the nearly 12,000 acres of land recently returned to the Pottawattomi tribe, Lester Jessepe, tribal council chairman, and Francis Hattehe, council vice-chairman and business manager, will host a luncheon Tuesday in Blake Hall to explain the history and future bones of the project.
The land contains St. Mary's College, Leavenworth and adjoining farm and pasture land. Jessepe said the return of the 1800s was to "stagger the imagination."
He said now the tribe had to begin the task of fund raising, restoring the buildings on the college campus to use and triving to improve education for Indians.
The project began when the Jesuits decided to sell the land and some of the older tribe members recalled the agreement that said when the church no longer used the land, it would be returned to the tribe.
Dwayne Evans, a member of the tribe and at that time a KU graduate student, began to research the question along with Norman McKay, assistant professor of wolf biology.
Also present at the press conference were Forer, Daniel Elash, Lawrence graduate student, and Diane Zuch, Ft. Riley graduate student, all members of an advisory committee involved in research and planning for the tribe.
JESSEPE SAID he and Batttes were planning to go to Los Angeles to begin soliciting funds to develop the programs and resources the students college used as a seminary by the Jesuits.
Forse said the trile had received much support from Kansas State University and Rockhurst College. He said he hoped KU people would get involved with the project now because they could provide some expertise in proposal writing and
housing project, health clinic and other community improvements.
The tribe has made plans for a 110-unit
KU students and faculty could also provide some additional manpower this summer in repairing the college, Jessepe said.
ELASH SAID the level the project had achieved was important. He said that reached 100%.
there was much to do and he believed this
good place for people to get
involved.
Both Forer and Elash said that the tribe welcomed volunteer assistance.
Forer said anyone interested in the project could contact him in 306 Blake, or Dan Elash in the psychology department at Fraser.
Black Women Rate Race As Number One Priority
Kansan Staff Writer
By DONNA DALE
Kansas Staff Writer
"Essence of a Black Woman," a project sponsored by the black women of Hashinger Hall, featured a speaker and a guest Tuesday night at Hashinger.
The speaker was Stella Smith, a black registered nurse at the KU Medical Center. She spoke about women in nursing and especially black women.
Karen Saunders and Cynthia Robinson, Kansas City, Kan., sophomores, and Rose Webb, Kansas City, Kan., senior, made up a panel which discussed "Is Women's Liberation Relevant to the Black Woman?"
Smith said the nurse's role was changing from a technical one, such as operating equipment, to more frontline roles.
"Nursing education is geared more toward talk-talk and healing social needs than physical ones. Public health and the nursing profession require a high level of nursing education," she said.
Smith said she had encountered few cases of racial prejudice in her profession. She said that she had no trouble getting into the nursing education program at the Med Center and that with her degree the wife was highly valuable as an enmuele.
attitudes might be toward you if you are black." she said.
"It's dangerous to generalize what
The reason an individual is not selected for employment could be other than racial, social or religious.
She said black women might have an edge over white women in employment opportunities. Institutions which are funded by federal money may have requirements to hire both blacks and women.
"By burying a black woman, they kill two birds with one stone. Executives feel it is safer to have a black woman in a position of power than a black male," she said.
The generalization of a downtrudden black is just as detrimental as one of a clear reds.
Smith described her attitude: "I am a manain being. Don't give me a beast, just someone to love."
The panel gave a basic description of the goals of Women's Liberation movement in three areas: career, the University and in general, and sexual liberation.
The program will sponsor a modern dance group and style show tonight at 7 in Hashinger. The group is lead by Irene Townsend, an interior instructor from wastown City, Kan. Models the fashion show shows be girls from KU with fashion supplied by local merchants.
Vet Groups Work for More Jobs. Benefits. Hospitals
By KENT PULLIAM
The Campus Veterans, the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) and the American Legion all have the needs of the veteran at work. The Veterans are working for added benefits for the veteran.
Kansan Staff Writer
All three of the organizations are involved in a program called Jobs for Vets, and their activities are coordinated with the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
One of the major problems facing the veterans of the Vietnam era is finding jobs in the United States.
Wayne Strong, RFD2, commander of the American Legion Post here, said he thought the problems of veterans had been solved. He also noted that only difference was the time period and that each generation of veterans had problems which were cited to some of good books.
BRUNS SAID, "We always grew up with the idea that vets were heroes, and when you become one yourself you find out it is not always true.
Miller, commander of the VFW, and Strong is that he is returning from an undeclared war and most other veterans returned from a declared war.
One of the major differences the Vietnam veteran has to face, according to Ed Bruns, Leawood freshman and president of the Campus Veterans. Ellis
"Employment is nearly impossible to find, the GI bill is totally inadequate and you get no real help from friends or other people whom are supposed to be there to help."
According to Miller, the reception of the World War II veterans was not entirely different from that of the Vietnam veteran.
'I can't remember any parades or celebrations which occurred when we rebuilt the city.'
accustomed to the transition of high school seniors to college, but not prepared for the adjustment from the military to the cultural shock is what is called a cultural shock."
According to Strong the different reaction to the Vietnam veterans returning is just the difference between a victory and defeat. In an undeclared state, of the war in Vietnam,
Another source of problems is with the GI bill. According to Bruns the bill is inadequate and in Kansas is not up to the standards of some of the other states.
STRONG SAID, "We didn't get enough when we came back from Korea, and they did."
Bruns said, "The university is
He attributed this to the increase in the cost of living and a lack of increase on the interest rate.
Each of the groups had a different reaction to the Vietnam Veterans against
According to Miller, "a majesty of the older veterans did not like it."
Bruns said, "With their May Day demonstration they not only brought attention to the war but more importantly to the people in vets that are a product of this nuisance."
Strong said, "None of us ever wanted
war, and it is their privilege to demonstrate against this war. I would be more up in arms if they were protecting me against that happened at a very urgent time.
"Destroying or mistreating the flag is on our bigger side because that is what the military has for you."
ANOTHER PROBLEM that veterans of this era face that others did not face is a drug problem. Drug usage is more prominent in the service now that ever
According to Strong, "There were drugs overseas before but the soldiers didn't use them. It's more the social trend to use it now and that's part of the problem."
According to William Boswell, 932 Arkansas, American Legion member,
"The hospitals can get the finest equipment available and they use the best
The hospital facilities available to the veterans returning are among the best equipped in the country. The problems with the hospital have there never been enough of them.
facilities, but there just aren't enough of them."
Miller said, "The V.A. hospitals are experiencing the same growing pains as any other hospitals, but they are better equipped to handle the problem. I feel they are very good and handle the situation very well."
The American Legion also has a visitation program in which members of the group visit the hospitals in Kansas City and Topeka.
BOTH OF THESE organizations visit the hospitals regularly and help those veterans who are in them. The VFW sponsors a trip to the hospital on the weekend of the first KU home football game and brings some of the patients of the hospital to the football game. They also make a trip to the hospital once a month.
Membership in the Campus Veterans organization only requires that you be a veteran attending the University of Kansas. One is not required to give input into the organization to receive the benefits.
"We are a service oriented group, but we have not been trained by the steering committee. Bruns said."
TO BE ELIGIBLE for the VFW you must have served in a foreign war and during some of that time you must have been in a war zone. The VFW decides which dates they will accept for the United States to have been in a time of war.
The American Legion has adopted the dates that Congress has set for the U.S. engagement in war. Its members need not be citizens of any country outside the continental United States.
Each of these groups have some members who are of the Vietnam era, and the American Legion even tried to recruit from some of the returning veterans.
All three of the groups now have national programs which overlap to help veterans make the adjustment from military to civilian life, and to combat some of the problems that are unique to the Vietnam era vets.
2
Wednesday, April 19, 1972
University Daily Kansan
NO PARKING AT ANY TIME
BALEY HALL
EDUCATION
NO PARKING AT ANY TIME BAILEY HALL EDUCATION
Kansan Photo by JIM EATON
Traffic Plan Down the Drain?
Perhaps someone's comment on the current campus parking controversy is this bathroom-style sink. It turned up Monday morning in front of Bailey Hall for no apparent reason. No one was there when it happened, and no appearance. It may be assumed that the campus police had it towed off, but whether it was ticketed remains a mystery.
Mailbox on Daisy Hill Sacrificed to Automation
The mailbox on the corner of Irving Hall and Engel Roads was removed during spring vacation to make room for places to place both city and out-of-town boxes at other locations. The manager Jack Harris said recently.
Harris said the use of the automated mail processing center meant that all out-of-town mail was sent to Kaisa City. Mo. instead of here.
The purpose of the two boxes, Harris said, is to separate out-of-town mail that will go to the local area. The center for the center in Kansas City, Mo.
The automated mail processing service, which is being introduced by Harris said, operates with an optical character scanner, a machine that reads the address and zip code on a screen and sends the letter to the right area if the address and zip code correspond
Harris said the scanner was 80 per cent efficient and that 20 per cent of the mail still had to be hand sorted.
Mailboxes are ordered on a bid basis at the beginning of each week. Mailboxes for Service in according to anticipated need. Harris said that there were not enough boxes to meet them at each location in Lawrence.
"There's another factor determining the number of locations." Harris said.
He said that the Lawrence Post office was on a rigid time schedule, but he had to prepare out-of-town mail ready for shipment to Kansas City, by 5 p.m. Harris doubted, limited, Harris doubled, he said, that the mailbox would be in his home.
KU to Host Workshop On Computers in Design
Dewayne Hendricks, counsel and manager of Tek-Daymeh and Cardbadeh, ill, will conduct a two-day workshop with students in the School of Architecture and Design today and Thursday.
"Computer-related Problem Solving Methods" will be discussed at 1:30 p.m. today in the session for architecture majors.
A panel discussion about "Computer Simulation and Problem Solving in the Urban Design" will be at 7:30 p.m. today in the Seminar Room "Space and Technology Building and will be open to the public.
"Computer Graphics in Architectural Design" will be the subject of a film and discussion at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Big Room of the Kansas Union. This program also will be open to the public
Hendrickss specializes in computer research and in the areas of general urban and global intelligence solving. He mahered in mathematics psychology (artificial intelligence systems) at Wayne State University in Detroit and at McGraw-Hill University in computer research consultant.
Hendricks is also doing research in alternative life-systems design and has operated an experimental hydroponics simulation for six months this year. He is growing of plants in nutrient solutions with or without some material support.
Members of the panel tonight will be Hendricks; Robert David,
instructor in industrial design at the Kansas City Art Institute; professor of mechanical engineering; professor Douglas Tugle, professor of computer science, and Maynard Professor of business and psychology.
Campus Bulletin
By MARK BEDNER
Kansan Staff Writer
In an otherwise routine meeting, the Lawrence City Commission voted Tuesday to improve the Massachusetts Street from the city's plan to improve sidewalks. The council voted seventh Avenue to South Park.
Kansas Relays: All day. Memorial Stadium.
The sidewalk improvements are part of a larger plan to update and modernize Massachusetts in the central business area.
NONNA ROOM: 5 a.m. 4 o'clock Rooms.
French Table: 11:30 a.m. meadowland
Rooms, Caldereta.
K. Cliery Economics: noon, English
The commission's action to exclude the 1100 block came as a result of a protest registered by members of the owners of one of the buildings
Charles Rickart, professor of mathematics and chairman of the department of mathematics at Yale, remembers when he and his friend Martin Katz went to Massachusetts for less than $20 a month. Rickart spoke Monday about his reminiscences from the 1980s at the annual department of mathematics honor banquet held in the Kansas Room of the University.
Faculty Forum: noon, Westminster Center.
"Five of us rounded up the
emergency team."
Emporia State "Teacher's
College. We commuted from
Oxage and never missed a day."
Cafeteria, Kansas Union
AMAS Films: 9 a.m. Forum Room
Paving of 1 Block Delayed
Placement Officers; noon. Alcove A.
Cafeteria. Table 10.
After getting a grant from the College Student Education Program, Rickert came toice in his $20 a month apartment.
Because of financial
success, Bearstey will
his freshman year to commute to
Kansas State Teacher's College
in Emporia from his home town
the next year, Rickart received the Edwin E. Slosson scholarship award for $500. He decided to move out of his apartment and find more suitable living quarters. He found another apartment in Dallas and decided to join an eating club, which cost him 23 cents a meal.
Computer Science: 6 p.m., English Room.
Phi Lambda Uptown Dinner: 6:30 p.m.
Kansas Room.
Room
Faculty Forum: noon, Westminster
Professor Returns For Math Banquet
"You can look back on teachers." Most of them are two dimensional. The good ones are
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark
Room, Cafeteria,
877-456-9011
Kansas Room.
Pellittal Science: 6:30 p.m., Alcove A
2456 S. 19th St.
SIMS: 3:30 p.m. Council Room
Greening: 4:30 p.m., International Room
Art History I/O Exam: 2:30 p.m. Lread Room.
Social Welfare Student Council: 2:30 p.m.
Finance Team Auditing: 6:30 p.m.
Regionalist Room.
Student Services Health Committee: 6:30
p.m. Parlor C.
SC: 3 p.m. Regional Room.
IFIC: 3:30 p.m. Governors Room.
SIMS: 3:30 p.m. Council Room.
Carrilton Rectal: 7 p.m.
Student Services Organizational Sub-
Commitee: 7 p.m., Parlor A.
Browses: 7 p.m., Board Room
SUA Chooses New Officers
Association of Mexican-American
Students Lecture: 7 p.m., Ballroom.
SUA Classical Films: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff
Social Welfare Board Council: 2:30 p.m.
Big & Room
Broadway
Greeting: 4:30 p.m., International Room
Union Operating and Executive Committee: 5:30 p.m., Curry Room.
The Union Operating Committee recently selected four of the thirteen members of the board of directors. The newly elected officers are president—Charles Sack, Lawrence graduate student Jill Duncan, Wilmette, Ill. junior; secretary—Stephanie Blackwood, Hosington sophomore; treasurer—Howard Shawnee Mission freshman.
KU Dames Bridge: 7:30 p.m. Pine Room
8:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. and 15 p.m.
Woodruff Aiglomerium.
Cafeteria.
Finance and Auditing 6.30 p.m.
nightly
KU Dances Bridge: 7:30 p.m. Pine Room
Classical Film: 7:30 p.m. and 9:15 p.m.
Archaeological Lecture: 8 p.m., Forum
Room.
Alice Winston Memorial Lecture: 8 p.m.
Jayhawk Room.
Consequently, Hults said, the owner would have to be assured
Jayhawk Room.
Memorial Memorial Lecture: 8 p.m.
Big Room 8
Archaeological Institute of America: 8 p.m., Forum Room.
Hulls said that the owners of the building were afraid the cost of the sidewalk improvements would be doubled if the city were to go ahead with construction this summer, because the sidewalks are already in use and make way for the planned improvement so far the area in 1973.
THE OWNERS of the building at the southwest corner of 11th Avenue are obligated to pay for the improvements along 11th Avenue and along the front of their building on Massachusetts
The other board members, who were selected by previous board members, are as follows:
Robert KRAMSEY, Prairie Village sophomore; Films chairman-Mark Schier, College chairman-Kinglesley Click, Shalmar, Florida, sophomore; Fine Arts chairman-Mark Nebrasun junior; Minority chairman-Richard Marshall, Kansas City, Kan. junior; Public Relations chairman-Dave Hull, Junior; Recreation chairman-Kenneth Kubitschek, Salina sophomore; Special Events chairman-Dan Dellacher; Travel chairman-Pam Dieli, Prairie Village junior.
three dimensional because they make their subject alive to their students." Rickart said.
Rickart recalled that one of his students, G. Mitchell, had no prepared text for her class. Each student wrote up his class notes and handed them in to he
Several students and faculty in the department of mathematics were honored at the banquet.
Michael Thibodeaux, assistant instructor in mathematics, received the Florence Black Award from the Lawdry, Lawrence senior and William Laaser, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, were given $25 each for their achievement in the Mathematics Competition.
that any future improvement plans in the area would not require them to pay for the cost of building and rebuilding the new sidewalks.
A concrete replica of the crest of Sigma Tau, the national honorary engineering fraternity, is in front of Learned Hall, Friday.
Statue Placed Near Larned
"We would need some from the team who would help to repair the repair of these sidewalks if you need to tear them up in the future." Hulz
The city would have to bury conduit for street lights and traffic lights below the sidewalks of the new area. As a result, the new sidewalks would have to be torn up to make way for the conduit. The city does not have the funds to under the sidewalks this summer.
HULT'S REQUEST that the city delay construction of the sidewalks until the city could assure the owners they wouldn't have to pay for any re-construction was approved by a vote of 4.01.
Commissioner Nancy Hembleton voted against the delay because she said, she was afraid of having to move from future improvements because of the loss of federal financing due to the request by
In other areas, the City Commission received a claim of $200.75 from the owners of The Kush, 925 ulm, alleging damages caused by the back-up of a city sanitary sewer. The claim was to Milton Allen, city attorney, for his recommendation.
Hults was representing Odd and Skip Williams and Tommy Constant, owners of the building at 1101 Massachusetts.
THE CITY COMMISSIONERS also approved the settlement of $4,000 in the lease site. Owners of some of the land condemned for the project received settlements of $4,000 and appraised values of the property.
Heirs of the Ruth Garvin estate received $1,500 over the ap artments and $300 over Howard Heck received a settlement of $800 over the ap artments.
During a short recess, Mayor
John Emick welcomed high school journalists attending the meeting. Emick then introduced Jonathan Partek, who outlined the reasons for the city's apathy of a student commissioner.
Paretsky said his appointment to the City Commission was a result of efforts by the commission to open lines of communication between high school students and the Lawrence city government.
Campus Briefs
Gregory Battcock, teacher, lecturer and the author of several novels, including "New American Cinema," is scheduled to give a show and lecture on the films of Andy Warhol 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Woodruff Auditorium. There will be no admission charge.
SOFA
Fine the word SOFA and give it a new definition.
SOFA stands for **Something For All**.
It includes three dimensions: lightness, thickness, and durability.
SOFA is used in different contexts:
1. **In the context of furniture**: SOFA provides a durable and comfortable surface for various types of furniture, such as chairs, tables, and cushions.
2. **In the context of packaging**: SOFA can be used to ensure that products are safe and protected from external factors like dust, moisture, and heat.
3. **In the context of transportation**: SOFA is used in shipping containers to protect the contents during transit.
4. **In the context of construction**: SOFA is used in building materials to provide a strong and durable foundation.
5. **In the context of advertising**: SOFA is used in advertisements to attract attention and convey a sense of trustworthiness.
6. **In the context of healthcare**: SOFA is used in medical devices and equipment to ensure their safety and functionality.
7. **In the context of education**: SOFA is used in educational institutions to provide students with a supportive learning environment.
8. **In the context of recreation**: SOFA is used in recreational facilities to provide visitors with a comfortable and enjoyable experience.
9. **In the context of sports**: SOFA is used in sports teams to provide players with a comfortable and durable surface for training and competition.
10. **In the context of finance**: SOFA is used in financial institutions to provide customers with a secure and reliable way to make payments and transactions.
SOFA is an important technology that has been widely adopted across industries. It provides a range of benefits, including increased efficiency, reduced costs, and improved customer satisfaction.
If you have any questions or need further information about SOFA, please contact us at info@sofa.com. We will be happy to assist you with your inquiry.
Warhol Films Thursday
Religious Singer in Town
Tony Fontane, religious recording artist, will appear today through Sunday at the First Church of the Nazarene, 1942 Massachusetts St. Services will be held at 7:30 p.m. today through Saturday and at 10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m. on Sunday. Because of scheduling conflicts with the Kaiser Relays, Fontane will not be making an appearance on campus as originally planned.
'American Indian Poetry'
Europe is a four letter word:
Gordon Brotherston of the University of Essex will deliver the Alice Winston Memorial Lecture at 8 onight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Brotherston's lecture will be on "American Indian Poetry."
There will be a meeting of the Rodeo Club at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union. Plans for the overnight trail ride will be discussed.
Rodeo Club Tonight
Museum of Art, Cleveland
Visit the Museum of Art on 13th Street and West 26th Street. The museum has a large collection of paintings, sculptures, pottery, ceramics, and woodwork. The museum also offers a variety of exhibits, including a temporary installation, a cultural festival, and a temporary exhibit.
The Museum of Art is located at 26th Street and West 26th Street, near the intersection of East 46th Street and West 26th Street in Cleveland. The museum is surrounded by trees and greenery, providing a peaceful atmosphere for visitors to enjoy.
The Museum of Art is open Monday through Saturday from 10:00 AM to 7:00 PM, with an admission fee of $15. Admission includes a museum ticket, a museum guide, and a free museum experience. Visitors are welcome to explore the museum's diverse collections and learn about the art and history of Cleveland.
For more information about the Museum of Art, please visit www.museumofart.com or contact us at (313) 258-9555.
Please note that the museum is closed on Sundays except for special events and exhibitions. For additional information, visit our website at www.museumofart.com.
CENTERFO
RHUMANEX
PLORATION
Summer in Colorado
Seminar in identity New Feminism Racial Awareness Human Sexuality
Discovery in a natural environment
The Center for Human Exploration Word Counts
- Intro to Logic
More information at Kansas Union
lobby, SUA office, Numeraker
College, Continuing Education,
Dean of Men and Women
(817) 542-3000
Mountain climbing, hiking, horseback riding, and swimming
Earn KU Credit
· HR 141
Seminars with KU faculty Living in the woods
Explore new people and new ideas.
Ward, Colorado
Wednesday and Thursday
נהג מספר קטן בכל סוג חזירה.
Red Baron
presents
Wednesday Special
WILL FOXX
Pitchers ... 75°
Guys ... 75°
Girls ... FREE
312522012522012
Topic
University of California, Riverside
The Twenty-fourth Annual
E. C. FRANKLIN MEMORIAL LECTURE
presents
The University of Kansas
Phi Lambda Upsilon - Alpha Rho Chapter
Honorary Chemistry Fraternity
Some Social and Chemical Aspects of Air Pollution
James N. Pitts, Jr.
The Public is Cordially Invited
Wednesday, Apr.19
Dinner: 6.0 p.m. Kansas Room, Kansas Union
Lecture: 8.0 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
STUDENT NIGHT Wed. Nights 5-9 p.m.
Tickets for the dinner are available in the Chemistry office
Hamburgers 15°
Cheeseburgers 20°
Dbl. Cheeseburgers 39°
BURGER CHEF
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Wednesday, April 19. 1972
PHOENIX, Ariz.—The federal government's $4-million gambit in traffic safety smashed into a concrete bridge Tuesday, damaging the bumper area of the experimental air and one of three lifelike dummies. An air bag designed to protect the occupants failed to inflate as fast as expected. The front half of a fouled car was wrinkled accordian style in a similar test earlier.
News Briefs By The Associated Press
Experimental Auto Crashes
After watching from a desert testing site, U.S. Transportation Secretary John Vope said the results of experiments could create sweeping auto design changes in the not too distant future. The Department of Transportation hopes to produce a vehicle which will allow passengers to walk away from serious accidents with only minor injuries.
Butz Opposes Price Ceiling
WASHINGTON - If there are ceilings on food and farm prices "we must insist on price floors to protect us from the downswing," Secretary of Agriculture Earl L. Butz said Tuesday. Butz, opposed to controls, said, "If you are going to impose price ceilings on food and farm prices, and as our food prices do, then I think you've got to ask for guaranteed floors under them to protect us from the downswing."
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court ruled by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger has approved a Massachusetts loyalty oath that requires public employees to pledge to oppose the overthrow of the government.
Burger Court Upholds Oath
"We are not charged with correcting grammar but with enforcing a Constitution," Burger said Tuesday in delivering a 4.3 decision that the oath is not too vague to remain on the books. All of his 1969 decisions required the oath to commit themselves not to use illegal force. In this respect, he said, the oath is like the ones taken by presidents, members of Congress and even lawyers who practice before the court. The decision reverses a panel of three federal judges in Boston who took what they believed was highly literalistic approach" and declared the oath invalid in 1969.
Bombing in N-Vietnam Cut 'to Feel Hanoi Out'
SAIGON (AP) — Despite perfect weather and a multitude of prime military targets, the United States has sharply curtailed its bombing of North Vietnam and used the Hanoi intercept off limits to raid serialers. U.S. military sources said Tuesday.
The sources emphasized, however, that President Nikon was widespread bombing in the North if there was no positive signal from Hanoi indicating an end to the offensive offensive in South Vietnam.
One source noted that air
airplanes had to fly in order
to than a dozen a day following
the huge raids Sunday that included
the Hanoi and Haiphong areas.
THE CURTAILMENT, "to feel
Haniol out," as one informant told me. Haniola's delegation to the Paris talks said a bombing halt would be necessary in order to ring of negotiations to end the war.
Perhaps only coincidentally, war commen-
ties showed the ground war in the South to have
received better equipment and were no reported major battles.
Military sources here said bombing now was recreated in the 20th parallel of latitude, 60 to the south of Hanoi and Haiphong.
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Ladd said there are no immediate bombs in the reporting bombing restrictions. A White House spokesman said this was the first time a US official had reported bombing restrictions.
Thirty-eight persons heard James Duff, Lawrence graduate student, outline the functions, purposes and methods of the anti-
KU Anti-Smoking Clinic Attended by 38 Persons
By SCOTT EATON
Korean Staff Writer
University Daily Kansan
smoking clinic of the University department experimental psychiatry the clinic's introductory meeting Tuesday night in the Jawahhar campus
Business School Names Pichler Associate Dean
Joseph A. Pichler, associate professor of business, was named associate dean of the School of Business at Ohio State will assume his duties July 1.
Pichler, who joined the faculty in 1965, plans to continue teaching in the industrial relations area and becomes an administrator
He replaces associate dean Mitchelson who has been invited to the Management Institute in Oslo, Norway, as a visiting professor
Pichler received his B.A. from Darmine and Drame in Ph.D. from University of Chicago. He also received a Master's from Ford Foundation fellowship.
Pichler spent a year on leave from KU when he served as special assistant to the Assistant Secretary in the Department of Labor.
the co-author of "I am Rich in America" as well as a writer of journal articles in the areas on manpower and labor
Mitchell plans to retire from administration and his teaching afterment in Norway and return to KU as a full-time professor of history.
PETER HARRY
Duff told the group they would be required to keep track of the number of cigarettes they smoked until he arranged appointments for them. He said no decisions could be made that they quit smoking until after the individual appointments. Duff also asked that they record the average number of cigarettes they think they now smoke.
DUFF SAID people would be assigned to hypnotic groups and groups which would function on the basis of a will to stop smoking.
He also said that a small group of volunteers randomly assigned to a control group. These persons will receive no special treatment, but will be given the opportunity.
Joseph Pichler
Duff said the people in the control group that were still confused experiment would be given the opportunity to receive whatever treatment had been most likely during the course of the experiment.
Duff said the method he would be used with success by her clients, and by her psychiatrist. He said successes ranging from 10 to 90 per cent had occurred.
DUFF ADMINISTERED two questionnaires at the meeting. One of the questionnaires was to determine the ability of an individual to quit smoking. The Group Susceptibility Test, was used determine how easily the people could be hypnotized.
Apollo to Study Geology
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) —The moon is calm and peaceful now but the Apollo 16 astronauts think they'll find evidence on a rugged plateau that it had a hell-raising past.
The site is interesting and important, according to Leon Silver, lunar geologist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, because in the highlands he there are clues that the moon had a violent geological history.
Astronaut John W. Young is scheduled to set the landing ship speed on a tableland 8,000 feet above the level of the lunar mares. With fellow moonwalker Charles M. Anderson, he descended down on a bed of lava spewed out
in the explosions of ancient volcanoes.
Dr. Paul W. Gast, chief of the Dr. Paul W. Gast, chief of the NASA Planetary and Earth Science Division in the first billion billions of life, when it was being battered by the fiery impact of meteors, volcanic rock rolled up through the earth.
Many scientists were many, bubbling sea water with bubbling sea water with a scum of rock on top might have been the most dangerous depth of 30 to 60 miles and in cooling formed the lunar crust. Gast places this activity at a depth of 180 meters.
The Cayley Plain on which Young and Duke will touch down is believed to be a layer of lava created by volcanic activity.
from the outside, it is believed that it still has a hot, active interior like the earth.
The astronauts will gather samples from the plains and mountains, try to drive their lunar rover 700 feet up the side of a crater, visit a young 600-foot-deep impact crater called North Ray.
Although the moon has cooled
According to Ellison, she told police a man grabbed her from the street and he would kill her. The woman told police that she screamed and shouted at him.
that police received a call at 10:30 p.m. from another officer in the parking lot, assailed at approximately 8:30 p.m. near the rear southeast corner of a building.
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Two assaults were reported to Traffic and Security Tuesday捕. Capt. Bob Ellison of Traffic and Security said Tuesday.
Chemistry Prof to Lecture
Two Assaults Reported Here
Their match sets up westerner
An east vs. west battle shape up an East vs. Tuesday in the Republican race for the Kansas lieutenant governor nomination when state Rep. Calvin A. Strowg, 48-year speaker of the Kansas House, newses from Abhle, announced he was seeking the nomination.
James N. Pitts Jr., professor of chemistry at the University of California at Riverside, will speak at the Edward Curdts Hall on Wednesday at 8 a.m. Wednesday in the Big Room of the Kauai Union
Strowig against easterner Ove
Strogir indicated that
migration could also be
sheikh knowledge that another
candidate from western
Kansas came there, another
migrant there.
He added "it would depend on the quality of the candidate" before he would assume a Wichita candidate would hurt his chances.
Strowig against easterner Owen. He is a good lieutenant governor thus far has attracted only one candidate, the Republican Garth W of Hortt芝谷. Indication says that the Democrats will have other candidates for the position of Governor.
His lecture, "Some Social and Chemical Air Pollution is sponsored" is presented at Alpha Rho chapter of Phi Alpha Upsilon an honorary chemistry laboratory.
"A candidate out of Wichita would attract Wichita votes," Strowig said.
Owen, at 33 the
Pitts received a B.S. in
Strowig will face state Sen.
David Owen of Overland Park in
the August primary.
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chemistry from the University of California at Los Angeles in 1945 and a Ph.D. from there four years later. He then served as an professor at Northwestern University from 1949 to 1954.
Open Mon.- Sat. 10:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. — Open Sunday Noon 'til 6:00 p.m.
Pitts then joined the faculty of UCR, where he was an associate professor until he assumed his
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M
CHICA
ICANO AWARENESS WEDNESDAY APRIL 19 at the KANSAS UNION
All Day Film Presentation in Forum Room
SPANISH MUSIC IN THE UNION &
SPANISH MUSIC ON KLWN 105.9 FM and 1320 AM
Then Come to the Union Ballroom.
There Will Be Contemporary Chicano Films, Speakers and
FREE BEER From 7 p.m.-10 p.m.
4
Wednesday, April 19, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Garry Wills
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
P. Vittorio
Nixon's War Alibi
Now that we have resumed large-scale bombing raids against North Vietnamese cities, we should take the situation Nixon means by "Vietnamization."
Clearly, we can no longer take "Vietnamization" to mean a de-emphasis or de-escalation in the U.S. war role in Vietnam.
What Nixon's catch word does mean—is a ready alibi to pursue our war effort in Vietnam with unchecked fury. Perhaps Nixon ordered the bombing because he felt the heat was off at home; the war was a dead issue. If thats the case it is because Nixon himself has been imprisoned for so long that he does not exist. It is a figment of the imaginations of several liberal senators abetting the enemy, he says.
We are again bombing for peace. The message has become garbled. We were told "protective reaction" was to protect remaining U.S. troops. For "protective reaction" we must not read offensive provocation. Execute "protective reaction" strikes, the North Vietnamese mount an offense—or defense, depending on your interpretation of "protective reaction”—and we have a ready-made excuse to level Haiphong, Hanoi and all of North Vietnam if we could find justification. The U.S. military command says the raids are aimed at military targets, yet Radio Hanoi claims many hundreds of civilians are dead from the strikes.
All the old rhetoric be insignificant. It no longer matters who got us into Vietnam—Democrat or Republican—the fact is we have taken the war on with a new passion. The logistics are different, but the end result tragically remains the same—dead on both sides.
Americans of every political persuasion are tired of the war; domestic problems worry Americans; they do not need the struggle of more years of war to further confuse their lives. The killing must stop.
Where does Nixon get his motivation to pursue the war? Can he really believe Americans want him to bomb Haiphong?
He is gambling with his political success and thousands of lives for a cause.
Do Americans want out of his rhetorical death game?
—Thomas E. Slaughter
Readers Respond
Review, Vietnam . . .
Funk 'n' Punch
To the Editor:
obviously shows that he is an avid Grand Funker, so we all know where his tastes lie.
Theaner fine review by the Kanasan (April 10), Larry Kaufman (April 10), Larry Funk's *Funk'n* Punch. After all Larry was right, who wants to see a group that just stands there and skilfully plays some very fine songs. We all know that a group just does not make us laugh. It makes us laugh a Sonny Schlock. He was so right when he commented on their use of harmony, after all what's so good about perfect four part harmonry, is it really necessary that his comparison of *Funk'n* Punch to 'Grand Funk'
-Barry Ginsburg, University City, Mo
Good Coverage
body with what we believe are initial steps toward healing some of the divisions brought on by the fires in the city. We also will be of use to others concerned about the same problems. Complete copies of the manuals and reference list on amnesty will be available at the church (15th and Iowa) after Sunday, August 31st, and included in this additional information.
We wish to thank and commend the University Daily Kansas for its corrected coverage (Thursday, April 9) of the annexes issued by the faculty of University Lutheran Church. When first written, the resolutions were intended to confront a particular church
To the Editor:
Mike Brondos, Lawrence grad. student, and president of Unlv. Luth. Church
—Norm Steffen and Don Conrad Campus pastors, University Lutheran Church
Ethnic Pride Becomes Name Calling
PARKER
It is ironic that recent gangland-type slayings in New York involve rival leaders of Italian organization meant to express ethnic pride, ironic, because they have not brought people together, not divide them. Indeed, one ethnic spokesman, Michael Novak, ranked the attack on Joe Columbo with more famous political assassinations: "It was Martin Luther King, it; it was Bobby Kerry, once again."
inter-marriage are actually called "mongrelized" people by the "liberal" neo-racist.
But it should not surprise us that ethnic politics raises the passions of division. Mr. Novak himself, in his book on ethnic politics, is very cheesy about the race. He will not talk the category. He is offended by all the WASP faces hosting night talk shows. And even Ed McMahon does not pass the exclusive blood test test. Mr. Novak has the right to be a WASPPhD by association, and Novak finds that the Irish and Germans get
along too with WASP$ to be true ethnics. After all, even Nixon is Irish—and so are putitual Catholic bishops, while Mr. Novak wants to celebrate an earthy and easy going anti-WASP puritanian ethnic code.
One advantage of telling the Irish they need not apply for ethnic status is that it allows Novak to say, with self-pity, that Americans have had a uniformly WASP literature. Irishmen like Scott Fitzgerald and Germans like Henry Mencken are might-as-well-be WASPs for him.
The disadvantage of this method is that it leaves such an ethnicity with only one way to analyze contemporary North African populations in remote racial map of our grandfather's Europe (the Slavic and Mediterranean people pitted against Scandinavians and Caucasians). Old blood memories are reived by those who have a confused legacy by way of
Such a scheme is out of all touch with reality. Novak, for instance, says that a handwritten word is the standard of cleanliness, decorum, and the hardwork ethics—yet the first things such ethnics show at demonstrators is a handwritten letter, stop using four-letter words, and so on.
The mad lengths to which Novak carries his rubber stamping of everything in sight become apparent in his treatment of TV; he claims that people responded to Agnew's attack on the networks because they sensed that TV is a Catholic medium carrying a Protestant message, and Agnew, even himself, has "a Catholic pseudo-educ himself, has a" Catholic easily does ethnic pride become a mere matter of gang violence.—if not actually of gang violence.
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
YOU DON'T HELP ME
YOU DON'T TRY TO UNDERSTAND ME.
YOU'RE NEVER THERE WHEN I NEED YOU.
YOU DON'T PROTECT ME.
YOU DON'T LOVE ME!
BUT MOTHER-
MOTHER?
IM THE PARENT?
OH.
Kids Change Little in 40 Years
By SCOTT EATON Kansan Staff Writer
There is almost no difference between the students of 30 or 40 years ago, and the students of today, according to George D. Searle, director of institutional research at the University of Kansas.
Smith, whose experiences at
World War II, said the majority of
the student body remained the
as it did when he was a
Smith attributed this sameness to what he called a pendulum concept of change.
getting students to participate in student government is just as big a problem as it was 40 years ago. "
"I am convinced there is a pendulum movement that goes on in all of society and students are not exempl. "Smith said. "This always one way and then another, back through the center again."
Smith said the swaying of this condemnation from left to right was not sufficient to prevent the relative conservatism or liberalism in the politics of the country. He said it also extended his own position that most popular at a particular time, into the fields of writing and research, most of the other areas of society.
Smith said there was a difference, however, in the desires of some women students
"Students today have basically the same drives and motives they had when I was a student." Smith is the first four-year college education. Also,
Smith said the goals of students enrolling at the university level had remained basically the same over the years.
"Women are now more interested in occupations and
J. W. B. C.
George Baxter Smith
jobs than they were before," he said.
"There are times when athletes are looked down on by the critics," he said. "We have the attitude that I'd never do anything like that," but which changes back in only a few years and then the critics really respected." Smith said.
"These swings vary in length from five to 10 to 15 years, but they always seem to swing back.
Smith cited sports, intramural and the advance of social studies as evidence of the change of the pendulum.
"There are times when there is great interest in intramurals and times when this interest seems to wane. Now, on campuses like Iowa State University, you can always find someone playing a game of football somewhere."
Smith said the increase in interest in fields such as sociology, psychology and sociobiology is a problem pedagogy in the real society.
In areas like sociology and psychology we see frontiers new in the area of social sciences. We are trying to solve problems like how to live together in the city. The University is now becoming academically oriented, and think we've had enough of that.
Smith said the pressures of certain times have caused some changes in the desires of students and reasons for entering the university.
"Right after World War I there was a great push to catch up with the great loss lost by the Smolensk and more stress on individual application. Immediately before World War II, you were in the war before the war took you from college. After World War II, the United States followed the first world war."
Smith said splinter groups had also been present throughout his experience at the university and in many other group whose interests always
By Sokoloff
I'M A FLOP,
GRIFF...
...A COMPLETE
AND UTTER
LOSS...
WHAT DO YOU
WANT ME TO DO?
HELP YOU FEEL
SORRY FOR
YOURSELF?
WOULD YOU?!
bordered on the extremities of the swing of the pendulum.
Smith said there had always been groups which would try to get people to have telephone booths or cars with as many people as they could. He said there had always been groups who, today, be called radical elements.
Griff and the Unicorn
majority is concerned. He said that the universities varied within narrow limits, with the center moving one slightly in one direction or the other.
"Eric Sevari started at the University of Minnesota the year after I left. While I was there, there was a man named Harold who was working for these men were the fringe of my generation," Smith said.
The pendulum only swings very slowly, he said, and never too far in any direction as far as the
Smith said students had always sought a good and useful education.
"Students have always been interested in getting an education," she said. "I can remember when students were living in cars down by the football stadium during meals at the Union for 25 cents."
"Copyright 1972, David SokoloH."
"They are the same people today, they just have different faces," he said.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom—UN 4-4810
Business Office—UN 4-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas during the academic year current buildings and facilities are open for visitors. Please contact the university office to check availability for all students without regard to credit,班或课程. Admission is limited to 10% of available applicants. All applicants must complete the online application process at [http://www.unk.edu/](http://www.unk.edu/) and submit it by October 25.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 19. 1972
5
Kansan Photo by JIM EATON
ways useful
beenation Smith when down during meals
eople
erent
Crews Moffet
Moffet
Scott on Kling
Groom
Bergert
Puruck
Bergert
y Jones
oodrick
Netter
Young
Oloff
oooloff
rinkman
A Student Views Microfilms
Watson station short of funds . . .
M Young
n Carter
Manley
harzart
gerderges
la Lloyd
Murray
Delano
al Adams
Public Not Coming To Microfilm Files
By JOHN PATRICK MAHER
Kenneth Stoll Writer
A lack of public awareness of the microform service and a shortage of available funds for equipment and materials are two factors that can inhibit Library Microform Collection, according to Judy Castle, Columbus, Ohio; library assistant and supervisor of the microform
CASTLE SAID the collection was basically for research, and the materials could not be checked out except on interlibrary loan in or cases where physical copies may be carried on within the library.
The collection has materials in the areas of drama, history, music, literature, bibliography, photography and documents. A large portion of the material is pre-twentieth century because the more contemporary materials are often found elsewhere in the library.
There are four types of microforces in 35% (and some 16mm) microfilms; microfleshes (3'X5') and 4'X8' transparenties (3'X5') printed on both sides); and microfilms (4'X10' opaque).
"We would rather have the materials used here, so they will be available to everyone," she said.
According to Castle, as of March, there were 22,207 letters, 12,417 fiches, 58,692 cards, and 78,736 knives in the collection.
The policy of the library was to buy microform that material which was either too expensive or not available in hard-form, she
SHE SAID the microform collection did not employ the Dewey Decimal or Library of Congress classification system and hence operated under a fund from the rest of the library.
The facilities can accommodate only 16 persons at a
KANU Schedule Stereo 91.5 FM
time, although there are 20 useable reading machines, according to Castle.
Four of the 20 could not be use because money was not available to cover installation of the necessary electrical outlets, she machines needed repair, but no money to fix them, she said.
Noon—News-Weather Sports.
12:15 p.m. — Noon Hour Concert
12:30 p.m. — Campus and Community
Calendar
There are four portable units which can be checked out by faculty members and graduate students.
1 p.m. — Future Of
Music — New Jersey Music
2 p.m. — Weather Weather
Sports 30 p.m. — Managing Your Money
30 p.m. — The Art Scene
30 p.m. — New Jersey Sports
Weather 30 p.m. — From the Kansai
University Medical Center
4 p.m. — Music by Candlelight
5 p.m. — View from the Hill
6 p.m. — View from the Hill
7 p.m. — For Love of Music
8 p.m. — New Jersey Legacy
9 p.m. — To Be Announced
10 p.m. — To Be Announced
The microform facility averages about 20-25 persons a day during the school year, according to Castle.
MICROFORMS SHOULD be kept at not more than 30 per cent humidity and at a temperature not exceeding 75 degrees, she
Lovers, Tourists Visit Boulders
Editor's Note: This is the second of a two-part series on landmarks in Kansas towns.
"We have humidity control, but sometimes the temperature gets over 80. It gets over 80 at any time, and we library at times," said Castle.
By GARY NEIL PETERSON Kansan Staff Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Communist invasion of South Vietnam and the U.S. bombing response. War funds may hand in
A swing through Kansas could be made a life project, but since most people have neither the skill or the select juniper must be made.
A must for the tourist and the person interested in geological finds is Rock City, located six miles northwest of U.S. 81 near Minneapolis.
There, off the beaten path, you will find gigantic spherical hibernating lizards in landscape. Hundreds in number and varying in size, the rocks are large and marbles left by giants who became bored and deserted the rocky ground.
WHILE THEIR BEAUTY
weathers away, the rocks remain
standing. They wait for a traction and a place for young lovers to go and inscribe their names in stone.
Other towns having claims to fame are McPherson, Carlyle, Greenburg, Goessel, Hesston, Halstead and Lindsborg.
She said the microformo collection machine moves before the problem of heat and provide nore space for future expansion.
McPerson lays claim to three town its size. It is best known as the home of the world's first man-made diamond located at McCormack.
In addition, the town boasts of being the brightest town on earth notching with intelligence and either with the tremendous candle power of the street lights. Residents say they find their light brighter than the Moon times brighter than the Moon.
ONE TOWN RESIDENT is so fond of covered bridges that he has built one. A road leads to it. It runs, but on the other side is nothing.
There is a saying in the town: "McPherson is the halfway point between Climax and Paradise," two small towns of the area.
At Carlyle on U.S. 169, about 50 miles south of Omaha, stands a monument honoring Frederick Funston Memorial Museum stands waiting for any passerby to enter and partake of its historical significance.
northwestern church in fame is the "Worlds Largest and just outside of Goesel is the largest rural Mennonite church.
The firm has, Wallace said, set up a communications workshop for 400 students in the greater Los Angeles area. The workshop, she said, was to promote more awareness of issues in the communications field.
There are few blacks in the "Journalistic world in a few years" of this century. In the workshop was to gain more interest in journalism," Wallace
WALLACE DESCRIBED the public relations firm as a special market consultant to the black market.
Inner Kaiser deals with editorial advertisements, promotions, and marketing research. The firms promote the column, "Hints for Homeemakers."
Typical jobs range, Wallace conveys from setting up a campus conversion to the Orange Blossom Classic where the firm presents scholarships on behalf of students.
Wallace, who works for Inez Kaiser Public Relations firm, married four women and three females. She said her firm was the only black firm of its kind in the United States that was both female and minimally managed by a woman.
WALLACE SAID Ileen Kaiser
is an organization that Sprites
an organization for school girls, three years ago
because she was being done
blackwomen.
There is a particular need for black women in commerce, Joyce Wailock, an associate of a woman's business in Kansas City, MO., said Monday. Wallace gave the open speech "The Essence of a Black Woman," sponsored by the black women residents at Hashinger
Need for Blacks In Business Cited
"We have been running men for years. Why can't we run business?" Wallace asked.
Another purpose of the organization was to help girls strive for a higher education, she said.
By MONA DUNN Kansan Staff Writer
Classical Film Series
842-2047
In past years, the Del Spires have sponsored an Interracial Conference where both white and black students could get together. Daughters could get together.
Italian Straw Hat
7:30
and
A Nous La Liberte
9:15
Wed. April 19
Voodruff Auditorium $1.0
Tonight, Stella Stevens,
registered nurse at KU medical
center, will talk on "Professional Women" at 7 p.m. After her talk
she will talk on "The Silent Woman." On "Is Women's Liberation Relevant to the Black Woman?"
He did find it and climbed it. It is Mount Sunflower, located in the Rocky Mountains. Interstate 70 near the Kansas-Colorado border its height is
Woodruff Auditorium $1.00
A well-known favorite of
your customers is the antique
car museums in Heilbrunn
antique car buff would do well to
make the trek there to see the
museum.
NORTH-CENTRAL KANSAS has come to be known as Coronado country, named after Francisco Coronado. To
remember him, a Spanish castle was built on a ridge near Lindley's heights, Coronado Heights, this Wiltshire 1930's stly proudly on the crest of the hill in its shelter-house arches, similar to the Disneyland castle.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
"Horse and Buggy Days" and the old settlers picnic are big festivities during the summer months at Halstead. The late 19th and early 20th century days are held by the oldtimers of the area.
Irene McLaurian's Dance Studio of Kansas City, Kans, will perform an interpretive dance at 7 p.m. Wednesday night.
In addition to all the towns in Kansas that have their legitimate and historic boundaries, the state is dotted with breathtaking heights which have never been more famous.
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THE ELEVATION near Ashland in southern Kansas, 2.340 feet above sea level, is Mount Jesus, North Pole Mound.
The fun and laughs can go on endlessly as you take a swing through Kansas.
near Salina, measures 1,400 feet. The derrick took the task of climbing or walking to the highest elevation in continental United States. He on one occasion CBS news that the greatest diffence between Kansas in Kansas was finding that point.
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Public Schools Closing Friday For KU Relays
COURBLE STORM
THE ALBUM
Lawrence Public Schools have called off school Friday so that students may attend the Kansas Relays.
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901 W. 23rd
JOHN ANDERSON, JR.
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR GOVERN Wants to Know Student Views
Help Our Former Governor Develop the Issues for His 1972 Campaign.
SPEAK OUT ON WHAT YOU FEEL ARE STATE PRIORITIES
Clip Out and Mail—
These Will Be Compiled and Sent to Governor Anderson.
Return to: Students for Anderson, 2411 Louisiana St. No. 22B, Lawrence, Kansas or Call 842-4086
Dear Governor Anderson,
In Your Campaign I Hope You Will Speak Out On:
- Increased Funding for Education
Welfare Reform
State Tax Structure
Economic Development
- Penal Reform
- Other
Comments
If you wish more information about the campaign fill in your name and address.
NAME:
CITY: STATE ZIP.
CITY:
6
Wednesday, April 19, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Prof Applies Science to Football
By JIM SCHUMM
Kenyon Sports Writer
There are many behind-the-scenes jobs in the running of an effective operation. Dr. Robert Dudley has led an individually rewarding of these jobs in the functioning of the University of Kansas football
He has been a professor of kinesiology at KU for four years. He studied at the University of Texas.
At KU, Carlson is in charge of rehabilitating athletes who have suffered from any type of injury or muscle, cartilages or ligaments.
someone who is gifted rather than someone who doesn't know the skill at all. Consequently, at the college level you spend more time trying to refine or modify a skill, but not in the school, high school or junior high you may actually be beginning in the teaching of the skill."
"Right now we have about 20 people in our rehabilitation center and 80 away from atrophy, others who were subjected to operations and training."
Kansas Staff Photo by GREG SORREL
1980
"We maintained another ten athletes during the season who were able to play without serious pain and thus avoided surgery.
Dr. Carlson Supervises Therapy
Helps Mike Enludebrake, who dislocated shoulder
Carlson defines kinesiology as the attempt to look at motion and the various components of motion.
during the spring all of which were available in the fall and some of which were even starters." Carlson said.
"These can include the action of muscles or the mechanical analysis of the force of movement." Carlson said.
"Generally at the University level you are working with
"I think that it can go really to any sport or any physical action of the muscles. It can be broken down to just simple walking.
"We have many athletes who are also physical education majors. Many of them have made a difference in analyzing their own skill of the particular sport that they are playing, and providing additional information," he said.
"This is a program that started with the coaching change. Coach Eileen Wertzinger, Wertzinger, the team surgeon, and we got together to try to do something about it, but who never recovered well enough to enjoy a normal life again, let
kept up their strength."
"Kinesiology has a role in the anatomical portion of football because here the concern is with the shoulder and elbow, to athlete the injury. You immediately have reactions with the strength of the muscle, he seriously impaired or not, he will begin to feel a loss of control."
"I think that the program has been very successful so far. We had five or six people operated on
in evaluating the program Carlson said that he was very pleased with the success so far.
we only had one knee injury last year, which is simply a minor injury. Denny Lanz when he slipped fielding a pun on the first day of season.
"This was a surgical injury,"
"It has been rehabilitated in six weeks. Lanz
were ready to go for the opening of
the B18 season opponent with K-1
"Mike Burton had the same type of injury about two weeks ago and I expect to have him fully rehabilitated by the time school begins."
Besides rehabilitating the
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athletes, Carlson has helped with the conditioning of them in the off-season.
"This year at KU I started a 40-station circuit involving exercises that would touch upon the core of all of them. The exercises range from push-ups to running in place to all the different isotonic exercises with
MISTER GUY
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"I think that one of the mistakes that we do make in programming is that same programs seem to be perpetual and you don't always assess your team and come up with the type of program that will be most successful."
842-2700
Another of Carlson's duties is one he invented himself. It is a strength testing program that involves a lot of very complicated machines based on isometries. "I started that here as a means of testing," he says.
"If we assume the premise that strength is important, then you will learn that it is not as strong as possible for the season and particularly the conference
"It is my observation that an undergraduate weaker as worker as the conference program. Therefore he is probably weakest during the conference season and may be a problem."
"I wanted to accumulate some data over the years to see what happened to the once-injured player and to have the player who should have his strong and weak seasons. The test of that type of trend was what I was talking about."
DEEP PURPLE
WACHING HEAD
"In this way we know what to expect from the players when they come back in the fall if they play well, and finding over the summer," he said.
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The University of Kansas Theatre and the School of Fine Arts present LA BOHEME. An Opera by Puccini. (Sung in Italian)
Stage directing by PIERRE LAROCHE
Musical directing by GEORGE LAWNER
April 18, 19, 21, 22 at 8:00 p.m.
Matinee April 23 at 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre—Murphy Hall
TICKET RESERVATION
864-3982
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
3 0 1 kST
These three young men just made the discovery of a lifetime.The oldest is 34.
Remember when a young man could get ahead in business simply by growing old? It was a good system for those with a little talent and a lot of patience, but today's technology moves too fast to wait for seniority.
At Kodak, our extensive involvement in basic research has made the need for fresh, young thinking more pressing than ever. So we hire the best new talent we possibly can. Then we do both of us a favor by turning them loose on real problems, and giving them the freedom and responsibility they need to solve them.
that's how three Kodak scientists in their early thirties just made a breakthrough in liquid lasers, develop- ing new methods of laser engraving.
It was the kind of discovery most men work a lifetime for. Yet these young men still have most of their life's experiences.
discovery means more than just a new kind of laser. It means a whole range of new laser applications in fields such as astronomy, biology and medicine.
Why do we give young men so much freedom and responsibility? Because it's good business, and we're in business to make a profit. But in furthering our own business, we also further society's interest. And that's good.
After all, our business depends on society. So we care what happens to it.
Kodak More than a business.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 19, 1972
K. JOH
Kantan Photo
New Yorker to Compete in Relays
New Jersey high school record holder John McCree, now a freshman at St. John's University, will be a KU player the week for the 2015 NCAA Championship and compete in the Relays. The 245-pound McCree has thrown the hammer over 180 feet and has qualified for the NCAA championships. The open hammer throw for the Relays is scheduled for 1 a.m. Saturday.
Lakers Bombard Bucks; Chamberlain Dominates
LOS ANGELES (AP) —The Los Angeles Lakers, with Wilt Chamberlain outmuscling Karcem Abdul Jabbar on the court, have won a third Milwaukee Bucks. 115-90, Tuesday night to grab a 3-2 lead in their best-of-seven National Association semifinal series.
The packed Forum of 17,505
blocking and free throw shooting
of the 35-year-old Chamberlain,
gave the big arena a standing
place.
2% minutes to play after pulling down 28 rebounds and scoring 12 points—including eight free throws in as many attempts.
The series moves back to Milwaukee Saturday for game 14. The Bucks have been extended beyond five games in a playoff series. If a seventh game is played here next Wednesday night,
Two Stars Added to Relavs Roster
Jabbar, the Bucks' 7-foot-2 center, had 28 points and 16 rebounds after averaging more than 30 percent in the Lakers in earlier meetings.
The fields of two of Saturday * featured events in the Kansas Relays received late additions from other championship champion Bo Seagreen will enter the special pole vault, and Bowling Green junior Dave Wotte will be the seventh sub-team in the GIEN Cunningham Mile.
Seagren telephoned Timmons tuesday morning to say he would join the team. He is akaSken in the pole vault field. He was the fifth entry in an event
Jackson's countryman, Hans Lagerquist of Sweden; Terry J. Nelson of College, and Brad Winter, New Mexico Junior College are the
Seagren, then vaulting for Southern California, set the world record vault at 179 during a triathlctic trials in Lake Tahoe, Nev
He won the Olympic pole vault in Mexico City with a vault of 17.8%. His 17-9 mark still stands as
Relays Schedule
Thursday Morning
9:00—Decathlon 110-meter hurdles
the NCAA record.
5.00=Decathlon 110
meter hurdles
9:30—Decathion discus throw
snow
10:30—Decathlon pole
vault
Thursday Afternoon
Thursday Afternoon
12:15—Decathion javelin
throw
2:00—Junior college 440 relay, prelims
1:30—Decathlon 1500 meters
2:15—Junior college distance medley finals
2: 35—Junior college 880 relay, prelims
2:50—Julius Marks 6-
mile run
2:55 Julius Marks 140
3. 25—Junior college 440,
finals
3: 40—Junior college 880,
finals
Women Plan
Seven Events
For Field Day
The glories of the KU Relays will still be fresh in the minds of the many spectators and participants when the KU women take over the track at Memorial Stadium, women's intramural field day April 29 one week after the conclusion of the KU carnival.
Now a member of the Los
Saint-Étienne striders, Seenagre is
attempting to become year's
Olympics. He vaulted 16.5
earlier this year, his best last
The women's track meet is to open all female KU students. Practice time starts at 9 a.m. Saturday morning for the meet is 10 a.m.
Wottle will be in his second appearance in the Relays He anchored the Bowling Green
four-mile relay team to records at the Kansas and Drake Relays as a freshman two years ago. He then won last season with an ankle injury
Wottie's best mile time was a
3.590 two years ago. Six other
entries in the Cunningham Mile
赛程 were 3.587 and 3.584,
barrier. World record holder Jim
Decathlon Finale Set for Thursday
The decadent entrants will be up and running again Thursday and the relay teams of the junior college division will get their first taste of action when the Kansas team returns from action of action in memorial Stadium.
The junior college relay teams for the 400 distance medley meet the 880, the afternoon day after afternoon. The 440 and the 880 finals are scheduled as the
Today's events consist of the first five events of the decathlon. The ten-event competition was held on Tuesday, with 100-meter run. Three of the decathlon's six field events, the long jump and high jump are scheduled for this morning also. Today's activities include a track meet and 1000 meters of the decathlon.
The final events for the decathlon, the gruelling 10-2-day all-around competition are stated for the morning and evening sessions in a 10-40-martial hurdles.
The discus throw, the pole vault and the javelin throw are the folded events. The decathlon, the decathlete, and the final event in the decathlon, the 1500-meter race.
Events start at 9 a.m. today and Thursday and admission for both days is free to all. Friday students, 50 cents for grade students, 50 cents for grade
The women's intercollegiate softball team have scheduled make up games for the contests they are rained out last weekend.
The first open event of the Kansas Relays, the Julius Marks 6-mile race will be the featured day of the competition. It is to begin at 2:50 p.m.
Women Reschedule Softball Games
A delayed doubleheader will be played at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. Thursday at the Haskell Stadium.
school and high school students and $1 for general admission for adults.
Firstly, the team Scalabra will
the first game will pit the KU
women against KSTC. KU will
play Haskell at 3 p.m.
Ryun's 3:51.1 is the best time in the field.
In the NCAA indoor meet this spring, Wotter won the half-mile in 1:51.8.
Saturday the prices go up. $3 will buy a reserved seat on the west side of the stadium, $2 is the adult, grades school and high school students will be admitted with 12 ID cards will pay 50 cents.
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Dedicates Talent to Sacred Songs Conversion came about by a near fatal automobile accident
Tony Fontane RCA Recording Artist
will appear at
The 1st Church of the
Nazarene
20th and Mass.
April 19 - April 23
7:30 p.m. Weeknights
10:45 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. on Sunday
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He gives the group a style that is extroverted, but one that knows and unfailingly employs swing, dynamics, taste and an indefinable pulsation.
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Saturday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sunday Noon-5 p.m.
8
Wednesday, April 19, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Author Describes Prison From Own Experiences
Leading the fiction titles this month is Malcolm Bray's ON THE YARD (Premier, 15 cents). This one has been hailed as a "perfect crime" book by prison novels. Without being a cry of protest it describes in simple detail what life is like in prison. The author wrote from his
Getting the big displays in the book departments of Thomas Kroner and HIRE (£1.25). Trison is the erotile film actor ('The Cardinal'); he has produced here an effective horror movie based on his family in the 1930s and the mysteries that surround the world in a soon in movie version, naturally
William A. Block's G.P. (Crest,
85 cents) is about a doctor,
practicing in the town of
Greenville Lakes, N.J., who in
one week seems to be hit by all the troubles of mankind. The author is a general practitioner and he doesn't believe he doesn't have this much grief.
R.F. Dieldferl's DIANA
(Pocket, $1.50) is a big novel set in the English countryside during the 1960s, where she daughtea of a wealthy family who casts her magic over a Cockney house is one for the romantics. Here is one for the romantics.
Also full of high romance is Summer Lowe Ellock's EDEN LOST (Crest, 95 cents). This one takes place in Australia, and it is set a century past. World War II also is the time in which this story is set.
The setting of Shirley Hazzard's THE BAY OF NOON THE BAY OF NOON is beautiful, dirty, crime-corrupted. The heroine is an English girl
School to Sponsor Business Session
A much earlier historical period is the time for Carolyn Mary DUNDOND (Pocket, 95 cents) and the American Revolution. It is a love story between a girl in the wilderness and a Scottish woman.
who has come to Naples for escape and finds that Naples is not a place into which one might land, and both are everything in this one.
The School of Business will sponsor its annual "Business School Day" Friday in conjunction with the Kansas Relays.
The day-long series of speakers and forums was organized by the KU School of Business to all students, faculty, alumni and former School of Business
Registration will open at 9:30 a.m. Friday in the main lobby of the Kansas Union and will close at 10:15 a.m.
After registration, a three-member panel will discuss "The Human Side of Business" in the Forum Room.
A noon lunch will be served in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Cancer Institute the lunch can be made with Mrs. Jean Hamlin in 202 Suma
after lunch, Mary J. McCann
mattered of Touche Ross and a
lead accounting firm, leading
accounting firms, will
speak on "The Woman A Role in
A panel arranged by the school's Black Business Council will be the final activity of the day. Panel members will discuss the role of black businesses and the job requirements for Black graduates in business.
Another new one is John Williams' STONER (Pocket, 95 cents). This is about an English professor at a Midwestern university, about his life, his disastrous career and his future. The author teaches English himself, at the University of Denver.
Visiting Prof to Speak On 'Moral Rationality'
Gerwin joined the University of Chicago faculty in 1947, after receiving his degree from Columbia University. He has also been a visiting professor at Harvard, the University of Florida and Johns Hopkins University.
He specializes in moral and political philosophy and is a member of Ph Beta Kappa and a rocker Rockefeller Foundation
Alan Gewirth, professor of Philosophy at the University of Chicago and PhD in Philosophy at Chicago H. Lindley Lecture at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. He will speak on the topic "Moral Argument."
Gewirth has contributed articles to philosophical journals such as *The Philosophy of Philosophy*, "The Monist," "Philosophical Quarterly", and *The Journal of Philosophy*.
He has written three books, including "Marsilius of Padua and Medieval Political Philosophy," edited "Political Philosophy," and translated "Marsilius of Padua's" "Defensor Pacts."
[Name of the shield's crest]
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Elring's Gifts
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Home after College.
REMEMBER
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We Wrap for Mailing
The theme in Toni Morrison's
the BLUE BEST EYE (Pocket,
95) is identity and
identity in Sierra.
The heroes of life girl whose dream is to be pretty and popular like Shirley Temple. Needless to say she doesn't make
The Lindley Lecture is an annual lecture on the general subject of linguistics. Est Lindley Lecuurship Fund was established in 1941 in memory of Ernest Lindley, University of Kansas from 1920 to 1939.
CHANUTE (AP)—Terry Murphy, editor of the Chanute Tribune is leaving the paper in January. The Akron Ohio Beacon-Journal.
Volatile Honesty Ignites 'Red Book'
can pick and choose the sections you want to read and skip the others."
If you see a thick three by five inch book in the hands of a junior high or high school student, don't read it not written by the Chinese Chairman but by two Danish authors. They are just as volatile if not more so.
By DAVID HEALY
Kansan Reviewer
"the little red schoolbook" by Soren Hansen and Jesper Jensen (Pocket Books) has arrived in
It explains all aspects of modern education with a straight forward honesty and simplicity. We are always students, anyone should apreciate its frank openness! It makes us proud, which puts Dr. Rubin to shame
The book is based on the premise that your education is as
America with the help of Wallace Roberts, who Americanized the British translation.
The Danish book has appeared in seven other European countries. It was banned in France and was published in the United Kingdom by Scotland Yard under the Obscene Publications Act I am sure that some Americans wish it to be published.
The book is in manual form with an extensive index "so you
Edward Dorn read a selection of his poetry to a receptive audience of about 40 persons last month in the Kansas Room of the Union.
KANSAN
Kieser said though he and his wife were the only two members of their school, she told students and other faculty members would be invited to
four pocket
Lee
bells
Kiesler said the meeting would consist of discussions and the presentation of papers. He said that "Professional Ethics in Research." The topic for this meeting will be announced later.
HUNDREDS OF WORLD FOLDED
He read "Time to Burn" and *Henlock* from his book, "How I Learned to Read" from his book, "Geography." He also read from what he referred to as a memoir, which explained his "tenic record" as being "where I put everything at home."
The Society of Experimental Social Psychology will hold its annual meeting at the University of Kansas Oct. 13 and 14, 1972. Charles Kiesler, chairman of the department of psychology, said Tuesday.
Kiesler said the Society of Experimental Social Psychology was an international organization that offers membership of 115 members. Membership is by invitation only, and requires a minimum of five years of postdoctoral experience in social psychology or research in social psychology.
Kiesler and his wife, Sara, an associate professor of psychology, will be hosts for the meeting.
"HUNDREDS JUST ARRIVED"
Dorn said he was planning to publish a weekly newspaper called "Bean News" and had been working on conv for it.
He said the paper would have its origin in his poem the Gandhi Diary, a character called the gandhiener would say something like, "Oh, the Bean News is my favorite newspaper," would be the paper's beginning.
Poet Dorn Interprets Writings
If this book had fallen into the hands of my high school class, we would have had no less than a dozen. We'd be setting in central Kansas.
KU Will Host Psychologists Next October
He said that the paper would have a column called Dear Flabby. He read a sample of this, which begins with a meteorite
Maybe there will be a little dust yet!
much your business as anyone else's. From there, it proceeds to outline student rights, response to criticism, and methods of realizing the same.
He said the paper would characterize everything. He would all talk and tell their stories. He said he wanted them to see what he did.
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bell. To fit your
life style.
HOURS: 10 to 10 Mon-Sat, 12-6 Sun,
523 West 32rd Street
that has landed in Australia
Writing Dear Flabby for advice
and ends with a virus writing to
their parents. This is advice
Flabby has given the
The album stands as a tribute to some fine instrumentation, vocals and a use of varied talents. It also celebrates the moment about a memorable debut album. To think America is just another fly-by-night rock group is wrong. Judging from this album, will there be around for some time?
meteorite.
'America's' First Album Marks Memorable Debut
By MIKE BICK
Kansan Reviewer
All songs on the album were written by the group's three members: Dewy Bunnell, Gerry Bannon and Mike McGrath. They possess the unique ability of producing a *happy*, warm, mellow sound which lets the listener know that their music is made in America* should not be overlooked.
Dorn said that he was motivated to start a newspaper because he had seen such dull copy in other papers.
Perhaps the group's biggest drawback is its similarity to Crosby Shills Nash and Young, but after listening to the album, you notice that they have some similarity. America stands on its own with songs like "Riverside," featuring some fantastic guitar work; "Guitar Work" features "Need You," and their current hit, "A Horse With No Name."
Someone liked seeing what you had to say.
Schlitz
...
Photograph taken by Donna L. Schnitzer, University of Colorado. Winner of the Schlitz Photo Competition.
You only go around once in life. And you've got to reach for all the gusto you can. You can't settle for less. Because you don't get a second chance.
© 1923 Jos. Scttch, Birewng Co., Miliauwke and the woielf.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 19. 1972
TACO GRANDE
9
TURNING LOCK
With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free!
Coupon not good on Wednesday (National Taco Day.)
Offer expires May 15, 1972
1720 West 23rd Street
ENGINEERING
Applications for officers to serve on the Engineering Council during 1972-1973 may be picked up in 111 Marvin. Positions are: President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Recording Secretary, and Corresponding Secretary. Applications must be returned by 2 p.m. Friday April 21. Voting will be April 24 and 25 in Learned Hall. For further information contact the Dean's office or Lee Knapp. Corresponding Secretary, at 843-6607. Note, you must be in engineering to qualify.
26th & Iowa PH. VI3-1353
Wkdays 8 5:30 Sunday 10:3
Use Kansan Classifieds
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Parts at a discount
Your Complete Service Dealer
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
Ample Park Spaces Available
3409 W. 4th 842-7700
Webster's Mobile Homes
Just West of the Drive-in Theatre
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & 11th
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
842 9694
KAT Suzuki
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store
634 Mass
FRONT DISC BRAKES
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
842-6966
▶ OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
▶ 0 TO 60 MPH—13.5
- RECLINING FRONT SEATS
- UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL.
500 E.23rd
Five days
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATESUN
Independent
Open
24 hrs.
per day
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
days per week
DRIVE IN
AND COOP IN
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
COIN OP LAUNDRY
19th & LA.
843-9631
RAMADA INN
Figua Salen
842 2323
Spacious new facilities. Group participation.
Spacious new facilities Group participation welcome No appointments necessary Free figure analysis Swimming privileges
The Bull & Boar
50¢ OFF any two handed sandwich with the purchase of one at regular price. You MOST prefer this option.
11 W. 9th
Featuring—Roast Beef, BQB Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef, Grilled Cheese, and the Reuben
Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon-Sat 12 to 10 m.
Offer Expires April 30
★★★★★★★★★★★
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
each additional word: $.01
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
One day
25 words or fewer: $1.00
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Klean are offered on request. Students may color, creep, or national orism
FOR SALE
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:
* you use them,
2. If you don't,
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 41f West 14th. 71f
NORTHISE COUNTRY SHOP 707
Bridgetown, NJ. used furniture,
collectibles, old wood cooking and
living rooms, wooden shelves,
stoves, bicycles, books, old photo-
graphics, furniture, corn, and thousands of other useful items. Havendays Haven 709 Albernend, 842-319
1960 Austin-Cambridge 4 dr. Neuf.
Neues time-up, $150. Call 841-3216
after 5:00. 4-19
Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, 515 Mich St. Outdoor pit Bar-B-Q, 12呻 Use Slat or port rack $1.50 Small Snail $4.50, Large Bate. Plate $1.80, Small Snail $4.50, Large Bate. Plate $1.80, Small Snail $4.50, Large Bate. Plate $1.80, Open 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Phone 842-9510 Sun-Tun
56 MGB roadster in top condition.
18, 50 million miles. Engine overhauled at
43, 000. $900. 842-2473. 4-21
Pulley-shaggy Little Hungarian sheepdog puppies. *AKC* Top bloodlines. **English** Pulley-shaggy Crossbred puppies. **KS-319-758-28**, McLennith, Kansas. **4-26**
For sale or trade 1971 Plymouth 440
GTX. 7,000 actual miles. Need to
bank. Bank financing. 843-0507 or 843-
4469
1970 350cc Suzuki, orange and black,
excellent condition. $550 or best offer.
Call 842-7479 after 5:30.
4-19
75 Chevy, 2 door 282 automatic tires, rebuilt). Near new tire, brakes, valve, oil no oil, gas. Chevrolet 840-6460. Ask for Jefk. 4-19
1962 GMC school bus converted into camper. Far out lemonade yellow. Fiat. Ford. JD. Chrysler at Jayhawk Volkswagen. 84-290-2001
5. a-834535. 4-19
1970 Volkswagen Fastback, dark blue,
radio, only 11,000 actual miles, Sharp.
Asking $1,585 Call 842-8468. 4-19
STEREO SYSTEM SYSTEM tape player--AM/FM stereo, brand new Panasonic, retails for $169. Must sell, call 842-6728 4-19
1964 green TR-4, runs good, new seat and carpet—$750 or best offer Call Chris. 842-8533 4-19
1962 Harley Davidson GLXL Sportster
—Stock-in good condition. A good
buy to shop Wilt accept small trade
conditions. Call 314-633-4299.
314-633-4299.
Mobile home for sale: Three of living in an unpleasant place while waiting to be delivered. One deprived, depriveable little. Here is a home where you can enjoy privacy and the comfort of being surrounded by studying or laying in a warm, pleasant room. Bright 20' room. Living room, bedroom, refrigerator, washer, refrigerator, automatic洗衣, gas range, gas water heater and kitchen. Unusually good condition. 1622-1945 83-610. Massive possession. 843-610-600. 4-19
Air Force Mesh Dress-New—size 42
-$75 -842-9096
4-20
ROGER'S WEST HILLS REALTY,
house just west of the campus in old
room just west of the campus in old
room with fireplace, 5 bedrooms in
room with fireplace, 5 bedrooms in
baths (3 with tub & shower),
partially finished with new 2-
ment, partly finished with new 2-
ment, large & large beautiful lot
& eleast large beautiful lot Drapes
family or student church center
Roger's Reality 1450 Mason, 843-9005.
Roger's Reality 1450 Mason, 843-9005.
Amplifier—Ampeg BT-15 bass ampli-
mpter, with a 120-watt extension
cabinet with 2.15" speakers,
sound affects wah pedal and,
sound must Sell Need! Speakers
842-2643. 4-209
TROMBONE 3-B 3-B with F-
ATTACHMENT - King $495, will sell for
$225. Excellent condition, used little.
Mike Huebner, 82-934-584. 4-20
1967 Triumph Tiger Cub 200 cc. Good condition. $280 or best offer. Call Mike at 842-9688 after 6. 4-20
KENWOOD 3130 AM-FM stereo receiver. 16 w per channel rms. Best offer. 864-2952
4-20
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
THE MERCANTILE
Leather-up - RED RIDER - Leather-
up masks, muscled custom work.
Reasonably priced — 1000 Ohio
Opi. Monday through Saturday.
4pm
Four 13" chrome rims, will fit Dat-suns etc . . . , perfect condition—Call 842-6798 4-20
Three days
LIKE NEW—2-10 in. Deep Crager SS wheels & 2 G (6) 15 in. Gd. Yr. Poly 4-2 Call Jih, 842-1043
8x43 mobile home, furnished, great for single or couple, 2 BR, only $1,000.
Phone 842-8158. 4-19
Natural cosmetics for women & men,
vitamins, biodegradable household
products, from "Shakeee" of Calif.
Miami, 842-765-6000. p. 60. m. 113.
Miami, 842-765-6000. p. 60. m. 113.
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUSAGES
AKC Irish Setter Puppies 842-5287
421
25 words or fewer : $1.50
4-14" Deep Chrome Reverse Wheels
Fit Duster. 2-5/60inches Studded Snow
Tires Mounted on Wheels—Used
4-21
Winter. 843-2478.
1943 Chevy Impala SS, PS, Post-trac:
4-peed tread 32冲, in deep navy
good condition. Contact B Kerrman 700 Max. for
stairs entrance.
8-
Save money—sew your own clothes.
Used Singer straight stitch: $25. 842-
6810. 4-21
Bautiful little I, Magic三版 Convertible
1967, MK III - Absolutely perfect engine,
excellent body, top, torque
864-3919, Peter Dart, Peter
864-3919, 4-21
Stereo: KLH, dual turntable, Kenwood amp In very good condition. 842-3785. 4-21
1946 Dodge ½ ton charm . . . and
runs too. $115 drives it away. Also,
4V WB Vug $500; 843-6466. 4-21
Pro Bikes: 35 pro bikes in stock in a pack of Pinggat, Fingerlift, PU Patent-Free and Flat-Packed Foam Protectors. An Aloa, Campfire, and Remo Aloa, Campfire, and Remo Aloa, Campfire, and Remo Ride-Or Bee Ride-160, 141.4, Mass.
1958 2 bdmh *Great Makes Hook*
Home, all regularities plus air con-
ditioning equipment
carpeting Occupancy for
fall $1,950. Phone 842-3856 after $9.99
十-speed bicycles: Fugat. Aiga:
Pugget. Manufacant. Fabak. Zah
Khan. Manufacant. Fabak. Zah
speedes. Over 2 and hundred bicycles in
recompensate for expept. Ride-On:
repair and
Members of our Karas-BOKONON
BECONS * we told you * and he said
* Word over the shoulder* he
beams for it. Veraardhon
, NOAKOBK, 819; Vernor-4,
NOAKOBK, 819;
1969 Alpine Sunbeam G.T. needs engine work $600 or take over payments and we give you $200 cash.
Call 842-6244 at 5:30 p.m. 4-24
Guitar for sale **-$80** Green Hummingbird-4 new (set) stewings, stringed guitars, bass guitar, 844-5650, or message at Hammersdale-4 box 822
28" bicycle, 5 speed, flat tire, duralierall, 5 speed, Call 843-3955, 4-20
1966 Chevy Van for sale. Painted green in January 71. Has seat rear, carpeted and panelled interior. Ask $450. Call 655-2819. after p.m.
70 Suzuki TC-125, 950 mi., w/Helm
$375,842-5420
4-24
1971 Honda 350-SL. Excellent condition, extras included. Must sell for best-off-Call Dennis, 843-7604 4-24
1965 Volkswagen Bug, new tires,
needs rebuild engine $100 or best
offer. Call 842-9354 after 6 p.m. 4-24
1967 VW bus, good condition, must sell. Best reasonable offer, 843-8108. A-21
BSA 250 Goldstar. Not one year old-
used only last summer. Asking $700.
Call 843-2018 after 6 p.m. 4-24
1948 Ford School Bus Camper, simk.
stove, sleep 3 comfortably. Rebuilt
engine & new brakes $800, 842-3340,
4:21
1970 Kawasaki, 350c e., good condition,
must sell. Best reasonable offer,
843-8108.
4-21
1959 Ford Pick-up with custom camper,
runs well, sink, lee box, carpet,
2-banks, $700, 842-6868 4-21
PANASONIC stereo model SS-7000 72watts ATM-FM multi model one year full warranty, bought overseas, will save savings on you. 842-3540. 4-21
% MG City Roadster-Unfortunately-I have a blue body, luggage carrier, both wheels and is tuned to hum along with it and is tuned to hum along with it and can consider a reliable trade Call Rue.
MUST SELL--1865 Triumph Bonneville, 450ce. Runs good. Call Jim at 843-8549. 4-21
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
1971 Kawasaki 500, excellent condition.
$800. Call 843-4055 4-25
MUST SELL Finder Junior with case and accessory. New 1973 model with column, great sound, cheap. Also 1967 Porch 1973 miniature furniture. Must sell. Mirror #B-822-306. 425
YARD SALE 9-5 sat and sun-
April 22 & 23 Antiques, Books, Records,
clothes, Mice. 2003 Crdarwood
South of Montgomery Ward. 4-21
1970 Honda 350 SLI, great bike on and off the road. Excellent condition. $699 or best offer. Call Dave. 841-2581. 4-25
1969 YAMAHA 125 cc twin, very warm,
condition, low mileage, new knobby
on rear. $310. luggage rack and helmets available. #82-002 4-25
2 students want to buy new 2 bedroom mobile home—Cash. Call 845-3287. 4-25
1970 Kawasaki 175cc Dirt Bike, less than
5,000 miles $375. Call Runs at
842-2198
4-21
1967. Firebird, 326-3-speed. Ampex
tapes and tapes included. Runs great
and looks good. $1,100 or best offer
Call Rog at 843-507-9000
4-21
The season of leisure has arrived. We have haunchies, French Foreign Leather, swimwear, packs, packs, rubber bats, etc., Sunflower Surplus, 815 Vermont; ¥79.00.
1971 Toyota Celica Yellow with black vinyl roof, mug wheels Mud sni immediately. Excellent 124 condition available. Excellent 118
1, 843-8649 4:25
Well-balanced stereo component system. Battery-powered AUX-type H Sharp cordless S-3A Asus type H Sharp cordless S-3A Asus push button Mercer receiver. question answer card $750.14112 Indiana, Apt. 1, 8125 N. Muncy St., Indianapolis, IN 46299.
FOR RENT
Model 1725-81, Roberts reel to reel and cartridge type recorder. Like New-Will sell for $240 Also other albums, cheap, $42-533. 4-25
LAW STUDENT DIGS WALKING
WILL SELL 675 V W EXCELLent
SHAPE INSECT & OUT CALL 842
5647 AND MAKE OFFER
4-25
'56 VW for sale. Runs good. Call 842-3100 mornings or evenings. 4-25
Rockledge Villa Apartmentments. Limita-
tion of available rooms. Students can have two bedrooms furnished apart, with all utilities paid.
p.m., 843-7731 4:20
p.m., m843-7731
COLLEGE HILL MANOR now showcases the 2014 Dodge for fitted and unfurnished apartments that rate start at $250 to campus. The 2014 W198, W194, Ap B3 or call 844-632-7777.
D tired of trying to find that ideal apt. room, so I tried to locate it available 1. 2 & 3 bdrm, apts and hubs in various location and price ranges. I found a McGrew Apartment 901 McGrew University, K842-845, McGrew Apartment 801 McGrew University, K842-845.
LOOK WHAT SANTEE APTS HAVE TO OPERATE! Summer rates, swimming pool, A C. Free cable-TV and cable TV, 122nd iowa. 843-218-918
When you're hot, you're hot. When you're
doubled comfort—at UNIVERSITY
MUNTS. Enjoy your pool & close to
MUNTS. Enjoy your pool & close to
MUNTS. Apr 11, 1529 W 9th Phone 843-767-0000
OPEN NIGHTS
MODERN APARTMENTS Furnished and unfurried one bedroom from $95-110 mo, plus play areas. Near campus, next fall Dave. B43-8024. B43-1601. B43-1602.
Available 5-13 room room air, air-
conditioned $1 mo. One room apt $6 mo.
Room $8 mo. Two rooms $12 mo.
stone fireplace $5 mo. All apts are
available. Room $4 mo. Near KU
Near KU Hills paid $783-49 1-73
SUMMER RENTALS Live close to campus this summer in a room, house, or apartment for lease. 812-765-3100 Louisiana. 843-1601-3122 5-91
Renting for summer and fall; nice furnished rooms, kitchen privileges, near KU. Also 1-3 bedroom apts. 842-5067 after 4.00. 4-19
1903 Mass. 843-3007
- Recorders
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
San Francisco
5 a.m. 12 p.m.
5-5 Sun.
5-10 Su.
1730 W. 23rd St.
842-3664
Apartments for rent. Available May 15, summer rates, air conditioning,租金 $50-$85. Call 842-8123 after 6 p.m. p. 19 W. 14h. 4:21
JAROLD'S Diving Supplies
JAROLD'S
Rose
- Accessories
KEYBOARD STUDIOS
Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I.
Equip. in Stock Certified
- Accessories
Competition Sports Cars Inc
Large, two bedrooms, mobile home.
Fire and water air-conditioned, water
heater, 24-hour concierge, single person,
under $160. Phone 1-800-745-3200 or Card UN-
434-858
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Room for rent. Need girl to share
home $8.00. Utilities included. Avail-
able May 1, 842-5768 4-20
AVAILABLE THIN SUMMER High room to compele in complex 101 Mississippi Avenue bedroom apartment available. Availablr free parking most available at end of season, except wienerpark available at end of season wienerpark
Availon, 9th & Availon, Harvard and University. 10th & 11th & Museum. Then computer cost of living in one of these buildings and you will be able to rent apartments and you will be more to have a dobbath, central kitchen, laundry room and many more features. $5-12.
NOW IS THE TIME TO MEMBER
1972, when selection is still available
for the position. 642-5250, or 2017-A. Harvard
lawyer's bureau has built foundation
and training programs.
Walk to KU- 2 bedrm. apartment, carpeted, central air, appliances, parking Call: 843-5899 4-26
Sublease for summer, apt. one bedroom, A.C. private, close to campus, furnished, $130, 1025 Indiana, 842-7100, Apt. E, 4-26
4 bedroom house an edge of campus
For summer at reduced rate or year
lease. Call 843-5838 or 843-6111. 4-20
Townhouse duplex, 2 bdr., elec. kit-
formal or, f.l., fully carpeted. A/C; pati-
gage; $130 mo. Call 842-9199 after
5:00 p.m.
Two bedrooms, furnished apartment for $130. Air conditioned, steve, refrigerator. No stafflite. Call 842-5834 after 5 and weekends. 4-21
Carol Lee
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWYEN? YOU can enjoy yourself to apartments of several summer homes, or visit a private summer home, or visit WITH A VAHLA Harford Road Missouri, Avon Apartments 9th & 10th Avenue, Harvel, can be economical and enjoyable at our surprisingly modern special summer apartment. This summer is a wonderful time to be
NOTICE
To KU male nice apt close to Union
May work out all or part of rent
Available now, phone 843-8534 5-9
SUMMER RATE - Now leaving furnished apartment, sleeping room with or without kitchen privileges for guests. New KU and Tau 681-743-6971
Two studio apartments. Quiet, turret-style office with two bathrooms and walk-to-wall carpet. Business man or graduate student. Business man or graduate student. Call 843-8006. May Available.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. John Bells, 842-5220
Barn Partner! Now available for
rent at the Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry,
Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry, and cooler and deckier parking at the Apple Valley Farm. Call Foil Strang after 6 p.m. at 813-254-0920.
Luxurious, spacious town house for summer. The bedrooms, den, living room, kitchen, bath and shag carpet, central air, garage, & garden. Complete furnished Cab 842-803.
/onem's Alterations. 20 years experience.
Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:45 JOB
WEDDING INVITATIONS — PRICES
ARE DOWN INFORMATION AND custom
designs. Contact the designer
catale and samples to Arnold Agren-
East Earl Math. ROBB, August 4,
2015
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER. 842-7694. Professional care-for children in 1 no. 124 no. Pull or part-time. 1 No. 1 Specially designed for environment. E-2
Red Blood
(913) 842-2191
Lovely furnished apartment, with central air, for 2 men, very close to rampus, available May 20th for summer and or fall. Phone #863-409-8244
211 West 32rd St.
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas 6044
CROSS 9138421553
WHY RENT?
REFERENCE
MUSEUM OF THE ARTS AND CULTURES
RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843 8499
PLANNING A TRIP??
TWK
See
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
Early at Our Union Office!
e Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union Phone 843-1211
Order Your Eurailpasses
Maupintour travel service
Two left feet? Kapert intensive instruction will transform you into a troublingIndividual. Come Study Social Behavior at the Student Activity Center. Free 4-19
The religions rock musical by Otis Shorts. Love, will be performed in the Masonic Chapel at Holiday Hill Church of the Nanaimo, 180th and Kassidy Fourteenth Street. The musical is the music in Lawerence Kvist's invited and two-charge 4-19
SUBLASE 2 bait, 2 baths, unfairly Gadgette apartment fuller. Pilthouse 4 bait, 2 baths, unfairly wainwasser A-C C bath, Baleenwater A-C C bath, Baleenwater water. m Water pad Call 824-8586 s
SHAIRA APTH, LAPH. SS QWISK. Clean
IADM. baptist, bath, A/H. C Water paid.
Must rent at 35% or 15 of May
or 412-268-7000 for 1 month.
or 412-268-7000 after 6 p.m. 4-24
VOX BASS, AMPI FLOREAL,
MAGIC MODEL, KENTUCKY BLUE
WHITE YEARS, KERGONA, VONNE-
DERAUPHIL, THALEAMAPOR,
THE LADY AMPARO,
"COTHES," DUCONN, 91 N.Y.CW.
HORSES, BOARDED - EXCELLENT
FULL STAILL TARE - CLOSE IN -
STABLE - A PAIR OF
STABLE - ASIAN SHOE
FOR SALE #82-1406 4-25
FOLK DANCES come from many cultures and genres. Dance is generated from the experiences of living things, and our experience of dancing bears with them. In 1975, a group of dancers with "Village with a Pint" at Portland Lake Park performed in a dance called *Puntin*.
GILLS - WOMEN Are you the model for Call Melora for free evaluation training available. Call Melza. Pork at Karen, 822-852-0411 or at Karen, 822-852-0412.
WANTED
We buy used books, also old Playboys
& Poet-House magazines in good condition!! Call 842-0216 5-9
FOUND BROWN GLASSES size
boxes maybe female but who knew?
Found a girl ago. Sunday just West
*Strong*, Call MD-4253. 4625
One or two roommates to share an apartment with two other girls for next fall. Call after 4:00 Pm or Cindy, K12-G82 4-19
OVERSEAS JOBS, FOOL STUDENTS,
All Government and accession-
sessions. All government accession-
sessions quizzing. Free informa-
tion. 507-264-8315, 507-Sun, DCAE,
602115
Good running used car wanted Have $150 to spend. Look and year not important but must be in good shape Call 423-876-9278 4:00 p.m. 4:19
or 1 person to sub-let apartment for
summer. $135 m, furnished. 2 blocks
from Fraser. Call 864-1252 or
864-
4218
To meet people who read the Uranita Book, call 842-7691. 4-20
Experienced Draftman will do these work such as Graphics, Flow Charts and Histogramming and prompt user input. Ask for Batele Hernick 4-21
FAMHUHOE-Wanted to rent. Respondible KIU students with reference writing to make repairs. Negotiate lease for one year longer. M42-935.
Roommates to share large furnished
house for summer. Must see to appre-
ceate. 2 blocks from campus, own
room Call 842-5755 4-20
Male Roommates() to share spaces, two-bedroom, spit-level apartment for summer and maybe fall in Lawrence-Call Ron-824 -8293 4-25
TYPING
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, paper formats, other mis-type texts and documentation. Eye. Accuracy and graspful speech. Phone: 843-9554. Mrs Wright.
Typing in my home, IBM Selectric.
Prompt accurate work. Experienced.
Call 841-2556. 5-9
SENIORS
Please call for your appointment for SENIOR PICTURE
4 proof sittings $3.00
Fast accurate typing Reasonable rates. Call 842-2052 4-20
Threes, form papers, typed accurately and promptly. IBM *Electric*, your choice of style types. Also editing at state rates. Kinsa, 840-797-961. 843-505-865.
Hixon Studio
TYPING THEISER DISSERTATION
MISCELLANEOUS WORK
Dial Selective, with pica type
Travel. Travel. 819idge Cave
82-1400
Experienced typist will type your term paper, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-281-281. Mrs Rauckman.
PERSONAL
Aquai, Hawaii. Want to get acquainted with students from this island. Call 43-6850. 4-29
My Servant? Thee art even as a低温 temped窥含蜡 in concealed from the alice hidden from the artist's eye. From the sheath of womb from the sheath of womb and desire to tat yow worth may be made re-readable, Baha'u'tah, 841-242-324
HELP WANTED
Special Senior Rates on all orders.
All kinds of love make the world go round. Gay Liberation now meets on Thursday, 7 p.m., 1204 Oread. Seen 4 out First Sunday Gay Day Picture.
Need KU HR141, Speech 98, or Phila
12 credit? The Center for Human Ex-
ploration. Call 864-4234 or 842-0047.
4.21
TEACHERS WANTED . Contact
Southwest Teachery Agency. Box
831, Alphabeeville. N.M. 87063. "Ours"
Banded and a member,
NATA.
LOST
Girls wanted for interesting work. Work hours own, generous commission. Call 1-642-6389, ack for Mike Olson. 4-24
Two chicks wanted for Chase Conciert Tickets furnished. Call 664-2828
MISCELLANEOUS
摄影
JOBS ON SHIPS!
MEN WOMEN
Small white turtle with brown spis.
Wearing a red collar. Very, very friendly. Very important to family.
Reward offered. Please call 843-1068.
Puppy (4 months) white and black-brown spots, curly hair, tan collar, answers to Pete—REWARD. Call 842-1796.
BRIDAL GOWN GROW Sale-Sizer
8-10-12, up to 75% off. Fall and spring
fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky.
4-20
SEDUCIED by spring! Give in, and simultaneously shake your thirst for knowledge; learn international talks; stay days, 7-14; m. 4-9 p.m.
e. Free.
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LUDIOTRONICS
928 Mass
---
10
Wednesday, April 19, 1972
University Daily Kansan
PEDRO A. CAVALLO
Man Views Women's Identities L.D. Smith, Lawrence junior, attended workshops
Hilltop Director Selected
By GAIL PFEIFFER
Kenyon Staff Writer
Judy Bencivenga, Lawrence graduate student and director of the United Child Care Center, was named Saturday as the director of the Hillock Child Care sponsored by the Student Senate.
There will be a class of 19 consisting of 4- and 3-year-olds, a class of 19 consisting of 3-year-olds and a group of 12 infant
Hillip is being patterned after the United Center's programs. According to Bencivengo, three of the four large child times will be available.
Bencivengue said that the first day of the program was to work with the children and a working and learning relationship between the child
WHEN THIS has been established, cognitive learning activities will be begun. According to Bencivengo, the
According to Molly Lafley, chairman of the board, the center will be housed in the Weskey room, the board is confident the center will be housed in the Weskey room.
AT PRESENT the center is awaiting for the allocations to be made by the Student Senate or be on the building, Laffin said.
The center also plans to hire a number of male teachers and aides. Bencivengo said that from past experience with child care workers, he proved beneficial to the programs. Bencivengo said she wanted to have a male and female teacher in every class at all times.
At the hearings held by the
Finance and Auditing committee
Monday night, Lafin requested
$2,000 to open the child care
program will expose the child to a variety of activities which will enable him to manipulate ideas
Wilson Fellowships Lose Ford Funding
Woodrow Wilson fellowships, which have been given every year for the last 27 years, will not be maintained permanently discontinued. Eugene Fox, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Arts Administration,
Various aspects of the women's movement were explored Tuesday in a series of workshops sponsored by the Women's
Barbara Day, a representative from the Wichita Self-Help Clinic, speaking on "Woman and Her Childhood," was educated about their bodies so
The workshops dealt with the subjects "Woman and her Body," "Women Identified Women," and "Factors Affecting Women" in economic Factors Affecting Women.
The fellowship program was established at Princeton University in 1945 to encourage students in the humanities who were the humanians or social sciences and who otherwise would have been lost to occupation and professions with which they competed. It has more obvious rewards.
Workshops Discuss Women
they could have a better feeling towards them.
You can't be a woman without knowing where it all starts. Learn to play with their bodies. Little boys, on the other hand, are very curious about what they see.
"Women are told they smell or they are too big or too little; their legs are too big, their legs are too small, their arms are too peculiar." Day said.
"I can't imagine a book like "Portnoy's Complaint" being
about a little girl who masturbates," she said.
"There is such a nasty tone about women's sexuality. Women get the feeling that they don't want to touch their bodies."
According to Fox, the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, which administered the fellowships, would have supported from the Ford Foundation. This year Ford withdrew its support, probably because it thought its money could be better spent in other projects than be an excess of Ph.D. B. S. Fox said.
"Sexuality is looking at yourself and knowing what you look like. It's much healthier to know what your body looks like, what it feels like and what modifications it can have." Day said.
Day also discussed the various methods of birth control, abortions, and self-examination.
In a slide presentation, Day explained the steps of a legal and of an illegal abortion.
According to Fox, KU had more Wilson fellowship students than Eight schools combined. He said KU was often in the top five in the nation according to the number of students and always in the top ten
center next fall.
During the 27 years in which the fellowships were granted, over 100 University of Kansas students received them.
Students in any college or university were eligible for the fellowships but could not personally apply. The various departments at KU nominated students and had the best chances and then sent the nominations to the regional committee. Fox said.
Twelve regional selection committees personally interviewed the three promising candidates. These sent the credentials of their selections to the national committee which made the final decision.
The amount of the grant varied from year to year, depending on the cost of living and the money available. Fox said.
Les Schwartz, Overland Park senator, was elected chairman of the state's commissions on munications Committee Tuesday at the committee's first meeting in June.
Communications Committee Selects New Chairman
The committee discussed plans for the formation of a resource center and a freshman education program.
resolutions of the senate meetings.
The resource center, approved by the Student Senate this year, would make available to students the following enquiries, enacts, minutes, and
The center would also compile senators' voting and attendance records and provide background information on the resolution pending in the senate.
Lafin said the $2,000 would be a one time allocation for supplies and that the aim of Hilltop was to be self supporting.
Various proposals for the formation of a freshman education program were discussed. The program would inform freshmen and transfer students about the senate and functions of the senate.
"The center would serve students first and then University staff and faculty." Laffan丛硕. in his book, *The School*. he post at University because she
"I was hired at United to set up the program and now that it is running smoothly someone can come in," he said. "I leave." Benviceno said.
U HAJL U HAJL
CRAIG'S Fina and U-Haul
had fulfilled her duties there
Another reason for her leaving,
Bencivengo said, was the need
for more child care centers in
Lawrence.
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We urge faculty and students to participate
feedback
feedback
Feedback: a survey of courses and instructors will be available between April 17 and May 19.
Prospective
KU YELL LEADERS
There Will Be a Yell Leading Clinic Held
Wednesday April 19th
at 7 p.m.
in
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
The Date for Tryouts Will Be Announced at Wednesday's Clinic.
IF YOU'VE MISSED ANY PREVIOUS CLINICS DON'T WORRY, COME ON DOWN ANYWAY!
Rain falling on bird.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
REIN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
82nd Year, No.126
Chicano Leader Stresses Need For Involvement
Thursday, April 20, 1972
See Page 2
KU Senate Schedules War Debate
Action on four resolutions concerning the war in Vietnam will be taken at a special session of the Student Senate at the Joyhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The first resolution on the agenda, requests the student body president to voice University of Kansas students' opposition to major escalation of the Vietnam war to the Kansas Congressional delegation and asks him to urge the president to call on the President Nixon end the bombing and continue to de-escalate the war.
A resolution supporting an anti-war presentation at the Kansas Relays on Saturday is the second item to be discussed.
Third on the agenda is a resolution that would prohibit military recruiting at KU. The debate has been long and bitter.
The last resolution on the agenda would rescind a speaking invitation to Sen, Robert Dole, R-Kan, because of his pro-Nixon stance on the bombings.
Dale is scheduled to speak here as part of the Vickers Lecture Series on April 27.
Kansan Photo by DAVE. BLISS
TOMMY LEE
John House, Raytown, Mo. senior and chairman of the Student Executive Committee, said Wednesday that the special session had been called because the Student Senate office had received the necessary and proper amount of funds for the construction of the Student Senate, pursuant to Article 3, Section 10 of the Senate Code."
Over 200 Convene at Westminster War is not healthy for children.
Board Drops Traffic Plan
By RICHARD COOLEY Konson Staff Writer
Plans to convert Jayhawk Boulevard and Memorial Drive into one-way streets and install parking meters at selected locations on campus were scrapped Wednesday by the University of Kansas Traffic and Parking Board.
Robert Malinowsky, assistant director of KU librarians and chairman of the board, said the "violent opposition" expressed by students and faculty at an open hearing on the proposal Monday night had led to the decision.
"I don't anticipate any major opposition to the new plan," Malnowsky said, "because all of the controversial aspects have been deleted."
THE NEW PLAN would retain the color zone containment in the original proposal. The only change would be that the price on permits for Red Zone would be increased to the price of Blue Zone permits, Malinowsky said. Permits for both zones would cost $30, $20, and $10 for the fall, spring and summer terms.
The less controversial aspects of the plan would be incorporated into a separate office for approval, Malinowsky said. He said it would be up to the chancellor to decide whether additional public hearings would be held on the new version of the plan.
The traffic control stations would remain in operation at their present locations, although an effort would be made to recruit more students rather than security personnel.
Improvements would be made on Memorial Drive to create more parking
O Zone would be converted into a gate-
net with a 25-cent ieee charged
between 7 and 13.
The provision for temporary parking permits that could be purchased daily, weekly, or monthly would be retained as stated in the original proposal.
Malinowski cautioned that the traffic and parking problems that would have been alleviated by one-way streets and parking meters would continue.
"I THINK the provisions of the original plan would have created a partial solution," he said. "The problems are going to get worse as time goes on."
A new KU Traffic and Parking Board will be appointed by the Senate Executive Committee to give it the responsibility of devising a solution to the problem next year, he said.
Malinowsky said he had been surprised by the reaction to the original proposal. "expected opposition," he said, "but I didn't want it to be or to be organized to the extent it was."
He said he had thought of some the opposition would disappear when details of his life were known.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., speaking at his weekly press conference, praised the work Malinowsky and the board as a responsible board lead come up with a feasible plan.
CHALMERS discounted the charges made by some students that there had
been an effort to "ramrod" the plan through at the end of a semester without consideration for unfavorable student reactions.
"Theoretically, students were represented on the planning committee," he said. "If the student representation was it wrong, then I think that would be quite complaint, but there was definitely to conscious effort to exclude students."
Chalmers said that it was imperative that some "rather drastic" action be taken to solve the traffic and parking problem by the fall of 1973, when Wescove Hall, the new humanities building under construction, will be opened.
He said the traffic and parking board next year would have to grapple with the
Kansan Requests Increase In Fees Budget Allocation
Printing costs were rising, Adams said, and a change in the format of the Kansan from a tabloid to a full size paper had widened the news coverage and reduced the advertising percentage and advertising revenue
If the Kansan were no longer published, Bassett said, it would affect the School of Journalism, but would more directly affect the University.
Chalmers said that an eventual goal was to close Jayhawk Boulevard completely.
EDWARD P. BASSETT, dean of the School of Journalism, said the Kansan Board was committed to making the Kansan as good a paper as possible, but he also continued to continue the downward cycle of increasing that it had been experiencing.
By CATHY SHERMAN
Bassett told the School of Journalism could produce a laboratory newspaper
BY EMILY BARNES
Kanean Staff Writer
"The University of Kansas is a major institution and should be able to support a management team."
A request was made by the University Daily Kanas to the Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee for budget hearings. The committee will budget bearings held Wednesday night.
According to Bill O'Niel, Ballwin, Mo.
Junior and Student Senate treasurer,
this increase would raise the $1.35 allotted to
the Kansan per full time equivalent student to
$1.65 and would entitle reducing the line
apportionments in the other seven areas.
Adams said the Kansan had not received a raise since 1958, when it received $1.45 per student. He said publishing the Kansan was becoming more costly and was continually losing money, but the paper was receiving less per student.
He said the project loss for the Kansan this year would be between $20,000 and $30,000 and the Kansan had lost $50,000 in season when the Senate had not allocated any money.
The request is an increase of $9,770 over the $43,990 allocated the Kansean by the Senate line apportionment enactment, which distributes the $12 semester student activity fee on a standard basis to eight University areas.
MEI. ADAMS, business adviser to the Kansan, said the Kansan had a budget of $152,000 for the 1971-72 fiscal year and less than 50 per cent of printing costs.
the School, but he said, this was not the ideal for either the School of the University or the College.
The Black Student Union made a request to the committee for $80,330, nearly twice that amount.
GILBERT DEAN, Sandersville, Ga. junior, said the increase was due to additions of several new programs, to BSU activities, including draft counseling, legal aid, drug abuse counseling and craft workshops.
See KANSAN REQUESTS, Page 2
Escalation Sparks Meeting
Local Groups Plan Relays War Protest
By STEVE RIEL
and DONNA DALE Kansan Staff Writer
A possible renaissance of large-scale, organized war protest in Lawrence began Wednesday night in Westminster Center at the University of Kansas, as more than 200 people convened to establish groundwork for immediate and continuing action to protest increasing U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
A consensus of those present supported the proposal of a rally and statement of protest to occur this Saturday at the Kansas Relays to show widespread discontent with President Nixon's increased bombing in Vietnam and escalation of U.S. air, naval and logistical support.
Earlier in the week, representatives of campus and city organizations formed a coordinating committee to organize war. Among groups represented on the commission were Women's Coalition, Science for People, Vietnam Veterans Against the War, the Peace Action Coalition, a local labor union representing of foreign students at KU.
VARIOUS SPEAKERS supported the relays proposal as a means of reaching a large number of people. In addition to communicating discontent to the people they said national coverage of the relays would increase the number of people affected.
The specific course of action adopted at the meeting included presentation of antivirus software, which have been circulating on campuses. The course was taught by Laurence Chalmer Jr. on Friday. At that time, the students will ask for approval of proposal to speak and rally at the relay.
The purpose of the rally, which is designed to be totally peaceful, is to reinforce the anti-war statement that in an era of meeting hoped would be read at the relays.
The demonstrators want to march into the stadium during the noon hour, carrying placards and banners and present a 15 minute speech against President Nixon's decision to resume the bombing.
The proposal calls for the statement to be made at a time which would not conflict with the letter.
THE PURPOSE of the weekend activities, as envisioned by those at the meeting, was to get people to support and identify with a stance calling for U.S. withdrawal rather than escalation in Vietnam.
At the meeting, an organizational structure was formed for the protest. The structure consists of a coordinating committee, a committee to organize the relay's action and seven other committees to be maintained on an ongoing basis until United States has withdrawn from Southeast Asia.
A committee for education plans to have workshops on the war and also plans to extend its activities to include discussions in classes at the University.
Other committees will be involved with publicity, financing and the legal aspects
Information on the committees will be available from University information
THE MEETING began with statements made by three speakers who had been contacted by the coordinating committee. They were also assigned as assistant professor of social welfare, John Musgrave of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War and Manuel Fierro, head of a group for minority employment and a minority candidate for governor of Kansas.
Forer said that the American people were angry with continuing U.S. involvement in Vietnam and actions in and around Haiphong by the United States reflected general contempt of the Nixon administration for the American people.
"The American people are angry at the Nixon administration—all its sycophants, toadies and those who profit from the war in Vietnam," he said.
He said that Nixon had ignored the U.S. Senate's recent legislation which expressed opposition to executive commitments.
★
HE CALLED this a "perversion of legitimate governmental process."
The escalating air war in Vietnam, he said, was murder without the realization that killing was occurring. He said that because American soldiers had been withdrawn in large numbers from Vietnam, people tended to overlook the killing that continued as a result of the automated airwar.
Forer said the American people did not want escalation and for this reason would support actions for withdrawal. Current opposition to the war, he said, would be the last leg in a long struggle to end involvement in Vietnam.
Musgrave spoke on the evidence of U.S. escalation in Vietnam. He read a long list of indicators of this escalation, which was military installations here and abroad.
THE LIST included mobilization of air and naval craft, full alerts being posted at U.S. installations in the United States and abroad and the possibility of a nuclear-armed air-craft carrier being sent to Vietnam.
Mugrawe said protest at KU was part of national action to end the war.
"Most college campuses and large cities have activities planned," he said.
★
College Students Plan Strikes Against War
NEW YORK (AP)—The presidents of the eight Ivy League schools in a joint statement issued Wednesday condemned renewed bombing in North Vietnam and criticized coercive student strikes. At the nation's colleges and universities, meanwhile, students planned votes on a coordinated antwar strike for Friday.
Maryland State Police fire tear gas late gase Wednesday to clear portions of U.S. Route 1 blocked for the second day by about 300 antwair protesters from the University of Maryland, the most serious clash in demonstrations at a handful of colleges around the country.
About 500 students at Columbia University in New York voted Wednesday to approve a proposal and succeeded in cancelling a number of classes by barricading some buildings and picking.
They ignored or burned copies of restraining orders issued by a State Station.
The Ivy League statement, which noted the presidents were signing their names "personally" and not for their institutions urged full disengagement and opposed troops other than immediate protection of U.S. troops in the process of withdrawal.
The Ivy League schools are Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton and Yale. Also the University of California and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
In Wisconsin, 2,000 antiwar protesters massed at the University of Wisconsin in Madison and marched to the state capitol several blocks away.
No one was arrested, although the demonstrators broke into groups in an unsuccessful attempt to penetrate a line of county police encircling the building.
While some students bodies have already voted to strike on Friday, as urged by the Student Mobilitization Committee and other groups, students at MIT, Brown, Dartmouth, Dentmouth, Yale and several California schools have scheduled strike votes.
In Eugene, Ore., an apparent antiwar protest took the form of what authorities said was a firebombing attempt at the airfield of Airborne's Air Force ROTC BUILDING.
Two liquor bottles filled with gasoline and wicked with a partly-burned rag were found at the building early in the morning Eugene police reported.
1970 FOLK THEORY CONFERENCE
Kantan Photo by DAVE BLISS
Speakers at War Protest Meeting Propose Rally at Relays
Protesters will present Chancellor Chalmers with a petition and request for approval of rally
2
Thursday, April 20, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Speaker Explains Bad Marriages
Fierro Calls for Involvement
Spoke on Chicago Awareness Day . .
BY JOHN PATRICK MAHER
Kansas Staff Writer
Never before in history has so much pressure been put on marriage. Richard Auer, overseeing the division of psychiatry of the Menninger Foundation, said at a Wednesday afternoon Faculty Forum.
Speaking on "What is Happening to Marriage," he said that some of the systems composed of certain subsystems: cultural, having to do with social approval; shared interests, the nature of these interests; about the quality of the
relationship; and psychological having to do with the intimacy and sexual relations of a marriage.
IF THERE are problems in these subsystems, then a marriage is in trouble, according to Bollinger.
He presented four theories on why marriages break up: a "bad people" theory, which says the marriage is unacceptable; a married; an incompatibility theory, in which the relationship between marriage partners is wrong in an environmental theory; a relationship that is not well but suffer from other well but suffer from
adverser circumstances; and a "bad idea" theory. Bollinger said that marriage might be a bad instance of institutions had not yet been found.
He said marriage was especially vulnerable to environmental factors and the pressures of individual needs.
INCREASED MOBILITY and changes in the roles of women were two factors causing stress on marriage and tendency to terminate marriage for common rather than individual reasons, changing attitudes toward sexual
According to Bollinger, company moves, more employment opportunities for women, social and economic changes lessening the difficulty of divorce and increased pressure on sexual pleasure can be quite demanding on a marriage.
He said marriage was generally viewed as a problem solving institution
Kansan Requests . . .
"I think individuals get married, even under the best circumstances," to solve problems," he said.
He said that because of a lot more data awareness the program has requested these programs and the BSU assumed responsibility for them.
Continued from Page 1
Dean said there were certain types of problem particular to blacks in the realm of legal aid, draft and drug abuse counseling
could be more effectively handled by black people rather than by other similar Senate members. Draft Help and Headquarters.
PERSONS WITH close family ties may seek marriage to fill a vacuum created by separation of spouses. They are lonely persons and those with bad family backgrounds may desire marriage from an intense attraction, but they are not beloved. Other persons may seek their identities through marriage, although they would be better off finding themselves together.
"SOME MARRIAGES do well because of the built-in flexibility of the individuals," he said.
He said personal drives for self-fulfillment and competition between husband and wife could cause conflicts.
Other programs included in the BSU request were requests for funds for sickle cell disease testing, funds for subsiding a medical office, and funding to Board, to take children to school, a recreational program for high school and junior high students to acquaint them with university life and a carrier radio to transmit news from the BSU Community House.
excessive interest in a job, hobby or other people, he said.
Catalyst, which consists of the
Acid catalyst and undergraduate
instructors for LA&S program, asked for $20,050
for instructional or laboratory
assessments.
REPRESENTATIONS FROM thirteen other groups also presented their committee. Wednesday, the Commission on the Status of Women asked, "What are you asking for $10,452 Feminism Requested for $10,452 Cottonwood Review asked for $2,700. The KU Soccer team requested $3,450. The Coalition requested $3,450.
According to Bollinger,
children can play with the
parents of their parents
and cause the parents to compete
for their attention and affection if
they play.
"Many parents try to work out when they want their children," he said. "When the children don't work out the way they wanted, this creates problems."
Chicano Spokesman Implores Within-the-System' Involvement
Headquarters, which is part of catalyst and is an information center for the requested $3,955.40. The KU student council asked children asked for $330.
Speaking of alternative and experimental models for marriage, such as multiple-mate, courtship, or contract marriage, Bollinger said there were certain needs better taken care of by the sex education arrangement than by anything found yet in experimental arrangements. However, the marriage model showed signs of weakening.
Another factor causing stress in marriage is education and training, which can intellectually at different rates and may make it into marital distress because of it.
"The models we have now don't seem to prepare people for the stresses and strains," said Carlyle. "We need to get rid of the nuclear family."
Phase 2 Backed
WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of the Treasury John Yelpawitz and editors Wednesday that Phase 2 controls are on course to meet President Nixon's goal of restricting it to 2 to 3 per a year.
He said he would like to see more trial marriages and more experimentation in various types of marriages.
Supportive Educational Services, which tutors Urban Scholars, asked for $13,174. The
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% THE ECONOMICS OF
THE COLD WAR
By Robert Smith
Manuel Fierro, Chicano leader and independent candidate for governor called for direct action against a change for Chicanos in society, in a Chicano Awareness Day event in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
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Fierro stressed the importance of working "within the system" to produce change and accepting that the changes would bring.
JEALOUSY COULD strain a marriage if one partner takes an
"We can holster and about about equality as much as we want, but it is good to a point. If the equality does not become a reality all the other has to do."
By KENT PULLIAM Kansan Staff Writer
BURGERS HOT TUNA
"There is no longer a need for Chicanos or any other minority group, for that matter to sit in the hall and which candidate they want to endure," he said. "Now is the time to involve in running for offices."
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Fiero has been lobbying for Chicano interests in the state legislature and is a declared candidate for governor.
HE ALSO SAID that Chicanos needed to get directly involved in the system through a political avenue.
He said, "Attitudes have boards and city councils, but if we don't commit ourselves to the change we want, nothing will happen."
"We want people to accept us as we are, we want the justice that is supposed to be there for them," she said. "I hasn't been there for Chicago."
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He said, "When I decided to run for governor, the Democratic and Republican parties said don't bet that the Chicagoans involved with us."
injustices against Chicanos.
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Chicoan Awareness Day was designed to include all the students who have completed in two parts. One was to expose and involve all the KU students in the activities of the day, and the activities of assist the Chicoan students at KU.
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"I can't expect an Arab or a black to take up my issues, I must do it," he said. "We must make sure we believe whether we want the
FIERRO POINTED out that you would reluctant to get involved with the movement for fear that they would be looked upon as un-justified.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
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Mrs. Betty Fierro spoke just before her husband about the involvement of Chicoa women in the entire movement.
"YOU DON'T have anything to fear about not being feminine by being strong," she said.
She said that women had to do more than just support the men. "I had to do a lot of work and they should demand equal terms and rights in the workplace," she said.
She said older women were more enthusiastic about being in sports because they remembered what it was like when they had come
The Firers spoke before approximately 50 persons at the American Student's (AMAS) lecture held on "Chicano literature"
A group of Chicano students from Wichita State University who were present, performed several skits that reflected
Campus Briefs
Friday is the last day for graduating seniors to rent caps and gowns. After Friday a $1 penalty fee will be charged, and after May 1 the penalty is $. Caps and gowns can be rented from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the business office on the first floor of the Kansas Union.
Jayhawker Applications
TACO GRANDE
Applications for staff positions on the Jayhawker, other than editor and business manager, are being taken in the Jayhawker office, Room B115, in the Kansas Union, Rick McKernan, Salina junior and editor of the Jayhawker, said Wednesday. Applicants may pick up forms in the Jayhawker office or the School of Journalism.
Coupon not good on Wed
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Offer expires May 15, 1972
Human Exploration Center Spokesman for the Center for Human Exploration said that the summer in Colorado program has been cancelled. Refunds of any registration fees will be made promptly, they said.
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Indian Literature Scholar Speaks on Aztec Poetry
Gordon Brotherston, author of several books and numerous articles on literature, literature, said Wednesday the book will be in the desks to know more about his spurred translations and research on American Indian languages.
& speaking in WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
Brotherston delivered the Alice Winston Memorial Lecture Wednesday night in the Jayhawk room.
Brotherston said many problems existed in trying to
He said he thought the information gained from anthropologists wasn't entirely reliable. He and his anthropologists suffered from the philosopy they were working with, and much of their thought much of anthropologists' findings were to support theories which they began their research.
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Thursday, April 20, 1972
2
News Briefs By The Associated Press
MIGs Attack U.S. Ships
SAIGON (AP) - North Vietnamnesse MIGs attacked U.S. destroyers off North Vietnam Wednesday. One plane was shot down, the U.S. Command reported. At least two enemy torpedo boats that joined the assault in the Gulf of Tonkun were believed to have been down.
FTC Raps Painkiller Ads
The American destroyers were shelling North Vietnamese coastal targets when the MIGs attacked.
WASHINGTON - The Federal Trade Commission Wednesday accused the nation's top three manufacturers of pankillers of unfair and misleading advertising. The proposed complaint alleges that the companies have been leading nonprescription analgesics that its products are superior to others. The proposed orders by the commission would require the companies to disclose the presence of aspirin or caffein in their products and call on the manufacturers to run corrective amendments for two years to counter the alleged misrepresentations.
Nixon Aide to Testify on ITT
WASHINGTON - Presidential aide Peter M. Flanigan said he would allow members of the Senate Judiciary committee to question him on what he knows about locating the Republican national convention in San Diego. In a concession to Democrats on the committee the close confident of President Nixon cleared the way for a precedent-setting appearance today at hearings called to reconsider the nomination of Richard G. Kleindienst to be attorney general.
Democrats Fix War Deadline
WASHINGTON - House Democrats, spurred by the renewed U.S. bombing of North Vietnam, moved toward their strongest action yet on end-the-war legislation. At a party caucus the Democrats set the stage for adoption of a resolution calling for the fixing of a date to end U.S. ground and air involvement in Indochina, subject only to the release of American war prisoners.
By PATTIO'NEILL
Kansan Staff Writer
Grad Schools Keep Uniform Rules
As a result of the recent decentralization of the Graduate School, the separate departments and schools now make decisions in which to teach, but in general they are the same throughout the University, according to Robert Ellerlemier, dean of the Graduate School.
He said a student must have a Bachelors degree and a three point grade average to be admitted. He also said his student has between a 2.75 and a 2.99 grade average he may be admitted on a probationary basis if his chosen department thinks he is a graduate student. Test scores, letters of recommendation and grades in significant courses will determine whether Ellermeier said Once a student attains a B average in his graduate course work, he is automatically taken off
ELLERMIEI SAID that if a student did not have an acceptable point value as a reason for cultural or emotional deficiencies, he could continue his education as a special student. A teacher's status may be transferred to regular graduate status on the recommendation of the department and approval by the department.
He said that in general, 30 hours of course work was required for a masters degree. He said that in many department courses, he wrote up of writing a 4 to 6 hour thesis. If a student chose to write a thesis for
KU Vets' Plans Go to Senate
By RICHARD GUSTIN Kansan Staff Writer
Ed Bruns, Leawood freshman and chairman of the newly-formed Student Senate of diversified college, interviewed Wednesday that the committee would ask the Student Senate to recommend administrative changes the University should make to deal with the problems of diversity.
Bruns said that by obtaining State endorsement of the proposal, he would gain student support for the proposals and increase the number of veterans and the changes necessary to aid the veteran in training.
The first proposal will recommend housing changes in Stouffer Place and the residence of the student. The Place, the proposal suggested that at least one-third of the total cost of the property be reserved for veterans and that a month's rent be due on the first day of the first subsequent semester.
CONCERNING RESIDENCE halls, the proposal suggested that housing contract payments be
prorated over the period of the veteran's occupancy without requiring a payment system. Also, the proposal recommended that a predemedigned wing or floor be located with veterans in Me Collium Hall.
The second proposal recommends that a deferred tuition payment program be established to supplement the assessed a penalty fee for late tuition payment have their money refunded by the government.
THE THIRD PROPOSAL lists nine recommendations Bruns said he discussed with the senator. The three recommendations, Washington, D.C. These recommendations, Bruns said, are part of all Vietnam-era veterans.
The recommendations are:
An increase of at least 20 percent in the monthly stipend for educational assistance from the school is required. A maximum $1,000 a year for books and fees to be paid by the student. THE RECEIPT of educational assistance checks as soon as an appointment is made with certification of enrollment is
received by the U.S. Veterans Administration. These checks are now received after the attended school for one month.
An increase in eligibility for educational benefits from the present 36 months to 48 months.
his Masters, less course work would be required.
A STUDENT can obtain a masters degree in an area other than his undergraduate major. To do this, he must also fulfill the requirements for the undergraduation major which would add additional hours to the requirements for his masters degree.
Reinstatement of a government-administered life insurance policy.
Federally funded tutorial assistance programs at institutions of higher education.
Improvement in the availability of federally-insured loans to veterans attending school.
Federal funding of a full-time veterans counselor and advisor at institutions of higher education.
Eierleimer said the doctoral requirements and programs were more advanced than the individual student. In general around 60 hours of course work, he said, would be required for a doctor of philosophy (Ph D) degree, he
Job placement preference for Vietnam-era veterans.
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Ellermeier said the student must first be admitted to the doctoral program as an aspirant. He then takes all of his course work, which may take one to two years to complete, before taking his degree. If he passes this, he is admitted to candidacy and begins to write his
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PRIOR TO TAKING the comprehensive examination, the student is expected to exhibit a research ability. This may be skill in a foreign language; computation skills or a background that relates to his area of study.
work, if he passed a qualifying examination. The student was still expected to take the same exam, although no thesis was required.
Some schools offer advanced degrees other than the masters and doctoral degree, such as the B.A. or Ph.D., which offers a doctor of education (Ed.D). Paul Haack, associate dean of the School of Education, said this degree was more practically oriented than the Ph.D.
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4
Thursday, April 20, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
PARKING METERS
ARE UGLY
Hearing Manners
The purpose of an open hearing is to allow a group to present its proposal and to provide a time for any criticisms, recommendations or compliments that the plan may merit. That purpose was only grudgingly achieved by opening the open hearing on the Parking and Traffic Board's now famous, or perhaps more accurately, infamous, proposal.
The people who went to the hearing were so mad that they wanted to dispense with the formality of an explanation of the plan. They wanted to bring growing meters. They wanted to begin with vigorous criticism of the plan.
The few facts that the board's chairman, Mr. Malinowsky, was able to utter between verbal assaults made it clear that some of the anger was based on misinformation. For instance, the parking meters were not to be placed all along Jayhawk Boulevard and there would be a lane which would allow for two-way bicycle traffic. Someone in the police department suggested that everyone calm down and listen to the board's explanation. He pointed out that we all might learn something.
The crowd listened to the board's presentation, although it seemed to take a lot out of them; they grumbled the whole time. Often questions and expressions of discontent could not be contained. Any declaration of good will by Maalinowsky was either hated at or laughed at by the audience. I find it hard to believe that he is the blackguard many people at the hearing seemed to think he is. Emotions had so overtaken people that they had as much trouble sitting still as a group of five-year olds would have.
It is unfortunate that people who suggested worthy counter-proposals felt they had to shout them. People repeated earlier statements of criticism, often louder and more rudely than former speakers.
One of the most obvious effects of the crowd's irrational overreaction was that it made those on the panel defensive. They were forced by the crowd to defend not only the plan but themselves as well.
It disturbed me that in this community, in this era, the hearing turned out the way it did. In an era when people are supposed to be recognizing as vital the virtues of tolerance and understanding, the "University people" at that hearing displayed what can only be described as a disdain for both those virtues as well as any compassion for people in difficult positions. This community was founded as a place for the development of the intellect. Here knew how to act on fact. However, students at the meeting did not want to be bothered with the board's presentation of the facts, much less any rational consideration of them.
I did not like the proposal when I went to the hearing and I still do not like it. Nevertheless, I think the board should have been given a fair chance to present the thing. As it was they were forced into a corner and had to listen to loud criticism, some of which was unduly harsh.
I am certain they would have listened to objections presented calmly and rationally. Such a presentation would be discrediting the proposal without discrediting those who spoke against it.
Mary Ward
Loyalty Oath
The Supreme Court Tuesday upheld the constitutionality of a loyalty oath required by the state of Massachusetts for its state employees. This ruling seems to reverse the trend established during the years of the Warren Court of ruling such oaths unconstitutional under First Amendment guarantees.
The requirement of an oath is, of course, a stupid idea. If the revolution is acumin' I doubt that the first wave of bombers and burners is gone in the war. It may be that once upon a time they signed an oath of allegiance to the country.
Such oaths are simply offensive. Most of us, I imagine, are irritated at having our patriotism questioned and having to swear that we believe certain things in order to get a job. We have to be given statements contained in an oath, the idea of signing a document that binds one to certain beliefs as a
requirement to work, seems
to have with the essence of the
First Amendment.
However, the fact that loyalty oaths are now to be considered constitutional is not important. The fact that such a ruling clearly establishes the Supreme Court on which the state has involved individual rights as opposed to the rights of the state, is of utmost importance.
The individual is often the dissenter in the society. When the court swings to the side of the government in such cases, a dangerous situation arises, for now the courts, in giving the government the benefit of the doubt, may tend to quash dissent.
And if dissent is quashed, and is thereby allowed to be fermented, we may indeed find ourselves in a situation those loyalty oaths sought to avert.
Associate Editor
James J. Kilpatrick
Compare Rulers in Greece
WASHINGTON-IT is a familiar part of politics, known to every student of the ancient art, that the people seldom have a choice between two courses almost equally good, or between one course that is altogether good. Politics, alas, ordinarily offers little more than a choice among evils.
the trumis may be seen in Greece today. Since the revolution of April, 1967, the country has been dominated by a junta of right-wing military leaders. These are the famous, or infamous, "colonels," led by George Papadopoulos. Arrayed wing counter-revolutionary factions identified with former Premier Andreas Papandreou. If the people were in a position to make a peaceful free choice, what would they do? Would they turn upon the colonels and throw the rascals against them, not—so long as their only alternative is to throw the Papandreou racsals in. With all
its repressive aspects, the present regime is infinitely better, which is to say infinitely better. It makes that would like to take over.
Two events in recent weeks tend to buttress this view. I have in mind a recent speech by Papadopoulos and a letter—a curiously unpublicized public letter—addressed by Papandreu on October 10 to a meeting of his exiled followers in Vienna.
In his message, the prime minister made several gestures that merit a favorable word. To be sure, he did not proclaim the resumption of a freely elected government in a country exiled King Constantine, much less the monarch's meddied mother, to come back to Athens; he did not empty the prisons of all persons under political detention. But Papadopoulos did announce the end of martial law over two-thirds of the country and he did not allow anyone to enter including both military and political fees, who may now return to their homes. It is not
much, perhaps, but it is something—a small step in the right direction.
By contrast, one may contemplate the direction indicated by Papandreou in his
D. S. PARKER
James J. Kilpatrick
October letter to his followers.
For nearly five years, Greece has enjoyed internal peace, public order, and general stability.
What does the leftist Papandreou have to offer instead?
He writes from exile in Ottawa:
"There is absolutely no
possibility for an evolutionary solution of the Greek problem." How then, then can change be achieved? Papandreou, taking a hard line to make his position "perfectly clear." It is impossible, he says, for change to be achieved without "a dynamic armed struggle and harsh confrontation"—in brief, a balky revolution and civil war.
"Such a struggle," he continues, "requires the creation of a political-military national liberation movement in the classical context of the third world."
Papandreou goes on to define his goals. If he can overthrow the colonels, "Greece will be a neutral country"—i.e., Greece will withdraw from NATO and ant-Communist posture of the reformers for the defense of its affairs. Greece will become "socialist (and not simply social democratic);" That is to say, Greece will become socialist as the term is defined in the Soviet
Union, rather than socialist in the pattern of Sweden.
The people of Greece reportedly are unhappy that the colonels have failed to restore free elections. Would they regain power in a revolution? No, indeed. Papandreou offers only a "socialist community surpassing the petrified parliamentary life" he proposes "new lively forms of participation by the people."
"It is not so curious that Papandreau has failed to arouse much of a following in Greece. They were the traveling movement, with its ritual denunciations of "American imperialism," has attracted the support of so many Americans, like the Americans. Given a Hamlet's choice between "the ills we have" and "others that we know not of" it is small wonder that Greenland sticks with the rares they have.
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Readers Respond
George, Gus, Barry, Randy . . .
Di Zerega
To the Editor:
Vive la Democracie! Student
somente ha llorado con la democa-
tiva para dos de las da Giuia D
Zerega tells you to do; otherwise,
bald Bad Wolf is going to kick
him.
Claire L. Dehon Graduate student Lawrence
Ombudsman
To the Editor:
been criticized and questioned for its role as a co-paintiff in the complaint filed against the February Sisters last semester. In response to this, the charter of the school was changed somewhat, to produce the following goals and purposes:
To the Editor:
The Office of the Ombudsman
at the University of Kansas has
1. To provide an independent office to counsel investigate and mediate student, faculty or administrative grievances.
2. To refer valid grievances to the appropriate University organization.
3. To seek out intra-University injustices and inequities.
The Ombudsman Office is based on the principle that members of the University community should have their questions answered by the University investigated and remedied without resorting to judicial measures. Problems among students, faculty and researchers are more readily solved by mediation than by litigation.
To promote this end, the office shall refrain from serving as counselor for either side of a judicial proceeding, or as a party to any court case, in order necessary to maintain an independent and unprejudice*
© 1921 L. A. CORD DOCKLES
1972 L. A. TOMS PRODUCTION
ARMY IN SOUTH VIETNAM
ARMY OF SOUTH VIETNAM
CHOCH HAWKIES
Changing of the guard in Vietnam
Bv Sokoloff
agency able to arbitrate in an unbiased manner.
To the Editor:
THE BRIDGE
BY LONGFELLOW
I STOOD ON
THE BRIDGE AT
MIDNIGHT
AS THE CLOCKS
WERE STRIKING
THE HOUR ...
The office can perform a personal service in a totally independent, confidential manner for a person who does not have where or to whom his question should be directed for answer.
Griff and the Unicorn
AND THE MOON
ROSE O'ER THE
CITY
BEHIND THE
DARK CHURCH
TOWER
THE BRIDGE
BY LONGFELLOW
I STOOD ON
THE BRIDGE AT
MIDNIGHT
AS THE CLOCKS
WERE STRIKING
THE HOUR ...
AND THE MOON
ROSE O'ER THE
CITY
BEHIND THE
DARK CHURCH
TOWER
HI,
MOON
HI
CHURCH
TOWER
KNOCK IT OFF,
YOU GUYS!
THIS IS A
SERIOUS
POEM!!
GIGgle
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
--Mike Weiser
--Geary N. Group
For the KU Ombudsman Office
Albin
The Traffic Court's treatment of Prof. Hanson's case is outrageous.
Nan C. L. Scott
KU Alumna
1638 Barker Ave.
HI, MOON
HI CHURCH TOWER
KNOCK IT OFF, YOU GUYS!
THIS IS A SERIOUS POEM!!
GIGGLE
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
SKEEP OFF
Gould
This letter is to serve notice to Mr. Albin and any other "justices of his ilk that I have given you permission to Kansas tax lawyer and member of the general public just because I am, heaven help me, a faculty wife; that I will take my children home for college at Museum and park in the section reserved for museum visitors whenever I wish to do so, and that neither my husband nor I will pay tuition while I am doing this.
However, there is one part of interview that makes the difference. Yoward is the end of that interview (Kansas, April 14) it is stated that Shaw was a lawyer who struck out the charges in Lawrence were dismissed. Nothing is further evidence.
The insincuse of Barry Albin, named in Professor Hanson's April 17th lecture as the judge in a trial for his own misapplied match by his ignorance of young children. I have a son of two years and three months who has been looking at and naming animals in the Natural History Museum's dioramas. I am sure that by the time I am ready and even if the interest there
I first wish to thank you for giving me a chance to present our side of our legal hassles with the federal and state governments. We have generally been denied opportunity by the news media.
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff.
I believe the state of Kansas dissolved those charges only when I was available. (A spectator in the courtroom even overheard the judge tell the assistant county attorney, "Think of what thinker else to do.) I thought of anything else to do.) As a result of the support of a lot of people for the attention our cases have received, the state still would not have dropped their ridiculous accusations.
Remember that I was charged in the first place on no more than $200,000 for the preliminary hearing—none. Remember that it cost my family, friends and myself thousands of dollars of fear and emotional strain just to get to the point where Kansas had to dismiss charges which never should have been charged, or forget that it cost us over $3 million.
$60,000 worth of bonds to just keep me out of jail these nine months that it took us to get Kansas to admit it had no case.
Throughout this particular case I have seen a judge (federal) deny defense motion to take everything the government has asked (including a continuance of our trial which is moving past the month and a half stage—we've never had it before, and later we still waiting). We've seen that same judge overrule defense objections before they are admitted. We also see those that haven't been made. And we've seen that judge invoke maximum security (frisking), metal detectors, armed guards, or in any reason than to try to keep spectators from the courtroom and to paint an image of my "corporate death" deadly criminals. And finally I've seen how the judicial system has and is treating Arnold (you get sentence reductions if you mouth it like you're getting felony charges if you don't.)
Further I've seen too many good friends locked away in jail and even some who've been seen people sturge from Douglas county juries simply brown, red or brown, red or connected with the university. And that's just a little more.
I did indicate to your reporter that I have a new faith in jurors, but that is because of my belief in the justice system, people actually know what is going on, they react in a progressive way. And I indicated that I believe that a reasonable judge can in a few instances affect its working. But I'm afraid that overall my experiences of the past year have only grown more judicial system itself really is.
Randy Gould Former Student
McGovern
Congratulations to the students.
They have been working on the state who have been working on the local and county level in the candidacy of George Govore.
Here in Oklahoma we are working just as hard to get representation on the precinct elected at the district level for the national convention. I am sure that there must be students at KU who are from Oklahoma and who are not there. In lieu of them, them that our precinct meetings are May 5 and at these meetings delegates will be elected to the county council. We are down from KU to a hometown in Oklahoma and the effort to attend a local precinct meeting could be very beneficial. And one can write friends at out and do the work necessary.
In their eagerness to participate at KU students from Oklahoma and from other states should not forget what they can do with the equipment any of you I can who are from the KU-field Field County area.
J. T. Moore (KU, Ph.D. 1970)
Garfield County Coordinator
McGovern for President
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom-UN-4 4810
Business Office-UN-4 4358
Editor Chip Creew
Business Manager Carol Young
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 20, 1972
5
Indian Education Review Initiated
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By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
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Two task forces have been appointed by an inter-institutional committee recently named by Chancellor E. Chancellor E. Haskell Supet, Wallace Gallucci to research and make recommendations on Indian education, Tom Beaver, representative of India at the State Department (CIA) and co-coordinator of the task forces said Monday.
students
houghout
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level in
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One task force, composed of staff and students from the University of Kansas and Haskell courses offered at the University now and make recommendations for additions, he said. The other task force, according to Beaver, will consider Haskell students and administrators and will be concerned with finding ways for Haskell students to pursue part-time work at KU for credit at Haskell
s to s from states they can assist from the a.
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nator
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THE INTERN-INSTITUTIONAL committee, made up of three members from KU, four administrators and one student from Haskell, was formed to help establish an office with Indian perspectives in mind.
The group was also interested in making current and prospective Indian students aware of the opportunities they in the way of scholarships and loans. Beaver said that new financial aid programs were not necessary because most Indian students already eligible for aid already offered
The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), Ford Foundation, Arrow Incorporated and the National Association of Distance Education (NAB) offer scholarships, and
hip Crewsrol Young
loans to students who meet the requirements. Although the requirements vary, most Indians can receive aid from at least one organization, he said.
The inter-institutional committee and its task forces, were developed through efforts by the CIA last fall. Beaver告了
INDIAN STUDENTS at KU knew other schools were offering Indian studies programs and Indian languages programs, Beaver said. The group thought Indian awareness be promoted here in this area.
"The top five graduates from Haskell will not go to KU because it does not offer Indian courses." Beaver said.
They are looking at colleges a long way from Lawrence to get what they want, he said. Washington and Utah have In-Formation Schools, as well as Oklahoma State University.
The first step towards Indian awareness on the KU campus was taken in September of 1970 when a group led a movement to change the plaque on display with Comanche in the Museum of Natural History. The plaque was moved in and inaugurated in a ceremony last semester.
"THE UNIVERSITY needs to make a definite commitment to the proposed program before an appointment with Haskell can be made," William Burgess, dean of information at Haskell and International Institutional Committee, said Monday. The first step toward that commitment was made by point of contact with the committee and the task forces,
Beaver said.
Beaver said the task forces would mainly be concerned with placing an Indian representative in the KU Office of Minority Affairs, and placing an Indian to the University. The task force has received a letter of support from Marshall Jackson, assistant director of ad-hoc programs, and received favorable reviews from Chalmers, Beaver said. The task
forces will meet April 20 with the chancellor to discuss a new Indian representative.
Financing the new program is a circular problem, according to Beaver. If the University would be more willing it could I get the money it needed.
Funding organizations will not give aid to an unstructured program, he said, and it is hard to know what the role of funding the money is not there yet.
Blind to Navigate In Rallye Sundav
The ninth annual Braille
Celebration of American
Jayhawk Sports Car Club will be run Sunday, Bill Francis, Rose Hill junior and president of the club.
Navigators for the rally will be students from the Kansas State University and are decapped (KSVH) in Kansas City. Navi. Navigators will be divided into two categories: those who read only Brille and those who read both Brille and the KSVH.
Drivers will meet at 11 a.m. Sunday in the southeast corner of O zone, where they will form a caravan to the KSV.
Francis said that the drivers would be paired with their navigators at the school at 12.30 n.m.
The rallie will begin at 2:15 p.m. leaving the starting line at one minute intervals. The rallie will end with a paternal later in the afternoon.
Park.
Francis said that about 15 cars would compete, with entrants coming from Pittsburg, Topeka and Kansas City, Kan.
About 75 cars would be neede,
Francis said, to make the rallye
successful and guarantee that the
cars were not dispatched.
Last year, he said, students had to go in groups because there were not enough cars and drivers.
Trophies will be awarded to the team that won a category. Both the driver and the navigators will be presented trophies Dash plaques will also be awarded.
So far, Francis said, $50 had been delivered because new car dealers to the trophies. Also, the A&P Super Market has donated the food for children.
An entry fee of $2 is being charged. Francis said.
Committee Planning Continues in SenEx
The University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) is still in the process of making committee assignments in the University and Faculty senates, according to Ronald K. Calgaard, cochairman of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and SenEx chairman.
Calgaard said SenEx hoped to have the appointments ready for presentation at the combined University of California and Faculty Senates on April 27.
Charges to the University Council committees, which were
appointed last week, are also responsible for that a special effort was being made to clarify the ambiguous function of the Planning Committee.
Calgaard said the Planning and Resource Committee had no expilet function provided for in his tenure. He devoting its energy to general long range academic planning, Confusion arose, he said, when Confusion Bork established the Planning Body for this purpose.
Over 1,000 questionnaires were sent out last week by the University Safety Committee to faculty members, staff and students who will be able to obtain comments from all segments of the University concerning safety problems at KU, Elmo G. Lindquist, associate professor of mechanical engineering and committee chairman said Wednesday.
Safety Committee Solicits Planning Needs for KU
included everything from "fire escapes to sidewalks to improper work rules."
Ellen said Wednesday.
Lindquist said this diversity
For the past few weeks the University Safety Committee has been investigating safety at the University of Kansas.
The committee hopes to centralize the safety problems to determine a feasible approach to their risk requirements, Llindquist said.
KU Scuba Club Trains For Potter Trash Dive
The KU Scuba Diving Club will conduct a trash dive from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday to clean up the bottom of Potter Lake
In order to participate in the dive, members of the club had to take an eight week course involving classroom and pool instruction, and be instructed in the fundamentals of seba diving, diseases, diving hazards, diving equipment and teachers from Kansas City diving.
Participants must have passed a written test, a pool check out and a water check out last. Test the same as their open water check out April 17. This semester's classes will be closed for water check out April 29 and 30.
Patty Feist, Arkansas City senior, said prizes would be given
LHS Students Test New Plan For Enrollment
The club has been making diving flags required in Kansas to warn boaters that divers are in the water.
The new enrollment system is similar to KU's, according to LHS Principal William Medley. After making her class select cards, she picked up card cards at stations in the high school cafeteria.
Lawrence High School students got a chance to schedule their own classes for 1972-73 last week. The students assigned the schedules assigned by commu
Medley said the high school was trying the system to reduce the number of student complaints about scheduling.
for various items found in the lake, including the most unusual item found.
The new system gives the student freedom to select his instructor and, usually, the order of his classes.
In past years, counselors spent much of August and September changing the schedules of dissatisfied students.
1976
BENEANNE BURKE
TENNIS
Tennis Dresses
from
Point Set and Court I
Made of Washable Polyester for Easy Care
Priced from 24.00 to 30.00
KIRSTEN'S In The Hillcrest Shopping Center
The University of Kansas Theatre and the School of Fine Arts present LA BOHEME. An Opera by Puccini. (Sung in Italian)
Cantata nell'originale
Musical directing by GEORGE LAWNER
Stage directing by PIERRE LAROCHE
Prof Gets Grant
April 18, 19, 21, 22 at 8:00 p.m.
Matinee April 23 at 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre—Murphy Hall
TICKET RESERVATION
864-3982
Robert D. Moyer, KU associate professor of mathematics, has created a National Science Foundation for an additional year of work on a project entitled "Solvability of Equations and Index Theory."
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Those days are over. But not everybody realizes it.
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There was a time, fifty or sixty years ago, when a major corporation in America might expect profits of twenty-five cents on the sales dollar.
What would you call enormous?
In 1970, Fortune's Top 500 industrial corporations realized an average credit of about 4 cents on
$
General Electric fared slightly better than average. Last year, our profits amounted to about 5 cents on the dollar.
We are occasionally attacked, along with business in India, "oponotori oriented."
People argue that if social progress is to be made, business must make it. And that profits stand in the way of social progress.
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The business of business is not just business.
The purpose of a busi-
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A business must reflect society's needs. Economic, political, legal and moral, as well as social. It must change as society changes and, to some extent, influence those changes.
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GENERAL ELECTRIC
6.
Thursday, April 20, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Relays Decathlon Opens in Rain; Hill, Wedman Take Early Lead
By DAN GEORGE
Kansan Sports Writer
On a day better suited to picking up fallen cats and dogs than having a track meet, Gary Hill of Oklahoma ran in the 47th Kansas Relays decathlon Wednesday.
Gone into today's final five events, Hill had a total of 3,928 points, good enough for first place but only 23 more than runner-up. And the second-half point differential, Andrew Pettes is third with 3,885 points.
The events were marred by cold weather and intermittent showers. The rains began shortly after the 100-meter dash and at one point became so heavy that the contestants were forced to retreat to Allen Field House for the high jump.
Hill, who finished second in last year's decathlon gained an advantage early when he ripped off a 10.7 in the 108 meters, the meet's first event. That gave him 69%
Hill benefited also from strong showings in the long jump, shot put and 400-meter run. His 22-10% leap in the long jump was the decathlon's best.
COLORADO'S WEDMAN also had a fine first day. His best events were the shot put, where he led the field with a heave of 8-4/4, and the high jump, where he leaped 6-2/4.
- PETES recorded excellent marks in four of the day's five events and only a poor showing in the remaining one kept him up. He was right at 10.8 time in the 100 meters, a 48.6 in the 400 meters, and leaps of 22-8+3 in the long jump and 6-4 in the high jump. Each gained him 790 points or more. His 36-5 goal shot put, however, was good for only 539.
Novotny Promotes Early Ticket Sale
John Novotny, University of Kansas Athletic Union director has encouraged tickets to purchase tickets early for Saturday's session of the Kansas
An unexpected rush of about 2,000 students shortly before world record-holder Jim Ryun was scheduled to run the Glenn Cunningham Memorial Year in Rockwall, swamped ticket boards at Memorial Stadium. Novotny said.
This year, Novotny has arranged to open nine ticket booths—six on the west side of the stadium, three at the center, two on the other; only four boards last year.
That measure still wouldn't handle a rush of several thousand in a few minutes, Novotny said, so he is pushing an advance sale.
Tickets for Friday and Saturday will be on sale at the ticket office inside the East entrance to Alien Land. The prices are $m, 3 m, and 3 p.m. today and Friday.
Admission to Friday's Relays is free for KU students, 50 cents for grade school and high school students and $1 for adults.
For Saturday's session, admission is 50 cents for KU students, with a discount on other schools; school and high school students, $2.50; admission and $3 for reserved seats.
A minor surprise of the deacathon's initial day was the less than outstanding performance of Bruce Jenner of Graceland College. Jenner, the defending champion was a distant fourth, with 3,642 points.
Although Jenner said the first day was always terrible for him, he expressed sadness. "It was a bit messy."
running. He ran the 100 meters in 11.4 and the 400 meters in 51.5.
"After all the running I did, I can't understand why I'm not getting any faster," he said. "I got tired after the first game." He had given that time without any practice."
KU'S ENTRY, Marc Harris, was eighth with 3,345 after the first day's events. His best event was the long jump, where he turned 21-5/2 for 723 points.
One of the more interesting aspects of Wednesday's decathlon was the pulleyman. He was 40 years old and an insurance salesman from Birmingham, Ala., Mulke is attempting to break the masters world record of 5,161 in the decathlon.
Mulkey, who entered today's events with 107 points, said he was satisfied with his performance.
in doing what I wanted," he sat,
and going to try to score an eent 6,000 point.
This is the 40th decathlon for Mukley, who has won the Kansas Relay event eight times, the last in 1968. He has not run since that time and has done no special training for this year's decathlon. He was optimistic about today's events, though.
"I'll do better Thursday than I did today," he said. "The second day is technique day. The high jump becomes the pole vault and the dash becomes a hurdle run. I can t run as fast or jump as high now." He says that I will have an advantage in technique."
Mulkey, whose put shot put of 45-7½ was second best in the event, said he also thought he could pick up points in discus and javelin.
"But," he grinned, "if I beat anyone here this year, it ought to be shame on them, as lousy as I am. They ought to try something else, like maybe basketball."
The decathlon resumed this morning at 9 a.m. with the 110-meter hurdles. The final event, the 1,500-meter run, is set for 1:30 p.m.
Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THRONE
25 16 6
Offensive Tackle John Bryant, Left, Blocks Defender
Line has protected quarterback David Jaynes, right, well this spring.
Decathlon Standings
10 meters. 1. Ill., Hilliokia Christian
10.7, 2. Pethes, Oklahoma, 10.8, 3. (the
Atlanta, Northeast Missouri State and
Wadremont, Colorado, 11.0)
★★★
G. Gary Hill, Oklahoma Christian, 368; II. Westman, Colorado, 39; II. Anderson, Florida, 40; III. Greenback, Georgia, 46; II. Laurie Frank, South Carolina, 42; III. Mamberg, Texas, 16; III. Smabt, G. Greackway, Texas, 16; III. Barker, 32; I. Danny Orange Wyoming, 30; I. Andy Orange Wyoming, 30; II. Phelouk, unattached, 13; T. Tom
Long jump - 1. HILL Oklahoma Christian
2. HILL Oklahoma Christian 22.8%, 3.
Wedman, Colorado 28.4%, 3.
Spot put - Wedman, Colorado 47.8%, 3.
Sukhye,attachies 47.2% 3.
Hill University 47.1% 3.
Rovals Lose
High jump - 1. Westbrook, Colorado, 106, 2. Peterson, Oklahoma, 6-14a (3). The all-Elite Northeast Missouri State, Frank, South Dakota and Brian Jewett, Greeneland, 6a and 7a.
460 meters-1, Pettys, Oklahoma. 48.6; 2 Hill, Oklahoma Christian. 49.6; 3 Frank South Dakota State. 30.3.
"I think that our most basic change is the way we are protecting our passer Coach McCallum, and take the defensive man on at the line of scrimmage rather than letting him engage you," Buda said. "As for running plays, he has played them in every game we have for the past six years."
OAKLAND (AP) -- Reggie
Bullard breaks run as the Oakland A scored twice in the eighth inning to beat Kansas City 81 for a
60-59 victory.
"I think that right now with our people, this seems to be the best thing to do. We've had more money than we anticipated so far."
Maligned Line Shapes Up
'IT'S HARD for them to go out there every day and take the power he has the chance to make a big tack, recover a fumble or even to intercept a pass, but an opponent can always have a chance to gain recognition.'
By JIM SCHUMM
Kansan Sports Writer
Every football team in the country has a group of players who are usually among the biggest on the team, who are seidum recognized for the part they play in the team's success and who will be out when a play is not effective. They are the offensive linemen.
Buda said that the main difference between last year's line and this year's line extends to the personnel, teaching down to the personnel.
This year's offensive line coach Joe Spencer, who came to KU from a professional football team. He has made some changes that so
"It's a very hard position to play and very seldom do the job," said Nathan Parnes in the paper, but they sure deserve it. "Budd said in a recent interview. "They work just like us." But they just get only half the credit.
'Aother call would be 'gut.'
It tells the guard to go and get
the ball.
In a block involving the tackle
and the tight end the call would
- Also working with the linemen this year is Sandy Buda, a KU graduate who is starting his sixth year as a coach here.
"If we come to the line and see the defensive player in the guard play to the outside, then the guard calls 'tag.' This indicates that the guard is holding the gap and the guard will loop around and block the loose ball.
"It's a very complicated system that involves a lot of calls among the different linemen. In most instances, we have several plays that we can block as many as five different ways depending on the defense we see when we come to work with scrimmage." Buda said.
"A lot of people don't realize how much an offensive lineman has to learn. It's probably one of the best things in football," Fambrough said.
HEAD COACH Don Foley coaches an offensive lineman himself, note some of the handicaps that an offensive lineman has to work with.
BESIDES THESE limitations
Buda said, the complexities of the overall system are a handicap
When you play defense, you're allowed to use your hands if you want to strike them, but an offensive lineman has defeat a man without these skills.
"What makes it so difficult is that you're asking a man to do something that just isn't natural.
"Another technique that we are teaching the kids this year is the combination block. If there is a man in the gap, then we give both of our linemen the option of firing into the guy. If he slides into the gap, they can stop him. Man slips off the double team and blocks the loose linebacker.
This tells the two adjacent players to move their ball, both going to the half in each manner. The purpose of all this is to give our lineemen block angles on the ball.
"I think that one of the reasons our rapid improvements this year are so great for people. They are younger, not as experienced as last year, but they are much more confident."
"This is something that we haven't done in the past, not because we didn't know it about us," she said. "Kids could handle it." Buda ==>
As it shapes up this spring, the asl shape line consists of John Bardin's knapsack tackles, Jim Schumm and Roger Bernhardt at the guard positions behind the ball.
"We are blocking plays just
we are playing. We give them a lot more options,
whereas last year we said, 'This is
your man and you block him'
for the attack.'
"Another reason is that last we year we asked them to do some things they just weren't capable of doing.
Although an offensive lineman rarely does anything at one time to win a game, there are some rewards involved.
THESE ARE all newcomers to the starting positions. KU lost the entire starting interior line through graduation
"They have really picked it up very well so far."
"The reward is knowing that you were responsible for making a good block that enabled your back to make a big gain or a loss. Then you know that you did your job on pass protection, enabling the
quarterback to complete the pass." Fambrough said.
"Any time that your offensive game improves, you have to give most of the credit to those people up front," he said.
"We have been very pleased the spring with our pass protection program, scrimpage last Saturday, our running game in improved form."
IT'S VERY rewarding just to know that you had something to do with the success of the play.
Buda summed it up best when he said that the definition of a good back is a very good line.
TEXAS
Texas' Greg Hackney Grimaces After Putting the Shot
Kansas Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Hackney stood seventh in decathlon after first five events Wednesday in Kansas Relays
Sink Might Miss 6-Mile Today
Major Relay Races Start Friday
Whether or not Sink will defend his Kansas Rales title in the Julius Marks six-mile run this afternoon in Memorial Stadium could well depend on his thumb. The Bowling Green State University track team cancelled a game to Lawrence Wednesday.
Sink, who finished his
Relays Schedule
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
THE BURKE PLANETARY
1:30—Decathlon 1,500 meters
2—440 relay (junior college)
neliminaries
2:15—Distance medley relay (junior college) final
2:35----880 relay (junior college)
preliminaries
preliminaries
2.50—Julius Marks six-mile run
2. 50—Julius Marks six-mile run (open)
3:25-440 relay (junior college) final
4: 80-880 relay (junior college)
fcool
FRIDAY MORNING Field Events
preliminaries and final
9:30—Javelin throw (high school)
9-Shot put (high school) preliminaries and final
preliminaries and final
10—Long jump (high school)
preliminaries and final
8. 30-100 dash (high school) preliminaries
Dave Wattle, the star miler who is Bowling Green's key man in the longer relays, had a sore throat. Bowling Green decided to
so unless Sink made his own
trees he would have no chance to better his
Relays record of 28:42.6 when the
event is run at 2:50
8:40—100 dash (univ.-coll.)
preliminaries
The first major event, the four-
mile relay at 1:50 p.m. Friday,
shapes up as a potent one.
8:50—120 high hurdles (high school) preliminaries
BESIDES THE six-mile, this afternoon's schedule is devoted to junior college relay events. Junior colleges offer 440 and 880 relays will fill most of the afternoon. The junior college distance medley champion also
(university) preliminaries
preliminaries
9:10—Sprint medley relay
9—120 high hurdles (univ.-coll.)
preliminaries
university prelimaries
9:30-Sprint medley relay
(college) preliminaries
Defending champion Kansas State, which staved off Missouri
MISSUOI, HOWEVER, ran a 16:32 to win at Texas. The Tigers had placed second in 16:31, in last year's Rivals.
(college) preliminaries
9:50—Sprint medley relay (junior
Shane A. State, Missouri will bring a completely rebuilt team. Dave Rogles, Jerry Watson, John M. Kelley and Kelly Keller in the Texas Reliefs.
50- Spiral index perry (yukiro college) preliminaries
college) preliminaries
10:10—Sprint medley relay (high
school) preliminaries
Another Big Eight team, Oklahoma State, was within two tenures of a second K-State in that Texas Races relay. Charles Beatrigh, John Holdermank, John O'Brien, and Manek Manke are at 16.39.
Lutz holds the KU record in the with 207, 6 Seavacu, who will win with 239. 4 Stevens, 21. 1 Steep, the 440 man, has run the quarter-mile in 47.0, and the long-distance in 47.0.
10. 10—Sprint medley relay (high school) preliminaries
10. 30—440 relax (college)
Coach Bob Timmons has said he expects KU to approach a 3.18. Louisiana State won the Texas RELays sprint medley in 3.18.5 Last year's Kansas RELays sprint medley by Texas in a record 3.18.7
10:30-440 relay (college)
preliminaries
preminimaries
11—distance medley relay (high school) final
to break the Relays record by five seconds last year, will return with a team that has run within the league of last year's winning time.
10:45—880 relay (high school)
nreliminaries
11:15—880 relay (college)
preliminaries
Jerome Howe, Rick Hitchcock and John Corbin return from the squat that clocked a 16:30.4 mile rear. Joined by Clarend Vinson, you run the Texas Relies in 16:37.2 weeks ago.
The Masters Mile for men 35 and older will be run at 3 p.m. The only other open event is the Masters Mile with 400 burdens will follow at 3,25.
preliminaries
11:30—300 intermediate hurdles
two-mile title at Texas, and
Texas, which placed fourth in its own meet, are also expected to contend.
KU WILL enter Mark Lutz
Tom Scavuzzo, Phil Stepp
Rick Jacques in the sprint medley.
(high school) preliminaries 11;45—Cliff Cushman 440 hurdles
After the four-mile, finals will be run in the sprint medley for the junior college, college and university divisions.
1; 45- Cliff Cushman 440 hurdles (open)
Nehraska, which went for the
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday. April 26. 1972
7
Baseball Team Returns Home To Host Tigers
By DAN GEORGE
Kansas Sports Writer
"Beware . . . of the dog that does not bark."
Well, okay. Floyd Temple might not put it exactly that way. But that's the kind of thought that will be on his mind when his baseball team takes on Missouri this weekend in Lawrence
The Jayhawks, returning home
after road trips to Nebraska and
Colorado, head to the Tigers in
the Tigers in a 1:30 p.m.
doubleheader and a single
Saturday.
In Missouri, KU will face iam whom we record a conference war. A major is cause the pitching staff which, having given up 38 walks in 67 games, has been named the league's league. Tiger hurlers have also surrendered 78 hits and 53 runs.
But Temple isn't taking anything for granted.
"THEY'RE BETTER than the record indicates," he said. "We've heard of three, but you can't just say that because they're in last place."
One of Temple's concerns will be the Missouri offense Tiger Cats, who lead the average, fourth best among big Eight hitters, and teammates
Albrecht are not far behind with 344 and 333. As a team, the Tigers have scored 35 runs in nine games.
As usual, the Jayhawk coach will count on his pitching staff to beat Missouri. The KU mound will be 42 feet deep, and the ERA of 2.69, will be led by Bob Cox (3-2) and southpaw Steve Corder (4-1) who will start the Friday games. Either Bob Wolf or Willie Davis (4-2) will pitch at the Saturday contest.
With the Big Eight season
with the Big Eight season,
overall) and trails league-leading
Oklahoma by two games. At this
stage of the season, Temple
will be on the tour in January.
CATCHER DICK BADLEY and
pitcher-first baseman Wolf head the
Washington Nationals games, Bradley has a .444
average, and Wilt is hitting 353
"I thought our pitching against Colorado was 'outstanding,'" said Coach John Wendy Wild in the last game and we got a couple of bad breaks but, all in good time, they came out well.
"You get to looking ahead and that's when you get beat."
BOSTON (AP) — The Boston Celtics, faced with virtual leadership for the fourth season, rallied behind Jo White and Dave Covews for a 115-90 victory over the New York Knicks, who kept keeping their hopes in the National Basketball Association's Eastern Division.
The Celtics, who lost the first two games of the best-of-seven series, built a 55-47 halftime lead but then fell behind from behind by a score.
Jo Jo Keeps Celts Alive In NBA Eastern Playoff
Bill Bradley sparked a New York comeback in the third period, scoring 14 points. The Giants gave up two advantage and were ahead, 96-92, midway through the final. White hit on a basket and Cowens banged a jump shot to tie the score. But the leftfanded hook shot and a free
throw, sending the Celtics ahead to stay.
The Knicks trailed by just two points, with three rests, but red居ress on jumper from the key and the Celtics had things in their favor.
With the Knicks in foul trouble, the Celtics played it cool the rest of the way and New York was unable to close the gap. Bradley Hareman jumped up within one point, 103-102, with just over four minutes remaining.
While led the Celtics with 29 points while John Havlicek scored 13 rebounds. Cowens had 23 points and 16 rebounds, while Don
Bradley wound up with 29 points, one more than Walt Earl Monroe hit for 17. Jerry Gavin hit 14 and Dave Debussche息
ENGINEERING
Applications for officers to serve on the Engineering Council during 1972-1973 may be picked up in 111 Marvin. Positions are: President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Recording Secretary, and Corresponding Secretary. Applications must be returned by 2 p.m. Friday April 21. Voting will be April 24 and 25 in Learned Hall. For further information contact the Dean's office or Lee Knapp, Corresponding Secretary, at 843-6607. Note, you must be in engineering to qualify.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
JAYHAWKER TOWERS
KU
APARTMENTS
Five days
by the
K. U. Campus
ARTMEN
1603 West 15th
300
2 Bedroom
Apartments
Now Leasing for Summer and Next Fall
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
All Utilities paid
Auto parking included
Heated swimming pool
Tenant Storage Rooms on each Floor
Your own thermostat for heat and air conditioner
Two large units in each building
Incinerator dump on each floor
Modern kitchen with disposal
All-Brick walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and quiet
the elevators in each building
Complete laundry in each building Outside exposure for each room
Call 493-4795 for Appointment to see
Convenience - Comfort - Safety - Extras
The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing
lath tub, shower, two lavatories each apartment
Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
One day
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
each additional word: $.01
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI 2-
8508.
Accommodations, goods, service and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered under regard to color, or enrolment.
25 words or fewer: $1.00
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them.
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
you're at a duvantage. A
Kitten is "the analysis of
thing—"New Analysis of Western
Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 412
West 14th. 412
NORTHISLE COUNTRY SHOP, 707
Bridges Antique, used furniture,
collectible items, old wood cooking and
tools, antiques, bicycles, stoves, books, old
photograph records, home grown pops-
pular items, 9 to 13 days. Herb shop
opened 9 to 13 days. Herb shop
Poultry-shampoo little Hungarian sheepdog puppies. AICP bloodinons, 35-40. English-Poultry-shampoo puppies. $35-193.798-298. McLouth, Kansas: 4-26
1967 Triumpth Tiger Cult 200 cc. good condition, $30 or best offer. Call Mike at 842-9098 after 6. 4-20
65 MGB roadster in top condition.
58,000 miles. Engine overhauled at
43,000. $900. 842-2473. 4-21
Air Force Mesh Dress-New-size 42
-$75 -812-9096 4-20
Michigan St. Bar-B-Q-Quad $15 Mish
plate $14.95 Bar-B-Q-Quad $15 Mish
plate $14.95 Bar-B-Q-Quad $15 Mish
plate $14.95 Large Rug $18.95
plate $14.95 Large Rug $18.95
plate $14.95 Large Rug $18.95
plate $14.95 Large Rug $18.95
TROMHONE - King 3-B with B-
attachment; $45,99 new, will sell for
$25. Excellent condition, used little
Call Mike Hulmei 82-556-4
4-20
Amplifier—Ampeg BT-15 bass amplifier
extension cabinet with 2" speakers,
extension cabinet with 2" speakers,
sound systems wah wah pedal, and
Must Sell Stabilizer.
842-7643. 4-20
KENWOOD 3130 AIM-FM stereo receiver 10 w per channel rms Best offer, 864-2952. Bottom
Leather-up - RED RIDER - Leather
up. Riders have miscellaneous custom work.
Reasonably priced — 1000 Otho.
On Monday thru Saturday
4:30 PM
Four 13" chrome rims, will fit Datsus etc . . . , perfect condition-Call 4-26 479-8788
LIKE NEW-20 -12 in. Deep Crater SS
wheels & 2 G (C) 15 in. Gd. Yr. Poly
pires, Call Jim, 842-103. 4-20
BARE FIND—191.1Kawasaki 250 SX
Excellent condition with 1500 miles
Selling cheap Need gas money for
convertible Call 842-420-4
842-444-
AKC Irish Setter Puppies. 842-5287.
4-31
Natural cosmetics for women & men
of all ages. Specialized household
products, for shoppers like
distributor. Free demonstrations.
Hair. 842-425-6-00 p.m. 4-25
Hair. 842-425-6-00 p.m. 4-25
1946 Chevrolet Impa 5S, Post-psat
4-speed truck $22 cu in deep navy
blue exterior; good condition. Con-
tainer's room. 702-831-6288,
stairs entrance. 702-831-6288
Save money—sew your own cloth.
Used Singer straight stitch. $25.842.
6810. 4-21
Beautiful little red Spire convertible
1967, MXM . Absolutely perfect en-
closure. Perfect for all levels.
Cover $500 firm. Peter Dart. 842-5500
844-3911
4-21
Three days
Stereo KLH, dual turntable, Kenwood
amp. In very good condition.
842-3785. 4-21
Pro Bibexes; 35 pro bibes in shoes in stock at the Boxwood. **Poult:** The Poet-Poult, POULT-100, POULT-200, POULT-300. **Poet-Poult:** The Poet-Poult, POULT-100, POULT-200, POULT-300. **Alai**, *Campanization*, and *Proteas*; **Ride-On Base**, *Bike Shop*. 160 Lbs. 4.28 kg.
Members of our Karaas-BOKONKON
BECOON *Testing* .& he said
that the Karaas-BOKONKON
-Uded clothes e.tc. Variauss-Vaiae
-NOVOKOB, BIKONB 8:49m
Thermal, NOVOKOB
1946 Dodge it ton charm . . . and it runs too $115 drives it away Also,
'64 VW Bug $500: 843-6464 4-21
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Ten-speed bicycles: Pugi, Atala, Kona. Equip with a rear disc brake. Azekine, Sekile, Perlore, Also 3. Avent two hundred bicycles in stock. Avvent is expert in export and cheap. Ride up to £180.
1958 2 bdmr. Great Lakes Mobil
400 Series w/ storage. Warranty,
wherer,衣ter, stove equipment,
carpeting. Occupancy for summer or
fall. $1950. Phone 842-3852 after 5
pm.
1969 Alpine Sunbeam G.T. needs engine
payment $600 or take over payments
and we give you $200 cash.
Call 842-6244 at 5:30 p.m. 4-24
26" bicycle, 5 speed, flat tire, good
derailleur $20 Call 843-3955 4-20
each additional word: $.02
Guitar for sale $1,950 Grew Humbling-h-6 -new (steel) strings, great condition with case. Contact Betty. Desk: Box 822 Darm desk: Box 822
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
1971 Honda 350-SL. Excellent condition, extras included. Must sell for best offer - Call Dennis, 843-7454 4-24
1966 Chevy Van for sale. Painted green in January 71. Has rear seat, carpeted and installed in asking $450. Call 44-283-8028 after payment.
1965 Volkswagen Bug, new tires,
need rebuild engine $100 or best
offer. Call 842-9354 by 6 p.m. 4-24
BSA 250 Goldstar. Not one year old
—used only last summer. Aking $700.
Call 843-2018 after 6 p.m. 4-24
1967 VW bus, good condition, but
sell. Best reasonable offer, 843-8108
4-21
'70 Suzuki TC-125, 950 ml., w/Hei-
met, $375, 842-5402. 4-24
1970 Kawasaki, 250c.c., good condition. must sell. Best reasonable offer 843-8108 4-21
PANASONIC stereo model SS-7000 72
watts AM-FM multiplex one year full
warranty, bought overseas, will pass
savings on you to 842-3540. 4-21
1948 Ford School Bus Camper, simkose,
sleepes 3 comforts. Rebuilt
engine & new brakes $800 842-3540
4-21
25 words or fewer: $1.50
25 additional words: $1.50
1959 Ford Pick-up, with custom cam-
apter, runs well, ank, ice box, carpet,
2-bunks, $700 842-6686 4-21
% MG Rail Readers-Unfortunately! You can read a blue body, luggage carrier, both and is tied to hamm along with. It is also a reliable a retailed book. Call RR 843-7022.
MUST SELL—1965 Triumph Bonneville, 650ce. Runs good, Call Jim at 843-8549. 4-21
Guitar--Martin D-35, acoustic six-
string. Hardshell case. 4 years old.
Good condition. Call 843-5113 after
6:30 p.m.
4-25
1971 Kawasaki 500, excellent condition,
$800, Call 843-405-051
4-25
1969 YAMAHA 125 cc twin, very good condition, low mileage, new knobby on rear, $310, luggage rack and helmets available. 842-0002. 4-25
YARD SALE 9-5 Sat and Sun.
April 22 & 23. Antiques, Books,
Records, Clothes, Mice. 4:26 Cedarwood
of Montsant Hill. 4-21
MUST SELL. Fender Jacket with
access and casestorage. K&L Comm-
mission. Also for Macron 911 must
be acquired. Also for Porche 911 must
be acquired. Must Call 842-3166.
4-25
2 students want to buy nice 2 bed room mobile home—Cash. Call 843-3287. 4-25
1971 Toyota Celica Yellow with black vinyl roof, mug wheels Must sell immediately. Excellent condition. Mint-New. 1142 IHBE 8349. 1, 843-6849. 4-25
1967 Firebird, 326—3-speed. Ampel
tapes and tippes included. Runs great
and looks good $1,100 or best offer.
Call Rog at 843-5970 4-21
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court
1970 Honda 350 SL great bike on and off the road. Excellent condition $800 or best offer. Call Dave, 841-2581, 4-25
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
1970 Kawasaki 175cc Dirt Bike, less than 5,000 miles. $375. Call Russ at 842-2198. 4-21
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
The season of leisure has arrived. We have hammocks, French Foreign League bandana, Viet Nam Jung Boo's, French baseball bats, Flower Surplus, Viburnum 4-12.
Pickens Auto Parts
Wet-balanced stateroom computer
tyseware
S II Sharatec cartoon
S II Sharatec cartoon
batter room tiger recorder
culinary
batter room tiger recorder
culinary
batter room tiger recorder
culinary
Great laughs while frolicking king size water bed, liner and frame: $40 with the Carnegie executive with carnegie-ware - $40.58-$58.98 4:26 6:00 p.m.
56 VW for sale. Runs good. Call 842-3100 mornings or evenings. 4-25
LAW STUDENT DIGS WALKING
WILL SELL 67 V W EXCELLLENT
SHAPE INSECT & OUT CALL 842-
5647 AND MAKE OFFER
4-25
Model 725L-81, Roberts reel to reel and cartridge type recorder Lake Use-Will sell for $240. Also stereo albums, cheap, 842-5393. 4-25
Parting out 1906 Olds 2 Dr. Dyren 87
Dryden 35 Olds 3 Dr. Dyren 87
Rebuild 4108 - 780 Two级 line Holeley
Rebuild 4108 - 780 Three级 line Holeley
Tubeless 4 Ply Nylon Tubeless XLD
XLD Red lines 5 Likes, Like 45
855-1899.
$975 NORTON Cafe Rafer, Excellent,
$1675, 1959 Ford pickup ½" to $275,
see at 900 Oak St. afternoons and
early evenings only. 4-24
For Sale or trade for pickup, 1965
Ford Galaxie 502 2 door hardtop, W4.
Air. Automatic powder blue with
black interior trim.
2401 W 5th, Apt. 411. 4-24
843-9694
Tennis racket Docket Classic 4.5/8
Strung, String up with red violet
super gut, new Bancroft grip Fine
addition Call 812-643-646
A.A.U.W. sale of books and mis-
cellaneous art objects. Community
building, 4-8 p.m. p. April 21 and 9-12
m. april 22.
Practically good new electric Smith Corona elite typewriter for sale. Less than 15 hrs use. First $90 take it *A*2671 or *B*482-4444. Ask for Dick
B girl's Raleigh 3-speed bicycle
Call 843-6556 if interested—ask for Phyllis
4-26
THE MERCANTILE
Rockledge Villa Apartments. Limited
rent to students. Some students can have two bedroom furnished. p.m., with all utilities paid
p.m., mkt. with utilities paid
m.p., 843-7731 4-20
TAPES 8-1-track. $2, 4-track. $1.25
Also bargains on taptie players, tape decks, record players and cassettes
Buy-Sell Trade. Traders. 822 Mass
SAVE ON BOOKS - used paperbacks only 15c PLAY-USED now $2 price Money to loan Traders, 822 Mass 4:26
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
FOR RENT
CAMERAS. Polarisoid, camera at $5. Also 35 mm, movie cameras, matamatics, projectors. Money to Loan Traders, 822 Mass. 4-26
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK EGGS CHEESE
COLLEGE HIL MANOR now showcased furnished and unfurnished apartments start at $129. Charge to cumnium 174 W 19th, Apt 8B or call 855-352-1620.
Dired to trying to find that ideal apt.
For one of our four locations,
available 1.2 & 3 bpt, apt;
in various locations and location for
McGrew Agency, 901 Kentucky; 842,
Maryland; 856, Maryland.
When you're hurt, you're hot. When you're hungry, you feel uncomfortable comfort at UNIVERSITY MENTS. Enjoy out pool & close meetings at MENTS. Enjoy out pool & close meetings at MENTS. Apt IR 1529 W 8th phone set.
LOOK WHAT SANTRE APTS HAVE TO OFFER? Summer rates, swimming pool. A C. Free cable-TV and DVD station. 192 lead. 1832-2116.
MODERN APARTMENTS. Furnished and unfurnished one bedroom from 810-310-110, plus features. Near amenities include next fall dove, B43, 842-684, B43-160-161
Large, two bedroom home home mobile and lot text paid. Mobile and lot text paid. Priced for single person Under $100 Phone Nights nags 842 or Carol URN 414
SUMMER RENTALS. Live close to campus this summer in a room, house, or apartment (conservatory) located at 1059 E. 42nd St. Louisiana. 843-761-1401, 843-132-52
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
Apartments for rent. Available May 15, summer rates, air conditioning range $50-$85. Call 842-9153 at 6:00 p.m. i. p. 19 W. i. 40th. 4-21
Tony's 66 Service
Room for rent: Need girl to share house. $5. Utilities included. Available May 1. 842-5758 4-20
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right next door to campus: 102 Mississippi University bedroom apartments available. Aug 3, 2024 to Sep 1, 2025 maturities available as end of semester dates. w.c. www.summercampus.org w.c. w.e.f. springtraining.w
FINE SAUSAGES
4 bedroom house on edge of campus.
For summer at reduced rate or
lease. Call 843-5838 or 843-6111. 4-20
starting service
Walk to KU. 2 bdm apartment, carpeted, central air, appliances, parking. Call 843-5899. 4-20
2434 Iowa V12-1008
NOW IS THE TIME TO INVESTKE
1972, while collection is still available.
Lawrence, 842-2348, or 1627-A Harvard
Lawrence, the best built location,
and Lawrence's best builder.
Avalon, 9th & 11th; Availon; Harvard Square, Iowa & Harvard; and Afarge, New York. The cost of living in one of these handsome apartments is $285 per month. Spacious apartmentes and you will be more to have a dishwasher, central heating, and many features plus many more features.
Townhouse duplex, 2 br.' bse, ele. kit,
formal d. fully carpeted, A/C, C/patio.
garage, $130 mo. Call 842-9159 after
5.00 p.m.
Sublease for summer, apt. one bedroom, A/C, private, close to campus, furnished, $130, 1025 Indiana, 842-7160, Apt. E 4
Two bedroom, furnished apartment for $130. Air conditioned, stove refrigerator. No utilities paid Call 842-5834 after 2 and weeks.
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWWEAR
You can enjoy life in New York by enrolling in a law firm or an apartment complex. Call Me, for questions or visit or email Harold Road Harvard, 914-763-5020, MAXX Museum, Apt. 400
To KU male nice apt. close to Union.
May work out all or part of rent.
Available now, phone 843-8534. 5-9
SUMMER RATE - Now leasing fur-
nished apartment, sleeping room with
or without kitchen privileges for
one person. New KU and TU tow-
ers: 813-7567.
Luxurious, spacious town house for nine. Number three bedrooms,死生双胞胎、豪车、豪车、豪车、豪车
Two studio apartments. Quest, furnished, air-conditioned, sleeps 8. Business man or graduate student. Business man or graduate student. Available. Male. Mail CALL 830-8901. Male. Call 830-8901.
Lawrence's first and only REAL accessory store
For Sublease, Furnished. Stouffer
Place apt. May 20-Aug. 20, date's
flexible. Must be married and attending
summer school. Call 842-6510. 4-26
NOTICE
KAT Suzuki
Barn Partied! Now available for
their first time in Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry.
Apple Valley Farm is cooler and cooler plenty of parking.
Call Colle Brose after 6 a.m. to 8 a.m.
Colle Brose after 6 a.m. to 8 a.m.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. John Wells, 842-5220
Women's Alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-7267, 9-50-3-45
WEDDING INVITATIONS — PRICES
printed only $45. $45 for free
catalogs and samples to Arnaud Apen-
el East, Main Harold, Richmond, Idaho
THE MIDDLE EAR comes to law-
rence. Stereo components at cost
save you money. Money call 863-5843
Decide. All manufacturers. 4-24
INFANT DAY-CARE B42. 842-7694. Professional child-care for
children 1 mo to 42 mo. Full or part-time.
Facility. Specialized environment. E-S
5-5
Lovely liftened apartment, with central air, for 2 men, very close to campus, available May 2019; for man and or fall. Phone 813-680-244
FOLK DANCES come from many places and are given to generation to generation. In the experience of doing these dances with children, you can reach 7:10 pm at Potter Lake Park. For more information, call (864) 329-2500.
VOX BASS, AMP $1 MFLORAL,
MERCURY MEDAL $2 MILK
KEYS ENGINEER VONNE-
LAR GRAPHIC BOOK TRADEMAMP
BOULET TRADEMAMP CLOTHES DORKONON 819 Vernor.
SUBLZASE-2 - 2 bdt 2 bath 2 unfurn.
SUBLZASE-2 - 2 bdt 2 bath 2 unfurn.
Alcoholic, kitchen with
dishwasher. A-C Cloth. Pool.
Balcony. Dishwasher. Moor
per. Water pad. Call R825-8-5
SUBLZASE-2 - 2 bdt 2 bath 2 unfurn.
SHAARA APTS 626. Schwarz. Clean
bath, kitch. Alk., A/C Water. Maint
rent from lot or 12 of May.
Cabin, enclosed. Clean. Mail
@ 841-290-126 after 6 p.m.
4-24
GIRLLE - WOMEN? Are you the model Call Morna for tfr evaluations? Yes, call Morna for Training营. Call Morna for Frisk Atkinson for Training营. Call Morna for Frisk Atkinson for Training营. 842-0562 or 841-2315.
Dealer
HONESSE BOARDED - EXCELLENT
FULL STALL CARE - CLOSE IN -
STABLE - AISO ENGLISH SADDEL
FOR SALE 842-166-3
4-25
Webster's Mobile Homes
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
Your Complete Service Dealer
Ample Park Spaces Available
FOUND—BROWN GLASSES — size looks maybe female, but who knew? Found a week ago Sunday just West of Strong. Call M2-4525. 4-25
Ample Park Spaces Availabl
3409 W. 61h 842-7700
Just West of the Drive-in Theatre
Typewriters and Sewing Machine-
Name Brands at Bargain Prices. Money
to Loan. Traders. 822 Mass. 4-26
WHY RENT?
RIDGEVIEW
843-8499
GUNS Wintheater Remington, Cur-
sure on off hones model 32 shot
revolvers arm sale selection
revolvers arm sale Guns
Money loaned on guns. Trades-
298
WANTED
Mobile Home Sales
843 8499
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
To meet people who read the Urantia Book, call 842-7631 4-20
OVERSEA JOB, FOR STUDENTS
A information and incubation specialist.
Work with Shipping. Free info.
info@oversea.jobs.com
15671, San Diego, California
92118
We buy used books, also old Play-
boys and Pent-House magazines in
good condition! ^1 Call #423-156- 5-9
MCHC
1 of 2 people to sub-le住 apartment for
$35.10 am; furnished 2 blocs from
Fraser, Call 864-1252 or
864-
1218
TOYOTA
Experienced Draftwork will do the works work such as Graphs, Flow Charts and Illustrations and prompt the user to complete the Ask for Renault Henckel. 4-21
FAMILYHUSE- Wanted to rent. respondable KU students with references willing to make repairs. Negotiate loan for one year or up to 495,913.
CSC
Two-Mathmats() to share spaces,
bath-mat, spal-devel apartment
for summer and maybe fall in West
Lawrence-Call for .485-8258 4-25
Wanted. Resume to share 1 bed-
room apartment next fall. For info
call Pnl at 843-6607
4-26
2300 w. 27in Lerr.
TYPING
1. female roommate for summer and fall to share 1 bedroom; in couple.
Rent $45/mo . till: Call 842-4891
891 after 7 p.m.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Sports Cars Inc.
Competition
Experienced in typing themes, dissemination of material and have electric typewriter with pen type. Acquire and prune fonts. Req's Bachelor's degree or related Phone 843-8544. Mr Wright
Typing in my home. IBM Seetric
Prompt accurate work. Experienced
Call 811-2556 5-5
Thews, term papers, typed accurately and promptly IBM *Sellect*, your choice of type styles. Also editing at location: Mt. Raina, 842-709-6250, 842-505.
*TYPING - TIRES - DISSERTATIONS - MISCELLANEOUS WORK*
On each壶 select with pie size *pice*
Tim Troutel, 2499 Huge Cup-S
812-1406
(913) 842-2191
Fast accurate typing Reasonable calls. Call: 842-2053. 4-20
telephone:
FASHION, EFFICIENT WORK. CARBON
FIBER, used like books with
literature for legal papers, will check
letters and grammars. CARBON
4734 4-56
Jobs are available at national parks, hotels and resort areas. You will have to be able to only be able to handle the first 100 jobs Mail $5 to jpimorganindia.com or email 4782 for information. If you write your resume, write your, yes $5 will be refunded.
HELP WANTED
TEACHERS WANTED TEACHERS
Southwest Teachers' Agency, Box
1308 Alpinepine, NM 76106. "Our
Bonded and Biled team"
N A I A
5-8
Two chicks wanted for Chase Concert. Tickets furnished. Call 864-2828. 4-21
Now taking job applications for full-time jobs pay $40,000 per month. Pay work outright at Minneapolis. No experience necessary. Job with Warrington College. Job with Tulsa College. 719-852-6600, Katie Roberts
565 to 585 per WRP PART TIME. Use individuals at home in your spare time. Provide equipment for individuals with GOOD handwriting and provide them with their envelopes. For further information contacting opportunities with these companies, P.Q. Box 497, Crawfordville, VA 23014, P.O. Box 497, Crawfordville, VA 23014.
LOST
Small white terrier with brown spots.
Wearing a red collar. Very, very friendly. Very important to family.
Reward offered. Please call 843-701-6250
Lost- Male cat, short hair, black with white chest and white hair while glass was broken in a month. Kentucky. 842-8627, 1130 Kentucky. Keep it. 4-26 Kitten.
12 or 13 men's shifts are lost at the latham on the 1901 and Louisiana. Reward for their return Please call 842-872-9752 or arrangements. 4-24
PERSONAL
Kauai, Hawaii. Want to get acquainted with students from this island. Call 843-6850. Cal 420
All kinds of love make the world go
beyond. Gay Liberation now meets on
Thursday. 7 p.m., 1234 Ovad, Seed-
ing and annual Spirit Day. Gay
Day 4-28.
MISCELLANEOUS
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale—Sizes 8-10, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics. Galerie Bridal, 910 Kentucky.
JOB'S ON SHIPSS
MEN. WOMEN.
Perfect summer job or career.
No experience required. Exce-
sive pay. Worldwide travel.
Send $2.00 for information.
SeaFax, Box 1239-KF, Seattle,
Washington 98111
4-26
1000
You find the greatest things in the
Call today!
UN4-4358
8
Thursday, April 20, 1972
University Daily Kansan
'La Boheme' Production Done Capably, Delicately
By MARILYN N. KING Kansan Reviewer
"The La Bohene" is one of the most often produced operas ever written and continues to delight audiences with its simplistic but beautiful music and unpretentious arias.
The composer of the opera, Giacomo Puccini wrote in the late Romanic style, and did not depend on rich musical embellishments to decorate his operas. Instead, he composed a work in which he used ebbed gracefully and sounded deceptively easy to sing.
The KU production of "La Boheme" is not perfect, but it is great. It combines competence, and should reach even professed opera haters. The only real drawback is the set design, which is a bit sparse and colorful. Abstract toothpick-house buildings and raw wood do not successfully convey the old, charming aesthetic of the Latin Quarter of Paris.
PIERRE LAROCHÉ, a visiting professor of theater, has shown great sensitivity in his directing. Even while working with each piece which demonstrates a thoroughness of thought and preparation on the part of Laroche. The blocking is good, the acting is excellent, and the scenes work well.
Three of the four principals give very fine performances. Stephen Robinson as Rodolo, the struggling writer, has a fine tenor, and though he strains to hold his high notes, he projects
well and is careful not to drown out Mimi in their duets. Rebecca Hayes, a wisp of a girl with a haircut, wrote a book about the consumptive heroine who loves and loses Rodolo. This is one of the most important and there should be many more.
THEN there is Antonio Perez, assistant professor of voice, with a bartonite that is absolutely thrilling. He sings Marcelo with a lusty power that is comical then real sustenance of the opera.
Paula Plumlee's Musetta, the flirtatious femme fatale who spurs Marcelo only to take him back, is not the lively couquette of the soprano. It comes across as a hard, jaded woman with no warmth. Musetta enjoys breaking hearts for the fun of it; Miss Plumlee does it with a vengeance. Her voice does not sound too strong, but her part is drowned out by the orchestra or other singers. "Musetta's Waltz," undoubtedly the most beautiful and famous aria from the opera is a letdown that lacks lilt and the tessing of the part of Musetta requires
COSTUMES FOR the production are unpretentious, and the lighting techniques make up for what the sets lack. The set is well-performed with well-performed organized chaos, except for the images of stick-figure soldiers that are projected on the proscena to mimic the movements of technique does not fit and appears absurd, and the soldiers
look like an invasion of ant in imaginary lands. But the audience simply let the audience imagine the passing military regalia, and leave Marshall McLuaud out of it.
"LA BOHEME" is a good opera to cut one's teeth on. The story line is easy to follow, and the libretto is sung in Italian, the music fits the moods of the audience. This really lost in the omission of translation. This is a beautiful opera.
Correction On Kansan
It was incorrectly reported in Wednesday's Kanasan that 12,000 acres of land containing St. Mary's College, Leavenworth, was owned by the school. On the land returned to the Pottawattam们 were 12 buildings which made up the old St. Mary's College, St. Mary's, Kan., in Pottawattam county, a college for training Jafar students 1831 to 1867. The Jesuit college was moved to St. Louis 1968.
The radio-TV-film department at the University of Kansas probably has one of the top six universities in the country, according to Peter Dart, associate professor of radio TV-film, journalism, speech and music.
Dart, who was a professional filmmaker before he started teaching, worked for Fidelity Films in Dallas for about a year, as well as for several advertising agencies and production companies. He said that lately he has been able to much film work as he used to.
By ROGER FULK
Kansan Staff Writer
"I made a decision to write instead. I'll probably get back into filmmaking in a few years," he said.
IN THE PAST five years, the program has tripled while the number of faculty members has remained the same. Dart said he thought more administrative budget might be needed
Dart expressed concern about whether the radio-TV-film department would be able to maintain its high standing.
"Film is an aspect of the radio TV-film program, but there is no
Dart said KU, unlike San Francisco State where he taught for a while, really had no separate film department.
Prof Rates Film Dept. High
DART SAID students started at the bottom, learning basic principles of lenses, cameras, editing and sound. In the advanced course, the students do more advanced production work. DART said, a student ought to produce his own films.
According to Dart, when students take the job of making a film for an organization, such as the athletic department, the students assume all responsibility for that production. Dart said he would like to see more involvement in film production.
The job market for radio, TV, film majors is varied. Dart said. Jobs for director, photographer, editor and other related jobs in broadcasting are limited. Job opportunities in the field of broadcasting are quite a bit better, especially if a student has a very strong minor in business. Dart said. Job opportunities far off sharply in the TV industry.
Dart said students taking film courses could expect to invest a lot of money in them. Basic production courses are expensive, he said, and students in advanced courses must either find funding or provide it themselves. For example, a half-time thesis for a Masters thesis would probably cost at least $1,500.
KU Speech and Drama Names Patton Chairman
Bobby R. Patton has been appointed to a three year term as chairman of the department of
C. R. DURAN
film department as such. The program is broadly based in several aspects." he said
Bobby R. Patton
Campus Bulletin
TODAY
English Poetry Reading 4 p.m., Forum
Room
Patton will succeed William A. Conboy, who will devote full time to teaching and research.
- w - walking 1. p.m. for
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- d - Department Dinner; 4. p.m.
- m - Eating Buffet;
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- k - Tuva Department; 6.30 p.m.
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- e - East Amah Study Dinner; 6.30 p.m.
- c - Class Officer Meeting; 6.30 p.m.
TODAY
English Boston Poetry
speech and drama at the University of Kansas starting July 1.
DART SAID a broadcasting graduate of the radio, TV film program would, in most cases, have to serve an apprenticeship with the station. If you could get a job at a larger one. This is because the larger stations want the new man to make mistakes, which he is bound to make, somewhere else he works for them, he said.
Proof that the program does what it sets out to do is the percentage of alumni who have been successful in getting jobs. Dart
Patton has been instrumental in revamping the fundamental speech curriculum to include topics from all of our discussion at the University
The jobs are in all areas of audio-visual media. The vicepresident of the American Broadcasting Corporation, a CBS corespondent, five play-by-play sports announcers, several radio
For four years Patton served as director of the speech and drama department of Music and Art Camp, a summer workshop for high school students.
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Chalmers Senses Anxiety over War
Senate Academic Affairs Committee: 8:30 p.m. International Room.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said in an interview Wednesday that he sensed the reaction of the University of Kansas community to the North Vietnam as one of "dismay."
The escalation of the Indochina war in the past week has caused many people to believe Kansas students as to the impact this action will have on univ-
*This (the bombing) does not begin to have the same type of violence as Chalmer's in reference to the invasion of Cambodia and the war in Vietnam.*
station managers, film production company owners, and news directors were radio, TV, film students at KU.
In response to the Student Senate's special meeting tonight, he asked for the resolutions, a resolution to block the appearance of Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan, next week because he was speaking. He said he considered the idea "absurd." Dole has spoken out in support of the renewed benoim resolutions.
Concerning the recent controversy about the proposed recall of two members of the University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx), Chalmers said he was "puzzled."
Based on his understanding of the reasons for the recall positions aimed at David G. Moore, Chairman of the Board of Scott, Lawrence senior, Chalmers he was not sure of the justification for the recall of Mr. Moore as a member of special committees appointed by Chalmers.
Chalmers said the University was an atmosphere where all ideas could be expressed. He
Sixty-eight per cent of the graduates since 1952 are currently working or have worked in the field of broad-based education required by Seventy-five per cent of those persons received their masters degree from KU are also working in the field. Some of them work for advertising companies; others work for themselves or in other areas of audiovisual media.
referred to the speech given by Abbie Hoffman.
Campus police claim to have solved a case involving five incidents of exhibitionism in the Watson Library Reading Room, John Thomas, director of Traffic and Security, said Wednesday.
Thomas said the suspect was apprehended in the library. Tuesday afternoon, but that no arrest was made.
Grad Makes Opera Debut
and completed his master of music degree at KU in 1967.
Police Solve Exhibitionism
Holloway appeared in musicals and operas with the KU Dance Company. He been associated with the Kansas City Lyric Opera Company.
David Holloway, a University of Kansas alumnus, made his debut with the New York City Opera Company April 14. Holloway sang the leading role of Guglielmo in "Cosi fan tatu."
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Holloway, a former instructor of voice at KU, received his bachelor of music degree in 1964
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Sports Section Features Color
See Relays Section
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
82nd Year, No.127
Read Activism's History On Campus
See Relays Section
Friday, April 21, 1972
KU Vets Make Bid for $10,000
By HAL RITTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Sixteen more student organizations or student-related groups were questioned Thursday as the Finance and Auditing Committee of the Student Senate held its fourth night of hearings.
The largest budget request came from the Campus Veterans. That group asked for $10,258 after receiving $1,775 this year.
Ed Bruns, Leawood freshman and president of the organization, said the Campus Veterans had not received funds until last December, making the new request the first for a full fiscal year.
BRUNS SAID that when the first request was made he had not known if the group would last and the funds were "just to get the thirst rolling."
The Concert Course Series was a larger request than the Campus Veterans, but its funds have already been provided by the Senate's activity fee apportionment enactment.
According to the enactment, the series will receive 80 cents per student per semester or an estimated $26,065 in fiscal 1973.
Other groups that requested funds were the Association of Mexican-American Students, $8,372; Kansas Latinamericanist, a monthly publication by KU students in conjunction with the Center of Latin American Studies, $290; Oread Daily, $5,618.
The KU Handball Club asked for $520;
Engineering Council, $2,600; Ombudsman
Office, $1,291; Graduate Association of America Studies Students, $75; Humar Relations Committee, $1,200; Undergraduate Social Work Organization, $300.
The Law Students Social Action Group requested $2,215; People to Ube, $4,397; Slavic Club, $565; KU Bands, $2,962; American Institute of Aero and Astronautics. $445.
After meeting from 6:30 to 11 p.m. the past four nights, the committee will hold shorter meeting tonight at 6:30 with earphones scheduled to end at 9 p.m.
The committee will meet at 8 a.m. Saturday and meet again Sunday as it prepares recommendations on each budget request to aid the Senate in its budget meeting Wednesday night.
In Monday's sessions, 13 organizations requested a total of $59,599. Tues. ten groups requested $24,664. On Wednesday 15 requests, totalling $164,408.40, were made. Thursday's requests from 15 groups totalled $38,705.
The amount requested so far in the four sessions of the Finance and Auditing Committee meetings is $286,337.35.
Awbrey Backs Protest Resolutions
. Senate veteran pleads case to representatives
Student Senate Backs Protest
By CATHY SHERMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
As a protest against the continued U.S. involvement in Vietnam and the U.S. escalation of the bombing at Saigon, the Student Union in a special session Thursday night, passed three resolutions calling for the immediate withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Vietnam and supporting any peaceful and unarmed accommodation at the Kansas Saturday.
The resolutions also directed the student body president or any other office of the student senate to read the resolution calling for the termination of U.S. citizenship and the deem to the assembly attending the speech to Sen. Robert Dole on April 27, 1972.
The first resolution, passed by a roll call vote 65-8 with 3 abstentions, is to be presented to the Kansas delegation to Congress and to President Nixon. It is to be read during the protest at the Kansas Relays and before the Dole speech.
THE FIRST RESOLUTION calls for the immediate cessation of the air war and the withdrawal of all economic and military forces to the South Vietnamese government.
It asks that President Nixon recognize the self-determination of the Vietnamese
people. It also asks that President Nixon comply with the Articles of the Geneva Convention and the Mansfield Amendment.
The resolution also asks that "President Nixon no longer ignore 71 per cent of the American people who are in favor of a change in government," and commitment, in any form, in Indochina.
Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior and student body president, called the special session of the Senate in response to a report of the Senate that he dealt with the anti-war resolutions.
Dillon, who proposed the resolution with Ed Bruns, Leawood freshman and Vietnam Veteran said that the purpose of the resolution was to affirm the Senate's opposition to the war.
DELLON SAID that "my feeling is that the Student Senate is not the place to voice opinions on national issues," he thought that enough student Senators and students had expressed interest in protesting the amendment to the law, the instrument of the Senate's opposition to the war.
"We ought to deal with this issue," he said, "if it has any effectiveness at all."
For some opposition, the second resolution called for planned protest at the Kansas Relays, passed in a roll call vote, 49-19 with 8 abstentions.
N. Viet Troops Sweeping to Saigon
David Awbrey, Lawrence graduate student urged the Senate to support any planned and peaceful war protest at the Kansas Relays.
SAIGON (AP)—Waves of enemy troops in overpowering strength seize a 50-mile stretch of Highway 1 in eastern Cambodia and threat to Saigon, 40 miles down the road.
1970 Burning of Union Remains A Mystery
He expressed concern at the reluctance or some Senators to discuss or commit to such an action.
After two years, the identity of the person or persons who started the fire that caused an estimated $2 million damage to a building at night of April 20, 1970, is still a mystery.
Officials from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and Traffic and Security said Thursday there had been no leads to establish the identity of the arsonist.
The fire, starting in the late evening, caused extensive damage to the roof and third floor of the old part of the Kansas Union which has since been restored.
Thomas said it had been established that the fire was the work of an arsonist who had used some type of flammable petroleum product. He said police had not been able to discern whether the incendian was a bomb.
John Thomas, director of Traffic and Security, said all clues had been followed up, but the majority of those leads had been eliminated as possibilities.
Leads on the arsonist had gone in two directions, Thomas said. Some clues had indicated that the fire was started by someone in the university. Others
indicated that someone outside the fire. He said both and resulted in nothings.
The case was still classified as active, Thomas said, and would probably remain so. There is no time limitation on the investigation of the case, he said.
A representative of the KBI said that there was no way of knowing whether the case would ever be solved. He said there were only two people who had information would talk.
Since the fire two years ago, extra security precautions have been taken in the Union, according to Frank Burge, director of the Union.
At the same time, North Vietnamese troops and tanks struck savagely at An Loc in a renewed attempt to seize that central capital, 60 miles north of Saigon.
Electronic smoke and fire detection systems have been installed in all the rooms and the staff has been increased to patrol and monitor the Union, Burge said. All but three of the eight seats are closed at night while the office coming only through major entrances.
"HOW CAN STUDENTS continue to support the Vietnam War?" he asked. "It's not an issue any more, it is a tragedy of US allies politics. It transcends discussion."
Cambodian officers suggested that the enemy aim is to seize all of Svay Rieng Province in eastern Cambodia, thereby reestablishing border bases for joining the offensive in South Vietnam. The Viet Cong has made no secret of the fact that the ultimate aim of the offensive is to capture Saigon.
Burge said he thought student unrest at that time was one of the factors in the decline.
The collapse of a large part of Svay Kiang Province opened a new route for enemy forces either to threaten Saigon or to attack south-eastward into the Mekong Delta.
patrolled by Saigon troops until March 30, when the North Vietnamese opened their general offensive, forcing the pullback of South Vietnamese forces.
Much of the Cambodian sector had been
In the battle for An Loc, enemy troops attacked South Vietnamese rangers and paratroopers north and southeast of the city following a day-long, 1,600-coup
The loss of several South Vietnamese outposts and villages is be assessed by some officials as a diversionary move to draw off reinforcements and open the way to Communist command strikes at Dak To, to town and Koun, a provincial capital.
John Paul Vann, the senior U.S. adviser in the 2nd military region, said the campaign is expected to last about two
Apollo 16 Lands on Moon
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)-Two American astronauts landed safely on the moon Thursday night be begin an expedition that was temporarily threatened by a failure in the main engine of the Apollo 16 command ship. Casper.
"Orion is finally here, Houston," exclaimed Charles M. Duke Jr., moments after he and John W. Young achieved man's fifth landing on the moon and began a scientific exploration of a plateau high in the lunar mountains. They became the 9th and 10th Americans to make the lunar landing.
Young and Duke are scheduled to deploy an atomic science station near the landing site. They will also use an electric car to roam the surface in search of evidence of volcanoes thought to have convulsed the moon billions of years ago to form the bright, rugged mountains which cover most of the lunar surface.
James McDivitt, the program manager at the space center, said at one point, "I was very skeptical about it."
THE SIX-HOUR DELAY of the landing caused a likely cancellation of the third moon walk, originally scheduled for Saturday and forced postponement of the first walk until 12:12 p.m. (Lawrence time) today.
The landing was only possible, officials said, because engineers were rapidly mobilized to study and solve the engine problem in less than six hours.
Some officials see the North Vietnamese simply bypassing fire bases and moving more heavy equipment.
See APOLLO Page 7
months. He predicted it would concentrate on three provinces: Kontum and Pleiko in the highlands and Binh Dih on the central coast, 75 miles to the east.
See SENATE Page 7
War Protesters Plan Peaceful Relays Rally
At a meeting of the coordinating committee of war protest in Lawrence Thursday night, a statement was released explaining the group's goals and details of events planned for the Kansas relays this weekend.
Members of the coordinating committee were scheduled to meet with Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. at 9 a.m. today to participate in rally to rally at the Kansas radoss on Saturday.
The proposed request read as follows: "We, as members of the following or as members of our Memorial Stadium on Saturday, April 22, for a half hour during the KU Relays, while no other events are taking place, for the purpose of peacefully demonstrating our interest."
THE PETITION to Chalmers named 17 campus and city organizations as its
A rally was planned for 1 p.m. today in front of Strong Hall at KU, following the victory over Michigan.
"We are a broad coalition of members of various local organizations who feel that we will always be against the war. One of the ways that we have chosen to display this feeling is to make a peaceful, visual representation of Memorial Stadium during the KU Relays. And there will be people there, too, who will always be against the war."
"Our first action is 'Project Haiphong,' which will take place on Friday and Saturday, April 21 and 22. Its purpose is to broad crosssection of America in opposition to the war. On Friday a delegation will meet with Chancellor Chalmers to request permission for a mass march into the stadium Saturday between KU Relay's units, to peacefully demonstrate against the war, urging athletes and spectators to join."
日 日 日
A time was to be announced for the stadium protest if it had been approved. THE STATEMENT of intent released Thursday said:
The first full day of competition in the Kansas Relays Thursday was also a full day of rain. Since the Relays became a four-day event in 1970, it's been almost a sure thing that rain would fall on at
Full Day of Rain Dampens Spirits at Opening of KU Relays
least part of the Relays. Whether today and Saturday will be as miserable for spectators as Thursday was for these at Memorial Stadium, though, is uncertain. Weather forecasters optimistically
have said the weather would clear this afternoon, but they reserve a possibility for more showers Saturday. The trainer at left, who is walking away from the outdoor training room set up at Memorial
Kansan Photos by ED LALLO and BICK KERSEY
Stadium, donned a combination of coat, hat and towel to keep out the wetness. Contestant-observers at right huddled under umbrellas and ponchos at trackside.
2
Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
News Briefs By The Associated Press
China Attacks U.S. Bombings
SANTIAGO, Chile—China condemned U.S. bombing raids in North Vietnam and told a 140 unit U.N. trade meeting here Thursday it supported the underdeveloped Third World against American "plunder and profiteering." Chinese Deputy Commerce Minister Chou Hua-min stated his country's position in a speech to 3,000 delegates attending the UNTAD III Trade and Development Conference. His words seemed to eliminate the glow that had surrounded U.S.-China relations after President Nixon's trip in February.
ITT Fix Attempt Denied
WASHINGTON - Presidential aide Peter M. Flanigan denied attempting to fix the outcome of three multi-million dollar antitrust suits pending against International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. last summer. Flanigan's long-sought appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee was interrupted repeatedly in a wargame over the range of questions he could nor would answer. The committee is reconsidering at his request Kleindienst's nomination to be attorney general.
PARIS-North Paris withdrew its demand that the United States cease bombing the North before regular and secret sessions of the Vietnam peace conference resume. At the same time, North Vietnam made public its hinh-tong secret record of 1968 negotiations with the United States under which bombing of the North ceased, leading to the start of the peace conference in early 1969.
N. Viets Withdraw Demand
WASHINGTON - President Nixon was urged to seek $500 million a year in income tax credits for parents who make tuition payments to parochial and other nonpublic schools. This was a key feature in a 38-page report formally presented to Nixon by his fourmember President's panel on Nonpublic Education. In essence, the presidential panel said it would be cheaper to aid nonpublic schools than to bring the five-million-plus youngsters into the public school system.
Tuition Tax Aid Urged
WASHINGTON—House Democrat described the bombing of North Vietnam as a dangerous escalation of the war and ordered the prompt drafting of a bill calling for complete U.S. withdrawal from Indochina. The resolution, approved 144 to 58, was the strongest antitwain action taken so far by the House Democrat representing Vietnam. The House defeated Vietnamese offensive, was by far the biggest victory yet scored by the antitwain forces in the House and is evidence of their growing strength.
Teacher Cautions Media Against 'Liberal' Attitudes
Sister Ann Christine Heinelt, of the St. Mary Center for Learning at Chicago and the High School Journalism program, warned the media Wednesday that she would average minority students. She said that such an action only emphasized the idea that there weren't many achievers to be challenged.
Democrats OK Antiwar Bill
or bad. She said this 'reverse English' would help eliminate the standardizing effect measurement has on people.
HEINTZ said the media should instead look at society's measurement of achievement and find out whether it was good
She said the media had lost the ability to present issues that makes people important. She said journalists must be sensitive to people and issues and have an understanding of them.
"I personally never say to a staff go out and find achieving minority students," Heilz said. "That that's re-enforcing the idea that we don't want it much, but we're able enough to dig something out."
About 150 students and their
sponsors held a symposium
sponsored by the Humanities Program on April 18 and 17, at Rock Springs Ranch
Families Attend College Retreat
Robert Knight from the University of Missouri Columbia State Journalists that when handling a tension story such as demonstrations and objective reporting became extremely important. Tension stories should be covered thoroughly, Knight said.
Dennis Quinn, director of Pearson College, said Wednesday that the parents' responses were approving.
Henzie spoke at a two-day mass media-race relations seminar in Atlanta sponsored by the Ethnic-Black Awareness Center in Kansas City and the Division for Continuing Education. The event, Missouri-Kansas City, dealt with the problems of ethnic news media cartoons, the role of the black woman reporter, and the handing of race relations in news media.
Speaking via telelecture, Thomas Engleman, executive director of the Newspaper Fund Inc. in Princeton, N.J., said that while everyone had his own idea on reaching and getting income, he decided the team had to start stimulating interest at the high school level.
Shortly after the conference began Sunday morning, the three professors who teach in it have been Quinn, John Senior, and Frank
Over 180 representatives of mass media and ethnic organizations attended Kansas. Missouri and Illinois attended the two day meeting.
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The entire symposium was based on the discussion of a paper by Mark Van Doren that is described in Mark Van Doren's book, "Liberal Education," which stresses the non-utilitarian liberal education. Quinn said.
The conference brought students and parents together in a setting where both were able to see and talk to one another in a different kind of atmosphere University, said Susan Cup, University, and said Susan Cup, secretary in Pearson College Office.
Quinn said the high point of the symposium occurred when the students recited poetry that they learned from Ms. Ching to exercise the group sang songs.
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3
Review of Grades Sought
By S. ARTHUR COHEN
Kansan Staff Writer
A re-evaluation of student grades and the implications of new policies will be presented at College Assembly meeting Tuesday, the Forum Room of Columbia University.
Reports were also given by the Educational Policies and Procedures Committee (EPPC) on curricular changes.
Donald Marquis, assistant professor of philosophy, teaches comparative practices. The report stated that grading standards varied widely from department to department, but the college do not accept the traditional grading system and compare evaluations with comparative evaluation of students only appears reasonable if grades in different courses are included.
According to Marquis, information on each transcript student receives in each course in which he is enrolled at the time grades are sent; the mean grade (average grade) in each course is taken from the credit; the number of students enrolled in that course; the grade point average (GPA) for each cumulative ordinary GPA; an adjusted GPA for each semester; and an adjusted cumulative GPA.
THE MOTION stated that the student should register at RU to include additional information on each student's transcript besides
"The adjusted GPA gives an indication how a student did on the exam he took from other students who took the same courses he did in those courses in which the instructor chose to comparatively," Marques said.
MARQUIS EXPLAINED that in order to arrive at a student's adjusted GPA, subtract the mean GPA in each course from the student's grade when converted to percentile (B-3, C-2, D-1, and F-0); multiply by the number of hours credit in each course; total for the entire semester; divide by the total number of courses the student is enrolled and add 2.
his motion was referred to the ad hoc Committee on Grading Practices and Philosophy for his research, which includes Herman Lujan, associate professor of political science; Arthur Skidmore, wildlife biologist; Philip philosophy; Phil McKnight, education; David Homes, associate professor of biology; Ray Braden, professor of mathematics; Richard Sapp, professor of physics; Terry Moore, associate professor of psychology; Semb, assistant instructor of human development; Jeff Southard, Wichita freshman, and Pitman, Wichita sophomore.
HOWARD BAUMGARTEL
chairman of the EPCP and
vice-chairman of the 49 new courses have been
approved by that committee and
35 courses will change the title,
and the number of hours credit. The
number of hours credit. Twenty-four courses have been
continued; the three courses will be cross-listed
and one course will be added to
the course of Liberal Arts and
Sciences.
Three courses in the area of Environmental Studies have been offered at the semester and an LAS 48 course, Topics and Problems: Astrological Thought, has been approved for the summer session
The EPPC recommended that
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COLUMBIA CULTURES PRESENTS
ELIZABETH MICHAEL SUSANNAH
TAYLOR CAINE YORK
PAKISTAN AIR
KANTAR PRODUCTION
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A report submitted by Brower Burchill, associate professor of
MEMBERS OF the College Assembly voiced an opinion wanting more information about the University. General Studies (BGS) degree.
Physics 1 and 2 be added to major requirements, that foreign language requirements be reduced to ten hours and that the mathematics requirement be changed to include Mathematics III. This was referred to the EPC for further investigation.
In an EPPC meeting Tuesday morning, Baum gartel helped with the College Assembly meeting he held May 9. College Assembly meetings are only scheduled for the week of the month in the special meeting under consideration, the EPPC hopes to make a revision on the plan.
University Daily Kansan
The Godfather
The Go Gather
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Sunday 9:30 & 8:00 p.m.
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Man Flours 7:00 p.m.
Open 8:00 p.m.
Tickets on sale for that day performances on all tickets sold total
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biology, was read by William Conboy, professor of speech and drama, which stated that a dinner-mesetting was scheduled for the next day across the different sectors on University problems of teaching.
COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents A BBS PRODUCTION
THE LAST PICTURE SHOW R
Fifty persons have been invited to the dinner-meeting and our speeches will be segmented connected with the University. They include Floyd Horowitz, associate professor of social sciences; faculty; Dennis Embrey, Lawrence senior, students; Dr. Thomas Kershaw for academic affairs, education, and Jess Stewart, secretary and Kessiana Kansas Board of Regents.
Hillcrest
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Art Museum To Offer Tour
The University of Kansas Museum of Art will offer a mini-tour called "Views of Lawrence" at 10 a.m. on Friday, March 12.
Elirdee Fischer Rose, a long time Lawrence author of "Wonderful Old Lawrence," will lecture
The works of art for the exhibition come from the museum's collections but are works that are not usually shown. Charles Eldridge, museum director, said Thursday.
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4
Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Kansan editorials reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Unite for Peace
No more, for God's sake, no more!
Two million Vietnamese are dead,
another 10 million are homeless,
military spending has gone from $42
billion in fiscal 1960 to an estimated
$76.5 billion for fiscal 1973. And as of
the 25th of March, 45,659 Americans
had died in action in Vietnam,
302,787 had been wounded.
As long ago as Jan. 31, 1971, a Gallup poll showed that 73 per cent of the American people wanted all U.S. troops brought home from Indochina by the end of that year. Now, nearly 15 months later, 70,000 American troops remain. And despite the decrease in ground troops (the total at one time was more than a half million) the number of B52s in the area is increasing, and more than half the Pacific fleet is now sailing in Indochinese waters.
What has this vast expenditure of
dollars and dollars and millions of lives acquired?
Well, the enemy now controls, in addition to North Vietnam, half of Laos and two-thirds of Cambodia. The South Vietnamese army, which at the expense of the United States has been trained and equipped to the extent that it is now second only to Communist China's among Asian armies, cannot repell the current North Vietnamese offensive, even with massive U.S. air and sea support.
On the economic front, we've experienced years of turbulence resulting in 25 per cent idle plant and 10 per cent unemployed and 5 to 6 per cent inflation.
It would be ludicrous to say it has been worth it. But there are those in our government that must believe it has been, for under their direction it continues. The fact that American ground troops have been phased out of the action doesn't mean that the war is over.
In fact, the death and destruction through bombing has been escalated American bombers and ships are shelling, for the first time since World War II. Since Nixon took charge of the war, more bombs have been dropped in
Southeast Asia than in the first four years preceding the Nixon administration—the era of heaviest fighting.
This new wave of bombing can only be explained in terms of political opportunism on the part of the President. He must think the failure of Vietnamization will lessen his chances for re-election, but at the same time he knows he must get the war ended, withdraw then brobbs, withdraw them again, in mad effort to placate all shades of political opinion.
But the blood is not on his hands alone. Congress has supported him and three other presidents, in this senseless, immoral war. Nor have the American people done all they can to stop the blood letting.
We can all share the blame for what is past. Some are more guilty than others. But let us all now make it clear that we will not tolerate more killing in the future, that the morality of the American people can be compromised while the politicians try to fix the blame on one another.
Tomorrow, all over the nation Americans will stand up and in united voice demand that it must stop.
Here in Lawrence our chance will come during the Kansas relays. If the chancellor approves their plan, between 11 and 12 demonstrators will march into the stadium and present a 15-minute speech. Those seated in the stands will be asked to stand and join hands as symbol of united opposition to the continuation of the war.
If tomorrow, millions of Americans do stand and pledge themselves to peace, and sustain that pledge with action, the politicians will see, and the killing will stop.
If not, more blood will flow, more will die. And what little dignity and integrity American has left will also at the hands of her people.
-Mike Moffet Associate Editor
In most emergency cases speed is the critical factor, and Marcare's crew is trained to react quickly.
To most people, sirens mean excitement or disaster, but to Larry Marcium and the men in his company they mean more life—or death.
The majority of the emergency calls are for persons who have suffered from hip fractures and heart attacks. Harris said.
"in the last few weeks we averaged several calls daily—reasonably simultaneously," said Scott Harris, a Lawrence freshman with the ambulance service, which is located at 19th and Mass.
Marceau's Citizens Ambulance Service has sped to call far away in response to backpacks. The ambulance canvasses five area counties.
BY LAW, ambulance or ophthalmic nurse may be on course to puncture the skin, administer drugs, or perform the sometimes necessary operations like a knee surgery.
Harris said he thought many lives could be saved in the ambulance a well-trained officer can on request power to do what was necessary. Harris said he saw a change for ambulance service and care in the future by giving attendants other drugs and intravenous aids.
BROSE SAID the most dramatic change for emergency care will come in the form of a team of medical personnel the ambulance and the hospital. Brose has set the example for better communication between ambulance and doctor by the impromptu calls he the Super Ambulance.
At least one local expert agrees with Harris, Dr. Richard Brose, director of Emergency Care Training at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said that he not favor the change to the ability to administer drugs but said that it was necessary.
"I think that it will have to come as a controlled expansion of the attendants' role. Certainly we need to make sure we give heavy drugs," Brose said.
Ambulance Crews See Troubles
The 'Super Ambulance,' the 'Super Ambulance' Center, looks like a large bread truck and contains some sophisticated equipment like an ambulance.
Rather than the attendants having to follow "standing instructions" they can speak directly to a physician over two-way radio.
The physician could diagnose the symptoms and advise the attendants as to what they should do.
THIS TYPE of radio communication would be necessary because ambulances which have to cover a large area, as Marsum's must, because the time in theENCEance to the hospital is most crucial.
"I don't see why properly rained attendants shouldn't administer drugs, military drugs, doing it for someone," Brice said.
It has been estimated b, several professional publications c, that attack victims could have been en route to the hospital if only ambulance attendants would be present to perform what was necessary.
Brose said he thought the killer was a man, who would soon endorse a policy which would expand the role of the attendant to a larger, more aggressive man.
HARRI CITED two more problems which the ambulance drivers must face every day. One was the problem of traffic.
"Cars just don't cover up over it," he said, conditioning radios, and the new soundproofing in cars just doesn't help. People hear our cars." Harris.
The second problem Harry noted was the widespread criticism, even from doctors, that medical professionals were enough in the emergency field.
Lawrence does not have any doctors specializing in emergency care. Lawrence can be on call for doctor on call, one registered nurse, and one orderly on duty at all times. This is the minimum number of emergency employees required to keep their accredited
ACCORDING TO Dr. David R. Boyd, chief of the division of emergency medical services and a professor of the Department of Public Health, most emergency departments across the country have become overwhelmed by the emergency hospital. The emergency ward is the most neglected, understaffed, under-equipped, and under-funded in the hospital, Bayd said.
"In the case of an extreme emergency we never go to Watkins—they don't even have a breathing machine," said Harris.
Upon hearing that Watkins was not equipped to handle some injuries, Brosse said. "I'm afraid the case with quite a few hospitals."
ACCIDENTAL INJURY is the
Policeman Majors in Journalism
By JERRY M. VOKRACKA
It is not unusual for a college student to work and to attend classes. But it is unusual when a law enforcement officer. The combination of the two is part of the daily routine of Nichols, Nicholas, Kansas City, Ky. Law enforcement. Lawrence Police Department Nichols said that he had been a Lawrence police officer since last August and a Kane County, Kansas, police officer since January. "I CAME on the force about the middle of August last year," said
"I asked in December if I could go to school, and they immediately started things turning so I could go. I had to get per- sonnancy. I got on and then arrange to get on one school Lawrence Education Department
POLICE
was a lot more cooperative than some departments I have heard about."
Kansas Photo by JIM EATON
Vern Nichols
Nichols said he was majoring in journalism background in the journalism field when he was in the Army and when he worked in Kansas
Nichols, who is 24 years-old, said that he had been an auxiliary policeman in Kansas City prior to joining the Lawrence force.
Nichols said that, when he got out of the service in 1960, he had planned on staying home and playing. But his operas killed him. He went to work as a photographer for the Kansas City Kansan but quit after he learned they had sent him to school, he said.
"In the military, I was in public information operations," he said. The Army's armed forces Radio and Television network. I disjoined some tapes that were shown during the States during the holidays.
"I also edited an overseas newspaper and took a lot of public relations pictures of arades," he said.
Nichols said that being a policeman in Kansas City and going around town from being a policeman in Lawrence and going to school. He said he would be around school in Kansas City but now he has to make school fit.
1 'ENROLLED at Dontley
to get a job as a stringer for WDAF-
TV on weekends and one day a
week, worked the police
department.
"I've known some people who I have been fairly friendly with, the two guys in coffee." Nichols said. "They don't count. I'm a police officer who's been friendly."
But those are only a few of the problems Nichols has exacerbated. He said that as soon as some students discovered he was a police officer, they would be cautious when they talked with him.
"One day I stopped a guy for drag racing and gave him a knee on his hip, and he whispered something to a guy I was talking with. I did not hear what he said, and I didn't ask about the expression on his face what he was.
"The guy had been pretty free in talking and mentioned a lot of things, a lot of things! When he came back, the conversation
promptly stopped and he said he had to go.
"I asked him what was wrong, and he said, 'Well, the guy just told me you were a cop.' He told me, 'Yeah,' said he, 'yeah,' said he, 'well, you kind of make me feel uneasy.'
1970
"SOME ARE WORSE than that. They won't have anything to do with me. They just completely cut me off."
"I CAN FORESEE getting too wrapped up and becoming too tired to enjoy anything else except for walking down the street when you are off duty and seeing some people you don't know. You can't live like that. But if property when I'm off duty, it is going to be the same as if I am on
Nichols said that when he attended classes he tried not to be a policeman but found it difficult
"I don't try to press it. If you wear one in culture, and the police depend on you, be one culture, you miss out on what is going on outside and what you're doing. We're acting. I don't want to get to a bag or so bag, or put up I forgot to wear."
"You're a policeman 24 hours a day, whether you like it or not," Nichols said. "If you don't like it, then you shouldn't get into it."
duty. But you don't go out of your way to run after cars."
Being a black police officer and student, Nichols is in a position to see how the black resident is different from the black student.
"The basic black person in Lawrence, who is a resident, is working and trying to support her family," said Sue. "The average black student's parents send him to work or help with his marriage or he works in the summer.
"He isn't occupied with work every day. Through education—especially through learning how to think, where to find information and how to organize your thoughts—you expose yourself to different facts."
"I think that black college students are more apt to be heard because of the terms they use and the references they make. I wonder who doesn't have as much to pull from as far as terms. The basic difference is that the black in college will be in influential jobs somewhere while the black downtown isn't going to go much
"EXPANDING ON these philosophical principles you learn in school, you see the short lesson of your race you as a person.
school, has a position, and he can do something about some things he doesn't like. He will soon be in a position to do something. I don't mean by radical ways, but the other way is that things should be changed."
Nichols said his immediate plans were to finish school and to have a job that would encompass enforcement and journalism.
Ambulance Drivers Always on Alert
Larry Mcurman is owner of Citizen's Ambulance Service.
"I foresee the day when police departments are going to have an expanded public relations force. Nichols said.
"THE BLACK, WHILE in
Kansan Staff Photo
number one cause of death in the 1- to 37-year age group, according to the March 6 issue of Modern Medicine. There is only a handful of schools offering specialized training in emergency care.
The American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP).
submitted its proposal to set up a residency program and eventual speciality in emergentology to the University of Amlan (AMA). The proposal was rejected on the basis that there are too many specialties already covered, that emergency care medicine is given to a specialist, and medicine to be a specialist.
The proposal has been resubmitted.
If the ACEP proposal is recognized by the AMA, emergency medicine will its way to becoming a respectable specialty where doctors could be trained for the needs of emergency medicine.
Lt. Gov. Candidate Says Economic Role Important
By JIM KENDELL
Kevin S.M. Writen
Sen David Owen, R-Overland Park, a candidate for the Republican nomination for senator said Tuesday night that if elected he intended to work hard on economic development in
Owen said, "I see the job as one of a real leadership role in expanding the economic base of the state."
The 33-year-old senator explained that as lieutenant governor he would be chairman of the Kansas Economic Development Commission, chairman of the Interstate Commission and presiding officer of the Kansas Senate.
OWEN SAID his business background would help him work for economic development. Before he was elected to the senate in 1968, Owen was vice-president of Overland Park State Bank.
Owen has served on the Overland Park Industrial Development Commission and is a commissioner in the United States Government Agency.
He is presently executive vice president and partner in a real estate firm, as well as a dreector of another bank.
Owen said he looked forward to an increasing need for revenue in the next two years. There should be an even balance between
property, sales and income taxes he said.
Owen said he would prefer raising more revenue by increasing the gross state product and increasing tax rates.
Owen the funding for higher education this year "was better than before, but it still not adequate." He had feared many good teachers if the legislation did not voted for salary increases.
Owen said he was concerned about the stepped-up bombing in Vietnam.
"UNLESS THE PRESIDENT takes rather immediate steps to speed up the withdrawal of troops and ends the bombing, it's going to create problems. 'Owens said. Owens said. Owens said. The compulsions as senator were the sponsorship of bills creating additional facilities for juvenile offenders in Kansas and accelerating state highway con
Owen said three additional stages for juvenile offenders. The only existing facility, the Boy's Industrial School in Hutchinson,
Transforming roads like highways 10 and 69 into four-lane roads is a challenge according to Owen. Construction costs are rising 12 per cent a year, while revenue from the road construction sector is only per cent, Owen said. So it's ad's
OWEN HAS PUSHED for more highway construction for three reasons—safety, economic and environmental in the construction industry.
vantageous to build roads now, he said.
Owen said that he was abolutely opposed to the presidential commission on Marijuana and the Presidential Commission on Marijuana released its report on Friday.
Although he hadn't studied the report, Owen said there was now room for consideration of the issue.
OWEN VOTED for the equal rights amendment to the constitution and said it was all right. He also noted that he involved in business and politics.
"I don't think there should be any discrimination for reasons of sex for job opportunities," he said.
Owen voted for the retention of a current Kansas abortion law which passed last Senate session. He said he wanted the present law to remain
Owen voted for restoration of cuts in welfare payments made by the previous legislative session. He does not favor certain categories of welfare, such as aid to dependent children.
"I AM in favor of 100 per cent verification of those who go on the welfare rolls, so that we can ensure confidence in welfare," he said.
By verification, Owen said, he means going to each welfare recipient and verifying the information that son had given to get on welfare.
Owen was in Lawrence to set up a student campaign organization and to find out what issues were concerned about.
KU to Offer Soviet Culture Degree
By MARCIA CLIFTON Kansan Staff Writer
The University of Kansas is among a handful of universities in the United States which can boast of a rare assortment of scholars, including those of Russian culture, according to Gerald Mikkelsen, assistant
KU Prof Working on Project For NASA Skylab Program
By KATHY ELLIS
Kansan Staff Writer
Richard K. Moore, director of the Remote Sensing Laboratory at the Space Technology Institute, has federal grant from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to put a Skylab in earth orbit.
The University of Kansas has been working on the Earth Resources Experiment Package (ERP) since 2011. Moore and his colleagues have helped NASA supervise the building of a microwave instrument and hope to be responsible for analyzing the data.
Moore said the biggest application of the microwave experiment was to prove ideas about light and wind winds on the world's oceans.
"We hope it will prove once and for all that you can use a system
IF THE EXPERIMENT is successful, the microwave would put on an unmanned spacecraft and weather satellite. Because the satellite would orbit observations many point in the man's area that were received, and it would be possible to forecast the weather a few days in advance. Captains will know the best areas to travel.
like this as an anemometer, Moore said.
the objectives of the Skylab ais to perform scientific investigations on orbit, test effects of long duration space flights on men and the effect of high cost on the economical approach to the development of a basis for Skylab.
The Skylab is scheduled to go up in May 1973 for the first of three missions. Each mission will
have different crews.
MISSION ONE will last 2 days.
experiments (medical emphasis)
and then evaluate the 28-day habituation of the spacelab and the spacecraft.
There will be a two-month wait before the 56-day mission two begins. This time there will be an emphasis to the experiment.
There will then be a month before the 56-day mission three goes up. The resources impairments be coequainted with the complete Skylab program.
professor of Slavic languages and literatures.
Moore said he anticipated a change in the mission plans. Earth resources experiments might be conducted in mission mode of mission three, which is scheduled for the middle of winter.
"It is unusual to have all these combinations here at KU and to have such a well-rounded offering," Mikelson said.
The Skylab will be built in Philadelphia by General Electric.
The availability of such professors was one of the main reasons for the formation of a university, because they offered for the first time next fall.
The degree will be a master of arts in Russian Culture. This "novel inter-disciplinary option" offers students the opportunity to traditional M.A. in Russian Language and Literature and literature with an emphasis on Literature, Mikkelson said.
"THERE IS A latent demand to
Students will be able to make comparisons between different departments, Mikkelson said.
Mikkelson said that another reason for creating the new degree was an effort to make the language requirement more attractive by allowing students to use the language in a larger context.
"I THINK THAT a lot of students are a little tired of having everything in a degree tied up in one strict discipline," Mikkelsen said. "But this degree is very different to how my approach to a broad culture."
The degree is designed education for students to train persons to teach both the Russian language and surveys of Russian culture." Mikkelsen said. He also to students anticipating careers in government, business and academia.
broadened the approach in a foreign culture," Mikkelson said, "and as far as we know this program is not only such program in the world.
MIKELSON SAID that through a number of surveys and research they had learned that high enrollment increases would be beneficial to college level. Consequently, Mikkelson said, the program will offer students the opportunity to participate in an African community junior colleges.
Those who will be teaching required courses for the program and who are specialists in their area on Russian culture include Ivan Kuznetsov, TV-film; Richard DeGeorge, professor of philosophy; William Kuhik, professor of speech and drama; Jeanne Stump, art instructor; and Edward Williams, assistant professor of music history.
Mikkelsen said there were already two candidates for the governor, and the other did undergraduate work at Georgetown University and the University of Texas.
TO QUALIFY FOR admission
to the program, a student need not have majored in Russian. He must have a bachelor's degree in Russian or foreign university and must have completed the equivalent of 22 semester hours of Russian language courses as well as three semester hours of Russian history.
Requirements for the M.A. in Russian culture include nine semester hours in Russian literature, six hours of Russian culture, nine hours of Russian literature, three hours of Russian aesthetics (philosophy of art), and nine hours of Russian culture other than Russian literature. The last category may be selected from any one of five fields, which are Russian theatre and drama, Russian music, Russian art, Russian religion and Russian
Nothesis will be required, but a comprehensive written and oral examination will be given. Students in Kansas junior colleges must also complete three hours of educational psychology, three hours of junior college orientation, and three hours of methods of teaching Russian.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom—UN 44300
Broadway—NW 144308
Editor Chip Creew
Business Manager Carol Young
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 21.1971
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University Daily Kansan
Competition High for Med School
By JOHN REED
Kenan Staff Writer
Admission ministers at both the University of Kansas Law School and the University of Kansas College are required to either professional school is highly competitive. The University of Kansas college each year is growing and exceeds the number of students that are able to be enrolled in the college.
Records from the office of Walter Gehbach, director of admissions and records at the Medical Center, show that about one out of every five applicants in this Jury as a first-year student.
For the entering 1972 class, the School of Medicine received 758 applications, of which 147 students were selected.
STATISTICS FROM THE Law School's admission office, which will provide a bleaker picture for applicants to the class beginning next fall. For 1500 available places have been 1500 applicants and they are free with an application deadline of May 15, the figures show that less than 10 per cent of the total number of applicants will begin taking classes.
The admission information brochure to the School of Medicine says that the selection for 'is a comprehensive appraisal of the applicant's background, preparation, and suitability for a career in medicine. It is evaluated by
The first criterion evaluated by
the selection panel is scholarship.
Except under certain circum-
cumstances, a baccalaureate
degree is required for admission.
The grade point average of all
undergraduate work as well as
average of premedical
science courses is considered by
the panel.
The entering class displays a general grade point average of 3.41 and a grade point average in science courses of 3.45.
THE SPECIFIC COURSES required for admission are described in the admission section of didactic and laboratory study in general biology including conversion to vertebrate zoology "
Other requirements include chemical, one year of aliphatic and aromatic organic chemistry, one year of instrumental analysis, analytical chemistry, one academic year of major concepts in physics and sufficient English proficiency.
Another criterion considered by the selection panel is the applicant's scores on the test by the Association of American Medical Colleges. The results of the bannum test, with all other test scores removed, from the college premedical adviser, must be with the selection panel before the application for an interview on the paper.
The MCAT presents scaled scores in four areas; verbal ability, quantitative ability, general information, and science.
OPEN HOUSE at the GARDEN OF EDEN Nudist Resort
★ Saturday afternoon April 22
The test is designed to measure academic ability and command of written English. As emphasized in the catalogue of the Law School, "the beginning law course should be education the fundamental skills necessary for effective oral and written communication."
★ Broadcast Live Over KUDL Radio
★ Playboy Bunnies
must be submitted to the Law
Department of Education the
Educational Testing Service
in Princeton, N.J., for evaluation
prior to forwarding to the Law
★ $1.00 each Admission
★ Clothes Optional
The Law School admits only students with bachelor degrees from accredited colleges or universities and are based primarily on prelaw coursework and Law School Admission. Undergraduate transcripts
The respective scores in these areas for the entering class were 555, 805, 535, and 545. These scores correspond to percentile ranking between 68 and 88, indicating that students higher than he average applicant
Directions to Get There
Go to Tonganoxie, Kansas on 24-40. Take the gravel road at the curve North 1 mile, turn right. 3 of a mile, turn left 1 mile, turn right 1.4 miles.
Northwest Releasing presents NEIL DIAMOND
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Tickets: $3.50, 4.50, 5.50
Available at the Chosey Beggar, Caper's Corner, Darnaby and Sons in Prainville Village and Indian Springs, Grain Exchange and the Temple Slug. Coming in independence, The Temple Slug, Kieff Lawrence, and the Municipal Auditorium day of concert.
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Friday, April 21, 1972
Apollo 16...
University Daily Kansan
7
Continued from page 1
Continued from page 1
study of data, intelephone conferences, showed the malfunction could be controlled
As a result, Young and Duke gave him a go-ahead and they guided their way through the desert in a long curving descent from orbit and brought it to rest among the rocks.
THE ASTRONAUTS did not land precisely on target, but were delighted with their final landing site.
"We don't have to walk far to pick up rocks," said Young, the commander. "We're among em."
Flight director Jerry Griffin said the landing appeared to be about 650 feet away from the targeted point.
The third Apollo 16 astronaut, Thomas K. Mattingly II, remained in lunar orbit aboard the command ship, Casper. It was aboard Mattingly's ship that launched the component almost canceled the moon landing on the $475 million mission.
The component is part of the electrical-mechanical system that controls a back-up battery system in paper form. Justified function just before Mattingly was killed in Mission Command ordered the landing delay but later decided the problem posed no harm to the astronaut if the system was down.
MISSION CONTROL studied the Apollo 16 problem and used a circuit in the servo loop" or "controlled the back-up steering
Senate ... Continued from page 1
"Every year the Senate asks us to fight against the war. It's not going to do any good, yet if we lose our Senate outrage, lose our sense of patriotism."
He urged the support of the peaceful demonstration to "reaffirm our humanity."
Dillon and some Senators questioned the interruption of the Relays events, particularly the turnover of the field, which would run continuously.
Dillon said he was also opposed to the protest at the Relays, because the Relays were paid admission athletic events which include the "audience captive for such meetings they may or may not agree with."
BRUSS RETIALIATED, saying that "over two and a half million veterans have come back to a captive audience in Vietnam."
"We shouldn't worry about pole vaults or audiences, but people being killed." he said.
In response to a suggestion that the protest be moved outside of the stadium to the hill so that the crowd can see it, the interrupted Bruns said, "I nick kicks of kids trying to move the protest. It's more important to them to sack the men mained and killed them, not just those fifteen minutes as a protest, just minute of silent prayer to quit maiming people, to get out of the war, to stop wasting money, then they can go on the hill, they can so ahead."
Awbrey, who presented the resolution to the Senate, said he wanted Dole "so that he will know where the students at the University of Denver are."
There was some concern by some Senators that reading the speech would jeopardize his speech. Lecture Series, which is sponsored by Senators, said he had contacted Dole Thursday afternoon concerning the resolution proposal and the resolution before Dole's speech.
"He respects what we're going to do." Bruns said.
THE THIRD RESOLUTION,
the first one, was to read the first resolution.
Dole's speech, was passed by the Senate.
Sens. Robert S. O'Brien, 52-18
four absentations.
Bruns said Dole intended to comment on the resolution in his speech April 27th.
Warhol's Films Labeled 'Real'
He said that Warhol's films had "ruined sentiment for our time" because they had made the audience deal with real emotions.
Gregory Battock, a film and art expert, spoke briefly about the war last night in Woolfruff's torium of the Kansas University.
Battcock said that when Worhal made a film, he used real, indifferent, plottless characters and not what is seen on TV or in films with sex and drugs films deal with sex and drugs accepts these things as real phenomena and not as some perversion of the Puritan ethic.
After Battcock was through speaking, excerpts from three of Warhols films were shown.
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP)—Advertisements from firms which market prepared term papers are no longer being used in Herald, the student newspaper of Western Michigan University.
motor of the large rocket engine.
"We ran exhaustive tests on the control and structural aspects and everything looks okay," said Mission control.
Mattingly was preparing to fire Casper's main rocket when the steering problem was discovered.
He was to ignite the rocke, while the spacecraft were behind the moon. But when the two craft emerged and re-established radio communication, Duke announced Mattingly had not fired the rocket engine.
It was two orbits later—almost four hours—before Mission Control could decide whether it was safe to attempt the landing.
Mission Control immediately ordered the moon landing delay.
upon the powerful descent engine of Orion to break out of the moon's gravity. This meant the lander would not be depleted in making a landing, but it was dictated that the landing had to be delayed until it was determined that the landing engine must be needed to come home.
THE BROAD PROBLEM was how to get the astronauts home if the engine failed. Without the engine, the spacemen would have to rely
Officials said that only one component in the large command ship engine—the back-up manually operated steering wheel. There was still a normal automatic steering system. But mission rules dictated that Mattingly could not fire the engine without the back-up and therefore chose not to fire the rocket.
Mission Control decided that the landing could proceed and Duke and Young were given the chance to start their landing descent.
Twenty-one journalism
education students of eight
graduate were initiated
Thursday night into Kappa Tau
Alpha, honorary journalism
institution
Kappa Tau Alpha Accepts 21 Journalism Students
Kappa Tau Alpha, a national honorary honoring teachers who accept for membership the top journalism undergraduate and graduate
Initiates are Randall Becker,
Overland park junior, Steve
Brown, Wichita junior, Bruce
Efron, Overland park senior,
Michael Lewis, Kansas City,
Lincoln, Kan., sophomore,
Lincoln, Kan., sophomore,
Juniors, Richard
Overland park junior, Michael
Moffet, Lawrence junior, Michael
Moffet, Lawrence junior,
John Nixon, Ormaa, Neh.
Geographers Group to Meet
Chancellor E. Laurence
The Kansas University geography department and the University of Missouri-Kansas City will co-sponsor the annual association of American Geographic Society through Wednesday at the Muehbach Hotel, Kansas City. The association has over 7,000 members.
Walter Kolmiger, professor of geography; Thomas Smith; professor of geography; Glenn Hale, professor of geography; James Shortridge, geography instructor; Simpson, geography teacher; teaching and Barry Wellar, assistant professor of geography, are on the local arrangements committee and also on the program committee.
Robert McColl, associate professor of geography, will conduct a session entitled "Political Geography" in Status of Political Geography*.
Chalmers Jr. is scheduled to make the welcoming statement Sunday.
Those presenting papers at the meetings are: Murray Austin, a Distinguished Residential Patterns: A Place Utility Formulation. Robert B. Hewlett.
Wellar will preside over the overseeing geographic Research in an international Systems Context, and Smith will condense session on the history of research.
Besides hosting the meetings, the department members will participate as chairmen of their sessions and will present papers.
Area Data and Their Utility in Urban Information Systems"; R i c h a r d s S a m p o n s "Observations on the Problems of Urban Information Systems in Southeastern Europe"; Thomas Smith, "Chart-makers in Seventeenth Century London"; Philip Jackson, "The Spatial Analysis in Phoenix, 1968"; Barry Kearney, "Remote Sensing and Urban and Regional Information Systems", and Stanley Morain and Jim Campbell, "Soil Mapping from Remote Sensing and Preliminary Application".
Morain and Anke Neumann,
geography teaching assistants,
will participate in group
discussions and panels.
Wakefield Dort, professor of geology, is the organizer for a field trip of the Missouri Valley on Sunday.
senior, Rees Olander, Salina junior, and Linda Schild, Lawrence junior.
Graduate student initiates an Reg Ankrom, Lawrence, Judy Henry, Lawrence, Barbara Kihm, Chanule, Robert Nordykhe, Mary Haymond, Lawrence, Martin, Stewart, W. Vauceman, Mike, Stewart, T. Henry Young, Kansas City, Mo.
THANK YOU from DALE WILLEY PONTIAC & CADILLAC
Many KU students and faculty have used our service department this year—and we're glad you did. We're just as eager to keep your GM automobile in excellent condition as we are to sell you a new one.
For those who let us serve them last year, thank you. For those who haven't, we would like the opportunity to serve you in the future.
CHEVROLET
dale
willey
PONTIAC - CADILLAC
Don Jugenheimer, assistant professor of journalism, will join the faculty as a member. Graduate students Ron and Jeffrey, both of lawrence, will present their
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Because of the almost hourly traffic tie-ups at the west end of Memorial Drive, two stop signs have been put on West Campus road, Mike Thomas, director of Traffic and Security Operations at KU, said Thursday.
Signs to Ease Traffic Tie-ups
Send us your tired, your poor, your hungry.
McDonald's. Fast service. A lot of good food and
McDonald's
The signs, which force traffic from all directions to stop at the intersection, are an attempt by Traffic and Security to alleviate the jam which occurs as students pass to and from class.
F. H.
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A
Cantata nell'originale
Stage directing by PIERRE LAROCHE
The University of Kansas Theatre and the School of Fine Arts present LA BOHEME. An Opera by Puccini. (Sung in Italian)
Musical directing by GEORGE LAWNER
April 18,19,21,22 at 8:00 p.m.
TICKET RESERVATION
864-3982
Matinee April 23 at 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre—Murphy Hall
MOB MAN
where you'll find springtime freshness
8
Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
DR. W.
RESEA
REGIO
PON
Garner Speaks at EPA Meeting Explains Environmental Protection Agency's role
Kagan Photo by TERRY SHIPMAN
Agency Protects Nature
"We are an agency with a mission," Garner said. "The mission being the preservation of our environment 'wherever possible.'"
The committee is beginning to formulate final recommendations for a county-wide waste disposal system.
Garner said the EPA must work with existing agencies to get anything heed. He said anything that concerned the EPA was in the public domain was under the jurisdiction of the EPA.
Eudora and Lecompton have no municipal system for waste collection, although a private company does serve about half of Eudora.
By JEANNE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
The sub-committee report also described the existing methods of distribution of materials in the county, particularly the types of containers used by individuals to store them.
Ilegal rural trash dumps are the major problem areas affecting the Douglas disposals according to a subcommittee report of the Douglas County Solid Waste Management findings were discussed Tuesday night at a monthly meeting of the committee in the Douglas County.
County Trash Problem Sparks Proposals for Waste Disposal
The job of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is to preserve and enhance the environment. William Garner, an EPA official, said Thursday in a news release that he is leading a new Space Technology Building.
Garner said the national research budget for the EPA was about $83 million. He outlined the objectives of his virtual environment researchers to use in
Garner is the director of the research and monitoring division of district seven of the EPA District seven whose offices are located in Kansas City, Mo. Missouri Nebraska and Iowa.
BALDWIN AND LAWRENCE have their own city collection agencies.
Another sub-committee, set up to study the estimated waste production, reported that about 20 percent of the waste produced in the total county area.
The sub-committee studying methods of collection found that a quarter of the county would receive its recommendation. The committee stated in its report that $20,042 would be needed to purchase equipment for a program and that the county would encounter a cost of $13,120 a month in operating the equipment.
Various options to the in-
dividual communities in the
state of Texas include a
Kevin McKinney, professor of civil
engineering and adviser to civil
engineering.
A REPRESENTATIVE of Baldwin said his city would prefer to maintain its own
Campus Briefs
Tau Sigma Dance Concert
Tau Sigma, KU dance fraternity, will present its annual concert at 8 p.m. April 28 and at 2:30 p.m. April 29 in the University Theatre. The program will have 14 dances which offer a variety of ballet, modern and jazz styles. All except two of the dances will be choreographed by Tau Sigma members. KU students will be admitted free with ID.
collection but would possibly be interested in using a county landfill if it were available at reasonable rates.
McKinney said this would be possible according to the state law, but that if any community wished to separate itself totally from the county, that community must have to draw up its own plan.
The sub-committee set up to method express the law on express laws would eventually provide for solid waste to be considered
The report stated that a county-wide governmental agency would be the most feasible because of the size of the organization and the establishment of the organization would be handled by the board of County Com-mittees. Because there would be a savings in expenditures by eliminating duplication of services and that would allow the overall planning and managing.
THE COMMITTEE report said the county administration system could be used until a provision is made to direct the agency of a public utility by law.
The processing sub-committee recommended using a landfill. The report said that it would be the most economical method, and land was available at that time because recycling methods were not really reliable at the present time.
The finance sub-c委员会 had not completed its report but Buford Watson, committee member and city manager, said the members were looking into how the city were also considering a service charge as a method of financing a county program.
what the format was.
"As far as I'm concerned, it could be written on the back of a brown paper bag," he said.
what the format was.
KU
applying to the agency for funds for projects. He said he liked the first application to be informal, and placed no restrictions as to
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Friday at THE MADHATTER
Architecture Slide Show
BIKALES-WEINBERG Band
TACO GRANDE
TURNING TABLE
With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free!
The School of Architecture and Urban Design will sponsor a slide presentation and lecture "Modular Approach to Housing in the Black Community" by Charles McAfee, Wichita architect, at 4 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas University.
Coupon not good on Wed
nesday (National Taco Day.)
Offer expires May 15, 1972
1720 West
Sigma Delta Chi to Meet
23rd Street
Sigma Delta Chi, journalism society, will have an initiation of its new members and its last business meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the basement of the Triangle fraternity house. The election of officers will take place at the meeting. A debate between representatives of the broadcast and print media is scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Auction — 3 p.m.
We're liquidating a major part of our inventory due to arrival of new shipments. Every rug is unconditionally guaranteed, & may be exchanged at anytime in the future.A large selection including KERMAN, BOKHARIA, HAMADEN,SILK,& other rugs
Exposition — 2 p.m.
Azima Inc., Central & Ward Parkway, on Country Club Plaza, K.C., Mo.
PERSIAN RUG Exposition & Auction Sunday, April 23
Ramada Inn, 6th & Iowa
From the land of British Racing Green.
Only 24 of the top racing drivers in the world are eligible to compete in all International Grand Prix.
More than half of them are British.
While for many nations, racing cars has become a national pastime, in England it has grown into an national
For the English, cars are avery no-nonsense, unfri business. In a car, they regard beauty as a function of how
beautifully if functions, and nothing reflects the English character more in this regard than the classicly British TR 1R-2R
It is English to the core. In fact, it just about all core a big, beautifully engineered 6-cylinder motor, powering a sturdy transmission that from one gear into another.
A heavy duty independent suspension that can take anything that any road can dish out. All tightly to put it in between.
body with rugged, clean lines and topped off with a couple of comfortable reclining seats to sit in it with
TRIDENT
The classically British TR-6, is an utterly straightforward, square-jawed kind of car, that can hide any anymore, anywhere but England.
(The only concession to excessive luxury in the car).
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Telephone:
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Competition Sports Cars Inc.
SENIOR CLASS PARTY
Friday, April 28.
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The University of Kansas
Alumni Association Membership
1972 Graduate
□ Membership to
□ Payments on Life Plan
□ Tradition Keeps Fired
Executive Director
BEFORE YOU LEAVE
You will receive KANSAS ALUMNI newspapers and magazines through the school year. Your students will also be able to keep track of your classmates through the special "Class Notes" column.
Wherever your future might take you, you will be able to keep track of what's happening on the "hill" through your membership in the KU Alumni Association.
1972 graduates are also eligible for a $25 discount on Fulfil and Installation Life Memberships. Under the installment plan, one must make an installation deposit of $300 at least by June 15th, plus Kaiser Alumni publications and other alumnum membership benefits forever without any additional charge or billing. For a 1972 graduate, life membership is the most economical method for continued Alumni
As a 1972 graduate, you receive a special 50 per cent discount on annual membership. You are eligible for a special 40 per cent for *F* husband and wife. For 1972 graduates, however, the dues are only 50 per cent for single and 56 per cent for married members.
R
Th the cone p.m in th
Before you leave, start your membership in the K.U. Alumni Association.
CHECK MEMBERSHIP DESIRED
$5 Single annual (half price)
$6 Husband and Wife annual (half price)
$18.50 Installment Life (10 annual payments)
$21.50 Husband and Wife Installment Life
$150 single Full Life Membership
$175 Husband and Wife Full Life Membership
Name...
Address...
City...State...Zip...
School...Degree...
(Mail or bring with check to the KU Alumni Association
(Mail or bring with check to the KU Alumun Association
103 Kansas Union, Lawrence, Kansas 60044)
KU ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
9
rs
By LINDA SCHILD
Kansan Staff Writer
Reservoir Bids to Open
Clinton Reservoir, a proposed lake that has been in the appalachian region longer than any other lake of its size in the country, should be built to protect it for four years, according to Bill Woods of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which is supervising the planning and construction of a dam, will it will open bids in Kansas City April 26 for construction of the dam embankment, spillway and outlet works. Construction will begin in MIA and should be completed by May.
The reservoir, to be located about two and one half miles southwest of Lawrence, has been in the purchasing stage for five years, he said. Once finished, the reservoir will be twice the size of Perry Lake.
WORK IS ALREADY UN-
ministrative buildings and an
outlook area near the north end of
the dawn in corps representative
"Clinton will be one of the
cleanest lakes of its kind in the country," Woods said. "Of the 31 small ponds in the area, 26 will be above the lake, filtering the water before it reaches the reservoir. Generally, in the same watershed area not found in the same watershed area."
Four federal parks and
northwest areas are planned for the lake, he said. Jayhawk Park will be
northwest on a north shore on an extension of the lake.
Some of the land on the edge of the lake will be purchased by the federal government to meet flood and pool level requirements, the City of Cranham, this district's city-county planner, said Tuesday.
This reservoir will prevent
the loss of water. The
pool, or conservation, level
is the depth of water that must be
maintained for conservation
RAW WATER CONTRACTS
require certain depth requirements, he said, although he did not know exactly how deep they are.
Conference to Consider Black Business Problem
The Black Business Council of the School of Business will conduct a regional conference 2 conference room in the Kansas Union.
There will be a several workshops and a panel discussion Friday to discuss the problems in these related areas.
The conference will be concerned with the problems associated with black businesses and the job market for black
Jim Woodson, an attorney from Topeka will also be present to give his ideas on the legal side of black enterprise.
Speakers at the conference will be Curtis McClinton, president of the Black Economic Union of Africa, and an operator of her own public relations office in Kansas City, Mo., and a business consultant for several black businesses; and Jollette Bernard, operator of a consulting firm.
A lancheon has been scheduled
Invitations to the conference have been set to students in all Kansas universities, colleges and junior colleges, as well as to those of several other states. All invited students are invited to them.
Campus Bulletin
TODAY
Columbia Cafeteria
Latin American Studies Publications
Luso-Brasilian: 11:30 a.m. Alceve B.
Cafeteria, Kansas Union.
Latin American Studies Publications Committee: 11:45 a.m. Alove D. Cafeteria, Bahai. 12:00 m., Meadowlark. cafeteria, Department: 12:00 m., Sunflower Room.
Centennial Room.
KU Business School Day: 12 noon, Kansas
Geology Associates: 12 noon, Curry Room.
Library-Snyder Book Content: 12:30 p.m.
English Room.
Humanities Committee: 12:30 p.m.
Alceve A. Cafeteria,
280 W. Woodward, Marianne
Cafeteria
Muslim Students: 12:45 p.m., Room 299.
Varsity Baseball doubleheader, KU-Missouri:
10:30 a.m. Oleander Field.
RU Business School: 2 p.m., Forum Room.
RU Business School: 2 p.m., Regionalist
Room.
Activities Development 2:
p.m. Great Room
Senior Class Committee: 3 p.m. Curry
Senior Class Committee: 3 p.m., Curry
Room.
Architecture: 1:30 a.m.
"It's standard procedure to buy up land for these reasons," he said. "Land owners have the option of taking their case to court if they aren't satisfied with the price the government offers."
Architecture: 3:30 p.m. Forum Room.
East Asian Studies: 3:30 p.m. Room 305.
IPC Judiciary: 3:30 p.m., Governors
Room.
Greening-Balsa: 4:30 p.m., Regionalist Room.
Kansas Association of Educators of Young Children; 3:00 p.m., meadow Lake, cafeteria,
Kansas Relief—Chamber of Commerce; 6:00 p.m., Ballet Park, Perleon
Woods said the farmers who owned land where the lake would be built hated selling, but they liked that they were getting a good deal.
"Basically, it's zoned for agriculture," he said. "But some changes will be made to accommodate various types of nursing."
"Some commercial zoning will be approved, but we haven't gotten into that very deeply. It is hard to find the neighborhood shopping areas."
p. Civil Engineering Chairmen: 6:15 p.m.
Walkin' Room
"The entire county is already zoned." McClanathan said.
p.m. Ballroom, patio
RU Folk Dance Club; 7 p.m., 173 Robinson.
Senate Finance; 7 p.m., Regionalist
prior to the panel discussion and those who wish to attend should contact Wilbert Thomas.
Christian Women's Club: 6:30 p.m., Big 8
Blooms, Chamber of Commerce
"The watersherd conservation data was used to establish conjunction with the House and Senate Appropriations Committee on this project," he said.
"The federal government has appropriated something like this every year," McClanahan said. "They only can budget so much an amount."
APPROPRIATIONS have been scanty in the past because of the problem of funding the war in Iraq and elsewhere, so they are coming steadily now.
KU Relays—Chamber of Commerce: 7 p.m., Ballroom, parlors.
KU Folk Dance Club: 7 p.m., 123 Robinson.
Club Club Center , p. m.; 175 Regional
Senate Finance; 7 p.m.; Regionall
Room
SUA Popular Films: 7 p.m. Woodruff.
IVCF: 7 p.m. International Room.
"Hearings by the Bureau of the Budget will be held on next year's budget in the late spring or summer."
Greg Riekie, Shawnee Mission senior and co-chairman of Students for Anderson, said Thursday that a small core of eight students was working to expand the group's membership.
Students to Seek Support For Anderson Campaign
Students for Anderson, a committee of University of Kansas, will lead this week to aid John Anderson Jr., former Kansas governor, but for the mean nomination this year's gubernatorial race.
Rieke said the group was looking for a wide geographical representation of students who could go home over the summer and work for Anderson. The high school principal, said, of workers, Rieke said, where registration drives would be held for 18-year-olds.
A possible visit to campus is planned by Anderson, a KU graduate who is now a practicing
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KU's 1972-73 yearbook at a
fellowship meeting on Thursday afternoon.
Rick McKernan, Salina junior and 1971-72 Jahawker editor, was named the new business manager for the yearbook.
Applications for staff positions in the Air Force being taken in the Jayawerwah Room B115 in the Kansas Union, Tom Yose advisor for the Air Force.
Board Names Yearbook Head
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10
Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
(AP)
Kansan Photo by RICHAED GWIN
Oklahoma Teammate Congratulates Randy Heierding
Heierding, left, came from behind to win Belafonte-6-mile . . .
Big Crowd Expected For Relays Saturday
Even if the rains continue until Saturday afternoon, the focal point of the Kansas Relays, world record-holders entered in four invitational events are expected to travel to Memorial Stadium, John Novotny, UU assistant athletic director, has said.
Novotny therefore has encouraged students to arrive at the stadium early in the afternoon to avoid creating a sudden rush like the one that swamped ticket booths shortly before the Glenn Cunningham Mile in last year's RELays:
Jim Rumy, world record-holder in the mule, is expected to be the biggest gate attraction. He will run in the Glenn Mile at 2:40 Saturday afternoon.
Charlie Green, world record-holder in the 100-yard dash, and Cliff Branch, world indoor record-holder in the 100, will take on a flashy fire in the open 10 at 2:25 p.m.
Delay Likely For Baseball
Postponement of the University of Kansas baseball team's doubleheader game against the Chicago Bulls made likely by rain Wednesday and Thursday, coach Floyd Temple said Thursday night. A decision whether to postpone the game was to be made this week.
The Jayhawks' series with Missouri would be moved back a day. The doubleheader would be played at 1:30 p.m. A single game would be at 1 p.m. Sunday.
KU has yet to play a weekend baseball series as scheduled. Friday-Saturday series have been posoned here against Iowa State and on the road against Nebraska and Colorado. Cold weather was responsible each time.
IN THE FIELD events, the open shot put will feature a dual between world record-holder Randy Matson and world indoor record-holder Al Feuerbach. They are the only two men who have ever put the shot more than 70 feet. The shot put will start at 3 p.m.
Kjell Isaksson, who has set a world record each of the last two weekends, will compete in the open pole vault. Vaulting will start at noon.
Isaksson vaulted 18-1 at the Texas Relays two weeks ago, then 18-2 last week at the UCLA Meet of Champions. Isaksson's countryman, Hans Lagervagst Isaksson (17-8%) and Olympic champion Bob Sagenen (19-9) will also enter the pole vault.
Admission to Friday's Relays is free for KU students, 50 cents for grade school and high school students and $1 for adults.
For the Saturday session, admission will be 50 cents for KU students, $1 for grade school and high school students, $2 for freshman admission and $3 for reserved seats.
Hill Wins Relays Decathlon; OU's Heierding Nabs 6-Mile
By MATT BEGERT Assistant Sports Editor
Despite the wet day and the damp score, Gary Hill from Oklahoma Christian College pleased that he had won the game on Saturday. It was his first big 10-event win.
Hill stayed close to last year's winner, Bruce Jenner of Graceland College, and this years run-up, Mike Wedman of Colorado, until the last event, the 1,500. Hill knew he had to beat Wedman in the 1,500 to win.
"I just tried to outrun Mike," Hill said. "I had no choice. I knew I had a chance to outrun him."
Hill scored 560 points to Wedman's 358
for the last race. Hill's time was 4.344.6.
He came in second at 4.345.7.
BUT HILL fell short of the Olympic qualifying total of 7,600. he scored 7,530.
"We were all trying to, '800,' "hissed,
talking about himself, Wedman and
Jouer. "But when it came down to the last
even of course, each of us wanted to win."
Hill's previous best for the decathlon had been the 7200-plus. He attributed his higher score to training during a program during the season and good off-season work on weights and technique. He said he and the other leaders tell short of Hill's final qualifying mark because of the weather.
And rain it did. Mother Nature dumped 1.6 inches of rain on the KU track meet between the time the decathlon began early morning and Thursday afternoon.
The University of Kansas gold team will host Kansas State, Iowa State, Missouri and Nebraska in a golf meet at 10 a.m. Friday at Lawrence Country Club.
Hill said he did better than he expected in the 100 meters, though he thought he lost points in the discus and described his performance in the javelin throw as poor.
Head coach Bob Frederick said he was unsure who KU would enter. Frederick has been on a basketball recruiting trip, and missed the qualifying rounds for his team.
Golf Team to Host Four Big 8 Teams
Wells turned in his best score in a college meet last week with a five-under 67 at the Alamara Hills Golf Course against Baker University.
One KU golfer who probably will be in the team in Roger Wells, three year letter to the president.
Frederick said he thought that Nebraska and K-State would be the teams to beat. KU will travel to the Manhattan Country
KO will travel to the Manhattan County Club to play K-State Saturday.
IT WAS a major victory for Hill over defending champion Jenner.
"he beat me all last year," Hill said.
"He hasn't been in outdoor meetups to be in shape yet. He'll be strong by the time nationals come around."
Hill has two chances left to qualify for the Olympic trials, his goal for this year. He is entered in Drake Relays, and the meet in Billings, Mont., is upcoming.
The decathletes were not the only ones to brave the inclement weather, which is becoming more of a tradition to the Relays than new records.
The junior college teams for the 440 relay, the distance midley relay and the 880 relay ran thursday, and so did the first event of the carnival, run, the first open event of the carnival.
SID SINK, the Bowling Green track star who won last year's 6-mile title, did not report to the track when his name was added. The team withdrew from the meet Wednesday.
But the race went on without Sink, and Randy Heierding, a junior from Oklahoma, sprinted from behind during the last 680 to win with a 24:52.6 time.
Heering took the lead relatively late in the race. He said he had had an Achilles' tendon injury and was not sure that the leg would hold up throughout the race.
But it did, and all butheed the time was slower than his best. Heerding said he was happy with it since it was the first time he had a single race in a year because of the injury.
"I just wanted to maintain contact, 10 to 15 yards behind, and then with about a mile or so to go, I'd try to do my best," he said.
HE SAID he wasn't particularly affected
when Sink didn't show up at the starting line.
"It didn't really hit me that he wasn't going to be there. I thought there were several other runners here who could run faster than me," he said.
Heierding first ran the 6-mile last year at the Los Angeles Meet of Champions, and he only ran it three times in the past. But if you can prove him if he would like to try it, so he did.
"I just wanted something new, I guess," he said. "I feel more confident running a longer distance."
Between the decathlon and the 6-mile run, the junior college teams were passing through a hurdle.
Florissant Valley emerged as the undisputed relay king, taking first in all three events. Florissant Valley's time for the 440 relay was 42.0; for the 880 relay, 1:27.6, and for the distance medley relay, 10:12.8.
MEANWHILE, PHIL MUKEL, a 40-year-old Birmingham, Ala., insurance
Hershberger to Run Masters 880
Millionaire Holds 19 Age Records
Jim Hershberger, Wichita oil millionaire and major contributor of the Tartan track in Memorial Stadium, will compete Saturday afternoon in the first Masters 880 to be held in the Kansas Relays.
By ED LALLO Kansan Sports Writer
Hershberger will be running in the Kansas Relays for the third straight year
In a recent interview, Hershberger said he had fully recovered from the ankle injury he received while running the Masters Mile in last year's Relays and the two bladder operations he had in October and November.
and is hopeful of winning a watch to match the one he earned at this meet 21 years ago when he led off the Jayhawks' winning distance medley team.
"I've run in Philadelphia, Hawaii, the Astrodome and the Big Eight Indoor in Kansas City," said Hershberger. "I feel fine now. I'll certainly be ready for the Relays, but I won't make an predictions on how I will do."
The team will practice behind Allen Field House instead of at Memorial Stadium.
The University of Kansas football squad will wind up its fourth week of practice today with the team concentrating mainly on passing, as coach Don Fambrouch said Wednesday.
hold their week-end scrimmage at 2 p.m. Sunday in Memorial Stadium.
Earlier in the week it was announced that there were two position changes. Defensive边 Jeff Turner was switched to defensive end Ted Weidner. Weidner moved to defensive end.
Sogg and sore, Mulkey was glad he beaten the masters' records of 5,003, but I couldn't stop looking at him.
salesman, was breaking the masters' record in the decathlon.
AT THE TEXAS Relays two weeks ago, the 40-year-old sportsman won the Masters Mile in a record time set of 4:38.8., three seconds under the mark he set in 1977.
Hershberger, a self-made millionaire by the time he was 30, has spent the past 11 years concentrating on his athletic achievements. This year he is eligible to try out for five Olympic events for men 40 years and older. He has a good chance of
A third move put rowing linebacker Gordon Peterson, Wichita sophomore in the attack.
The Jayhawks will find little freedom from practice over the weekend. They will
needed all the points I could get in the pole vault. I immediately my next masked opponent.
At last count, Hers伯格尔 had 19 world records for various ages and distances, including the Olympic runners 38 and 39 years old. That total is exceeded only by Ron Clark, the great Australian campaigner who is credited with recording world records at distances from 3,000 meters up.
being one of the 100 chosen for the U.S. team.
This will be the fourth Big Eight meet for the netters this season. They will face Missouri in Columbia April 29, then Nebraska in Cornhusker territory May 1. Iowa State and Colorado will be here May 5 and 6.
The University of Kansas tennis team will take on arch rival Kansas State in a dual at 1 p.m. Saturday on the newly-refurbished courts of Allen Field House.
KU to Host K-State In Tennis Showdown
"I THOUGHT I was ahead of schedule.
All of a sudden I was behind schedule and I
What saved the day for Mukley was his javelin throw of 165 feet. His career best shot, he had.
But what Mulkey didn't know was that Norton broke his own record of 5,161 at a meet in Oonolulu, Ha., March 11. Mulkey found out about Norton's new record of 5,503 while he was competing on the pole vault Thursday.
The points he got for the javelin gave
Mikeley a 5,507 total before the 1,500
metre.
"I know I can do better than that," he said of his total of 5,638. "I can do better than that even if I don't get any better by next year," he continued, saying that he could have done by next year's Relays. "I've never gone through a decathlon in so much rain."
Mukley called KU track coach Bob Tummies before the Reliays to tell Tumley that he had decided decathlon to shoot for the masters' record set by Brayton Norton of Santa Clara, Calif. Tummies let him enter, even though an event place because it was not an open event.
Scrimmage Sunday
Mulkey did no training before he entered the decathlon, he said. He had never had a rubdown during a decathlon in his life, he found that he needed several this time.
*all put my pride away and went over*
*to training every time there was a*
*training day.*
Mukley, a Woyming alumnus, won the decathlon at the Relays eight times between 1959 and 1966. In 1960 he qualified for the Olympics, but pulled a muscle in his elbow and was forced to withdraw. He was fifth in the running when he dropped out.
Mukule has two sons in high school who have both been state school champions in college.
MICHIGAN
AHOMI
BRAKE
Kansan Photo by RICK KERSEY
Leaders Jockey for Position Early in 6-Mile Keith Pearl Jeard, Ryan Eichler is second. Randy Heierding, third
Relays Results
*Gary Hill, Okla. Christian, 7.500 m., 2.988 ft.* *TOM BURKE, North Carolina, 7.500 m., 2.988 ft.* *DANIEL ALBERTon, North Carolina, Mt. Ste. 6, 5.480 m., Larry F. Hartzell, North Carolina, Mt. Ste. 6, 5.480 m.* *MARIE HARTZell, K.I. 6.345 m., 9.100 m.* *DWAG BOOGLISTEN, ISI 6.477 m.* *THAKSANA TRAX, Breight Wright, 7.944 m., 1.913 ft.*
Jawelin- 1. Bruce Jensen, Graeland, 2. 6. Brett Wheeler, Graeland, 3. John Kelley, Gary Hill, Oklahoma City, 4. Phil Mukles, Birmingham, Ala., 14.6%; 5. Andrew Pattee, Oakland, Ala., 14.8%; 6. Mike Gardner, Garyville, Missouri, 18.2%; 7. Mike Wedman, Colorado, 15.7%; 9. Tom Smyth, Newton Illinois, 15.2%; 10. Marc Harris, St. Louis, Missouri, 15.5%; 11. Daniel Levy, Larry Frank of Dakota State, 13.1%; 12. Dog
1,500 meters. - 2, Danny Orange (4,179). - 2, Bruce
Hawkins (3,864). - 3, John Randle (4,157).
4, Larry Frank. - 4,1,6,7,6,10,7,6,10
10. motor hurder... 1, Gary Hill, 14, 17, 2, Andrew Wade
11. hurder... 1, Gary Hill, 14, 17, 2, Andrew Wade
Marc Harte, 15, 1, 6, 7, Green Hackett, 14, 17, 8, Bruce
Brown, 15, 1, 6, 7, Green Hackett, 14, 17, 8, Bruce
16, 2, 12, 8, Brian Hickey, 17, 13, 8, Doug Bloquetman, 14, 12, 19
17. Brian Hickey, 17, 13, 8, Doug Bloquetman, 14, 12, 19
18. Mike Wedman, 13, 14, 8, Gary Hill, 14, 13, 10,
19. Mike Wedman, 13, 14, 8, Gary Hill, 14, 13, 10,
20. Ging Hackett, 17, 13, 8, Tom Smyers, 17, 13, 8,
Mike Hockey, 17, 13, 8, Tom Smyers, 17, 13, 8,
21. Ging Hackett, 17, 13, 8, Tom Smyers, 17, 13, 8,
23. Dan Doyen, 8, 46, 14, 1, Marc Harte, 95, 12, 3
24. Dan Doyen, 8, 46, 14, 1, Marc Harte, 95, 12, 3
Pole vault - 1, Mike Wedden, 16:0, 2. Don Attliont, 16:0, 4. Brewery Bears, 14:4, 6. Duckfoot Birds, 14:4, 5. Gapley Birds, 14:4, 6. Dan Orange, 12:4, 9. Tom Sayve, 12:0, 10. Andrew Petes, 12:0, 11. Paul Hillman, 11:0, 12. Brent Wright, 10:0
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16th card relay. 1 Florida Voulte (Houston Barker)
2 Illinois Voulte (St Louis Barker)
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6 Texas Voulte (Austin Barker)
800-340-jardel | Florissant Valley (Fred Nature)
800-340-jardel | Florissant Valley (Fred Nature)
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North East | North Eastern Oklahoma | Farnes, Nebr.
Writer Experiences Physical Discomforts of Football
Editor's Note: This is the third in a series of weekly reports from spring practice by Kansan Sports Writer Brad Avery, who was working out with the team since football drills began in February.
By BRAD AVERY
Kansan Sports Writer
A chill, southerly wind blew unhindered across the practice field and caused players to thrust their knees forward in search of a source of warmth.
Cold, even more than being
rammed by an onrushing
lineman, and the greatest
need was held during the
week and a half of practice.
But the weather soon changed,
becoming oppressively intense.
Under his gloves, he portalled saunas and absorbed the thick player was leaking by the fire.
being exploited. Then he would usually try to gain the same position by casually drifting in a semicircle.
THE TERM "cotton mouth" is usually reserved for the dry mouth one has after a drinking spree. But it is every bit as applicable to the crusty mouth one develops during a practice of smoking. You will welcome because it is the only smiden of moisture on the field.
While I was standing on the sidelines, I would try to jockey for a position so that I was shielded from the wind by my helmet. Then, if I would last about a minute until the other player realized he was
So I watch a movie, go to bed and rise once again in the morning completely unprepared for another class. When one goes through a few weeks of practice, he feels he is on a team, an emphasis on last year's team who had nearly a 4.0 average, seems particularly amazing.
Football is a game of discipline, and that quality is decidedly lacking in my personality. In an equip. room, the term "anathema" becomes anathema after a long and tedious day on the field.
1 usually arrive home at about 6:30 p.m. That ordinarily leaves about two and one half hours for eating dinner and napping. After arising, I ascertain the late hour is much too late to start working.
After practice one is treated to a watery orange drink to quench his all-consuming thirst. One has the option of sampling a very salty lime drink which has the flavor of a lemonade or stomach if it is consumed too fast. Somehow, neither hits the spot.
ON THURSDAY of my second week, I received my first battle scar. A defensive halfback hit me on the back with the right arm. Consequently, I
developed a large, purple bruise in the shape of a forearm.
I was told that there wasn't much that could be done. With that rebuff, I became curious about what was being done in the war and why they weren't curing bruises. So I went to the head nurse, Nesimh.
It was exceedingly painful, so I went to the training room, which is not often fully attended, "Deaner's Hospital," after the KAU Trainer, Neesham Mellish.
Nesmith reminds me of career Washington bureaucrat who sits in a secure position and watches the action around him. As Nesmith puts it:
"I just seem to stay here while head coaches come and go."
Indeed, Nesmith must seem invincible to those who look at his record. he's been trainer at KU for 34 years and took the job when he weren't flying around too freely during the Depression."
WHAT NESMISH does most in his "hospital" is taping. By his own initiative, he was刻着 initially a half-mile of tape a day. Taping is done mostly around the ankles to prevent twisted knees and turned
Nesmith contended that many players were not the rough, unbrilious people that their stereotype called for.
"A lot of them try to baby me and the same one to me with the same thing that is painful, but really isn't that bad," she said. "We work with a little girl." he said.
They yell and scream a lot on the field and, in the process, bruise many eggs. But they also
Another little-see area of the
Kiwi forest is where the coach
explore was the personalities
behind the coaches. It's easy to
acquire a stereotype of coaches
I didn't bother to ask in what category he put my bruise.
mother those same egos eventually and develop a sort of closeness to the players. After the players have been through it all, they have been through it all.
Take Charles McCullers, the offensive coordinator, as an example. The affable Floridian said he might be working in the Florida phosphate mines or farming if he had not been received a scholarship to attend the University of Tampa.
"Football," McCullers said, smiling. "I have been after my family and my religion. The most important people in my life have been coaches." They were "well-known."
Another coach who came up the hard way is Sandy Buda, the offensive line coach. Buda grew up in Nebraska and taught class district in Nebraska.
"WHEN IVE gone back home and seen the people I went to high school with, I want them to plants, I wonder if that is what I need for my scholarship. My parents simply couldn't have afforded to send me to a school the caliber of my classmates."
disciplined person. I was not the nicest person in the world before I became interested in football."
Both Buda and McCullers had similar views as to why college football had become the immense business it has.
"I think the reason football has grown so large," said McCullers, who is a member of many of them live and die with a favorite player on the field, and I think in today's world people have a kind of outlet for aggression.
Buda said that the aggressiveness players demonstrate on the field was in line with the satisfaction a satisfied desire for violence.
KU
Brad Avery
University Daily Kansan
Friday. April 21, 1972
11
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
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Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Kannan is available to all students. Please regard to color, creat, or national origin.
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pm.
Pro Bikes. 35 pro bikes in stacks in a basket.
**Bike Shop:** Pro Bikes, P.O. Box 1026, Beigsted, P.O. Box 10E-IPE. **Fuji:** The Fuji Group. **Olympia:** Falcon, San Bernardo.
**Bicycle Store:** All levels. *All with keyes* 321 fishing tackles. *All with keyes* 349 cycling helmets.
Members of our Karaas-BOKONKO
BECONS "Testing" and he said
"We'll bring you a hat, because
we need it. Veron, Veron.
Veron, VERON 1609, MILY 4:24
Twin-speed bicycles. Fifa, Abala,
Azek, Ayad, Alas, Leo, Aksim, Azik,
Sakke, Leo, LePierre. Also 3 & 8
bicycles. Accounts unimited and our
Bike Shop. Accounts unimited and our
Bike Shop. Bike Shop. Ride-
Bike Shop. 160 Mass.
1969 Alpine Sunbeam G.T. needs engine work $600 and take over payments and we give you $200 cash Call 842-6244 at 5:30 p.m. 4-24
Guitar for sale - $89 Gourab Gluminum hummingbird new (steel) strings, great sound case, contact Betty, 843-550 or Dave Dorm desk; box 822
1971 Honda 350-SL. Excellent condition,
extras included. Must sell for best offer-
Call Dennis; 814-634-724
70 Suzuki TC-125, 950 ml., w/Hel-
met $375.842-5402
4-24
BSA 250 Goldstar. Not one year old
—used only last summer. Asking $700.
---2018. 6 p.m.**4-24**
1966 Cherry Van for sale. Painted green in January for sale. Hair cut and carpeted, and painted interior. Asking $450. Call 835-2038 after 6 p.m.
1967 VW bus, good condition, msu sell. Best reasonable offer, 843-8108. 425
1948 Ford School Bus Carrier, sink,
slope sleep 3 comfortably. Rebuilt
engine & new brakes $800 812/1540
627
1929 Ford Pickup with eBay warranty
2009 Ford Pickup with eBay warranty
$700, $800-6250 4-21
PANASONIC thru model SS-2000-702 warranty, bought overtime. will pay for parts.
$800-6250
MUST SELL--1965 Triumph Rams-
ville 6502 Rams good. Call Jim at
*43-8549* 4-21
- MG MGR Roadster. Unfortunately, it has a blue body, baggage carrier, both wheels and is treaded to bum along with the seatback. It also contains a reliable trunk. Call Raleigh Auto Parts at (256) 871-9140.
1971 Kawasaki 500, excellent condition,
$800. Call 843-4025. 4-25
MUST SELL. Pearl Jawaj with all cabs and accessories. Health Kit Combo. Cheap! All-Purpose Porch Kit 911 must have a mail-in phone. Must wint Call 821-3465. - 4-25
1970 Honda 250 SL, great bike on or off the road. Excellent condition $800 or best offer. Call Dave, 811-2581 4-25
Guitar - Martin D-35, acoustic sig-
string. Hardshell case. 4 years old.
Good condition. Call 843-5113 after
6:30 p.m.
1969 YAMAHA 125 cc twin, very good condition, low mileage, new knobby on rear, $310, luggage rack and helmets available. 842-002. 4-25
YARD SALE - 95-54, Sat and Sun,
April 22 & 23, Books, Records,
Clothes, Mice, 1962 Cedarwood
South of Montgomery Ward
4-21
2 students want to buy nice 2 bed-
room mobile home-Cash Call 841:
3287. 4-25
1970 Kawasaki 175cc Dirt Bike, less than 3,000 miles $375. Call Russ at 842-2108. 4-21
1967 Firebird, 326-3-speed. Ampex
tapes and tapes included. Runs great
and looks good $1,100 or best offer.
Call Rog at 843-5870. 4-21
The season leisure has arrived. We have hammers, French Foreign League sandals, Viet Nam Jong Booteh flags, and a soccer ball flower. Burleson 185 Vermont. 4-25
1971 Toyota Celica Yellow with black vinyl roof, mug wheels. Must illimmediately excellent. condition. 112-864-3951. 112-864-3951. 4-25
183-864-3951.
Well-balanced starter component pys-
trol system. 12VDC, 150W. Type II. S2-A500
Type II. S2-Carriage kit. A5-420
push button stater motor receiver. cus-
tion switch $75.141 Indiana. Apt. 8. 1530
Northwestern Ave.
56 VW for sale. Runs good. Call 842-3100 mornings or evenings. 4-25
LAW STUDENT DIGS WAKING
WILL SELL 67 V W EXCELENT
SHAPE INSECT & OUT CALL 842-
5647 AND MAKE OFFER 4-25
Model 1725-81, Roberta reel to reel and cartridge type recorder Like New-Will sell for $240 Also stereo albums, cheap, 849-3039 4-25
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Great laughs while frolicking king size water bed, liner and frame $10—Cussette Car Storer, excellent sound car set-$84, 824-695-4260 6:09 p.m. 4:26
Parting out 1965 Glda 2 Dr. Dyn. 82¢ cu ins jugging AO Auto Traction $30.00 Each $40.00 Also 2 G 70 H-Load Range B 150 Wide Oval Red Lines $35. Like new
1968 NORTON Cafe Racer, Excellent,
$975, 1959 Ford pickup ² , ton $275,
see at 900 Oak St. afternoons and
early evenings only. 4-24
For Sale or trade for pickup 1965
Ford Galaxie 300 2 door hardtop, H-8.
AIR, Automatic, powder blue with
a white stripe. Mint condition.
2015 W. Ack, 261 W. Apth,
425 W. Apth, 411 W. Apth
4-24
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can buy them components at FACTORY STORE, Inc., 2047 150th Avenue. The only office-Midway Office Suite. Free Rooms. Fee for full room.
1970 B.S.A. 500 Startie, Blue Run,
well. Excellent condition, 2,900 miles.
$550 or best offer. Call Dave at 842-
6552
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Tennis racket Davis Class 4.3/4
medium. String with Imperial gut,
new Bancroft grip. Fine condition.
Call #82-6436
4-28
Practically brand new electric Smith Corona elite typewriter for sale. Less than 15 hrs use. First $80 takes you. 842-3671 or 842-4444. Ask for Dick
Blue girl's Raleigh 3-speed bicycle
Call 843-6556 if interested—ask for Phyllis
4-26
SAVE ON BOOKS. Used paperbacks only 15c **PLAY BOYS** now *2*价; Money to loan. Traders. #22 Mass
TAPES & -tracks $4, 2-tracks $1.25
Also bargains on taup players, tape
record, record players and causeries.
buy-Sel-Trainer Traders. 822 Max
GET YOUR OFFICIAL KANSAS RANE
LAYS 'T-SHIRT AT THE KANSAS
BOOKSTORE' ONLY $2.52
COMPLETE: WITH DECAL.
4-21
GET YOUR OFFICIAL KANASSA DECORATIONS T-SHIRT AT THE KANASSA BOOKSTORE# ON WWW.KANASSA.COM #2-21 WITH DECAL FOR THE BUY!
CAMERAS Polaroids, starting at $2.50 also 35 mm., movie cameras, instantiates, projectors, Money to Loan Traders, 822 Mass. 4-56
103 Observer Imaging 4 dts. HT 879
104 Observer Imaging 2 dts. HT 879
LH SNKS, New Trees, Bertlington
Rock IH Immuno-Guardian Guards
with maintenance 600 book $75.45
with maintenance 600 book $75.45
Haircutter, stream, Lady Schick, 30 rollers, used once. $19. Call Lara after 6:00, 843-1999. 4-25
STREFO SYSTEM -Mt-State AM-FM
stereo. Brand new Panasonic
referral for $169. Must sell. Call 842-6728 4-27
Must Sell 1968 VW Sedan, used mechanically but needs body work. Also 1960 Bear Clivy, 6 x 4), auto-home stove, electric stoves, $27.49 NIO; NX-640
Cashman Eagle, excellent credit, $80
25c mcro. Macbook, basket job, no title,
$40 #82-3877 Please leave no, and
4-27 to return your call
Microscope for sale. If coming to KU-Med, School. you will have to furnish your own microscope. Call 842-6929 at 5:00 p.m. 4-27
Sale on all winter coats, sweaters,
jackets and tuxedos. To everything
there is a season. Earthshine, 12 E.
8th, 4-27
Guitar Amp for sale: Small amp will work great for stage monitor or sounds real nice miked. Less than $30, call Bob at 842-9783. 4-27
Schwinn—Variety 10-speed bicycle,
has everything and in perfect condition.
Price $75 Call Bill, JRIP 214
864-2647
4-25
FOR RENT
SUMMER RENTALS Live close to campus this summer in a room, house or apartment. Economical accommodations. Louisiana. 841-731-6211. 5-9
Apartments for rent. Available May 15,
summer rates, air conditioning.
range $50-$85. Call 842-9123 after 6:00
p.m. 19 W. 14th
4-21
Tried of trying to find that ideal nut, or home for your vents. We now have nutmeg in various locations and price ranges. McGrew Ability, 001 Kentucky, 84252; McGrew Ability, 001 Michigan, 84252.
When you're hot, you're hot. When you're cold, you're cold. Do comfortable comfort at UNIVERSITY MENTS. Enter our pool & close it. MENTS. Enter our pool & close it. Apt I1, 529W 9th Phone: 835-672-4200.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR now show-
troom furnished and unfurnished apart-
ments, short acre址 at 1279 Chap to campus
place. Call 800-635-3929 or 1 W41 19w. Ap 2B or call 845-353-
6800.
LOOK WHAT SANTE APTS HAVE TO OFFERT SANTE rateres, swimming pool, A.C. Free cable, tiled bathrooms 112-711 Bags #843-2116
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right next door to campus, MISSOURI; bedroom apartments available. Aug 21-23 for rent; rooms available at end of semester. Rentals available at end of semester. www.careers.washington.edu/careers/careers.html var.college, centered 847-789-808 between 5.25 p.m. and 10.20 p.m.
Large, two bedrooms mobile home.
Bedroom are accommodated, water
and lot rent. 1600 sq. ft. single person.
Room = 180 $Phone
hours: 4/5-8/6 or Carrel
UNIT 1358
MODERN APARTMENTS. Furnished and unfurnished one bedroom from $83-110 per room, plus utilities. Near campus. In next fall Dave, B42, 692-694, B42, 695-161.
Sublime for summer, apt. one bedroom,
A C. private, close to campus,
furnished. $130, 1025 Indiana. 842-7160.
Apt. E, 4-26
Square, Iowa & Harvard; and A. M. 11th & Missouri. Then compare the cost of living in one of these handsome apartments with the cost of renting apartments and you will be able to more have to a dishwash, a C.A., heat and water utilities part.
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
A DIPARTMENT FOR August,
1987. Make one call or visit to
Mrs. Reynolds, 482-2548 or 2607-A Harvard
Lawrence, 312-3315. Lawrence's law-
rence's best built, located, and
managed garden property. Lawrence's
Townhouse duplex, 2 br.'s, elec. kit,
formal d., fully carpeted, C/A, patio,
garage, $130 mo. Call 842-9159 after
5:00 p.m.
two bedroom, furnished apartments for $130. Air conditioned, store, refrigerator. No utilities paid. Call 842-5834 after 5 and weekends.
SAHAIM AACH 602. Schwarz. Clean
1 admon, kitch, bath, A/C water. Maint.
rent from 1st or 15 of May
for 4-8 hours per week. A-
mnts -842-2933 at 6 p.m
4-24
Two studio apartments. Quilt, furnished, air-conditioning, steam-heating. Two bedrooms. Business training. Businessman or graduate student. Reference Available May 20 at www.mcneill.edu.
SUMMER RATE-New leasing furnished apartment, sleeping room with or without kitchen privileges for children. New NEU Kit and tour 815-757-697
SPENNING THE SUMMER IN LAW-HYBRIDITY: You can enroll yourself in appropriate office programs with a summer program offered by the University of Arizona Law Harvard School. Living in AZA, Arizona Harvard School is a two-member (male & female) Agreement, mth & Avonion. Harvard can be emotional and personal, but it is also surprisingly modest special for women. After attending a professional summer this summer a wonderful time to be!
airport, spaces town house for summer. Three bedrooms, detached. 1300 sq. ft. 2-car garage, shag carpet, central air, patio, & garage. Complexity, Call 800-745-6959.
To KU male nice out close to Union
May work out all or part of rent
Available now, phone 843-8234 5-9
Need to sub-leave apt. 2, bbfm., umbrella, 1bk, from campus, for summer.
$80 mo. Call 842-2862 or 843-2116
Rooms for rent. Need girls to share
house $50 includes included. Avail
May 1 or May 19, 842-5768 4-27
PLAZA MANOR Summer and rentals now available. Students, one hour furnished Swimming air-port club rates summer 2014. Merge 8-Drive.
For Sublease, Furnished Stouffer
Place atep. May 20-Aug. 20, dates flexible.
Must be married and attending
summer school. Call 842-6531 4-26
Barn Parties! Now available for
barn parties at Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry,
Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry, and hot and cooler areas of parking
Call Joe Stronge 6 p.m. at 831-270-4920.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. John Wells. 822-5220 tf
NOTICE
WEDDING INVITATIONS — PRICES
custom printed only $4.95; custom
printed only $6.95; Sold to
catalog and samples to Heldy
Agency, 206 East Muni, Richmond,
Idaho
Women's Alterations. 20 years experience Call 843-7267, 9:30-5:40 3-52
THE MIDDLE EAR comes to LAWRENCE. Stenson equipment at cost. THE HARDWARE wants to save $500,000. Decide All manufacturers. 4-24
INFANT DAY-CARE, CENTER 812-
7604. Professional child-care for
children 1 mo to 12 min. Full or part-time.
Specialized design offered.
Environment 2.
Lovely furnished apartment, with central air, for 2 men, very close to campus, available May 20th for summer or and fall Phone 843-689-424
VOX BASS, AMP $165 FLOREAL,
SATURDAYS 8:30 AM KEYEROS, VONNE-
NIE KYEROS, WONNE NIE GRAFICHE
BOLUS TRIALFAAMPER
CLOSETES BIKONON 119 Vernier
SUBLASEE - 2-bir. 2 bath, 2衣thr. unfurried Gatehouse apartments. 4-bath, 2 bath, 2衣thr. dishwasher. A-C Bath. Pool Balcony. Great Location. Call 618-3588-2-820. Call 618-3588-2-820.
**GIRLS** & **WOMEN** Are you the model for Call Momoza for free e-waste recycling training Training taking Call Mr. Frick at Momoza Model, 845-2309 or at KR Momoza Model, 845-2309
HOISES ROARDED EXCELLENT
FULL STALL CARE CLOSE IN,
FULL STALE A PRIVATE
STABLE Also IGNORE
'SALF' 842-1406 4:25
FOUND—BROWN GLASSES — she looks maybe female, but who knows? Found a round ago Sunday just West of Strong. Call 812-4255 4-25
Typewriters and Sewing Machines—Nane Brands at Bargain Prices. Money to Loan. Traders. 822 Mass. 4-26
CUNS Winchester, Remington, Cur-
sor and IH Mills were each 32 sho-
tle winners. Large selection of Colli-
nage, Nissan Motor, Marine
Motive based on gears, Trades
River
GET YOUR OFFICIAL KANSAS BEAUTY T-SHIRT AT THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE! ONLY $2.25
COMPLETE WITH DECAL.
Nortgrowth Laundry and Dry Cleaning,
at the Mini-Fliza Modern and
quick service. 1910 Haskell. 842-9292.
Just arrived - Western shirts in blue
denim and chamaise. Fun, funny,
functional, and cheap. Earthshine. 12
E. 8th. 4-28
Physical Therapy Club will meet at
1:00 p.m. Sunday for their aging
outing. Those not at the 4th
amphitheatre will be brought
248 further for information 4-21
OVERSEAS-JOBS FOR STUDENTS,
Bachelor's in Education, all
All Professors and occupations;
complete online coursework;
significantly tight-fitting. Free informa-
tion. Job list 1527; San Diego, Cal.
92115.
WANTED
We buy used books, also old Playboys and Pent-Home magazines in good condition! Call 842.6216-5-9
Experienced Draftman will do Thesis work such as Graphics, Flow Charts and Illustrations and prompt, and print. Send resume to Ask for Renate Henick 4-21
FAIMHOUSE-Wanted to rent. Respondible KU students with references willing to make repair. Negotiate lease for one year or longer. 842-9135
Male Roomsmith(s) to share spaces,
two-bedroom, quiet-level apartment
for summer and magic fall in West
Lawrence - Call 842-823-9000 4-25
Wanted: Roommate to share 1 bedroom apartment next fall. For info call Phil at 843-6007. 4-26
1 female roommate for summer and
tall to share 1 bedroom apt, in complex.
Rent $45 mn. | util. Call 842-
7891 after 7 p.m.
WANTED PEOPLE TO COME INTO THE KANASAN UNION BOOKSTORE OF THE KANASAN UNION OFFICIAL KANASAN RELIANCE OF THE KANASAN COMPLETE WITH DECIPH. 4-21
WANTED—People in the mood to go offef, to folk dance with us tonight at Putter Lake. 7-10 p.m. (172)
Robinson Gym (if rain)
Roommate wanted to share house for the summer. Call Haywood. 842-2256. 6.29
Wanted: one or two roommates to summer in house on Ohio Lease the $40 per person. Each have own room. Will accept couple. 843-7362. 4-2
TYPING
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other type, merit papers and other writing types. Type Accurate and prompt typing. Phone 814-3544, Mm Wright.
Three, term papers, typed accurately and promptly. IBM SELFycor, your choice of style types. Also editing at choice rate. Ronda, 840-979-842-860-863.
Typing in my home. IBM Selectric.
Prompt accurate work. Experienced.
Call 841-2556. $-9
*TYPING THIES THESES DISSERTATIONS MISCELLANEOUS WORK*
One Solicite with plex typo, with ptx typo in Travest.
821-1400 2099 Ridge 6-90
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-2881. Mike Ranckenb
FANL, EFFICIENT WORK. CARRY
EFFICIENT WORK for legal cases
for local parents, will check
writings and grammar* 4-26
4734 Experienced typists with type
work experience 4-26
HELP WANTED
TEACHERS WANTED Contact
Southwest NM
Northwest NM
NAM 87106 NM
200 year. Borned and a member of
N.A.T.A.
Banded and a member of
5-8
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt, reasonable rates. Please call cah8-1954. 4-27
7-38
wanted for interesting
Work own hours, general commu-
sion Call 642-639-169 ask for Mike
Two cheats wanted for Cheat Case
4-24 Two chicks wanted for Chase Concert. Ticke's furnished. Call 864-2828.
4-21
Now taking job applications for work positions at Microsoft pay, for work surroundings and location. Microsoft No experience necessary. Send resumes to Microsoft, 50 West 42nd Street, Washington, DC 20006. Within 10 business days call 415-876-5252 Key Roberts
$65 to $90 Per WK/PAKT TIME. Unsupervised occupancy at home in your spare time. Provide occupancy data for individuals with GOOD hardwriting skills and CORE ENGINEERING experience. For further information regarding opportunities with those companies, FQ Box 82, Cawdorville, WA 98324. FQ Box 82, Cawdorville, WA 98324.
LOST
Small white terrier with brown spots,
Wearing a red collar. Very, very
friendly, Very important to family.
Reward offered. Please call 843-106-365
Books Bibles Potter's Gift Framing
(CRISP) 1352-8533
REFERENCE
711-8640
+
711 West 23rd St.
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Lawrence, Kentucky 60044
JAROLD'S Diving Supplies
Jobs are available at national parks, hotels, and resort areas in New York. Employees will only be able to handle the first 100 jobs. Mail $5 to Action Indiana 47023 for information. If you have any questions, write your $1 will be refunded.
843-3565 Lawrence. Kansas
Hair Capes—If you didn't get one,
you should be very湿 by now. Next
month, stay dry—at EARTHSHINE,
E 8, Ethr.
4-27
Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I.
Equip in Stock Certified
Instructor
MISCELLANEOUS
Young, male cat. Pale yellow with orange eyes, missing on Sun. Evening. No collar. Please call 842-8129
kansas union
Lost- Male cat, short black, hair with
white and shear white gloss,
shape on neck, 6 months old.
Kitten: 1130. Kentucky. Age:
6-26
kitten
T-SHIRT
GET YOUR
Prevention Sunglasses at, Robinson
Field No. 3. Left in case hanging on
backpack. Call Roger Miller—843-8154
at 6:00.
RICHARD—for your sore leg, why?
Your sore leg from a heavy day are recommended by doctors to cure ankle, molygne, dihydrone, and whatever else plus
KIEF'S Discount Records
OFFICIAL KANSAS RELAYS
Only $2.25 complete with decal at
LINDA RONSTADT DANNY COX
PERSONAL
Live at COWTOWN BALLROOM Saturday Night
JAMES KRAUS
Delicious Food and
Superior Service,
Complete Menu,
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Our menu is and always been
ROSE KEYBOARD STUDIOS
Tickets $1.00 off face value with student I.D. at
- Guitars
- Recorders
- Music
- Strings
- Accessories
sirloin
1903 Mass. 843-3007 OPEN NIGHTS
YOU BETTER GET ON OVER TO
THE KANSAS ANNEX BOOKSTORE
FOR YOUR WISHES. YOU CAN
KANSAS RELAYS 7-SHIFT IT IS
ONLY $2.5. COMPLETE WITH DATE.
***
All kinds of love make the world go round. Gay Liberation now on robes at 7 p.m. 1250 George Street. Our 2nd annual Spring Gay Day Celebration 4-24
Right Next to Campus
121 OREAD
RIGHT AND SPIRS
MILK EEEEEEE
EASE FISE SAWES
SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
843 785-10 and Delivery & 911
THE HLE in the WALL
Phone 843-1431 Open 4:30 Closed Mondays
1. Mines Works of the
Kaw River Bridge
Webster's Mobile Homes
CALENDAR
CALL
UN#-4444
For SUA Events
Tony's 66 Service
THE MERCANTILE
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
turning service
Lawrence, KG54 60044
344 Iowa
VI 2-1008
40
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Your Complete Service Design
6 proof sittinas $5.00
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
24th & Iowa Ph.V13(155)
Waxdays 8:51:00 Sunday 10:3
4 proof sittings $3.00
The downs - Skirting - Parts
Ample Park Spaces Available
3409 W. 61h 842-7700
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
Special Senior Rates on all orders.
Parts at a discount
KAT Suzuki
Please call for your appointment for SENIOR PICTURE
摄
SENIORS
CSC
TOYOTA THUMPH
Lawrence's first and only REAL access store.
Factory Authorized
Sales & Service
Hixon Studio
Ph.843-0330
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-291
EAGLE
Competition Sports Careers
FA
30 Varieties of Donuts
Hot and Cold Drinks
Sandwiches
5 a.m. - 7 p.m. Tues. - Sat.
5-5 Sun.
5-9 Mon.
17:30 - 23:rd St.
824-894
WHY RENT?
Carol Lee
Red Baron
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
841.8699
BURTON MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY
843-8477
2020 Iowa / South Hwy. 501
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
Mass—The Malls—Hilicrest—KU Union Phone 843-121
PLANNING A TRIP??
See
Open 24 hrs. per day
Maupintour travel service
DRIVE-IN
AND COOP OP
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
days per week
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
★★★★★★★★★★★.
50¢ OFF any two handed sandwich with the
MUST one at regular price. You
must not purchase a sandwich with a
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
The Bull & Bear
11 W. 9th
Featuring—Roast Beef, BBQ Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef,
Grilled Cheese, and the Reuben
Coffees on 1 a.m.
Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon-Sat Sun 12 to 8 p.m.
Expire Apr 130
RAMADA INN
Fiqun Salen
842 2323
Spacion two groups, Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free future analysis. Swimming privileges.
DISCOUNT
---
043
0500
PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
The Stereo Store
AUDIOTRONICS
---
928 Mass
12
Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
0109 55 24 70
'Views of Old Lawrence To Be Shown at Spooner
ART
SEVEN EAST SEVENTH
GALERY: 'Michael Patrick:
M.F.A. Themes Exhibit' Opens
M.F.A. Screenings intaglio,
and silkscreen prints
SPOONER ART MUSEUM:
"Views of Old Law," Opens Sunday. Alfredo Röder, author of "Views of Old Law," will conduct a tour of the exhibit at 2 p.m. Sunday. Lawrence, prints and drawings, paintings, prints and drawings
UNION GALLERY: An exhibit by students in the departments of painting and sculpture. Through May 4.
KANSAN
CONCERTS
HOCH AUDITORUM: Kansas Relays Concert, "Chase." 8 p.m. Saturday.
EXPERIMENTAL THEA-TRE: KU Opera Workshop recital. 8 p.m. Wednesday.
DANCES
EAST LAWRENCE CENTER:
"Revolution of the Mind" dance,
sponsored by the Upsilon chapter
of Alpha Phi Alpha. 8:30 p.m.
tonight. The Black Rock
Adventure band will perform.
LAWRENCE NATIONAL
GUARD ARMORY. "The Man"
will be there.
LAWRENCE NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY: The Mu chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi who sponsor dance from 11 to 3, to 5
AURH to Host Honors Banquet
The Association of University Residence Halls will hold an honors banquet at 5:30 p.m., Thursday, in Lewis Hall.
According to Kathy Leavitt, Mound City junior and chairman for the dinner, the purpose of the annual event is to honor both past and present officers of AURH. They include residents and residence officers and all those who have worked with AURH are invited to attend.
a. m. Saturday. Everyday People and TNJ will perform.
FILMS
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
SUA Popular Film, "The Fox"
7:30 and 12 p.15. tonight
and vacation.
Anne Hine
Kerula Deleu
SPOONER ART MUSEUM:
KU MUSEUM of Art Films, "The Chicken,
'Chairy Tale'
and 'Place to Stand'
3 o'clock, Sunday.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
International Film My Sister,
Sara and her husband. Directed by Vilogt Sjoman, Starring Bärl Andersson, Sweden.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
Film Society presents a collection of experimental films directed by the Dadaists and Surrealists. 70
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
SUA Classical Film, 8/4; 7.30 and 9.15 p.m. Wednesday.
directed by Federico Fellini,
starring Marcelo Mastroianni,
Bob Dylan and Claudia Cardinale.
California, Italy, 1983.
and 9 p.m. Monday
DYCHE AUDIORIUM: SUA Science Fiction Film, "Five Million p.m. to Earth" 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
GRANADA THEATRE: "X, Y & Zee."
& Zee."
HILLCREST 1: "The
GUINNEDER
HILLCREST 2 & 3: "The Last Picture Show."
VARSITY THEATRE: "The Hot Rock."
THEATRE
UNIVERSITY THEATRE:
"La Boheme." 8 p.m. tonight and
Saturday. 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
The KU Theatre Department has been honored this semester with the presence of Pierre and director and director from Belgium.
By RON PARKER Kansan Reviewer
Laroche has directed the current production of "La Bohème," the success of which justifies his reputation as an artist of the theatre, as well as a filmmaker. Laroche is also a brilliant filmmaker.
Laroche Shines as Filmmaker
This fact was evidenced earlier this month with the screening of Lacroze's film "I'll Pleat Dans Me" in New York. The film was released in Belgium a couple of years ago, but has yet to be released in this country. And a jury it is, too that America wants its films to embrace this lovely film.
"IL PLUT," is based on the play by Paul Wylie, which features a young boy who seeks high acclaim. Willems and Wylie's characters compete in screenplay, eliminating all
The story line is so simple than a description of it would sound complex. As briefly as possible, the programmer named Herman is in love with a lovely boutique operator named Madelaine. Madelaine's relative passivity is that she will hang on to Herman hanging on. One day Madelaine inherits an estate in the country. She and Herman go to Paris to get a new house, begins a series of gently funny, slightly improbable adventures.
THE FILM is very much a romance—spirited and lyrical. It never plunges into sentimentality, however, because Laroche and Willems sustain a constant hint of parody. There are some good songs, but reminiscent of Mack Sennett and Richard Lester, but more often
traces of stagnation. The picture is wonderfully cinematic, filmed with considerable love and skill.
the film looks like a romantic painting. Each shot is carefully composed with interesting relations and artistic framing.
The physical qualities of the characters are perfect, and the fact that all the acting is splendid seems merely a happy bonus.
It is my sincere hope that "I Pleats Du Ma Sonna" will find its way to this country as soon as possible. Its widespread release and acceptance international film-maker. In the meantime, take advantage of his presence by seeing "La Bohème." It's the crowning work of an old master, by a talented new master.
Alan Gewirth, professor of
Chicago, spoke on the topic of
"Moral Rationality" Thursday
night to Forum Room audience
Architecture School to Offer Study Program in England
By CLYDE LOBB
Kansas Staff Writer
A junior study abroad program for architecture was planned by H.Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
DONALD P. EWERT was a student in the School of Architecture in 1925. After his third
The junior year study abroad program was proposed as one method of employing part of the Donald P. Ewert Memorial Fund.
Kahn completed arrangements with universities in England that will allow architecture students to attend Kansas to attend next year.
Kahn said the purpose of the trip was "not just to establish a junior year abroad program for our students but a student exchange program for students in English universities."
year of study. Ewert and two others visited the world while crossing the Sinai desert to Cario. Ewert contracted diphrasia and died in a hospital.
Ewert's parents, who died in the 1960s, lived in Kansas and later moved to California. They continued to correspond with the school and when they died left their entire families in the Architecture and Urban Design.
Nine students will be competing for three full scholarships to study abroad next year. The three scholarships will be given to each student. The recipients will choose one of four schools to attend in England.
THE FOUR SCHOOLS are:
The college of Environmental Studies of the University College London, Cambridge University,
University of Leeds, Harriet Watt university of the college of art of the University of Leeds
Edinburgh in Scotland.
"In order to insure a diversity of experience," said Kahn, no two students will be attending the same school."
Kahn said that he also held some preliminary discussions with the U.S. government in Europe that were being considered by the U.S. Embassy in Paris in 1973 and 1974.
Those schools were the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich Switzerland, some schools in London, some in Northampton and the Institute of Technology in Haiti at the Royal Danish Academy in Copenhagen.
Kahn said Zurich would work
on agreement with the
he said there was no possibility
of agreement in Italy because
the Italian universities are
really not as well prepared.
KAHN DESCRIBED these meetings as having "mixed success."
Between Ellen
and Jill
came Paul
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Turbulent '60s Rocked by Race, War Demonstrations
By STUART BOYCE
Kansan Staff Writer
The decade of the 1960s may be referred to by future historians as the era of protest. During this period there were more restrictions than in any previous decade.
The protest at the University of Kansas reflected the national trend. The following summary of protest at KU is taken from a report that was published during that period.
The decade started innocently and quietly. The major protest of the year 1960 happened when 20 freshman girls from Gertrude Sollardars Pearson residence hall were arrested by the police while whistled at the bypassers. The law students were surprised to see their traditional perch occupied but solved the problem by typing one of the women to the statue of Jimmy Green. This tactic discouraged them on the steps and ended protest for 1960.
IN 1961, THE Civil Rights Council was
in fighting to integrate KU and Lawrence.
They sponsored a petition that stated that those who signed it would support boycots of businesses that refused service to anyone because of race, religion or national origin. In two months they had 800 signatures.
The Council sponsored a sit-in at Louise's bar. Ten white and nine black students walked into the bar and asked to be served. Louise refused to serve them and called the police. The police removed the protesters to the police station, where they were kept for a while but not booked or charged with any crime.
The Council also tried to get barbers to integrate their shops. They were successful, for within a year nearly all the barber shops were integrated.
IN 1982 THE first war protest of the decade was heard.
Students formed a Student Peace Union whose aim was to find alternatives to war. They said "nothing freedom or the human nature" in nature in a world committed to rallition.
When the United States resumed nuclear
testing, with its atmospheric nuclear explosions on Christmas Island in the Pacific. 19 persons formed a sign-carrying team and participated in a St., up 14th St., and across the campus.
Other peace efforts were carried out by eight members of a KU Methodist study group. They marched in Topeka in a "Witness the Peace" march for disarmament.
In 1963, the Civil Rights Council renewed its efforts for integration. They announced that blacks were still not being served in Louise's or the Huddle bars. They threatened to take the case to the county attorney if no action was taken to integrate them.
THE COUNCIL also picketed the major KU political parties for not taking a definite stand on KU racial issues, especially in the fraternities and sororities.
During this year the Student Peace Union picketed members of the Arnold Air Society (an honorary branch of Air Force ROTC) who were meeting in the Student Union. The picketers carried signs with slogans such as "This is a University, Not
The year 1964 hosted only one major demonstration. About 100 persons picked the Sigma Nu fraternity house for two hours because it had a discriminatory national constitution. They hoped to force the national chapter to remove this clause.
a Military Installation."
Also the Civil Rights Council petitioned the Inter-Fraternity Council to make a public statement clarifying its stand on the inter-fraternity group members into the KU Interfriam Council.
BY 1963, the war in Vietnam was well under way. This motivated 30 members of the Student Peace Union to picket the Lawrence Selective Service office. They protested the drafting of men to fight in Vietnam.
During that year one of the largest arrests at a KU demonstration took place. The Civil Rights Council sponsored a protest demonstration in Chancellor W. Hearn's office, holding the 'tact approval of discrimination in campus, fraternity, and sororities."
The police arrested 110 persons and charged them with disturbing the peace. When the University learned their names they were locked up three days later. Wesco, removed the suspicion.
The calm before the storm was 1966, when very little noticed took place.
A PEACE VIGIL took place in South Park every Sunday from noon until 12:30 p.m. Participants protested the war in Vietnam.
During 1966, an experimental legal counseling program for inmates of Leavenworth penitentiary was established by the KU School of Law.
In the fall, the SDS made its presence known. They protested military recruitment by sending letters to Congress.
was set up by the U.S. Marine Corps in the Kansas Union.
OTHER PEACE efforts were carried out by students who collected signatures on a petition they took to Congress. The signers were expressing "indignation at the senseless destruction of Vietnam and its people."
Students also took out a two page advertisement in the Kanan protest the week prior.
A petition was passed around that protested CIA recruitment on campus.
The war was not the only subject of protest at this time.
KU African Club members hold a small demonstration in front of the student union protesting alleged racism and white supremacy in Rhodesia.
Three students circulated a petition which 'demanded that Watson Library remain open with full book services until midnight Sunday through Friday.'
See TURBULENT '60s on Page 7
Special Section
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Friday, April 21, 1972
THE WATER CITY SCHOOL
Student Activism
Dandelion Pickers Beautify Strong Hall Area
KU students are shown at a wartime organized student project—picking dandelions in the front yard of Stron Hall. The year was 1945, so these students were on duty.
Student Involvement An Age-Old Reality
of the vicinity of Strong Hall. Malot himself reportedly joined the students in their endeavor. (See site on Page 6A.)
By LESLIE RISS
Kansan Staff Writer
Riots and rebellions in the academic world have been in evidence since at least the 4th century, A.D., according to Professor James Stanford University's school of education.
"American students have been involved in public issues since the Revolution. Alexander Hamilton began his career as a student agitator. For 40 years prior to the War, students from the North and the South were the issue of slavery." Cowley reported.
In 1823 half of Harvard's senior class was expelled for activity in anticoronics.
Outside agitators appeared on campuses in 1906. Upton Sinclair, Clarence Darrow, Jack London and others founded the Intercollegiate Socialist Society which, during the Great Depression, created turmil on campus.
On April 12, 1934, 500,000 students across the country rebelled in a peace strike. The
Student Shouts Turned to Murmurs
Kansan Staff Writer
Today, two years after the campus upheavals at Kent State and Jackson State, the loud voice of student activism has died down to just a quiet murmur.
"Activism," Peggy Scott, Prairie Village sophomore and a member of the Women's Coalition, said recently, "has declined. There haven't any real issues yet to student. The people are still radical and they have no real issues to act upon."
By MONA DUNN
"Student activism is dead ... apathy new rules," said the president of the Gay Law Center.
The president of Gay Liberation, who wishes to be identified only as Joe,
"Before, it was strong on the Black Students Union and getting rid of the war. It was not."
that before his group came to the University, he said the student knew nothing at all about burglaries.
The Gay Liberation group, which was started in the summer of 1970, was aimed at decreasing the hostilities surrounding homosexuality, he said.
Joe said the organization had up to 100 members. The present membership is 30. The number of members fluctuate from semester to semester, he said.
The Gay Liberation Front, which is open to anyone who is gay, has meetings about a once week. Joe said the front advertised the fact that it is on campus in order that other homosexuals who do not have friends or "understanding" can join the group.
The Gay Liberation Front has been seeking recognition from the University.
They have brought their case to court
and have lost. They are now preparing to appear before the Supreme Court,
Joe believes that the U.S. laws are for them.
The Gay Liberation Front, Joe said, does many educational things. He said they had a lot to do about what homosexuality is. During the past year Gay Lib has gone to Kansas State College at Pittsburgh and has presented a Gay Caucus in Kansas State's Gay Caucus at Manhattan.
"If we go to the Supreme Court we will win," he said.
issues of civil rights and war were primary concerns.
Another outlet for student activism is the Women's Coalition, which was started nearly three and a half years ago by a group of women who were dissatisfied with their roles as women, a spokesman for the Coalition said recently.
The members of the Coalition formed a
Political repression, scare tactics of McCarthy and general apathy continued until late in the '50s, when the civil rights movement aroused the sympathies of students.
Student movements usually followed political trends. It was not until the 1960s, that national attention was focused on campuses. The New Left became widely recognized and organizations such as the Democratic Society (DJS) were created.
IN THE 1930s, the first mass student movements began with the antitwar question. But World War II shifted concerns from the student movement.
group called the February Sisters and gained public attention when they occupied the East Asian Students building in February. They protested the lack of a day-cure center, a women's health center or a扮 of a woman in an administrative post.
Since that time plans for a day care center and a women's health service have been established. There is presently a search committee which was appointed by the Chancellor. The committee is interviewing candidates for the position of director of the Office of Affirmative Action for Women.
Peggy Scott said the day-care center which was approved by the University failed to meet the needs of the participation center in the day-care center will start operation in the fail.
The history of student activism at KU has been moderate.
In 1882 the yearbook of the University of Kansas, Kikkabe, contained an introduction which stated that student interests had been attracted to society affairs, athletics, and "these other pursuits that form no portion of our regular college work."
THE INTEGRATION also states that, "Our University, while sadly lacking in the elements that go to make up the frock-lose some barricades of some of the Eastern institutions, and while hazing, shower baths, cane fights and other pernicious pleasanties are to us unknown, we still have our spirit . . ."
This was the time when the faculty picture was contained in a one page photograph. Student activism was not obsolete, but it became more powerful. Arbor Day, for two-weeks of Christmas vacation instead of one, for a vacation the day after Washington's birthday, for excuse from "chapel rhetoric," and the facetious lower the price of diplomas from $5 to $7.75.
Most of KU's student movement until 1914 consisted of football rallies, organizing male and female student councils, practical joking, raising the enrollment and debating. Few students worried about keenin race with "dead old Havlad."
THE 1914 Jayhawker editor said, "The University of Kansas has a reputation for being a tough school."
est and most moral of any of its sister schools."
KU had 2,700 students in 1914, and it was realized that good behavior was not always possible. To criticism that the "castle walk" and other dances were "immoral," students replied that any dance, or dances, were thinking immoral, thoughts.
Also in 1914 it was suggested by students that the Men's Student Council would be less criticized for inefficiency if it had been allowed to act as the real student government of KU.
Julian Street of Collier's visited the Lawrence campus in 1915.
"The University of Kansas is anything but backward," he said. "Directness, sincerity, strength, thoughtfulness and practicality are Kansas qualities."
ALTOUGH NO one thought that girl dancing together at the 1915 Girls' Prom was an act of Women's Lib, "feminine unrest." The quiet demands for equal rights between men and women were heard on many campuses. But with the extreme patriotism brought on by World War I, the individual concerns of college were side-by-side.
"Our Bays are Coming" was the theme of the foreword in the 1918 Jayhawker. Student activities centered on the war. Enrollment dropped from 3,457 to 2,846. A War Council was created to raise funds for Liberty Bonds and Thrift Stamps.
The 1919 Jayhawker, "The Peace Book," shows a year of reorganization and renewed academic interest. Students in 1920 rallied to the "Put KU First" spirit in hopes of raising $1 million to build a Service building and a Victory Stadium.
THE 1930 yearbook was dedicated to the "Spirit of Youth." Many students saw no need for involvement in war efforts. However, the usually passive mind on campus gradually changed. In 1941 a student said, "I went to school and studied at torchlight demonstrations, but are pleading for students to rise to their rights and freedoms."
See STUDENT on Page 6
Administrators Reminisce About 'Old Days' at KU
Kansan Staff Writer
Rv.IUDVHENRY
Student concern and involvement in events on campus is nothing new at the University of Kansas, according to three administrators who studied at KU in the past.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, studied at KU in the 1920s and then at the University of 1924 to 1928, has been a professor of physical education at KU for 31 years, and this is his 56th year as chairman of the department. He was also the person who began his career as a KU student in 1941.
The three reminisced about student activism and involvement at KU during their student days as well as during the time they have been on the faculty.
SHENK SAID, "I can remember several cases of student concern. The usual things they were concerned about were a little bit different from now."
Nichols said none of the students were on campus because of vacation, but many of them were interested in his gymnast support of Lindley. Shenk he got a job with the Alumni Association to help with the correspondence as a result of his visit. The students' around to the various houses on campus.
Shenk and Nichols both remembered the Christmas vacation of 1924 when Gov.
Johnathan M. Davis fired Chancellor Johnnath K. Lindley. Shenk said the governor controlled the universities at that time instead of a Board of Regents, and Davis had fired the chancellor in a political move.
TWO DAYS AFTER the students returned to campus, W. L. Burdick, vice president of the University and professor of law, presided over an all-student conference at Yale Law School. Nichols said there was a tremendous student turnout in support of Lindley.
Within two days after classes had
started, Shei Shuang and Indah had
restored his shirley.
"Burdick said that he could say one
Alderson said that a few years ago at the reunions that take place during commencement, one old alumna commented on the student reaction to Lindley's being fired. The alumna said many of the students went to Topeka in defense of Lindley, even though it was much harder for the students to get there in 1924.
thing in his time as chancellor, "Shenk never and anyone flunk a final exam."
AS A RESULT of the Lindley incident, the Board of Regents was created, and control of the universities passed from the governor to the regents.
While discussing dissension at KU, Nichols there was a publication called the Dove when he was in school. The Dove, printed on pink paper, was a liberal journal1 of opinion which championed unpopular causes, according to Nichols.
One of the principal writers for the publication was Paul Porter, a liberal who was disliked on campus because of his views, Nichols said. He many of the
rightest students challenged Porter's right to freedom of expression, and the chancellor had to defend Forter and the Dove against those who wanted to censure them.
NICHOLS SAID one of Porter's articles deal with the abolition of the traditional freshman caps. All freshmen were supremely important, and many didn't like them. The upperclassmen formed paddle sides and paddled the freshmen who weren't wearing caps. After Porter's article on abolishing the caps appearance rights threw Porter into Potter Lake.
Alderson said the freshman caps were still in use when he was a student.
"Porter asked me to hold his watch so it wouldn't get wet." Nichols said.
ONE TRADITION that Shenk and Nichols remember from their university days was the tradition of taking a photo.
"We had to freshman caps," he said. "They were blue on top with red bills. They really didn't fit—they just sat on top of your head."
The Monday morning following the victory, Shenk said, the students had a rally in memory of the victims.
After the game upset of the year, Shenk said, the students asked Chancellor Deane Malot to declare the following Monday a holiday, but he refused.
day before the Missouri-KU football game in the fall. Everyone dressed like hobos or tramps, in torn clothes, and the men wore beards. There were also prizes.
Nichols said classes were disrupted by people parading up and down Jayhawk Boulevard and through the class buildings. Some professors dismissed classes and joined in, he said, while others invited the students into the classroom to perform stunts.
THE FIRST STUDENT revolt on campus that Shenk remembered was in 1941. He said KU had a bad football team that year and hadn't won any games. The day KU played Kansas State University, which he played that year, KU won by several points.
"We want a holiday," two or three thousand and students paraded down Jayhawk Boulevard, 11th Street and Massachusetts Street, carrying a coffin that was labeled Maui.
SHENK SAID the activities quickly subsided and students went back to classes. KU pried itself on staying in class after a victory, Shenk said, because K-State students were accustomed to taking holidays after almost every victory.
Nichols said he remembered mary demonstrations in front of the chancellor's home. He said Lindley and Malot were chancellor. He said students often asked for a holiday after a football or basketball victory, although they usually didn't get it.
Another event of the '40's that Alderson remembered was Dandelion Day. It always took place in the spring, he said, but he didn't know who sponsored it.
"IT WAS A contest to see which organization could dig the most dandelions
See ADMINISTRATORS on Page 7
2A Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
'Student Power' Making a Dent
By STEVE RIEL
College students long ago forsook the ivory tower for community and world involvement. In the 1960's this skill became a painful experience for many who saw a war, racism and a deteriorating environment where the being done to solve these problems
They had no votes and hence were not considered credible by many politicians who had the power to govern. Some students campaigned for them.
candidates like Eugene McCarthy or Bobby Kennedy; others took it upon themselves to national awareness of its problems.
drawing from classes.
They demonstrated at Berkeley, they marched with the Student Mobe through Lawrence and they went to Washington. In a word, they became activists. Their activities were not always peaceful.
STUDENT ACTIVISM of this type reached its peak in 1989 and 1970. College campuses shunt students away from learning to give students the option of with-
In this atmosphere people listened and the process of change began. Troops were withholding supplies that promised that more would follow. Protection of the environment became a top Congressional priority.
Today there are fewer than 100,000 men in Vietnam and fewer than 50,000 women. Ecological legislation includes the Clean Water Act, which will require that $2 billion in the next 13 years clean up the nation's lakes and
Class Rivalry Highlighted KU in Early 20th Century
In the early 1900s, student activism at the University of Kansas was confined generally to class rivalry, membership in other groups and a few several reactions to criticism from outside the university.
In May 1800, the Kansas men inhabited the scrap. The freshmen had difficulty, retained their flag. No one knew what they wore. One sophomore's clothes were torn and his hair smeared with oil. He climbed into the crook and fled. His freshman's defines.
Class rivalry manifested itself in the annual May Pole Scrap. Each year framed by a front of Fraser on May Day. Sophomores would try to tear down the flag and repaint it with that of their own
MOREOVER, FOR the first time, 18-year-olds will be able to participate in national elections by provision of the 28th Amendment.
1905 the administration banned the May Pole Scrap violated by the violent. The following year, the freshmen celebrated May Day by organizing a funeral procession, sophomore class being the first to attend.
Two of the most active organizations of the time were the YMCA and the YWCA. They have a large student population, few students and sponsored Bible
Concurrent with these
activities, students may
reduction or at least pervious
student activism. Campuses are
outwardly quiet. at least comp
ultively engaged.
lessons and a banquet at the end of the year.
Sometimes criticism was encountered from outside the University. Professor Carruth was accused of anarchy because he advocated municipal waterworks. Waterworks waterworks. Another faculty member, Professor Snow, was accused of being an evolutionist.
Oratorical contests were popular with the students. KU competed with other universities in this contest and also held. The subject of one essay contest was "The Cost of War" and a prize of $225 was donated by William Jennings before he visited the University.
"EACH IN HIS Own Tongue," was published by Carruth, was published concerned the idea of science and the theory of evolution as opposed to it.
There were football and baseball games every week in season. The report of the game was the outstanding news in each issue of the Weekly. Opponents had their first win at Haskell, Nebraska and Missouri.
The Atchison Globe ran an article in 1902 accusing the State
University students of stealing the body of a Negro from the disecture, and hanging it up to the Guevara. The Guevara is more, the faculty permitted it. Perhaps they are afraid of the youth men with long hair who steal their bodies.
The Weekly refuted this allegation, saying there wasn't a bit of truth in it. They severely criticized the report for not investigating the report.
Students themselves criticized the University. For many years, they had been dissatisfied with athletics. Now, with managers for athletics
Criticism was also leveled at the in. 1900 S.W. Williston, in University. left for another position with a higher salary. An editorial criticized the state for new salaries paid to the faculty.
In 1903, what was then the greatest flood in history in history. In 1904, the flood was close to the end of the year. Commencement canceled. Students were stranded. Students were unable to get to Lawrence. and summer school students helped with local rescue efforts.
One explanation for this change might be a growing ability and desire of students to effect change within the system.
One manifestation of this transition can be seen at the University and in Lawrence. Since January, according to Douglas County Clerk D.E. Matha, more than 1,500 persons in Douglas County between the ages of 18 and 21 have registered
This figure does not include students who registered during Vaccine Week. Students must register to 9, at locations on campus. In the spring registration nearly 250 persons became eligible to vote. Other students were registered in their vouchers.
SEVERAL LEGISLATORS who spoke on campus during the semester have acknowledged the important impact of the student vote.
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-InD,
speaking in March, said the youth
vote would be an important
presidential candidate of the
Democratic party. Rep. Larry
Winn, R-Third District, said in
an April speech that the student vote
becomes a key factor in the
presidential election.
Locally, State Rep. Morris Kay, R-Lawrence, said in February that the student vote should be held three hours Lawrence voting districts.
Organizations at the University also reflect an increasing involvement in the political system. Student Vote of the Student Senate for the State represents registration and student participation in politics.
THIS SEMESTER, the group has sponsored speakers from both parties in Kansas, a forum explaining procedures used at the
local Democratic conventions,
and on-campus voter
registration.
Another organization, the McGovenn for President Committee, has been especially active in coordinating with informing members of the community about their candidate, they organized a trip over semester break to canvass for McGovenn before the Wisconsin election.
At the local unit convention for the Third District in Douglas positions were filled by a state of seven McGovern supporters elected at the open meeting. Several of the delegates are KU
Prior to the April 8 local unit democratic convention they held an annual meeting of supporters and elected a slate of delegates to be nominated at the convention.
THIS CONVENTION reflected heavy involvement of young people in politics. KU students and teachers braced outnumbered others by at least two to one. Some of the students convention reflected its constituency. These resolutions will be taken to the district conference.
A proposal for immediate withdrawal from Southeast Asia by the U.S. government, in response to the political and economic support.
The resolutions passed included:
-An affirmation of equal opportunities for women.
—The legalization of marijuana sales or use removed, and pardons granted to those who have been convicted of marijuana
THE RECOGNITION of equal rights for homosexuals.
A proposal to make abortion available to any woman who wants one.
A proposal for amnesty to draft evaders of the Vietnam war.
The Republican local convention in March also elected a number of KU students as delegates.
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THE KANSAS UNION WELCOMES RELAYS GUESTS
It's Always a Thrill to Come Back to KU, and the KU RELAYS!
Alumni and Friends Travel From Afar to Gather Once Again to Bring Back Old Memories and Begin New Ones. Let the Kansas Union Be Your Host This Week.
WHILE YOU ARE HERE YOU CAN ENJOY THE FINE FOOD AT THE KANSAS UNIVERSITY STUDENT UNION, ONLY A SHORT WALK FROM THE MEMORIAL STADIUM
THURSDAY & FRIDAY
CAFETERIA
Breakfast: 7:00-8:30 a.m.
Lunch: 11:00 a.m.-12:0 p.m.
Dinner: 5:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
HAWKS NEST
8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
TRAIL ROOM
6:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m.
KU
PRAIRIE ROOM
11:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
HAWKLET IN SUMMERFIELD
Snacks Available from
6:00 a.m.-1:30 a.m.
SATURDAY
CAFETERIA
Lunch: 11:00 a.m.-1:20 p.m.
HAWKS NEST
7:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
TRAIL ROOM
7:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m.
PRAIRIE ROOM Closed
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We hope that the 47th Annual KU Relays will be the best ever. Remember that as the afternoon wears on, there are plenty of refreshing drinks as well as appetizing food and candy just a few steps from your seat. KU Concessions is happy to be serving you this weekend.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 21, 1972 3
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3A
Make Church a Part of Your Relays Weekend . . .
Worship this Weekend at One of these Lawrence Churches:
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH AND STUDENT CENTER 15th & Iowa Co-pastors, Norman Steffen, Mo-Synod Donald Conrad, ALC-LCA Study Time 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship Services 10:00 and 11:00 a.m.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. M.C. Allen, pastor
Rev. V.L. Palten, minister of christian education Worship Services 11:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Church School 9:45 a.m.
Nursery provided during S.S. and Worship
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
2415 W. 23rd Rev. Harold Mallett, pastor Rev. Forrest Link, assistant pastor
Worship Services 9 and 11 a.m. Church School 9:45 a.m.
Coffee Fellowship after each service Free bus service to and from Church Bus leaves Haskell at 10:20, stops at 9th and Mass., Corbin, Chi Omega Fountain, Daisy Hill, Oliver Hall and Stewart Drive
CHURCH OF CHRIST
1105 W. 25th Willis W. Cheatham, pastor Ron Price, assistant Sunday Services 10:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Bible Classes 9:30 a.m.
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
10th and Vermont
Rev. Ronald L. Sundbye, pastor Sunday Worship, 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Church School 9:20 a.m.
©BCW.INC.
ST. LAWRENCE STUDENT PARISH 1434 Engel Road
Rev. Donald Redmond, O.S.B.
Masses: St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford, at 4 p.m.;
Woodruff Auditorium, 11:00 a.m.;
Weekday mass at chapel, 4:45 p.m.
PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL A UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
925 Vermont
Dr. John E. Felible, minister Rev. Maynard Beemer, associate minister Dr. James Moesier, musical director Worship Service 10:00 a.m. Coffee Hour 11:00 a.m.
REFORM PRESBYTERIAN FELLOWSHIP
W. 23rd and Kasold Drive, 842-3842
M. L. McFarland, minister Worship Service 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Church School 11 a.m.
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4A
Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Woodruff Recalls Activism, Frivelity of Last 35 Years
By MARCIA CLIFTON Kansan Staff Writer
Campus activism hasn't always been political, according to L. C. Woodruff, professor of biology.
Woodruff completed his undergraduate work at KU in 1924. He finished graduate school in 1934 and returned to KU to be called "the middle of the depression and the drought years."
Woodruff said that he remembered one time when there had been political activism on the campus and that said since it was 1984, the depression, he thought the issue was "a child of the depression."
not being able to have a holiday
THE ISSUE developed after the death of a student named Don Henry, who was not related to the Don Henry on campus today. The reason why time there was a great deal of furor in this country over the civil war in Spain. Persons equated the situation with Communism, although Spain had been more than anything, Woodruff said.
Don Henry went to Spain to drive an ambulance and was taken to Spain and someone to Spain and someone in the KU administration reportedly held a secret office of the students were infuriated and Henry became their martyr.
"This agitation culminated in the Dove, 'a provocative paper which was also called 'red,' and the other matters worse, it was printed on pink paper, and for six or eight or ten years it was a liberal campus expression, although it wasn't as long as papers, but papers have been," he said.
"Well that was all balderdash," Woolruff said. "But they had mass meetings of the board, including a sit-in in the chancellor's office and a meeting in Hoch, which was packed. But they had no business."
The next two decades, according to Woodruff, were dominated by enthusiasm over sports events.
Woodyfruf recalled the spring of 2015 a year of excitement and activism. He won the National Collegiate Basketball Championship in his team's debut.
"THESE YOUNG MEN were bright and intelligent liberals, as some of us today."
"There were about two rallies every week for a period of about a month." Woodruff said. "Thousands of students attended rallies."
THE CHAMPIONSHIP games were played in Seattle and the last game ended at 1 a.m.
"Until the 60's, we had quite a hot period over a football holiday. Woodward, I said to them to enter into their calendar so that their students could have a day off from class if they wanted to celebrate something during the KU students wanted that too."
"I'd just gotten to bed when Chancellor Murphy called me at 4 a.m." Woodruff said. "Well I
looked out the window and I had 1,300 kids on my front yard. A student named Charles Seanilin, whom we'd nicknamed 'Dugan,' was the self-appointed organizer if the rallies and he had students at that time and they were wanting a holiday."
"They really tore up my yard and trampled my roses," Woodruff recalled.
"In 1941 or 42 when we beat the socks off of Manhattan when we weren't supposed to the students for a holiday," Woodruff said.
"The next night the team flew home and arrived at about two in the morning. The north end of the stadium was covered in a mass of people." Woodruff said.
AS THIS was at the beginning of the war, students tried to base their appeal on the basis of some of the men going off to war and
become an inferno," Woodruff said.
"THE STAR of the team was driving a fire truck and there was a big parade in Massachusetts. It ended at a corner where they front of a big lumber yard, where the A & P is now. They are a big bonfire right there in the middle of the street. That lumber yard could've
Wooldruff said that "along about this time panty raids were becoming popular among colleges in the East." Since the excitement about the basketball win has been growing, Wooldruff was fomenting come the first of May. and the girls were prepared," Wooldruff said.
said.
"Sometimes during the $60 water fight took place between the Grassroots and the Kappa Sigma house. The Kappa Sigma house was there, then." Woodruff
"I WAS OVER THERE and someone throw a bucket of water at me. I was able to dodge it, but somehow the story got in the papers and I even have an article that appeared in the London Times about a professor getting hit with a bucket of water." Woordraff said.
"But suddenly a mass of them collected in A-one, behind JIRP and made plans to go down to drive that way on Memorial Drive and Dutch Lonborg (former KU football coach) was coming up the hill with my car-Dutch has never forgiven me for turning his side of the car toward the oncoming of student cars." Wooldruff said.
In 1956 we got word of a panny being planned so she would be a teacher, teachers and administrators that the students knew, like Henry
pretty well thwarted," Woodruff said.
hundred of them, just kept going right around me. When they got to Baker they ransacked a set of silverware and, in general, tore up there. We were about 50 KU men and women, and some pretty nasty things happened. After it was all over six guys were gone. They left the place.
week and terms were that for one week they wouldn't date or shave and several activities were planned "for men only."
"BUT THE CARS, about a
Another incident of activism, Woodruff recalled, was in the form of a stag week. This also took place during the '50s
ideas at all," Wooodruff said, "not they planned an ant-operation." Wooodruff said that the KU Inter-fraternity Council finally called the thing off after several months, and others were getting hurt.
The men decided to have a stag
Wooldruff said that in the past campus activism generally took the form of an "entertaining" or "fun" type of outlet.
"I had misgivings about student representatives on policy making committees." he said.
Marquis was also opposed to the credit-no credit grade option. He said he simply happened to like requirements.
By ROGER FULK
Kansan Staff Writer
Prof Unsurprised At Quiet Campus
One reason was that a lot of students were in the first year before he did to do educational reform. On these matters, warisquis is fairly good.
Marquis said another reason for his limited activity was that
He said the two main things student activism was directed at were educational reform and the war.
Donald Marquis, associate professor of philosophy, views activism in colleges as the exception rather than the rule.
Marquis said student activism is the most important element in the late 1980s coalescence of strong anti-war feelings and anti-establishment feelings.
THERE WERE several reasons for his limited involvement with campus activism. Marquis said.
Marquis, who was faculty adviser of the Young Socialist Alliance (YSA) until the chapter broke up last year, said he would not consider himself really active although he did some work with anti-war movement and gave some talks at anti-war rallies.
Maurisquai said that because of this he was not surprised that the French army had been active activism during the late 1960s directed at the Vietnam war was because people were "scarred to death."
Marquis said that he was not involved in any issues at present but did not participate more in issues he believed in if he were able to. He said he was especially interested in the topic of whether or not before it broke up. He said faculty sponsorship of the group did not commit him very much.
"The problem is that there are strong pressures not to participate," he said. "People at a university are fantastically busy. If you are a faculty that don't have an nate job, work."
he was a teacher.
BECAUSE IT takes so much time, Marquis said, it is difficult for a faculty member to give you a lot in student politicism.
He also thought this same problem applied to students. If a student really tries to be active in campus affairs, Marquis thought it would benefit the academic work. He said that if there were serious student activism on a campus, the students involved could quite easily flunk out of school, and an increased number of activists could be lost.
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Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
5A
Di Zerega Traces Growth, Decline of SDS at KU
Editor's Note: Most of the following is the text of an interview conducted recently with Gus Zierega, KU student involved in left organizations at KU during his undergraduate period.
By S. ARTHUR COHEN Kansan Staff Writer
Nearly all aspects of student life have been influenced by the efforts of student radicals, especially those in the University of Kansas chapter of Students for Derecho Society in Desert Springs, D.I. DZO; St. Joseph Wichia, a graduate student, said in a recent interview.
Di Zerra came to KU in the fall of 1965 as a conservative freshman. He became involved with the group Freedom (YAF) at that time.
After talking to persons from SDS, Dzi Zerega realized that his way of thinking was congruent to those in SDS.
In one and a half years Di Zerega's philosophy changed from one of conservatism to one of the student left in politics.
Di Zerega currently writes a column for the Lawrence Daily Journal-World.
The following is what Di Zerega said of his student involvement with SDS at KU:
THE KU SDS was formed during the 1964-65 school year. At that time and for the next year or two, students about 15 people on nights with a good turnout. As through the rest of its history, its major role was in opposition to the war and minority rights. At that time a majority of students supported the war, and civil rights were ignored. One had ever heard of Women's Liberation, Black power, Gay Liberation or hippies. You could be among the pot smokers on two hands.
SDS began as a very open group with hardly anyone pushing his or her ideological beliefs, but most were general dissatisfaction with American society, and it grew as that dissatisfaction grew. Nationally, McNamara's selling arm, the Christmas branch by Christmas he'dn't say which Christmas—and locally, a growing realization of the extent and indefensibility of University politics sensitized us to how we and others were getting screwed over by the powers that be. A large number of regulations covering students existed at KU, especially over living arrangements and women. So the draft, the war, and student activism general frustration, swelled the ranks of the New Left.
I THINK OUR first real attempt to influence purely University events, since the sit-in in 1968, was made possible by Wescone, wanchce, KU from 1960-69) to protest Greek racism in 1964-65, that led to the chapter's formation was when Al McLean became student body president in 1966.
Martin's people came to us and said, "If you help us win, we will push all this reform legislation through the Student Council." We believed them and helped Martin. We were there, and that's all we're interested in so shove it. They said it pretty bluntly. We learned a valuable lesson about "go-getter" student politicians. A girl was ill and didn't tie the right way and took over government ourselves.
The Independent Student Party (ISP) was an offshoot of SDS and it caused the chapter's first big blow when students were into the "Worker-Student Alliance" thing and wanted to tell the working class where it was really at. Others of us felt that we couldn't reach fellow students, that if we couldn't reach kids with backgrounds similar to ours, we couldn't reach anyone. Nothing could do that, who tried to do the work thing.
The rest of us concentrated on campus issues. The first was over the administration was going to close Watson an hour earlier each night—at 10:00 p.m. instead of 9:30 a.m. We had to get away. We got a petition upet over it and the cretins in student rooms were a committee to study the issue.
The trouble was they didn't appoint anyone to the committee. They were too busy posing for yearbook pictures or something. They were not in the petitions or neither the ASC (Student Council) nor Wescoe did anything, they announced a "Read-In" until midnight at the reed-in thing, the night of the reed-in the Chancellor found the money.
THIS LED to the formation of ISP.
That same year Dean Emily (Emily Taylor, dean of women) told a friend of mine there were no such things as compulsory
floor meetings at KU. This was interesting because freshmen women's residence hall would be open, and they didn't come to floor meetings, they be kicked out of the school. There were school, for "breach of contract."
CORALIS
Women members tried to put up posters to this effect in Corbin, GSP, and Oliver but dorm room windows were cut so we all printed up hundreds of leaflets and they distributed them one night to every girl
Gus Di Zerega
living in the dorms. Thought control failed. The next day the University Daily Kansan exposed trippers to the power trippers they were.
THE SAME YEAR we had the first occupation of University property since Wesson had left. The U.S. Navy Union had made an inaeine ruling that only one organization could have a literature table on a floor in the Union. They were afraid the Navy Marine recruiters or something.
The Military set up a table in the Union so we formed several tables to have literature tables in the Union. There weren't enough floors. So John Garlinghusen and his band played on the military, passed out leaflets and free food, got a microphone, some folk singers, and packed in
The most violent thing we did to the recruiters was to get a little pet to watch them shoot and petals to shoot at the officers. The Union rescinded their ruling decision.
BEFORE WE had done any of the proper procedures, we could provide proper channels, but as want and to some extent still is) the case, nothing happened till we got there.
Probably the most important event to happen that year stemmed from a very imprudent student at the University of Pennsylvania (Francis Heller, vice-chancellor for academic affairs) concerning the issue of student participation in University governance. "All students are transients," he said. The president was immediately asked that faux pas a petition was formed by a group called "Students Voice" which demanded 50 per cent student representation on all University committees and Heller's resignation.
We got a couple thousand people out for a rally in front of the university, and decided to negotiate and the result was our present Student Senate, University Senate, and the university's president. One of University governance, one of the potentially most powerful student governments in the world.
EACH OF THESE events demonstrated a hard and fast rule about the average次数 you have to hit them. First you have got to hit them over the head (or at least look like you're going to do it) to get their attention. Then you can talk like they're because they'll be listening.
To nobody's surprise but the fraternity big wigs and University administrators, the men in the Student Body, Marilyn Bowman were elected president and vice-president of the student body to preside over the first year of the Student Body, whom they were elected on the ISP ticket.
Under Awbrey the student Bill of Rights was adopted and student government funded things more important than the Annual Jelly Been Rolling and Master Essay Exams. Student protection has existed for all against arbitrary administrative action.
People's theory was to be suspicious of theory. And so the politics of confrontation were on the local university level, even the biggest peace marches with 500,000 to one million people in them failed to move the debate frustrated and desperate for success or at least something romantically spectacular—some radicals turned to violence. The president of the masochistic Marxism didn't help much either. Their talk, "power comes out of the barrel of a gun," neglected to remind potential fodder just who had the guns.
of American society, let alone a strategy to change it or an idea of what to replace it with.
UNFORTENTLY, after the form of Bill Ebert, who served after Awbwre, student politics helped them garner the games and of the past. But even today under a most uninspiring student government, groups such as Headquarters, LAS 48 and was able to receive funding.
SDS, WHICH had become far and away the largest radical youth organization in the country, an organizational mistake. Originally no one who believed in a totalitarian philosophy such as Marxism-Leninism had been allowed to join. This stipulation was not made explicit by members felt that local SDS chapters were autonomous and it would be impossible for a minority totalitarian group to make us of us had misgivings, but we were outvoted.
About the time of the success of ISP, student radical politics came to the fore, turn towards violent confrontation. The New Leflah had new confrontation with students.
The result of this policy culminated in the split of SDS into two factions during their Chicago mayoral race. The factions were essentially Marxist. One was the Moasist Progressive Labor Party and the other later developed, with the factions splits, into the Weatherhens.
NEITHER WAS really representative of the majority of members. However, the minority is much more centralized organizations, and a weakness in SDS conventions which gave any member present, even if not a power player, in the game of power politics.
The take-over of the National Office gave control over the newspaper and over membership requirements. These were not only a person who no person could become a member unless he formally endorsed Albania, of all things. I suspect the average delegate didn't even know where Albania was, but as a result he was voted as he was told to vote.
THIS KILLED SDS. The local chapters wanted nothing to do with it and melted away, before the convention. KUSDs could get organized without practically no publicity. Afterwards there were no meetings for over a year. Then a progressive labor group tried to hold an event in front. It flopped. Most students smart to get involved.
Nixon is a lot better at the violence game than are college kids—as even the Weathermen know. He collapsed of a tactile plus an explosive nose, not bombs, from Vietnam pulled the rug from under most radical leaders Who listens to Abie Hoffman or Tom Hayden
The New Leaf remained organizationally active for a while after September commencing its uprising over Nixon's Cambodia invasion demonstrated the depth of student anger and frustration over our little Caesar's empire, that we saw in the time with the invasion, time that, to look at the papers, seems about run out, but I think the uprising forced him to not send publicly any more American troops into Vietnam.
THE SLAUGHTER of students at Kent State and things like the murder of Niek Rice (killed in the shooting of his wife), Lawrence showed the emptiness of the tastes of confrontation, however. They led to defeat and harm.
Their mistake, I think, was in getting trapped in a tactical box canyon and in never formulating an argument about the American society and an alternative to the present. When the tactics proved disastrous, it was clear that the only other theory generally available was Marxism which, because it usually leads to wrong conclusions, turned most young teen off.
AS A CONSEQUENCE the movement broke up in a variety of single issue groups like groups in Gay Liberation, Gay Liberties and back-to-the-earth people, and so forth. Others, seeing no alternative, have gone into law to work for a change. Some, with less sense, are putting their hopes politicians like McGregor
Still others, in total despair,
Jesus Freakdom or heavy drug use. But mostly people have become, suspicious of leaders of extremism.
I think this is good because until people get their own stuff together, but until they do our country and our country, and more importantly, what to put in it, we are manipulated by power freaks. A philosophy of freedom, I think needs to develop into one that unmasks blacks, Indians, Chicanos and Wasps, before organizations on the ground try to take control.
TILL THEM there won't be much visible and a lot of people will be feeling pretty hopeless. Yet today more students are going to college and don't know what to do so they may join an ecology or liberation group, but generally are complacently disapproving, which is a lot better than the approval of seven years ago.
The change has been most visible here at KU in the lack of broad-based groups and the degeneration of student life. The student when Marilyn Bowman was suspended because she had participated in an anti-ROTC demonstration, the Senate voted to give her her office back when he back to school the next semester.
Today we see the sickening spectacle of many student "representatives" afraid to vote in favor of legalizing grass because they are afraid of what President Obama has yet. Yet even the President's own commission supports legalizing use and possession.
The next year Bill Ebert was active in organizing the demonstrations and teach-ins over Nixon's Cambodian escapades. Alumni kept on giving and the state legislature didn't financially any worse than they had more quiet Kansas campuses.
Almost all existing student rights, the Student Senate and University Senate, funding for Headquarters, the LAS 48 courses, the fact that the library is open unit time of these units of student activity especially by KU SDS members."
MOTHER
MARY'S
"A BEER JOINT"
2406 IOWA
By LINDA CHAPUT
Kancan Stuff Writer
In April 1935 the University Daily Kansan announced that the American College Students would hold a strike to promote peace the day before. The students convocation. All participants were urged to cooperate in carrying out an end to their demands and thereby effective demonstration."
Peace Movement Emerged in '30s
Seven hundred students
standard
course, which was held under
the auspices of the National
Council of Teachers, with the
Student League as
Student League for Industrial
Democracy, and the Inter
Intergovernmental
agency.
The strike committee issued a statement. The will, "The University will be 140 universities on whose campuses the students are enrolled," and the voices to tell the war mongers and munition makers of the world that the will be defended.
THAT SPRING an organization called the KU Peace Action Committee sponsored a number of round table discussions on war.
By LINDA CHAPUT
At one discussion, "Propaganda on War and Peace," a speaker told the students to elect to office men who were for peace. Another speaker suggested that the moneyed interests he referred to would be virtual dictators of U.S. government policies should be eliminated
The Men's Student Council began a week ago, Week tradition carried out by each fraternity the week before the pledges were initiated, in May.
Hell Week, Hazing Under Fire in '30s
Kansan Staff Writer
In the fall of 1935, the Peace Action Committee again sponsored a series of roundtable meetings in which participants in a student control committee joined every major student organization in the United States in protesting war and compulsory military training, which the Oxford pledge "never to support the United States in any conflict."
The tradition had been maintained for years and several fraternities had discontinued the practice, but no action had been taken to preserve it.
TWO THOUSAND students attended the first all-student convocation in the history of KU
In April 1936 the sentiments of the peace movement were again voiced in a student walkout and a march against a dropover by a student, 800 students became part of a group organized strike against war.
The fraternities were allowed to make their decisions individually; all voted to abolish Hall Week. Panhellenic was allowed to impose 800 fines on fraternity members engaging in Hall Week practices.
A representative from each house was invited to meet with the Men's Student Council to discuss abolishing the tradition. The men and women helped their houses to discuss the issue with other fraternity members.
In October 1935, the K-Club, a letterman's organization, passed a resolution relinquishing its
duties as custodian of freshmen traditions at KU. This move marked the end of padding for the new tradition, to ignore their obligations to wear red and blue beanies; in short, it would mean that students practice of freshman hazing.
The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences had passed a resolution forbidding the paddling of students to enforce traditions, and the Men's Council voted to do the same.
The resolution came as a result of criticism from faculty and staff. The K-Club treated freshmen too severely for failing to observe the dress code.
The paddle, it was decided, would still be used as a means of enforcing freshman attendance for the game. The Parade the Friday night before the K-State football game. KuKu's, Members of Owl Society, the Student Council and the Student Council would wield the paddles instead of the K-men.
Five hundred thousand schools went on strike that day to demonstrate and to act on a five point platform: to protest, war the UN peacekeeping.
demand passage of the Nye Krake Audit program by training, to demand support of the Oxford pledge, and to demand more academic
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6A
Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
PAPA SRI LANKA
Chancellor Malott Joins Nightshirt Parade
Chancellor Deane W. Malotl waves enthusiastically to students in this nighttime show from the mid-1940s. The tradition was initiated by Chancellor Dean D. Chancellor.
utneutic victory. It was continued for many years. Malotit was KU's Chancellor from 1839 until 1951, when he accepted a position at the University of Cambridge.
Dandelion Problem in '42
By MARTY LYONS Kansan Staff Writer
In 1942 there was a different kind of student activism than there today, according to the magazine Money, KU had won a football game, perhaps the first one in two years. The university wanted the day off.
Suthi said that the students surrounded Chancellor Malot's house in hopes of having classes cancelled. Malot also said that he was according to Suthi, then he announced that there would be classes as usual.
This was one issue that students took action on in 1942, according to Stuhl.
"And the students went to class," Stuhl said.
CHANCELLOR MALOTH had
replaced Harrod. Stuh said that he
sponsored Dandelion Day as a
palm campaign to clean up
"Malotl had said that not only the grounds but also the buildings resembled City Hall rather than a university," Stuhl said.
Stuhl said that the Malott wanted to see a more distinguished look about the campus and inside the buildings. To achieve this Malott
took smoking privileges away from the students except when they were on break. Hall, according to Stuhl. Malot also had ashrets placed in all of the rooms.
"The whole community was impressed," he said. Said him that said on Damascus Day itself there were students and faculty members out digging.
"YOU CAN BET that
"YOUCEI Cmalott and his wife
were right out there with the
man in the pulling dandelions."
Stuhl said.
"The Chancellor's wife and the wife of John Nelson, graduate student at UC Davis, helped truck to make sure that the redbud trees were planted," she said.
Another student activity that was enthusiastically participated in this year's season was Arthur Lonborg, former athletic director, said that these parades were like pep pals before the first home football game each season.
"Students and faculty dressed in nightshirts joined hands and smaedaken down the hill into town." Lonborg said.
died out in the mid-fifties.
He said that these parades were well-attended but that they
WHEN ASKED about student activism today Stuhl said that he had been told than there was in 1945. After explaining the principle of Feedback to him, Stuhli agreed that he had a good organ of student opinion.
"Students do have a tendency to be too loud, overemotional and less reasonable." Stuhl said.
Suhl said that an antidote for this would be closer connection between the feeling of the student and the student's feelings for the student. He said that this
Stuhl emphasized that the atmosphere at KU was the friendliest and most cordial in the nation as far as the teaching
could be promoted by a higher degree of emphasis on affection for the student and the subject.
MALOTT THOUGHT that there should be a cordial atmosphere with a high degree of teaching efficiency, according to
Stuhl said that when Malotti walked down the sidewalk on campus he could call most students by their first names.
1910-20 Marked by Political Reform Night Shirt Parades, Men's Union
By PATTI O'NEILL Kansan Staff Writer
In the period from 1910 to 1920 student activism here at KU ran the gamut from frivolous night meetings to major social and the more serious issues of social and political reform. Times have changed, to be sure, but students today are voicing their opinions about the new curriculum; students did over 50 years ago.
The period from 1910 to 1920 was marked by student concern with the growth and development of the young University.
In 1910 students realized the need of a student union. State legislature passed a bill at that time, so after much work, in 1914, a temporary union was established. This union was called the Student Union and was open to men only.
THE MEN'S union failed because of financial insufficiencies. A plan for a co-education was then presented to the legislature, but it was not until 1974 that the union was finally founded.
Starting in 1911 the Women's Student Government Association (WSGA) organized to obtain a women's university. They held a Women's day rally which was attended by 500 women from all over the state and over 800 women students. At the rally they through subscriptions for the new dorm, with plans to collect $75,000 by the end of the school year. They never reached their goal and the dorm continued into the 1920's.
Women's rights are also very much in the news during this week, because the men prosecuted against the Men's Student Council (which made most of the rules) saying that the men had no right to KU women.
1912 the Women's Equal Suffrage League became active at KU. Women students took part in the movement to aid the growing movement.
Women students who didn't subragette to the views held by the subragettes started their own
Anti-Suffrage League because, according to a 1912 edition of the University Kansas, they didn't want to miss out on the good social times (teas, meetings, and the suffrages were having.
One of the more unusual, but practical demands of University women, was a plea in 1814 for a faculties to be established which seems the absence of such a facility was inconvenient for many students. It spent much time in the labs at Sapient.
Students were as much concerned then as they are today about the use and destination of their education. The student council started an effort to clean up campus offices, but money was going into the pockets of elected student officers instead of benefiting the betterment of the University.
IN 1912 KU students initiated a Legislature because fees were paid into the State Treasury instead of being directly used for the college.
Pacifists Active After WWI
They issued a statement to the legislature calling for the repeal of this law and in the fall of 1912 over 1000 students appeared before the legislature to voice their protest. Students worked tirelessly to petition the institutions in their home towns until the bill was defeated in 1915.
By ANITA KNOPP
Kansan Staff Writer
Pacifists and women were some of the more active student groups in the 1920s, former President James D. Carolynel Anderson said recently.
Anderson, who attended "KCU"
and set up getting over World War I at
he time and there was quite a
action as well. I attended church groups.
particularly a group sponsored by the YMCA that met every Friday.
"There was a widely held feeling against military training, but the Army had the time, but K-State, a grant college, did. I think that's why some of the boys came to KU and were sent to Manhattan." Anderson said.
Student Involvement . . .
Continued from Page 1
Similar feelings continued in 1921. One student asked, "Why study when I'm going to get killed?" The teacher responded that year's yearbook wrote, "Maybe this war isn't being fought for democracy, but does."
Those students who did not volunteer for war service objected being forgiven. The anatomy building burned, but the origin of the fire was never known On Monday they "jammed" the hallways outside Chancellor Malolt's office in Strong Hall and demanded longer time to reassemble scheduled four days. The limited length of the vacation was a result of the University Senate's effort to "-speed up" the school week.
THE PROTEST was reported to have ended in a 'riot.' The next day eight students represent campus organizations that had been sensitative of the whole student body and asked the Senate to reconsider its action of voting down two resolutions granting an ordinance for the vacation two days later, the vacation was ordered at seven days.
After World War II the weary apathy at KU was representative of the post-World War II Lawrence, though, were aware of the fact that if they could be called upon to fight in wars, they would have a responsibility in other areas also.
Korea, "Commie-hunts," shorter skirts and easier lifestyle styles were represented in 1953. The skirts were also peaked such as "Are Our Teenagers Rejecting Our American Heritage?" and "Teenage Good or Bad?," the director of the 1953 Jayhawker wrote that the "new awareness is due to changes in technology, science, fashion." Lawrence was aware but quiet.
The Kansas River flood of 1981 the
students united. Seven hundred Greeks appeared in "Life"
magnesium cleaning up the flooded
river.
STUDENTS AT KU were like most in the United States in the early 1960s. New music, new
courses and new habits were en joyed.
On Nov. 22, 1963, John F. Kennett and the Jawkower of that year reflect the horror and grief of that day and the respect students have for them.
"U.S. News and World Report"
"The Journal of Autumn 1964 is considered the birth
of the U.S. student revolution. At the time,
demonstrations erupted in a few cities."
The 1966 Jayhawk had pictures of "stop the war" posters, students of the University, many students at colleges and universities across the country, and KU was no exception. The fear of speaking out no longer exasperated them.
In 1967 a "protesting group." Voice, was created at KU. It called for more student representation in campus affairs. Most students backed the organization because it was the first Council toward a compromise
In April 1988 action erupted a Columbia University in New York. Students, led by the SBS, took control of part of the campus for a week and then forced the close of the entire university for the reopening. The action was taken after peaceful petitions and protests concerning student rights and the war. We need you to listen."
Black students in America were among those wanting to be heard. In 1969, after quiet pleas with no results, guns were枪杀。In 2014, a Cornell University in Rhaca, New York. No shots were fired.
AND THEN there was 1970. Students and others in the United States were criticized for drug use, and they were also perceived as appearance, draft evasion and worthless protests. The war continued and the explosions were heard again and again among them. President Nixon's announcement of the invasion of Vietnam.
For once, the trouble was not only at a few radical colleges and universities, but erupted with varying degrees of destruction. From the University of Wisconsin, University of Calif., to the University of Maryland, Dennison, Jackson
State, Kent State and the University of Kansas.
In April and May many buildings on campus burned. As the Jahayawk of that year states, the buildings will often be misunderstood.
In the fall 1969 semester, students requested more responsibility and power and improvements of the Senate Code. On Feb. 23, 1970 black unrest resulted in the University of Kansas.
Student Body President Dave Awrey asked support for a student strike in protest to the Red Cross and the NRA. Promotions of Velvety and Littie
Velvel had criticized Judge Julius Hoffman for his actions at the Chicago 7 trial. Litton had criticized which Congress had criticized.
IN EARLY April the Board of Regents delayed the promotion of associate professor Lawrence Darden and assistant professor Fredric Lutton.
AMONG THE publications read by the students. Anderson and Squire learned newspaper, and the Sour Owl which was banned at one time for obscurity. Anderson said he wanted to help the students. She said the jokes in the Sour Owl which caused it to be banned could be termed "medical" humor.
John Spearman Jr, chairman
of the firm himself as arm
themselves since they had
been receiving threatening calls
since asking funds for a Hoffman
During this period many lingering traditions were repeated, bonfires enjoyed active student participation. In 1910 the first shirt parade was held KU men, in their nightwear, in the student district, down Massachusetts Street and stopped at the school's snake dance was started that would become the traditional event to work up enthusiasm for Kansas-Missouri football game.
Abbie Hoffman was in Law rence for the strike.
There was trouble at Lawrence
High School. The Kansas Union
basketball team had trouble at the Rock Chalk cafe,
gunshot, national guard are
HENRY BUBB, Regent, said,
"Instead of writing resolutions,
those kids should be standing up
for the flag."
Anderson was personally involved in the women's group on campus. The group, composed of non-sorority members, was recruited from all schools for the girls in the Women's Self Governing Association (WGSA).
KU 1S once again quiet and as are most universities. According to "Newsweek" magazine, stud- ing teams are forced for change "within the system."
Anderson, who was the leader of the non-sorority group said, "we organized women scattered throughout the town into groups left we had elected four women, from our group the WGSA."
Professor Cowley and many others believe that student activism will always continue on varying levels. Cowley said, "There is no stopping student activism in the workplace those who expect to be as influential 'outside' the campus as 'inside' are naive indeed."
The media often ask what is the role of universities. Could such actions as those in 1970 occur again? Are students not politically apt to be recruited?
"The Dean of Women had forbidden women to smoke and I still smoke, but we knew that she smoked. The faculty women who smoked had also smoked."
The question of blacks' rights was not a big issue at the time, Anderson said.
"The thinking about it was there, but we were not militant about it. We looked at it in a calmer way." she said.
One of the most debated issues at the time was the restriction of smoking on campus.
Anderson couldn't remember that there were any black teachers at the time, but there were quite a few black students. She said she was described downtown against the Blacks.
ANDERSON SAID that the first woman she remembered seeing smoking in public were not residents of her house late in the evening.
They had to sit in the second balcony in the剧院 downstairs. She did not think they were discriminated against on campus. The only thing they were not allowed to do was take the swimming pool that was a homework for a bachelor's degree," she said.
"Among the most active groups on campus were the church groups which met every Sunday," Anderson said. "This was the only school activity by the school on Sunday."
DRESS CODES were also regulated by the University when Anderson was here.
Overall, Anderson said, there was a feeling among students that they were privileged to be getting higher education. She said students were generally satisfied with things as they were
"Of course our dresses were knee-high and above already," Anderson said. "The most striking difference was that in 1920 it was that we had a hobo day once a year and now they have它 every day."
"We had a lot of respect in most cases for our professors. We stood in awe of them almost. We just felt privileged to be here."
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student who was ill with typhoid fever. In the same year they took up a fund to provide a brighter home for the aging jannie who was paralyzed
IN 1919 KU students started a Loyalty Movement designed to increase school spirit. Loyalty convocations were held, loyally arm bands sold and fund raising drives held to raise money for a charity. That was at this time that the KUKU pep club was originated.
However, students of that time were not wholly concerned with pep rallies and good times. Continual willingness to help the community pervaded the period between 1810 and 1920.
In 1910 students took up a collection to pay the medical expenses of a destitute fellow
IN 1919 THERE was a coal strike. The University was in danger of closing down because of fuel shortages. More than 50 KU men went to Scammon, who workers in the coal mines there.
When war broke out in 1917, a new kind of student involvement arose. Women students were hired to work in the Red Cross and working for the Red Cross.
Fraternities and Sororites adopted war orphans. Students saved war stamps.
Along with the war came the usual protest to war. The War in Europe that all men must participate in military training while at the University. Many men withdrew from classes in protest to this
In 1917 the Army investigated the distribution of cards on campgrounds. You have nothing to gain and your life to lose." The distributor went on.
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Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
7A
Students of'50s 'Lost'in Search for Peace, Security
By MARSHA SEARS
Kennan Staff Writer
Students attending college in the 1950s often were called the "lost generation." They were often not involved in reared during World War II and lived in constant fear of world War III. Many asked if war was a tragedy, but students thought that to be born in this century was a tragedy. Though the times may have been tragic, they certainly were not tragedies.
The uncertainty of those years created a need for security. According to a 1950 opinion survey, college students preferred security to ruggedness or security to commissions or profit. The survey also showed that college students liked the high living
their parents gave them.
IN 1957, one University Daily Kansas editor wrote, "Conformity—and complacency (selling American society)."
"Probably the biggest governing force the campus is the law enforcement law court. The real individuals, who dare to wear headgear and galoshes when it is raining or a shirt which down-on-down cover, are our research subjects."
As an experiment, students in one class dressed in church clothes for three days when they learned that they saw those strange clothes on campus made caustic remarks about the nonconforming students. An editorial urging students to overreact was written which asked students
to do their own thinking
In a united effort, the students joined in a campaign to raise awareness about the broadcast behind the Iron Curtain in 1950. The purpose for this "Crusade for Freedom" was to promote a war against prosecutions war with Russia.
THE SOCIETY of the Ree Haters, an anti-communist organization, which could be responsible according to one University Daily Kansas editorial, gained strength in the 1950s. The battle against communism was on. The Cuban government and the University Daily Kansan editorial for not interfering with underground activities of Communists. The Curie University Headquarters for the Caribbean headquarters for communism.
Turbulent '60s ...
Continued from Page 1
Continued from Page 1
LATLY. A group of women wearing about dressee cloaks, closing hours and housing regulations at KU.
A 24-hour vigil was held in front of the School of Religion for people concerned with the plight of starving Biafrans.
The year 1968 also was filled with a variety of protests. First, 21 students, faculty members and staff, marched in protest if necessary, to gain a student vote. Several days later, 1,700 students signed a petition asking for more in decisions that affect their lives. They gave it to教室.
the editorial claimed.
A group of KU students protested the city-proposed $10 car tax, which was eventually voted down.
the last protest of the year took place when 100 persons marched in a "Female for the Democratic Process" from strong Hall to the Douglas County courthouse. They were nonvoice forced upon us in this election." Nixon had just been elected President.
PROTEST IN 1989 began with a civil rights action. About 130 KU students, faculty members and staff participated the picket the Hotel Inn Restaurant. The demonstrators charged that the management
There was a protest march down Massachusetts st. When Lt. Gen. Lewis Walt came to speak at the rally, his pro-war beliefs protested his pro-war beliefs.
Also, in a protest against the war, demonstrators, some streaked with imitation blood, shot at the USS Bonaparte, sus Union, temporarily disrupting student voting. Later the demonstrators marched through the city.
The other protests in 1969 were related to the war in Vietnam.
ON MAY 12, 150 demonstrators disrupted the KU military review in the stadium. They were pro-
tested by war and ROTC on campus.
The ROTC reviews were the stage for the next round of protest. On April 30th, a small group of students on ROTC on campus disrupted the review taking place in front of Allen Field House. They walked among the cadets carrying drums and playing the timing drums and tumourbins.
Later, 25 of these students were suspended.
The next protests were the huge nationwide moratoriums in the fall of 1969.
On Oct. 15, about 2,500 KU students, faculty and lawyers townpeople marched down the street to protest the war in Vietnam.
To combat communism, the United States had entered the armament race with Russia. The war has been developed. The bomb was called "a wedge for insuring peace—a peace of a selfless, unified Daily Kansan editorial KU students sent a petition to President Truman asking that not allow the hydrogen bomb be used.
On the same day a small group of faculty members returned their pay for the day honoring the moratorium.
On Nov. 14 and 15, the second of the large moratoriums took place. About 250,000 Americans, more than half a million, tested against the war with a march in Washington, D.C. On the same date 500 persons, including KU students, marched in a demonstration in Topeka.
THE YEAR 1970 climatically ended the decade of the 1960s. A few years later, he marched in February, when 200 students marched from the KU campus to the Douglas County Courthouse in protest of the "Chicago 10" attack.
The Black Student Union (BSU) became angered when Attorney General Kent Frizzell did not deliver a ruling on whether the BSU had the权 to publish the documents of the BSU members of the BSU seized 6,000 copies of the Kansas and dumped them in Potter Lake.
The BSU also presented a list of demands to Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. They demanded that administrative positions, such as the campus provost and dean, be removed by held by blacks. They also wanted ten per cent of the freshman class to be black within two years.
In March, 65 students participated in a bocquet of the Yuk Down because of alleged discrimination against men with long hair.
A PROTEST rally and strike was organized in April against the Kansas Board of Regents. The board had passed over the proposed bill to associate professor of law, and Fred Licott, assistant professor of speech and drama. Velvel had spoken out against the war in Vietnam and Lilly had produced an anti-Semitic book that declared as un-American.
Several days later David Awlach spoke to a crowd of 4,000 persons gathered in front of Strong Hall and demanded that the regents
Toward the end of April, the Kansas Union burned down and fifteen people were killed in a science building. There were bomb threats at several resisted sites.
A curfew was imposed on Law-
A UNIVERSITY Daily Kanman writer criticized the United States for refusing to recognize Red China. He said:
"Nationalist China no longer represents the hundreds of millions of Chinese. It is Mao's. He is a godfather for the Chinese people."
"If the United States does not recognize Red China as a state, it cannot argue a case against it in the United Nations or negotiate with it concerning civil or military incidents, which may surely confer an unanticipated war spreads to include use of Chinese Communist Troops."
and distance they are from the fighting."
rence. April 22. 23. and 24.
ALTHOUGH McCARTHYISM was criticized, many politicians waged successful campaigns by calling his opponent a communist. Richard Nixon, who was running for U.S. senator in California, called his opponent a communist. domestic communism as a major threat to the campaign. He capitalized on the fact that he was a member of the Un-American Activities Council of Pumpkin Papers that were so important in the Alger Hiss case. In 1950, when President Truman decided to actively aid the South Sudan world armistice stood in jeopardy. A cross-section survey of KU students revealed that students approved of U.S. action against combat in Korea, 12,000 Americans had died. Many KU students then questioned whether the Korean War was justified.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur wanted to bomb Manchuria. He said that more than 200,000 Chinese had poured across the border into Korea. he said half a million were awaited only orders to move.
Although a poll showed that KU students did not think President Truman was justified in firing Gen. MacArthur, many K川aan writers thought President Truman was justified. One wrote:
May 14, nearly 2,000 Kansas college students gave Governor Scott a hand in the steps of the capitol in Topeka. The students wanted Docking to call a special legislative session to vote on the bill it unlawful for Kansas men to fight the soundings of United States law an official declaration of war.
Administrators . . .
"FOR A PEACE loving nation, we certainly are raising a lot of people. We want to expand the war in Asia. You, who will have to support a third world arm with music and culture, we want peace, don't we? The President fired Public Hero Number One. We think it was a mistake."
China. The author of one University Daily Kansas should be used to save southeast Asia from "the ravages of the internet" which could be free world power is strengthened in Asia. By 1854, 105 American aircraft technicians were in China aiding the development of China.
An author of a 1922 editorial spoke out against a Kansas segregation law which provided that cities may segregate by race, but did not equal facilities for blacks and whites. A 1957 editorial encouraged Lawrence citizens to assist the movement to integrate. Students petitioned asking why such laws allow all people to be served
WOMEN'S LIBERATION was almost non-existent in the 1850's. A director of a beauty school said she had learned that the ideal woman according to make tastes would play with women she have "35", "29", "34" measurements. She said she made her husbands throughout the nation begging her not to be swayed by the flapper trend and to stick to it.
ON MAY 7, 1,000 students at
the College of Science and
of Strong Hall. About 420 of these
students later went to the Mili-
tery School and several
were inducted.
WHILE DISCUSSING recent success, he said, "The most overwhelming reaction was when Chaimers accolade his team of students at the stadium after the problems in 1970. The depth and sincerity of the students were immeasurable."
In 1850, the first veteran returned from Indo-China. Since 1947, the French had been fighting the Communists in Indo-
Many students worried about the draft and the possibility of another world war. One editorial writer suggested "training soldiers" to prepare for "the amount of blood thirstiness increases with the senators' age
because they are becoming convinced that they are not the fraile flower-creatures which man know them to be. If we are not careful, the dear things will soon realise that the majority of the women are florists and the stamina of six-day bicycle racers.
She said, "That's the type of girl I'm going to advocate, no matter what the fashion experts say. After all, it's more important for women to suit the men than other women." Daily
Shenk said most of the activism until recently dealt with pranks. He said the '50's, when Franklin D. Murphy was chancellor, was the era of the panty raids. At that time, Shenk said, the University had no policy to make national headlines because of the panty raids.
Shenk said there was a time when students tried to see how the flagpoles swallowed, then came the flagpole and telephone pole sitters, and then crowding as many people as possible into phone booths and
taneous expression of happiness and appreciation at what the boys had done."
"COURTESY IS the only answer to this crucial problem. Our advice to men is be over-solicitud of women's health, respect of women, womanly grace, treat them as if they were made of frillable china."
One male University Daily Kansan writer wrote in 1950:
Editorials of the 1950's urged better housing for independent students in room and shared one closet for all four. Carruth and O'Learay was built for women students and married students in the 1950's.
Is this the feeling we should have for a type of music which has influenced history? This same feeling has followed jazz through the decade and is now being applied toward the American inferiority complex is in the art. We believe that we are the Europeans cannot surpass.
"Now women want more equal rights; they want to be treated as the equal of man in all situations. Women want equal rights
Russia had "outside the west" with their two satellite spain and the U.S. to KU poll, students said Soviet space technology America became increasingly education conscious and in 1988 the U.S. satellite "Explorer"
"If this procedure fails there is but one alternative--suicide. Anything is better than fixing your own meals."
Continued from Page 1
Students collected the dandows and put the sacks and then the sacks were weighed in the grove in front of Flint.
The Kansas Union fire, sniper fire, and local bombings and fires were brought to the spring of 1970 that forced the University to suspend classes. Chan taught at a stadium, talked with students at the stadium, and explained the alternatives they could select to be able to finish the school year with students.
Continued from Page 1
A MUSIC REVOLUTION was taking place in the 1950s. According to a 1850 editorial he denied not accepted by Americans.
"To the laymen it sounds as if the musician is playing as many notes on his instrument as we do, and at the amount of time," said the writer.
"Let's give jazz and bop a chance to get out of smoke-fired dance halls and on the concert stages of the country."
"This wildness of today's adolescent college students is equal to the restless confusion of stdrow bums.
ANOTHER EDITORIAL
writer said that jazz is not a
"passing fancy; it is music." Jazz
is the only genre underrated
of art that time.
Bop gradually gained acceptance by some students and in June and July, 1857, students practiced it. But some students in 1857 still did not accept Rock 'n' Roll music. One University Daily called Rock 'n' roll as a combination of jazz and hill hilly music. He said:
"American sentiment has been against jazz since its beginning.
"One year, after weighing the dandelions and dumping them into the seabed, he had been weighed in the sack along with the dandelion.
"I WAS IN Topkea at a meeting, dressed in tux. I came back over here for the rally when the team came in."
The three administrators agreed that KU's 1952 NCAA basketball championship generated an enthusiastic student response.
The team arrived from Seattle at 3 a.m. after winning the game, and then met at the bridge. Alderson said. A fire engine was taken to meet the team, and team member Steve Gouldt it down Massachusetts streets.
Shenk said the students supported the team 100 per cent, albeit without much effort to cater for the students to attend games. The games were held in Hoch Auditorium, he said, and seating capacity was at a mini-
Shenk said, "The whole community was involved. The student body had a pep rally in front of the arena, and then it continued after the game till time to tremendous outpouring of loyalty.
Nichols said, "The students and the townspeople were wildly enthusiastic. It was a spoon-
Nichols seemed to express common sentiments when he said, "They (the students) are concerned changes that they're concerned with society. In my day, it was only in the 'Dove.'"
"Either KU students become more responsible adolescents or they become more addicted to hound dog records and the whining voice of the 'circle hill' billy from Tennessee.
"THERE WERE few season tickets," Shenk said. "They sold half-season tickets, and students had to alternate games."
Alderson, Nichols and Shenk voiced the opinion that the orientation of the students has changed.
"If you reject constructive expression because study is hard, or because living and working are so trying, you'll never grow up."
Luckily, both students and rock music survived and grew during the 1850s.
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8A
SA Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Quiet Campus, Local Issues Followed World War I
By BETSY MORGAN Kansan Staff Writer
The post World War One years formed one of the most extreme crises in American history, of Kansas history. Students' minds were turned from national school to school, activities, careless raising anxiety on the part of faculty and parents at the recklessness of the younger generation.
Robert Tafil, in his book, "The Years on Mount Ouret," said of the women of Paris who the deans of men and women had to face problems of dress, drink, sex, deportment and smoking, unprepared in the city.
Yet, the students were also quite active in working to promote KU and its traditions. In addition, the school's Chancellor E. H. Lindley in an effort to expand KU's budget to allow for additional teachers, classrooms and supplies. Their most recent university, Westerville, was best university in the Midwest."
EARLY IN 1921, the Kansas Legislature responded to their demands by appropriating over $3 million for the following two
In 1921, students launched a million dollar driver drive to raise money for World War I, who died during World War I. The average contribution among students was $60, and within the cohorts that were collected, Part of this sum went for the construction of the first football stadium in 1921 Stadium completed in 1921
In addition, a memorial to James W. Green, former dean of the KU law school, was built from the fund and was unveiled at commencement in 1924. The award was named "Uncle Jimmy" to students.
IN THE EARLY '20s, signs of women's lib are also beginning to sprout. Smoking had long been the accepted rule for men, but when women in the early '20s were more likely to authorities were quite upset.
One prominent faculty woman in 1923 said of the habit, "It is injurious to women who are not as temperate as best it is a horrible weed
... at best it is a horrible weed and should be left alone."
However, by 1930, the Kansan
was forced to admit that, "the practice is not merely a fad, but an established habit."
In 1928, after much discussion, women were also allowed to form debate squads for the first time in KU history.
IN 1924, the Dove, "a journal of liberal opinion," was published by KU students and graduates (near-red) paper, was not sanctioned by University Press, was completely financed by its authors.
was written by a Jap."
The creators of the Dove
issues of the day, gaining
issue of the day, gaining
paper national prominence as an
outspoken and outstanding
author.
Charles D. Ise wrote in the KU graduate magazine in 1930 that he is one of the greatest magazine editors and sociologists in the country as a product of genius and one of the best of brewing veridials in existence.
In 1925, the Dove published many editorials concerning the important campus issue of Negro rights. Negroes at KU during this period were working to be the junior and varsity dances and to have a representation in the Interfraternity Council. The staff of the Dove also pointed out that Negroes had to sit in a specific room in the gymnasium, and allowed to use the University swimming pool.
THESE EDITORIALS caused a quite a stir and prompted several debates about the role he held a different point of view. This remained a central issue throughout the country.
In 1927, the Dove began a series of articles which opposed ROTC on the KU campus. ROTC had begun under the National Defense Act as well as with other KU students, felt not ROTC "bred the spirit of militarism and its accompaniments."
One staff member of the Dove, Signo Ogiadone, a Japanese student, wrote an editorial against preparing for defense. The defense throughout reacted bitterly, and one paper noted that the story "evidently
In February of 1927 another student newspaper, the Hawk, was born. The aim, its editors felt, was to popular feeling at the University.
THE HAWK, in answer to the Dove's position on ROTC, said that ROTC was a "valuable element in college education." However, this argument claimed unsolved by either side.
Throughout 1927, the two publications continued to debate issues. Another joiing point for the two became the rating which was used by students in sorority from taxes. The Dove felt this plan was unfair to students not in houses, while the Hoyle felt it was necessary to students living in houses who could not afford the cost if the houses were forced to pay taxes. The issue remained unresolved and legislature ignored the problem.
The Hawk's career was quite short-lived, and, after a few issues, disbanded, while the Dove remained in existence until 1932.
IN THE SPRING of 1823, the entire student body was campaigning for liberalism. Women students were expectations to be home at 10 p.m. on week nights and would be expected to wear clothes. Women had to have written permission to go to Kansas City in a car with an earl, and had to walk to the school.
Students also wanted to be allowed to play tennis on Sundays, which authorities felt proper activity for the holy day.
These rules were gradually elaxed after much student complaining.
Freshmen in 1925 were beginning to question upperclass authority. For several years the tradition at KU was for freshman men to wear caps at all times on campus, and also at Thanksgiving, and to every home football game, with a ribbon in the band of the cap.
IN ADDITION, after the first home football game, freshman men were to perform a snake bite in Lawrence, Lawrence, wearing white
However, the freshman class of 1925 thought the tradition a mokery of freshmen, and after the big KU-University of Oklahoma, they huge bonfire and burned their caps. The student council, upset
nightshirts. The purpose was to show loyalty to the KU football team in the case of defeat and spirit in the case of victory.
by the incident, relaxed the rules and said that men were not compelled to follow tradition, as they as did they not burn their cups.
HOWEVER, IN 1926 women were made to wear the caps and men were "urged to tip their hats when they passed the KU flag,"
The 1928 freshman did not take much offense at the rules and the
little protest that followed came mainly from sophomores who urged freshmen to hold the council to its 1925 promise.
Throughout the decade, clothing was an example of women's fashion life. Authorities were quite upset at a woman's manner of dress.
One Dean of Women, in the
early '20s stated that, "Women shall not pass through the portals of our dining room unless they have a hostess's hosiery." By 1830, however, short skirts and bare tgs were as regular dress on campus.
THE DECADE from 1920-1930 wrought many changes, both in student attitudes and in the
attitudes of authorities in viewing students. Establishing their rights, students found that longer were they subject to and whims of the legislature and authorities. Students had created an active and effective voice in education and governed their University.
Pranks Common in KU History
Rv KEN HARWOOD
KANSAS STAFF WRITER
Student activism on the University of Kansas campus has not always involved mass participation, physical threats and public change. The history of the University suggests that student activism usually involved pranks with a general absence of social interaction.
Thomas Yee, an assistant to the director of the University of Kansas and a graduate Department and a 1939 graduate of KU, has a broad background on the history of the University and activity in a recent interview.
You said that in his days as a student, "it was not stylish to consider that we've just got to wear what we're going to wear, we've got weve to have change."
There was a much different concept of activism in the 1880s. Yoe cited the case of a KU Latin student who was shot through a relatively innocent act.
"Large numbers of student
students are at risk of being
recaf'ed and involving a
physical threat on our campus is
a phenomenon of the '60s." Yoe
Yoe said Professor Robinson
"There were people around the state who believed Mount Oread was the hotbed of subversion in those days," Yoe said.
"We did have people on the campus who were very sympathetic to worldwide revolution of the proletariat," he
"The best stunt I can perform in the Kansas State basketball game here about five years ago, is shooting a free throw and the game down unrolled some curtains over the big scoreboard in the field house with some big players."
Traditions also had a part to play in the activities of students. One such tradition called the Nightshirt lasted more than 30 years.
The game had to be stopped and the scoreboard lowered to take off the curtains so the score would not be shown to show for the rest of the game.
In October 1939, at a meeting of the Men's Student Council, a resolution was introduced to ban buildings in which students buildings except the Union
gathered at the home of Chancellor Strong hoping the Chancellor would come outside and make a speech.
would not have been a student at KU the next day.
The Nightshift Parade, Yea,
began one night in 1909 after
the University had won some
major sports event. The students
Chancellor Strong, though he was on his way to bed, did come outside and give a speech—in his nighthirtie. For over the next 30
years. Yoe said, students would
would go to Central Park in nigh-
ture, march around the campus and down to
Central Park where a bonfire was
One night, Yoe said, two see a professor at work. "The social call" to the professor's house. After a chaty visit and some hymns singing with a piano, they marched down the street.
Several campus organizations quickly approved the resolution: the Women's Self-Governing Association passed a rule banning smoking for women in the first and second floors of Strong Hall. The W.S.G.A. decided that women found
"People in those times were more tradition-minded," he said.
The Men's Student Council adopted this rule for men and appointed a committee made up of members of the faculty, Men's Student Council, and Women's Association to discipline smokers.
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He said considerable apprehension about Communists began to rise in the 1930s.
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The next morning, the professor noticed that the outside doors to his cellar had been tampered with, so he went down the cellar steps. When he looked up at the floor of his wine hine was poured out.
Expulsion Was Penalty Of 1939 Ban on Smoking
breaking the rule for the first time would be asked to refrain. The second offense would be called if the offender's name in the Kansan and the third offense would make him lose the loss of credit hours or expulsion.
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also was the victim of a prank in which he accidentally moved with temperature, movement, which urged the prohibition of alcohol, but instead his own wine in the polish galleried.
Peace movements and protests surrounding the ROTC Review happened on campus in the 1930s, but it was not a big part of the physical attempt for disruption
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Kansas Relays Edition
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
82nd Year, No.127
Friday, April 21, 1972
Kansas Relays Edition
USA
Former Jayhawks Karl Salb, top, and Steve Wilhelm, above, will battle the world's top two shot putters Saturday in a rehasl of last year's Kansas Relines open competition. The photo, since last year has taken over the leadership from Randy Matson, right. They are the only two shot putters who have brokely the 70-foot barrier, but not the long-distance record. All four shot putters are shooting for berths on the U. S. O. Olympic team.
LAMBURG
Shot Put Giants to Clash
Kansan Sports Writer
Bv BILL SCHEELE
"There were giants in the earth in those days," Gen. 6, 4. Moses wrote of an era.
Sports writers will be writing of modern giants in Memorial Stadium Saturday, when some of the world's largest and best athletes meet the Kansas Relaxes open shot event.
Steve Wilhelm and Karl Salb, who only a year ago dominated the collegiate ranks for the University of Kansas, will compete against the only 70-foot shot putters in track history, Al Feuerbach and Randy Matson.
While Salb and Wilhelm have been burdened with scholastic endeavors at KU, Feuerbach and Matson have been able to maintain a number of indoor sports this past winter.
It will mark the second year in a row that the four giants have met at KU in the third week of April. Last year Matson heavened the iron ball 88-four, 3½ inches; Feuerbach, 67-5·3; Sail, 61-10; and Mackenzie, 42-10. Continuation. It may not be as close this time.
Matson, a 270-pound Texan, had been king of the shot put world for seven years until Feuerbach, an Emporia State graduate, surpassed him this winter. By the end of March, Feuerbach owned a seventy consecutive victories over Matson.
Matson holds the world record of 71-52. Feuerbach's best has been 70-1.
"We'll probably just go out and compete in the KU Relays," said Salb. "I don't know if I have a chance of winning. Those ways will probably toss it around 70 feet."
Sab's all-time best is 62.7%, at the AU
finals in Eugene, Ore., last summer. He
will return to Eugene July 8 for the
Olympic trials.
Salb and Wilhelm, meanwhile, have seen united action this year. Indoors, Salb's players and teammates reacted.
Wilhelm, a first-year KU law student, and Salb, who graduated in physical education in December, have not received a salary under the weather for their spring workouts.
"It hasn't been too bad for workouts here in Kansas," Salt said. "It's been too
cold and wet. Weather has really hampered our efforts to practice outside. We've been concentrating on lifting weights and throwing inside."
However, both men went to more clement regions for their spring breaks—Sabt to his hometown, Crossett, Ark., and Wilhelm to his Altos, Calif.
The temperature got up to 75 and 80 degrees in Arkansas, "Salb said. I got wet."
Wilhelm went to California to receive some pointers from Hank Norker, his high school coach, who has helped him improve his form on past occasions.
"That's the only thing that counts this year," said Sah. "The Olympic trials are what we're shooting for. We have to be at our best at that time."
Both men are trying to build to a peak by July 8.
Track Stars to Shine In Saturday's Events
Although the Kansas Relays have entered their third day at Memorial Stadium, all that has taken place before is a practice in comparison with Saturday's events.
Saturday's action will include most of the open events—the ones with the name stars, and nearly every event will decide who will receive the awards. Friday were devoted to preliminaries.
That's not to say that nothing worthwhile will happen this afternoon, though. The university-college division four-mile relay committee was meeting in medley relay finals in three divisions.
The Masters' Mile, an event for runners 35 and over and one which usually proves the winner, has been a favourite.
Today's other finals will be the Cliff
Custman 400 yard hurdles and the in-unit
hurdles.
Competition will begin at the crack of dawn Saturday with the Kansas Relays Marathon at 7 a. m. Stadium shadows will be lengthening across the field when the meet finally concludes with the university division mile relay at 5:06 p.m.
The Glen Cunningham Mile at 2:40 p.m. probably will be the largest crowd attraction between those times. World record-holder Jim Riyun, who will run in the event, still draws a large following when he runs.
Last year, Ryum's scheduled appearance created quite a problem for the ticket agent.
"Ryun was scheduled to run at about 2:40." John Novotny, assistant director of athletics, said. "So at about 2:15 we had a team of students show up. About 2,000 of them."
"And when you have 2,000 people show up at once wanting to buy tickets, you've got problems. There's no way they could all get in at once."
Novotny and Meet Director Bob Immonds decided to open the gates at the South side of the campus.
Open Events Remain
"We didn't want to disappoint anybody." Novady said. "The students still have to do what they need."
Novotny said plans had been made to open more ticket booths to handle larger
Relays Include All Olympic Events To Assist U.S. Track Preparations
By BOB SIMISON
Kansan Sports Editor
In past Olympic years, the Kansas Relays have participated in preparations for international competition by using a single-ball course and an open mile, which became a 1,500-meter race. Contributions to the United States effort by the Relays more recently have led to the inclusion of a
Since 1970, the Relays have regularly included every type of Olympic event, if not distance, in an effort to develop U.S. strength in several weak areas. So even though this year's mile will be a mile, the team will move more toward preparing for the Olympics.
For example, Timmons added two mile walking events to the Relys in 1970, one in the high school division and one in the open division. The two Olympic walking events are for 20 kilometers (12.4 miles) and 50 kilometers (31 miles).
The mile walk takes roughly twice as long as the mile run, so 20 and 50 kilometer events would take a considerable amount of time. That's why the edition in the Relays is only a fraction of the Olympic walking event. Timmons explained.
were weak," KU track coach Bob Timmons explained. "Now, the relays touch on all the Olympic events, but not all the distances."
"We've added events through the years to help the Olympic effort in the events"
on the high school level. I guess it is a little dangerous and it does teep up the ground where it hits, but it's something we need to learn about, and it's fully weak event for the United States."
The hammer throw was added to the Relays in 1968. That's an event the NCAA will host in 2014.
The Relays have for several years included the marathon, a 28-mile, 385-yard event which originated in the same ancient city of Naples. The NCAA does not include that event, either.
So the influence of the Olympics definitely will be present in this year's Relay, but the Glenn Cunningham Mile metamorphosis to a *18-meter* event.
Ryun's Ritual Run to Be Important
"That's an awfully important event," Tirmitson said. "Only Rho Island uses it."
"We've gone to the standard mile distances mainly because the fans don't understand the metric distances," Timmons explained. "It's just meaningless to them when you talk about 1,500 meters."
By DANGEORGE Kansan Sports Writer
It's gotten to be something almost as regular as the seasons themselves: summer, fall, winter, spring, the Kansas Relays and Jim Rivn.
That's the way it is, seemy. With the exception of 1970, Jim Rim has run in the last few years, but he has nearly become synonymous with the event. It's taken for granted by most track fans not only that he will be running in the event, but also that he will, of course, win.
One person who won't be taking the upcoming Relays for granted, though, is the 1,500-meter qualifying for the 1,500 meter run and with the 1972 U.S. Olympic trials only three months away, the Wichita speedster is likely to be in trouble should be the most crucial he has ever run.
In the Meet of Champions March 4 in Los Angeles, he finished dead last with 4:19.6. In the Florida Relays, he ran a 1:48.6 half-mile in the two-mile relay and a 2:56.3 half-mile in the distance medley. Between the two events he had returned to Lawrence to train.
Ryun's recent performances have been spotty. In January, he beat his 1968 Olympic nemesis Kip Keino of Kenya in the mile in slow time, then three weeks later finished sixth in a field of seven in even slower time.
If but Ryn, who holds world records in the mile, 1,500 meters and 800, is to get back on the winning track, he would be hard pressed to find a better place than the Kansas Relays. The famed runner has a history of fine performances in the event.
In 1963, he won the high school mile with a time of 4:21.3. He was also the anchor man on the Wichita High School East two-mile relay team.
In 1965, as a senior, he broke his own meet record in the high school mile with a mark of 4:0.8. In addition, his 800-ydr anchor time of 1:47.7 helped Wikiastia East set a national record of 7:42.9 in the two-mile relay.
The following year, he also won the high school mile, this time with a meet record of 4:11.0 Again, he was a member of his school's two-mile relay team.
Joining the University of Kansas track team in 1986, Ryan promptly set a meet at Graceland. He and Mile in 3:55.5 His 3:59.0 distance medley mule enabled the KU freshman to set a national record of 9:54.0. He also ran at 47.0 on the backtrack to hawks to a first place in the mile relay.
In 1967, he again won the Cunningham Mile, this time with a record of 354.7.
He prepared for the Mexico City
Olympic Games, with 1,500
meters, which he won in 3:42.8.
The following year, his last with KU, he was the anchor man on a Jayhawk distance medley team which set a world record of 8:30.5. He ran a 3:67.1 mile in
When Ryun entered the Kansas Relays last year, he was in the beginning stages of his comeback drive—one aimed at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich. His performance in the meet, then, verged on the critical.
But that's history and of no importance to Ryun. His only goal is a berth on the U. S. Olympic team and another shot at a gold medal.
But he proved himself more than equal to the test. In running the Glenn Cunningham Mile in 3:55.8, he posted the world's best mile mark in three years.
And he knows more than anyone that a good performance in the Kansas Relays would be a big step toward attaining that goal.
crowds this year. Even so, he is hoping students show up early so he doesn't have to wait.
Tickets sell for 50 cents for students with
KU identification cards. High school student admission is $1 and general admission tickets sell for $2 and $3, Novotny said.
★ ★ ★
Relays Schedule
Friday Morning
Field Events
9- Shot put (high school) preliminaries and final.
10—Long jump (high school)
preliminary and final.
9:30.-Javelin (high school) preliminaries and final.
Track Events
8:30-100 dash (high school) preiminaries
8:40-100 dash (uni.-col.) preiminaries
8:50-120 high hurdles (high school)
preiminaries
prehmatter 9-120 high hurdles (univ.-col.)
9:10-Sprint medley relay (university)
preliminaries
9:30-Sprint medley relay (college)
reliminaries
9:50 - Sprint medley relay (junior college)
preliminaries
10.10—Sprint medley relay (high school)
reminimates
10 40-440 relay (college) preliminaries
10 45-800 relay (high school)
10 85-1250 relay
11-Distance medley relay (high school)
finals
11.15--800 relay (college) preliminaries
11.15--800 intermediate hurdles (high
school)
11:45- 440 hurdles (open) preliminaries
Friday Afternoon
Field Events
1- Pole vault (high school) preliminaries and final
1:15.-Shot put (univ.-col.) preliminaries and final
1:30-High jump (high school)
preliminary and final
See RELAYS on Page 4
KANSAS
Kansan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG
Jim Ryun Walks Off the Track After Mile
Newman then, as now, hound his heels immediately . . .
2B Friday, April 21.1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAS
68
TRACK
WELLAND
KANSAS RELAYS
Kansas Staff Photo by GREG SORBEE
Bob Bornkessel. Left. Stretches to Cross Hurdle in Early
KU senior hurdler will enter his last Kansas Relays as a Jayhawk . .
Each Occurrence a Miracle
By ED LALLO
Kansan Sports Writer
Two score and seven years ago,
three men at the University of
Kansas had a dream, a dream to
make the Kansas Relays a
Despite what many sports writers and university officials might want to believe, the dream of "Forrest" *Pho'g* "Allen, and Karl Schaideman, has not always been the established event that it is
The first Relays, April 21, 1923, was most impressive for its field success. The team notables are Dr James Naismith, inventor of basketball, Adolph Rupp, recently retired basketball player and former Kentucky, and three future Kansas football coaches, Ad Lindsay Gwinn Henry, and H. W. Jackson.
KU did well that first year. It won the meet after claiming the honor of winning the first event, the 440 yard relay.
A COMMOTION was raised by Bill Hargiss. coach of Kansas
State Normal (now Kansas State University), when it was announced that the pole vault would be omitted. Hargass pressed for inclusion. His team were rewarded, and K-State won the event.
The Kansas Relays throughout
the season will be an attraction to dignitaries.
Knute Rocke, the immortal
football coach of Notre Dame.
For that occasion the Relays were insured against rain for $3,000. As might have been the case in any of three world records were broken.
Other VIP's who have been referees of the event include Dan Gilligan, the national AAU president and now president of the International Olympic Committee, and Glenn Cunningham in 1942, a former VC.
MUCH OF THE BUILDING of the Relays into national promotion came through the promotions of the "Allen, former athletic director."
participate in a publicity stunt.
He had the male Indians run from
Kansas City to Lawrence while the
women ran from Topeka to
Lawrence. A top distance runner
married with the men. The men won.
In 1830 Allen pulled another of his publicity stubs. This time, he staged a rodeo and buffalo barbecue the night before the
Despite the promotions of Allen, the Relays did not gain the airplay they expected in World War II. When the Relays are known from coast to coast and are ranked in the top three of the nation along with Drake and Kane.
NEVER IN its 49-year history has the event been postponed or called off due to weather or rain. During the war years of 1843 to 1870, the British
The worst year for the relays was 1947, when, as one reporter noted, they got stuck in rain, wind, cold and mud got a jump on the other teams with a special practice late Friday night and went on to swamp all
There is a lot that can be written about the history of the Relays—about its admission of airplanes, about outside activities associated with it—and on matter of importance. The most important is always left out.
"You don't have to dig very far to get the history of the relays' information director said, "but to get the Relays to place each year, with each event going off on a miracle is something of an miracle.
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Anyone who's seen the glittering array of hardware in the form of watches, trophies and medals passed out every year at the Kansas Relays can't help but wonder where all the gold comes from.
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Thus, the second largest expense is the $1,500 budgeted for trophies. (The largest cost of Novtayo is the largest single expense is $3,500 for trophies and gifts.)
"Barring rain, we'll always make money on the Relays," Novotny said, "but not much."
And to get the personalities, the Relays must pay the athletes' expenses. Only amateur athletes are allowed. The USTF and UNTF-sanctioned meet.
Fortunately, however, the crowd of 22,000 those quality athletes attracts put the RELays on the map. Each point each year to channel money into the next year's RELays. John Goodman, a former athlete, explained recently.
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To bring Randy Matson from his Texas home, the Reliefs who are heading to New York are lodging and meals. That will total about $175 for Matson. Novotny
"YOU'VE GOT to have the personalities to draw the crowds," he said.
$21
THE BUDGET for this year's Relays count on income totalling $12,000. That figure is based on programs at the agency ($12,000, estimated profits from programs and concessions of the activity fee funds of $2,000.
Expenses, though, are expected to total at least $14,000. Building and Grounds personnel; expenses for officials, guards and gatekeepers; banquet costs; equipment and training; awards; and other expenses.
"Our problem is making the income equal the expenditures," Novesty said. "To do that, we need a promotion of these name athletes."
Costs of the officials are minimized. Novotny pointed out, by a volunteer force of Lawrence track officials trained by KU
Despite Extravagant Glitter, Relays Earn Enough for Profit, Expansion
Indeed, the name athletes, such as Randy Matsy, Al Feuerbach, Charlie Green and JR Ryan, are the major crowd attractions.
Downstream merchants, besides providing some of the volunteer work for the promotion of the Relays. The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce sponsors those efforts.
"We hope to make a profit of "$1,000. Novotny said. "If we get it, we'll put into next year's name and can bring in more name athletes."
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 21, 1972 3B
Timmons, Elbel Behind Relays Scenes
By BILL SCHEELE Kansan Sports Writer
University of Kansas track coach Hobbs gets much deep lately. He doesn't have insomnia, he's more like Kansas Relays.
The responsibility for organizing and securing thousands of treasures on shoulders of Timmons, who is also relay counsel. He helps get volunteers to the Kansas Relays student committee and the Downtown Kansas Relays team.
Bob Timmons
Still, Timmons, the little 47-aroid dynamo in his seventh season, is driving force behind the success of one of the top track meets in America.
"We spend every spare moment we have working on making the relays a success," Timmons said. "We spent one hour reviewing the process and judging. We really go full blast the last couple of weeks."
"I THINK we have a great field again this year," Timmons said. "I think we have the largest university division and college division representation ever. Our Olympic athletes will be here."
PETER D. LEE
Timmons is responsible for contacting many of the big name athletes and arranging for them to participate in the Relays.
"The Jim Hershberger Tartan track has really saved the Relays, making it both an athletic and financial asset," Dr. Edel rushed.
education professor for 37 years, has been working with the Relays since 1928. He is now retired from his job, managing the Relays in his hobby.
Ed Elbel
H. C. W.
"We start organizing the Relays early in the fall," said Amy Anderson, who send out season's greeting cards to all schools who we think might be interested. If a school apresenta an we send it an application.
"Actually, we do most of the work in the last few weeks. The students get pretty hectic then. Teams wait till the last minute to send in their assignments."
JAY SIMON, KU sports information director, said that the Jayhawks were the last team to apply an application last year.
Eibel said part of the Relays' task was to ensure that the law enforcement track officials association. It is one of the top groups of officials in the region.
"The association meets several times a year," Eilblad said. "They are the officials for all track events." Lawrence, not just the relays.
"All together, we need 125 actual officiates to run the Kansas numerous, but counting Rummanes persons who smaller but still important jobs. We have a separate group of officers to the marathon and deacionation each day."
Elbel stressed the tremendous amount of time organizing the meet takes.
"I can't think of any single
sports event that requires more preparation than the event, allowing the event, we also like to stress the idea of being good hosts to the competing athletes.
Elbel thinks that the Relays are very important.
"I HAVE A firm belief that relays such as ours do a great deal to promote track and field events in the United States. The athletics can use a relays as a steppingstone to success.
"One great thing about track and field is that an athlete in this competition doesn't use his knee." For the pros, it's purely for the pros. It's purely
competition for the feeling of satisfaction."
Elibel works closely with the Kansas Reilys student committee in organizing the event.
George Chase, Walnut Creek,
Calif., senior, and Steve Wamers,
Emma Morrison, head the student
committee, which is composed of
freshmen, six juniors and two
seniors.
"Seven to nine freshmen are usually selected on the basis of their academic standing and their academic standing their first semester at KU," said
"A STUDENT is expected to
stay on the committee for three years," he said. "Two seniors are always picked to head the team." No other seniors are allowed."
The responsibilities of the committee include sending entry for the opening meeting, processing entry blanks for individual events, organizing meetings to select lanes and organizing the opening meeting.
The KU band and members of ROTC participate in the opening ceremonies.
"This year we have selected the KU pompom girls to distribute awards," Chase said. "This is a good chance for the pompom girls in KU in a complimentary way to the outside athletes."
Chase said that the Relays queen tradition had become outmoded.
"Girls just aren't excited about being queens anymore," he said.
Chase said that the event was in an evolving stage.
"The KU Relays is changing from being an all-student project to being a community project," he said. "The last few years the KU relief chairs committee has taken over more of the responsibilities."
"It is composed of prominent downtown businessmen. They have arranged a housing. a transportation, awards, awards
"They have made many improvements since they started taking an active role. Other
major relays have had businessmen take an active part for several years."
The long hours and strenuous work of Timmons, Elbel, Chase, Wammer, and others during this third week of April.
Grueling Event Slated to Start In Wee Hours
Much of the most grueling event in the Kansas Relays, the marathon, will be run in the greatest solitude.
The running of the 26-mile, 385-yard course not only will take the runners far from the crowds of Memorial Stadium, but it also runs out of bed at a very up-prime time. The race starts at 7 a.m.
They then will follow Louisiana before touring Leary ahead before touring Eastward the Lawrence-Baidun road, where they will turn South once more to Virginia and follow Vinland school and follow the same course back to Memorial State.
After starting in the stadium, the runners will run past the Campanile, across the campus and Indiana Street to Lawrence High.
Estimated times put the
estimates at Lawrence High at 7:15.
The back at Lawrence High at 9:12
and across the finish line about
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Experienced Coaches to Be Referees
Five experienced track coaches who have coached outstandedly success track events in the past been placed as head referees for the five divisions of the Kansas Relays. They were chosen by the Kansas
University of Kansas track coach Bob Timmons said the men were picked because of their integrity and experience in track coaching. He considered an honor for the coaches to be picked for the job.
Sevigne, university division referee, is currently in his 17th year as track coach at the University of Nebraska.
The referees for the RELays are Frank Seigne, university division; Ray Vaughn, college division; Nelson Sorem, junior college division; John Davis, junior college division; Ack Hague, high school division.
Since 1955. Sevigne's
Cornshaker teams have compiled a 91-28 dual and triangular win. Cornshaker teams have won two Big Eight championships and finished
SEVIGNE HAS been on the NCAA rules committee and has been a member of the U.S. Olympic committee.
Vaughn, college division referee, is now in his 18th year as athletic director and track coach at Christian University Christian College in Oklahoma City.
A 1970 inductee into the National Association of Football Teams, and a Training and Feld Hall of Fame Vaughn coached Olympic hopefuls in the decathlon at the Olympic training camp in Boulder, Colorado, in 2003.
Vaughn was a referee at the 1970 NAIA national meet and the 1971 Big Eight outdoor meet.
Sorem, long-time track coach at Hutchinson Junior College until his retirement three years ago, as the meet's first junior college
The Relays committee picked
A graduate of KU, Sorem's Hutchinson teams won 14 state titles and national championships in 1954 and 1959.
**FROM** 1951 to 1959, Sorem was president of the college meet. in 1967 and 1983 was president of the National Junior College Track Coaches
Davis will be the first women's division referee for the Kansas relays.
Jack Hague, high school division referee, has been track coat at Great Bend, Kan., high school since 1960.
Hague's teams have consistently been strong in the West Central Kansas League, which includes two other, the second four years.
Hague has had 25 athletes win state championships in individual events and relays.
Davis was head coach of the U.S. women's track and field for the 1971 Pan-American games in Colli, California. He is a member of the Committee for women's track and field for the 1972 Munich Games.
Each of these five men will be active referees in their own divisions. In case of a dispute, these referees will make the final decision on their play to make sure the 4th KU Relays run smoothly.
The women's entries for the Kansas Relfays have been supervised by Davis since it was the event he met the 10 years ago. The Kansas Relfays are the first track team to include events for women.
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Friday, April 21, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Relays Schedule . . .
Continued from Page 1
2- triple jump (univ.-col.) preliminaries
and final
3- Discus (univ.-col.) preliminaries and final
Track Events
1:30-120 high hurdles (high school)
semifinals
1:35—120 high hurdles (univ. col.)
seminals
1:20 - Four-mile relay (univ.-col.) final
1:50 - Spraint midley (university) collage
2:25 -Sprint medlev relay (college) final
1:45 - 100 dash (high school) seminaries
1:50 Four mile lapel, uniform, final
1:40 to doast (high school) seminars
1:50 -Mile-mile relay (univ.-col.) final
1:45 - 100 dash (high school) semifinals
1. 40-100 dash (univ.-col.) semifinals
final ... mendey reilly (university)
2:15 -Sprint medley relay (junior college)
final
2:25 -Sprint medley relay (college) final
2:35 -Sprint medley relay (university)
3—Masters' Mile ($$ and over)
2-10, 2-15, 2-20, 2-25, 2-30, 2-35, 2-40, 2-45, 2-50, 2-55, 2-60, 2-65, 2-70, 2-75, 2-80, 2-85, 2-90, 2-95, 2-100, 2-105, 2-110, 2-115, 2-120, 2-125, 2-130, 2-135, 2-140, 2-145, 2-150, 2-155, 2-160, 2-165, 2-170, 2-175, 2-180, 2-185, 2-190, 2-195, 2-200, 2-205, 2-210, 2-215, 2-220, 2-225, 2-230, 2-235, 2-240, 2-245, 2-250, 2-255, 2-260, 2-265, 2-270, 2-275, 2-280, 2-285, 2-290, 2-295, 2-300, 2-305, 2-310, 2-315, 2-320, 2-325, 2-330, 2-335, 2-340, 2-345, 2-350, 2-355, 2-360, 2-365, 2-370, 2-375, 2-380, 2-385, 2-390, 2-395, 2-400, 2-405, 2-410, 2-415, 2-420, 2-425, 2-430, 2-435, 2-440, 2-445, 2-450, 2-455, 2-460, 2-465, 2-470, 2-475, 2-480, 2-485, 2-490, 2-495, 2-500, 2-505, 2-510, 2-515, 2-520, 2-525, 2-530, 2-535, 2-540, 2-545, 2-550, 2-555, 2-560, 2-565, 2-570, 2-575, 2-580, 2-585, 2-590, 2-595, 2-600, 2-605, 2-610, 2-615, 2-620, 2-625, 2-630, 2-635, 2-640, 2-645, 2-650, 2-655, 2-660, 2-665, 2-670, 2-675, 2-680, 2-685, 2-690, 2-695, 2-700, 2-705, 2-710, 2-715, 2-720, 2-725, 2-730, 2-735, 2-740, 2-745, 2-750, 2-755, 2-760, 2-765, 2-770, 2-775, 2-780, 2-785, 2-790, 2-795, 2-800, 2-805, 2-810, 2-815, 2-820, 2-825, 2-830, 2-835, 2-840, 2-845, 2-850, 2-855, 2-860, 2-865, 2-870, 2-875, 2-880, 2-885, 2-890, 2-895, 2-900, 2-905, 2-910, 2-915, 2-920, 2-925, 2-930, 2-935, 2-940, 2-945, 2-950, 2-955, 2-960, 2-965, 2-970, 2-975, 2-980, 2-985, 2-990, 2-995, 2-1000, 2-1005, 2-1010, 2-1015, 2-1020, 2-1025, 2-1030, 2-1035, 2-1040, 2-1045, 2-1050, 2-1055, 2-1060, 2-1065, 2-1070, 2-1075, 2-1080, 2-1085, 2-1090, 2-1095, 2-1100, 2-1105, 2-1110, 2-1115, 2-1120, 2-1125, 2-1130, 2-1135, 2-1140, 2-1145, 2-1150, 2-1155, 2-1160, 2-1165, 2-1170, 2-1175, 2-1180, 2-1185, 2-1190, 2-1195, 2-1200, 2-1205, 2-1210, 2-1215, 2-1220, 2-1225, 2-1230, 2-1235, 2-1240, 2-1245, 2-1250, 2-1255, 2-1260, 2-1265, 2-1270, 2-1275, 2-1280, 2-1285, 2-1290, 2-1295, 2-1300, 2-1305, 2-1310, 2-1315, 2-1320, 2-1325, 2-1330, 2-1335, 2-1340, 2-1345, 2-1350, 2-1355, 2-1360, 2-1365, 2-1370, 2-1375, 2-1380, 2-1385, 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2-2015, 2-2020, 2-2025, 2-2030, 2-2035, 2-2040, 2-2045, 2-2050, 2-2055, 2-2060, 2-2065, 2-2070, 2-2075, 2-2080, 2-2085, 2-2090, 2-2095, 2-2100, 2-2105, 2-2110, 2-2115, 2-2120, 2-2125, 2-2130, 2-2135, 2-2140, 2-2145, 2-2150, 2-2155, 2-2160, 2-2165, 2-2170, 2-2175, 2-2180, 2-2185, 2-2190, 2-2195, 2-2200, 2-2205, 2-2210, 2-2215, 2-2220, 2-2225, 2-2230, 2-2235, 2-2240, 2-2245, 2-2250, 2-2255, 2-2260, 2-2265, 2-2270, 2-2275, 2-2280, 2-2285, 2-2290, 2-2295, 2-2300, 2-2305, 2-2310, 2-2315, 2-2320, 2-2325, 2-2330, 2-2335, 2-2340, 2-2345, 2-2350, 2-2355, 2-2360, 2-2365, 2-2370, 2-2375, 2-2380, 2-2385, 2-2390, 2-2395, 2-2400, 2-2405, 2-2410, 2-2415, 2-2420, 2-2425, 2-2430, 2-2435, 2-2440, 2-2445, 2-2450, 2-2455, 2-2460, 2-2465, 2-2470, 2-2475, 2-2480, 2-2485, 2-2490, 2-2495, 2-2500, 2-2505, 2-2510, 2-2515, 2-2520, 2-2525, 2-2530, 2-2535, 2-2540, 2-2545, 2-2550, 2-2555, 2-2560, 2-2565, 2-2570, 2-2575, 2-2580, 2-2585, 2-2590, 2-2595, 2-2600, 2-2605, 2-2610, 2-2615, 2-2620, 2-2625, 2-2630, 2-2635, 2-2640, 2-2645, 2-2650, 2-2655, 2-2660, 2-2665, 2-2670, 2-2675, 2-2680, 2-2685, 2-2690, 2-2695, 2-2700, 2-2705, 2-2710, 2-2715, 2-2720, 2-2725, 2-2730, 2-2735, 2-2740, 2-2745, 2-2750, 2-2755, 2-2760, 2-2765, 2-2770, 2-2775, 2-2780, 2-2785, 2-2790, 2-2795, 2-2800, 2-2805, 2-2810, 2-2815, 2-2820, 2-2825, 2-2830, 2-2835, 2-2840, 2-2845, 2-2850, 2-2855, 2-2860, 2-2865, 2-2870, 2-2875, 2-2880, 2-2885, 2-2890, 2-2895, 2-2900, 2-2905, 2-2910, 2-2915, 2-2920, 2-2925, 2-2930, 2-2935, 2-2940, 2-2945, 2-2950, 2-2955, 2-2960, 2-2965, 2-2970, 2-2975, 2-2980, 2-2985, 2-2990, 2-2995, 2-3000, 3-3005, 3-3010, 3-3015, 3-3020, 3-3025, 3-3030, 3-3035, 3-3040, 3-3045, 3-3050, 3-3055, 3-3060, 3-3065, 3-3070, 3-3075, 3-3080, 3-3085, 3-3090, 3-3095, 3-3100, 3-3105, 3-3110, 3-3115, 3-3120, 3-3125, 3-3130, 3-3135, 3-3140, 3-3145, 3-3150, 3-3155, 3-3160, 3-3165, 3-3170, 3-3175, 3-3180, 3-3185, 3-3190, 3-3195, 3-3200, 3-3205, 3-3210, 3-3215, 3-3220, 3-3225, 3-3230, 3-3235, 3-3240, 3-3245, 3-3250, 3-3255, 3-3260, 3-3265, 3-3270, 3-3275, 3-3280, 3-3285, 3-3290, 3-3295, 3-3300, 3-3305, 3-3310, 3-3315, 3-3320, 3-3325, 3-3330, 3-3335, 3-3340, 3-3345, 3-3350, 3-3355, 3-3360, 3-3365, 3-3370, 3-3375, 3-3380, 3-3385, 3-3390, 3-3395, 3-3400, 3-3405, 3-3410, 3-3415, 3-3420, 3-3425, 3-3430, 3-3435, 3-3440, 3-3445, 3-3450, 3-3455, 3-3460, 3-3465, 3-3470, 3-3475, 3-3480, 3-3485, 3-3490, 3-3495, 3-3500, 3-3505, 3-3510, 3-3515, 3-3520, 3-3525, 3-3530, 3-3535, 3-3540, 3-3545, 3-3550, 3-3555, 3-3560, 3-3565, 3-3570, 3-3575, 3-3580, 3-3585, 3-3590, 3-3595, 3-3600, 3-3605, 3-3610, 3-3615, 3-3620, 3-3625, 3-3630, 3-3635, 3-3640, 3-3645, 3-3650, 3-3655, 3-3660, 3-3665, 3-3670, 3-3675, 3-3680, 3-3685, 3-3690, 3-3695, 3-3700, 3-3705, 3-3710, 3-3715, 3-3720, 3-3725, 3-3730, 3-3735, 3-3740, 3-3745, 3-3750, 3-3755, 3-3760, 3-3765, 3-3770, 3-3775, 3-3780, 3-3785, 3-3790, 3-3795, 3-3800, 3-3805, 3-3810, 3-3815, 3-3820, 3-3825, 3-3830, 3-3835, 3-3840, 3-3845, 3-3850, 3-3855, 3-3860, 3-3865, 3-3870, 3-3875, 3-3880, 3-3885, 3-3890, 3-3895, 3-3900, 3-3905, 3-3910, 3-3915, 3-3920, 3-3925, 3-3930, 3-3935, 3-3940, 3-3945, 3-3950, 3-3955, 3-3960, 3-3965, 3-3970, 3-3975, 3-3980, 3-3985, 3-3990, 3-3995, 3-4000, 3-4005, 3-4010, 3-4015, 3-4020, 3-4025, 3-4030, 3-4035, 3-4040, 3-4045, 3-4050, 3-4055, 3-4060, 3-4065, 3-4070, 3-4075, 3-4080, 3-4085, 3-4090, 3-4095, 3-4100, 3-4105, 3-4110, 3-4115, 3-4120, 3-4125, 3-4130, 3-4135, 3-4140, 3-4145, 3-4150, 3-4155, 3-4160, 3-4165, 3-4170, 3-4175, 3-4180, 3-4185, 3-4190, 3-4195, 3-4200, 3-4205, 3-4210, 3-4215, 3-4220, 3-4225, 3-4230, 3-4235, 3-4240, 3-4245, 3-4250, 3-4255, 3-4260, 3-4265, 3-4270, 3-4275, 3-4280, 3-4285, 3-4290, 3-4295, 3-4300, 3-4305, 3-4310, 3-4315, 3-4320, 3-4325, 3-4330, 3-4335, 3-4340, 3-4345, 3-4350, 3-4355, 3-4360, 3-4365, 3-4370, 3-4375, 3-4380, 3-4385, 3-4390, 3-4395, 3-4400, 3-4405, 3-4410, 3-4415, 3-4420, 3-4425, 3-4430, 3-4435, 3-4440, 3-4445, 3-4450, 3-4455, 3-4460, 3-4465, 3-4470, 3-4475, 3-4480, 3-4485, 3-4490, 3-4495, 3-4500, 3-4505, 3-4510, 3-4515, 3-4520, 3-4525, 3-4530, 3-4535, 3-4540, 3-4545, 3-4550, 3-4555, 3-4560, 3-4565, 3-4570, 3-4575, 3-4580, 3-4585, 3-4590, 3-4595, 3-4600, 3-4605, 3-4610, 3-4615, 3-4620, 3-4625, 3-4630, 3-4635, 3-4640, 3-4645, 3-4650, 3-4655, 3-4660, 3-4665, 3-4670, 3-4675, 3-4680, 3-4685, 3-4690, 3-4695, 3-4700, 3-4705, 3-4710, 3-4715, 3-4720, 3-4725, 3-4730, 3-4735, 3-4740, 3-4745, 3-4750, 3-4755, 3-4760, 3-4765, 3-4770, 3-4775, 3-4780, 3-4785, 3-4790, 3-4795, 3-4800, 3-4805, 3-4810, 3-4815, 3-4820, 3-4825, 3-4830, 3-4835, 3-4840, 3-4845, 3-4850, 3-4855, 3-4860, 3-4865, 3-4870, 3-4875, 3-4880, 3-4885, 3-4890, 3-4895, 3-4900, 3-4905, 3-4910, 3-4915, 3-4920, 3-4925, 3-4930, 3-4935, 3-4940, 3-4945, 3-4950, 3-4955, 3-4960, 3-4965, 3-4970, 3-4975, 3-4980, 3-4985, 3-4990, 3-4995, 3-5000, 3-5005, 3-5010, 3-5015, 3-5020, 3-5025, 3-5030, 3-5035, 3-5040, 3-5045, 3-5050, 3-5055, 3-5060, 3-5065, 3-5070, 3-5075, 3-5080, 3-5085, 3-5090, 3-5095, 3-5100, 3-5105, 3-5110, 3-5115, 3-5120, 3-5125, 3-5130, 3-5135, 3-5140, 3-5145, 3-5150, 3-5155, 3-5160, 3-5165, 3-5170, 3-5175, 3-5180, 3-5185, 3-5190, 3-5195, 3-5200, 3-5205, 3-5210, 3-5215, 3-5220, 3-5225, 3-5230, 3-5235, 3-5240, 3-5245, 3-5250, 3-5255, 3-5260, 3-5265, 3-5270, 3-5275, 3-5280, 3-5285, 3-5290, 3-5295, 3-5300, 3-5305, 3-5310, 3-5315, 3-5320, 3-5325, 3-5330, 3-5335, 3-5340, 3-5345, 3-5350, 3-5355, 3-5360, 3-5365, 3-5370, 3-5375, 3-5380, 3-5385, 3-5390, 3-5395, 3-5400, 3-5405, 3-5410, 3-5415, 3-5420, 3-5425, 3-5430, 3-5435, 3-5440, 3-5445, 3-5450, 3-5455, 3-5460, 3-5465, 3-5470, 3-5475, 3-5480, 3-5485, 3-5490, 3-5495, 3-5500, 3-5505, 3-5510, 3-5515, 3-5520, 3-5525, 3-5530, 3-5535, 3-5540, 3-5545, 3-5550, 3-5555, 3-5560, 3-5565, 3-5570, 3-5575, 3-5580, 3-5585, 3-5590, 3-5595, 3-5600, 3-5605, 3-5610, 3-5615, 3-5620, 3-5625, 3-5630, 3-5635, 3-5640, 3-5645, 3-5650, 3-5655, 3-5660, 3-5665, 3-5670, 3-5675, 3-5680, 3-5685, 3-5690, 3-5695, 3-5700, 3-5705, 3-5710, 3-5715, 3-5720, 3-5725, 3-5730, 3-5735, 3-5740, 3-5745, 3-5750, 3-5755, 3-5760, 3-5765, 3-5770, 3-5775, 3-5780, 3-5785, 3-5790, 3-5795, 3-5800, 3-5805, 3-5810, 3-5815, 3-5820, 3-5825, 3-5830, 3-5835, 3-5840, 3-5845, 3-5850, 3-5855, 3-5860, 3-5865, 3-5870, 3-5875, 3-5880, 3-5885, 3-5890, 3-5895, 3-5900, 3-5905, 3-5910, 3-5915, 3-5920, 3-5925, 3-5930, 3-5935, 3-5940, 3-5945, 3-5950, 3-5955, 3-5960, 3-5965, 3-5970, 3-5975, 3-5980, 3-5985, 3-5990, 3-5995, 3-6000, 3-6005, 3-6010, 3-6015, 3-6020, 3-6025, 3-6030, 3-6035, 3-6040, 3-6045, 3-6050, 3-6055, 3-6060, 3-6065, 3-6070, 3-6075, 3-6080, 3-6085, 3-6090, 3-6095, 3-6100, 3-6105, 3-6110, 3-6115, 3-6120, 3-6125, 3-6130, 3-6135, 3-6140, 3-6145, 3-6150, 3-6155, 3-6160, 3-6165, 3-6170, 3-6175, 3-6180, 3-6185, 3-6190, 3-6195, 3-6200, 3-6205, 3-6210, 3-6215, 3-6220, 3-6225, 3-6230, 3-6235, 3-6240, 3-6245, 3-6250, 3-6255, 3-6260, 3-6265, 3-6270, 3-6275, 3-6280, 3-6285, 3-6290, 3-6295, 3-6300, 3-6305, 3-6310, 3-6315, 3-6320, 3-6325, 3-6330, 3-6335, 3-6340, 3-6345, 3-6350, 3-6355, 3-6360, 3-6365, 3-6370, 3-6375, 3-6380, 3-6385, 3-6390, 3-6395, 3-6400, 3-6405, 3-6410, 3-6415, 3-6420, 3-6425, 3-6430, 3-6435, 3-6440, 3-6445, 3-6450, 3-6455, 3-6460, 3-6465, 3-6470, 3-6475, 3-6480, 3-6485, 3-6490, 3-6495, 3-6500, 3-6505, 3-6510, 3-6515, 3-6520, 3-6525, 3-6530, 3-6535, 3-6540, 3-6545, 3-6550, 3-6555, 3-6560, 3-6565, 3-6570, 3-6575, 3-6580, 3-6585, 3-6590, 3-6595, 3-6600, 3-6605, 3-6610, 3-6615, 3-6620, 3-6625, 3-6630, 3-6635, 3-6640, 3-6645, 3-6650, 3-6655, 3-6660, 3-6665, 3-6670, 3-6675, 3-6680, 3-6685, 3-6690, 3-6695, 3-6700, 3-6705, 3-6710, 3-6715, 3-6720, 3-6725, 3-6730, 3-6735, 3-6740, 3-6745, 3-6750, 3-6755, 3-6760, 3-6765, 3-6770, 3-6775, 3-6780, 3-6785, 3-6790, 3-6795, 3-6800, 3-6805, 3-6810, 3-6815, 3-6820, 3-6825, 3-6830, 3-6835, 3-6840, 3-6845, 3-6850, 3-6855, 3-6860, 3-6865, 3-6870, 3-6875, 3-6880, 3-6885, 3-6890, 3-6895, 3-6900, 3-6905, 3-6910, 3-6915, 3-6920, 3-6925, 3-6930, 3-6935, 3-6940, 3-6945, 3-6950, 3-6955, 3-6960, 3-6965, 3-6970, 3-6975, 3-6980, 3-6985, 3-6990, 3-6995, 3-7000, 3-7005, 3-7010, 3-7015, 3-7020, 3-7025, 3-7030, 3-7035, 3-7040, 3-7045, 3-7050, 3-7055, 3-7060, 3-7065, 3-7070, 3-7075, 3-7080, 3-7085, 3-7090, 3-7095, 3-7095, 3-7090, 3-7095, 3-7095
2:50——Mile run (high school) final
3:10-440 relay (university preliminaries)
3:10-Cliff Cushman 440 hurdles (open)
3:35-300 intermediate hurdles (high
school) final.
3:50-Mile run (univ. col.) final
3:50 - Mile run (univ-col) final
8:00 relay (university) preliminaries
4:15-Mile relay (high school)
polliminaries
preliminaries
4:25-Mile relay (junior college)
4:25-Mile relay (juniur college)
preliminaries
preliminaries
4:35- Mile relay (college) preliminaries
4:35 -Mile relay (college) premiminaries
4:35 -relay (university)
eliminates
Saturday Morning
Field Events
9:30--Javelin throw (univ.-col.)
noun; object
preliminaries and final
9:30—Triple jump (high school)
preliminaries and final
9-10 Discuss throw (high, school)
9:30—Discuss throw (high school)
multiplication and factorials
11—Hammer throw (open)
Saturday Afternoon
Frack Events
Track Events 7—Open marathon
10-Mile steeplechase (high school) final
10:10-Two-mile run (high school) final
10:30-Mile walk (high school) final
10:30-Mile walk (open)
10:55 440 relay (high school) preliminary
Field Events
12—Pole vault (univ.-col.) preliminaries
and final
1:20—High jump (univ.-col.)
preliminaries and final
1:30—Long jump (univ.-col.)
preliminaries and final
?
Track Events
1:10-120 high hurdles (high school) final
1:10-120 high hurdles (univ. college) final
1:20—100 dash (univ.-col.) final
1:25 - 100 dash (high school) final
1:30 - 100 dash (women) final
final
1.45 Two mile race (juvenile college) final
1.35-Sprint medley relay (high school)
final
1:45 - Two-mile relay (junior college) final
2:45 - Distance medley relay (college)
3:45 - Swimming relay
2.10-Distance medley relay (university)
final
final
2:25—100 dash (open)
3:20—Masters' 880 (40 and over)
4:20—Glen Cunningham Mile (open)
2:50—280 run(women) final
2:50—440 relay (high school) final
3—440 relay (college) final
0:50—440 relay (university) final
3—Three-mile run (open)
4:00—Three-mile (high school) final
3:40—Two-mile relay (college) final
5:00—Two-mile relay (university) final
4—880 relay (K.C., Mo., high school) final
4:05—880 relay (high school) final
4:10—880 relay (college) final
1:55—880 relay (univ.-col.) final
2:30—3,000-meter steeplechase (open)
final
Mile relay (high school) final
Mile relay (junior college) final
Mile relay (college) final
Mile relay (university) final
Open 100 Field Includes World Record Co-Holder
One of the shortest events in the Kansas Relays, the open 100 yard dash, could prove to be one of the most exciting. Saturday at the nation's nationals the top sprinters have accepted invitations to run the 100.
He was stationed in Europe as a U.S. army officer and planned an April tour in preparation for the Olympic trials.
Charlie Greene, the former New York Giants owner, the world record of 91 in the hundred, was one of the first to accept an invitation in late 2014.
Ivory Crockett, Southern Illinois' two-time AAU champion, has also entered the event. His best time is a 9.3.
Colorado's Cliff Branch and
George Daniels, both 9.2
sprinters, will be in the meet and
are expected to run the open 100.
Greene is one of a half-dozen sprinters in the world who have
clocked an acceptable 9.1.100. A number of others have produced wind-aided gems.
The four others who share the world record of .91 are John Cormack of Scotland, and Canada's Harry Jerome. Willie McGee of Alcatel A & M ran a .91 in 1970, but his clocking has a share of the record, he accepted for a share of the record.
Greene was the first of three men to run the open 100 in 9.3 in 1967 and 2010, while Johnny Novak, 1969, Carlos, running for San Jose State, did it in 1970, and Branch Miller, running for Texas, did it in 1970.
The open 100 is scheduled for 2:25 p.m. Saturday.
High humper Gary Johnson. Lawrence junior, has been named the first recipient of a track scholarship recently by Ed Ehlong, long time manager of the Kansas Relays.
Local Merchants Sponsor Awards
Seventeen lawrence
Brownville provide trophies and plaques for
championship teams in all 25
Kansas Relays this week.
These firms have donated trophies:
Lawrence Journal-World.
Lawrence National Bank,
Lawrence Savings Association,
Ober's Raney Drugs, Rumssey
Food Stores, Food Store,
Stores. Vikh Investment and
Weaver's Department Store.
As in years past, the trophy for the university mile relay will be sponsored by Chuck Cramer of Chemical Cramer. Gardener
All Star Dairy, Anchor Savings Association, Burnett Instruments, Calvin, Eddy and Kappelman, Inc., Douglas University National Bank, Hallmark Cards, inc., Kansas Public Service Co.
The Downtown Relay Committee recruited the trophy sponsors.
1892
A CASTLE IN LAWRENCE?
Probably few know the legend of the enchanting Castle Tea Room that reigns conspicuously on Massachusetts Street.
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 Endacott, an artist sculptor and artist and some of his work is in the drawing room of the Lord Holtford home.
The Castile was built in 1854 as a home for J. N. Roberts, a retired Civil War general. He was a man of great wealth with an income from patents on wood containers carved in the Spanish style.
There are five beautiful fireplaces in the house, each a unique design with various colored marble and brick. The original dining room is very ample with an unusual built-in widescreen and chinless chair. A recess cluster of mirrors and stained glass window above the fireplace gives the effect of an altar in a chapel.
The tower which gives the old castle appearance has a stairway leading to the third floor. About 150 feet up, there are several windows. They were used during the summer months. The balloon with a spacious window seats on the third floor is also visible.
If you have never been inside the Castle Tea Room, come and dine in the only restaurant in proximity with such a beautiful historical and cultural background. The only way to really interact with the castle is through its walls.
The Castle Tea Room
The Most Unique Restaurant in Lawrence Reservations Suggested
1307 Mass
843-1151
Enjoy
Coca-Cola
Trade-mark ®
Compliments of Coca-Cola Bottling—Kansas City, Lawrence
240
PLEASANT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Senate Hearings On Budget End
82nd Year, No.128
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Monday, April 24, 1972
See Page 2
THE SCORE
AND THE
MINDER
WE ARE NOT TAKEN TO BE A
WAR. WE ARE NOT TAKEN TO BE A WAR.
The bombings
and Killings
in S.E.
VVAW
Wichita
VETS
HELP!
Peace
Fellowship
UNIVERSAL
PEACE
Ignoring The War
Wont Make It St
The worst
depe I took
was Nixon
Kansan Photo by SCOTT SPREIER
War Protestors Demonstrate Outside Memorial Stadium
Demonstrators remained peaceful despite unfriendly crowd
Hundreds Voice Protest at Relays
Rv KEVIN SHAFER
Kansan Staff Writer
With competition from the boos and jeers from part of the 32,000 people attending the ceremony, several hundred students, faculty and interested participants held a peaceful demonstration at Memorial Stadium in U.S.'s renewed bombing of North Vietnam.
The demonstration was the culmination of a week's planning.
At 11 a.m., several hundred demonstrators marched silently into the stadium carrying banners pledging their opposition to the war.
David Dillon, Hutchinson junior and student body president, made a brief statement to about 10,000 people that had gathered for the day's athletic events.
DILLON THEN introduced John
Marmot to the Vietnam
Veterans Against the War.
Dillon said that KU's student senate had passed a resolution expressing its opposition to the re-escalation of the Vietnam war.
Musgrave expressed his gratitude and the gratitude of all the organizations participating in the demonstration for the war, "we express their feelings toward the war.
Mugrave said the demonstrators had gathered to exhibit a "peaceful visual representation" of the protest, and said that if the American public were made aware of the growing concern for the environment, they would certainly step back.
The Vietnam veteran said although de-
escalation of American troops in Vietnam was supposed to be taking place, only the ground troops were being pulled out. He said the decrease in ground troops was being countered by increased numbers of air and naval forces.
MUSGRAVE THEN produced what he said were facts that the American public knew.
1. Over 300 Indonesian civilians have been killed in the war each day.
2. Over one ton of bombs have been
minute the Nixon administration has been off.
3. Over two thirds of South Vietnam's
towers have had to be relocated because of
the war.
4. The Plain of Jars in Laos has been made an uninhabitable desert because of its arid conditions.
5. More bombs have been dropped in Vietnam that in either World War II or Krieg.
Mugrave said the Nixon administration had challenged the other two world powers, Russia and Red China, to "put up or shut up in the Indochina war."
During Musgrave's presentation, several hundred demonstrators lined the fence surrounding the track. Many had shouts and signs voicing their protest to the war.
When asked to stand up and join hands to show their support to the demonstration, many of the people in the stadium complied with the request.
SUCH WAS NOT the case, however,
when the second statement was read at
North Viets Cut Highway Overrun Critical Outpost
★ ★ ★ ★
SAIGON (AP)—North Vietnamese forces cut highway 14 in the central city before a Monday and a column of government base camp at Tan Chan. The outpost was considered critical to the conflict in Pleiku, the area's two largest cities.
The enemy's long-range 130mm artillery also shelled a series of South Vietnamese fire bases south of Tan Chanth that guard the northern approaches to Kontum. The U.S. Army conducted the assault on an engineered computerized AC130, was unable to stop the tank column, although crewmen reported knocking out three tanks and South Vietnamese forces claimed destroying four north of Tan in an eight tank was reported captured.
Before the tank assault on Tan Canh, North Vietnamese forces cut Highway 14 from Saigon to Vung Tau and seven miles below the base camp, isolating it. A rocket attack earlier set afire and completely destroyed the Tan Canh command post, killing one South Vietnamese soldier.
Field reports said 20 tanks were involved in the attack on Tank Canh, forward line and rear of the battlefield. 22nd Infantry Division, just west of Highway 14 and opposite the district town of Dak To. The reports said at least seven vehicles were destroyed and one was captured.
The North Vietnamese took more than 300 U.S. air strikes, including about 50 by giant B52 bombers carrying about 30 tons of explosives each. The enemy waited for overcast skies, then the provincial capital of An Loc from four directions.
March 30. A South Vietnamese infantry battalion was scattered in the central highlands, with 15 men killed, 19 wounded and 120 missing.
Two American advisers were slightly wounded.
But the U.S. crewmen in the AC130 reported that the rest of the column continued down Highway 14 at high speed toward Tan Canh, then entered the village.
The Saigon command whilemean was reshuffling its thinly spread forces. Much of its strategic reserves have been chewed up in the enemy offensive that began
three o'clock. By then, about 32,000 people had sated for the Relais.
Enemy forces launched the assault on Tan Cah, and dealt new blows Sunday to government units at An Loc, 60 miles north of Tampa, the most intense U.S. embattles of the war.
Mona Harmman, assistant instructor in Western Civilization, read the second statement which was drowned out several times by booing.
Hamman's request for a moment of silent prayer for the men who had died in Vietnam received response mainly from the student section. Boos and complaints against him surfaced after he interrupted by the protest continued throughout the moment of meditation.
Mmusgrave, an ex-Marine who was wounded three times during his tour in Vietnam, said he was very upset by the bombing and took place during the moment of silence.
"Those people who booed and jeered are worse animals than I was when I was a child."
Following the reading of the statement,
REPRESENTED IN the demonstration were the Vietnam Veterans Against the War, Union local 1123, Women's Coalition, KU faculty, several foreign students' organizations, KU-Y, the Athletic Youth Conference, Gay Luberty Liberal, and Theizations. The organizations said new groups were showing their support every day.
The coalition said they had complied with the University administrations' request to limit the size of the demonstration.
In a press release, the coalition listed some of their goals and demands.
a group of demonstrators marched from the campanile to the restraining fence of the stadium and began yelling antiwar chants.
The coalition condemned the Nixon administration's escalation of the war and the occupation of Kosovo.
Orion Begins Return Trip
"What a ride, what a ride!" Duke called as Orion climbed into space. The two astronauts left the moon at 7:26 p.m., Lawrence time, and speed on toward a linkup with the command ship Casper, plotted by their crewmate Thomas K. Mattingly
The astronauts gathered 245 pounds of rock and soil, including one small boulder weighing 40 pounds. Scientists at the Manned Spacecraft Center believe the samples include rocks of volcanic origin, both near the time of the original lunar crust.
with astronaut W. John. W. Young and Charles M. Duke Jr. at his control, Orion, the lunar module blasted upward into the black lunar sky, and sped into moon orbit. Scientists on earth praised Duke and Vayner for their accomplishments on the moon.
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)—Apollo 16 exploded rockets away from the Descartes Mountains of the moon Sunday, carrying with them rocks formed by early lunar volcanoes. The two men thus achieved their primary goal.
"I believe we got everything we went for," said Dr. Tony England, a scientist-astronaut at the Manned Spacecraft Center.
Young and Duke were on the moon for 71 hours, and with them they brought a pocket full of records, the amount of rocks brought from the moon, time on lunar surface and speed travelled in the moon vehicle.
The astronauts roamed a field of black and white boulders—some of them building sized and the largest moon rocks ever seen—and walked to the very edge of a crater so deep they could not see its bottom.
A FAILURE in the command ship's back up control rocket engine control system forced officials to cut one day out of the mission.
TOGETHER THE three will rocket out of lunar orbit Monday night and start toward earth and a Pacific Ocean splashdown Thursday.
The engine worked perfectly Sunday when Mattingly fired it briefly to make a slight change in the orbit of the command ship. It will not have to be fired again until
The lunar surface expedition Sunday lasted 5 hours and 40 minutes, giving Duke and Young the record of 20 hours and 14 minutes in total time exploring the lunar
With Lunar Cargo
KUGraduate Student to Announce Candidacy for Secretary of State
By JIM KENDELL
Kansan Staff Writer
Mike Manning, Emporia graduate student, said Saturday he would announce his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for Kansas secretary of state
Manning and several of his staff members stressed in an interview Saturday that his candidacy was more just a candidacy for secretary of state.
Manning said his candidacy was part of a project started last December to make the voice of youth felt in Kansas by a group of local activists and candidacies of "good and decent people."
If he wins he said he hoped to draw people together into an organization which can work informally to get more 'good and decent' people elected in Kansas.
Manning said he would try to win without compromising his principles and his ideals to show that the system does work, as he believes it does.
MANNING SAID he hoped to reach these people off campus in his campaign and urge them to register and vote. Most Kansas colleges have already been the object of voter registration drives like the one conducted by KU Student Vote.
According to Manning, 304,000 new voters will be eligible to vote in Kansas in 1972. Two-thirds of them are not connected with a college campus.
The young candidate said good and decent people didn't get involved in politics because they saw politicians corrupted in and by the political process.
The 22-year-old political science student said he was a serious candidate. He intends to campaign hard and professionally. In the process he and his staff hope to create a lasting "neopolitical" coalition in Kansas.
He sees his campaign as a catalyst which will furnish the experience and
organizational models necessary to get even poor people into office.
Manning noted, "Poor people find it very difficult to run for office."
HE CHOSE to run for secretary of state rather than governor or attorney general, for example, because he is a serious politician and wants to spread his message statewide.
Manning pointed out that there were no special qualifications for secretary of state, like there for attorney general. The secretary usually has a background in law.
He said if he were running for governor, a very prestigious and powerful position, people would not take him seriously. This might destroy the project.
Manning graduated from Kansas State University in June 1971. He has spent a year in Washington, D.C. as vice president of the National Association of Student Governments.
He organized the "Countdown 72" voter registration conference in October in Manhattan. He has also organized similar finances and some other registration drives.
MANNING TALKED about three of the issues he hopes to raise in the campaign: the power of the secretary of state to register and certify corporations, influence voter registration and register lobbists.
The secretary of state meets with election officials throughout Kansas and instructs them where to set up voter registration facilities in their counties.
The secretary of state registers and certifies all corporations in Kansas. If a company does not comply with state laws, it is deemed to have done so, does not have to register and certify it.
By putting tighter controls on
the machine, Manning
bags in airtight seal in Krause.
Though the only formal control the secretary of state has over voter registration is the power to appoint the election commissioners of the four largest
counties in the state, he has a lot of informal power.
MANNING WANTS to know why the voter registration books are kept in middle class areas of Wichita rather than in black areas of the city, for instance.
"We think it's the responsibility of the government to register people to vote. Traditionally it's been a game between the two sides. It's where we learn the books are," Manning said.
The secretary of state registers
Mike Manning
lobbyists and records who they work for. For example, lobbyists might be men with tightly controlled
PATRICIA D. RUBER
Manning will announce his candidacy officially May 1 in a series of airport press conferences in Kansas City, Topeka, Wichita, Hays and Emporia.
surface since their landing last Thursday night. They drove their moon buggy at a speed of 11 miles per hour, beating Apollo 15's eight m.o.h. record.
Dr. Harold Masursky of the U.S. geological Survey, said the rocks and soil from that bed at the moon between 4 billion and 4.5 billion years ago. I think in these samples we are going to find pieces then when the original lunar crust was formed."
In their final minutes on the moon, the spacemen leaped about in what Young said was an abbreviated "lunar olympics."
THE 245 POUNDS of moon surface gathered by the astronauts was a record by a wide margin and 50 pounds more than 16,000 pounds. The astronaut had to get an okay from Mission Control to bring it home aboard the lunar module which must be within prescribed weight limits for the lift off. Apollo 18 rock total 50 pounds more than gathered on Apollo 18.
"We were gonna show a guy could do, like jump flat footed straight in the air three or four feet," Young said. He demonstrated by leaping upward in the slow motion typical of movements in lunar gravity.
Throwing things was Duke's best event in the impronta olmics.
"Sorry about that." Duke said.
DUKE TRIED IT, too, but not with the same grace. He leaped and then fell on his
"Charlielee," "Young said in disgust
"That isn't very smart."
The astronauts worked together closing out their final visit. They loaded bags with rocks, film, experiments and core samples and used a clothesline-like arrangement to transfer them to the front porch of the lunar module Orion.
The Student Senate Executive Committee (StudiEx) decided Sunday to limit the agenda for Wednesday night's Student Senate meeting to consideration of the student activity fee budget for fiscal year 1973.
StudEx to Limit Senate Agenda To Activity Fee
The Senate, at its annual budget session Wednesday, will consider for approval the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee's recommendations for the funding of campus organizations from the student activity fee fund.
In budget hearings Monday through Friday of last week, the Finance and Committee considered the budget requests. The requests organizations. The requests totaled approximately $122,100, nearly four times that is allotted to campus organization.
IN ADDITION to the budget, a proposal that would add to the campus privilege fee a charge of up to $2 per student per semester to finance a campus bus system to begin next fall will be presented to the Senate. The Senate will be asked to either approve the proposed fee or refer the Senate at its May 3 meeting or refer the issue to the students as a referendum.
StudEx approved a request for $75 toward the publishing cost of an intensive study of the feasibility of mass transportation in Lawrence. The School of Engineering costs. The Senate commissioned Francis Winterberg, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, to make the study. One hundred copies will be published and used as text books and distributed to the Chancellor, members of the Senate Housing and members of the Senate Housing and Transportation Committee.
STUDEX APPROVED a line item transfer of the KU Curriculum Instruction Survey of $40 remaining from the printing program. The program will be a permanent part time computer programmer. The programmer is to begin work on this semester's results of the teacher evaluation survey so that the fall enrollment back will be available at fall enrollment.
StudEx also approved a request of Intercollegiate Women's sports to use $300 to $400 from their open allocation of $4,000 for the purchase of numbered lerses.
A $700 semester salary for the director of the Human Relations Committee's Racial Awareness Center was also approved. The Committee's open allocation of $1,300.
2
Monday, April 24, 1972
University Daily Kansan
[Photo] A man holding a snake, surrounded by others.
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
Profs Review New Law
Lawrence area fifth and sixth graders get to touch a live rat snake held by Richard Lattis, Lawrence graduate student. The animal was one of many caught Saturday during a snake-hunting safari sponsored by the Museum of Natural History. The snake is a common rodent that was designed to permit local youths to collect and study various snakes to learn about their characteristics and habitats.
By SALLY MORGAN Kansan Staff Writer
TOPEKA-A-The American Association of University Professors (AAUP) can now bargain collectively as a result of the agreement session of the Kansas Legislature, Charles Krider, assistant professor of business and member of the AAUP's committee on the economic aspect of professors, said Saturday.
A suggestion by Gordon Davidson, a member of the Fort Hays State College AUPP and Hays University, suggested to hire a joint Kansas-Nebraska executive secretary for both state legislatures was generally dislike by the governor. The AAU needed a full-time lobbyist and that a person could not do an adequate job if he had to watch two legislatures. Davidson said the reason because hiring one man by both states would be less of a financial burden. For that reason the suggestion was not completely successful.
In a report to the annual spring general meeting of the Kansas AAUP conference in Topeka, Mr. Singer stated that it possible to set up the AAUP, which has 16 chapters throughout Kansas, as a collective resource for the negotiation for the 1973 state budget. To negotiate, the unit must have a petition in by July 20th, the budget cycle begins in Topeka.
Sen. Tom West, R-Topeka
opened the meeting with a short speech summarizing the actions of the 1972 Kansas Legislature.
THE CONFERENCE
THE CONFERENCE
dues to finance the hiring of a professional lobbyist to watch out for AALP interests in the Kansas
WEST, AN associate principal at Highland Park High School in New Jersey, said one of the main reasons educational legislation had difficulties in the legislature was the lack of members of the legislature. He said enough farmers and bankers supported legislation to make their needs
Senate Hears Last Of Budget Requests
The Student Council for Recruiting, Motivating and Educating Blue Engineers (SCOREMBE) requested $2,165 of the student activity fee for fiscal year 1973 for operational staff. The Auditing Committee's final budget session Friday night.
The scope of the SCOREME program is growing extended to students from other minority students from other minority groups as well as black students.
A representative for the black chemical engineering group said its annual travel purposes. SCOREMEB provides money for black engineering students by soliciting interest in classes of large petroleum companies.
BLACK LAW STUDENTS at KU requested $5,000, $1,200 which can be used for travel unless specified. Students of potential black candidates for
the KU School of Law, according to David Brown, Kansas City, Mo. third year law student.
High Injury Rate Fosters Iowa Street Improvements
Brown said that the existing program of recruiting black law students had failed to reach a base of black candidates. Although the law school sponsors state-wide recruitment covering most Kansas colleges, most of them attend Kansas colleges. Recruitment drives must encompass predominantly black colleges and universities, most of which are in state, according to Brown.*
in the past year there have been ill records in four, five and involved injuries. Five mishaps have been recorded in tibs and fists, two of which were fatal.
Williams said that the state would match federal funds under the Traffic Operations Program to Increase Capacity and Safety.
The state of Kansas will accept bids April 27 on projects to alleviate the hazardous conditions at 15th and fowa and 19th and Iowa streets, according to the variance director of public works.
IMPROVEMENTS WILL be made for the north, south, and east lanes at 19th and Iowa. Williams said that provisions had been made with the University of Iowa to complete the construction of 19th Street west of Iowa.
Traffic lights are to be installed at 23rd and Haskell within the next three or four months. The residents should consider this intersection to be one of the worst in Lawrence and Davis where accidents there so far this year.
According to Williams, about a quarter of the intersections are illuminated and lighten turns. Part of this work has been completed at 16th Street on Sunday.
Three of the worst intersections in Lawrence that already have traffic lights are located at 6th and 8th Iowa and 19th and Massachusetts.
POLICE DEPARTMENT traffic charts list 12 minor accidents and nine minor accidents at 19th and Massachusetts so far this year. Sergeant Garcia of the Lawrence county has three accidents at 9th and Iowa to heycon congestion and to the warming right and left off of Iowa.
Officer Richard Jump, of the Lawrence Police Department, said all three intersections carried heavy traffic and that in the congestion it was surprising there weren't more accidents.
He blamed many of the accidents on careless driving. He added that when a collision occurred usually some law had been broken.
Cap. B, L. Ellison of the KU Department of University Department said that for a congestion, the University was lucky to have as few accidents as
THE KANSAS FREE UNIVERSITY requested $3,148 to cover operating expenses and materials for the university magazines. Part of the funds will be used for advertising Free University classes, in order to help students pay for college. Haskell Indian Junior College and other non-university students.
HE ATTRIBUTED this to luck and partially to the realization by drivers of the pedestrian orientation of the campus.
Memorial Drive has claimed the largest number of accidents when three times the amount of its per mile commuting rate makes the Road Responds.
90 Seniors Elected To Phi Beta Kappa
Ninety University of Kansas seniors were recently elected to Phi Beta Kappa, the national honor society in liberal arts.
The new members, who were selected on the basis of grades for seven semesters, all had at least a 3.60 overall grade point average and about about the upper 10 per cent of the liberal arts graduating class.
Phi Beta Kappa is the oldest Greek letter society. The KU chapter, founded in 1801, is the chapter west of the Mission.
Those senioys elected to Phil Beta Kappa were:
Wilh. Arkansas City, Dariet Lec Rock,
Arkansas City, Bradley Benson Spring,
Benson Spring), Aspenway, Boston,
Cincinnati, Coffeyville, Jail Tust,
Victoria Hallabee, Coffeyville, Jail Tust,
Stephen Wainner, Emporia, Marsha Sue
Richard, Rush, Richmond, Richard,
Richard, Richar
Another proposal, which was presented to the city for approval, is sign up Sunderland Road and Jawaharluk Road.
that could be changed would be to make it one way.
Ellison said he thought the one-way plan would also improve other bad spots on campus such as at Sunflower Road and Jayhawk Boulevard, when a car came from southbound traffic by parked cars on the east curbs and by the incline of the road.
Three-way stop signs were installed at Memorial Drive and West Campus Road April 19.
lawrence; Diane Wright Gunneria,
lawrence; John Nellthing, Lawrence; Mary
kartha Rees, Lawrence; and Jon F
ichards, Lawrence.
Lindhart, Lawrence
Lawrence, Warren, Warren, William T. Lambert, Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence, Lowndes, Riverside, Lowndes, Riverside, Lowndes, Lowndes
KANSAS CITY (AP) — The
American Academy of Family
Health participates in a national
education event to combat
disease.
In the annual state officers' conference over the weekend at AAFP national headquarters here, the academy decided to campaign this fall through the Public Broadcasting Service.
understood, but not enough educators.
LOMBARDA SAID that part of the funds could be used to bring in nationally known artists for dance workshops.
The International Club requested $3,800 in funds for the coming year. A group spokesman told the newspaper had approached the International Club for money to cover office supply expenses. Part of the re-posed $3,800 in funds should be the individual needs of such groups, he said.
All Free University classes are without charge, although most students need necessary for art class materials. The Tau Sigma dance course is free for the fiscal year 1973. Susan Lombard, Tau Sigma president, said that more than one fifth of all students were收费ed by teacher well known dance instructors who could come to KU to teach master classes.
The KU chapter of the AAUP surveyed the KU faculty on the issue, and the chair said. The chapter asked questionnaire to about 1,500 members of the KU faculty, but only about 300 were returned. Another 200 were not interviewed by the questionnaire, 60 per cent favored the collective bargaining and 10 per cent opposed it on the issue. But it was unprofessional.
ANNOUNCING
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PICTURE FRAMING
Krider said the KU chapter to endorse collective bargaining at the AAUP national meeting May 4-6 in New Orleans.
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The aim of the program, which is sponsored by the KU African Studies department and Crane University, is to provide educational understanding and to enhance communications among young people of all racial and cultural groups. Jacob Gordon, a professor at the KU African Studies department, said
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Gordon said he hoped students could avoid the conflicts which have plagued some high schools in recent years if they became active in human relations and understanding at a young age.
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The program will include a
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MOSCOW (AP)—More than 300 Jews from穿越到Soviet Union have addressed an appeal to U.S. and European Jewish communities as part of a reported effort to demand aid to President Nixon before his Moscow summit meeting next month.
The appeal, made available to Western correspondents Sunday, also was addressed to the U.S. ambassador in Washington and Jewish sources said the letter and accompanying sheets with 304 signatures have been smuggled into the country and sent to Israel's U.N. ambassador, Toséf Teekah.
Cancer Research Fund Of $93,000 Given to KU
The Kansas University Endowment Association has been named the residual beneficiary of the funds raised by Loveland. The funds, totaling nearly $850,000 will be used for the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Loveland, a prominent Kansas physician, died Aug. 17, 1970.
Lovekaid was director of the Lovekaid Board of Health for 20 years and served as chairman of the medical examination board of the Police and Fire Department Civil Service Commission.
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SENIOR CLASS PARTY
Friday, April 28.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Interviews for Next Year. APRIL 26 $ ^{TH} $
Interviewing for the SUA Public Relations Board Member.
Interviewing for Chairmanships with Films, Fine Arts, Forums, Travel, Festival of the Arts, Recreation.
Interviewing for an Asst. Treasurer.
INTERVIEW TIMES AND APPLICATIONS IN SUA OFFICE, KANSAS UNION
THE University Shop announces a
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University Shop
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Hours----9:30-5:30
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 24,1972
3
News Briefs By The Associated Press
81 Congressmen Write Nixon
WASHINGTON - Eighty-one members of Congress have signed a letter to President Nixon asking for a meeting to discuss the issue.
"We are writing as representatives of our constituents who want an end to U.S. involvement in the war in Southeast Asia," their letter, released Sunday, said. The letter was signed by 12 senators and 69 members of the House.
Britain to Common Market
PARIS—French voters gave Britain a lukewarm welcome to the European Common Market on Sunday and dealt President George Pompidou a stinging rebuke by refusing his call for a massive vote. The EU was to be one of the two major powers Denmark and Ireland into the European Economic Community (EEC) with France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg. When the four countries become members Jan. 1, 1973, the Common Market will include a population of 256.6 million people, the second-largest economic power in the world after the United States.
Humphrey Expects Win
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Min., said Sunday he was going to win the Pennsylvania presidential primary on Tuesday and expected to capture the Democratic nomination for the White house, but would support Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., or any other "good Democrat" chosen to lead the 1972 ticket. McGovern was at his campaign tazer in Massachusetts trying to unite with a coalition that is already a hefty lead over Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, D-Maine, and the Democratic field. Muskie called off a last-minute campaign trip to Massachusetts, and a spokesman said he would instead remain in Pennsylvania through Tuesday's election.
Man Turns 130 Years Old
BARTOW, Fla. — Former slave Charlie Smith, thought to be the oldest living American, celebrated turning 130 with the first birthday party of his life. Sen. Lawton Chiles, D-FLA, dropped by the concrete block house where Smith lives alone to shake hands with the man born in 1482. More than 500 local residents sang happy songs from their homes on Saturday for the Civic Center. Charlie helped care for the Smith family's children until slaves were freed by President Lincoln in 1863—when Smith was 21—and then bounced around the West as a cowboy.
IRA Ambushes. Wounds 4
BELFAST, Northern Ireland - Gunmen of the outlawed Irish Republican Army sprung and pushed in Londonderry and Belfast Sunday night, wounding two British soldiers, a policeman and a civilian.
Y
Summer Job Placement Offered for KU Students
The senior class of 1973 with the University of Kansas Alumni Association, will set up a job at the university to assist students, John Haehnek, Wichita junior and newly elected member of the 1973 senior class, said Friday.
Through this system, KU students summer jobs would contact the Alumni Association which would direct them to a job.
A new committee designed to help students for higher education at KU and throughout the state, will be set up, Hackney said. He said this committee will also be responsible for the senior class connected with the cause of the concerned students.
The committee chairmen of the eight committees have been selected, Hackney said. TRYH, Prairie Village junior; aid to higher education—Nancy Archer, Amnasa, i.a., junior; senior obs—Bryan McDonald, and, aid to Waechtier, Overland Park junior;
HOPE奖 - Mark Shockey
- Ablene junior; activities - Mary
Treacy, Wilmette III., junior.
- Abelene junior; communications - Mary
Adrick, Prairie Village junior,
and Ivan Cheptellé, Lyons
University, Michael Gibbon,
Kirkwood, Mo. junior, and
Loranth, Wichita junior.
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An increase in the number of cases litigated in the Douglas County District Court (Seventh Judicial District) impelled the Kansas Supreme Court to authorize, March 27, a second division and a second judge for Douglas County District Court.
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Judge Frank Gray has been the only elected judge of the Douglass County jury. He assigned judeo, Floyd H. Coffman from Ottawa, has worked with Gray for several years to meet the steady increase of case.
Gray said Monday that an increase in University students, who were studying in the seminel had increased the area population and, subsequently, the number of graduates.
Also, a trend of the population to move to metropolitan areas has created a need for more law courts in these areas, he said. The number or district court cases is decreasing in sparsely-populated western states and the increase of court cases in metropolitan counties. One district judge may hear cases for as many as five or six western states.
LAST YEAR 802 cases were filed in Douglas County compared to a state-wide average of 576 in similar courts. In addition to the 802 cases, about 300 to 500 over from 100 last year, Gray said.
The judge for the new second division of the Douglas County District Court will be elected in March. He will assume office next
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Judge Charles Rankin filed for the judgement with the Secretary of State in Topeka on April 7, 2015. He is presently is completing his ninth, two-year term as judge of the Douglas County World War II Veteran, U.S. Army Reserves Colonel and the chairman of the military Association. In addition to these activities, he is a member of the Douglas County Kansas and Missouri American Judicial Society. He currently is serving on the Committee on Criminal Adjudication.
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JAMES W. PADDOCK,
Lawrence attorney and another
Republican, announced his
candidacy for the new judiciary
in 1980 and was later a practicing attorney in
Lawrence since he graduated from the University of Kansas Law School in 1956. He served in the Army during World War II.
Advocate Corps from 1983 to 1986 and has served as assistant
county attorney, municipal court judge, assistant city attorney and city prosecutor. In addition to his work with the Douglas County, Kansas and American Bar Associations and the American Judicature Society. He has lectured on criminal law at the University of Kansas School of Business.
THE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS have not decided where the new judge's office and
courtroom will be located. Gray said that placing the new judge's facilities outside the county jail would be desirable. The judge would need court records that are located in the county clerk's office in the jail. He said that most of prisoners from the jail, which is located directly behind the courthouse, to a distant courthouse would be a security risk, he said.
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7:00 and 8:00 p.m., Mon-Fri,
May 1.5, at the Reading Dynamics Institute
Hillcrest Shopping Center
915 Iowa Phone 843-642-
TONIGHT! Bring this Coupon to SHAKEY'S
for
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544 W. 23rd 842-2266
Offer Good April 24 Only
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
You only go around once in life.
And you've got to reach for all
the gusto you can.
You can't settle for less.
Because you don't get a second chance.
Photograph taken by James R. Bain, University of Colorado. Winner of the Schlitz Photo Competition.
Someone liked seeing what you had to say.
Schlitz
© 1972 Jos, Schlitz Brewing Co., Miliwaukee and the world.
4
Monday, April 24,1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Garry Wills
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Relays Conversation
By MARK BEDNER
Kansan Staff Writer
"Burns." he said.
"Huh." I said, turning to look at the guy seated next to me.
"Bums," he said again. "Nothin' but a bunch of bums, just look at 'em, Marge. Now you know why I won't let Romnie go without a haircut. Next thing you won't . . .
"But they aren't hurting anyone," I said softly, debating how a shopgirl might get up and leave or just leave it.
"I trunk you understand that," I said. "That's why they are asking for your support, to ensure that you will be safe."
"He's a good looking boy." I said, looking at the pimple face shaded by the red baseball cap. "How
nam's what you think," he answered. "I paid three bucks to watch the relays, not listen to some bread grown 'on' about the war. I've got my rights too, you know."
"Just turned 17, the man said. "Goin' out for the truck team next year." He smiled and jolted the driver back to his seat.
We turned toward the microphone. The resolution
had been read and the request was made. Would we all stand up and join hands . . .
"Booo," the guy was standing up but he wasn't in any mood to join hands with me. I wasn't in any
I looked at the kid, his eyes were fixed on his father. They were questioning.
"Boooo," he yelled loader. It was obvious he envoiled the role of section 13 chaperone.
I wonder if the boy will remember this afternoon, and in thought. In 1976 he will be just about old enough for his first draft physical and subsequent classification by the local board. What will his eyes see then? At this rate he could conceive the ability to in the field. The local paper would run a story.
"Ronnie something or the other was listed by Pentagon officials today as the last American killed in action in the Indochina War," the story would say, but his sut down and looked toward the polevault pit.
"Ain't it amazing," he said, "at the heights we're reaching now days. Who would ever think a man like that could get so far?"
"Yea," I said as my thoughts raced from the heights of the pault vault to the B-32 and on to the
"Excuse me," I said, looking once more to the man and his boy. "I have to go to the bathroom."
A Nation Gone Mad
There is a crazy air of recurrence in this week of the bombing. We have all, God help us, been here before. Over and over. When the chickens come home to roost, the fliers out to bomb. Slip news of the escalation out in a little weekend announcement from Saigon, too late for the first editions of Sunday's papers, with official Washington gone on the verge. The demonstrators are out again. Senator Fulbright asks where it will all lead, knowing it will lead nowhere.
A Hanoi offensive in the spring of election year. Talking about talks in Paris. A president wildly boming and killing a man he has accused of nightmare daa vi. Where will it end?
The horrible thing is that the press tells us we have the war with us again, as if we had ever been without it. Nixon's talk of Vietnamization as an end to the war was accepted at face value, while he clearly meant to
continue the war through intermediaries (as if that exonerated us).
And they had to come as desperation moves—that is; not only are we in the wrong, we are also ineffectual. We are as inefficient as immoral. Then why go on? Because we can admit neither that we are in the wrong, nor that we are weak. The two have always been together. We are a country that obsevers songs, "And conquer we must, for our cause it is just."
Yet even his half-measures could not work, have not worked. It is no withdrawal to drop manpower while upping our firepower in compensatory ways. The war of bombing Hanoi, now bombing Haiphong. Those steps would come, many of us wrote when the Vietnamese was uncomet, and now they have
And because we cannot admit we were wrong, we add wrong to past wrongs, crimes to our crimes, death to all the deaths, our own and those of foes, ales, and bystanders. It seems a nightmare because it is one, because we cannot have and have a great deal yet to suffer, infliched so much suffering.
What is there to say, but what has
been said over and over by all the war's critics, and is still treated by Nixon as unsayable, as unthinkable? He sits in a corner, his eyes closed, hands in his ears, and just sends out more bombs, more than we have ever dropped, more than his predecessor sent out, a crazy act of self-destructive bravado.
What kind of madman, bernied by power, treat four years of further killing as a war to play with, to have and not have, not-to-win yet not lose, on a calendar of electoral caprice? On an away absenteeism, like a smile despot, out of pique. His action links a disproportionate anger with a lack of imagination—that is he bombs, not because it does any more only because he can do nothing. Certainly he cannot do the unthinkable—unstop his ears, or open his eyes; face what we have done, without justice, without profit, without effort, without loss, one loss trying to justify an aggression, each making them all less defensible.
The thing has reached a scale of historic nemesis. A nation that can reelect Nixon after four years of senseless slaughter as (I fully expect it to do) deserves whatever retribution lies in store for us all.
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
Readers Respond
Indians, Meters, Pot, Grave . . .
Mere Decencv
To the Editor:
I feel constrained to comment on your article in Monday's Kansan headed, "Land Worth $750,000 Given Back to Indiana." I want to emphasize the importance, there were two factual errors. St. Mary's College is in St. Mary's, Kansas (Pottawattamie County) not in Jackson County. St. Mary's and is just a few miles southwest of the present day Pottawattamie reservation in Jackson County. In addition, there was a printing error regarding the color of the correct failure is 1,200 acres.
Secondly, I would question the editorial judgment that resulted in the article's receiving only a third of the re-deeding of this land to the Potawatomiatsi a momentous event that should be of interest to those who have suffered in Potawatomiatsi history that began in the seventeenth century, when pressure from Whites first encamped in the area and then later in Iowa, before finding a institution of territory for that tribe. The tribe was pushed around for two centuries, first in Kentucky and then in Iowa, before finding a "permanent" hospone in Kansas. Even that tract was taken up by the land-greed size through the land-greed of Kansas politicians, railroads and churchmen. And today, due to the current land-greed size of Potawatomiatsi own but one-fourth of the reduced reservation. Not only has the reversion of the St. Louis district to an abrupt upward turn, it has done so in a manner that is consonant with what is happening in the dismal story
Finally, the Jesuit claim, quoted on in Monday's Kansas that the return of the land was free and demonstration of demonstration consciousness and commitment" is out and out bullshit. It represents instead capitulation to the pressure of a well-organized Jesuit body, to recover the property. Similarly, to state as you did that the Potwatotamts gave the land to the Jesuits "is to fly in the face of the political forces that have stolen from the Potwatotamts through "legal" means by the railroads, who bought off the politicians and the Jesuits in the early 1860s (the Million Acre). The treaties of 1861 and 1878 by which this fraud
was perpetrated were forced upon the Potawatami against their will and were protected by the Jesuits. They land that the Jesuits got for keeping their mouths shut was disgusted for awhile by the Jesuits, and the use of said tribe" (1867 treaty). Yet the school for Potawatami was closed in the 1870s and re-opened for Whites
In short, by returning the land to the Potatowitzas the Jesuits did the only decent thing they ever did. They taught decency due来 such laivish praise!
-C. Hoy Steele, Instructor in Scolology
To the Editor:
Bicyclists
The proposal to alter the flow of campus traffic on Jayhawk Boulevard and Memorial Drive will increase meters in "inoffensive" areas can be disputed logically on the basis of environmental aesthetics and the bus transit system over commuter traffic. Representing thousands of students and faculty who use the public hearing night that the new plan calls for 144 diagonal parking spaces between Jayhawk Boulevard, Mr. Jayhawk's residence, and the public bearing night
—Dale Denio,
Enon, Ohio, sophomore,
Mount Oread Bicycle Club
Pot Plot
uphighlight a timely application to the resolution's significance prompt this reader's response. With state and federal funding for higher education at its low, low, low level, what really is needed between a legalization compromise between students and solons.
The Student Senate's recent resolution on the use of marijuana on campus and Tom
To the Editor:
A part of any legalization compromise could be a lid tax—that would make it impossible might go for. Any compromise of this type could very well bring a much greater rush of green stuff into your office, offering oft more personal realize.
This or any similar proposal or compromise would perhaps be best exposed by a meeting of theiller boys—Vern and Dave, that is.
Anything, even a compromise, should be tried in an attempt to protect the extremely lascivious thrills that attorney god Vera Miller apparently gets from rousing audiences. A lid tax could take many forms and a few examples follow: a luxury levy such as that passed by Congress or federal income tax forms that would permit war protestors to have a part of their taxes used for military purposes, the more peaceful use of marijuana.
Harold Hempweed and Sally Palicyce, who gather at the River where the grass grows in the shallow stream, which if such an option became law.
A few politically conservative "social drinkers," however, might see fit to withhold their taxes in a new kind of protest.
Federal or state funding for an educational high school would certainly be much less expensive than Meanwhile, whatever be the papourpain, praise the lord and
Jerry Esslinger, Morrill Junior
Furthermore, as it is one of the few unique features of the town, visitors are often taken to see it.
Gary Neil Peterson's article, "Tourists View Odd Ball in Cawker" (April 18) was, as the searchers found, the "suitcase law" in Lincoln. As residents of Lincoln, we find it incredulous that your reporter found that many people were ashamed of it.
Lincoln, like so many other small Kansas towns, still celebrates Memorial Day with services in the cemetery. Anyone who has grown up in Lincoln or has become an active member in the town has seen that grave at least once a year on Memorial Day.
We cannot imagine who could be ashamed of it. Had your reporter inquired, he would have
To the Editor:
Lincoln Pride
something of which to be proud, not ashamed.
learned that Mr. Jacobs died in 2013, and he is survived by relatives. Several merchants who traded with him donated money for his funeral and the tombstone. He also helped with laundry.
-Edward Burns,
Lincoln sophomore
David Healy
Lincoln lunior
Letters Policy
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 100 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, and should not contain any other formatting or judgment. Students must provide their name, year in school and home location, students must provide their name and position; others must provide: their name and
THE BOOK OF UNIVERSITY
The great American Image
I'VE GOT A DENTIST APPOINTMENT TODAY. I'LL PROBABLY HAVE A MILLION CAVITIES AND BE DRILLED TO PIECES...
DON'T LET IT THROW YOU... EVERYTHING WILL BE FINE IN THE END.
IT'S EASY FOR YOU TO BE PHILOSOPHICAL YOU DON'T HAVE ANY TEETH.
DETAILS! DETAILS!
SCROLLF
By Sokoloff
Griff and the Unicorn
James J. Kilpatrick
DON'T LET IT
THROW YOU...
EVERYTHING
WILL BE FINE
IN THE END...
PARKLAND
Conservative Books: Merely to Endure
Communists, those agrarian-reformers, he published Freda Ulley's "The China Story," one of the most powerful anti-communist works of our time. When progressive education was all the rage, he sought out a Smith, and thereby introduced a academe a cool voice of common sense. He breached the very citadels of the Eastern Establishment with Bill Buckley's "God and Man at Yale." In 1918, when liberals
CHICAGO—Nearly 200 American writers and teachers, all of them identified with the conservative cause, gathered together to honor a benefactor and to renew old bonds. Liberals, of course, have such occasions also; they are indispensable to the keeping of democracy. The anew of the importance of ritual in the survival of civil man.
Our own modest consistency was summoned to pay homage to Henry Regerny, founder and now
IT'S EASY FOR YOU TO BE PHILOSOPHICAL YOU DON'T HAVE ANY TEETH
DETAILS!
DETAILS!
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff."
You have to be a professional writer, perhaps, to understand that invocation fully. The act of writing, in itself, is among the most powerful tools conceived by man; but to writefully—to write and not get published—is to know the fortures of the damned. It is like the tree that falls in the desert: Does anyone hear? Without a doubt, it is impossible fiddle; other instruments are playing. He is mute.
These were the 25 years we recognized last week—the quarter century since Henry, at the University of waterstates of the book publishing business. He set out in Chicago, of all places, to publish books by conservatives of all people; and he built Arlington House and the Conservative Club came along. Henry and Devin Adair Garrity in New York were the first to be in the land. Bless them, I Owl.
Today, James J. Kliptack
Chicago publisher who has supported conservatives by publishing their work for the last 25 years.
A. G.
chairman of the board of the publishing house that bears his name. Henry is a diminutive fellow, maybe five-feet-six, slender as a snap bean, but he stends pen line straight and his placid face belies a stubbornness within. He is 60 years old, but in his 25 years he gained a pound or added a wrinkle.
Henry Regney made it his mission to string us up. He challenged the orchestrated liberalism of the whole book publishing world—not merely the houses themselves, but also the book reviewers, the periodicals, the critics who can make or lose us now, as now, the media were dominated by intellectual hostile to conservative thought. Henry took on the whole crew.
Thus, when it was highly fashionable to praise the Chinese
ruled the Southern roost, he sought a conservative in Richmond and let the young cock crow.
most significantly,
he discovered in Mecosta, Mich., up in the burnt-wood country, a ruddy little Scot whose pediatric image concealed a quick and lively passion. This was Russell Kirk, teacher and philosopher. The seminar work, "The Concern Mini-Mint," came after nearly 20 years the one best starting point for an understanding of contemporary conservative thought.
What did Henry glean from his labors? Personal satisfaction, little more. Relatively speaking, he rarely made a dime. In the whole of the 25 years, only a quarter of his generous account, ever ranked as best-sellers. But he had a wonderful time.
So the clan gathered to pay him honor, and as such ritual proceedings go, this one went very nicely. The preliminary speakers rambled on too long, but Bill Buckley, as principal orator of the evening, was exactly right. He said that in the Chamber's vivid description of the typical tiny shop on a side street of a great city. Here no customer is ever seen. A curious visitor, wondering what the shop conceals, finds at a dimly lit desk in the rear an old man who lovingly offers a few bottles of alcohol meant to sell, but merely to endure. So, too, with Henry, keeper of the conservative store.
Every faith must have its Henry. The liberals have theirs, and the conservatives have theirs. Also someone has to keep the tablets, if only to preserve the possibility of enduring truth the cause and destruction of the passing hour.
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate. Inc.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
Kanan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--UN 4-610
Business Office--UN 4-858
Editor Business Manages
Chip Crews Carol Young
Monday, April 24,1972
5
Plan Pairs Interns
The National Intern Matching Program recently announced nationwide pairings between graduate and graduating medical students at the University of Kansas Medical Institutions that train interns.
Graduating students indicated to the Matching program their desire for programs in institutions. After reviewing the applications, institutions supplied the matching program with materials and information on positions in various programs. The matching program then paired their preferential choices with candidates.
DR. DAVID WAXMAN, dean for student affairs and associate professor of pediatrics at the American Medical Center, said Thursday that the matching program, whose operational center is in Philadelphia, has seven member organizations including the American Medical College, the American Society of American Medical Colleges. The matching program also had liaisons with public health service agencies.
Waxman said he had taken advantage of the pairing program. He received his M.D. degree from Syracuse in 1950.
According to Waxman, the pairing program is the best
KU Develops Computer Plan For Efficiency
A faster and more efficient way of obtaining information for instructors is the purpose of the computer network at the University of Kansas, according to Kemmil A Bishop, associate professor in geotechnical and petroleum engineering.
BISHOP SAID it would be possible with this method for the instructor to obtain information concerning a topic quicker and more thoroughly than in the past. The three committees are the Ethernet Computer, the UCG and the Functions Computing Committees.
The Executive Computer Committee's main function is as a representative of the administration, headed by Chancellor E. L Laurence Chalmer Jr., and to the comp. office which implements its decisions.
The UCC handles the development of policies and procedures relating to all phases of computer operations on the island.
Crews Young
The UCC is made up of people from various units of the University of Chicago, from all of the departments plus the libraries, the School of Medicine and the central admin office, to make up this committee of 27.
Because of the UCC's size, much of its business is transacted through four subcommittees: the Function, Initials, the Finance, and the Range Review and the Long Range Planning Subcommittees.
approach to coordinating internship selections.
James Rosser, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, has served as the chief pharmacy and head of the Executive computer committee.
Campus Bulletin
OF THE 126 graduating seniors at the Medical Center, 78 per cent received their first choice of intern assignments and 85 per cent were paired with either their or second choice. Waxman said,
Big 8 Alumni Directors; 6:30 a.m.
Governors Room, Kansas Union.
Of the 46 new doctors who have received internships in Kansas, 20 will intern at the Medical Center, 18 will intern in Wichita and two will interm at Bethany Hospital in Kansas City, Ks.
Journal Club: 11:30 a.m., Alcove B.
Speech and Drama: 11:30 a.m., Alcove D.
English Department: noon, Alcove C.
Twenty-four doctors will intern at hospitals in Kansas City, Mo.
English Department; noon, Alcove C.
B 8 Alumni Directors; noon, Centennial
Room.
German Department: noon. Watkins
Room
Linguistics: moon, Curry Room.
College Office: 12:15 p.m., English Room.
Audio-Reader: 12:30 p.m., Alcove A.
Military internships will place five doctors in the Army, three in the Navy, and six inthe Air
College Office: 12.13 p.m., English room.
Audio-Reader: 12.30 p.m., Alcove A.
Russian Table: 12.30 p.m., Meadowlark
Room.
international Room
Physics Lab 4 a.m. p.m. 237 Mailt
Russian Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark
Room:
Search Committee: 2:30 p.m., In-
Force. The remainder of the Medical School class will intern at hospitals throughout the United States.
By STEVE RIEL Kansan Staff Writer
The selection of Kansas delegates to the Republican and Democratic convention will be completed by June 10. Later this summer, these com- missioners and uncommitted delegates go to San Diego to nominate the two major presidential candidates.
THERE ARE 31 local delegates from Douglas County who will attend the state convention. The delegates include Carthage, Mo., freshman, who was elected an alternate to the national convention in the area on Tuesday.
SIMS: 6 p.m. Council Room.
General Motors Scholarships: 6 p.m.
At that time, the 1,242 local unit delegates, who were elected in unit delegates, were placed at large delegation. These 10 at-large delegates, combined with the 68 at-large delegates already chosen at the district level, will comprise the Kansas
Party Conventions To Pick Delegates
Political Science: 6.30 p.m., Curry Room
Student Rights and Responsibilities: 7
p.m., Room 305.
The Kansas Republican party will complete selection of national convention delegates at the convention Saturday in Toonka.
Council Room 185A. 7 p.m., Baltimore Senate Academic Affairs: 7 p.m., International Room.
THE TRADITIONAL in popularity is becoming less popular among graduating doctors, and many choose an intern program in which they rotate among various medical services, many new doctors prefer programs which have a high degree of residency specialization, he said.
Seminar in Physiology) 7:30 p.m. Oread
Room.
Waxman said, although there were only four nurses in medicine and seven in surgery, there were currently only five slots for rotating interns, at the end of the year.
Tweemers; 7:30 p.m., Hoglontal伎
Workers' Recognition Prayer; 7:30
Women's Recognition Prayer
The district convention also selected an at-large candidate. He was appointed executive from Olathe. His membership on the national delegation will be submitted for inclusion in the state convention Saturday.
Women's Recognition Program: 7:30 p.m. Kansas Room
p.m., Kansas Room.
GASN) 7:30 p.m., Big II Room.
ternational Room.
Overcameras: 7:30 p.m., Regionall
list.
CALIFORNIA TALENT PRESENTS
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Sunday; 3:45 - 6:30, 8:40
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Fri-Sat; 4:45, 7:30, 9:40 (Fri.)
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The growth fell below 1 per cent last year, only the second time this year in a decade for the Bureau and Sunday.
According to the bureau, the national growth rate in 1971 was 0.38 per cent compared with 1.06 in 1969. This difference below one per cent, in 1968.
The state Republican convention will also consider resolutions which will determine the nominees of the national delegation.
Kansas Democrat will meet
Missouri district level con-
ventions. Part of these con-
tions will be 21 local
delegates who were eche-
nued in April to serve as
local delegates were committed to
George M. McGovern D-S.D.
and Robert W. Browning.
THE KU STUDENTS who will attend the district convention are Lynn Knox, St. Louis freshman; Jonathan Gurns, Barn Hills, Hutchinson fifth engineering student; Jackie Davis, Lawrence graduate student; Robert Park senior; Betty Jo Charlton Lawrence graduate student; Charlie Wichita junior Lawrence graduate law second-year law student.
At these district conventions 30 of the 31 Kansas Democratic nominees will be chosen. Each Candidate select six dialectele elect six national delegates.
The remaining five delegates will be chosen at the Democratic state convention on June 10.
The district and state con-
tinues of the Democratic party will
be held in separate con
resolutions which will determine
the national delegation's plat
form.
University of Kansas women who have made contributions to the University will be honored at the reception, which occurred 30 tonight in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union at the annual Women's Recognition Night sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women.
On Jan. 1, the total population including military personnel rose to 6 million, an increase of two million people over the previous year. The bureau said the decline in the rate dropped dramatically last year to 7.2 per one thousand and the lowest rate ever recorded.
Commission Plans Recognition Night
Four women will be inducted
into the Hall of fame, in its third year,
honors KU women faculty, staff,
or graduates who played for KU
Winners of the SMOP scholarships, the Watkins scholarships and Women's Memorial scholarship. The Women's Memorial scholarship is given in honor of a KU woman whose career was tragically ended. The SMOP money comes from onationals.
The awards ceremony, which begins at 8 p.m., is open to the public.
Awards will be given to the outstanding woman teacher, outstanding woman senior, outstanding female group (residence halls, sororities and scholarship halls) and nine innovative women students. The women were selected from the student students, faculty and alumni.
Also named are next year's members of CWENS, sophomore woman's honorary, and Mortar
Freshmen named to CWENS are :
Nanah Bench Hutchinson, Carroban
Ursula Klimke, Ursula Mackenzie,
Ulissy Candy Charley, Wukla Krishna
Coatier Mr. Paul Cairns, Coatier
Mr. Piaa Clainman, Hill City
Cairns, Hill City Driscoll, Hill
Cairns, Hill Driscoll, Hill
Cairns, Hill Driscoll, Hill
Board, senior women's honorary
Gretwinkle Greenham/Hillbush, Paterson
City College, Hasselt, Parkside,
Oklahoma City, Kirkland, Overland Park,
Washington, Winston-Salem, Kim Hoekstra,
Sacramento, Sacramento, Kalamazoo,
Kansas City, Knoxville, Knoxville,
Knoxville, McAllen AFB, Linden Lake
Knoxville, McAllen AFB, Linden Lake
Michel Llechk, Applepitt, W. Wife, Fidia Gomez, Fidia Gomez, Village Patterson Mills, Martha Village, Patterson Mills, Martha Village, Oka, Paula Parkerd, Wellington, Oka, Pauls
Twenty-six jailers who were accepted into Tennesseans Overland Park Jail, L.A. Armored Troop, Cobb County Cally Berg, Kannah Clu (Ms., Mt.), Nesco Condine, Kannah Clu (Ms., Mt.), Nesco Condine, Kannah Clu (Ms., Mt.)
Jeremy Crawford, Kansas City, Kan. Marvin Dodgegen, Pittsburgh, Micha. Marvin Evans, Overland Park, N.J. Nicole Johnson, Overland Park, N.J. Nikelle Haskell, Butler City, Kana. Nikelle Haskell, Butler City, Kana.
Anna McFride, Lawness, Linda Millett, St. Louis, M. to Millett, St. Louis, M. to Millett, St. Louis, Jorge Newman, Kansas City, Josephine Ginn, Prairie Village, Lawrence, Ginn Prairie Village, Prairie Village, Lawrence
"The Spanish Hour" by
Maurice Ravel and "Gianni
Schichi" by Pucini, will be
presented by the University
of California at 1 p.m.
Wednesday in the Experimental
Theatre in Murphy Hall.
Stage production for "The Spaint Horse," a "spain farce, is being directed by Kenneth Kane," the man Paige, associate professor of voice, is directing the stage work. Kenneth Kane, which tells of a forging of a will
Leann Hillmer, assistant instructor in piano, is the musical director and pianist for both operas
KU Workshop To Perform Two Operas
BREITKOHL (AP)—A HEAVY SAMURAIATWEST COAST SECRET HEYDREAMS
The Godfather
2 p.m. - News Weather Sports
3 p.m. - NBC Sports (after 10 p.m.)
4 p.m. - The Weather Channel
5 p.m. - News Weather Sports
6 p.m. - News Weather Sports
7 p.m. - News Weather Sports
8 p.m. - Traditional Jazz
9 p.m. - Traditional Jazz
10 p.m. - News Weather Sports
10 p.m. - Rock and roll
THE MEN
KANU Schedule
Stereo 91.5 FM
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R... Cale B. Incrochi & Pamantine M
Mon thru Thurs
8:00 p.m. Only
Fri and Sat
3:00-7:00, 10:10
Sunday 3:30 & 8:00 p.m.
Box Set Mon thru Tues 1:00 p.m.
Open Fr-Sat Sun 1:15 p.m.
Tickets at theatrical
All tickets save time
Hillcrest
Robert Redford
George Segal & Co.
Hillcrest ALL SEATS $2.00
Novo- News Weather Sports.
12:15 p.m. Noon-Hour Conference-Campus
and Beach Club (12:30 )
1:30 p.m.- Book Best
1:30 p.m.- French Music and French
COLOR by
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6
Monday, April 24, 1972
University Daily Kansan
ALL UNIVERSITY T.G.I.F.
FRIDAY, MAY 5TH 1-9 p.m.
LAKE PERRY DAM
ALL PROCEEDS DONATED
TO
KU BURN CENTER FUND
BIKATHONALAPERRY(LAKE) POM-PONvs.PROF“SOFTBALL”
- 4-man and 1 alternate relay team to Lake Perry
- 4 classes 1) Under 40 men
2) Under 40 women
3) Under 40 mixed
4) Over 40
- Heats: 1:00, 2:00, 3:00 p.m.
- Donations $5/team—Prizes awarded
- Must submit entry blank and money by Thursday, May 4th
VOLLEYBALL COMPETITION
- Any teams of 4 people----4:00 p.m.
- Divisions: 1) mens, 2) womens, 3) mixed
- Must submit entry blank by May 4th
Presented by the Board of Class Officers:
SENIOR: John Mize, Jim Gilpin Nancy McElroy, Nancy Pile
JUNIOR: Doug Rose, Steve Cosner. Pam Henderson, Cindy Boone
SOPHOMORE: Jim Harrell, Pete Ochs, Linda Moll, Ellen Reimers
FRESHMAN: Rick McLaughlin, Scott McFadden Jan Seymour, Pat Soptic
- KU Pom-Pon Squad to play KU's "Jock" Profs
- "Play ball" at 3:30 p.m.
DRINKING CONTEST
"KU's 1st Annual Best Beer Boozer's Bash" 900 GALLONS OF BEER
- 4 "man" relay and individual heats
- Divisions: 1)womens,2)mens,3)mixed
- Donation: $1/person—Prizes awarded
- Must submit entry blank and money by Friday, May 5th
THE GREAT GASLIGHT GANG
- For spring entertainment 7-9 p.m.
- All Awards Given at 7:30
- CONTRIBUTIONS TO BURN CENTER ANNOUNCED
ENTRY BLANK
Name (Team, if one) ___
Event
Circle One: Mens, Womens, Mixed, Other
Amount of Donation ___
($1/person for Bikathon and Beer Competition)
RETURN TO: ALL UNIVERSITY T.G.I.F.
CLASS HEADQUARTERS
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION----103 UNION
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 24, 1972
7
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
Divers Surface with Junk at Potter Lake
The KR Succai Diving Club came up with a bunch of worthless junk Saturday—and cleaned up Potter Lake at the same time. During its 2% hour "hour trash" day, they collected bottles, bottles, part of an automobile hood, a tire and a
Foreign Gift Sales Help Finance Museum Projects
By MARSHA CLIFTON Kansan Staff Writer
help them from the Russia, and other items from all over the world are merchandise sold through the gift shop at the Museum of Natural History. The profits are used to fund museums or museum-related activities.
How could a toy from Russian help the University of Kansas"
Owl figurines from Ecuador, Italy, Mexico, Protugal and Russia. These are designed by Gwen Frostie; material, clothing, doilies and leather items from Paraguay. Carry a wooden soldier nutrieracker from Germany are just a few of other items soiled through the gift box.
Kathy Olsen, Audubon, Ind. sophomore, is one of the clerks for the gift shop. She said before Easter, alabaster eggs from Italy were very popular and students also purchased rocks and shells
MANY PEOPLE buy oyster
but the most popular items in the gift shop are the jewelry items from American Indians in the north.
Stephen Edwards, administrative assistant at the museum, said most of the merchandise from the Southwest region came from tourists. The jewels is purchased directly though a trading post.
Edwards aid he made the final approval of merchandise purchases but the personnel in the suggested items to be ordered
Olsen said she thought if more students visited the shop they could give the buyers a better idea of what to order.
Edwards said quality and cost were influences on their decision to stock any item.
THE QUALITY of most of the items in the shop is pretty fine. But if you buy very few items which cost over $10,000 your cent fall well below that price."
The shop is to be a source of income to support museum-related activities, Edwards said. These activities have included public education as well as guest tours and events. Profits from the shop have also supported scholarships for the museum's summer workshops
"The profits have been minimal, but they have been enormous. The costs and expenses are figured to the penny, so we have to at least cover them."
Edwards said initial plans were made for the gift shop in 1967 and later moved to the director of the museum. At that time the administrative offices moved upstairs from their location on the museum's main floor.
Area on the main floor was then designated as space for a gift shop. The counter in the gift shop is designed a general store. Thomas Swearingen, museum artist, refinished the counter and designed and constructed the museum buildings and grounds officials.
Black Conference Talks About Business Problems
Edwards said next year a coordinate would be hired to work with the museum in it and work in it, as well as work with the museum's associate.
Expansion of the gift shop will be determined by the person who assumes these duties. Edwards and others had currently reached a plateau.
Most black people have never worked for black bosses, most have worked only for white bosses, Jim Woodson, an attorney from Topeka said Friday at a region's Big Business Council of the University of Kansas Business School.
By MIKE MOREY
Kansan Staff Writer
THE STAINED glass windows were created by Swearingen and his assistant at that time, graduate Student Doug Abough. He is now working on information gathered by an administrative assistant who talked
Woodson said that most black people were filled with self-hate because they had been "at the bottom of the class," and they had been in this country.
Woodson, who helped start and operate a corrugated box factory with his brother, accused exclusively by minorities, said that his company wanted to help black people know that they could be proud and be of themselves.
He said that the image of the black man always working for the white man had to be changed.
CURTIS MCCLINTON, an investment banker and president of the Kansas City Mo., agreed with Woodson and said that blacks had traditionally been "consumers not producers, employees not workers."
Theodore Curry, a member of the Black Business Council, said that he wasn't "necessarily dedicated to integration."
Curry said that if he owned a business he would hire blacks and other minorities before he would be able to take on the job without "a racist statement." Blacks need jobs, they need experience in business, because for advancement, he said.
Curry said that it was difficult for a black man to get a good job with a white firm, let alone have the opportunity to cement into a managerial position
CURRY SAID that the number of blacks going into the Business School was about 10% and going into other schools had decreased. He said this was not unusual.
interest in business, but because the Business School lacked enough experience in grants and didn't offer enough courses which dealt with the subject.
Wilbert Thomas, a member of the Black Business Council, said he was getting paid from the country were getting money, but not KU. Thomas said that if the federal government would come from the state that they would go to the federal government with him.
Thomas said that the Council wasn't asking for a free ride, but was simply asking for enough money to begin a self-help program.
Thomas said that the self-help program would include recruiting Kansas blacks to KU. He said that KU actively recruited minorities and minorities, but that they usually went out of the state to do it.
THOMAS SAID that this wasn't fair to Kansas blacks or to Kansas. He said that most out-of-state students graduated because there was nothing to keep them here. This "waste of resources" would change, he said, if more money was given to Kansas blacks to attend KU.
McClinton agreed that the Council should try to make the KU Business School more available to Kansas blacks. He said, "This is one hell of a system that's not its work within this system."
McClinton said that there were grave problems confronting business businesses in black communities. He said that those businessmen had trouble staying in business because a lack of money in black communities.
No matter how much a black businessman wants to operate a business, he won't. McClinton said, "emotions don't keep you in business and they can't."
Executive Talks About Role Of Women at Business Day
By FOSS FARRAR
Kansas Staff Writer
A woman applicant for a job in business should be considered by prospective employers as an individual and not as a member of the public. The partner of the international public accounting firm Touche Ross & Co, Kansas City, Mo. is involved in Friday the Kansas Union.
The luncheon, which featured McCann was part of the Business School Day which involved 75 students who attended an annual event was sponsored by the KU Business Council, which will be held at Bayne Boeckman, Wetmore senior.
McCann, a KU graduate and the first woman to pass the CPA examination in Kansas, said she didn't think women had a 'role' in industry. She said if women were considered as a group, only women would be given opportunities would be denied opportunities would be denied
"because they are women."
A WOMAN typically enters the labor force after college, works, gets married, has children and goes to school. She is a mature woman, Mccan said.
"About 60 per cent of (working
women are married), McCann said.
"One-third of these women have children under 18."
McCann said nearly half of the female population from the ages of 16 to 64 were working and most in the labor force because of need.
The statistics and information she gave in her speech, ("Women's Role in Industry," were based on studies made by the Bureau of Labor of 1869 and 1970, she said.
McCANN SAID the profile of the average woman worker had changed since 50 years ago when she was 28 years old and a factory worker. She worked in working women is 39; a mature married woman is most likely
doing clerical work. Most women workers are found in the lower levels of lower paid occupations, McCann said.
The Business Council also sponsored two panel discussions Friday. Panel members for the American Human Side of Business," were: Janet Epperson, trust investment officer of the City National Bank of Kansas, and Joey Iezkaiser, president of Inez Kaiser & Assoc., Kansas City, Mo. and John Newlin, controller John Deere Co., Kansas City, Mo.
Panel members for the afternoon discussion on minority business were: Curtis McClennon, executive director, Parkwood Bank and president of the Black Economic Union, Kansas City, Mo.; Tollette Bernard, owner of a Hutchinson catering service, and lawyer for the Office of Economics, Opportunity, Kansas City, Mo.
*'WHEN YOU CHOOSE a market'* Mr Clinton said, 'we have a limited amount of capital, we need the help of our White
Tollette Bernard, who operates
the own catering service,
Hutchinson's, for any businessman had to capitalize on the things people wanted and
She said that if she had to depose on the black community in order to business. The people who require her services, she said, are the people in the white community, and they designed to deal with the problems associated with Black businesses and the job market for them.
Thomas said that the conference "really came off well." He said that the Black team planned it with plans to "be bigger next year."
TAC
TACO GRANDE
With This coupon
Buy 2 Tacos
Get 1 Free!
Coupon not good on Wed
nesday (National Taco Day.)
Offer expires May 15, 1972
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Student Book Collectors Cash in on Collections
Four winners were announced Friday in the Snyder Book Collection Contest.
% THE ECONOMICS OF $
THE COLD WAR
By Robert Smith
11.25
At your bookstore or Hudson
Rand Press 111 Orchard
$Street, Monroe, N.Y. 10956
The book collection contest was sponsored by Elizabeth Snyder, Kansas City book collector, and the Oread Bookstore.
There were two divisions, graduate and undergraduate. The second place division received $100 gift certificates from the Oread Bookstore. The second place division received $30 gift certificates.
In the undergraduate division,
Roger Stump, Lawrence senior,
placed first with his collection on
the works of William Kirk
Kirk McAlexander, Hoshingon
senior placed second with his
collection on the works of D.H.
The contestants then annotated ten of their books and wrote an
In the graduate division Larry Watkins, Lawrence, won first prize for his natural history books on mammals. Robert Demeritt, Lawrence, placed second with his collection of books on the Taoping
Each contestant presented a list of 20 to 25 books in his collection, Engliksi said.
She said the book collections ranged from a collection on mammalian zoology to a collection on sexuality.
Most of the collections were related to the entrants' major, although some of the collections were just bobbies, she said.
essay explaining why they were collecting their books.
The books involved in the collection were also judged on whether they contributed something to the subject, she
Each collection was judged on the interest, sincerity and knowledge of the subject that it displayed. Englinski said.
The judges were Joseph Shipman, director of the Linda Hall Library in Kansas City, Mo.; Thorpe Mnre, book review editor of the Kansas City Star; Del Mar High School; the Lawrence High School English department, and Barbara Backus, associate special collections librarian. Associate judges were former contest winners. The graduate student, and Jim Swindler, Lawrence sophomore.
See classified ad.
feedback
The Curriculum and Instruction Survey (Feedback) is accepting applications for: Survey Director, Associate Director, and Feedback and Graphics Supervisor.
INTERVIEWS FOR THE EMPORIUM BOOK EXCHANGE MANAGER will be held THURSDAY, APRIL 27
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Sign up for interview time in Student Senate Office-105B Union This is for part time help. If you have any questions please call 864-3710
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8
Monday, April 24, 1972
University Daily Kansan
FADIUM
Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THRONE
Barry Schur Flops Over Bar at 7-1 to Win High Jump New approach resulted in Kansas Helays record, KU record for sophomore Schur
KU Drops Series
Rv DAN GEORGE
BY DANGEORGE
Kansan Sports Writer
The University of Kansas baseball team ended its three-game series with Missouri on a happy note Sunday afternoon, winning the victory the fielded to alter the game song as a whole was a disaster.
Saturday, the Jayhawks dropped two to the Tigers, 12-3 themselves from Big Eight contention. With a 6-4 record, KU
Fiddelke 1st Team 2nd In Golf Meet
Fiddelke took medalist honors by shooting a 70.
Mike Fideldee, Paulina, Iowa, freshman, led the University of Kansas golf team to a second place finish Saturday in the Big Ten header golf tournament at the Manhattan Country Club.
The first half of the doubleheader was scheduled for Friday at the Lawrence County Jail, where she canceled because of wet grounds.
The University of Missouri won the meet with a total of 291. KU scored second, other teams third in the tournament for 305 for Kansas State University, 308 for Iowa State University and for the University of Nebraska.
Fidkelee was a member of last year's freshman basketball team at 10 point scoring average and 6.0 per cent field goal average.
Coach Bob Frederick said that Fideldeke had a fantastic putting touch.
Fiddeke barely made the traveling squad to Manhattan. He shawne Mission sophomore and after the qualifications for the meet and were forced into a nine-hole playoff. Fiddeke shot 45
"The greens were pretty slow, but I was really putting good," Fiddelke said.
"Everybody else had trouble reading the greens, and I didn't guess they just had an off-day nutting," he said.
holds the league's third spot, two games behind front-fronting Oklahoma. Overall, the Jawhaws are 13-7.
Going into the weekend set at Quailty Field, the KU mound corps was ranked first in the league with a 2.89 ERA. But telling the Tigers that that was too much could have fooled them Saturday.
Led by slugging third baseman Jack Bastile, Missouri hitters ravaged KU pitching for 19 runs and 26 hits. Bastile alone contributed five hits, including a triple and two home runs, for six runs and Roger Dickans both had roundtrippers for the Tigers.
AT THE SAME time, the Tiger pitching staff also did an abuse. Ranked last in the cone, the Tiger pitcher led by Tigers, led by starters Ben Tensi and Jim Thomas, limited the Jayhawks to just 12 hits and 69 pitches.
"They had their hitting shoes on, that's for sure," said KU coach Floyd Temple. "It was just one of those days when nobody out. They hit every one. It didn't matter who was pitching."
It was the second consecutiveheader loss for KU hurriers in Saturday's game. Corder is now 42, and Cox 33. But all that was pent up the Saturday burst out Sunday. The KCU team erupted for 10 runs on 12 hits.
The Jayhawk scoring been in the second moment when, with two wins and two losses, doubled into left field to knick in one run, and Bill Glass followed.
KU added a run in the third on KU raked back the score when they put a throwing error and singles by Evans and Johnston together for
IN THE seventh, after Bob Wolf walked, Bradley jumped a single into left-centerfield. John kicked the left-field fence then drove him.
The Jayhaws added three more insurance runs in the eighth on singles by Johnston, Glass and Bradley, and a double by Corder.
Bob Wolf, now 4-2, was the winner for KU. He allowed only even hits before he was relieved by Bill Stiegemeier in the ninth.
series for the Jayhawks was
rabbit-handler slammed out wears
hits in 11 trips to the plate,
including a home run. He drove in
That series will begin in
Norman Friday with a
doubleheader at 1:30 p.m.
and the game starts at
1 p.m. Saturday.
SATURDAY
Schur Tops 7-Foot Barrier
Missouri 1005 20-13 12-4
Kansas 1001 6-13 1-3 2
Tennessee 1001 6-13 1-3 2
Strand (7) and Branley W - Trembling (7)
Corridor (42) H-Rastleau, M.Dernfort,
Burton
By BOB SIMISON
The offensive standout in the
There's nothing like using a new approach to an old problem to gain a higher perspective, University of Kansas high school discovered in the Kansas Relays Saturday in Memorial Stadium.
Secondary
Mississippi 401-922 0-1-9 2-12
Kansas 020-1000 0-1-7 2-12
Thomas and Cole: Cox and Bradley; W.
Thomas, L. (Cox, 3.5). HR-Hasbault
Kansan Sports Editor
N. NVSC
bissport 000 000 93-32 10-12
lancaster (03) 01 00 -12 12
anasian (03) 01 00 -12 12
or wolf Warrior (03) Brad and Brad
W-Volf (4-24) L.-Foster BR- Bradley
Schar adjusted his approach to win the university-college high jump. The old record was 7-04 by Fernando. Abugadatas of law were in town in 1969. SkuNXKU recruitment was 6-104, earlier this year.
To get that 6:10% jump, Schur had adjusted his approach. The change helped him jump faster but he still needed more speed.
"I was ready with a new approach last week at Iowa State. Schur said, "but they had to deal with it through, and it messed me up."
So he was ready to try it again. He was the Kansas Relsays. The relay team wore a black jersey and Seur did not miss a jump until the bar was raised to 7-2. That meant the relay team was over.
his 7-1 effort, once each at 6-6, 6-8,
6-10 and 7-0.
"THAT GAVE me some momentum, but it also saved my energy," Schur said.
Michigan State
Schur admitted that the 7-0
Herb Washington
KU's Stull Nabs Triple Jump Win
For KU's Mike Stull, the two shoes on the ground were worth as much as the two on his feet Friday. The stull used all four shoes to win the university-college triple jump of the Kansas Reliefs.
By BILL SCHEELE
Kansan Snorts Writer
Stull placed warmup shoes in strategic places along the runway and wrapped his winning distance of 50 feet, his win was all-time best of 84th. He was all-time best of 84th.
"I placed one shoe at the 18-foot mark for my hop and the other at the 35-foot mark for my step, and I followed perfectly," Stuil said.
"My jumps had been off-balance in the preliminaries because I was overdoing my step. It's illegal to put any markers such as tape on the knees or make sure they and made my bumps ever."
Stull was one of two KU winners Friday. The other one KU victory came from the sprint medley event in both matches, a circuit victory in two years. Tom Scavuza, Phil Stepp, Mark Lutz scored combined for a 3:2 4:1 clock.
In other Friday highlights,
Oklahoma State's Jim Bolding
won the Cliff Cushman 400-yard
intermediate high hurdle in 50.4
miles of the Big Ten superb
Big Eight powerhouses Kansas
State and Missouri by easily
winning against the Giants at
16.31.8; Sam Walker of SMU won
the university-college division
shot put with a touch of 82-2.
Malecol Robinson of Des
Masters won the Masters
Mile in 4:29.9
He needed his best jump ever, too. His jump was only 1½ inches ahead of the second-place mark.
Timing Seems Off
Football Team Srimmages
For 32,000 Kansas Relays fans
at 3:20 p.m., the KU game on
Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
For the KU tennis team, teams
were much gloomyer at the Allen
By BILL SCHEELE
Kenneth Sports Writer
The University of Kansas
the University of Kansas
demonstration weather and the Kansas
leagues,犊 its fourth spring
crimination Sunday afternoon at
the University of Kansas.
KU plays the Cornhuskers a Lincoln this afternoon.
The tennis team was defeated by archival Kansas State, 7-2, and according to coach Mike Schrader it should never have happened.
Head coach Dan Fambrough said that his team's timing was better than the team because the team practiced only twice this week in deference to the coaches.
Tennis Team Loses to KSU
The Blue team, led by first-string quarterback David Jaynes staged an aerial of the reserve down the reserve Whiteys. 27-9.
Fambrough had high praise for the passing attack of both teams.
"we definitely have the potential for an extended run," David Jaynes said. "Both David Jaynes and Bo Brueggem are capable of moving the team."
"I was extremely pleased with the performances of our young receivers," Fambrough said. "Knox Saithoff, Bruce Adams and others have shown their sophomores, have shown me they will be high-quality receivers.
Jaynes completed 16 of 28 passes for 272 yards. Brueggen hit on 8 of 14 for 122 yards.
"When you couple these young boys with veteran Marvin Foster and the two guys, Schroll and throw in the two outstanding quarterbacks plus an improved offensive line, you have ingredients of a potent attack."
for 127 yards and one touchdown for the Whites. Adams caught four for 124 yards, a 31-yard average, to the blues.
"I'm not putting all my eggs into one basket though," Fambrough said.
Saathoff was the day's leading receiver, catching eight passes
He said that the Jayhawks would also be capable of moving the ball on the ground.
"We need to have a balanced attack," he said. "On rainy days, we might not be able to put the ball in the air as much as we would on a dry day. We have to develop a ground threat to complement our passing."
The top ball-carrying prospects for the dayyahs are veterans Vince McCormack and Jamie Moyer, a newcomer Robert Miller. O'Neill rushes the ruskers Sandy carrying his left leg, which is in better shape.
The Jayhawks' annual spring intrasquad game will be at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in Haskell and the North Carolina game will go to the KU marching band and the minor sports of KU athletic program. Tickets prices at the gate will be $2 for students and faculty.
height had been a psychological barrier before Saturday.
Schur's third shot at 7-3 was nearly good, but his back leg kicked the ball over. Schur Schur was qualified for the Olympic trials. The standard is 7-4.
"I found out that if I think about it right going up to the bar, I'm going to hit my head. You had to jump harder to get over 7.0. I took it easy today and I didn't."
"The guys told me I was doing okay, so I just kept doing it."
IN THE POLE vault, n.
having been placed behind
behind Dave Roberts of
Rice at 16-6. Sam Colson placed
the javelin in the javelin with a throw of
50 yards.
Schur's victory was KU's only one Saturday. Jayhawks placed well in other field events, though
KU placed second in the 880- yard relay with i: 12.40 behind Southern Illinois with i: 123.3.
Braham in the long jump with a leap of 24-7%. Mike Stull placed third with 24-6%.
Jon Callan ran fifth in the open steeple chase. His time was 9:02.8.
"I if I had felt like that before a race four or five weeks ago, I would have run 4 to 5 or so. With a backpack, it's easier to fall back on it, easier to sit up."
"I felt good after my warmup, but there was delirium in battle," he said of a Kyun said. "If you feel lousy and still, you must be making sense."
Ryun had come back from a disastrous last place finish in the Los Angeles Meet of Champions March 4, where he ran a *196.8*, by running shorter distances in the Texas Relays and the Texas Relays.
Ryun was clocked in 53.8 seconds for the last quarter.
Ken Swenson had moved into the lead at the start of the final quarter. He led Ryum passed him a hundred yards later. After that, it was Von Cronk who led for lead. Ryum opened a three-step down the gap in bright GHT we'd go faster, but I was ready for win." Ryan said. "I was especially happy that I was able to respond to Von Ruden and run back."
Most of the 32,000 fans who showed up in Memorial Stadium Saturday for the Kansas Relays hit a home run by Glen Cunningham Mile. They saw it. Ryun edged Tom Vonn in a race that wighted all the way.
Southern Illinois also won the 440 relay. Illinois won the two-mile relay. Michigan State, the 200 relay. Oklahoma State, the mile relay.
Rynset set the early pace, then faded back to its normal pace. The laps before pouring it on in the third quarters of a lap. He won in 0.571. V. Von Ruden (2008) set the early pace.
"I didn't feel particularly good in the race until I was able to respond to Von Ruden on the last night of the battle," he told "When I moved I felt strong."
GREENE AND Branch had shared the old record of 9.3 with John Carlos, San Jose State.
quarter-mile for Oklahoma
kate's mile relay team, was
outed the top performer in
the Canaas Relays by sports writers.
and outed the Riley 40s
ard intermediate hurdles record
t 50.4 Friday
Jim Ryun, who won the Glenn Cunningham Mile, was second in the voting.
Jim Bolding, who ran a 45.5
Watson was second with 68-34;
Steve Milton and Karl Sali
former KU shot putters, place
and team with 68-3 and 6-8
6 efforts.
Woestemeyer apparently suffered a heart attack after he received a Relays watch for his involvement in the Relays.
The only tragic part of our Ballet season was the awards stands of Arduino - West Wooltemeyer, with three other men had received an award for their work.
Ryun Edges Von Ruden Responds in Last Quarter
THEY BATTLED evenly down the final stretch. Hershberger won only by diving across the finish line and landing flat on his face.
SEORAME
The freak, Loren Schnell of Boulder, Colo., zoomed past Hershberger down the backstretch of the second lap. Hershberger had to pour it on to keep the pace and narrow the one- or two-step advantage Schnell had gained.
Loren Schnell
"I had him easy at the Big Eight indoor," Hershberger panted after the
Establishment Dives Past Freak To Win Masters 880 in Relays
The establishment. Jim Hersberger, Wichita oil millionaire, averted what appeared a certain deficit by lunging into the last second. Both were docked in 2035.
By BOB SIMSON
Kansan Sports Editor
A greater contrast is seldom seen than the one between the two men who battled down to the wire for the Masters 880 in 1976, and Relays Saturday in Memorial Stadium.
And who won?
Striving desperately to pass him in the outside lane was a sharply clad, closely clipped 40-year representative of all men in establishment desirabe desirable in a man.
On the inside line stretching toward the finish line was a 41-year-old freak in tattered white tops, his long, black hair and full beard flying.
race. "The son-of-a-bitch has been training on me."
Schnell also finished second in the Big Eight indoor half-mile.
The victory was Hershberger's first on the Tartan track he financed and which bears his name. Although he ran in the Masters Mile at the Relays last year, he had not won a race at KU since KU's start in 2014. The team made the anchor carry for that team
"When people see me run they think I'm a professor or something." Schnell said. "It just freaks them out to know I'm a dishwasher."
The contrast between Hershberger and Schnell goes deeper than appearance. Schnell has been running for three years, while Hershberger does it to set age-group records.
When Snell left the business world, he left it completely, he said. He walked away with a few pounds of cash.
"When he passed me, I thought he'd have to kill himself to finish." Hershberger said. "I dove to win. I'd do anything to win."
Schnell was a successful businessman in Boulder for 16 years, he said. His last venture was a resort. Now he's a dishwasher.
"I STARTED running for a number of reasons". Schnell said. "The weather in Bouler was beautiful, and I wanted to get out and have a change my lifestyle from being a burglar."
"I'm writing a book about myself,"
because that's what I am.
because that's what I am.
"I walked away from everything because I could see myself saying one thing and doing another. I could smile at him, station and stab in the back the next.
"THE DIFFERENCE now is that I'm living. Before, I was just existing."
Schnell doesn't expect to publish his book for six or seven years.
mark.
"I do things like, when they ask me, 'Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth so help you God,' I answer, 'If I told the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, I would be God.' It pisses them off."
Schnell's long hair helps him get along with kids, he runs. He a crash-pad at his apartment in Boulder, 24 hours a day. message for KU students.
With that, the oldest freak in town resumed cheering for KU's Jon Callen in the steeplechase. Schell roamed with others, hitchhiking to Lawrence for the Relays.
"The establishment is not all fucked up, just part of it is fucked up. And the long hairs don't have all the answers, just some of the answers."
MATSON'S WORLD record is 71-512.
"I finally convinced myself that I was ridiculous how I was asked to walk away from the spot walked away from the shot put area." So I just relaxed and waited.
"I like it said, I'm happy I had, I was two major goals. We had to come KU and beat Matson, the team to go over 71%-3% this year."
Kjell Isaksson, the world
record-holder in the pole vault from Sweden, won the open pole vault with 17-5. He had set the world record at 18-1 at the Texas two weeks ago, then at 18-2 at 18-2 in the Meet of Champions a week ago.
Terry Porter's 17-9 vault for fourth place set a national junior college record. Porter, of Ranger High School, played the record at 16-11 earlier this year.
★★
800 relay -1, Southern Illinois, 1:23; 2, Kansas, 1:24; 3, Ohio. Methodist
1:24; 3, Oklahoma State. Methodist 1:24; 3, Kansas State.
1:25.
Hans Lagerqvist, also of Sweden, was second with the same height, but Isaksson had fewer misses.
SATURDAY RESULTS
Relavs Results
Distance medley relay -1 Michigan State.
4.12; 6. Kansas State, 9.27; 3. Missouri
9.50; 3. Oklahoma State, 9.52; 1. Iowa
State, 9.52
- relay 1. 5 Southern Illinois. 6. 4 Southern Mississippi. 8. 6 Kansas State. 9. 4 Athens Christian. 10. 6 Kansas State. 11. 4 Athens Christian. 12. 6 Missouri. 13. 4 Iowa. 14. 7 Iowa. 15. 7 Iowa. 16. 7 Iowa. 17. 7 Iowa. 18. 7 Iowa. 19. 7 Iowa. 19. 7 Iowa. 19. 7 Iowa. 19. 7 Iowa. 19. 7 Iowa. 19. 7 Iowa. 19. 7 Iowa. 19. 7 Iowa. 19. 7 Iowa.
**Univ. Gil Division**
High hardship, Murray, Michigan, 10:2;
Hodges, Texas, 10:4;
Jacques, Northern Illinois, 14A; 5;
Ahwaya Colle, Illinois State, 14B.
Mile relay -1 Oklahoma State, 3.06:8; 2.
Oklahoma, 3.08:0; 3. Texas, 3.08:3;
Nebraska, 3.08:4; 3. Missouri, 3.09:0.
100 dash- 1. Branche, Colorado; 9:41, 2 Schulz, Alabama State; 9:43, 3 William Kansas State; 9:53, 4 Hargett, Dallas Baptist; 9:5, 3 Brinson, Cameron
Javellin 2, Morland, Kansas State, 24:54;
2. Hollaway, Iowa State, 24:00; 3. Colon,
Kansas 21:26; 4. Pearce, Rise, 22:5; 5. Winn,
Washington, 22:8.
Pole vault 1, Roberts, Rice, 16c.
Hatcher, Kansas, 16; 3. Attrib.
Missouri, Missouri, 16; 4. Marrs, Kansas
State, 16; 5. Hardwick, Kansas, 13; 6.
Long jump=1, Brabbam, Batey 2-7, 2-9,
Seay, Kansas; 24-7,3, Stull, Kansas;
24-6, 4, Walker, Pittsburgh State; 24-5, 5,
Gray, Missouri; 24.4%
Marabon 1, Zigler 0, Oklahoma.
2-23 (20)呼兰Record 4, Oklahoma.
2-23 (20)呼兰Record 4, Oklahoma.
Colorado State 20, 20 (14), Oklahoma.
Colorado State 20, 20 (14), Oklahoma.
Brams 10, Brown 23, 22 (7), Lowery.
Brams 10, Brown 23, 22 (7), Lowery.
High jump- 1. Schur, Kansas 7.4 (Hale
record. Old record 7.6%; by Augatagua,
Northwestern Iowa 1.09%). 2. Stoner,
Illinois 6.10%. 3. Taylor ACM, A-6; 8.
Illinois 6.10%. 4. Taylor ACM, A-6; 8.
Mile walk -1. Young, Columbia, Mo. 6:05. 2: Paas, Oklahoma Christian, 7:04. 3: Hale, Okakaun Church, 7:34. 3: Ile, Okakaun Church, 7:30. 3: Herof, Omaha, 7:35.
100 dash. 1- Washington, Michigan State,
Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, North Dakota,
Nebraska, Iowa, San Jose State, Idaho,
Oregon, Oregon, Oregon, Oregon, and
Branch, Colorado. 171, 2. Crookset,
Colorado. 163, 4. Oregon, Oregon, Oregon,
4. Greenwood, U.S. Army, 4.9. Schultz,
California.
Masters. 800-1. Hershberger, Wichita
Track Club. 2.03.5. 2.03.5. Schenck, Colorado
Greenwood, unattached. 4.01.4. 4.01.4. Greenwood,
unattached. 0.10.5. 0.10.5. Uneach, unattached. 2.11.8.
Hammer throw. 1. M. McLaughlin, Navy
18.7; 2. Bugtegen, Oakland (Crblrtn)
9.3; Weibullson, U.S. Navy, 4. M. Mercer
162.5; 1. Buler, Northern Illinois
152.5.
Cunningham Camillus Mile. 1, Yule Club.
West 3,171. Bambridge, Pacific Coast
Club. West 2,084
Three mile run - 1. Oakland, Boston
trains. 14. Bayfield, 2. Sherbrooke, Florida Track
Club. 3. Oakland, 4. Greene, Colorado Slab. 13. BM
Track Club. 5. Oakland, 6. Bayfield (Helsinki) Record. 10. Bayfield (Toronto) Record. 9. Oakland (Washington) Record. 8. Mation. 6(1), 6(1); Gilbert Mation. 6(1), 7(1); Mid America Track. 6(1). Mid America Track. 6(1).
3,000 meter steeplechase - 1. Timmin
Minnesota, 8.46.6, 2. Grosse, Illinois, 8.98.
3. Eugen, Wyoming, 9.09. 4. Klnpatrick
Nanaas State, 9.02. 5. Cullen, Kansas
Poulveault 1-1, Nakasson 1-5, Seenan 13, 24.
Lagerauget, Swedens 17, 5. Seenan 15,
California Stadium 17, 6. 4. Porter, Ranger,
18. Junior College 17, 6. Roberts, Rice
66.
Shot put- 1, Walker, SMU; 62.2, 2
Aaron Servon, Michigan; 59.10$, 3
Adams Michigan, 58.10$,$ 4
Blinder, Northern Illinois; 57.11$, 3
Michelle Mitchell, Maryland
Spirit medley relay -1 Kansas, 3:22.4, 2 Drake, 3:22.6, 3 Texas, 3:23.4, 4 Texas Christian, 3:23.9, 5 Netwraka, 3:24.2
University-College Division
Four mile relay. Illinois. 16,32.8. Missouri. 16,41.0. Kansas State. 16,44.4. Michigan State. 16,52.0. Oklahoma State. 16,52.8.
Mile Run - 1, Bach, Northwestern, 0.4:3.3
2. Walk, Wichita State, 0.4:7.3
3. Hill Southern Illinois, 0.4:3.3
4. Bentley, South Dakota State, 0.4:6.4
5. Durklin, Illinois
Triple jump 1- Stull, Kansas, 30:8) 2-
Brown, Dale Baptist, 6:7) 3, Gerdner,
Northeast Missouri, 4:0) 4- Gregory,
Michigan State, 4:1) 3, Gray, Michigan,
4:4)
Discu'r - 1st, Sadel, 173; 170, 2. Broutus,
Kansas State, 19; 10; 38, Emmanuel, Okla-
moba, 16; 47, 4. Thomas, Texas, 16; 42, 5.
Neugen, Oklahoma City, 16; 9.
Masters Mile (35) and over . - Robinson,
Des Moines, IA. 4,295; I.296; Howell, IA-
bilsburg, Colo. 4,205; Loyden, Columbus,
Maryland. 4,205; Wichita, KS. 4,205;
3,0. Hickory, Columbia, MO. 4,472;
IIb Coughman 40 interim陆军 hardrubs.
III Coughman 38 interim Army hardrubs.
IV Record old 36.5 Brownbrook, Rice (12).
V. 2. Crombain, Rice, 31.2, 3. E. Cassidy,
(12). 2. Cassidy, Michigan State, 52.4.
3. Cassidy, Michigan State, 52.4.
COLORADO
90
INCESSIONS
Kansan Photo by PRISCILLA BRANSTED
Schnell Runs Masters Mile
He placed 8th in mile Friday, 2nd in 800 Saturday
Monday, April 24, 1972
University Daily Kansan
9
Pharmacy Professor Gets Grant
Carlton Erickson, associate professor of pharmacy, has published a book that will continue his study of the effects of alcohol and nicotine on the brain.
The National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism granted Erickson $21,500 to study his history of the effects of alcohol on acetylcholine, the neurotransmitter between the brain and nerves.
ahoma was in the writers. ys 440- record
2. An, Adams,
Northern
3%.
4. n. 404.3
5. n. Hill,
South
Illinois.
colhounson,
fl. Idaho
columbia,
club Jack
club
hurdles-
hurdles
(Relays)
im. Rlee,
3 Lee.
ud State,
e. $24.
Erickson said that so far his research had shown that after the intake of alcohol there was a decrease in acetylene in the brain.
"By flushing the brain with a salt solution you can analyze the amount of acetylcholine in what it is doing," Erickson said.
Glenn
cond in
rently after he for his in the
of the on the Westy" three award
According to Erickson the process of making what the behavioral mechanism is and correlate the decrease of acetylene with the state of reaction.
vault
n pole
set the
Texas
n at 18-
compions
Erickson said that once the mechanism was found, a drug can alter behavioral characteristics of intoxication With the development of drugs it possibly be implications in preventing chronic alcoholism.
Assisting Erickson with the Alcohol Research, Searching, Australia, Graduate student, and Jeremy Matchett, Topeka State University.
The Council for Tobacco Forensics will continue Erickson $10,550 to continue his study of the effects of nicotine on acetylcholine, in connection with research.
"Small doses of nicotine have been found to facilitate learning in animals (mainly rats) whereas larger doses express learning," Erickson said.
The importance of this study for the future Erickson said is that he has shown learning enhancement pill that would be similar to a nicotine tablet.
Student Juror Discovers Duty Is Educational
Carl Bingham, Shawnee Mission mission, is one of the first University of Kansas students to serve on a jury under the new law that permits persons on the tax roles in years-old or over to serve.
"It was very interesting," Bingham said Saturday. "I learned more about the judicial than I ever learned in school."
Bingham, who turned 21 before he served two weeks of jury duty, said he was on the jury for three days. He is a former 38 District Court, a civil court.
Bingham said the two weeks of jury duty did not interfere with his school work.
"Young people were elected to the jury more than old people." *Abbey* said that noceice has something to do with it. I found that they tended to like them.
THE DAYS OF FIRE AND BRIMSTONE ARE OVER.
isolated in a pulpit but part of the scene.
One day
Remember the preachers who press us to repeat in tone, and rafter? Those days are gone
Paulists meet the challenges that change presents.
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $0.03
Maybe he became a Paulist because he felt unacross about the state of the world or because he wanted to be the pastor is doing—whether he is a parish priest, a missionary, a press, radio or television personality, an educator or involved in the University or college that is concerned and involved.
The Paulist,
for instance, speaks
the language of
today because
he is praised to
be it is not
in isolated in a "
For more information about the Paulist priesthood, write to Rev. Donald C. Campbell, C.S.P., Vocation Director, Room 600
paulistfathers.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.02
FOR SALE
415 West 59th Street New York,N.Y.10019
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered without regard to color, gender or race.
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI. 2.
8088
Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
You're 34 and a disadvantage.
Erik Itchner eats the same food as "New Yorkers" of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 14th W. 14th H.
11f
you're at an advantage.
If you don't,
Michigan St. Bar-B-Q-Que 1515 Mich St. Gidnorion St. Bar-B-Q-Que 1,515 Mich St. Gidnorion St. Bar-B-Q-Que 1,515 Sub or part rent $2.50 Small Robust $4.34 Large Robust Ribs $18.90 Small Robust $4.34 Large Robust Ribs $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 $18.90 Phone 822-6510 Open Sun-Tue
Pali-shang-you Little Hunger dog puppies ARC 1PC. Top bloodlines, pedigree袋 $60 up also. Old age (3 years) $79.99-783. McLennan 4-26
Pro Bibles 35 pro blues in stock in a pack of 10. *Pro Bibles Pugoued 198-108* **Fuel:** The Athletics 26-17. *Olympics*: Patient, Sarena Romo, Tracy McGregor. *Ride-On Rite*: Rockie Ribeiro, 141-105; Marshmallow Ride-On Rite: Blake, 141-105.
Members of our Karaus - DOKONON
BECONS "Testing" and he said
Would we be long now? We'll fug a brake.
We'll be long now? Nissan V40. Vernon
NOKONON, NISSAN V40. Vernon
1958 2 bdm. Great Lakes Mobile
Mobil 4000. 12 month warranty.
carpeting. Occupancy for summer or
fall $1,950. Phone 811-3851 after 5:50.
1969 Alpine Sunburst G.T. needs engine work $600 or take over payments and we give you $200 cash
432-6243 after 5:30 p.m.
4-24
Deadline : 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Ten-speed bicycles: Figo, Aleta,
Sprint, Shimano, Jilinski, ADI-
Ankle, Schieke, LePierre, Also 3 &
4 Speed. Accessories unlimited and
accessories customized to shop at Ride-
like, like Shop, 1601 Mass.
70 Suzuki TC-125, 950 mi., w/Hel-
met. $375 842-5402 4-24
BSA 250 Goldstar. Not one year old,
only last summer. Asking $700.
Call 843-2018 after 6 p.m.
4-24
1971 Honda 50SL-8L Excellent condition,
extras included. Must sell for
best offer--Call Dennis, M47-7404 4-21
Guitar for sale $99 - Green Hummingbird-6 new (steel) strings, great condition with case. Contact Belfty. 408-531-7244. Dorm desk Box 822. 4-244
1971 Kawasaki 500, excellent count-
tion, $800 Call 842-4055. 4-25
106. Cincy Van for sale. Painted green in January 7. Has rear hat, carpeted and panelled interior. Aking $550. Cald 8-25-19 after 6 p.m.
1970 Honda 350 SLs, great bike on and off the road. Excellent condition $400 or best offer. Call Dave, 841-2581, 1-255
AUST SELL Forder Junior with and accessories. Forder Kit Combo (includes 10 items). Also 1967 Porchie 911 mini truck. Must sell $2,500. Must sell $8,426 - 246-316.
Guitar -Martin D-35, acoustic sk-string. Hardshell case. 4 years old. Good condition. Call 843-5113 for 2-25 o.m.
1969 YAMAHA 125 ce wren, very good condition, low mileage, new knobby on rear, $310, luggage rack and helmets, 842-0002 4-25
Tony's 66 Service
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
2434 Iowa V12-1008
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4.4444
FOR SUA Events
电话
For SUA Events
2 students want to buy nice 2 bed-
room mobile home-Cash. Call 843-
987 4-25
The season of lecture has arrived. We have hammocks, French Foreign London loundaise, Vellam dunge bumble beans, and a few other gifts from flower Sorpus, 115 Vermont, 4-25
1971 Toyota Celica Yellow with black vinyl roof, mpg wheels. Must win immediately. Excellent condition. Finished in 112. Tire size 4:25. #: 863-649.
Well-balanced stereo compact gassymeter with CX-8500, 14-inch type II Stereo cartridge, CX-8500 AMP, 14-inch putton shaver specifier, vacuum pump, $75.14 (124 Indiana) Ap. $65.99 (124 Indiana) Ap.
56 VW for sale. Runs good. Call 842-3100 mornings or evenings. 4-25
LAW STUDENT DIGS WALKING
WILL SKILL 67 67 VISION EXCELLENT
SHAPE INSECT & OUT CALL 842-
56 7 AND MAKE OFFER 4-28
Great laughs while trailing, king size water bed.衣长 and frame $40—Cascade Car Stretch, excellent sound system.床高-$82, 424-800-6:00 p.m.
Model 725-II N, Roberts reel to reel and cartridge type recorder. Lake New-Will sell for $200 Also stereo bass,贵的,423-892 4-25
WHY RENT?
1969 NOKTON Cafe Racer, Excellent,
$875, 1939 Ford pickup 'l' $275,
at see 906 Oak St. afternoons and
early evenings only 4-24
Piring and 1962 Old 2 Ddr. Dee Drum.
$185.00. Also $185.00. Battery Refill $185.00. Radio line $100.00. Also 2 On 7 to 14 Lead Rastafari Battery $185.00. Cables $185.00. Lens $185.00. Lenses $185.00. Lens $185.00. Lens $185.00. Lens $185.00. Lens $185.00. Lens $185.00. Lens $185.00. Lens $185.00. Lens $185.00. Lens $185.00. Lens $185.00.
For Sale or trade for pickup 1965
Ford Galaxie 500 2 door hardware, VW.
Ai. Automatic power blue with
black trim. 4x4.
2801 W Bath, Apt. 441
4-24
1970 B.S.A. 250 Starfire Blue Runs well. Excellent condition. 2,000 miles $350 or best offer. Call Dave at 842-655-424
Practically good new electric Smith Corona elite typewriter for sale. Less than 15 lbs is required. First $9 takes 183-781 or 824-4444. Ask for Dick
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can buy your new TV with a cost plus 10% in RAY AUDIO-MD2 or an HDTV above Discount House in the United States. Cutter & Consulting Service - 5-800-376-9111.
tennis racket Davis Classic 4.3 4.4
Strong. Strung with imperial gut.
Bone Benocraft grip Fine condition.
all 821-654-656
4-26
Hospital Building
T A P E S - 8, 5 bargains - 2.4 *tackle* - $1.25
T A P E S - 8, 7 bargains on tape, playes,
record, record players and cassettes.
Buy-Sell-Trade. Traders. 822 Maa.
CAMERAS Paloys, starting at $3. Also 35 mm, movie cameras, instantiates, projectors. Money to Loan. 822 Mass. 4-26
Blue girl's Raleigh 3-speed bicycle
Call 841-6556 if interested—ask for Phyllis.
4-26
Haircutter, steam, Lady Schick, 20
mollers; used once, $10. Call Lora after
6:00, 843-1909. 4-25
SAVE ON BOOKS-Used paperbacks only IG THE PLAY BOYS now 1½ price. Money to loan Traders, 822 Mass-4:25
161 Champion Impulse 4 ft. HT, TPU
163 Champion Impulse 5 ft. HT, TPU
152 Left Shifts, New Tires, Burgundy
(black II trim) Invincible Gran-
marine (white trim) Invincible Gran-
marine with maintainer 600 book $752.85
with maintainer 600 book $752.85
STEREO SYSTEM—8t-stamp AM-FM
stereo. Brand new Panaison retails
for $169. Must sell. Call 642-6782 4-27
dont sell. 1968 VW Sedan, good mechanically but needs body work. Also 966 Bearchuck 6 cly, auto, trans. 967 Bearchuck 6 cly, auto, trans. 824 -44369 4-27
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
finally-a field of the new Army issue—FIELD JACKETS. Limited quantity so far. We also have Army jacket 845-7000 and Supply 4-288 845-7000
THE MERCANTILE
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
RIDGEVIEW
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
843-8499
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Ubrushan Eagle, excellent rend. $50,
cisco. Males, job篮, job no.
40, 842, 3877. Please leave no and
return to your call room. 4-27
Rose
Music
Recorders
work great for stage monitor or sounds nice nice nice Less than $3 call Bob at 842-9582. 4-27
Microsoce for sale. If going to KU
Med. School, you will have to furnish
your own microsoce. Call 842-
4019 after 5:00 p.m.
4-27
Accessories
SUMMER RENTALS Live close to
campus this summer in a room,
burrow, or apartment. Kenwood
Cinemas 108-234-5720 Louisiana 841-1631-3223 5-9
COLLEGE HILL MANOR now snow-covered and furnished and unfurnished apartments that date to 1928. Cloe to compare with the 1930s W. 174 W. 1916, Ap. 4B or call 844-539-1000.
Sale on all winter coats, sweaters,
jackets and tuxedos. To everything
there is a season. Earthshine, 12 E.
8th., 4-27
KEYBOARD STUDIOS
TEAC 4029 tape recorder, 1970 model
$390 Will trade for 35mm camera
Call Bill, 842-1882
4-26
- Guitars
- Recorders
- Accessories
FOR RENT
Tired of trying to find that ideal home for rent? We now have a variety of options. Our homes in various locations and price ranges are available. McGrew Agent #101, Kentucky, KY 68425; McGrew Agent #811, Kentucky, KY 68425.
Schwinn - Variety 18-speed bicycle has everything and in perfect condition, Price $75 Call Bill, JRP 214 864-2647 4-25
Yamaha 650 Street. 842-3871 924-
Schwarz Road. Evenings. 5-5
1903 Mass. 843-3007
OPEN NIGHTS
LOOK WHAT SANTEE APTS HAVE TO OFFER! Summer rates, swimming pool, A C. Free cable-TV and DVD. 843-216-1212, I123 Ireland 843-216-1212
When you’re hot, you’re hot. When you’re cold, you’re cold. Dressed, comfort at UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK MENTES. Enjoy our pool & close to MENTES. Enjoy our pool & close to APT. HI 1329 W 9th Phone 855-740-6000.
Large, two bedroom mobile home.
Fully cared, air-conditioned, water-
filled, and equipped with a single person. Under $100. Single phone night. 842-936 or Cam UR 4-114. Nights 842-936 or Cam UR 4-114.
MODERN APARTMENTS. Furnished and unfurnished one bedroom from $180-$190, plus utilities. Near carport. In-law suite
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right now, the 2nd bed and Messiah Bed are available. Aug 14 one room available. Aug 15 one room available at end of semester. Available at end of semester www.campus.com/campus/campus/wifi www.campus.com
NOW IS THE TIME TO REHEPSE
1022, while collection is still available.
1032, when collection will be available.
845-2848, or 2017-A. Harvard
Lawrence's building, built by
Lawrence's law firm, built on
the same grounds.
Avalon, 9th & Avalon, Harvard
and Yale, and 11th & Abbott,
11th & Abbott. Then company
cost of living in one of these
handicap apartments and you will be
more to have a dishwasher, central
utilities, utility bills, utilities
and more many features.
Sublease for summer, apt. one bedroom, A/C, private, close to campus, furnished, $130, 1025 Indiana, 842-7160, Apt. E. 4-26
SAHARA APT, 626 Schwarz. Clean 1 bedm. kitch., Bath A/C. Water must rent from lk or 15 of May 1998. Room size $1,400 or 841-293-6 on 6 p.m. 4-24
To KU male nice apt. close to Union.
May work out all or part of rent.
Available now, phone 843-8534. 5-9F
JAROLD'S Diving Supplies
FI
SUMMER RATE - New leased, terminated apartment, sleeping room with or without kitchen privileges for children. Near KU and Loyola BC #1-835776
Two studio apartments. Quiet, furnished air-conditioning, sham-heat furnishings. Fully-equipped businessman or graduate study reference. Available May 20 Call 811-354-7596
Luxurious, spacious town house for summer. Three bedrooms, design by Louis Kahn. All carpet, shag carpet, central air, patio & furniture. Complete furnished. Call 842-759-6100.
SPENDING THE SUMMER in LAW
You can enjoy yourself in the summer if you call Marissa, a number of summer rates
Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I. Equip.in Stock Certified
To need to submit leaf, 2 birch, orru-
cern, 1 bit from campus for summer.
$80 fee. Call 842-2862 or 843-
2116
Furnished apartments and rooms.
Good location and utilities paid.
prices reduced for summer. Very rare
phone. Call M2-8425. after 4:30
M2-507.
For Sublease. Furnished. Shoallet.
Place and May 29-30, date required.
Must be married and attending
summer school. Call 642-8138.
4-50
PLAZA - MANOR, Summer and, fall.
Available in Standing, Stone, two-
and two bedrooms furnished
furnished Swimming pool, air-cou-
dored swimming rate, 240 Murphy
driver.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. New-low summer rates. Both furnished apartments offer 1 and 2 bedrooms apartments with air-conditioning, dishwasher, refrigerator, pool, spa, swimming pool. All utilities and swimming pool. Information call: 811-200-3567 or day or night.
TRIUMPH
1921 two-bedroom mobile barn for
rent for summer. Located at Mobil
Acres South. Call 842-2315 4-28
Rooms for rent. Need girls to share
house $50. utilities included. Avail
May 1 or May 20. 842-3768
4-27
Need to leave good, old house, bony
$125 mms. Utilities paid except electricity.
Count by anytime, 933 Ala-
bama. Visit 2 people, 486
August.
Quarter, comfortable 2-bedroom apt for
Quinter. Fully furnished, and expect-
able in the upstairs, basement and downtown. $150 m., including
phone. 643-8252; after p.m.
. CROSS 913842-1553
Renting for summer and fall: new furnished rooms, kitchen privileges near KU. Each 1-3 bedroom apts 812-5087 after 4:00. 5-9
Books-Bibles-Posters-Gifts-Framing
Largest 1-bedroom unfurnished apt. on the campus of campus in iner area. Lb. inc. furnishings and equipment. shower. Kit with refrig. & electrical supplies. Unit costs $10,895.佣金 $10,895.
Nip's older home in old West Hills just west of West Village. Large rooms including 1 large master bedroom, kitchen with 2 bedrooms, kitchen with 2 baths, 4 bedrooms with private outside room and 6 bedrooms with private outside room. Hoover Realty. 165 Mass. Ph. 840-797-3400.
NOTICE
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas 64644
REFERENCE
30 Varieties of Donuts Hot and Cold Drinks
Barn Partied! Now available at The Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry, Apple Valley Farm on Lake Perry, and coorde plenty of parking for the event. Call Joe Soe after 6 p.m. at 843-752-1050.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. John Wells, 842-5230 tt
TOYOTA
2000 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2919
Carol Lee
1730 W. 23rd S1
842-3664
Maupintour travel service
0 Mass-The Mallts-Hillcrest-KU Union
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
Women's Alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 4-25
WEDDING INVITATIONS • PRICES
ARE LOW IN HAWAII - 100 students
are invited. Attend a wedding and samples to Ariela Apel-
nato, Madhvi Maek, Hawaii. $8450
8346
THE. MIDDLE EAR comes to Law-
nature. Storm roars at end.
THE MIDDLE EAR wants us to save
the Earth. Decide all manufacturers.
4-24
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTRE 82-7694.
Professional child-care center for a
male in a 102-inch Pillow or part-time
Pillow. Specially designed infant-
care E-2-5
See
Lively, furnished apartment, with central air, for 2 men, very close to campus, available May 20th for suitcase and or fall. Phone 843-680-4249
Competition Sports Cars Inc.
HOUSES BOATMED EXCELLENT
FULL STALL CARE - CLOSER IN
EXAMPLE OF FUNCTIONAL
STAIRL ALSO USING SAFFRON
FOR SALE M2-180. 4-25
GIRLS, MOMS. Are you the mode of
special type Mobile Moms? free evaluation
training available? Training can
train Miss Frik as Miss Kritz.
82-062 or #41-231
@kritz.com 82-062 or #41-231
SRIKLEA - 2-bath, 2-bath, outdoor-Galveston House. Fully furnished. Dishwasher. A-C Pool. Bathroom. Great location. Aaavil Jumbo. $1500-$1800. Call (944) 750-3326.
FOUND · BROWN · GLASSES —
looks maybe female, but who knows?
Found a week ago Sunday just West
of Strong. Call 812-425-3287.
Phone 843-1211
Norcross Laundry and Dry Cleaning
at the Mini-Place Modern and
quick service. 1910 Hackett 842-6522
3-9
Typewriters and Sewing Machines—Nane Brands at Bargain Prices Money to Loan. Traders, 822 Mass. 4-262
Just arrived - Western shirts in blue
denim and chambray. . . Fun, funky,
functional, and cheap Earthshine, 12
E, 8th. . . 4,28
WANTED
LENNY ZEROS at 710 Mays, your son and his team will be well prepared. We really want you to stay in spirit. We need you ready to receive our second round thawing out our experience so you are helping the organization grow and our store is great to listen to
OVERSEAS JOBS, FOR STUDENTS
All positions accept all qualifications,
the AllPROPERTIES and occupations.
Offer direct services to overseas
education, lightening. Free information.
Job locations: 5027, San Diego, CA
90115.
TONY'S IMPORTS
DATESUM
H
HALF DAY BOWLING
500 E.23rd
OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
10 TO 120 WINDSHIFT
- RECLINING FRONT SEATS
- UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL
FRONT DISC BRAKES
LOVE THAT
UP TO 25 MILES PER G
DATSUN
Open 24 hrs. per day
Independent
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
COIN
DRIVE-IN
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN O
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843.5304
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
days per week
RAMADA INN Figure Salon
Needed new facilities, Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free inquiry request. Swimming privileges
Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 10, Sat till noon.
We have used books, also old Playbooks, and Pen-Post-house magazines in good condition! Call 842-6216. 5-9
Male Homosexual (x) to share spaces.
Two-bedroom. Two-room. apartment for summer and may fall in West Lawrencine.住房 N84-8239. 4-25
Wanted. Remarks to share 1 bedroom apartment next fall. For info call Phil at 843-6607 4-26
1 female roommate for summer and
tail to share 1 bedroom apt. in com-
plex Rent $45.10/m² until Call 842-
7891 after 7 p.m.
TYPING
Roommate wanted to share house to the summer. Call Haywood 842-2256
4:27
Wanted: one or two rumbmums in summer in house on Lake Ontario. Less than $40 per person. Each have own room. Will accept couple. 831-762. 4-25
Typping in my home. IBM Selectric.
Prompt, accurate work. Experienced
Call 841-2556 $^5$
Liberated Female to share modern 1922 two-bedroom mobile home with traditional living style. Private room for dinner and/or fall outdoor for autumn and, or fall 813-830
These, term papers, type accessor-
and promptly. IBM SESiure, your
model of type styles. Also editing at
rate. Ronda, 842-797-9
842-765-30
Experienced typist will type your term papers, terms, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-288. Rachel Mankenhill
TYPING - THESIS - DISSERTATION
MISCELLANEOUS WORK -
Do. Suicides with pica type
Truel, Travolt, 2009; Bridge Corp.
82-1436
FIFTH EDITION WORK. Carbon
rifted can-do looks for printing.
17. carryrage for legal papers, will-
call for translations and grammar.
482-6
1734
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt,reasonable rates. Please call 841-7943 4-27
HELP WANTED
TEACHERS WANTED: Contact
Southwest Teachers Agency, Box
432, Albuquerque, NM. 87065. "Our
Hands" Hendrick and her staff.
NATA
5-9
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court
Girls wanted for interesting work. Work own home, generous commission. Call 1-642-4389, ask for Mike Olson. 4-24
4 proof sittings $3.00
Please call for your appointment for SENIOR PICTURE
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
SENIORS
843-9694
6 proof sittings $5.00
Special Senior Rates on all orders.
Hixon
Studio
摄像师
STUDENTS. Earn $400 per person, when in school. MUST BE 21 years old, aggressive, willing to learn, and personal interview 4-14, 45-14, 48-18, 4-28
$65 to $35 Per WK-PART TIME
addressing employees at home or in office,
addressing envelope mailing, and
addressing individuals with GOOD
housing and addressing their envelopes.
For EOE applicants, awarding opportunities with these companies. P.O. Box 697, Crawfordsville, NJ 07621.
Now taking job applications for Fall 2015.
You may pay five cents per workaround.
Missouri No experience necessary.
Work with a team of professionals.
Phone 1-771-8549, Kerry Robbey.
LOST
Babysitter needed during summer, 2-4
days a week, 2.30 p.m to 11.30 p.m.
Own transportation. Call before noon.
841-3270 4-26
Unit leader for Girl Scout Camp
Contact, Mrs. Owen C. Barnes, 20
South 10th St. Kuwait City, Kuwait
66102
4-28
Lost-Male cat, short black, black with
low chest and short white hour glass
on one on mone 8 months old, calf
8425 inches 100 Kcentury A-4-26
8425 inches
12 or 13 men's shirts were lost at the
Sandforton on 1981 and Louisiana
Reward for their return. Please call
421-972-5723 or arrangements.
4-24
MISCELLANEOUS
Rain Capes. If you didn't get one,
you should be very wet by now. Next
time, stay dry—al EARTHSHINE. 12
E. kith. 12
Prescription Sunglasses at, Robinson
Field No. 3. Left in case hanging on
backstop. Call Roger Miller-843-8545
at 6:00.
Young, male cat. Pale yellow with orange eyes, missing since Sun. evening. No oopl. Please call 412-8125.
PERSONAL
Webster's Mobile Homes
All kinds of love make the world go round. Gay Liberation now meets on Thursday, 7 p.m., 1204 Gavin. Our 2nd annual Spring Day Gay Day (March 8) is open.
Dealer
Your Complete Service
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
50¢
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Finel Entou Place
11 W. 9th
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks Our menu is and always been best
1. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Phone 855-321-7459
Open House 10:30 AM
University of Oklahoma
50 C OFF any two handed sandwich with the
toothpaste at regular price. You
MUST present
Featureting—Roast Beef, BBQ Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef,
Grilled Cheese, and the Reuben
Open 11 a.m. 8 b.p. Mon-Sat Sun 12 to 8 p.m.
Offer Expires April 30
★★★★★★★★★★★★★
DISCOUNT
PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
The Stereo Store
LUDIOTRONICS
...
928
928 Mass.
10
Monday, April 24, 1972
University Daily Kansan
101. 7.24
Bawdy Taylor Swings in 'Zee'
By BARBARASCHMIDT
Kansan Reviews Editor
Elizabeth Taylor is clearly the issue in "X & Y Zee" (Granada Theatre). She leads the movie on a visit to the theater, letting go of the reins, and the result is a boisterous performance that's pure joy to watch.
"X Y & Z" IEEE'tt, however, doesn't rise to Taylor's standards. Edna O'Brien's script takes place in late spring on Taylor's philandering, architect-husband (Michael Caine) falls in love with a serene young widow who runs a boutique (Susanann. York). Taylor becomes more upset than usual with her husband's latest affair
Dance Society To Perform This Weekend
Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity, will present its annual dance concert at 6 p. Friday in the Student Union day in the University Theatre.
The program will consist of 14 dances with a variety of ballet, dance company and choreography but two of the dances were choreographed by Tau Sigma members. Those who attended the Sigma family advisers, Elizabeth Sherbon, associate professor of physical education at Ludwig, instructor in dance.
Traditionally, students decide what will be presented and choreograph much of the program themselves. This means that they are the most important part of the fraternity, according to Sherborn.
The dances are usually performed to records and tapes, but also some which are performed to live guitar and harmonica accompaniment with singing by the student composer Daniel O'Connor. The composition for Tau Sigma by a choreographer who piece choreographed the dance to accompany it. A third piece will use a new technique for Tau Sigma; it will be performed without it.
Tickets for the concert are on sale in 201 Robinson or at the door. Students will be admitted free.
and gathers up her weapons to wage war against both Caine and York. She launches a verbal attack on both Caine and York, she engages in hand-to-hand battle with Caine; and she even slashes her wrists in an overflowing bathhut. But such violence desperately finally lands on the ultimate weapon: her body. Susan Caine, the sister of Susannah York, who was out expelled from school for falling in love with a nun. Needless to say, Taylor demolishes York and York becomes the battered fruits of victory.
'O'BRIEN'S DIALOGUE is wiry and wry throughout. Susann York make admirable do something with roles that are doomed to be flaccid And everyone in the party chic party hidden beneath an effusion of silver-breasted steals the too few she's about to face.
But none of these brownie points can hide the central flaw in 'X Y & Zee'. Why does it all happen? Why can't Caine so obviously dependent on each other? Why, after years of putting up with her husband's extracurricular activities, does Taylor suddenly balk? And how, too, does she seem spiteful, drawing marriage lasted this long anyway?
IT REQUIRES more than the usual suspension of disbelief to accept all the premises O'Brien and director Brian G. Hutton and worth the extra effort just to see Ebrahim Taylor in top form.
I readily confess to never having particularly enjoyed Taylor's adult performances, such as "The Ruddy Roof" "Suddenly Last Summer" and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" cannot be slighted, but she's had memorable roles there was always something missing. Maybe it was the depressing seriousness of the scripts. Maybe I should have been a Great Actress. I don't know. But in "X Y Z & Eee" I found myself not only respecting her performance, but myself from bellowing "Go, Liz!" She puts in a five-dimensional performance and, time in my memory looks like she's actually having a ball doing it.
'Chase' Takes Control With Glorious Sounds
By MIKE BICK
Kansan Reviewer
Bill Chase, who got his start several years back playing guitar and banjo, has become an instrumental-vocal group in 1970, aimed at playing hard rock. He was born in Brooklyn.
Getting their start in Las Vegas, Chase (the group was named after their leader obeyed a police one of the most popular groups around. Two years of playing together and two albums later, they are now one of the magnificent sound Saturday night at the RU KELLS Concert with some of the most glorious music ever to shake the rafters of Las Vegas.
From the beginning of the concert, Chase took control of their audience with sounds ranging from hard-driving, industrial bass to mellow jazz. Starting with a number called "Open Up Wide." Chase quickly established themselves as a very talented, unified group with the ability to generate an amazing display in a beautiful festival of sound.
Playing many selections from their newest album "Enone" on Sunday, the concert came when the lead singer, G. Shin, invited the audience to clap along to a song by a drummer in the River. At that point, the
assistance physically got into the music, not only clapping, but dancing and stomping in the aisles, in front of the stage and in their seats, letting the failful chance of Charge come over them.
Special recognition for Saturday's performance should go to Bill Chase himself. As the drummer, he strained his varied talent through some of the most exquisite technique I have ever heard. He went on to play with the band loving it, letting the sound caress his audience, then suddenly assaulting our ears with biting, twistery notes, never letting up for a minute.
The concert concluded with the group's hit "Get It On," which brought down the house.
Buy Sell & Trade
We pay the best prices for good used furniture and appliances.
Haas Furniture
Appliance Store
7014) Mass.
843-0648
JAZZ ARTIST
CANNON BALL ADDERLEY
IN CONCERT
8 p.m. K.S.U. Auditorium
Tickets $2.50 and $3.00
April 28, Friday
Sponsored by the Black Student Union as part of the "Longest Weekend Ever"
also
Dick Gregory will speak at an all university convocation at 1:30 p.m. April 28
Hear and Question
SENATOR ROBERT DOLE
OF KANSAS
Chairman of the Republican National Committee
Senate Spokesman for the Nixon Administration
PETER J. TURNER
Senator Dole, appearing at the University of Kansas in the Vickers Lecture Series, follows a similar performance here by Democratic National Chairman Larry O'Brien. He will speak on current national issues and then be open to all kinds of questions from the audience.
Thursday, April 27
7:30 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom Lawrence, Kansas
NO CHARGE FOR ADMISSION
EVERYBODY WELCOME
WB
Billboard FOR WEEK ENDED APRIL 22, 1972
WB Billboard TOPLP's FOR WEEK ENDING APRIL 22, 1972
elektra
Contains the hit single
A Horse with No Name
The Nation's Top 5 LP.'s are on Warner Elektra Atlantic Records.
AMERICA
2. 97
(They have 19 of the top 50)
All LP.'s in this Ad
5.98 list 3.89
6.98 list 4.19
2. 97
★ Bangla Desh Excluded
Many other unadvertised specials at all times
THE WEEK
WORN ON CHART
1 10 AMERICA
2 8 NELLE YOUNG
6 10 BORBETIA FLACK
4 14 TYA FRAGGE
5 5 ALLAIN BROWS
6 3 21 PAUL SIMON
10 11 ALLIEEN
8 12 MITTLE JEFFERSON
9 18 DAVID YOU
10 12 55 CAMILLE KING
11 11 DAVID HAFFMAN
Young, Chief & Black
18 4 HUMMEL PIE
13 13 GARREGE CARLIN
14 14 JINE HENRIKE
9 24 WACHALE AMERICAN POST
16 17 SONNY AND CHEER
17 15 JOANNE KING
21 5 PARTRIDGE FAMILY
24 11 MALE
20 16 GEORGE HARMISON & FRIENDS
21 18 RODDIE WORK & TARS
22 16 MICHAEL JACKSON
23 16 ROLLING HOOK, Hot Stocks, 1964, 1971
22 22 LED APPLEFIELD
25 8 DONNY HATHWAY
25 8 DANNY HATHWAY
26 19 STILLISTICS
26 19 STILLISTICS
30 5 EDGER WINTER'S WHITE TRASH
29 25 STEVE WINTER
29 25 STEVE WINTER
29 13 DEMONS
20 11 DENNIS LINK, Vol. 2
31 12 WAR
32 14 STARLEE & SWIMNS
33 20 TRAFIC
33 20 TRAFIC
35 13 LIZION HONN
35 13 LIZION HONN
37 20 ROSELAIR FLACK
THES WEEK
WORN ON CHART
1 10 AMERICA
2 8 NEIL YOUNG
6 10 BORBETIA FLACK
4 14 TYA FRAGGE
5 5 ALLAIN BROWS
6 3 21 PAUL SIMMON
10 11 ALLIEEN
8 12 MITTLE JEFFERSON
9 18 DAVID YOU
10 12 55 CAMILLE KING
11 11 DAVID HAFFMAN
Young, Chief & Black
18 4 HUMMEL PIE
13 13 GARREGE CARLIN
14 14 JINE HENRIKE
9 24 WACHALE AMERICAN POST
16 17 SONNY AND CHEER
17 15 JOANNE KING
21 5 PARTRIDGE FAMILY
24 11 MALE
20 16 GEORGE HARMISON & FRIENDS
21 18 RODDIE WORK & TARS
22 16 MICHAEL JACKSON
23 16 ROLLING HOOK, Hot Stocks, 1964, 1971
22 22 LED APPLEFIELD
25 8 DONNY HATHWAY
25 8 DANNY HATHWAY
26 19 STILLISTICS
26 19 STILLISTICS
30 5 EDGER WINTER'S WHITE TRASH
29 25 STEVE WINTER
29 25 STEVE WINTER
29 13 DEMONS
20 11 DENNIS LINK, Vol. 2
31 12 WAR
32 14 STARLEE & SWIMNS
33 20 TRAFIC
33 20 TRAFIC
35 13 LIZION HONN
35 13 LIZION HONN
37 20 ROSELAIR FLACK
ARTIST
Title Label Number (Dot Label)
37 40 14 DRAMATIC
Title Label Number (Dot Label)
38 38 1 BAYVIEW BROWN
Metropolitan (2017) 1000 (London)
36 148 2 HISTORY OF EIC CLAPTON
Title Label Number (Dot Label)
40 42 17 JACKSON S
Greatest Hits
41 41 18 BRS WESTFERTERSON
Title Label Number (Dot Label)
42 42 5 GORDON LAFTON
Don Quotes
54 54 1 BOOTHATER
Title Label Number (Dot Label)
44 47 5 LILY JOHN
And Tell The Truth
45 45 1 CHURCH & GONG
Don Quotes
46 49 2 SANTINA
Title Label Number (Dot Label)
47 39 14 ENCMORE, LAKE & PALMER
Title Label Number (Dot Label)
48 43 21 ALEX CORKIN
Title Label Number (Dot Label)
49 36 25 T. REX
Title Label Number (Dot Label)
50 48 13 HURST MUSEUM
Travel Rock
51 50 21 CHIANDO
Don Quotes
166 167 JERRY PAPY
Don Quotes
53 55 9 DAVID MASON
Don Quotes
54 58 6 CHARLEY PRINCE
Don Quotes
55 51 11 I. CALE
Don Quotes
56 59 27 JEET DOG NIGHT
Hurst Museum
57 57 18 BADMINE
Don Quotes
56 60 20 ISAC MAYES
Black Moose
59 61 47 CARPENTER
Don Quotes
72 72 6 CARBERT
Don Quotes
61 62 14 AKES 790
Don Quotes
62 60 20 FINDLER ON THE BOOF
Don Quotes
63 64 14 AGES 790
FREE
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PLEASANT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Eden's Opening Called A 'Success'
82nd Year, No. 129
Tuesday, April 25, 1972
See Page 3
I
Kansan Photo by PRISCILLA BRANSTED
This construction by Jason Knapp, Kansas City, M., junior, is one of the many works of art by KU art students now on display in the Kansas University Gallery. It is part of "The Scholarship Show," which will be on display until May 4. The show displays work done by students who are graduating from Kansas State University and about $19,000, were awarded mostly to undergraduate students. (See story page 5.)
Art Show Displays Scholarship Work
Apollo Jets Homeward With Valuable Cargo
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)—Apollo 16 astronauts rocketed out of lunar orbit Monday night, smoothly firing a once-troublesome rocket engine, to begin their 66-hour 240,000-mile voyage home with a record cargo of rocks.
Astronauts, W. Young, Charles M. Duke Jr, and Thomas K. Mattingly II fired the main engine of their command ship, the *Knox* attack helicopter and out of radio contact with earth.
That engine had delayed the lunar landing and almost forced cancellation of the final moon excursion which provided Apollo 16's major findings.
Eleven minutes later they reappeared from behind the lunar backside.
They had burst of the moon's orbit and were speeding home.
"Coming up like thunder," said Young.
"Burn completely nominal."
"IT'S REALLY beautiful," he added.
"That baby really reads out of there."
While Duke and Mattingly were busy taking pictures of the rapidly receding moon, Young looked toward the earth, and said:
'Spectacular. The earth rise is just beautiful. It just came up like beautiful rock.'
"It's just a crescent earth, a silver," he said. "We can hardly get to get there. We know."
before we get there, but we're really looking forward to it."
Tucked into Casper's hold were 245 pounds of rock and miles of black and white and color film taken on the moon. Geologists believe the rocks may tell the story of how volcanoes wracked the moon a decade ago. The mountains and cave canvases and valleys.
YOUNG AND DUKE collected the moon material during their 7-lour stay in the Descartes Mountain region. They lifted off Sunday night from the highlands, a major portion of the moon never before visited, in their lunar module, Orton.
With the cargo, they had achieved the primary goal of the mission. Apollo 16's stay in moon orbit was shortened 25 hours because of the engine problem discovered before lunar time last Thursday. Between the time and the crucial firing Monday night, the engine fired properly twice, to guard against the possibility of the engine's condition worsening, officials ordered the Apollo mission cut short.
With their science cargo, they had achieved the primary goal of the mission.
Fund Shortage Cited
Budget Recommendations Slash Groups' Requests
By HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writer
Less than one-fourth of the student questions questioned by the Senate's Finance and Auditing Committee have been received, and the full allocation they requested.
The recommendations released Monday night reflected the problem of a shortage of funds for student organizations faced by students during their budget hearings last week.
The recommendations will not go into effect unless they are approved by the Senate during its budget meeting Wednesday night.
Besides reducing most of the organization requests, the committee cut the proposed budgets of three of the eight student receivers receive funds from the student activity fee.
to receive about $162,920 according to the line item apportionment system approved by the Senate last December, but the committee reduced the request to $156,000.
The Athletic Corporation was supposed
THE LARGEST CUT was to school councils which were given 75 cents per student per semester by the department and enrolment or an estimated $24,440 for fiscal 1973.
The committee reduced this amount to $3,760 and placed a minimum of $200 and a maximum of $1,000 on each council's allocation.
The Student Senate was allotted about $66,725 by the apportionment enactment, but the Senate's budget totaled $60,610. The Senate had recommended an allocation of $66,810.
Committee Vetoes Restructure Bill
Two of the eight areas, the University Daily Kansan and men's and women's intramurals, were voted increases by the committee.
By FOSS FARRAR Kansan Staff Writer
Sixten members of the Student Rights Committee voted Monday night to reject an amendment that would substantially restructure and functions of the Student Senate.
The original amendment was proposed in early April by Peter George, Lawrence special student; Richard Mackenzie, John House; and John House, Ravtown, Mo., senior.
Neil Shortlidge, Chicago junior and member of the Student Rights subcommittee, which studied the amendment, said he objected to the amendment's proposal that the position of student of the student body be abolished.
Shortlidge said that the amendment proposed that "living groups" on campus be represented in the Student Senate but that it failed to define such groups.
Shortside he disagreed with the amendment's proposal for fall elections of the student body president and representatives to the Student Senate. He would instead recommend that election move up to an earlier date in the spring.
The amendment would also change the membership of the Student Executive Board.
THE AMENDMENT also provided that in any student body presidential election, at least 30 per cent of the student body would vote. The president must vote to make the election valid. Shortlisted if elections were moved to an earlier date in the spring, a run-off election could be held a week after the primary, and a per-cent mark were not reached. he said.
Special representatives are elected by the Student Senate and are usually previous Senate members, Shortlidge said.
Shortlist said the amendment proposed would do away with special representatives to the Student Senate but that the subcommittee would propose that the representatives be retained because of their expertise.
involved in the Senate on a rotational basis, Shortlied said. He said the subcommittee objected to this because "StudEx should be a set group so that they would know what was going on for a whole term."
DEBORAH BROOKS, Croston, Md., sophomore and chairman of the Student Senate, who attended the amendment came up at the next Student Senate meeting, possibly in two weeks, she thought the Senate would move to have it in writing. She could study and revise the amendment.
The committee also approved the creation of a minority affairs subcommittee consisting of one member from the Womens Coalition, two members of the Womens Women, two members of the Womens Coalition, one member from the BSU, one member from the AMAS, one member of the Iranian Students, one member of the American Indian and four students.
The committee recommended that Robert Shelton, assistant professor of religion, be asked to attend the first meeting of the minority affairs subcommittee to explain the function of the Human Relations University Senate. Shelton was a former chairman of the Human Relations Committee.
The Kansan was supposed to receive $43,900 or $1.35 per student per semester according to the Senate enactment. The committee recommended an allocation of $60,800 to the Kansan Board had agreed on an increase of $1.85 per student or an estimated $53,760.
INTRAMURALS RECEIVED a recommended increase from $5,150 to $9,750 after the University withdrew its annual allocation of $3,300 to the program.
Two of the apportionment areas, University Theatre, and the Concert Course Series, were recommended to be presented stated in the apportionment enactment.
Committee Fiscal 1973 Recom Request mendation
SPORTS TEAMS AND CLUBS
Women's Intermediate Club, Inc. $300.00 $2,672.42
Women's High School Club, Inc. $300.00
Jaybrook Youth Soccer Club, Inc. $1,500.00
R1 Stewardship Club, Inc. $1,500.00
R1 Feeding Team, Inc. $2,000.00 $1,000.00
R1 Soccer Club, Inc. $1,687.30 $1,613.00
R1 Soccer Club, Inc. $1,687.30 $1,613.00
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS (international)
International Organization of Turkish Students Organization 625.00 170.00
Turkish Students Organization 625.00 170.00
Iranian Students Association 600.00 230.00
Iranian Students Association 600.00 230.00
Organization of Arab Students 343.00 150.00
Organization of Arab Students 343.00 150.00
ACTIVITY ORGANIZATIONS 1,800
University Chapel 349. 811. 600. 612.
Tin Signage 349. 811. 600. 612.
Folk Dance Club 349. 811. 600. 612.
Folk Dance Club 349. 811. 600. 612.
RU Bands 349. 811. 600. 612.
RI Bands 349. 811. 600. 612.
RI Bands 349. 811. 600. 612.
MAGNUS INSTITUTION ORLANDIA
Cats & Dogs
Cat Cat
Cats and Dogs
Cats & Dogs
Black Bristle Road School
$275.00
Green Street School
$320.00
Cottonwood Review $255.00 $255.00
Cottonwood Insider
Hampton Beach $477.00 $1,900.
Klaw Law Review $477.00 $1,900.
GRADUATE STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Kappa Ppa Pharmaceuticals 130.0
Rupa Ppa Pharmaceuticals 90.0
Bayer 80.0
Mathematica Graduate Student Assoc. 25.0
Mathematica Graduate Student Assoc. 25.0
Grad. Assoc. of Amer. Students Students 75.0
Grad. Assoc. of Amer. Students Students 75.0
Of the 78 student groups that requested funds from the activity fee, only 18 received support from the committee for the full allocations they requested.
The two largest requests in this category were the $20,000 asked for by the Hilltop Day Care Center and the $10,912 requested for forensics.
The largest cuts recommended were to the Campus Veterans and the Black Student Union. The BSU was cut from $18 million to $14 million. Were dropped from $19.39 million to $1.175.
The requests and recommendations are as follows:
Committee Fiscal 1973 Recom-
1945 RECORDS
Assoc. of Black Social Work Students 2,319 785.0
Nut Fed of State Law Students 2,160 758.0
Black American Law Students 644 355.0
Black American Law Students At-risk 644 355.0
SOCIAL ACTION ACTIONS ORGANIZATIONS
- CWEWS
Douglas County Legal Affairs 6,350 4,380
Des Moines County Legal Affairs 6,350 4,380
National Environmental Law Society 670 256
R.U.V.
Sierra Club 1,150 140
United States Department of Labor 1,200 140
United States Department of Labor 1,200 140
Human Relation Committee 1,200 140
Sheraton Hotel 1,200 140
Human Relations Committee 1,200 140
Aviation Planning 2,300 2,300
Commission on the Status of Women 7,800 3,200
American Students University 3,200 3,200
Self Defense Law 1,920 1,900
Law Students Social Action Group 2,115 2,000
Black Student Union 20,520 1075
Black Student Union 20,520 1075
Anthropology Undergraduate Assocs 145 117
American Society of CEngs Teachers 145 117
American Society of CEngs Teachers 145 117
University Council for Exceptional Children 145 108
American Studies Undergrad. Assoc 150 82
American Studies Undergrad. Assoc 150 82
French Department Plug 965 470
France Department Plug 965 470
Skate Club 652 400
Skate Club 652 400
Armenian and Armenianated
Budget Cuts May Force Increase in Ticket Prices
Student season ticket prices for football and basketball games may be raised next fall, Dillon Dillon, Hutchinson junior and student body president, said Monday.
prices, according to Dillon.
Dillon said the Athletic Corporation had budgeted $162,000 for the fiscal 1972-73 year based on the expected $162,000 of student activity fees and allotment from the student activity fee.
If the Senate, in its budgeting session Wednesday night, decides to lower the Athletic Corporation's expected revenue, the committee probably be forced to raise student ticket
Dillon said there was also the possibility that a minor raise in student ticket prices would be made even if the Senate decided to fund the Athletic Corporation the entire $102,000.
Although the Athletic Corporation had been "cutting corners everywhere" it would probably lose at least $20,000 this year, Dillon said.
Dillon had regular season ticket prices would probably not be raised within the year. He said regular season tickets had already been printed for next year.
N. Viet Offensive Takes 7 Bases; Drives S.Viet Forces to Highlands
SAIGON (AP) - South Vietnamese forces retreated 15 miles Monday before a slashing North Vietnamese attack in the central highlands that overran seven
They began to regroup Tuesday in a tight defensive ring north of Kontum City, with enemy tanks reported half a mile from the new line.
Troops of two regiments of the South Vietnamese 22nd Infantry Division—
overwhelmed at Tan Canh and Dak To, 25 miles north of Kontum—were reported scattered and trying to reach friendly lines. The fate of its half-dozen American advisers and of its Commander, Col Le Duat Duc, was unknown.
A surface calm prevailed Monday at U.S. Command headquarters in Salamon. But an office present at a top-level command was called into service, and it was used to describe the situation in the
highlands, where the enemy is apparently bent on cutting the major highways and seizing the cities of the three provinces. Some South Vietnamese troops were trapped in Tan Cah when it was overrun by enemy tanks. They were reported in in battle. Ho Chi Minh were maintained with Col. Dat until Monday night.
The U.S. advisers were lifted out by See N. VIET Page 2
Student Senate Adopts New KU Curriculum Survey
BY ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Following a detailed explanation of the KU Curriculum and Instruction Survey, Monday the Academic Affairs Committee of the Student Senate adopted a resolution calling for mandatory use of the survey pressing a budget increase for its operation.
Dennis Embry, Lawrence senior, and Steve Emerson, Tompea senior, directors of the survey, planned activities and future plans for the survey. The committee had requested Embry and Emerson to appear before it decided who would be responsible for requesting the by the survey was warranted.
Kansan Staff Writer
Embry emphasized that the survey's purpose was not merely to evaluate instructors but also to improve the quality of instruction. He concludes that strategy is based on the tick technique. The carrot is the improvement of instruction through diagnosis of teachers'
faults and the stick involves evaluation of performance, he said.
THE TWO-FOLD ASPECT of the carrot and the stick approach. Embryo said, will enable students to choose their courses with teachers and teachers with concrete suggestions.
The third option, made available for the first time this year, allows teachers to request that the results be sent only to them, with no superiors seeing the ratings. The other way around requires instructors could receive help in improving the level of instruction, but not
to have to worry about the effects of adverse ratings on their careers.
Embry said it was important to avoid a hostile environment in evaluating courses and instructors, especially where first-year students were being improved that teachers could achieve through feedback from students would not occur in such an environment. He said evaluation surveys had been moving away from the traditional questions to questions of a diagnostic nature."
EMERSON SAID the third option was an attempt to maintain a balance between the carrot and the stick technique and avoid antagonizing faculty members.
Embry said there has been a change in the hundred-year-old tradition of using research and publication as the only criteria for the promotion and tenure of faculty members. The reversal has not been 100 per cent, he said, but more emphasis is being placed upon the quality of instruction.
Emby said an increasing number of departments were using the Curriculum and Instruction Survey in determining whether non-tenured teachers were rehired. These include the mathematics, English and speech departments, he said.
"It would be politically unfeasible for the administration to require every instructor to use the survey." Embry said. "If this were done, there would be no student publication. The autonomous nature of the survey is important."
ONE-THIRD OF the instructors currently use the survey, Emryh said, and 80 per cent of them have requested that the results be published in Feedback. He said the vehicle by which total faculty would could be achieved was the University Sequate.
Embry said it would be equally inadvisable to act through the University Senate Executive Council. Support for the mandatory use of the survey should be
generated at the grass roots level of the university, he said, reducing faculty spending.
Emby said that the Curriculum and Instruction Survey was in the process of expanding its work beyond the University of Kansas.
ONE COMMITTEE MEMBER proposed inviting AAUP representatives, the committee, to help the mandatory use of the survey to address the committee. He suggested forming a coalition of interested parties to bring pressure for adoption of a mandatory rule.
Embry said the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) adopted a resolution two years ago calling for mandatory publication of survey results as well as its mandator. The AAUP also requested that faculty interest in improving the quality of instruction and a general willingness to participate.
Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia and Oklahoma State University have requested their services, Embry said. He said the survey was now working on a limited basis at Emporia, but technical considerations, such as course designations differing from KU's SSN numbers, made extensive expansion of services impossible without additional personnel.
Widespread use of a Student Profile of Expectations and Values could greatly improve course content, Embry said. For example, he said, an urban policies course containing primarily sociology and political science majors would be taught differently than the same course comprised mostly of architecture and a specialization in the first week of class would give an instructor an idea of the class composition and he could proceed from there, Embry said.
2
Tuesday, April 25, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Summer Jobs Here to Be Few
by ROGER FULK
Kansas Staff Writer
Summer jobs in Douglass County will probably be hard to find. Barker, an interviewer at the Lawrence job Information Center.
Barker estimated that last year only one out of every seven students who applied for summer jobs was hired. This year the
center has sent out 750 letters to employers and has advertised in newspapers on cab ride and bus response. Barker said this was partly because it was even hard to jobs for full-time employees.
summer instead of increasing as it does in most cities.
Lawrence is an unusual city, Barker said, because the population decreases during the
Although the overall population decreases, there are approximately 8,000 students who remain in Lawrence to attend college or stay at Barker said a lot of these students would want jobs.
THE CENTER maintains a special file until the end of
Local DAR Encourages Development of Patriotism
BY JOHN PATRICK MAHER Kansan Staff Writer
The meetings of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) and patriotism," according to Mrs. Kendall, former local chager, report.
The Lawrence chapter of the DAR was established in 1886, and it is one of the largest women. Currently there are no University of Kansas women who are members of the DAR although there have been in the past.
Bremer said the objectives of the DAR were to encourage patriotism to educate and to inform about American heritage.
According to Bremer, the creed of the DAR is "To perpetrate the memory and the spirit of the men who have been killed in war." American independence; to
promote the development of an enlightened public opinion; and to foster patriotic citizenship."
She said the DAR supported elementary and secondary schools in Tennessee, South Dakota, and Oklahoma, and she had been a historical relics and a historical and genealogical library in Washington, the D.C., the national congress of the DAR.
Locally, the DAR has a "good citizen" program, for which outstanding senior high school students are offered a of a DAR test and the opinions of the students and faculty of their schools. Bremer said. The test required the students to know the DAR and concerned current events and American history.
She said the local DAR also sponsored an American history essay test for students in the fifth
through the eighth grades. Over 100 essays were entered in the last contest, the topic of which was selected by the national DAR
Chapters of the Sons of the American Revolution and the American Revolution, counterparts to the DAR, could be found in Topeka.
Membership in the DAR is held at 10 a.m. 18 years or older, and whose ancestors took part in the American Revolution, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
summer with information about applicants, including factors that might limit the type of job the applicant could take or the hours he would be available. Anything the center comes across that vaguely resembles a summer job is reserved for students. Barker
The local chapter has a genealogical library in the basement of the Douglas County School where it used to trace ancestry, she said.
Besides making referrals, the center tries to create jobs by talking to employers and trying to convince them to hire students. The teacher may also try to the applicant a referral, it tries to supply him with some ideas as to where to look for a job or where job openings might be in the near future.
"We're doing everything we can possibly do." Barker said. "If the students have any trouble, they would really like to hear them."
Judy Banks, youth coordinator of the Missouri State Department, asked she was optimistic about the summer job situation this year.
OF THE NEARLY 6,000 applicants the employment service handed last summer, 3,000 were able to find jobs.
Banks said there were two
campuses where he can get to a summer job. The applicant must be in school now and must be returning to school
Banks said that the Missouri Department of Employment Service accept jobs in persons living all over the state but that the jobs offered were all located in the city.
Most of the jobs the jobs in the government agencies are in government agencies are said, and $1.60 an hour is the rate of pay for these jobs. The jobs are paid.
The Kansas State Employment Service, which is also involved with jobs in the Kansas City area, has not received many job offers yet this year, but it has already received quite a few summer job applications, according to Rose Garrison, an employment service workers.
private businesses, though, and the pay is a little better in these jobs. Banks said.
DENT SAIED the many strikes which affected Kansas City last year resulted in few summer jobs. This year, she said, things could have been improved although there still will probably be too few jobs to go around.
The overall job outlook for Kai will probably be rather discouraging for a lot of students this summer, but they will try to find jobs elsewhere. They might discover, however, that bosses are just as hard to find
Bob McGill of the Colorado and students who wanted to work Colorado would probably get jobs in the tourist trade, if they are not.
Increased operating costs have forced Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. to seek a rate increase. If approved the increased charges to customers will amount to $14,783,000 in new revenue.
Megill said summer jobs
the school offered a
possibility of an out-of-state
student finding a job would be if he came to Colorado and started
working in the job.
Telephone Prices May Rise
By MOLLY LAFLIN
The Kansas Corporation Commission is sponsoring a hearing on the proposal to be held in Topeka, KS, state office building in Topeka.
Ed Carter, district manager for southeastern Bell, said the last inpatient vice charges was in 1984, but the cost of operation was much more.
STEVE CALL, Southwest.
Jell's unit manager in Lawrence,
alic the proposed increase would
rate the number of rates
n the following manner.
One-party lines in the city for residential use presently cost
A new music education guide has been prepared by a University of Kansas extension team and teachers in the Topeka school system.
Class Prepares Musical Guide
The class was taught by Elin J. Stene, professor of music education at KU. She directed the class, which included administrators and music consultants in preparing, "Let's Make Music; a Guide for the Classroom Teacher from幼儿园 during Grade Six."
$5.90 a month. The proposed rate is $7 a month. One-party lines in the city used for business cost more, but now, but would cost $1.75 if they
Residential two-party lines in the city now costing $4.40 would be increased to $5.40 a month.
RESIDENTIAL EIGHT-
PART lines in rural areas
where the rent could be
would be raised to a $5 charge.
Rates for business eight-part
lines in the rural areas would
be from $7.50 to $8.75
monthly.
The cost of an extension pro-
tection a business increases from the old new proposal, but cost of a residential extension phone service.
Carter said that Southwestern Bell was also requesting an increase in intrastate long distance toll charges but that the proposal or a reduction of some charges would be direct-dialed long-distance calls.
CARTER SAID that one of the reasons that Southwest Bell sought the higher rates was that wages had increased 35 per cent in 1970, and that $48 million in 1970. He said a contract agreement that had been reached before the wage-price freeze went into effect in 1972. That meant of southwestern Bell's wages a three-year period.
taxes affecting the company had jumped 54 per cent from $25 million in 1964 to $39 million in 1970.
Construction expenditures had grown from $21 million in 1964 to $61 million in 1970, with a rise of about $20 million. Carter said, he also said, *Saint Louis*.
OCEANIA HASTE
25TH ANNIVERSARY
25TH ANNIVERSARY
25TH ANNIVERSARY
WASHINGTON — An unanimous Supreme Court has concluded that air-pollution problems generally are so varied it often best to have audits heard first at the local level. The decision blurs a drive to install automobiles and auto makers to install control devices on some 85 million old cars.
Court Blocks Pollution Suit
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Diamond Needles
Two Share Top Honors At Women's Ceremony
Flora Wyatt, Teaching association in education, and Casey Elke, Kansas City, Mo. senator, to lead the annual Women's Recognition Night awards ceremonies on the status of Women
Wyatt received the outstanding woman teacher award and Elke was named the outstanding senior woman for 1972 Selections
Fires Damage McCollum Hall
Three residents of the hall,
Warner Lewis, Topea freshman,
Kent Swafford, Wichita
sophomore, and Archi Solksy,
sophomore a sophomore,
discover the fires about 1.30
a.m. Monday
were made by the Women's Recognition Committee from the nominations and votes of KU women.
Damage to the doors in those two fires was estimated at $100. The third fire, also in a sixth floor, was set on fire from where paper was set on fire.
Three fires at McColm Hall Monday resulted in about $100 damage to doors where the fires started.
They told investigating officers that mop heads doused with a liquid they spilled in the stairwell and set afire against doors in the stairwells of the sixth and eighth floors.
McGovern Expects Win
Four women were named to the Women's Hall of Fame for their contributions to the University. They were Martha Peterson, a professor at Brown University; Women at KU, who is now serving as president of Barnard College; Deanell Reese, the first KU graduate to be a White House minister; professor of education, who received the outstanding alumna and distinguished professor awards, and Marilyn Stokstad, newly named associate dean of the Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Women students recognized as innovative women were: Nell Bly, Arkansas city senior, Dee Cowden, Cawkes City, Mo., junior, Ronni Erenhoff, Prairie Village sophomore; Moll Laflain, Victoria junior; Hutchinson senior; Mary Mitchellson, Baxter Springs junior; Gayle Wamier, Emporia senior and Karen Zupko, Morton
News Briefs By The Associated Press
Brandt's Job Up to Vote
BONN, GERMANY—The opposition Christian Democrats, seeking to exploit Chancellor Willy Branden's weakened political position, announced Monday that they will try to unrestrict this week's budget and give their president the power of ousting Dusitgen's Social Democratic-Free Democratic coalition could jeopardize ratification of his nonagression treaties with other countries. The move would also damage the atmosphere for President Nikson's Moscow visit.
WASHINGTON - A Stanford University researcher said that secret food-safety files opened by his lawsuit show the Food and Drug Administration violated a section of the law which have endangered the public health. The FDA's safety data on sodium nitrite were opened for public inspection after Hattis, a graduate student in genetics, and the FDFA filed a federal court suit under the Freedom of Information Act.
Researcher Attacks FDA
NEW YORK-Price Commission Chairman C. Jackson Grayson Jr. said some of the nation's largest companies would be ordered in the next few weeks to make price rollbacks and customer refunds totaling "hundreds of millions of dollars." The action will serve as a second line of defense" in an attempt to hold down profit-margin increase, he told the annual luncheon of The Associated Press.
Consumers to Get Refunds
Donor Pearson Remembered at KU
By JOE ZANATTA
Kansan Staff Writer
Joseph R. Pearson, with his wife, Gertrude Sellars Pearson, a native of Kansas to the University of Kansas to build five residence and campus homes interested in helping the average Kansas boy and girl to have an education." Joseph J. Wilson, director of housing, said.
One of KU's largest benefactors, Pearson never attended the University.
Pearson became acquainted with KU through his wife
Gertrude Sellards, a university of Kansas said she the time he married her teaching in Kansas, Wilson said. Pearson was working for the said university when he became acquainted with the University, Wilson said.
"Mr. Pearson was a dynamic man," Wilson said. "He left the town, so sold land in Colorado. Then he interested in the oil business."
"He had phenomenal forestegh and phenomenal luck. His luck was not a blind luck. It was an above normal vision. He hit it big
Visually Handicapped Navigate in Rallye
John Severn navigated for Dean Brumbaugh, of Lawrence to win the large print category
Kirk Ford, a blind student from the Kansas School for the Visually Handicapped, translated navigational instructions to Jake Miller, Topeka freshman, to win the braille category of the 8th Annual Headed heed in Kansas City Sunday.
ence to win the large print category. The braille rallye was an annual event co-sponsored by the Braille Institute of Kansas School for the Visually Handicapped. All entrants of the rallye were teamed with a visually handicapped student who served as navigator. The student completed in either braille or large print.
Second place in the braille category was won by the team of Dennis Hale. Independence, Mc. McMillin, played place was won by Rocky Entriken of Salina and the team of John McMillin and Aliese Leons.
Second place in the large print category was won by Pamela
in Texas oil." Wilson said.
There were two parts to the rallye, a simple directional rallye and a time, speed and distance rallye. The directional rallye involved following instructions through the course. The teams penalized for any mileage over the actual distance of the course.
Funk, a K-State student, and Linda Severn. Third place was won by Chuck Hanson, Garden City juju, and Billy Heims.
The objective of the time, speed and distance rallye is to drive a course in an average speed of 18 m.p.h. Teams were penalized for arriving early or late at various check points throughout the rallye and the overall winners were combined to determine the overall winners.
According to Bill Francis Rosehill junior and president o. kane, the dashboard plaques were awarded to all participants and the contest winners, received trophies to the Kansas School for the Visually handicapped for their participation and help with the
PEARSON WAS interested in the new school. Wilson said he donated $219,000 to build two halls—Pearson Hall for his family and Halls Hall of Pearson's family.
At the time of Pearson's financial success in the 40s and 50s, the University of KU's Association was trying to raise funds to build residence halls. Until this year, they were still under KU's enrollment was only 4,000 and the campus was located near town where students could rent a car.
"The most important thing is that the kids have a good time," Francis said. "We feel that the rallye was a great success."
Tide,' Will Foxx
To Entertain
Frosh Party
Pearson came up with the idea of larger residence walls, Wilson said, and also the idea of bonds of them through revenue bonds.
PEARSON DIED before the finished product of his ideas was completed. Plans for two large projects were approved by Sellaris Pearson and Joseph R, Pearson, were completed by his wife.
These scholarship halls,
completed in the early '50s,
housed 60 students each.
Most of them, however,
tightly pleased with the result.
"This is where Mr. Pearson was when I met him," Wilson said. "He came to me and said 'I put $219,000 down there and attend two scholarship halls to meet with people who are in a pianist plan won't work—too much money, too much capital house money.'"
The freshman class will end the year with a party from 8 p.m. to midnight Friday at the Red Dog Inn.
The party will feature continuous entertainment by two singers, a DJ and freshman and freshman class president, said Friday. The two were the first to attend.
"When Mrs. Pearson died, a trust went into effect over his properties. Income from oil and gas was given to other states went to his brothers
and sisters and to KU for the betterment of student housing," Wilson said.
"The world had been good to him and he was trying to pass it on." Wilson said.
Last year, when the trust funds became available, KU received $80.00. Wilson estimated the income from the estate at 110.000.
McLaughlin said the party was to give the freshmen a chance to celebrate the end of the year with a send-off for the summer.
Admission will be free to freshman class card holders and $1.50 for other freshmen.
Pearson left very few
employees. He spent
money, its use in the future was to be determined by need and by
participation in programs.
Two-thirds of the money, Wilson said, would be used for physical improvements and maintenance on the five landmarks; the third would be spent on library and cultural improvements.
"Mr. Pearson was a great believer in art," Wilson said, when he mentioned the need to be used on cultural improvements. He said this part of the money would be used to pay for equipment in an organized living unit."
HE SAID these funds would continue indefinitely, unless the oil wells ran dry.
KU'S CONTINUING gratitude to Pearson is inscribed in the lobby of Joseph R. Pearson Hall. He is a member of the Pearson family, a generous and loyal friend of the University of Kansas. Gertude Strellkids Pearson has infused the lives of hundreds of KU students and will similarly influence the lives of more students more in the years to come."
N. Viet . . .
helicopter to the nearby Dak To military complex, which fell later. At last report the Americans were moving through mountainous jungles and U.S. troops were securing the area for them.
The new defense line was
Continued from page 1
Applications Due Today For Research Proposals
To apply for an award an undergraduate student should send a letter of application to Shankel briefly describing his proposed course and from a faculty member who is willing to support and advise the
the deadline for applying for undergraduate courses this summer is awards day, cording to Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the College of Business.
student on the proposed research. Shankel said the awards provide stipends of $600 for eight summer researchers in research during the summer.
The college office has not received many applications, but frequently students wait until the college submit applications, he said.
Announcements of the recipients of the summer awards will be made shortly after May 1.
THIRTY U.S. B52 bombers dropped 750 tons of bombs on North Vietnamese troop positions in the northwest and southwest of Kontum City. The provincial capital of about 30,000 people is considered the key highlands where the 27-day-old enemy offensive.
Troops in Vo Dhih reported a small northwest of the town. U.S. Air Force gunship was not known to attack, but the results were not known.
thrown up at Vo Dinh about 10
km north of Saigon, capital of
kontoum City, Six South Vietnamese battalions totalling
about 3,000 men up in positions
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feedback
The Curriculum and Instruction Survey (Feedback) is accepting applications for: Survey Director, Associate Director, and Feedback and Graphics Supervisor.
See classified ad.
Friday, April 28.
SENIOR CLASS PARTY
INTERVIEWS FOR THE EMPORIUM BOOK EXCHANGE MANAGER will be held THURSDAY, APRIL 27
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Sign up for interview time in Student Senate Office-105B Union This is for part time help. you have any questions please call 864-3710
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 25.1972
28
Bernie Olsen
Boys Discover Nudes in the Garden of Eden 500 Guests inspected camp
Garden of Eden's Open House Draws 500 Disciplined Visitors
By LINDA CHAPUT Kansan Staff Writer
The Garden of Eden held its grand opening Saturday—this time for 500 spare seekers instead of the original two.
The Garden of Eden Nudist Camp is located north of most golf courses, its entrance is marked only by a mailbox with the camp's name and a red apple painted on it. Visitors to the mudist camp's beach can also see the sounds of disc jockey Jimmy "The Greek" Morgan in a live radio broadcast from the camp. The camp has a husband Vernon owns and operates the camp, said she considered the day a complete
"I can't believe it," she said. "We had all types of people here and people of all ages.
**WE HAD HIPPIES from KU, businessman—even older couples came with the ladies trumpeting through the mud in their dresses**
Mrs. Coleman said she was amazed by the way the visitors all got along.
people were talking to each other, not just standing in their own little groups," she said.
"There was no fighting, and you'd usually expect some in a crowd this size."
Mrs. Coleman said that because she usually served as the camp's bouncer, she was glad there was no big trouble.
She said, however, that a KU football player who was at the camp for the afternoon did help her ston one minor disturbance.
MRS. COLEMAN said that she and her husband had made a lot of money during the day, and that they will probably be able to build a clubhouse and a new lake this summer. The Colemans also have plans to build a new lake in their backyard.
opening alone on that they were wives. "But some of them wives," she said. "But some said that after seeing what it was like they would like to bring their husbands to work."
"You know, with the KU Relays going on today, we expected 100 people at the most," Mrs Coleman said, "and at 11 a.m. there were so few people who attended. We'dnwere lucky if we got 50."
She said most persons started coming at noon and a big crowd developed
Mrs. Coleman said that more women came than she had expected, but that they were still going to the doctor, said she was disappointed to hear some of the men saying it was worth paying a dollar to see the doctor.
"I DECIDED not to undress and give them any more of an eyeful that they already had," she said.
"A lot of men who came to the
The Colomans said they were playing volleyball tournament during a game, but other camps in Kansas. They said the team had not yet arrived and already all they expected to have more people there this summer than they had last year.
The Garden of Eden will host an apple festival for other nudist camps and is planning fall activities for its members.
Facilities at the Douglas County Health Department are inadequate for efficient service to the county, according to Arthur Heek. Douglas County Health Department is the best.
By LESLIE RISS Kansan Staff Writer
Coleman said, "We will be open all season but clothed in the winter."
Officials Want New Courthouse
The courthouse, at 11th and Massachusetts streets, was built in 1904 its construction cost $65 million. It has been remodeled except in the commissioners hearing room where wood paneling had been installed.
Heck said every "inch" of space in the courthouse was in use. Employees have had to convert hallway space into office rooms, where records were kept, were overflowing he said.
Last September, a proposal for a bond issue for a new building was submitted. The proposed building was to be constructed where the jail stand would be.
POOR TECHNICAL operations such as lighting are also a hindrance, in several offices, according to Heck. For example, the driver of the county jail must be present because of automated futures
Heck said he thought there were several reasons why the boroughs had voters did not want city and county facilities and operations.
Tau tacchion of Alpha Delta Pi
saturday were the hosts for a
kaleate day for about 132 collegiate
basketball teams and alumni of
Alpha Delta Pi.
Mary Van Akin, grand vice-president of Collegiate Chapters, Altamonte, Fla. was the guest, Avid Jeevonbess, professor of art and cartooning spoke about the art of cartooning a luncheon in the Kansas Union.
2 Sororities Host Alumni, College Reps
Also on Saturday, Epsilon Beta chapter of Alpha Gamma Delta joined International Reunion (IGR) AGD alumni from the midwest. The reunion was in conjunction with the 50th anniversary celebration of the IGR AGD alumni Blindy Bldgnet, first grand vice-president, Kansas City, Mo., attended the reunion along with original members of the chapter.
commissioner explained that although the departments would be in the same building, their operations would remain separate except for some computer systems and record space.
HECK SAID the city and county jails would be combined so that duplicating facilities, not waste tax payers' money.
ANOTHER REASON for the failure of the proposal was the cost of construction, $5.6 million, which seemed too high to many
The Kansas Legislature specified this year that Douglas court and a 2nd district judge, by Jan. 1, 1973. Heck stressed that it must be able to give the new judge room at the courthouse. He said it was ridiculous that "you have to go out of this courthouse to establish a judge."
voters, Heck said.
located where the first proposal had specified. Heck said if Lawrence votes so desired, the County offenders would be county operated. This would include a call to a city jail and a county jail.
The commissioner said a new proposal was being studied by the commissioners which would include plans for a new building
"We want to show our solidarity with the soldiers and our opposition against the
THE BUILDING, which may be proposed, will house offices of Douglas County. The old courthouse for administration offices.
Scheurich said this demonstra-
tion would be outside the base itself and that the demonstration will be intended to show feet to soldiers in the "theory of enforcement." Scheurich said the demonstration would not be against the soldiers
Heck said there had been no decision on a date for the proposal. He said the commissioners would like to propose it without having a special election.
SCHURCHER SAID there would probably be some very difficult situations, and disagreed very much with Dole's political views and policies. He said that the nature of the environment would be peaceful and that any other actions that might take place would not under the influence of Dole.
"We want to make it very apparent to Dole what our feelings are concerning what he is doing." Scheuer said.
The committee will also plan a demonstration at Forbes Air Force Base in Topeka.
Heck said Dougals County had grown from being the 16th to the sixth most populous county in Kansas. With this growth, he said his population underwent the overcrowding and strained facilities of the old courthouse.
By KEVIN SHAFER
Kansan Staff Writer
The coordinating Committee for anti-war activities at the University of Kansas will sponsor the 1248 Expedition to 1204 Oraea to plan anti-war activities for this week and the future, according to Jim Schurechaw Lawrence graduate student of the coordinating committee.
War Protesters Plan Rally To Coordinate Activities
Tentative plans include activities at three events in the near future. Most immediate will be a demonstration held at a speech to be given by Sen. Robert Dole, R-Iowa, in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Scheurich said the plans did not call for a violent disruption of the speech.
According to Heck, the commissioners would like to see some changes in the way they do business because if the proposal does pass, it still will take time for comment.
EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES
They also be planned tonight.
The Lawrence community involve the Lawrence community as a whole rather than just the
military establishment,' Scheurich said.
Scheurich said ideas that have been proposed including going into detail about sections of the city, handling and informational leaflets. The leaflets will contain information about "things that the press has not made readily known" concerning the re-selection of voters.
THE COORDINATING committee decided to cancel its demonstration tonight at a speech to be given by John C. Montgomery, assistant to the Chief Health, Education and Welfare.
Scheuer said the committee fective educational demonstration could not be organized adequately in time for the
This weekend, the committee tentatively plans to hold a peace dance. Admission will probably be about 50 cents to cover the costs for financing the printing of cards and other activities. Special allowance for the dance will be made available a later date, be made.
Instead, the mass meeting will be held tonight to determine future actions, he said.
Scheuerich said that at the mass meeting, the coordinating committee should decentralize more. An effort to spawn off in independent committees designed to take care of individual actions will be made.
of the mass and to make it more of a popular decision-making process, according to Scheurich
Scheuhris said the coordinating committee would still exist, however. The effort is being made to personalize the actions
"WE DON'T WANT to run this like an organization where a few people tell everyone else what to do. We want to make it so that people are involved in the making." Schuehrich said.
For the meeting, the committee has planned four action points given about the events held Saturday. Next, a discussion will take place concerning Chancellor Gerald R. McCormack of the time for Saturday's third annual meeting. Third, the女王's causes, which held a meeting Sunday about the role of women in the anti-war movement, will make a brief statement.
Petitioners Seek Resignations Of SenEx's Miller and Scott
The committee will then announce tentative activities that might be planned. Following these proposals, suggestions will come from the floor concerning any proposals for further activities.
John Montgomery, assistant secretary of the U.S. Department of Defense, will speak at 8 tonight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas
Treacy said the discussion would be informal with question and answer periods.
Montgomery will be in Lawrence for a dinner and forum sponsored by the School of Social Welfare. He is expected to talk to President Nikon's welfare proposal, which is now before Congress.
HEW Official To Talk Here
Members of the panel will be Rober Hamlin, Hamlin Theater Company, and Arlington Don Parson, associate professor of drama and drama, and Calder Roberts, associate professor of drama.
The Godfather
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The Gunfather
According to Tim Tracy, William Schaffer, the chairman for the discussions, tonight's topics are "The Press and the Dilemma," and the Dilemma is "The Election." and
Thirty petitions are now in circulation on the campus for a petition for the resignation of Dave Miller, Eudora senior, and Louis Scott, Sullivan junior.
By LINDA SCHILD
Kansas Staff Writer
The final panel discussion of
the program was the second
series, "What is the american
Presidency?" will be at 7 o'clock
in the Forum Room of the Kansas
Panel to Cover Presidency, '72 Elections
FOLLOWING THE meeting,
the committees will break off into
various caucuses to determine
definite actions to be taken.
I am not going to take part in it. Miller could not be reached for comment.
Asked about the success of the memoranda presentations Scheurich said, "Most instructors felt really good about the stuff on the hill outside the garden."
Greater University Fund Elects New Chairman
The petition cannot bind anyone to any action he will take in the case it will pressure Miller and Scott into resigning from SenEx or initiating a recall
"IF THEY refuse, we will initiate recall measures," he said. "But, we don't want to, that is too drastic. If they lose, we will take them off of all committees we are on and out of the Senate."
"BUT THE moral implications of their votes are more important than the denies the legitimacy of our attempt at self-defense. To deny even a student opinion poll is a good action for a student senator."
"If the petition is ignored, we will not let it ride," DiZerega said.
Senate Executive Committee
Direzegena, Lawrence, graduate
student and graduate school
semani who submitted the petition
"THEY (SCOTT AND MILLER) don't have the basic respect for human beings that we do. We are on that committee," he said.
"Where they can do damage is
Although he doesn't know how many persons have signed the petition, Dilgeera said Monday he has in his possession petitions calling for a court hearing.
The group's goal is 2,000 signatures, Dizelaera said, enough to submit considerable moral pressure on Miller and Scott to resign. The petitions were called in until the end of this week.
DiZeera led Scott and Miller misrepresented their constituency. He cited straw polls he had conducted in nine Western states as evidence all overwhelmingly in favor of legalization of marijuana.
"Dick" Hunter, Oklahoma City, and Harold Greenleaf, Liberal were selected to fill board positions.
in SenEx,not the Student Senate We do not desire a blood purge.'
April 29 2:30 & 8 p.m.
STUDENT-FREE
Miller's main argument,
Dizzeга said, was that it was wrong to ask a new Senate to take
action regarding the personal
issuais in its first press.
In other business, the group heard talks by Martin Dickinson, dean of the KU Law school; Larry Heeb, director of deferred giving for the Endowment School; and Laurence Chaimers Jr. and Rick Whiston, director of the Greater University Fund.
The new officers will begin their duties May 1.
Tau Sigma Dance Concert
Adult $1.50 Child .50
Scheurch said he thought a consensus was that most people would leave for the holidays at 11 a.m. Saturday was more effec- tive, and it announcement made up at 1 p.m.
Dizelae said he based his complaint against Miller and the University students behind their "no" votes on the Student Senate resolution to legalize the possession, use and disclosure of cocaine passed April's at the first meeting.
Also elected were Gary Davis, Bartlesville, Oka., first vice chairman, and John Erksen, chairman, second vice chairman.
"THE LEGISLATURE'S reaction has been along the lines of a yawn." Dizerega said, "No threat was made prior to or after the passage of the resolution. The response that they want to punish us."
Miller could have tabied the resolution or abstained from voting. DiZeera said. Miller should explain his position in debate.
Gary Cooper, Colby; Dean Bauer, Coffeyville; Dixon Vance Jr., Kansas City, Kan.; R.A.
Robert E. Roth of Lamed was elected chairman of the Greater University Endowment group's annual meeting Saturday.
University Theatre
According to Dizegena, Scott voted no because he wanted to avoid antagonizing the Kansas Lezislature.
April 28 8:00 p.m.
Enroll Now for Summer or Fall
7:00 and 8:00 p.m., Mon-Fri,
May 1-5, at the Reading Dynamics Institute
Please send the name and contact information
following information.
Name ___
Address ___
Phone ___
Regular Course (June July):
9:30 a.m.-Noon, June 4-18
7:30 a.m.-Noon, June 4-20
Winter Civic
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.-June 4
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.-June 4
--evelyn wood
reading
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Regular Course (May-June):
Wed. 7-9 a.m. on, May 10-June 28
Thurs. 9:30 a.m.-Noon. May 11-June
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PHI KAPPA PSI '500'
Come enjoy yourself at . . .
The races include a queen crowning, women's tricycle race, and the wildest, sloppiest, funniest, mud-ball fight imaginable.
The 7th annual Phi Kappa Psi '500' races will be held at 2:00 p.m. Sunday, April 30th.
The 7th Annual Phi Kappa Psi '500' 1602 West 15th Street 2:00 p.m.
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Interviews for Next Year. APRIL 26 $ ^{TH} $
Interviewing for the SUA Public Relations Board Member.
Interviewing for Chairmanships with Films, Fine Arts, Forums, Travel Festival of the Arts, Recreation.
Interviewing for an Asst. Treasurer.
INTERVIEW TIMES AND APPLICATIONS IN SUA OFFICE, KANSAS UNION
4
Tuesday, April 25, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
BGS Questions
Some educators are studying the possibility of the University offering a Bachelor of General Studies Degree. One proposal for a general studies degree would eliminate all distribution and major requirements. For this degree all a student would have to do would be to pass 124 credit hours of college classes.
It is not unreasonable for a university to require a minimal understanding of certain areas of knowledge before it grants a degree. The distribution requirements at KU are not unduly restrictive, and many courses of classes they may choose to take within each distribution area.
The common requirements for all bachelor of arts degrees—such as nine hours of elementary English composition and literature, or proficiency in a foreign language—are required to most students or are receiving enough criticism that they will be satisfactorily altered.
A general studies degree could let administrators and faculty members avoid facing questions about the necessity of certain training examples in example imagine a student being told, "If you think the speech requirement is
inane, why don't you get a BGS instead?" It would be much easier to place a student in another major class. Or to demonstrate the validity of his dissatisfaction.
In the present system, if a student is not interested in any of the majors offered, he can create a major more suited to his interest and temperament, he can also be moved to have some of the requirements changed.
There is some validity to the argument that even with these options, degree requirements still may be too restrictive for some students. If a student feels he is locked in by current requirements, perhaps it would be more logical for him not to be concerned about getting a degree. He could enroll as a special student and take whatever courses he wanted for as long as he wanted.
By sacrificing requirements and running the risk of lowering standards, educational policy committees make it easy for anyone to get a degree. They also place too much emphasis on a degree. This dilutes any value a bachelor's degree may now have—and there is no magic in having those two initials after your name.
Mary Ward
Garry Wills Catalogue Not Book But Lark
Garry Wills
The Whole Earth Catalogue was a lark, which became a good business tool for the American instititors, who know when to get out, have issued a giant last number. And some adults, playing at delayed kiddie games, are using it to award a Contemporary Affairs.
It is a Sears catalogue for the counter-culture. By praise and excerpts from the books and products offered, it is also a freaky how-to-do-it book. How to grow your own natural food, and your own marijuana. How to order a delicater. How to have your own baby, and nurse your own baby. How to take care of your baby. How to treat Buckminster Fuller as a guru. How to do your own cremation ("We went home and got out the six foot box which we had made long before them."
odd bits of plywood for five dollars").
How to do your own Whole Earth Catalogue.
Girls are told how to masturbate—the book deserts its emphasis on the "natural" (as in delivery, food, and remedies) when it includes an electric vibrator among the methods. The passage is addressed to girls too young to use the vibrator as own: "It's nice sometimes to make up sexual fantasies while masturbating."
As I said, a lark—and by people who know when they have carried a good thing far enough. But the "straight" culture blunders in on each fad of the counter-culture just when it has had its freaky moment of life. The New York Times has written that the Yale Teacher Charles Reich's claim that Kid Konsciousness was on the verge of triumph just when it was on the verge of defeat.
Harrison Salisbury—the Times editor who handles the page that went ga-ma over Reich—was included in one of the judges' panels of the Book Award committee. He is Chairman of the Committee. A memorandum to all judges stated
fairly; "Edited books are not eligible." Mr. Salisbury took the position that the judges alone should be judges of that matter—and he prevailed on a second member of the Contemporary Affairs panel.
I was the third judge, and took the position that book awards should be given to books; that books should be written; that the awards should be given to encourage and reward authors in their difficult task; that my service on the panel was undertaken with this in mind, and with the memorandum's purpose, that I give them what that gives the award to a freak-fashion catalogue just going out of fashion would be a disservice to the writers' profession.
The head of the National Book Committee tried to mediate our differences, promising the other two a special award for the Catalogue, one that would not deprive an author of the Contemporary Events prize. That met the criteria and the jury who were supreme arbiters of all rules when it came to abrogating the memorandum, became suddenly powerless and conservative: they
would not be part of any innovation in the set order of things that made for a new prize.
At that, I quit the panel, reflecting that if the judges had the courage of their quirks they should give the Book Award to the person who built the best Buckmuster Fuller done last year. (They considered the Catalogue a "must-read" book) The artifact, with a single "author" in the sense of that artifact's constructor.
It also seemed to me that the compilers of the Catalogue, if they lived by the ideals of natural integrity they profess, should refuse the prize. But when I attended a conference in any rate, they come off better than their celebrators. It has long been a commonplace that the straight culture "co-opts" the vital trends of our world. And we all did. We'd have grown when the guardians of our "civilization" must stretch and bend to guaze on the goodies of a morbid movement, death feeding on life. The National Book Award had bad for the National Book Award had to fall victim to this necrophilia trendness.
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
Readers Respond
Greece, Faculty, Petition
Kilpatrick
To the Editor:
to the book of *Papa John's* editorial on April 20 stank. It was prejudiced, bigoted, slanderous and ignorant. He calls the only honest Greeks "rascals," because they oppose the tyranny of the jounta. By the time Jefferson was born, Jefferson, Franklin and other fathers of the American
Revolution are also racsals. He accuses Antares Pandreurol of advocating violent overthrow of the jouta. Since when has it been possible to take a crime? The answer is, since it conflicts with somebody's interest. It seems Kilpatrick dreads the thought that Greece under wasted its resources in withdraw from NATO and go socialist). So, it is better
I WANT A JOB.
WHAT ARE YOUR QUALIFICATIONS?
SIXTEEN YEARS OF EDUCATION.
GET A HAIRCUT.
GET A SHAVE.
GET A SUIT.
SORRY, WE DON'T HAVE A THING.
I TOLD YOU HED SETTLE DOWN.
James J. Kilpatrick
Primary Reform Urged
PHILADELPHIA — The Democratic presidential hopefuls take two more jumps today in the Grand American National Steeplechase, entries limited to lumacats and other politicians. Surely, surely, there must be a better way.
The metaphor seems apt. According to the Tom Jones tradition, the steeplechase began as a wild race among the landed gentry of 18th Century England. They lined up their horses, took off in a canoe and went—over stone walls, chicken coops, and picket fences. They took water jumps, mud jumps, and brush jumps. They terrified the livestock and left the native open-mouthed. They left a trail of cracked skulls and metal bones. They won winner limped home on a winded horse. It was, in its way, great sport.
What remains of this year's field is plunging on. The betting
in Boston is that George McGovern will sail over the chicken coop of Massachusetts, while Hubert Humphrey runs around the jump instead. Here in Pennsylvania, Edmund Muskie ran galloping through a fog of intrapolitics toward a wall, George Wallace, the gray fox from Dixie, has been harking in Pittsburgh and Wilber-Barre in Ohio. It is too late to halt the madness now. The candidates are doomed to race on to the richest prize of all—the California stakes in early June, when 271 delegates will be drawn from the ballot. After that, Miami. The exhilaration winner will have made promises he cannot keep; he will have lost support he sorely needs. The candidates collectively will have raised and spent—or borrowed money, and the neighborhood of $20 million, and the money-raising task must then
begin anew.
Twenty-three separate primaries have been scheduled this spring. They are not wholly meaningless; they are telling us something: The remarkable vote for Wallace and McGovern is a manifestation of discontent that cannot go unheeded. But the two candidates provide the measure of statesmanship; they measure stamina instead. The primaries do not clarify; they confuse.
Two proposals, one old and one new, are being advanced by way of reform. Senators like Mike Dainik and George Aiken of Vermont have revived the idea of a single national primary. Senator Robert Packwood of Oregon is offering a five regional primaries instead.
The Mansfield-Aiken proposal is cast in the form of an elaborately detailed, 1,300-word amendment to the Constitution.
to have as ally a nation of slaves rather than having a free state among the poor, dissuiring to see that the only freedom that Kilpatrick cares about is American freedom, and as he did so in 1864, as a piece of information, Antreta Papandreau was never premier before. His father, who he dead is.
Viewing their resolution as a bill, many observers will find the proposal attractive. Mansfield and Aiken recommend a single bill to approve each presidential year. If none of a party's candidates received a plurality of at least 40 per cent, a run-off would be held four weeks later. If each president's plan has the virtue of simplicity; it has the defect of nationalizing a political process that until now has rested with the States, and it raises the expensive prospect of elections in a three-month span.
As such, their resolution is plainly preposterous; they have written a statute, not drafted an Constitution. A statute in constitution truly is required (authorities disagree), a single sentence would suffice, vesting in Congress the power to provide by order for a national primary system.
Packwood's alternative
proposal envisions five regional primaries, one month apart, beginning on the first Tuesday in March. A five-man commission of city officials supervise the balloting. Convention delegates would be awarded on a basis of proportional representation. The Commission would vote if the vote would name one-third of the delegates. The Packwood plan would retain not only the basic federal structure but also the diversity of its vast improvement over the steeplechase madness of 1972.
Neither proposition is likely to be considered in Congress this year. But next year, when the president signs a new sober thought must be given to a sander scheme for 1976. That year will mark the 20th anniversary of the great American revolution, making it 'high time for another.'
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
It is alarming to see a man with the power of the pen behind him such a misinformed bigot. I wonder how many people his editorial has influenced. If it has influenced even a single person, in favor of tyranny, then his label of tyranny on should be labeled poisonous.
Parking
Costas Orundontiotis Senior
To the Editor:
Monday night's meeting regarding the proposed new parking arrangements was announced, consequently could not be attended by persons having previous commitments. This is why who nevertheless consider it important to have inputs to the efficiency and comfort of our work setting. Because of time pressures, several of us are required to letter, rather than individually.
To the Editor:
Dear Chancellor Chalmers;
Future plans call for a consolidation of the present T, R, L, H, D, and Q lots, as well as the existing parking buildings, into a single "Blue" parking zone. The sticker for this zone will cost $30. The addition of new parking spaces can be expected to increase the demand for such spaces as exist in the "Blue" zone. However, the number of such spaces which will be available for faculty and staff parking, since many will become alleviated by other zones, since the "Blue" zone sticker will be alleviated by other numbers of "Blue" zone stickers issued sufficiently exceeds the number of parking spaces allowed under the "top priority" parking and will be forced to park off-campus. This amounts to raising the price from about $40 to $75, reducing the parking privilege
Those of us who work in building on the east side will benefit by the plan to disadvantaged by the plan to make Jayhawk a serious, seriously
We feel that the proposed changes in the parking situation have come upon us rather suddenly. We, the faculty
and staff, have not had an opportunity to express our views. We do not know whether the proposals are the result of a cause or are simply traffic patterns and parking needs or not. At first glance, we feel that it is a costly and major revision which may prove no more satisfactory than the usual evacuation, and may even be worse.
We therefore urge that no change be made in the present parking system until considered feasible, and that least for another academic year. If it has not already been done, it might be wise to employ a research firm to study the trait which might be pertinent in making a decision. Thus, if we find that a change is warranted, we can implement a policy that will best preserve the entire academic community.
J. Mistler-Lachman Department of B
J. Mistler-Lachman Department of Psychology
Resignation
Ms. Dehon's letter in Thursday's Kansas was, I am afraid, an exercise in total mistrust with the petition for the resignation of Senators David Miller and Louis Osom from both the Senate and House between myself and several other Senators before we decided to go ahead. Since then many other Senators have endorsed the petition.
The reasons motivating us as a group are not that they voted "no" on the resolution to legalize same-sex marriage, but because reasons they gave for so voting cause us considerable concern over their fitness for membership in our community. We committee in the University. We desire only their resignation from SenEx, not from the University and would be grateful for Senate. While the reasons for our concern are too lengthy for this letter we invite anyone to visit the University and talk with us personally if they are interested in the quality of student representation on the committee at KU.
By Sokoloff
Students on SenEx (there are only three) have input far out of proportion to their numbers and have been appalled. Apparently during the past year the former student members of the council have achieved peaceful solutions to two campus crises in which many faculty and administrators have been unnecessary and unneeded police intervention. Thus, who the failure affects us all, and we feel it quite legitimate to question those selected if we have doubts. After a couple of months Royalty does not exit at KU.
B. W. Goff
Griff and the Unicorn
As for me, personally, yes, I do believe that their vote against the resolution to legalize pot, pardon marijuana violations, and have a student opinion poll over the issue this Spring, was sufficient for me (though not necessarily all those who are serious about them) they have no business serving on SenEx. My reason is a very basic moral one. I believe that every man must be responsible for his or her own interests as he or she deems best, so long as neither force nor fraud is initiated against another person. And the vote of "no" by Miller and Scotty to be a highly immoral act.
in a peaceful non-violent way.
along with many other activities,
smoking, possessing, or selling
not is such an activity.
Our resolution was essentially an act of self defense. Students have been arrested, humiliated, and killed in the Middle River here in Lawrence for the "crime" of smoking pot. We will not support such actions which our action might have significant political impact to defend ourselves and others by being present on campus or present and future Senators and Representatives from Douglas County to Topeka that would legitimate forum in the capitol.
All the Student Senate resolution basically affirmed that people should speak up and be served when they are partaking of an activity
Miller and Scott could have abstained from voting, they did not vote in the legitimacy of our attempt at self-defense. A vote is not the expression of opinion carrying only the power to persuade. It has no coercive force. A vote in a democratic body is an act, an act that is neither coercive nor over the minority regardless of the latter's opinion. A vote is coercive to other voters, and so are obvious in that a major defense of democratic voting is "At least voting is better each other. It is less wasteful."
In voting, "no" Miller and Scott tried to destroy our only legal force against him. He was reasonably expected to bring strong pressure to bear on some of our political leaders—by telling them not to position clearly and then having the students vote on the issue. If they did not deny them through no fault of theirs, I do not deny them their right to voice their opinion. But I don't deny that they have the right to vote in a manner as to destroy, trample upon, or to attempt to attack the basic right of personal persons. To confusevoice with speaking is a serious logical error with grave consequences for the rights of people.
N F
in Senators Miller and Scott could not see the principles involved in this issue, principals taken in the Student Senate, then I feel they are not perceptive enough to serve on SenEx. Further, there is no shortage of students who have felt
**w**
is " "
at Rob Ron four are diar Gold Yato (for hels real than hour
Some issues are so basic as to transcend even personal friendship.
Gus diZerega Lawrence Graduate Student
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." Business Manager
Chip Crews Carol Young
Tuesday, April 25, 1972
University Daily Kansan
5
New Heist Movie 'The Hot Rock' Follows A Warmed-Over Theme
By STUART CLELAND Kansan Reviewer
If ever there was a film genre that has worn out its welcome, the "heist" *flick* must surely be the one we know. "The Eleven" *Topkapi*, *Assault on a Queen*, "Gambit," "The Thomas Crown Affair," "Grand Glam," etc., (plus four or five movies) and "The Twelve" which is sort of a weekly mini-caper), we've been deluged over the last 15 or 20 years with so many incredible robberies that he has seemingly gone into overdrive. For lately these supposedly exciting, action-filled suspense-comedy-dramas have changed, in ways imaginaries that if the powers that be were listening closely to the movie-going public, they'd probably be able to hear a faint cry of "Enough, already!"
as to onal
WHAT THIS IS all leading up to is "The Hot Rock," now playing at the Varsity, and starring Ben Rohr. He's joined Rob Lehmann and Paul Sand as four semi-competent crooks who are out to steal a fabulous African diamond Written by William James, with his Yates, it's sporadically funny, (for this one runs in the "comic heist" sub-genre) but it never really amounts to anything more a not-quite-boring two hours.
The main problem is that if you're going to make a certain decision, you can't be sure of which have been brilliant, you'd better make sure that yours is going to be able to compare the inevitable comparisons. "The two are the same," he assumption that more is better, it involves not one robbery, but four. But car wrecks, prison breaks or even the death of someone so forth are all odor at his day, and when they're not even terribly well done our attention is drawn to the fact that "Does Robert Redford bleach his hair?" And that's not so good.
A WHILE BACK William
Art Exhibited By Recipients Of Scholarships
"The Scholarship Show," an annual event for college students, mainly by undergraduate students, is now on exhibit in the Union Gallery. The show will run
Scholarships totalling $18,907.50 have been awarded this spring to art students.
Although the scholarships have been awarded for the past few years, this is the first time a show was presented by the winners.
Winners of scholarships in the Lockwood Scholarship Fund, which amounted to $15,000. He served as president Rick Mitchell, Lawrence senior; Mark Royer; James Holmes, Wichita junior; M. Jason Knap, Kansas City, Mo., junior; John Hammond, Junior, Letha Church Letha.
Robert Nitcher, Lawrence
senior, received the $250 Ada
Buchtel Hauser Memorial
Award
Winners of the Walker Art Scholarships, worth a total of $3,500, were Janet Olda, Omaha neb. freshman; Greg Gaylor, Kansas City; Daniel Wessel, Kansas City; Kan. junior; Mary Ann Banning, Bozeman, Mont., junior; Cathy Dillon, Leavenworth善o谬; Jan Morris, Tulsa, OK; juni, Smith, Lawrence Smith
Topeka Senior Receives Grant
Richard S. Brock, Topeka senior in mechanical engineering, is the winner of the 1972 Old Sun Project Grant. The Oli Corporation Charitable Trust (020) 4000 for Brook's research project.
Crews Young
Goldman really hit the jackpot with his whimsical dialogue for "Butch Cassidy and the Sun," but it doesn't do so pretty much the same thing, only adding a bit of self-porading "tough guy" dialogue now and then. It doesn't work too well for me; it's like the dialogue isn't better, even when Redford says a line like "I'll take the job." (pause) "it's what do I," you hope it is, no, you're serious, but you can't be sure.
Brock's proposed project will survey the needs of sheltered workshops in Kansas and at the University of Crippled Children in Topeka.
Probably the element of the film that works best is the "bite" of the story, Sand and Kon Leibman as Redford's confederates. Seal doesn't have any particular "bit" to describe, but it has character and constantly in-
Campus Bulletin
Big B Alumnai Directors: 8:30 a.m.
Governors Room, Kansas Union.
Counselor Senate 15.20 a.m. Woodford
Computer Science 15: 8:30 a.m. Woodruff
Auditorium
8:30 a.m. Woodruff Auditorium
Psych 40: 9:30 a.m., Woodruff Auditorium.
Italian Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark
Room.
eology Department; noon, Alceve A. Dean's Council; noon, Alceve B. History Department; noon, Alceve C. History Department; noon, Alceve D. History of Art at Harvard University; noon, Alceve
Social Welfare: 6 p.m., Centennial Room.
SIMS: 6 p.m., Council Room.
teresting to watch, especially as a foil for Redford. Sand and heather's chance to let their considerable comic talents run free, but even so they manage some nice stories. The prisoners, feigns insanity by attacking his cellmate's feet (or ears) or the time of his life, sits on the edge of a roof and lobe tears *bombs* into the street, you've got
Synchronize Swim Team: 7 p.m.,
Rodhson Natatorium.
Presidential Forum: 7 p.m., Forum Room.
Room 150
SIMS: 6 p.m., Council Room.
Pen Club: 6:30 p.m., Parkers AR.
International Club: 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room.
Science Fiction Film: 7 p.m., Woodruff
Auditorium.
Blick 3, p. 205.
SUA Board: 7 p.m., Governors Room.
Social Welfare Lecture: 6 p.m., Big $8
Room.
Latin America Area, Collegeville: 8 p.m.
UNFORTUNATELY, there examples are offset by a rather tasteless scene in which Leibman, to distract museum guards, crashes his car and then lies on a sidewalk, or an even more unpleasant one in which Redford threatens to throw Sand down an
The Seventh National Sculpture Garden in 29 in Allen Field House will feature sculptors from across the United States and from several locations.
Delta Sigma Pt: 7 p.m. Pine Room.
SUA Board: 7 p.m. Governors Room.
Latin America Area Collequim: 8 p.m.
Regionalist Room.
Kappa Pst. 8 p.m., Council Room.
Rapital Student Union: 8:30 p.m., International Room.
Robert Redford is generally wasted, since no one seems to have any idea what he's supposed to do. You don't much except look cool and much except look cool and
Stills with Album 'Manassas Is Back on Right Track
elevator shaft. The audience may laugh, but it's a weak, sickly-girl kind of laughter that doesn't necessarily indicate enjoyment.
As many as 50 industrial metal plating, plastics, tools and equipment firms, will be at the field house for a two-way flow of materials.
By JOE ZANATTA
"Manassas" does have its low spots, side two in particular. The listener is treated to 17 golden spots of pure country hoodedown.
By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer
After listening to Stephen Stills's first two attempts at a solo album, I doubted if I would even bother listening to a third album by him. But Stills is back with the fight track with "Mansassa."
The new two-record Atlantic
FOR THE C, S, N & FANS,
the "The Treasure," which
sounds somewhere between
"On Time Gone" and "Carry
Up."
Glass Work to Be Featured At Sculpture Conference Here
Eldon C. Tefft, professor of painting and sculpture, who started the conferences 12 years ago, is in charge of preparations.
KANSAN reviews
handsome. The other actors far better, but one can't help wishing that they'd all signed the dotted line on this list instead of wasting everyone's time and talent on what doesn't amount to more than a rather modest paycheck.
Each morning of the conference, Tefft said, two men gathered in a room of glass blowing at the north end of the field house. Slides and demonstrations by other artists were opposite end of the field house.
Also discuss glass as an art object. **Andre Billec** of Alfred, N.J.; **Andre Billec** of Alfred, N.J.; **Joel Meyers** of Normal, Ill.; and **Marcin Lipovsky** of Berkeley.
PARTICIPANTS IN THE glass blowing must pay a fee of $25, he may participate. The man asked to register at an information booth so that the attending can be ascertained.
The exploratory emphasis of this conference, Tefft said, will be supported by the foremost attraction in this area, according to Tefft, will be Harvey K. Littleton, professor of visual art and University of Wisconsin in Madison.
The discussions would allow sculptors to explain what they need and the suppliers to explain which can be manufactured, Tefft said.
Tefft said that glass art forms would be exhibited in Spooner Art Museum. Other artists in the sculpture exhibited. Other exhibits will be displays of equipment the artists have found most useful to them.
ETIENNE HADIJ and Saint-Maur from France, Manuel Silva Guerrero and Manuel Fleguere Barra of the University of India at New Delhi, secretary of the Nepal Association of Fine Arts.
Although it is still called the
National Sculpture Conference,
the event has become
internationally important.
1960, Tefth said. This year, Mr.
Krishman of Bansuri Hues
and Dr. Mohammed Al-
discus "Gerse Pleure Casting in
India," and Harry Hollander
of Senneville, Quebec, will discuss
New Developments for Senneville.
Kathnandu, Nepal, will attend the conference.
The side is saved by Stills's twangy country guitar work and by the music's overall ridiculousness.
The conference was planned by Tefft on the basis of sculptors' suggestions made in reply to requests for proposals he sent them. The committee also suggested something special to offer repiled and their proposals were screened by a program committee. Invitations to present papers were sent to those offering projects to the theme of the conference.
The men coming who are not backed by any school or organization, Teft said will be assisted with transportation.
release is well worth the money. She was one of the talent that brought Stillia admiration when he was with the Buffalo Springfield and Crosby. She was a great coach.
Skills has learned how to share a spotlight, a noticeable image in his performance and to attempt the result is excellent vocal harmonies and instrumental performances from the tenor saxophone on his guitar on hillman guitar, Paul Harris at piano and organ, Fuzzy Samuels and Dallas Taylor on drums.
"Manaassas" is *Silla*'s long-overdue solo album (ignore the other two attempts). For those Buffalo Springfield and C, S, N & W, the last year or so, it should provide an interesting surprise.
THE HORN SECTION, which so blatantly blasted away on "Stephen Still II" is gone, thank David Wylie for his contribution that he's master of — electric folk rock. The only place of place where the music comes from Moo Synthesizer. Stilus works it into one song but proves nothing other than he can afford the use of synthesizers.
Side one, called "The Raven," is the best offering on the album. It moves from Latin-rock into rock, through a slow blues number and ends with a soft ballad. Some of the songs from this work is contained on this side."
The School of Fine Arts of the University of Kansas will present the 14th annual Symposium of Music, Music, Music, April 30 through May 2.
Symposium to Feature Noted Music Composer
The featured speaker at the symposium will be Gunther Schuler, an American composer and the New England Conservatory.
The events for the symposium
"Bound To Fall," on side three, should please all those who enjoyed the Buffalo Springfield.
include a Chamber Music Recital at 8 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall, a concert by the University Chamber Choir at 8 a.m. Tuesday in Swarthout and a lecture by Schuler at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout, and an Orchestra Concert at 8:20 p.m. Tuesday in the University
All events are open to the public without charge.
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6
Tuesday, April 25, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KU 2nd in Soccer Meet
Seeded eighth in the Big Eight tournament, the University of Kansas dark horse soccer team defeated defending champion K-State in the second round match, then advanced to the finals to bow out. The tournament was Saturday and Sunday in Boulder, Colo.
KU beat Nebraska in the first round of the tournament on their way to a second place victory. The Reds won by a tie, take second in the tournament.
And the win against K-State assured the 'Hawks of a berth in the finals with fourth-seeded Colorado.
KU Fencers Now Eligible For Tourney
Two individual competitors and two teams of the University of Kansas fencing team qualified for competition in the Amatur Fencers' League of America midwest sectional tournament at the Kansas division tournament and Sunday in Kansas City, Mo.
Matt Begert and Dan Thrapp of the Mets sectioned tournament. Thrapp placed fourth in the epee event and Begert placed sixth in the baseball tournament.
Frank Anger, associate professor of mathematics, who fences for the Kansas City Metro fencers' Club, won the epee
Sabre, epee and foil are the three types of weapons used in modern fencing. The divisional was held the previous weekend.
Both the KU epe and sabre teams placed second and are automatically qualified for both the tournament. A team is made up of three team members who face each of the members on an odd-numbered roll.
The KU team has qualified
for the national season.
Sectionals are scheduled for May
14 and 15 in Lansing. Mich. the
nationals will be this summer in
Michigan.
Celtics Sold Off For Third Time In Seven Years
BOSTON (AP) — The Boston Celtics won the NBA basketball Association's most successful franchises, have been so for the third time in the past six years.
No details of the sale were revealed and it was not immediately known if the club would stay in Boston or if the organization's personnel would be subject to approval of the NBA
The Celtics, eliminated Sunday in the playoff for the NBA's Eastern Conference title, were sold to a syndicate headed by an unnamed New York attorney. Announcement of the agreement was made in Friday's Monday game against the Furious 7, which holds controlling stock.
Wesley Wood, a spokesman for Investments Funding Corp., said details of the sale would be made when the transaction is complete.
Howie McHugh, a publicity man for the team, said he had "no indication" that the sale was 'imminent'.
Guy Darlan scored two goals and Edmonon homered to assist with Randy McClain two to defeat Nebraska, 3-0, in the first round
KU's Raul Azcu and Darlan scored one apece against the former champion Wildcats for the 2-1 victory.
But the 'Hawks were not in full force when they squared off to face the Bufs in the finals of the
tourney. Darlan and Ohiohoma, the scoring stars of the game with both knees injured, knee injuries. Darlan had missed five games already this season.
Dennis Cook scored the only KU goal in the finals and KU was unable to stop the Buffaloes' 4-point winning streak.
He said he had understood that two groups, one based in Boston and the other in Chicago, were negotiating for the club but knew no names of the people involved.
The soccer team's next game will be with the Internationals Sunday at KU.
Basic Grid Drills Keep Team Busy
Practicing on a cool, brisk day, the University of Kansas football team continued to concentrate their efforts in drills Monday. Head Coach Dam Fambrough said the team worked on techniques that would correct some of the things the队 did wrong in Sunday's scripimage.
Fambrough said the team would work on the fundamentals the rest of this week, and then close the spring football practices with the annual spring truss联赛 game night in Haskell Stadium.
Besides drills, there was more work done on all phases of the kicking game. Not much work was needed this week with the kicking game.
with the naming game. There was only one injury reported during the practice
K-State Nips CU In 12 Innings, 5-4
MANHATTAN Kan. (AP) —
Manhattan won 14-7 Kansas State nipped the Colorado Buffalo 5-4 in a 12-inning Big Eight Conference baseball game
K-State is 6-6 in the Big Eight and 14-14 for the season; Colorado 7-6 and 15-15.
Jerome Nelloms, back back, suffered a slight injury. Fambrough he thought that someone could practice the rest of the week.
The Jahawks will practice today, Wednesday and Thursday but will play the game. They normally do not practice on Tuesdays, but the squad is making up the day it lost week because of the KU Relays.
Playoffs Open Wednesday
NEW YORK (AP)—The New York Knicks and Los Angeles Lakers will open their best-of-seven National Basketball Association championship playoff Wednesday night in Miami. The Lakers will host Monday. Game time for the series opener will be 9 p.m. CST.
The second game of the series will also be played in Los Angeles on the first day, then will travel to New York for the next two games. May 3 and June 1.
States for the fifth, six and seventh games of the series, if necessary, have not been announced.
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LINGO LIMBERT — RENE GUIRGIST
RINGO STARR — KLAUS VOORMAN
BADFINGER — JESSE DAVIS
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KANASS CITY (AP) — The KANASS CITY (AP) day of the demonstration on Friday 'stakes, five weeks after the little horistop was sidelined with a police presence.
Eat your weight in french fries and win an "M" for your letter sweater.
MCDONALD'S
Royals' Shortstop Returns
To make room on the roster, Patek's replacement, Bobby Floyd, was optioned to Omaha of the Ravens—in opposition—the Ravals' AA farm club.
Floyd had played all nine games for the Royals, batting 138 with 4 hits in 29 at bat.
If you weigh approximately 150 pounds, that's only 52,867,419. (give or take 600,000.) That's a whole lot of golden, crisp goodness.
MCDONALD'S
901 W. 23rd
Patek, smallest man in the majors at 5 feet 4, has not played since his injury March 20. His comeback was complicated by nervous exhaustion but he said today, "I'm as ready as I can get."
Patcked the American League in triples last season with 11, and his #4 stallman bases hit him second time. He was named Omaha Ots, who had 51 thefts. He was a key part of the league-leading double-play combination and hit .267. Patck finished sixth in the Most Valuable Player balloting.
Manager Bob Lemon said put him on the bench and in his customary leadoff position here Tuesday night when the Royals take on the Baltimore
HOUSTON (AP)—Johnny Edwards belted a home run with one out in the bottom of the 11th inning. Houston Astros stretched their winning streak to seven games in the city's history over the Chicago Cubs.
653 Series At Jay Bowl
Karine Thomas bowled a 683 game and a 653 series in intracurial bowling action last week at the Jay Bowl. Other high games in the Guys and Dolls series include Randy Bowers and Laurie Chipman. 232 Rob Simmon bowled a 646 series. The close team race is led by the
BSers, who have a 35-13 record compared to 33-15 records for 4Aces+1 and Sticky Fingers.
In the All-Star Scratch League, bob Wilson of Kistani bowed out of Gringos a $96 tie. Gringos a $96 tie. The Gringos have moved to a commanding position in the league.
Their record is 240½-95½, a .714 percentage.
In the All-Campus League, the Snarf Patrol has a 208-128 record, which leads the 194-142 record of second-place. Abellans: Harold Tucker scored a 576 series and Mike Speek of the Truckers a 375.
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If you think Kodak is just pretty pictures,you ought to have your chest examined.
When a chest x-ray shows that you have a potential killer like TB or cancer, it's not a pretty picture. But it's an important picture because it can help the doctor detect and catch the killer in time.
When doctors are out to catch these potential killers, they want the sharpest, clearest x-ray films they can get. And that's why people at Kodak spend so many hours creating new and better x-ray film equipment. Already, the results in
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 25, 1972
7
CASINO DAYS
OVERLOADING
SALE
Wednesday thru Saturday
Rules of the House
First:
Select an armful of our new spring merchandize and seek out a dealer (a clothing consultant)
Second:
Have your items written up but not totaled
Third:
Spin our Casino Wheel to determine the discount you will receive, ranging from 10 to 50%
Fourth:
Our entire stock is included, no aces are held up our sleeve, at least 10 percent off our regular quality stock
The Casino Wheel will be spinning till 9:00 p.m.
Wednesday thru Thursday
5:30 p.m. Saturday
MASS.
MISTER
GUY
Five days
920
The Clothing Consultant 842-2700
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
- Free Refreshments
- No Alteration Charges
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $0.01
One day
Accommodations, g. ds., services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kumman are offered on campus in color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars, 601 Vermont. VI 2-
8608. tt
2. If you don't,
Western Ciy. Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
2.
a university with
Either way it's the same
thing—"New Analysis of Western
Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 411
West 14th.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each addition word: $0.02
Deadline : 5.00 p.m., 2 days before publication
NORTHISLE COUNTRY SHOP, 707
Bridgestone Bags, used furniture,
collection items, old wood cooking and
furniture, stoves, beds, books, old
pieces of wood, clocks, corn,
corn, and thousands of other useful
items, open 9 to a seven day. Herb
Store.
Michigan St. Bar-B-Quite, 315 MIch
Street, Milwaukee, WI 53209. $15
to buy or lease. Bistro Ice-Brewed at
$1.45. Icelandic Beer Freeport at
$1.75. New York Bistro Sargent Hibiki Pike at $1.80.
Bordeaux Bistro Sargent Hibiki Pike at
$2.00. A.m. to 6 p.m. Phone 717-297-3400
Phone 717-297-3400
Pali-shangy little Hungarian sheepdog puppies ACK Arc bloodtieins, crushed 45 up old, also English-Italian 60 up old, English-Italian 71-937-288-1, McLouth College, 4-28
Pro Bikes 25 pro bikes in stock in a variety of colors and frame sizes: flat, flexible, fixed. Fits: **Fiat**, "Professional" and "Olympica," *Fiat*, "San Renzo." Pro Bike: "Sportional" with All Reynolds 313 tuking. Ride-On Bike店, 1641 Magnus, 4-29
1958 2 bdmr. Great Lakes Mobile
Mobil phone company,
wather, wader, car,
carpeting. Occupancy for summer or
fall. $1950. Phone 814-3853 after 5:00.
Guitar--Martin D-35, acoustic six-
string. Hardshell case. 4 years old.
Good condition. Call 843-5113 for
6:30 p.m.
4-25
Ten-speed bicycles. Fugu, Alaia.
10-speed bicycles. Maui, Ailaia.
Aikuni, Sekkei, Alaia. Also, 3
Aikuni. Seiko, Alaia. Also, 3
Accessories unimagined; unimagined.
1969 YAMAHA 125 ice twin, very good condition, low mileage, new knobby on rear, $310, luggage rack and hatchables available. 842-8002. 4-25
The season of leisure has arrived. We have hammocks, French Foreign Legion sandals, Viet Nam Jungle Boots, soccer jerseys, and flower surpluses. 815 Vermont, 4:25
2 students want to buy nice 2 bedroom mobile home—Cash, Call 843-3287.
1971 Kawasaki 500, excellent condition,
$800, Call 843-4055. 4-25
1971 Toyota Celica Yellow with black vinyl roof, mug wheels. Must be immidablely excellent. condition. Price: $149.12. Indiana 112. Missouri 183. 84-6894. 4-25
MUST SKIL. Learn Javan with care and accessories. Health Kit Combo. Skiing, snowboarding, skiing. Also 1967 Persere 911 mint condition. Must sell. Must buy 841-366-1162
1970 Honda 350 SL, great bike on and off the road Excellent condition $600 or best offer Call Dave, D41-8251-2851
56 VW for sale. Runs good Call 842-
300 morning, or earlys
Well-balanced itero system compares two types of II Shure cartridge. C-B-AS04 type II Shure cartridge. C-B-AS09 type II Shure cartridge. Buton buttoniera receiver, custom $75; 112 Indiana, Apt. 1, 423-812-7600.
LAW STUDENT DIGS WALKING
WILL SELL GIZ V W EXCELLent
SHAPE INSECT & OUT CALL 842-
5657 AND MAKE OFFER
4-28
Model 1725-41; Roberts reel to reel and cartridge type recorder. Like New-Will sell for $240 Also stereo albums, cheap. 842-5393 4-25
Great laugh while frolicking, king size water bed, liter and frame $40—Cassette Car Stereo;赛力士-$20—Sony Entertainment;xs-848-8388 6:00 p.m. 4:26
Parting out 1965 Olds 62D Dr. Dyn. Jr.
Dyn. Jr. Red Line Halo Rental $13,000. 792 Dual line halo Rental $13,000. 792 Dual line halo Rental $13,000. 792 Dual line halo Rental $13,000. 792 Dual line halo Rental $13,000. 792 Dual line halo Rental $13,000. 792 Dual line halo Rental $13,000. 792 Dual line halo Rental $13,000.
T A P E S - $1-track-$2, $4-track-$2 1. Also bargains on tape players, tape decks, record players and cassettes Buy-Sell Trade, Traders, $2 Mass
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can
have the best sound quality on
COST plus the HAY AUDIO - 82N-
B7M - Pacific Avenue. The only
choice is Office-Show. Call
Office-Show. Free WiFi.
Hairsetter, steam, Lady Schick, 20
rollers, used once, 10. Call Lora after
6:00, #43-1909.
4-25
CAMERAS: Polaroids, starting at $5
Also 35 mm. movie cameras,
instances, projectors, Money to Loan
Traders, B22 Mass.
Practically new electric Smith Corona elite typewriter for sale. Less than 15 hrs use. First $9 takes it 842-3871 or 842-4444. Ack for Dick
SAVE ON BOOKS—Used paperbacks only 15c. PLAY BOB'S now 1½ price Money to loan. Traders. 822 Mass 4:2
Tennis racket Davis Classic 4 3/4
medium. Strung with Imperial gul,
Banroct grip. Fine condition.
Call 842-6546. 4-26
Blue girl's Raleigh 3-speed bicycle.
Call 843-6556 if interested—ask for Phyllis.
4-26
1933 Chevrolet Impala, 4 dr. FTJ, 283
1933 Dodge Ram, 4 dr. FTJ, 270
LIFF Locks. New Tires. New
Locks. Guaranteed perfect end
maintenance 600 book. $255-$315,
$756
Finally, a shipment of new Army
ware—FIELD JACKETS. Limited sale
so harry. We also have Army Su-
porters. 8-5000. Simplify. 4-28
Norton 845-3000.
Must Sell! 1686 VW Sedan, good机械但不需 body work. Also 1966 Chevrolet C-6, gcv. auto trans. AWD. Must Sell! 1686 VW Sedan, good mechanical but not need body work. Also 842-6400. 4-27
Cushman Eagle, excellent cond. $80
25c m. Caio. Macro, job basket, no job
$40. 842-2872. Please leave no
time to return your call 4-27
Microscope for sale. If going to Kill
Med. School, you will have to furnish
your own microscope. Call 842-
4019 after 5:00 p.m.
4-27
STEREO SYSTEM—81-tape AM/FM
stereo. Brand new Panasonic retails
for $149. Must sell C-612 4-678-3228
Sale on all winter coats, sweaters,
jackets and tuxedos. To everything
there is a season Earthshine, 12 E.
8th, 4-27
TEAC 4092 tape recorder, 1970 model
$300 Will trade for 35mm camera
Call Bill, 842-1882
4-26
WHY RENT?
Schwinn—Variety 10-speed bicycle with everything and in perfect condition. Price $75. Call Bill, 3HP 214 864-2647 4-22
Guitar Amp for sale: Small amp will work, great for stage monitor or sounds real nice minked. Less than $30, call Bob at 825-9783 4-27
MARY L. KINNEY MUSEUM OF ART
Yamaha 650 Street. 442-3871. 924-
Schwarz Road. Evenings.
1965 Ford Mutting with air, good condition, $425. 842-$353. Robert Reed and cartridge tape recorder, excellent condition, price $200. $366. Sold for $225. 842-$353.
1969 Yamaha 350 trail-street motorcycle Excellent condition Asking $450 or best offer 8-51-114
1963 Ford-V-8. 4-door, overall good condition, must sell-$200 offer takes it. Call 842-9738 5-1
Pentax Lens, Super Takumar 17mm, 44.9 Built-in filters, like new cond. Reasonable 841-2376 4-27
Excellent-used Magnavox 50 watt component stereo complete with turntable and speakers $275 at Ray Stone-back's. 5-1
Magnavox remote speaker systems
reg. $59.90 pr now 1 price at Ray
Stoneback's
trand new. Magnaxon headphones
equally $29, now U₂ price at Ray
doneback's. 5-1
RCA. 190 watt amp. 3-way speaker.
Women's. 2-way speaker. Old-
standard timer, 1 year old.
phones. 2 years old. Total cost new.
$200. Excellent sound. Make an offer
10-speed men's bicycle for sale. Good condition—$50 Call 864-6417 4-27
AKC Irish Tsetter puppies Excellent bloodlines--hunting and show stock Sire out of Furman Kennels, Topeka 842-1770 5-1
Large farm house 15 minutes from KU. Swimming pool, upgrades can be customized by the realators fee $2,000 and assume customer phone number 524-8763 Box 5224 Jayhawk Station 9-8
Two used tires-4ply tyre 790 l x 1000 miles, $15 pair or best offer
Used G.E. portable stereo-good condition.
Used best offer. 842-1862. 5-1
FOR RENT
COLLEGE HILL MANOR now show
their latest offerings. Furnished
and unfurnished apartments
start at $219. Go to college
online for details.
745 W. 179th St, 148th Apt or
855-223-0060. Apt 3B or cell
855-223-0060.
YAMAHA 620 c.c., 4300 miles, excellent condition. $900. Dave Bliss. 842-
7098. 5-18
D tired of trying to find that ideal autumn or winter for her. We now have a list of schools in various locations and price ranges in various locations. McGraw Acquisition 801 McKenzie. McGrew Acquisition 801 Kentucky. K422.
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
LOOK WHAT SANTINE APTS HAVE TO Offer! Summer rates, swimming pool, A C. Free cable-TV and Internet access. 121, Ibid. 1834-8316.
RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843-8499
SUMMER RENTALS. Live close to campus this summer in a room, renting a private suite, summer rates Marie Litchfield, 1601 Louisiana, 841-1631, 3-823-59
MODERN APARTMENTS Furnished and unfurnished one bedroom from $85-110 room, plus utilities. Near campus in next fall. Dove, B3-6924, B3-6924, B3-1601.
When you're hot, you're hot. When you're cold, you're cold.
comfort = UNIVERSITY MENTS
MENTS. Enjoy our pool and close to the beach.
Ment 4, Ap 18, 1329 W. Phone 828-650-7700.
Sublease for summer, apt. one, bed room, A/C, private, close to campus furnished. $120, 1025 Indiana. 842 7160, Apt. E. 4-26
To KU male nice apt. close to Union.
May work out all or part of rent.
Available now. phone 851-8534. 5-9
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
THE MERCANTILE
Large, two bedroom mobile home.
Fully contacted, air-conditioned, water
heater, private entry, single person. Under $100 Phone
号码: 415-832-9050 or Carol UNIT 18
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right
away!
21 DIRECTIONAL 102 Meeting Rooms
two 2-hour rooms, available.
Aug. 15 1:45 am, one room, available.
Aug. 15 1:45 am, one room, available.
a full year of gate end of semester
programs.
new computer, distributions, central
networking.
new computer, distributions, central
networking.
7:588 between 3:59 and 10:30.
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
1972, while selection is still available.
WILLIAMS, SEBASTIAN - 1967-A Harvard,
482-2548 or 2017-A Harvard,
Lawrence's building has been built,
and Lawrence's faculty buildings are.
Avalon, 8th & Avalon; Harvard
Southeast, Iowa, and Argo;
and Argos. Our cost of living in one of these hard-
working apartments is $250 per month;
spacious apartments and you will be
in need to have a dwindler waiver at
A.C. B, heat and water utilities paid,
as well as insurance.
SUMMER RATE: New-leased fortified apartment, sleeping room with or without infirmities privileges the new KU and 5-6
813-757-697
we studio apartments. Quiet, relaxed, air-conditioning, steam-heating facilities. Business run or graduate studies. Business run or graduate studies. Available May 21 at 8D-890.
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWYNESS
You can enjoy yourself in the sun or on the beach if you call my妻 800-352-6780, or if you call my媠 800-352-6780, or if you call my婶 800-352-6780, or if you call my媽 800-352-6780, or if you call my媽 800-352-6780, or if you call my媽 800-352-6780, or if you call my媽 800-352-6780, or if you call my媽 800-352-6780, or if you call my媘
Luxurious, spacious home for housekeeping, bedrooms, bedding room, kitchen, laundry, dining room. All car seats curved, central air, pigeon feather. Completely furnished. Call 855-323-7018.
For Sublease. Furnished Shoulder
Place at May 29, May 20, dates flexible.
Must be married and attending
summer school. Call 842-6310. 4-26
Need to sub-lease apt., 2 bdrm, unim,
1 book, 1 bk from campus for summer.
$80 mo. Call 842-2862 or 843-
2116
Rooms for rent. Need girls to share
house $50 utilities included. Avail
May 1 or May 20. 842-5768 4-27
PLAZA MANOR. Summer and fall rent, now available. Studios one hour south of the beach furnished. Swimming pool, air-conditioned. Special summer rate: $249 Murphy
WYST HILLIE AF_ARMATURES. New
armature systems that are integrated and informed testable warehouses. We will conduct a demonstration, drawdown, walk-through, co-ordination, and performance testing for our new warehouses. For information call 811-295-4300.
Furnished apartments and rooms
Good location and utilities paid.
Prices reduced for summer. Very real-
seasonal accommodations. CALL 426-508-3671
B2-5607
1971 two-bedroom mobile home for
rental for summer. Located at Mobile
Acrees South. Call 842-2315. 4-286
To need leav. old, home, honey
$125.0m. Utilities paid except
electric. Come by anytime. 934
Already interceded. two people.
August 2
quiet, comfortable 2-bedroom apt. for summer. Fully furnished, and carpeted throughout. Suite and downstairs. $150/month, including all utilities. Phone #841-2329, after 5 p.m.
Kenting for summer and fall; rice
furnished rooms, kitchen privileges,
nur KU. Each 1-3 bedroom apts. 842-
5067 after 4:00. 5-9
Large 1 bedroom, infirmized apt on top of a large basement in campus area. Lay up kitchen in campus area. Lay up bathroom in campus area. shower kit with reticle & electric tub. Utility room. Utilities paid $120. Money required to purchase suite.
New older home in old West Hill. Dishwasher, refrigerator, entertainment room, with 6ft living room, with 6ft bedroom including 1 major master bedroom, bathroom, kitchen with refrig. & electric oven, 3 bathrooms, 4th bedroom with private outdoor enclosure. Req's Realty '145, Mos. 843, Mo. 729.
RIDGHOUSE APTS. Summer rates for the budgeted number All the apartment units at best rates in town EFF & I 2 kd II 118 for detail $4,000. 118 for detail $4,000. Cedarwood 118 for detail $4,000.
Lavely furnished apartment for 2 men, with central air very close to campus to use to appraise--Available summer and winter; 4 and 15- $839. Phone 632-807.
Apartments for rent. Available May 15, summer rates, air conditioning range, $50-.85; Call 842-9153 at 6:00 p.m. p. 19 W. 14th. 5-1
CSC TOYOTA TACOMIN
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
FOR SUBLASEE. Large, 2-bedroom,
unfurnished apart near shopping center.
Air-conditioned. One cat allowed.
Cell. 842-542-6123 or 5 after 3 or
0604.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
Lewrence, Kansai 60444
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
NOTICE
Webster's Mobile Homes
Apple Books Group Available
3409 W. 61th 842-7700
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
Your Complete Service Dealer
Barn Partied? Now available for
rent at Apple Valley Farm in Lake Perry,
Apple Valley Farm in Lake Perry,
and cooler, plenty of parking
for all. Call Joe Slurpew after 6 a.m.
or fill Joe Slurpew after 6 a.m. at
855-732-1044.
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. John Wells, 842-7220. tf
Women's Alterations. 20 years experience. Call 845-2767. 9:30-5:30. 4-25
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER. 882-7649. Professional child care for children 1 mo to 12 mo. Full or part-time. Specially designed embrass-2-M.
WEDDING INVITATIONS — PRICE ROMAN
customization
paid only $30. Send $150 for
catalog and samples to Arlen Arod
East, Main Street, Bismarck,
8-28
$340
SUBEASE- 2 bbr, 2 bath, anthurium
BASEMENT. Aquarium furniture. Furnished
room. Swimming pool with dishwasher. A-C Bath. Poolacing. Great location. Pool size. Refrigerator. Cal. ID-482-88
Typewriters and Sewing Machines—
Name Brands at Bargain Prices, Money
to Loan, Traders. 822 Mass. 4-26
GIRLS - WOMEN Are you the model
Call Me Rafa for free (for events)
Training available at Training
Training Available Call Ms. Frikk at
802-6220 or at KFRIK
822-6220
FOUND-BROWN GLASSES — size cups may be female, but who knows? Found a week ago, Sunday just West of Stratton. Call 842-425-
HORSES BOARDED EXCELLENT
FULL STALL CARE CLOSE IN
STABLE EXCELLENT
STABLE ALSO ENGLISH SADDLE
FOR SALE: 832-1462 4-25
GUNS Winchester, Benington-Curry,
Pittsburgh, New York, and on ilauna plates 37 shot-
board revolvers. Large selection of choice of
military boats. Marine based on guns Traders. 822
1014 North Park Blvd. 822-699-6255
Northeast Laundry and Dry Cleaning at the Mini-Pizza Modern and quick service, 1910 Haskell 842-8320
Just arrived - Western shirts in blue denim and chambray. Fun, funky, functional, and cheap Earthshine, 12 E, 8th. 4-28
LENNY ZERO'S at 110 Miles, your non-profit community record, which is valued up to $75 million national and The Hope Fund. As a donor you will be able to so you are helping the organization clean and not store as great in litter. Love Lanny P.S. We give money to love Lanny P.S. We give money to Whistle & more! Special $9.99 Harvest. Nash Beach, Naples and David Crosby Beach.
DAY CARE PLUS - From June 12 until startups in the fall. For ages 6 and up, students receive education in a country setting. Weekly transportation from Lawrence axial to Portland.
AUDIO - AIDUo-stereo Hi-Fi, Precision
Pression lab complete facilities. Factor
authorized warranty for most all
major lines. Call Raft Audio, 842-207-47
HELP WANTED
TEACHERS WANTED TEACHER
Southwest Teachers' Agency
Box 432, Allouguayev, N.M. 8706; "Our
Work" Bounded and a memoir,
N.A.T.A.
The Curriculum and Instruction Survey (Feedback) is accepting applications for the SURVEY DIRECTOR--This position requires someone who is somewhat knowledgeable in computer science and research and who has some experience and communication problems. A successful person will work closely with the instructional team. In the Companion Course, he or she will teach other institutions. He or she would be a KuU student and faculty. The Student should have at least three other institutions. He or she would be a KuU student and faculty. The Student should have at least three other institutions. He or she would be a KuU student and faculty. The Student should have at least three other institutions.
During the summer and 3.4 time during the semester year. The person must be able to pay in-service training period time paid in-service training period time.
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR—This position also requires someone who is knowledgeable in research and administrative responsibility for much of the internal Survey and should be able to work with students and critics. Fewer than twenty hours a week during the academic year full-time, he or she will have had some commercial art training and experience with the problems and mechanics of printing. He or she will be a graduate student in one of the courses and other documents printed by the Survey. It will be a two-year position directly behind the School of Receptionary Work.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
STUDENTS. Earn $40-$60 per month in school. WMUST BE 21 years old, aggressive, willing to learn, and have a personal interview. WMUST BE 4-28
852 to B59 Per W/PART TIME. Use winnertraining, powerful addressing companies you are working with. Companies are paying big money for your services and are personally addressing their customers by providing accompanying opportunities with these companies. **P.O. Box 647, Cawdorville, NY 13065**.
Unit leader for Girl Scout Camp.
Contact. Mrs. Owen C. Barnes, 20 South 10th St., Kansas City, Kansas
66102. 4-28
Babyssister needed during summer;
2-4 days a week 2:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.
own transportation. Call before noon.
841-3370.
4-26
WANTED
OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS
All professors and occupations
are all professional. All
overseas sightseeing. Free info
for jobs in 1977, San Diego, CA.
0215-824-3555
1 female roommate for summer and
tail to share 1 bedroom apt. in complex.
Rent $45.mo + util. Call 842-
42-26
receive 7 p.m.
We buy used books, also old Play-
boy and Pent-House magazines in
good condition! Call 842-0216. 5-9
Male Roombati (m) share space with
female Roombati. A couple of times
for summer and magha fall in West
Africa. Roombati is wanted. Wanted:
Roombati to be a bedroom
apartment bear fall. For more
information, call 916-248-7300.
Roommate wanted to share house for the summer, Call Haywood 842-7256 4.23
Wanted: one or two roommates for summer in house on Ohio. Less than $40 per person. Each have own room. Will accept 842 students. 4-25
Liberated Female to share modern 1922 two-bedroom room suite with the traditional living style. Private room for summer and autumn for summer and for summer, or all. (813-834-8500)
Female roommate for summer needed to share 1 bedroom furnished put in Meadowbrook West. Call 842-8667
Female roommate for summer to share two-bedroom, air-conditioned apartment near campus. Call 864-1580
Roommates to share large furnished
house for summer. Must see to appl-
cele 3 blocks from campus, own
room Call 842-5755 5-1
TYPING
Typing in my home IBM Selectric
Prompt accurate work. Experienced
Call 841-2556. 5-9
Experienced in typing theses, disseminating them to students and having Electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Experience in composing Phone 843-8544. Mr Wright.
TYPING - THEERS - DISSERTATION - MISCELLANEOUS WORK
One. Select Equipment with pica type
One. Travel, 2409 Ridge County
851-4240
Thues, term papers, typed accurately and promptly. IBM Selectric, your choice of type styles. Also editing at krista Munda, 842-697-9751, 842-690-9653.
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work Call: 843-288. M: Rankman K
RAST, EFFICIENT WORK. Carbon
fibonid used—look like printing.
17, carriage for legal paper, will
carrieve and grammar. C4-42-
4734
Experienced typist will type all
responses rate. Please call 743-7941, 4-22
Typing on elite electric typewriter
Please. Please prompt attention,
403-958
LOST
Lost-st hate, male cat, short hair, black with white chest and white hour glass shoe on knee 8 * months old. Kate 1120 Kentucky 4 • 426 kitten
Proscription Sunglasses at Robinson
Field No. 2. Left in case hanging on
backstop. Call Roger Miller-B42-854
after 6:10.
Young, male cat. Pale yellow with orange eyes, missing since Sun. evening. No collar. Please call 842-8129 4.37
MISCELLANEOUS
Rain Capes—If you didn't get one,
you are very be wet by now. Next
time, stay dry—at EARTHSHINE 1,
E. 80h. 4-27
TRAVELING? STAY OVERNIGHT
TREAKING? Stuck at work? Meet
travelling people. Exchange privileges
with members in U.S. and Canada
University Travelers Club Box 9147
Box 914
Berkeley, Calif. 94709
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
and Service
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Wkdays 8-5:30 Sunday 10-3
Parts at a discount
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATESUN
500 E.23rd
OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
O TO 40 MPH -13.3
RECLINING FRONT SEATS
UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL.
842-0444
LOVE THAT DATSUN
8
Tuesday, April 25, 1972
University Daily Kansan
ALL UNIVERSITY T.G.I.F. FRIDAY, MAY 5TH 1-9 p.m. LAKE PERRY DAM
...
ALL PROCEEDS DONATED TO KU BURN CENTER FUND
BIKATHONALAPERRY(LAKE) POM-PONvs. PROF“SOFTBALL”
- 4-man and 1 alternate relay team to Lake Perry
- 4 classes 1) Under 40 men
2) Under 40 women
3) Under 40 mixed
4) Over 40
- Donations $5/team—Prizes awarded
- Heats: 1:00, 2:00, 3:00 p.m.
- Must submit entry blank and money by Thursday, May 4th
VOLLEYBALL COMPETITION
- Any teams of 4 people—4:00 p.m.
- Divisions: 1) mens, 2) womens, 3) mixed
- Must submit entry blank by May 4th
Presented by the Board of Class Officers:
SENIOR: John Mize, Jim Gilpin Nancy McElroy,Nancy Pile
JUNIOR: Doug Rose, Steve Cosner Pam Henderson, Cindy Boone
SOPHOMORE: Jim Harrell, Pete Ochs, Linda Moll, Ellen Reimers
FRESHMAN: Rick McLaughlin, Scott McFadden Jan Seymour, Pat Soptic
- KU Pom-Pon Squad to play KU's "Jock" Profs
- "Play ball" at 3:30 p.m.
DRINKING CONTEST
"KU's 1st Annual Best Beer Boozer's Bash" 900 GALLONS OF BEER
- 4 "man" relay and individual heats
- Divisions: 1)womens,2)mens,3)mixed
- Donation: $1/person—Prizes awarded
- Must submit entry blank and money by Friday, May 5th
THE GREAT GASLIGHT GANG
- For spring entertainment 7-9 p.m.
- All Awards Given at 7:30
- CONTRIBUTIONS TO BURN CENTER ANNOUNCED
ENTRY BLANK
Name (Team, if one) ___
Event
Circle One: Mens, Womens, Mixed, Other
Amount of Donation ___
($1/person for Bikathon and Beer Competition)
RETURN TO: ALL UNIVERSITY U.G.M.
CLASS HEADQUARTERS
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION—103 UNION
DREARY
KANSAN
82nd Year. No.130
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
City Plans To Beautify Downtown
Wednesday, April 26, 1972
See Page 7
THE HUNDREDS OF FRIENDS
Kansan Photo by MARC MAY
Assistant HEW Secretary Speaks in Union
John Montgomery, assistant secretary of Health Education and Welfare, spoke in Washington to the nation on a guaranteed minimum income Tuesday in the Kansas Union. Montgomery promised
to take a statement given to him at the meeting back to President Nixon. The statement said domestic issues have caused the use of the Vietnam war. See Story Page 12.
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon will make a nationwide address tonight by radio and television to discuss the situation in South Vietnam and to announce his decision on U.S. troop levels there after May 1.
The White House announced Tuesday that the broadcast will be carried at 9
But Presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler told reporters, "I wouldn't draw
The President made his decision about the address after meeting with his top national security adviser, Henry A. Akers, who returned its 'return' from a secret trip to Moscow.
Nixon to Discuss Vietnam
Committee sources predicted a close vote recommending that Kleindienst, a nomination of the Nixon administration, be confirmed without further delay.
Before the vote however, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass, planned to ask for a one-day extension of the committee if the committee already spanned more than eight weeks.
Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W. Va., Senate majority whip and a committee member, said he would support that as well as an extension by one day of a committee-imposed deadline to report to the Senate by Thursday.
McGovern, Humphrey Split Presidential Primary Wins
Committee Vote Expected Today On Kleindienst
WASHINGTON (AP)—Amid liberal protests that its investigation is incomplete, the Senate Judiciary Committee will meet today to vote on what to recommend to the Senate on the bill, or for the general of Richard G. Kleindienst.
Instead, the Pending Legislation Subcommittee of the Student Rights Committee recommended that the bill be amended and until further study of it could be made.
Kansan Correction
It was incorrectly reported in Tuesday's Kansan that the Student Rights Committee of the Student Senate voted Monday to change the balance of votes to change Be structure of the Student, Senate.
THE REST OF THE 102 Massachusetts
congressmen attended among the 12
congressional districts.
Bv The Associated Press
John Hackey, chairman of the subcommittee, said Tuesday that the recommendation had been made because he was not satisfied he had been enough discussion of the groundmine.
In Massachusetts, McGovern was approaching the sweep he had forecast, leading for 88 convention votes. Muskie led for none. As the statewide winner, McGovern was assured of 20 first-ballot convention votes. That meant the big name Democrats who had supported him were winning their convention votes for the South Dakota senator on the initial convention ballot.
Hackney said that no official recommendation of the bill had been made, but that if banners of the bill had been submitted to the committee subcommittee would have probably recommended rejection, since its members thought more time was needed.
Sen. George McGovener, D-S.D., won the Massachusetts presidential primary Tuesday night and, in Pennsylvania, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Dinn, swept to his first victory as Democrat voters House of Seven, Edmund S. Muskie, House guest of Seven, Edmund S. Muskie.
FOR HUMPREY, by bypassed Massachusetts, Pennsylvania delivered the first major primary in a career of successful campaigning that dates back 12 years.
Muskie lost twice in a day, by wide margins. Furthermore, he was running a virtual dead heat with McGovern for the second time, when he came up a campaign concentrated on that state.
The presidential preference poll in Pennsylvania was not binding on national convention delegates. In separate competition for nominating votes, the candidates led for 35, Muskue for 32 and McGovney for 12 with 7 per cent of the vote counted.
a linkage between Henry Kissinger's visit to the Soviet Union and the President's decision regarding what troop levels will be in South Vietnam after May 1."
NIXON HAD consulted with South Vietnam president Thieu and top U.S. advisers and received their concurrence in his decision. Ziegler said.
Nixon has been systematically reducing the level of U.S. forces in South Vietnam since the summer of 1969, when the United States invaded the headquarters of its armed forces in South Vietnam.
He put set a withdrawal rate that would heid that to 69,000 by May 1. Ziegler hit 73,000.
In deciding whether there should be a continued pullout, Nixon has been faced with an escalation of the war and a major offensive launched by the North Vietnamese, who are known as the Marsh. He ordered a resumption of bombing of North Vietnam targets, including raids by B52 bombers on Hanoi and Haiphong.
NIXON ADMINISTRATION officials have publicly admonished the Soviet Union for its large scale shipments of sophisticated armaments used by the North Vietnamese in their current offensive.
In the face of these developments, Nixon dispatched Kissinger on a secret mission to Moscow for talks with Soviet officials on the war in Afghanistan on "important international problems."
The President also consulted and received the "approval and concurrence" of President Thieu; U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker in Saigon; Ambassador William Porter, the chief U.S. negotiator at the Paris peace talks; Gen. Creighton W. McGee, the former South Vietnam, and senior advisers, including Kissinger, Ziegler reported.
Nixon conferred by telephone with Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird andonymously with Kissinger again Tuesday.
Pennsylvania was electing 137 of its 182 delegates to the convention.
Govern. George C. Wallace of Alabama was running fourth in Pennsylvania, second in Georgia.
The senator from Maine decided after that battering to focus his campaign on Pennsylvania. He denied that he had been in a fist fight with the South Dakota, "but he cut back his
Pennsylvania
Here are the totals in the Pennsylvania Democratic presidential preference primary with 65 per cent of the 9,656 precincts reporting:
Appalachian 18,732 - 25 per cent.
McGovern 189,332 - 22 per cent.
Muskie 183,711 - 21 per cent.
Wallace 158,711 - 19 per cent.
Jackson 28,905 - 3 per cent
Massachusetts
Here are the totals with 23 per cent of the
1,964 precincts reporting:
McGovern 57,431 - 48 per cent
Muskie 24,948 - 21 per cent
Wallace 10,531 - 75 per cent
Chisholm 6,988 - 6 per cent
Mills 4,648 - 4 per cent
McCarthy, 2,664 - 2 per cent
Humphrey's Pensylvania victory was sure to resound in the campaign for the Ohio primary, which will pick 153 convention votes next Tuesday.
McGOVERN APPEARED likely to
McGOVERN APPEARED likely to
the chief rival to Harmbrew in
hops
President Nixon was a runaway victor in the Republican preference poll in Massachusetts, where he was gaining 79 per cent of the vote.
Rep. Paul N. McCloskey Jr., R-Cal., who urged voters for himself in the GOP balloting and for McGovern in the Democratic primary as protests against him began on Monday, with a 15 per cent Republican share. McCloskey had withdrawn as a official candidate.
Rep. John M. Ashbrook, R-Ohio, had 5 per cent.
THERE WAS NO GOP preference contest in Pennsylvania.
Alabama's Wallace, who was in Indianaapolis, said the share of the votes he got in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts indicated "we are going to win in Indiana." The primary there is next Tuesday.
Humphrey's campaign game plan made Pennsylvania a pivotal state in his third bid for presidential nomination. He was the only candidate to secure a candidate for the nomination in 1960.
THE STRATEGY was devised when Muskie the Democratic forerunner, and was based on a maximum Humphrey labor, to overtake him in Pennsylvania.
But Muskie ran into trouble when the primaries began, scoring a minority victory in New Hampshire, where McGovenn gained a 5.71 per cent share of the vote, while the Democrats defeated Florida's March 14 election. Humphrey finished second to Wallace in that one.
M. GEOVEN LOST to Muske, 60 to 13, in a contest for delegates in the Illinois State tournament to victory in Wisconsin on April 4. Muske once again ran a lagging four.
and Philadelphia Democratic chairman Peter J. Camiel in Muskie's behalf. He backed four years ago, when the nomination without entering a primary. But he said the party has been reformed when and that he helped bring that reform.
UNDER THE PENNSYLVANIA system, the 137 delegates elected in the primary will choose another 27, and the state committee will elect the other 18.
Wallace campaigned in Pennsylvania and briefly, in Boston, on Monday, where he accused McGovern of "stealing my thunder" by casting himself as a candidate running against the establishment.
Antiwar Activities to Continue at KU; Protesters to Plan for Moratorium
By JOE ZANATTA Kansan Staff Writer
McGovern pushed hard in Massachusetts, and a poll commissioned by the Boston Globe rated his support at 43 percent. He said the and the absent Humphrey at 44 per cent.
Steve Hollis, Lawrence senior and spokesman for the organizers of the meeting said the purpose of the meeting was to discuss specific projects for the next few weeks.
"We're trying to build onto the energy of Saturday's demonstration," Hollis said. "We're committing ourselves to continued action until the war stops."
In Massachusetts, Muskie was allied with an array of party leaders headed by Mayor Kevin H. White of Boston and Rep. Richard O'Neill, the House Democratic whip.
Committees were organized to plan action both on and off campus. A spokesman for the Vietnam Veterans Against the War announced that plans were being made for a demonstration at gates of Forces Air Force Base in Tuekske.
campaign and his budget there to put his push in Pennsylvania.
Vietnam and presentations at chemistry department functions were also discussed.
A committee was organized to plan activities for the Lawrence area on May 4, which has been named as the date for a national moratorium against the war.
A program against the war was tentatively scheduled for May 1. This program will feature lectures, workshops, slide shows and a theater presentation. A
A 20-minute film was shown during the meeting. It presented interviews with Vietnam veterans and showed war scenes in Vietnam.
IN THAT CONTEST, he had the support of Gov. Milton J. Shapp and Democratic organization leaders, notably in Philadelphia. But the organization backing showed signs of coming unglued after his Wisconsin defeat.
site has not yet been scheduled for the program.
Also organized were committees for a teach-in, a possible newspaper of antiwar activities and a discussion on women's antiwar action.
A further demonstration is scheduled to Thursday noon in front of Anderson Hall.
Humphrey criticized the efforts of Shapp
Plans were also made at the University of Kansas meeting to get as many people as possible to attend the Robert Dole, RKan, lecture on Thursday. The group also planned support for the Palestine Liberation Day activities on Friday.
The silent protest is to begin at 7:30 p.m. under the sponsorship of the Manhattan Ad Hoc Committee to End the War. The committee is composed of students, faculty and clergy members of the community.
An all-night candlelight vigil in protest of the Vietnam War will be held tonight on Sunday.
★★★
Senate to Debate Hike In KU Student Fees
The distribution of a slide show on
By HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Writer
The Student Senate will meet tonight to consider the student activity fee budget proposed by the Finance and Auditing办公室. The meeting promises to be a long one.
To solve the money problem, the Finance and Auditing Committee will recommend a $2 increase in the semester activity fee to $14 and a 20 cent increase to $1.40 per hour for students enrolled in less than six hours.
The reason why the senate may run into problems is that allocations proposed in the budget total $473,400, $64,500 more than the estimated activity fee revenue for
One opponent of an activity fee increase is David Dillon, Hutchinson junior and assistant coach.
He said an increase was also what the Senate had tried to prevent when it passed enactment No. 17 in December that created the new apportionment system of eight major areas that receive senate funding.
Dismayed by the committee's recommendation, Dillon said he would urge any student who objected to the proposed increase to contact his senator and voice protest before the senate meeting tonight.
Dilson based part of his opposition on a belief that an increase was proved to be undesirable to students by the activity fee referendum held last fall.
"IF NOTHING else, the one thing it did say was that students don't want an increase in the activity fee," Dillon said of the referendum.
"If there isn't any increase things will suffer. 'There's no way around it.' Downer
The idea behind the creation of school councils, as provided in Enactment No. 17, was to provide each school with a body that could assume the job of making allocations to groups that are related to a school and are now funded through the Senate.
A proponent of the activity fee increase is Barbie Downer, Topeka junior and chairman of the Finance and Auditing Committee.
SHE SAID KU students had expressed a desire to have so many groups funded that
With the council's budgets cut to leave only enough money for "operating expenses," the Senate will fund all school-related groups again this year.
Downer said the cuts were made because the councils had not been formed, but if they did exist they could help the senate out of its financial squeeze.
If the Senate does not approve an increase, Downer said it would have to decide between excluding two or three major allocations or else make "a percentage cut across the board" to all groups funded by the Senate.
money was not available with the present activity fee.
The latter solution was especially undesirable to Downer because she said all groups had already been cut to the "bare heart" of the group, and would "unmarry their ability to operate."
DOWNER SAID the school council's budget had been reduced from nearly $2,000 to $3,780 to allow more funds for student organizations.
She said that although a final decision had not been made, the athletic team would have to increase student football and basketball tickets next year regardless of the senate allocation to athletics. A $ 600 cut would mean a 25 percent cent increase to football tickets. she said.
Downer defended the committee's proposed cut of $8,000 in funds from the athletic department by saying that the plan had been presented to athletic director Wade Stinson and that Sinton supported the cut.
Returning money to the school councils would allow each school to determine allocations to most student groups since most are tied to a school.
See FEES DEBATE Page 6
United Methodists Urge Confession of War Guilt
ATLANTA (AP)—The United Methodist governing conference approved a report Tuesday calling on the United States "to confess" that the war in Indochina "has been a crime against humanity" and to take immediate steps to end the war.
About 1,000 delegates, after a heated two-hour debate, adopted the majority report by the Committee on Christian Social Concerns.
Calls on President Nixon to cease immediately all bombing in Indochina.
—Pleads with governmental leaders of Hanoi and the United States to agree immediately to the release of all prisoners in Guam, a possible date, no later than Dec. 31, 1972.
-Calls on Nixon to proceed with immediate withdrawal of all U.S. military forces from Vietnam no later than Dec. 31, 1972.
Calls on the U.S. Congress to cease providing any funds for the support of military activities in Southeast Asia after Dec. 31, 1972.
"We are exposed for caring more for the lives of Americans than Asians and for blocking from our minds the horror of our continued bombings. . . .
Citing an estimate of more than 450,000 Asian civilians killed, more than 790,000 Asian military personnel dead, and more than 55,000 American military men killed, the report said. "We are therefore moved to congratulate the men for their complicity in this violence and death..."
"We further call upon the leadership of the United States to confess that what we have done in Indochina has been a crime against humanity, and an insurmountable step to bring U.S. involvement in this war to swift conclusion."
Kanan Photo by PRISCILLA BRANDSTED
Calder Pickett Speaks at Forum
Speaking on the speech in the 1972 election, Calder Pickett, said that the one party press exists primarily on the editorial page. Pickett spoke at the
American Presidency Forum held in the Kansas Union. See story page 6.
2
Wednesday. April 26, 1972.
University Daily Kansan
Astronaut Tests Insects
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Speeding ever faster homeward, Apollo 16 astronaut Neil Armstrong threw through the hatch of his command module Tuesday and walked in deep space to recover two canisters of film and expose insects to the harsh environment.
As John W. Young and Charles Luke Jr. worked from the campus, the edges down the side of the spacecraft, about 200,000 miles cylindrical service module housing the mmo-mapping
After making tworound trips to the cameras—recovering a canister of film each time—Mattingly then exposed some 60 million microbes to the effects of radiation and radiation in space.
SCIENTISTS HOPE the bug experiment will help determine how the harsh environment of Mars affects the growth and mutation of micro-organisms and thus also help learn whether man can travel to Mars and back.
Dr. R. E. Benson, a Manned Spacecraft Center scientist, said the microbial experiment was the start of a series of investigations that have revealed how to board other spacecraft. It is designed to determine whether man can live in deep space for the years required for such travel.
During his space walk Maturingly mounted a container out of the vacuum tube to allow the ultraviolet rays to pepper the microbes, still inside
Another 20 million bacteria,
another 50 million bacteria,
the near vacuum of space but not
to the rays, and 20 million more
only cold and weightless
THE EFFECTS of the 10-minute experiment will be studied when the bugs are returned to earth.
"If there are effects, I would expect them to be detrimental—to retard growth and development," Benson said.
Apollo 16 is bringing to earth a record 245 pounds of rock, the first ever gathered from the mountains of the moon.
Duke expressed doubts that he and Young found the volcanic material that scientists had predicted.
The future experiments will be conducted on Skylab, an earth orbiting science laboratory to be built next. Rats and mice go next.
Apollo 16 is scheduled to splash into the 44 p.m. EST line in the South Atlantic at 70 miles southeast of Christmas City, and will hit Casper's all-moon rocklet thunderstorms for eight seconds Tuesday morning to put them precisely on course.
DR. TONY ENGLAND, a scientist astronaut, told Duke University that most of the rocks which seemed to have been formed by meteorite impacts could actually be formed when they had been shattered by meteorites.
Dr. Palmer Dyal, an Ames Research Center scientist, said the high magnetic field in the Descartes Mountains where there might have been that there might have been an earth-like dynamo on the moon."
"If that were the case, the moon had to be a lot hotter in the past and it had to spin faster," he said.
Scientists said an instrument called the DyeSpectrometer measured Young's measuring magnetic fields on the moon which were 100 times longer than expected in the sun.
A PLANETARY dynamo is a torrid, metallic liquid core. The dynamo sets up an electric field which magnetizes material around it.
Apollo 16, speeding homeward since rocketing out or lunar orbit, passed at 9:47 a.m. EST through
Diane Armstrong, Kansas City,
Kan, senior, commutes five days
a week from Kansas City. She
was cheaper and easier to
live at the campus for evenings during the week and all
day Saturday. Armstrong said that
by working during the school
year, she could have the same job
that most students may go job hunting in
maybe like so many other students.
1,600 KU Students Commute to Campus
Armstrong's criticisms against commuting are the bad weather conditions on the highways and in other parts of the country, night classes or meetings before
Of the approximately 18,000 students enrolled at the Kansas State University campus last year, about 1,600 commuted to KU from a distance over 15 miles, according to a study by the Institutional Planning Office, headed by George Smith, vice-president.
Students commute from all parts of eastern Kansas to Topeka, Ottawa, Bonner Springs and Overland Park. Most commuters come from a radius Lawrence, according to Smith's data.
"The weather, especially snow, is bad for driving, even on the hill," the turnpike is expensive, "and for the令人不安ing anyway," Maher said.
going home. Also by community she does miss out on social events at night, but she said that there were different kinds of social events in Kansas City she did not. She easily to make the hour drive on K-10 was bad too, but overall commuting was worth it.
John Mahar, Topeka graduate student, commutes four days a week from Topeka. He is married to Jennifer Barker and lives in Topeka. Maher was living in Topeka when he was accepted in KU's Graduate School. He decided to commute rather than face the business and make his wife commute.
Students have their own reasons for commuting to KU. Students need to make their way back and forth from home to school. Situations that cost the least amount of time for commuting for some is cheaper.
Maher said he was in a car pool last semester but his schedule didn't allow it this semester.
Peace Talks to Resume, White House Announces
WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States and North Vietnam will resume the Paris peace talks in New York. House announced Tuesday night.
In making the disclosure, Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said, "It is the United States' view that the first item of business in these talks must be clear about the measures which will put an end to the flagrant North Vietnamese invasion of South Vietnam.
Ziegler refused to say when Nixon decided to resume the talks.
"We are not interested in sterile propaganda debate."
Ziegler said that the United States 'will take a dm view of keeping the Paris forum open' if he should use it for such purposes.
But the unusual night-time announcement came less than hour after President Obama said the President's top foreign affairs adviser, Henry Kissinger, had held four days of secret talks in Moscow over the weekend.
President Nixon ordered the talks suspended on March 23 and the North Vietnamese have responded appropriately that they be resumed.
The United States is interested,
the presidential spokesman said,
"in discussion that will lead to
negotiations end to the war.
"We are willing to test the other side, to test their intentions," Ziegler said.
Asked specifically whether the Russian minister the Kissinger Moscow talks. Zagel said, "I wouldn't comment about the contents of the Moscow Treaty."
Ziegler said, in answer to questions, that the United States is fighting Vietnamese about the wording of the statement, specifically the portion giving priority to North Vietnamese offensive.
After suspending the sessions this year on March 23, Nixon continued to allow them to use this forum for the purpose of bullying the United States in a war of words, and seriously negotiating peace.
The Paris talks began in 1968, when President Lyndon B. Johnson halted air raid raids on North Vietnam.
a twilight zone where the
a gravitational pull of the moon
and earth are equal. At that
point, the earth's gravity began
pulling the streaking command
off its surface to a Pacific Ocean splashdown.
Since then, the North Vietnamese are for a resumption. Noting this, Ziegler said, "We are willing to test the other side, think the Vietnamese are quickly" whether the North Vietnamese are ready to resume.
"They are aware of our willingness to proceed with the negotiations," he said. "They will work in conjunction with it with your dispatches."
"Whenever the enemy is ready to negotiate seriously," Nixon said. "A march 23 news conference" "are ready to negotiate."
Casper's main rocket worked to perfection and start the mission. The rocket engine had been troublesome earlier in the mission. A back-up control system gave the rocket a forcing six-hour delay in the moon landing and causing offensives that the mission short by a full day.
Ziegler was asked whether Nixon had agreed to halt bailout requests and order to resume the aks. He responded that the United States was determined to assist South Korea in its war, imposing its will through force.
"We will take whatever military steps are necessary," including the boobing of military targets in North Vietnam.
Angela's Love Letters To Be Heard by Juvy
SAN JOSE (AP)—A judge ruled Tuesday that three love letters from Angela Davis to Michael Kidder could not bear the jury, but that jurors could not hear testimony of a guard who knew that he was face-to-face meeting of the two
Attorneys for Davis had fought vigorously to keep the jury from hearing the letters.
The prosecution claims they are key to proving that Davis was so driven by love for Jackson she snatched him from Marin coasthouse to exchange
later for Jackson's freedom
OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP)—The Washington State Library recently filled an interlibrary loan request from the LENIN State of the S.S.N in Moscow for his S.S.N in Your Heart" by Myron Brenton.
Arnason said he would not allow a guard to testify about what he observed during the only face-to-face meeting between two states because this would violate Davis' constitutional rights.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 26, 1972
3
VERSITY
---
CHARITY T.G.I.F.
SOFTBALL GAME
LAKE PERRY DAM, FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1-9 p.m.
. Teams of six or more people, beginning at 4:00
. KU 1971-72 and 72-73 Pom pon girls play KU professors in a unique softball game
- Playball at 3:30
. Divisions: men, women mixed
- Sign up in the Alumni Office, 103 Student Union by Thursday, May 4
- For spring entertainment, 7-9
.Contribution to the Burn Center announced
SPONSORED BY the BOARD of CLASS OFFICERS
BIKATHON to LAKE PERRY
.4 classes; under 40 men, women , mixed, over 40
. Must submit entry blank and donation by May 4, Alumni Office, 103 Student Union
.4 person relay and individual competition beginning at 5:00 p.m.
- Divisions: women's relay, men' relay and mixed individual(20 minute time limit)
- Must submit entry blank and donation by May 5, Alumni Office
. Prizes donated by Ball Park Louises Bierstube Mad Hatter Harbour Mother Marys Hawk
900 GALLONS OF BEER
ALL PROCEEDS DONATED TO KU BURN CENTER FUND
4
Wednesday, April 26, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
PETER J. ROSS
Defending Death
As the killing in Southeast Asia continues we will be treated with a visit from Robert Dole at the Vickers Lecture tomorrow. It is not out of coincidence that I mention the two in the same sentence.
Politically, Dole is an apologist for Richard Nixon—more politely, he is chairman of the Republican National Committee. As Nixon's man in the Senate, Dole is bound to defend his policies. As chairman of the National Committee he takes the offensive supporting his incumbent candidate. In both instances his tactics involve first, discrediting the opposition, and second, standing on his candidate's record. He is a name caller; that is his job Unabashed about his criticism Much of his rhetoric tomorrow evening will undoubtedly be devoted to defending Nixon's current war posture in Southeast Asia. Nixon, and Dole by association, are very much responsible for the carnage in bit of the world.
Dole plays the war rhetoric game by attacking those who oppose the military incarctions—and denies are Democrats—sending for President—and by refusing to
confront the fact that we drop bombs that kill people.
This is what makes him so pathetic and frightening. He has made a political game out of death. He still talks in terms of strategy—protective reaction, counter offensive. He fails to sense that this war has drained too much of the national spirit. Americans are weary of My Lai, tiger cages, napalm, defoliation and killing, most of all killing. The war has left its scar on the face of the nation—a nation that has come to accept violence as a way of life. Many psychologists attribute this violent disposition to the alienized our morality. Our heroes are gangsters and football players. We worship violence. All this is out of Dole's consciousness; his only mission is reeleding Richard Nixon. To do so he has deserted his constituents and become a slave to rhetorical offense and defense.
When you listen to him tomorrow, remember—he cannot face the American responsibility for the dead in Southeast Asia.
—Thomas E. Slaughter
Readers Respond
Memorial
Memorial Donation, Cops
To the Editor:
It was with great sadness that we learned of the sudden death of Richard Wiercienk on Easter Sunday of this year. He was the victim of a fatal automobile accident in Kansas City, his home town.
Richard had just completed the requirements to obtain a B.A. in Slavic Languages and Literatures, with a major in member of the student exchange between the University of Kansas and the Adam Mickiewicz University of Poznan, Poland. This April, he attended Trans World Airlines in Kansas City. He hoped eventually to be a steward on an American airline with flights to Poland. He also had hopes of being able one day to travel to Polish descent in social work.
His teachers and his friends.
particularly those who came to know him well during his studies in Poznan, will always remember him as a kind-hearted, courageous and likeable young man. We all grave deeply at his loss.
Personal condolences can be sent to Richard's parents, Mrs. and Mrs. Wiercinki, 5044 E.16th in Kansas City, Missouri, 64127.
Richard's friends at KU can give a concrete token of their memory by contributing their blood to the Kansas General City City, and designating their donation to the hospital in his name.
Blood can be given at the General Hospital, Kansas City, (third floor), or the Lawrence Memorial Hospital. A Blood Mobile will be at Lawrence University from 9 a.m. to 2.15 p.m. Please be sure to designate your donation for: Richard
Wiercinski, Kansas General Hospital, Kansas City.
Professor of History
Resident American Director,
Poznan, 1971
Security?
One wonders why Traffic and "Security" people have time to walk around a blue space and been detained in a dorm for an extra 25 minutes around 11:30 p.m. on a Friday at the school where they ticket those who park on yellow lines around campus on Saturday mornings. Both are illegal at all
I wrote this letter not because I expect to argue about my ticket. I want the police to voice to those extremely with me with the priorities in that department.
A. M. BROWN
Who determines which rules are enforced so strictly and which are not?
-Diane Beecher.
Lawrence graduate student
Garry Wills
It is odd that Senator McGovney, the "egg-head" of the lot, seems to be giving George Wallace his toughest challenge in the country of world-class America. Some think his very maniac help to him - it sounds tjihl-Catholic.
'Ethnic' Vote Really Means Catholic Vote
The mere fact that this possibility has been seriously raised is an indication of the weight that "ethnic" factors bear in determining what a woman really means. "Catholic." After all, what else is left when one eliminates WASPs, blacks and Jews? The Irish, Italians, and Poles are left—along with a largely Catholic background.
Since Americans are deferential to the idea of church-state separation, it is not safe to form an open religious faction in electoral terms—a Catholic fraternity or a secular political politics to encourage "ethnic diversity" barely covers the fact—that a large
Catholic vote is out there (roughly a quarter of the electorate); that both parties want to get it; and that both sides will largely come in "ethnic terms."
It is hardy accidental that most theorists and spokesman for this movement are Catholic- e.g., b. Barbara Mays and J. O'Donnell, the principal spokesman are both priests -Mgrr. Geno Barne and Fr. Andrew Greeley. And a good deal of the ethnic speculation has centered on them, especially Ed Muskie and Ted Kennedy.
Nixon is well aware of this movement's importance. It is not enough for him to point to his own Irish background, or to celebrate the near-heritage of the Irish language and his birthday. Nor is it enough to have a Greek Vice-President. That gives us three "ethics," indeed—but none of them are Catholic, in this very Protestant administration. So Nixon would address the issue; address large Catholic assemblies and tell them he would save parochial schools. He issued a gratuitus, unsolicited statement against abortion. As usual, he gets down to basics very quickly. He taught Catholic bishops and their monied benefactors. While Democrats
passyfoot around the religious issue (Muskie so carefully that many people do not even know his name) the emperor blatant appeal to this important blog.
Like all political tactics, this one is full of imponderies. Catholics themselves are undergoing a crisis of faith in the church and in chaos; most of them seem to ignore parapalach teaching on contraception; the parochial schools themselves are under fire. It might seem there is no Catholic loyalty for politicians to take a free ride.
But much of the unrest is directed at reforming priests and theological dissidents. Some schools are abandoned because they were attached to inner-city parishes, now inundated by blacks. The crisis of faith has made many Catholics look for promises stability. Mass Catholic dissatisfaction is not directed to reactionary bishops, but to younger clergy under them. Thus heightening of Catholic political awareness and social grievances can well be channelled to the purposes of Right-Wing politics. The Catholic Church's "new populism" to the parishes are in that sense doing Richard Nixon's work for him.
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
James J. Kilpatrick
A David in Academic Groves
WASHINGTON—One of the pleasant things about our town is that some ambitious David is forever passing through, twirling his slingshoot for a crack at some Goliath. Such a visitor turned up last week: Richard W. Mason, 43, of the San Fernando Valley.
He doesn't look much like a David. He looks more like a school teacher, which is precisely what he is. For the past fourteen years he has taught sixth-grade math and English in the Los Angeles public schools. Now he has taken indfinite leave to have his go at Golatlh: He is
serving as president of the National Association of Professional Educators. His purpose is to offer teachers an alternative to the compulsive National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers.
Not many of our David's manage to tell their targets; Justice Douglas is not impached, a World Calendar is not adopted, seniority reigns untouched on the Hill. But now and then, against improbable odds, a few determined men and
women put enough energy and dedication in a cause that is right, and crash—down comes a supersonic transport plane. Mason and his NAPE may triumph yet.
Surely, at least in a conservative view, their cause is right. Whatever, may be said of trade unionism in other areas of public employment, trade unionism among teachers holds an incongruous place. Teachers in schools should loyalty should be to teaching only—to the difficult art of pursuing truth and transmitting
learning. No winds should blow in academic groves but winds of freedom.
In recent years some alien winds—winds of compulsion—have entered there. The American federation of Anthers (AFL-CIO) has into a powerful body with all the trappings of old-time trade unionism—the bargaining committee, the shop steward, the strike. And the NEA, once a free teacher, has become a teachers, has felt compelled to compete with compulsory devices along the same line—checked-off does and a union shop. Both organizations are involved in representing their own members in bargaining with school boards—
supposes, of the AFT, and to the outraged cries of the independents.
Hawaii's compulsory "service fee" is not unusual; it is increasingly typical of the power department. The defense of the compulsion, union spokenmars allhall the threadbare arguments against free riders. But their arguments were so effective that the "service fee," or call it an "agency shop," the system approaches extortion—the obtaining of money under threat with force, the case of fire being fired.
Mason's National Association of Professional Educators, headquartered in Encino, came into being two years ago when
NATIONAL ECONOMY
INFLATION
MUCH HAGNIEM
The Courier-Journal
"Congratulations on reaching this great new height... I flew up to greet you..."
By Sokoloff
"Trade unions among teachers hold an incongruous place," says James J. Kilpatrick today, and the American Association of Professional Educators, an organization committed to conservative or unionism.
no one reasonably could object to that; they also are demanding the power to bargain exclusively for non-members as their own. The non-members to pay a fee for the unwanted service.
In Hawaii, to cite a recent example, the Hawaiian State Teachers Association, an NEA affiliate, won a certification election over an opposing union aligned with the American Federation of Teachers. On November 15, the Controllor notified all teachers—the NEA members, the AFT members, and the several hundred independent teachers who wanted no part of either union—that henceforth a "service fee will be deducted from all payments amounting to $77 a year, "is a "mandatory deduction." Proceeds will be turned over to the HSTA—to the considerable chuggin, one
Griff and the Unicorn
This way to LIFE
* CHALLENGES!
* PAIN!
* SECRET THRILLS!
to E GES! THRILLS!
SIGH
HEY! WHERE'RE YOU GOING ?!
I'VE LOST MY NERVE ...
6,000 independent teachers in Los Angeles rebelled at paying compulsory tribute to a union they positively did not want. Now membership is spreading among the nation who are fed up with militancy, with strike threats, and with class war against parents, pupils, and taxpayers. Mason was in town to testify and argue that legitimate exclusive bargaining rights for unions of public employees. He was headed for Miami to talk with independent teachers there. He will be visiting students in his community and the AFT are seeking to impose union membership or service fees as the price a teacher must pay to stay in her classroom. And he has his own mission with a lovely missile—the love of freedom. Right on!
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Sendleate, Inc.
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff."
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 26, 1972
214
iationators, came when
in Los
want.
want.
address
across
up with
app with
testify
testify
would
would
listen to
listen to
NEA
price
a
rice as
as his
ave of
of
lip Crews
sport Crew
soft Speller
soft Speller
lew Scott
Klingo
Klingo
ob Simpson
ob Simpson
Spark lock
Spark lock
anonyms Jones
anonyms Jones
a Schalm
a Schalm
and Young
Rona Rush
Rona Rush
British man
days and postage advertised expressed
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
arol Young
Ron Carter
man Manley
e Barhart
apergerdert
murray
move Murray
coog Delano
Mel Adams
BENOIT DE FRANCOIS
SDX Hosts Debate at Meeting Bill Mayer (left) ponders Jint Pritchett's retort
Campus Briefs
May 4 Moratorium Meeting
There will be a meeting tonight for anyone interested in helping to plan activities for the Lawrence community and the University for a moratorium on May 4. The moratorium is to be held in conjunction with the Emergency Nationwide Moratorium. The planning meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. at Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana.
Peace Studies Meeting
Students interested in a possible major in Peace Studies are invited to a meeting at 7:30 tonight at the American Baptist Campus Center, 1628 W. 19th St.
Air War Speech
Dr. John Wright of the Child Research Center, will speak at 7:30 noon in 200 learned to the Institute of Electronics Engineers and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. The subject of his speech is "Automated Air War."
Peking Opera Film
The film, "Taking Tiger Mountain by Strategy," starring the Peking Opera from China, will be sponsored by the TYT action committee from 7-9 p.m. tonight in Dyche Auditorium. The admission price is $1.
Media Functions Debated
By CARLA DENNIS Kansan Staff Writer
The Sigma Delta Chi journalism society had its last meeting of the year Tuesday night. The program included election of officers for 1972-73, initiation of new members and a print and broadcast media representatives.
Use Kansan Classified
Randall Becker, Overland Park junior, was elected governor Neerman, kansas City, Rose junior, was elected vice-president, and Debra Beachy, Newton junior, was elected governor.
Initiates to SDX were Anita Knopp, Hays junior; Elaine Knope, man; Lee wood sophomore; John Stenner; Wichita junior; Jimmer; Karen Klinkenberg, Basehor senior; Klinkenberg, Bracco, Minister, Ind., junior.
The highlight of the meeting was a debate between Jim Pritchett, a newsman from WDAF, representing the broadside side of journalism, and Lawrence, executive editor of the Lawyer's Daily Journal-World, representing the print medium.
There was no real debate between Pritchett and Mayer on which media was better suited and more capable in covering the news. They both agreed that the real essence of journalism, which to inform the public, is the same as both print and broadcasting.
Pritchiet said there was no question that television had a chance of being printed the print medium. But television cannot be any better than print as long as newspapers are doing a small amount of reporting on the news, he said.
Pritchie said the relationship between print and broadcasting was growing, with ideas and sharing news so strong. He said the two media were competitive, however, on the business, news and personal level.
Mayer said the immediate impact of television was greater, but newspapers had a longer range impact.
needed more talented, active and skilled leaders in the speech of the public. Pritchett said the media needed more versatile speakers who could engage well with audiences.
Both Pritchett and Mayer said the primary function of their respective media was to give the
Mayer said the journalism field
public a fair and accurate picture of the news.
"The role of newspapers and television is only to spark interest. We shouldn't totally ignore it, hear the ear or read, but we should try to out more and understand more about a situation," said Pritchett.
Dole to Lecture at KU; Protesters Plan Actions
By JIM KENDELL
Kansan Staff Writer
Senator Robert Dole, R-Kan., chairman of the Republican National Committee will speak at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Dole's speech, open to the public, is part of the Vickers Lecture Series. Dole will answer questions. There is no admission charge. There is no admission charge.
War protesters have planned a demonstration at the speech, where they will face tjwar resolution passed last Thursday at a special Student
The resolution condemns U.S. involvement in Indochina, calls for an immediate halt to the bombing of North Vietnam and the immediate and total withdrawal of armed forces incident in any form from Indochina.
He was elected to the senate in 1968. He represented the first Kansas congressional district from 1960-68. He was Russell Winkler, and a member of the Kansas legislature from 1951-53.
Dole has a special interest in the handicapped. He was totally disabled in Italy in World War II.
Dole, a stautch supporter of the Nixon administration, became Republican national chairman in 1970.
He proposed the current Presidential task forces on the mentally and physically handicapped and introduced to create a national resource information center for the handicapped.
Dole received his bachelors
degree and law degree from Washburn University in Topeka. Before he enlisted in the army, he attended KU from 1941-43.
The speech is the third this year in the year's Lecture Series, delivered by Lawrence O'Brien, Democrat national chairman, spokes as part of the event.
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SENIOR PARTY
The end of our last semester has arrived. We are the 100th class to graduate from KU and we're going to send ourselves off with the biggest senior party yet. On Friday night April 28th we have reserved the new Knights of Columbus Hall. Music will be provided by Bikales-Weinberg. Mix, ice and glasses will be provided free at both bars, so bring a bottle of your favorite booze (and an ID that says you are 21). There will be no cover charge for senior class members. Everyone else will be asked to donate a buck. Doors open at 8:00 p.m. at the Knights of Columbus Hall located one door this side (West) of the Co-op Fertilizer plant on K-10 (East 23rd Street). Leave your grubs at home and come to the best party in 100 years, this Friday night.
DENNIS CHERRY CLASS OF 1972
6
Wednesday, April 26, 1972
University Daily Kansan
TOMMY & DANIEL
Kansan Photo by STEVE HILT
Women Prepare for Relays Saturday
Denise Hickerson (left) and Claudia Posten show their style.
Women to Run Relays Saturday
The University of Kansas Women's Recreation Association can't let the Athletic Corporation sponsor a golf tournament or sponsoring an all-cumbers track
Kissinger Goes To Moscow, Sees Brezhnev
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon secretly dispatched Henry Kissel for four tours of talks with Soviet leaders on Vietnam, disarmament and Nixon's summit conference there.
Kissinger's clandestine journey, the latest in a series of secret foreign missions he has undertaken for Nixon, was disclosed by the White House and the Kremmlin in a terse joint announcement凌晨24小时 after he returned to the United States$^{10}$
A few hours after disclosure of the Kissinger mission, the White House announced that Nixon would go on national radio and television at 10 p.m. EST Wednesday to discuss the issue with his own known his plans on troop withdrawals after May 1.
Senate Meeting To Authorize Appointments
The University Senate will meet on Tuesday at Swarthout Recital Hall. After the meeting, student senators will leave, and the Faculty Senate will meet on Thursday.
The appointments made by
Senate Committees to the
committees of the University
Senate and the six committees of
the Faculty Senate are to be
The Faculty Senate will vote on an amendment to the Senate Code involving the jurisdiction of the Court Tenure and Related Problems.
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Memorial Stadium probably won't be as crowed Saturday when the women take to the field, encouraging mass participation
meet for all KU women students just one week after the crowds gathered to watch the Kansas Relays.
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naming time for the meet is 10 a.m. Competitors can sign up with their WRA representatives, or if they are independents, they can sign up at 9 a.m. at saturation. Competitors who charge 25 cents for entry fees.
Trophies will be awarded to the top three teams in each event, and ribbons will be given for the first six places.
Races to be run are the 70-yard hurdles, 72-yard dash, mile run, and long jump. Relay to be announced during the meet. High jump, long jump and softball throw are the three field events mandatory for all competitors.
Panel Debates Teaching Quality
Questions concerning the meet can be directed to Bairie Murrow at 843-5901. It is the first time in college that a woman sponsored a women's track meet, and the WRA wants to make it a success. Murrow said.
By KEN HARWOOD
Kansas Staff Writer
Instruction and was described as a pilot program to exchange ideas about the nature of teaching.
A panel of representatives from four sectors of the government have viewed their views on the topic of teaching improvements to a specially invited audience at the Institute for Education. Improvements on Tuesday night.
The caucus was sponsored by the Subcommittee on Environment and Conservation of the College Committee on the Evaluation and Advancement of
The four speakers were selected to represent the views of the administration, faculty, alumni and students.
Francis Heller, vice-chancellor of academic affairs, opened his remarks by stating that the barriers between teaching and learning were artificial. There are many people he said, who share both
Panel Examines Tactics Of Presidential Campaign
3y GAIL PFEIFFER Kansan Staff Writer
duties to varying extents.
The selling a presidential
selling a commercial product,
Robert Hamlin, assistant
professor with speech and drama
training.
In the final panel discussion Tuesday of the Student Vote sponsored series, "What is the student vote?" said that in today's highly programmed campaign, an attractive package with competing elements removed neatly presented to the public.
"Speaking on the "Press and the T2 Election," the Calder Pickett, professor of journalism, said the electronic media had altered campaigns by scheduling events one-time periods on television.
"Campaigns are pseudo events," Hamlin said, "but because we are issue oriented, our campaign becomes part of our vital lives."
TELEVISION COVERAGE of campaigns has incorporated several problems. Pickett said. First, there is the television networks' need to compete for Neilson ratings and second, the viewers desire to be entertained. Neilson led to fabrication of stories.
Discussing the press, Pickett said that with the exception of the Lyndon Johnson campaign, there was no significant effort throughout the 20th century. As for the 1972 campaign, Pickett said he thought we'd find publicists like John S. Knight, who worked back to a Republican press.
Donn Parson, professor of economics at the University member, said he thought the primaries worked against the good men campaigning for President.
PARSON'S THEORY on primaries is that a bad primary
HE SAID teaching should not be studied in terms of a process, but in terms of people. Most people, he said, conceive of the world as being based on basic data, relying on terms of their secondary school education.
can fade out a potential candidate, a candidate who starts out as the leader has no place to grow. To be a candidate, voters are committed to a candidate at the time of a primary, there is no guarantee that if a candidate wins a primary, it will also win the nomination.
Today the "wait for New Hampshire" is attitude a fading, Parson said. States see the need to have primaries because of the importance of the state and primaries bring in revenue.
Too often candidates are so much alike that they try to create a mismatch between themselves out of the crowd during the primary campaign.
"The polls show Nixon got tremendous mileage out of the China trip." Parson said.
Usually it is foreign matters and he is an incumbent, Parson said. The president of the domestic level because he can aller the course of war.
Those who receive the money for their research are, almost without exception, those who never shirk teaching and enjoy it.
As for the 1972 campaign, Parson said President Richard Nikom had all the advantages he can direct the news coverage.
Heller, who there were a
helen of dedicated scholars,
teaching and denied the
claim that the University
rewards the researcher and not
the teacher.
Parson suggested that primaries and conventions be scraped and time alloted on television and radio for candidates to confront each other. 80% of attitudes would develop which would help voters to make a choice.
"The present system prevents the voter from making a choice," Parson said.
Frances Horowitz, chairman of the human development and family department. she obtained a degree of student evaluation by grades
ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP)-A major earthquake occurred Tuesday about 150 miles southwest of Manila in the Philippines, according to the U.S. Geological Survey on rth quake information Center.
She gave an example of a course within her own business department, she works at his own place, does not have to attend a lecture, takes frequent quizzes with immediate feedback and is expected to meet a competence level of 90 per cent on each unit, succeeding units of the course.
SHE SAID everyone who completed the course received an A for achieving the 90 per cent level throughout the course. This upsets many people, she said, because they ask "if everyone in the course knows how do you know who the good students are?"
The University must abandon its notion of sorting students into educational bins and the relative distribution of competency raised she said. The University has also put graduating mediocre students out
She proposed a system by which each student would determine for himself what he should study and the student would graduate with
excellence in whatever his goal would be if instructors would focus on bringing each student to excellence in each class.
Jess Stewart, a University of Kansas alumnus and a member of the Board of Directors suggested several changes in approach for academic research.
HE SAID the major part of KU'S mission is the education of students at the undergraduate level, and that concerns needs to be changed by the administration, the Board of Regents, the legislature and the president.
Stewart said the administration should focus more "on where the action is and cut out as much of the politics as possible."
For the Board of Regents, Stevens plans for planning with the emphasis on quality teaching and quality budgeting. He said a plan should be based on the steps financed in steps and implemented in an orderly
The plan should set guidelines, he said, to improve the student-faculty ratio, faculty salaries, and teaching assistants and facilities.
Stewart said that the time for handling education problems as the needs arise was gone and the range approaches should be used.
"I BELIEVE the legislature designed programs designed to improve our universities and colleges through expansion of curriculum and research."
The last speaker was Dennis Ember. Lawrence senior and director of the KU Curriculum and Instruction Survey. He worked with students in the surround education and presented information he had
Fees Debate . . .
Embry said his survey showed that in terms of conveying information, there was no difference between smaller and larger classes.
gathered which dispelled the myths.
He said the correlation between the undergraduate grade point average and graduate school success "is only slightly above."
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The correlation between a researcher and his teaching ability has been shown to be negative, he said.
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Continued from Page 1
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EACH SCHOOL would be forced to cut the funding of many its groups, but each school would also be the best judge of which groups were most deserving of funds.
3. 233, would receive $4,984 for the council under school the council system instead of the $197 funded non-related groups by the Senate.
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As an example, the Law School, with 404 students, would receive $45 million from a council money for funding of school-related groups. Under Senate funding, law-related groups would be given the Finance Committee's recommendations are accepted. With 404 students, the Law School, with an enrollment of
Funding by the school councils would also eliminate the inequality of Senate funding.
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1970
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Wednesday, April 26, 1972
University Daily Kansan
7
Lawrence Commissioners Vote to Beautify Downtown
By MARSHA SEARS
The Lawrence City Commission Tuesday unanimously approved the plans and specifications for Phase I of the neighborhood Development Program Project. The plans will next be delivered to Housing and Development (HUD) for approval.
ROBERTSON SAID that the work begun this summer would be completed by Nov. 15 so that he could be affected. He said the project called for coordination between contractors and downtown stores. He said customer access to stores would not be made impossible. The project will take 120 to 140 working hours, complete by Robertson.
Don Robertson, an architect for the project, presented a short summary of his beautifully designed Massachusetts Street will be resurfaced and repainted. New materials and landscaping are included and the meeiers and landscaping are included at 11 a.m. Wednesday. May 11 bids would be received. Within 30 days of receiving the bids, the planners hope to begin construction.
the commissioners unanimously reading of an ordinance ordering the reconstruction of Massachusetts Street from 7th to 10th Ave.
The commissioners approved a site plan for the Village Inn
Restaurant, to be located on the west side of Iowa Street approximately 150 feet north of 9th Street. The site plan was used for a large number of some of the parking spaces be used for additional landscaping. THE COMMISSIONERS passed a site plan for an expansion containing 216 units. The development is to be located on the east side of Alabama at Jasu Drive. The approval is subject to landscape screening and the opening of a middle car entry way.
The commissioners approved a request to rezone 344 acres located between 18th and 19th Street, the Green Avenue and Kentucky streets. The area is presently single family, duplex and triplex housing. Olin Chase, a representative of Gree, who is a homeowner in the explained, that deterioration of homes in that area was occurring because the homeowners "money down the drain" and no one would finance loans to improve that area. Sixteen area residents have agreed to rezone
A letter from Western Homes buildings requests the paving of Oussdahl Road and a portion of Ridge Court was referred to the
MAYOR JOHN EMICK proclaimed May 1 and Law Day in Lawrence. George Catt, a representative from the Douglas County Bar Association read the proclamation to the commission.
Director of Public Works for his recommendation.
The mayor reappointed Guy Ouxsdahl, 1619 B. Wist st. S1; L. A., Brien, 602 W. 2718 St. Terrace and Blain Bidlew, 219 Llyon st. to the Board of Examiners, Plumbers who are Fitters for one-year terms.
LARRY FLANNERY, 1701
He was a member of the
Marvons Road were
reappointed by the mayor to
serve four-year terms on the
Marvons Road.
Ralph Gage, 1320 E. 16th St.
and Ward Thompson, Sr.
and Seth Gage, Jr.
by the mayor to serve three-year terms
Traffic Safety
commission
The commissioners unanimously passed the amended Highway Safety Commission meeting of April 3: to remove parking from Westchester on the southern and western sides from Kingston to Staten Island; to remove Street at Ride Court, to remove parking from the east side of Ousdahl from 25th Street to 28th Street and to place "No Through Traffic" streets at 25th Street. Barker streets. The commissioners recommended that an addition be made "No Through Traffic" signs at Connecticut and 17th streets.
The commissioners voted against the establishment of traffic controls at 8th and 9th streets and at 5th and Walnut, streets.
IN OTHER ACTIONS the commissioners:
Thieu Orders Recapture Of Two Overrun Bases
SAIGON (AP) - With South Vietnamese troops falling back before an enemy tank tanked onslaught in the central highlands, President Nguyen Tieu was told Tuesday to have ordered a counter-attack to keep key bases lost the day before.
Six U.S. advisers had been lifted by helicopter from Tan Canh, 28 miles north of Kontum, soldiers were clinging to the skids, the craft landed at nearby Dak To. Another helicopter picked them up a Dal To. But they were unable to kill the advisers and four
crewmen.
U. S. officials reported that 10 Americans were killed in the firey crash of a helicopter Monday during the evacuation of the two bases, Tan Canh and Dak Thieu. The team ordered recaptured
South Vietnamese troops abandoned two more bases, Fire Bases 5 and 6 of North Korton. But a U.S. air strike wrecked a bridge behind the main force of North Vietnamese advancing ground forces near North Korton, believed the first objective of their offensive.
THE MAIN force of enemy troops was moving slowly southward 21 miles north of Konum when the fighter-boat over the bridge over the Dak Sii River, several miles behind them.
" that is enough to halt the enemy's armor and slow down their advance," one U.S. officer said. "They'll have a hell of a time dragging artillery through the road, but can't get it down the highway.
U. S. warplanes caught an enemy supply convoy in the open
B52 Stratfortorres continued their pounding of enemy positions from southwest of Kontum to 28 miles northwest of Kontum to 28 miles northwest of the provincial town, stopping about 400 tons of bombs.
★★★
near Tan Cah late Tuesday and said they were spotted the vehicles were spotted "trying to move stuff and got the hell blowing out."
Secret Papers Claim U.S. Bombing Ineffective
South Vietnamese troops were regrouping with defensive positions around Vo Dinh, 10 miles north of Kontum.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen. Mike Gravel was blocked today when he tried to place in the Congressional Record secret documents he said show that U.S. lawmakers insiders told him three years ago the bombing of North Vietnam was ineffective.
AT THE STATE Department, a spokesman said the U.S. bombing tactics in Vietnam took place in 1968 under different circumstances than the current air and analysis of the two are not comparable.
Excerpts he quoted from the documents included not the judgment of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, but the military commander in Vietnam on the effectiveness of bombing attacks, but the opinions of civilian officials of the Pentagon, and the Central Intelligence Agency.
THE MAIN THRUST of the North Vietnamese advance reached Dien Binh. 11 road miles north of the city, hampering air attacks, if appeared unlikely that counter offensive moves ordered by Thieu could be mounted soon to attack enemy positions already in enemy hands.
Spokesman Charles W. Bray said it is "not a fair or accurate criticism" to say that President Nixon has reconstituted a policy
The Alaska Democrat told newsmen later that from a close study of the documents he concluded that President Nixon "is fearful of a reckless, immoral policy which is doomed to failure."
proved to have been wrong by the 1969 National Security Council memorandum.
Bryan said the current North Vietnamese offensive has pushed more access to American plans because the current drive involves conventional tactics and has resulted in logistical and supply systems.
Attention centered on the growing threat to Montauk, a city of 30,000 already being swollen by refugees fleeing the war zone.
GRAVEL/EFFORTS to place GRAVEL/EFFORTS to place the at start of Tuesday Senate session were blocked by acting Republican leader Robert P.
Gravel said he would continue in efforts to place the full document on file, and arrange to be recognized for 15 minutes when the Senate passes it.
Meanwhile, he said, he had distributed excerpts from the sallim presiding senators, including some Democratic presidential can-
And he said he would continue to do so even at the risk of a censure motion for disclosing official secrets.
White House officials were plainly disturbed that more of their secret documents had been leaked. Mr. Trump uncertain what steps to take.
April 28, Friday
JAZZ ARTIST
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Tickets $2.50 and $3.00
However, the auto firm shifted its position Tuesday. It said the present axes and bearings would be made available to customer, with newly designed bearings and thicker axes which went into use on the assembly lines April 17 for the rest of the model year. Montego built this model year.
Ford set up the machinery to send out letters to all owners of the 1872 cars involved and had set weekend a schedule to get them in the mail.
Ford said it would put a beardings plate on each car so no one would be forced to themselves if any problems occurred with the beardings. It is not necessary of notice to the motorist that a potentially dangerous situation could arise.
The company said, however, that since there would be a delay until new bearings and axles can be installed, it will also serve as a safety feature, it will go ahead with the program it has already installed to install the bearing plates.
On April 17, Ford made public the problems it was having with the rear axles and bearings on its new Torinos and Montezos.
Ford's decision to add a second wave of the Torino-Montecago recapture by aides of auto industry criticized by Wall Street for failing to defend the strong steps when the first defect was discovered in
DETEOTH (AP) - Ford Motor Co. which has already announced a campaign to correct a bearings defect in its Mercury Montego, and Ford Terrinos, added Tuesday a second step to the recall.
lease between the City of Lawrence and Delbert Erhart regarding the use of approximately 100 acres.
While the company would not put a price tag on the job, in-
The initial problem centered on 20 cases in which the wheels fell off cars when the rear axle one was hurt in those mishaps.
Sponsored by the Black Student Union as part of the "Longest Weekend Ever"
also
- Passed unanimously on the reading and or demand order in the city of New York, toward of-way for the improvements to Highway 58 from 23rd Street
Dick Gregory will speak at an all university convocation at 1:30 p.m. April 28
- Passed on the final reading and attendance ordering interaction with traffic installation of traffic signals at 15th and Iowa streets and 18th
—Approved the request of the Lawn Artist Lawrence Gift to hang a banner across Muschessuets 4000 block from April 28 to May 8.
debris from 1109 Delaware according to the provisions of the Minimum Structures Code.
-Ordered the removal of
- Deferred for three weeks any decision regarding storm sewers in the vicinity of 4th and Maine streets.
- Set 2 p.m., May 10 as the date to receive bids for the demolition of the structures at 704 Lincoln St. and 644 Walnut St.
-Waived the notice period specified in the lease with Packer Plastics, Inc.
Discussed the proposed franchise ordinance between the City of Lawrence and Kansas Power and Light Co.
Ford Expands Recall Repairs
THE PARKING AREA
No, just some people frolicking in the mud at the PHI PSI "500" races. The PHI PSI "500" races include a queen crowning, a wild women's tricycle race, and a huge mud-throwing melee. The fun begins at 2:00 p.m. Sunday, April 30th.
MALE CHAUVINISTS?
Come join in the fun and hysterics.
The 7th Annual PHI KAPPA PSI '500'
1602 West 15th Street
Aviation, Inc. regarding Lawrence Municipal Airport. —Deferred for one week a decision concerning the proposed
2:00 p.m. Sunday, April 30, 1972
—Deferred for one week a decision concerning the proposed lease between the City of Lawrence and Lawrence
dusty sources said it would run over $30 million, making it the second-costliest recall in auto industry history. General Motors is spending an estimated $35 million on a Chevrolet carburetor problem.
INTERVIEWS FOR THE EMPORIUM BOOK EXCHANGE MANAGER will be held THURSDAY, APRIL 27
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Sign up for interview time in Student Senate Office-105B Union This is for part time help. If you have any questions please call 864-3710
Freshman Class Party
8:00-12:00 Friday April 28
RED DOG INN
$1.50 or Free with Freshman Class Card
FREE BEER
So You Need A SUMMER JOB?
Yes, they're hard to find in todays tight job market, but there are still jobs available for KU students who are hard-working and dependable.
Over $700 a month for qualified students. (Please do not apply unless you have an entire summer open.
Southwestern: A Times-Mirror Company is an equal opportunity employer.
Mail To: SOUTHWESTERN CO. PLACEMENT
c/o Jim Helm
523 N. Duck Street
Stillwater, Oklahoma
74074
Name Major
School Address
School Phone ___
Type of work you did last summer.
---
8
Wednesday, April 26,1972
University Daily Kansan
1965
Bradley Catches During Practice
Tons KU baiting list
Bradley Powers 'Hawks
Kansan Sports Writer
Plumb to Stress Passing Install Pro-Type Offense
By STEVE STRAS
Plumb played three end years (1898-04-01) at Baylor University and was the co-chairman of Bridges. He was a member of Baylor's 1896 Gator Bowl and the 1937 Friar Cup.
By DAN GEORGE
The University of Kansas football team will install a protype offense in the fall, with more emphasis on passing The transformation will be mostly through hand, thumb, new pass receiver coach
Plumb joined the KU coaching staff in February after coaching at Texas Christian University and was a faculty member of Tulsa the past four years.
After he graduated, Plumb
buffalo. Buffalo
professional football team
His playing days were cut short,
by an injury in 1962.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Baseball Standings
Bradley, whose grandfather also played baseball for the Jayhawks, transferred to KU and went on to Junior College in Mesa, Ariz.
"When I graduated from high school, coach Floyd Temple talked to me about playing for the Rams and offered me a scholarship," he said.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
"I went to Arizona because the play good ball out there and then I went to Arizona. Then this year, when Temple was able to offer me a scholarship, I took it. because my family's wanted to play in the Big Eight."
Minneapolis 4 2 667 -
Vancouver 4 2 667 -
Oakland 3 2 625 -
Tampa 5 3 625 -
Kansas City 5 3 625 -
Detroit 4 332 618 -
Houston 10 2 778
Los Angeles 10 2 778
San Francisco 10 2 778
San Francisco 4 5 444 3
Atlanta 4 5 300 4
Chicago 4 5 300 4
| | W | L | Pet. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Baltimore | 4 | 1 | 478 | |
| Cleveland | 3 | 1 | 290 | |
| Detroit | 3 | 1 | 500 | 1g |
| Denver | 3 | 1 | 600 | 1g |
| Milwaukee | 3 | 1 | 400 | 1g |
| Oakland | 3 | 1 | 123 | 1g |
A major reason for his recent batting surge, Bradley said, is the Jayhawk pitching staff.
"I'd have to say the good KU
Champion Tops List In Drake Decathlon
If the hitting attack of the University of Kansas baseball team were to be compared to that of awhance of late—and it has—fault can hardly be hardened.
DE MONES. lowa (AP)—An entry list of 18 headed by defending champion Rick Wanamaker will comprise the field for the decastion, which the team gave to Drake Relays here Wednesday.
He has been on the West Coast training for a berth on the U.S. Olympic team.
W L Pct. Pet. GB
Montreal 4 2 651
New York 4 2 651
Philadelphia 4 3 371
Pittsburgh 4 3 371
St. Louis 4 3 144
Houston 4 2 722
The trio finished one-two-three last weekend in the Kansas Relays.
His primary opponents in the two-day, 10-event decathlon are expected to be Gary Hill of Oklahoma Christian. Mike Wedemain of Colorado and Bruce Graceland of Graceland, Iowa. College
While the Jayhawks' team average in big Eight play has risen, the young catcher from Oklahoma City has ripped opposing league pitchers at a 300 run game. The Rangers' plate, Overall, he is hitting 475.
"It's really a trick to be doing in the big Eight. Bradley said he was just hoping to hit 300. It's just unbelievable to be doing this."
Wanamaker took the title here last year with 7,683 points in the playoffs. He's still Hill with 7,106. Wanamaker, a player for Iowa, has a personal best of 7,405.
Unable to play professional football, Plumb turned to coaching. Starting in 1963 and for the next three years, Plumb coached high school football in Texas in 1966, he went back to California to coach at Cerritos Junior College in Norwalk
Two years later, Plumb returned to the Southwest Conference to join the coaching staff at TCU. He remained at TCU for three years before moving to Tuila last year.
Plumb said he got the opportunity to coach at KU because he was a former Fulva coach Don Fambrough and Arne Martin, athletic director at TCU. TCU had one of the top teams in the nation, which was coached. The one team that did not seem to have much difficulty in winning when Fambrough was a player.
"Coach Fambrough and Martin became good friends, and he recommended that I get a recommendation that I got the job at KU." Plumb said "I was very impressed."
Plumb comes to KU with some excellent credentials as a pass coover coach.
He has coached some out-
standing pass receivers at both
TCU and Tulsa. Several of the
teams have been named top
professional football
Plumb said he thought there were several receivers on the team, and he also said he was with sophomore flankers Emmett Edwards, Ken Saathoff, Bruce Adams and senior flanker Porter were having a fine spring.
Plumb has plenty of good ability to work with, he said. The squirrel is three deep at the three feet of the fence, split end, tight red and flapper.
"The main thing I have been doing with the receivers this spring is working on their
Drake Relays Next Stop For Ryun
World record-holder Jim Yum
will run in a special mile run at
the Drake Relays Saturday after
his 3,517 mile performance at
Ryun was far from his best,
he was the best he ever
anyone had run the day.
Until Oregon's Stefanie Prefontaine
clocked a $5.66 at the Twilight
hour on Saturday.
Another surprise entry in the Drake Relays is 1968 Olympic high jump champion, Diek Kruis. The high jump event on Saturday.
Plumb said that because more passing was being used in the film, he felt it was important to develop the talent he has and 'exploit the talents of David' for his project.
development as receivers,' Plumb said.
Even though the spring football season is nearly over, Plumb will stay busy for most of the summer until the start of football season.
In May, he plans to go on a recruiting trip for a couple of years. He will be placed where he used to coach. Then, he will wrap up some loose ends concerning the football team. He is preparing himself in their search for summer jobs.
He said he wanted a little time before the start of the football season to spend with his wife and three children.
"I also plan to visit a pro camp and pick up ideas on what they are thinking. I hope I have time to prepare炭 after that." Plumb said.
Plumb's receivers will be on display in the annual intraseason game at 7:30 Saturday night in Haskell Stadium.
pitching, he said, *Corder, Cox, Wolf and Sieglemeyer* are pretty tough for just batting practice. And you get a lot of practice when you bat against good pitches. It forces you concentrate more."
"I've always been able to hit the fast ball, but I’ve learned to cut the curve since going to the lighter bat," he said. "The smaller bat enables me to wait longer and still because I can swing quicker.
Bradley said he also thought that luck had a lot to do with his success.
KANSAN
switch from a 35½ oz. to a 34 oz hat.
homerun" he said, "I never try for them. I just go up and try to hit the ball. If you do that, the homeruns will come."
"I've also moved closer to the plate, which helps me to handle the ball better. Being closer, I can judge the curve better. Coach Temple has taught us."
Knicks forward DAVID BDeusseh挛 said the Lakers "have been great all year. But we sort of need a few more series anything can happen."
"A power hitter is a guy who goes up there trying for a
The Lakers, off their regular season 69-13 record—an all-time league standard for victories that included a sensational 33-game
Take Steve Corder," he said. "He's one of the better hitters on the team, but he's not doing that with his right arm, but it rallies at someone every time."
Sharman, whose team responded to his call for more rebounding against Milwaukee, discounts this season's successes of the Lars goes along with the career he has goal now, he said with a raspive voice, "to 'stay lucky for four more games."
"I feel I'm a little too slow behind the plate, he said. "My size (6-3, 20) make it hard to move fast sometimes.
Bradley said he was really impressed with the Jahawks' attitude and that it was due to competitive spirit of the players.
"But with me, they've just been falling in," he grinned. "Really, nobody can actually have the right to win now, it's not right now. It's unprofitable."
"The reason we've done so is because everyone's trying to hard. We've got a lot of young guys who want to play and everyone has a lot of friends."
"One thing that has helped me is the physical education program at KU. We have to take my kids to the gym, Lockwood has really helped me out. He's shown me exercises to help me quicker and develop my coordination. I don't know if he programs, but they should."
Bradley admitted that he was a stronger hitter than he was a fielder.
"People stay after the coaches and practice fielding. And sometimes, even when there's no scheduled practice, some of us are on the field."
Harris Does It All Well
I've been told that some of my mechanics aren't good. I had a couple of injuries in high school, and cold weather has a bad effect
on my arm. But if it's warm,
though, and I'm limber, I can get
the ball down there (second base)
pretty good.
By JIM SCHUMM
The hang-up is when the fans try to make an association between punting and the hats. It isn't important, isn't any. Somewhere between practicing for the ten events, Harris spares in enough time to hand the punting chars at the Arizona football team practices.
After sinking his foot into about 15 or 20 footballs he ran off the field and traded his pads for a pair of track shorts. From there he went back to the stadium to get pat and discuss for another hour.
LOS ANGELES (AP) —The Los Angeles Lakers are making their way to the summit of the National Basketball Association playoffs with the New York Knicks in the way of their first success.
He then ran onto the field just in time for the 5-20-5-20 punting period at football practice, which had already been in progress for about a year.
Last Monday could serve as a perfect example. Harris climbed into his sweat clothes for track practice around 3.00 p.m. He went through a club or so runs at the long jump pit at Memorial Stadium, then began to mark off his steps for the 10-arm high hurdles.
Lakers Favored to Win
"Everyone on our team is out there because they like the game. And I think that's the best kind of attitude to have."
At about 4:30 p.m. he got into his car and headed for the dressing room at Allen Field where he donned his football uniform.
Coach-of-the-Year Bill Sharman's record-breaking Lakers won the Western Conference by beating the NBA champion Milwaukee four games to two. The Red Holm-coached Knicks, NBA champions of 1969-70 when they defeated the Lakers in the finals, ousted Boston in five for the Eastern Conference crown.
and Sports Wrestling.
Marc Fleury, runner,
jumper, thrower, hurdier and
punter. Many sport fans would
deduce that he is a deathatle.
"Lately I've been just concentrating on track because of the season," Harris said. "I usually check with the coaches
The Lakers will be favored in the best-of-seven playoff series opener Wednesday night at the top of Forum. It starts at 9 p.m. CST.
The nationally televised series continues Sunday at the Forum. The series will be played Wednesday and Friday nights of next week in New York.
KANAS CITY (AIX)—Dick Eckert of the Kansas City Royals haled off a game losing stroke with a 36 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
The only hits off Drago were a
wheel 'Paul Hail' with one on
the second wheel by singer
by pitcher Pat Dobson with
out in the sixth airthe Olofres
loss in the eighth.
winning streak—earned the homecourt advantage.
Drago Blanks Baltimore, 3-0
Kansas City jumped on Dobson, 2-1, for two runs in the second.
Oliver's triple and a single by Rojas produced Kansas City's third run in the eighth.
and show up for punting practice."
This type of life is nothing new in Lawrence, where a Lawrence High School he was, of football player and a track team member, and also a basketball team member.
The truth of the matter is that in his senior basketball season the Lions made a trip to the state tournament in winter, where they won 20 years'
Harris was also the starting quarterback for his high school team that year. Their record of 89 points fourth in the Sunflower League.
"I wasn't a big star on the team or anything. My average was only around 12 points or so," Harris said.
Only one runner reached second after Dobson took a turn to second after a single when dragon walked Buford. However the threat died before the runners touched the finish.
"I wasn't like many guys that came out of high school and get at it," he said. "I played basketball. I just seemed to get at few of them in all my sports."
Harris was contacted by half a dozen or so local colleges to play basketball. The problem was that he was not good at that sport, enough to pursue it.
"As far as football went, I always knew that I wanted to come to KU." Harris said. "I did not want to attend schools around here though." Many can remember back to last November when the KU football team was ahead of the University of Michigan by 20 seconds left on the clock.
KU had the ball deep in their own territory and a fourth down.
"He just told me to be sure and has onto the ball, and it will go." Harris just supposed to run around with it and eat up the clock," Harris
Head Coach Don Fambrough called Harris over and told him to make an intentional safety.
Harris used up 12 seconds running around. Missouri took the free kick and failed to make a touchdown with the one play the
The maneuver worked perfectly and the Jayhawks went on to win. It was Harris's big sport in high school. Consequently, it was track scholarships that appropriated him more than ones approved by the university.
"I think I had one from just about all the Big 8 schools," Harris said. He also received
ones from Cornell, Brown, and Tennessee among others.
"When I was being recruited, the football coaches told me that I must make a difference." It all comes from the same place anyway so I guess that it doesn't make any difference," Harris said.
"Coach Timmons said he would give me a chance to run the college hurdles but that if I hadn't given him the opportunity he would become a decadent man."
The decadence is a ten event experience that is often thought of as the most grueling of all the track events by many coaches.
It includes three weight throwing events, three jumping events, a hurdle race and three running events ranging from a jump to a run.
"I think that the one I like the best to do is the discs." Harris said. "I would throw it, I usually come up to 20 to 30 feet short of everybody else here."
"Needless to say the 1500 meters is my least favorite running event. It's not too bad if it's the last event of the ten." he said.
The decathlon usually takes about two six hour days to complete.
"I don't even eat anything until after the events are over each day." It makes it kind of a long day.
Harris took eighth last weekend at the Kansas Kanslas out of 16 participants with a score of 6.335 points.
CHICAGO (AP) - Alling Leo Durocher, 85-year-old manager of the Chicago Cubs, entered a hospital Monday.
He will compete today and Thursday in the Drake Relays.
"I think Rick Wanamaker is going to be there. Right now he's about as close to Bill Toomey as anybody." Harris said.
"I've never been in a meet with Toomey and I'm kind of glad about that."
Toomey won the gold medal at the 1968 Summer Olympics.
"He usually scores up around 8,000 to 8,400 points. He is for sure the best." Harris said.
Harris is not necessarily a big star or a athlete at anything, it's just that he does a little bit of everything very well.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Chi-
man started his season with a no-
hitter. Tuesday was named
National League player-of-the-
M
Durcher, suffering from a throat infection since the baseball season began, returned here Saturation from New York
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Wednesday, April 26, 1971
9
KU Alumni Enjoy Travels
sified
By CANDY HERBERT Kansan Staff Writer
The Orient, the Soviet Union, and the United States have increased places to be reached only in dreams? Not for the University of Kansas Flying
Since the first informal trip to Miami in 1984 to use KU play in the Orange Bowl, he became Flying Jayhawks by participating in the many chartered tours sponsored by Kansas University Alumni Association.
Dick Wintermite, executive director of the Alumni Association for New Jersey's program offering tours to KU alumni and their families at the New York Museum citation client by alumnae who wanted to attend the 1986 Orange Bowl game.
"BECAUSE OF THE ex- statement, Wintermute said, in a letter he wrote to chartered buses and planes to take nearly 875 alums to Miami. On this trip we also offered, as a thank you, a midnight cruise to the Bahamas."
0 Only
Wintertermate that although the trip to Miami was really the highlight of his time, as a group, the Flying Jayhawks were not formally organized until after the participating alumni had expressed their enjoyment of it.
"After we learned from comments how much fun alumni members had on the tour as a result of their common background, we decided to offer one year a tour," Wintermute said.
"As the program grew we
began offering two and three
tours a year, and next year we
will be offered to offer four."
Wintertime was.
WINTERMOTE SAID that the Flying Jayhawk tourcases are open to all KU alumiums and his family. They stay at a short, low-cost, one week getaway trip or a longer major vacation of up to three weeks.
"The short trips of one week
are possible, so that the alum can
get away from it all and
lightsee for himself." Win-
ning, a former alum.
"On the short trips we offer a general get-acquainted cocktail with the city and visit it with the city they are visiting, and we also make the hotel and our meals go ahead."
The longer trips, Wintermorte explained, were much more structured because alumni members who take those trips
WHILE THE Flying Jayhawk tours are sponsored by the KU Alumni Association, Wintermorte said that all details such as hotel reservations, meals offered and tours are provided by a professional travel agency.
The Alumni Association also sponsors one couple who act as University host and hostess on the trips, Wintermote said.
termite said that 175 alumni members and their families had received tickets and 50 more to replace any cancellations.
He explained, "We try to send someone from KU whom the alums would enjoy meeting and would like to know better."
THERE HAVE been six formal Flying Jayhawk tours prior to the London Escapade.
The next trip planned by the Flying Jayhawks is the London Escapade, scheduled to depart London in June. Britain's famous capital, Win-
The first trip in March 1970 took 52 alumns to Hawaii. The following June, 58 Flying Jayhawks left for 16 days in the Orient, including stores at Expocap, Panama, Hong Kong and Thailand.
In January, 1971, 33 alumni members left for a two week Carribean cruise aboard the Queen Elizabeth II.
Paris is the destination of the Feng Jiahua tour in April 1971. The train chartered Pan-Am 707. Forty-two trains departed July 1971 for the longest tour thus far offered—a three week trip behind the Iron Curve.
Just this past January, 70 former Jawahra sailed on the second Caribbean cruise sponsored by the Alumni Association.
WINTERMOTE SAID there is a three week trip planned for this coming July to Seandinavia and other international institutions through the Alumni office.
"even now," Wintermute said, "we are talking about planning a new location for our series of several short trips to Rome, Madrid and other European capitals."
"If there is enough response, we may even schedule several short ski trips for the younger alumni," he added.
Mildred Clofster, assistant secretary-treasurer for the Atlantic Treaty Organization and the Flying Jayhaws in Paris, confirmed the popularity of the
"It's so enjoyable to go with the nice group, we are nice group. We are nice people because we had so much in common from our experiences."
CLODFELTER SAID that the tour offered hotel accommodations, which turned out to be in excellent condition, struck at the Hotel Grande where they were supposed to have stayed, a general cocktail party held for them.
Optional tours offered to the group also included a night club tour, a trip to the Follies, a trip to the Eiffel Tower, a trip to Seine and a two day chateau tour.
Clofetleter said, "I especially enjoyed the trip because I had a friend who lived in Paris, KU and Donna Hall, to show me the city.
"We not only want to all the famous attractions such as the Eiffel Tower, Notre Dame Cathedral, the Louvre, we also get to see some of the fascinating little-known places in Paris, like the Procope, a cafe frequented by Benjamin Franklin when he was in the
VINCE BILOTTA, field director of the Alumni Jawahar Singh and Jayhaws who toured behind the Iron Curtain, reflected the difference between the short, one-week career and the longer vacations offered.
"The trip wasn't really fun... it was more educational. It really made many people on the trip appreciate their way of
life in America, and all the little conveniences that way of life offers. "Bilotta said.
Bilotta said the most important lesson from the trip concerned the difference in communism and the daily lives of people of the USSR and North Korea, as well as the daily lives of people of the other Communist countries that
"The people of the Soviet Union are very sober looking and very work oriented. They seem to have few opportunities for good
"EVEEN THOUGH everyone in *Mexico* lives in huge government buildings, people seem to be quite individualistic or alone. You never see a man in public just standing and talking to each other, and you hardly ever see him."
Bilbao said that in Prague and other cities outside the Soviet Union, life was much more westernized.
“In Prawe, we made mini skirts and long hair on men. We even wore them in some situations together. In Budapest, I went on my own and took a walk see people from the streets, people was like, which I would have never been allowed to do in Budapest.”
BILOTTA SAID that the Jayhawks always felt they were
He said that the routes to and from the airports were always planned over streets where there was little to be seen and that on planes, all the seats were located in windows of wings to cut down visibility.
"It also seemed as though all the famous landmarks we saw in the Soviet Union, such as the Kremlin and the Palace, were constructed prior to the communist take-over during the time of the crises," Blotta wrote.
being kept from associating with the Russian people.
"In the Soviet Union," Biltza continued, "it seems as though the people know their boundaries and they are happy within them. Since they haven't known any other type of life, the communism has been compared to their miserable lives under Russian coars."
"I (fee) that communism appears to have been the answer for the people of the Soviet Union simply because they were so
"But I don't think that type of communism would be accepted as an answer for those countries in the world, where a more novel way of life," Bilota said. The Flying Jayhawk tour behind the Iron Curtain also includes visits to East and West Czechoslovakia and Czechoslovakia.
KU-Y Joins with RAC To Stop White Racism
The KU-Y in a meeting Tuesday night decided to focus next year's program on the elimination of racism.
The KU-Y plans to work with the Racial Awareness Center (RAC) to help in the elimination of white racism.
It plans to present small group classes and rap sessions to promote RAC. It also plans to do the public relations for the center help in recruiting organized groups to use its services.
The KU-Y has joined with RAC in 1993, and the philosophy of the elimination of racism Dae Cavine, Paola senior and a member of the KU-Y.
Financially, the KU-Y will
continue its sponsorship of the Rock Chalk Revue, Freshman Encounter, basketball games and the International Fair Fair.
The Rock Chalk producer and business manager will be responsible for the KU-Y. The chairmen of the other programs will also be under KU-
It plans to discontinue its sponsorship of the mum sale. It has also announced a Big Sister program. The latter program the KU-Y hopes, will be introduced.
Next year's KUY-staff will be
coordinator, three student
executives and one secretary.
These will be all paid staff
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SENATOR ROBERT DOLE
Hear and Question
OF KANSAS
Chairman of the Republican National Committee
Senate Spokesman for the Nixon Administration
CARL F. WILLIAMS
Senator Dole, appearing at the University of Kansas in the Vickers Lecture Series, follows a similar performance here by Democratic National Chairman Larry O'Brien. He will speak on current national issues and then be open to all kinds of questions from the audience.
Thursday, April 27
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10
Wednesday, April 26, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Achievement Place Aids Six Juvenile Offenders
By CHRIS MILLER
Korean Staff Writer
In a white frame house at 1320
taskell Ave. there is a unique
building, the E. L. Phillips, his wife Elaine, their
small daughter Catey and six
children.
The house is called Achievement Place. The boys have been placed there by the Douglas County Juvenile Court for various offenses, ranging from to mind their parents to rape.
*Acmevement Place is supported entirely by the community and offers a restful vestment to establish the home in 1967, came primarily from conventaries.
FUNDS ARE provided by the Douglas County welfare department, on time, on behalf of those living at a given time. Phillips said
"The major goal of
abandoning kids back into a family, either their own or a foster family, as
quickly as possible. Phillips
He said they preferred to return the boys to their own homes within six months.
Achievement Place is operated under a system of "token reinforcement." A film depicting life at the home, available through the University of Kansas audio studio system and the theory behind it.
"THE BEHAVIORIAL management system is designed to supervise the boys in supervision." Phillips said. "The idea is to help the boys change behavior."
The program of treatment is based upon a family-style study in the live home 24 hours a day, enabling them to interact closely.
Achievement Place is not an institution. The boys remain in the same community, attending at various schools; however, is monitored closely. When boys first arrive at Academy, they are placed on the point system. Under this system points are assigned to students and taken away for unacceptable
Voter Board Explains How Mistake Made By ANITA KNOPP
By ANITA KNOPP
Kansan Staff Writer
University of Kansas faculty invited last month to join the National Voter Advisory Board of the American Security Council were among several million people to receive the invitation. John M. Fisher, president of the University in a telephone interview.
The Kansan contacted Fisher at the council's headquarters in Washington, D.C. after a complaint was made by Juan Squaresco, who said that since he was not an American citizen and couldn't vote, the invitation was an insult to his intelligence and an invasion
HOWEVER, FISHER said the majority of the KU faculty had been involved in the Fisher also said the lists of names for the mailings were rented from a brokerage firm. "We are going to America," contributors to the Democratic and Republican parties and officers of civic clubs.
Fisher said his organization had to depend on the assurance of the broker that the lists would reach what he called "opinion data." It was impossible to check every name to insure citizenship.
In response to the complaints about the organization at KU, I must say that my organization must be doing something worthwhile if it struck such a nerve he said there are a lot of differ and still communicate.
Fisher said the council's research on America's international security was not covered in the treaties but included treaties and agreements with other countries. Voting records of U.S. Congressmen are compiled and sent to council members.
In the area of internal security, Fisher said the organization collected data on the various organizations within the United States.
"We investigate communist parties we are either Moscow or Peking orientated, working for the Communist Party. Our instances we have investigated the leadership of particular mass actions and demonstrations."
**TYPES OF BEHAVIOR** that earn points include watching television news reports, reading articles about current events near room, reading appropriate books, helping with household jobs and performing well in school.
behavior. Points purchase privileges such as allowance, watching television, snacks and permission to go downtown.
"WE DON'T POINT an accusing finger at groups. These kinds of groups are proud of the criticism they don't denit it." Fisher said.
Fisher stressed that the organization dealt only with facts in their research. He said that he wanted to get these facts to the public.
Types of behavior that cost points include failure at school, bad grades, aggressive speech, disobedience, tails back to the house parents, stealing, lying, cheating and stealing. From the point system, the boys advance to the merit system. Under the merit system, they are awarded a "moral responsibility. Only one "moral warning," however, is allowed a boy each week. After the second, it is returned to the point system.
"If I got, say, a bad schoolwork and a bad homework in the same week, that would put me off the merit." he said.
structured. Under it, Phillips, said the boys spend nearly as much time at home as they do at Achievement Place.
Randy, another boy, described the function of the nightly family conferences.
we decide like, if somebody was kicked out of school, we decide what happens to him and we give him can get him back into school.
The honor system is the least
FRANK SAID the boys may appeal any judgment which they felt had been made unjustly at the family conference.
The boys said they had some say in changing the house rules. Some rules, such as the one that required them to wear shirts, they said cannot be changed.
Phillips said the Lawrence area needed two more homes like these, a younger boys and one for older boys. They can accept, he said, only one of every seven apples in the store, which he handle only 12 of a year.
Several things, Phillips said; may happen to those boys turned away from Achievement Place.
"They're referred to us again, or they go to Boy's Industrial School to work in a probation, or they go to the BERT Nash Mental Health Center or another place, so they turn adult, and get into trouble and go through an adult school."
Juliet Shaffer, associate professor of psychology and chairman of the University of Kansas Affirmative Action (AA) Advisory Committee, said Tuesday that progress in the
By ROBERT E. DUNCAN
Hyperion Staff Writer
Action Program Awaits Rulings
Debate Team Ends Season With 95 Wins
The team members were Lydia Beeber, McPherson sophomore; Joel Goldman, Shawne Mission sophomore; Bill Webster, Carthage, M. freissman, and John Werner, Falls Church, Va. junior.
A University of Kansas debate team won KU's 86th victory of the season in the Big Eight-Missouri tournament at Vernison. S. D. April 20-23
Heeble and Webster won first place for the negative team. They compiled a 6-1 victory second place for the affirmative team. Together they compiled a 7-1 record.
This is the third time in four
weeks that Houston has won
Eight Missouri, Valley
ference sweepstates title. Tom
Goodnight, Houston graduate
The tournament was the last activity of the year for the squad.
Shaffer, who attended a conference for affirmative action in Chicago last week, said she was surprised by the lack with a representative of HEW.
development of an AA program has been delayed because of the lack of guidelines from the AACN for Health, Education and Welfare.
The lack of guidelines has only allowed the committee to discuss general plans and has caused a distressing situation," said Shaffer.
The spokesman for HEW, a participant in the conference conducted by William Karp of Covenant College, told reporters the guide when the guidelines for AA
programs would be released, according to Shaffer.
She said she would discuss the new ideas she had learned from the committee with the committee in its meeting and committee plans to develop an overall structure for the impact action at K庐, Shaffer said.
Part of the structure the committee hopes to develop will include a complaint procedure for minorities and women may use.
Chancellor E. Laurence
The Super Sandal is from south of the border and you can't beat it for style & comfort. Step into some natural tan leather and step out in style. It's for men & women. What more could you want?
Arensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen
Chalmer Jr., who will review all proposals made by the AA committee, is expected to announce the new complaint process early after his return out-of-town conference later this week.
GENERATION
OBLERATION PRESENTS
CELEBRATE OF SPRINGTIME
- STRANGE * NIGHT * FOR * A DANCE * DANCE
"CAMP OUT AT LONESTAR" PICNIC
SAT APR 29 Dawn by the stepway of dorsal lake for in case poor weather. May 6 Bring something.
- JACK BAKER
GAY LIBERATION
president of the U. of Minnesota Student Body
M. K. Feldman, Lynn
The Curriculum and Instruction Survey (Feedback) is accepting applications for: Survey Director, Associate Director, and Feedback and Graphics- Supervisor.
See classified ad.
GAY LIBERATION meets Thursdays 7 PM to 1204 Oread
DO YOU HAVE A QUESTION ABOUT
- KU events
- tutoring
- legal help
?
- counseling
- entertainment
- KU policies or ANYTHING ELSE
Call the Information Center 864-3506
24 hours of every day . . .
We're there to help you.
Nutra-Tonic Life
Hair Treatment Conditioner
12 oz. size
Man. Sugg. Price $2.50
Open 9:00-7:00
Thurs. 9:00-9:00
Sun. 10:00-6:00
Sale $1.67
You must present coupon with purchase Good thru April 30
50 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management
COUPON
Anti-Perspirant
Dial
Open 9:00-7:00
Thurs. 9:00-9:00
Sun. 10:00-6:00
Man. Sugg. Price $1.
Sale 86 $ ^{c} $
You must present coupon with purchase Good thru April 30
.29
ZIP
DISCOUNT
DRUG CENTER
747 MASSACHUSETTS
Now Under New Management
--exercise sandals
Levi's® Capstan Split/Knee
LEVI'S
Levi's
general jeans
1000 Mass
Open Noon Till
Nine Weekday
9 to 3 Sat
you back—and Levi's Capstan
more than scenery. Down-
e furry or corded, almost
the trappers wore
√ knees for the cow-
lash front and
...back pockets. Settle
into your rustic ways!
Levi's
general
1000 Mass
jeans
Dawn Neon Till
Nine Weekdays
9 to 5 Sat.
Better than Barefoot.
SANDAL WITH BUCKLE BACK
Sun shinin', Feelin' good. So kick off your shoes and get into your Scholl Exercise Sandals.
Experience Comfort. Wiggle your toes under the cushioned leather straps. Move your bare feet over the polished beechwood. Feel the hollows where you have dips, the dips where you have hollows.
Experience the Scholl Shape-up. Scholl's exclusive toe-grip encourages your toes to grip firmly, helping to tone and firm your legs. So your legs are getting shapelier while you're comforting your feet.
Scholl Exercise Sandals. They're nothing like wearing shoes. They're a little like wearing nothing at all, but a whole lot better. $12.95*
*$12.93*
*Suggested retail price*
At leading department, shoe and drug stores
All you've got to do is walk.
1970
Scholl
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 26.1972
11
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Karan are offered to all students without regard to gender.
Highest price paid for used cars. G.J.
Joe's Used Cars. 610 Vermont. VI 2-
8008
tf
Western Cty. Notes=Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
2. not used them.
FOR SALE
2. If you don't you are of a disadvantage.
you're at a disadvantage.
Effortless. It comes the same,
"New Apple" of Western
Civilization." Campus Mathouse, 11f
West 14th.
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $0.3
Michigan St. $15 Bust-Qua $15
Poll-shung Little Huntanian sheepdog puppies ARC Top bloodlines, long legs up on also. Long legs Cropped to 42 inches 131-756-288, McLaren, Maids 4-26
NORTHISE COUNTRY SHOP, 707
Bridges Avenue, used furniture,
collections items, old wood cooking and
kitchen ware, vintage bicycles, books, old pho-
tomachines, leather bags, corn, and thousands of other useful
items, open up to 3 in seven days. Herb
shopping center, grocery store.
Pit Bike: 35 pro bikes in stock in a
bundle.
Popup: "IP90-190," "Flipper"
"The Pit Bike," "Olympic," "Falcon," "San Benito."
All with 26-inch tubing.
All with 26-inch tubing.
V
1958 2 bibron, Great Lakes Mobile
phone; all regulations include a
capacity of camping. Occupancy for summer or
fall $199. Phone 841-3855 after $99.
Tentiped biotypes. Fugu Atala, Alaia Atala, Alaia Biotype, Achira Achira, Alaia Solenha, Solenha Solenha, Also a species. Over two hundred biotypes in the range are used in expo and cheap. Ride-Ons Ride-Ons.
LAW STUDENT DIGS WALKING
WILL SELL 67 VIEW EXCELENT
SHAPE INSIDE & OUT CALL 842-
5657 AND MAKE OFFER 5-2
Great laughs while frolicking, king size water bed衣ed and frame $46—Cassini Car Staircase, excellent sound system $89—$42, 8:45-10:00 p.m. 4:26
Parking out 1963 Ocala D. Dr. 28 Dr.
Dryden 4500 Kmh 7900 Lmh 7900 line
Ride $10.69, 7900 Dual line Honey
Drive $10.69, 7900 Dual line Honey
Tubercle 4 Ply Nylon XLD XLD
Red lines $15 Like red
$25-1899
Practically new electric Smith Corona elite typewriter for sale. Less than 15 hrs use. First $90 take it. 843-2671 or 842-4444. Ask for Dick
Tennis davis Davis Classic 4 3/8
medium. Strung with Imperial gut,
n Biscutto grip Fine condition.
Call 812-634-646
4-26
STEBRO DISCOUNT. Now you can get a discount on your RAY AUDIO-MD3 CLIENT plus at RAY AUDIO-MD3's new discount House in the Bronx, NY. Office: 212-750-9860, Coffee & Consulting Services. 2-800-444-9222
TAPES S -track $2 -4 track-$12
Also bargains on record players and cassettes
Bays-Shop Trade - Traders 82 M-Mar
07/31/18
SAVE ON BOOKS- Used paperbacke only 15c PLAY BOYS now 1½ price Money to loan Traders. 822 Mass 4-26
Blue girl's Raleigh 3-speed bicycle
Call 843-6556 if interested—ask for
Phyllis
4-26
STEREO SYSTEM—St-tape AM-FM
stereo Brand new Panasonic retails
for $180 Mull Call Bell 842-6728 4-27
CAMERAS. Polarisoids at 55
Also 35mm, movie cameras,
initiatives, projectors. Money to Loan
Traders. 822 Mass.
196) Oberwalt Insurgie, 4 dr. lt. 187, 283
197) Oberwalt Insurgie, 4 dr. lt. 187, 283
198) New York, New Tring, Newbury
Borough; Box int. Immunodeficiency Guaranty
Bond; Box int. Immunodeficiency Guaranty
& Immunodeficiency Book 527; $845, 845
Mant Sell. 1968 WV Sedan, good mechanic but needs body work. Also 1960 Rehair Clivey, 6 cyl., auto, trans. Also 1959 Rehair Clivey, 6 cyl., trans. Also 82, 84-640
43, 27-42
Finally, a shipment of new Army issue - FIELD JACKETS. Limited quantity in busy We also have Army Issue 846-5000 and Supply 428-846-5000.
Cushman Eagle, excellent cord. $80.
252cm. Macro job, basket no. j1,
$40. 842-3877 Please leave no.
time to return your call. 4-27
Sale on all winter coats, awnings,
jackets and tuxedos. To everything
there is a reason. Earthshine, 12 E.
8th, 4-27
Microscope for sale. If going to KU
Med. School, you will have to furnish
your own microscope. Call 842-
4019 after 5:06 p.m.
4-27
Guitar amp for sale: Small amp will work great for stage monitor or sounds real nice micaked. Less than $30, call Bob at 842-9783. 4-27
THE MERCANTILE
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
TEAC 4620 tape recorder, 1970 model.
$300. Will trade for 35mm camera.
Call Bill, 842-1882
4-26
1969 Yamaha 350 traintree motor-
cycle Excellent condition Aaking
$450 or best offer 864-1114 5-1
Yamaha 650 Street, 842-3871. 924
Schwarz Road. Evenings. 5-5
1965 Ford Mustang with air, good
condition. $425, $833, Robert New-
and carburetor, tape recorder, excellent
carriage, new cost $300; sell for $145,
$323.
1963 Ford-V-8, 4-door, overseat,
condition, must-sell. Purchase $200 offer
takes it. Call 842-9738. 5-1
Pentax Fishbase Lens, Super Takumar
17mm, 4.0 Buffalo filters, like new
*odt. Reasonable.* 841-2370. 4-27
Brand new Magnavox headphones regularly $29.95, now 1'; price at Ray Stoneback's. 5-1
Excellent used Magnavox 30 watt component stereo complete with turntable and speakers. $275 at Ray Stone-back's. 5-1
Magnavox remote speaker systems
reg $29.90 pr now 1/2 price at Ray Stoneback's.
5-1
10-speed men's bicycle for sale. Good
condition- $50 Call 864-6417 4-27
Large farm house 15 minutes from
luxury swimming pool upgrades can be
realized with $2,000 down. assume con-
sumer realtor fees $5,000 per month.
Box 3254, Jayhawk Station 5-9
RCA, 100 watt amp, 3-way speaker,
4-way subwoofer. Standard timer, 1 year
purchaser, 2 years old. Total cold new.
Made in America. Make an offer. 842-1044.
YAMAHA 650 e.c., 4300 miles, excellent
condition, $900 Dave Bliss, 842-
7098 5-1
ARC Irish Seller puppies, Excellent bloodhunting—and show stock
Site out of Furman Kennels, Topsail
842-1770 5-1
Two used tires -4-lymil rov 700-1
3,000 miles $15 pair or best offer
Used G.E. portable stereo -good condition
best offer $82-1822 5-1
Heathkit guitar speaker system. Black vinyl cabinet; mounted on counter. 2 Vetron special design 12" speakers. 3 Vetron special design 9" only. $75. Randy at 842-609-899
Blue 179 CLYX6083 Honda this is good deal-$775 or best offer of course) Call Steve 5 p.m. 843-5418
BSA Victor, 441 c.c., 1967, excellent cond $550 firm. 843-0302 5-2
1962 Chevrolet Impala Rebuilt engine put in over Spring Break of 1972 Paint job in summer of 1972. Asking $235. Call 874-7597 for help. 4-28
Special made Conn B-flat clarinet w extra mouthpiece (HS Double Star) and barrel 652 842-2614 4-28
Honda—1972 CL 350, 550 miles, gold,
absolutely perfect. Must sell, 841-2772.
4-28
1967 Firebird, 326 3-speed Ampelx
tape and played tapes. Runs great
and looks good. $1,100 or best offer.
Call Rog at 843-5870. 5-2
MUST SELL - PORSCIK 1967 911;
mint condition with 911S suspension.
AM FM stereo, 8-tr. new steel radial
tires, 5-speed. Call 842-3166. 4-28
Cultating cows isn't fun without jeans old clothes and all sorts here at Bokomon yesterday clothes at yesterdays clothing store 819 Vermont 8-22
HELP! Want to go back to school
Must sell '69 VW, runs beautifully
New engine, tires & shocks 842-3588
1970 Volkswagen Squareback—red-
black interior $1,400 Cheap! Call 842-
7434. Ask for Richard. 5-2
Volkswagen semi-camper, new transmission, good mechanical condition, no rust, need freight and brake wear. 109-345-2878, 30-52-8787, T, J or K, www.435-2655.com
Used Vacuum Cleaners. $9.95 and up.
However, Electrolux, Durekte, etc.
White Sweeping Center, 916 Mass, 5-5
Sieve Component Sale. All units reduce. Save on receivers; speakers, tunables. Buy a system and save money. Color. White. Sweep Center. 916 Mass.
One day
3-speed woman's bike for sale Ex-
cellent condition B叫 842-9677 5-21
Breathtiful little red Sprite convertible, 1967, MK III- Abolished perfect engine, excellent body, top, tounge, motorized body. Peter Dart, 838-504, 864-391, 1969
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Station Wagon, 1961 Ramber, good body, lifespan, battery-engine has needs, netsome someone who can work on it to keep it going. Call 844-623-7800.
Trumpet, king, excellent condition.
$140, call Bob, 864-6152 5-2
THE HILL in the WALL
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843 7685 — We Deliver — 9th & 11th
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
1955 Mercedes Benz 220 S, completely
rebuilt engine, red leather upholstery,
dash wood and window frames 4-
seats, front radiator, hood, B-5
5000.
1971 Yamaha 125 c. e. MX motorcycle bicei, 21" front tire, camper, overhauled. $445. Excellent bike. 843- 473 Dana. 5-2
Used sewing machines. Zig Zag and straight seams. Prices start at $19.95. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. 5-5.
FOR RENT
SUMMER RENTALS Live close to campus this summer in a room, house, or apartament. Economic Housing. Louisiana 843-161-801, 843-161-323-5 Louisiana 843-161-801, 843-161-323-5
COLLEGE HILL MANOR now showroom furnished and unfurnished apartments rates start at $219. Compare to陈列 W 178 W 191, Apr 6 or call 843-575-8044.
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4-4444
For SUA Events
dried of trying to find that ideal apt. room. I tried to find a 1, 2 & 3 bdm apts, and available 1, 2 & 3 bdm apts, and prices range throughout the city, and price ranges
When you hire, hot, you're hot. When
you hire comfort, cold, you're comfortable.
UNIVERSITY MENTHS
MENTHS. Enjoy our pool and close by
MENTHS. Apt 18, 529 W. Phone 843-
Apt 18, 529 W. Phone 843-
TO LOOK WHAT SANTINE APTS HAVE TO LOOK? Summer rates, swimming pool, a C. F. Cole TV- and TABLENET hotel, t123 house, 843-211-68. 5-9
MODERN APARTMENTS. Furnished and unfurried one bedroom from 830-110 room, plus play area. Near campus. In秋冬 fall Dave. B43-6924. B43-1601.
Sublease for summer, apt. one bed-
room, A/C, private, close to campus,
furnished. $120, 1025 Indiana. 882-
134. Apt. E. 4-26
Large, two bedrooms mobile home,
Pully carpeted, air-conditioned, water
heater, pool, hot tub, single person
person Under $100. Phone:
848-793-8058 or CATUN $95-89
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
To KU male nike ant, close to Union. May work out all or part of rent. Available now, phone 845-8534 5-9
NOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
The late Dr. Edward W. Wilson, 1972, while selection is still available, will be making a new sylph. #843-2548, or 2107-A. Harvard University, 645-Building 8, built hosted and located at the original location.
AVAILABLE TIS SUMMER Right now to campus, 102 Missoula University bedroom apartments available. Avail between 8:45 a.m. and 9:30 a.m.; rooms available at end of semester. Call for room reservations w/camping, central location, or hotel room. 847-7898 between 8:30 p.m. and 10:30 a.m.
Avalon, 9th & Avalon; Harvard
Square, Iowa & Iowa; and Argue
cost of living in one of these hand-
held apartments and you will be able
to have a dishwasher, central V.
C. heat and water utilities paid,
and no fees for cleaning.
SUMMER RATE-Now leasing fur-
nished apartment, sleeping room with
or without kitchen privileges for
you. Neat KI and TV.
Call 831-567-89.
*PENDING THE SUMMER IN LAW-*
**FOR ONE OF LOWEST OFFICES**
you can enjoy in life on
a Law School summer
camp if you call Mr. Sumner,
surveying the law at Inge
Living in Anglo-Australian
Homestead and Agentson,
8th & 9th
& Availant of Harvard
Harvard can be economical and
effective for your summer,
at our surprisingly meded special
class, or at his summer a wonderful time to be
educated.
843-5363 Lawrence, Kansas
Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I.
Equip in Stock Certified
Luxurious, spacious town house for the summer. The bedroom is a large room with two baths. All shag carpet, central air patio, & spa baths. Completely furnished. Call 618-354-0722.
JAROLD'S Diving Supplies
Diving Supplies
Need to sub-lease apt., 2, birnum, umfresh, 1 bik, from campus for summer, $80 mon Call 842-2862 or 843-2116
For Sublease. Furnished Stoffler
Place at, May 29-age 20, dares
flexible. Must be married and attending
summer school. CALL A24-623. 4-26
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. New, low summer rates. Both furnished apartments offer 1 and 2 bedrooms apartments with art-conditioning, dishwasher, laundry room, pool and swimming pool. All utilities and swimming call 813-254-6000 or information call 813-254-6000 or day or night.
Jacket, comfortable 2-bedroom apt for summer. Fully furnished, and carpets on bedrooms. Room 10 downstairs. $150 mw. including kitchen, bathroom. Phone 841-2232 after 4 p.m.
PLAZA MANOR, Summer and fall
new arrivals, now available, one-time
reservations. $159.00 furnished.
Swimming pool air-conditioned.
Special summer rates: 240 Murphy
Furnished apartments and rooms.
Good location and utilities paid.
Prices reduced for summer. Very rare.
842-5007 Call 842-5007 A-4-28
4:28
Rooms for rent. Need girls to share
house $4.00 utilities included. Avail.
**1 or May 20. 842-3768. 4-27
Need to fixage, good old, homely
Need 12m. Utilities and except electric
C Economy by anytime. 963 Also
informed, interested, 4, 288
August.
Large 1 bedroom unfurnished apt on top floor with balcony. Located in campus area in large, lightly occupied building. shower. Kit with refit & cleaning utilities paid. Utilities paid $10 per month. Rooms include bathroom, fire alarm, window
hurring service
Lawrence. Kansas 66044
1971 two-bedroom mobile home for
rent for summer Located at Mobile
Acres South, Call 842-2315 4-28
RIDGEHOUSE APTS. Summer rates
are valid through April 15, with
feature and the maximum space
limit of $600 per bedroom.
Dupage and duplex. Price start at $85-$116 for details. 404-232-6900. Cedarwood—1164 West 7th Street, New York, NY 10017.
Renting for summer and fall: pier-
mished rooms, kitchen privileges,
near KU. Also 1-3 bedroom apts 842-
5007 after 4 per month. 5-9
Lovely furnished apartment for 2 men, with central air, very close to campus, see to appreciation—Available for rent in the area of room 853-6099 or f. 51-8447 Phone #853-6099
New older home in old West Hills
just west of Waco, central Lafayette,
rooming includes 1 master bedroom
rooms including 1 major master bed-
room, kitchen with frug & eletc
kitchen with frig & eletc
bedroom with private outside en-
closure. Bedroom with private outside
enclosure. Rooger Realty 1055 Moss, Ph.
814-736-2695.
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Apartments for rent. Available May 15,
summer rates, air conditioning,
range, $60-$85. Call 842-9153 after 6:00
p.m. I9 W. 14th. 5-1
FOR SULBEASE. Large, 2-bedroom
unfurnished apt near shopping center.
Air-conditioned. One car allowed.
Car. Call 432-756-153 or 5 a.m.
0864
Rent a luxury apartment for the summer at cheap summer rate. Three bedrooms apt. A, C, D.洗车馆, car wash. B, C, D. 842-510 after 1:30 p.m. e-mail:
House Trailer (8430) for summer
A C, $75 tmo. plus utilities. Call 842-
0675 for appt. 4-28
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Parts at a discount
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Give us both a break. We need summer residents. Will you join us on a retreat in apartments living in large intragreat residential area? Two fantastic private residential areas. Two fantastic private residential areas. Two fantastic private residential areas. Offering free live management (offering free live management) for all 24 hours. Mth & Fri. #824-4444.
NOTICE
Barn Partied! Now available for
rent at Apple Valley Farm in Lake Perry,
Apple Valley Farm in Lake Perry, and cooled parking at
Cobble Creek Resort. Call Joe 800-496-1234 or
Call Joe 800-496-1234 or c
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co., Wells, 842-5220
2 apartments 16th & Tennessee. Call
941-2336 after 8 p.m. or before 8 a.m.
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER, 862-7694. Professional child care for children 1 mo to 12 mo. Full or part-time. Fit. Specially designed environment. Fri.
WEDDING INVITATIONS -- PRICES
ARE LOW IN HANDS. 100 cotton
invitations, with matching catalog and samples to Arnie Arodia
Arnie, East Maithe, Hampshire.
8340 4:28
5 a.m. - 12 p.m. Tues.- Sat
5-5 Sun.
SUBLEASE - 2 bib, 2 bath, unfurnished room.
Cookware, electric kitchen, dishwasher. A-C Pool, Bathroom. Water heater. Ice maker. Water. water. w
Typewriters and Sewing Machines-
Nanu Brands at Bargain Prices; Mon-
tery to Loan, Traders, 822 Mass. 4-26
Carol Lee
Just arrived - Western shirts in blue denim and chambray . . . Fun, funky, functional, and cheap Earthshine, 12 $ 8.th, 8th, 4-28
**GIRLS & WOMEN** Are you the model or role you are evaluated for? We need professional training. Travel required. Call Mr. Frank at 212-530-7486, www.girlsandwomen.com, #82-062 or #82-215. -255
Norwalk Laundry and Dry Cleaning at the Mini-Plaza Modern and quick service. 1910 Haskell 82-932
30 Varieties of Donuts Hot and Cold Drinks Sandwiches
LENNY ZEROS at 710 Mass., your host will be still in business. We need you really well to help us with our record stores are threatening our customers so you are helping the organization save money and our store is open to listen to cheap and new ideas. Love Lenny FS. We give money to Whiskey & more Special £9 99 Harvest Grain, Nash and Dodge and Chevrolet. Love Jerry P.
GUNS Winstonchester, Remington, Curry-Valley and oniima lines 32-shot rifles on Hiima lineage 32-shot rifles resolvers. Eagle, selection of Colt .40cal ammunition. Money loaned on guns. Tradez $8,999.
DAY CREASE PLUS - From June 12 until summer starts in the fall. For purposes of this program, students receive education in a country willing. Worker training is required. Translational from Lawrence芜湖 to New York.
MAY AUDIO - stereo HI-FI, repair
Precision lab complete facilities.
authorized warranty for most all major lines. Call Ray Audio, 824-207-491
White Eyes Concert Friday, May 5 at the Armory, $12.15 at JOB-Got.com—All guests to hand give ACCAN THE KING-5 on a call, 843-646-66.
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
WHY RENT?
FOR HIRE. Experienced technical system technician, systems system technician, computer systems technician, part-time summer job involving writing and data analysis and BA math. Call 628-741-3950.
Your Complete Service Dealer
Webster's Mobile Homes
WHS—SKIRTING—P
FOUND BORDER COLLEE PUPPY
White with black ear, two black eyes,
black spot on side. Have cairn.
Paper cards. Can read by Jerry
434-1324
434-1324
HELP WANTED
3409 W. 6th 842-7700
STUDENTS. Earn $60-$80 per month in which, when MUST BE 21 years old, aggressive writing to learn and personal interview. 434-744-3128 4-28
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR.-This position also requires someone who is knowledgeable in research and administrative responsibility for much of the internal budget of Survey and should be able to work well under the pressure of deadlines during a survey. It will be required to work during the academic year, as well as with the ANIMALS AND GRAFICS SUPERVISORY.-This position would have some commercial art training and experience with the problems and challenges associated with the layout and design of FEEDBACK - A GUIDE TO EDITING OF THE FEEDBACK. It will be a occasional work during the academic year, including Instruction Survey, 101 Wesley Johnson UN 4-4422
4-28
$65 to $95 Per WK/PART TIME Timed potential earning addressing opportunities for Corporate companies are paying top money to them, including the opportunity for personally addressing their customers' growing opportunities with these competitive pay rates. - P.O. Box 407, Crawfordville, FL 32930.
**STUDENTS:** Summer jobs available in the Rockford, Illinois area. Carson College, Oakland, Ontario, Massachusetts. Oclare College, Leavenson North, New York. Part-time delivery work. (2) Maternal health worker. (4) Wage. (1) Easy to apply $8.50 to $9.50. (2) Possible possibilities: Bachelors, 642-892-4000 after 3 p.m.
Babytaylor during summer, 2-4 days a week 2.30 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Owen transportation. Call before noon.
841-3276 4-26
Unit, leader for girl, Seat Camp, Contact; Mrs. Owen C. Harries, 20 south 10th St., Kansas City, Kansas #602 4-28
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
The Correlation and Instruction Support Committee will be the following positions: One position requires someone who is somewhat fluent in French and English, and research and who has some experience in communication problems and ability to communicate well with the students. The position will work closely with the documentation Center of the Printing Services, the Library, and representatives from Senate and representatives from a graduate student or a senior student of one or two years). Full time employment at the academic year. The position will require paid in-service training period.
Books. Bibles. Posters. Gifts. Framing
711 West23rd St.
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas 60444
CROSS REFERENCE
Rose
---
- Guitars
- Recorders
- Music
- Accessories
ERN'S CYCLE SALES
WE SERVICE
WHAT WE SELL
1903 Mass. 843-3007
OPEN NIGHTS
EAGLE
CAROLINA MUSEUM OF ARTS & CULTURE
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
○ TO 60 MPH—13.5
RECLINING FRONT SEATS
○ UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL
RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843-8499 843-8499 3020 Iowa (South Wv. 591)
CSC
TOYOTA ENGINEERING
RU
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN
500 E.23rd
See
Maupintour travel service
0 Mass—The Malls—Hillcrest—KU Union
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
DATSUN
Phone 843-121
842-0444
LOVE THAT
We buy used books, also old Play-
books and Pertt-House magazines in
good condition!! Call 842-0216. 5-9
Salespeople needed Demonstrate skin care and make-up. Earn proper commissions through your local Hobby Shop. Send resume to 1-442-6399 for information: 2-310-8569.
1. female roommate for summer and call to share 1 bedroom apt, in company Rent $45 mo . util Call #42-426891 after 7 p.m.
OVERSEAN-JOURS FOR STUDENTS
All proficiency in English, math, and geography.
All proficiency in English, math, and geography.
overnight sightseeing. Free internship.
Office space (Box 174), San Diego, Calif.
Grilled Cheese Coors on Tap
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842.9450
WANTED
Roommate wanted to share house for the summer. Call Haywood. 842-7256. 513
11 W. 9th
days per week
Female coachmate for summer needed to share 1 bedroom furnished apt in Meadowbrook West. Call 842-8667
Featuring -Roast Beef, BBQ Ham, BBO Beef, Corn Beef,
Grilled Cheese, and the Reuben
50¢
Open
24 hrs.
per day
Need immediately. 428 men for continuity properly implement promising progress on a project willing to live on premises. Full or part-time. Contract: 824-444, fall or spring.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Literated Home to share modern
1922 bedroom suite home with
traditional home style. Private room
for summer and for fall 832-834
836-838
Open 11 a.m. to b.p. Mon Sat Sun 12 to b.p.
Offer Expires April 30
Roommates to share large furnished
house for summer. Must see to appreciate
3 blocks from campus, own
room. Call 842-5755 5-1
Independent COIN
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
TYPING
DRIVE-IN
AND COOP IN
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
3 gives to share large furnished 3-bed room house for summer. 2 dresser, 5 min walk to campus, all utilities paid for $30. Dave Bowers
OFF any two handed sandwich with the purchase of one at regular price. You MUST present this ad.
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
3. girl looking for a fourth room
mate for fall or furnished Jayhawker
Towers apartment Call Leslie
Marcel, 842-8561 5-2
Three male roommates for apartment next fall. Phone 842-7770 and ask for Clyde if interested. 4-28
There, term paper, typed accurately and promptly. IBM Setouchi, your choice of type styles. Also editing at choice of rate. Klunda, 842-579-762. N2-560-600.
Experienced in typing theses, diagrams, term papers, other types, typed documents. Familiarity with type Access and prompt scripting. Req's Bachelor's degree. Req's Phone 81-8234, Mrs. Wright
TYPING • THISE • DISSERTATION
MISCELLANEOUS WORK.
On IBM IDA
Transport, plexa type
Traxxell, 2004 Huge Cap-
82-1446
Typing in my home, IBM Selectric
Profit accurate work. Experienced.
Call 841-2556 5-9
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu
Steak Sandwiches,
Sweets & Snacks
sirloin
Our movie is and has always been There is no substitute for quality
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Farmstead Fiction Writers
11. Miles North of the
Kaw River Bridge
Typing on elite electric typewriter.
No. types please. Prompt attention.
843-0958 5-9
LOST
Experienced typist will type, with your term paper, thesis, or dissertation.
Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 801-2581. Mr. Mackennan
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt, reasonable takes. Please call 843-7954 4-27
RHON, EFFICIENT WORK, Carbon
fibonoid—looks like printing 17
carriage for legal papers, will check
writing and grammar. Carbon
4734 4-26
Fast, accurate typing by experienced typist. Reasonable rates, call 842-2033. 5-2
Prescription Singerlasses at, Robinson Field No. 3. Left in case hanging on backstop. Call Roger Miller-843-854-129 at 6:00.
Young, male eat Pale yellow with
orange cheese, missing since Sun.
No earl. Please call M42A129
427
Least - Male cat, short black, hair with white chest and white hour glass gel. 842-9672. 1130 Kentucky. Also free kitten. 4-26
Brown suede sandal on Jashawk
Bedardon on Monday, April 24. Keep
money. Please return cards. Call 813-865-
7001 for information or bring
Indiana to
Virginity of 6th & Maine. Small male puppy Long hair, white with (tan) spots, one over eye no collar. Please 842-1255. 617 Maine. Weight: 2-5
My male puppy. White with black
myself around and black spot on back.
Lost Sat. April 22 around 9 o'clock.
Miss I. Miss I. Miss I. Miss I.
Miss I. Miss I. very much like 5-2
Black Iranian Prosper. It found
black case contact Dean of Foreign
Students, 208 Strong, or call 863-289-
Oportant pass Eriza Nannan-Mageck,
4-262
Simultaneously 4 small old male pup. Smooth hare-bear on top, brown legs and belly 2 brown rings around eyes. Answers to Monkey Cal 842-842-5.
Small blonde female牙 dog with dishy爪, Hawkered from 1927 Vermont Mint. Original date 21. Wearing a red collar. Shire 42. Please call N3-6158, we love her! Please call N3-6158, we love her!
MISCELLANEOUS
Rain Caps—If you didn't get one,
you should be very wet by now. Next
time, stay dry—at EARTHSHINE 1
E. 8ih. 4-27
WHITE EYES IS COMING. Get your tickets at Bokomax. New shipment of Jeans-Clos de Mayo-Jackets, 8-$25. This week thin-backs-B-5 $19 Vermont.
TRAVELING? STAY OVERNIGHT FREE! Stuck at work? Meet treating people. Exchange privileges with members in U.S. and Canada.
te: University Travelers Club
Row 945
Berkeley, Calif. 94709
SENIORS
Please call for your appointment for SENIOR PICTURE
4 proof sittings $3.00
6 proof sittings $5.00
摄像师
Special Senior Rates on all orders.
Hixon Studio
Ph.843-0330
RAMADA INN
Tigure Salon
842 2321
Spacecus new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming givences.
643
8500
DISCOUNT
PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
The Stereo Store
LUDIOTRONICS
928
12
Wednesday, April 26, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Museum to Display Kites
By LINDA CHAPUT
Concon Stoff Writer
The University of Kansas
Museum of Art will hold an
exhibition of Skaters by noted
Skiers Stéster April 30
through May 28
HEW Official Defends Plan, To Aid Poor
"Public Welfare must be reformed," said John O. Montgomery, assistant commissioner for Education and Welfare (HEW), in a speech about "Welfare Reform. Issues with the Big Eight Room of the Union."
"As Nixon has escalated the war domestic problems have suffered," she said.
Before he began his presentation, Diane Zuch, a graduate counselor at a college, collision, read a statement that she asked McKenna to take responsibility.
The government must reorder, its priorities to people instead of the businessmen, the promised he would take the message back to Washington
He spoke in defense of the proposed H.R.I. welfare bill, President Nixon's minimum wage law, that it would supplement the income of a man who was unemployed or paid less than the man who was on welfare. He said that it would eliminate 60 per cent of the benefits people receive to people who would lose their food stamps benefits and would make 200,000 public service jobs at a federal minimum wage.
Many people in the audience of about 130 persons disagreed with the bill and leaflets were passed criticizing the proposed bill.
The leaflets and members of the audience criticized the bill because states were not forced to pay the fees, but if they decided not to, welfare payments would be less than there are now. Also the proposed bill did not convince the state to carry out the present food stamp program.
Student Wins Writing Award
Melissa Berg, Kansas City, Mo.
senior, was awarded second place in the Kansas Press
writing contest. WJ University
writing contest.
The announcement was made at the annual KPW spring convention awards dinner April 22 in Hillsboro.
Berg's entry consisted of a twopart series which appeared in the Wichita Eagle and Beacon.
The contest, open to all female journalism students in junior colleges and four-year universities in Kansas, had 26 entries.
LANSING, (AP) - William H. Addington, one-time operator of a Kansas grain storage empire, was released on parade Tuesday. Kansas prison after agreeing to grain from any grain dealing.
Streeter will be present for the opening of his show at 2:30 p.m. on Monday, March 14th, for his sculpture and his kites at 5:15 p.m. May 8, in the museum
Streeter, who grew up in Manhattan, graduated from KU with bachelors and masters degrees in fine arts. He then studied in New York, where he was the first one man show in 1962.
His most known work is a bright red structure, "Endless Dreams" (1964), in New York City's Central Park in 1970. The 70-foot structure is shaped like an inverted booth of art in the city
Streeter's work is represented in the museum of Modern Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art, the Francisco Museum of Art, the Wadworth Atheneum and the San Diego Museum of Natural History.
Streeter became interested in the ancient art of making kites when he was in Tokyo working on a proposed project for a scupure building, according to Charles Eldridge, director of the KU art museum.
Streeter's kites are made of samboo and rice paper like traditional Japanese models. Eldredge said, he uses simple
geometric designs, usually painted bright red in patterns similar to his sculpture motif.
(1)
Tal Streeter
"The kites are an attempt to take Streeter's sculpture off the ground," Eldredge said. "They effect a release from gravity."
"The kites were shown in Tokyo, but this is the first time
The fee for elementary enrollment will be $15 and the secondary enrollment will be $30. The fee for waive fees in needy cases.
A report on the proposed law presented and approved Monday night at the board meeting of Lawrence Unified School District
The federally supported program will again include free courses in math and reading from the college, which have been referred by teachers. These courses will be offered at Anderson High and Pinkney Schools.
Eldridge said that the kites would be placed on exhibit throughout the museum and that a model of the sculpture Streeter's sculpture would be shown in the lower exhibition room of the museum so the viewers could see how the kites naturally out of the sculpture
The board approved the ac-
The plan includes an elementary grades session from June 12-July 21 and two secondary sessions, June 5-30 and July 31. Academic courses as well as arts and crafts will be offered.
Lawrence Plans Summer School
they have come to the United States. We're very happy to be giving them their American debut."
"These are not the usual five and dime store kites," said Eldredge.
rrection On Kansan
"They are rather more artistic in intent, and I hope people can appreciate them," he said.
ceptation of a bid for asphalting
sites, the grounds will repair paved surfaces at 11 schools and increase the play area or crease parking at three
The low bid for automobile tires this year is about $38 less per tire due to this new purchasing method.
The decision was made to buy tires for school-owned vehicles in bulk amounts the year. William Hunt wrote that this was possible for the first time due to the recent purchase of a maintenance and supplies facility.
In other actions, the board accepted the resignations of 13 teachers and approved the addition of six new staff members.
A headline in Tuesday's Kansan which read, "Student Senate Adopts New KU Curriculum Survey" was incorrect. The Academic Affairs Committee should be recommended mandatory use of the KU Curriculum and Instruction Survey.
THE
Head Shop
A Roffler
Avante look
Exclusive
J.C.'s
HAIRSTYLING FOR MEN
6446 NIEMAN ROAD
FOR APPOINTMENT CALL
30 min. East of Lawrence 631-9803
Located in Shawnee-Neimon & K-10
DAVID CLAYTON-THOMAS
including
Sing A Song Magnificent Sender, Bard She
We're All Meat From The Same Bone Syringa Love
Introducing D.C.&T.
Unlike most new solo artists, David Clayton- Thomas made three albums with Blood, Sweat & Tears.
His voice, and feel, have influenced a lot of singers and groups since he arrived from Canada to join Blood, Sweat & Tears.
The voice that sang "You've Made Me So Very Happy,""Spinning Wheel,""God Bless the Child,""And When I Die,""Lucretia Mac Evil,""Go Down Gamblin'" belongs to David Clayton-Thomas.
And, the fact that he's on his own now,
has the following significance:
Steve Cropper, Joe Osborn, Cley Knechtel, Russ Savakov, Patrice Holloway, C迪里克, Vanetta Fields, Melissa Mackay, among others, back up that great voice for the first time. It was a triumph of skill and courage, even a few B.A.S&Ts Dick Halligan and Bobby Colomby.
It's an album that David Chayton-Thomas has wanted to make for years. So if you've enjoyed any of his three previous albums, you're in the right place.
OnColumbiaRecords ~ and Tapes
Campus Bulletin
Campus Crusade: 7 a.m. Alcove D.
Class of 1947: 9:30 a.m. Woodruff
Auditorium
Speech Pathology: 9:30 a.m. Governors
Room
Room
Visual Arts: 11.30 a m. Alcove B
Cafeteria
Design: 12:30 p.m. English Room.
MATHS MON, CARY ROSE
School of Religion mian, sinflower
Cafeteria.
BOOK TABLE 10.28 w.m. Handwritten
Social Anthropology: 11:30 a.m., Alenva C.
French Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowwick
Caleforte.
Alenva: noon, Alenva D.
Library. book on give-away.
Linguistics: boom, Curry Boom.
Russian Table 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark Cafeteria.
Design 12:30 p.m. English Room
Social Welfare 12:30 p.m. Cottontail Woods
SUPERMA 👽 WATCH IT STUDIO YA
Social Welfare 12:30 p.m. Cottonwood
Cafeteria
Social Welfare Undergrad. Field Instr.
2:30 p.m., Oread Room.
Social Welfare Sylvial Counsel. 2:30 p.m.
Social Welfare School Council. 2-30 p.m.
Parlors AB
Boston, MA Room 1603
ESC: 1 p.m. Regional Air Room
Education Faculty: 3.00 p.m. Fortune
Square
Phi) Alba Theta: 4 p.m. Jayhawk Room
Signa & Signature: 3 p.m. Pine Room
Design: 6:30 p.m. English Room
Sierra X: 6:30 p.m. Kansas Room
Sigma Psi 7 p.m. Flipper Johns
Alma Bai Sigma 10 p.m. Governor
trooper
Student Senate. 6:30 p.m. Big 8 Room.
Breece. 6:30 p.m. Big 8 Room.
Room.
SUA Classical Films: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff
Sigma Xi 6:30 p.m., Kansas Room
Student Senate 6:30 p.m., Big B Room
Breezer 7 p.m., Oread Room
College Republicans . 30 p.m. , Farber A
Young Democrat: 7 p.m. , Rentallist
Room.
Phi Alpha Theta: 4 p.m. Jayhawk Room
Sigma Xi Initiation: 5:30 p.m. Pithe Room
Degree: 6:30 p.m. Knighthawk Room
SU/Classical films: 7:30 p.m., Anderson
Auditorium
815 W. Main St., Brooklyn, NY 11204
phone: (212) 555-6789
Philosophy Club 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk
Room.
Democracy 7:30 p.m. Hamilton
Rooftown
Philosophy Club 7:30 p.m. Jawahar
We've invented the small sensible solid American car all over again.
1930 Model A Deluxe Coupe.
1972 Ford J Drive Sedan shown with optional air brakes, front bumper group.
When people shop for car insurance they look for some very simple values. Dependability of economy and security. Good mileage and
These bones are our birthplace. The Model T the Model A, the first produced steer wagons, name a book of ideas, and choices that
Now to Ford Pinto
Pinto is as simple and solid a small car as there is in the world. And its proud lower than the three leading imports, lower than its major U.S. competitor yet it has every basic modern necessity.
A gutty little engine that gets the same economical kind of gas
A solid-an-rock four speed transmission Sports car steering
A welded steel body with six costs of paint
Ball-pit front suspension, and a wide stable stance on the road.
Pinto is one small car that doesn't have to fear a high-speed
And finally, Pato gives you comfortable interior leg and shoul-
der comfort. This chair is bordered by the interior lining to provide
See the Pitz at your Ford dealer's 40 years newer than the Model A, but it's still the same basic idea.
When you get back to basics,you get back to Ford.
FORD PINTO
FORD DIVISION
Ford
See your Ford Dealer now.
Use Kansan Classified
ANY AIRLINE CAN TAKE YOU TO EUROPE FOR A LOW FARE. BUT ONLY TWA CAN OFFER YOU ALL THIS:
TWA's STUTELPASS.*
TWA
FUN 10 24/75
A coupon booklet that gets you a room and Continental breakfast in either a guesthouse or student hotel in any of
52 European cities for only $4.80 a night
And, as a bonus, we throw in free coupons good for bullfights, concerts, the use of a bicycle, theater tickets, sightseeing and more.
TWA's BED AND BREAKFAST ADVENTURES.*
They range in price from $6 to $18 a day, and include a room and Continental breakfast in either a guesthouse or economy hotel, taxes and all service charges.
A higher grade of reserved accommodations, in any of 52 European cities.
Getaway Adventure
THE GATWAY ADVENTURES
EUROPE 1972
WESTERN ROCKS
WESTERN ROCKS
As a free bonus, we also throw in sightseeing tours, parties, theater tickets, local transportation and TWA guide books.
TWA's GETAWAY GUIDES.*
THE INTERNATIONAL MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY
THE INTERNATIONAL MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY
THE INTERNATIONAL MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY
THE INTERNATIONAL MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY
THE INTERNATIONAL MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY
THE INTERNATIONAL MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY
There are 16 of them, covering 19 of the world's most popular cities.
They not only describe the regular sightseeing attractions, but the bollout places as well.
And have discount coupons good for hotels, restaurants, shops, cars, tours, etc.
For only $1 a book you can save up to $100 a city.
They're available at all TWA ticket offices or from your TWA travel agent.
TWA's FREE GETAWAY CARD.*
TWA
Getaway
with us
With it, you can charge youth airfare, Stetelpass, Bed and Breakfast Adventures, car rentals and more, in the United
States and Europe.
And then, if you want, you can also take up to two years to pay.
TWA's CONVENIENT DEPARTURES.
TWA offers over 150 Ambassador flights daily to Europe. And over 40 flights a day across the United States.
TWA CHARGES THE LOWEST SCHEDULED FARE.
TWA guarantees that the fare you pay is the lowest fare charged by any scheduled non-stop airline.
And should the airfare be lowered, we'll refund the difference.
So, call your travel agent or TWA. And this summer get more than just a low fare to Europe. Service #
TWA
rks owned exclusively by TWA
1
COOL
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
82nd Year, No.131
Critics Indict U.S. System Of Education
Thursday, April 27, 1972
See Page 9
Kansam Photo by MARC MAY
AUTHOR
Committee Proposes Activity Fee Incentive
Senators Face Stormy Protest
Jerry Slaughter, Salina senior, fights for $2 hike.
Senate Postpones Decision On BSU Budget Allocation
By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
After more than an hour of heated debate, action on a request by the Black Student Union for an allocation of $35,350 was deferred until May 3, in the annual Student Senate budgeting session Wednesday night.
The action came after approximately 40 representatives from BSU packed the back of the Kansas room to protest the cut. The BSU members and other interest groups had waited three hours while the Senate debated the activity fee like before. The committee, including Audit Committee's budget recommendations, organized organizations were opened for discussion.
The BSU had originally requested a yearly budget of $3,350, but the amount was cut by the Finance and Auditing Committee, which recommended $1,075.
Mickey Dean, a representative from the company, drastic cut in the budget examined by the budget.
"When a drastic cut is made." Dean
The BSU allocation will be discussed by a special committee of seven non-finance and auditing senators and seven members of the BSU and Blackteet. The full Senate will then meet next Wednesday to take action on the request.
Nixon to Continue Bombing
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon said Wednesday night he will withdraw another 20,000 American troops from Iraq. The president also will continue U.S. air and naval attacks on North Vietnam until it ended its "naked and unprovoked . . . invasion" of the
The speech, delivered in stern tones as he sat behind his desk in his Oval Office.
AS HE ANNOUNCEED over radio and television that U.S. troop levels would be cut in the next two months to 49,000-500,000 below the level when he took office from 1967. Xinsen solicited public support for his determination to "be steadfast . . . not falter."
The chief executive said the United States is returning to the Paris peace talks today with the aim of halting the month-old invasion and "with the firm expectation that productive talks leading to rapid acceptance follow through all available channels."
The President spoke shortly after dispatches from Saigon told of a renewed North Vietnamese drive against the city of Quang Tri south of the démilitrated zone, with military helicopters and Highlands of South Vietnam remained uncertain under heavy offensive pressure.
"We will not be defeated," Nixon declared in a nationally broadcast report to the nation, "and we will never surrender our friends to Communist aggression."
He said, "The Communists have failed . . . their one remaining hope is to win in the Congress of the United States and among the people of the United States the greatest victory among the people of South Vietnam or on the battlefield in Southeast Vietnam."
was Nixon's first report to the American people on the war since the enemy trump led him to renew bombing of North Korea in air attacks near Hanoi and Hainong.
Barbi Dower, Topeka junior and chairman of the Finance and Auditing Committee, said there were two main reasons for the drastic cut. The first, she said, was that student activity fee to fund duplicate programs such as the proposed BSU draft and drug abuse counseling programs, which were already covered in other Senate committees such as Draft Help and Headquarters.
He said the chief Communist negotiator, Le Duc Tho, is returning to Paris and
Shortly before Nixon's address, his chief foreign-affairs adviser, Henry Kissinger, briefed newsmen at the White House and, although declining to talk about specific private negotiating, said "Notable diplomatic actions are going on . . ."
Dower also said the committee did not have enough information concerning BSU programs and use of funds to adequately consider the BSU request.
added, "He doesn't return for trivial reasons."
said, "it is usually caused by the invalidity of programs or rumors based on other than the invalidity of programs. So after all the problems was the budget chopped off like that?"
NIXON'S THREE decisions—continued withdrawal, a return to the Paris peace talks, and continued air and naval attacks on North Vietnamese military targets—major impact on the domestic election-year acae as well as on international relations.
In his prepared address, Nixon did not renew his previous criticism of the Soviet Union.
She said the committee had recommended enough money for operating expenses until further information was received and discussed.
See NIXON, page 3
It was moved that action on the request be deferred until the BSU request could be studied more thoroughly, but representatives from BSU protested that the optionalusal less than enough money would be served to adequately cover BSU requests.
At first, Bill O'Neill, Ballwin, Mo, junior and Student Senate treasurer, said the college would support money because there was no way of knowing much money would remain in the contingency fund. The contingency fund is designed that was not spent by campus organizations.
O'Neill said the Senate would probably have to retain the present contingency fund of approximately $10,000 as a pad in case the estimated revenue from the student activity fee was not sufficient enough to cover senate allocations.
He said that based on past years it was fair to assume that there would probably be a cash balance of $40,000 by July 1, when the fiscal year begins.
Muskie Cancels Ohio Trip, Aides Report Senator to End Candidacy
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie Wednesday suddenly canceled a campaign trip to Ohio, the next big battleground in the Democratic Presidential fight.
The Mutual Broadcasting System quoted Muske aides as saying the Maine senator should stay in Washington.
Muskie's press secretary denied the report. Some supporters in Congress predicted the senator would pull out of the debate and remain a candidate for the nomination.
Meanwhile, Sen. George S. McGovern, propelled by a Massachusetts landslide victory, and Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, saying he had won "a decisive battle" for the party's center in Pennsylvania, gave the campaign to Ohio without Muskie.
Muskie had been scheduled to appear at an evening rally in Toledo, but the trip was canceled so suddenly that when the word "cancer" came out, Muskie was already on the way to introduce him.
MUSKIE'S HEAD QUARTERS said he is "evaluating the political situation" and will hold a news conference Thursday morning.
Earlier he had vowed he is in the campaign to the end, despite his batting failure.
George C. Wallace of Airbnb said his second-place finish in Pennsylvania indicated he had "a better chance to be the nominee than ever before."
Wallace confronts Humphrey next Tuesday in the Indiana primary, while Humphrey, McGovern, Muskie and Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington compete
Dispute Erupts in International Club
By S. ARTHUR COHEN
Kansan Staff Writer
There seems to be some controversy among International Club members as to whether there should be a separate member.
Ronnie Sookhoo, Trinidad senior and president on Monday of the organization, said Wednesday that a regular meeting of the International Club was held Tuesday in the Kansas Union to discuss an amendment to the constitution to allow all students on campus to vote in the next election of the International Club.
He said that the vice-president of the International Club, Sohail Lafif, Quetta, Pakistan junior, had a list of names of 40 new members Monday who had paid their
Latif never said anything about the new members before Monday and he and Sookhoo had been working together, Sookhoo said.
Sookhoo had at the meeting Tuesday that those 40 persons could not partake in the meeting. In order for them to vote, the candidates had six weeks before the election date, he said.
THE 40 entered the room and when the union security was not able to get them to answer, they called for an emergency.
The registered members left, Sookhoa said, but the 40 remaining students, mostly Arabs and Iranians, stayed and moved to impeach the president because he was an "imperialist," an enemy of the third world people and a puppet of the administration.
"I made no attempt to stop the meeting," Sookoho said. "As far as I'm concerned the meeting was called off by the police and the legal transaction could not take place."
not be held because of the disorder in the room.
LATIF SAID that by a vote of 33 to 3, the General Assembly decided to impeach Sookko on charges of his misconduct toward members present at Tuesday's meeting.
An Iranian student who wasn't a member of the International Club, he said, motioned that the vice-president become the president until elections in the fall.
Sookhoo said elections would be held shortly.
According to Latif, he was asked to preside until elections in the fall and at the meeting membership of present members was to be extended until the fall elections.
Tuula Tossavainen, Joutsa, Finland, junior and cultural chairman of the International Club, said Iranian students who are part of it will be members of the International Club.
Both Dean of Foreign Students Clark Coan, adviser to the International Club, and Chuck Friedricks, assistant to the adviser, declined to comment.
"I UNDERSTAND the International Club can't avoid becoming political and it seems most of the foreign students who come to KU have already formed rather than just as students. American students who deal with dates and sock-hops at the same age," she said.
The vice-president didn't submit names and money of the new members to the treasurer or to the executive committee, and that was where the trouble began.
"We don't need to have two Iranian clubs. The money we have could be better used to help those foreign students who come here to study. Tuesday's meeting was a one-man ego trip. It was frightening to see how easily the crowd became excited, almost to the extent of using physical force," she said.
at the same time for Ohio's 153 delegate votes.
The South Dakota senator picked up a surprise bonus in Pennsylvania, where he earned $30. The vote gaining 74 more convention delegates.
HUMPIREY WON the Pennsylvania primary with 38 per cent of the vote and earned 65 more separate delegate competition, winning 57.
McGovern emerged from Massachusetts with a clear majority, 52 per cent of the vote in a 12-member primary, and with a 73 per cent plurality at the Democratic national convention.
That made Muskie a hit at his own game, for he had concentrated his campaign effort in Pennsylvania and, as a result, he was the best competition. He nicked up only 29 delegates.
Wallace won two Pennsylvania delegates, and 23 were uncompetitive to any
Tuesday's balloting sent McGovern into the lead in committed delegate votes for the first ballot at the Democratic national convention.
He emerged with a total of 234% of delegates, sweeping past Muskie, who wound up in the top three.
Humphrey's delegate count after the Tuesday balloting was 81. Wallace had 77.
President Nixon walked away with the Republican preference vote in Massachusetts, gaining 82 per cent over two GOP congressmen. One of them, Rep. Paul N. McCloskey Jr. of California, had asked for GOP ballots to protest Nixon's renewal of the bombing of North Vietnam. He was getting 14 per cent.
there was no Republican contest in Pennsylvania.
JOHN N. MITCHELL, the former attorney general, now managing Nixon's re-election campaign, said the Massachusetts primary indicated that he "has the ability to undeclared support" of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.
He said Kennedy's failure to endorse McGovern might mean he wasn't sure the South Dakota senator could win the nomination.
"If this is the case, his past and present support may only foreshadow the emergence of a more personal goal between now and then," he gathers at Miami Beach," Mitchell said.
David Miller, Eudora senior, concurred with O'Neill and said that his best guess was that there would be at least $40,000 left remaining from Senate allocations "if organizations don't spend money as usual."
Members of the special committee to study the BSU budget request were then elected. The seven senators and seven members of BSU and Blacktet will all have equal voting privileges in making the recommendation for BSU funding to the committee. The committee plans to meet Tuesday afternoon to discuss the recommendation.
Following the deferral of action on the BSU request, action was taken on 17 February before the Senate's adjournment at 3.30 a.m. Thursday. More than half the allocations have not yet been considered and on when the meeting continues Monday.
The senate also approved changes in the
line apportionment distribution to seven university areas.
The seven areas are as follows
Organization
Evaluation Code
RU Sailing Club
University of Houston
Turkish Students Organization
Kansas State University
Iranian Students Association
Michigan State University
Organization of Arab Students
Kansas Lutheran Mennonite
Association
Douglas Co. Legal Aid Society
Oklahoma State Office of Women
Oklahoma State University
Hilltop Child Care
Women's College present contingency
Women's College present contingency
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
**Line Item**
Student Senate Operating Budget $1.50 $68,700
Staff Senate Operating Budget $1.50 $68,700
NI Ubicational Association $1.50 134,000
Ubicational Association $1.50 134,000
University Daily Russian $1.50 185,000
University Daily Russian $1.50 185,000
Мерседес в Интернете $0.30 9,000
Mercedes in Internec $0.30 9,000
Budget requests were approved for the
Budget requests were approved for the
Senate Passes $2 Hike In Student Activity Fees
By HAL RITTER
Kansan Staff Writer
The Student Senate approved, disapproved and finally reapproved a $2-per semester increase in student activity fees to meet its budget at its budget meeting. Wednesday night.
The increase will raise the activity fee to $14 for each fall and spring semester, the increase will be in effect only one year unless it is reamproved the next year.
The amendment to Senate Enactment No. 17, which was passed by the Senate last December, also includes a fee increase for part-time students from $1.20 to $1.40 per hour enrolled, and an increase for summer students from $3.50 to $4.
The Senate's final decision on the increase recommended by the Finance and Auditing Committee after it held its budget hearings last week, came following several hours of debate on the $450.58 deficit attributed to the Senate by the committee.
THE SENATE's meeting began when Barbie Downer, Topeka junior and assistant director of the Committee, moved to suspend the rules so an amendment to Enactment No. 17, which included the activity fee increase, could be agreed because it was not on the agenda.
Before deciding whether to suspend rules, the Senate defeated a Finance and Labor bill that would have made changes in Enactment No. 17 possible by a simple majority vote.
Dower then spoke in favor of the amendment and its increase, which she said was needed to give the Senate enough power to adequately fund student organizations.
The Senate then voted not to suspend rules and thus supposedly end any changes.
Jerry Slaughter, Salina senior and member of the committee, then criticized the Senate's lack of consideration concerning the committee's proposal.
"THE ABSURDITY of this body just kills me," he said. "I can't believe that you guys are afraid to vote even to consider changing this enactment."
A motion to abolish the activity fee and another motion to send the committee back to work with instructions to present a budget without a deficit at the May 3 Senate meeting were then made and defeated.
Finally, Debbie Ebeling, Chesterfield,
Mo. jumor, responded to Slaughter's plea
to the league committee.
See $2 FEES HIKE. Page 10
Victoria
Kansan Staff Photo by TOM THRONE
BSU Leader Seeks Allocation Review
Senate postpones funding decision until next week.
2
Thursday, April 27, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Astronauts Prepare Craft For Splashdown Today
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Apollo 16 travels toward a splashdown in the South Pacific today. its command personnel near Weed as seen in 10 days of activity we see in 20 lifetimes."
Astronauts John W. Young, Michele D. Duke Jr. and Thomas K. Mattingly II, aboard their command ship Casper, will parachute to earth at 2:44 p.m. southeast of Christmas Island.
The prime recovery ship, aircraft carrier Ticonderoga, is cruising in the splashdown zone. It is a large ship which is just south of the equator—call for gentle seas, because there are no hazards and an almost unlimited visibility.
In a press conference held in space Wednesday as the astronauts hurried their home planet, Young said, "Mr. Apollo removed far from us to be beyond our reach, or so hidden that we cannot discover it." He referred to 16th-Century Earth in a way that the moon mountains where Apollo 16 landed were named.
"THAT IS really the story of our mission so far," the astronaut added. "We have been out testing this theory, . . ."
"We worked hard," said Young. "but we got all the sup-
port from our staff, our mission control Center, Hous-
ton." He said, too, there were "lots of work and wheels turning
on the ramp to solve our problems."
Mattingly, who remained in Young and Duke landed on the island, he may have seen the lunar module and the rover mouse car.
"There were two occasions when I caught a glint of light," he said. "I got mother to mother little flash of light on the mountain slope was on a mountain rover."
Asked his most memorable impressions of the mission, Duke said he had two.
"The first is the dazzling beauty of the Descartes Mountains on the surface," he said.
it was just one of the most awe-inspiring sights I've ever seen. And the second one is a space there just utter blackness out there."
Before the press conference and alarm light flashed in the ship's guidance and navigation system, it but proved to be only a stray electronic impulse and Mission Command code. The crew are now a clean bill of health.
Little was planned for the astronauts during their last day in space.
They busied themselves with preparations for splashdown, securing the 245 pounds of moon rock samples and the miles of film taken on and about the moon
Mission Control awakened them Wednesday with the news that the weather prediction was excellent in the recovery area
"That's the best news we've heard in a long time." said Mattingly.
APOLLO 16 will smash into the upper layers of the earth's atmosphere about 13 minutes before splashdown At that time, Casper will be sliding through space at almost 25,000 miles per second.
As it plunges earthward, friction will create temperatures of up to 4,200 degrees on the outside of the spacecraft.
The spacecraft will blaze across Pacific skies south of the equator. Small pilot parachutes are deployed to about 10,500 feet above the water, three orange and white main chutes will snap into the racing
After a parachute descent of about five minutes, the spacecraft will splash down at a gentle 22 miles an hour.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The government said Wednesday the cost of an intermediate standard diesel engine four harsen to $10,911 a year.
This is a 2.9 per cent rise from the last time the figure was computed 18 months earlier. Consumer prices rose 6.3 per cent in March but tax cut and other sectors helped ease inflation's sting.
For a lower, more austere
price, we live at the cost rose
9.6 per cent of the standard
of living, providing
some luxuries, the cost went up
from £250 to £348.
The figures, from the Labor Department's 'Urban Family Budgets' surreptitiously released for previous updating of these widely used statistics was published in The Times and also costs as of the spring of that year.
Family Budgets Rise
The budgets cover a specified package of goods, services and equipment required for the trip. The father is assumed to be 38, his wife does not work, they have a son 15 and a daughter 8. The couple also already have purchased an average supply of clothing, furniture, appliances and other
Department as an austerity or subsistence budget, provides for rental housing without air conditioning, transportation where available or a used car where needed. Lower-budget families do much more with their meals, cooking, and use free recreational facilities. Meals are nutrients; but use lower-priced refrigerated foods to keep fresh fruits and vegetables.
The higher budget, sometimes called liberal or comfortable, often leads to investments bought seven years ago when prices and mortgage rates were lower, more new car ownership, more goods and more paid services.
The lower budget, sometimes referred to outside the Labor
Costs vary from city to city. Anchorage, Alaska, is highest at $245 a person for the average for the intermediate standard of living. Lowest were smaller Southern towns with an average cost of $100-$50,000 at an average 84 per cent. Place whose intermediate location was near the national average were Green Bay, Wis., Kansas City, Mo., Los Louis, Mo., Baltimore and Los Angeles.
Picture a warm summer day and a walk on a sandy beach, then picture yourself in sandals.
Get into some broken harness leather and go out and enjoy the season.
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Peace Strategy Changes
AP News Analysis By LEWIS GULICK
WASHINGTON — President Nixon's resumption of the Paris peace talks is an abrupt turnabout from the
LAI KHE, Vietnam (AP)—North Vietnamese forces have given up trying to capture key cities in the north, destruing it with artillery barrages of up to 2,000 rounds a day, the commander of the north's forces said.
Li Gen. Nguyen Van Minh learned of Hanoi's "capture or destroy" order from prisoners of war, he told a reporter.
North Viet Forces Bombard An Loc
South Vietnamese also intercepted a message to the army from the enemy's failure to take the province capital 60 miles north of Hanoi.
"It apologized for their lack of accomplishment and blamed the North Vietnamese tanks for racing too far ahead of their infantry." Minh disclosed. "So there was no one to protect their vehicles, so they ran into anti-troops equipped with anti-tank rockets."
The province capital has been under siege 20 days. Mihai said he was in danger but he was clearly worried by the sustained North Vietnamese attack on his air support to Kontum Province in the central province.
"My men have held An Loe," he said. "They are not worried about the enemy tanks or infantry, but they are concerned by the heavy shelling. In the last weeks we have evacuated 130 wounded."
"Many of my air assets have been diverted to the fighting in Kontum. I need more B52 strikes."
Minh said the Communist command initially committed three divisions to the campaign in which he was led by which An Lac is the capital.
their helicopters, more fighter. I don't need more troops because I wouldn't have the air power to support them."
"We were surprised at the amount of ammunition they had, the large number of tanks and the speed with which they moved." Minh conceded. "They took Loe because we were not prepared."
"But I poured reinforcements into An Loc."
administration's stand against negotiating wwth Hanoi while North Vietnam is mounting an all-out drive in the South.
The siege of An Loc began April
Administration sources suggested that Nixon's policy reversal stemmed from several factors including:
Presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger just-concluded secret leaders, who have been calling for S. return to the conference ahead.
THE U.S. STATE Department's on-the-record reason for Napier to order of William Paris is that the return to Paris the parley was:
"The other side had been pressing very hard over the last few days for a resumption . . . it was really important to use explore to help lay behind
Propaganda points scored by the Vietnamese Communists, who supported Nixon, in the United States for the sterility of Nixon. Nixon suspended them March 23.
Domestic U.S. criticism of Nixon's action, including some Democratic presidential contenders.
This is a sharp switch from what administration spokesmen have been saying since the March 19th suspension of the suspension of the Paris meetings. Nixon said the Communists were using the parley for propaganda against the United States.
U. S. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee April 18 that it would be the "height of irresponsibility" to negotiate for peace with the Bahamas while their invasion of South Vietnam was under way.
their insistence."
SECRETARY OF STATE
william J. Koehler
on 17, the United States
was not prepared to resume the
work of resumption "while
the invasion is occurring."
On April 20, a U.S. State Department spokesman reaffirmed the position.
Senate Committee Votes To Extend ITT Hearing
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate Judiciary Committee recalled Richard G. Rendelman and the nominee for attorney general about differing statements regarding a major antitrust case.
The committee extended an earlier hearing deadline by one day as it agreed to send the full minutes of the nomination by late Thursday.
At the same time, Republican
committee members with some
Democratic affiliation seek to
liberals to further
extend the hearings and call still
U. S. officials said Wednesday they had no signal of Hanoi intent to get into serious discussions.
more witnesses, including presidential aide Peter M. Flanigan.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass, said he still would ask the full Senate to send the nomination committee for expanded hearing.
Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W. Va., the Democratic whip, said he was particularly interested in what Kleindienst would say about earlier testimony that he did not recall talking to Flanigan about the Obama administration's suit against International Telecommunications & Telegraph Corp.
Court to Rule on Suit Challenging State Remap
TOPEKA (AP) — A suit challenging the constitutionality of a 1972 law that will reapportion the Kansas House. House of Representatives unadversary Wednesday by a three-judge federal district court.
The plaintiffs are asking the court to halt election of a new 125-member House on the basis of the 1972 apportionment law. There is an appeal under three-judge panel when a decision might be handed down.
Hill said the alternate plan was not presented with the idea that it should be the purpose of showing that the bill passed by the legislature was
Ted Hill, Wichita attorney submitted an alternate plan to the court which he said had him among the 125 districts than the passed by the legislature over the vet of Gov. Robert
Hill put two legislators on the stand who testified that a major item in the consideration of the bill would be to prevent the re-election of incumbents.
Plaintiffs in the suit contend the reapportionment law is discriminatory and dilutes the voting power of citizens contrary to the union. one-vote concept laid down by the U.S. Supreme Court.
It was stipulated by both sides that the 1972 apportionment plan will create 125 districts that will be served by the 29th district, in Johnson County, to 19,124 for the 34th District, in Wyndow州等地. The 1972 apportionment plan averages 5.2 per cent below the average to 6.3 per cent above.
An exhibit showed that Hill's alternative plan would have 108 districts with a deviation of less than 5 percent, while only 70 districts come within those limits under the plan approved by the legislature.
Jack Quinlan, an attorney for the legislature, introduced an exhibit to show that before the legislature acted this year, there were 78 existing House districts that were greater than those under the apportionment law that was enacted.
In a letter to committee chairman Sen. James O. Eartland, D-Miss., earlier this week, Flangan said he had delivered a financial report on the proposed settlement to the plaintiff Alys. Guy. Richard W. McLaren who kendtend was present.
McLaren, renamed as the Nixon administration's trustbuster before he left office in 1987, said the financial report prepared by investment banker Richard J. Ramden was a major factor in the decision not to carry out IT cases to the Supreme Court.
Witnesses testified that three small cities had been divided between two legislative districts on the part of the legislature.
"It looks to me as if the legislature did a good job in the light of decisions handed down by the courts." Quinlan said.
Kleindienst's nomination was approved once before by the state senate, and then reopened at Kleindienst's request. They followed allegiance to the assault Jack team that the attack settlement was connected with a financial commitment by ITT for the national bicultural National Convention
Flanigan also said he relayed the announcement shortly before the settlement announced that ITT would not accept the original proposal.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 27, 1972
2
___
---
Iron Sculpture Frames Spring Skies
Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
Persons walked behind Bailey Hall might have noticed a particular rustling sculpture that is spherical in shape and has a diameter of about 3 to 4 feet. It appears to have been constructed by welding various pipes together. If a person was able to climb inside
the artwork, the view would be stimulating. In this case, with such sight reserved for leprechauns, a camera placed in the bottom left corner would be the best choice.
Nixon to Continue...
Continued from page 1
weapons used in the current offensive—a diplomatic decision that might have resulted from kissinger's just-concluded secret agreement.
Although Nixon did not spell out any specific new private cell phones that the United States expects proctive talks leading to rapid expansion of these channels" was viewed as an indication that some would consider another roadmap.
Nixon said Ambassador William C. Porter was going back into the Paris talks Tuesday to express very specific purpose in mind."
"We are not resuming the Paris talks simply in order to hear more enemy propaganda and bombast from the North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegates," he said, "but to get on with the constructive business of making peace."
THE FIRST ORDER of busi-
ness will be to accept the
will be to get the enemy to halt
his invasion of South Vietnam,
and to return the American
He said he is fully rejecting the proposal that the United States should take control of the Vietnam as a condition for returning to the negotiating table.
"They said that package to the United States once before," the president said in 1988 agreement that led then-President Lyndon B. Johnson to suspend bombing raids on North Korea, which it bought it again in 1972". Nixon said.
In terms of numbers, the new withdrawal rate represents an apparent slowdown from the previous pulloot pace. But, Kissinger said it was in line with the numbers he and decided upon last November.
At the same time with withdrawals from South Vietnam proceed, however, the United States is at odds with Japan over other parts of Southeast Asia. There are now about 34,000 Americans in Thailand, which is home for a large segment of the population of 40,000 naval personnel at sea.
SEVERAL HOURS before Nixman's broadcast, military sources launched that 36 more F4ighter aircraft would be sent to southeast Asia, bringing to more than 200 the number of U.S. aircraft zone since he offensively opened.
tirely by South Vietnamese forces.
He said the U.S. commander in Vietnam, Gen. Creighton Abrams, cabled him a report Wednesday morning which said he was among the wounded; "very heavy" casualties on the invading force.
Campus Briefs
And, he said, although Abrams more weeks of very hard fighting he is convinced that if we continue to provide, the enemy will
German Club Play
NIXON SAID his decisions were made after consulting Vietnamese President Nguyen Xuan Dinh, ambassador to Saigon Ellsworth Bunker, Paris negotiator Porter Garrison, senior advisers in Washington.
A played titled "Die Physikser" by Friedrich Durrenmagg, is presented at 8 p.m. May 2 in Woodruff Auditorium by the KU Music Department.
Without directly mentioning the raids on the Hanoi and Haiphong areas, Nixon said recent air and naval strikes on the North had been directed only against supporting the invasion of the South.
The President said, "The great question then is how we, the American people, will respond to this final challenge."
Air War Slide Show
The Vietnam Veterans Against the War will present a slide show on the automated air war in Vietnam at 8 p.m. at The Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, 2312 Harvard St. There will be a discussion afterward.
The French Club will meet at 7:15 p.m. today in Room 305 in the Kansas Union. The speaker, Cliff Bertolhau, will discuss his *Exposition*.
French Club Speech
"They will not stop until that invasion stops," he said.
Summer Language Institute
A factor which administration sources said weighted heavily in Nixon's deliberations was the lack of a plan to enter the May 22 to 29 Moscow summit talks. These sources said Nixon did not want to go to Moscow in a position of glaring embarrassment with the Communist offensive.
It was incorrectly reported in Wednesday's Kansan that sculptor Tal Streater would lecture on his kites and sculpture at 8 p.m., May 8, in the museum lecture hall. The lecture will take place Tuesday, May 2, at 8 p.m.
There will be a meeting of the Summer Language Institute for study in Barcelona at 4:30 p.m. today, in 104 Carruth O'Leary Hall.
Nixon said the offensive had been resisted on the ground en-
Kite Lecture May 2
Officials have changed the location of the lecture to the Forum Room of the Union
College Republicans Plan To Support Dole at Talk
The University of Kansas College Republicans made plans at a meeting Wednesday night to host an evening by Senator Robert Dole, (R-Kan.) to voice their support for him as well as for the Nixon administration.
Plans include bringing pro administration signs to try and counteract the anti-Dole forces who attend the meeting.
The group also elected new officers for the coming year.
Senate representative of Centennial College.
Christine Baker, Valley Falls freshman, was elected chairman and will take the place of Mr. Meredian freshman and Student
Pergol Destey of Senedectine department and the secretary, Grant Hewitt, Great Bend freshman, was elected treasurer and Damon Button was named vice president.
Ralph Nicol, Newton sophomore, was elected vicechairman.
Dostal, Hewitt and Button all ran unopposed.
LHS Company Makes Lamps, Issues Stock
It was also announced at the meeting that Cook had been elected president of college Republican Organization at their convention last weekend.
Local Cycle Race Track Receives Initial Approval
The Lawrence High Lite Co. has been formed at Lawrence College to offer wood and metal shop work more interesting and practical, according to Fred Schultz, creator of machine tool process.
KANU Stereo 91.5 FM
By LINDA SCHILD
Kansan Staff Writer
The purpose of the program is to show students how mass production operates and to teach them how to weld skills in the process.
10:00 News Weather Sports
10:15 TBA underground rock in sterec
10:20 Sign Off
After an hour of occasionally heated discussion at its meeting with the board, Douglas County Planning Commission gave its approval to allow the children to be allowed to open a motorcycle race track on his 80 year old daughter.
Shultz said any profits made from the sale of lamps were paid to the stockholders.
10:30 THA Afternoon (14:00)
12:30 New Year Specials
1:30 News Weather Spotlight
1:30 Music by Candle-light
1:30 Radio Show
2:30 RANI Jazz Performance Orchestra
The students, who elected officials and sold stock, designed and produced tiffany style lamps, which were made by the mass labor force. The last semester necessary tools for production were made.
8-30 Campus and Luna...
8-35 Spring Concert
8-39 Report from Haskell Indian Junior
8-40 Morning with the Masters
8-45 Fall Concert
8-12 Noon Hour Concert
8-16 September Calendar
8-18 Listen to Their Vocals
8-20 News Weather Sports
8-21 News Weather Sports
8-22 News Weather Sports
8-24 Heritage
Martin, a 22-year-old plumber, won his request over the objections of a number of his neighbors who accused him of voicing their disentire at the meeting by the neighbor he was affiliated with. His signatures tied by 22 persons in protest of the request had previously been presented to the judge.
8:00 Boston Symphony Orchestra Conver-
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8:00 Boston Symphony Orchestra Concerto
STRATHMORE AQUARIUS A New Watercolor Paper
MARTIN, AT TIMES assisted by his wife Nevi, described his plans to the seven commissioners and audience of about 100.
A blending of traditional cotton and modern synthetic fibers into a sheet that does not warp or buckle under any degree of wetness. $ ^{1} ^{0 0} $ per sheet.
Both Martins race motorcycles
at
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quarter mile of his home. Martin said Because of other races in his team, he only be held on 6 to 9 times a year; only this would usually be on
thoughtened to turn a profit, Marti
problem of finding a place to ride
the track. The growth would be built by making improvements on a dirt trail already in existence on his
circular course, which runs through a wooded area, would feel to meet the requirements of the American Motorcycle company jumps and obstacle would also be needed He and his wife are are very concerned with ecology, and hopefully, no wash would be cut
Chairman Barkly Clark reminded the group that the request would be addressed by Commission for consideration at its May 10 meeting if he lived within 100 feet of the Martin's property protest, two-thirds of which Commission should be necessary. That all three commissioners would have to vote in favor of granting the commission.
Martin's neighbors presented their objections, which included the noise and dust, more litter along the roadaides and increased damage to that there is a church about one mile from the Martina's land. "I wouldn't mind," he said.
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The commission finally approved Martin's request with the following conditions. There will be a maximum number of six students, two on holiday between the hours of 8 a.m. and 6 p.m.; the Martins are to provide adequate parking off the highway; they are to furnish their accommodation to the sanitary facilities; races are to be held in accordance with AMA standards; and the permit, if granted, is to be subject to review after the first three months of admission and annually after that.
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SIX COMMISSIONERS voted in favor of granting the request, one abstained.
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Thursday, April 27, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Too Far, Gus
At the special Student Senate meeting held to consider the resolutions protesting the war, a petition was passed around urging that the invitation which had been extended to Sen. Robert Dole be rescinded because he supports President Nixon's stand on the bombings in North Vietnam. Some of the students on this campus are opposed to Nixon's stance but I do not think we want to limit the speakers allowed on this campus to only those who echo what we like to hear.
The Student Senate has recently been pestered with resolutions which, if approved, would limit the range of opinions allowed to be presented on this campus. This is intolerable at a university; it would receive a fair and rational consideration by its students.
It was reported that Dole agreed to allow a statement to be read at his speech calling for the termination of U.S. involvement in the war which should be Vietnam's. He is giving us more consideration than a few others. But the petition was wisely disregarded by most of the senators but it is pathetic, perhaps even frightening, that it was even brought up.
There is also an attempt on the part of some students to have David Miller and Louis Scott removed from SenEx because they voted against a resolution to legalize marijuana, to pardon persons already convicted of marijuana violations, and to conduct a student opinion poll concerning marijuana. Gus Dizeregua explained in a letter in
Monday's Kansan why he had helped to initiate this action.
I am inclined to agree with him that the use of marijana should be legalized but I could never believe that anyone who disagreed with that opinion was morally and ethically insensible. Dizerega claimed the issue was a moral one but then attempted to argue that there was only one correct stand. To claim that something is a moral issue tends to diminish the possibility of an absolutely right opinion.
Voting, like speaking, is a way of expressing opinion. However, senators should be attuned to the thoughts and desires of their constituents when voting. It is possible that Miller and Scott, unlike diZerega and his associates, were students at the university and students in this campus who were opposed to any legislative approval of marijuana.
I cannot believe that Miller's and Scott's "no" votes will in any way "destroy" or "trample upon" inaliable human rights. Nor do I believe that they are insensitive to either student opinion or students who have been convicted of marijuana violations.
It is proper that dizerega has expressed his vigorous opposition to the way Miller and Scott voted. It is even commendable that he took the time and effort to do so. However, he did not ask for votes from them removed from office for voting on one issue in a manner which he believed to be wrong.
Mary Ward
Pipeline Report
Because of the public furor over the construction of a trans-Alaskian oil pipeline, the Secretary of the Interior ordered a study to determine how this plan and others in terms of both economic and environmental costs.
That report has now been released, and the Department of the Interior, on the basis of the report, has decided that a permit for construction probably will be granted. Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton has said he may issue a pipeline permit on or after May 4.
No public hearings will be held on the report. Said Underexsecretary of the Interior William T. Pecora, "The department . . . feels that another public hearing at this time is not necessary . . . It is the secretary's view that this complex report needs to be read; needs to be understood; that a public hearing would be a cause in comparison to the kind of communication substantial common that might come in to the Council of Environmental Quality or other offices. Public hearings . . . would interfere with a more thoughtful and rational analysis of this complex document."
However, if you want to make a "thoughtful, substantial comment," on the report you may have a bit of difficulty. First of all, you will have to find a copy of the report. There are exactly seven available for public inspection in the "lower 48" states. They can be seen during office hours in certain government agencies in Washington, D.C.; Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland and Seattle.
If you do decide to fly out to look over one of the reports, take along your reading glasses. The report is nine volumes, or 3,550 pages long, and is not well organized or indexed. If you don't have air fare to Portland or San Francisco, you can order a copy of the report for just $42.50. However, delivery time is unknown.
Well, if the report revealed that all of the environmental questions that have been posed about the pipeline had been adequately answered, then we should need to want to look at the report. But of course this is not the case.
In fact quite the opposite is true, and it looks as though big business, in the form of the Alysesa Pipeline Service Co., has succeeded in persuading the government to make the same time pushing for a quick authorization to go ahead with construction.
Furthermore the report indicates that a "no-spill performance" for the pipeline would be "unlikely," and goes on to say that even under emergency shutdown procedures as much as 64,000 barrels of oil could escape from a pipeline break, and not only severely but undetectable." (A minor leak is anything less than 750 barrels or 31,500 gallons per day.)
The report indicates, according to some Washington environmentalists that have seen copies, that an alternative route through Canada, bypassing the railway, will be employed route transverses, would be an efficient alternative to the trans-Alaska line.
Of course such leakage would undoubtedly cause irreparable damage to the fragile Alaskan environment. However, the report fails to explain what the environmental consequences of such leaks might be.
It does occasionally let slip an assessment of the extent of possible damage. "A significant spill into the upper Gulanka River, during the peak of the salmon run," says the report, "would likely cause fishery damages of catastrophic propor-tion." You can consider what might happen if the oil flowed into the Copper River, which is connected to the Gulanka and supports one of the greatest birdlife concentrations on earth.
Actually, it looks as though there is little that can be done now to stop the issuance of a permit to start construction of the pipeline. However, you may try by writing the President, urging him to extend the examination period for at least 90 days and asking for full public hearings on the report. Writing to congressmen, urging them to ask the President for these concessions, might also be helpful.
The environmental battle in this country rages on. And despite the administration's plattitudinous assurances to the contrary, it looks as though the side with the upper hand is industry, with its extensive power and influence in the Nixon administration. The people, who are land that is being desecrated, and of course who stand to lose the most by the greed-inspired environmental mismanagement of industry and government, are again the underdogs.
Mike Moffet Associate Editor
Protest Failures Examined
Guest Column
By MIKE THARP
Cuest Columnist
The nation's third president, author of the Declaration of Independence and an owner of slaves, once said that that government is best which bureaucratic dictation applies to the current uphour of the local peace "movement" and its most recent action at the KU Relays. The demonstration, protest, or really failed to politicize that needy audience necessary to provide the movement with any kind of broad base of support. The action did succeed in polarizing many persons in the audience who supported the sympathy with the intended purpose of the rallies.
The reasons for the failure are found behind the scenes as well as behind the barricades. A
The committee, unintentionally or otherwise, locked itself into the same bureaucratic pleixglaeas for the protection of a bureausive government of the establishment. Procedures, semantics, pediatry, and an amazing unconcern for the health of the war—cassation of the war—
betrayal of goals, and an unconscionable disregard for strategy, doomed the protest to ineffectuality at best and alienation at worst. The self-styled group, the antiwar groups, did everything but coordinate. Some, not all, members of the committee seemed to choose a path of self-indulgent ego reinforcement and self-rightous intolerance, effectively short-circuiting the honest efforts of hundreds and perhaps thousands who consistently committed war protesters.
Perhaps their failure may be explained, if not justified, by the pressure of space or pressure. That is why they must be pure, their intentions unimpeachable—what must be explained and evaluated is the result.
characterized some of the committee members' preoccupation with machinery, with image, with themselves.
The decision to read the most important statement of the day at the most significant time is regretless. The majority of the speech turned off many of the 173 per cent of the people in the stands supposedly favoring an end to American involvement in Indochina. The surge of the antagonism against prices and subsequent chanting and sloganing did nothing but antagonize the audience and
participants, although the frustration which moved the demonstrators to take such steps is understandable.
Future actions of the current antiwar movement here run the risk of undercutting the broad base of support ballboaked on the microphones and audience people not like to be preached to or yelled at. They need information more than evangelism, information presented in a reasonable way to presumably prevent them from presumably reasonable opponents of the war.
The spectre of Senator Robert Dole, offstage Thursday in his Witness Day would do irreparable harm to the movement, as would any confrontational tactic at Forbes' headquarters. In many of the workers in the
movement, the average man is tired of the war. But disruptive militancy nowadays is self-sacrifice and counterproductive.
There are thousands of people at KU and in Lawrence willing and able to devote their efforts to end the war. Their intentions should not be aborted on an altar of bureaucracy in an almost religious quest for power. Not all of the committee members are so engaged—many of them have given up to help their beliefs and they are to be commended and cooperated with.
But unless some wider vision erases the obvious blind spots of those who want to move movement will strangle on our red tape. People will again become indifferent or radical or antidote. And the war will go on and on.
Garry Wills
Putting Ed Back Together
Life recently ran a hopeful article called "Putting Ed Muskie Together Again." But that may be an impossible task for this self-destruct candidate (Humpty-Dumpy Edmund-Muskie, must-be be-so prone to dumb-dumbs).
There was that first gaffe he lived with for so many months, telling a black group that no white people were President. The point is not whether he was voicing a truth. The point is that there are political ways of saying things like that—to warn against weeks of practice, a crash-course
he had to go through to cancel the disadvantage of saying it wrong the first time.
Political skill of the voter-sucking kind is not one of man's highest gifts. In fact, I'm willing to entertain argument that it is a bad idea to vote. It is a fairly obvious skill. You have it or you don't. *Muskie don't.*
The next chance he had to prove this was during the Democratic National Committee chairman, Muskie withdrew support from the reform candidate, Senator Hughes, long
Then New Hampshire—playing William Loeb's own game on William Loeb's own ground; as if FDR should storm out of the city to camp in the Louisiana legislature to heckle Huey Long.
enough to anger the liberals; then made a late, ineffecible move in his favor, just in time to anger the labor-middle faction. His timing was perfect in its way—which is a loser's way.
votes he would not be honored to accept.
But in his quiet way he outdid himself last week, after the bombing of Haiphong. He told newsmen he was introducing a "sense of the Senate" resolution against the bombing. The掖舕 press asked what good he did, and he answered that any expression of public disfavor was to be welcomed in this crisis.
Rogers. Muskie is a member of that committee, and was even in town that day-part of the morning he had spent on the golf course. Muskie answered that he took such hearings did any good.
Then a newman thought to ask why he had not been present that morning when the Senate voted to grant him a grilled Secretary of State William
In short: any gesture is valuable in this crisis, except a Senatorial televised newsmaking气事 that happens to coincide with Muskie's fairway respite from campaigning.
The man has a positive talent for falling apart (Humpty-Deddum Dumpy-Muskie. Must he?).
James J. Kilpatrick
Copyright, 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
Juvenile Crime Rampages On
WASHINGTON—One of our town's most professional liberals, a fellow who ordinarily has the answers to everything, threw up his hands the other day on the matter of juvenile crime. He couldn't explain it, and for once he was confident that he was pretty certain that conservatives had nothing to offer either.
Perhaps not—not if answers are sought in terms of instant social solutions or politically charged arguments, dimensions of this problem are
Between 1960 and 1970, arrests of persons under 18 more than half of the crimes committed each year are committed by persons under 25. One-third of all robberies, 52 per cent of auto thefts, and 60 per cent of auto thefts are attributed to youths 15, 16 and 17 years old.
appaling, and when we ponder the punk kid with the smoking pistol, something better is required than the liberals' limp excuses. There is more to this than poor food and poor housing.
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No other society in the world matches our wretched record of juvenile crime.
What can be done about it? A conservative might respond by suggesting a sobering re-examination of certain patterns and institutions that have fallen into slow decline.
One of these, plainly, is the concept of family. We have come a long way—and not an especially pleasant way—from the time of family solidarity and family responsibility. Divorce courts function as efficiently as airline service but they are less comprehensive portions of a ticket. Scorned by the zealots of women's lib, the role of motherhood increasingly is seen as a kind of bit to paren, be played by women who can't make it in the big time. The elderly fare no better. Like ancient Eskimos, we tend to put our aged parents on an ice floor: Off to Medicare Manor. Manor. Seldom ask what all this ties to our child.
A free society is one thing; a permissive society is something else entirely. Many of our educational theorists seem not to understand how important it is for mushy tutelage, we have raised two generations of children to suppose that discipline is cruel, that obedience is a sometime weakness, and that schools that teachers would seek to indictate their charges, especially in the primary grades, with old-fashioned virtues: humility, wisdom, manners, excellence. They indoctrinate them in traffic safety now.
What has become of the church? Our leading ministers, it often appears, are obsessed with ministering to Mozambique. Such institutions as the Boy Scouts and the Girl Guides are saddened by the bulk. But for many years they surrendered to the mokery of pseudo-sophisticates who
found them just too square for words.
A conservative, searching for legislative answers, would urge a fresh look at laws that govern child labor and fix a minimum wage. This is not to suggest a change in the sweat shop and the garment loft. But it is to suggest that thousands of boys might stay out of trouble if they learned the discipline of honest work at 12 or 13. The present minimum wage law coupled with needlessly expensive active and healthy youngsters with little to do but hang around.
Our courts cry out for reexamination also. One hesitates to generalize, but the FBI figures suggest that something is sadly wrong. The
system is not working. Fewer than one per cent of the juvenile offenders taken into custody wind up in criminal courts. It is fine to temper jail with mercy, but prevent leniency is bad all around.
What lies ahead? The melancholy prospect is that prospect in America will get worse in the future, it tides keep rolling in; they eat at the shores of moral values. The Congress is not likely to lower the minimum wage for youngsters, to reduce their board. Until we make up our minds to get back to fundamental principles, we can look ahead to more young punks who sneer at a society, unwilling to be healed.
The
Pl
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a sm
prop
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Doug
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Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 27, 1972
5
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City, County Define Development
Crews Crewens
Scott Spelter
Speaker Speaker
Groom Groom
Simkinton Simkinton
Spurlock Spurlock
Jace Jones Jace
Schmidt Schmidt
KR Netker KR Netker
Roush Roush
Solo killoff Briskman
Carol Young
Robert Carter
Man Manley
Bearnbar
Linda Lloyd
Mire Murray
Mel Delano
Mou Adams
By MARSHA SEARS
Kansan Staff Writer
off
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commissioners Wednesday morning explained to a small audience of newsmen the proposed subdivision and settlement regulations for Dougcastle County.
1 Sokoloff."
The purpose of the subdivision and development regulations is to assure that the subdivision of land, which is an initial step in urbanization, will be in the general interest, and for the general welfare.
Barkey Clark, the chairman of the planning commission, said that nearly two years of intensive research and had gathered information about the country. From this information the commissioners have selected the following officials:
"This may be the most carefully drafted ordinance in the
history of man," said Clark.
THE COMMISSIONERS tried to get the regulations just as they wanted, he said.
"But, we can't satisfy everyone." Clark said.
The commissioners tried to balance the competing interests of environmentalists and developers.
Clark explained that the county is divided into four districts: the city of Lawrence, the primary village, the rural growth area and the rural area.
Lawrence has the highest standards standards in the strictest industry. However, proposal only clarifies existing city policy for urban development.
The primary urban growth area the area surrounding Laverne is expected. Urban growth is expected. Less stringent standards are imposed on construction.
sewers and sanitary sewers are not required as they are in Lawrence, but the proposal requires the construction of these facilities.
THE SUBBARRAN growth area extends southwest of Lawrence to the eastern side of the Reservoir. The remaining area is rural and has the most lenient slope in the park.
Each town in Douglas County will designate its primary growth area and choose one of the four under which to be regulated.
A division of a tract of land for agricultural or residential purposes is corporated office of Douglass County is exempted from the regulations if the division does not create any new streets, roads or buildings.
A farmer who wants to divide his farm among his children could be exempt from the
regulations, but, the land is not exempt from regulations (such as plating) it it is divided into three or more lots, any of which is
Also exempted is the subdivision of any land used only for cemetery purposes and vacation of land impressed with public
TOPEKA (AP)—The U.S. Labor Department presented to Gov. Robert Docking Wednesday night a summary of a federal investigation into allegations of political favoritism in Kansas hiring practices under the federal policy employment program.
State Hiring Probe Ends
THE PROPOSED regulations
the loop holes would not be created,
but the regulations are amenable
loop holes or other
them to make public all correspondence from Hodgson as well as the report.
In a cover letter to Docking from James D. Hodgson, U.S. secretary of labor, the state was urged to give his procedures for hiring workers under the program or face the prospect of losing state control over the program within 30 days. The governor said Wednesday night to receive the report and Hodgson's letter, but aides said the governor had authorized them to make public Hodgson as well as the report.
Clark said that legitimate developer-appropriate the new regulations to regulate regulations prevented the "flying night developers" from entering.
James Shaffer, Docking's
friend and the letter public, saying in a statement "Gov. Robert Docking has not been the victim of this."
me to release the summaries whether they reflect poorly or favorably.
"He believes the people o. Kansas have a right to know the truth of certain allegations which light of certain allegations which have appeared in the news
director Harris, regional director of the U.S. Department of Labor, and head Hadoop administrator in the U.S. Labor Department, prevented a breach by the governor who authorized
KU Owl Society Names Twenty-Two Sophomores
Twenty-two KU sophomore men have been selected for membership in next year (Owl) college. A large organization for junior men.
Members are chosen on the basis of student activities, leadership, service and scholarship.
David Francisco, Prairie Village; James Harrell, Emporia; Robert Joseph,潘伊; Bening Sheepreve, La. Ken Lashce, Overland Park; Gary Nevins, Paola; Evan Olson, Salina; James Packard, Pitt; Michael Sharp, Prairie Village; Paul Rankin, Lawrence; David Sanford, Wichita; Gary Scott, Stockton; Robert Shakewa Meeison, Warren Hastings, Steven Warren, Hastings, Neb.
To plat an area, a person mou-
submit sketch plans from the
developer that include soil type,
soil properties, features and historical site information. The sketch is submitted to the city-county planter and mistakes are amended. Then a final sketch is drawn up, a legal document, drawn up.
New members are Gary Buck-walter, Turon; Daniel Burk-wichita; Thomas 布鲁斯; Busch Mission; Robert Eckoff; Mission, Robert Ecoff; Wichita;
To comply with the new regulations a land owner may have the added expense of plating costs, but a subdivision maintains its value if it is plated. The cost to plating a person's perse is a reliable investment.
CLARK GAVE one example of a problem that could have been developed regulations had been effective when the Indian Hills Subdivision and the Indian Hills Subdivision did not require sidewalks. Now the residents want them because of fire hazards. Yards must be turn up and sidewalks can be put in at a much lower cost. The system was developed. Now the regulations require all subdivisions to construct sidewalks along the roads.
SENIOR PARTY
One of the principal objectives of the regulations is to insure that a subdivision will successfully fit into the Clark explained that the proposed subdivision and development regulations are not sufficient to meet the proposal and the proposal did not require the rigid Lawrence standards for
The end of our last semester has arrived. We are the 100th class to graduate from KU and we're going to send ourselves off with the biggest senior party yet. On Friday night April 28th we have reserved the new Knights of Columbus Hall. Music will be provided by Bikales-Weinberg. Mix, ice and glasses will be provided free at both bars, so bring a bottle of your favorite booze (and an ID that says you are 21). There will be no cover charge for senior class members. Everyone else will be asked to donate a buck. Doors open at 8:00 p.m. at the Knights of Columbus Hall located one door this side (West) of the Co-op Fertilizer plant on K-10 (East 23rd Street). Leave your grubs at home and come to the best party in 100 years, this Friday night.
DENNIS CHERRY CLASS OF 1972
A public hearing for the proposed subdivision and development regulations will be held on Friday, June 16th in Junior High School. Then the proposal will be submitted to the county commission for approval.
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Thursday, April 27, 1972
University Daily Kansan
I
RELAYS '72
DRAKE IKINSON
Rick Jacques, Sprint Medley
STATISTICS
Bob Seagren, Pole Vault
JOHN KLEIN
Jim Ryun, Mile
PACIFIC COAST CYCLING
AI Feuerbach, Shot Put
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Michigan State
Herb Washington, Open 100 yd. Dash
Ed Morland, Javelin
BRAZILIAN HOCKEY CLUB
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KING OF THE CLOUD
Kansan Photos by Pris Brandsted Becky Pivonka Tom Throne Hank Young
Kjell Isaksson, Pole Vault
SUNY STADIUM
Barry Schur, High Jump
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 27, 1972
7
Lucas, Bradley Blister Lakers for Knick Win
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The New York Knicks, with Bill Bradley and Jerry Lusac leading a blistering shooting assault by the Los Angeles Lakers at the Los Angeles Lakers, 114-92. Wednesday night in the first game of their best-of-seven played series, the Lakers defeated the Association, grown
Bradley hit 11 of 12 shots, in the game. He jumped for a series of long-range jumps as the Knicks built a big first outing, but were never challenged, wound up with 29 points and Lucas had Goodrich led 14 with six hits.
The game was decided in the first half, when the Knicks hit 72
Royals Edge Orioles, 5-3 In 5th Inning
KANSAS CITY (AP)—The Kansas City Royals broke Dave McNally's string of scoreless 17 innings on Saturday night, exploding for five runs in the fifth for a rain-ainbroreved 5-4 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
Rain battered the stadium in three games, but Orioles had scored three runs. And Etchie barbearen was on second base out of outfield for the previous opponents. The defeat was the fourth straight for the American League team.
Fred Patek and Cookie Rojas led the Royals' nine-hit assault, each collecting three hits.
per cent of their shots and took a 67.49 lead
Baseball Standings
The Knicks, who beat the
Nationals in both the championship two years ago in a seven-game series, and Los Angeles return her Sunday for a third game.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
| Game | W | L | Pet. GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Detroit | 5 | 3 | 628 |
| Green Bay | 4 | 3 | 100 |
| Cleveland | 4 | 3 | 444 |
| Carolina | 4 | 3 | 146 |
| Rocky Mountain | 4 | 3 | 363 |
| York | 4 | 3 | 27 |
west 7 2 714 19
Minnesota 2 7 714 19
Chicago 3 5 600 2
Cleveland 3 5 600 2
Tennessee 5 5 400 2
Kansas City 5 5 400 2
Miami 5 5 400 2
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York W 5 L Pet.
Montreal 6 2 724
Atlanta 5 1 718
Philadelphia 5 4 356
St Louis 5 4 356
Louisiana 5 4 356
Houston 8 2 819
Ala Josea Beach 8 9 400 %
Boca Raton 9 4 164 %
San Diego 4 7 366 /3
San Francisco 4 7 332 /3
Atlanta 4 7 333 /3
American League
New York, Oakland
California, Minnesota
California, Minnesota
Detroit, Texas
Illinois, Milwaukee
National Leage
San Francisco 5. Philadelphia 4.
St. Louis 8. Atlanta 4
New York 6. Chicago 5
Newark 8. San Diego 1
Los Angeles 7. Miami 4
While six members of the band will try to win another gold watch at the 63rd Drake Relays Friday, a big surprise is that the wagers will hopefully take another step on the road to a bigpot of gold—the Munich
Re RILL SCHEELE
BY DIESE SHEELE
Kanean Sports Writer
KU Seeks Gold at Drake
KU's flying foursome in the spruce medley. Phil Steph, Tom McCallum and James Jacques, will face a tougher field at Drake, KU track coach Bob
"I think our boys will have a hard time repeating their skills in the field, fields are not only tough, but they are large. All the Big Ten teams enter, as well as all the Big East teams, and there are Big Eight teams."
The quartet broke KU's two-year relays circuit victory drought last weekend by clocking a 3-22 in the Kansas Relays.
SCHUR WILL be in the same field as Pat Matdzorf of Wisconsin, who holds the world record of 7 feet $6\%$.
Two KU jumpers who broke magic distance marks in winning their events at the KU Relays, and two at the triple jumper Mike Mull, will also face tougher competition. Schur jumped 7 feet 1 and Stu 50 feet 8%, the first time they have been seven and fifty-foot barriers.
Meanwhile, freshier Jayhawk shotputers Steve Wilhelm and Karl Salb and former KU miler Jim Ryun will enter special open
Salb and Wilhelm will compete
in the open shot put,
which includes world record-
holder Randy Matson, the
Wilhelm tossed 6 feet 8 and
Salb. 63 feet 6% at the Kansas
Raleys to place third and fourth
before Feuerbach and Matson.
Going into the Drake Relays,
three athletes have a shot to add
the last jewel to potential Triple
Crown.
Ryun will seek his third victory on the Texas-Kansas-Drake team. He will open the open mile. His competition will include former Oklahoma State stars Peter Kail and Larry Rose and former Nebraska receiver Braydon.
Ken Stadel of Rice is looking for his third straight discus triumph after winning at Texas and losing at Kansas with a 173-10.
Colorado's Cliff Branch has won both university 100-yard dash events, but must contend with the Baylor State and Michigan State to complete the sweep. Washington won the special 100-yard dash at KU in 93.
present premier putter, Al Feuerbach, and the top collegiate thrower, Fred DeBernardi of the University of Texas at El Paso.
THE OKLAHOMA STATE MILE
team of team with Bolding running the
course through the field, winning
win three in a row after winning
at Texas in 2017.8 and at Kansas
Ryun ran $3.51 to win the Glenn Cunningham mile here.
ALL THREE former Jayhawks are shooting for the Olympic team. They are trying to peak for six trials July 8 in Eugene, Ore.
Other top-flight entrants at the former Oregon State high jumper who made the "fop" jumping style famous is Greene, the former Nebraska spinner who shares the world 100-yard dash record of Lance Stephens.
Timmons said that although he has never been as important, his team was priming itself for the Big Eight outdoor championship May 19 and 20 at the U.S. National Open.
Oklahoma State's Jim Bolding,
however, may pass up his
chances of a triple sweep in the
Nationals to compete against world
record-holder Ralph Mahn in the
open event. Bolding set the
Kansas Relays record of 50.4
after winning the Texas race in
"We must improve in three areas to win the Big Eight," timmons said. "We must
KU to Play 1st-Place OU
Harris Stands 14th in Decathlon
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Defending champion Rick Wanamaker weathered poor performances in two events Wednesday to take the first-day game at the Drake Reliefs decathlon.
The University of Kansas baseball team may have its back against the wall when it v-turns to play its third game on league-leading Oklahoma, but it's a fact that doesn't seem to be coach Coach Tedy Temple very much.
"They (Okahoma) should be better," he said, "are he," said, "but, then, there have been other teams that were supposed to be better than us and they are."
The Jayhawks are scheduled to meet the Sooners in a 1:30 p.m. doubleheader Friday and a single at, t. 1:00 p. Saturday.
KU will be trying to rebound after dropping two games out of three to last place Missouri last weekend in Lawrence.
"They probably have the best overall talent in the league, but we're going down there to win."
The series loss to the Tigers left the Jawahars with a 64 covey record. They fell behind the Big Eight race which could be described as something less than enviable. Trailing the Sooners by six games, the Jawahars has nine games left to play, but six of those are with teams that have lost first and second in the Big Eight.
By DAN GEORGE Kansan Snorts Writer
AND TEMPE'S squad could hardly have picked a worse team against which to hit the comeback trail.
The Sooners based most of
their pre-season pennant chances on a pitching staff which was ranked top in the league in 1891. The most part, it has followed through.
Before last week's games,
Gregorian beat the Boosters in pitching standings. Standing out among Sooner hurlers was Jack Todd who boasted a 3-0 win.
But Oklahoma's balance is
not bad. Joe Henson was also
rated number two in the Big Eight before last week. First baseman Bob Jack, with two
pitches, scored in his shortstop Mike Ford, with a 34 mark, lead the Sooner at
34.
Temple plans to start Bob Cox (3, 2-3, 8.4) and southpaw Steve Corder (4,2-1.85) in the Friday doubleheader and other Bob Stiegeiemer (10, -4.57) in the single contest Sateqam.
Bv DAN GEORGE
CORDER AND Cox, both o
n were disappointed in their
loss, who did not win 18
runs against Missouri in two
games, have been impressive.
They have
"There's no problem," he said, "but the bad man believed him. But if they go down there (Norman) and have another bad game, well, then I'll win."
Although the Jayhawks have not been consistently a good-hitting team, they have had their success against Colorado and 10 against Colorado.
Tennis Team Stops NU For First Big 8 Victory
The victory moved the Jayhaws into a fourth place tie in the Big Eight, coach Mike Howard said.
The University of Kansas tennis team defeated the Nebraska Cornhuskers, 6-3, at Lincoln Monday.
Volleyball Title Goes to AGDs
1.
Wiggins-Smith, NU. def. Isaac-Kkngsley,
6-4, 1-6, 5-4.
Temple said that it depended on who Oklahoma pitched the ball. He would make and more swift moves to line for the series, Robert Ohm, who suffered from the flu in the spring, whose wounds would be able to play, he said.
The Jayhawks Big Eight match record is 12 wins and 24 losses in four dials. Each dual singles and three doubles matches.
Singles
Wick KU, Jack R., Defatte 6-1.
Henry KU,摧 R., Defatte 6-1.
Katherine KU,摧 R., Defatte 6-1.
Carlson KU,摧 L., Defatte 6-4.
Shaffer KU,摧 Smith 6-1.
Buffalo KU,摧 Smith 6-1.
The semifinals and finals
Tuesday. The team's
competition, which started
March 7, Claire McEiroy,
amitruramural director,
and Tuesday.
Oklaahoma, 8-4, will also be rebounding from a series loss and with Colorado only a half-game behind them. Temple knows the
Wick-Carlson, KU, def. Crew-Rathe, 6-2, 6-1
The Alpha Gamma Delta A championship combination of male and female talent to win the olympic volleyball championships Tuesday night in Atlanta.
Delta Delta Delta-Delta Tau Delta No. placed second in the season. Delta No. placed second in the season. Kappa Team No. 6 was third, Sigma Team No. 6 Gamma Delta B Team was fourth.
"You never know," he said with a laugh. "If you make a move and it pays off, you get all the money." If it doesn't, you're a bum.
"they've been hitting pretty well," he said. "But if we get the good pitching and the good backhand once. But we've got to have it."
"It's really hard to say," he said. "We're not a good hitter, but we can be better than I thought before the season. But you never know in that game."
Missouri. Temple, however, was reluctant to comment on how this might affect his team's hitting confidence.
matches remaining before the Big Eight tournament May 19 and 20 at Homewed Country Club in Kansas City, Kan.
TEMPLE, WHO did some extensive protection of players in the last game against Missouri, and was caught flagged off the strategy behind it.
The KU attack has been bolstered primarily by the team's three starters Bradley and pitcher-first baseman Wolf. Bradley, with 10 RBIs, is bating 475. Wolf has three home runs and 14 RBIs.
The next match for KU will be host Iowa State on Saturday, Missouri Tigers. A week from Friday and Saturday, KU will host Iowa State and Colorado in a game that is slated to take place in the fall.
KANSAS 4, NEBRASKA 3
PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE
on RCA records
get better in the hurdles, in distance running and in the discus.
KU has three conference
reg. $5.98
$2.99
Delario Robinson, Gregg Vandaveer and Bork Bonnkess are the key Jayhawk hurdlers entered at Drake.
KIEF'S
Discount Records
Malls Shopping
Center
Discount
Diamond Needles
Bruce Jenner of Graceland
(iowa) College was third at 3,679
followed by Drake senior Steve
Scullen (3,653), Rex Harvey of
Air Force (3,588) and Larry
of South Dakota State
(3,983).
Wanamaker's time in the 400 meters was ninth best in the field of 14, and he suffered another 236 yards (6-2 effort in the high jump).
K. RUBER
M0 relay-M1 relay-Scavuzza, Phil Stepp and Delario Robinson.
Sprint, med-ley-Lutz, Scavuzza, Stepp, Rick Jacques.
the 6-foot-8 former Drake
off the field. He outmassed
an assorted 3,424 points for the
five games to lead Kansas Rales
champion Gary Hill of Oklahoma
to a victory over St. Louis.
The University of Kansas football team scrimmaged during a short workout Wednesday in Memorial Stadium.
Marc Harris of Kansas was 14th with 3,059 for the five events. He ranked as follows:
Hill had the best performance in the 100-meter dash (10.7) Harvey in the 400 meters (49.8). Joe Hackey Texas in the long jump (25.2%) and Don Bairtnick State in the high jump (6.4%).
Head coach Don Fambrough said he was not pleased with the scrimmage Wednesday. Nobody was watching during the scrimmage, he said.
100-meter dash, eighth, 11.2;
long jump, 14th, 38-shot, shot;
14th, 34-8%; high jump, 10th,
15%; 400-meter dash, 13th, 53.7;
Short Football Practice Disappoints Fambrough
Fambrough said he was not really surprised with the way the scrimmage went. The team has been doing workouts, including a scrimmage Tuesday afternoon, and have a few practice games. Fambrough said that the team
was really beat up now with all the practices it has had the past week.
Enroll Now for Summer or Fall
In Wednesday's scrimmage, running back Delvin Williams was injured. Fambrigh said he was not sure whether Williams would be able to participate in the spring game Saturday night at Haskell
Fambrough said the team would go through drills instead of scrimmaging today.
**Shuttle buses - Hoboken, Gregan Van**
**Little bighorn, Vanderbilt, Hoboken,**
**10 high bighorn, Vanderbilt, Hoboken,**
**1,000 meter stowageplane, JC Callen,**
**Pole vault, BH Billet, Neapolitan,**
**Pole vault, BH Billet, Neapolitan,**
**Triple jump, St. Louis, Roger Jones,**
**Triple jump, St. Louis, Roger Jones,**
**Triple jump, St. Louis, Roger Jones,**
**Dle Lenco, Govervara,**
**Dle Lenco, Govervara,**
Friday, the team will take a day off so they will be ready for the spring game Saturday. The team will conclude the spring season.
Hillcrest Shopping Center
925 Iowa Phone 843-642
**Required Course (May-June)**
7:10 a.m. 10 p.m. May 10 to 38
Thurs. 7 a.m. m. Monday, May 11 to 38
Thurs. 7 a.m. m. Monday, May 11 to 38
Thurs. 7 a.m. m. Monday, May 11 to 38
Thurs. 7 a.m. m. Monday, May 11 to 38
West Park City (June-July)
7:10 a.m. 8 p.m. June 8 to 38
North Park City (June-July)
7:10 a.m. 8 p.m. June 8 to 38
Free Mini-Lesson
M
ERIC CLAPTON — BOBDYLAN
GEORGE HARRISON — BILLY PRESTON
RINGO — RINO
RADFINGER — KLAUS VOORMAN
RADFINGER — JESSE DAVIS
evelyn wood
reading
dynamics
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Granada
THEATRE...iphone W3-STAR
Please send the Photo 10 at home or go
to School Program
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Address ___
Phone ___
THE CONCERT FOR BANGLADESH
7:00 and 8:00 p.m., Mon-Fri,
May 1.5, at the Reading Dy-
nomenics Institute
Eve, 7:30-9:30
Mat. Sat, and Sun, 3:00, 5:00
Twilite Bargain Rates 5:00 Only
THE CONCERI FOR BANGLA DESH
NOW SHOWING!
4 Track Stereo Sound!
Use Kansan Classified
DON'T FORGET TO HAVE YOUR PHONE DISCONNECTED
Before you leave for the summer, remember to have your phone disconnected. Just call the business office, 843-9000, and tell us the last day you'll need phone service. We'll do the rest.
ALERT
Southwestern Bell
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BUDGET TAPES & RECORDS
628 W. 12th (Next to New Haven)
8
Thursday, April 27, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Kansan Photo by BECKY PIVONKA
Opinions on Food Prices Differ
By RON WOMBLE
Kansas Staff Writer
Larry Schwarm Frames for a Living
Cattlemen, beef packers, store managers and especially consumers generally agree that they are most important in particular, is "exclusive."
One of the most talked-about issues this year has probably been food prices, and everyone involved sees the problem in a different way. A group of 14 per cent last year and the search to find the persons responsible for the increase has been in full swing, with baskets which hunt in some areas.
Producers and retailers, agreeing that prices are high, point to "a higher standard of living and higher incomes."
V. C. Springer, owner of Rusty's IGA stores, called food, "probably the biggest bargain in the housewife's daily needs today." Springer eicheng a rooftop U.S. agricultural or agriculture, Earl Butz.
SPRINGER SAID that when assessing the cost of food, the consumer must consider "not an hour's work will buy."
A local beef producer, Al Pendleton, strongly agreed.
"Food prices," he said, "have not increased with income."
Delmas Windholz, a Dillon's store manager, summed up the current situation by saying, "It's just expensive to live today."
Few housewives take the situation so good-naturedly. In a
. KU grad makes small shop a thriving business . . .
series of interviews last week, several housewives said that they were "not impressed" with the "middlemen" were getting too tight to meet from great Representatives and farmers and middlemen all said, however they were not the ones in charge.
THE GROCERS said their influence on prices was "not that important."
Windhole and Springer traced increased food costs ultimately back into the consumer had demanded better service, more variety and higher quality foods as well as lower prices, all of which added to the cost.
"We're just selling a service," said Springer.
Food chains have been operating on a total profit margin because the volume has been possible, according to Windholz, because of the volume
More careful shopping and sacrificing some of the convenience items. Mr. Wohlschleid he said, some housewives had "forgotten how to cook." The housewife might save money, he said, by choosing simpler foods more skillful, more mall and time to prepare.
LOUIS E. LEHR, Lawrence Meat packer, said higher farm prices were a big reason meat prices were not 'out of line with'
Owning your own business can be a frame-up, a nudge-poke or a funnel. The names of stores owned by former KU students reflect the owners'
KU Produces Local Merchants
By JOE ZANATTA
The Frame Up is owned by Larry Schwarm, a 1988 University of Kansas graduate in fine arts, and his wife, Laurie, a former art history and English teacher at the shop shop at 1008 Massachusetts St.
Kansan Staff Writer
Scharwarm said he originally worked to do photography and framed his work extra money. Now he is exclusively in the framing
"If you take it easy people don't get too upset," his wife added.
HE SAID he enjoyed owning his own business because he could work shorter hours and close the shop when he wanted.
"I had a hard time working under people," Schwarm said.
"You don't have to be a public servant. We're not very businessy." she said.
"We don't take it quite as seriously as other business owners. It works out a lot better, Scharm said.
Sherri Coleman, a former KU fine art student, is the owner of Sherri's West 9th St., sells a wide variety of goods, from leather-work to
"It's a lot more work than you would anticipate," Coen said. "You have to work about 12 hours a day when you first start."
COLEMAN ALSO said she wouldn't want to work for anyone else.
"Being your own boss means you can work your own hours but you have to be available if you're wanted." she said.
Lenny Zero's, a non-profit
business, is owned by the
S. is owned by Sally Cannon
1969 KU graduate in education,
and 1970 Jering Gerring, 1970 KU
graduate.
"We patterned the store after a non-profit record store in Ann
"I am the owner, technically.",
"paramore said," but there is no owner-employee "relationship".
TOM NARAMEH, 1970 KU graduate in business, owns the Kansas Key Press, a print shop located behind the record store.
The store had helped programs such as the United Child Care Center and Meals On Wheels, Gerling said.
Arbor (Mich.), "Gering said. 'We just decided to open up the record store It was a bit more difficult than we wanted to help the community."
Naramem said one of the advantages of owning the shop was that he was working for himself.
"We intend to last a pretty long time. A lot of record stores have come and gone in this town," she said.
"There's a hell of a lot more headaches," Naramore said, "but there's a lot more control. We're going to do our own problem down its our own problem."
"As an accountant or a printer for a company I could make as much money as I need every month, but I don't have to punch a time card and do as the company requires."
Gerling said the main advantage of running a record store was that it was fun.
Pendleton agreed with Lehr but he qualified the statement. He said the big cattle raiser could make money in the present day by raising the man with 10, 50 or even 100 cattle" could not do so.
HE SAID he liked the people in Lawrence and that there was not much competition between print shops.
'they (other print shops) help us out. They send us business and we send them business You give us a bigGER, that in a biggerGER," he said.
"I'm learning a trade, learning a craft through experience and not out of a textbook. If you make a watch, you're making money and cents." Naramor said.
Naramee said printing was an area of creativity and that the growth of his business would depend on the effort put into it.
THE MERCANTILE,
a grocery store at 1237 Oread,
is owned by Kroeger, a
graduate student in
organic chemistry.
Lehr said that the higher prices had alleviated many of the money problems farmers had been experiencing.
the cost of living."
He said that few jobs were available for a person with an
"There are no advantages," Kroger said. "The government has tied down what you can do. Small businesses are at a disadvantage."
Kroger said he started the store as a means of earning a living but he was not, at present, making a living from it.
advanced degree in that field.
P. R. VOLDING was studying architecture at the University of Chicago and bought up his own shop. He is now owner. Custom . Jewelry . 708 Kline
"I'm not making any money," he said, "just sort of running it as a public service."
"I opened the shop about a year ago," Voldeng said. "I'm still trying to see if the town can support this kind of thing."
"Too many people opening a small business try to make fast money." Voldeng said. "You've flirted around the town for a while."
Pendleton said statistics showed that the "cow man" and the feeder operated at cost, and the amount of retail of meat equal $1.4 a pound.
Voldeng said he enjoyed the work and it gave him more of a chance to be his own boss than any other career.
Louise's. Bar. 107.
Massachusetts, is owned by Bob
Alba, Leavenworth senior, and
Ty Brown, Raytown, M. senior.
"IT'S SOMETHING to do other
things to go school." Brown
said.
Brown said the business did not take away from time used for school.
"Most students have spare time in the first place," Brown said. "You just can't put things on your desk." You've got to get them done.
Brown said the business did not take away from time used for school.
"We didn't realize the full responsibility when he called us and getting paid by the hour. It's yours—how's it? How did they hear?" he said in their own words.
"Most students have spare time in the first place," Brown said.
E. L. Meter, Douglas County Agricultural Extension Agent, plant nursery, in the picture of the economic situation on the farm. He said last year he had 100 new plants in 20 years but it was still necessary to supplement farm water.
disadvantages to owning a business, such as licenses, but that the good points far outnumbered the headaches.
"The business is run very loosely. We're not out to make every dollar we can." Brown said.
"It's something you can call your own," Brown said. "It's a good feeling."
Jennifer Kern, a former employee of the department, is co-owner of Strawberry Fields, a store that carries homemade gingerbread from Georgia.
Kern said that she and her husband started the store with about $50 and a few antiques. The store has had no problems except one that was broken.
"We're independent. You don't have to hassle with the owner. You can do what you want. You can be peaceful with peace with yourself." Kern said.
SHE SAID there were also disadvantages to owning her own business.
"You have to work all the time.
"You have to put up with a lot of crazy businessmen and also with the person who he/she you about
METER'S EXPLANATION of high meat prices that was "more people are trying to make a living than ever before" all the people who handled meat were necessary, though. He also cited increases in non-food items.
how expensive things are.
There's no money around. We're just making enough to live on," Kern said.
John Willhite, who did postgraduate work in biological sciences at the University of Georgia or of Earthline, a clothing store.
The last thing Meter wants to see is government price control on raw products.
Wilhite said some of the advantages of owning a business were that you could be your own boss and determine exclusively what direction your business was going. Wilhite also said that worrying about a wardrobe
"I know where the college student's budget is if I go to college or myself." Wilhite said. "I'm not in this to rip everybody on the problem is supporting yourself when the operation is on."
WILLHITE SAID that being the same age as his clients was an advantage.
He said he made enough profit to make a living, pay one employee and increase his stock.
Pendleton did not think anything would be gained by a ceiling on raw products either but the groceries disagreed.
Springer said he had been advocating price controls on all products as well as wages for over two years.
Several housewives strongly advocated such controls. One woman said she hadn't been able to figure out why there were no price controls on raw products included in the President's phase
MEAT PRODUCERS and salesmen have similar theories about why the controversy has developed over food prices.
Tau Sigma Dance Concert
April 28 8:00 p.m.
Windhole said people today are "more outspoken." Meter said they were "the country of screaming people." Pendleton said politicians in the *metropolitan areas* were "not understandable," they did not understand them.
University Theatre
Many seemed to think, however, that the housewife
April 29 2:30 & 8 p.m.
Adult $1.50 Child .50
understood the problems that were behind high food prices. Few of the housewives interviewed were as understanding as the producers and sellers had hoped they would be.
STUDENT-FREE
Some women expresses sympathy with either the farmers or the marketers and a few with the middlemen but some with the farmers seemed to be the least criticized while the middlemen, the packers and processors, raced against the supermarkets
for first place in criticism received.
"PRICES ARE UP because the supermarket runs the little grocery out," said one woman. "The store makes a gross profit!"
when confronted with the statement "I made my money," because food prices had not risen at the same rate when I lived of living had risen, one man said.
"My wages haven't gone up like food," he demanded.
Cowtown Ballroom presents
HOT TUNA
FEATURING
DARIA KAWOKISI
PAPA JOHN CREACM
JACK CAZADY
SAM PAZZA
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Saturday
May 6
7:30"
11:00"
Tickets $4.50
5:25 IPO!
Tickets Available at KIEF'S
Biodegradeable
Big Mac.
Two pure beef patties. Lettuce, Cheese and special sauce on a toasted, triple-deck, sesame seed bun. Eat it up. . . it's all gone. Try doing that with aluminum foil.
McDonald's
901 W. 23rd
MOTO MOULDING SHOE
Rugged .
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Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see
Convenience - Comfort - Safety - Extras
BLOWN MINDS AND BODS?
No, not really. It's just a lot of guys and girls enjoying themselves at the PHI PSI '500' races. The PHI PSI '500' is famous at KU for its outlandish experiences. Among these happenings is the mud-slapping, mud-slinging contest. In this event, girls challenge guels to a wild and free mud-throwing fractas. As seen from the picture above, both teams usually win!!!
throwing fratcas. As seen on the previous subway car, Among other events at the '500' are the queen crowning, and the race itself. The fun begins Sunday, April 30th at 2:00 p.m. If you desire something extraordinary, then see it, or do it, at the PHI PSI '500'.
The 7th Annual PHI KAPPA PSI '500' 1602 West 15th Street 2:00 p.m. Sunday, April 30, 1972
Thursday, April 27, 1972
A. G. M.
University Daily Kansan
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Students Act in Opera Workshop
.. Paula Plummer, Ian Thomas in "Lheure Espagnole" ..
U.S. Education System Faces Numerous Attacks
Singers Shine in Opera
BY DAVID HEALY
Kansas Reviewer
By FRANK SLOVER Kansan Staff Writer
The Opera Workshop performed the overflow auditions of the Experimental Theatre last night. About 25 chairs had originally been donated, were added, over 25 people were forced to sit on the floor or stand up.
I suspect that the Expo I had to attend, but that the audience could hear various male singers who cannot project enough for the other two women.
"L'HUEUR ESPAGNOLE" is Ravel's only true opera. His "L'enfant et les Sortièges" is considered to be more pan-
*L'heure Espagnole* by *Maurice Ravel* and *Maureen Schiech* by *Glaimo Puccini* were both sung in English. They are 20th century creations, first written in 1895. Puccini shortly after World War I.
Both productions suffered from mediocre blocking and melodrama acting, making the version slightlySilver Sheila the vocal line often yielded to the drama. Whatever the producer made up for in singing, they made up for in singing.
Although he is often compared to his contemporary, Debussy, Ravel is not as adventurous.
Editor's Note: This is Part 1 of a system in America. This story deals with some criticisms of the methods and goals of today's leaders.
The concept of several differ- different types of bachelor's degrees, with varying contents, was also con- sidered.
EARLIER THIS MONTH, the Educational Policies and Practices Committee considered the Bachelors of General Studies required for admission, called, as well as modifications to the Western Civilization and
KU Choruses To Psalmodize 'King David'
Requirements were discussed and faculty members tended to accept only the basic requirements, with the exception of the Western Civilization course. The degree is greater degree, the comprehensive exam associated with
Early this semester, the University of Texas, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences met to review and possibly redefine bachelor's degrees.
The two University Choruses,
the University Singers, the
Concert Choir and the Concert
Chorale will participate.
James Ralston, teaching associate in choral music, said "King David" had not been danced at KU for several years.
Three KU students will be he
deber Debra Hater, Rayon M.
Junior; Rebecca Hayes, Overlard
Park junior; Steve Robinson,
Miller
The production is being presented by members of five University of Kansas choral with the University Symphony.
Some members expressed a favorable opinion toward the creation of an alternative degree Degree, to the BA. This new degree would have fewer requirements now necessary for graduation.
There will be a production of "King David," a retelling of the biblical story with narration and music, Saturday in Hoch Auditorium.
He remains much more classical in his compositions.
"L'heure Espagnole," which loses the full import of its meaning in translation, is a showpiece of Mr. Maker's wife entertains three prospective lovers simultaneously in her husband's absence. The husband returns, and then leaves with the situation. It ends in fardess.
Thank heavens this was in English. Otherwise, understanding would have been harder. We were little indication of the drama.
Ravel's forte was piano, both of which he did exceedingly well. On the other hand, Puccin's work will prove he has a job to do, and I credit Scheichi" was written late in his career and it reflects his mastery
"GIANNI SCHICCHI" is better written than Ravel's opera. The music of the change of mood in the drama. Had it been sung in Italian, the English-speaking world would be better known. The music contains the drama.
"Gianni Schiechi" is from a
"Tritite" of one-act operas. "Il
Tabarro" and "Suar Angelica"
were the other two.
"Igami Seichichi" is based on the book by Nagi Yoshino. It concerns the surviving relatives of Buozo Donati as they try to write themselves into his life.
There was no room in the Eclectic Theater, and she sort out a song that Ann Hillman and a piano took its place. She was admirable as a one-man
Paperback List Features New Brautigan Romance
Two new fiction paperbacks don't look or sound like fiction at all. She is the second of Brautigan's THE ARROTION: AN HISTORICAL ROMANCE (100+) ($2.25). The plot is about a girl who is library, a girl comes to see him, moves in with him, becomes her friend, and Tuanna to get her an abortion.
Benjamin Siegel's CASE HISTORY (Crest, 95 cents) is about a psychiatrist and his work with a patient. Several people are involved with this man in this ultimately exciting, suspenseful story as the psychiatrist himself becomes a trajeform in the tragedies that unfold.
High adventure is the mood of Decmond Bagley's RUNNING book is about a former secret agent who goes on a mission to Iceland—a messenger who rapidly becomes involved in the plot. Farris' SHADOW ON HARRISON HIGH (Pocket, 95 cents) is set in that now-famous drug and drugs is the message
SUSAN HOWATCH'S PEMARRIC (Crest, $1.65) is a different cup of tea; one of her best books and gets in Cornwall—rugged moors, hills and family mansion to which one of the men of the family brings his new wife. It's old-fashioned, recalling the big books she loves.
"The persons who want high standards maintained for the BA degree want it as a safety valve," he said, "and the progressives who want it means to liberalize degree structure and create more autonomy."
Two of the new volumes are romantic historical novels by MARY ANNE *Pocket*, $1.25) and Norah Lofts's *The CONCUBINE* and NORAH LOFTS's *The CONCUBINE* a treasure of a lush story about a woman and her conquests in Regency *London* "The BOYBIRD" to *London* Bojney-is there a queen who left
According to Howard Bawardgartel, professor of psychology and chairman of the EPPC, the principles of the BGS degree will probably be accepted from all factions' demands from all factions.
And now this month's Gothics.
One is Jake Alen Hodge's *SAVANNAH PURCHASE* (Crest, 89 cents)—identical cousins of Jean and Marion French Revolution who become involved in an impersonation.
language requirements.
hasn't been chronicled in a recent novel?
Black Troupe At KU Gets USO Praise
Hans Holzer's GOTHIC GHOSTS (Pocket, 95 cents) includes 19 stories of haunted houses and the ghosts in them.
It seems strange to mention another book in this context, but the one we had was PASSIONATE WITCH (Pocket, 95 cents) is an old one, from the library that carries a witch. It seemed awfully funny in those sweet old books.
For western fans there is Hall G. Evart's *FUGITIVE* THE CANYON (Pocket, 60 cents). It a collection of short stories.
these concerns have become known outside the meeting halls of university faculties or shared with student representatives.
Perhaps such discussions have always taken place in academies of higher learning but it has only been in the last few years that
Background Report
Kathelen Westcott's THE BRIDE OF KILERKERN (p. 94) and about this girl, and this old house and strange voices out of the past.
A certificate of appreciation was given to the University of Kansas by the USO for a KU basketball team that entertained U.S. servicemen in February and March. The group toured the Northeast Command, which is comprised of Greenland, Newfoundland, Brador and Newfoundland.
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) — Former President Lyndon B. Johnson was released from Brooke Army General Hospital afternoon and flown to his ranch, the hospital announced.
The show, produced in KU Experimental Theater, was directed by Horace Bond, visiting instructor of speech and drama to teach students contemporary one-act plays performed by 15 KU students.
WHETHER SUCH intranuiversity discussion has accrued (and it probably has) the current emphasis on being invoked by indictments of the American education system from critics both inside and outside the country.
The challenges are directed at the entire system and include both the philosophical and the dimensional dimensions of education.
The most extreme attacks come from commentators whose complaint is not that American schools are not succeeding in teaching students what they are supposed to learn but that the wrong things by the wrong methods with the wrong goals.
Two examples of the current literature excoriating American education are "Education and Ecstasy" by George Leonard and Teaching As a Subversive Instructor, by Matthew Austman and Charles Weigartner.
LEONARD ARGUES that American schools are not now either allowing or encouraging learning.
According to his definition:
"To learn is to change. Education is a process that changes the learner."
He complains that by holding them, he reminds them to memorize sterile, meaningless facts, the teacher is defeating the purpose of
He identifies "one of the first tasks of education" as being "to return man to himself, to enlarge the role than to stifle awareness."
H isthesis: "Education, at best, is estatic."
Postman and Weingartner have much the same sentiments toward the purpose of education
1
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INTERVIEWS FOR THE EMPORIUM BOOK EXCHANGE MANAGER will be held THURSDAY, APRIL 27
7:00-9:00 p.m.
but instead of portraying true "education" in purely "ecstatic" terms, they define it in terms of "education" that the ability to cope with the future.
THEY MAINTAT that the traditional subjects taught in schools bear no relation to the impact of acceleration becoming serious because of the impact of the acceleration of a future world, known as future shock.
The authors set, or reflect, the tone of much radical criticism of American education by their denunciation of the supportive role it plays for what they inwardly as the evils of American society.
The recommendation is to end all "teaching" and "subjects" with students to ask questions about anything they find interesting, so that "subjects" are intermingled it is counterproductive to restrict teaching.
Sign up for interview time in Student Senate Office-105B Union This is for part time help. If you have any questions please call 864-3710
These schools, according to Leonard, tend to produce what is necessary to prevent the "social machinery" from breaking
Leonard complains that when earnings potentials are thrust at the surface he tends to indicate "that giving an acceptable interpretation to 'Ode' on a Grecian Urn" somehow makes it better uphorb and drive a blower.
LATER HE SCORES the militaristic discipline to be found in schools as unsuited to the proper purposes of education.
These necessities include:
'Right answers', specialization,
standardization, eager
detachment, detachment from the self'
Postman and Wiengartner begin their book with this concluding problem in the United States is mental illness; there are more Americans suffering from depression forms of illness combined."
He continues, "If education continues along the old track, humanity sooner or later will simply destroy itself."
THEY DESCRIBE the American system of education as having supported a system which has led to a揪a problem of problems, including: air pollution, the Bomb, Vireo, Foreign aid, english, the whoami i-problem and the whatso嘎 all-menl problem.
School to Host Awards Dinner For Architects
The School of Architecture and Urban Design will hold an awards banquet at 7 to 9pm in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
"KU and International Education" will be the top of the guest speaker, J.A. Bazle, director of foreign study and associate dean for education.
The Donald P. Ewert Memorial scholarship and the distinguished alumni presentation will be presented at the banquet.
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Hear and Question
SENATOR ROBERT DOLE
OF KANSAS
Chairman of the Republican National Committee
Senate Spokesman for the Nixon Administration
Maurice P.
Senator Dole, appearing at the University of Kansas in the Vickers Lecture Series, follows a similar performance here by Democratic National Chairman Larry O'Brien. He will speak on current national issues and then be open to all kinds of questions from the audience.
TONIGHT
7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Lawrence, Kansas
NO CHARGE FOR ADMISSION
EVERYBODY WELCOME
10
Thursday, April 27, 1972
University Daily Kansan
I am confident that we will achieve our goals. I will meet with you to discuss your plans and determine if they are feasible. I will also provide you with the necessary information and support to ensure that your project is successful. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me.
Karen Photo by PRINCILLA BRANSTED
Ray Evans, Former Regent and All-American, to Return to KU
. Falkenstein, Robert, Clark, Lawton and Chapman the reunion dinner and ceremonies where Evans will speak . . .
Education Goals Stir 1880s Debate
By KEVIN SHAFER
Kansan Staff Writer
The role a college education should play in a graduate's life has been seriously debated in the past. Now it seems to come as a surprise to learn that this same issue was being discussed by the Kansas of the 1880s.
On Oct. 10, 1883, an article appeared in the section entitled "History of Medicine" by P.R. Bennett, pleaded with students to stop specializing their
Bennett said that students came to the University of Kansas primarily to learn something that was difficult, but they burst into the cold world.
As an example, Bennet said students shunned the thought of studying any sort of language. The student who realized that
Campus Bulletin
Social Welfare Juvenile Delinquency: 9:30 a.m. Oread Room.
Rehearsal for the 20th Century Club: 10:30
Sculpture Films and Video Tapes: 9 a.m.
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union.
a.m. Oread Room.
Rehearsal for the 20th Century Club: 10:30
a.m. Centennial Room.
a.m. Centennial Room.
Education Graduates: 11:30 a.m.. Alcove
B.
B
Latin American History: noon, Alcove A.
Petroleum Engineers: 12:15 p.m., Curry
Room.
educational Psychology: 12:30 p.m.
Alcove D.
Sculpture Conference: 1 p.m., Woodruff
Auditorium
Private Groups: 1:15 p.m., English Room
402 W. Washington St., Regional Req.
800-763-1400
*Private Group* 1:15 p.m. English Room
Slavic Club b:3. Regional Room
Greening and Bala: 2:30 p.m.
International Room
p.m. Pine Room.
SUA Travel: 4 p.m., Council Room.
Black Journalism Students: 5:30 p.m.
Social Work Summer Field Placement:
p.m., Pine Room.
Sculpture Conference: 4 p.m., Forum Room, Jayhawk Room.
Social Work Summer Field Placement: 0
nstack Journalism Students; 5:30 p.m.
Oread Room.
NU Retirement Dinner; 5:45 p.m. Big 1
KU Retirement Dinner: 5:45 p.m., Big 8
Room
English Lecture Series Dinner: 6 p.m.
English Room.
English Room
Board of Class Officers: 6.30 p.m.
Conference Room
Senator Dole Press Conference: 7 p.m.
Centennial Room.
BSU: 7 p.m., Council Room.
Board of Trustees 100 p.m.
Governors Room.
Senator Dole Press Conference: 7 p.m.
Centennial Room.
Senate Communications: ? p.m.
Governors Room.
Stave Clue : 7:30 p.m. Cottonwood Room.
Vickers Lecture Series - Senator Robert
Day: 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom.
Conference Day: 7:30 p.m. Woodford Auditorium.
Student Services-Emporium Interviews:
7 p.m., Room 299.
a bicycle Club: 7 p.m. Oread Room.
French Club: 7:15 p.m. Sunflower Room.
Architecture Awards: 7:30 p.m. Kansas
Room.
Latin American Area: 8 p.m. International Room.
Room, Counsel Room, Jayhawk Room
International Film Committee: 8:30 p.m.
Regionalist Room.
language would not help him earn his living
BENNET SAID money making was the chief desire experienced by most students, making it a common practice to be used in satisfying that desire.
Too often, Bennett said, a
satisfaction to reading texts used
in his classes, daily newspapers,
and an occasional novel for
Bennet said, "Is not more discipline the great end of college life? Are not the more facts about your education than important things we learn? What is really valuable, is the training, the method, the alertness and concentration of the mind, the power of finer perception that we understand."
BENNET PLEADED for a general education first and specialization second. No experience in life when the only goal was to make money, he said. He advised spreading oneself out enough to reach others.
Another article published in the same issue of the Courrier dated December 15, 2003, an article, written by R.A. Horton, included in a section entitled "Ambition."
Horton said, "The chief object of education should be to teach the student to write and speak the language as well as the student as him as possible with
reference to his after pursuits in life."
Horton was also concerned with the growing specialization of students in their studies. He said that he would have centrated on specific fields, such as medicine or law, three out of five of these students had forgotten much of what they had learned by the time they moved.
"IT HAS ALWAYS been the tendency of Western institutes to 'ram' their students, and that is the real reason why the best colleges have become more thorough scholars than the Western." said Horton.
On April 23, 1883, an article by someone identified only as Chase was published. The article delved into a problem much related to the other two authors.
Chase quoted figures from the census of 1889 which showed that nearly six million children were not attending schools of any sort.
"In this, the land of liberty, where every man is a sovereign, and chooses who shall represent him, we have seen that the stability and character of the government depends upon the intelligence with which this sovereign performs the duties of citizenship," he wrote.
CHASE FURTHER noted that two million voters were illiterate at that time and could neither
reconsider changing the make the motion to reopen the issue because she had voted against discussing the issue the
$2 Fees Hike
The issue was immediately reopened by Dave Awbrey, Lawrence graduate student, who reported that a number of senators during the roll call vote.
--read nor write. Furthermore,
said Chase, in the nation's 34
largest cities at that time, 50 per
hundred dollars is an important
of the English alphabet.
That motion received two-thirds approval and, after considerable debate, the fee increase was approved by a 32 to
Continued from Page 1
"IN MY FOUR years in student government I've never seen such a violation of ethics," he said.
He accused members of the Finance and Auditing Committee of undermining belflagging and belligerning people' and charging change votes' before vows were made.
"I voted for the majority and I move to reconsider the question." Awbrey said in conclusion.
An orderly roll call vote followed and when the 43 to 32 tally was short of a two-thirds majority, the disease was apparently defeated.
Chase proposed an alternative to equal education for all when he said, "If necessary, let the children of all who need the demands of the multiplying population which is either increasing in intelligence or ignorance. Let the statements of the universal suffrage, universal education."
The next move came from Bill O'Neill, Baldwin, M. junior and senior officials, who introduced an enactment, rather than an amendment, that called for the reauthorization of the bill.
Members of the Haiphong Project Coalition announced Wednesday that a more useful anti-terrorism team will place at the Vickers Lecture by Sen. Robert Dole R-Kan, at 7:30 in the Kansas University Hall.
"Sen. Dole is chairman of the Republican National Committee and has voted consistently for him in recent elections, he feels that his defense of the Nixon Administration is representative of the wishes of his Kansas State University President's announcement last night of the continued bombing in North Vietnam, we feel the anti-terrorists should be presented."
O'Nell's enactment was ruler to be "supplementary" rather than conflicting with the team, by Kyle Allen. Tomepea sophomore and the Senate's presiding officer. Allen's action made a simple majority necessary for its removal also to two-thirds vote.
Coalition members said that people wishing to participate should come at 6:30 p.m. and other visitors at 8:30 a.m. or other offices of the "world's protect"
The enactment was approved by a 35 to 29 vote which created the Senate. Senate began its study of individual allocations within the State.
opportunity to voice their opposition to the continuation of the Indochina war.
Coalition Plans Protest At Dole's Talk Tonight
TOPEKA (AP)—General fund revenues exceeded revised targets by $200 million for the first nine months of the current fiscal year, Kansas
During the discussions, Falkenstien was appointed master of ceremonies for the Dearth Day celebration in Kansas State University professor and professional public speaker, was chosen to address
1947 KU Class Plans Reunion
The coalition issued this statement: "We feel this demonstration will give people an
Ray Evans, Kansas City. Mo.
resident and 1947 class president,
was also scheduled to speak at
the reunion ceremonies. Evans
won first place in basketball
player for KU and has served on
the Board of Regents.
The funding of a silver annuity is provided by the University by the class of 1947 will also be a topic of discussion and the funds are made available May 20. Solicitation for the gift is in now process and at that time it will be bought. The type of gift will be bought.
The program committee of the University of Kansas class of 1947 met Wednesday morning in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union to discuss plans for their scheduled reunion dinner on May 20.
Incomce taxes exceeded the estimate by $2.5 million.
1947 graduates who attended the meeting were Keith Lawton, chancellor of faculties and operatives at KU and chairman; Martin Chapman, continuing education department; Fred Falkenstien, general manager of Sunflower Cablevision; and Mrs. Eileen Falkenstien, reunion program chairman.
KU Students Work In Omaha Election
By LINDA SCHILD
Kansan Staff Writer
In anticipation of an important showdown between Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders and Republican Michael McGovern in the May 9 Nebraska primary, a group of local McGovern is supported to its north by three weekends before May 9 to help canvass the city, John Meyer, Overland Park freshman who participated in the trips, said Wednesday.
Five University of Kansas students, and students from Kansas City and South Dakota drove to Omaha last week, he teamed up with students organized in conjunction with the Douglas County McGovern for President Committee, whose chairman is Lynn Knox, St. Louis
THIS WEEKEND 14 KU
students and 25 students from
Kansas City plan to go, leave
Friday night and returning
to work in the Midwest,
workers from Massachusetts and
Michigan will also be in Omaha.
A third trip is scheduled for May 6 and 7, he said. McGovern holds the delegate count lead, and he said that the remaining 24 delegates are elected, will be important in keeping that lead, he said. Eight of the delegates are elected from the Omaha Democratic district in the state.
"The basic format of McGovern's campaign is a personal approach." Meyer said. "We canvass door-to-door, we canvass candidates the people favor and what issues they are concerned about."
"AUT ATBOUT 4:30 in the afternoon" South Omaha MGcco governice, eat, then write a personal letter to each person we talked to who said he was an independent or not. Then we send letters we send information about McGcco's stand on the issues that person was interested in.
South Omaha is a very conservative area, Meyer said. Sally is one of the majority of them over 30 years old. Volunteers who intend to help canvass, rather than help to request an e-questioned to wear "Sunday club" dress.
canvassing experience of last weekend, he believed McGovern's main opponent in the mahwa would be George Wallace.
THE COST of going to Omaha for the weekend is $5. Meyer said. The money is used to pay for gas. Drivers do volunteer. Drivers load food in workers are provided by McGovern supporters in Omaha. Those interested in going to Omaha should call 840-4898 or 864-4422.
Meyer said that, based on his
Meyer said he thought the personal approach of the McGovern campaign had been highly successful.
8:00-12:00 Friday April 28
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Other scheduled reunion events for the 1947 graduates are an inform at reception at 2 p.m. May 31 and a reunion at Allen Field House addition, followed at 3 p.m. by a program on football to be conducted by KU head coach Dambrough in Allen room at Allen Field House.
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The reunion dinner at 6 p.m. in the Ramada Inn will wind up the day's activities.
Big 8 Schools,
Cities, Police
Confer Today
Representatives of chambers of commerce, universities, news departments from cities containing Big Eight schools are meeting today and Friday in Atlanta to discuss Big Eight Conference, Odd Williams, President of the Chamber of Commerce, said Wendy McCarthy.
Williams said the conference was helpful year to year to afford the faculty time to discuss community problems and solutions they might use for their research.
of discussion on this year's conference were drug use and sex on campus and campus security. Besides Williams, those representing Lawrence are: John Emick, mayor; City Committee member; Hambleton and Chuck Fisher; Richard Stanwick, chief of police; Buford Watson, city manager; and John Conard, director of university relations, who is activating the University of Kansas.
The Big Eight Cities conference was started in 1967 with the initiative of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
Emick said panel discussions for each representative's particular area of interest were needed for the two-day conference.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 27, 1972
11
Senate Creates 5 Subcommittees
A subcommittee to advise the operation of the Emporium book committee has recently organized by the Student Services Committee, the Library Committee, the Mert Buckley, Wichita sophomore and chairman of the committee.
Buckley said the Emporium subcommittee, whose chairman is Robert Minniewee, coral, Coral, and New York City's new director and reorganize the Emporium this week so that the team will remain open. It will be open three hours a day, five days a week through the first week of finals.
Buckley said that the Emporium would probably be open in the afternoon, but the specific preference of the new director.
The Emporium will also be open in the fall, Buckley said. But because it is expensive, it might be necessary to close the Emporium except at the beginning and end of each semester when most students buy tickets.
BUCKLEY SAID the Em-
porium other than text books, such as science fiction and books of general interest, said that the book would be suitable for students sell many books that they could not sell in the Kansas City area.
Natalie, Rolph, thelena
sophoree, the lenexa
which initiates new projects and
works with new ideas, Buckley
Although the Emperior would sell any paper book directly off the shelf, Buckley said, a hardback book would make his job that person wishing to sell a hardback book would make his job that person available to students on file.
Buckley said the organization will form a "Consumer Relations Board. A meeting concerning the board would be held at 4 today in
A COMPAINT SERVICE subcommittee to handle complaints concerning University services was also established
Buckley said. He said the complaint service had been in operation this semester.
Buckley said that in the few months since the service was organized, over 500 complaints to local emergency services had been received.
Chairman of the complaint service subcommittee is John Wulf, Morton Grove, Ill., sophomore.
The subcommittee investigated and attempted to remedy any complaint received concerning University services, Buckley. He said complaint forms are available in various buildings on campus.
Five days
Buckley said that the subcommittee was compiling a list of committee members, October, which will contain basic information needed by students, such as information concerning employment and work hours, Wakins, and information about the Emporium and library hours. Buckley added that the committee was assisting in gathering medical services involved for the bursure. Buckley said
Lynn Tattock, Wichita
Publicity subcommittee of
the Publicity subcommittee
handled the publicity and
advertising for the other sub-
committee.
THE SUBCOMMITTEE also worked on the company so that any problems that might arise could be resolved and avoided in the future.
Gay Liberation Leader To Speak at KU Forum
Accepting insurance company bids and recommending an option would be available at fall prices, but functions of the Health Services subcommittee whose chairman is Scott McFedden, Syracuse University.
Jack Baker, a leader of the gay liberation movement and president of the Minnesota Student Association, will be the speaker for the next SUA Minority Opinions Forum on May 18. The forum will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Fox College Kansas Union.
Baker is the first avowed homosexual to be elected president of a student university at 34,000 University of Minnesota students eligible to cast ballots on April 7, 1971 when Baker was elected, over 6,000 voters turned in. As a result, Baker received 46 per cent of all votes cast in what was a five-way race. Baker was then elected to serve a second term.
Although Baker had been involved in the gay movement since 1968, his student association
Baker's election was covered by most of the national news media, including a segment on the CBS evening news with a focus on the spread in the January 26, 1971, issue of "Look" magazine.
campaign was centered around general student issues.
25 words or fewer: $1.75
Baker also received national attention on September 3, 1971 at the White House. Michael McConnell, in what was legally recognized homosexuality,
In a statement to the press after his 1971 election, Baker insisted that he supports gay liberation and even more, a victory for the students. The Senate recognizes that sexual preference is irrelevant in a political context.
Baker will be speaking on the epic of gay liberation for the opening of a university forum will be Baker's second appearance at the University of Florida, where he will campus two years ago to encourage the then-embryonic fetus.
The Lawrence Gay Liberation Front will host a reception for Baker at 1246 Kentucky Street following the forum. Further information can be obtained from theorum may be obtained from the UA office in the Kansas Union.
Sororities to Participate
In Regional Conference
A Kansas - Nebraska
Pahatchelen day will be hosted by
the University of Kansas
and Kansas State
and all day Saturday, Gina Sante,
Prairie Village junior and Ku-
man Chairman, said
Wednesday.
The conference will be attended by about 75 sorority women and men from college programs in the Kansas and Nebraska. Sante said.
Although the majority of faculty will be students, alumni and panhellenic advisers from the various colleges have been inducted.
represented by the presidents of the KU sorority houses.
According to Sante, the National Association asked to host the conference. In addition to providing the meeting's agenda for the meeting, KU sorority members present a panel discussion entitled "Feminism and Fraternity."
AURH Appeals Board Selects New Members
Five members who will serve on the Association of University Educators for the 1972-73 school year, were recently selected by members of the association.
Chosen to the board were Rosemary Yaussi, Lawrence sophomore and chairman of the board. Roger Williams, Denver, Nebraska sophomore, National sophomore, Bill Gianakon, Philadelphia, Pa., junior, and Susan McGuire, Prairie College sophomore.
WANTADS WORK WONDERS
Two additional students will be selected to fill positions on the board. According to Jack Meyer, Norton junior and chairman of the board, one of the new members is pending selection of residence hall assistants. Three candidates for the board are also candidates for residence hall assistants. Students are not eligible to serve
A freshman will also be selected in the fall to fill the other position on the board.
One day
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
each additional word: $.01
25 words or fewer: $1.00
Three days
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kauan are offered for color coded, or national origin
FOR SALE
Highest price paid for used cars. G.I.
Joe's Used Cars. 601 Vermont. VI
2-8087
2. If you don't,
each additional word: $.02
NORTHISIDA COUNTRY SHOP, 707 431-8600 BRIDGE Antiques, used furniture, collectors items, old wood cooking and baking items, bicycles, books, old photograph records, bicycle parts, old photographs of other useful items, open to nine to seven days. Herbs open to nine to seven days.
25 words or fewer: $1.50
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Midtown St. Bar-Hu Queso $15 Mishroom
$12.99 Ibft Burrito $13.99
$14.99 Ibft Burrito $13.99
$14.99 Ibft Burrito $13.99
$14.99 Large Bite Plate $18.99
Plate $18.99 Large Bite Plate $18.99
Plate $18.99 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Plate $18.99 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Pri Bikes 25 bikes in stock in a book on bikers' equipment, including the Peugeot PX-18E, Fugl, The Tanker, Olympia, Falcon, Saxo Benny, Giro and BMW. "All with Reynolds 521 tibung racing shoes."
1958 2 bdm. Great Lakes Mobile
mobile all regularities plus a con-
dition to meet specific needs in
capacity targeting. Occupancy for
summer or fall. $1,950. Phone
841-3856 after 5:00.
Ten-speed bicycles: Bicycle, Atala, Ariadne, Akita, Atlas, Ankara, Apollo, Andika, AKIKO, Askik, LePierre, Also 3 & 4 sports bicycles: Bicycle, Atala, Akita, Akiko, Accessories unlimited and all repair is expert and repair. Hide-On: Ride-Off. Ride-Off: Ride-Off.
LAW STUDENT DIGS WALKING
WILL SELL 67 VW EXCELLENT
SHAPE INSECT & OUT CALL 842-
5657 AND MAKE OFFER 5-25
tinally - a shipment of new Army issue - FIELD-JACKET Limited.权限 so harry. We also have Army Issue - FIELD-JACKET Limited. 428 65-5000 4-28
Custman Eagle, excellent cond. $50
c. mace, M货车, job no, tile
$40, 842-387-87. Please leave no,
time to return your call. 4-27
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can
pay for a 1-hour discount at
COST plus 10% at RAY AUDIO - 802-
391-7455 or online at www.stereo
stereo Discount House in the
northeast United States. Tea,
Coffee & Consulting Services: 5-8
Microsec for sale. If going to KU
Med. School, you will have to
furnish your own microsec Call 842-
4019 after 5:00 p.m.
4-27
163 Chevrolet Impala 4 dts. HRT 8905
163 Chevrolet Impala 4 dts. HRT 8905
Lift Shocks, New Tires, Burstury
Lift Shocks, New Tires, Burstury
perfect cond. 71.00% actual rules
with maintenance 600 book $752.85
$752.85
Sale on all winter coats, sweaters,
jackets and tuxedos. To everything
there is a season. Earthshine, 12 E.
8th. 4-27
Guitar Ampl for sale. Small ampie work great for stage monitor or sounds real nice miless. Less than $30, call Bob at 842-7838. 4-27
STEREO SYSTEM ST-14eau AM-FM
SYSTEM ST-15eau AM-FM
for $100 MIXED BAND 847-2789-6278
enables phantom but needs body work. Also
piano keys and stering $250.
power jack wires & stering $300.
1969 Yamaha 350 trail-street motorcycle. Excellent condition. Aaking $450 or best offer. 864-1114 5-1
Yamaha 650 Street. 842-3871. 924
Schwarz Road. Evenings. 54
1965 Ford Mustang with air, with
cardholder, $25, 842-3539. Robert Reel
and cartridge tape record excellent
new cost, new $60. Sale for $1-
842-3539.
Pentax Fisheye Lens, Super Takumar 17mm, 14.0. Bold-in filters, like new cond. Reasonable. 841-2370 4-27
Two used tread-4ply nylon 200-10,
300 miles *15 pair or better.
Used G.E. portable storeer—good condition,
best offer. H82-1862
AKC Irish Setter puppies Excellent blood-mines-hunting and show stock Sire out of Furman Kennels, Topeka 842-1770 5-1
$225 120 Watt-Fisher Amp $180
$255 Reel-Heal Deck-Ampl 750A
$150, $160 Turntable-Dual w-car
ridge, $100 Call, Rick 8425-012, 5-1
KU large farm house 15 minutes from KU Swimming pool, upstairs can be separate apartment. Buy now. New construction UN 43490 earlyfores or PO BOX 80057 WASHINGTON DC 20260
1963 Ford-V8. 4-door, overall good condition. must sell- First $200 offer takes it. Call 842-9738. 5-1
RCA, 100 watt amp, 3-way speakers.
RCA, 80 watt amp, 3-way speakers.
Standard tuner, 1 year. Son's earphones, 2 years old. Total cost new, sound excellent. Make an offer. 883-1904
10-speed men's bicycle for sale. Good condition—$50. Call 864-6417. 4-27
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Suzuki TS-90 good running condition $250. Also 1962 Dodge Dart. 864-6349 or 864-2033. 5-2
Magnavax remote speaker systems
reg. $29.90 pr now 1/2 price at Ray
Stoneback's. 5-1
Excellent used Magnavox 50 watt
component stereo complete with
tumble and speakers $275 at Ray Stone-
back's. 5-1
Brand new Magnavox headphones regularly $29.95, now 1'; price at Ray Stoneback's. S-1
26th & Iowa Ph.V13-1353
Bike 1970 CLYSK63 Honda This is a good deal-$775 or best offer of course) Call Steve after 5 p.m. 83-2
0418.
Heathkith guitar speaker system. Black vinyl cabinet mounted on casters. 2 Venson special design 12" speakers. 2 speakers, only $79. Rusty Nail at 842-689-52. 5-2
BSA Victor, 441, 41c 1967 excellent
adds $500 firm, 843-0302, 5-2
1962 Chevrolet Impala. Rebuilt engine in put over Spring Break of 1972. Chassis #304. Pricing $235. Call 842-7597 before Sun. 4-28
MUST SELL - PORSCHE 1967, 911,
mint condition with 911S suspension.
AM; FM stereo. 8-tr, new steel radial
tire, 5-speed. Call 842-3166. 4-28
Honda—1972 CL 350, 550 miles, gold,
absolutely perfect. Must sell, 841-2772.
4,59
Special made Comm B-flat clarinet w/
extra mouthpiece (H Double Star)
and barrel $65.842-2614. 4-28
1967 Firebird, 326 3-speed. Ampex
tapes and tapes included. Runs great
and looks good. $1,100 or best offer.
Call Reg at 843-5970. 5-2
Cultating cows isn't fun without jeans old clothes and all sorts here at Bakken. yesterday climbs at yeshirt trucking. Trucking. 819 Vermont. -5-2
63 Volkswagen semi-camper, new transmission, good mechanical condition, no risk to fire and brake system. can carry a Firearm T. J or K Hammer. 843-2655. 3-5-2
1970 Volkswagen Squareback—red—black interior 1,400 Cheap! Call 842-743k. Ask for Rick
HELP! Want to go back to school Must sell. 66 VW, runs beautifully New engine, tires & shocks. 842-3588
Used Vacuum Cleaners. $9.95 and up.
Hoover, Electrolux, Euroca, etc.
White Sweeping Center, 916 Mass. 5-5
Sterile Component Sale. All units are guaranteed. Buy a system and save even more. Student financing available. White Sewing Center, 1916 Mass Ave.
Beautiful little red SHP convertible,
1963 MK-II. Absolutely perfect engine,
excellent body, top, tomastone
engine, Peter Dart, 842-52-0
864-3991
3-speed woman's bike for sale. Excellent condition. Call 842-9677. 5-2
Station Wagon, 1961. Namber, good body, tires, battery-engine has needs, needs someone who can work on it to keep it going! Call 844-6232-8211
Trumpet, king, excellent condition,
$140, call Bob, 864-6152
5-2
1971 Yamaha 125 e.c. MX motorcycle blair, 21" front tire, chamber, over-tauled. $445. Excellent shape. 883-843. Dana. 5-2
1959 Mercedes B220 S, completely rebuilt engine, red leather upholstery, wood dash and window frames, trans new radial truss. #43-3006.
Used sewing machines. Zig Zag and straight seams. Prices start at $19.95 White Sewing Center, 916 Mass 5-5
Crotch Tops—biggest selection, newest styles The Attic, 927 Mass. 5-3
SWIM WEAR JUST ARRIVED. THE ATTIC, 927 MASS. 5-3
Tank Tops, all styles and colors at
The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 5-3
Yellow Schwinn Varian 10 speed, 1-speed
set-up & Schwinn Varian 20 speed,
set-up & Schwinn Speedometer—Harris
carrier and saddle bag. Recently had
adjusted and resealed brake
adjustment $8.
1966 Chevrolet 4 door, white V-8 engine, 67,270 actual mileage. Call 864-2217 at 6:00 p.m. everyday. 5-9
KAWASAKI 10-speed, 100 c.c. (179)
The switches automatically from
anywhere to anywhere. Excellent shape. Need
go anywhere. Excellent shape. Need go
around. So make an objection.
Ron. 843-6523.
FIREWORKS AT DISCOUNT! $15
Fireworks for illustrated firework brochure. Complete line of fireworks. Fireworks, Milwaukee, Kamloops 67466.
Guitar--Guild 12-string, 1½ years old.
Good condition—with hard shell case,
$325 Call 843-5113 at 6:30 p.m. 5-3
British Voy Defiant Amp. 21's, horn,
MBR, TRB, Vibrato, reverb, fuzz,
Chassis, covers. Can't do better for
840. $303-806. 5-3
Now plan for next year. Build equity in double-wide mobile home 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, C.A. furnished, carpeted. Call after 5:00 - 842-1027.
Must sell men's bicycle, one-speed,
in good condition, new tires, with
lock, for only $75. Call 842-1012. 5-1
For Sale: 1970 Suzuki T-125, excellent condition, very low mileage, must sell immediately. 842-5402. 5-3
1968 PORCHESE 912 TARGA Excellent condition. Make offer. Call Rick >fter 5.00 at 842-0254 3-3
1946 Military Jeep, good condition
$795. Call (318) 431-9253. Joe Good-
yon, Chanute, Kansas. 5-1
D tired of trying to find that ideal apt
location for a new home. Available
1. 2 & 3 bdrm, apt in homes in various locations and price
range. McGrew Agency, 901 Kentucky, 817-854-7688,
McGrew Agency, 901 Kentucky, 817-854-7688
Peugeot—and six other brands in stock. Ride-On Bike Shop. 1401 Massachusetts. 5-3
1971 HODAKA 100 cc. perfect trail-
side bike or race. Moto-X Good,
speed 1,100 miles $75.00 Call Steve.
842-6522
FOR RENT
SUMMER RENTALS Live close to campus this summer in a room, house, or apartment on economical land. Locations: 841-362-1031; 841-362-1030; 8-9
THE MERCANTILE
COLLEGE HILL MANOR now showcases furnished and unfurnished apartments that start at $1799. Close to campus in the heart of Downtown, the college starts
When you're hot, you're hot. When you're cold, you're cold.
dressed comfort at UNIVERSITY MENTS. Enjoy our pool and close MENTS. Enjoy our pool and close MENTS. Enjoy our pool and close MENTS.
April 15, 1529 W 9th Phone 842-361-7200
To KU male nice apt, close to Union. May work out all or part of rent. Available now, phone 843-833-5-9
LOOK WHAT SANTEE APTS HAVE TO OFFER! Summer rates, swimming pool, A.C. Free cable-TV and DVD. 843-2116 (125) I212. 843-2116
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER Right next door to campus. 1025 Mississippi Avenue between apartments and august house. All available at end of semester. Availances available at end of semester. www.careers.duke.edu www.careers.dku.edu www.careers.dku.edu targeting. dickwheat. central campus 847.7989 between c.p. 10. and ip. 10.7989
Large, two bedroom mobile home. Fairly carpeted, air-conditioned, water heater, central空调, single person. Under $106 Phone Norm night: 942-896-3004 Card UN 4-106
NOW IS THE TIME TO INSERVE
JAMES L. BURROWS, 1972, while
serving is still available.
Burrows, 842-2348, or 2017-A. Harvard
Lawrence, 842-2348, built, located,
and licensed by the Lawrence
Lawrence's building.
Right Next to Campus 1237 OREAD
Avalon, 9th & Avalon, Harvard Square, Iowa and Harvoar, Ando & Argos cost of living in one of these handicapped apartments, or spacious apartments and you will be surprised to learn that it costs $450 for A/C, heat and water utilities paid.
SUMMER RATE-New leasing furnished apartment, sleeping room with or without kitchen privileges for 1 person. Near KU and to 5-9. Call 843-7567
SPENDING THE SUMMER IN LAWENRY
FOR A MORE ADVANCED ability of Lawenry to attract attractive apartments in the city, you can call Mrs Forsey, B6358, or Mr A Harvard Road, Boston, MA. Visit the Airport Museum, Airport Museum (9th & 10th floor), Airport Museum (11th & 12th floor) at our surprisingly modest special offer price of $475 per night this summer a wonderful time to be
Luxurious, spacious town house for guest room. One, and half bath, both All shear carpet, central air, & garaging. Completely furnished. Call 518-624-3900.
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
Rooms for rent: Need girls to share house. $20, utilities included. Avail May 1 or May 20. #842-578-427
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. New, low summer rates. Both furnished apartments. 1 bedroom, offer 1 and 2 bedroom apartments with air-conditioning, dishwashers, laundry facilities, pool and swimming pool. All utilities paid. For information call 413-505-7000.
PLAZA MANOR Summer and fall red dress now available. Students one week away from school furnished. Swimming pool, air-conditioned summer rates. 2409-838-071 Driven
Furnished apartments and rooms.
Good location and utilities paid.
prices reduced for summer. Very reasonable.
Call 842-7601, after 8:30AM.
842-5607.
1. Large 1 bedroom unfurnished apt. on the south side of campus in nincasa area. Lg. rm. in the basement, full bathroom, shower. Kit with refrig & ceiling fan. Utilities paid $30 per month. Boggers rented a vacant apartment for $25,000.
1971 two-bedroom mobile home for rent for summer. Located at Mobil Acres South. Call 842-2315. 4-28
Renting for summer and fall, nice furnished rooms, kitchen privileges near KU. Also 1-3 bedroom apts. 842-5067 after 4.09.
Need to least贫, old house, money $125 mns. Utilizes paid except electricity. Catch by anyone 903 Ala-na interested. 2 people 4:28 August.
Nice older home in old West Hills with a large master suite, living room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms including 1 major master bedroom, kitchen with refit & closet, bathroom with private enclosed bathrooms with private outdoor enclosures. Rogerty Real Estate, 1805 Mass., Ph. 844-262-7920.
Lovely furnished apartment for 2 men, with central air very close to campus; see to apprehension-Available in summer and fall; and of 5-1
Phone 843-809-
FOR SUBLAGEE. Large, 2-bedroom
unfurnished apt near shopping center.
Air-conditioned. One cat allowed.
0004. Call 842-3646 after 5 or
11:51.
Apartments for rent. Available May 15,
summer rates, air conditioning,
range, $80.-$85. Call 842-9153 at 6:00.
p.m. 19 W. 14th. 5-1
House Trailer (8x30) for summer
A/C; $75/mo. plus utilities. Call 842-
6075 or 4-28
For summer 1 bedroom, furnished
apartment $90; mo. plus electric. 1231
Oread. No. 102 or call Susan at 843-
4901. 5-1
Tonv's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
Rent a luxury apartment for the summer at cheap winter rates. Three bedrooms, apt. 428, dahlwater, equipped, queen bed. 823-730 316. 823-730 316.
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
NOTICE
Use us both a break. We need sunny days to work, and we need philosophy to give our lives purpose and a new philosophy in apartments living close to creative communities. We offer ballcourt games, game and study room offers 24 hrs in our apartments and an intervening golf course. GH& I and an intervening park.
2 apartments 16th & Tennessee. Call
841-2236 after 8 p.m. or before 8 a.m.
Available on 1 on one year lease,
large ranch style home, completely
furnished, all conveniences. Rent new
home for $495 per square foot.
843-6876
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS: 1 and 2床
broom apartment, furnished with
balcony, kitchen, air-conditioning,
kitchen, air-conditioning, and
luxury furniture
445 W. 86th St. 841-362-6453
445 W. 86th St. 841-362-6453
Harris Partition is available for the Red Bed Garden, Oak Ridge and Angle Valley. Red Bed Garden lake park offers a board and cooler parking of parking lots in the Strange after 6 p.m. at 834-702-1000 Call the Strange after 6 p.m. at 834-702-1000
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co., John Wells, 842-3220
Women's Alterations. 20 years experi-
ence. Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30
WEDDING INITIATIONS • PRICES ARE LOW LOOKUP TO $6.50 for $6.50 Send for free catalog and samples to Armed Aid Pharmacist East Winnipeg, S4140 4-28
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-7694. Professional care for children from 1 mo to 12 mo. Pill or part-time employment. Designed specialized furniture. $10.
SUBLEASE - 2 bater. 2 bath, infu-
trometrical. Kitchen, kitchen with diwakher,
A-C. Pool, Balcony.
Water pump. Water pump. Water pump.
Water pump. Water pump. Water pump.
GIRLS - WOMEN Are you the muddy-
est kid in your household? We need professional model-
训 Training. Call Mme Frik at Mora,
802-4962 (mefri) or at Kris,
802-4962 (kris).
Norgetown Laundry and Dry Cleaning
at the Mini-Plaza Modern and
quick service. 1710 Haskell 842-9322
Just arrived - Western shirts in blue denim and denim blazer ... Fun, funky, functional, and cheap Earthshine, 12 E. 80; 4-28
DAY CARE PLUS - From June 12 un-
tended starts in the fall. For ages 4
up, please visit www.daycareplus.com
education in a country setting. Weekly
-$30 Monthly $100 per student.
Cash only. See www.daycareplus.com
able. #82-3124 after 6:30 p.m.
*Swimwear and
JUST ARRIVED—Swim, wear and tank tops. The Attic, 927 Mass. 5-3
White Eyes Concert Friday, May 5 at the Armory, tickets $12.5 at the armory-Get something to give and the armory-to give and the armory-ING a call, #814-646-66
POR HIRE. Experienced technical support for the new system pneumatic conveying, pumping and mixing part-time summer job writing involving a variety of math & BA math. Call 842-730-9511.
FOUND BORDER COLLIE
White withBorder耳, two black eyes
black spot on side; barely paper
side. Please call Me/Hr.
M43-1342 4-28
JUST ARRIVED - SWIM WEAR AND TANK TOPS. THE ALLEY SHOP. 843 Mass. 5-3
The software can be invoiced, because the stereo component calls. Call 483-5844 for information and quotations. P-3 EUROPE. Save and make money in Europe by visiting Local tours. More $1. Malt Owl (Oak) Box, 492 Magnolia, Syracuse, New York.
HELP WANTED
TEACHERS WANTED: TEACH
Southwest Teachers Agency, Box
433, Albuquerque, NM. 8706- "Ou
Bodies" Bordered and a memorial
N A T A .
STUDENTS: Earn $400-$60 per month in school. MUST BE 21 years old, aggressive, willing to learn and a hard work. Call 843-424-3950.
4-28
enlist leader for Girl Scout Camp.
Contact. Mrs. Owen C. Barnes, 20 South 10th St., Kansas City, Kansas
66102. 4-28
**STUDENTS:** Summer jobs available in various fields including Gardern, Columbus, Owatonna, Parsons, Olivia Inla, Leavantowne, Newark. (1) Part-time delivery work, (2) Must have can be computer skills. (3) Easy to make $25.00 to $28.00 and more. Or Advantage $40.00 to $50.00.
Working mother needs young couple or single with transportation to stay with 2 older children this summer
References: 843-8336 evening. 5-12
CSC
Salerita needt Demonstrate skin care and make-up. Earn generous continuation through your local Hairdresser or salon. Send in 1-413-6389 for information 2-507-6582.
KI COURSES and other documents
for the KI position. Holding a full position, nurses and
caregivers will receive yearly professional at the Corrittion
School of Nursing, and the School of
Nursing U 4-4922.
WANTED
The Curriculum and Instruction Services team will follow the following positions: (1) instructor; requires someone who is somewhat knowledgeable in computer science and research and who has some experience in software development,ability and communication problems, and (2) person with work closely with the department to work on the patient center, the Printing Service, the Hospital Management, and representatives from Senate, and representatives from other departments to be a graduate student or a senior professional of one or two years. Full time employment during the academic year. Theperson must complete a paid, five-hour training period, and provide training period.
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR. This position familiar with educational statistics and management of sports sponsorship. He or she will be responsible for the preparation and management of the teams under the pressure of deadlines during the academic year full-time and as part of the GYMCO AND GRAPHICS SUPERVISION. This position has some commercial art training and experience with the problems and issues associated with the production of FEEDBACK A GUIDE TO
OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS:
Airline Operations, Airfare &
Airline Management. All professional and occupational experience, light感ing. Free interview. Inquire at 914-785-3200, Box 1651
We buy used books, also old Play-boys, and Pent-Office magazines in good condition! Call 842-0216. 5-9
Roommate wanted to share house for the summer. Call Haywood. 842-7256 5-1
Female roommate for summer nests, to share 1 bedroom furnished aft in Meadowbrook West. Call 842-8667
Liberated Female to share modern
1927 was bestowed upon her,
whose marriage bred with
traditional living style. Private room
was available for summer, or fall 843-830
for summer and, or fall 843-830
Female, roommate for summer to share two-bedroom, air-conditioned apartment near camps. Call 864-1580 5-1
Roommates to share large furnished
house for summer. Must see to appr-
eciate. 3 blocks from campus, own
room. Call 842-5755. 5-10
Need immediately. 428 men for continuing program with preservice pre-program KU students or willing to live on premises. Full or partial contract. Contact 422-444-1444.
-
3 girls looking for a fourth roommate for fall for furnished Jayhawk Tower Towers apartment. Call Leslie or Marci. 842-8561. 5-2
Sports Cars Inc.
Male Graduate Student needs Male or
Female to share house. Owen room,
summer and or fall. May capitalize
+ $50 + utilities 85-4
602
Competition
three male roommates for apartm
next fall. Phone 842-7770 and ask for
cry if interested
4-28
TYPING
Experienced in tying these, dissertation term papers, other merit type papers. Experience with type tape. Accuracy and prompt response. Phone 843-9544. Mrs Wright.
Typing in my home. IBM Electric
Prompt accurate work. Experienced.
Call 841-2558. 5'
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2911
WHY RENT?
BARRINGTON HIGH SCHOOL
RIDGEVIEW
Theses, term papers, typed accurately and promptly. IBM Self-collect, your choice of style types. Also editing at rate. Kobe, 842-597-7800, 842-660-7600.
Mobile Home Sales
841.8400
*TYPING - THESER - DESERTSAT-
TONS - MISCELLANEOUS WORK*
On Detail; with pice type
Mail. Travell. Troxel 219 Ridge Cove
*i*-140
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt, reasonableness. Typing on chic electric typewriter No. These please. Prompt attention.
LOST
Fast, accurate typing by experienced typist. Reasonable rates, call 842-2053. 5-2
Prescription Sunglasses at Robinson Field No. 3. Left in case hanging on backstop. Call Roger Miller-843-8544 at 6:00.
Young, male cat Pale yellow with orange eyes, missing since Sun, evening. No collar. Please call 842-8129
FAST, EFFICIENT WORK. CARBON
fibre was used—look like printing,
17 carriage for legal papers, will check
letters and grammar. Cal. D-53
4734
My mike puppy. White with black around eyes and black spot on back Los Sall. April 22 around 9th A Mias. I mike puppy. Black around eyes. I mime. I mike very much. 2-3
Victory of 6th & Maine Small male puppy. Long hair, white with tan spots, one over eye. No collar. Please住842-265-8165.Maine Gift Reward 5-23
Small blonde female dog with darty hair. Waiveder from 1027 Vermont April 21. Wearing a red collar. She is 34 and a red haircut. 843-635-6358. love her, love her 2-3. 843-635-6358. love her, love her 2-3.
Small 4 month old girl pUmph. Smooth hair-black on top, brown legs and bells. 2 brown rings around eyes. Answers to Callen Maguil (842-802-5)
Golden Retriever, female, thick brown color, answers to Dawna $0 reward from 8-6. Call 821-2191, ask for Rose. After 6 call 824-6677
5-2
Lost in or in vicinity of Kansas Union
—large key ring with two keys Five
dollar reward. Call 842-8732 5-3
MISCELLANEOUS
Rain Capen? You didn't get one.
You should be very wet by now. Next
time, stay dry at EARTHSHINE 12,
E-80h. 4-27
WHITE EYES IS COMING. New shipment of tickets at Bokenwol. New shipment of tickets—Checo De Muen—Juice! $75 to New York—week-booked—$19 Vermont
Tank Tops, Best Selection The Attic,
927 Mass. 5-3
Swim wear—all the latest styles. ...ors, and different sizes. The Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 5-2
PERSONAL
Be Cool this Summer with Tank Topi and New Swim Wear from the Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 5-2
FOUND
Found. Dark brown, short haired dog
About 30 lbs. Has white chest. Female. Call 864-6413. 5-
TRAVELING STAY OVERNIGHT FREE! Stuck at work? Meet traveling people. Exchange privileges in members in US and Canada
Box 9147
Berkeley, Calif. 94709
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
TURBOTRANSFER
Webster's Mobile Homes
Your Complete Service
Dealer
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
3409 W. 6th 842-7700
Just West of the Drive-In Theatre
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
12
Thursday, April 27, 1972
University Daily Kansan
CHARITY T.G.I.F.
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SOFTBALL GAME
. KU 1971-72 and 72-73 Pom pon girls play KU professors in a unique softball game
LAKE PERRY DAM, FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1-9 p.m.
- Playball at 3:30
Teams of six or more people, beginning at 4:00
. Divisions: men, women mixed
. Sign up in the Alumni Office, 103 Student Union by Thursday, May 4
GREAT GASLIGHT GANG
. For spring entertainment, 7-9
All awar Contribution to the Burn Center announced
ENTRY BLANK
Name (Team, if one)
Event
Circle One: Mens, Womens, Mixed, Other
Amount of Donation ___
($1/person for Bikathon and Beer Competition)
RETURN TO: ALL UNIVERSITY T.G.I.F.
CLASS HEADQUARTERS
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION----103 UNION
BIKATHON to LAKE PERRY
.4 classes; under 40 men, women , mixed, over 40
. Must submit entry blank and donation by May 4 , Alumni Office, 103 Student Union
- KU's first annual Best Beer Boozers Bash
. Divisions:women's relay, men' relay and mixed individual(20 minute time limit)
- Must submit entry blank and donation by May 5, Alumni Office
Prizes donated by Ball Park Louises Bierstube Mad Hatter Harbour Mother Marys Hawk
900 GALLONS OF BEER
SPONSORED BY the BOARD of CLASS OFFICERS
ALL PROCEEDS DONATED TO KU BURN CENTER FUND
1
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Health Column
Begins Today
See Page 9
82nd Year, No.132
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Friday, April 28, 1972
Kansas Staff Photo by KIT NETZER
'No One Has a Monopoly on the Desire for Peace'
Dole Sees Bombing As Prelude to Peace
... Sen. Robert Dole speaks to crowd of about 1300 in Ballroom.
By JIM KENDELL
Kansan Staff Writer
A tense crowd filled the Ballroom 25 minutes before Dole began the speech, which was sponsored by the Vickers Lecture series.
Dole began the speech 10 minutes late,
bronxing a scheduled news conference
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., was interrupted repeatedly by antiwar protesters as he spoke Thursday night at the Kansas Union.
The 1,300-plus crowd jammed the ballroom to hear Dole defend President Nixon's war strategy and Nixon's policies for better relations with China and Russia.
pressing a scheduled news conference.
Before Dole's speech John House,
Raytown, Mo., senior and chairman of the
Student Executive Committee, read an antwar resolution passed April 20 by a special session of the Student Senate.
The resolution condemned U.S. involvement in Indochina, called for an immediate end to the conflict, and called for the immediate and total withdrawal of U.S. commitment in any case to the commitment in any
THE CROWN CHEERED the resolution for a minute and a half.
When the Republican national chairman was introduced about 300 protesters with the names of war dead pinned to their hats and up and turned their backs on the senator.
Clenched fists waved in the air, but supporters of the President were also in the crowd. One young woman held a sign that read "Re-elect the President."
Dole said there were many issues he could talk about—the economy, the
Gays Present Requests to Balfour
By RANDY SCHUYLER Kansan Staff Writer
A group of ten members of the Lawrence Group on Liberation Front (GLF') and of the gue band presented a statement and list of requests to William M. Balfour, a technician of the Lawrence Group.
The paper, issued in connection with Wednesday night's robbery of a GLF cash card at a dance, stated that the robbery was carried out by a man accused of oppression suffered by Gay People on this campus" and that they had been treated and taunted by their peers, finally robbed, and that one person who was injured could claim his legal rights because he was gay.
SPOKEMESEN FOR THE GLF placed the blame for the robbery on the University administration for denying its (the GLF) ability to conduct its energies and resources in fighting court battles. They asserted that their own chief purpose was to deal with people and "provide them with the information for an understanding of gay people."
The robbery occurred in the Kansas Union about 10:30 p.m. Wednesday.
According to spokesmen for the front, they were continually harassed by people in the
Union and, at one time, a group of 12 to 15
attention, but soon left.
According to officials at Traffic and Security, the robbery took place when a small group of males sued a cash box containing about $75 from a table and fed. One member of the GLF suffered a facial cut when he attempted to stop them.
FRANK BURGE, director of the Kansas Union, said Wednesday night after the incident that he thought adequate security measures were needed in circumstances but to prevent future
incidents of this type, additional security would probably be necessary. He said that in a building as large as the Union The building has to have a certain amount of "mutual security."
According to GLF spokesman, Burge canceled the rent for the room when he
THE GROUP presented a list of seven suggestions to Balfour.
Thev were:
1) A request for an immediate dialogue with the chancellor about gay problems.
2) That the administration pass a
Apollo 16 Lands Safely
ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (AP) – Apollo 16's astronauts splashed safely into the South Pacific Thursday, completing a 1.2-mile-mile mission to the mountains of the moon. The Apollo commander is outstanding. The condition of the crew is outstanding.
The men, John W. Young, Charles M. Duke Jr. and Thomas K. Mattingly II, returned to their home planet with 245 rockets that flew over highlands that were formed billions of years ago.
South Vietnamese Halt Quang Tri Offensive
SAIGON (AP)—A tank battle erupted Thursday on the approaches to Quang Tri on the border with China, seize that northernmost provincial capital. Allied officers claimed victory in the armored battle and said the South forces were holding their own elsewhere.
Associated Press correspondent Lynn C. Newland reported from Quang Tri, after a flight over the battlefield, that a North Vietnamese ambush knocked out trucks and disrupted traffic on Highway 1 three hours earlier. That was the closest enemy, report reported.
years before man walked the earth.
The savagery of the fighting in the enemy's new offensive was reflected in casualty figures for last week. The South Vietnamese reported 1,149 soldiers killed and 3,376 wounded, the heaviest of the war. The Americans said 10 Americans were killed, 8 were missing and 78 wounded, the heaviest losses in six months.
The spacecraft flipped upside-down, a common occurrence with Apollo landings, but the astronauts quickly uprighted it by a 20-degree angle and pointed at point at the top of the cone-shaped craft.
A U.S. officer at Quang Tri said 10 enemy tanks were destroyed in the armored engagement five to six miles north of Quang Tri.
14 on the northern front, U.S. fighterbombers attacked enemy targets in North Vietnam, hoping to blunt the North Vietnamese attack.
With bad weather holding air strikes to
The command ship Casper splashed
down precisely on tune at 2:44 p.m. EST
on the clock.
While no major new fighting was reported in the central highlands, there was no lessening of enemy pressure and attacks were feared there by the weekend.
Swimmers leaped from hovering helicopters and stabilized the bobbing spacecraft with a sea anchor and flotation collar.
The An Khe Pass on Highway 19, the vital link between supply bases on the coast of Morocco and Algeria, was officially declared open. Associated Press special correspondent Peter Arnett said tanks were the first to use the equipment heading west toward the fighting front.
The U.S. Navy also joined the battle.
The Gulf of Tokkin is still an energy line.
At An Loch, the provincial capital 60 miles north of Saigon, 2,260 shores rained down in a 24-hour period ending early Thursday. Saigon headquarters said.
It was the heaviest bombardment in any 24-hour period at An Loc since the North Vietnamese struck along the invasion toward Saigon early in the offensive.
President Nixon later called the astronauts from Key Biscayre, Fla., to congratulate him and give Duke and Mattingly military promotions.
Duke, an Air Force lieutenant colonel,
became a colonel, and Mattingly, a navy
lieutenant commander, became a
commander. Young is a Navy captain and
congressional approval is required for the next rank of admiral.
“Their skill, their courage and their enthusiasm have written another proud chapter in the stirring story of mankind's struggle against the mysteries of the unknown.” Nixon said.
"You did a great job and the entire nation is proud of you." Nixon told the 1968 Democratic nominee.
Earlier, in a written statement, Nixon praised the astronauts for a 'job well done.'
directive not only to themselves but to the rest of the academic community and read as main books on Gay Liberation as they provide. GLF would provide a bibliography, GLF would provide a bibliography,
3) That an investigation be made of the problems encountered by gay people living in such areas.
Dr. George Loew, deputy administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, said Apollo 16 succeeded desite a series of problems.
So close was the landing to this recovery ship that sailors on its decks and television screens used to monitor its clutch deploy, followed seconds later by the main parachutes, which streamed out partially collapsed as planned, before blooming into huge, taut mushrooms of color.
4) That a gay studies program be initiated.
"One week ago, he said, we all had serious doubts whether Apollo 18 would be able to fly."
Television coverage was relayed by satellite.
5) That the University hire a full-time
gay man and a gay woman to deal with
their needs.
6) That the University conduct an investigation into hiring and firing practices to see if gay people are being discriminated against.
7) That members of the administration speak out against the oppression of gays on the campus whenever the opportunity presented itself.
FOLLOWING THE reading of the statement, there was a discussion between the authors on the issue.
The spokesmen said that because they weren't recognized, they had to pay rent for the building.
Bailour replied that he would check into the rights of recognized groups, as opposed to unrecognized groups, to see that everyone got fair treatment.
A member of the Women's Coalition said that this had not been the first incident of unfair treatment. She said that about a week ago there had been harassment of an all-women dance in the Union and that they were being subjected to complaints and thrown pennies onto the floor.
BALFOUR SAID people should be able to meet in the Union without harassment, but he didn't agree that recognition was the problem.
The GLF spokesmen said that because they were denied recognition, they lacked adequate facilities to inform people about their purposes.
Bafour suggested that their problems would probably have to be taken up with other people.
environment and the political system—but that he realized the crowd was interested in it.
The GLF spokesmen said they desired a series of meetings, similar to the Lawrence Police Community Dlaogue, to explain gav problems to the chancellor.
Balfour said that no directive could be made on point 2 of the statement, but that he and his own staff would take note of it. Balfour then gave his opinions concerning the other suggestions.
HE AGREED to set up a committee comprised of the dean of men's and dean of women's offices, the IFC, the Panhellenic council, Bailour's own office, the GLF, and the gay caucus of the Women's Coalition to look into housing.
He made no comment on point 4 or 5 of the statement. On the question of discriminatory employment practices, he suggested talking to the chancellor. On the last point, Balfour said he himself would speak in favor of the GLF.
Dole said he supported President Kennedy's conduct of the war, the Gulf of Tokun Resolution, President Johnson's visit to the U.S. and President Nixon's conduct of the war.
He said, "Perhaps this stance was wrong."
He said he would leave history to judge, adding that the demonstrators had every reason to believe they were there.
DOLE SAID most KU seniors were in the fifth grade when the war began. When the Tet offensive came in 1968, they were seniors in high school.
Most of that time, Dole said, Nixon was a private citizen and had nothing to do with the conduct of the war. He said Nixon had reduced the number of troops in Vietnam
to 69.000 and cut casualties to fewer than 10 a week.
Dole said, "No one has a monopoly on the desire for peace."
Hecklers retorted that the government had a monopoly on the media.
... monoply on the media.
Dole said, "We don't have a monopoly on
Dale said, "We don't have a monopoly, the media, believe me. I wish we did." He said of what would happen if U.S. bombing and aid were withdrawn from Vietnam.
WHEN NIXON CAME into office, he
had to leave Snow now were fragile
and those with Peking came from
Russian troops at that time had invaded
Czechoslovakia and the North Koreans
He said changes in relations between the superpowers represented a challenge to achieving 'achievement.'
See DOLE, Page 10
★ ★ ★
By KEVIN SHAFER
Kansan Staff Writer
By KEVIN SHAFER
Kennon Staff Writer
People began gathering outside the locked door of the Union Ballroom as early as 6:00 p.m. Dole's speech was scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Crowd Opposes War, Disrupts Dole's Speech
More than half of the 1,300 people who attended the Vickers Lecture given by Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., Thursday were invited to debate their opposition to the war in Vietnam.
The evening began early for many who attended the lecture. In front of the Kansas University building, students bearing the slogan that said, "Dole speaks tonight; get your face painted, free!" Several protesters had half their faces painted with tempera paint to give their opposition to the law.
Members of the Haiphong Project Coordinating Committee began organizing volunteers at 6 p.m. for the planned demonstration during Dole's speech at the same time members of the Collegiate Republicans began gathering.
THE DOORS were opened at about 6:45 p.m., 45 minutes before Dole was scheduled to speak. By then more than two hundred people had gathered outside the door and the opening of the doors brought a rush to secure seats on the first two rows.
People who were definitely against the
men who were definitely against the
Dole were migrated throughout the crowd.
The 45 minutes before the senator's appearance were occupied in various times, between pro and antiwar group members. Signs bearing the names of Kansas men killed in the Vietnam war were frantically being made and pinned to the floor.
PLEAS WERE made to all potential demonstrators to keep the demonstration peaceful and to allow the senator to deliver out to those who wished to bear them.
At last the senator appeared, appealed to the conservatives conservatively dressed in coats and ties.
Dole opened by saying, "It's obvious that I'm here tonight." . . . and the beckles began. As soon as the lauger subsided Dole attempted to regain an air of comfort.
WHEN DOLE began his formal lecture, about 300 protesters who had on their backs the name of the president had been in the war stood up and turned their backs to the senator.
Banners of all sorts were displayed in the audience. One banner bore the lyrics of
See CROWD DISRUPTS, Page 9
Re-elect
the
President
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Some Came Supporting the Administration . With varying opinions and emotions, an audience awaits answers .
2
Friday, April 28, 1972
University Daily Kansan
CANADA
Kansan Photo by BECKY PIVONKA
Award recognizes years of service to the University . . .
Leslie Tupy Receives Citation from Chalme
Award recognizes years of service to the University
Retiring Faculty Honored
HALL, WHO COMPLETES 28 years at KU as an instructor
Eight University of Kansas faculty members were honored at a retirement dinner Thursday at the Rugby Room of the Kansas Union.
The eight retiring faculty members are E. Raymond Hall, professor of systematics and ecology; M. W. Anderson, professor of the Museum of Natural History; Laurence C. Woodruff, professor of biology and entomology; James B. Kelley, professor John H. Nicholson, professor of Morris Teplitz, assistant professor of chemical and petroleum engineering; Joie L. Gilligan, assistant professor and physical education; A. Byron Leonard, professor of systemsatics and ecology; and A. Bruce the professor of music education.
Approximately 250 faculty members, students, alumni and friends watched as Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers. Jr presented a certificate with awards for as years of service to the University.
SenEx to Consider New Traffic Plan
The University. Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) will hear details of a new traffic control plan at its next regular meeting on Wednesday, Ronald Calgaard, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, SenEx chairman, said Thursday.
Following the presentation of the traffic plan, Calaigard said, SenEx will call a special meeting of the council to discuss the meeting will be before the end of the current school year and the council will make recommendations to the chancellor with an overview of next year's traffic plan, he said.
Calgaard made the announcement at a combined meeting of the Faculty and University Senate. Other appointments to the standing committees of both senates.
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
A PLAN previously formulated by the Parking and Traffic Board called for converting Jawahay to one-way streets and installing about 400 parking meters on campus. According to the board, the change was needed because facilities at Wescoe Hall. The plan was dropped by the Parking and Traffic Board following a review of students and faculty at an open hearing on the matter April 17.
The first plan was considered by the administration before it was presented to the public. Plans for its presentation were obtained by the change in SeenEx membership coincided with the controversy. The second plan is to go through legislative channels—SeenEx and the University Council—before it is presented to the chancellor.
THE FACULTY Senate approved an amendment to the Senate Code that broadens the scope of student research on Tenure and Related Problems.
John Wright, professor of psychology and human development, said the amendment would work to combat discrimination in the workplace and appointment by providing a clear means of settling such questions outside the University Judiciary.
SenEx's appointments to the standing committees of the Faculty and University Senates were also approved.
The University Senate Committees are:
Calendar. John Landgrebe, professor of education at the University of Virginia; REG. Nebbing, associate professor of education; Ralph Klein, dean of the School of Education; Jonne Langer, professor of education; Aly Johnson, intermediate school sophomore; Sophomore Jennifer Judge, senior teacher; Judge Joni Murphy, ju
School two numbers of the Honor
Scholarship, Kathy Tolney, the chairman of
the chairman, Kathy Tolney, the
numerator, Elizabeth Carson, the
numerator, Monica Stone, the assnng manager, monica s
Foreign Students - Muncie Shanktad, NJ
Engineering Students - Newark, NJ
Clark Coe, dean of foreign students in Frank
Pierce School, assistant professor education, Elmo Lima, associate professor of engineering, Arne Wiesel and student, Steven Susskind, assistant professor of architecture, Shawney Mishman, freshman, Bredillon Dillon, topical kappa team, Alex Thompson, topical kappa team
Human Relation - Beatrice Wright, Professor of Human Relations at Brown University, died of women in men. Kennelly Taylor, daughter of women in men. Barbara Kirkman, acting assistant professor of African studies, brian Rothbeer, Walter Schatz, Robin Rothbeer, Whitna joan, Pilarcia Rothbeer, Malachi Salmon, nate Thomas McKinney, malachi salmon, nate Thomas McKinney.
Lectures and Concourses: Charles Stanton, associate professor of history, assistant professor of journalism, Myra Human, professor of science, Harold Krug, professor of political science, Harold Krug, professor of biology, Harold Krug, professor of computer science, Walter Sodowel, professor of computer science, Felting, Charterfield Hills, juniors, Carterwood, Charterfield Hills, junior, Gary Mussert, West Bend, Iowa, graduate student Henry Palmer, Huntsville, graduate student Henry Palmer, Huntsville, graduate student Cindy Sheldenger, Kansas City, kansas,
administration and research-
er education. He later received M. A.
and Ph.D. degrees from the
University of California at
more.
Swaraji. Robert Hoffman, professor of mathematics at Yale School of Mathematics; professor of history at Harvard School of Public Affairs; associate professor of education at University of Alabama; Phi Beta Kappa, professor of East Asia Studies one year ago; professor of English and American Literature a year ago; the school of Law at Yale University; law graduate student; Kansas State University; Teppeka sophomore; Barbara Radkemper, graduate student; Jupiter High School; Johns Hopkins University.
Cooperation Among Institutions of Higher Learning - George Davidson, associate professor of law, University P. Allrecht, associate de la Graduate College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, John Murphy, associate professor of law, Anna Tolman, associate professor of business, Thomas G. Professor, associate professor of ballet, chairman, Curt Clark, professor of chemistry, engineer-engineering, Paul Husman, associate professor of education, Marna Weiss, associate professor of education, Marina
In 1944 Hall returned to KU to reopen and rebury the Museum of Natural History in the zoology department. In 1958, he became a Summerfield teacher.
Hall has written more than 300 research papers and is presently a staff member in the museum to the Department of the interest he is working for the park. He lives in national park, perferably in Kansak, and plans to continue his work.
Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities. Professor of engineering; chairman of Robert Beer, professor of psychology; Chairman Charles Krohn, professor of psychology; Harold Rodan, professor of psychology; Howard S. Schwartz, assistant professor of philosophy; Founder of churecture John Wright, professor of churecture
Society Publications - Sally Seebel
Society Publications, director of the BioLog
Frank Cross, director of the BioLog
and ecology, Marty Silkataid professor of
biology, George W. Woodward associate
biologist, George W. Woodward associate
Research-W. J. Ackeringer, associate professor of English and sociology at Barbara Calfra, professor of French and German, professor of movie education, Mohammed Joual, professor of English, Joel Gold, associate professor of English, Robert Hoffman, professor of systems and development, David Kohmish, professor of political science, associate professor of political science, Henry Snyder, associate dean of research faculty, Henry Snyder, associate dean of research faculty, professor of human development, ex-officio member of the School of Law, and the School of School of Law, and the School of
Woolfruff was also a member of the KU class of 1924. He received a Ph.D. from Cornell KU, in 1934 to teach, after receiving a Ph.D. from Cornell University.
Temere and Related Problems - Frances
Marcela Meyer, professor of English,
first Ernst Ditt, professor of German.
Robert Fradl, professor of physics, James
A. Kahn, professor of education, one representative from the
United States.
TUPY RECEIVED an M. S.
TUPEY in accounting from the
University of Illinois in 1924 and
then joined the KU School of
Business at Judd law on a
basis basis and earned a law
degree in 1933.
At that time, Kansas was the scene of several stock and bond standals and he took a leave of absence to serve on the first Kansan commission. My plans to devote full time to the practice of law.
Teplitz received a degree in chemistry from KU in 1938. He returned to KU as a chemist for the KU Research Foundation in 1943. He later became a member of the chemical engineering department.
His studies and research have been concerned with the synthesis and purification of natural gas. He plans to continue his research in this field at STAPLETON JOINED the KU faculty in 1939. She earned a Ph.
A KU woman fought off a man who attacked her. She was near Irvine Hill Drive Wednesday night, according to Traffic and Security officials.
For several years, Staplenet the students invited letters to her weekly newsletter which was issued on KFKU-KANU radio. She led the students in a series of events.
Two Students Report Attacks
While Stapleton was the head of the women's physical education section, she designed a device for detecting small nets in place and patented it.
D. from Columbia University in 1953.
A woman was walking to Lewis in the kitchen. He approached her and grabbed by the neck. She said after she hit him with an umbrella, he ran away.
Leonard has received both his 1937 and 1938 degrees in 1937. He has taught at KU since then. He was chairman of the zoology department from 1959 to 1968.
Campus police reported that another student was assaulted Wednesday night while she was riding a bus to the Kansas Union for a ride.
His zoological specialty was paleontology. He presented papers on the subject at the Inner Republic Congress in Rome in 1953.
FROM 1958 to 1969 he directed the Ford Foundation sponsored program to assist the science of Oriente in Venezuela. KU later orientated in 1970 he was asked to bestow the diplomas in biological sciences and that class was designed for the A. B. Leonard of KU.
25-year association with KU in the field of music education.
She instructed in the classroom and supervised the dff-campus teaching of music education students.
Nicholson received an Ed. D. from Teacher's Colllege at Columbia University in 1945.
Stene received her Ed. D. from Columbia University in New York City. In 1947 she began her
At KU he taught courses in school administration and conducted surveys and studies of schools and systems requested through KU3's Bureau of Research and Service.
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News Briefs By The Associated Press
Muskie Quits Primaries
WASHINGTON - Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, his once-bright prospects battered by a series of primary defeats, withdrew Thursday from active campaigning in Democratic primaries but said he would stay in the presidential race. Almost to a man, Muskie's big-name supporters said they would stand by his candidacy, hoping he might still emerge as a possible compromise choice at the Democratic National Convention this July in Miami Beach. Privately, however, some conceded this was unlikely.
Peace Talks Resume
PARIS- The North Vietnamese said secret talks on the Vietnam war were probable. The statement was issued after both sides returned to the bargaining table. The first meeting of the two sides in five weeks erupted into charges and denials of a North Vietnamese invasion of the South. But they agreed to meet next Thursday. In Washington, the United States accused North Vietnam of "a sign of bad faith" by Hanol's launching of a further offensive while the peace talks were resuming.
WASHINGTON- The Senate Judiciary Committee approved for the second time the nomination of Richard G. Kleindienst to be attorney general, ending the longest Senate confirmation hearing in history. By an 11-4 vote, a wider margin than expected, the committee sent the nomination to the Senate floor with reconsideration on October 23. The committee recommended Edward Kennedy; D-Mass., to continue the eight-week hearings failed. He promised a fight on the Senate floor to defeat the nomination. No vote is expected there for several weeks.
Kleindienst Vote to Senate
BONN, Germany—Chancellor Willy Brandt narrowly defeated an opposition attempt to oust him. The vote in parliament brought guarded sighs of relief to his supporters in East and West who had feared his policy of easing European tensions would fail. the crisis was not over. Opposition Christian Democrats mounted a fresh challenge to Brandt's coalition of Social Democrats and Free conservatives. The opposition failed by two votes to unseat him through a no-confidence motion raised in the Bundestag, the lower house.
Anti-Brandt Vote Fails
U.S. Trade Deficit Up
Senate OKs Aid to Amtrak
WASHINGTON—The Senate voted to authorize $887 million to help fund Amtrak, the nation's rail passenger system, for the year beginning July 1. The total is about $250 million more than what the Nixon administration requested and the House approved.
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From 3:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at Potter's Lake
Sponsored by SUA Recreation
In case of rain the concert will be held in the Union Ballroom
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 28, 1972
3
Small Business May Be Job Solution
By JEAN MORGAN
Kansan Staff Writer
The spring semester is quickly drawing to a close, and there are many students who do not have the ability to work in college they have not decided on their careers. If jobs are a problem, they might be the rewarding solution.
Experience obtained on jobs, in school and from hobbies will help students develop the skills. Bunn, deputy chief of the procurement and management division of the Kansas City Small Business Administration, said
In making a selection of a business, Bunn said, the more experience and training a person has had that can be put to direct operation a particular enterprise, the better his chances of success.
A CAREFUL STUDY and investigation should be made of the amount of capital needed for a business, Bunn said. No average figure can be specified because the amount differs by company; for example, business, type of establishment, location and current price level.
Bunn said one of the principal causes of failures among students is poor financing. Therefore, the available capital must exceed the initial capital requirements by a minimum of $10 million only to have money to get started but also enough in reserve to meet future needs until it becomes self-supporting.
If a person does not have sufficient capital, Bunn said, he may be unable to afford enough employees to keep the business running. He recommends equipment, maintain an adequate stock of merchandise or materials to build sales volume, take advantage of discounts by creditors and grant customer credit to meet competition.
BRUN SAD the first source of money for a business was personal savings. Other sources are relatives, friends or other people who might be found willing to share their savings in a business, he said.
Once a person can show he has carefully worked out his financial requirements and can demonstrate experience and integrity, a lending institution may be willing to finance part of his operating expenses on a short-term basis from 60 days to as much as one year.
equipment manufacturer, Bunn said.
The main outside sources of capital credit in the early days of a business are the commercial bank and the trade creditor or
Although it is important for a person to choose a location for his job, you should be happy. Bunn said, he should make sure the community needs food.
TIME AND EFFORT devoted to the selection of the town or city, the area within the town or city and the particular site within the town. There is a difference between success and failure for a business, Bunn said.
In selecting a town, the trend in population should be considered. As much as possible should be considered by the population, such as the breakdown by age, occupation and income on the sales volume, Bunn said.
The number of competitive businesses already in the area should also influence the choice of location. Research indicates there is a relationship between the number of inhabitants in a city and the number of stores of various types they can support.
RENT IS A significant expense in the operation of most small businesses. Therefore, the manager must be aware and whether rents are out of line in relation to the planned sales volume should be determined. As a caution, Bunn said, a town office must stand solely on the basis of low rent.
The kind and variety of merchandise carried helps to determine the type of shopping being made, and closes within the town. Bunn said.
For example, clothing stores,
jewelry stores and department
stores are more likely to be
successful in the main or outlying
areas of the city, while elsewhere, Grocery stores, drug
stores, filling stations and
bakeries do well on principall thoroughfares and neighborhood streets outside the shopping districts. Bunn said.
HE SAID the size of the store would also help determine the area to be chosen. The original small that it would be impossible to obtain sufficient sales volume in this town location. It would then be necessary to select the outlying neighborhood area of a large city from the smaller one.
After finding an area best suited to a type of business, Bunn said, as many facts as possible are needed for the competition. The sales volume of the same kind of businesses in the area is an important factor to consider.
The population of the area, the nationalities, occupations and ages of the people should also be considered. Bunn said. To help in planning the move to power, the average rents for homes in the area, the average real estate taxes for homes, the number of telephones, the number of automobiles and the capita income should be known.
CHOOSING THE ACTUAL site for a business within an area may just be a matter of taking what is available. Bunn said.
However, if there is a choice of a building site, a check should be made on the competition, traffic and use of the building location, physical aspects of the building, type of lease and the amount, speed, cost and quality of the building.
A soft-frozen desert stand can be a profitable small business to start in the summer. Bunn said. Some soft-frozen desert stands are suitable for all seasonal basin in northern areas. Others operate all year in
THE PROSPECTIVE owner-manager should study the volume of sales and the volume of sales he can expect from his soft-serve stand, Bunn said. The competitive development often necessitates the serving of sandwiches and beverages to attract customers as as to increase volume and profit.
Some of the soft-serve stands are independently owned and some are franchized by one of several chains.
downtown areas or near resort areas in the South.
Bunn said the right location was a mumu stand the stand to was the ideal location for a soft-serve stand is one on a wall with an open footwaling traffic and a speed limit not over 25 to 30 miles per hour. Location on a corner near a street corner was safer.
The stand should be recognizable for a least a quarter of a mile in both directions of the highway to give customers time to decide how to floodlight at the essential for the same reason.
THE TRADE estimates a cost of at least $25,000 to build and equip a typical stand with two freezers.
a well-managed bookstore can also be a profitable business, Bunn said. The type of business has the biggest bearing on the amount of capital needed. For example, a college bookstore usually has the highest ratio of profit potential because it has the number of college students.
Class of '73 Accepting Committee Applications
The committees of the senior class of 1873 are now accepting candidates for the Kansas City, Mo. Susan Cowden, Kansas City, Mo. For the 1873 class, said Thursday
Applications for committees
According to Cowden, membership on most of the committees was unlimited because the committees needed as much manpower as they could get. She said that she probably would be put on a committee, although it might be their second choice.
can be obtained in the alumna
association office in the Kansas
Union, Cowden said. Although no
definite deadline had been set,
the school officials should be returned to the alumna
office the end of the semester.
Cowden said membership on the committees was open to all students of senior standing. The committees were selected last week.
If possible, a new bookstore should be in an area not already served or where companies will buy books on or near a college campus are more likely to be located in the best second-choice.
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Heavy traffic areas are important as book buying is mostly done in person. People passing a bookstore will come into the store to browse. Browsing sells more books than shopping and it should be encouraged, he said. The store itself should be spacious enough to allow self-expression people pass.
Keep your eyes on
BY UNDERSTANDING his trade area, the owner-manager should be able to stock the types of books most likely to sell. For
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
Your Headquarters for LEVI'S
instance, today's every-changing development in such fields as technology, automation, computerization and economic forecasting is creating a flood of business publications. The volume of these packs of value to the retailers in his business community.
Bunn said a hobby shop should be situated in a high traffic area. Some do well downtown, others in lower income neighborhoods shopping centers. The latter may be a hobby and craft "island" of the city where the shopping center's parking lot is.
Capital requirements for a
baby shop are estimated at a
much smaller stock and six
stock and six months' operating
expenses for a small shop
A DESIRABLE FORMAL education for a person starting a men's and boys' wear store would be a partnership combined with liberal arts training, then many business new specialized retailing curriculum, he said. Instead, marketing, accounting and other business skills must be acquired
The initial amount of money invested in a men's and boys wear store should be minimal
Bunn said, because if the store is unsuccessful, chances are the entire amount will be lost. A store anticipating first year gross sales of $100,000 at retail should and should not account of about $30,000 at cost.
A block with several men's wear stores draws many more customers to the block with only one store, Bunn said. Many stores located on sidewalks and other pedestrian traffic ways are successful because of unique service and customer experience.
Pope Grants Award to Prof
Sesto Prete, professor of classics and classical archaeology, has been appointed Commendator of the Order of St. Gregory the Great for his work in classical and Renaissance studies.
Prete was nominated by Carlo Colombo, president of the Toniio Foundation and the University of New York at Clinton. He awarded the award by Pope Paul.
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4
Friday, April 28, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Students Trace Genesis Of McGovern Activism
By JIM KENDELL
Kansan Staff Write
April 8 McGovern for President
won all of Douglas County's 21
delegates to the state and third
congressional district
Lynn Knox, St. Louis, Mo.
treshman, is campus coordinator
Though she is the youngest of the
four, she is been seriously
involved in this project.
Four leaders of McGovern for President talked recently about their personal political history, including the campaign, campaign and future plans.
Serve New York, Junior,
union, was assistant campus
coordinator of the group. This
was the first time he had served as a political campaign
John Poley, Wichita senator,
was chairman of the delegate
selection committee. He also
wished that campaign was his
first political campaign also.
Dan Conyers, Lawrence senator,
the Democratic
National Convention.
To McGown. He is the third
chairman of Young
Democrats.
Knox's first recollection of anything political was in 1890 when a teacher of hers talked to herself as rather conservative.
By December 1967 her opposition to Vita Willett was to work for the presidential candidate of former Senator Eugene McCarthy. Knox
After McCarthy lost in 1988, he became a public figure. He became her words, girlfriend and adorer of the local SDP president" at Washington, D.C., where she lived.
As SDS escalated their tactics of confrontation, she and her boyfriend came close to violating them. Though they thought, though, they out SDS, she said.
Two years ago her boyfriend Two years ago her boyfriend in his draft card and is running time. Knox was very upset by this and fell away from her radical policies.
She got back into high school and community political and social action. She was involved in trying to reform student council, organizing for the moratoriums for the arts and tutoring Black students
Last semester at KU she got involved with women's groups.
"Somehow I had to do something to. I不知道, know pushforward for my sisters, with very important thing," she said.
Part of her urge to politics comes from her frustration with social action projects.
one same time she felt an urge to get involved in presidential politics. The choice was between McGovern and Chisolm. McGovern seemed his campaign, so she joined his campaign.
"Things that affected my effectiveness were made by the city council or OEO or something else," she said. "I seemed the root of the problem
Fefr first became involved in politics in 1968 around the war issue and campaign of Sen. Robert Kennedy. His Robert Kennedy mince because there was little for a 16-year-old to do in Kansas, he said.
Recalling Robert Kennedy's assassination, he said, "I was rather at the time mentally preparing for when the assassination came."
The assassination, Fehr said.
made him more cynical toward changing conditions and embedded the ideals Kennedy stood for in his mind. He was not a fan of the militarism with which McCarthy and supported Humphrey without enthusiasm.
Fehr went to antiquar
heaven, but he said,
not ever believing them. "I'
always been a little leary of
demonstrations, even they
do."
Poley is a political science major who remembers being sent to college and debates in 1960. Taking his cue from his Republican parents, he has become a strong supporter of the party.
Though he'd always been pro-labor and pro-integration, he said. "It was the war that really came off to the Republican party."
Polyer worked against the war in 1969, helping with letter writing campaigns organized by Student Mobe. By the time Cambodia came in 1970, he said, they were to go anywhere to stop the war.
Conyers' first political involvement was waged against the war presidential campaign. He did some campaigning, but not
"We were all caught up in a blend of ideality and didn't easily know anything about politics." Conyers said.
In 1969 he decided to get involved in party politics and find out how it worked.
That year he was the parliamentarian for KU Young Democrat and then the democrat president of the club. he became active in the county Young Democrats organization democrats in the third district.
This year he is treasurer of KU (young Democrats and chairman f the third district Young democrats, again.
In 1970 he worked on Jack Coursey's campaign for congressional representative, like Glover's campaign for Democratic and Tom Moore's campaign for Kansas representative.
"I really have no political position," she said, not dressed off about the way things are. "By getting into the conys, Conyers thinks he's having an effect."
The local McGovern for President organization began in January, though both Fehr and Koch had been elected by McGovern people before then.
Knox contacted the national McGovern office in November and then tried to find out how delegates would be elected. She and a friend tried without success because the Democratic rules in Kansas
In December Fehr attended a McGovern meeting in Kansas City and me McGovern, but we was still no organization locally.
Over Christmas break Knox worked in McGovern's St. Louis office. After returning to organization in Lawrence. The organizational meeting of McGovern for President was held in St. Louis and returned from Christmas break.
About 60 people attended that meeting. Knox was chosen coordinator Foley volunteered to chair the elected and Foley volunteered to chair the delegate selection committee and was elected to the
The delegate selection process will expand the base of the group. One of their major tasks was to make people aware of the local problems.
The delegate selection committee added to its card file by setting up tables in the Kansas Union and the residence halls.
They called every faculty member in the phone book. They called New Democratic Coalition members; they contacted leaders and campaign workers in the dover and Moore campaigns.
In the end this produced the names of 250 supporters in the first county district, 150 in the second and 450 in the third.
Congers had been active in KU Student Vote early in the semester. When things slackened, he started to drop into the McGovern office in the city and do add jobs for the group.
Students for McGovais also organized a drive to take 15 KU students to Wisconsin and Illinois in break to work for McGovais.
Feh worked in the Madison office of McGovorn for President during that week; first telephone, and then answering telephones.
"If that was the best organized campaign ever, I'd hate to see the worst ever. That was a mess," Knox said.
The trip motivated those who went to Wisconsin, he said.
To prepare for the local conventions in Douglas County, Missouri, supporters reminding them of the conventions and selected their delegates at mock conventions before the actual conventions.
At the mock conventions the group also showed their supporters how the convention would be conducted to prevent contagion.
When April 8 came the cemetery was full. There were record turmats up at the local conventions: 21 in district one, 102 in district two and 415 in district three.
Besides winning all 21 delegate slots, the McGovern supporters passed resolutions against the war, for gag lib., against laws prohibiting the sale and use of naphtha and for liquor by the drunk.
McGovern delegates won a majority in the third district. This gives them the right to select the candidate from the congratulations from this district.
Conyers and Betty Charlton.
Lawrence graduate, student,
and professor of foreign
national convention from
Douglas County, since they are
committed to the arts.
Conyers said the McGoverson organization is trying now to persuade uncommitted delegates to vote for him and making deals in other cases.
Conyers pointed out that with McGovern's stands on women's issues and farm issues there has been an increasing fundraising uncommitted delegates.
His stands on these issues are more progressive and coherent than those of Humphrey and Muskie, he said.
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must provide their own contact information faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
M. B. MURPHY
James J.
Kilpatrick
Strangling National Interest
which the Senator from Arkansas is embarked. He is proposing to slash the budget of the United States information Agency by more than 20 per cent; in the process, he is proposing to reduce the Voice of America to a whisper.
WASHINGTON—If the United States Government were run in the fashion of a major university, it would be necessary to list among the catalogued courses a whole Department of J. William Fulbright. Here the persistent student could begin with Introduction to Fulbright, advance through Organic Fulbright, and afterward study at AFTER extended scholarship studies a dedicated scholar might understand one of Washington's most puzzling men.
Surely it would seem inconceivable that such a man, geared to global thinking and trained in the importance of ideas, would set about deliberately to publicize his views on American publicize the American idea. Sad to say, that is precisely the course on
The chairman of the Senate's Foreign Relations Committee was 67 years old this month. A omelette Rhodus scholar, lawyer, and university president, he has served in Congress for almost 30 years—two years in the White House and three years as a knowledge expert in foreign policy, he is widely respected in other fields also.
Three reasons are advanced to explain the Senator's inexplicable assault.
It is said that Fulbright gazes in distaste upon Frank Shakespeare, the USIA director, and finds him personally obnoxious. Fair enough. Shakespeare takes a hard line on his criticism of soft, not exactly soft, is perhaps more flexible. But directors come and director go, and the damage that would be done by the proposed budget reduction is far more important than a personal conflict. In the long haul, Fulbright sees Shakespeare mutters. This program does.
More to the immediate point, it is said the Senator is reacting with personal pique to the recent incident in which a USIA filmmaker appeared in a televised interview with Conservative Senator James Buckley of New York.
the filmmaker, Bruce Herschensohn, tactlessly described Fulbright as "naive and stupid." He then resigned, and Shakespeare did not help matters—though he apologized—by giving Herschensohn the USIA's highest award. A flasco. But, again, Fulbright called him a genius; the named calls too many times before—to give a personal indignity provoke so grave a retaliation.
A more plausible explanation lies in the refusal of the USIA, acting on White House instructions, to make publicly available to the Foreign Relations Committee a so-called "country paper" on papers confidential in home memoranda, spelling out our propaganda plans, country by country. As such, they are covered by the doctrine of executive privilege. Their publication could cause a distortion in the USIA is the sticking point, why it could be eased by rational compromise.
But we are at this sorry pass: The Foreign Relations Committee, at Fulbright's behest, has voted 9-4 to cut USA's authorization for Fiscal 73
from a requested $200.2 million to $155
million. The recommendation could be
overridden, of course, by floor action,
or deliver the award, diever carries
respectable weight.
The Voice of America now carries 35 broadcast hours a week, in 35 languages beamed around the world. The Fulbright slash would cut this program to 464 hours in 11 languages. We would be competing at the level of Portugal and Albania. More than 3,500 students in Portugal and Albania them with irreplaceable language skills, would have to be fired. The VOA, in short, would be stranded.
Such folly must be avoided. The USIA, under Shakespeare, has not engaged in empire building; it has 600 fewer employees than it had four years ago. By comparison with Russia, China, and the Arab Republic, the United States is waging a modest program of information and education. But they need our continuing national interest around the world; and Fulbright, who is genuinely a man of the world, must see the need to keep it strong.
Copyright, 1972, Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Readers Respond
Bureaucratic Bungling, Pot ...
Why Wescoe?
It is common knowledge that in any bureaucratic structure there is and will continue to be a great difference in the mismanaged manpower. However common this concession is, it is still possible for anyone outside the bureaucracy
To the Editor:
On April 24, the K.U.
Computation Center printed up a
histogram for the administration
of the fall semester and used
for the fall semester, 1972.
to see the deleterious effects of this poorly run structure. It has an obstructive blunt and costly blunder on the part of the Board of Regents and the K.U.
Letters Policy
We were appalled at the results. More than half of the classrooms had computers, a possible fifty-hour week and yet the University has the gall to construct a new building. We are not ready to use it for its use. Furthermore this building will be used to train ophthalmologists who do not need a building of
COSTS
TO MIAMI
DELANS
IT'S BOONDOGGLE
"Just whose screwball idea was it to hold the convention?"
in San Diego in the first place?
their own in the first place. The University says it doesn't have money to hire new professors to upgrade the caliber of teaching at its schools and to squander on new buildings. We wonder if the administration and the Board of Regents would have the nerve to publish the actual statistics on class usage and building in light of these statistics.
By Sokoloff
—Rick Head,
Topeka senior
—Ted Spradley,
Lawrence senior
we always lot nowadays about a plant called wild hemp. My sources tell me that wild hemp makes us stand out, and that some people have been known to take the dried leaves of the wild hemp, roll them in a cylinder of paper and burn them, in the highest the smoke and it allegedly gives them a lift. This wild hemp is classed as a noxious weed. Now wild hemp does well only on very cool days, but never overnerv the countryside.
Make a Rope
To the Editor:
For longer than anyone alive today can remember, people from the past have used tobacco plant in a cylinder of paper, lithed it and then inhaled the smoke. This, I am told, gives me vision. The smoke has been listed as a noxious plant. It also does well only on very fertile ground and never overrun the countryside.
The list goes on and on. The Hospitals are full of people who have misused the product of the bobtail (bob-tail type Scotch), and barley (beer), yet none of these have been classed as noxious plants. The product of each is supposed to be used for medicinal depends on who is being lifted. Misusing the product of the harmless wild wilt is just as stupid as misusing these other stumps; stupidity is hardly criminal.
With my family, I live on 40 acres near Tonganoxie. I raise most of our own food and experiment with salvaging wild animals. We make our own maple syrup, for example, from wild boxelder
Z
Griff and the Unicorn
"Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff."
Campus Gardener, Tonganoxie
trees. Next I might decide to make my own rope. I am told that wild hemp makes very good rope.
Abbman, Karr.
We wish to take this means to express our profound shock and revulsion against the continuance of war in India and war in India-China and to urge our fellow faculty members and students at the University of Kansas to use appropriate means to prepare for a speedy bring the war to a speedy end.
The recent North Vietnamese offensive provides no excuse for the Administration's brutal and aggressive war in Vietnam is essentially a civil war, the only parties that can properly be labeled aggressors and interventionists are the ones in the war—i.e., our own forces.
To the Editor:
No More War
We, like many Americans and Asians, are deeply distressed by the war. Despite the air-war. Despite talk of disengagement and withdrawal, ever greater numbers of ships have been sent to Southeast Asia, and more death and destruction visited upon the Vietnam War and other Indo-Pacific conflicts.
Associate Professor
Oriental Lang. & Lit.
How Instructor
Instructor
Oriental Lang. & Lit.
—C. Leban
Acting Chairman
Oriental Leng. & Lit.
—Paul F. McCarthy
Lecturer
Oriental Leng. & Lit.
Jr. Speaker
Associate Professor
Oriental Leng. & Lit.
—andrew Tusbaki
Assistant Professor
Oriental Leng. & Lit.
—Masaya Tsukamoto
Teaching Assistant
Oriental Leng. & Lit.
Associate Professor
Oriental Leng. & Lit.
J.O.L. Whalen
Instructor
Eastern Civilizations
YAWN
CLICK!
Z
—C. C. Huang
YAWN
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to what
pope.
and
by of
ships
te tothe
the do-
ness
nease
and
and
a
that
gestes
the
in
as to
as to
ance
the
our
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aeans
bringing
---
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 28,1972
5
Cim Grews
Aloe Mofet
Jim Scott
Stew Scott
Ol'King King
Bib Stinson
Bib Stinson
Hegert Berg
Arry Lardy
Arry Lardy
Goodrich Goodrick
Riet Nketane
Young Young
Soleicko Soleicko
Brankman
Carol Young
John Manley
le Barbart
opergerdes
oper Gerdes
mire Murray
delano
Mel Adams-
CHARITY T.G.I.F.
---
SOFTBALL GAME
LAKE PERRY DAM, FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1-9 p.m.
- KU 1971-72 and 72-73 Pom pon girls play KU professors in a unique softball game
- Playball at 3:30
- Sign up in the Alumni Office, 103 Student Union by Thursday, May 4
. Teams of six or more people, beginning at 4:00
. Divisions: men, women, mixed
.For spring entertainment, 7-9
Al' Contribution to the Burn Center announced
ENTRY BLANK
Name (Team, if one)
Event___
Circle One: Mens, Womens, Mixed, Other
Amount of Donation ___
($1/person for Bikathon and Beer Competition)
RETURN TO: ALL UNIVERSITY T.G.I.F. CLASS HEADQUARTERS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION----103 UNION
BIKATHON to LAKE PERRY
.4 classes; under 40 men, women , mixed, over 40
. Must submit entry blank and donation by May 4 , Alumni Office, 103 Student Union
.4 person relay and individual competition beginning at 5:00 p.m.
. Divisions: women's relay, men' relay and mixed individual(20 minute time limit)
- Must submit entry blank and donation by May 5, Alumni Office
. Prizes donated by Ball Park Louises Bierstube Mad Hatter Harbour Mother Marys Hawk
900 GALLONS OF BEER
SPONSORED BY the BOARD of CLASS OFFICERS
ALL PROCEEDS DONATED TO KU BURN CENTER FUND
6
Friday, April 28,1972
University Daily Kansan
Kansan Photo by MARC MAY
It Looks Like One, but Maybe It's A . . .
Spooner displays samples from sculpture展会 . . .
KU Student A GOP Alternate
CONCERTS
SPOONER ART MUSEUM:
"Views of Old Lawrence." Ends
today
UNIVERSITY THEATRE:
The 14th Annual Symposium of
contemporary American Music
concert. 8:20 p.m.
tuesday.
UNION GALLERY: "The Scholarship Show." Through May 4. An exhibit by students in moments of painting and sculpture.
SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: The 14th Annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music Chamber Choir, 8 p.m. Chamber Choir concert, 8 p.m. Monday. Lecture by the sumposium's featured speaker, Gunther Schuller, an American composer and head of Conservatory, 2:30 p.m. Tuesday.
HOCH AUDITORIUM: "King David," 10 p.m. sunday. A retelling of the biblical story with narration and music, presented by the combined University choruses and the University Music Balaenoptera Teaching associate in choral music, will conduct.
SEVEN EAST SEVENTH
GALERY: "Michael Patrick:
M.F.A. Thesis Exhibit." Through
May 12. Lithographs. Intaglios
SPOONER ART MUSEUM:
Sunday Streeter, a KU grad, will lecture on his kites and sculpture at 8 o'clock in the Forum at 8 o'clock Sunday in the Forum.
Sculptors Display Work
Webster, 18. is the youngest delegate or alternate elected to the national delegation so far from Kansas.
ReSTEVE RIEL
BY STEVE RILEK
Kansan Staff Writer
Those in the political center of the party maintained support for the new government, and Webster said. A Southern element of the party was also present.
Bill Webster, Carthage, Mo.
freshman and a Kansas alternate
to the Republican National
Caucus will be the real interest of the national convention would be the selection of a vice-presidential running mate.
Several groups within the Republican party, Webster said, were supporting different administration vice-presidential nomination.
Webster said he was not definitely committed to a particular party for presidential nomination. He said his support leaned toward Nixon because he believed he would be viable candidate in the race.
Webster was elected alternate to the national convention at the Third District Republican convention. At that time, Webster opposed Kevin Eichner of Ottawa University, by 141 votes.
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE: THE Seventh National Sculpture Conference. Through Saturday, 9 p.m., at the Museum by various sculptors will be shown at the south end of the field house. The public may participate and can pay a fee to participate in the demonstration at the north entrance. The public may attend and can pay a fee to participate in the demonstration at the north entrance.
Members of the black and liberal element of the party were supporting the nomination of Sen. Robert Dodd, vice-president, he said.
Overall, Nixon has done a very
adequate job as President,
Webster said, however,
was not in complete agreement
of bombing in Vientian.
"I am not pleased with the bombing increase. I don't think it's the right thing for the President to do," he said.
Despite increased bombing,
Webster said, Nixon was still
getting troops out of Vietnam
and he would probably not resort to
Weekend Scene
Webster said his election as a convention reflected a national convention reflected a Republican party to achieve a balanced delegation regarding
renewed troop commitments.
"I think my age was beneficial." he said.
Webster will attend the national convention later this year. The convention, presently, is to be held in San Diego.
KU to Produce Movie For Mancini TV Series
Some University of Kansas student will soon be producing a film which will appear on syndicated television in the fall.
The CoBurt Corporation, producers of new series called "Wolf," commissioned the radio-TV film department of the School of Film at Warner Bros. to short a minute film based on a Henry Mancini composition titled "Your Wolf."
KU was one of 26 schools selected to produce TV films. He directed "Marked War," composition, F. Dennis Lynch, assistant professor of journalism.
"It's a good opportunity for students to have some fun with film." he said.
Any student may submit a submission for making the film to Lynch's office in 217 Flint by
Lynch said the committee will judge the applicants on the basis of the proposal for the film and the ability to meet the July 15 deadline. The committee will look primarily for visually exciting ideas, he said.
The student selected to produce the video will be bound in film except its use in connection with the Mancini series, written to the CoBurt Corporation.
Thursday, May 4. A department committee will determine which student will receive the $500 BobCurt grant to produce the film.
DANCE
809 W. 23rd
842-9549
UNIVERSITY THEATRE:
Tau Sigma dance concert. 8 p.m.
tonight and 2:30 p.m. Saturday.
Tau Sigma, an honorary舞
fraternity, will perform 14 dances
in a variety of styles. All two
of the dances were choreographed by
Tau Sigma members.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
SUA Popular Film. "Women in Love." 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. tonight and Saturday. Directed by Ken
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
International Film. "Innocent Sorcerers" 7:30 p.m. Sunday.
by Andy Rizal. Wajda Jalapa
Died. 1980.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM:
SUA Classical Film, "Rules of
the Game," 7:30 and 9:15 p.m.
by Jean Renoir, 1938.
FILM
Kubrick,starring Peter Sellers, George C. Scott. 1964.
GRANADA THEATRE: "The Concert for Bangladesh."
HILCREST 1: "The Godfather." Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, Robert Duval, James Cahn.
**OODRUFF AUDITORIUM:** SUA Science Fiction Film, "Dr. Strangelove." 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Directed by Stanley
HILCREST 2 & 3: "The Last
Peter Bogaovandian, starring
Timothy Bottoms, Cloris
Leachman, Ben Johnson, Ellen
VARSITY THEATRE: "Relations."
Russell, starring Glenda Jackson, Oliver Reed and Alan Bates. 1970.
The camera crew showed no imagination in the filming of "Bangladesh." Most of the shots are the classic straight-on long
THE BIGGEST FLAW in "Bangladesh" is that about one-third of the picture is not synchronized with the soundtrack. The subject of the film is a musical performance. The instruments are about a second behind the sound, it is very annoying.
"Bangladesh," an apple-20th Century Fox release, was produced by George Harrison and Allen Klein and directed by Saul Swimmer. The final product shows that they were extremely creative in the creation of a film. The movie just lacks technical know-how.
A continuity that the film builds up between these breaks is quickly eliminated. Short film clips of the overflowing concert refugees casually remind me of the concert's purpose.
'Bangladesh': Great Rock Packaged in Flawed Film
Just when they are looking pretty(dim for the technical crew, the musicians that they're filming save the day.
F
Leon Russell rocks the house with "Jumpin' Jack Flash". And Ringo Star, poor Ringo, just can't remember all the lyrics to the song but since the Beatles's breakup
But Boh Dyian is the show's thief. He walks out on stage like a little kid who's afraid the audience will bite, slowly gains confidence and sings "Blinow" in an assortment of his best songs.
The concert, staged by some of the top rock stars of the 60s and 70s to aid the Bangladesh refugees, was the pop music event 1971. Its 1972 information on the screen is a near-dissertion.
"BANGLADESH" captures all the sincerity, charm and magic of Dylan in one of her rare public appearances, easily the hainpoint of the movie.
By JOE ZANATTA
Kenny Reviewer
RAVI SHANKAR turns out an excellent star performance that has resonated with stereophonic sound. Harrison takes the audience down memory lane with energetic chorus and rousing post-beat songs. Eric Clapton
"Bangladesh!" has all the flaws of an amateur演出。它 also has the top rock music of the '80s and '70s performed by the original group, a piece of three on this ticket, could give you such an odd combination?
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The Campus Young Democrats
Shawnee Mission graduate
student, as a candidate for third
precinct committeeman Wed-
dow.
"The Concert For Bangladesh" (Granada Theatre) is a filmmaker's nightmare and a musician's dream.
Coupon not good on Wed
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Offer expires May 15, 1972
The group also discussed plans to boost membership for next year.
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shot of all the musicians. There's an occasional good closeup of Harrison, the film's star. If a closure is needed of some other member of the band, the long shot is merely blown up to the point that the overall effect is film green the size of a baseball.
HOWARD LESTER, who edited the film, has made skingdales. He choreographed the dissolves, which separate every song performed, usually feature one or two tracks on a screen and cracking soundtrack.
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The races include a queen crowning, women's tricycle race, and the wildest, sloppiest, funniest, mud-ball fight imaginable.
Come enjoy yourself at . . .
The 7th Annual Phi Kappa Psi '500' 1602 West 15th Street 2:00 p.m.
Sunday, April 30
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SENIOR PARTY
The end of our last semester has arrived. We are the 100th class to graduate from KU and we're going to send ourselves off with the biggest senior party yet. On Friday night April 28th we have reserved the new Knights of Columbus Hall. Music will be provided by Bikales-Weinberg. Mix, ice and glasses will be provided free at both bars, so bring a bottle of your favorite booze (and an ID that says you are 21). There will be no cover charge for senior class members. Everyone else will be asked to donate a buck. Doors open at 8:00 p.m.at the Knights of Columbus Hall located one door this side (West) of the Co-op Fertilizer plant on K-10 (East 23rd Street). Leave your grubs at home and come to the best party in 100 years, this Friday night.
DENNIS CHERRY CLASS OF 1972
Friday, April 28, 1972
University Daily Kansan
7
ers
THE CLOWN AND THE WILLOW
Kancan Photo by DAVE BECK
Leroy 'Slim' Hatch Leads Fidderl's Concert
Swinging concert last Saturday raised funds for Penn House
By DIANE CARR
Housing Troubles Internationals
Kansan Staff Write
Residence hall food, not planned for those foreign students whose religion prohibits meat, also drives foreign students into housing where they can cook their own meals.
A DILINE of American food and noise and a cool reception by American students are other reasons foreign students list for moving to residence halls in living room enclaves in off-campus housing.
Few foreign students have cars so they must live near campus. They will usually save money, and living in a residence hall is too expensive for them.
Today it is hard for foreign students on a tight budget to find inexpensive housing close to campus.
Mohammed Amin, Raljansen, iran, senior, he had many American friends. Most foreign students in Iran dorm because Americans are unfriendly but because of cultural differences. Foreign students stick together because they relate to Americans, he said.
However, the residence halls do fix sack lunches for Arab students whose religion requires a period of fasting during the day.
In the past, many foreign students lived in old rooming houses and apartments east of campus, but the last several years when he moved down, Clark Coan, dean of foreign students, said recently.
TINA HSIEN, Taiwan,
graduate student, said the
residence hall was nice
compared to the campus.
She said she would not move
out because she had visited
friend们 who lived off-campus and
Penn House Works to Teach Poor
Penn House, 1035
Pennsylvania, was established not to solve poor people's problems for them but to teach them to solve their own. Owee house, House secretary, said recently.
The purpose of the organization is to conduct self-help activities for low-income families, said Miller, and to discover new ways to serve them and effective local leadership in the low income neighborhoods
Charitable goods and services to families in need are also provided by Penn House. In creating ties with the low-income community, members work to increase and improve the participation and
By DAVE BLISS Kansan Staff Writer
communication between the lowcome neighborhood and the Lawrence community at large.
MILLER SAID that many Penn House members were on welfare or social security. One of several programs designed to accommodate the needs of these members is the Food Club. The club also offers possible grocery prices for the poor people in the neighborhood.
The Food Club lost more than $20,000 in the first two years of its existence, but Miller explained that the club was approaching financial self-sufficiency. The club offered priced only to cover the expense of stocking and restocking the items.
The job of Food Club store manager, like other Penn House staff positions, is rotated among
Penn House members, said Miller. Assistant manager jo-
nely Sauer will teach for younger House members to learn
principal skills of bookkeeping.
THE MECHANICS of maintaining the Food Club operation are additionally complex since milk, because must be served from stock stamps, which are accepted from members by the store.
Because the Penn House Food Company relatively small volume, Miller said, its prices are roughly equal to those in large chain grocery stores.
Food Club membership numbers about 300, with one fifty of the members actively of the artisan or managerial capacities, said Millie.
Daylight Savings May Deprive Many of One Hour of Sleep
Kansan Staff Writer
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Saturday night promises to be a
dramatic day. Citizens will tare
carousers and those who tare
their sleep. Citizens will set their
cloaks ahead one hour and go on
a trip to the shopping mall.
But will it be that easy?
Spring fever may assume epidemic proportions as students put off studying until it gets dark, and people go out drinking. Or perhaps hundreds will miss 'All in the Family' because it doesn't look like spring.
Not only the alarm clock, but also the biological clock must be held up so that it can be accorded to Joseph Mendelson, associate professor of genetics.
HE SAID the effects of Daylight Savings Time were the same type as those encountered by passengers on airplane flights. The magnitude was smaller, however, since the change involved only a one-hour shift.
Mendelson said that rats were normally active at night, but if they were exposed to the adjustment took weeks. The animals hung on to their old biological clock. Eventually the mice became in with the new clock, he said.
Little research has been done on the effects of time changes on animals. Comparative studies using animals could offer helpful insights.
EVEN WHEN RATS were kept in conditions of constant illumination, temperature and air pressure, Mendelson said, but they could not approximating 24 hours. Individual cycles varied from 22 to 26 hours, but the internal clock of any given rat was extremely accurate. Each rat's cycle did not be by more than 20 minutes, he said.
"We believe that there is a part of the brain that makes a pacemaker of the heart with a 24-hour cycle instead of the one-half second cycle of the heart. One part keeps the rest of the brain awake and on alert, 'and another pain causes it to rest. To change this cycle, you use an EEG. The brain. It's not like setting an
alarm. You must retrain the brain."
It is presumed that the human brain has the same kind of learning ability as that of the rat, he said. With an accuracy of 20 minutes or better, he said, the one-hour change of Daylight Savings Time would be worthless.
NEITHER DRUGS, such as LSD, nor a variety of operations performed on the rat could alter biological clock. Mendelson said.
"Drugs can't easily interfere with the natural cycle of the rat, so it is unlikely that they would assist the human in readjusting to the cycle," he said. "Since it is not possible for a biological clock by altering body chemistry, it would probably be even harder to change it by the
will. We're used to drugs being more powerful than the will."
Mendelson said that sleep deprivation experiments had shown that there were large differences in the adjustment period. Subjects felt most tired and hungry during the night, even when they normally slept and ate.
"This shows how powerful the internal clock is," he said. There are prey that can cycle into body and all would be affected in some way."
"Under constant conditions subjects can adapt. It is easier to change from a warm climate there are no conflicting environmental cues. When flying from New York to California, the air was much colder than the same clock time," she said.
Since a large number of client members are elderly, blind or disabled, their degree of disability depends largely on the weather.
CLASSES IN arrest procedure, along with those in state welfare and real estate laws pertaining to the criminal offenses. House members, said Miller. Knitting and crochet classes give students a chance also aids in achieving the primary Penn House goal of being able to point for the borough police.
High Schoolers Invited To BSU Career Day
"Members don't have to do anything. People can work when they want at what they want," said Miller.
The high school students will hire Jackson, the head teacher, to talk to students and staff members from departments and staff members about
In the first years of Penn House existence, the organization was unable to obtain Economic Opportunity. Miller said that Penn House, however, has always been a success.
The Black Student Union
(BSU) will sponsor a career day for
41 black school senior students
in Kansas City, Mo., on April 29.
Marshall Jackson, assistant director of admissions, said Wednesday that the career day was a general introduction to campus life and organizations for prospective RU students.
Mickey Dean, Sanderson, Ga., freshman and chairman of the BSU will start the career day with a visit to the museum and are also tentative plans, Jackson said, for Phil Gary, director of Urban Affairs, to talk to the high school.
their rooms were small and dirty. The environment in the dorm is much better for studying, she said.
Jand Jundi, Aman, Jordan uphomore the residence, where he lives the residence this because there was no privacy and was expensive but off-campus students. Mr. Kowalski said several of his friends paid 150 a month for a small room wice the size of a bed and they had six or seven people, with six or seven other people.
A panel discussion on "The Black Undergraduate Organizations on Campus" will be held.
"OUR LIVING arrangements are inexpensive but crummy," said Man Lee, Kyonggi DO Korea, graduate student.
Jundi suggested the University inspect the housing for cleanliness and safety.
"When Penn House first opened, we had an average of one door. At the beginning of this winter, we had one every week. During the coldest part of the winter, we had at least one real crisis per day."
PENN HOUSE maintains an emergency food and clothing program which is used to provide immediate help to families in need.
"The housing is too expensive for what they get," he said.
The BSU plans to have a workshop for the high school student on the topic of the "Black Student on Campus."
Jackson said that they planned to have a party for the participants at the American Barnist Center.
"If an agency is giving you money, every hunter will be better off." "People will come around for more constructive purpose," said
"We have also had trouble with the landlord. Several students from our school rent their rent on time and the landlord came over and called them to come in."
The students will then spend the night in various KU residence halls.
There are 279 foreign students living in organized housing including Stoffer Place and 244 students living in unorganized housing.
The number of emergency requests decreased when spring weather lessened the need for heated living quarters, said Terry Brown, who food requests were more numerous than clothing requests.
THE MADHATTER will be closed Saturday April 29th
DEAN COAN said that when the students first arrived his office provided transportation for them to the housing. The type of housing they choose is entirely their decision. He said they do things in a rush and wind up with housing arrangements they don't like, he
Many KU students and faculty members have given both time and effort to extend the Penn campus experience with "Principles of Community Change" holds its class meeting at Penn House, using the program as an educational resource for sociological research.
Many of the apartments that foreign students rent would not require Coan's standards. Coan said that he tried to tell the students what to look for before renting and tried to ensure they could do better. Yet, often the student is used to a lower cost of living or does not take his advice. Coan said.
Snow Rock
The last several years the university has room for foreign students, but a majority of them are graduate students. We want to give our living the best
TWENTY-FIVE per cent of the foreign students are married. Mario Carvajal, Costa Rica, graduate student, said he thought it was nice to be able students to find a place to live. Several landlords told Carvajal that they had bad experiences with foreign students but liked to rent to married couples because they kept their apartments cleaner.
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Several KU landlords said that
they had problems when they rent to foreign students because of the "cultural gap."
Communications cause the biggest problem, Marie Lynch. 1216 Louisiana, said recently. Some foreign students don't understand the terms of terminology and will break a contract without realizing it.
LYNCH SAID that unfamiliarity with the operation of American appliances and slumbing also caused problems. several students tried to staff the laundry drain until she asked them to it.
They are not used to cooking with our facilities, said a local hospital. They are used to let it boil over because they are not used to the heat of our cookware.
Many foreign students have had little experience keeping their apartments clean she said
had little experience, keeping their apartments clean, she said. One Chinese boy said he thought it was terrible that he had been told his sister did this because only women in his country such tasks in his country.
SIE SAID, several foreign students had gotten behind with their rent but she was usually more lenient with them than with American students. They are also less likely to arrive from their countries.
Lynch said she rented to several foreign students whom she enjoyed.
"They are friends of mine and we have more than just a tenant-landlord relationship." she said.
we have more than just a tenant,
and many of the rooms building
were built before electricity was
in use. Bad wiring and open gas
lines are common landlords' association that Lynch
belongs to has been instrumental in
starting inspections for
landlord associations in the
houses, she said.
OFTEN LANDLORDS don't realize the bad condition their property is in because tenants won't report it.
Many foreign students said they were afraid to make too many complaints to their
landlords for fear of the rent increasing.
Amin said he thought there was still some discrimination against foreign students by landlords. He asked the students had answered ans and had been told the apartments were rented. The students rented. Several hours later someone else would call the landlord and rent the advertised property.
A foreign student who is dissatisfied with his housing and thinks he has been discriminated against campus life at the off-campus housing committee. The city of Lawrence can also be requested to inspect
Coan said he encouraged students to file complaints if they
Class of '72
To Hold Party
The 100th graduating class of the University of Kansas will celebrate its graduation with an over-21 party at 8 p.m. tonight in Columbus Hall on East 23rd street near the Coop fertilizer plant.
Music for the party will be provided by Bikales-Weinberg, John Miro, Salina senior and Nicole Stern, 1923 class student, said Thursday.
Mize said admission to the 1972 senior class and one dollar for everyone else. He said everyone should bring a passport.
Mize said that seniors should bring their own liquor and that the mix, ice and glasses would be provided.
Although advertisements for the party asked seniors to "leave your grids at home," Miree said he doubted that anyone would be away because of sloppy attire, said it was just a suggestion.
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--had justifiable grounds for them.
Most students won't pursue a complaint.
Please enter the name of person or office
Identification (first)
Address
Phone
Enroll Now for Summer or Fall
Regular Course (May-June):
Wed, 7-9 p.m in, May 10 June 28
Thurs, 9-3 a.m in. Noon, May 11 June
Free Mini-Lesson
**Regional Court (June July):**
7:30 to 9:30 a.m. June 6-18 June
7:35 to 9:30 p.m. June 10-June
7:45 to 9:30 p.m. June 12-June
7:75 to 9:30 p.m. June 18
7:00 and 8:00 p.m., Mon-Fri.
May 1-5, at the Reading Dynamics Institute
Hillcrest Shopping Center
925 Iowa Phone 843-642
Without a car, foreign students cannot go far off campus. They need to be near campus so much that their teacher files a complaint, Amin said.
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8
Friday, April 28, 1972
University Daily Kansan
95
Kansas Staff Photo by TOM THRONE
Robert Miller Heads for Line
Sohmore fullback draws starting assignment . . .
Golf Team Attempts To Upset Missouri
The red-hot University of
Kansas will host the annual invitational tournament today and Saturday in Columbia. The University of Kansas will
Missouri was the victor last weekend in the second half of the Sunflower Golf Tournament in
Juco Runner Signs with KU
University of Kansas head
teacher, Dr. Katherine,
announced the signing of a
national letter of intent by Jim
Euuel of Mesa Community Junior
School.
So far this spring, Euell has been clocked in relay carries of 1:49.3 for the 880 and 4:08.5 for the mile.
His best time last year in the open races have been 1:50.0 for the half mile and 4:10.1 for the mile.
Manhattan. The Tigers had a team score of 291. KU was second at 295.
Scott Bess and Tim Meli will lead the Tigers. Both are returning lettermen and have been selected for performances so far this spring.
Bess placed 14th in the U.S.
Amateur last year and tied for
sixth in the Big Eight meet with a
223.
Mehl placed 12th in last year's conference meet at 230.
Other teams participating in the tournament will be Kansas State, Iowa State and Nebraska.
the tournament will be Kansas State, Iowa State and Nebraska. This will be the final meet of the season for the Jayhawks before the Big Eight tournament in Boulder, Colo., May 19 and 20.
KU golfers who qualified for the meet are John Gooss, Wichita State, and David Colo. Senior Mike Fiddelle, Paulina, Iowa, freshman; Stan Zimmerman, Lawrence senior; Shawnee mission sophomore.
Spring Game to Unveil Passing Attack
Fans will see a preview of the passioned 1972 University of Delaware Dartmouth Fambrough's No. 1, units take on the remainder of the squair in the spring game at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in Haskell
This year, the game is a benefit for the KU marching band and the minor sports program.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
W L 1. Pct. Gb.
Detroit 5 3 5 625 —
Baltimore 5 3 500 41/4
Cleveland 5 3 500 11/4
New York 5 3 375 2
Milwaukee 5 3 375 2/4
2 5 286 2
Minnesota 5 2 714 %
Chicago 5 3 704 %
Cleveland 5 3 704 %
Texas 5 5 500
Kansas City 5 450 8
San Diego 5 450 8
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East
W L P. Pet.
New York 6 2 750
Xmontreal 6 2 625
Philadelphia 6 5 625
Philadelphia 6 4 1
burgh 6 3 1
Santa Fe 3 7 300
Chicago 3 7 184
Chicago 2 3 0.5
Houston 9 2 818 -
Angeles 9 2 818 -
San Francisco 7 4 417 +
Cinnaïnet 4 6 400 +
San Diego 4 6 400 +
Baltimore 4 6 344 +
x—played late game.
Thursday's Scores
American League
No games scheduled
National League
Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh 4
Philadelphia 7, San Francisco 6
Tickets will sell for $1 for students and KU faculty members, $2 for general admission.
New York 4, San Diego 3 Montreal at Los Angeles
Friday's Games
American League
Minnesota at New York
Michigan at Baltimore
Chicago at Oakland at Milwaukee
Cleveland at Kansas City
Boston at Texas
National League
Cincinnati and Chicago
St. Louis at Houston
Atlanta at Pittsburgh
Dallas at San Diego
Montreal at San Francisco
New York at Los Angeles
The starting lineup for the No. 1 blue team indicates Fambridge's emphasis on passing this spring. At quarterback will be passwiz David Jaynes, with more than 200 yards in each of the four performances of spring practice.
Sophomores Emmett Edwards and Bruce Adams moved ahead of such veteran passers after the start of split end and flanker positions. Senior John Schroll, who caught a touchdown in the season, will start at tight end.
NEW OFFENSIVE line coach Joe Spencer has molded the front wall into a unit that drew praise from Fambrough through the drill.
Don Perkins, Jim Schumm,
Mike McDaniel, Roger
Bernhardt and John Bryant will
provide the pass protection for Jaynes.
In the backfield, fullback Robert Miller and tailback Jerome Nellons won the starting jobs over veterans Vince O'Neil and Delvin Williams. Nellons and Delvin two years, Miller is a sophomore.
Williams, who led KU rushers in his sophomore season last year, will play tailback for the team against fallback O'Neil.
The white team is likely to put on as respectable an aerial show as the blues. Bo Brueggem pass for sophomore Ke Santhoff at split end, Greg Hossek at center, Wesker an hanker Marvin Foster.
THE DEFENSE, which returns five starters to the offense (one Schollis, will have two of his younger young players than the offense.
junior Bill Skepkne will join the seven defensive lettermen. The offense will start eight letterholders.
Returning starters are end PAT Ryan, tackle Kyle Gpal, limbback Tommy Oaken, hawk Georgia, and safety Gary Shea.
All features of a full-fledged game will be included—from kickoffs to punts.
Awards for the 1971 football season will be presented during halftime ceremonies. Awards that will be presented are the outstanding player as voted by the squad, the Mike Getto Award to the outstanding lineman as selected by rival Big Eight and the player for the leading tackler, the Arthur Weaver Award for the senior with the top academic record, the Ray Evans Trophy and the Lawrence McInce and the Jayhawk Trophy the most inspirational player.
Jenner Wins Decathlon Harris No.13 at Drake
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)—Bruce Jenner, a senior from Graceland College of Lomani, will deliver lectures decathlon here Thursday.
Jenner came from third place to edge by defending champion Katie Edgar, who was sidelined with an injury, and Kansas Relays champion Alexandra Burke.
Wanamaker finished sixth at 9,398 points, but did not finish the eventual event, the 1,500 meters, because of a leg injury.
Jenner finished with 7,678 points, a personal high. His pass also qualified him for a berth in the U.S. Olympic trials in June. Jenner finished with 7,291. Eugene Miller of Akron, Ohio, was third at 7,118.
Nanamaker held a 58-point
camera. The lens remained
remained in the lead until
Jenner got off a 227-foot, 11-inch
javelin. Jenner then moved to
something else.
Wanamaker took one step in the final event, the 1,500 meters, so he wouldn't be disqualified or aggrade his injury.
Rex Harvey of the Air Force and a former Iowa State trackman was fourth at 7,023.
followed by Gene Hackney of Texas at 7,007.
Mark Harris, Kansas, was 13th with 5,407.
His ranking in the final five various events:
110-meter hurdles—Harris tied for 3rd in 15.2
Biscayne Harles, 1906.
Pole vault—Harris, 14th, no height.
for 3rd in 18.2.
Discus—Harris 8th, 108-5.
Javelin—Harris 8th, 150-1½,
1,500-meter run—Harris 9th,
5:00.8.
After making a surprising second place showing last weekend in the Big Eight soccer tournament at Boulder, Colo., the University of Kansas soccer team will play the Internationals amateur team at 2 p.m. on the east of the O-Z parking lot.
The KU soccer team will take a 10-5-2 game into its game with the internationals. This will be followed by two teams have met this year.
KU Soccer Club to Host KC Internationals Sunday
Earlier in the year, the Internationals, a Kansas City
PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE
team, defeated KU. KU defeated the Internationals, 3-2 in an open tournament in Kansas City.
Boyke Gaffar, KU team captain, said that there would be seven substitutes backing up the 11 starters for this weekend's game. Several key players were in the tournament last week.
There will be no admission charge to see the game this weekend. There will have three regular season games left after Sunday's
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Emmet Edwards SE Ken Saithoff
Don Perkins T Ferdy Cillian
Jim Schumm G Mike Englebrake
Mike MacDaniel D Randy Fruits
Roger Bernhardt G Gregg Beggs
John Bryant T Gordon Stockemer
John Schroll TE Greg Hosak
David Reynes QB Greguqging
Jerome Nellons TB Devin Williams
Robert Miller FB Vince O'Neil
Bruce Adams FL Marvin Foster
OFFENSE
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DEFENSE
Pat Ryan E
Bill Skepnek E
Don Goode E
Steve Towle LB
Dean Baird LB
Tommy Oakson LB
Eddie Sheats H
Henry Lattis CB
Rocky Bron CB
Gary Adams C
Odell Weiner
Geary King
Dean Zook
Joe Shannon
Eric Botcher
Pat Henderson
Galen Schmitz
Kyle Rose
James Bowman
Rick Mudge
Writer-Player Questions Football
We are having our spring outing at 4:00 p.m. Sunday, April 30th at Lone Star Lake. For further information contact Judy Edwards at 843-2438.
Physical Therapy Club NOTICE:
NOW SHOWING!
4 Track Stereo Sound!
THE CONGELI FOR BANGLA DESH
THE CONCERT FOR BANGLADESH
ERIC CLAPTON - BOB DYLAN
GEORGE HARRISON - BILLY PRESTON
RINGO STARR - KLAUS VOORMAN
BADFINGER - JESSE DAVIS
Editor's Note: Here is the conclusion of a series of four reports from spring football games. Brad Avery, who participated in the first four weeks of practice, these are his observations about football based on the insights he gained during the four weeks.
Not that it isn't fun catching passes from David Jaynes or an assistant, but the pattern from John Haddi, it is. It would often watch players coming off the field, some who are going to equipment worth over $100, and ask myself why Why all the expenditure of money and
The economic and practical reasons are clear. No other activity could finance over 100
The players themselves, in particular the scholarship athletes, are a privileged group.
Kansas Sports Writer
My last day of practice was completed in a downpour and the beginning of the Kansas Reiays. decided not to participate in the week of practice because the use of dumplings dull and seemed purposeless.
It probably has something to do with the fact that the American economic system itself is based more on demand than on supply, rather than usefulness. So it takes a superlative like the football program to accomplish a relatively simple thing such as providing an education for who couldn't otherwise afford it.
However, playing football player for nearly two months had been enlightening. It had been a big rigorous undertaking.
It wasn't just the physical rigors, which I enjoyed, but the realization that a good portion of my time during the period I was in prison was to an activity which had a purpose that was at best ambiguous.
By BRAD AVERY
The social and moral justifications for the immensely difficult job of teaching coaches I've talked to argue that students and others demand it. They say that the aggrievance field are an outlet for the tensions and frustrations that students have accumulated living in a school.
scholarships, which football does. No other activity could draw you from college campus and get their financial support as football does. And, of course, no other activity is so entrenched in the American sport.
The only really positive thing football seems to accomplish is its ability to put large numbers of players on the field. You should it take a multi-million dollar stadium, an expensive annual program? an expensive annual program?
Yet, they work extremely hard for those privileges. Playing more than is dispensed of physical practice it treats mental perseverance and discipline. It can be a draining, tedious way to get through.
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THEATRE • Telephone V13-3780
They live in conditions that could be called luxurious. Until they were declared illegal earlier this year, the players had passes, were granted the players. There was an arrangement whereby local movie owners were reimbursed by season from the athletic department.
That argument leaves a lot to be desired, as those frustrations could probably be alleviated by a quick game of touch football.
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wrong with football.
"I but believe that an athlete must know how to be involved in the school by using his body just as a person with a great mind is entitled to an education by using it."
Sandy Buda, an offensive line coach, has said, "I'm not defensive about the criticism the players give to the people who do the criticizing owe a lot to the games. There is no world, and there are some things
Surprisingly, most coaches are trained to protect their game and profiter receives. Perhaps that is because they know what they do is so powerful.
But many of the players I tried to teach said the experience would be hard, and they did not have a scholarship. An attitude like that is testimony to their hard work.
The most striking observation I can offer about Don Fambrough is his ability to delegate authority on the field. Although my only responsibility was as a school experience, Fambrough's practices seem smoothly run.
want it. I’ve found consequently, that he is a good long time to come. And yes, I’ll probably be contributing to the insanity next fall showing my innocence.”
As McCullers explained it, "Of course, the overall responsibility of coaching is to teach Coach Fambridge's hands, but there is so much that goes on that one man can't watch it all. I serve as coach, and I am more than anything else between the various offensive coaches and Coach Fambridge. He's an easy man."
He provides the overall policy guidelines, but the mechanics of the practice sessions are handled through the offensive coordinator, Charles McCullers, defensive coordinator, John Cooper.
In summary, my football experience was part of an overall career that spanned five years in American. Its use of money and resources is largely pursueless because I don't know what to do with it.
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9
Grading Game Endures
Editor's Note: This is Part Two of the education system in America. This story deals with the relevance of grades to performance in later years.
By FRANK SLOVER Kansan Staff Writer
Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, meets the charge of dogmatism in the high school classroom by noting, "Our students get less than one-fifth of their university training with
Scannell, in a recent interview,
said "They get their ideas in
social studies from the people
who teach them social studies.
"If they are dogmatic and
don't allow questioning, they may
get it somewhere in the
versatility but it's not all from
it."
He does have a theory on why many instructors tend to dogmatism and insist on "right" answers.
"One can't allow freedom of thought in a subject unless he feels confident in that subject," he said.
"A person who feels somewhat intimidated when he goes before the class will tend to go by the book."
Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner, in their book "Teaching As a Subversive," complain that "most of our schooling" inflicts irrelevant curricula upon students.
THEY ADD, "It is insane for a teacher to teach" 'teach' unless his students require it for some identifiable and important purpose, which is to say, for some learner, it is related to the life of the learner."
This cry for relevance has been heard more often from university students than from those in high school.
In their more cynical moments, professors are often prone to identify "relationships" and productive relationships" at a campus bar, or practically any other activity that excludes studying and research.
Scannell dismissed relevance from prime importance in a college education.
"Interest in immediate problems means you ignore some of the basics.
"Too much emphasis on the relevant," he said, "guarantees early obsolescence.
Campus Bulletin
Anthropology: 11:30 a.m., Cottonwood
Cedarwood, Yukon
Anthropology: 11:30 a.m. Cottonwood
Cafeteria, Kansas Union.
Above B
Lebanese Brazilian: 11:30 a.m. Acesso B C School of Education: noon, English Room.
n. noon, Meadowlark C.
MPA Studies: noon, Alcove D Calefer
Harmony Comm.: noon, Alcove A Cafetera
Table: 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark
Cafetera.
Oread Room.
Sculpture Conference: 2:30 p.m., Council
Sculpture Conference: 1:30 p.m. Woodruff
Auditorium.
Room. Sculpture Conference: 2:30 p.m., Forum
School of Education: noon, English Room.
Physio-Ecologists: noon, Alcove Cafeteria.
Room 305
Sculpture Conference: 1:30 p.m. Woodcraft
Muslim Students: 12:45 p.m. Room 299
Human Relations-African Studies: 1 p.m.
Room.
CAI Interest Group: 3 p.m., Governors
Room.
Class Conference: 2:30 p.m. Jajawah
Room.
CAI Interest Group: 3 p.m. Governors
Sculpture Dinner: 6:30 p.m., Ballroom.
Panellenie: 7 o.p., Kansas Room.
Auditorium.
Social Welfare Practice Comm.: 2 p.m.
Office.
Sculpture Conference: 2:30 p.m., Council Room.
Auditorium.
VFCF: 7 p.m., International Room.
KU Folk Dance Club-Instruction: 7 p.m.
Sculpture Conference: 2:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room.
Law School: 3:30 p.m. Regionalist Room.
French Department: 3:45 p.m., International Room.
Room.
Sculpture Conference: 2:30 p.m., Jayhawk
SUA Popular Film: 7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium.
IVCF: 7 p.m., International Room.
Room:
Sculpture Conference: 3:30 p.m. Pine
Tree
PARTNERSHIP p.m. Kansas Room.
SUA Popular Film: 7 p.m., Woodruff
Auditorium.
IVFC: 7 p.m., International Room.
Club Instruction: 7 p.m.
Potter Pavilion.
Tau Sigma Dance Concert: 8:20 p.m.
University Theatre.
Square Conference 9 p.m. NYC
Room
Square Conference 9 p.m. Forum
Rooom
Sculpture Conference: 9 p.m., Council n.
BSU Careers Day: All day, Kansas Union.
Panhellenic Meeting: 8:30 a.m., Kansas
Room.
Museum Associates Snake Hunt: 10 a.m.
Dyche Hall.
Museum Associates "What Is H" program for kindergartens: 10:30 a.m. Dyce Hall, Chemistry Honors Luncheon: noon, Big 8 Room.
Western Civilization Exams: 1 p.m.
assigned locations.
Tau Sigma Dance Concert: 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre.
University Theatre.
KU Band Dinner: 5 p.m., Big 8 Room.
KU Band Dinner: 5 p.m., Big 8 Room.
BSU Meeting: 7 p.m., Forum Room.
Spring Football Game: 7:30 p.m., Haskell
Stadium.
Tau Sigma Dance Concert: 8:20 p.m.
University Theatre
University Theaters
SUNDAY
Tal Streeter Kie Exhibit: 2:30 p.m.
"University education doesn't involve immediate changes in the social environment."
Tal Streeater Kite Exhibit: 2:30 p.m.
Museum of Art.
AN EXAMPLE of what can happen when students view the use of learning environments than an institution of learning is currently taking place at the university.
Basement Lecture Hall, Spooner.
3:30 a.m. Dock Auditorium.
2:00 p.m.
apart, according to a recent Associated Press report.
Background Report
Carlton Reedal 3 p.m., Campanile.
Art Museum Film Series 3 p.m.
There, radical students, the most active of whom are freshmen and sophomores, are threatening to tear the school
German Film: 7 p.m., Forum Room.
International Film: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff.
One resident American professor described the students as "lost . . wild . . mean . . important."
which he claimed that "college grades bear little or no relationship to any measures of adult accomplishment."
Two other studies were criticised for their methodology. O'Neill found a correlation between grades and success. The critics maintained, that the difference was found was due to other differences between the low-grading students.
According to another teacher at the university, the students are inadvertised by Marxist cadres in high school.
"They come to us loaded," he said, "For them, the period of discussion is past.
"They want action and that's all."
A political science professor said, "German youth want to remake all societies as we know them" and exactly what will come after.
ONE OF THE insurgents' demands was "no examinations."
The same sort of question is currently being debated in the House, where focus is more on "no grades" than the examinations that
The debate over the value and function of grades is a continuing battle which ranges between the use of teacher instructors in education journals.
Ironically, the writers of the articles tend to be those who have undergone grades as students. In a 1969 article in Today's Education, Brian P. McGueira identified three grade-pointers with "the highest grade-point leverage in the College of Letters and Science." After thus accruing a credential, went on to attack the 'grade-point game' for encouraging an attitude that sought "the best possible amount of work."
THE GRade controversy surfaced in the "letters" page of Science magazine in the latter 1970 in two letters to the editor.
The first, from Henry Lindgren, supported a relation between grades and performance later in life.
"The idea," he wrote, "that college grades are unrelated to anything in 'real life' seems to be a permanent fixture in the mythology of academia, despite overwhelming evidence to the
He went on to claim that people tend to be consistent in behavior because of the logical that someone who was successful in college would have been.
One study, completed in the early 1980s and cited in the letter, showed that students high grades especially in science medicine, and law, tested to earr
Later that year, the magazine published another letter rebutting the notion of the relevance of grades.
THE SECOND letter cited a
1965 study by Donald Hout in
Jerome H. Sore, region seven and Environmental Protections Agency and former U.S. assistant geogenator. He presents the honors presentation of the department of chemistry at 1:30 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas
EPA Executive To Speak Here
The high-success groups had higher socio-economic backgrounds, a higher level of education and emotional adjustment as indicated by such things as divorce rate and consumption of alcohol.
Currently, many American campuses offer their students a certain number of courses on a pass-fail or credit-no-credit basis. The pass-fail course gives the student a receive D or an F on his transcript without the grad being assigned to him. A student receives a D or F under a credit-no-credit system, the low grade is not recorded on his transcript.
His talk, open to the public, is entitled "Progress in Protecting the Environment,' and will be delivered on Tuesday at awards presentation, ceremony.
SCANNELL SAID that in theory the pass-fail option was offered to encourage a liberal education by encouraging a student to sample academic work and expertise, were lacking.
"The research with which I'm familiar," he said, "suggests that that hasn't happened.
It suggests that the students just use the option as another way to beat the system and raise their grade point."
He added that the same research, when applied to schools where the professors were not told who was on pass-fail or pass-take, he said the pass-fail students achieved "markedly lower" grades.
"We feel it to be desirable because the type of things that are evaluated are different from thins in regular courses."
A University of Michigan experimental program reported that its pass-fail students had not suffered adversely upon entering the program, and that they had benefited from reduced academic pressures.
"In the School of Education we use a credit-no-credit system for student teaching, but it isn't optional.
ONE OF THE pitfalls of the pass-fail system is that graduate schools tend to prefer precise, explicit grades.
At B. Brown University, Providence, R. I., however, where 50 per cent of the course was taken for a majority of their courses in 1869, the figure fell to 29.4 per cent in 1972. One assistant dean attributed the change to the requirements for schools of law
Tau Sigma Dance Concert April 28 8:00 p.m. April 29 2:30 & 8 p.m.
University Theatre
Adult $1.50 Child .50
According to the article there has been a rise in the average grade point at the University of Wisconsin from 2.5 in 1968-6 to 2.8 in 1970-7. There was also a rise from 2.67 in 1970 to 3.0 last year at Northwestern.
A recent New York Times
issue in college grades in the past
years gave the discriminating
use of the pass-fail option "as a
solution."
STUDENT-FREE
At Harvard, just over one-half of the class of 1961 was graduated with honors. Last spring the number was more than two-thirds.
PERHAPS ONE of the causes of this "grade inflation" is that "today's students are more sophisticated than they used to be, as Alan Pifer, president of the Carnegie Corporation, maintained when he presented a $344,000 grant to the State University of New York to prepare three-year degree program.
The Times article quoted a Mary McLean who never go to school any more, and I still get wonderful grades. There are consensus here that it is worth going to school.
Two facts seem to mitigate this contention.
The second is the phenomenon that while grades have gone up, the seniors in the college entrance class have gone up. In 1962 college freshmen scored average 471 of 800 on the verbal test; last year's freshmen got an average of 503.
The first is the attitude of the students.
SOME OF THE reasons suggested for the rising grade-points:
—More independent study courses.
—The trend away from large, impersonal lectures, where exams are graded by anonymous teacheh assistants, to more formal ones.
Younger teachers, who either lack faith in the grading system or confidence in themselves.
Health Column
—An anti-autitarian sentiment which is felt as a bond between young faculty members and their students.
—Pass-fail.
—Entry of underprivileged and undereducated minor students (which tends to push up the need for extra students with richer background.)
Rubella Cases Increasing at KU
During the past few weeks, an increasing number of students have been forced to take leave from their classes and friends to remain in the hospital or in their apartments because of illness, or, as it is sometimes called, German or three-day meals.
Editor's note: This is the first column of a regular health feature which will appear in the Kausa. The articles will be published on Mondays and Tuesdays.
This mild viral infection has an incubation period from 14 to 21 days. Minor "cold-like" symptoms with a low grade fever may precede the development of a pink rash, which appears first on the face, then becomes generalized. The lymph glands, especially those located behind the ears, are often inflamed and occasionally joint pains or arthritis symptoms may be present.
The importance of this illness in women is not in its symptomatology but in its established relationship to the pregnancy. For example, the months of pregnancy. Every attempt must be made to protect any woman in her first three months of pregnancy from exposure to the Rubella virus. This is the rationale for three weeks of rubella cash, which persists for about three five days, has faded.
The last Rubella epidemic occurred in 1964 and resulted in more than 20,000 children born with congenital malformations as a result of maternal infection. In 1969, Rubella vaccine was first licensed for use in this country. Virus transmission is primarily among young school age children. The rubella vaccine being made to immune all children between the age of 6 months and adolescence in an attempt to eliminate the reservoir of infection from which maternal Rubella infections arise.
Since it is now possible to determine the susceptibility of a woman to Rubella by specific laboratory tests, it may eventually be feasible to extend the immunization program to include women and adolescent girls in certain selected cases.
—Mary Hatfield, M.D.
Guidelines for political campaign displays in front of Strong Hall were established last week. The University Events Committee
Political Display Policies Established by Committee
Terry Edwards, assistant to the dean of women, said these political campaigns were key year to year, but the committee established guidelines because of political campaigning for the governor and the presidential election.
Groups wishing to set up displays must contact Edwards at least one day in advance. Groups wishing to set up one-day basis, and must be reckened with Edwards each group wishes to campaign
Groups must provide their own tables and chairs. They may not use more than four tables for each group, and then up the area when they leave.
The events committee must give approval to selling microphone stickers, and no public address systems or microphones will be used.
These guidelines apply only to political campaigning, but all other group requests to set up a committee have been brought to the events committee.
Any major objections to displays will be brought to the events committee for consideration.
Groups wanting to set up displays in front of the Kansas Union must contact Union authorities. Those wishing literature, without use of tables, need not obtain approval.
Psychologist Advocates Silence
He said the right hand was characterized by doing, and the left hand was characterized by not doing the tuition. The left hand is
Heider said the United States was characterized by a goal-oriented, technological achievements are made by American lack a cultural identity.
The value of silence isn't taught in the Western educational tradition. John Heider, clinical psychologist, said day at a faculty forum laughter.
Kansas GOPs To Select Slate For Convention
Heider has been studying the transcendental meditation, yoga and similar movements on the human body. He also taught Harvard College and Duke University (P.D.). Heider taught students at East Institute. He Bur. Sur.
Lynn Knox, St. Louis freshman and head of the KU students for McGovern, said the new guidelines has not been in effect because he judge whether they would tamper campaigning on campus.
our culture doesn't teach how to be passive, quiet, or to contact the quiet places in each of us Heider said.
The final group of Kansas delegates and alternates to the Republican National Convention will be selected Saturday at the Republican state convention at the Municipal Auditorium in Topeka.
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan, is scheduled to deliver the keynote address at 11 a.m., according to J.D. King, chairman of the Board in Douglas County. The constitution will begin at 10 a.m. 45.
The morning session of the convention would be devoted to the organization of committees, King said. The afternoon session will involve the election of at-tenors and nominees to the national convention.
Several Kansas delegates to the national convention were elected at district conventions in mid-April.
represented in the Oriental cultures. Young Americans are turning inward, that is, they are meditating, he said.
Yoga, transcendental meditation and other forms of silence consciously belong to the school of silence, which seeks to calm the mind by turning the turning world, he said. The goal is to create inner harmony
Heider said a person had to beware of the temptation to understand too quickly.
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Psychologists say that the conscious mind is bound by considerations of what others think of that person, he said. In contrast, the mind transcends from a state of conscious to a quiet state.
In order to understand what people express, one should be quiet, listen and set aside any what has been said, he said.
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Crowd Opposes . . .
One member of the crowd quoted facts that showed an in-depth investigation in the number of bombs dropped per month and civilian killed per month in Iraq, according to figures. Dole was asked whether he still thought the war was being de-excalibated now that he had advanced on the ground.
ANOTHER YOUNG man attempted to get a more clear answer from Dole on the question of escalation.
a song by Phil Ochs, entitled "White Boots Marching in a Yellow Land." Another banner reminded the crowd that more than 70 per cent of Americans oppose the war.
The young man was recognized at the same time as another
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person was asking a question
Dole asked the young man with
the question on escalation to wait
for his question to be answered.
"According to Pentagon figures, 90,000 tons of bombs per month during the Nixon administration; 60,000 tons of bombs per month being dropped during the Nixon administration; and 85,000 civilians are being killed per month during the Nixon administration, and 85,000 civilians are being killed per month during the Johnson administration. Senator Dole, given these figures, do you still think we should deescalate," the man asked.
Bill Palaskas, Kansas City
Kan, junior and member of the
Haiphong Project Coordinating
Committee, said, "I was
well prepared to depart. It was evident that many questions were left unasked and many of those asked were left unanswered by Dole." Palaskas said the Coordinating Committee had a demonstration in Topeka.
The question was put off for twenty minutes before Dole attempted to answer it. Again the
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The question-answer period ended almost as quickly as it began. Many people were left unhappy because they did not get answers, but many were with many and many unsatisfied with the answers they were given.
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10
Friday, April 28, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Chalmers Explains Pay Increase
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
The funds appropriated by the Kansas Legislature for a 5 per cent salary increase for unclassified employees at the university have been "skimmed" into other categories of spending within the University. Chancellor E. Chalmers Jr. said Thursday.
Chalmers prepared his manuscript in a meeting of the University and Faculty senates. Because of conflicts in the Chancellor's office, he resigned.
Calgaard, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and SenEx chairman, read the speech.
He said recent questions concerning the distribution of the
Chalmers emphasized that the proposed budget was only ten percent of the budget of Regents had approved it and it was still not known if the budget needed approval.
Olathe Sophomore Forms Proposals for Security
A series of suggestions concerning increased security at the University of Kansas has raised concerns about Warman, Olateb sophomore.
Warman, who became concerned about the increasing number of assaults and robberies in our community with the help of some friends.
"IT IS A FACT that when the legislature increases paid and unafforded salary increases at least $ per cent will be budgeted in this category."
Warman's suggestions include enlarging the campus police foot patrol by taking some of the officers and by instituting a mid-campus report station where victims of campus crimes could report the incident to a policeman or call it to the office, or a university office in Hoch Auditorium.
Warman also suggested that better lighting, a proven crime deterrent, be installed in some of the darker areas of campus and that campus police make sure about legal self-defense weapons.
Many people seem to expect a certain amount of crime in a community like this, Warman said.
"I don't feel that you can say that it is going to happen and let it go at that," he said.
The suggestions were given to Fred McElenbie, associate dean of men.
McElenian said, 'though Warman was acting as a private citizen, the proposals would be on to 'the appropriate people'.'
Pollution Study Wins Contest
The American Trial Lawyers Association presented an award Wednesday to Kristine Hall, Lawrence first-year law student, who was the KU winner of their case. The law professor's legal essay contest.
Hall said her essay examined the legal requirements for water pollution, with direct reference to the Industrial Water Pollution Act of 1971.
Campus Briefs
Palestine Program Tonight
Campaign Number Correction
The Organization of Arab Students is sponsoring a Palestine Day program at 7 onight in Dyce Auditorium. The program will include a panel discussion, poetry, slides, songs and a documentary film about the Palestinian Resistance Movement.
Alpha Chi Sigma Banquet
It was incorrectly reported in Thursday's Kanan that students interested in going to Omaha any weekend before May 9 to canvass for Sen. McGovern should be call 864-4089 or 864-4422. The numbers to call should be have call 864-4089 or 864-6854.
Veterans Forum at Forbes
Rep. Olm Teague, D-Tex, chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, will speak at a Veterans Legislative Forum at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 12, in Room 305 of the White House.
Ed Bruns, Leawood freshman and Campus Veterans president said Thursday his organization would provide buses to take approximately 200 veterans to the forum. The buses will leave at 7 p.m. from the Kansas Union.
Concert Sunday at Potter
5 per cent increase did not result because of the total budget for a particular category. Rather, they were the results of individual faculty members failing to receive 5 per cent increases next
SUA will support a free concert at Potter's Lake from 3.4 p.m. this sunday. There will be five different bands performing during the event, including Durie Marsh, Treefrog and Tarbaby, Dave Murfin, Wichita sophomore and SUA recreation chairman, said Thursday that the bands were being provided free of charge, compliment of the local musicians union. The event was scheduled during the scheduled times in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
Within the broad category of unclassified salaries, Chalmers said, funds could be used for only two purposes other than pay employees in those positions. These purposes were part-time student employment for undergraduates or graduate students working as teaching assistants and an assistant manager of new or vacated positions.
CHALMERS SAID planned alterations in student employment, and it usually leave more than the allowed 5 per cent available for other programs.
Although the proposed budget provided for salary increases for teaching assistants and assistant teachers, the increases was more than offset by a reduction in the number of instructors, the chancellor said.
*Upgrading new or existing positions may cut into the funds available for faculty salary increases.* Challers said.
THE STATE provided $10,500 for each new unclassified position. Calmers said, so if positions per person were received positions were to receive more than $10,500 next year, the added 5 percent of the 5 per cent legislative increase.
Chalmers said that to provide positions for three add-ons, he would teach them to teaching, he had to create three new positions at $10,500 each and up-grade them to position five. He also upgraded two new positions to create an Office of Instructional Resources, to create a new library for Women and to take over the Office of School Relations from the Endowment Association, as requested by the University Board.
POSITIONS CAN be downgraded as well as upgraded, and downgrading are accomplished in college; the funds available to the college
Dole . . .
Continued from page 1
Today, there is a treaty banning the use of nuclear weapons on the sea floor, a treaty banning the use of nuclear weapons on the sea floor, a treaty concerning Berlin.
He said, "This diplomatic climate is unprecedented in the postwar era."
With President Nixon's visit to China and upcoming visit to Russia, there was a new climate in the world. Dole said.
Dole said, "The leaders in Peking and Moscow know this war is ending."
After the speech Dole opened the floor to questions. One questioner asked about defense service with social expenditures
The international climate indicated that conclusion, he said.
DOLE SAID, "We're now spending more for social needs than defense."
A student read some Pentagon statuses indicating that Nixon had dropped more bombs and had gone up since he took office.
other schools within the University would not change.
Dole replied that preceding "naked aggression" by the North Vietnamese, bombing was down 90 per cent in Vietnam.
If funds for up-grading were located from the new appropriation, the salary increases for continuing faculty members would be
For the schools of Business,
Engineering, Pharmacy and
Architecture, Business and Sciences the net
cost of upgrading was zero,
Chalmers said. The schools of
Medicine, Education, Social Welfare
and Law and the KU libraries
received varying amounts for
He said, "As far as I'm concerned, the de-escalation is continuing."
The remainder of the gross allocation went for salary increases for continuing faculty at some schools this figure fell below the 5 per cent level, and in other schools increases exceeded the
THE GROSS AMOUNT allocated by the vice chancellor for academic affairs was further
reduced by the necessity of granting faculty promotions over a two-year period rather than a one-year period, Chalmers said.
Chalmers said the legislative allocation of 5 per cent "was used to upgrade positions, to recognize two years of faculty promotions and to provide for merit judgements of administrators charged with the responsibility of making these decisions."
By CATHY SHERMAN
Kansas Staff Writer
KU Students Plan Consumer's Board
Plans for a Lawrence consumer protection board are being developed by members of the State Law Services Committee, and interested University of Kansas law students, Kathy Allen, Topika sophomore and student vice-president, said Thursday.
Allen said the Consumer Protection Board Committee planned to organize the board after a trip to the first National Conference on Student Consumer in Manhattan, Kan. May 3-6.
The three-day conference involves workshops dealing with consumer protection and legal issues. She also said she would solve consumer problems, Allen said. She said the conference would also explain the procedures necessary to set up an online consumer protection board.
Allen said there would also be a series of speakers, including Betty Furness, a member of the Advisory Council to the Senate Subcommittee on Consumer Affairs, and Lance Burr, head of the government proceeding committee of the Kansas attorney general's office.
"From this conference we hope to get a solid base to work on," Allen said. "We will know what to expect, what consumer problems we will be encountering and how best we can solve solutions to these problems."
Allen also said, "hearing consumer protection and students from other schools will provide a valuable exchange of knowledge."
Alien said she hoped the
become involved in the consumer
protection board. She said the
board could be beneficial to the
company.
Allen said that following the conference, the Board Committee planned to extend membership of the board, establish goals and set a sensitive goal for the completion of the board.
Better Business Bureau. She said it was important to get input from Lawrence townspaces because problems belong to everyone."
PETER J. HOFFMAN
Communication Is Goal Of Schools, Businesses
Dr. Karl Menninger
The American Cancer Society has extended its cancer drive through May 1 in the Lawrence area, Bill Easton, associate education and chairman for the drive at the University said recently.
Dr. Karl Menninger, a founder of The Menniger Foundation and chairman of its board of directors, said he sponsored speaker May 8 at Woodruff Auditorium. His speech, "Whose Criminal Behavior?" will probably reflect his longtime interest in prison
Lawrence teachers and business men have been participating in activities this summer in the system's Career Education staff and the Education Subcommittee of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce in conjunction with business-industry Education Week.
According to Grace Wilson, member of the Career Education staff, teachers have been touring various businesses and factories to discuss work with students of the nonprofessional work world so
"People should know that it is not too late to give if they would like to," he said.
Donations to the cancer drive should be sent to Easton, 208 Robinson.
Karl Menninger to Speak May 8 on Prison Reform
Easton said that the amount of money collected this year was down 50 per cent as compared to last year's total.
Approximately 100 teachers, businessmen and KU students attended a group discussion and group dynamics session on Tuesday night to increase awareness of the importance of occupations.
Area businessmen, in a tour of the school system Thursday morning, viewed Career instructors and vocational programs.
The latest of the nine books he has written, "The Crime of
Cancer Society Extends Drive At University
they can inform students about possible occupations.
Wilson said that the week's program improved communications between businesses and schools.
Punishment," appeared in late 1988. In addition to his interests in prison reform, medicine and psychiatry, Menninger had an interest in music, archaeology, art, ecology and American Indians.
Menninger holds nine honorary degrees and holds five professorships in psychiatry at the University of Chicago, founder of many psychiatric institutions including: the Mennenger School of Psychology, the Temple Society, the Psycho Society, the Topela Psychanalytic Society, the Central Neuro Psychiatric Association and the Psychiatric Hospital Association.
1
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Toughest 4-letter word on wheels Jeep
843-8080
THE LOVE STORY
FROM DENMARK
8:00-12:00 Friday April 28
Freshman Class Party
RED DOG INN
RELATIONS
ID's Required — Adults Only
KARNAZE AMERICAN JEEP
No One Under 18!!
Weekdays: 2:30, 7:35, 9:30
Sat. & Sun: 3:00, 5:00, 7:35,
9:30
Varsity
— Timeline 9:34-9:45
1116 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas
See it now ... leaving town soon
See it now
The Godfather
**R** <--> Color On Technicolor A Paramount Picture
Mon thru Thurs
8:00 p.m. Only
Fri and Sat
3:30, 7:00, 10:10
- Tickets on sale for that days performances
- All ticket sales final
Sunday 3:30 & 8:00 p.m.
Hillcrest ALL SEAT $2.00
Winner 2 Academy Awards
Best Supporting Actress
Cloris Leachman
Best Supporting Actor
Ben Johnson
COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents
ABC丹尼斯电视
THE LAST PICTURE SHOW R
Alhazard
Hillcrest Set
Mon. Tue. 7:30 & 9:40
Fri. Sat. Sun
4:45; 7:30; 9:40
Hillcrest No. 2
Mon. Thur. 6:30-8:40
Tue. Wed. 7:45-9:15
3:45, 6:30, 8:40, 10:50
Sunday 3:45, 6:30, 8:40
THEATRE POLICY
THEATRE POLICY
- Ticket must be timely and accurate prior to that time and must be paid by the same time.
- All ticket sales are final.
- No ticket exchange. All seats
Just a person who protects children and other living things
BILLY JACK
TECHNICOLOR® Form Winter Suits.
A Always Latest Design. GP
CHARLTON
HESTON
THE
OMEGA MAN
Bonus Fri & Sat The McKenzie Break
Billy Jack—7:40
Omega—9:45
McKenzie—11:35
Sunset
BRIEF IN FIELD 4790. Mail us at Michigan 3268
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 49
See Our Selection of
DANIELLE SANDALS
X
The Heavy Look In Saddle Tan and Mahogany Brown $9.
The Village Look With a Toe Ring, Saddle Tan or Dark Brown $9.
The Heavy Look In a Thong $8.
McKenzie
shoes
813 Mass. St.
VJ 3-2091
10
A Bare Foot Thong In White, Navy, Black and Brown $6.
University Daily Kansan
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all members without regard to identity.
FOR SALE
Highest price paid for used cars. G.J.
Joe's Used Cars 601 Vermont. VI 2-
18
Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
2. If you don't.
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 411 West 14th. tf
2. If you don't, ___.
NORTHISLE COUNTRY SHOP 707
Bridge Antiques, used furniture,
collection items, old wood cooking and
furniture, antique fireplaces, sliding doors,
snowshoes, bicycles books, old phonographs,
carnival tickets, cameras, commodes, and thousands of other useful items, open up to 8 or 10 days. Here you can buy or rent anything.
Fridav. April 28. 1972
Michigan, St. Bar-B-Q, 351 Mc
St. Outdoor pit, bar-H-IQ "white"
chicken grill; small Slab or port rasp $1.50. Small
Slab or port rasp $1.50. Large Slab Rib-Pat $1.80.
Large Slab Rib-Pat $1.80. Small Slab Rib-Pat $1.80.
$1.80. Open 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Phone 842-951-6031 Sun-Tree
Pre Bucks **20** per basket in shows (about 18 minutes) — Rudy Gobert, Joey Baskett, Popelagos **PX-II** pitcher. **The Storm** **PX-III** pitcher. **Olympics** Falcon. **San Jose Rangers** Derek Jeter. **San Francisco Giants** Sam Hornsby. **Milwaukee Brewers** Mike Frazier. **Orlando Rockets** Mike Garcia. **New York Mets**
Ten-second bicycles. Fight Atala, Argentina.
10 S
LAW STUDENT DIGS WALKING
WILL SELL 67 V. W EXCELENTL
SHAPE INSECT & OUT CALL 842-
5637 AND MAME OFFER 5-12
STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can
pay for a stereo with cost plus 10% at BAY AUDIO - 832-269-5400.
Visit www.bayaudio.com to see the stereo Discount House in the area. Savings on Coffee & Consulting Services 5-9
Finally, it boasts of new Army issues as a shipwreck so heavy. We also have Army is issue ponchos. Sturniflower Surplus. 812
Vermont. 835-5000. 827
Five days
25 words or fewer: $1.75
each additional word: $.03
Yamaha 650 Street. 842-3871. 924
Schwarz Road. Evenings.
1965 Ford Mustang with air, good condition, $245, 823-3920, Robert Reilly and cartridge tape record, excellent new car cost, $400, Sel for $445, 823-3920, $400
$325 120 Watt-Fisher. Ampl. $86
$325 Reel-Heel Deck-Ampl. 755A.
$150 100 Turntable-Dual w car
bridge. 190 Call. Rick. 8025-1-5
H
1969 Yamaha 350 trail-street motorcycle Excellent condition Answering $450 or best offer 861-1144 5-1
1963 Ford—V-8, 4-door, overall good condition, must sell—First $200 offer takes it. Call 842-9738 5-18
Brand new Magnavox headphones regularly $29.95, now ½ price at Ray Stoneback's. 5-10
Magnavox remote speaker systems
reg $2.90 pr now 1/2 price at Ray
Stonehack's 3-1
Large farm house 15 minutes from
lawn mowing pool. upgrades can be
added to the house. rentals are
realtors fee $2,000 down, assume con-
struction cost of $7,000.
Box 324, Jayhawk Station 5-1
RCA, 100 watt amp. 3-way speaker.
RCA, 50 watt audio tuner, 1 year old. Sony earphones. 2 years old. Total cost $200. Excellent sound. Make an offer.
Two used tires—1-ply tyre 700-1300 miles, $15 pair or best offer Used G.E. portable鞋 good con-ductive best offer, 822-1862 5-1
ARC IHF Setter, purges Excelent blood-hunting—and show stock Size out of Furman Kennels, Tempel 842-170
5-1
Suzuki TS-90 good running condition $250. Also 1962 Dodge Dart 864-6348 or 864-2343
Brew 1970 CLY1063 Honda This is a good deal, $775 or best offer (of course) Call Steve after 5 p.m. 832-5418.
1962 Chevrolet Impala. Rebuilt engine in put over Spring Break 1982. Paint job in summer of 1972. Asking $235 Bux 842-791 before Sun. 4-28
Heathkit guitar speaker system. Black vinyl cabinet, mounted on black. 2 Vernon special design 12" speakers. 3 Vernon special design 0" only. $75 Randy at #84-8599
Honda—1972 CL 350, 550 miles, gold,
absolutely perfect. Must sell, 841-2772.
4-28
1967 Firebird. 282. 3-speed. Ampex
player and tapes included. Runs great
and looks good. 950 or best offer.
Call Kailr at 843-2970. 5-2
Special made Comm B-flat clarinet w/
extra mouthpiece (HS Double Star)
and barrel 845-824-6124
4-28
Cultating cows isn't free without jeans old clothes and all sorts here at Bokomken yesterday clothes at yeshiva 819 Vermont. Renting - 0-2-819
BSA Victor, 441 c.c., 1967, excellent cond. $550 firm. 843-0302 5-2
MUST SELL -PORSCHIE 1967 911;
maint condition with 911S suspension.
AM FM stereo. 8-tr. new steel radial
tires, 5-speed. Call 842-3166. 4-28
HELP! Want to go back to school.
Must sell $60. VW, runs beautifully.
New engine, tires & shocks 825-3588
a.a
1970 Volkswagen Squareback-red-black interior $1,400 Cheap! Call 842-7434 Ask for Richard 5-2
63 Volkswagen semi-camper, new transmission, good mechanical condition, no run time need (trease and brake repair). 4x2.5 4x2.5 4x2.5 T, J or K, model N43-2655.
Used Vacuum Cleaners, $9.95 and up
Hoover, Einethelu, Kureka, etc.
White Sewing Center, 916 Mass, 5-3
3-sped woman's bike for sale
Excellent condition. Call 842-9677-5
247
Stereo Component Sale. All units restored. Save on收件器, speakers, turntable. Buy a system and save money on White Sweating Center. 916 Mass.
Station Wagon, 1961. Humber, good body, tires, fireproof - engine has new needs, needs someone who can work on it to keep it going. Call 844-6223.
Beautiful little red Spice convertible,
1967, MRK-III Absolutely perfect engine-
eight excellent body, top, tom-
pan and leather. Peter Dewar, 842-5-30
844-391-99
Trupmet, king, excellent condition $140, call Bob, 864-6152 5-2
1971 Yamaha j155 e-c 155 MX motorcycle hicke. 21" front tire, chamber, overhauled. $445. Excellent shape. 843-847. Dana
1930 Matthews box 220x, compact rebuilt engine, red leather upholstery, wood dash and window frames, ape speed trans, new radial tires, 8 RZS
Used sewing machines Zig Zag and straight sewing Prices start at $1995. White Seewing Center, 916 Mass, 5-5
Crotch Tops—biggest selection, newest styles. The Attic, 927 Mass. 3-10
Tank Tops, all styles and colors of
The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 5-3
1966 Chevrolet 4 door white V8 engine,
67.270 actual mileage Call 5-8-
2217 at 6:00 p.m. everyday
Yellow Schwinn Variety 16-speed. bed-
carrier- $2,950 & Schwinn Sport Bed-
carrier- $2,950 & Schwinn Sport Bed-
carrier and saddle bag. Recently had
and reloaded, and revealed, brakes-
adjusted $800
Guitar—Guild 12-string 11; years old
Good condition—with hard shell case
$255. Call 433-3113 after 6:30 p.m. - 5:35
KANSAN WANT ADS
KAWASAKI 10 x 16sp. ect. 100 ect. Trail Blake, switches automatically from ESC to ESC. Need goes anywhere. Excellent shape. Need works with so many machines, so make an ebook. Ron. 843-6723.
British Vox Defiant Amp 2-12's, horn
MRB, TRB, Vibra, retrob, reverb, fuzz
Chassis, covers. Can't do better for
$390. 843-5106. 5-3
FREWORKS AT DISCOUNT! $15
FREWORKS WITH DANIEL BENNETT,
and Write for illustrated fireworks
brochure Complete line of fireworks.
N.C.K. FREWORKS, Millivoltage, Kansas
1946 Military Jeep, good condition
$795 Call (316) 431-9253 Joe Good-
yon, Charlie, Kamas. 5-1
1968 PORSCHE 912 TARGA Excellent condition. Make offer. Call Rick after 5:00 at 842-6254 5-3
Plan now for next year. Build equity in double-wide mobile home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, C.A., furnished. Carpeted. Call after 5:00 - 842-1037.
For Sale-1896 Ossa um-do-you 200c e.g. Great shape -urns perfectly. Call 443-773 or see at 1403 W. 7th next to Stables. 5-3
Peugeot—and six other brands in.
stock. Ride-On Bike Shop. 1401 Mass-
achusetts. 5-3
For Sale 1970 Suzuki T-125, excellent condition, very low mileage, must sell immediately. 842-5402. 5-3
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
1971 HODAKA 100 lce .perfect trail street bike or race Moto-X Goo shape, 1.100 miles $375.00 Call Steve. 842-6552 5-3
Sony 600s receives with case, year 2018.
Straighten Headphones—like new-1500
Headphones for iPhone/iPad—live
liver for approval. Writty Guitar
Friends Park, Kans. 62694 Phone 1-267-6547
65 VW Bus excellent condition, recently overheated. Must sell. Call 843-1919 or see at 1340 Tenn. 5-4
MG8-1968 15,000 miles on engine and clutch. Clean nets all around. New Sears battery and rear windows AM-FM. $1,500 62-9235 5-4
BRIDAL GOWN Sample Sale—Sizes 8-10, up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics Galerie Bridal. 910 Kentucky ca.
One day
1971 Fiat 850 Spider. w-radio, 3,000 actual miles. Call 842-2522 after 5 p.m.
e.x
25 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $.01
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
1970 Honda 550 CL, 1600 miles. $600.00
including helmet. Call J. Gelman at
432-1718
5-4
Stereo component system | Electra
Voice For Receiver @ w/ 2.0 way
connection | 1 amplifier
& 2 midranges | Allied record
changer Wax $250 | New $175
FOR RENT
Three days
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.21
line: 5.00 p.m. 2 days before publication
D tired to trying that first ideal apt.
Available 1, 2 & 3 btm apt, and
available 4 btm apt,
rangled throughout the city. **M**
McGraw Agency, 901 Kentucky, **82-**
275-8688, www.mcgraw.org
SUMMER HENTALS Live close to
campus this summer in a room,
house, or apartment. Economical
accommodations. 833-1001, 841-3223,
605-8701, 843-1001, 841-3223
COLLAGE HILMAN MONAR now show-
ing the 180mm, unfurnished and unfur-
nished quartz-tilted shades at $219 each to compa-
nies at $530. 174 W bw/ Ap 5B or call 815-352-3650.
When you learn, but you’re hot. When you
don’t, then you’re cold. UNIVERSITY
dismissed. “Dismissed” is a UNSWRE
MENTS. Enjoy your post & close with
UNIVERSITY. Applicant for 50% off.
9th Apr, 1329 W. 6th St. Phone:
855-477-4777 www.university.edu
LOOK WHAT SANTA APTS HAVE TO OFFER! SANTA tastes, swimming pool. A C Preezable-TV and free早餐-843-2118 5-9-843-2118
Larger, two bedrooms mobile home with carpet and air-conditioned, water closet, private bathroom, single person. Under $100. Phone Nights northeast 8:05-203 or Carol UNK 9:00-173
To KU male nite apt. close to Union.
May work out all or part of rent.
Available now, phone 845-8534. 5-9
GOW IS THE TIME TO RESERVE
ITF2, which is collection still available.
Its selection is still available.
82-2548 or 2017-A Harvard
Lawrence Hall building located;
lawyer's office built and heated.
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER. Rights reserved.
Two bedrooms 2 bathrooms and one row
One room 2 bathrooms and one row
One room 4 bedrooms and one row
One room 1 bedroom apartMENT
All apartments cloak and quilt with
All apartments cloth and quilt with
All apartments carpet and squared dining rooms. Call (877) 520-3959 between 8:30 am and 10:00 pm.
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Avalon, 9th & Avalon, Harvard,
Hampton, and Milton. Then compare the cost of living in one of those handheld apartments and you will be surprised to have a dishwasher, central Avalon, water utility patents, and more!
SUMMER RATE-New-leather furnished apartment, sleeping room with or without kitchen privileges for guests. Near KU and K-5 841-756-767
SPENDING THE SUMMER in LAW-HENNY. You can enjoy your summer in New York if you call 212-749-5088 or live in Living at Agathon Square, 11th & 12th Avenue, Apt. 306, Savannah Accoons, or Harvard School of Law. Bayville can be monitored and安心 at our surprisingly modern special location. At 212-749-5088 this summer a wonderful time to be.
Luxurious, spacious town house for summer. Three bedrooms, den baths, large kitchen, all alog carpet, central air, patio. Completely furnished. Call 618-250-4500.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS. New,
low summer rates. Both furnished
apartments. One 1 bedroom apartme-
ture and 1 + 2 bedrooms apartments
with air-conditioning, didwalawe,
kitchenette, laundry room, condo
and swimming pool. All utilities
are included. Call 813-542-079
day or night.
PLAZA MADON. Summer and fall. Two bedrooms and two bedroom furnished and unfurnished. Swimming pool, air-can. Driver rates. 240s. Murphy Drive. Summer.
Furnished apartments and rooms.
Good location and utilities paid.
Calls reduce for summer. Very rea-
tional. Calls 821-3640, after 4: 49,
823-5067
To need loan, old house, money $125 mo. Utilities paid except electricity. Comp by anytime, 903 Alla Augment, 2 people, 48 August.
Parts at a discount
Large 1 bedroom unfurnished apt on the south side of campus in nine acres. lg bed, bath, shower. Kit with refrig & electric utilities. paid $109,000. Highest rent.
JAROLD'S Diving Supplies
Renting for summer and fall; nice furnished rooms, kitchen privileges, near KU. Also 1-3 bedroom apts. 842-5007 after 4:00.
Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I. Equip. in Stock Certified
RIDGEHOUSE APTS. Summer rates for the budget minded! All the packages at best rates in town FFF & 2 bd. L116 to L134; $196,116 for 116 details or 403 Coddington.
1971 two-bedroom mobile home for rent for summer. Located at Mobil Airs South. Call 842-3215 4-28
Nice older home in old West Hills
with 2 bedrooms, 1 living room with fireplace, 3 bed-
room, 2 baths with showers, pizza
kitchen, kitchen with dishwasher,
Oven with stainless steel
bedroom with private outdoor en-
trance. Realty: 1406 Miles, Phi 845
1-800-555-1405
FOR SUBLASE, Large. 2-bedroom,
unfurnished apt near shopping center.
Air-conditioned. One can allow:
Cam. 842-542 after 3 or 5-
weeks.
Apartment for rent. Available May 15,
summer rates, air conditioning,
range, $85-85. Call 842-9153 after 6:
0:00 p.m. 19. W. IAckley 5:14
Lovely furnished apartment for 2 men, with central air, very close to campus; see to apperception—Available summer and autumn of 1-5. Phone 814-690-8141. Phone 814-690-8141.
Rent a luxury apartment for the summer at cheap summer rates. Three bedroom apt 150, didyair teacher, cashier 43-3710 after 1.30 p.m. -2
live us both a break! We need summer to recharge. Our new sophisticated open and a new philosophy in our apartment living. Large attractive poet residency space. Two portable movie room with the freedom to move more purposefully but line management of our spaces. 6th & 8th floor and an atmospheric loft. **6%** & **8%** of rent is free.
House Trailer (8x30) for summer,
A.C. $75 mo., plus utilities. Call 842-
6475 for appt.
4-28
2 apartments 16th & Tennessee. Call 841-2336 after 8 p.m. or before 8 a.m.
5-2
Available large 18m on one year lease,
large ranch style home, completely
furnished, all conveniences. Rent ne-
eded for $990 range. Fiat
843-0067
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS. 1 and 2
Bedrooms. One bedroom unfurnished, drapered, drapes. Kitchen. air-conditioning and heating. Bathroom. Toilet available. 1745 W. Phone 841-2634.
Sublease for summer 4-5 bed-house, air conditioner, carpet, garage, sera-furnished, acre from house. No. 792, 451-313. Landlord Sara
Sublease furnished 1st, one bedroom, kitchen, bathroom, a. Utilities pad. FeeLEX dates for summer. 14th and Manufacture. Call 842-744-5346.
Apt. for rent 3 spaces room 2 bedrooms,
first floor central air conditioning,
two bathrooms, ref. furnished.
Ref. and ref. furnished. Available
for $949. N2H, $10 per
VI 3-5001
AVAILABLE THIS SUMMER large one bedroom apt. furnished A.C. private, close to campus, $120, 1025 Indiana, 842-7510, 5-4
Available in May. One-room two-floor
apartment $71.70 me. 3-bedroom
unit $145. Both are furnished
with furnishings. near Y-2.
Bills Paid. B4-7830
3 bedroom, 2 story apartment 1 block from Union. Available immediately.
Call 845-4797 for details. 5-4
2 bedroom furnished apt. for sub-let.
$125.00 month. Call 842-7521 between
* and * p.m. 5-4
NOTICE
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Barn Partert's Now available at Barn Partert's 350 E. 76th St., Valpine Valley Farm on Lake Pepin Bay and cooler plenty of parking at Barn Partert's 1428 E. 76th St., Call Joe Bower after 6 p.m. at 583-693-7880.
Books, Bibles, Posters, Gifts, Framing
913 842 1553
WEDDING INVITATIONS - Prices are LOW.
Are you interested in $45. Send for free
catalog and samples to Arnden Agung
Riai, East Main, Restaurant, Island
8480
Excellent, low-cost hospital insurance (including pregnancy benefits) American Health & Life Insurance Co. Wells, B42-5220
711 West 212rd St.
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas 64044
T. REFERENCE
Women's Alterations. 20 years experience Call 843-2767, 9:30-5:30, 5-9
UBELEASE - 2 bdr, 2 bath, unfurnished Gatellone apartment. Fully furnished. Bathwater A-C-C Pool. Bathwater A-C-C Pool. Bathwater A-C-C Pool. Water mo. Water mo. Water mo. Water mo. Call 852-8156 - 3000
INFANT DAY-CARE CENTRE 842-7094. Professional care for children in 1 mo to 12 mo. Pull or part-time. Pls. Specially designed environment 2-3
GIRLS - WOMEN Are you the mind-set of a work woman? Do you experience. Work proficiency. Training available. Call Mr. Frank at 825-4362 or 841-2315. 2-800-6526 or 841-2315.
DAY CARE PLANS - From June 12 until school starts in the fall for age-appropriate education in a country where work is required. Transportation from Lowell availabie.
Just arrived - Western state in blue denim and chambray. Fun, funky functional, and cheap Earthshine, 12 E. 8th. 4-28
Norgentown Laundry and Dry Cleaning at the Mini-Pizza Modern and quick service. 1910 Huskell 842-5592
White Eyes Conect Friday, May 1 at the Armory. Tickets $12 at BONN #8 Vermont—Got some tickets? No way! TOMBOW ING a call. 843-466-3925. 2-5
FOR HIRE. Experienced technical
workforce in prenatal care envoying,
health services, prenatal care envoying,
part-time summer job involving工
业管理,商务与会计,EBA math Call 82-845-7690
JUST ARRIVED - Swim wear and tank tops. The Attic 927 Mass 5-3
JUST ARRIVED—SWIM WEAR AND TANK TOPS THE ALLEY SHOP, 843 Mass.
FOUND BORDER COLLIE PUFFIE
White with black ear, two black eyes,
black spot on side; barely paper
scale. Please call Hush or
843-1424
4-28
The Middle Ear is here. Middle Ear wants to save you money on the best stereo components made. Call 843-3834 for information and quotations. 516-709-2222
Wheelsport Motorcycle Club
Action Points aerate VIBTA recruits
to position them on May 31 in the Ur-
bania and Education Placements-May 4, Lil-
nac and MAP School Placement-May 5,
MAP School Placement-May 6,
MAP School Placement-May 7.
presents
Motorcross Races
April 30 $1.50
Bancroix Cross
April 26 $1.50
Will give adult registered German Shepherd to someone who will provide him a good permanent home. Call 844-2205. 5-4
April 30 $1.50
Races 12 Uces End 6 Ounce
Rain or Shine
Baldwin Mt-Cross Park
VISTA and Peace Corps are looking for candidates in architecture in design, city planning, and engineering to work with low-income group in U.S. colleges. Sign up in the Engineering Seal. Sign up in the Engineering Seal. Sign up in the Engineering Seal. Sign up in the Engineering Seal.
Strong May 3-5
2 White Gobbs, North East of U.S. 56-59 Jet, Baldwin, Kan.
Right Next to Campus
1237 OREAD
HERBS AND SPICES
MILK, EGGS, CHEESE
FINE SAUAGES
THE MERCANTILE
CALENDAR
CALL
UN4.4444
For SUA Events
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
*own drive* - Lawrence Optoptic Plating Club has Cresna 150, Cresna 132. Lowest rates to town, in building Platinum 812-124 or Plan-54 812-124
HELP WANTED
TEACHERS WANTED • Contact Southwest Teachers' Agency Box 413, Allenburg, N.M. 87916. *Offer* Bounded and a northeast NATA A
STUDENTS: Earn $400-600 per month in which WUST college be 21 years old. aggressive, willing to hear and take part in personal interview. 4-28
Unit leader for Girl Scout Camp,
Contact, Mrs. Owen C. Barries, 20 South 10th St., Kansas City, Kansas
68102
4-28
STUDENTS:
Summer jobs available
Garrell College, Granville, Pennsylvania.
Garrell College, Granville, Pennsylvania.
Olade Ida, Lake Levettown, Nebraska.
Patrick's dinner party, 2. MDT
Patrick's dinner party, 2. MDT
wage, 1. Easily to make $250 to
wage, 1. Easily to make $250 to
wage, Call 847-6499 after 6pm.
Cocktail waitress wanted for the Sanctuary. Must be an attractive person. Call for an interview 843-0540 or 842-3248
Working mother needs young couple or single with transportation to stay in the hospital. References: 843-8236 events; 5-5 Sabatini needed Demonstrate skin care techniques for oral communication through your facial Hairline at 1-422-6389 for information 2-5
The Curriculum and Instruction Supervise the programs for receiving applications from prospective students who are his or her own institution. Requires someone who is his or her own institution, and has an undergraduate degree and two honors cumulative awards, and has some experience in quality assurance and communication problems. Requires a commitment to work closely with the institution will work closely with the curriculum center. The Printing Services Center, which provides printing, design, and representatives. From the graduate center in a graduate center or a senior center. A full term of one or two years. Full time position in the academic year. The person must have paid in-service training培训 period.
OVERSEAS JOBS, FOR STUDENTS,
All Professors and occupations,
All Professional and occupational
overviews, slightestty. Free information.
Job ID: 1507, May 15, 2007, San Diego, CA
92118.
WANTED
Rose
KAROONS CARE
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR. This position familiar with educational statistics and management of the occupational suitability. He or she will be responsible for operation and management of the well under the pressure of deadlines during work in the academic year that he or she has been assigned to AND GRAPHICS SUPERVISOR. This position has some commercial art training and experience with the problems and needs of a teacher. He may be required to help FEEDBACK THE GUIDE TO MY COURSES and other documents necessary for full time position this summer and year. Please apply at the Curriculum Center located directly behind the School of Reception.
Male Graduate Student needs Male or
Female to share house. Owner room.
Summer and or fall Male capitalist
applicants $20 + utilities 85-4
462 462
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
hunt-ups
starting service
Webster's Mobile Homes
OPEN NIGHTS
Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts
3409 W. 6th 842-7700
- Guitars
- Recorders
- Music
- Strings
- Accessories
Drive-In Theatre
Carol Lee
Female associate for summer needed
to share 1 bedrooms furnished贴
in Midnowbrook West. Call #42-8667
5-1
Museum of Art and History
WE SERVICE
WHAT WE SELL
716 North 2nd
ERN'S CYCLE SALES
WHY RENT?
⚙️
Three male tourmates for apartment next fall. Phone 842-7770 and ask for Clyde if interested. 4-28
Female roommate for summer...
share two-bedroom, air-conditioned
apartment near campus. Call 804-1580
Liberated Female to share modern life.
Higher NJ student is bored with traditional living in NYC. Private room for female students for summer and, for full, $425,860.
3 girls looking for a fourth roommate for fall for furnished Jayhawk Tower Towers apartment Call Leslie or Marcel, 842-8561. 5-2
30 Varieties of Donuts Hot and Cold Drinks Sandwiches
EAGLE
Roommates to share large furnished
house for summer. Must see to appriciate.
3 blocks from campus, own
phone. Call 842-5755. 5-11
TYPING
We buy used books, also old Play-
boy and Pent-Heart magazines in
good condition!! Call 842-0216 5-8
Red Baron
Resemble to share 2-bedroom modern apartment. One off campus, on the first floor. Dentent mature undergrown. Rent reasonable. #434-6694 or UN #431-7187 Leaflet.
Nevad Immediately! 4 to 8 men for
tour group K1. Visit K2 or K3,
professor KU Student or person
willing to live on premises. Full or
part-time Contract 824-444. (link)
Mass-The Malls
2 guys to have large furnished 3-bedroom house for summer. Eddie dwalwader, 5 min walk to campain house for $30. Dave. B4-6519
Competition
CSC TOYOTA THUMPH
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
WIL
PLANNING A TRIP??
Typing in my home, IBM Selectric.
Prompt accurate work. Experienced.
Call 841-2556. 5-9
Maupintour travel service
Experienced in typing these, dissertations term papers, other mis-type papers and academic type. Accurate and prompt type. Accepted by telephone or electronically. Phone 813-6544, Mrs.Wright.
Order Your Eurailpasses Early at Our Union Office!
TWIPING . THESE . DISSERTATIONS . MISCELLANEOUS WORKS - On. Selective with pica type Typem Troel, Troull 2000 Bodge Type 82-1446.
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-288) Mrs.ruckman.
These, term papers, type accurately and promptly. IBM Selector, your choice of type styles. Also editing at other schools. Ralea, 842-607-9751, 842-605-9603, 842-605-9603.
Phone 843-1211
842-2323
days per week
Open 24 hrs. per day
necessary new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments needed. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges
COIN
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
Mours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 10, Sat. till noon.
DRIVE.IN
AND COOP OP
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
Typing on elite electric typewriter.
No theses please. Prompt attention:
843-0958. 5-9
Fast, accurate typing by experienced typist. Reasonable rates; call 842-2053 5-1
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
Independent
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
FAST. EFFICIENT WORK. Carbon ribbon used—looks like printing. 12 carriage for legal paper, will check with printer and grammar. Call 543-4734.
PERSONAL
MISCELLANEOUS
4 small 4 inch old male pup. Snap, hair-shallack on top, brown legs and belts. 2 brown rings around eyes. Answers to Monkey叫: K482-503-520
Experienced typist will type your academic writings. Prompt, reasonable rates. Call please 842-7934. 5-4
6 proof sittings $5.00
$ REWARD $ to antique, bakee
purse and or contents. Phil 10 book,
checkbook, no questions! 842-5496
Ask for Ann. 5-2
FOUND
te Cool this Summer with Tank Taps and New Swim Wear from the Alley Shop. 843 Mass. 5-3
LOST
around eyes and black spot on back.
Lot St. April 22 upfront 8 & 9th &
Call: 414-817 or telephone by 917
615-203-3400
Small blonde female dog with shaggy
hair Wanded from 21 Vernon Street,
Florida. 21 Wearing a red colllar. She
pleasures at 83-675-9000. Please
Please call 83-675-9000. We love her =
2-543-733-0200
Teachers—What will you do when you graduate? VISTA and Peace Corps are looking for dedicated teacher candidates. May 3, 2019 MAY 3, 2019 MAY 3-5, 2019
WHITE EYES IS COMING. Get your tickets at Bokomco. New shipment 12-5pm. Do this week—book it, out-of-print this week—Bokomco. 12 Vermont. 5-2
Golden Retriever, female, thick brown color, answers to Downa $50 reward. From 8-6, Call 821-219; ask for Rose. After 6 call 842-6867. 5-3
Lost in or in vicinity of Kansas Union—large key ring with five keys. Five dollar reward. Call 842-8732. 5-2
4 proof sittings $3.00
International Employment
Please call for your appointment for SENIOR PICTURE
Found: Dark brown, short haired dog.
About 30 Ibs. Has white chest. Female.
Call 864-6413 5-1
Swim wear—all the latest styles, colors, and different sizes. The Alley Shop, 843 Mass. 5-3
Box 9140
Berkeley, Calif. 94709
TRAVELING? STAY OVERNIGHT
TREAKING? Stuck at home? Meet tra-
veling people. Exchange privileges
with members in U.S. and J.P.
countries.
Tank Tops, Best Selection. The Attic,
927 Mass 5-3
Write: University Travelers Club
Special Senior Rates on all orders.
Hixon Studio
NTERNATIONAL JOB!
Victoria of 6th & Maine, Small mmape puppy. Long hair, white, with tan spots, one over eye No collar. Please call 842-2657 617 Matthew. Reward $-2.
摄影
SENIORS
Europe, South America, Asia, Australia, U.S. Opening in all fields—Sciences, Business, Sciences, Engineering, Education. Email: bjoseph.mccarthy@univr.edu; weekday, weekly SEM or permanent. Paid expenses, bonuses, travel. Complete current information on our website and back guards. Contact info: www.univr.edu/write-yet!!
Peahody, Mass. 01960 (Not an employment agency)
Ph. 843-0330
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSA
Finest Eating Place
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu Shrimp, to K. C.Teas. Shrimp, to K. C.Tea.
Our motto is and has always been There is no substitute for quality
11 W. 9th
50¢ OFF any two handed sandwich with the purchase at regular price. You may buy one for $10 or double it for $20.
recurring -Roast Beef, BBQ Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef,
Grizzled Cheese, and the Ruben
Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon-Sat Sun 12 to 8 p.m.
Offer Expires April 30
843
8500
★★★★★★★★★★★
DISCOUNT
The Stereo Store
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
UDIOTRONICS
12
Friday, April 28, 1972
University Daily Kansan
JEWELZIKU
TRANSPORTATION TO TOPEKA SUPPLIED BY CAMPUS VETERANS BY CALLING 864-4478
★ VIETNAM ERA VETERANS
★
THOSE WHO SERVED IN 'NAM, KOREA, EUROPE,
TURKEY STATESIDE & ALL THOSE OTHER PLACES)
LET'S SPEAK FOR OURSELVES
$
$ GI BILL BENEFITS TO BE INCREASED
VETERANS
$
At the invitation of Congressman BILL ROY
CONGRESSMAN "TIGER"TEAGUE
Chairman of the U.S. House Veterans Affairs Committee THE MAN WHO SHARES VIRTUALLY ALL LEGISLATION FOR VETERANS . . . TELL HIM LIKE IT IS !!
TONIGHT 8 p.m. FORBES AIR FORCE BASE SERVICE CLUB VETERANS LEGISLATIVE FORUM With Question & Answer Period
TO BE DISCUSSED AT FORUM:
1. A maximum of $1,000 for the customary cost of tuition, books, and laboratory to be paid directly to the veteran before enrollment or to be paid directly to the educational or training institution on behalf of the veteran.
2. An increase in educational entitlement from the present 36 mos. to 48 mos. Additionally, those enrolled in a graduate school, law school, or medical school have their entitlement such a time as their pursuit of such a degree is completed.
3. Immediate receipt of educational assistance checks as soon as an application for benefits coupled with certification of enrollment is received by the Veterans Administration.
4. An increase of at least 20 per cent in the monthly stipend for educational assistance for the single veteran with a corresponding sliding scale increase for married veterans and for those with dependents.
5. Reinstatement of a government administered life insurance policy (NSLI) for the Vietnam Era Veteran. Therefore, support for Senate Bill 2825 by Sen. Pearson of Kansas.
6. Full-time tutorial assistance programs for Vietnam Era Veterans attending institutions of higher education. Wherever possible employing qualified teachers and those assistants that are vets to tutor his fellow veteran.
7. increased availability of federally insured loans for education of veterans.
8. A full time veterans counselor and advisory available to veterans at institutions of higher education employing Vietnam Era Vets.
9. Job placement preference given and enforced for the Vietnam Era Veteran to include those government agencies designed to aid the Vietnam Era Veteran.
10. Women veterans, who are married, be allowed to claim their husbands as dependents when receiving the G.I. Bill benefits.
SPONSORED BY CAMPUS VETERANS