BLAZING THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 82nd Year, No.1 Welcome Back The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Monday, June 5, 1972 Cambodians Cast Votes In Election PHNM PENH (AP)-Cambodians in communities not held by enemy troops balloted for their first elected president in the 2015 election, crowded, but the turnout seemed light. Cambodia's present leader, Marshal Lon Nol, has been given an overwhelming chance for victory, but the results will be several days in coming. It may be a week or more before the official announcement of the victor is made. Others in the race were In Tam, former president of the National Assembly, and Keo An, dean of the law school at Phnom Penh University. In Tarn charged the Lon Nol regime with drawing up electoral lists on which names were chosen. "People have come to complain to me that they were on the last dayster but are now off." A random check of a half dozen voting points indicated that less than a third of citizens registered on the lists held by polling officers had cast ballots. Other wouldbe voters crowded around ballot boxes searching for their names on the lists. In contrast to urban polling stations, where one polling officer revealed that only 84 of 600 persons named on his list had served in the war was by platoons at military camps. The voting had to be cancelled near the district town of Saang because of heavy fighting all day where the Cambodian high command said the battle continued throughout the day and only ceased an hour after the polling ended. CARL J. KENNEDY Kensan Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG Computers Await Information Tape programming KU for the Computer Era . . Jury Out 13 Hours THE 28-YEAR-OLD Miss Davis, a Communist party member and former UCLA philosophy teacher, had for nearly two years faced charges that she plotted a 1970 Marin County courthouse escape in which four died. She had spent 16 months awaiting trial, but was freed on bail before the case went to court Feb. 28. She was not present at the scene of the SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)—An all-white jury found black militant Angela Davis innocent Sunday of murder-kidnap conspiracy charges and was given an ovation of cheers and applause in the courtroom. Angela Davis Freed By Jury's Acquittal Miss Davis burst into tears, hugged her long-time friend Kendra Alexander, seated next to her, then went into the spectator section and threw her arms toward Davis. The tail, slender defendant embraced her father, brothers and sister. "Power to the people" Power to the jury!" shouted defense attorney Howard Moore Jr., as jurors were led past Mary Davis' cheering supporters in the courtroom after the announcement of their verdict. The jury was debarred of deliberation in the 13-week-journial trial Two jurrons, a 22-year-old woman and a o-year-old man, wiped tears from their eyes. crime and maintained throughout that she was "totally innocent." "The defendant will be discharged," announced Superior Court Judge Richard Campbell. The judge praised all participants and said that as a result of this trial, “all of us who walk the streets of our society can hold our heads higher than before... You have conducted yourselves admirably.” DEFENSE ATTORNEY Leo A. Brandon, saying he spoke for the prosecution and defense, praised Arnison for "the even-banded manner in which you have handled this trial." He called Arnison's credit to the judiciary and the country. Miss Davis, still tearful with joy, told reporters, "this is the happiest day of my year." Asked if she thought she had got a fair trial, she said, "the very fact of an acquittal means that there was no fair trial and the fair trial would have been no trial at all." Of her future plans, Miss Davis said she probably would remain in California "I guess we're going to celebrate some, and steel ourselves for the struggle. We can begin to give all I have to three political prisoners and oppressed people," she said. Subtle Computer Revolution Grows at KU Editor's Note: This is the first of a two-part series on computers and their effects at KU. By SCOTT SPREIER Kansan Staff Writer There is a quiet revolution going on at the University of Kansas. It is a revolution that involves cybernetics, information systems, memory banks and third generation computers. It is a computer revolution. It's not a dramatic revolution, but rather a very subtle one that began in the 1950s when KU obtained its first computer system. However the revolution has grown quickly and today involves the students, faculty and administration of KU. One goal of the system is the simplification of administrative transactions, for the benefit of both students and faculty. Hitt said that this might "permit people to Today every student at KU is related to the Honeywell 635 computer on the first floor of Summerfield Hall. They are part of KUIS—the KU Information System. support to the University. He said KUIS was simply an organized attempt to use the present computer most effectively in support of those activities. JAMES K. HITT, director of systems development at KU, said recently that KUIS was fundamentally devoted to providing institutional and student service KUIS began its first stage of operation in fall, 1971, when it incorporated student registration into its system. For the first time, students could obtain data sheets instead of the older cards. Tuition Due June 14 To Avoid Penalty Fee Payment of fees for the summer session is due on or before Wednesday, June 14. Enrollment is not complete until fees have been paid in full. An itemized fee statement and directions for payment will be mailed this week to each student at the address he gave during registration. Any student who does not follow this statement by June 9 should obtain a copy of the Registrar's office, 123 Strong Hall. Students on scholarship may complete payment of fees by presenting their fee cards and verification that their fees will be paid. Students at the Office, 36 Carrubh-O'Leary Hall. and June 20 a $10 penalty fee will be charged. This fee will rise to $25 during the summer season. Penalty fees for late payments will be assessed after June 14. Between June 14 After July 5 payment of fees will no longer be permitted. Refunds must be requested at the Registrar's Office. Full refunds will be given for withdrawal from the University or courses dropped on or before June 14. From June 14 to June 23 half refunds may be requested. No refund of fees will be given for courses dropped after June 23. Students who withdraw from the University for military service may be eligible for partial refund and partial credit. They should contact the registrar. About 1% Use Withdrawal Option To Protest War During Finals By MARTHA NORDYKE Kansan Staff Writer He said 186 students withdrew from classes during the exam period out of 17,630 students enrolled in classes. One student withdrew from three classes, six withdrew from two and 179 withdrew from one class. John Conard, director of university relations and development, said about one per cent of KU's students used the option of withdrawal from classes during final week to formally protest and show opposition to the war in Indochina. Of 88, 150 classes, 194 were affected, Conard reported. Totals showed that 99.78 per cent of the classes were finished without the use of the withdrawal options. The proposal allowed a student to withdraw passing from a course that he was passing on the last day of classes. The withdrawal period was extended from the last day of classes to the time designated for each final exam. A student exercising the option received nor credit and no grade in the course. The University Senate passed a proposal on May 10 in response to demands made by antiwar protestors then occupying Strong Hall. OTHER EVENTS of May 10 included the continuation of the occupation of Strong which had begun Thursday afternoon in Allen Field House to discuss the war, in Allen Field House to discuss the war, in Indochina. David Dillon, Hutchinson senior and president of the student body, announced that the student executive committee voted money to send two students to Washington, D.C., to speak to congressional delegation about the war. ON MAY 27, 27 arrests resulted from the late night and early morning four-mile march around campus. Kansas Atten. Gyn. Vern Miller arrived and let two charges into crowds blocking streets after he and the other groups to disperse. Capt. Merle McCurray, the aeward Police Dept. and Col. William Tendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol, turned in low key performances during the demonstrations. Chancellor E. Laurence On May 11, 11 persons were arrested by Lawrence police and Kansas Highway Patrolnet for refusing to comply with a lawful order of a police officer in connection with marches through the campus and into downtown Lawrence. The only violence from either side during the demonstrations occurred when a small splinter group of protesters, accompanied by high-school age persons, damaged and stabbed $500 worth of property in the Military School Station. The protestors moved to vacate Strong Harms and moved to downtown Lawrence, where they focused their attention on the Douglas County Selective Office and the military recruiting stations. Chailmers Jr. praised them for preventing any violent disruptions between the an- gels and the police. MILER SAID he went to Lawrence MAY 11 while anti-war demonstrations were taking place and found "a reluctance on the part of everyone to take action to meet what I considered to be threatening violence." Chalmer called Miller's remarks "unjustified criticisms of the law in Kansas Highway Patrol) law enforcement officials' performances" and added that the comments were "unfair and injurious." Chalmers charged Miller with "undermining three days and nights of superb law enforcement efforts" by local authorities in Lawrence. According to Chalmers, Miller was not called into the court as a responsible officials here felt his coming as an inflammatory effect on groups which had assembled for the demonstrations. Local law enforcement officials, on the other hand, commended protesters for their generally responsible attitude during the marches. Leaders of the protest declared a temporary end to the Nairobi session at May 13, 2015, from the front of the main hall. As the second week of final exams neared an end, the KU Coordination department of the antwar movement here can claim a construed construction efforts to end the war. focus on the main reason they came here, which is to get an education." For example, he said, this would take some of the problems out of enrollment and permit students to concentrate on the subjects they courses rather than standing in line. Hitt appeared sold on the system, although he admitted that the initial cost was high. Transitional simplicity should at least equal, if not reduce, costs, he said, and thus leave more money for faculty and books. "WE'RE NOT interested in running a cheap university," Hitt said, "we are interested in putting the money where it belongs." Hitt said another important purpose of the system was to provide a readily accessible source of management information for managers at all levels of the organization. It would also computer, and decisions could be made by consulting the computer for information. Management information, according to Hitt, is information that would help a manager make correct decisions. The information would enable him to make more refined decisions than if he depended upon luck or tradition. Hitt admitted that at the present time University management information was "We're trying to rig this computer so you will remember what it did in case anything happens." "If that silly box can just remember and tell you when you ask, then as time goes on, you're probably going to develop your skills and be able to manage your management information needs. THE COMPUTER really doesn't have all that much to do with it. It is really hard to keep up with new technology. The next stage of KUIS to be implemented will be a payroll and budget system, which will begin July 1. Hitt said most of the payroll information, which is stored in a series of lapes and punch cards, would be incorporated into a large disc file. The new system will permit a better analysis of where University money is being spent, Hitt said. Presently 75 per cent of the funds are by the University is allocated for wages. There has been talk, especially in Topeka, about starting a network of computers for state institutions. Hitt said. There are drawbacks to be considered. Such a network could possibly have a leveling effect on state schools, making all institutions alike. Hitt said. Taxpayers could save money under such a system, but in the process some schools would improve while others went downwell. ANOTHER PROBLEM is that each soul has its own system of doing things, so it "I can show you schools that have a lot better enrollment system than we have," Hitt said. "I'm not sure whether their teaching in the classrooms is as good as ours because they spend so damn much money making a nice enrollment system." KUIS is still in a very early stage of development. According to Hitt, by July the system will be only one-twentieth complete. It could take five or 10 years to complete the program. Although everyone at KU seems to be linked to computers in some way, the computer science department, which is in its fourth year at KU, remains fairly small. A number of students are enrolled in the master's program this summer, but the department offers no undergraduate degree. Floyd R. Horowitz, acting chairman of the department, said recently that the future of an undergraduate program at Texas Tech would take additional faculty and See COMPUTER, page 5 SHE SAID that her personal safety may be a problem in her future travels and朋遇. "Over the last week or so, we've heard of numerous threats that have come in," she said. "But I'm not going to allow that to occur. I'm going to active in the liberation struggle." Atty. Atty. Gen. Albert Harris Jr., who prosecuted Miss Davis, declined comment and left the courthouse. he did not ask for a hearing. The jurors after the verdict was announced. Brandon called the prosecution case "weak" and criticized the state for 1976 Angela Davis keeping Davis davis jail for 16 months "when they had no case against her." THE DEFENSE and Miss Davis' supporters apparently had hints in advance that the verdict would be acquittal. Grimming and jubilant, they gathered in the courthouse corridor beforehand, clapping hands and singing a spiritual with the words "We've got our minds set on freedom. Halluelaigh!" He said he still considered the case 'a frame-up that resulted because Miss Dillard was a black woman.' Miss Davis, in a blue mini-skirt and bright print blouse, joined in the singing. See ANGELA, page 7 ADMISSIONS Room 10 Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTEI Students Wait in Enrollment Line-up Summer school enrollment began Friday in Allen Field House in alphabetical order. Although lasting only one day, the process of getting into classes was a familiar one of long lines and long faces. Monday, June 5, 1972 University Summer Kansan U.S. Jets Bomb Haiphong SAIGON (AP)—American warplanes that dropped video and laser guided bombs left a major fuel distribution station on the outskirts of Haiphong in flames and wrecked over a rail line linking Hanel with China, U.S. spokesmen announced Sunday. North Vietnam claimed that one American plane was shot down in the raids near the Chinese border, but there were no immediate reports of any losses over the North by the U.S. Command. The command reported, however that a U.S. Marine F4 known unknow causes on a mission in support of South Vietnamese troops enforced by Communist Phu My On the central coast of South Vietnam. The two crewmen were killed, the com- THE NORTH Vietnamese Foreign Ministry issued a statement charging that U.S. There was no comment from the U.S. Command on the North Vietnamese charges. Air Force F4 Phantoms using air Force aircraft attacked bombs attached the keel of a railroad line midway between Hanoi and China, a source of the attack. aircraft "continued to mine and blockade" North Vietnamese ports and "savagely" bombed the port and other areas Saturday The raids against the Haiphong petroleum pumping station and warehouse among more than 250 tactical air strikes carried out by Air Force, Navy and Marine jets across Nakhon Si Ayutthaya in a hand in Saigon said 16 bridges, 59 surface craft and 38 supply buildings were destroyed or burned. THE AIM of the U.S. bombing campaign ordered by President Nixon is to destroy installations of Iranian nuclear weapons in enemy offensive in South Vietn Japanese Offer Apology to Israel asked officially Sunday for Israeli forgiveness for last week's massacre at Tel Aviv airport by three Japanese teenagers who expressed sympathy to the victims. Kenji Pukunaga, a special envoy sent to Tokyo, conveyed Japan's apologies to Mr. Mia in their Meir in a 45 minute meeting. The gunmen killed 24 persons and wounded 70. "My government is ready to do all it can to help the victims of the attack. Mr. Meir also gave her a letter asking for forgiveness. Sato expresses his condolences." Fukunaga said the Israeli premier responded "with gratitude for our prompt reaction." Two of the Japanese terrorists, the Marxist Popular Front for Israel and the Poplar front for Palestine, died in the airport attack Tuesday, and the third was Fukunaga told a news conference that Japan would also donate money for humanitarian aid and compensation for the killings. The Japanese government, Fukunaga added, is not planning to ask Israel to extradite the surviving terrorist. Kozo Okamoto, 24, who still is being informed by Israeli investigators. payments would be made to survivors and relatives "of this terrible deed." South Vietnamese military spokesman in Pleiku announced that the southeast sector of one of the fighting zones be "completely cleared" of North Vietnamese forces and 100 enemy troops had been killed without a single government casualty and without any air or ground attacks. The police appear suspect since only 18 weapons were captured reported. Japanese sources said the captive gunman refused to talk to Japanese officials. He refused to say what cash nam and to wreck the supply and transportation network over which war materials flow southward to sustain the offensive. They said Okamoto is guarded around the clock by Israelis. He was "very relaxed" with his cantors, they added. **exports from Tokyo said the weapons gunman's father wants its son killed in death. Israel law has no death penalty except for Nazi mass killings.** Foreign Minister Abba Eban the Foreign Minister should give Lebanon an ultimatum, to choose between the upriver or the guerrilla organizations. Overcast skies cut heavily into U.S. air strikes across South Vietnam, cutting them to fewer than 200 firefighters and many more during clear weather. town of Phu My on the central coast in Binh Dinh Province. Eban, commenting on the airport massacre before leaving for Stockholm, said, "Lebanon is responsible for the activities of those who have all over the world because their headquarters are in Beirut." Fighting continued for the 11th day in the central highlandias provincial capital of Kontum and for the third day at the district Jurors Emotional After Davis Trial SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)—Members of the Angela Davis trial jury, some in tears, accepted hugs, kisses and thanks Sunday from Mrs. Davis in her emotional post-trial meeting. Encircled by a security guard of 20 men and women who linked up with the student Miss Davis was happily pushed and showed to an area near her house. The seven women and rive men who acquired Miss Davis of murder · kidnap · conspiracy charges met her for the first time out of the courtroom as they attended a news conference in the courthouse. SOME HUGGED her; others embraced her mother. One man told her, "Good luck in your endeavors." An elderly woman juror told defense attorney Howard Moore Jr., "God bless you." Before Miss Davis spoke, one of her attorneys, Lee A. Branton, told the crowd simply, "I have been speaking for the last 10 years." Lawyers in lawyers this day belongs to Angela Davis and the people." The woman who was named foreman, Mary Timothy, spoke for the panel, saying they thought Superior Court Judge Richard E. Arnison was "fantastic" and she declined to reveal how many ballots jurors had to take before reaching their verdict. East Berlin Interprets Access Treaty Strictly BERLIN (AP)—The Berlin agreement easing access to West Berlin and making it possible for West Berliners to visit the East took effect Sunday. But snarls developed almost immediately, and East Germany began building a new stretch of The Wall. The detailed accords worked out by East and West Germany in 1953, and they accounted for 2.2 million people while the East German population of 17 million was reduced to 4 million. The agreement became effective 12 hours after the United States, Britain, France and the United Kingdom, designated a final Berlin protocol here. West Berliners can now apply for up to 30 visiting days a year in East Berlin or East Germany. However, East German officials manning the two pass offices Sunday refused to issue wall passes except in hardship cases. Transit traffic restrictions were also eased under the agreement, but the East German government maintained the right to turn back, search or redirect anyone for whatever reason they chose. The number of changesovers was the speedy exchange of bits of territory, giving West Berlin enclaves inside East Germany for the first time. The village of Steinstuecken previously was isolated from the village of Steinstuecken away. Its 200 inhabitants used a special road controlled by East German guards. All Americans and foreigners fly to the office by helicopter. Peace Force Threatens IRA INSIDE FREE DERRY, Northern Ireland (AP)—A new force of guerrilla gunmen patrolled the streets here Sunday. They may be a force for peace, a challenge to the nationalists of the Irish Republican Army's Provisional Wing. Under the agreement, Stein- stuecken will have a road of its own which will not be controlled by East Germany. The gunmen appeared at checkpoints in the Creggan zone of Free Derry, the Roman Catholic area of Northern Ireland, the largest city, dominated by the guns of the Provisionals. Sources close to the women's peace movement that in the past supported women with power base said they believed the new force would come to the aid of the peace demonstrators if they were threatened by the Provisional. The "ex-servicemen," as the newly emerged gummen are called by residents of this ghetto, are said to be organized by Lordondery frishman who were loose members of the British army. This new outfit appeared as Martin McGuinness, commander of the IRA guerrilla force that claims to rule Free Derry, said in a statement the intention of calling a cease-fire. Over the past two weeks a large body of Christians in the ghetto, by virtue of their religion and afraid of a violent Protestant backlash, have called on the IRA to arrest them. The Marxist Official wing last week bowed to the appeal but the Provisional maintain that their bombing and shooting must go SALE of SPRING Sportswear & Dresses STARTS NOW! - Dresses Reduced 30% - Discontinued Nitewear Reduced 40% - Knit Tops—Reduced 40 & 50% •One Group Pants—Reduced 40% O...C...Horts—Reduced 40% - Shrinks Now $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price We Offer Mastercharge and Bankamericard Jay SHOPPE FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 835. 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(913) 842-2047 Write, Call or Stop In—You'll See Ray Audio's Stereo Warehouse 1205 Prairie Avenue, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Use Kansan Classifieds We're really strong on the classic looks . . . many of today's best clothing ideas are an evolution of the great looks of the 20's and 30's. In our shop, we are specialists in choosing the best of the old and the new and blending them perfectly and tastefully for you. Stop in . . . The Town Shop 839 Massachusetts St. Downtown The Men's Shop University Summer Kansan Monday, June 5.1972 2 A (1) $ \frac { 1 } { 2 } x - 1 > 3 - \frac { 3 } { 2 } x $ Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED Counselors Greet Girl Staters 440 girls study the government this week . . . Boys State Attended By 1036 Kansans The American Legion, The State program was held on the KU campus last week. There were 1036 delegates from throughout the state who engaged in learning of "learning by doing" politics. The purpose of Floyd State, state according to Floyd Leopard, state according to the American Legion, is to teach city and County and state government officials. "It is what we call a learning by doing process," said Boynton, the boys' State for a week and they run it just like a real state would be. The boys attending Boys State are divided into nine counties with four cities in each county. They then have elections for city, district and offices between the Federal and the Nationalist parties, he said. The elections are run just as real elections are run. There is a filing fee, primaries and finally the regular election. The week is centered around teaching and learning about politics, but there is other competition in the area; there is competition for the best city and best county of the day. On the final day of the week there are awards for the best city, and achievement for the week. One on evening of the week the state officers of Kansas visit Boys State to take to the boys who have been selected by the mock elections. Among those who spoke this year were Karen Kowalski, hiking and Atly Gen. Vern Miller. Approximately 440 citizens of Saskatchewan welcomed to the University of Kansas campus Sunday evening by Chancellor E. Laurent 440 Girls Staters Arrive The two boys who will attend Boys Nation in Washington are Greg Hack of Lawrence and Mike Leopka of Topeka. The delegates who have completed their junior year in Kansas high schools, were selected by local American Legion Anxiilies on the basis of citizenship and leadership. They will spend the week of June 4 to 11 in a practical study of government. "It is actually government in action," said Mrs. Doris Seymour, director of Sunflower Girls State. During the week, the delegates will campaign and elect city, county and state officials from their own ranks. The groups. follow regular election procedures for petitioning, campaigning and electing of flicks in a two-party system Results of the election will be announced at 3:45 p.m. Wednesday and attended officials will carry out a curry over elections in the mock government. Highlighting the week's activities will be a visit Friday to the state capitol in Topeka. The event includes representatives and Senators Governor Docking will speak at the inaugural ceremony Thursday evening. Among the other dignitaries who will address the group during the week are Atty. Gen. Vern Miller, Lt. Gov. Greg Williams, Rt. Gov. Heinemanm, R. Garden City, and Rev. John Carlin, D-Smolan. By GARY STEPS Kansan Writer Physicists at the University of Kansas are developing a technique which they hope will detect the presence of types of cancer. They are using an "atom-smasher," or particle accelerator, to determine the concentration of certain elements in patients suspected of being diseased. Research at other institutions has indicated that the concentrations of some elements in human tissue are more drastically. For example, in one kind of cancer the amount of metal molybdenum drops to less than 0.2% in normal tissue. In another type of cancer the concentration of cadmium drops to about one hundred times an amount in healthy tissue. THE MAJOR ADVANTAGE of the technique being used at KU is the speed with which samples can be studied. The normal analysis time using other techniques is much shorter, and facilities here, the total time can be reduced to less than an hour. In fact, the time may be reduced to less than ten minutes per case or certain types of specimens. KU 'Atom Smasher Aids Cancer Study This time element could become important in diagnosing brain cancers. Also important is that the disease may be diagnosed by this technique long before it could be tested, or by the tests currently available. The test is extremely sensitive. Accuracy to ten parts per billion is possible. IF CANCERS can be detected in early formation by this method, treatment will be easier for the individual. It has become apparent in recent years that cancer can be easier to treat, and early detection will also make possible much important research in the causes of cancer. if cancers can be studied while they are foreseen more about them may be learned. In the procedure an extremely small sample of tissue is bombed by a high-energy beam which excels at its wavelength as a laserator. As a consequence, the sample gives off X rays. Every element when bombed on this way gives off X rays characteristic of that one element. By measuring the amount and amounts of each element in the sample can be determined. DIFFERENT COLOR THREADS by Male The spice of life in a pair of pants. In MALE, Different Color Threads it likes walking around in a rainbow. A color of small cotton with sitting to it your mini-colored masks. Perfect for fancy days. For cool letter days. For blue days and yellow days. And those are just a few of our Different Color Threads wearing through MALE, pants for different kind of look. Bringing life and expression into what could be another ordinary day in the life of cotton - well and bright. These parts are all 100% cotton. COMMODORE • CAREFREE COTTON Monday-Friday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday Noon to 5 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. possible, after which the animals will be released to return to their natural habitats. Sunday Noon to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Parents should enroll their children at the Museum administrative office, 802 Dyce Street, at the time of registration. Enrollment deadline at the Museum for the second session of the art study comparison program is noon June 8. Children up to 10 years old will have their hair cut and study their characteristics, then draw their own versions of the animals. ROBERT BEARRE, associate professor of physics, is the leader of the KU project. He is working on the medical chemistry department and Don Dogg, Eudora grad. He also funds the National Institute funds from the National Institute to approve this request will be made to operate on a full scale basis. The KU Museum of Natural History will sponsor a Small Mammal Safari during three Saturdays in June and a June 10th Saturdy. The museum will prepare real or preserved animals with their artist interpretations. will meet in the House and Senate Chambers at the Capitol, and they as well as other elected officials, will meet their counterparts in the Kansas government. The Girl State officials will also be luncheon guests at the Grest, the Governor's mansion. The safari, to be held from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. on June 10, 27, and 24 will take children to a variety of locales in Douglas County, where you can see and where small mammals and other suburban and rural areas During the week the Girls State staff and delegates will wodge and meet in Lewis and Tempin residence halls. The field trip will utilize actual animals collected in the natural setting whenever Thick as a Brick JETHRO TULL on Reprise Records $2.77 stereo KU Museum To Sponsor June Safaris only at KIEF'S Discount Records MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Pioneer Stereo Components I'll go with "Boy" or "Girl", but the image shows a girl, so I'll use "Girl". IS IT WORTH AN HOUR? To discover a method that will increase efficiency in reading 3, 4, or 5 times without losing comprehension? A technique that will help put an end to unorganized cramming? One that will give you more time to do your favorite things? We think so. Attend a Mini-Lesson - it's FREE and will give you the full picture of our course and what it will do for you. CLASSES BEGIN THIS WEEK Regular Course- Regula: Tuesdays 9:30 a.m.-Noon, June 6-July 18 Thursdays 7:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m., July 8-20 Western Civ Course—Tuesdays; 7:00-9:30 p.m., June 6-18 July (Year's required) Western Civ readings. Prepare for Western Civ comprehensive of July 22.) FREE MINI-LESSON TONIGHT 7:00 and 8:00 p.m. I EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 928 IOWA STREET TELEPHONE 843-6424 LEATHER-IFIC McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" Get into the truly terrific look of soiled leather A wedge-sational design in Natural Dark Brown 829 Mass. FANFARES IS our Shoes" OSS. 4 Monday, June 5. 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Kansan Doubles Volume This summer's Kansan will be an experiment in many ways. For the first time, a summer Kansan will be published four days a week rather than two. The staff has been increased in size to make this possible. Two new summer session classes, Reporting II and Retail Advertising, will be held and students experience working on the Kansan. For six of the eight Fridays during summer school, a newspaper produced by students in KU's Journalism Camp will be published. As in the past, this semester's staff will do its best to dig into the news that concerns members of the KU community. We will try to do so fairly and accurately. We know, before we start, that we will not always be successful, that we will miss stories, that we will be biased in some way, that we will be guilty of ambiguities. This does not mean that we are oblivious to our mistakes. We are perhaps the most vehement critics of our own work. And we hope that through our successes, you our readers, will find a newspaper that you can trust and enjoy. We will restrict news to the news stories and opinion to the editorial page. You will be free to form your own opinions from our news pages. In some of our papers, like today's, we may put advertising on the editorial page. This means that business firms more than those that advertise on our other pages. Letters to the editor will always be welcome but will reflect the views of the writer and not of the Kansan. We ask that he be signed and be restricted to 500 words. These are only a few of the things that will be different in this summer's Kansas. You, our readers, will be getting twice as much for your money through more frequent publication and larger issues. We invite your comments and suggestions so that we can keep constantly growing and changing, because we believe we are a newspaper for our readers. —Rita E. Haugh Editor Landscape Damaged By Bombs Pictures of the old World War I battlefield of Verdun still show fields pocketed by Russian tanks, was primitive by current standards, almost toylike guns drawn up by horses. What was that kind of bargeage and what did they bomb? that a single B-52 now drops on a field? such a plane, in one run, leaves a hole 30 feet wide (30 feet wide) craters behind it. A comic ad says that is naughty to deceive Mother Nature. More serious poems have, through the centuries, been told that "the mother earth" that feeds them. But no other culture had has the power to ecological matricide that we possess. Garru Wills I have actually heard these staggering figures used to argue that our bombings were humane. If we had gone after population, it is argued, such mass destruction would have wiped out all human life there, or if more people went behind—why, yes, killing some men, we also (and only) managed the countryside. that Texas-size area. And even this comparison is misleading for most of the states, where Texans are South, not in Laos, Cambodia, or North Vietnam—in that less than Texas-sized areas have been exploited. It is true that most of our firepower was meant to harrass and interdict, to strip off "cover," prohibit areas, and prevent attacks. But even after all the direct victims of our "aid" have died, there will be thousands of indirect victims through the coming months. Direct bomb-damage is only part of the story. We have also used chemical bombing, but not by the caterpillars. But it now looks as if the craters will upset Vietnam's ecology and destabilize the world. They make many fields reclaimable. They let in water, bake some soil, promote erosion. Fertilize with water, the soil becomes fertile and forms to former crops and malaria fauna. The charts, statistics, maps and photographs that tell this story can be found in the current issue of Scientific Journal. It contains a summary of the study and a report and a professor of zoology, working in Vietnam on a scientific grant. We have not hit factories, because there are so few to be hit. The land itself was our target, and all the land gave its way to nature. It has been conducted with nature itself. Centuries of shaping, coaxing and mating of that vast maternal support-system have been systematically documented. We are struck at the very source of life. They trace the steps of a huge crime wrought, and their brutal story has none of the alienating charm or fear there is no mystery to that. We done it. Images of Trips and War Clash SCRABBLE, VA.—I am no bad thing to draw a perspective on the summit talks in Mossew from a mountain. I see Mountains. From here the McGOVERN THE POLLS CANT JOIN SHOW THE NUM- MUSKIE INATION CANNOT BE BECAUSE BEATEN When farmers try to plow, fill, or navigate these craters-hard enough labor in itself—they can be blown up themselves, their plowing animals become hardened, the hooves and legs; metal clogs the plows, as it does the saws, used on shrapnel-riddled trees. All this is added to the regular hazards of life in a war-zone. James J. Kilpatrick The scale of the thing is colossal. In all of Indochina—an area about the size of Texas—we have dropped roughly twice the tonnage of bombs that we use anywhere (Africa, Europe, and Asia, during World War II—and this was a crucial factor in our war. In fact, we have dropped the equivalent of 450 Hiroshima bombs on McGOVERN CAN'T WIN THE NOMINATION BECAUSE... THE POLLS SHOW MUSKIE CAN'T BE BEATEN. NO THAT WAS OUR STORY BEFORE NEW HAMPSHIRE. BECAUSE HES A ONE ISSUE CANDIDATE? NO THAT WAS WHAT WE REPORTED BEFORE WISCONSIN. BECAUSE HE DRINKS HIS SUPPORT FROM ONLY A SMALL BLOC OF VOTERS. NO THAT WAS OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE OHIO. BECAUSE HIS RADICAL STANDS AVENUE MIDDLE AMERICA? NO THAT WAS OUR ANALYSIS BEFORE NEBRASKA. GEE. WHAT IF HE CAN WIN THE NOMINA TION? MCGOVERN CAN'T WIN THE ELECTION BECAUSE... THE POLLS SHOW NIXON CAN'T BE BEATEN. I find it hard to imagine a million of anything—of dollars, or pounds, or ounces. We have raids over 20 million such craters, whole unimpaled acres of up-and-down water-dispersing new landscape, also bombed by bombs and bombdebris and unexploded shells. NO THAT HAS WHAT WE REPORTED BEFORE WISCONSIN BECAUSE HE DRAWS HIS SUPPORT FROM ONE OF A SMALL PLACE OF VOTERS? BECAUSE HIS RADICAL STANDS ALIEN ATTE MIDDLE AMERICA? NO THAT IUAS OUR ANALYSIS BEFORE NEBRASKA. GEE, WHAT IF HE CAN WIN THE NOMINA TION? MCCOVERN CANT WIN THE ELECTION BECAUSE. THE POLLS SHOW UNION CANNOT BE BEaten. turning whole landscapes into moonscapes. MOGUVERN CANT WIN THE ELECTION BECAUSE THE POLLS SHOW NIKON CAN't BE BEATEN REP. CHISHOLM also advocated withdrawal. Yorty and Hardin advocated intensified detention, a way to get the prisoners jaack. He said that if the United States pulled out and the Communists did not release the prisoners "we then can take our case to the courts," he added, more force" than was possible while U.S. forces remained. Candidates Debate Issues "We have to go on the faith that we have after every previous war that once the fighting has stopped and we shall be released," McGconn said. "Megan said." The two contenders in California's crucial Democratic presidential primary differed on the way to get out the prisoners and on U.S. defense policy in the war against ISIS, met in a television interview. McGovern said it was clear that the prisoners were not going to be released while the United States had a policy and support of Saion. LOS ANGELES (AP)—Sen- Hubert H. Humphrey proposed Sunday that President Nixon send an emissary to Hanof to release the release of U.S. prisoners in exchange for military with- "I THINK that's fine," said McGovern rated the heavy favorite in California's polls. Sen. George McGovern said out and the United States should pull out and 'go on the faith' that the President would be freed when the fighting ends. The hour-long session on the ABC program "Issues and Answers" was the third of the California campaign. Humphrey also challenged McGovern to another hour of debate Monday night on California stations. "WE SHOULD set a firm date for the reunions of forces. That date should be given to this presidential emissary and taken directly to Hanoi." Humphrey and McGovern were joined Sunday by Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles and Taylor Hardin, a campaign manager for Alabama Gov. George C. Walleye in the Los Angeles interview. By WALTER R. MEARS Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N.Y., whose equal time court challenge led to last-minute expansion of her position from a studio in New York. Humphrey proposed that Nixon send a high-level administration official to Hanoi to seek to pin down an agreement for release of information related to U.S. withdrawal from Indochina. He suggested that the assignment go to former Secretary of the Treasury John Kerry. "I don't think there's any evidence that Hanoi will release those prisoners." Humphrey said. One question put to the candidates was whether under any circumstances they would attack US troops to the defense of Israel. Humphrey said he could not agree with McGovern "on leaving those prisoners there." HUMPHEY SAID the Middle East was the critical area in which U.S. interests were really important, and they would avoid any need for U.S. forces was to see to it that American defenses were adequate. Humphrey said McGovern's proposed plan would not leave them adequate. He said if there were a major Soviet invasion the United States would have to respond, but "I think that's going to happen." McGovern said he saw no point in "doing a lot of saber-rattling about what we're going to do to the U.S. government first in the Middle East." That sequence led to the most direct exchange between the two countries. McGovern had voted against bills including aid to Israel. McGovern said when he did so it was the result of unfunded funds for the war in Vietnam. "I think you're inconsistent," Humphrey said. THE FIRST question put to the five politicians was that of backing the nominee the party selects in Miami Beach in July. Taylor Hardin, a campaign manager for Gov. George C. "Yes, of course I will pledge to support the nominee. Humor is all I need," he said before that man, adding that he believed the party would "pull itself together" after the primaries and field a strong McGovern he believed the convention would be open and those circumstances, the broadly representative of party concerns and philosophy, "I will intend to support that person," he Rep Hishley Chisolm of New York earned a equal-time challenge to challenge the program, said she was not going to sign "a blank check" for him. Wallace of Alabama, said the question was a personal one for his candidate to answer. Hardin had led a third party campaign in 1968, now "has nothing else in his mind" other than his quest for the presidency. "I CANNOT support just any candidate who is nominated by me or someone he may pay because he demoney to be the Democratic nominee," she said. Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles said he reserved the seat in the third power" to decide when he'll support the ticket. CALIFORNIA IS one of four presidential primaries Tuesday. New Jersey Democrats will select 109 nominating delegates, while Florida and preferential primary to award 18 convention votes, and South Dakota will assign its 17 votes to unopposed in his home state. "He still considers himself a most viable candidate," Hardin said. The two California contenders already had appeared on hour-long interviews on CBS and NBC. The campaign is also offering offer Mrs. Chisholm equal time. McGovern and Humphrey campaigned in the Los Angeles area Sunday after the television appearance. journey seems, in the deliberate choice of a shopworn wor.d. fantastic. McGovener planned a trip to Abuja to address the issue, seek votes in the primary there. Sunday's televised session got over in favor of the vote to went federal court and won an order for equal time to match proceedings. We provided McGovendor and Humphrey with This is such stuff as dreams are made on—imaginary figures, impossible events, a script as hard as the scenes we see the faces on a television screen. Nixon smilin, Brezhnev smiling, but the images fade in and out. Cutting hay is dainy through his clothes. Moscow past the binder, dimly. "United States Stratofortresses dropped 1,000 tons of bombs around Kontum today, in response to airstrikes troops from reinforcing the provincial capital. North Vietnamese forces slammed 100 Soviet-supplied artillery shells and thousands of ground vehicles, meanwhile, south of An Lac, the communist enemy blasted South Vietnamese troops with more than a thousand rounds of artillery shells and mortar shells. Twenty-three Fantastic is the word. On Monday afternoon, the 29h, the news from Vietnam came on to this effect: armored personnel carriers, supplied to the South Vietnamese by the United States, were destroyed . . . This was the same afternoon that Nixon and Brezhnev, at the Great Kremlin Palace, were dining in jovial attire at "huge tables laden with caviar, smoked meats and other food." The two leaders jested with Times correspondent Max Frankel. Does the Times print the truth, asked Brezhnev? "Pravis," said one of them, "giving us on elementary Russian." "That means truth." some 2,000 words. The 2,000 words in their way, are as real as these 2,000 bales of hay: real words. Somehow the hay seems hard to represent, but the two leaders are "guided by a desire to strengthen peaceful relations." They recognize "the need to remove the threat of insurrection" and they have agreed, "to conduct their mutual relations on the basis of peaceful coexistence." And to demonstrate good faith, will mine the harbor at Haitian ports with the military missiles hurled on Anoc Lob. It is all mixed up. Half way around the world, in the bloody agony of war, one perceives a part of the truth of Soviet-era history. In a Russian tank, the wreckage of a U.S. truck. Our allies demolish one another. At the same moment, there is something else: Our leaders demolish plates of Russia. Can this be truth as well? How much is real? How much is make-believe? This much, I think, has substance. The fact of the rest is mostly moonshine. The rest is mostly moonshine. The summit produced a joint communique that rambled on for The President's two "journeys for peace," one to Peking, one to Moscow, now are facts of history. Mr. Trump has warned the risks; he went. And at least in the political view, for the short haul, this is likely to count for him. His presidency accomplished. Marco Polo went to the court of Kuba Khan, and Venice loved him for it. In our own political catechism, boldness remains a virtue. Top 2 Demos Compared Humphrey Here is how Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey stands on the major issues in the California presidential primary. There is this second fact: the nature of communism. Nothing in the record of recent years, nothing in the gaudy array of TAXES: He is cosponsor of a bill to close tax loopholes and "demolish the tax shelterers for all people," who are the minimum tax for all people making more than $30,000 a year, and would provide $16 billion a year. VIETNAM WAR: Did not speak out against the war while president, but says in 1968 when he ran for the presidency, "I was the only man that recommended a ceasefire of our forces from Vietnam." Now says, "It is time to set a date for peace and operations and obtain peace." WELFARE: "Raise Social Security payments 25 per cent in the next five years have a minimum income for a family of four of $3,000. DEFENSE: "I think there is a chance to reduce the defense of the White House," Congress, we did it the year before, and the defense analysis made by the Brookings Institution, "you have the Favors keeping strong armed forces, saying, 'You cannot negotiate with the Russians from a position of weakness; if we were able to learn, we learned nothing." assistance programs from state and local levels to federal government. He would include such agreements and training programs. PETER C. McGovern Here is how Sen. George S. McGovern stands on the major issues in the California Republican presidential primary. TAXES: "I have proposed a fundamental reform program in this country that will be fair to the little person and will help them close loopholes in high-income brackets to require higher taxes VIETNAM WAR: Proposes immediate withdrawal of all U.S. forces from Vietnam in opposition to this war ever since 1963." He calls the war "a folly," and America's "greatest military political and moral blunder." DEFENSE: Proposes a heavy cut in defense spending, slicing the annual defense budget from 1.7 million to 1.7 million. He would place prime nuclear reliance on a strengthened submarine fleet. He would increase the defense spending the country would not be able to negotiate an arms reduction with the Soviet Union. for "the very rich and the poor" to manage taxes on all incomes over $12,000. New tax income and defense programs are required for property taxes and to finance schools and public works projects in housing, pollution control and other areas. WELFARE: Suggests "a minimum income supplement of $1,000 per person ... when you are working. I want to scrap the existing welfare mess." He says he would like to exact estimate of this welfare proposal, and denies the $72 guaranteed by Humphrey has slapped on it. creates, agreements and accords at Moscow, nothing all suggests that talk of "peaceful coexistence" is anything more important than another, by whatever devices may seem most useful, the apostles of communism mean to dominate the world. Crab claws or guided missiles, it is all the way we had better not forget it. Nixon is a realist. In the end, that characteristic becomes his greatest asset. He knows the people he has met and they know he knows it. Thus his first commitment is to arms, his second to disarmament, it is meant to protect himself in means of grace and the hope of glory. Here in a grey-green haze, you are surrounded by a sunny away. They are parallel windows on a field of history; endlessly we bind them up together, we harvest of a summer afternoon. (C) 1972 The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN NEWSSTAFF News Adviser...Del Brinkman Editor Campus Editor News Editor Copy Short Photographers Newspaper Editors Rita E. Hugh Rita Jackman Norwick Schultz Linda Schild Prize Branded, Hank You BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams Business Manager Advertising Manager Classified Dealer National Advertising Manager Promotional Manager Sales Manager Doug D'Evray Sleave Carver Lawnmower Carol Williams Dave Bennett Todd Kramer Country House House As always, when we have a SALE we really have a BLAST and now is the time for our annual SPRING and SUMMER SALE of our great stock of young women's fashions . . . Dresses long & reg... 1/3 off Swimsuits ... 1/2 off Tops Slacks & ... 1/3 off A Hang 10 group ... 1/2 off Shorts Country House at the back of the Town 839 Mass. St. Downt ALL SALES FINAL—PLEASE at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Downtown Country House F Previ Univers mer for These session last one FREE COCA-COLA McDonald's McDonald's 901 WEST 23rd resourc scarce The comple get the with ac The faculty ment, in or mathe The progran Meyers School be enro bote to co registr ar the fall Co One Coke Free With Purchase of a Double Cheeseburger HOR KU prc additio becaus increase year. Right now McDonald's is serving up oceans of free Coke and there's one waiting for you. What's more refreshing than an ice cold Coke? Free Coke at McDonald's. Your face will be snowy from your free Coke. Altho become Horowi a requ Howey be put readab follow use cou Wolff 3,000 daily and pr came PAU the recog cramp faciliti He sa mass e telepho telepho possibil Anno- develop depart genera There people compu are a putative CRT comm comp sepa There the ce with t time. But facilii said, down every the c their altho librar regulcente Alt mach such basit vant mach had were profe University Summer Kansan Monday, June 5, 1972 5 Frosh Begin Previews June 12 By KENT PULLIAM Kansan Staff Writer Previews are back at the bakehouse this summer for the first time since. These summer orientation sessions will begin June 12. The program will be held Monday through Friday. The summer orientation program was reinstated by John Meyers, director of the Office of Student Affairs. We are to allow the students who will be enrolling as freshmen next fall to complete many of the registration forms that are required for school starts in the fall he said. The prospective students will complete their physical exams, get their I.D. photos taken, talk with advisors and select some of the courses they want to take in the fall. Other activities for the new students are some special interest sessions in which they get to meet faculty members and students who are involved in campus activities. Many of the students have representatives available to talk with these students. THIS SUMMER's sessions will begin during the last three weeks of April and June. A schedule is arranged for June 12 to 13, 15 to 16, 19 to 20, 22 to 23, 26 to 27 and 28. The program is completely self-supporting, and each of the students who comes will pay his own way. There is a $20 registration fee, which covers room and board for the day and half each student attends the previews. All the students will be housed in residence halls for the sessions. The women will be in the SSP and the men in the north half of Corbin Hall. Meyers said he was pleased that the first session was receiving for reservations. The first session had been full for several days and the second one was only about a week long. "There will probably be somewhere between 1000 and 1200 students attending this summer's sessions," he said. MEYERS SAID the 1969 sessions were attended by almost 850 freshman class, and this year there were already nearly 450 "The program is for the students," Myers said, "and we've tried to give them the opportunity to complete some procedures in a more relaxed atmosphere during the summer." receiving from 50-80 new responses each day. The KU Preview program originally started in the 1854. Each of the sessions was for incoming students to complete an eight hour block of examinations and prepare for placement. When KU went the ACT testing program, there was no need for this eight hour block. The program was discontinued after 1969. "ALTHOUGH the program is for the students, it also helps the advisors and faculty during a week in the fall," Merriams said. "We didn't realize how much they accomplished," he said. The previews cut down the show's schedule and in the fall so that each of them can see an advisor easier and more when they get to see them. "The only real concern for the program was whether there would be enough faculty at KU to teach it," said Furman, who "but everyone we are help with the program ever sees." We get preview sets at KU. Computer Revolution . . . From nage 1 resources—both of which are scarce at the moment. HOROWITZ DESCRIBED the RU program as modest, and said that he would not use it because of a 20 to 25 per cent increase in the program each There are only nine full-time faculty members in the department, and these are taught in other fields, such as mathematics or English, he said. Although computer science is a core subject, Horowitz said, he doesn't see it as a required course in the future. "We'll probably be put into the machines in readable form, and it would help us to give people we would learn to use computers." He said computers could have a mass effect similar to that of the telephone. Almost everyone used them as a way to stay in contact possible to exist without them. CRTS are remote units that can communicate with the main computer. They can be located in a rack and can be accessed there. There are 55 terminals outside the center, 27 of which can work with the main computer at any time. "I've been to four or five instationaries, and I've never smaller than the KK that have more their hallways than we have in our total computation center." Another factor which limits the development of the computer department and of computers in general is the problem of space. There are limited facilities for computer work to be undertaken on computers at KU, and few places are as crowded as the computation center. PAUL J. WOLFE, director of the computer center,计费 system for cramped conditions and calls to cramped conditions and calls at KU "minimal." Although many people fear machines and dread a course such as Computer Science 16, a few who were introduced to Herowitz said he saw an advantage to working with machines. They were reliable, had few breakdowns, and often found interesting than professors. But there is a need for extended facilities at KU. As one official noted, the university downtown to mail letters, everyone shouldn't have to go to the computation center to get information from the library, although nobody would go to the library at 3 a.m., people come regularly to the computation at that time. Wolfe estimated that 2,500 to 3,000 transactions took place daily in the computation center and that about a quarter came into the center every day. He said the amount of equipment such as key punch machines and CRTS (computer terminals at KU was also limited. SMALL COMPUTER networks within the University could ease the problem of space. Such a network can be created with help from the National Science Foundation. Small laboratory units will be connected to the main computer and be connected to the main computer. The system is designed to help automate laboratory experiments and record relay data from them. He said there was a constant rate of high performance between a student and a machine. It was sometimes easier to learn from a teacher than a computer communicated more effectively than a professor. Such learning was immediately rewarding, and it gave both practical and theory work. He said that white computer courses would probably not be required in the future, more information would inform high and high school levels HOROWITZ SAID he thought the fear of computers which many people had was the same response made to any new intellectual theory. He gave the reason of early fears of Darwinism. Another professor, Walter Sedelow, who teaches both computer science and sociology, agreed that teaching by computers could be more satisfying for the individual student and because the University environment more personalized for students. In the 50s, when computer science was first introduced at Announces the Opening of its Second Lawrence Location the week of June 5th in the Malls Shopping Center. FOR THE PAST several months, the University's computer has been operating near its maximum level. KU, of the people interested in its possibilities most were in research. Today things have changed. Now almost every department and school has money allocated for computer develop a University information department, college, department, schools, college and central administration has produced a new level of FOR EXAMPLE, today more people are becoming interested in the computer as a creative, artistic medium. In 1967, when the computer now in use first went into operation, it averaged 250 jobs per day. A month later, it turned out more than 1,000 jobs a day. Some of these include individual student programs. of the computer in all areas is increasing between 15 to 20 per cent per year. This increased use of students involved, in the dramatic increase of bisease use, and the multiple approaches such as instructor evaluation, labelling and simulation. The decision to According to recent information from the computation center, "it is obvious that the use JAY BOWL Kansas Union 5 Facts You Should Know!! We are also ringing in a NEW SWEET SHOPPE. Stop by and browse around our complete assortment of magazines, cards, gifts, books and newspapers. - BEST Bowling Rates Available - MIXED LEAGUE STARTING 6:30 Wed., June 7th - OUTSTANDING Student Rates—Every Day Mon. thru Fri. Noon till 6 p.m. Bowl 3 games for only $1^{\textcircled{10}}$ with your KU I.D.!! - *Summer operating hours— Monday -Friday 10 a.m. - 9 p.m. (approximately) Closed Saturdays Sundays Noon - 4 p.m. (pending) - Air Conditioned for your bowling and billiard comfort JAY BOWL Bowling—Billiards For Information Call 864-3545 Maupintour HAS AN EXCITING HOLIDAY FOR YOU TOM SAWYER TOUR to the National Fence-Painting Contest! July 3-4th Weekend From Topeka / Lawrence / Kansas City to Hannibal, Mo. and the annual Tom Sawyer days festivities. This fully escorted tour includes Private Motorcoach roundtrip, sightseeing to Mark Twain Home and Museum, Becky Thatcher House, Mark Twain Cave, Molly Brown House, 2 hour Paddlewell cruise on Mississippi, overnight accommodations on sharehouse rentals in New Orleans, the French Quarter, hotels and Brisket of Beef dinner at Old Tavern, Hamann, the boyhood home of Mark Twain, keeps alive yet today the spirit of this old Rivertown first settled in 1818. YOU'LL ENJOY IT! Limited Reservations Available $37.15 per Person Stop by Our Kansas Union Office by June 7th! LAST 2 DAYS FOR RESERVATIONS Maupintour-planned tours can oftentimes begin from your home town or joined en route close to your home town. quality tour operation since 1951 Maupintour travel service ROLLING STONES BUTTONS BARRICAIS BUS GROUP "Exile on Main SL" on Atlantic Records THE Town Crier Please call or write Maupinport Travel Service, 900 Massachusetts Street, Lawrence, Kansas 60404. Telephone 913 843-1231. HOLLYWOOD SCHOOL OPEN DAILY UNTIL 10 P.M. Reg. $ 9^{95} $ 5^{88} Discount Records KIEF'S Discount Records MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Discount Diamond Needles -5 12 (0) 121 (34) 4143 (43:1) (43:1) 12 122 122 xx) 1 Patronize Kansan Advertisers TOMMY HARRIS WHETHER IT'S JUST JEANS AND TOPS FOR A LEISURE SUMMER, OR SOMETHING REALLY UP TOWN LIKE THE KNIT OUTFIT SHOWN ON THE RIGHT WE HAVE IT ALL. Come See for Yourself. The University Shop 1420 Crescent Rd. At the West End of Campus Hours 9:30-5:30 6 Monday, June 5, 1972 University Summer Kansan DANCE THE DANCE OF SAN FRANCISCO Folk Dance Club Swings The image shows two individuals in a dance studio, engaged in a dynamic interaction. They are facing each other with arms extended and hands clasping, suggesting a strong physical connection. In the background, there are several people participating in different activities, possibly dancing or practicing their moves. The setting appears to be a modern舞蹈教室 with large windows allowing natural light to illuminate the space. "Hashua!" and "Hora Aggadat!" are names you don't run across every just week at U-uties to the museum at the KU College Club. They're the Israeli names of two of the many dances practiced at the U-boy Friday meetings in Robinson Gymnasium Marguerite Bohm, Tonganoke graduate student and the club officer, her husband and several friends, and lead the dances. Although most of the dances are from other countries, predominently European, at least one American Dog "Rag," is also performed. The club comprises about 20 members, a diverse group that includes a Lawrence doctor and a computer science student. There are no dues to membership requirements. Mrs. Brown anyone is welcome to attend meetings. The meetings usually begin with Mrs. Bohm's instructing newcomers in several dances. Then members and newcomers together perform the dances. As soon as the evening evenly often even onlookers, join in dances whether they know them or not. Above, Rosa Nelson leads others in the Hora Aggadaj, a fast Israeli dance which is done in a dance school called *leader* (with microphone) teaches a now dance to Meredith Brown in the background follow along. Kansan Photos by JOHN GRAM I'll keep you safe. (Left) The polka is popular with the club because almost everyone knows it. Members are shown in front of the Czechoslovakia. (Right) A club member's young partner leaves the club he's doing the right steps. Marguerite Bohm, Tonganoxie graduate student, acts out the part of a fox in one of the dances. Her expression shows that she throws herself into the part vigorously, adding to the quick-paced motion of the dance. A Sa T CHJ / Dappe second rolled the fi Lee T- K753 tourn The finish in the house a par Hollow THI vast g disma secon second Gam 68, cl South Austru and C born next, final Don into playl challe Monday, June 5, 1972 University Summer Kansan 7 Sanders Drops in Birdie To Beat Trevino By One CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Dapper Doug Sanders took 40 seconds to line up a putt, then struck the ball with a flick of the final hole Sunday and beat Lee Trevin by one stroke in the $175,000 Kemper Open Gif The 38-year-old Sanders and the 49-year-old a four time All-Star in the bright sunbath of a 72-hour haze and a 72-hole total of 275-13 under par on the 7.27-yard Quail field. Trevino, one of the game's most feared competitors, played in the group just behind Sanders and Larry, who is also playing off for the $35,000 first prize. He was faced with a 10-foot putt for a birdie to tie on the last hole. The Super Mex stalked it in and he hit a low, low bounce. His killer does and fuffing his kit THEN HE missed it, as the vast gallery of 23,000 gowned in dismay. Trevino finished alone in second with a 68-276. Gangling Labron Harris, with a 68, claimed third with a 277. He was joined by Mark Devlin, Australian Bruce Devlin, with 81 and Cesar Sanudo, a Mexican-born American citizen, were next, tied at 278. Sanudo had a 30-point lead. The final round was one of the most thrilling of the year on the tour. Each of six players played for first place or shared the lead at one stage or another. And at one time, 15 players were drawn into a match under a tie. Down the stretch it developed into a two-man race between playboy Sanders and the challenging Trevino, winner of the Danny Thomas-Memphis Classic just two weeks ago. THEY WERE tared at the end of five hobs, but Trevino took a leap forward. "I'm ready," he called it "the worst hole I've ever seen," where and," we've laid again." KANSAN It staved that way through 16 and 17, each missing a good birdie opportunity, and they went to the final hole. Sanders put his second shot on the left side, on the fringe, some 30 feet away. It took him 40 Sanders moved to a two-stroke advantage midway through the back nine but the 14th hole had a three-stroke swing and another tie. seconds standing over the putt, then he stroked it home. He had a one stroke margin. Sanders, a walking rainbow in lavender and white, beogeyed it from a bunker and Trevino, just before the burglar snatched the burtle dart put that put them square Air Force Pilot Killed In Transpo 72 Exhibit WASHINGTON (AP)—An Air Force Thunderbird jet pilot was killed Sunday during a precision flying exhibition at Transpo 72, although he parachuted from his plane before it crashed and exploded. Officials identified the pilot as Maj. Joe Hawkey, 32, of Awkosie, N.C., a decorated veteran of 122 missions in Southeast Asia. The plane, a Phantom 2F4E appeared to stop in midair, an then with a wallowing motio rolled to the left. The parachut did not appear to blossom imminently, but eventually it opened to the point that military of course said "he had a goof" creature. The accident occurred on the last day of the huge transportation exhibition at Dulles International Airport, and a fatal accident to mar the exhibit. The aircraft drifted, then fell and exploded in a huge fireball. and exploded in a huge fireball. Helicopters searched for several minutes before locating the wreckage. An emergency hospital installation at the airport where he was pronounced dead. EUGENE, Ore. (AP)—UCLA track coach Jim Bush said it early this year. "This team has the potential to be the most powerful 'big meet' team we've ever had here at UCLA." He probably wouldn't change a word of that today. The Bruins once again are the NCAA track and field champions. UCLA Retains Track Title As expected, it was three West Coast powers and University of Texas-EI Paso bidding for the game. The AA meet, which ended Saturday. The Bruins, scoring 82 points, turned what had been a tight race into a romp and also settled a rousselown rival Southern (courtesy) Southern Cal won the Pacific 8 championships over UCLA. The Trojans had 28 points, UTEP 25 and Oklahoma State 21. And final day of the meet. GETTING 20 POINTS in the triple jump alone, UCLA played it on during the final day and USC made a distant second with 49 points. UTEP finished third with 45 points. Oregon, the hometown favorite, took fourth with 32. For the Bruins, James Butts on the triple jumps at 53 feet 24 inches, and for the Clippers, and four place went to the Uclan's Harry Freeman and John Smith, the 440-yard world record-holder, *successfully* won the 45.4-meter record winning the 400 meters in a meet record of 44.5 seconds. Smith also anchored the Bruins' mile relay team, which turned in a winning finish. UCLA sprinter Warren Edmonson won the 100 meters Friday in a wind-aided 10.1. For USC it was another runnerup finish. The Trojans lost the A MUSCLE CRAMP knocked two spinnerets to the floor and 200, 201, 202, Edesel Tormack took his place on the Trojans' 440-yard relay team, throwing a ball. UTEP, a favorite because of its talented sprinters, never put it together in the speed events, but he did his part by winning the meet's only double winner. He won the shot put in 66-45 Friday, then captured the discus An injured Bouncy Moore cost Oregon expected points in the long jump. Moore, the 1971 winner, pulled out after NCAA title to UCLA by 11 points in 1971. Oregon's other defending champion, Steve Pfortainte, won the 5.90-meter lf1 upsets win the 5.00-meter lf1 upsets win the 5.00-meter lf1 upsets win the 5.00-meter lf1 upsets win the 5.00-meter lf1 upsets win the 5.00-meter lf1 upsets win the 5.00-meter lf1 upsets win the 5.00-meter lf1 upsets win the 5.00-meter lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.00-metr lf1 upsets win the 5.28.9 DAVE ROBERTS of Rice retained his NCAe pole title tilted at 17-3 Saturday, while Oregon State freshman Tom Woods field in the high jump with a running mark of 2 feet 3/4 inches. Kansas finished fifth in the team totals with 25 points, while Washington, Rice and Kent States for sixth with 18 each. qualifying for the semifinals As the verdict was announced, her mother, her head down, clamped the hands of her husband, B. Frank Davis, and her son, Ben, a defensive back for the national football Cleveland browns. Moore followed moments later to the same kind of cheering applause. Brandon was cheered and applauded by a crowd of about 150 people. He came out of the courthouse with both hands raised above his head. THE VERDICT climaxed a trial which many had seen as a testing ground for the American judicial system. Continued from page 1 The world mark of 71-5% was set by Randy Matson in 1967. portrayed the Davis case as a criminal trial with one of the onest motives known: love. In a dramatic start to what was expected, he prosecutor Albert Harris Jr. unbelieved his love and passion theory. He claimed the tall, attentive lawyer as an driven by love to murder. The heave boosted the 28-year-old, 300-pounder into the forefront of the Olympic shot-put picture. Miss Davis, soft-spoken and scholarly, delivered her own opening statement. She branded the state's claims "utterly fantastic; utterly absurd." She can evidence to prove so to live aotive "a symptom of the male chauvinism which prevails in this society." LOS ANGELES (AP) -George become the Coast Guard became a member to throw the shot beyond 70 feet, when he hit 70-148 at the Compton Woods Breaks 70-Foot Mark Bobby Allison Charges To Win 500 Mile Race Angela Davis . . . called it a "political trial" and charged a frame-up. DOVER, Del (AP)—Bobby Jones of New York won for 800 miles训, then zipped home a comfortable winner in the Mason Dixon 500 stock car race. The driver threw out the race. Schaal Connects for Grand Slam As KC Royals Split with Red Sox Curtis, 2-0, struck out five, walked two and was helped out by three double plays in the night- cap. In the fourth, Miller drew a leashoff walk from reliever Paul Spitlottter, took third on Mon-Khair and came home on Carris' grounder. PHIL GAGLIANO's triple and Miller's sacrifice飞 cappped the Red Sox' scoring in the sixth. Boston got the only runs they needed in the second inning. The Giants' third Mortgoney singled for the first run off Mike Hedlund, 0-5, and when left fielder Lou Piniella's hit, Griffin also scored. KANAS CITY (AP)—John Curtis pitched a seven-hitter and Dick Miller drove in a run and scored two others Sunday to lead Kansas to a 40-victory over Kansas in a spit of their doubleheader. Boston staked Ray Culp, 4-5, to a 4-1 lead in the first game before his own infield sabotaged him in the sixth inning. Paul Schaal's grand-slam home run capped a five-rally in the sixth inning that powered to a 73 trump in the onener. Gail Hopkins singled for one run, Ram Ots Otis loaded to load the bases, then Schal unloaded his second homer of the season over both runners were safe when third baseman Rico Petrocelli dropped Catcher Carlton Fisk's throw. That made all the runs squeaked them a seventh-inning the attack on the nightcap at the streaming of the blanket the faltering Orioles in a Sunday doubleheader by iden- tity. ELSEWHERE IN baseball, Jim "Cafun" Hunter hurled a two hitter in the opener and reliever Darold Knowles Pinieira was safe on shortstop Lai Asparic's error and took second on an infleed out. Cookie Rojas followed with a bunt but The sweep extended Oakland's in the American League West and extended Orioles into third place in the East Division, three games THAT WAS all the Reds, hot on top of the league and Angels in the National League West, needed to chalk up their future. With their staggering depth, and pitch in the game, goYankees. Johnny Bench's two-run double in the first inning and the solid pitching of Jack Billingham and Tom Hall carried Cincinnati's Bob Gibson hurled a five-hitter for his 25 career career-out- and second in a row-and also slammed a two-run toenail or criminals to a 40 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers Sunday. streaking Reds to a 2-0 baseball victory over the staggering Philadelphia Phillies Sunday. Supporters of Miss Davis had Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W, 19, L. Pit, G.C. Detroit 20, 19 513 Cleveland 20, 19 513 Baltimore 21, 20 513 Chicago 21, 20 513 New York 18, 24 696 Philadelphia 18, 24 696 Allison, a 37-year-old racing veteran from Hueytown, Ala., drove the 590 laps around the one-mile race course without relief as he brought his red and gold Chevrolet to the flag more than mile ahead of Petty's. The two leaders completed the Winston Cup Grand National event 13 miles in front of third place finisher LeRoy Yarbrough as the mid-80 degree temperature to its toll of both drivers and cars. Fourth, in a Ford, was England's Jackie Owler, who won the 1986 Masters. Dave Maris, John Searn, a 30-pounder from Ellerbe, N.C., was tied for first. West Oakland 28 13 683 -- Chicago 25 13 683 -- Minnesota 20 14 679 Texas 20 24 455 Oklahoma 18 16 459 Texas 18 26 459 NATIONAL LEAGUE East W. L. P. G. C. H. New York Pittsburgh 27 16 168 39 27 16 628 39 Montreal 19 24 424 39 N. Louis 17 26 342 14 17 26 168 14 Indiana 14 Los Angeles 28 18 609 ...5 Cleveland 27 18 609 ...5 Atlanta 20 23 463 ...5 San Diego 16 17 383 ...5 New Orleans 16 17 383 ...5 PARIS (AP)—Billie Jean King of Long Beach, Calif., won the French Open tennis championships, the only major crown that had escaped her, by defeating Elena Golagolog of New York. French Title Won by King Mrs. King avenged her loss to Miss Goalang in straight sets in the women's singles, Spain's Andres Gimeno scored his first international victory, rallying for 4-6, 6-3, 6-1, 6-4 on Sunday. The men's singles title. BELTS SANDALS HANDBAGS WATCHBANDS LEATHER GARMENTS LEATHER ACCESSORIES ALSO: MOCCASINS FRYE BOOTS HIKING BOOTS PRIMARILY LEATHER craftsmen of fine leather good THE BOOT- LEGGER 523 W. 23rd doctor LEGG your eyes with fashion from Allison, who won the Mason Dixon last year when the distance was increased from 350 miles to 420 miles in 12 hours, 12 minutes and 47 seconds for an average speed of 118.67 miles per hour. Three yellow cars on the road. Open 10-10 Mon.-Sat. 12-6 Sun. BANKAMERICARD welcome here The Bootlegger CENTER OF NOW FASHION 523 W.23rd master charge THE INTERBANK CARD Limit! 1 per Customer Good on any $5.00 Purchase THE BOOT LEGGER Bootlegger Buck Good thru June 11, 1972 1 Allison, the second place starter, earned almost $13,000 from the $33,400 purse. 1 SKYJICKED PG METROCOLOR MGM Mat. Daily 3:00 Eve. 7:30, 9:30 Granada THEATRE... Telegraph V13 STEP WARNING THE SEXUAL TRANSFORMATION OF A MAN INTO A WOMAN WILL ACTUALLY BE A PLACE BEFORE YOU EXPERIENCE YOUR WEB EXP. DRJERU SISTER HYDE ENG COLOR Ends Tuesday Evenings Matinee at 7:10 & 9:30 2:10 Varsitu THEATRE ... telephone V13-1065 Jesse James and Cole Younger's most daring bank robbery! Eve 7:25 & 9:10 "THE GREAT & NORTHFIELD, MINNESOTA RAD" Child 75 Hillcrest CABARET PG Technicolor Distributed by AurelArt Eve 7:15 & 9:25 The Hillcrest Ends Tues An Incredible Adventure of the Future ... to Save What We Abuse Today! 50 Hillcrest STAR WARS Adult Eve 7:45 & 9:30 Child WANT ADS WORK WONDERS FOR SALE ANSAM CLASSIFIED RATE Three Days "silent Ends tues. running" Onday 13 words of freeway, $7.00 each additional word, $8.00 each additional word: 6.32 DateTime : 10:48 pm = 10:48 before publication 2. If you don't Western Civ. Note: Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it. 1. If you use them, you're at a cloudwantage Either way it comes to the same amount. Civilization 14, Campus Madhouse 41, West 14th 7-22 1969. Great Lakes Mobile Home- comp. 2 bedrooms - Best offer over $2,300. Call 812-7186 or 812-8653 8-25 Server systems and large disru- gements hand in hand at RMS Electron- ical Systems, a national entertainment companies. 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HELP WANTED Mediterranean St. Bairn St. Bairn $515, Mile St. Gribin St. gibin St. gibin Large $350, St. Jansen St. jansen $250, $150, Stub to get $360, Stub to get $85, $85, Drink Plate $185, Plate $85, $85, Drink Plate $185, Plate $300, $300, Meet Brisket $300, $100, 14 inch to 9 qr. plate $42, $42 TEACHER OPENINGS Current listings of hundreds of California schools in California School Placement, 1974-1975 60720 60721 60722 60723 60724 60725 60726 60727 60728 60729 60730 60731 60732 60733 60734 60735 60736 60737 60738 60739 60740 60741 60742 60743 60744 60745 60746 60747 60748 60749 60750 60751 60752 60753 60754 60755 60756 60757 60758 60759 60760 60761 60762 60763 60764 60765 60766 60767 60768 60769 60770 60771 60772 60773 60774 60775 60776 60777 60778 60779 60780 60781 60782 60783 60784 60785 60786 60787 60788 60789 60790 60791 60792 60793 60794 60795 60796 60797 60798 60799 60800 60801 60802 60803 60804 60805 60806 60807 60808 60809 60810 60811 60812 60813 60814 60815 60816 60817 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Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule Daily 9 to 10, Sat. till noon. 843 8500 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass 8 Monday, June 5.1972 University Summer Kansan Group Studies Complaints By MARTY LYONS Kansan Staff Writer When the Complaint Center, a project of the Student Services Department, proposed the committee wanted to name their idea Ombudsman, according to Susan Goering, an assistant professor at Harvard. However, the project was named the Complaint Center because of the Ombudsman Organization. Goering said that the Ombudman Organization consisted of law students who acted as a liaison between students and administrators or faculty in an effort to fairness of grading procedures. Goring said that the Complaint Center was designed to receive complaints about University services such as admission, admissions and Kirkins Memorial Hospital, the Kansas Medical and the cafeterias. The centers were posted in all the residence halls and all the buildings on campus in March, according to Goering. A center itself consists of a yellow poster with black lettering and white complaint forms, according to Goering said that a student could tear off a form, fill the form out with a complaint or a request for an insurance dress and telephone number and place the form in the envelope. "They must sign their name," Goering said. The reason given by Goering for the requirement of signed complaints was that the information Services Committee could look into the complaint with the student who made the complaint. The complaint was concerned enough about his complaint the investigators could do a better job of research on the problem than could the individual. After an investigation, the KU Photographers Win At Intercollegiate Contest University of Kansas photojournalism students won four first and second place awards at the annual International competition judged at the University of Missouri at Columbia. Harvey Haster, Lavern. Oak senior, won first and second place in the pictorial category. Jir Gamble, winner of the took first in both the portrait personality and college life categories. John Larken, Prairie school senior, took in the portrait-personality category. Steven R. Craig, Garden City junior, took second place in the picture story sequence category. A total of 16 of the 72 students selected for the traveling show were those of KU students. Other students whose work was in connection with Tom Thone, Overland Park senior; Darras Delamaide, Pittsburg sophomore; Fred Berns, Peabody junior; John Dresser, Leavenworth junior; Ed Lallo, Toplek sophomore; and Emily Kramer City, Mo. graduate student. Judges of the 75 photographs Capitol-Journal and Kenneth Park Kansas City Times-Star, and photographer from St. Louis. Grad Students Given Awards Four KU graduate students have received Falbright-Hays awards for graduate study abroad. They are James W. Park of Lawrence, Norman S. Hastings of Lawrence, Joe L. Wilkinson of Lawrence and Joel L. Wilkinson of Nashville. Penn. Tennis will study in Columbia. Hastings in Kentucky and Wilkinson in the Soviet Union committee members in the investigative branch of the Student services Committee take the role of a mediator of the Student services committee so that they can write up the Studentnote, Goring said. Goering gave an example of a complaint concerning Watson's book "The Book of the Book" books were too high. She also said that a suggestion was made that the Student Services Composition Center had academic buildings such as Goering expressed optimism that complaints could be effective. He were willing to participate in the investigation of the complaints Murphy so that visitors and new students could find their way around. "The purpose of the investigative branch of the Student Services Committee is to correct deficiencies." Goering said. She said that the Complaint Center would help them find deficiencies in student services. E. Jackson Baur, chairman of the institute, will be the resultant scholar. will be Engineers for Rivers and Waterways C. from July 1972 to June 1973. Prof to Work In Washington He will be a leave of absence while he works as a consultant to the Board and participates in planning for the Association's Planning Associates Program. Even though other researchers are doing similar work, Schlager said he believed that his study was especially significant The Board was established by law as a review board of the U.S. resident scholar makes special studies on high priority water resources. Prof Experimentally Links High Blood Pressure, Genes By DENNIS LINGLE Kansan Writer AFTER SELECTIVELY breeding thousands of mice for seven years, Schlager has found that they are most sensitive (genus that impends a tendency for the mouse to have high blood pressure) to be extremely sick. The high pressure in humans is many times the result of aggressive behavior. (Thus, the corporation becomes the target of heart failure.) Schlager said his aim was to mimic the human alimentics in animals that lack the gene or genes that may cause blood pressure extremes. Genes are the cellular materials that transmit traits from parent to child. Gunther Schlager, associate professor of systematics and ecology, said recently that he has found experimental evidence that susceptibility for high blood pressure in humans may be inherited. Schager, a geneticist working under a two-year grant from the Kansas Heart Association, has conducted tests concerning the genetic causes of high blood pressure and hypertension and heart failure. because he was investigating the role inheritance played in blood pressure, and had developed a more advanced further cardiovascular studies. Another facet of Schlager's effect is the feeding of the physiological reserve in diet of mice with high blood pressure and those with blood pressure too low. The addition of salt to the mice's diets resulted in elevated blood pressure. "THIS IS why many orientals, who have high salt content in their foods, on the whole have a hard, good pressure," said Schlager. With this knowledge, Schlagger said, doctors will be able to detect the possibility of high blood pressure in children by testing the testing of the child's parents. If the patient is a probable victim of high blood pressure and pressure-related illness, would place the patient on a salt free diet. The next step would be to place the patient on a job which requires very little pressure. By controlling the environment for the hypertensive person, doctors could improve his chances for a longer life. ALTOUGH Schlager's study was directed at the genetic causes of heart disease and pressure, many times in a single possibility of heart attacks, he TOMMY HILFIGER Sassy Summer Comfort Mister Guy has put together the knit shirt selection for the man who commands attention in his casual shirt wardrobe. They are offered in a variety of stripes and solids in an unbelievable array of color. For all your spring and summer clothing needs, talk to the clothing consultants at Mister Guy. MISTER GUY 920 MASS. The Clothing Consultant 842-2700 MISTER GUY also recognized the fact that the environment was a major antagonist to the person suffering from hypertension. "Certainly these mice don't attack the cages," office can be said, "the Schlager, 'but maybe I will do as one researcher did have cats inside the cages." Schlager said he viewed his work as an explanation of some of the unknowns surrounding the heart of disease. His findings, researchers in developing ways to prevent heart attacks. HOB NAM 8 W 9th Patronize Kansan Advertisers Slow, unorganized reading is boring! You lose concentration and perspective! You seem to spend all your time studying! BLACE Overwhelmed? or [Photo of a woman seated at a desk, holding a pen and looking down at a document. She has blonde hair and is wearing a dark polka-dotted shirt.] Confident Fast, intelligent reading holds your attention! You grasp the ideas sooner & more accurately! You have time for leisure enjoyment! Regular Course: Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m.-Noon, June 6-July 18 Thursdays, 7:00-9:30 p.m., June 8-July 20 NEW CLASSES BEGIN THIS WEEK Western Civ. Course: Tuesdays, 7:00-9:30 p.m., June 6-July 18 READ THE ENTIRE YEAR'S WESTERN CIVILIZATION ASSIGNMENTS IN ONLY 7 WEEKS Reading Dynamics teaches you how to find the meaning in all those thousands of words. Our instructor is also a Western Civ. Instructor. Our unique note-taking technique simplifies, organizes, and relates ideas in graphic form. FREE Mini-Lesson Tonight I EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS S] W T The Kanss price event of ati Downstairs at the Sound-Hillcrest Shopping Center 925 Iowa Phone 843-6424 The stude incre one d The $162.9 depa along final $156.0 Солнце видом THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Connally Given Diplomatic Duty The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 82nd Year, No.2 Tuesday, June 6. 1972 See page 2 Sports Plan Would Raise Ticket Cost By KENT PULLIAM Kansan Staff Writer The Athletic Board of the University of Kansas will recommend an increase in the price of student season tickets for sporting events leading to Wade Silson, director of athletics. The proposal would raise the price of student football tickets from $5 to $10 and increase the cost of basketball tickets by one dollar. The proposed raises came when the Student Senate did not allocate the funds which the finance and auditing committee recommended for the athletic department. The Senate originally recommended a department but that figure was trimmed along with other allocation requests. The final appropriation to the department was An increase of one dollar was recommended at a meeting of the athletic board April 11, but it was raised to $1.50 at a May meeting of the athletic board. That was which lost in the $7,000 cut. The $6.50 ticket will be split in the following manner. Five dollars will go to the Endowment Association to pay off the $15,000 loan from the stadium. This is not any different from the old system. However the extra $1.50 will go directly into the operating budget of the club. A resolution from the Senate concerning the allocation of seats to the visiting team for football and basketball games was passed by the Senate, and discussed at the Big Eight meeting. The proposal called for a certain number of tickets to be reserved for the visiting team. The committee was taken to the Big Eight conference by Charles Oldfather, KU faculty representative. The faculty representatives then referred it to the athletic department. After some study, Stinson said they decided that it was not a workable solution to the problem because of the different situation at each school. *Each school in the conference likes to teach its of home fans before the visit.* M Summer Student Carries Heavy Load Linn Kovar, Lawrence graduate student, started summer school Monday by relieving himself of a good deal of the spring semester at Watson Library. Omits Encore Debate McGovern Expected To Win in California LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sen. George McGovern, the pollsters' favorite in the crucial California presidential primary today, wrapped up his hunt for votes Monday and arranged to meet with skeptical Democratic governors. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey was covering the state from San Diego to San Francisco, battling for the victory that could stall or secure Bern's drive for presidential nomination. It was evident Humphrey would have to it without the encore debate he sought. In a nationally televised interview Sunday, he challenged the South Dakota senator to meet him head on election eve, sharing the cost of the TV time so they wouldn't have to share with minor candidates. McGoverson said he'd try to work it out. MOMENTS before he set out on his Monday campaign schedule, McGovern announced he was going to Houston, Tex., where he is running for the Democrats at the National Governor's Conference. He said he wanted to demonstrate that the governors would have communication with his as the chairman and "easy access" if he became president. Southerners among them said they North Vietnam Admits Bombing Toll Serious SAIGON (AP)—North Vietnam acknowledged Monday that two months of intense U.S. air strikes were exacting a serious toll. American pilots continued their raids over the North and bombed two more major rail bridges, severing the northwest train line to China, the U.S. Command announced. Radio Hani, quoting the official Communist party newspaper, Nhan Dan, said North Vietnam is having "very difficult economic problems because of the bombing. "But our people can . . . still defeat the U.S. aggressors," it declared. The broadcast, monitored in Hong Kong clearly referred to damage inflicted by super-accurate "smart" bombs on the country's transportation, power and railways. Both the northwest and northeast rail lines to China have been cut by the raids. THE U.S. Command said more than 260 strenues were flown Sunday, and eight Air Force aircraft were deployed to Dong Khai bridges, 50 miles south of the Chinese border. Flying in two formations the Phantoms directed five 2,000-foot bridges on Wednesday about 85 miles northwest of Hanol. "Those laser-guided bombs don't miss," said one officer. U.S. aircraft also hit a highway bridge south of the key port of Vinh, the command said. Coalition to Review KU Research In South Vietnam, government forces reported some gains in Konkay, saying they reopened the airstrip for the first time since December. The attack occurred in the capital headquarters provincial capital. Kansan Staff Writer THEERE WAS scattered fighting along the central coast and in the north, but bad weather had them up. By MARTHA NORDYKE Korean Staff Writer The Haiphong Coalition will hold an open meeting of its research committee at 7 tonight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union, Steve Hollis, a spokesman for the Coalition and member of the research committee, said Monday. Holly said main objectives of tonight's meeting included finalizing the recommendations which the Coalition would recommend to the University aim of an ad hoc committee to investigate current research policies and procedures and to review research and progress at KU. The Coalition will also discuss its research independent Coalition research committee. Some of the specific concerns of the Coalition regarding KU research include the need for a laboratory, in the psychology and anthropology departments under Project Themis, in the microbiology department or two more done through the Computation Center. PLANS FOR THE Coalition's research project are (1) Critical investigation of university research to insure that the research is honestly with the problems; (2) Development of general public education concerning research so that those who want to do research understand and control it; (3) Upright scientific and technical workers to take IN RESONSE to demands made by the Coalition during the May 9 and 10 sit-in at Strong Hall, SenEx issued a statement in which it agreed "to the appointment of an ad hoc committee to investigate current research procedures and review research and progress. In the appointment of the committee include students, faculty and staff, SenEx, its custom, will consult with appropriate bodies concerned with this issue." He said that while this committee was being set up by SenEx the Haiphong College of Engineering and Political Action (ESPEA), were organizing a long-term research project which would run parallel to identify the work of the SenEx committee. Coalition was now working to avert the lack of focus on particular targets or people linked to U.S. involvement in the Indochina war. Hollis said the second weakness the "IN TALKING to people in the community and on campus following the protests, we've been able to identify two major weaknesses in our efforts which we are moving to correct. One was the lack of organization and any leadership with the ability to lead or respond to crisis in an organized way, he said. "Many persons," he said, "feel the need to exert some sort of pressure on institutions or authoritarian persons in order to obtain a genuine voice in decision-making processes, particularly those involving the war. "But one of the most exciting developments," Hollis added, "is the fact that probably 1,000 people stayed in the city in recent years involved in the continuing development of this protest movement. Of the people that left Lawrence, several are working in Kansas City, Wichita, Chanute and other areas." And he said for future summer and fall actions". "About 100 persons have met off and on early since May to build an organization, a hard core group, that will be able to lead well-planned actions in the fall," he said. GENERAL PLANS for summer activities by this committee include setting up discussions and films in living groups, classes, and in labor and community settings. The programs carried out by the education project committee would serve the dual purposes of passing on information to concerned persons as well as broadening the senses of the Haiphong Coalition for the people it comes in contact with. Another committee established by the Coalition is the education project committee to "raise the issue of the war in Iraq" and assigns it to educate ourselves and others. "During the negotiations, SenEx vocally promised the negotiators for the Haiphong Coalition that they would consult us before making their recommendations to the chancellor for the ad hoc committee," Hollis said. "I think too many people have reached the point where they're thoroughly dischanced with the long established menagerie of museum and others for a voice in decisions." HE SAID that from communication with persons in the community and on campus, more organized civil disobedience such as arresting law enforcement or the traffic blockades was possible. steps to increase their own say in the research progress and helping them do so; (4) Development of ways to change the direction of research and to insure that the research areas are not missed; (5) Carrying out actions designed to bring about changes. Hollis said the research committee was one of several work committees established by the Coalition since the May protests. "We hope this will be a means of working from the bottom up, rather than on the top." In neighboring Cambodia, early presidential election returns showed incumbent Lon Nol holding nearly 60 per cent of the vote in a surprisingly narrow lead. Cambodians voted Sunday for the first time since Prince Norodom Shanouk was deposed two years ago and a republic is expected to unexpectedly large vote was going to a dark horse candidate who campaigned for Shanouk's return. feared a ticket led by McGovern would fare poorly in their region in the Nov. 7 election. There was no evidence of a real stopMcGovern effort, Gov. Robert W. Scott of North Carolina said it was a little late for that. Rockets slammed into Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital on Monday, killing six—including three girls—and wounding 11. One was a direct hit on the Defense Ministry, and other exploded by Lon Nol's villa. IT WAS the first daylight rocket attack on Phnom Penh in more than two years of war. Associated Press correspondent Robin Mannock reported. U. S. military sources in Saigon said a seventh aircraft carrier, the Ticondao, was expected in the Tonkin Gulf off North Vietnam within a week. An antisubmarine warfare ship with sonar-enabled aircraft and helicopters on board, the carrier was dispatched from Vietnam to support against submarines, sources said. There was no indication a specific threat was feared, however. McGOVERN evidently hoped to allay the concerns of governors who believed his personal platform was too liberal for Democrats and some Democrats elsewhere. Humphrey planned to go to Houston welcome, after the pivotal primary in California. The Ticcondera and its four-destroyer escort will be bring to about 70 the number of aircraft from Europe. THE MAN who wins in California will get 271 votes for the Democratic presidential nomination. Eighteen votes are at stake in New Mexico. New Jersey Democrats will elect 109 convention delegates. McGovann campaign managers said they expected to pick up about two-thirds of them. The California voting hours are 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. CST. CALIFORNIA is the one that counts, and an independent poll by Mervin D. Field rated McGovern the leader by 20 percentage points among a sample of voters interviewed a week before the election. In California where the candidates spent their time and money trying to persuade 5.1 million registered Democrats, a turf war over whether or not the party's voters was forcest. THERE ARE eight names on the Democratic ballot in California, plus a write-in effort for wounded Alabama Gov. Rick Wallace. It is a winner-take-all primary. ★ ★ ★ 537 Delegates Now Pledged To McGovern George. Gov. C. Wallace of Alabama lost a few as a result of official distribution of funds to the students on 67. On the basis of primary returns he had been accorded 72, but the adjustment came when the state's delegation was apportioned among its congressional dis- He added delegates from Oklahoma, Kentucky, Connecticut, Colorado and Illinois in caucuses and conventions at the law firm of Baird from the official canvass in Nebraska. WASHINGTON (AP)—George S. McGovern pushed his Democratic National Convention delegate total to $577 on the eve of the big California primary on the strength of new delegates picked up over the week end. Wallace remains the second-place Democrat in votes lined up for the July 10 convention, with 318 delegates. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota is third with 296 and Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine. There are 44% uncommitted delegates. It takes 1,509 delegate votes to win the Democratic presidential nomination at the Mugabe rally. Money Shortage Slows KU Computer Use Editor's Note: This is the second of a two-part series on computers and their use at By SCOTT SPREIER Kansan Staff Writer Although the growth of computers at the University of Kansas has mushroomed in the last 15 years, its immediate future is uncertain. The university now common at KU—shortage of funds. This year for the first time, the KU computation was not able to end the year with a balanced budget. The authorized expenditure budget for fiscal year 1972 is $123,000,000 as come so far has amounted to only $1,320,000. In short, the center ran out of money. Paul Wolfe, director of the computation center, said recently that the problem was not normal, but consistent with the way computing had been funded at KU. Guaraneed investment of the computation center comes from state appropriations, student fees and research overhead. Cash grants and contracts are supposed to make improvements to a recent computation center document, "at no time have the cash grants and WOLFE SAID that in the past the center had a service clearing account, which was similar to a revolving fund. When the center performed services it would collect the money through this year. Wolfe said, there were still bills, but no money coming in to pay them. contract funds been forecasted to be sufficient to cover the balance needed." Wolfe said that as a result, in the last six months expenditures had been reduced by leaving a position vacant, reducing the cost of supplies on supplies, travel and other activities. One of the major reasons for the computation center's shortage of funds is a lack of research overhead. Francis Heller, vice chancellor of academic affairs, said the problem originated in the 1950s, when the University began its computing program. Research overhead is money given to a university by the government to offset expenses incurred by the university when it is given a federal grant. For example, it must be given to pay the cost of finding a temporary a professor who had received a grant. AT KU THE money is pooled into a single fund. The University is then allowed to use the money for anything related to research or teaching. Heller said that at the beginning, the main computing push came from people interested in research. As a result, he had to devise a way of amounting the amount of the computer center's costs. The overheard was used in this way until last year, when the state legislature struck, putting a ceiling on the amount of overhead which could be spent during a year. Heller said that if it were not for that ceiling, there would be no problem. However research overhead isn't the only problem. There are many smaller troubles. The National Science Foundation (NSF) for example, stopped directly supporting university computation centers in 1970. Wole said that made a significant difference, because the grants helped UCSO get to its computing KU's last grant, in 1968, was for $425,000, half of which went directly to the computation center. departments to develop a tri-level computer network on campus. THE CENTER still gets money in- crease through such as through a re- great change in the way the customer. The computation center is also faced with the problem of controlling variable costs. Wolfe said that in the past there had been a number of different departments a department could use a computer. Each department is allocated funds for a certain amount of computer time. Some departments have less computers and spend less. The result has been a general balancing out effect. This year however, departments that have more computers must find different sources of funds. An additional cost this year was restoration of the facilities that were damaged by a fire. The restoration was funded by the state, but renovation connected with the IN ORDER TO aid such departments, the center recently began a "bargain basement" project. For 10 cents, a department could obtain 99 cents worth of computing time. Wolfe said the 10 cents covered the additional variable cost, and although it was expensive to compute more slowly, it did allow people to complete their projects on schedule. restoration, and security changes cost the University $39.700. The effect of the financial squeeze will be felt by everyone, including the students. For example, students may be required to buy their own basic supplies such as punch cards. Although a box of 200 cards costs less than $2, the University spent $8,000 on cards on tapes. THERE MAY also be a cutback in student personnel. The proposed amount for monthly, hourly and work study for students next year was $83,000. But the amount for students this year was $15,000. Wolea said that amount would get the center through almost three months. "It's a fact," Wolfe said, "we can't run this computation center without students." Wolfe said that every university he knew of had been faced with similar problems at different stages. He said he thought KU was at a different and more advanced stage than most, "because of funding from the University, which is very small here in Kansas." He said state funds were not sufficient to cover either the money spent by the See COMPUTER, page 5 2 Tuesday, June 6, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs By The Associated Press College Aid Announced WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal Office of Education announced Monday it had allied $1,219,000 to groups of colleges in Kansas to help them improve their academic quality. The money has been put into strength development grants in which larger schools or outside agencies share their resources with other schools in the group. Bethany College at Lindsborg will co-ordinate the work a group which has received $250,000. The other schools are Kansas Wesleyan, McPherson, Sterling and Tabor. Docking Cites No-Fault TOPEKA (AP)—Gov. Robert Docking said Monday he will ask the 1973 Legislature "to take action to develop a Kansas no-fault insurance plan that will not increase rates to individuals," if he is elected to a fourth term. The governor issued a public statement expressing concern that congress may force some national no-fault plan on the states. "The United States Senate Committee of Commerce has applauded a forcible no-fault insurance plan," Docking said. "The committee's action is a clear indication that if the states do not develop no-fault insurance plans to meet the needs of individual states, the federal government will force a no-fault plan upon them," he said. Anderson Talks Taxes WICHTA (AP)—Former Gov. John Anderson Jr., a Republican candidate for governor, said today that finding an equitable balance of state taxes was a matter of first priority for the next session of the state legislature. Anderson was here to meet with the board of directors of the Sedgwick County Federation of Republican Governors State University. Anderson cited the increase of property taxes at 45 per cent across the state during the three-term administration of Democratic Governor Robert Docking. Diploma Returned in Protest MHANATTH (AP)—A Jaw who graduated with honors from Manhattan High School has returned his diploma as a protest against the commencement speaker. "Men like Jack Parr are dangerous," said John Friedmann, 17. "When he gives a speech that excludes all other beliefs, it becomes dangerous." Parr is gendered and is known to be a bad man. Ken. He is an officer of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and was an all-star basketball player at Kansas State University. He got $10 for his commencement speech last week. Postage Rates Studied WASHINGTON (AP) — The Postal Rate Commission Monday recommended a 5.5 per cent reduction in proposed postage increases. The changes would leave the rates paid now by the average mailer at about the same. The recommended $78.3 million reduction would not affect first-class or air-mail letters, which cost 8 cents and 11 cents respectively. The commission urged that post offices continue to reduce their rate of redemption from the U.S. Postal Service's requested 7-cent rate. It estimated this would save the mailing public $25 million each year. KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)—President Nixon is outgoing outgoing Treasury Secretary John B. Connally on a 15-nation, month-long tour to discuss international economic matters which his hosts wish to raise, the White House announced Monday. Connally Talks Left Open Connally, however, will not go to North Vietnam to negotiate for the release of prisoners of war as a result of the war in Iraq. Humphrey, D-Minn., in the Democratic presidential candidates' debate Sunday in Connally will travel to South America, the Far East, Australia, South Asia and Europe. Details of the trip are not firm, said Ronald L. Ziegler, the leader of the World Bank. He said Connally will go first to Argentina, Bolivia and Peru HWEILL depart Key Biscayne Tuesday and be in Caracas June 10. La Paz June 9-10. Buenos Aires June 12, 13. La Paz June 14. between June 6 and June 14 on the first leg of his journey. Ziegler declined to give the names of the other countries on the itinerary but said it could be possible that he would go to India and Pakistan. He said flatly that Connally would not travel to Africa, citing recent visits by Mrs. Nixon and Secretary of State William P. Ziegler said Connally, traveling as a special representative of the President, would "meet with chiefs of state and heads of government in Washington to discuss matters of common concern between us and the countries with emphasis on current international economic issues." HE ALSO said Connally would be in a position to 'respond and respond' to the issue of a potential international field with reference to the President's recent trip to the United States. Connally was summoned to the President's Florida home on Monday afternoon, inference with Nixon and a briefing by Henry Kaisinger, Nixon's naked friend. Kissinger will travel to Japan and where he was born. He will attend President Obama's discussion with political, academic, and businessmen. Connally will not visit. On the prisoner of war issue, Ziegler said Connally would be prepared to discuss the U.S. position and not the purpose of his mission. Hanoi Offensive Could Cost $5 Billion More, Laird Says WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of Defense MELvin R. Weinberg has issued a memo that the Hamid's offensive could cost the United States an extra $5 billion if the United States had to maintain a military response through 1972. they must be negotiated from a position of strength. LAIRD TESTIFIED in the afternoon before a house subdued the mining of North Vietnam harbors could add $3 billion to his requested $48-billion budget if it continued through the end of the year. Earlier in the day, Laird had told a Senate subcommittee that if Congress approved a $30-billion cut in defense funds proposed by presidential aspirant George McGovern it should provide "at least a billion for white flags . . . because it means surrender." The secretary said also that if Congress did not approve funds for the project, it would be jeopardizing further U.S.-Soviet arms-limitation agreements. The secretary said he would ask for more than $70 million in funding to support the increased U.S. war effort, which ends this month. Laird's comment before the Senate foreign aid appropriations subcommittee o. McGovern's proposed $20 billion defense cut would match with a match with Chairman William Proxmire. D-Wis. Proxmire called Laird's testimony "a serious charge for which you have no documentation." Laird said the Moscow arms limitation agreements will knock a net $30 million off defense spending for the reduction to two anti-missile sites from 12, offset missile increases for offensive weapon Laird said that going into further U.S.-Soviet negotiations on permanent offensive arms limits in Europe would reduce reductions in Europe and restrictions on military aid with the United States. He proposed $44 billion defense budget "we would be in a position to deal," he said before the negotiations start." Fight for Delegates Bothers Governors HOUSTON (AP)—Democratic state governors, worried that their party's national convention may again dissolve into chaos, asked major presidential candidates Monday to settle most of their proliferating delegates informally and quickly. Some saw the surprise request as aimed at Sen George W. Bush, who was from election-eve primary campaigning to meet with the governors. They are assembled in the National Governors Conference. What worried the governors was that roughly 500 Democratic supporters were challenged, mostly by McGovern supporters. This is roughly half of the voters. Pennsylvania Gov. Milton DeLay declared a delegate peace mission, said that less than the trend was halted, some rebates were given every state four face challenges. Shaap said the party reforms a long rang from the rotroux 1868 Democracie. He said Democracie Chicago may have gone so far and fast that next month's Miami Gator season will be more. Some governors did not know how to interpret or apply new rules requiring more women, and were among the delegates, he said. The aim is to get the candidates to agree among themselves on how to dispose of as many of the challenges as possible, especially those because of violations of rules, and to recommend solutions jointly to the credentials committee. Williams Wins Poetry Contest James McClure, Wichita graduate student, Chris Craig, Lawrence graduate student, and Judy Hill. Lawrence sophomore, and Jerry Hall. Lance Williams, Lawrence senior, was named the winner of the William Herbert Carruth contest. He will receive $200. Susan Cohn, Tulsa sophomore, won second place. Gary Taylor, Topeka freshman, placed third. Canadian Urges Sharing Of Resources by Nations STOCKHOLM (AP)—Man must curb his greedy exploitation of the globe's dwindling reserves to ensure a more equally between rich and poor countries, the United Nations Conference on Environment was told Monday. Keynote speakers warned that the alternative was more international conflict in the human struggle to survive. "In the decades ahead, we must learn to conquer our own divisions, our greeds, our inhibitions, our fears, and they will conquer us." Police patrolled the streets in anticipation of demonstrations by the protesting women. Proposed protests flirten in the face of the massive show of governmental action. Secretary-General Maurice Strong of Canada told 1,200 government delegates at the opening ceremony on the health of our only one earth and our common interest in all our man-made divisions. JAY BOWL Kansas Union 5 Facts You Should Know!! - BEST Bowling Rates Available BEST Bowling Rates Available MIXED LEAGUE STARTING 6:30 Wed. June 7th *OUTSTANDING Student Rates—Every Day Mon. thru Fri. Noon till 6 p.m. Bowl 3 games for only $^1$$^\infty$ with your KU I.D.II - Summer operating hours— Monday - Friday 10 a.m. - 9 p.m. (approximately) Closed Saturrdays Sundays Noon - 4 p.m. (pending) can send the environmental change "demands" we can communicate with, and provide opportunities for creating a planetary environment worthy of our planet. - Air Conditioned for your bowling and billiard comfort Angela Eyes Law Career JAY BOWL Bowling—Billiards For Information Call 864-3545 SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - Angela Davis, free for the first 22 months, started planning a law that may include a law a career. She slept alley and spent the rest of the day relaxing after her acquittal Sunday of murder, kidnap and conspiracy charges Friends said they were urging Miss Davis, 28, a black scholar to attend law school, the police instructu to attend law schools. They said they urged her, through work in the courts, to carry out her awarded efforts to help the victims. MISS DAVIS had been charged in connection with an Aug 7, 1970, Marin County courthouse shootout which resulted in four deaths. The tall, articulate Miss Davis had acted as counsel at her trial and delivered her own opening statement to the jury. numerous threats against her in the final weeks of her trial. Associates appeared concerned about Mis Davis's future personal security, and she conceded, "It will be a problem." Defense attorney Howard M. Warren said during her months as a prisoner, said during the trial: "I think she is the best lawyer in the world." But she added, "I'm not going o allow that to prevent me from becoming active in the liberation struggle." RELAXING at her San Jose apartment. Miss Davis said her mind wasn't made up about the future. She may take a vacation ONE OF HER first plans, she said, is to vote in Tuesday's California primary election, but neither would say for whom she would vote. THE CELLEBRATING went on into the dawned hours Monday. Hundreds of Miss Davis's supporters danced to blaring rock music, corks and toasted 'Angela' airplane at a San Jose night club. Mis Davis was granted bail shortly before her trial began last February. But she had already spent 16 months in jail. making plans. I haven't made my plans yet," she told reporters. "I guess we're going to do it." She left ourselves for the struggle ahead." "I can begin to give all I have to free all political prisoners and oppressed people," she said. Nine of the jurors who had pronounced Miss Davis innocent joined the celebrants, returning Miss Davis and Miss Davis's friends and family. "Now . . . is the time to start She said there had been A young woman juror, caught up in the festive spirit, danced to the rock beat with a defense attorney. But the honored guest—Angela Davis—neither danced nor mingled with the crowd. She sat Rocket Attacks Blemish Cambodian Election Day Miller Questions Bingo Law Before State Supreme Court PHNO MENH, Cambodia (AR)—Rockets blasted Phnom Penh Monday in the first daylight attacks on the Cambodian capital two years of war. Six people were killed and 11 wounded. Incumbent Lon Nol won just under 60 per cent of the vote in the first round, than predicted, and a dark-horse candidate campaigning for the return of deposed Prince Norion was unexpectedly wide support. TOPEKA (AP) - Atty. Gen. Vern Miller questioned the scope of Kansas's 197 bingo law in a grand jury proceeding, supreme court. Monday, declaring, "I find it very difficult to believe the state legislature intended to legalize all forms of bingo when it passed the law." country's first presidential election. The attacks came as ballots were being counted from the Miller is appealing a ruling by Allison County District Court Judge Dan Pfeiffer last year that operation of slot machines in Kansas is legal because the machines are games with desirable characteristics" to bingo. State Rep. Robert Talkington, R-Iola, argued for the lower court before the supreme court Monday. THE HIGH COURT took the time to review the cases of vision and should have a decision July 8, the normal date for issuing opinions on cases "It is our contention that the legislature intended to include more than just bingo in the law," Talkington said. Stadier dismissed charges against three persons stemming from the allegations by Miller and his agents on the American Legion club at Iola. The court ordered that raid. Stadier ordered the machines returned to the club's headquarters. passed by the legislature legalizes other forms of gambling other than bingo, when played by the nonvoting members and benevolent organizations. At issue is whether the 1971 law The attorney general told the court Monday he was not challenging constitutionality of his own arrest, but were trying to enforce the law. STADLER HELD that the 1971 law legalized games with 'comparable characteristics' to those and these included slot machine court had a rule under which it did not settle questions of law unless they were raised by the appellant in a case. He also indicated, however, that the supreme court may not be able to rule in the iola lot court on constitutionality of the law Miller is challenging that ruling, but not the constitutionality of the entire binge law. "We were not trying to contend the constitutionality of the law" CHIEF JUSTICE Harold O'Neill has argued that the supreme arguments that the supreme He told the court he believed the justices could settle the constitutional question, if they wished. Miller said, "I suspect that sooner or later we'll have to meet the question of constitutionality." MILLER asked the supreme court to overturn Stairman's ruling on grounds the district court refused to hear the merits of gambling games and devices were the same as the case. In consideration, chance and price. "We argue that gambling devices such as slot machines are available in bingo, Miller said. The court's ruling says, in effect, that any games which require consideration, or the protection of the bingo law," at a corner table surrounded by body guards who occasionally allowed friends through to greet her. DADDY COOL TEENAGE HEAVEN Includes 18 Honey Kit, Teenager Blues Town One Belt Loo, Let Me Burry You Boo Daddy Cool Teenage Heaven Reprise album MS 2088 With the addition of another guitarist, Daddy Cool. Australia's a number one group, bring the full-blow sound of good-time rock and to roll to their latest LP, Teenage Heaven. Although all eight of the songs were written by the group they could just as well serve as a retrospective of the best of the 50s. r We Welcome You Back The Best Way We Know How... Only $3.69 All 4.98 list & 5.98 list lp's BOB WEIR / ACE ACE Includes Looks Like Ram Cassady (WE ALSO HAVE THE LARGEST STOCK IN LAWRENCE) Includes Looks Like Rain. Cassady Rings in the Band. Greatest Story Ever Sold Bob Weir Ace Warner Bros. album BS 2627 a mainstay of the Graffed Dead, Bob *Ace* - Wear front his own album to display his considerable skills as a song writer, guitarist and singer, accompanied by some familiar friends on eight new songs. WB BABYBEAR E I saw the Light/lift/I wouldn't Have Made Any Different / Wolfman Jack/Cold Morning Light/ It takes Two to Tango/Sweet Memories / Breathless The Night the Carousel Song/Song of the Viking/ Went to the Mirror/Black Maria/ One More Day/Couldn't I Just Tell You/Torch Song/Lite Red Light/Overture Money / Dust in the Wind / Piss it is Me/My Fake Fakes is Even White That Me You/List Sore/Sut. 1 NE Dieg regu sum draft Todd Rundgren Something / Anything? Includes: Countdown I Just Tell You Hello to Me. It Takes Two to Tango Waltman Jack. I Save Your Light Todd Rundgren Something/Anything? Bearseil/Warner Bros. album 2BX 2066 d iscount records America's Largest Coast to Coast Record Stores 1420 Crescent Rd. 842-4626 ( ) Store Hours: 10-8 Mon-Fri 10-6 Saturday master charge THE INTERBANK CARD 'a ou ns k se on wo m em s. auto nss ps ad h 's se on the University Summer Kansan Tuesday, June 6, 1972 3 Baseball's Draft Begins NEW YORK (AP) —The San Diego Padres will open the regular phase of the two-day summer schedule. The Padres begin business today. The major league clubs will select in inverse order of their origins from the greatest leagues. The Padres, who had the worst record in the National League, will be followed by Cleveland, and then the record in the American League. World champion Pittsburgh will pick 23rd and American League champion Baltimore will select last. Selections in the secondary phase. The Los Angeles Dodgers will pick first, followed by Cleveland. York Mets, San Diego. The secondary phase covers free agents selected in previous drafts but not signed. Among the highly regarded prospects expected to be picked in next year's NBA draft, Bobby Grossman of the University of Maryland; Larry Christiansen of Maryland; Wash. Dick Ruth of Minnesota; and Scott MacGregor of El Segundo. Calif. Also, catches Richard Bengston of Peoria, Ill., and Boby Goodwin of Tempe, Arizona. Godfrey Dade-Chauca of the University of Texas, Dave Roberts of the University of Oregon, Danny Thomas of South Dakota, Richard Copper, Calif., and Richard Manning of Nigarra Fells, N.Y. Baseball Standings Kemper Boosts Sanders Into Top Ten of Golf AMERICAN LEAGUE NEW YORK (AP)—DJ Sanders' victory in last season's tournament boosted him to eight place on the season money-winnings list the PGA Tournament division an Monday. Kemper Open, continues to head the list with $156.051. Lee Treviow, who finished second by one stroke to Sanders at Charlottesville and $186.650 and fourth from fourth on a second the list with $189.397. Sanders, who won only $24,891 in all of 1971, earned $35,000 for winning at Charlotte, N.C. raising his season's total to $74,222. That purse moved to 28th place to eight on the last. Jack Nicklaus, who skipped the Jerry Heard is third with $110,111. George Archer fourth with $106,963 and Wei Toksum fifth with $87,179. W L W. L. PFL. G.B. Detroit 16 21 50 6.8 Baltimore 21 21 50 15.0 Cleveland 21 21 50 15.0 Boston 17 22 43 6 New York 18 24 43 6 Los Angeles 18 24 43 6 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Oakland 29 13 600 Minnesota 29 13 600 Miami 26 17 549 California 20 24 450 Texas 18 36 410 Tampa City 18 36 410 Completing the top ten are 3obby Mitchell, $85,685; Bruce Dampton, $84,243; Sanders, $74,985; Dave Hill, $74,485; and Save Hill, $71,977. W. L. P. G. B. New York Pittsburgh 27 16 638 5 27 16 639 Chicago 19 14 442 19 14 442 St Louis 17 26 378 14 17 26 378 14 Nixon Seeking Extension Of National Debt Ceiling WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nikson's administration said no Monday to tax-loophole closing this year, but promised to work with Congress in 1973 on a comprehensive review of the law. Officials took this position as the leader of the House Ways and Means Committee. They paid $15-billion temporary raise in the national debt ceiling, to $465 million. Backing up the request were new estimates of budget deficits—$26 billion for the year ending June 30 and $22 billion for the year before. We were an improvement over earlier estimates but partly because the government through miscalculation is withholding too much income tax from incomes this year—about $26 billion worth. BUDGET Director George P. Shultz said the administration favored the purpose of a bill that would force a review of the dozens of special tax provisions by bringing them up for repeal over the next three years. D, the told Chairman Wilbur Mills, D-Ark, of the Ways and Means Committee, author of the method, we have some problems. But Shultz said the administration was flat opposed to attaching any tax-reform legislation to the debt-billing bill for immediate consideration, as a number of Democrats were Nevertheless, he said, "we are anxious to sit down with this committee and work on it next year." HE NOTED that, unless Congress completes action on the legislation by June 30, the debt ceiling would drop automatically to $400 million, some $25 billion than the actual outstanding debt. "The deadline is June 30... we think you could do any way a review of the revenue code in 25 days is out of the question." Mills's proposal to bring about review of the revenue code proposed in the 1990 proposal ran into sharper criticism from the senior Republican member. Ways John W. Byrnes, the committee chairman, W.J. Byrnes of Wisconsin. "YOU DON'T have to repeal a law to study a law," Byrnes said. "... I can't think of anything more likely to disrupt confidence just when business is getting its feet on the ground." Meanwhile top Treasury offi- cials insisted that an internal mern- tial committee that became known last week was simply a study paper, not the tax policy. "Here it is June 5." Shultz said INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The president of Indiana said he club said Tuesday a three-man panel will hear the Indy 500 appeal of race driver Jerry Grant. Grant Will Explain Indy 500 Mistake Charlie Brockman said he would preside over the closed hearing, but he did not identify the other members of the panel. Grant pulled into the pits because of a handling problem, and Gurney thinking Grant was running out of fuel, stopped the The appeal, filed by Dan Gurney, owner of Grant's car, conveyed to the judge an illegal refounding on the 18th趴 of the Indianapolis 500. Grant, who had finished second, was dropped to 12th place in the official standings, a difference of about $7,200 in prize money. Gurney had admitted the induction, but is appalling because he had been severely and there was no set penalty for the infraction in the rule The crew coupled Unser's fueling hoses to Grant's car for about six seconds. Brockman said the results of the meeting Tuesday would not be announced until at least Wednesday or Thursday. FCC Member Says TV Pushing Drugs "Every indicator of drug use—from cigarette sales to aspirin sales, from the use of alcohol to the use of vitamins, from sleeping pills to stay-awake pills—is increasing annually," she said. And detection is intimately involved in these drugs." WASHINGTON (AP)—Federal Communications Commissioner Nicholas Johnson assailed drug manufacturers who said, "television is the said." "And I don't think television is wholly responsible for creating a society that craves drugs." Speaking to the annual meeting of the National Coordinating Council on Drug Education, Hampshire officials said they would think "television executives have made a conscious decision to sell drugs as opposed to other com- Johnson said the current anti-drug spots featuring professional stylists are likely to be, encouraging drug use by calling to the attention of young people to a glamorized, illegal alternative drug, gurkized or adult world." He said he would make "to major decision" without first checking with the ailing governor. He said the Nixon administration's efforts to dry up the supply of illegal drugs "doesn't work in practice." "If we could totally choke off the supply of illegal drugs . . . there are enough other legal drugs that can be, and are, used to treat someone who is not more of a social problem than illegal drugs," he said, listing Beasley, 35, downplaying any political differences with Wallace and expressing concern for the governor's health, she said he urged the President in a telegram to set up special prayer day for Wallace. Expressing regret that the duties befit him because of Wallace's hospitalization in Maryland. Beasley assured the judge that he would give Wallace's cabin members his full cooperation. MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)—As George C. Wallace continued to show signs of improvement Monday, acting Alabama Gov. Jere Beasley took over the state's best office and urged President Nixon to proclaim a national day of prayer for Wallace. Governor's Office In Alabama Filled Wallace, who was reported improving from an abdominal wound as well as receiving increased physical therapy (for the cooperaion and his public statements in the governor's car in the pit of teammate Bobby Unser. behalf." a Wallace aide said. He also made his first official act as governor in proclaiming Wednesday's anniversary of the speedy complete recovery" of Wallace. Comp Center Offers Classes The governor has been under treatment in Silver Spring, Md. during the 15 white seeking the Democratic presidential nomination. The Computation Center will offer several courses without fees or credit this summer. Students must pass the Honeywell 6351 computer 6351 computer. The two courses will meet the next three days. noons from 1:30 to 3 p.m., June 13 to July 27, FORTRAN IV, which will meet in 405 Summer College, re-reading the course material. Required texts are available in Requirements and Registration register for the courses by calling 864-4291, or by signing up with the Computation Center secretary in the provided address. Fate of General Degree To Be Decided June 16 The fate of the proposed bachelor of general studies degree at KU will be made public June 16. the members of the College Assembly will be counted. At that time ballots mailed by The original intent of the degree was to allow a free-choice curriculum. Hijacking Ransom Recovered BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The FBI said Monday that a authories had recovered the rest of a $200,000 taken by a murderer. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SUA to Sponsor Films Bridge During Summer Student Union Activities will sponsor three film series, popular, classical and summer Shakespeare, during the summer school session. The popular and musical productions of Woodruff Auditorium and the Shakespeare series will be shown in Dyacite Audiorium. Labor Department Grant To Help Kansas Indians SUA is also sponsoring duplicate bridge this summer. It will meet at 1:30 p.m. Wednesdays at the office in the Union, 864-347-77. "Night in Casablanca," starring Chico, Groucheo and Harpo Marx, June 7, will be the first film in the classical series. The films begin at 7:30 p.m. and admission is 75c. Double features are $1. The grant will pay for administrative costs of the program, as well as provide The first showing of the popula series will be "The Circus", starring Charlie Chaplin, June 1 The Shakespeare series will begin with "Henry V" starring Sir Laurence Olivier June 11. Roy said 100 persons will take part in the program, receiving training in fields such as building cuisine, food services and graphic arts. TOPEKA (AP) — U.S. Rep. William Roy, D-Kan., announced Monday that the U.S. Department of Labor has approved a $737,767 grant to provide training for Indians in northern Kansas. Indian Enterprises Inc., an Indian-owned economic corporation, will administer the grant, in cooperation with the Kansas State Security Division of the Kansas State Department of Labor. allowances vor participants during training. Haskell American Indian Junior College at Lawrence will provide the most, of all, summer campers and a summer session. The program is open to Indians in northeast Kansas, principally members of the four united Indian tribes. Potawatomi and Sac and Fox, IN MIAMI, meanwhile, Norman N. E. Bliss, a special FBI agent who led the attack, frickerdrick William Hahnman, cuscuted of hijacking a plane and bombing an airplane on May 5. Bliss said Hahnman had the ransom money was bound for "the Bank of Communist China in Hong Kong." In the Nevada case, the FBI reported searchers found $160,000 in a remote area of the state. The officers quickly shortly after he parachuted from the United Airlines jet, left the airport with the money aboard the plane. man who parachuted from a hijacker over Nevada. Suffered at $95,000. $400,000 by a hijacker last month was charged with a Communist binge hotel in Nebraska. "He just said he accomplished his mission by Monday night," the agent said. "The money was coming back to him. The money was coming back to the U.S., but first it was going to a bank in Honduras and then was to be channeled back to the U.S." Mr. Crawford, a Communist China in Hong Kong Under cross-examination, Bliss was given a woman wielding anti-communist rifle to the far right. He didn't specify exactly what he meant by far BLISS SAID Hahman told him he had delivered the bag full of cash to an unknown inter-neter in Nürnberg the night of May 5. U. S. Magistrate Michael Osan ordered Hahneman held without bond and bound over to federal authorities in Alexandria, Va. Biss testified that he and two other agents interviewed Hahnene. One agent also hired Ahnene when turned himself in to U.S. Embassy officials. sisting people with whom he was working in Central and South America," said Bliss. JETHRO TULL Thick as a Brick "He said it would wind up as on Reprise Records alcohol, glue-sniffing, pill popping, and anti-freeze and cough syrup drinking. $2.77 stereo only at KIEF'S Discount Records Taking aim at the TV industry, Phan said, is sure that the company will capitalize on the drug phenomenon to their great profit MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Pioneer Stereo Components RAY AUDIO'S STEREO WAREHOUSE Created primarily for young people and folks who really dig music. We carry only the finest gear and we offer the lowest possible price, cost plus 10 per cent, for most all lines. We don't sell junk or anything we don't personally dig. STOP IN, IT WILL BE WORTH IT. We will honestly advise you. We do extensive market research and product testing. We are quite proud of our reputation for professional consulting. 842-2047 1205 Prairie Ave. Lawrence, Ks. 13th Street Prairie Ave. Here Mass. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Catherine M. D'Arcy, a teacher at St. Joseph's Catholic School in New York City, wrote this memoir to share her experiences as a teacher and to honor her memory. The book is available on Amazon.com and other online retailers. Z+ Overwhelmed? Slow, unorganized reading is boring! or You lose concentration and perspective! You seem to spend all your time studying! Mary Confident Fast, intelligent reading holds your attention! You grasp the ideas sooner & more accurately! You have time for leisure enjoyment! NEW CLASSES BEGIN THIS WEEK Regular Course: Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m.-Noon, June 6-July 18 Thursdays, 7:00-9:30 p.m., June 8-July 20 Western Civ. Course: Tuesdays, 7:00-9:30 p.m., June 6-July 18 READ THE ENTIRE YEAR'S WESTERN CIVILIZATION ASSIGNMENTS IN ONLY 7 WEEKS Reading Dynamics teaches you how to find the meaning in all those thousands of words. Our instructor is also a Western Civ. Instructor. Our unique note-taking technique simplifies, organizes, and relates ideas in graphic form. 图 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Downstairs at the Sound-Hillcrest Shopping Center 925 Iowa Phone 843-6424 4 Tuesday, June 6, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. 'Ms.' is Miserable Journalists have often been accused of corrupting the English language, but let's set the record straight about one of the most recent additions to our language. We journalists did not, I repeat, did not inform female who exists in a state of limbo somewhere between the married and the unmarried. What prompted the creation of "Ms." anyway? Are we females to blame because we have often failed to sign our names properly so that no one knows exactly what we are? Was it a plot by the author or a mistake? Did they and require only two spaces for a title? Or was "Ms." an offshoot of the women's lib movement? If the women librarians needed a term to symbolize their independence, why did they choose "Ms."? We already have several respectable abbreviations for these two letters. "Ms" in capitals or small letters can mean manuscript, and if printed "M.S." it may mean master of science or master of surgery. And then there are those who say "MS" means multiple sclerosis. So, this "Ms." business just adds to what is already a confusing situation. Maybe the new "Ms." will soon drive all the other "Ms" forms out of circulation and show an example of Bernstein's Law that bad words drive out good ones. Won't it be amusing to see those who have failed to stay abreast of the developments in the English language? We will hear stodgy old editors saying something like this: "We are returning your Ms because it did not meet required standards." What is the editor referring to, an article or the woman who may have written it? Life is complicated enough without adding additional confusion. And so, say what you will, fair and unfair critics. I wish to go on record as not favoring "Ms." for another reason. My mother and I have the same first name, so when something comes to our house addressed "Mrs. Rita Haugh" we must remember what it behooves us. I read her mail and she is reading mine. Take your pick; is this addition to our language an improvement or a corruption? -Rita E. Haugh Editor -Readers Respond people who enjoy them but does nothing for those who don't. there would be nothing left to do at the university except smoke pot and sleep overnight in Strong Hall. In the first place, it would be impossible to enforce a belief about the welfare of research is enhancing "the welfare of the world's people." Atomic energy may do this or it will fail. It can be a piece of art, whether it be a painting or a cleverly proved illusion. Research enhances the welfare of a few It seems that the Haiphan, Coalition has gotten the cartel to agree with the statement issued by them entitled "Research Should Benefit Everyone Anyway in part, in research's sake. It is done for a reason—and that reason should be to enhance the welfare of the people." The truth that millions of dollars are wasted on trivial academic matters and on research intended to benefit the people poses, but in the name of academic freedom I can not complain of the above statement. -David Kesler Secondly, it is a fallacy to suppose that those whose work most benefits humanity are ecologists, for example, have particularly noble souls. Intellectual curiosity and a desire to have a reputation in one's field must be enhanced by 'enhance the welfare of the world's people.' Certainly, a researcher enjoys the publicity he receives when he has done something valuable, but that is not why he did it. Lawrence graduate student Finally, no research benefits everyone. Penicillin doesn't help those who are allergic to it. Seat belts killed because they were trapped in their car. Although certain research benefits a great many others, it does only to that which benefits everyone, or even that which enhances our welfare or the lives of pack our bags and go home; To the editor: OF THE PREP. PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES THE ELECTION "But, sometimes at night I wake up screaming Could it be the same of bag we had it in... back in 1948?" Four States Hold Primaries Today BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS scheduled Tuesday in California, New Jersey, New Mexico and South Dakota. Here are some thoughts. California DELEGATES-GOP voters will choose 98 delegates to their convention. Democrats will accept only the delegates are required by law to support the California primary winner until released by him or her or until the winner polls less than half the votes are the convention. The Republican pledge in the winner take all primary is not specific, but is interpreted to bind the vote until released by him or her. VOTERS—About 9.1 million are eligible, including 5.1 million Democrats and 3.4 million Republicans. DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES.- Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey, Minneapolis and Minnesota and Dakota, Rep. Shirley Chisholm of New York, Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles, Sen Henry Jackson McCain of Maine, Muske of Maine, New York mayor, John Lindsay, former Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCormick, George Wallace as a written VOTERS—About 3.37 million are eligible. REPUBLICAN CAND- DIDATES—President Nixon and Ren. John Ashrock of Ohio. REPUBLICAN CAN- DIDATES—President Nixon runs unopposed. slates; Rep. Chisholm and Gov. Wallace each have limited slates and sen. Muskue has released his leadership in the Senate. In a popular bontest, Rep. Chisholm opposes former Nor- Carolina Gov. Terry Sanford. New Mexico DELEGATEES Democrats to delegate votes to National Convention, committed to either Humphrey or McGovern to delegate votes are not binding. REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES-President Nixon and Rep. Paul N. McCloskey of California. VOTERS—About 408,808 are eligible, including 282,385 Democrats and 126,423 Republicans. DELEGATES — Republicans in the convention, Democratis 18. The two top Democratic vote getters will divide the 18 delegate votes DEMOCRAT CANDIDATES-Sens. Humphrey and McGovern, Rep. Chisholm, Gov. Clinton, Jesssen, Jackson and Muskeg. South Dakota VOTERS—About 337,000 eligible. REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES—President Nixon runs unopposed on a slate of 14 delegates. DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES. McGovern runs unopposed on a slate of 17 delegates. DELEGATE-State law committed for three balloons or until committed for three balloons or until his vote percentage falls below James J. Kilpatrick Increase in Social Security Bill Expected WASHINGTON, D.C.-Toward the end of this week, if all goes well, the Senate Finance Committee will complete its work on this year's mammoth Social Security fund. The committee reaches the floor, toward the end of the month, we will witness one of those seasonal phenomena that mark our political climate: in mid-summer, Christmas. TWO DAYS later, Agnew said Speculation Raised By Connally Trip Connally said when he resigned just month that he had no reason to fear his question asked about the vice president, and he speculated at this point in time." 18 strains of Jingle Bells. By DON McLEOD The complete itinerary has not been announced. Connally's first steps are in Venezuela, Brazil, Venezuela, Brazil and Bolivia. Per Toil will be visits to South Vietnam, Singapore and New Zealand. WASHINGTON-With the Republican convention little more than two months away, President Nixon has stoked John Connally's commitmentmate by sending him Connally around the world. WITH THE TIME of decision he asked, Connally said whether he would keep Agnew as his vice president, and Connally has not definitely been ready. none. The cost would be borne by them, who only hope for redress lies in the expectation that when they themselves retire, someone will come to their aid. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said in Key Biscayne, Fla., that Connally would be ready to take up "any crime we want, to rush to paint," including Nixon's move to China and the Soviet Union. Indications from the white lodge that Commission Whale had world leader President's Peking and Moscow trip adds to the importance of the trip and to the out-going Treasury of such a statue as bearer of such news. House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan said Sunday in a radio interview he disagreed with Vice President Spiro T. Agnew's assertion that a president should be made his place would be inconveniently Social security hoax is the best it have seen. A longer work by Mr. Zuckerberg in Security Fraud '19, *Artington House, H. 795*, is also excellent. THIS IS the kind of mission traditionally handed by vice president Obama to state. The Washington rumor mills have Connally available for a test run. Nixon's announcement Monday that Connally will represent him on the ballot, and today came a day after another key Republican a day it is possible a Democrat, such as Connally, to oppose O.P. vice-presidential nomination. Regardless, the trip will give Connally public exposure in the foreign-policy arena. Among his stops will be South Vietnam. About a year ago, Milton Friedman, the Chicago economist, debated these points with Wilbur Cohen, former chairman of the University Administration. A test of their debate, sponsored by the American Enterprise Institute, can be obtained for $7.5 from the University of Washington. Friedman won, hands down. His exposure of the Which is to say that when it comes to increasing Social Security, the president expected to outdo the house. Under the bill, an increase would be provided across the country; a committee will recommend at least 10. Senator McGovern is running for Humphrey is pledged to 25. Whatever figure finally is accepted for a basic increase, the proportion still remains benefits in certain classifications. Medicare provisions will be expanded. The amount of OF (or unpaid/unaliened earnings of a retired person will be boosted to at least $100,000 per year. Senators will adjourn to the Very well. The Social Security system will be 37 years old on October 1, 2025, and it is socially secure. There is not the slightest prospect of a taxpayers' rebellion against it. But once the authorities have ruled, especially should take a sober, critical look at whither this thing goes. It will be taken for a very expensive ride. The closest Nixon has come to addressing the subject directly when he asked why he winter when he said he saw no reason to break up a winning team. The Social Security people are fond of talking about "contributions." They speak assuringly of "trust funds" and "deep care," the deceptive name of old-age "insurance." All this is sham. The increased benefits about to be voted on will not be paid by "contributions." They will be received only if the employee earns comp of law, and these will be among the steepest and most regressive taxes collected in our district. They represent a percent on earnings up to $9,000 a year, half of it paid by the employer, half by the employee. That produces a maximum tax of $45,000 per year by 1977 would go to 14.8 percent on earnings up to $10,200. Not many persons. I know, take the trouble to read either book. Most people take casual shots that are taken at Social Security by syndicated columnists. Most Porter are bawn away in the wind. So bring on Christmas! But young persons should understand that they face 40 years of January it would be "totally unrealistic to expect the Republican convention to accept" Connally on its national ticket. contract, under which fixed premiums are paid and fixed interest is earned; relationship is clear between what is paid in, and what is paid in No such relationship exists under the bogus "insurance" of Social Security. One of the pending proposals in the Senate has raised concerns that an income worker who retires after 30 years. He now received $135 a month in Social Security benefits. The bill will boost this to $200. In the meantime, he had relationship to the taxes he has paid, and the $200 would have producing a maximum tax of $1,509. Copyright 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. In theory, but only in theory, these taxes go into a "trust fund." Sometimes they call it a "special fund." But so long as the purpose of the fund is meaningful, these statements are baloney. References from Social Security goes directly to the U.S. Treasury, passing only long enough en route for the writing of U.S. U.s. The "trust fund" is a myth. Most Americans have a fairly clear idea of what is meant by "insurance." They understand that an insurance policy is a Environmental Protection Expressed in New Laws By STAN BENJAMIN WASHINGTON (AP)—Some people say the pollution uproar will soon blow over. Lately they want it to be more for the noise on the subject. —Senate approval for controls on harmful chemicals. Some fast legal maneuvers to get the nation's second-largest auto-maker out of a jam after it apparently up-ended an oil tests. Associated Press Writer A court order tightening national air quality standards. Federal approval of state plans to achieve those standards. —A TOUGH new federal government water pollution and a meeting with state officials to explain it. At the core of this whirlwind is the fact that environmental protection is just beginning to find its expression in laws. Many have yet to be written; many still will be applied in challenge or, interpetred in court, often for the first time; and once understood they are ready. THE SENATE's passage Tuesday of the proposed Toxic Substances Control Act by a 700 vote in the House, law to control dangerous Russian Man Aims at Nationalism The nation has had laws to control air and water pollution since 1967 and 1985, and may as well be calling for even more still are being sorted out. The Environmental Protection Agency issued its first approvals last Wednesday of state plans to establish the nationwide standards. chemicals. IN THE meantime, an 1899 water pollution law was still being reinterpreted last week The air pollution laws were amended in 1970 setting nationwide air quality standards on pollution from automobiles. MOCSW (AP) — Vladimir Oisovos is a publisher without a printing press, a former political activist, and a founder of his underground magazine around in a shabby briefcase, where the current issue will be his last. F He hurried to launch his enterprise last year during a spate of political scandals that party congress this March was going to endorse re-Stalination. But re-Stalination didn't engage the enterprise has continued THE MAGAZINE is one of several typewritten underground publications that have been recaptured and on passed in greater number by their readers. The system is called "Samizdat"; the Russian publisher has said. Osiopiv's journal is named "Whee" after the councils of freemen that existed in Russia during the Anglo-Icelandic invasions of the 18th century. Clokely associated with the ideas of the Russian Orthodox church, as well as his churches' dependence on the state, "Veché" measures contemporary Soviet society against capitalist and socialism, and society wanting It. is, in Oisipov's words, "the first periodical of a national character in the U.S.S.R." WITH OSIPOV'S confidence in rising Russian nationalism goes a faith in a religious renaissance in the Soviet Union. Until he was 13, he was intensely religious. "Then I became an atheist, joined the Komsomol, the Communist youth organization, and was a brilliant author, I believed. I was a fanatic." Osipov, 33, has twice changed his faith. As a history student at Moscow State University in 1959, he recalls, he wrote a letter protesting the arrest of a friend by the secret police. For this he was expelled from the university and communicated to the Komsomol. Then, on the morning of Oct. 6, 1961, four men in civilian clothes stopped him on the sidewalk in front of the school as he turned up to take his turn at the bar only for an identity check, but Oskov knew what it was about. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom—UN-4 4810 Business Office—UN-4 4358 At the police station he asked to go to the toilet. Inside, he shredded the pages of his address book, flushing the names and addresses down the drain. That was his last act for seven years. Published at the University of Kansas four times weekly during the summer session. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $12 a year. Second class payment帖住 at www.school.edu/us/psychology. Priority mail is expedited to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Education. THE SECRET police, the KGB, took over that day from the civilian police. They sent him first to Lubyanya Prison, and later to Fortovoe, the other KGB officer in Moscow. His trial lasted three days. NEWS STAFF News Adviser ... Del Brinkman Editor Campus Editor News Editor Copy Chief Photographers Cartoonist Rita E. Haugh Karen A. Kramer Bob Norfolk Reg Adam Pris Brandon, Hank Young BUSINESS STAFF Business Advtser ... Mel Adams Business Manager Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Promotional Manager Doug DeTray Steve Conner Laura Dyntz Carol Williams Dave Bennett Todd Brown Griff and the Unicorn JOGGING, SIMON? YEH. PUFF PUFF WORKS OFF EXCESS WEIGHT IF THAT GUY WORKS OFF ANY MORE WEIGHT, HE'LL BE INVISIBLE SKDPLUFF JOGGING, SIMON? By Sokoloff The accusation was that he and three friends had planned, "an act of assault," but Khrushchev, a charge that Khrushech IF THAT GUY WORKS OFF ANY MORE WEIGHT, HE'LL BE INVISIBLE SCROLLF His crime, he adds, had been to errors of the premiers and the farmers his agricultural policy and his congressional conduct on the Berlin question. Osipov maintains his magazine is not political and therefore not illegal. "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." ROLLING STONES "Exile on Main St'L on Atlantic Records Reg. $ 9^{95} $ 5^{88} KIEF'S Discount Records MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Discount Diamond Needles University Summer Kansan Tuesday, June 6. 1972 KU Institute Studies Shakespeare By CONNIE PARISH By CONNIE PARISH Kansan Staff Writer KU students interested in learning about Shakespeare and the Elizabethan era met Monday in the first session of the Kansas Shakespeare Festival and will continue to attend will continue July 29. The Institute, which is being offered for the first time at KU, is designed for students of various disciplines such as music, art, history. English and theatre to give under understanding of language are Not only will Shakespeare's literary works be studied, but also the music, art, and theatre of Elizabethan times. This wide range of experiences should enrich the student's awareness of Shakespeare by placing him in his cultural context, said William Kuhlke professor of speech and drama and the Institute's academic advisor. Festival activities include three Shakespearean productions, a film series madrigal music, and a contemporary art exhibit and guest lectures. asunt Vaughan, eminent American Shakepearean theater teacher for the Institute, Anne Thompson, a Shakespearean actress who has appeared in plays at the Shakespeare Festival, the Kennedy Center's Eisenhower Theatre and others, is actress in. Scholars-in-residence are Paul Murray Kendall, professor of English and Charlton Himan, professor of English. Kendall, a, historian and biographer, is a professor of Shakespearean drama. Himman is a leading authority on the editing of Shakespeare's works and currently collaborating on an edition of Shakespeare's comedies. The chairman of the festival committee in Jack T. Brooking, professor of speech and drama, will present materials other than speech and drama participating in the in- J. Bunker Clark, associate professor of music history; James Connelly, associate professor of art history; Richard Tucker, associate professor of English; Eric Wimmers, acting assistant professor of English. Charles Mastinon, associate professor of English, is the English department's student in planning the institute. "Hamlet" will be featured July 6 to 8 and July 10 and 11. Brooking will direct this production. Three dramatic productions will be staged during the festival. These productions will be open to the public. Stuart Vaughan will direct "Twelfth Night." 'to be broadcast' 24, to 26, on July 1. The final production will be "Mortchant of Venice" on July 15, to 12 or 7. It will be directed by the instructor in speech and drama. Computer Use Slowed From Page One computer center for instruction or administration. Wolfe said that the future program would have to be more efficient that it is today. "WHAT WE'RE faced with, I think," Woolf said, is "that not only the computation center operate more efficiently, but even watching it carefully when we are doing and doing essential things." Wolfe said that there was a rather large adjustment to make, and that there was no easy way of doing it. Summer School "We're probably all going to go there, a re-evaluation of what we're doing, why we are doing it, and how important it is to do it." I smile, a smile that is professional and appropriate for do all the time anyway." He said that people were going to be asked to look at reports that they receive and determine if they are necessary and have to be produced as often as if there is a economic way of producing them. These figures were released by William L, Kelly, registrar. Wolfe said the priorities of the KU Information System would have to be determined more carefully. All theatre performances will be at 8 p.m. in the university Theatre. Tickets are available with certificates of registration. Ways of reducing fixed costs, such as equipment charges is also being looked into. Wolef said they were trying to cut down on the total monthly bill on equipment and make its basic computer equipment. Enrollment is Up 3 Per Cent The projected final enrollment for the Lawrence campus is 6,388 compared to 6,343 for an increase of 1 per cent. pieces of information." The problem is also being committed by the university committee on computing. The Long Range Planning Sub- committee of the University of North Carolina is currently currently doing a study which should be completed sometime in The large increase at the Med Center is due to a change in schedule, and the new students now need more time with their parents and of waiting for the fall. "IT IS really a basic question—where are you going to put your bucks? Where are you going to get them?" "If it is important it is to have certain Total first day enrollment for the summer session at the University of Kansas and the KU Med Center is up 3 per cent over last year, and in the same year's first day totals were 5.015 in Lawrence compared to 4.953 last year for an increase of 1 per cent, and in Kansas City the total was up 14 per cent with 1.033 students to 908 for last year. Meantwhile the demand for computers increases, and as Wolfe put it, "with little or no funding increase, we're headed for an increasing amount on our portfolio for a very very scarce resource." 40 Jobs Required To Help STEP Up Several parts for men are still open in both "Hamlet" and "The Wife," so students are eligible to try out. Those interested should contact the Department of the Experimental Theatre and from 3 to 5 p.m. in Room 233. Lawrence's Summer Teen Employment Program (STEP) helps teens reach the goal of 100 job slots for underprivileged and minority students. Six Shakespearean films are being sponsored by the Student Union Activities as part of the festival. These films are open to all KU students. Laurence Olivier will be present. V' will open the series June 11. On Sunday afternoons follow on each there are production and exhibition halls, with informal gatherings for festival participants to discuss the events. In addition, Phil Briscoe, coordinator of the program for the Hellenic Academy of the Resources, said Monday the program was $5,000 short of being adequately funded. Donations are STEP's sole source of in- come. program's operating fund. STEP originally was founded to keep adolescents off the streets after school and into summer months. But the orientation now is toward helping youngsters work out attitude issues in their different environment through their summer jobs. Some job slots now provide training with Step. In some instances the employer pays his STEP employee's wages. More often, wages are supplemented or paid from the supplement. STEP want to provide more help than others said. More than anything else, youngsters need to feel that others are concern about them, "Romeo and Juliet," featuring a ballet performed by the Bolshoi Theatre of Moscow, will be shown at the Metropolitan Theater featured as Puck in Max Reinhardt's production of "Midsummer Night's Dream." A Russian-made version of *Othello* will be shown July 18, "Throne of Blood," a Japanese play that will close the series on July 23. organization Gays Continue Challenge Of District Court Ruling The Front filed suit against the University because it had refused to give recognition to the Gay Lib The Lawrence Gay Liberation Front has begun an appeal of a U.S. District Court decision F.10 which denoted the homosexual group's request for recognition by the University of Kansas. Klinknett said that one such case had been reviewed in the police station and that a man was fired from his job when he applied for a marriage license. Jack Klinken, attorney for the Front, said that a major argument centered on whether she had sufficient force people to accept its beliefs. Briscoe stressed that anyone with a job must provide an employer program to provide a steady job for a minimum of two hours a day, five hours a day. The District Court in this case ruled that the man should regain his job, but a Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court ruled that he was forcing his personal beliefs upon his employer. A record of appeal, including documents related to District Court Judge Guever Templar's attempt to have the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver. The Appeals Court would make its decision on a case. All films will be shown at 2 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union and at 7:30 p.m. in Dynec Auditorium. Tickets are 75 cents. Prospective employers must be definite about what type of work needs to be done. In addition, and with the right personnel, the employer must provide supervision—positive reinforcement well trained in enforcement the well youth is doing his job. University students and faculty often make the best supervisors, said Briscoe. "I am somewhat displeased with attitudes of some people in Lawrence." Briscoe said the job slots yet to be found. Music and art offerings are also available to the public as well as institute participants. The opening of the Boydell Theater will be at 3:30 p.m. June 11 in the Spoonther Tayer Museum of Art. Participation in STEP is one form of community involvement, and the more people that contribute than one's money he said. A truly concerned citizen can show his interest in more ways than his money to his church, he said. Klinknett said that this argument was one of the main defenses used by the University. Forty students are enrolled in the institute, which is offered for both undergraduate and graduate credit. The Lawrence Chamber Players will provide music for the University of Texas program of Elizabetah music will be offered by the KU Colegium Musicum at 3 p.m. The University Spooner Thayer Museum of Art There will also be concerts each week. The final concert for the junior high camp will be at June 16, in Hoch Auditorium. Guest conductors for the junior high camp include Robert E. Foster, KU director of bands, and Michael W. Schoenberg, instrumental music in Winfield. For the orchestra, the director of music at Lawrence High School bands. Duncan Couch, director of musical music at Southern Baptist University. The Senate Executive Committee is considering a recommen- date defense-related research being done at the University, according to associate dean of law, Dr. Alex Exhairman Ron Calgaard. Calgaard said the Chancellor would make the final decisions on committee appointments and investigations, but that SenEx was considering criteria for the appointments and the committee in general. James B. Lingwall, associate professor of speech and drama and generalist of occupational clinic, said recently that anyone over 14 years of age could attend therapy. In addition, therapy would be conducted in group and individual positions. I will do everything I can to get you back. SenEx Plans For Committee There will be two bands of 150 players, and they will rehearse four hours daily in preparation for a grand concert finale to the camp. An orchestra of 125 students will rehearse the same piece at least twice as often as 150 voices will also prepare for the grand concert. Calgaard said SenEx planned to make a recommendation to the Chancellor's office sometime next week. The Spepp and Hearing Clinic at the University of Kansas will offer a therapy program for adult stutterers in the Lawrence and Buffalo areas. More information about the clinic may be obtained from the speech pathology office at UN4- 4690. Meetings will be at 7 p.m. each Thursday beginning June 8 in Room 288. Worth Hall. The first session will be a general orientation, Lingwall said. Kansas Staff Photo by LINDA SCHILI Clinic Offering Stutterers Aid Geraldine Jenkins, Kansas City, counted votes Monday in a party caucus as the electoral process got under way for the 408 citizens of Girls State. Politics will take a buck seat Wednesday after she elected officials fill their positions in the model government. This year's camp for junior high students will have an enrollment of about 400 students according to Russell Wiley, director of the camp. The only group in his age group is in music and art. Girls Reach for Office The junior high students will The 5th annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp will get underway Wednesday with a group of junior high school campers. sements. The junior high camp will last ten days, an abbreviated journalism camp for high school students a week and a five-week camp for music, art, journalism and speech and drama will start June 17. Three Are Named To Get Promotions Gilbert Dyck, an assistant registrar, has been appointed KU director of admissions. Vice President of Education, Balfour announced Saturday. Dyck has been an assistant registrar at KU for the past four years and was previously a teacher in the university mission. Before joining the KU staff, he was director of records at Kansas State University and a professor of research for Wheaton, Ill., public schools, a coach and counselor at Riley County High School, and a coach and teacher in the school. Two other appointments were announced. Jan Roakam, professor of aerospace engineering director of the flight research laboratory of been named chairman of aerospace engineering at the School of Engineering and Robert T. Angeenbrug has been named director of the Office of International Research and Planning. Dyck, who will begin his new job in august succeeds tax law Dyck, who will enter business. Roskam succeeds David Kohlman, who will be on sabbatical leave during the summer. Angengruben will replace George Baxter Smith, who is ap- posed to retire at a reti- retirement age for administrators and plans to return to his professorship in the School of Law. He earned the Ph.D. degree in 1965 from the University of Washington in aeronautics and aviation, he received a KU faculty in 1967, he was an aerodynamic engineer with the Boeing Company in Wichita for eight years and was a part-time instructor at Wichita State University Roskam's appointment will become effective at the beginning of the fall semester. Aangenbrug, now directed by the Institute for Social and Environmental Research, has assumed his new position July 1. projects in the lab for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. In 1960 he won a scholarship to teach Award in engineering. Aangeenbrug received his B.A. degree from Connecticut State College in 1958, taught in New York and then went to the University of Wisconsin where he earned his Ph.D. degree in 1965. He came to KU as assistant professor of history at Boston University faculty. In 1988 he was appointed director of the Center for Regional Studies at KU and the following year he became director of the Institute for the Environment Studies. Aangenebrug is chairman of the Governor's Technical Advisory Board and Communication Systems and serves as a member of the board of directors of the Urban and Regional Association. Aangenebrug has served for the past two years on the Governor's Advisory Council on Ecology from KU in 1967, his A.B. from Bethany College and his M.S. from Rocskam. He roskam, a native of the Hague, Holland, was educated in aeronautic engineering at the University of Delft, University at Deft, Holland. At KU, he has been instrumental in the development of the flight research laboratory and has conducted research He received his Ph.D. degree from KU in 1967, his A.B. from Bethany College and his M.S. from Kansas State University. Band Camp to Start Wednesday ROLLING STONES COTTONWOOD WORKSHOP The Bess Stone Activity Center, a workshop for mentality and physically handicapped adults, began moving to its new home, Cottonwood, Inc., Monday. The new facility is located at 3145 W. 20th Street in Cottonwood, where the director, plans an open house in September. Cottonwood will carry on Atlantic Records New Facility Opens for Handicapped "Exile on Main St." Kansas Staff Photo by PRES BRANDSTED on programs already existing at the Bess Stone Center and gradually expand them. A new emphasis will be on job training; preparing persons for actual employment as well as training them in the production of handaerds and goods and services for wholesalers. Reg. $9^{95}$ $5^{88}$ KIEF'S enroll Wednesday and will be housed in McColium Hall during their stay at KU. Discount Records MALLS SHOPPING CENTER After 967 the enronem- droped off at the KU camp as well as many other camps across the nation The Midwestern Music and Art Camp was organized 34 years ago by Wiley. The enrollment has increased from the handful of students who started in the first year to the enrollment of 2,400 students in 1967. "The economic situation in the United States became a little tighter." Wiley said, "and many of the other camps had to close down. Even some of the shortest roads were run for only a week are closing." Disc Preeners The 1,100 students who were SKYJICKED PG METROCOLOR MGM Eve. 7:30,9:30 Mat. Daily 3:00 Eve. 7:30. 9:30 Granada THEATRE... highway VI 1-5784 DR JERKU SISTER HYDE Ends Tuesday HAPPY HOUR COLOR Ends Tuesday Evenings Matinee at 7:30 & 8:30 2:30 Varsity TELA123 ... Telphon VP-005 Jesse James and Cole Younger's most daring bank robbery! "THE GREAT NORTHFIELD MINNESOTA RAID" Child .75 Hillcrest CABARET PG Technique Distributed by Allied Artists Eve 7:15 & 9:25 Ends The Hillcrest Toniigh enrolled this year is down somewhat from the expected enrollment of around 1,200. An Incredible Adventure of the Future . . . to Save What We Abuse Today! A UNIVERSAL RELEASE Adult 7:45 & 9:30 Chil- 1.50' Hillcrest 7.50' STAR WARS The final camp is a concentrated journalism camp that will start Sunday and end June 23rd. To attend, the concentration of the camp will be a senior high students. There will be about 85 students in this section of the camp. 50TH Hillcrest "We have always had a real fine camp program," said Wiley, "and even with the fewer num- bers we year will have a great camp. WANT ADS WORK WONDERS HANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days Oral day (1) oral food / fewlet : $7.98 (2) additional fewlet : $0.51 The senior high camp will preside in each of these concerts there will be three bands, one chair and two orchestras. The concert will Accreditation, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanana are offered for college credit, gold, cremation, or national origi- How do we advertise? If you don't. FOR SALE 23 words at fifteen; 11.50 each additional word; 11.50 Deadline: 1:00 p.m. | Next before publication "silent Ends Tonight running." Western CVs. Note-New On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, you're at an advantage. 1969 Great Lakes Mobile Home—Comp. furn. 2 bedroom—Best offer over $3,300 Call 842-3186 or 843-8555-7 You're of a divaadvantage. Every way it comes to the same thing. The Westerly, Western Civilization," Campus Madhouse, 141 Worth 14th 7-27 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 351 Mich. Hilton Grand Central, 340 Mich. Briana Plate $14, 560 Briana Plate $15, 560 Briana Plate to go-$30 $150 Slab to eat -$35, 585 Bear Plate $15, 585 $300 Bear Plate $15, 585 $300 Breaf Refreshment Sand-$80 $900 Breaf Refreshment Sand-$72 901 Closed Sum-Tim...7-27 Stress systems and large discount offers. 10% off prices. Lawrence selected selection of Pro- tective Entertainment components. Open 11-7, Mon-Sat. 4-12 20 gallon all glass aquarium complete with fluorescent heat, feather, filters, gravel, stand and two 10 inch Oceans if desired. Call 811-2546-6-13 Oldtie Equalities CROSSED SMAGGY Owl Equalities PUPPLES MUALES OR EXFAMELS $53 C E GOSHW MOLDITH RAMSA RAMA 6-128 6-128 HELP WANTED 843-3565 Lawrence Kansas JAROLD'S TEACHER OPENINGS Current listings of hundreds of California school districts. 1974-1975 California School Placement. 1974-1975 California School Placement. 1974-1975 OCLS. 86-1255, Berkeley. 6-15 Good job Galler. Colorado booming Sales to jobs by $30,000 monthly. Workshop starts in January. $25, $30,000 weekly. Summer jobs- labors. $15,000 weekly. Drawer, Hunter, Labeo, Cohote TYPING Typing, IBM selectric, pica type Fast; accurate; typing guaranteed Phone 843-3186 6-8 JAROLD'S Diving Supplies 804-353-369 Laurence, Kansas Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I., Equip. in Stock Certified Instructor WHY RENT? First Days 21 words or fewer $1.75 each additional word$2.00 Experienced (typical will type) y term papers, thesis or dissertation Electric (typewriter) prompt, accurate writing. Mail resume to: 443 821-3889; Matee 6-212 WANTED RIDGEVIEW LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Plate RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843.8490 TEACHERS WANTED Contact Southwest Teachers Agency Box 433 Albuquerque NM 87066 *Uore Albuquerque* Bored and a sister-6 NATA A Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches, MISCELLANEOUS BETHEL MUSEUM OF ART FOR RENT STEREO REPAIR RMS Electronics. 724 Mass Storage Systems, Compact- Station Tape Machines and Spanners. Lowest Tape Machines and Spanners Service. 2672 Open 11-17 Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steak 1. 1 pts, 1 lb; 2 bedrooms. Pool patio and gas grillies. Dishwashers and dishwashers. Walk-in cloests. Sinks. Baths. 200-63. Size: 812-7453 Our motto is and has always been "There is no substitute for quality sirloin SUMMER WORK - Earn $10.00 per hour over a $80.00 base. Be your own boss in Michigan State University summer Deliver or sell National Zip Code Directories. For sample addresses, visit www.michiganstate.edu and your House and School address to Zip Code Publishing. For more information, visit Wisconsin, 231.7 020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59) 11. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge --- YAHA Phone 843-1431 Open 4:30 Closed Mondays ERN'S CYCLE SALES - WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 716 North 2nd 043 8500 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store V UDIOTRONICS ... 728 Macie Mass. 6 Tuesday, June 6, 1972 University Summer Kansan Ballet KU's All-Around Gymnast: A New Trend in Competition MARK DAVIS PETER GRAFMAN Performing in all six events requires not only a great deal of skill, but also basic concentration and control. A little assistance from the coach to begin the event contributes to perfection of each segment of the performance. Through each distinct X maneuver, the strength and endurance of the gymnast is enhanced by contrast ripple effects in the degree of difficulty epi. This is the basis for jugging. BASKETBALL PATRICK MORGAN Strenuous body control is followed by a brief moment of apparent exhastion when the gymnast leaves the protective mat, allowing for a powerful return. All-around gymnast Marc Joseph, Lawrence junior, anticipates his performance and moves to mind. Joseph tries to remain mentally at ease while he focuses on the performance of his teammates. Left, prior to the meet, he is preparing for handling pain while stretching stiff muscles. 1974 NISSEN The all-around gymnasm often has to rely solely on the strength of his arms and legs to catapult his body through the air. During the vaulting horse, above, and every other event, Joseph remains in free fall for an instant, twisting and turning in different controlled movements. He must be able to return to earth. A final pat on the back from the coach makes the hard work for control, strength and endurance all worthwhile. By STEVE STRAS Kansan Sports Writer "I had a fight with my girl friend, and while we were not talking to each other, I turned on the television set," he said. One night six years ago, Marc Jobe joined the University of Kansas gymnastics had a fight with his girl friend. Now he's the best all-around player. "On television that night I watched the NCAA gymnastics tournament and watched the *tie* between me and myself that I could do that, too." Joseph began participating in gymnastics as a sophomore at Lawrence. He worked on the parallel bars and placed fourth in the state meet his sophomore year. He won the event his final two years at Lawrence High. During his senior year in high school, Joseph started working as an all-around man at the coach of his coach, Bob Manning. He decided to come to KU because he had lived in Lawrence most of his life and knew several of the KU gymnasts. Since Joseph has been at KU, legislation by the NCAA has increased the importance of the all-around gymnast. Legislation has initiated a trend toward emphasizing all-around performers and putting less emphasis on specialists, according to KU Coach Bob Lockwood. "The United States and Canada are the only countries in the world with specialists in gymnastics. All other countries, however, have very few regulations, only have all-around performers." Lockwood said. Two years ago, the NCAA rules that a team must field three all-around performers. A team now only two specialists in each event. In 1964, a team needed only one all-around performer and could enter three specialists in each round. The third competitor attempted to eliminate Now, the NCAA is considering a change requiring four all-around men for a meet and tournament event. If that change isn't implemented, the number of all-around men will remain the same, but the number of athletes might be reduced to one. specialists from collegiate gymnastics. All an-airborne man performs in all six gymnastic events—floor exercise, side horse, high bar, horizontal, parallel bars and still rings. Each event takes much hard work and a great amount of time, Joseph, Lockwood, and several other members of the gymnastics team regard the new legislation with little favor. "Gymnastics is a minor sport in which many people want to participate, but many don't have the physical attributes nor the desire to become all-around." "Not everybody in gymnastics in the United States can be an all-around performer," Lockwood agreed. "The physique has much to learn, but it is also what man needs a well developed body and great overall body strength." Rich Schubert and Terry Baird, two oceans specialists, it would be bad for the sport and many people if oceansists were faced out of competition. Joeph does not think that the Nets all-around men. There will always be a place for the players in collegiate gymnastics, he said. As an all-around performer, Joseph said he did not think the recent legislation would effect him. "I don't think I am good enough to compete internationally, and I am not." Sometimes, my knee will lock when I am performing," he said. Joseph doesn't plan to enter international competition when he leaves KU. Bad leg and all, Joseph has the fourth best score ever recorded by a KU all-around man, a 49.45. SAMUEL LOVETTE Kansan Photos by RON SCHLOERB Gr Tues Law cere an $ THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Laird Skeptical Over Arms Pact See Page 3 82nd Year, No. 3 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, June 7, 1972 VERTY & HEDGES ESTATE & INSURANCE Kansas Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED Downtown Beautification Project Begins .. Mavor John Erick and into Massachusetts St. .. Downtown Facelift Work Begins Groundbreaking ceremonies were Tuesday at 9 a.m. for the downtown Lawrence law enforcement project. The final official beginning of an $833,923.60 project. Pete Whitenight, chairman of the Downtown Lawrence Association, hosted the ceremonies. Representatives from all three of the project spoke at the ceremony. "Six years ago this downtown improvement was just a gleam in a few people's eyes," John Emick, Lawrence Mayor, said at the ceremony. "Buford found that the money was available, and now that gleam is a reality." A downtown improvement program has been in various stages of preparation for a number of years, and most participants in the brief morning ceremony appeared optimistic about the final realization of the project. Don Robertson, partner in Robertson. Peters and Williams, said, "This project is late and has been delayed long enough. I'm not going to delay it any longer. Let's get started." John Scanlon, representative of Constant Construction Co., invited everyone in Lawrence to watch the work as it progressed. He led the mayor over to the earthmoving equipment, where Emick operated the digger to lift the first bite out of Massachusetts St. The improvement begins in the 800 and 900 blocks of Massachusetts. Work will continue on only one side of the street at a time. Present construction is concentrated on the east side of the street, where the 800 block is now curriculled. When work on the west side of the block starts, construction will shift to the opposite side of the two-block area. Pedestrians will be able to move through the area in times. One lane for walking on the sidewalk is reserved. Work in the 700 and 1000 block sections of the area area will begin as soon as the first block. When the project is completed, Massachusetts St. from 7th to 11th St. will have been repaved and the center hump on the street will have been removed. Sawtoot curbing will be added, and there will be two additional block crossings areas. Three midblock crossings will be made and 210 trees will be planted along the curbing. Best rest篝s, new traffic signals, new water fountains and ramps for the handrail system. Private contributions will play a part in the project. The downtown landowners will pay for new sidewalks. The city will also foot part of the bill, in paying for street repaving and sewers. Federal Neighborhood Development Program funds will help pay for the actual construction, administrative costs and planning. Early Returns Place McGovern Up Front RULLETIN The vote totals in the California Democratic presidential primary election with 79 per cent of the 22,647 precincts reporting: Verdict Is Delayed McGovern 1,243,966 – 45 per cent Humphrey 1,040,673 – 38 per cent Wallace 129,323 – 6 per cent Dunlain 125,330 - 5 per cent Muskie 58,869 – 2 per cent By The Associated Press Sen. George McGovern took the lead over Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey Tuesday night as scattered returns were tallied in a crucial Democratic presidential primary. But the verdict likely to decide who challenges President Nixon for the White House was at least hours away, because of a court-ordered extension of voting hours. McGovern won over the unexpectedly strong showing of Gov. George C. Wallace in the New Mexico presidential primary, where Humphrey ran third. The wounded Alabama governor appeared to have gained half that state's delegates. In New Jersey, Humphrey forces acknowledged McGovern had won at least half the 109 nominating votes decided by Tuesday's primary. And McGovern won 17 delegates unposed in his own South Dakota. The main event was California, 271 votes, winner-take-all. The counting there was stalled after a federal judge ordered the polls in San Francisco kept open for the weekend, until 1 a.m. CDT, to accommodate voters facing a long, complex ballot. Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown, Jr. then ruled that no votes could be disclosed in the vote. But the News Election Service reported some fragmentary and scattered returns, from 5 per cent of the state's precincts. They read this way: McGovern 86,890 or 52 per cent. Humphrey 61,179 or 37 per cent. Six other entries and a write-in effort for Wallace trailed far behind. In New Mexico, these were the figures, with 80 per cent of the precincts tallied; McGovney or 32 per cent. Murphy 40, 240 or 31 per cent. Mills 338, 280 or 25 per cent. Hampshire 33,280 or 25 per cent. Under a proportional system of assigning delegates, that meant McGovern and Wallace divided the 18 nominating votes, while Humphrey got none. In New Jersey, the vote count was slow and the picture confused. A close race developed for the seven delegates elected statewide. The 102 other New Jersey delegates were apportioned among counties. With nearly 40 per cent of the ballots counted in the statewide contest, the top voteegetter on McGover's ticket had received 76,600 for the leading Humphrey entry. McGoverson said he was encouraged by the New Jersey showing. Humphrey insisted long before the outcrop in California was known that California Balloting Extended ★★★ SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—A federal judge late Tuesday ordered San Francisco polls to stay open until 1 a.m. (CDT) to allow early voting in the state's long ballot in the California primary. With long lines of voters reported at polling places all day, U.S. District Court Judge George Harris issued his order shortly after 7 p.m., directing the registrar of voters to keep the polls open three hours each day, scheduled 8 p.m. (Pacific) closing time. The prospect was for a late count lasting into Wednesday. Judge Harris acted after the State Supreme Court turned down a petition to lift the voting law. Further on behalf of six voters on grounds the long ballot, which required the use of two voting machines in some precincts, and the reduced number of polling places in the state. Observers at polling places during the day estimated that the long ballot took an average of five minutes for each voter to handle. It included 68 candidates for the city's first elected school board, a large number of city and state propositions, and contests for judgeships. Haiphong Coalition Agrees to Probe Plan BY MARTHA NORDYKE Kansan Staff Writer The Haiphong Coalition decided Tuesday night to support a list of suggestions presented to it as SenEx's recommendation to the Chancellor for his ad hoc committee to investigate KU research. While agreeing in open meeting to what they understood to be preliminary recommendations from SenEx, the coalition formalized their own principles concerning the actual composition of the ad hoc committee. (1) Basic Charge—the committee should investigate all sponsored University research activities to determine whether they are in the public interest. Public interest means in the best interests of the health and well-being of all people regardless of gender, race, sex, age, etc. Sponsored research means any scientific or scholarly activity which is funded in part or in whole by a government agency—federal, state, or local— The rough outline of the SenEx recommendation that Steve Hollis, a spokesman for the Coalition and member of the staff, attended 20 persons attending the meeting stated: (2) Scope of the investigation—The investigations may include, on each project reviewed, any or all of the following: (a) origin and history; (b) expected results and anticipated or actual users or uses of the results; (c) how the research was funded; and (d) the research was implemented and the actual findings. (3) Report and dissemination-The committee shall publish its detailed findings of fact, conclusions, and any recommendations. Copies of the full report Recommendations from both groups will be presented to the Chancellor next week. foundation (public or private), private corporation or general University corporation South Vietnamese Claim Enemy Driven from Provincial Capital shall be distributed to: (a) the Chancellor; (b) the vice-chancellor for research; (c) the SenEx; (d) the Faculty Senate Committee on Research (e) the members of the ad hoc committee; (f) presiding over the organization which requests one; (g) the press, especially the University Daily Kansan, for their publication. The term full report shall include any minority reports prepared by one or more members of the University Daily Kansan committee shall also prepare a synopsis of full report for general dissemination. SAIGON (AP)—The South Vietnamese said Tuesday they had driven North Vietnamese forces from the vital central highlands provincial capital of Konmau after the assault. On the southern coast, a rush of energy on the fresh attack to Saigon's western flanks. He said that even after California, one third of the nominating delegates would remain to be chosen. He also said Wallace would have a large bio of delegates, and that whoever got the nomination would have to deal with them. A communique from the Saigon command said South Vietnamese units clashed with U.S. forces three times in rooting out the remaining enemy from the northern sector of Kontum. It said 411 enemy were killed with heavy air and naval attacks, and 26 government troops killed and 28 wounded. defeat would not spell the end of his quest for a second White House nomination. MGcovern said in an ABC television interview that despite the tough campaign he and Humphrey waged in California, he had the race would leave lasting political wounds. He claimed battles in and around the city had cost $5,868 North Vietnamese lives. "I expect to be talking to Sens. Edmund S. Muskie and Humphrey shortly," he said in Los Angeles. "But I'm not going to bring anyone on anybody to drop out of the race." The Coalition decided to request that additional copies of the reports from the ad hoc committee be placed in all University libraries for general access. They would also require a regular progress reports from the community and be available to the Kansas for publication. A spokesman for the 2nd Military Region inquariers in Fleiku said, "the fighting in Kaizu has been good." Hells said he drafted the rough outline from his interpretation of a SenEx preliminary recommendation paraphrased to him by Ron Calgaard, associate dean of Liberal Arts and SenEx chairman. Field reports said 42 enemy troops were killed. Government losses were put at seven men killed and 67 wounded. The fighting occurred near such familiar battlegrounds as Cu Chi and Trang Bang district towns. In Senate nomination contests: Tuesday, Calgary refused to verify or deny any points of the SenEx version. He then called the Hainong Coalition and the Haipong Coalition would make preliminary as the Chancellor would make the final decisions on committee appointments and the charge of the com- U. S. pilots flew more than 220 strikes over the North, concentrating on crippling Hanoi's inland waterway transportation system to prevent war supplies from moving and killing officers there. The strikes knocked a number of buildings across North Vietnam, they added. The U.S. Command announced that American fighter-bombers on Monday launched the most devastating raids on the canals, rivers and lakes of North Vietnam On the southern front, enemy forces attacked four different positions of government militiamen along Highway 1 ranging from 25 to 40 miles northwest of Saigon along the Saigon River corridor, a infiltration route leading toward the capital. The spokesman said he had no report on government losses, but other sources said at least 1,000 South Vietnamese troops were killed or wounded. The second recommendation, concerning membership of the committee, agreed upon by the Haiphong Coalition, called for the following considerations: since full-scale retaliatory bombing resumed two months ago. The U.S. planes reported shattering more than 100 supply boats. Hauan's official Vietnam news agency claimed in a broadcast that two U.S. F4 Phantoms were shot down Tuesday in Yenan province, attacking "a number of populated areas." The advances in Konton followed days of probes around three key positions in the town's north and southeast sectors held by the enemy. —Republican Sen. Clifford P. Case of New Jersey easily won renomination. Paul J. Krebs, a former Congressman, won the Democratic nomination to oppose him. people would do the best job because they have demonstrated the highest degree of skill. "(1) the Committee should primarily be made up of people from groups including children, women and gay people, World people, women and gay people, scientific students and workers and other students and workers who have been most exposed to HIV/AIDS concern about University research. These —In Mississippi, Sen. James O. Eastland sledged to Democratic nomination for another term. Gil Carmichael, a businessman from Meridian, was chosen the Republican nominee over civil rights activist James Mere迪h. "(2) Since research affects the entire society and since the purpose of the committee is to ensure that research is in the best public interest, the composition of the committee should reflect the composition of the population as a whole as closely as possible. Rep. James Abourezek won democratic nomination to the Senate in South Dakota. The Republican race was not decided. The Democrat was by ailing, retiring Sen. Karl E. Mundi. "(3) The committee should primarily be made up of people who have not previously been heavily involved in research sat- tivity. (4) The committee should it be merely another Faculty- See COALITION, page 5 - Sen, Lee Metcalf swept to Democratic renomination in Montana. Helena rancher Emmett Walker was elected governor. —Jack Daniels, a banker and former state legislator won a 25-race race for Democratic Senate nomination in New Mexico. Pete V. Domenici of Albuquerque was the Republican choice to seek the seat of retiring Clinton P. Anderson. Hop Shrimp is a public affairs presidential preference contest in New Jersey, defeating former Gov. Terry Sanford of North Carolina in a popularity poll that did not bind any Nixon already had the delegates for renomination. In the first scattering of Republican ballots in California, President Nixon was capturing 91 per cent against conservative Rep. John M. Ashbrook of Ohio. It was Nixon in a 90 per cent walkaway in New Mexico, too. The other names on the California ballot were those of Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, and Henry M. Jackson of Washington, Mayors Sam Yorty of Los Angeles and Sen. V Lindsay of Hawaii for Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy and Rep. Chushim. McGovern heavily favored in California public opinion polls, had ended his California campaign a bit early to make a stop in Abuquerque, N.M., then fly to Houston, Tex., to confer with Democratic governors critical of his liberal stance and influence in the South, already briefly in the South, of a ticket headed by the South Dakota senator. The election eve New Mexico campaign stop by McGovern made the stiff challenge posted by Wallace, still hospitalized after a horrific assassination attempt, the more surprising. A write-in effort was staged for Wallace. But in fact, only McGovney and Humphrey had a chance in the winner-take-all contest. McGovern's national count was 537%. He was second with 318. Humphrey had 290%. Angela Plans Long Tour In Appreciation of Support SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - Angela Davis will leave Friday on a three-week nationwide tour to thank her supporters winding up at a star-studded "Evening with Angela" in New York, a spokesman said Tuesday. After the June 29 Madison Square Garden tribute, the spokesman said, Miss Davis will leave for a six-week European trip in either the Soviet Union or Bulkaria. When Miss Davis returns to the United States in mid-September, spokesman She was accused of furnishing four guns and helping plot a 1970 courthouse escape attempt which failed and ended in four deaths. Miss Davis, 28, a black Communist and former UCLA philosophy instructor, was acquitted Sunday by an all-white jury of murder-kidman-conspiracy charges. Stephanie Allan said, she will begin organizing the organization for filling up of repression. Charlene Mitchell, executive director of Miss Davis's defense committee, said Miss Davis will leave for Los Angeles Friday for several days, then travel to San Antonio June 15, Chicago June 17, Detroit June 18 and New York June 20. She also probably visit Memphis, Tenn., and her homeetown, Birmingham, Ala., but no dates have been set. At the Madison Square Garden tribute, Miss Allan said Miss Davis would speak and there would be entertainment by Oscar Davis, Jimmie Witherspoon, Melba Moore, Chita Rivera and the Persuasions. The gala is being sponsored by the Athens Ballet Fund in a campaign raised thousands of dollars in the campaign to "Free Angel." 2 Wednesday, June 7, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Pearson Filing by Petition HUTCHINSON AP)—Reno County Republicans have granted 410 signatures on petitions to help Sen. James Pearson, R-Kan., who is attempting to re-election by petition. Pearson needs 3.71b signatures of registered Kansas voters by June 20. He elected to use petitions rather than file by fee. "I'm in favor of the decision," said Senator Mike Kim, Kun., co-chairman of the Reno County for Pearson Committee. "It's an economy measure, showing voters that you don't have to spend a lot of money to run for an office." Castro Has Heart Trouble WARSAW (AP)—Fidel Castro is suffering from heart trouble, Polish government sources said Tuesday night shortly after the Cuban leader arrived in Warsaw. The medical term used was "a state prior to the heart infarct." An infarct results from reduction in the flow of blood to the heart muscle. A precoronary state means that the flow of blood is narrowed, raising the possibility that it be closed completely. Castro, 45, has been on a tour of Europe and Africa. Promise of Farmer Asked HOUSTON (AP) -- Democratic state executives have endorsed Oklahoma Gov. David Hall's resolution asking the Democratic nominee for president to pick a farmer as the next secretary of agriculture. Hall introduced the resolution Monday at the National Governors Conference here and it was approved by the Democratic caucus. The resolution calls on state farmers to arrange marriage with the Democratic nominee for president pledge that a farmer will be named secretary of agriculture in the coming administration." Mine Blast Traps 468 SALIBURY, Rhodesia (AP)—A coal mine explosion entombed 468 rhodesian miners Tuesday. Rescue workers brought out one survivor and three bodies, all Africans, but there was no word on the fate of the remaining 464 men. An official of the Wankie Colliery in northwestern Rhodesia said: "I think we are just about giving up. We are only two people in this house, those still trapped in the mine, 431 were Africans and 33 were whites. Their deaths would make the blast the worst mining disaster in Rhodesia's history. Gov. Wallace Moved SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP)—Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, who continues to recover from gunshot shots, was moved out of the intensive-care unit and into a private room at Holy Cross Hospital Tuesday. Vascular surgeon Dr. Joseph Schanno, the main physician in the governor's case, told a wallace that he was being held until July 17, when she will be Wallace, a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination. The governor has been in the intensive-care unit since he underwent surgery to remove a bullet on May 15. Activity Fees Challenged LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)—University of Nebraska (UPA) University of Richard Ceeed sealed suit in Lin- coln on Wednesday, challenging the university's right to assess student fees for non-academic studies. He asked the court to enjoin permanently the university from charging fees for complete accounting of fees collected. He asked that he be collected. filed Lancaster County District Judge Bartlett B. Boyles last month named a similar request by four university students. A Supreme Court judge and the Supreme Court from the judge's dismissal of this suit has been In the new court suit, Inveed attacked fees collected for operating the Daily Nebraska bank and the student government organization. Associated University of Nebraska (ASUN). Veed stated that during the fall semester last year, he had to pay $1.25 for support of the Daily Nebraskan, $6 for the student magazine, $1.95 for an unallocated slush fund. He said this violated his constitutional rights because the supported organizations exposed philosophies and views with which he disagreed. Farm Leader Announces Candidacy for Governor TOPEKA-Ray E. Frisbie, a farm leader making his first entry into politics at age 61, announced Tuesday as a candidate for the Republican nominee for governor of Kansas. He made it a three-way race for the GOP nomination in the Aug. 1 primary, joining former Gov. Mike Huckabee and Gov. Reynolds Shultz, Lawrence as Republican candidates bidding to unseat Democratic Gov. Robert Johnson, who is seeking a fourth term The field of GOP contenders must figure out next week Rep. Merriam Kane, Lawrence, majority leader of the Kansas House, will represent Republicans. He's also considering running for the Republican governor DOCKING has no Democratic primary opposition, and isn't expected to draw any. Frisbie swept over Kansas in a Frisbie bureau airplane, making six stops to announce his candidacy. He made it official at Topeka—his first stop after he left Farm Bureau headquarters in Manhattan—the went to Wichita, Wichita, Wichita, and Hays. "Mine will be a campaign for and with the people," said the head of the Kanaas Livestock Association, who served the past six year Kanaas Farm Bureau president, and as a member of the Kanaas Livestock Association and a former member of the Kanaas Livestock Association. FRISHI conceded supporters of Anderson and Shultz had ad-hoc support on the sidelines, but he admitted they been encouraged by many friends, both Republicans and Democrats, in every county in the state. He said he had reached his decision to run "after much souls-searching" and "much deliberation." Frisbie was known reported yelling the governor's race for two months, but at one point a couple of weeks ago there was an incident where he would not enter the race. HIS AGE was cited by some as a factor against him, but Frisbie All are candidates for elections this year, except for Van Sickle who is leaving the Senate to serve as a senator nomination for state treasurer. "It's no factor as far as I'm concerned," Frisbe said. "I'm plenty physically able. I'll be able and tireless as a campagnaer." Miller's report was on an investigation he conducted after an investigation by the Kansas Institute of Minority Empowerment, had charged a few weeks ago that the four officials might have violated the terms of their listing on their campaign contributions form filed with the secretary of state funds as coming in under warranty and insurance companies. Cleared were state Auditor Day E. Hageman insurance California Fieldman State Stats Tom R. Van Sickle, Fort Scott, S. Frank, S. Hodge He plans to resign from the Farm Bureau presidency next week. He goes to Jackson Hole, Wyo., Wednesday for a meeting of the American Farm Bureau and will also resign that post. Kansas law prohibits a corporation from giving money to a political candidate. Miller, however, said, "the record reflects the actual contributions were made by individuals who had purchased cashers checks of money orders corporations prohibited by law." discounted it at his Topeka news conference. Miller also said, "there was Pribie, a native of Rawlins County, Kan., is a graduate of Colorado State University at Fort Collins and Kansas State University. MacKay and grain farm near McDonald in the far northwest corner of the state. WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said Tuesday he could not support a ban on limitation agreements, if Congress rejected funds for a military base in Ukraine and other U.S. offensive weapons. "Without the support of the Congress for these offensive strategic systems, Lard told us last year that we lack the security of the United States and the safety of our people in jeopardy. And we would be in a position where we could not look success in further negotiations." Laird said, however, he would not urge President Nixon to withhold final approval of the proposed laws. Congress approves money for the new weapons. He said he expected prompt action by In other congressional testimony, testimony high-ranking U.S. tentative military cuts last year on foreign military aid had severely damaged the credibility of the United States. Wis., challenged that assessment and warned the Pentagon to be prepared for further reductions. Congress on the money. Laird Leery of Arms Pact Lt. Gen. George M. Seignioil II, who is deputy assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs, asked Prixmire's Appropriations Committee to ask $1.2 billion asked for 1973 foreign military grants and credit sales. Last year, the Pentagon's $31.5 million request for foreign aid was cut back on just $45 million. some confusion regarding listing of contributions." Laird made his comments after The attorney general urged all political candidates to request staffing and instruct organizations supporting them to keep meticulous records of where individuals from and how it is dispensed. Miller issued a statement Tuesday saying his investigations "disclosed no documents of the law by the fictitious." TOPEKA (AP)—Four state officials have been exonerated by Atty Gen Vern Miller of any wrongdoing. He campaign contributions two years ago. He said some of the disclosure statements came from him. Swedish Head Assails U.S. Officials Innocent Of Campaign Sins The conference, however, rejected moves to discuss Vietnam. Palme did not mention the United States by name, but his reference to U.S. tactics in Vietnam was a clear Washington bias on his target Swedish Premier Olf Palme told delegates from 112 nations meeting in his country's capital, Stockholm, that he had brought about by indiscriminate bombing, by large-scale use of balldozers and herbicides is an outrage sometimes described as "urgent international attention." ment spokesman Charles W. Leslie said the deeply disturbed that the Swedish prime minister had introducted an investigation regarding an ex-occupation master. It is "incompressible that the head of government of a host state should have spoken as he did." Bray added. According to the State Department, the United states opposed discussion of the attack on American forces of *Ammo* can bombing and other actions because they were not on the agenda worked out over the past week. Bray was referring to statements some time ago in which Palme criticized U.S. involvement in the Indochina war. STOCKHOLM (AP)—The United States was assaulted at the U.N. environment conference Tuesday by the head of the government of the host country for waging "ecological warfare" Chagula, who said the 12-day conference should discuss "the destruction of man in Infochina." Chagua declared that other issues, including race discrimination must be raised because "environment and man's freedom are inseparable." Expressing regret that Soviet bloc countries were boycotting the U.N. gathering, Chagala said, "We don't want to get involved because are here because of an outdated political formula." "The creators of the old concept of cold war are trying to be a cool world." The Southeast Asia conflict also was raised by Tanzanian Minister of Economy W. testifying behind closed doors to the House Armed Services Committee. A Soviet-led boycott by Eastern Nationen wars was announced before the conference convened Monday because East Germany was refused voting membership at the meeting, observer status at the meeting. How can man develop and protect his environment unless he is free?" he said. Chairman F. Edward Hebert, Dr. Saad was confirmed Congress would fund the money for the offensive weapons. The requests included $942 million for the range missile-firing submarine and $445 million for the B-1 Laird did not specify what other offensive weapons considered essential to the U.S. support of the arms-limitation agreements. ROLLING STONES "Exile on Main St." on Atlantic Records Reg. $9^{95}$ $5^{88} KIEF'S Discount Records Discount Records MALLS SHOPPING CENTER GOP Aims at McGovern Disc Preeners In a preview of the kind of attack the Republicans can be expected to make on McGuern, Rhodes used the words of Sen. Unveiling plans for the 1972 GOP platform Tuesday. Rep. Josephine Williams promised it would be in sharp contrast to the GOP governors in Washington. WASHINGTON (AP)—Many Republican leaders appear to have all but conceded the election, which will nomination to Sen. George McGovern and already are eleven more Republican-election campaign against them. Rhodes, chairman of the Republican platform Committee, zeroed in on the possibility a news conference, If McGovern won Tuesday in California primary, said Rhodes, if he doesn't win the nomination, if he don't win the nomination. Rhodes would not rate McGovern as an easy opponent for President Kenixon but he said thought Sen Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts would be the best candidate to the Democrats could but us. Hubert H. Humbrey, PhD Humphrey P. Moore, picture the South Dakota automaton as an advocate of lavish government spending and weakening form, he said, "will be a document loaded with false hopes and phony promises. In contrast, the Republican platform will be realistic, advocating programs and projects that won't strain the economy or the breaking point or endanger our country's national security." In an effort to shape such a platform, Rhodes said the Republicans had mailed 60,000 letters across a cross-section of Americans. Britons Get Real Taste Of Disorder in Ireland "We can look at a Democrat platform that will, in the words of Mr. Humphrey, 'scare the country half to death with billion dollar schemes nobody will accept.' " said Rhodes. School Merger Annulled BELFAST. Nothern Ireland laws legislators investigating New troubles suffered a first-hand experience Tuesday, their car A McGovern-directed plat RICHMOND, Va. (AP)—A federal judge's order for merger of Richmond schools with those of two adjoining counties was overturned Tuesday by an apprehension at the Justice Department that the judge overstepped his constitutional authority. The appeals court said it could find no "invidious discrimination" in the way school systems now were operated in Richmond, whose public schools are 84 per cent black, and in suburban counties, where the schools are more than 90 per cent white. In his eagerness to implement the 14th Amendment by achieving racial balance in the 1950s, he rejected Robert R. Merge Jr. had insufficient note of "a fundamental principle of federalism" enunciated in the 10th Amendment. In an appeal, Appeals Board in a 5-1 decision. of such discrimination, it said, a compel one of the states of the Union to restructure its internal government* as a means of reducing discomfort. It happened while the six legislators in full silhouette, we talked inside headquarters of the Falls Road, heartland of Belfast's Roman church. AND BARRING the existence A SPOKESMAN for the Department of Justice in Washington halted the ruling as being "what we asked for" in a court order last year in support of the state's decision of Mechanic's appeal. Morhige's order would have created a single 700-square-mile, 104,000-pupil metropolitan school district from the three separate jurisdictions, in which 80 percent of pupils were Mrs. W. Hamilton Cockford, chairman of the Richmond School Board, which filed the suit that led to Morhige's Jan. 10 consolidation order, said the court ruled immediately to the Supreme Court. Reversal of Merhige's order, on grounds the judge used "erroneous" legal standards in ordering consolidation was one course of action suggested to the appeals court by the Justice Department earlier this year. Insurance Company Earnings Criticized "We HAD hoped the 4th Circuit would give us the go-ahead and permit us to implement the plans that we've had under way for consolidation." she added. WASHINGTON (AP) — The largest seller of mail-order health insurance was accused Tuesday of making high profits at the expense of policyholders from low-income elderly persons. Three youngsters stuck a gun in the back of the chauffeur and made off with his maroon limousine. Slater was questioned by the Senate antitrust and monopoly Mrs. Crockford said the city school board was "very disappointed, after all we've been through." at the reversal. But, added the chairman, Robert E. Slater, this is because National Liberty has written a book that shows how recently on which claims have been minimal because of benefits in the first two policy woes. The chairman of the insurance company. *National Liberty Corp.*, also his firm Pa. Co., which is making a substantial profit. Subcommittee figures showed that National Liberty's after-tax profit of 27 per cent on shareholder equity in 1970 was three times greater than the average phone and Telegraph Corp. and the Chase Manhattan Bank. Anthony Mehfoud, chairman of the Henrico Board of Supervisors, said the decision was to keep students so go somewhere and celebrate." Subcommittee statistics showed that of 270,237 persons who bought National Liberty's most popular policy in 1970, only 45 continued through March of this year—a lage rate of 47 per cent. A spokesman said the victim was one of six men of the Duke of Wellington's Regiment on foot He was shot through the head. He was shot through the head. But jubilation reigned in Henrico and Chesterfield counties, which had bitterly fought the consolidation order. "A depressing thing to happen," said delegation leader Stanley Orme, a frequent Commons speaker on Irish affairs. "This is the greatest news since the beginning of man," said Robert F. Kelley, superintendent of Chesterfield schools. "In the insurance business, like every other business, the greater the risk assumed, the greater the profit potential," said Siafer. Earlier, a British soldier was shot dead in the Catholic Balky-murphy district, a stonehold of Irish Republic Army. He was the 150th person to die this year in the IRA's campaign subcommittee in its investigation of health-insurance practices. to merge Northern Ireland with the Irish republic, and the 358th to die since violence erupted three years ago. Britain's administrator in Northern Ireland, William Whitewater, ordered the release of 75 prisoners from the prison in Long Kesh, Resettlement Camp. AIées aid des Highways hd防疫 AIées aid Sinter Lake hd防疫 AIées aid San Bernardino mths ago. mths ago. the camp still harbors mgm. the camp still harbors mgm. the camp still harboring mgm. the camp still harboring KU has been a warded $26,750 to fund the first year of a three-year research program on the formation of personalities in The grant came from the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development. THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE? BERNARDO "Game" is a well-rounded sport of a sandal; sturdy enough to go stalking in graceful for staying at home in. Small, medium or large in supple leather. "Brown, Navy and White" Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Right now McDonald's is serving up oceans of free Coke and there's one waiting for you. What's more refreshing than an ice cold Cake? A free Cake at McDonald's. FREE COCA-COLA McDonald's McDonald's 901 WEST 23rd Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street One Coke Free With Purchase of a Double Cheeseburger N Two adopted Eight not ma- Univer- accordi The 5 the use been at games 1304 "I'm 30-seco will m better cause allow f JAY BOWL Kansas Union 5 Facts You Should Know!! - BEST Bowling Rates Available - Summer operating hours— Monday -Friday 10 a.m. - 9 p.m. (approximately) Closed Saturdays Sundays Noon - 4 p.m. (pending) - MIXED LEAGUE STARTING 6:30 Wed., June 7th - OUTSTANDING Student Rates—Every Day Mon. thru Fri. Noon till 6 p.m. Bowl 3 games for only $^{1}$ Fri. with your KU I.D.II The Baskessissi four Paagesgrad NCAA Six plays struc has other acro For the The for while they their - Air Conditioned for your bowling and billiard comfort JAY BOWL Bowling—Billiards For Information Call 864-3545 Wednesday, June 7, 1972 University Summer Kansan 3 New Rules Don't Alarm Owens By KENT PULLIAM Kansan Staff Writer Two basketball rule changes adopted this year by the Big Ten, which allow a team to not make any difference at the University of Kansas next year. The 30-second time clock and the use of three officials have been adopted for all the Big Eight games next year. "I'm very much in favor of the 30-second clock," said Owens. "It makes a lot of sense to better game. I don't think it will cause any wild shot and it won't." This will probably improve the image of the Big Eight," Owais said. "Known as a conference, a conference, a conference, a proud of that fact. Our adoption of the 30-second clock is a positive move." Owens, who has promoted a conference time rule, pointed out that most good basketball players would eventually like to play professional ball and both professional leagues use a time "Prospects look at it. If they think it will help them it might influence their choice of conference," he said. He said it would cause some change in the style of basketball that some teams ran. It wouldn't allow complete hall control by a allow, but there would be no in- interference with the regular natterns that most teams run "It will create more of what I like to call situation basketball," he said. "There will be more one-on-one situations in the game." "It will let basketball be played the way it meant to be meant to be," he said, so attack the basket, and personally, I think it's great for Big Ten. Owens was not so enthusiastic about the second rule. At the conference meeting he opposed using three officials. "I'm not opposed to the me He pointed out that in some situations three officials could be involved. "I didn't want to dilute the talent of officials who were in the conference." chanics of the system," he said. "My concern is that it is hard to get two officials of high quality, let alone three." Ryun To Run In West Coast Distance Race - LOS ANGELES (AP) — World record holder Jim Rumy, seeking a comeback for the Olympic Games, filed his entry Tuesday for Friday night's Vons Track event at the Los Angeles Coliseum. The Kansas miler will run that distance in this meet although he competed at 5,000 meters in his first race. He was at Bakersfield on May 20. *time to test myself.* Ryan said. He'll face most of the athletes whom he will have to compete against for a spot on the United States Olympic team. Tom Vorn will be among those who Daya Wheeler among others. BASKETBALL Kanaan Photo by TY BROWN Young Athletes Get Pro Tutoring Kansas Photo by TY BROWN Owens Basketball Camp Opens Participants are between the ages of eight and 17. High school graduates are excluded by an NCAA ruling. The Ted Owens Jayhawk Basketball Camp opened its 1972 session Sunday with the first of four one-week programs. There are no special sessions for particular age groups, but while the boys are at the camp they are with youths of their own age. Six former KU basketball champions and coaches, strictly this year, and Owens has staffed his camp with several other athletes and coaches from Kansas. Former KU athletes helping at the camp include Jo Jo White, Boston Celtics; Roger Brown, Los Angeles Lakers; Dave Robisch, Denver Rockets, and Bid Stallmann, Seattle Super-Teams. LeBron James, Larry Johnson, Lochman and Ron Lang, played at Kansas several years ago. According to Owens, the morning sessions of the camp are devoted to fundamentals such as passing and dribbling. Each of them would touch him a series of drills which help him sharpen his game. During the afternoon, team skills are stressed and in the evening games are played. The morning instruction takes place behind Naismith Hall, where the entire day is coached at Lawrence High School. open. Anyone who wants to watch is welcome. "We want the people to come down and watch the games," said Owens. Each of the practice sessions is Recruits Improve KU's Court Squad Three basketball players who will enter the University of Kansas this fall are expected to play in a group of returning players. Powell, who attended Central High School in Joliet, is rated one of the best prospects to come from the State football team. He led state tournament scoring during his sophomore year and was a member of all-state teams for 15 years. Roger Powell of Joliet, Ill. Bob Falk of Madison, Wis., and Nino Samuel of Saginaw are among the saliva on KU's junior varsity squad. Pawle was credited with some 200 assists during his junior year. As a senior, he averaged 32.5 points per game. Falk attended West High School in Madison, where he was a three-sport athlete and made teams in football and basketball. He was named Wisconsin's high school basketball player of the year by United Press International. He ended his high school career in Wisconsin, where he prepared in Wisconsin history, having scored 1441 points. Samuel, who attended Salina's Central High School, as a junior led his team to a state championship. As a senior, he scored 23 points and rebounds per game. He scored 54 points in one game last year. x BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lou Pinellia drilled a two-run single in the sixth inning to rally the Kansas City Royals to a 4-2 victory in the fourth 4-2 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers Tuesday night. Samuel played in two postseason all-star games at the end of the school year. He played in the Dapper Dan Classic in Pittsburgh, a game between the top ten prep ball players of Penn State and Ohio State from the rest of the country. Left-hander Ken Brett, whose record dipped to 2-6, held the No. 1 ranking at Richie Seibemil and a triple by Paul Schaal in the second. Royals' Rally Tips Brewers THE MAD HATTER Will Be Open Thursdays-Fridays-Saturdays Thursday Night is Ladies Night Freddie Patek and Amos Otis socked consecutive singles and Otis stole second before Pinella came through. By THE ASSOCIATE1 Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Agee's single drove in Jim Beauchamp, who had delivered a two-game shutout to pitcher Jim McAndrews, $1, and moved to second on a walk to Hud Harrelson. The Mets' victory over Cincinnati winning streak. W. L. Pelt. G.B. Detroit 10 21 48 Baltimore 21 22 48 Cleveland 11 22 48 New York 18 22 450 New York 18 22 450 New York 13 22 419 13 22 419 Duke Sims drove in two runs as the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Chicago Cubs 5-0 Tuesday night. Oakland 30 10 698 4 Minnesota 25 16 610 4 Chicago 21 16 610 4 Texas 21 25 422 10 Tampa 21 25 422 10 The Dodgers staked their southpaw to a 3-5 lead in the first inning as Willie Crawford singled with a double in two more with another single. Los Angeles 29 18 617 † Cincinnati 27 19 617 † Houston 27 19 617 † San Diego 21 23 477 ‡ San Jose 21 23 477 ‡ NATIONAL LEAGUE Downing, 3-2 for the year, survived a first-inning jam and then allowed the Cubs three hits his second hit his second shutout of the season. Also in the National League, Al Downing notched his 100th career victory with a five-hitter and W. L. Pct. G.B. New York 12 14 Pittsburgh 27 16 Chicago 17 16 Cleveland 19 18 St Louis 18 25 Atlanta 19 28 321/14 Tampa Bay 18 25 391/14 JETHRO TULL Thick as a Brick on Reprise Records He also played in the Midwestern All-America Basketball Classic at Dayton, Ohio. Tuesday Scores Minnesota 5, Baltimore 4 California 7, Los Angeles 5, Chicago 0 Louis 3, San Francisco 0 $2.77 stereo only at KIEF'S Discount Records MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Pioneer Stereo Components The Dodgers scored their final two runs in the seventh as Frank Rose took a run-scoring single and pinch-hit in another run with a double. Fingers, the eventual winner, came out of the bulpen to choke off a Cleveland rally. In National League action, Tommie Agee knocked in the winning run with a seventh-hinging single as the New York Mets ceded off the hot Cincinnati night with a 3-2 trump Tuesday night. Bil Hands lost his second game in six decisions for the Cubs. Today ain't like yesterday... The Brewers jumped out and winner Tom Murphy, 2-1, for the win. And he beat Rick Auerbach's first home run of the season, a single by Brock Davis, Ron Theobald's out and Dave May's single. Monday-Friday Saturday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Blue allowed seven hits and both Cleveland runs before leaving in the seventh innning. Darold Knowles and Roland Elsewhere in the American League, Vida Blue failed to pick up a victory in his third straight start, but his Oakland teammates scored two goals and the last two innings to beat the eventual Indianz 2-7 Tuesday. But the Royals failed to move out of last place in the American League's western division ФООБАН Nostalgial Wide brimmed hats, Jitterbugging, Hepcat and Bogart pants. That's right, Bogart pants with flap pockets and thirty inch belts or pleated front and wide straight legs. All come in a variety of sizes and colors. If you're not into nostalgia, Poobah has the most complete selection of pants, shoes, ties, knits and skinny ribs, all very reasonably priced for you. Be-bop in. Pinch-hitter Don Mincer's two-run single in the sixth inning capped a three-run Texas win 84-7 victory over New York. "When you have the privilege of choosing No. 1 you want to pick the best," explained Pete Bavati, a former coach for operations for the Padres. "Some club talk about picking by number; he was the best player available." They believed they found both Roberts, a right-handed hitter and a left-handed hitter, in 37 games hit 12 homers but out only once in 144 at-bats. Padres Draft Collegian NEW YORK (AP)—Dave Roberts, a 410 hitter for the University of Oregon, became the second collegian in the 15-year history of the baseball draft to be selected as the No. 1 pick in the league when he was trapped by the San Diego Padres Tuesday The Padres, who batted No. 1 im the draft of free agents because they have the worst record in the major leagues, are looking for a draft looking for the best player available rather than a player available to fill a specific position. "By coincidence he also plays a position our club is in need of." OLE Overwhelmed? Slow, unorganized reading is boring! You lose concentration and perspective! or You seem to spend all your time studying! BEGINNING OF THE NEW YEAR WITH A LOT OF FUN. Confident Fast, intelligent reading holds your attention! You grasp the ideas sooner & more accurately! You have time for leisure enjoyment! NEW CLASSES BEGIN THIS WEEK Regular Course: Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m.-Noon, June 6-July 18 Thursdays, 7:00-9:30 p.m., June 8-July 20 Western Civ. Course: Tuesdays, 7:00-9:30 p.m., June 6-July 18 READ THE ENTIRE YEAR'S WESTERN CIVILIZATION ASSIGNMENTS IN ONLY 7 WEEKS Reading Dynamics teaches you how to find the meaning in all those thousands of words. Our instructor is also a Western Civ. Instructor. Our unique note-taking technique simplifies, organizes, and relates ideas in graphic form. 书 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Downstairs at the Sound—Hillcrest Shopping Center 925 Iowa Phone 843-6424 4 Wednesday, June 7, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comm Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. On Angela's Acquittal The trial of Angela Davis was considered by many as a test of the United States' judicial system. And she had been able to man that the system passed the test. I think these are fair observations to make. That an all white, basically middle-class jury could find a black, a vowed Communist not guilty does indicate that the jurors were able to set their own prejudices and emotions aside and coldly assess the facts. Furthermore, the Davis trial has shown that the calm, reasoned, diligent attitude of her defense attorneys is, as tradition states, the best course to justice. And her acquittal repudiates the claims of William Kuntler who owed significant to the reasoned approach and must therefore be shocked into justice with theatrics. Davis's statement that "the very fact of an acquaintance means that there was no fair trial because a fair trial requires some truth to it. The fact that has some truth to it. the fact that she was imprisoned for 16 months on what proved to be false charges, means that she was wrongly punished. This situation does point out a grave fallacy in the system. But it seems a necessary fallacy. As long as we believe that decisions as important as this one should not be protected, the law has a right to be protected itself, then our system of justice, complete with fallacies, is worth keeping. No, "no trial at all" would mean simply locking the cell and throwing away the key. The thing to remember is that the alternative to our system could indeed have been, as Miss Davis suggested: "no trial at all." But the court ordered the deed in many countries, would not have meant freedom for Davis. Sixteen months is a terribly long time to spend in jail for something you didn't do, but better 16 months than a lifetime. —Mike Moffet 1826 WALL STREET GO. R. ELECTION KOPE'S CHICAGO DAILY The Centrate Journal "Double your pleasure! Double your fun! To double your summits, Nixon's the one!" Defense Department to Study Satellite Destruction Systems By HOWARD BENEDICT CAPE KENEDY, Fla. — The Defense Department has decided to study the feasibility of a killer drone, a new weapon that intercepting, inspecting and destroying hostile space vehicles. The Soviet Union and other countries have a capability IF INTERCEPTOR satellites are built, they would be able to fly ne Air Force space and missile systems organizations in Los Angeles asked industry on May 26 to submit proposals on the system. Those expected are expected to be selected to conduct competitive studies. If defense officials decide, on the basis of the studies, to devise a new system, they believed subsystem testing could start next year, aiming for a test with the most significant benefits. alongside an alien spacecraft, determine its assignment and, if necessary, disable or destroy it. Destruction could be effected by some sort of a "death ray," perhaps a laser beam; by signals that would disrupt the payload's electronics, or by blowing up the vehicle, or blistering, destroying both payloads. Satellite explosion is the technique used by the Russians. Since 2014, the U.S. fully demonstrated their space-craft killer system at least seven times. THESE SOURCES say the successful tests involved 12 separate launches of Cosmos satellites. Five were target satellites and seven were pursuit payloads that conducted intercept inspections, five of the interceptors blew apart on radio signal from the ground. When President Nixon and Soviet Communist party leader Leonid Brezhnev signed the nuclear arms limitation treaty last summer, the United States said that war was not necessary and that spy satellites could do the job. The Soviet Union has an operational space weapon the United States does not possess—the fractional orbital bombardment of a nuclear weapon in recent years the Soviets have demonstrated that a FOBS rocket was capable of hurling a nuclear bomb into a low earth orbit and that it could be called in on an airborne operation in less than one global pass. Garru Wills IF IT WERE used, the action would be a violation of a U.N. treaty prohibiting the placing of nuclear weapons in space. McGovernism Seen As Political Heresy They are calling him, absurdly, they're calling him, absurdly, McGovern is, in fact, this season's Eugene McCarthy-at- when time McCarthy himself has taken the lead. The Gene McCarthy of 1968 was one who wanted to defeat "the System" by winning it. He aimed at a redemption of politics and hoped that Mr. Obama could bad a name). McCarthy asked voters to put him in office because he heeded a higher calling. But God does not wait him; rather, he leaves him, like Joan of Arc, to compare with his private spirits. McGovern is supported with the same religious fervor discernible around McCarthy. It is true that McGovern's followers are doing their political homework, which is most people with earlier McCarthytes a williness in his funkier kids to go "clean for Gene." If you played by the rules, you would get your man into a wheelchair and follow the rules. The same attitude shows up in the McGovern camp. That is why MGovernism is a heresy, a religious offshoot of our politics. His followers have seen their power expand as activity to anti-political uses. MGovern is a Cause. Ask the man in the street to answer, quick, what his first name, and what he does next moment. "Ed" Muskus, "Ted" Kennedy—but not plain MGovern, but just "George." He is not MGovernism—that is both his strength and his weakness. For McGovern is less interested in purity than are many of his backers. He is interested in winning, and he has already done much to make the necessary steps. If businessmen are uneasy with him, he takes out an ad in the Wall Street Journal to assure them need not be. He asks for big bug business. If opponents claim he is stripping away the nation's arsenal, he argues that defense trimming will improve business. But many of his followers do not want such an improvement. In short, a McCarthy who win. But McCarthys are not meant to win McCarthys bad moves. They can't compromise the opposers. The Anti-Politis puts itself in a bad light when it succumbs to the logic of conventional opponents imposed to be bought off by offers of the papal throne. None of this is said in criticism of McGovern himself. He has all along been more conventional than anyone, and he vows to vocates allowed. It just that he used the kinds of zeal, in order to become a contender, that must be frustrated. Mr. McGovern's disillusionment lies in the path of those who think one can defeat the System by a victory within it. Who those who win overcome by it, already been overcome by it. It probably understands this, and does not care. But many of his allies have no reason to be in a forsake disappointment. There is nothing more unhearinging for loyal heretics than to find that their leader has, all along, been secretly orthodox. The lack of support in campaign does not lie simply in his effort to be both radical and reassuring. The trouble lies deeper than that, and may be related to the fact that political is homoeremian, yet McGovern himself is no heretic. Copyright 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. U.S. Airlines Move to Stop Air Hijackings WASHINGTON (AP)—The Air Line Pilots Association orders its airline to refuse Tuesday to refuel to飞 to nations that provide sanctuary for airlines. ALPA president J. O. D'Connor asks union leaders to arrange for their members to withdraw service to all air and ground facilities. The head of the 46,000-member International Federation of Air Line Pilots *PLI* Associations *PLA* to join in the boycott event IFALPA has associations representing 60 nations. An ALPA spokesman said that while currently there were no watercraft that sheltered air pirates, the boycotts would be extended to any other countries that persisted in their use of pirate ships in the countries. The boycotts would, for example, be extended on my ship which still serves Cuba, he said. Some Arab states have welcomed back nationalists who committed air piracy in the name of Islam or on friends of the Jewish state. An ALPA spokesman said the new boycott was not retroactive but was in the form of warning to countries. O'Donnell made known his actions in a letter to President Nixon asking his help in halting the invasion of hijackings and extortion. O'Donnell the goal was to eliminate every sanctuary that might exist throughout the world for skierjacke-exortionists, and have them be hijacked passengers, crews and aircraft and extortion money. First Creeks Back On Ancestral Land MACON, Ga. (AP) -Ben Chechac, a 20-year-old Greek Indian from Muskogee, Okla., didn't think of it in historic terms when he pulled into Macon off the international highway. He was hot and tired. By WILLIAM L. CHAZE Associated Press Writer But he is believed to be the first his tribe to come back to Mongolia, where they were driven from their ancestral home in central Georgia more than a century ago. His ancestors were among ten thousands of Georgia Creeks who lived on the frontier, the "Trail of Tears" from the Southeast to the Indian Territory. LOCAL PEOPLE hope he is the first of many Greeks who will advantage of a new program that allows Greece ahead and return to Georgia. Dubbed "The Trail of Cheer," the program was originated by the president of the local Chamber of Commerce. The Bureau of Indian Affairs and the national Park Service are taking part. The program's goals are to help Creeks relocate in the Macon area and to open a Creek trading post at the Okmulguee National Monument. CHECOTAH HAS been employed as a monument tour guide and guides tourists over the burial mounds of his ancestors and describes the highly developed Creek culture that once surrounded it. The monument includes the area where the Creek Nation was founded. The land, regarded as sacred by the Creaks, was the last property the Indians were forced to hand over to the federal government, so they were expelled from Georgia and began the westward trek. A dozen other Creeks, mostly from Okmukiege, OKla., are to arrive by the end of June. Mason's Mercer University has funded 10 full scholarships for Creeks who are willing to come to Georgia. About 50 jobs have been spotted, and the trading post will soon be open. Mr. Ames is the monument's Creek museum. More than 80,000 visitors stop by the monument each year, and the collection does do an annual volume of $500,000. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsroom--UN-4-4810 Business Office--UN-4-4328 Published at the University of Kansas weekly during the summer session. Mail subscription rates 16 a month, 110 a year. Second class payment帖住 at the University of Kansas Post Office. All students are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Ognition are not necessary unless the of the University of Kansas or the St. Mary Board of Trustees declare them. NEWS STAFF NEWSSTAFF News Advisor ... Del Brinkman BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . Mel Adama Business Manager Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager Promotional Manager Rita E. Haugh Linda Schild Bob Norrbyte Reg Akron Prix Brandsted, Bank Young Jorge Salvador SDKLOFE GOODNIGHT GRIFF Griff and the Unicorn Doug DeTray Steve Conner Laura Dyatt Carol Williams Dave Bennett Todd Worrall I DON'T KNOW ABOUT THAT, PARTNER GOODNIGHT, WORLD! THE WORLD IS INDIFFERENT TO US, GRIFE "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." By Sokoloff Summer Paperbacks Reflect New Interests A thoughtful new work is THE This summer's paperbacks are the best. There are a number of author modifies these days, and the publishers seem to be able to meet them. The other book is John Kobler's CAPONE (Crest, $1.50). Here is a detailed, not at all cheap work about the most famous pub in New York, the celebrated Scarface, who moved from New York to Chicago and became the rackets boss of the city. Kobler is an able writer who has produced a good deal of novels, including "Capone" is highgrade stuff. Another that is of special interest is Hamilton Tyler's ORGANIC GARDENING a book by Tyler $1.50).Tyler's pitch is to restorality to the home garden by a return to natural methods—composting, mulching, using humus, companion plantings, treatment of plant diseases, and treatment of beneficial insects and birds. CHANGING VALUES ON CAMPUS (Pocket, $2.95), compiled by Daniel Yankelovich, Inc. This is an analysis of attitudes of young people—on radicalism the war, sex on radicalism the gun, environmental violence, student goals and expectations. Two extremely attractive books of poetry are now in stock. POCKET BOOK OF MODERN VERSE and THE NEW POCKET ANTHOLOGY OF AMERICAN POEMS by William Williams (Pocket, $1.25 each). Hyman J. Soblille has re-created early versions of these and other works. This set offers more than 500 poems by English language poets. ROLLING STONES "Exile on Main St." on Atlantic Records Reg. $^9$^{95} $5^{88}$ KIEF'S MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Discount Diamond Needles Discount Records RAY AUDIO'S STEREO WAREHOUSE Created primarily for young people and folks who really dig music. We carry only the finest gear and we offer the lowest possible price, cost plus 10 per cent, for most all lines. We don't sell junk or anything we don't personally dig. STOP IN, IT WILL BE WORTH IT. We will honestly advise you. We do extensive market research and product testing. We are quite proud of our reputation for professional consulting. 842-2047 Prairie Ave. 1205 Prairie Ave. Lawrence, Ks. Prain Here 13th Street Mass. N Wednesday, June 7, 1972 University Summer Kansan 5 the Air ordered airlines ations or air member of Air ations oycott rep. did that there no nounries is, the to any usted in such old, for many serve welcome com- mence of bonds of sid the active ning to n his president halting egss and ff Sokoloff. I 10 Kansan Photo by TY BROWN Work Progresses on Murphy Place The construction of the fountain and courtyard at Murphy Hall is well underway. The plaza at Murphy is being financed with money from the city's General Fund. University of Kansas, in honor of his wife. Funds for the project were also contributed by the class of 1938. Dr. Murphy's class, at its graduation in 1954, received $20,000 from the university. If the University could get a strong club organized, Jaworski explained, the club could represent the school in both regions and in community params. Such meets include both team and individual competition. What Jaworski and Mauk envisioned was a series of Now most of the original members are off campus and Jaworski, a sophomore at Otawwa University, plans to enroll at KU next fall, are trying to reorganize the club and increase interest in this fast-growing sport. A KU professor is among 150 founding members of a national Professors for Humphrey movement. If you try parachute jumping once, you'll love it. So promises parachute enthusiast John Jaworski who was on the KU Tuesday trying to reorganize the University Parachute Club. A Parachute Club was started at KU last semester, and Jim Baker, a student from Overland Park, was elected president. KU students went through a training program and made jumps. He is David Daiceff, professor of economics. The group's members will work actively for Humphry on college campuses in college communities, or assistant manager Jack L. Chestnut. Parachute Fan Promotes Jump Club for University Continued from page 1 Senate Research committee. It is not a research committee, but rather, it is an investigator and educational body. If advice is given by an investigator, it is Coalition Agrees . . . Ric Rilcare, Headquarters director, emphasized that volunteers of all ages would be welcomed About 25 per cent of the population. By CONNIE PARISH Kansan Staff Writer Headquarters Soliciting For Summer Volunteers Headquarters, Inc., a drug abuse and personal crisis center, needs at least 20 new volunteer workers this summer. Only 15 volunteers of the 60 member spring staff have remained in Lawrence this summer. interested persons may call 841-2345 for information. Headquartered at 1632 interested individuals will be conducted through June 9. Since Headquarters was organized in 1989, it has served approximately 500 Headquarters services originally were limited largely to drug counseling, but volunteers have also been developed the scope of the program. The training is to familiarize the workers with the pharmacology and the psychiatric drug use and abuse, crisis theory, suicide prevention, first aid and care. Volunteers work ten hours a week on the switchboard or in other areas, after completing a four-week training program. " (4) There should be people on the committee who do understand the technical aspects of research. However, these people should be carefully chosen. It is important that they demonstrate a genuine desire to educate and work with non-scientific people. They should have willingness to seriously and honestly question their own work, the social forces that shape it and the products that they produce. We are extremely concerned that the committee not be dominated or stagnated by the interests involved in the technicalities of research and in the status quo that they are insensitive to the needs of other concerned people. (5) The committee should have approximately equal representation from five major research areas, which neatly deal in research, namely, life sciences, natural sciences and humanities, social science and humanities. Representatives of the departments of sciences. educate themselves and others concerning University research. Girls Staters Warm Up For Upcoming Elections Rival orators of the Federalist and Nationalist parties vied for cheeres at a Girls State political rally Tuesday night. Susie Krehbiel of Olawen她家's primary election Tuesday to become the national nominee for governor. Catherine Strowig of Abilene, daughter of the speaker of the Kansas House, Calvin A. Strowig. POLI'ER'S GONE AWAY! Leading the Federalists as their candidate for governor is Fawaz Ulaby, associate professor of electrical engineering and an associate of the remote sensing laboratory of the Center for research, said the Coalition's research efforts must be directed to a very careful study of the micro-environment research projects at KU. State and county candidates were given time to campaign and meet with state representatives were required to remain on their floor in Lewis Hall, where the Girls State delegates are spent among the participants running for state offices were engineering and humanities attended the meeting, and they voiced their opinions about their specific projects. Uuaby took particular issue with a statement printed in a book that suggested the use of the Coalition. The flyer charged that "research done at the remote sensing laboratory of the University of California is attributed to the development of the surveillance and computer techniques used in the automated detection of small particles." The general election was scheduled from 10:30 to 11:30 this morning. Following the election Mr. Miller will address the girls. allowed to carry their campaigns throughout the building. Candidates for lieutenant governor are Alisa Greer of Wichita and Jennifer Kendall of Wichita. Nationalist, Sally Streep of Great Bend, Federalist, and Vicki Ernst of Wichita. Candidates for secretary of state. Governor Robert Docking is officiate at the installation of the winners Thursday night. Candidates for insurance commissioner are Katherine Mann of North City, Federalist, and Lynn Gugler of Abilene, Lincoln State printer candidates are James City, Federalist, and Patty Utecht of Lansing, Nationalist. Attorney general candidates are Debbie Pitts of Wichita, Arkansas City, Federalist, Varschelson of St. Marys, Liberal, Nationalist, Liberal, Nationalist, are running for auditor. Treasurer candidates are Debby Moore of Dresden, Hillary Clinton, Nichol of Hill City, Federalist. Girls Staters Campaign Jill Ann Dolees seeks position at Lt. Gov. Nationalist nominees for the Supreme Court are Sharon Nedlie of Lawrence, Daryl Liewellyn of Lawrence, Daryl Kane of Concordia, Joann Leavenworth and Mary Messenger of Kansas Springs. Arlene Bush of Kansas City and Les Oswald of Hutchinson Ulaby said the statement was erroneous and that the complete texts and reports for all research areas were available to anyone wishing to see them. The Coalition's fyer stated that "research done in the psychology and anthropology departments of universities contributed to the destruction of indigenous Third World Cultures and the imposition of puppet regimes dominated by the United States such as the Thieu-Ku'ring. The Federalist nominees for the Supreme Court are Debra Bunch of Independence, Elizabeth Mitchell of Paola, Garrison of Mutchinson, Alyson Graff of Mutchinson, Frances Garner of Severity, Susan Humel of Geneseo and Kimilee Clogston of Baxter Springs. Felix Moos, professor of anthropology and East Asian studies and co-director of Project Themis, a former research associate at KU, refuted a statement made by the Coalition about that project. "No member of Project Themis has ever worked in Vietnam," Moos said. "The purpose of the project was to try to understand what technology is being used for applications, especially in Microposts." In discussing these particular research questions, we have Ulisy pointed out that by law, classified research could be done at KU and said that for general purposes, the KU departmental professors should be trusted to conduct research were also accessible to interested persons. Mos added that Project Themis was never classified and that the results and findings of the study Ulaby added that if the Department of Medicine needs a specialist to do specific or classified research they would most likely turn to places such as Willow Run Laboratories in California Research Center in Berkeley where grouped andowed to that only about 11 per cent of military research was now done at universities, down nearly 30 percent. Moos said that the University rudely faculty members in good faith were not about research and that no student or faculty member was asked to attend. He questioned whether a single group of people could really determine what was or wasn't good research. Both Moos and Ulaby questioned the practicality of a new program for research projects at KU. Ulaby said it might take as many as 15 specialists in a field to thoroughly understand one project. A spokesman from the microbiology department commented that results of all research at KU were either published or made public, and that it was virtually impossible to find findings from misuse by outside parties if they chose to do so. Several persons attending the meeting questioned the possible misuse of the results of a research project. He will use the award during his sabbatical leave for 1972-73 to do research for a biography of Henry A. Wallace, secretary of agriculture and vice president under President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Wallace died in 1965. Theodore A. Wilson, professor of history, has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for 1972-73. Wilson plans many real interviews to obtain insight into the private life and personal views of Wallace, as his work as a lawyer in New York City helped him understand how KU Prof Gets Guggenheim Thursday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 2 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. on Sunday. Building Hours Changed For Summer Schedule Watson Library will be open 8 a.m. through Thursday and 8 a.m. on Fridays. The microfilms area will be open 8 a.m. to p.m. 5 a.m. Summer hours of many of the buildings on campus are considerably different from what is during the spring semester. Spooner Art Museum and Dyche Natural History Museum will retain their spring semester hours. During the summer, both classes begin on Monday through Saturday, and 1:30 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. on Sunday. Hours for the Admissions Office and Registrar's Office are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Hours for the closed hour during the noon hour. The Kansas Union, for instance, will open at 7 a.m. and close at 9 p.m. this summer. The University Union basement, will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, but will be closed on Saturday. meetings on the KU campus where club members could get training or seven hours of training at their home they jump. This training involves learning how to fall, which way to walk and finding where the rider is. Summer hours for the Law Library in Green Hall are 8 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Monday through The actual jump would take place at a drop zone at Ottawa. There, rated instructors who have passed written tests, and scored at least 100 free fails take the novice up for his first jump Watkins Hospital is open to emergency cases at any time, but students who want to see a doctor should visit the hospital from 8 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 8 a.m. to 11.30 a.m. on Saturdays. The first jumps are static line jumps from 3,000 feet. The jumper fails for about 3 seconds and the parachute is opened from the airplane by a parachute line to a hook in the airplane. After six static line jumps, a student advances to 3.000 feet and free falls from 5 to 10 seconds. He then continues up to 6.000 feet and shuts Height and time of free The first jump course, which includes the seven hours of injuries, is a rental, plane ride and jumpmaster fee costs $40. However parachute members of an organized parachute club would have less injury risk. falls increase as the student progresses. Later jumps cost $4 or $4.50 each depending on the height and type of jump. You need never have had a parachute on your back before, Jaworski stated, and the training is not long. "In fact we try to have the student finish the seven hours of training and jump the same day if possible," he added. Further information may be obtained by contacting Mauk or the Parachute Center at 1101 S. Hickory Ave. in Ottawa, or by b-mail to parachutecenter@yahoo.com. R Hillcrest R Ends Tuesday Eve/7 15:9:20 HOOL BEEZE Hillerson Adults Campus Host Of 19 Institutes Over Summer Charlton Heston Yvette Minieux PG: SKYJICKED ENDSTUES. Eve 7:35 9:25 Hillcrest D2 14th Street 150 China 19 EWNSTUES Eve 7:35.9:25 Hillcrest Adult 1.50 Child 7.5 Five summer institutes are currently in session on the KU campus and 14 more will be held before the summer is over. Eve 7:45:9:30 Adult Child 1.50 .75 Ends running Tues. SKYJACKED ACADEMY AWARD WINNER An incredible adventure of the future . . . to save what we abuse today!! Already meeting this week are participants in Sunflower Girl's science course for geoscientists, a workshop on the care and repair of soil samples, and a institute in radiation biophysics and the Kansas Shakespeare team. JACKIE KARA Hillcrest3 silent G NOW IN ENGLISH Eve 7:30, 9:30 Mat Daily 3:00 Twilight 2:00 All at 5:00 the Garden of the Finzi-Continis Granada THEATRE...Alphabet V13-5784 Later institutes will include a bank management clinic a university education workshop and a workshop dealing with economic issues. NOW HOWING Charles Bronson Room Rehearsal, Black Teenage Pageant 2.50 Ursula Andress Omedias 35 words or fewer. 9:00 Varsity TOTAL ATLAS - Telephone V92-3655 PAGE Titles / Audio Fragments 2:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. SMA Film Series, "A Night in Casablanca" 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. BEWARE! THE BLOB horrifying NEW adventure COLOR GP Campus Bulletin Library Study Group: 12:30 p.m., Alcove, amass Union SUA BRIAR Game: 1:30 p.m., Sunflower 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 TASTE THE BLOOD OF DRACULA Boxoffice opens 8:00 Sunset End Sat DIVE IN INFLATION - What are in the $ 2. If you don't Old English-Puuli CROSSED MAKES SHEEEDD SUEDED PUPPIES MALES OR FEMALES $15 C. E GOSEN MCOUTH KANSA 913-798-2600 79 gallon all-glass aquarium complete with fluorescent hood, heater, fitters, gravel, stand and two 18 inch Ovies if desired Call 841-2648-6-13 Michigan St. pat-B-Quse 515 Mich. St. Outdoor st. pat-B-Quse Large- $15.00 Bricket to go-$6.50 SAB st. to beat-$8.55, Bricket Bricket plate=$18.55, Bricket Bricket plate=$18.55, -$3.00 Bricket, $3.00 Bricket, $3.00 Bricket, d to 4 p.m Phone $425- 910 or 613-6090 City Phone 613-6090 Bolomco presents summer overheard in a 70-plus room, old jackets, throughout the old denim jacket, yesterday's clothes at yesterday's prices. Bolomco Used Storm systems and large discounts Theatre equipment and materials Lawrence's lawyer selected of Pro- tessional Entertainment componen- tors 11-Feb-Mon-Sat 11-7-Feb-Mon-Sat 6-12 FATHER'S DAY GIFTS of lasting value From the unique Christian Bookstore, Cross Reference Malls Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd 6-15 FATHER'S DAY CARDS—Half Price —Where Isee ?????? Cross Reference Malls Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd. 6-15 HELP WANTED **you're at it a disadvantage.** Either way it comes to the same new Analysis of Worcester, Civilianity Campus, Cambridge Watford 14th 7:27 1969 Great Lakes Mobile Horn-Comp. furn. 2 bedroom-Best offer over $3,200 Call 842-3186 or 843-8585-8 Webster's Mobile Homes Good Job Gabe! Colorado booming @jordan_paul #jordanpaul Dartmouth, bernard $90.00 to 16.0000; Summer Junior $100.00 to 16.0000; Summer jobs-in- stitute $75.00 United, Drawer II, Laporte, Clover United, Drawer II, Laporte, Reponsible couple or single student to live in pleasant air-conditioned house during latter part of summer if desired 842-4088 6-14 TEACHER OPNINGS! Curriculum first with teaching teachers in all fields. 53 California School Placement. 1974 California State University Berkeley. 1947 Oakland. 1926 Berkeley. FOR RENT Apartment for rent in exchange for work. Call 843-7863 6-14 Your Complete Service Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts 3409 W. 61h 842-7700 3409 W. 6th 842-7700 Just West of the Just West of the Drive-In Theatre First day: 20 words or fewer, $1.75 each additional word, $4.25 COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENT. Available now. 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, apartments. AC, pool and laundry. Lower summer rooms. Call +44 822 9010. Call +44 822 9020. Call +44 822 9021. TYPING Typing, IBM electric, pica type, Fast, accurate typing guaranteed, Phone 813-2186. 6-8 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. 8:30am-12:30pm, prompt, accurate Phone 843-2811. 6:22-6:25 Phone 843-2811. NOTICE WANTED SUMMER GAY LIBERATION Monday through Thursday and brothers. Meets every thursday at 1 PM on the bus at 470 East 25th Street, 641-869-1000. Write Box 234, Louisville, KY. lide needed from K.C., KS to K.U, nd back for morning classes. Will ay. Call 299-3144 6-12 PRESIDENT - Win FREES FREED EXECUTIVE ADMINISTRATIVE PAID TITLING to Imigration, and Banking INSTITUTE WEEKEND INSTITUTE WEEKEND CORPORA- TION SOUTHPORT, NORTH CAROLINA SOUTHPORT, NORTH CAROLINA MISCELLANEOUS EACHERS WANTED Contact southwest teachers Agency, Box 317, Albuquerque, NM 87068 "Our Team" Bordered and a memorial M-7 ATA. STEREO REPAIR, RMS Electronics, Accessories & Tracking Systems, Open Reel Tape Machines and Speakers. Lowest Reliant-Friendly Service. 814-253-7600. Diving Supplies 843-3565 Lawrence, Kansas JAROLD'S Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I. Equip. in Stock Certified Instructor sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Female Elder Nei Hot family Food Hamburg-style Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steals Our menu is and has always been 11 Miss Nearth of the Kaw River Beach Phone 843-1611 Open 4:30 Closed Monday 1500 TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE 0 TO 10 MPH -13.5 RECLINING FRONT SEATS UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL 500 E.23rd 842-0444 LOVE THAT DATSUN RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842-2323 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 10. Sat. til noon. 6 Wednesday, June 7, 1972 University Summer Kansan The house was built in the late 19th century and is now a museum. It features a large porch with ornate woodwork and a steep roof. The house is surrounded by trees, which are part of the surrounding landscape. 1015 Tennessee St. PARK Mansion 1307 Massachusetts St. THE MASTER HOUSE KANSAN Staff Photos by PRISCILLA BRANDSTED 1613 Tennessee St. Old West Lawrence By MOLLY LAFLIN Kansan Writer This year the National Park Service designated Old West Lawrence and a house located at 1015 Tennessee historical sites. Jim Postma, former president of the Old West Lawrence Association, said that the park will be responsible for the preservation of National parks and places of some historical importance. To preserve 19th century houses in Kansas and to preserve Kansas State Historical Site Survey nominated Old West Lawrence and the house at 1015 Tennessee to the National Parks Office for consideration as historical sites. Postma said this designation meant that the houses in this area could not be taken for federal land or as part of the National Park Service. The houses pictured were built in the 19th century. These and other houses help tell the story of the family from its early years to the present. Shortly after Stearns left, Paul bought a book and purchased a back of goods, and moved them into the building, making the fast cabin alsa the guest room. New England setters arriving later that year decided to organize a town company. They considered Stearns an obstacle and bought him out for $500. There still remains a cement store in the town, which reads "Site of the first house in Lawrence, 60 feet East." The first house in Lawrence was built in 1854. It was a log cabin about 18 by 24 feet, erected by Clark Sterns, a prosleya house from Missouri who built the farm as a squatter's claim for a farm. In 1860, Hiram Towne, a local carpenter, built a house at 743 Tennessee. In addition, he built Old North College, the first University building on Mount Oread. At the time of Quantrill's raid in 1863, the Towne house was owned by a Mrs. Hoyt who operated it as a boarding house. The house was spared by the raiders because Mrs. Hoyt pleaded that she would worm and the house was her only source of income. After changing hands several times, the house was bought by F.W. Jaedicke, a gunsmith and hardware merchant. Jaedicke added the bay window, the circular portion at the south end of the house, and the present iron fence which replaced a wooden picket fence. by Col. John O'Brien, a brickmaker, who was the first mayor of Lawrence. James Gideon, Lawrence's best-known architect, worked on the Kansas Statehouse and old Fresher Hall at the front section of the house at 1613 Tennessee. This is one of the most splendid of the town's early houses, featuring cherry woodwork, gold leaf moldings, woodworked dog heads, waiscotting and ten fireplaces. In 1869, Judge Solon Thacker bought the house. He had been chairman of the Wyandotte county brought statehood to Kansas in 1861. After 1872, when Thacher became ambassador to Central America, changes were made in the house. A back half was added with its original owner, Neil Macekaye and Tom Maupin bought the house in 1960. Since then the house and grounds were donated to their original magnificence. Construction of the house at 1501 Pennsylvania St. is began on Friday. The raiders set the partially-completed structure afire, but the house was not destroyed. But the scars from the fire remain. Austin H. Turney bought the house in 1931 when he came to Lawrence to organize the Bureau of Business Turney still lives in the house. Lawrence citizens commonly refer to the house at 1307 Oak Lane in Castle. It was built in 1894 for J. N. Roberts, a retired Civil War room in The Castle are finished in a different wood. There are five fireplaces, each of unique color. The multicolored marble. Above the tower is a roof garden, and on the third floor there is a large wooden wall. Located at 645 Tennessee St. is the house built for H. Tisdale sometime between 180 and 1818, with a beautiful, gently dented some time previously in a small house on the same property, and a family businessmen who shared in the post-Civil War prosperity did likewise, abandoning their earlier homes for more spacious apartments toward the end of the century. Mrs. Addie Penny, the house's present, owner, was one of the first tenants to rent the Penny now rents the building which is divided into 12 apartments. Beta Theta Pi Fraternity, which bought the house in 1912, added the rear wing of the building as a dormitory. In 1872 the house at 1425 Tennessee St. was built for John Palmer Uher, former secretary of the Interior under Lincoln. The house is mayor of Lawrence, but was unpopular with the townpeople. Much of Lawrence's history is in its houses. Jim Postma said that Lawrence was rather unique because of the preservation of so many of its old homes. He said, "It is really important to the preservation of these houses continue to be important to the Lawrence community." 1501 Pennsylvania St. M. A. M. C. H. THE HOME OF THE CLOSE DEALERS 1425 Tennessee St. FREEDOM HOUSE 1501 Pennsylvania St. BLAZING THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 82nd Year, No.4 No Kansan Until Monday Thursday, June 8,1972 SPEED LIMIT 20 STOP Officer Changes the Rules Delegate Campaign Stepped Up Some campus traffic rules change at noon and Traffic and Security officer Charles L. Brown will be present. justinets. The campus is closed to automobile traffic on weekday mornings, and bus stops are closed. McGovern, Muskie Confer; Some Claim Alliance Near By The Associated Press Aid reports he will get the support of Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, sen. George S. McGovern embarked on a quest for additional delegates and party unity Wednesday in his accelerated drive for the Democratic presidential nomination. Both NBC and the New York Times reported Wednesday night that Muskie, the original Democrat front-runner, might drop all vestiges of his candidacy and announce his support of McGovin in a Republican Press Club in Washington on Friday. McGovern, who won four primaries Tuesday, including a victory over Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey in the crucial California election, talked with Muskie by telephone Wednesday. A Muskie aide said he did not know what was discussed. SUPPORT BY MUSKIE and release of his 164 delegates could put McGovern within arm's length of the 1,509 votes needed for nomination in Miami in July. Hamphire, meanwhile, struggling to keep the nation's democracy governors there were circumstances under which he could accept Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace and then take a different approach. Mgovern, who began his quest when nobody thought he had a chance, capped it with a win over the United States in comfortable and decisive" victory over Humphrey in the California presidential election. WITH 99 PER CENT of the California patients reported, these were the vote totals. McGovern 1,527,485 votes or 45 per cent. Hampliphyre $132,582 votes or 40 per cent. The number of the vote is, but many of his ballots had not yet been counted. His votes were write-ins, and it will be days before the election. Six other entries on the California ballot trailed far behind. THAT PRIMARY victory awarded McGovern 271 nominating votes, and he added more by defeating Wallace in New Mexico, where Humphrey ran third and got no delegates; by outdistancing the former vice president in New Jersey, and with an unopposed win in his own South Dakota. University Will Permit Payment Of School Fees by Credit Card Students enrolling this fall can pay their fees using a MasterCharge credit card, Ron Hamilton, assistant comptroller, said Wednesday. Those primary verdicts pushed McGovens's total of first ballot nominating votes to 90%. It will take 1,509 to choose the top nominee. The candidates convention in Miami, Beach next month. Hamilton said that although the University had not actually signed a contract with the credit card company, he was certain one would come. did not offer to forgo the charge, Hamilton said. Hamilton said that the main reason the University decided to allow the use of credit cards because they were convenient for students. He said more time to pay their tuition. He said that since fees would have to be paid at enrollment, beginning this fall, students who didn't have the entire sum could use their card to make monthly payments to the company. It was learned reliably that Muskie was considering dropping out altogether, and sources said that if he did so, it would most probably be to support McGovern. An announcement of Muskie's decision was expected by Friday. IT REMAINED to be seen whenthe McGovern's four-state sweep would impress uncommitted or wavering delegates and wash them into his camp in the day ahead. A student can use his own card or his parents' card. To get a MasterCard charge, you have to have a good credit record. It takes ten days to process a MasterCard application. Wallace ranks second in delegate strength, with 328; Humphrey has $131\%$, and Muskie has 166. Another 474 Democratic delegates are uncommitted. The Lewrence National Bank is to sponsor the program. Hamilton said that MasterCharge was selected because it was sponsored and BankAmericard, another company that was being considered, was not. Hamilton said that the credit card company was not necessarily going to issue cards to anyone who applied. Persons will have to be good risks and have Hamilton said that MasterCharge had suggested that students also be allowed to use the cards for dormitory fees. There has been no decision on that proposal. Hamilton said that the University would not be charged the usual 5 per cent processing fee by MasterCharge. Merchants usually pay the credit card companies this fee for taking the cards for payment of merchandise. BankAmericard By JEANNE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer Muskie was in Washington conferring with his advisers and talking by telephone with allies around the nation. He has repeatedly declared he remains a can-can fighter, clipped from active primary competition April 27 after a succession of defeats. MasterCharge will put dollar limits on the cards, as with all their cards, but Hamilton said that the limit had not been specified by MasterCharge. Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, said that the Union Bookstore was considering allowing students to use credit cards to pay for books and supplies. some means of making payments in order to be able to receive the card. Hamilton said that the credit card companies' rates of interest were 18 percent and in view of that students might be ahead to consider other sources for loans. He said for the student who could expect to pay the quickly the credit card would be convenient. McGovern himself said he wasn't pressing anyone to withdraw. He said he would be talking with both Humphrey and Muskie, and planned also to visit Wallace at the Silver Spring, Md., hospital where the Alabama governor is recuperating from an A.M. 15 assassination attempt. Wallace remains partially paralyzed. IT WAS understood that McGovern managers had been waging a long distance telephone effort from Los Angeles to San Diego to make skuke to sign on with their candidate. MGCOVERN planned to campaign Friday and Saturday in New York for a June 20 primary in which he expects to be elected. He also conventions delegation, then fly South for a three-day unity campaign swing in the region of Democrats most hostile to his Gary Hart, McGovern's campaign director, said he expected the front-ranker would have at least 1,335 delegates and would be a major force in the New York primary, last of the season. THAT WOULD put him close enough to nominating strength so that late switches before or during the first ballot could put McGovenn at the ticket. "There is a good chance we can win on the first ballot." McGovern said. But Humphrey impressed he still had a good chance to win nomination on a second try. The former vice president got 90 minutes' sleep, then flew to Houston to talk with Democratic governors, many of them in favor of the liberal McGovern will lead the ticket. HUMPHEY said the test of a nominee shouldn't be who won the most primaries; it should be won can do the best job for the party. Nov. 7 election against President Nikon, Humphrey said he did not think there would be a first ballot nomination at Miami Beach because “there’s still a lot of bargaining to do.” He said some of it would have to be done with delegates now supporting Wallace. The Minnesota senator appeared to be getting a start on that process when he was asked whether he could accept Wallace as president. He said that out before the California primary. HIS ANSWER in Houston: "I have said repeatedly that if a man would accept the South Viet Marines Launch Drive SAIGON (AP) - Hundreds of South Vietnamese marines began a new push Thursday against North Vietnamese forces occupying Quang Tri Province. Officers in the field said the purpose was to take prisoners, clear out refugees and gain information about the terrain after a week of heavy rain. They said the sweep extended from the coast to Highway 1, and was supported by U.S. naval gunfire and heavy American air strikes. The operational area is one of sand dunes and rice paddies stretching from the beach to the north-south highway. Initial contact was reported light, with nine North Vietnamese killed on the east. IN THE AIR war against North Vietnam, American jets battles the enemy in the Pacific. U. S. officials reported no losses. They said Air Force Phantoms struck the North Vietnamese rail center and a nearby bridge on Tuesday only 20 miles from the Chinese border. The attacks on the installations, southwest of Lang Son were the closest raids to China since the 1965-1968 bombing campaign. Hahnel claimed U.S. F4 Phantom jets shot down over the North since Saturday. from China and bombed one of the North's biggest power plants. OTHER AIR Force Phantoms dropped laser-guided bombs on the Bac Giang thermal power plant, 25 miles northeast of Hue, Vietnam, since full-scale bombing, resumed April 6. In South Korea, newmen visiting korea found government troops in kinchang to suppress the protests. The commander of the 23rd Division, Brig. Gen. Ily Tong Ba, reported enemy units had withdrawn several miles to the north. American B52 bombers pounded the retreating troops Tuesday, U.S. officials said. Reporters noted heavy damage to most buildings in the vital central highlands provincial capital, which was under enemy attack for 13 days. THE BATTLE to retake Konum was three days, three nights of fighting hand to hand. Of the fighting was carried on with much of the support because of bad wather, he added. The general, who was recently promoted by President Nguyen Van Thieu, estimated the attackers lost 4,376 dead and 1,951 wounded at 388 killed and 1,477 wounded. The 62-day stalemate at An Loc. 60 miles north of Saigon, continued. But field reports said that about 800 paratroopers, who were airlifted in, linked up with other soldiers, and were moving north edge of the isolated provincial capital. THE U.S. Command in Saigon said 27% air strikes supporting South Vietnamese ground troops were flown in the 24-hour period ending Wednesday morning. Air action over North Vietnam Tuesday included more than 20 air strikes ranging from small to large. In Cambodia, the high command reported that fighting flared close to the Cambodian capital as well as in the northeast and southwest sections of the The battle for Paing Kasey, 30 miles southwest of Phenom Phem, went into its seventh day as government troops trying to capture the city wereashed at three points with enemy forces. platform he'd be eligible in my book for vice president nomination . I think it is highly unrealistic that George Wallace would permit the impatience would be on the same ticket." When McGovern was asked Wednesday about vice president possibilities, he said his main consideration would be to find a running mate well qualified to take over the White House. He but added the role of a "vision" in 'the same ball park as mine.' HUMPRIRE described his role in Houston as that of the party's titular leader, seeking to bind up campaign wounds for the sake of unity. ★ ★ ★ Nonetheless, McGovern said in Los Angeles that if nominated he would wage "a national campaign" and win some Southern and border states which Humphrey lost as the Democratic nominee four years ago. McGovern had met with the governors early Tuesday in what he called a mission of reconciliation, but didn't appear to have reconciled the more conservative Southerners who feared his nomination put the ticket in trouble in their states. Wall Street Ticker Skips The victory of the South Dakota senator in the winner-take-all primary meant that he could make a case for a new constitution. NEW VORK (AP)—Sen. George McGovern's victory in the California Democratic presidential primary was cited by Wall Street analysts as one of the main reasons for the stock market's sharp drop Wednesday. contender for the Democratic nomination and as a possible winner in the general elections in November, the analysts say. Mr. Obama's economic proposals, they said. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials finished off 7.34 at 948. Declines on the New York Stock Exchange led advances by more than 2 to 1. Kissinger's weekend visit comes at an awkward political moment. The U.S. Embassy said it would not be handling any arrangements. Though he is among the most powerful men in the Nixon administration, he will be the guest not of the government but of a U.S. administration—the Japan-U.S. Economic Council. Pacify, Kissinger Told TOKYO (AP)—President Nixon's ubiquitous national security adviser, Henry A. Kissinger, arrives here Friday for talks which seem more designed to smooth ruffled Japanese feelings that to arrive at any solid agreements. Within days of his closed-door meeting with Prime Minister Eisaku Sato, the Japanese leader is expected to announce a new policy using precipitating a scramble for power. Aware of this, Kissinger has scheduled conferences with the principal contenders. The political confusion, involving as it does a lame-duck prime minister and a pro-Western dictator, is more striking. position yet of foreign policy, leaves little room for hard negotiation. Both Washington and Tokyo seem to expect little more than some new insights into where the strained U.S.-Japanese relationship is heading. Many Japanese regard Kissinger as personally hostile to Japan, an impression he may be able to dispel in the give and take with political and business leaders. The biggest political issue up till now has been that of the U.S. unilateral approach to China, without prior Japanese consultation. Initially, the Japanese were hurt by the Chinese movement themselves move toward closer ties with Peking, that problem becomes less acute. One of the questions Sato has said he would discuss is that of combat operations and how to conduct such a mission. Under the U.S.-Japan security treaty, the United States is bound to confer with the government beforehand. In recent weeks opposition politicians have questioned government interpretations of prior consultation" clause of the treaty. Potter Lake Yields Catch For Scott Kaiser, left, and John Summerville, both protested Wednesday after a group of activists blocked a bridge. three fish and John claimed he caught 11. Both said their catches were more than luck. 2 Thursday, June 8, 1972 University Summer Kapsan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Troubled Kids Get Column PHILADELPHIA (AP)—A 10-year-old reader of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin thought the newspaper should have "a column like 'Dear Abby,' for smaller problems." The newspaper agreed. So Angel Maria Cavaliere will soon start writing a column of answers to children's question. It'll be called "Dear Angel." 428 Miners Remain Trapped WANKIE, Rhodesia (AP)—Rescue workers attempted to pump fresh air Wednesday into the underground mine shaft where 428 men have been trapped for more than a day, but company officials held little hope of finding survivors. Three massive explosions in the No. 2 shaft of the Wankie Collapsion mine morning. No container was attached with them. Rescue workers were supported by secondary explosions which damaged the mine's venting system. Deadly methane and carbon monoxide gas still filled the shaft. Nixon Supports No-Fault HOUSTON (AP)—President Nixon asked the nation's governors Wednesday to make no-fault insurance a matter of top priority. "I have endorsed this system because I consider it to be a vast improvement and a genuine reform for the benefit of the consuming public," Nixon said in a telegram read at the concluding session of the National Governors Conference. Nixon said he believed the states and not the federal level could best respond to the question of reform for the present system of automobile insurance. U.S. Asks UN Austerity WASHINGTON (AP)—The United States has issued a 14-point policy statement designed to spark a serious economy wave in spending by the United Nations and its related agencies. In a memorandum circulated by the United Nations and its agencies, the State Department said the austerity principle set out for federal expenditures must apply equally to international organizations. Military Bust Challenged TOPEKA (AP)—A petition filed in U.S. District Court here contends that military regulations are irrational in treating marijuana like hard narcotics and that Col. Gerald K. Kelhar was singled out for discriminatory treatment because of his rank. Kelhar is serving a three-year term at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Ft. Leavenworth for possession of marijuana. The petition also requests that the Civil Liberties Union forces be seeked from Kelhar from his imprisonment. Kelhar was commander of the 618th Military Airlift Support Squadron at Tan Son Nuh Air Base, Saigon, when he was charged with use, possession, transfer and solicitation to purchase marijuana. HOUSTON (AP) — Defeated in SEN. Hubert H. Humphrey abandoned his flat opposition to running mate and tried to drum up con- vention support among Democratic governors Wed- Hubert Approves Wallace At a news conference, Humphrey said he could accept Alabama Gov. Wallace as a running mate should Wallace accept the party platform, but he wouldn't be unrealistic that George Wallace and Hubert Humphrey would be on the ticket." Humphrey described his meetings with fellow Democrats at the National Governors' office, and he united, not an attempt to halt Sen. George McGovern's accelerating nomination. BUT SOME governors whom they support, and in at least one case asked a southern governor to withhold delegale support Humphrey said he intended the rest for a couple of days in his home state of Minnesota before Humprey's visit to the governors came two days after one by McGovern, who tried to assure the governors were not radical as portrayed by Humphrey and other opponents. picking up campaigning for the June 20 New York primary. HUMPHEMP took comfort in the fact that his California defeat was by a much slimmer margin than the 20 per cent poll had shown earlier. And he said he would have a winner-take-all rule he could have won at least half its delegates. Muskie Hints Withdrawal NEW YORK (AP)—NBC reported Wednesday that Sen. Edmund McSusen's "present plans" for a budget bill were approved. Sen. George McGovignor for the Democratic nomination for the presidency in a speech at Washington's National Press Club on Friday. Muskie, oneume tron-runner Treasury Suggests New Money System WASHINGTON (AP)—The Treasury Department Wednesday declared that the volatile and risky oil market was a prime reason why the world should phase out the pre-meridian in a new monetary system. "The demonstrated sensitivity of the gold market to self-generating and self-serving rumors. simply provides further evidence of the need to build a monetary relationship with commodity," the Treasury said. As the free price of gold skyrocketed, the Treasury described as false two reports that have been feeding the speculation. One report said it was a secret U.S.-Soviet deal to raise the price of gold drastically. The other report, published in the magazine *The New York Journal* for monetary affairs, Paul A. Volcker, plans to resign is without foundation, the Treasury It was a tacit recognition, however, that the free market price of gold had at the value of the dollar. The weakened dollar was three times as price of gold hit $65 an ounce. The Nixon administration's statement was cleared by Volker, chief architect of the Inter-American Agreement reached last December. Volcker wanted to phase out the part that gold played in the present monetary system. The value of the dollar, and other currencies as well, is pegged to gold official price of $38 an Industry Promises Help For Pollution Standards Prop 9, which proposed a law that would allow the nation's most populous city was turned down 2 to 1 in Tuesday's California primary LOS ANGELES (AP)—Thought soundly defeated at the polls, the Environment Initiative hasn't given the businessman who helped help it to defeat said Wednesday he had an "industrialized" proposition ONE SUCH avenue was proposed by the anti-Prop. 5 businessman. It the apparent victim of a man-do-or-die law, governmental leader who said a responsible antipollution need He campaigned hard against Prop. 9 around the state. "By God, the time has come to do something responsible to fight climate change," he said around too long inviting this sort of thing." said R. Jack Stoddard, chairman of the Los Angeles Department of Interior's major Contractors of California. He said he wanted businessmen to draft a ballot measure "that would get the pollution job done in California in the realm of good present technology. It would be an industrialized Prop. 9." HE DIDN'T elaborate much except to say that he had not visualized the measure as having 'de-die' provisions of Prop. 9. The Environment Initiative would have banned DDT and related long-lasting pesticides from gasoline from gasoline by July 1, 1976. outlawed offshore oil and gas drilling and put a five-year moratorium on construction of nuclear power was safe. Stoddard said he had already met with other business leaders, including Union and Standard Oil and support for such a measure. leaving it wide open for something like Prop. 9 to happen again," Stoddard said. Clem Whitaker Jr., partner in Whitaker & Baxter, the San Diego team that coordinated the $1,4 million anti-Pro. 9 campaign, said he had talked with business and people about such a measure "There's a strong feeling that there should be added emphasis on anything you need, and should be intelligent improvement on environmental controls. I think there's real substance to what he (Siddharth) said." "IF WE don't move, we're MEANWHILE, Ed Kouplah. Angeles-based group that placed Prop 9 on the ballot by gathering petition signatures, was dumbified. "We'll see," he said. He said he wasn't dishearted about Prop. 9's defeat. "Actually, we won by forming a coalition of leaders, including consumer advocate Ralph Nader, who advocates the measure and have it win." The Treasury said that President Nikon had made it clear that administration policies on shap- ing the air systems in the system were unchanged. "As the President said, in an announcement the day before, that he was答应 George Shultz, there will be a changing of the guard but no change in the rank." Spokesmen said the London office simply a commodity market's speculative and subject to rumors, and, "it doesn't affect for the nomination, is expected to confer with McGovern in the nation's capital Thursday, NBC will report a report from Los Angeles. But Richard Stewart, a Muskie spokesman in Washington, said he was confident that the still deciding and conferring with advisers about whether to continue as a candidate or throw his bid. But Mr. Steward, a spokesman said a decision would probably be announced during the National Press Club. Stewart added that McGovern telephoned Muskie from California to ask if he was said he was not sure what was discussed. He said he knew nothing of a planned trip to Hawaii, two seniors on Thursday. Stewart said also that the subject of delegates already committed to Muskie also would attend Friday press club appearance. Muskie has 166 committed delegates to the Democratic National Convention. Once Tuesday's popular votes in California, New Jersey, South Carolina and Florida tabulated completely, Humphrey said, he believed he would overtake Wallace as the leading candidate in all the primaries so far. MGOVERN stood third before Tuesday's votes, although he held the lead in delegate strength. Humphrey conceded that McGovern probably would go into the Miami convention controlling 1,200 or more delegates. McGovern has predicted he would have 1,200 to 1,300 and be in control of the event, the extras needed to reach the 1,509 required for nomination. As Humphrey spoke, the National Governors' Conference wrapped up its four-day annual meeting. TRANSPORTATION Secretary Deborah de lapierre the governor designated applauses he announced he would release to them a billion in highway money they already had. The governors passed resolutions reiterating their support for federal revenue sharing and federal assumption of state welfare costs, but the governor also valueed the federal value-added tax which they said would compete with state sales taxes. A motion to endorse the idea of federal compensation for innocent victims of the attack required two-thirds majority on a 12-affirmative vote. Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandel, a democrat, was elected to replace West Virginia's Republican, as chairman of the conference. Next year's annual meeting is set for April at the state capitol for a 1974 site went begging. 100 Kansan Photo by JOHN REED Suds Head for Potter Lake Water from the Chi Omega fountain, which drains into Potter Lake, carried sids with it Wednesday morning. Workmen were, according to a reporter, watching the edge of Javahawk湖, and closing the previously open culvert. Court Weakens Rights of Suspects The 5-4 decision in a Chicago case runs counter to a series of earlier rulings that expanded arrested persons' right to counsel. WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that police may place arrests in groups without a lawer on hand. As a result, a suspect must be offered a lawyer from the mourning party. But he can't insist on one if罪犯 him in a lineup or a showup in front of his wife. The ruling was produced by the four Nixon appointees plus Justice Potter Stewart. Its logic was challenged by dissenters. In a fury of actions on a busy day, the court agreed also to rule on the way all states except Hawaii finance their public schools. And the justices unanimously indicted committing criminal suspects found incompetent to stand trial. The Chicago case tested the Chicago case tested was enlisted to a lawyer when a holdup victim came to the station house to view him aba Stewart said the suspect, Thomas Kirby, did not have this right either under the Constitution or under a 1967 decision by the high court providing lawyers who had been indicted after they had been indicted. The decision is likely to have a nationwide impact. In at least 13 states courts had ordered police not to place an arrested suspect on the record in a lawsuit on hand. They are California, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin. Similarly, police have been barred by eight of the 11 federal appeals courts from the process. The high court in the Kirby case John J. O'Donnell, president of the National Guard, had shadowed him be selected but it would be conducted as a matter of desperation if the current president refused to do so. WASHINGTON (AP)—The Air Lift threatened Wednesday to call a 24-hour shutdown of air service if aircraft hijackings were allowed O'Donnell told a luncheon in New York that the CIO Marieme Trade Department, leaders of the 60-million international Federation of Air Transporters. Stewart was backed by Chief Justice Warren Burger and Justice Harry A. Blackmun, Lewis Rutherford and David Bentley. Rehquist, Dissenting were William C. O. Douglas, William J. Duncan, White and Thurgood Marshall Pilots React to Hijacks; Threaten Massive Strike Brennan said there was no good reason to supply lawyers at lineup stations. He denied them when the lineup was held at an earlier point, after O'Donnell said the boycott would be applied. If swelling of his throat caused such as Algeria and Cuba and that continued serving them. in London Thursday, may join in business with the British boycott of countries which sheltered airline hijackers, or for ALPA 4,000 member pilots. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) -Norway has pledged $250 programs in Bangladesh, Ambassador Ole Adekard announced. Chinese Seaports Closed to Soviets ST. LOUIS (AP)—Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia, the son of late President China, said the Chinese have not opened their seaports to North Korean海军 harbor from North American mines, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch said Wednesday in a copyrighted dispatch from Pele's office. Siankou, who has lived in Pekin since he was ousted in 1970 by Marshal Lon Noel, made his return with Richard Dudman, chief with Richard Dudman, chief Washington correspondent of the anti-communist movement is on a two-week tour of China. Sihanok said he understood the Chinese refusal was based on unwillingness to let Russian represidents see China harbor defenses. Sishanuk said the reasoning for the Chinese refusal was his own conclusion and not something the Chinese had told him. "The they have been strengthening the defenses of their ports and all their cities," said Sihanok, who self as a good friend of China. Shamokul said in the Post-Depad interview that President Nikon's action in mining North Vietnamese harbors and bombing real and highway links with the US slowed the flow of assistance. "They fear more an attack from the Soviet Union than from the U.S.A. They want to help them by sending troops yet open their ports," he said. He said, however, that large amounts of supplies had already been cached in Laos. Cambodia has also been engaged in action. And many American- "And so, while President Nixon has slowed down the flow of Russian weapons, we now have more captured weapons. It is an additional weapon in our president Nixon". Sihanouk said in his Post-Dispatch interview. made weapons have been captured in the past two months in attacks against military installations, he said. He told the newspaper that the only obstacles to peace in Indochina were South Vietnamnes were American forces. Then and Lon of Nam Cambodia. Prof Receives Study Grant For Algebra Paul F. Conrad, professor of mathematics, has received a $10,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to continue his research on partially ordered algebras, a new area of abstract algebra. "Mr. Nixon could have peace at any time he abandons support for them," Sihanouk said. JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)—Sign in a hardware store here: "Whitewash—any color." He is one of about 40 mathemeticians studying this branch of science, developed since World War II. Corrad began the research in 1970 at Ulm University, where he taught mathematics and he continued it at KU. JAY BOWL Kansas Union 5 Facts You Should Know!! - MIXED LEAGUE STARTING 6:30 Wed., June 7th BEST Bowling Rates Available *OUTSTANDING Student Rates—Every Day Mon. thru Fri. Noon till 6 p.m. Bowl 3 games for only $^{\circ}1.0^{\circ}$ with your KU I.D.!! *Summer operating hours— Monday -Friday 10 a.m. - 9 p.m. (approximately) Closed Saturdays Sundays Noon - 4 p.m. (pending) - Air Conditioned for your bowling and billiard comfort JAY BOWL Bowling—Billiards For Information Call 864-3545 CRUISING KNITS... Whether you're cruising on your ecology machine or in the back seat of your car, you'll enjoy the comfort and color of the bicycle shirt. Breast and rump pouches make it easy to stash loose ends. Bicycle shirts come in a variety of colors, racing stripes and patchwork designs. Cruise by and try it on. The bicycle shirt, from $11.00. БОООБАН MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Monday-Friday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. University Summer Kansan Thursday, June 8, 1972 3 Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED Kanman Stuff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTEL School's Out, Pool's In This young lady, like other Lawrence youngsters, finds swimming a pleasant way to beat the Kansas heat. The Lawrence students swim from 1:30 to 9 p.m. daily with family swims from 6 to 5:30 p.m. The cost is 30 cents for youth under 12 and 60 cents for those 13 and older. KU students may swim at the Robinson Pool from 6 to 7 p.m., then swim from 7 to 6 p.m. Saturdays and 1 to 4 p.m. Sundays. Admission is free. Ryun Will Top List Of AAU Contestants SEATTLE (AP) -A score of 149 to Ryan, have indicated they will test their talents next week in the Amatheat athletic Union track But several stars, including shot putter Al Fourierbach, have said they planned to skip the Olympic trials in Eugene, Ore., later this month, although they entered for the AUU showdown. Stan Hiserman, meet director, announced Ryun's entry Tuesday. The former Kansas holds the world's records of 3.31: in the mile and 3.31.1 for 1,500 minutes when he is scheduled to run here. Ryun's best mile this season was 3.57:1, which qualifies him for the Olympic trials. Feuerbach won the championship and George Woods and Fred deBernardhi, who both won the shot and discus titles at last week's National Collegiate Championships in Eugene. However, Feuerbach and Woods have indicated more recently they plan to pass up the meet. Feuerbach, Woods and Adams are the only men ever to have put the shot farther than 70 feet. Two sprinters who originally planned appearances, Charlie Green, three-time NCAA Racing Judges Uphold Ruling Against Grant Grant was dropped from second to 12th place in the Indianapolis 500 auto race May 27 for a broken battery Bobby Uusen's reserve tank INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - A $72- 000 penalty against race driver Jerry Grant was uphold today by the NCAA. Auto Club a board of judges. The USC panel said, "The appeal panel is of the opinion that a rules violation clearly took place and the stewards ruled properly. Accordingly, the appeal panel should have arraymey Grant, appeal is denied." The Grant and Bobby Unser cars are owned by former racer Dan Gurney. Charles T. Brockman, USAC president, read the decision at a news conference in his capacity of judge of the appeal panel. The decision cited the 500-mile race Supplementary Regulation that allows 250 gallons of supply other than that carried in the car, shall be 250 gallons stored in one cylindrical container of 400 gallons maximum capacity." champion, and Olympic veteran Mel Pender, also have said they now will skip the Seattle meet. Fred Luke of Bellingham and the University of Washington's Cuyahoga Feldman and Gary Walcott entered in jail also. Jaevelen also competed to compete is Mark Munro, the only American who has thrown the shot. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Amos Otis cracked a two-run double in the eighth innin Wednesday night to drive the Kansas City Royals to a com- mercial victory over the Milwaukee Brewers. Otis' Double Lifts Royals over Brewers Hiserman said about 500 entries have been received for the June 15-17 meet. Other athletes who had indicated in interviews they planned to use the AAU meet time for other work included students, world record holding intermediate hurdler Ralph Mann. Milwaukee had taken a 4-12 run in the top of the eighth on George Scott's double and Ellie Rodriuzue's single. But in the bottom of the inning, Lou Piniella singled, Ed Kirkpatrick doubled, Cookie Rojas was given an intentional walk Coaches at Southern California. Long Beach State, UCLA and San Diego State all athletes will all stay home except for a few who haven't made the Olympic qualifying standards, Jack Rose of Long Beach. and Otis rammed his gamewinning double to right. IT WAS Kansas City's sixth victory in seven games, and went to reliever Tom Burgmeier, 4-1. Ken Sanders, 4-1, tok the loss. Dave May tripped a home run for the Brewers in the first inning and doubled for another in the sixth on John Briefer's homer. But the Royals got two runs in the bottom of the sixth on Steve Hovley's run-production triple and a wild pitch, then tied it in the Kansas State Standout Drafted by Los Angeles “This is the end of my college career, but I'm not too sorry,” always said. “I love professional baseball,” said Jayron Warner in two meetings at Maracas. ST. LOUIS (AP) - Bob Leslie a Kansas State pitcher who played for two years at Merrimack said he was surprised at being picked the secondary of the baseball free agent draft Wednesday. "I didn't expect to be picked for high. It came as kind of a surprise. I thought I'd be picked, but Mr. said at his home in St. Louis. Lessie switched from third base to pitching in high school and became a regular starter in college. They also tapped two men in the secondary phase, for players who have been drafted before but did not sign contracts. seventh on Richie Scheinblum's run-scoring pinch single. In this category are Charles Payne, a right-handed pitcher from Delta State College at Cleveland, Miss., and Jerry Dowx, a third baseman from Cerritos College at Norwalk, Calif. The Kansas City Royals picked nine more men Wednesday in the regular phase of major league baseball's player draft. The righthander, who was 6-3 at Kansas State last year, was selected by the Los Angeles Dodgers. IN OTHER American lacrosse games, the Oakland A's stretched their winning streak to six games with a 14-hit attack, including home runs by Joe Rude and Mike Indiola. The Indiana 10s had 4-Wednesday night. Payne is 21 years old, 6-1 and 190 pounds. Maddox is 18 years old, 6-fetet and 195 pounds. Both bat handed. Wednesday's drafting in the regular phase started with the 29th round, and the Royals wound Rudd's fourth homer triggered the Reds' tompom in the fist imping and the fifth in the back, clubbed his seventh homer off the弱 Dick Tidroon a two-run up with 37 players in this category. 29. Doug Buchanan, catcher, Eastern College, Baltimore. The men chosen in the last nine pounds were: Brooks Robinson, had two hits and one RBI apiece. 30. Done Sparre, shortstop Chapman College, Orange, Calif. 31. Greg Fairbanks, pitcher Satellite Beach, Fla. Eastern College, Baltimore. 30. Done Spare, shortstop. College Course, Calif. 33. James Auriger, shortstop. Syracuse, N.Y. 35. Rod Boone, outfielder, Stanford. 32. Bernard Hunting, infielder, Rockford, Mich. 37 Eric Littell, catcher, Gideon, Mo. 36. John Urzi, infielder, San Jose State 34. Tom Robertson, catcher, University of North Carolina. Mr. Rocky Johnson and his fellowship. Stan Bahssen, 7-4, was credited with the victory with relief help from Rick Gossage. AMERICAN LEAGUE After Tuesday night's loss dropped the Orioles under the .500 mark for only the second time in four years under Weaver, the manager implied that some of their veterans may be "over the hill." field came off Laíni Taint in the first innering after Tian, 4;2 walked Andrews. That gave Chicago a 1-10 lead. Detroit W. L. Pte. G.B. Baltimore 22 22 500 3.8 Florida 22 22 500 3.8 Houston 18 23 435 4.9 New York 18 23 435 4.9 Chicago 15 23 435 6 Baseball Standings Oakland 31 13 705 3 Minnesota 25 17 705 3 Cleveland 22 15 698 12 Chicago 22 25 468 10 Kansas City 22 25 432 12 New York W L Pt. G.B. Pittsburgh 20 18 636 6 Fitchburg 19 20 636 8 Montreal 25 25 444 14 St. Louis 20 25 444 15 Detroit 19 20 770 15 NATIONAL LEAGUE The Baltimore Orioles, the manager Earl Weaver, thrashed the Minnesota Twins 11-2 Wednesday night end a five-game series. Los Angeles 29 18 617 — Cincinnati 19 18 617 — Houston 28 17 347 — Alabama 21 24 467 7 San Francisco 21 24 467 7 San Diego 17 36 321 — IN NATIONAL League action, right-hander Reggie Cleveland and left-hander Derek Storm slammed his seventh home for the season to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 6-9 victory Wednesday against Giants and Juan Martínez. Ken Holtman tied as the winning pitcher in the major leagues as he raised his record to 9-3. Gaylord Perry of Cleveland and Detroit's Mickey Lolich also have won nine. for THIS WEEK END! Bring this Coupon to SHAKEY'S 50° Off on a Double or Family Sized Pizza 50° Off on a Pitcher (Light or Dark) COOKING 544 W. 23rd 842-2266 Offer Good Thurs.-Fri. Sat. Only Veteran Dave Johnson drove in two runs while two other veterans, Boog Powell and IN DETROIT, Nolan Ryan checked the Tigers on three hikes while California teammates pelodis D尼克梯 for four runs in the game. He also angled the Angels a 5-1 victory over the Tigers Wednesday night. Stanton and John Stephenson followed with singles through the box for the first run. RMS System Savings '380.00 RMS ELECTRONICS Leo Cardenas unloaded a run-screwing double before Niekro, 11-6, Ryan to ground out and was then relieved by Cheek Seibell. Sander Alomar greater him with a run-single over second base. 724 Mass. 841-2672 Large selection of Stereo components includes: Marantz Teac, Altec Lansing, AKAI, J. B. Lansing, Miracord, Scott, JVC, Sherwood, Dynaco, A.R. and many others. System Discounting Available. Sherwood S-7100 Receiver (50 watt RMS) '219.95 Professional Series Headphones Reg. 39 $^{95}$ while supply lasts '20 $^{00}$ A leadoff double by Norm Casm in the bottom of the fifth was the first hit off Ryan S-4. A single by Jordan Russell was Aurelio Rodriguez's double in the six, prevented the American League East-leading Tigers from absorbing their eight shutout. They were blanked only six times BSR 310 X Charger Shure M75 Cartridge Base and Dust Cover 80.00 Save 219.95 Retail $599.95 CALIFORNIA'S big inning began with a leadoff ground single by Ken Mullen. Lerov 2 Air Suspension Speakers 12" Woofer, 5" mid-range 3½" Tweeter, Oiled Walnut Mike Andrews scored in the first inning on Dick Allen's triple, and Mike Anderson hit fourth inning to lead the Chicago White Sox to a 2-1 victory over the Boston Red Sox. Stop in and check out 5 Year Warranty 300.00 Lawrence's most complete stereo store. Repair facilities for all types of audio equipment. "For Sound Advice Ask the People Who Know" the 200-meter dash. While "The Star-Stapled Banner" was playing, the two sprinters raised their hands and clenched flaps into the air. Smith and Carlos were dismissed from the U.S. team and from the NBA, but "I don't think the black athlete will have anything to demonize," said Alonso. "We've said, 'Things are all right as they are as concerned.'" ALLEN'S TRIPLE to center RMS ELECTRONICS 724 Mass. Open 11-7 Mon.-Sat. "I haven't heard of any other dissatisfaction to this point," he said. "If they are, the problem will be taken up immediately." Olympic Protests Said Unlikely ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — An American athlete who want to use the Olympic games in Munich, Germany, as a protest plat- form, will be left at home, two days for Olympics said Wendee day. "If there are going to be demonstrations, it will take a different bent," Kelly said. But the Olympians, Jack Kelly, Amateur Athletic Union president, and Jesse Winslow, of the S. Olympic Committee, said a repeat of the Black Power demonstration four hours at Mexico City is unlikely. Also appearing at the $25-aplate dinner was Rep Bob Mathias, R-Calfi, decathlon champion in the 1948 and 1962 games and a bronze medalist in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, said the Olympic Committee had set up a consulting committee to demonstrate the Mexico City demonstration. Kelly, who competed in four olympics, and Owens were in Uxandria, a Washington, D.C. ambulance, to help raise funds for the team. Four years ago, winner Tommy Smith and runnerup John Carlos mounted the victory stand to receive their medals for MAC Overwhelmed? Slow, unorganized reading is boring! You lose concentration and perspective! or You seem to spend all your time studying! A Confident Fast, intelligent reading holds your attention! You grasp the ideas sooner & more accurately! You have time for leisure enjoyment! NEW CLASSES BEGIN THIS WEEK Regular Course: Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m.-Noon, June 6-July 18 Thursdays, 7:00-9:30 p.m., June 8-July 20 Western Civ. Course: Tuesdays, 7:00-9:30 p.m., June 6-July 18 READ THE ENTIRE YEAR'S WESTERN CIVILIZATION ASSIGNMENTS IN ONLY 7 WEEKS Reading Dynamics teaches you how to find the meaning in all those thousands of words. Our instructor is also a Western Civ. Instructor. Our unique note-taking technique simplifies, organizes, and relates ideas in graphic form. I EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Downstairs at the Sound—Hillcrest Shopping Center 925 Iowa Phone 843-6424 4 Thursday, June 8, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Is Teaching Important? Just how important is good teaching at KU? The answer to this question depends upon whom you are talking to. If you were to ask this question of the students at KU, the answer would be, "Good teaching is the most important thing for me at this university. It is the good teacher who helps you learn what makes him a vital part of what I want to go to his classes and to take additional work in his field." If you were to ask the parents of our students this same question, you would get a similar answer from them, although they would probably add something like this: "Of course I expect good teaching. That's why I'm paying both tuition and taxes to educate my children." But what do the Board of Regents and the university administration think about good teaching? An examination of their actions reveals that their answer to this question would be, "There are many much more important." The reason for such a conclusion seems obvious when one notes that of the 39 people who have won one or more of KU's top three teaching awards, only four will be paid as much as $20,000 next year. This is a scant percentage of a group recognized for good teaching. The percentage becomes exceedingly smaller when one sees that, according to figures released by the University of 138 faculty members and 34 administrators who will be paid more than $20,000 next year. The figures speak loud and clear. Teaching is apparently not as important as other criteria by which salaries are determined. One would think that good teachers would be likely to leave the University of Kansas if they were not properly rewarded for their efforts. In a number of cases, this has been so. The HOPE award winners of 1959, 1962, 1964, 1967 and 1971 have left KU for positions paying higher salaries at other schools. What we must not lose sight of is that of the 39 who received the teaching awards, 30 are still teaching at KU. We are probably more fortunate than we deserve to be. -Rita E. Haugh Editor Unique Coalition Formed Early in April a small group of individuals met in Topeka to outline a program for what could eventually become a powerful political force in Kansas. The group, comprising labor leaders and representatives from farm and education groups in the state, issued their recognition state and local politicians through a shrewd and calculated political move; they invited a group of students to attend the first meeting. By recognizing the potential impact of young people in this election year, the Topeka group opened the door to what may possibly become a unique coalition in state and national political circles. If the coalition succeeds in uniting thousands of blue collar workers and students, Kansas may be facing an interesting election year. A quick glance at certain important political battles during the '68 and '70 races highlights the effect a labor-student coalition in Kansas might have on the outcome of future races. For example, the margin of victory for Robert Dole in the 1968 senatorial race was 175,000 votes. In 1970 Governor Docking was elected by 71,384 votes. In the Lawrence area the two incumbent house members won by a combined total of 531 votes over the challengers. Compare these election figures to the 292,000 young voters in Kansas who will vote for the first time in 1972, added to the estimated Kansas labor force of 120,000, and the impact the two groups could have on certain state and local races becomes apparent. Regardless of the outcome, this attempt to bring the laborer, student, farmer and teacher together for a discussion of the issues in an election year deserves commendation. One can only hope that similar efforts will begin on a national scale only the time will be the politician who fails to recognize the broad constituent base that such a coalition represents. And isn't that what politics is all about? Mark Bedner Summer Invites Reading Also on the nostalgic side is a big western by Janice Hilt Goles, SIX-HORSE HITCH (Crest, 165 cents). Fictional characters and settings are as Big Holiday, Jack Slade, and drivers of the Overland Stage in this one. It takes place beginning in 1850, after the great war in the West and during the great days in the line lines. New on the lists is *Kurban* (Pocket, $1.25) and was a Tartar book of the Caucasus mountains of Asia Minor, and he wrote this story about a proud young man from an aristocratic family. His daughter of a rich Christian merchant. There is a culture there and the story is rich and romantic. Now we come to a group quite different: books about the Everybody KNOWS AND NOBODY CARES (Pocket, $1.25), about one O. J. Jones who leaves wife, school, to go out and find America. Morton (Pocket, $9.50), pensure (Pocket, $9.50) is a tale of the draft—young man, middle class values, sex. Patrick Skene THE CATALOGUE AND FRED DILLY (Pocket, $9.50 each) are sexy and funny, treating artificial insemination, sexual experimentation by scientists and the like. A nostalgic novel by Helen Tucker, THE BUILT OF AUGUST FIELDING (Crest, 95 cents) will appeal to readers who have watched the film from the tortured contemporary scene. This one depicts more than 70 years of small-town American life, treating a farm boy, his days in college, his first parish, the works and for whom he lives. Heading the fiction just... James A. Michener's THE DRIFTERS (Crest, $1.75). The drifters have a huge time limit in middle-aged man's view of six young Americans, wandering through Torremolinos, Pampiona, Mozambiquo, and Marrakech, in their experiences. An older volume by Michener also has been reissued. THE FIRES OF SPRING (Crest, $1.25). It's about a boy growing up in a park, discovering sex. It is also minor league Michener, sadly Still worth reading, however, is SARATOGA TRUNK (Crest, 85 cents). This is one of the most enjoyable courses written by a beautiful Cloe Jarmon and tough Clint Maroon, their adventures in New Orleans and Miami, with the days of great horse racing and competition between these two cities. Published in the University of Ramaphosa first weekly during the summer semester, *The Times* is published by the University of Ramaphosa. The University of Ramaph莎 has a print-only archive of materials to be made available to all members of the university. All materials should be submitted to the university archival department, which maintains a manual copy of the archive. Exclusions may apply. For information about publications, contact: mfurphy@uva.edu. Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsroom----U 4-6180 Business Office----U 4-6358 THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN NEWS STAFF News Advisor ... Del Brinkman LET US END THE WAR BUT LET US END IT IN SUCH A WAY THAT THE YOUNGER BROTHERS AND SONS OF THE BRAVE MEN WHO HAVE FOUGHT... BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser ... Mel Adama THE SOUTH VETNAMHESHE HAVE MADE GREAT PROGRESS THEY ARE NOW BEARING THE BRONT OF THE BATTLE. AND WE CAN NOW SEE THE DAY. THE TITANIC WAR Advertising Manager Creative Director Designer Dresser National Advertising Manager Careers Manager Caret William Marketing Director Rita E. Haugh Campus Editor Vern Ritchie Judy Chief Photographers Prize Brandeted, Hank Young Doug DeTray Steve Conner Laura Dyant Carol Williams Dave Bennett Todd Brown James J. Kilpatrick 10 Rhodesia Offers Lesson in Rule TV WASHINGTON—it was one of the maxims of Euripides that a bad beginning makes a bad ending. The story of Rhodesia, a landlocked nation with an melancholy chapter, offers an example of the rule in operation. From the time Rhodesia declared her independence from the United States, the blunder has followed in the footsteps of folly. If in the beginning the most elementary precepts of international order and statehood States especially had observed the rules of right conduct—today's miserable impasse between Greece and it never worked out that way. WHEN NO MORE AMERICANS WILL BE INVOLVED THERE AT ALL AND THAT IS WHY I SAY TO YOU TUNGHT. © 1972 JUES 6-4 T The thought of Euripides prompts a further thought. Richmonds, like the city of York, that unlike conventional melodrama, which pits rights and interests Greek to Greek. What now? Unlikely as it may seem, a large reservoir of good will still exists between the government and the local communities. There is some hope that the Sirb政府 once, it recovers from the sting of the Pearce report, may voluntarily move its assets embraced in the settlement. But Smith is under heavy pressure from a right wing that has opposed any concessions whatever. The situation will have to drift. It was in an effort to put an end to this folly that Britain's foreign secretary, Sir Alee Douglas-Home last year worked out an agreement with Rhodesia's minister, Ian Smith. The agreement was not perfect. In Commons on May 23, Douglas-Home fairly described it as "a compromise settlement which by definition must not meet the conditions of war but will gain for the Africans substantial new opportunities." these sanctions will continue also. These substantial new opportunities now have been sidelined. With the report of a commission headed by Lord Pearce, finding the settlement for all Africans, the whole delicate structure collapses. Sanctions will continue; and the mockery of "patently illegal," the United Nations embarked upon a course of falsehood, hypocrisy, and insult. It is clear that she was the sanctions imposed Rhodesia is a small country, but as Daniel Webster remarked of Dartmouth College, there are many things that can reflect of men's capacity for error that so much that is good and hopeful and right should be sacrificed, in this case, to UN peace, unrealistic, and wrong. WILL NOT HAVE TO FIGHT AGAIN IN SOME OTHER VIETNAM AT SOME TIME IN THE FUTURE. WILL NOT HAVE TO FIGHT AGAIN IN SOME OTHER VIETNAM AT SOME TIME IN THE FUTURE. Letters Policy Copyright 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must provide their name, year in school and home address; staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address. Editorials, columns and letters on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. These were among the rights in conflict when Rhodesia declared independence in 1965. By all the ordinary rules, and by the plain language of the United Nations charter as well, Mr. Kennedy insisted his business of Great Britain. It was none of the business of anyone else, he denounced by Dean Acheson as right against right. For the past seven years the notion has been carefully cultivated in the liberal culture. The fact that the right is on the side of the 5 million blacks, and all the wrong to quarter-million whites. It is not. The European inhabitants respond to these contents by asserting clear title—a title as ancient as the Bible. British pioneers of 1890 found a Stone Age society. They and their children brought the capital, the tools, the know-how, the fierce ambition that lifted the prenuine darkness. Their taxes and their labor enabled them to Africans of Rhodesia, relatively speaking, good schools and medical care. Blacks are represented in settlement. The Americans assume As for majority rule, the Europeans assert that the principle has been thought to apply only among those capable of governing, and those incapable of governing. The African inhabitants make the self-evident point that they were there first. Their sheer numbers have become the most today. They have worked the mines and tiled the fields and contributed greatly to the development of their country, unwillingly, the African Rhodesians have inherited English principles of political democracy and the principle of majority rule. STOP McGOVERN MOVEMENT Hubert Horatio at the bridge Seattle YWCA Involved In Women's Liberation SEATTLE—Two years ago the University of Washington YWCA brick building of the landscape building the University YMCA in the campus and are near the University and set up shop in a second-story office suite in the heart of the University District business center. "It was traditional male relationship before; just what we're fighting against," the director of the YWCA, said. "We knew from the beginning we would be considered first and foremost with women's liberation and liberating things around here," she said. "What happens here is really organic—in response to a need. Things start here and move on their own when they are able." Currently the YWCA has an abortion referral clinic, complete with a doctor and nurses of the YWCA. A newsletter called "Pandora" and a telephone answering service for a women's divorce cooperative that helps women obtain divorces without the expense of hiring an attorney. The abortion referral service had its beginnings in 1970 when a group actively backing an abortion law reform referendum was ordered off campus and in the YWC, Schweigeward said. After the referendum passed, the YWCA became base for about 50 volunteers who provide the names of doctors performing abortion and counsel those considering abortions. The service extends to providing rides, child care and companionship for women undergoing abortions. Last year the abortion referral handled 5,000 referrals, channeling women to doctors who will perform the operation for as much as possible. "A lot of doctors won't do abortions, even though they're legal, and some of those who will are aborted are women or women of," Schwiesow said. The most ambitious program is the women's clinic being operated from the CACF's of Boston, which prevents services, which include pregnancy detection, general physical examinations, counseling, general disease detection and treatment and birth control assistance. $50,000 Department of Health, Education and Welfare grant, features women doctors, nurses and assistants. The rooms used for the clinic designed by women volunteers. paired with women volunteers. Females also did all of the furniture construction, architectural design and These activities are not conducted without some repercussions. Schwieser said they had dried up a small group is withdrawing its support because they can't agree with what we are doing," she said. Also operating from the YWC is a women's co-op garage where females learn to repair and maintain their own cars. The Seattle-King County YWCA, which is an entirely separate group, also feels some of the pressure from larger programs, according to its executive director, Dorothy Miller. Schwiesow said the national YWCA was doing a lot of some of what was being done at her branch. "They have a liberal-to-radical stand that calls for an end to discrimination." she said. "But we're probably the only 'Y' in the whole country doing what we're doing." RAY AUDIO'S STEREO WAREHOUSE Created primarily for young people and folks who really dig music. We carry only the finest gear and we offer the lowest possible price, cost plus 10 per cent, for most all lines. We don't sell junk or anything we don't personally dig. STOP IN, IT WILL BE WORTH IT. We will honestly advise you. We do extensive market research and product testing. We are quite proud of our reputation for professional consulting. 842-2047 1205 Prairie Ave. Lawrence, Ks. Mass. 13th Street Here University Summer Kansan Thursday, June 8, 1972 [Image] Two visitors stand in front of a large framed painting. The wall is adorned with multiple framed paintings, each with intricate patterns and ornate frames. The room has a polished floor and dark walls. [Image of a young woman with a white headscarf, wearing a dark dress and holding an object.] Area's First Alice Murphy Exhibit at Spooner . Styie traces movements of late 19th century European art . Kansan Staff Photo by HANE YOUNG Murphy exhibited a style more bemerled with intricate details and grafts now at New York. Some of these paintings were exhibited in 1903 to 1904 at the Brooklyn Museum. Born near Independence, Mo. in 1871, Murphy studied at the St. Louis School of Art and later A range of styles is shown in the paintings, among them traces of most of the major movements of early 20th-century art as well as influences from Velasquez and Rembrandt. The artist's interest in Impressionism arises in her provincial watercolors in the western United States. Thirty-six works by Alice Murphy are on public display for the time in this area, following exhibitions in New York and Chicago. Urban Black Program Growing By MARTHA NORDYKE Kansan Staff Writer A loan exhibition of paintings by a turn-of-the-century Kansas City artist who won renown in late June 11 at Spooner Art, Muni. Of the 5,015 students enrolled for KU's summer session, about 20 students living in Olive Hall are black urban students attending school through the Service Application System (SES) program. Area Artist's Work Gains in Reputation Results of the summer program included the first summer session in 1970, SES scholars averaged a 2.8 grade point, with only one student achieving a perfect score. The SES summer session was set up as a channel for orienting students to campuses and college buildings. This consists of a six-to-nine-hour course load in addition to an optional reading and study skills SES was designed to assist students, who ordinarily would not attend college, to enroll at KU and, despite possible difficulties, succeed. Its development was management's finding, made by the educational committee of the Black Student Union. A 2.88 grade point average distinguished the 1971 summer students, and an unusually high number of students with a student body hold the program above the retention norm for freshman and sophomore KU retention. For KU KU retention norm was determined in a 10-year analysis by James Hilt, former KU registrar of systems development. SES functions as an educational tutorial and counseling services to helping black students succeed at the University. Education advocates like Zoelean Bond, associate director of urban affairs and director of SES, were determined to ease she as we as an uphill struggle to mount Oread for black students. The struggle hasn't always been dollars but often involves a high school preparation and, more and more, the stigma of being black with a white skin tone. In many cultures the heritage in the predominately white community of higher education. Bond, who was instrumental in developing the program, said she had looked at a number of similar organizations throughout the country. The study of such programs was part of her master's thesis in guidance and counseling. "I was convinced we needed a center, a place for the students to come for help or just to air feelings and talk," she said. SES headquarters are in Room 123, Watson Library, a facility which is open for discussion on topics in sessions and information aid. "It was also obvious that to succeed with a center like this, we would have to thoroughly re-examine the team. The centers that were falling apart elsewhere are extremely parochial." Bond said. "They just were not maintained and their respective universities." With this analysis, and in order to avoid costly duplications in staff responsibility, SES was assigned the existing framework at KU. Recruitment of black urban students was carried out through the Department of Education, Office of Admissions. Students qualified for financial assistance through "National Defense Opportunity Grants," both ad-hoc and in partnership with Opportunity Grants, both ad-hoc and in partnership with Student Financial Aid, Standard for admission and financial aid were the same for black urban students as for other KU students. SES was allotted only a certain percentage of the National Defense Loans and Educational Opportunity Grants. Counseling, academic advising and tutorial services call for the combined efforts of SES staff and other faculty colleges at KU. These outside groups refer qualified graduate student tutors and supply some of their resources to the KU work-study program. A few students outside the SES group, which after three years are graduating, are accommodated for tutoring also. SES interviews all tutors. Not all of them are black or even from an urban background. SES teachers and disciplines simply are not available. Tutors are accepted on the basis of their academic qualifications and, in part, their ethnicity. The height of the black urban student "We're constantly fighting the problem of the black student who enrols in, for example, a history or literature course," Bond said. With the conventional stereotypes of the black in our society. "The student often gets incensed, disgusted; but he doesn't always have the ability to refute such accusations." These stereotypes in academic terms. For the most part, he just isn't confident in his frustrations, to fight back. reference books and resource material files written by black authors and students which have beliefs, beliefs SES refers many students to black culture in academics to help effort to help the student verbalize and formulate refutations in academic language for assignment. Bond indicated that a common handicap for black urban students was their defeatist attitude and a deep-rooted feeling of compassion. She said it wasn't just a student's background, but his financial situation at KU that contributed to the dilemma. Students recruited by SES and who receive a loan or grant to finance schooling for their own family. The grant must be used partially for the summer session and stretches for the following two employers. Loans usually provide a housing allotment and a fee stipend. Money for personal necessities and books has to come from elsewhere. "Sometimes the SES staff or an interested faculty member concerned with the success of this program chips in to help carry a student over." Bond said. "One teacher who was a student never brought a required book to class and secured one for him without cost." Outside of the always critical funding situation, statistics show the program is having some successes. Of the 44 students who initially entered the program, 50 per cent went into the third year. While the first year drop-out rate was slightly higher than the 30-35 per cent of the student, did not return after the second year. This compares to the findings for the entire University. After the third year, Hitt's research indicated that 17-22 per cent of KU's students will not return. "If we can predict from our data, students will be more prepared first year," Bond projected, "our percentage of those students returning will be greater than ours." Of the 127 students currently in the SES program, an overall gradepoint of 2.24 has been achieved according to Bond's statistics. William M. Tuttle, associate professor of history, has received a grant from the American Association of Learned Societies (ACLS). Tutte's topic is a history of black-white violence in the United States in the twentieth century. Tribute Goes to Geological Survey Kansan Staff Writer Bv KENT PULLIAM The Kansas Geological Survey and the four found EarthKeeping in the four found Environment Action in Kansas May 23 during a meeting in Pitts- William W. H. Hambleton, director of the survey, accepted the award from John Reed, press- ist for the Environmental action group. Reed praised the survey for its research and public information program involving the Kansas environment. He specifically noted that the feasibility of the Lyons site for disposal of radioactive waste. (AEC) that there were too many gas and oil holes which were unable to be plugged. It also had underground cavern which would be used for disposing radioactive materials, runs under the city of According to Ron Hardy, director of information and education of the survey, the report showed that the AEC had not investigated well enough the use of an X-ray and was proceeding too hastily. "The AEC recognized the expertise of our study and it kind of stopped them in their tracks," said Hardy. survey, in cooperation with the Oraks Regional Commission, has been working with local farmers and industry in the initial reclamation of several Cherokee and Crawford counties. Another project that Reed mentioned was the Mined Land Redevelopment Workshop. The At the end of 1969 there were about 58,000 acres of strip-mined land which was not being used, said Hardy. "Until 1989 there was no law which affected this land. The municipality rejected the reclaim any of the land," he said. "You could just leave it as it is." The two organizations started working together and now about 2,000 acres have been reclaimed from grazing. They are grazing and farm lands and in Find Adds to Earth History previously unknown genus of fossil plant, has been discovered by Robert Baxter, professor of botany. Kansas Stark Writer A 300 million-year-old inhabitant of Kansas. a By MARTHA NORDYKE Kansan Photo by JOHN REKI Earth's History Focuses More Baxter views fresh Baxter has been searching strip mines near Pittsburg, Oswego, Columbus and other southeastern towns for a number of ancient plant life preservatives of ancient plant life can be found there, he said. The specimen was extracted from a strip coal mine in southeast Kansas owned by the Pittsburg and Midway Mining Company. The discovery was named after Frank Foresman, an officer of the mine, who Baxter said had been cooperative in his studies. The cellulose and protoplasmic contents, the actual stuff of life of this ancient plant, were found buried in their own coal ball tom. Baxter's find adds one more layer of mystery, given the jigsaw puzzle of life during the Middle Pennsylvania Period, and great Coal Age, the time when the earliest fossils of earth with jungles of vegetation and only the most primitive mammals were found. "The mines are a very fertile field," he said. "I've found 14 new genues, 20 new species and two that I'm working on now." The coal balls, spherical masses of limestone, are found in actual coal seams. The preserved rocks are clearly identifiable as aquatic. *marie's miholey park*. According to Hardy, some of the back hill into farming has yielded up 40 bushels of wheat per acre. The water-based roots, suggested by the plant tissues and the distinctive large air spaces around them, are con- tained in the evidence of the environments since they grew in, according to Baxter. "The preservation is exce- cional," Baxter said Wednes- day. "The roots, stems, seeds, leaves—all of it there." "The acid dissolves the surface but does not decompose the plant." Baxter explained. "The acid also destroys the surface flooded with acetone." The technique is known as the peel technique. The plant is reembedded in dissolved acetate film backing, a plastic, and the peel is peeled away once again to obtain even more distinct specimen. The other awards went to the Dillon company for their Ecology and Conservation division of the Kansas Power and Light for its research and development of a limestone wet scrub in the Central Plains of Environmental Youth Corps. "The habitats were most likely the great swamps whose water was eventually depressed to form our coal deposits," Baxter said. one instance a motorcycle p In his laboratory, Baxter cuts the coal with a large saw into thin coils, polishes the surface and employs it in a solution of hydrochloric acid. One theory of the formation of the preservative coal balls such swamps began to be compressed, lime and carbonates precipitated through 'streams out around the larger lakes within the larger coal deposit. The environmental group is based in Hutchinson. Baxter said there were several other theories on the coal balls' formation, but none have been proven conclusively. Baxter first published his findings in a scientific journal printed in Bonn, West Germany. Charles C. Eldredge, professor of art history and museum curator, said that her relatively small amount has drawn critical acclaim and has been favorably compared by the leading artists of the period. opened the art department in the then-new Manual Training High School in Kansas City, Mo. R Father's Day Gift SPECIAL Double Knit Flares Reg. 19.00 to 24.00 Hillcrest Ends Tues. EVe 7:25 9:20 COOL BREEZE Charlton Heston Yvette Mimieu --- SKYJACKED Now All 14.99 PG SKYJICKED ENDSTUES Eve 7:35 9:25 the Hillcrest South La Jolla Chid 106 An incredible adventure of the future . . . to save what we abuse today! "silent G Ends running Tues. Eve 7:45:9:30 Adult Child 1.50 .75 Hillcrest ACADEMY AWARD WINNER 1234567890 the Garden of the Finzi-Continis NOW IN ENGLISH Eve 7:30, 9:30 Mat. Daily 3:00 Twilite Sat. & Sun. af 5:00 Only Granada THEATRE...lispiana VI3-3790 GOOBAH Malls Shopping Center 9 NOW HOWING Charles Bronson Ursula Andres BETTA MORRIS WANT ADS WORK WONDERS "RED SUN" Varsity THEATRE ... 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Outdoor Plate. $15.50. St. go to $36.00. St. to have $8.50. St. to have Plate. $45.50. Brisket Plate. $30.00. Beef Brisket. Sand=$8.00. Coffee Plate. Phone=$8.75. Closed Plate. Sun-7-9. Phone +86-101-6010. Closed Plate. PATIERS, DAY GIFTS of lasting value. From the unique Christian Bookstore. Cross Reference Malls. Shopping Center. 211 W. Width. 23/4 in. Old English-Pull CROSSHALL ...MALES SHEPIDOG PUPPIES, MULES OR FEMALES K. E. GOSEN MLOUTH, KANSAS L91-798-281 FATHER'S DAY CARDS—Half Price —Where, Ease????? Confidence Mall's Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd 6-15 20 gallon all-glass, aquarium complete with fluorescent head, heater, filters, gravel, stand and two 10 inch cases. If desired, Call 841-2544. 6-13 Bokolan presents summer overheard present coats - cowboy & Hawaiian jackets, winter jackets and jacket's yesterday's clothes at 12th Street, 83rd Avenue, Kilbern 839; Worners 6-14 FOR SALE Mercedes-Benz 1960 Model 180 Reg. Gas Call 842-6140 6.15 FOR RENT Apartment for rent in exchange for work Call 843-7863 6-14 1. New 1/2, and 2 bedrooms, Pool, patio and gas grilles. Dilwashers and laundry. Walk-in, closets. Club location 250-638 Sixth, 4725. COLLEGE HILL, MANOR APARTMENTS. Attached to the apartment and furnished apartments. AC pool and laundry room. 9th Apt. B or call 843-8220. 9th Apt. B - call 843-8220. Attractive and comfortable rooms for students, utilities, paid, share kitchen, no pets. Calls 842-7690. 6-19 HELP WANTED Diving Supplies Responsible couple or arrange student to live in pleasant air-conditioned house during latter part of summer if desired. 842-4088-614 843-3565 Lawrence, Kansas JAROLD'S Dacor Scuba P.A.D.1. Equip. in Stock Certified Instructor Webster's Mobile Homes Your Co- pretive Service Dealer Tie-downs—Skipping—Parts Ample Park Spaces Available 3409 W. 6th 842.7700 Just West of the Drive In Theatre Friday: 10 words or less $1.75 hard addition word $2.93 TRACHER OPENINGS. Current listings of hundreds of California schools include: California School Placement, 1874 California School Berkshire, 1874 *43070 Berkshire, 1875 Good Jobs Gatewood, Colorado beginning with $250,000 in monthly salary. Darren Lee, Master's degree, $100,000 monthly. Summer jobs-inclusive. Dave Warner, Master's degree, United, Drawer H., Maitland, Colo- rnt. NOTICE WANTED SUMMER GAY LIBRATION good good good good every day every day every day every day every day every day every day dent dent dent dent dent dent dent dent dent dent dent dent dent 40-54 Write 11 Box 2A laws 40-54 Write 11 Box 2A laws Ride needed from K.C.,KS to K.U. and back for morning classes. Will pay Call 299-3144 6-12 SUMMER DANCE classes now enrolling Liz Harring Dance Academy. Taz jazz ballet, acrobatics, Beginner ballet. Call 842-7851 or 842-6875. ERN'S CYCLE SALES TYPING Typing, IBM seletic, pica type Fast, accurate; typing guaranteed. Phone 843-3186 6-88 ROOM FOR FEMALE in big, well- comforted home. Free wairer and daven and dishwasher. Sunny room. Large kitchen for Deborah or Jeburry. 6-15 A M A H MISCELLANEOUS Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electronic typewriter, prompt, accurate keyboard. (212) 835-6900; Mrs. Heyward 843-3281; B 6-23 USE USE KANSAN WANT ADS NITERO REPAIR, RMS Electronics 724 Mass Equipment System, Compaq Tape Machines and Speakers Lowest Tape Machines and Speakers Service 2672. Open 1-17 WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 716 North 2nd LAWRENCE KANSAS Delicious Food and Super Service with Stainless Steel Steak Sandwiches, Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks Our utility is always barefoot. sirloin 11. Mine North of the New River Bridge Phane (813) 1427 Opened 12 Cities/Counties WHY RENT? MUSEO DEL BARROCHE RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843-8499 3020 lowa (South Wheat. 59) 843-7960 TONY'S PORSCHE OVERHEAR CAM ENGINE • O TO 40 MPH-13.5 • RELICING FRONT SEATS • UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL. 500 E.23rd IMPORTS-DATSUN 842-0444 LOVE THAT DATSUN 843 8500 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UUJOTRONICS 928 Mass. 6 Thursday, June 8, 1972 University Summer Kansan 1 Braille Computerized Blind professor uses terminal . Blind Get Computer Terminals By CONNIE PARISH Kansan Staff Writer Braille producing computer code was rare, but a concept in the minds of three persons three years ago. But this summer that concept is now public. Dr. Dale Rummer, associate professor of engineering, or electrical engineer. Under Rummer's direction, Shonyo and a small team of graduate students built the computer terminals Use of the terminals will be demonstrated Monday, and plans call for them to be permanently installed by the end of the summer. Mike Shonyo, a doctoral candidate in electrical engineering, designed and built braille producing computer terminals to aid the terminations. The terminals look and work somewhat like a typewriter. The terminals will be used primarily by Professor Charles Hallenbeck. associate professor Gas Royalty Rates Freed WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court Wednesday declined 6 to 10 review a ruling that strips the Federal Power Commission of authority to monitor emissions on the sale of natural gas. Besides the government, appeals were filed by Mobil Oil Co. Cities Service Oil Co., and Shell Oil Co. all challenge the Cir- THE FPC'S authority to regulate the price of gas moved interstate was approved by the state legislature. The current dispute centered on whether the landowner who grants the right to explore, drill for and recover natural gas also has jurisdiction over the property therefore under FPC jurisdiction. More than 13 million cubic feet of natural gas is sold yearly in the United States. Of that revenue in excess of $2.2 billion, More than one-eighth of this is owned by a company. The FPC, in seeking a hearing, bad said the ruling by the U.S. court that Mr. Johnson of Columbia could lead to higher prices for consumers. The appeal was turned down without extenuating costs, and the decision of Justice William O. Douglas. Two other justices, Potter W. Powell Jr. and Fowler J., did not participate. THEERE ARE about 290 suits regarding royalties now pending in the state and in Texas. One before the high court originated in giant suits. of psychology, who with Rummer and Shonyo originated the idea. Hallenbeck, who has been blind since he was a teenager. He was given a padded center on campus to print braille for him. But it was a somewhat slow process, he explained, because the card deck to the center, where the computer had be adjusted to set the printout in braille. All of this took about an hour. Now the emphasis has shifted "mute terminals so that blind users can communicate" use computers where they work. The computer terminals Shonyo is now working on in Learned Hall will eventually be set up permanently in a lab in Halleenkos' office, from Halleenkos' office. He said he would use the in- formation and psychology of ex- periments. In addition, he has introduced computing methods in his The idea of computer terminals is not unique. Four or five places across the nation, such as Rochester Institute of Technology and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, already have them in operation. What is unique about Shonoya's terminals is their design. Hallenbeck explained that the terminals made the keys move as if the operator were making a call, and then using a long printed read-out sheet in braille such as some systems used. It is not known yet whether孙宇翔's design will prove effective in other conditions. But that will be determined by Halenbeck's use of a new sensor. Hallebueck said he would keep extensive data on the type of use, good and bad points of operation and the best approaches to hooping and improving the design. If the design should prove feasible, Hallenbeck said, it might eventually be manufacture and produced commercially. An FPC hearing examiner, and then the Commission itself in question, may issue payments may be regulated by the FPC. But the Circuit Court rules that the commission's officer is not really engaged in sales in terms of federal law and Supreme Court decisions and that it is not obligated to the 'market value' of natural gas as interpreted by state or federal authorities. Under a typical lease a royalty owner receives a one-eighth payment free of any of the costs of production, except taxes. He is also permitted a depletion under federal income tax law. "This system did not originate with the Docking administration, but it must have," he added. "haven't existed. I'm sure Robert Docking would have invented it." "It was been brought to my attention that a major segment of the news media has interpreted the remarks Monday at Oberlin, Kan., as an indirect staple at John Montgomeryy. . ." Hanson "There was no attack on you. If the lieutenant governor had asked me to do it, he undoubtedly would have undoubtedly on. And it wouldn't have been. SUNNY LAND "This characterization of Ren's remarks is inaccurate. Hanson said Shultz did clearly take a direct "slap" at the system of administering highway building program Hanson said Shultz proposed removing the job of highway clerk in the city and putting highway building is too important to all the people of Kansas to be able to work on it. "Ren pointed out that we have had a highway director who was a newspaper publisher and a law clerk. Some research would show that a clothesier was appalled by the administration." Hanson wrote. The Shultz aide, Glenn Hanson, made public a letter he had written John D. Montgomery, Kansas director of highways. TOPEKA (AP)—The top aid in the campaign of Lai Gov. Stephen S. Clinton, Republican nomination for governor said Wednesday the news media had misinterpreted remarks at Oberlin Monday. Student Is All Wet and Likes It sprinklers have been set out to make up for the recent lack of rainfall here. His books under his arm, an unidentified KU student joins through the cool spray of a campa springer trainer Wednesday. The Shultz Aide Says Slap Was Mistaken University Offers Study Overseas WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal government announced Wednesday a grant to the University of California at Davis to develop a program college-level courses which, if successful, will be distributed by Ana Herzlef, assistant to the Dean of Liberal Arts and former director of the Costa Rica section of the school, said her experience in a foreign studies program was rewarding to a student who had an interest in engineering. "Most of the programs were no more expensive than the cost of a comparable amount of time spent on the summer program is $875." Nearly 200 KU students are participating in Summer Camp at the University of Germany, Spain and Mexico this summer. The programs run for Besides the summer programs, Junior Year Abroad programs of some universities will spend an academic year in Costa Rica, France, Scotland or Ger- rates fixed by the commission. "The commission's control over one significant component in the investigation would be lost," the appeal said. In this program, students pursue regular course work and receive credit from KU. Most participating schools offer 30 to The FPC said in its appeal, filed through the Justice Department, that the bank has asserted its powers to pay payments those above the arrears. Grant Establishes Newspaper Course To qualify for most of the program, students should be able to speak the language of the host country, have a reasonably high grade average, be in good health and adapt to a new environment. Students can receive six hours of credit for the course 34 hours of credit for one year. The cost for this program is $600, plus $3,000 in France. The fees cover tuition, living expenses and food expenses. Herrfield said that the foreign studies office has wanted to involve more students in the programs. She said that there was no limit on the number of students in the Junior Year, Abroad program. Herzfeld said that when she took students to Costa Rica they often had to revise their plans for a trip to the island of quarters or to save money. 34 hours of credit for one year. By JEANNE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer The Mediterranean program has been scheduled during the spring term and the Poland program is scheduled from January to August. The Japanese program is in the summer Three programs that have recently been added to the foreign education program for Mediterranean Studies in Rome, the Advanced Language and Area Study in Poland and an Arabic language institute for Mediterranean Institute in Yugoslavia. Mediterranean or the Poland program. The Foreign Studies Office is in Room 210, Strong Hall. Students can still apply for the Herffeld said that there was some scholarship money available for students who needed financial aid. --political motives." TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE! Offer expires July 1st 1720 West 23rd Street TABLE TWISTER "Personal contact with a large number of the girls" played a key role in her gubernatorial victory, according to Krehbiel. newspapers through the country. Dr. Ronald S. Berman, chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities has had a successful outright grant of $60,000 for the first year's development and testing. A matching grant of $75,000 is to be used to begin work on new material that will effect wider distribution of the first during a second year. Krebbiel now begins her official duties of governing the week-long workshop in civies, in its fourth day on the KU camus. Krebbed list a head of national winners,领导 18 state representatives,38 代表性代表, six of seven Supreme Court justices, and five Supreme Court judges. The "courses by newspaper" project is directed by Caleb A brown and will be held at the San Diego institution. The pilot program will consist of 20 lectures of about 1,400 words published on behalf of teachers around the nation. Hanson said Shultz presented a specific plan to insulate the highway director from political pressure. BENEATHA SMITH UN Environment Talks Aired over KANU Radio KANU, the University of Kanu, is conducting live daily coverage of the U.N. Conference on the Human Environment now meeting in one-hour roundup reports are being broadcast at Radio Arena on each day both this week and next. Bill Brant, KANU program manager. --- The election climaxed several days of intensive campaigning, petitioning, hand-raising, and raising funds. Wild cheering, singing and handclapping by most of the 439 Girls State delegates greeted the election. tlements and the degradation of soils and other natural resources, and to provide a basis for action to meet these problems." Six areas are covered by the conference: planning and management of human set- tures in order to improve quality, environmental aspects of natural resources management; identification and control of pollutants of broad scope; educational, informational, social and cultural issues of environmental issues; development and environment, and inter- actions and applications of action proposals. Kansan Photo by STEVE CRAIG "I don't think it was our Old Governor Greets New Susie Krielhiel of Olathe, left, wins Girls State Governor from Olathe A jubilant Susie Krebbiel of Oliate was marched to the speaker's platform Wednesday after a cheering throng as official election results naming her governor of Girls State were Krehbiel was ushered into office amid a slate of victories for the Nationalist Party, which she represented. TOMPEKA (AP) - Robert R. Hormel former assistant attorney for the U.S. Senate nomined Wednesday that he was a candidate for the Republican nomination. Hoffman is now an attorney on the staff of the legislature in the revisor of statutes office. Former Kansas Lawman Runs for Chief Attorney platform that was the deciding factor so much as the contact," she said. In many ways, Krehbiel said, the Federalist and Nationalist platforms were similar. The Nationalist Party platform emphasized these points: —Requirement of a class in government for all high school juniors. Other state officials elected were: Governor Robert B. Docking will officiate at the inauguration ceremonies tonight. —A program of drug education involving audio-visual aids and speakers during the week of Girls State. Of Girls State, Miss Krebbsblad, I'd. I've used the word wannabee it's become meaningsign, but it's really been great. I'm sure I'll learn more about government in the future. It's a year of government in school." The availability of more organized sports such as swimming during Girls State so girls could get to know each other. "Upon my election, I intend to utilize my 23 years experience as a lawyer to operate the office as Lieutenant governor—Alisa Greer, Kansas City, Federalist. chief attorney for a billion dollar a year business, which Kansas government has become, as well as to fulfill my duty for enforcement of the law, favor by overseeing and cooperating with local prosecutors and law officers elected for that purpose by the people of county and community," Hoffman said in a prepared statement. - KU events DO YOU HAVE A QUESTION ABOUT - tutoring - legal help - legal help - counseling - entertainment ? - KU politics or ANYTHING ELSE Call the Information Center 864-3506 We're there to help you. 24 hours of every day . . Auditor—Cia Verschelden, St. Marus, Federalist Secretary of State—Vicki Enz, Wichita. Nationalist. Treasurer—Debby Moore, Dresden, Nationalist. Attorney General—Debbie Pitts, Wichita, Nationalist. Insurance Commissioner- Lynn Gugler, Abilene, Nationalist. State Printer—Patty Utecht Lansing. Nationalist. Supreme Court Justices Sharon Neville, Neosho Falls Beth Liewellman, Lawrence; Jo Ann Philips, Leavenworth; Mary Messenger, Baxter Springs; Arlene Bush, Kansas City; and Les Oswald, Hutchinson, all of the Nationalist, and Shire Baldwin, Hutchinson, of the Federalist party. The candidates petitioned, campaigned, and were elected under a two-party system similar to that of Kansas. Today, the elected officials begin governing Girls State. Levi's® JEANS FLARES Leave it to Levi's to come up with the great look in jeans. Same built- to-last construc- tion. Same lean fit. Same tough fabrics. But some fine new colors and a full flare to the leg. Fall into our place for a pair or two, with the famous Levi's tab. Levi's Shop where you can find a great selection of bell bottoms and flares—and we get out thousands to choose from! LAWRENCE SURPLUS BEAUTIFUL! THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Libya Pledges Arms to IRA See page 2 82nd Year, No.5 Monday, June 12, 1972 South Dakota Flood Leaves 200 Dead;500 Still Missing RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP) — The death toll passed 200 Sunday as people in the scenic Black Hills of South Dakota began identifying their dead and cleaning away the debris from savage flooding that left homes damaged and damage in the millions of dollars. Civil Defense officials said the death count had reached 208, but feared the count would go higher. Relatives reported that persons still unaccounted for in the area. Rapid City, a resort city of 43,000 about 20 miles north of Mt. Mushroom National Memorial, bore the brunt of the wall of water created when extraordinarily heavy rains forced the earthen Canyon Lake near Rapid Creek and Rapid Creek to overflow its banks. NATIONAL Guardians and volunteers joined in the search for more bodies in the flood-striken southwestern portion of the state, which was declared a national disaster by President Nixon. The designation made the area eligible for immediate federal aid. Persons of all ages were cleaning debris and hauling it away with every available truck Sunday. Meanwhile, they also combed through the wreckage for more bodies. Many of the workers were standing in water to their knees. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers predicted damage would reach $100 million. Homes were splintered and cars were burned and angered about like toys by the flood waters. The Pennington County Health Department uphold and batten shots to the survivors. GOV. RICHARD Kneip, who toured the flood-ravaged area Saturday and Sunday, said the final death toll not be known until next week is "the worst disaster to strike this state." "There are so many areas that have not been searched for bodies," the governor said. "In many instances we'll just have to talk about it to subside so we can dig into the rubble." Sen. George McGovern (D-D.S., D) left the presidential campaign trail to fly to his home state to survey damages to Rapid City and surrounding areas. He called the scene a destruction and disruption, it goes beyond what anyone can comprehend." THE RAPID City water system remained inoperable Sunday. Drinking water was brought to designated places in the city from nearby Elsworth Air Force Long distance telephone communications remained difficult, and natural gas service was virtually nonexistent. Police said some instances of looting were reported after flooding Friday night and early Saturday. Mayor Donald Barrett, did not declare marital law but ordered the arrest of sightseers. He later asked a judge to release local officers early. Sunday afternoon. Civil Defense officials said hundreds of low-lying flooded areas still had not been covered by the 2,000 National Guardmen and volunteers taking part in search efforts. "I expect many bodies to be recovered in the lower areas of the city where the waters have remained high," Sheriff Koehler east of Pennington County said Sunday. HIS OFFICE said no word had yet been received on the request. The Guardsmen and volunteers worked under fair skies Sunday morning and afternoon, but scattered shows with a warm breeze. The guardsmen were forecast for later in the day. EIGHT BODIES were recovered at Keystone, a community near Mt. Rushmore and its famed presidential sculptures. Civil Defense officials said assistance camps in the foothills near Keystone may have been trapped by floodwaters. Bodies were taken to three mortuaries in Rapid City, where survivors searched for evidence of the dead. Patrick Dixon, a Civil Defense volunteer, said he saw a preliminary list of the dead that contained mostly Rapid City residents. A spokesman for the Red Cross said more than 900 persons needed hospital treatment and 2,000 survivors were fed an evening meal. Civil Defense officials said 3,000 persons were fed Saturday at community kitchens in local high schools. "Westerners take care of each other, I guess," Gaddis said. "Most of the homeless were put up by people whose homes were not damaged." Residents received some advance warning of possible flooding. PHIL GADDIS, a spokesman for the Red Cross, said only 100 to 200 persons needed overnight shelter in five centers set up in the area. warning of possible flooding. David Herdery, 17, said his brother and a friend came home Friday night and warned a flood was coming. "WE HOUGHT he was kidding," David Heraty said of his brother's warning. "We just sat there, and pretty soon this big bunch of water down came the creek. We ran next door and the next thing I knew it was up to my neck. "Pretty soon the top of a house came floating by and we grabsbed onto that. A little ways downstream we got off and went to the neighbor's house, where we staved all night." Some seven inches of rain late Friday night and early Saturday turned normally placid streams into roaring rivers, sweeping hundreds of homes, cars and trees in its path. When the deluge over Canyon Lake, an earl dam gave way. The flooding and loss of life seemed to be concentrated in the Rapid City area and the community of Keyston. Other areas in Tallahassee still reported damage, but no loss of life. Authorities cautioned ranchers along the Cheyenne River southeast of Rapid City to watch the river for emerging bodies. Corn Rip Creek empties into the river. I Kaman Photo House Does Not Meet Standards Dwelling near campus lacks screens Houses Near Campus Violate Code by MARY HAYES WINDFIRE Washington State College Landlords owning property, immediately east of campus, that violates the city building code, can expect to receive letters from the Lawrence building inspector this week advising them to make repairs within about 60 days. There are 128 dwellings in the target area, but only 77 were finally singled out for inspection. Of these, three persons own six and one person inspected, and one owning 13 of those. The area, primarily rentals, bounded by 10th St. on the north, 14th St. on the south, Louisiana St. on the west and Tennessee St. on the east. KU Saves With Computer Contract By CONNIE PARISH Kansan Staff Writer Modifications in the present computer system resulting in improvement in the overall system of performance and reduction of equipment rental costs are the expected outcome of a recently negotiated contract at KU. The state department of administration approved KU's proposal to extend its current computer equipment contract with Honeywell for 39 months. Wescoe to Give Talk At Retardation Center In his first public appearance since leaving KU, former KU Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will present the address at the formal opening of the Lawrence facilities of the Kansas Center for Mental Health and Human Development Wednesday. Wescoe will speak at 10 a.m. in the playground area on the east side of Haworth Hall. The public may attend the ceremony and tour the facilities located in Room T. Steward Children's Center. The tours will be conducted between 8 a.m. and noon. The KU center will be directed by Richard L. Schieflebusch, professor of speech and theatre. The new facilities will include a large computerized professional training in the causes and treatment of mental retardation and other handicaps and will be one of the largest educational centers in the world. The Lawrence facility is one of three parts of a $7.3 million complex, with other centers located at the University of Kansas Medical Center and at Parsons. Wesco will help dedicate the project had its start during his administration at KU. "We are not making any major changes at this time from what we have," according to Paul Wolfe, director of the Computation Center. Before the contract could be negotiated, state approval had to be acquired and price reduction had to be worked out. The cost of renting a unit in monthly rental costs. The current monthly cost is $44,000 for rental and the terms of the new contract call for this to be completed. But if the contract had not been negotiated, it would have seriously harmed the University's computer usage, and the equipment would have had to be released. "A real campus effort" was put forth in order to evaluate contract options and in order to gain a better understanding. Wolfe explained, Major roles were played by the University Committee for Computing, the Chancellor and vice-chancellor and the university attorney in negotiating contracts. See COMPUTER page 2 Changes to be made in the existing equipment include: 1) a new input-output controller, which will triple the transfer rate of the present controller; 2) a new Owners live on the premises of nine of the dwellings and under scrutiny only two were inspected. City inspector Gary Montague said Friday he had narrowed a list of 94 buildings to 77 in this area that need repairs. This was done in a personal door inspection he single-handedly carried out during January, February and March. This inspection marks the first time the city has carried through with an inspection on this scale. Montague said previously action had been taken mostly in the case of vacant and abandoned property or on the basis of individual complaints. The target area *v* is determined as a result of a neighborhood analysis study done by the national Institute for Social and Environmental Studies. The group, led by Richard A. Greenberg, department, looked at Lawrence earlier this year in a "windshield" survey study. Montague said his office decided on this area for personal inspection because of its Montague said the City of Lawrence was making every possible effort to get owners to cooperate and repair those faults found in the inspection so that the use of force could be avoided. He added in extreme cases of unsafe facilities or appliances, the owner must repair the property, in turn filing a lien on the property against the owner's name. "It's basically multiple family dwellings, within walking distance of the campus, and the inhabitants are more transient than those of other areas, he the owners will cooperate before we "hope to go that far." Montague said. "In two cases the owners have already inspected what things we put in the inspection." Montague refused to name the landlord violators. He said because of the number of apartments some owners had in the area and the number of repairs needed on their properties, some flexibility beyond 60 days in gaining compliance may be necessary. The department's clerks dords for repairs, the figure ranged as high as perhaps a couple thousand dollars. Complication for some persons would include meeting code requirements such as removal or non-running cars stored on In the study, Montague found 58 per cent of the properties had improperly vented heaters or water heaters without relief valves, and 56 per cent had an inadequate number of improperly installed electrical outlets. Also detailed in his report, originally presented to the Lawrence City Commission, were violations of plumbing and water supply, unauthorized trash, and houses in need of paint. Montague used a new Minimum Structures Code of the city of Lawrence as well. According to the code: A basement or cellar shall be reasonably dry and ventilated as well as free from refuse accumulation. Only 21 per cent of the basements were reasonably clean and dry and only 49 per cent had excess refuse accumulation. Thirteen per cent of the dwelling units tailed to meet minimum ventilation requirements. See DWELLINGS, page 6 Problems in Choosing Committee Face Haiphong Coalition Members The Haiphong Coalition Research Committee met Saturday to discuss the problems facing them in the selection of committee research workers. Hollis said that the research committee was not a policy-making body and should not be treated as such. He said it was an investigatory and educational body. Steve Hollis, chairman of the Haiphong Coalition, said, "The Committee should primarily be made up of people who have not previously been heavily involved in research administration or policy-making on this campus." SenEx intends to recommend five faculty members from a committee of ten who have been involved with research projects, according to Hollis. The names of the committee members will be announced Wednesday. Hollis said that the research committee wanted to educate people in two ways. First, people not involved in research, but who are affected by research, must have the opportunity to learn and keep abreast of research developments, he said. Secondly, scientists have to learn from other people the social effects of their work. The mythology that science and problem be kept separate must be broken, he said. Hollis said that he was unhappy with the remarks from SenEx concerning the claims. "Once again, concerned students, faculty, and staff, who want to raise these students in an unresponsive administration," he said. "Every attempt is made to appear to 'go along with the people' while really they only work to maintain the status quo intact." State's McGovern Supporters Yield to Party Unity By BOB LITCHFIELD Kansan Staff Member TOPEKA-Supporters of Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., were dull in out their bid to add delegates committed to him in the nomination conti- ment at Topeka's Municipal Auditorium. State Democratic party leaders and McGovern backers reached "an accommodation" before the convention opened, according to a convention spokesman, to minimize conflicts on the convention floor. MecGovern backers supported the election of four uncommitted party regulars as delegates to the Democratic National Convention, challenging only Tom Corcoran, Democratic national committeeman from Topeka. They nominated Louis Douglas, a Kansas State university professor, to oppose Corcoran. convention are officially uncommitted. They are Gov. Robert Docking; Norbert Dreiling, state party chairman; Ralph McGee, Kansas State Federation of Labor (KO) leader; Neil Bangers, Salina, State national committeewoman, and Corcoran. The party regulars withstood this challenge, however—re-electing Corcoran by a 56% margin. The agreement or "accommodation" was reached between McGovern supporters and Dreiling in the interest of party unity. State party leaders have promised future support of McGovern in return for the cooperation of McGovern supporters in the convention, according to Mariann Blake" Harder of Wichita, a state representative and Mike Davis, Douglas County delegation floor leader. The five at-large delegates elected at the The election of the five uncommitted delegates means that of Kansas's 35 delegates to Miami Beach, 23 are officially uncommitted, with 12 committed to McGovern. McGovern supporters won the delegates at district conventions last month. The McGovern forces caucused in the balcony of the auditorium before the 10 a.m. opening. Harder explained that the caucus overwhelmingly endorsed the decision to oppose only Corcoran rather than push for additional delegates committed to McGovern. Harder, who has long been active in the state Democratic party, said, "I think we have accomplished our purpose here. I did not come to light the governor or the party." Some McGovern supporters reported favored an open fight with party regulars by running a McGovern slate for all positions. Davis said that the Douglas County delegation caucused at 8 a.m. a Saturday, and as a result some of its delegates arrive in time for the McGuevin caucus. "The decision reached at the caucus was the same one recommended to us by Rick Stearns of Sen. McGovern's office," Davis said. Earlier in the week, Dreiling and the party leadership rebuffed a proposal by Harder to elect a delegate slate of Docking, Drilling and McGee if Corcoran and Blangers would waive their right to be involved in the call that proposed a 'blackmail attempt'. "We want party unity, but we refused to be pressured by the McGovenn delegates." Dreiling said, "because we knew we had the votes to win in a showdown." Elected as alternates were Morris J. Krause of Wichita; Leo H. Boylan, Kansas City city official, and Mary Ellen Shank, Democratic Wyoming from Stanford County. Democratic Wyoming from Stanford County. Several other points of friction were fought out on the floor. McGovern supporters nominated four alternate delegates, including Steve Fehr, a chairwoman for the Republican Village, but they were defeated by the three nominees of the party regulars. McGovern-committed alternates who were defeated, besides Fehr, were Mary Tunainky of Wichita, o' the Aim Rose of Tulsa and Franklin, a Kansas State University Student. Earlier in the convention some McGovern supporters attempted to separate a vote on the resolution committee report, requesting separate votes on resolutions praising Gov. Docking from the remainder of the report. "But," he said, "there are at least three uncommitted delegates leaning to McGovern and I believe the weeks ahead will find even more in that category." Corcoran, who had refused comment before the vote, said afterward that he had asked the judge to stop the trial. Harder admitted he was disappointed that the Ministry forces failed to win any major victories. "I don't think the McGovern backers were against me personally. I believe it was the national committeeman position they were seeking." he said. Rep. Frank Gaines of August, elected The alternate selection fight was considered important because it was an indication of the strength of McGovern against Corcoran which followed, Davis said. permanent chairman of the convention, ruled such a motion was out of order under the rules and that the report could only be amended. A resolution on the Vietnam war drew a standing ovation from the McGovorn forces when it was read. The resolution stated: "That the American people desire peace and an end to the involvement in the Vietnam war and that the Democratic Party person for President of the United States." "Who is dedicated to peace and for the disengagement of American troops from Iraq?" "Who would vigorously pursue all humane, political and economic and diplomatic efforts to secure the release of all prisoners of war; "Who would revamp our national priorities and program our domestic and foreign policies so they would not rise and put pressure on fortunes of any foreign government." See McGOVERN. page 6 2 Monday, June 12, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Mine Victims Memorialized WANKIE, Ribodea (AP)—The nation paid tribute Sunday to the 426 miners who died in the gas explosions which wrecked the country's main coal mine. A crowd of about 5,000—mainly blacks—crowded into a football stadium here for the national anthem before he been left enthroned in the deserted pit. Prime Minister Ian Smith was among the long list of dignitaries who attended. Beans, Beans, Beans FRANKFURT, Germany (AP)—Quintuplets were born Sunday to an American and his German-born wife in Frankfurt, a hospital spokesman announced. Prof. Hans-Deter Taubert said Mrs. Harry C. Bean gave birth to four girls in New York City, and she and her parents were doing well. Taubert said Mrs. Bean conceived after intensive hormone treatment at the hospital. Birth was by caesarean section. Connally Rests in Argentina WASHINGTON (AP) - Gen. John D. Lavelle, who was fired as commander of U.S. Air Force units in Vietnam, is scheduled to testify before a House subcommittee Monday on the nature of the unauthorized bombing attacks which led to his dismissal. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. D. Ryan last April relieved his top general in Vietnam of command shortly before the Hanoi attack. He will be in the product of his command responsibilities. "Rep. Otis G. Pike, D-N.Y., a former Marine pilot, convinced Chairman F. Edward Hebert, D-La., of the House Armed Services Committee to open hearings to probe the dismissal of Lavelle. Lybia's Chief Pledges Arms, Aid to IRA BUENOS AIRES (AP)—John B. Connally rested Sunday at an Argentine ranch after his arrival on the fourth leg of his world tour as President Nixon's special envoy. The former Treasury secretary is scheduled to meet Monday with President Alejandro Lamusie. On his arrival Saturday, Connally said the purpose of his trip was to brief President Lucien B. Koehler of his Nixon's counsel also to obtain President Lamusie's counsel and advice on important conference conferences to be held late this year and next year." BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Libya's strongman leader, Col. Libya's kadir Kadar Awad, Sunday in the Arab nation was sending arms, money and volunteers to help the Irish Republican Army against British forces in Syria. Fired General to Testify He also assailed the United States and Britain as the U.S. and British ambassadors walked out on his speech in Tripoli, Libya's capital, Egypt's Middle East News Agency reported. Peter Tripp of Britain walked out when Kadifa accused Britain of collusion with the Zionists in the 1980s and was jailed in Jewish in 1948, the dispatched call. HE ALSO charged Britain with treason to her to occupy three Persian Gulf countries. Then Kadafi declared his regime was supporting 25 million Syrians against what he termed "America's arrogance, the white supremacy." islands late last year. "fight Britain and the United States on their own lands." States of backing Israeli occupation of Arab territories conquered during the 1967 war. supervisor Compaise U.S. ambassador Joseph Palmer walked out, the news agency reported. Kadafi also accused the United THE FLAMBOYAT, 29-year leader vowed to prepare the Arab region for an all-out war. In 1972, escalate the struggle and been Moslem-Christian clashes there recently. Kadafi, who recently announced his government would lead a movement to spread Islam throughout the world, also said that Moslems are the enemy of Muslims against the government in the Philippines. There have "Britain and the United States will pay dearly for the wrongs and perfidy they inflicted on us," Kadafi said in a speech at the conclusion of the evacuation of U.S. bases from Wheels Air Force Base. Shooting in Belfast Costs Lives of Three Civilians BELFAST (AP)—Three nights in a shooting war that erupted in the Roman Catholic church, Belfast, the British army reports. The army said troops came under intense fire from gunmen in both Protestant and Catholic districts around the Ardovie. Two soldiers were wounded. The army claimed to have shot five gunmen in firefights in the bomb-battered capital. Violence in Northern Ireland has claimed 368 lives in the past three years. A MILITARY spokesman said there were hundred shots fired when a student arrived and Catholic districts after a youth was shot dead in Old Park Troops of the Royal Regiment of Wales swept into the area and came under heavy fire. One troop was caught on the leg and another in the head. The army claimed the soldiers' return fire hit five gunmen. It was not known whether they were killed. GUNMEN peppered arm, patrols moving through a city almost enriched by Protestant built barricades. In Londonderdy, Northern Ireland's second city, a British sentry was killed when he smashed simultaneously into his head as he manned an observation post overlooking the Catholic Bogside The Provisional wing of the Irish Republican Army claimed responsibility for the killing. In Belfast British troops fired rubber bullets at militant gunmen in the barricades around an isolated Catholic enclave of the bombing site. DOZENS of Protestant-ball obstacles blocked main roads. Other harbors went up in the hills near Lazar, Largan and Dungannon. officers of the Ulster Defence Association, a Protestant paramilitary movement, said the barricades went up as a temporary measure toward the Catholic-oriented Irish Republican Army. It was the fifth consecutive weekend of Protestant roadblocks in Belfast and the most extensive barricading operation in Ireland. LEADERS of the Defense Association said the barricades would be made permanent next weekend unless the British army takes over Catholic areas of London. The largest city, commandered by the IRA's ultranationalist provisional wing. Protestant and Catholic youths threw stones, bottles and stacks at each other in a breakfast-time battle in East Belfast. That was when the troops moved to stop militants battling Catholics in the Catholic area surrounded by Protestant housing developments. Jets Destroy Giant Power Plant SAIGON (AP)—Three days of massive U.S. air raids destroyed North Vietnam's biggest hydroelectric power plant, raked scores of railroad cars strained south of the Chinese border and smashed supply depots near the city. An Israeli spiesman said Monday. The U.S. Command announced the loss of two jets over North Vietnam and two helicopters in a bombing strike total of seven cremain missing. The two crewmen aboard the A6 were listed as missing. One crewman aboard the F4 was missing, the command said. NORTH VIETNAM claimed three planes downed Sunday and several pilots captured. The command said a Navy A64 was downed near Nam Dinh, 45 miles south of Hanoi, Sunday and an Air Force F-4 Phantom was hit in the air missile in the vicinity of the militarized zone last Thursday. Over South Vietnam, an observation helicopter Sunday was shot down by ground fire 13 miles north of the two crewmen were missing. A few hours later, another aircraft came down, downward aircraft also was hit by enemy ground fire and crashed. its two crew members also were listed AIR FOREER fight-bombers struck Sunday against railroad cars isolated by cuts along the roads that connect Hanoi with China. Informants estimated as many as 600 railroad cars trying to move south from China with war materials were strung out and burned by weeks of U.S. air strikes. More were reported on sidings. AIR FORCE officers said 2,000-pound bombs guided by laser beams were used against the Lang Chi plant, 615 miles north of汉川, to insure that the 500 feet away, would be snared. Informants said the attack on the plant was approved by Washington but the dam was declared off limits. 1968 Viet Program Called Murderous On the ground in the South, a enemy sheild attack around An Loc and two other Americans were wounded in a mortar attack NEW YORK (AP)—A Newsweek magazine correspondent named and dilled a "suggesting number" of Vietnamese civilians in 1968 as part of a pacification program called "Speedy Ex- He said one official put the number of victims as high as 5,000. In a report carried in this week's issue of Newsweek, Kevin P. Buckley said the six-month operation at Kien Hoi in the south has been "made the My Lai massacre by trump by comparison." Buckley, who reported from Vietnam for nearly four years and was a graduate of Newweek's Saigon bureau chief, said, "In my opinion, the U.S. military has been guilty of more than one kind of belief, be documented that thousands of Vietnamese civilians have been killed deliberately by U.S. forces." PILOTS reported their bombs made direct hits on the transverse roof of the 400 by 150-foot rectangular structure. Photographs taken by reconnaissance jets showed damaged transformer rooftops. He said, "It has now become generally accepted that the American use of slave labor has made up of thousands of innocent civilians—perhaps, some U.S. soldiers—privately, as many as 100,000." Buckley said an operation code-named "Speedy Express" was run by the U.S. Ninth Infantry Division. He said the Kien Hoa area was under control of the Viet Cong. He and his team, faintrym took part in the campaign. 50 artillery pieces, 50 helicopters and Air Force fighters bombers made 3,381 aircraft. The 112, 500-kilowatt plant supplied considerable electricity to the Hanoi-Haiphong area, one officer said. Buckley said the helicopter headquarters had a sign painted reading "Death is our business and business is good." “This was a big real one,” another officer said. “But it does mean that they will be limited in their ability to have plant right inside Hanoi.” THE UNITED STATES has said the aim of the bombing on Honiol in Vietnamese plants that were supporting Hanoi's 74-day-old offensive in South Vietnam, to test the weapon and wreck the transportation system. But Hanoi's official Communist newspaper, Nhan Dan, said a week ago that "even if the enemy succeeds in the bomb destruction of our cities and our large industrial areas, we never will parallel our economy to the point of preventing our survival and our ability to supply the South." THEN ON SUNDAY the paper declared that North Korea U.S. bombing of North Vietnam "is to kill civilians and dampen fighting spirit of the Vietnamese It claimed that the U.S. bomb in the last two months had been used on medical establishments, 12 churches, 32 dikes, and 29 attacks. The U.S. Command in Saigon said Air Force, Navy and Marine tactical fighter-bombers flew through North Vietnam across North Vietnam Saturday. IN GROUND WARFARE in South Vietnam, enemy gunners fired 35 rounds of mortars into the city. Two American Marble Mountain near Dao Nang, two Americans were wounded and five OV10 spitzer aircraft systems damaged, the U.S. command said. A U.S. adviser was killed during a shelling attack against a South Vietnamese position on the island of An Loc, the command said. The Saigon command said that fighting erupted Saturday at several places on Highway 13, but most of the destruction was on the northern and central fronts. Kennedy Nomination Suggested by Mills THE SCALE BONE INFORMATION GROUP NEW YORK (AP)—Rep. Wilbur Mills, D-Ar, predicted Sunday That Sen. George McGovern, D-SD., did not win the Democratic presidential nomination and suggested that a Republican candidate might very well turn to Sen. Kennedy M. Kennedy, D-Mass. And in that case, he said, he might reconsider his position and accept the second spot on a Kennedy-Mills ticket. Mills, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, has so far refubbed suggestions that he run for vice president. Kansan Photo by STEVE CRAIG Head Bone's Connected to the . . George Pisani, teaching structure in biology, explains differences in animal structures to a group of about 15 youngsters, aged 9 through 11, during a program on perception of animals. The program, entitled "The Eye of the Beholder," was sponsored by the KU Museum of Natural History Associates and the KU Museum of Art, and featured studies of live and preserved animals, including several ways they have been protrayed by artists. Instructors were Pisani, Ruth Lawner, register editor for the Art Museum, and Dolo Brooking, assistant museum editor for the Art Museum. Computer Contract . . . Continued from page 1 Continued from page 43 printers are of the two printers now used, which will give the center higher quality characters than the dot disc controller with a capacity to hold 90 million characters, which should help relieve the burden of manual operation. Sensibly Yesterday Or Today. Though this additional dissec space will help, Wolfe said, it is not sufficient to meet the needs of storage shortage. This will force a certain amount of selectivity in the future as to what computation is done on each page. In order to establish priorities as to whose computing will be done, a group was formed consisting of major user groups on campus and members of the computation team. As TOLSTOY, Take Off Links TOUSTOY has met regularly for more than a year, Wolfe said, to look at better ways to handle it. To do this, he has suggested solutions such as requiring justification by file review each semester, which is one of the busiest times, and working for improved communication with his classmates. China was drumming up support among the other 113 coun- Caught off guard, the U.S. delegation was unable to get its reply ready before adjournment. The U.S. delegation attended the end of today's session. China made a slashing attack on the United States over Vietnam in Saturday's general debate. STOCKHOLM (AP) — A somber interaction between the United States and China over the U.N. conference on the human environment as it entered Paris. UN Environment Conference Clouded by Vietnam Question A total of 250 questionnaires were sent. One hundred and fifty went to persons who had used them or were interested in their worth of computation in the first eight months of the academic year. The other 100 questionnaires were sent to a random sample of computer users in all departments. them what they would like to do in the future if means were available. The committee's report is due in September. Their findings are expected to constitute the core of recommendations for a new contract. tries here for a conference condemnation of the United States for its "barbarian atrocities" in Vietnam. The United States and its allies had expressed hope that such a nuclear arm would nam and nuclear arms would be left aside while the delegates concentrated on the complex and the problems of the environment. The United States and Britain said the big political problems belonged in other forums. A proposal to replace the University's present Honeywell 635 computer with a new generation Honeywell 6500 was originally introduced for the approval of administration for approval last December, but since then a budget cut and a ruling that substantial equipment acquisition required competitive budding precluded the original proposal But their hopes were dashed at the very beginning when Sweden's Socialist prime minister, Olaf Palme, accused the United States of what he called "ecology bullying," by linking the ecology of the third world. After that note by the boss country, virtually every non-aligned delegation included a sidewise at American policies. The report in September, however, is an interim report rather than a final one, Sherr said. Changes in computers are taking place faster than in perhaps any other department of the committee will have to be repeated on a year-by-year basis. There were fears among some delegations that the consequent attacks on the reckless wreck chances of the conference completing a declaration of prince Philip's death would This was to be the guideline for the global counter-terrorism coordination of Nations—on the man-made poisons damaging the earth, the sea, the rivers, the fertile lands, the climate and the atmosphere. Bill Approving Debt Extension In Committee WASHINGTON (AP)—The House Ways and Means Committee agreed tentatively to amend the present $40 billion national deey ceiling through Oct. 31, and should consider the issue this year. No More Shocks, Japan Told Such a major change, such as KU had hoped to make, to the computer center's term planning process to identify the Computation Center's needs and funding specifications for equipment to furnish the new equipment. TOKYO (AP) — Henry A. Kissinger acknowledged Sunday that the United States had made a deal with the Islamic State last summer and vowed there would not be any more "Nikon" attacks to trouble a future relations. The first of the "Nixon shokus," as the Japanese called them, fell last July when the President announced, without a word, that he was going to Peking. The second, soon after, was the unexpected imposition of surcharges on foreign imports. That dealt Japanese industry a major blow to their ability to devaluation of the yee. if sustained, the decision means President Nikon's adminis- tration will be denied its request for a $15 billion increase. Kissinger, President Nixon's top foreign policy aide, made the pledge at a three-hour breakfast meeting with Foreign Minister Takek Fakuda in the second day of U.S.-Japanese peace-mending mission to Japan. The Japanese have been saying that Kissinger knew little about Japanese feelings and affairs. He disarmed Fukuda by admitting the fallings, then showing a considerable expertise on things KISSINGER told Fukuda he realized the United States should have worked more closely with Tokyo. He promised consultation on any further China moves and economic measures affecting Japan. According to Lawrence Sherr, associate professor of business, he wants the group to contact the group sent out questionnaires to major computer users. The Long Range Planning Subcommittee, a part of the reorganized University Committee for Computing, is now working on the development of a community and recommending resources to support them. Nakasone also brought up strained economic relations between the two countries. He argued that Nakasone should anticipate future sources of friction. Kissinger showed a keen interest in this and in Nakasone's further suggestion of U.S.-Japan relations in aid to poor Asian countries. "I was amazed," commented Fukuda in a news conference, "how much Kissinger knew about Japan." During his 48 hours of almost continuous talks with industrialists, governors leaders and said the United States would like to see the U.S. Japan security force form without revision. He called it the keystone to peace in Asia. It is a demonstration of Liberal-Democratic party, among them Yasuhi Nakasone who would take defense look at it in 1975 and possibly substitute a modified security system. Kissinger has been questioned CHINA's more prepandent role in the area figured largely in the exchanges. The Japanese, still groping for a better China policy, are trying to find out how they can fit into the multipolar world. This emerged since Nixon's more talks in Peking and Moscow. The talks, which included strong editors and representatives from the United States and the American Socialist party, have been held against a background of political turmoil. on the American position with positional urgency to address the changing chamber in Japan leadership Prime Minister Elsako Sato is expected retire Whoever replaces him is almost sure to move closer to Peking. The Japanese want to attack, but the United States intends to do about the security treaty and on about the nationalist Chinese on Taiwan. Kissinger does not appear to have much confidence in answer on the Taiwan question. His pledge for more consultation found an echol in a supposed Sunday after a foundation day. He spoke of Japanese and American leaders THOUGH HE had only a few hours sleep Friday night before embarking on his intensive round of talks, Kissinger appeared fresh and jaunty in the writing Tokyo heat Sunday night. He meet a coach session with a smile and a handshake for the participants. The U.S. and Japanese governments, the report said, should cooperate in urban studies, pollution control, health areas, welfare programs and domestic political processes. and scholars. THE PARTICIPANTS also urged the two governments to promote exchanges of educational personnel and hold middle-level official meetings to improve deteriorating economic relations. The report was adopted at the end of the Third Japan-American Assembly, attended by 60 Japanese and American College Hall former U.S. underscribee of State, and Nakasase. The report said the American initiative in relations with China was strengthened and the United States. But the participants also agreed that the U.S. government was "washed away" by changes in Japan. BEER SPECIAL Light or Dark PITCHERS $100 2:00-4:00 p.m. SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & Ye Public house 844 W. 23rd 842-2266 Monday Thru Friday Prices Good Thru June Windy Weather Reg. $598 Kief's discount price $299 Reg. $598 Kief's discount price $299 at Kief's discount records Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles University Summer Kansan Monday, June 12, 1972 2 s due are more of con- how father said. hinking s any ee f- have -year Missed Putt Costs Rodriguez $30,000 PHILADELPHIA (AP)—J. C. Snead won the third title of his bref professional career Sunday at LSU, where he pardoned a par put on the 72nd hole that would have given the little PUZZ Rican a tie for the top spot in the league. cision adsed its release. —The Com- mively standing tionation t. 31, again r. Snead, a 30-year-old nephew of the famed Sam Snead, had just finished with a 72 and a total of 282 when Rodriguez approached the final hole on the 6,108-yard Valley Country Club course. The graying, diminutive veteran needed only par on the 425-yard, uphill pair four hole to playoff for the $30,000 first prize Chi Chi, however, put his second shot over the green and into the gallery. He chipped back a few inches, but the cup, then missed the par for par. RODERIGUEZ had a final round 74—two over on the very tough, cool and breezy out—and finished second at 283. Another two strokes back were chunky Jimmy Jamieson and veteran Dick Rhyan, who shared third at 285. Jamieson, who had led or shred the lead through the two rounds, had a 73 and a 69 on the way, who had competed in four events all season, had a 70. Dave Hill matched that two- under-par 70-best score of the day and two of the only seven sub- par 65. He was, and was alone in fifth at 288. Hubert Green, 7, Homo Biancaes, 73, and Bob Murphy, 59, were tied at 287 and were the only others able to break par 288 for four rounds on the deceptively difficult layout. SCORES AGAIN were exceptionally high. Eighteen of the 73 players—almost one quarter of the field—had final rounds of 80 to the highest field performances in recent years on the pro tour. The gangy, slow-talking native of Virginia struggled for three full years on the tour until be broke through last season. Snead, who didn't take up golf until after abandoning a career and then playing in a soccer player, picked up $30,000 for the victory and advanced his total to No. 16. Snead started slowly this season, however, until he vaulted into contention one stroke off the ball and scored a goal in finish in Saturday's third round. HE WON the Tucson and Doral Opens in the space of three weeks, accumulated more than $82,000 in winnings for the year and played a starring role on the state's victorious Ryder Cup team. Rodriguez when he played the front nine in par 36 and Rodriguez slipped to a 38 when he hit into the seventh, fourth and bogeyed the seventh. Snead, playing in the group just ahead of Rodriguez, moved two strokes infront with a bird on the par five 17th, but Rodriguez came later and one stroke again separate them going to the 27th hole. Snead beogwyet it, plugging his drive into a fairway bunker and Rodriguez needed only the par in clenched him to tie for the lie. KU Signs Two-Miler, Record-Holding Vaulter The national junior college pole vault record-holder and a sub-minute high school two-miler have signed scholarship agreements with KU, Bob Couch, his coach, announced recently. national meet in Mesa, Ariz. The vaulter is Terry Porter of Ranger Junior College, Texas, who attended 11% at this year's Kansas Relays to surpass the national junior college record. Porter won the title at 15 feet 7 at the recent Porter went to high school at Aelon, Tex., and in 1970 ranked as the number one basketball player vaulter with a mark of 15 feet 6". He has also run the high hurdles. The distance runner signing with KU is Tom Kopmes of St. Paul's High School. Calif. He was clocked in 58.4 for the two mile event this spring and won the scholarship athlete award in the state qualifying postage at a 3.8 grade point average. Dallas Men Offer to Buy Suffering Memphis Pros Llangond "Zip" Viracola, a sports consultant, and real estate developer Charles Napier said they would pick up the assets of his company, Inc., the corporation which owns the Memphis franchise. MEMPHIS (AP) — Two Dallas businessmen said Sunday they agreed to buy the insolvent football Association Memphis Pros. The deal is subject to the approval of the ABA trustees, who meet Monday in New York, and the 4,618 stockholders of Memphis Area Sports. The offer by the two men reportedly includes giving Memphis Area Sports $110,000 initially and about $220,000 in 10 years and about $420,000 in tickets over a five-year period. The Memphis franchise faced a Monday deadline on finding a new owner or being taken over by the ABA. ... When are we gonna get to that wire? ACK STA Youngsters Run in Own Olympics CNITA MTC Taped legs, bandaged thighs, taped blown hair and sunburn are all part of a track meet of the Junior Olympic segment of the Junior Olympic program held at Memorial Stadium last Friday and Saturday. Many of the competitors came from many of the track clubs of the state for the girls' meet Friday. For some girls this was a thrilling event, ever participated in and for others it may have been the last. Mothers, fathers and coaches cheered their favorites and all around the track faces grimaced in smiles as girls completed. ... Those missing teeth may cut down wind resistance. The boys' competition on Saturday ended high school careers for some and just added a few weeks to the season for director RUNNING BOLL . Nice going, kid Royals Squeeze Past Yankees KANSAS CITY (AP)—Dick Drago pitched a five-hitter and Amos Otis singled in the game's only run in the seventh inning to give the Kansas City Royals a 1-0 victory. The New York Yankees Sunday then, in the sevent, Lou Pinella broke out of an 0-10 leap. She was taken left. One out later, John Mayberry singled Pinella to thrill and followed with a line of laughter, snapping the scoreless deadlock. Loser Steve Kline, 4-2, had a nonhit through four innings before Otis blooped a single to center leading off the fifth. DRAGO, who levelled his record at 4+4, worked out of a two-week stay in Germany to get Bobby Murcer and Roy White on Fly balls and striking them. Drago walked two and struck out four. In other American League Riva Is Prime Contender For Year's Best Horse NEW YORK (AP) — "He's just a trainer," Laurian Lecurius said Sunday in the aftermath of Riva's death. He said that definitely established the col as the leading 3-year-old and a prime contenders for horse of the season. Laurin said the Meadow Stable Star came out of Saturday's Belmont all right, but he was marked. Jockey Ron Turcotte said Riva Ridge kicked himself in the paddock before the race but if it bothered the colt, he certainly didn't show it during the race In adding the Belmont to his victory in the Kentucky Derby, Riva Ridge romped to a seven-length triumph over Greenlee and he did it with the third fastest bucking in 104 runs of the race. Turrette believed the wet track hurt the long-striding Riva Ridge. of times at about the furlong pole," said Turcotte. Even without a victory in the Preakness, Riva Ridge's credentials are impressive. He has won four of six starts this year and 10 of 15 career outings. He earned $49,544 from a gross Belmont earnings to $152,900 boosted his total earnings to $802,245. Riva Ridge ran the $ 1 \frac{1}{2} $ miles over a fast track in 2:28. Music Stars Entertain At 'Wallace's Woodstock The 21-year-old son of Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace failed to sing as had been advertised. But his voice was strong, and country stars such as George Jones and Ferlin Husky kept the music and "Vote for Wallace" message flowing to the $a-head of the Old Platanation Music Park. LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) — Country and western stars Tammie Wynette and Del Reeves joined Wallace Jr. in stumping for his wounded father in a court hearing of 10,000 at "Wallace Woodstock." George said he saw his father two days ago and reported the Young Wallace, who has recorded one country and western song, was the first after his father was shot while campaigning in Maryland last month, he decided "not to sing if father is up and around again." Pneumonia Won't Keep Trevino from U.S. Open would walk again, adding, "I can look in his eyes and tell." governor was taking 90 minutes of physical therapy a day for his paralyzed legs. He said he was sure his father The crowd was mostly middle-aged. EL PASO, Tex. (AP) —Vrse pneumonia or not, Lee Trevino said he was going to be in Pebble Golf Tournament Wednesday. The carefree U.S. Open defending champion was named after Paso the Providence Memorial Hospital. Dr. Robert May said he was suffering from 'early stages of pneumonia and infected sinuses.' But the doctor said it would be possible for Trevino to be "up and around" by Wednesday. games, Tom Shopop scored the winning run on a wild pitch and Dave Johnson doubled home another as the Baltimore Orioles struck for two runs in the ninth inning of the Texas Rangers' 1- Sunday. "I can," Trevino said, "I will try to get out of here Tuesday and try Pebble Beech on Wednesday. Right now, i am planning to play." Shopay scouted home from third base on a wild pitch by Johnson. Johnson capped the outburst with a double up the right-center field "You can imagine I will be a little weak when I get out of here," the champion added. Shopay was a pinch-runner for Brooks Robinson, who had opened the rally with a single. But he said he was exercising to overcome any weakness and "the doctors can clear my chest and lungs I will have the strength to play." TENAX TOKS a 1-0 lead in the sevent on singles by Dave Nelson and Joe Lovitto and Don Mencher's sacrifice飞. In Chicago, Carlos May drilled a ninth inning single to drive in the winning run for the Chicago White Sox, who defeated the Giants in the second game, completing a sweep of a doubleheader. Alien led a five-homer assault in the first game as the Sox won 6-4, whose two-run homer had been caught by a comeback from a 4-0 deficit in the nightcap, opened the ninth with a three-run bunted, burged, George Scott threw the ball away for an error, allowing Andrew to base and Andrews to set to second. Johnson led off the seventh with his homer to tie the score. Jim Palmer won his seventh game in 10 decisions. Scott gave the Browers a 10-lead with his sixth brown in the third innning of the opener but the Sox came back with three homers in the bottom of the third. Luis Alvarado hit one, Andrews hit two, with a man aboard and Allen clucked one into the upper deck. TWO HOME RUNS by Dick Allen led a five-homer assault in the first game as the Sox won 64-1. Allen was purposely walked filling the bases but May followed with his hit, winning the game. ALLEN HIT another in the fifth for a 5-2 lead but Dave May runs the Brewers within one run homer in the seventh. a two-run homer in the seventh. Ed Harrmann blasted his second in the Chicago eighth while Terry Forster held the Brewers to one hit in three, posting seven strikeouts and earning his seventh save. the first pitch for leadoff homeran in the bottom of the ninth inning Sunday, giving the Oakland victory over the Oakland A's. Freenan, the Tigers' catcher, had raced almost all the way to second base on a pickoff play that retired runner Olie Brown for the final out in the top of the oakland rally. THEH HE walloped Ken Holzman's initial pitch in the bottom half of the inning for the victory. In Detroit, Bill Freehan tagged Mike Epstein's homer started the rally. Then Coleman gave up a double to Larry Brown and Neal McKenna, forcing in the tiebreaks ruling. Two walks and Al Kaline's single filled the bases and another walk to Freehan forced in a Tiger run in the third. Wilson Horton grounded into a double play to end the threat and Hotamian retired the Tigers in the second half. Aurelio Rodriguez tripped to open the eighth. He scored on Tony Taylor's sacrifice fy, tying the Cesar Dedeno knocked in three runs, including two on a homer in Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W. 10 L. Ptt. G.B. Detroit 25 21 12 Baltimore 25 22 13 St Louis 25 22 13 Routin 20 24 15 New York 20 24 15 San Francisco 20 24 15 Miami 20 24 15 Oakland 13 31 742 67% Chicago 13 31 702 68% Miami 26 19 178 5% California 23 27 460 11% Kansas City 23 27 460 11% Nebraska 20 30 145 11% NATIONAL LEAGUE New York...W 13 L. Pet. G.B. Pittsburgh...12 L. 653 Cleveland...27 21 584 Chicago...27 21 585 Montreal...27 21 584 Miami...27 21 413 Baltimore...27 21 413 Cincinnati 31 19 620 Los Angeles 31 19 520 San Diego 21 29 114 Atlanta 23 26 469 San Diego 17 34 724 Miami Beach 18 36 724 TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE! Offer expires July 1st 1720 West 23rd Street Cincinnati in Montreal rapped 16 hits to support Gary Nolan's three-hit pitching as the Reds crushed the Montreal Expos 113-1 Sunday, maintaining a National League West Division. a decisive three-run seventh inning, to power the Houston Astros to a 4-2 baseball triumph. New York Mets Mets Sunday. CEDEND'S run-scoring triple in the third gave Houston a 10-4 victory over homer in the sevent to break a 2-2 tie and glue the Astros from the top. The rally made a loser of New York starter Jim McDonald, $2, and sent the Mets to their fifth defeat in the last seven games. The Houston winner has ninth-inning relief help from Fred Gladding. THE REDS staked Nolan to an early lead as they collected three runs off Montreal loser Steve Renko, 1-4, in the first inning. Pete Rose and Joe Morgan singled and Rose scored the first two hits. Johnny Bench then drilled a single to left to score Morgan and then Bench scored when Ken Griffey dropped a fly ball by Tony Pereira. A Cincinnati added a pair of runs in the third inning on a banana-themed double play by McRae. The Reds got two more runs in the fifth off reliever Joe Peres (13), and an extra ground-rule double out scored on a triple by Perez, who then came up with a three-run double. behind to a 4-3 victory over the St Louis Cardinals Sunday and halted a 10-game losing streak Nolan, 8-1, struck out three and walked two as he pitched his four complete game of the season in 12 starts. THE REDS got two more runs in the sixth and another in the seventh before Ken Singleton belts his third home run of the season just left the scoreboard to the end. The RedsExpos their only run. naited 18-game losing streak. Jerry Morales, pinch-running for Garry Jestad, came home from third base with the game-winner to make a loser of Rick Wise. 5-6. Wise had opened the inning with a single and Morales a sacrifice bunt and infeld error. Derrell Thomas's run-scoring single in the 10th inning pulled hometeam San Diego from WRE WE sailing along with a lead on a five-hitter game in the playoffs. He untagged the game on consecutive home runs by Nate Colbert and Steve Harvie. The Cardinals had taken a two-run lead by scoring three runs off San Diego southpaw Fred Norman. St. Louis tailled two runs in the fourth inning as Matty Alou walked and stole second. He scored on a single by Jerry Pace from a throw on a wrong error by rookie third baseman Dave Roberts. A walk to Don Clementon and a single by Joe Torre set up a runcreeding by McNerentry in driving Norman from the mound. Wise lost a shuttle in the eighth after Torre fumbled a grounder by Fred Kendall at third base. Thomas was struck by Thomas brought in Kendall. Reg. $598 Kief's discount price $299 Reg. $5'98 Kief's discount price $2'99 at Kief's discount records Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles THE ALLEY SHOP IS OPEN! 843 Massachusetts 4 Monday, June 12, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comme James J. Kilpatrick Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. A School Fails Change An experimental school has failed. The West Philadelphia University City High School, an innovation among urban schools, is returning to "traditional" A great part of the problem was that only 300 of the 1600 pupils were prepared for the new learning techniques. Twelve teachers and a core of 300 pupils had been acclimated to the programs of individualized learning during a two-year period. The teacher, the parent, the which was finished in December, was used to place pupils crowded out of other city schools, and by February had 1300 new students. The school, which was built in a predominantly black section of Philadelphia, used learning units to teach its students. These units were geared to move at his own speed. The individualized instruction was used in all classes. After the new students poured into the school, the teachers were divided on whether or not they should retain the learning units. The English and social studies departments kept using individualized instruction, but the math and science departments refused to. The students who were accustomed to the individual approach were as unhappy with the compromise as the new students were. In a survey of the new students, 75 per cent chose to return to traditional procedures rather than continue with the innovative ones. Contributing to the problem was the loss of some federal funding and the election last fall of Mayor Frank Rizzo. What does what he calls "frills" in education. Once again the twin foes of inadequate training and insufficient funding have forced a school to drop a program before it had a chance to prove itself. Perhaps the problem is not the solution to the problems of the new Pekka. But "traditional" methods are, not, either. In any case, this situation should point out that both students and teachers need a chance to get used to new methods, if they are to succeed. In addition, administrators need to fund new programs adequately. It's too easy to complain about how bad the schools are without recommending any constructive changes, and when the changes are tried, it's too easy to say the old ways were better. Let us hope the children do not suffer too much. -Rita E. Haugh Editor Convention Outsider The need to be on the "inside" at political events is, I suppose, endemic to all who are in reality always on the outside. I am one of those perennial outsiders. My account of the events surrounding the Democratic state convention this weekend will no doubt lend credence to this belief. Reporters cannot always fill the role of public investigator. They must report what they observe, taking care to remove the rose-colored glasses some insist on wearing. Covering state political gatherings is a new challenge for this reporter. To write about them, an unbiased public opinion column on newer, and perhaps larger, challenge. What I observed at the Democratic state convention in Topeka this past weekend was a refreshing respite from the politics of the past four years. True, there has been much bitter debates between young and old, liberal and conservative. Indeed, I witnessed one debate between two delegates over who was first in line for the last frosted malt at the concession stand. Both did justice by their party's emblem, a donkey. And yet the overall impression I gathered was that the women were the best in diversity in opinions between young and old, but rather benefited from it. reception early Friday evening, despite the hot dogs and beans. I later observed the old, sitting on the floor, laughing, in one case even sharing a bottle of counter-culture wine, at a reception given for the young candidate for Secretary of State, Manning. That was what I observed from my position as an ubiquitous outsider. More specifically, I observed the young having a good time at the Governor's If these observations were valid, then the state Democratic party should be applauded. So also should the McGovern supporters who furthered the cause of their candidate by their positive action in the lion's arena. There were no martyrs in the convention, and was in definite contrast to the Democratic national convention of 1968. Everyone seemed to be having a good time. But I was an outsider, trying to grasp the feelings of a convention that was essentially a product of the insiders. One can only hope that the atmosphere at the state Democratic convention was a sign of better things to come when the national convention convenes in one month. The Democratic convention of 1970 ago made them all look rather like fools. The burden will be on both young and old shoulders to prevent a replay of 1968. I hope they succeed as well as they apparently did in this state. To paraphrase the unfortunate chant of Chicago in 1968: The whole world will be watching! Mark Bedner WASHINGTON - IF our Republic dies before the end of this century, it likely will die not for us but for the institutions and our own internal frustrations. For an agonizing example of what we want to prevent in the latest child development bill. It offers a fine manifestation of our national talent for making Child Development Bill Doomed by any rational standard, or so it seems to me, this is a bad bill. To be sure, it is not as bad as the proposal in the Senate President Nixon vetoed last December. It its revised form, the proposed child development plan, is not better than the earlier version, at least at the outset, and perhaps it would not be quite so impossible to have been said, the best has been said. The new bill is directed toward some 2,000 cities of more than 25,000 population in each of these states. Development centers would be created. These would not be more day-care facilities. The bill makes that clear. The purpose of the bill is to provide for children, but to develop them. The idea is to provide "educational, nutritional, health, and other services," including training in physical, "physical," mental, psychological, and emotional barriers to full participation in programs." The cost per student is estimated at $2,375 per year. The bill proposes a startup authorization of $130 million for the fund. The proposal is followed by authorizations up to $1.2 billion in fiscal 74 and 75. The bill was reported May 16 by the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare. Even Colorado's conservative Sen. Peter H. Dominick, though he voiced reservations, voted to call to the floor. He entirely probes that the Bill will pass. The senators who have sponsored this bill, chief Mondale of Minnesota and Javits of New York, are not lunatics. They are good and decent men who are searching consciently for the right to ring from iron that hobbles society. All of us are dimly aware of this imprisoning circle. The ghetto child, born to poverty, passes its first few critical years in an orphanage. There is typically no father around; the mother works; the infant is dumped with any baby-sitter who may be hostile to them. Emotional needs are left unattended. He gets off to a poor start in kindergarten or the first grade. It is difficult for him to develop the male child of this milieu grows up to rob service stations and the female child to spawn illegitimate offspring upon the process all begins new. If this dispensing cycle could be broken for $2,372 per year per taxpayer, the best money the taxpayers ever spent. Twenty years down the road, the program might deliver productive, law-abiding citizens. But it is part of the frustration that no convincing evidence exists to prove that the program will work. On the contrary, there is sound reason to believe it would fail. As Dr. Aron Katz of Harvard University in testing before the committee, we know little about the right" way to deal with criticism from the centers would be staffed by competent persons? The nation's experience with teacher selection has shown us that "is highly discouraging." Add to the difficulties of competent staff the difficulties of efficient administration. The bill imposes a maze of overlapping councils and boards, and is certain that the costs are underestimated. Consider the failure of the present program of Aid to Of interest, too, is publication of several new Perry Masons by Erie Stanley Gardner (Pocket, 57). The CRIMSON KISS, THE CRISTMON KISS, THE LOW, THE CASE OF THE CALENDAR GIRL, THE CASE Summer Paperbacks Include Suspense Tales This month's horse operas are the ONE OF THE SAGE (Pocket, 60 cents) and John Reese's THE WILD ONE (Gold Medal, 59 cents). Nuff then we have Charles Runson's POWER KILL (Gold Medal, 75 cents), which takes us through the assassination of a senator, and the effort to show that the executed assassin was an imprisoned man. ASSIGNMENT BANKOK (Gold Medal, 75 cents) is another one about Sam Durell, field agent for the FBI, and derring-in to the Far East. OF THE SPIRIOUS SPINSTER THE CASE OF THE BIGAMOUS SPOUSE. THE CASE OF THE RELUCTANT MODEL, THE RELUCTANT MANZA AND HONANZA and THE CASE OF MISCHENUOLE DOLL. Next are the romantic suspense tales. First of these is Elizabeth Kyle's MIRROR DANCE ballerina who dances before the balerina who dances during the mirror, a girl who is killed in a train crash, and another who goes to Copenhagen to search for her sister Nora Holah JOSSY'S JASSY (Crest, 95 cents) is in set in rural England 100 years ago and is about a girl, gypsy, who has mysterious powers. Madeline U'LEGENE'S THE OTHER SIDE OF THE SUN (Crest, $1.25) is about a young girl, Stella and her life at Illyra, green coastal dunes. State Convention Only Formality By MARK BEDNER Kansan Staff Writer Kansas Democrats wound up their new delegate selection process this past week at the Republican convention. Although the politicking behind security was serious and at times bitter, it proceeded the convention, the events on Saturday were almost predictable. The convention itself was a very different event. The main issue surrounding the convention was whether or not it should be a segregation shuffle to Miami that will be mirrored or committed to Presidential candidate Senator George McGovern. The uncommitted candidates were the "party regulars," including Governor Docking, the state chairman and the national chairman and committeewoman. The committed McGovern forces were led by someone, although at times it was difficult to determine who had led him with the happer the Senator McGovern himself, since the mere mention of his name often calmed the heated debates between the two candidates of his convention supporters. The preconception story unfolded with Mike Hardee, professor of public policy who had taken it upon himself to negotiate with Democratic State Representative Sarah Sanders for her negotiating, one McGhee's supporter told me, "almost every time we talked to him." The trouble arose when Harder announced that he wanted the two spots already slotted for the Harder, acting as a de facto spokesman for the McGoventry people would contest before the convention that the McGoverty people would contest the "missed slate" of five delegates who were to be selected at the election. national committeeman and national committeewoman. In addition, he wanted Dreiling, as the chair of the letter sent to all delegates two days before the convention, to notify the existing national officers that they should waive their votes in case of a recent event trouble at the convention. Dreiling and state party leaders refused to accept Harder's proposal. The line of demarca- tion came into view at a convention time drew near. The McGovern staff was angry with Harder for alienating the party leadership in the state and wanted to be more available for McGovern after the national convention. Stearns thought that the two delegate candidates would worth the animosity that would result from a state convention battle, which he knew the McGovern people couldn't win. In the meantime, Dreiling had contacted McGovern's national office and McGovern staff of Harder's intends and found that Rick Stearns, McGovern's state attorney, was thinking of Harder's negotiation. Stearns then made plans to fly out to Kansas for the convention. The result was that she caught on June 3rd, the McGovern forces caucused to make plans for the state convention. The result was that a small rift appeared between supporters who were trying to prevent a knock down fight at the convention. The idealists felt that any concession to the party regulars was unacceptable, and the outcome of the convention. November election, and the overriding plan was to party. The caucus ended with no positive plan, although the overriding sentiment was with the The realists, led by many from Douglas County, Texas, and the Governor, would probably get the nomination at Miami and that the emphasis was on the grassroots. The week before the convention, however, turned out to be productive for everyone, including the state navy leaders. in meeting all necessary actions to preserve the same environment. Stevens and Dreiling with Senator McGovern and Governor Docking presiding in the wings, arrived at an agreement that would allow him to question something like this. In return for the McGovern forces agreeing to leave the uncommitted delegates at the national convention, the state convention, Dreiling would agree to release the uncommitted delegates at the national convention, requesting their support. The agreement would prevent the unneeded embarrassment of the state convention state convention, in return for the Stearns then made plans to fly out to Kansas for the convention state party's support of McGovern at the national convention. On Friday night, twelve hours before the convention was to begin. Stearns met with the five McGovinst district chairmen to discuss what had, for all purposes, been going the week. Each of the district leaders was asked to present the plan to his delegates. Although debate at the individual district caucuses was heated, general acceptance of the three McGovern supporters would run for slots as alternates to the national conveners, who decided that Thus, by day or morning when the state convention opened on Monday, Governor Docking, most of the decisions had been made. The governor also attempted to be little open conflict on the floor, except for sporadic applause that greeted the various candidates and national committeeman. One old man remarked to me, "All these young kids are great for the It came as no surprise to many members of the party that the three alternate assentions and national committee mani- position were retained by the state party "bloc" of McGovern support for Douglas and the three alternates. That, perhaps, was the key to getting the party regulated; everybody had a good time and party regulators controlled the convention and maintained their lead. Families with Dependent Children. And let us pray over the wisdom of shifting to the state—in the sense that obligation that ought to be the responsibility of the family instead. I don't pretend to have a good and workable answer; but I have read this 79-page bill, and thought about the costly and cumbersome iwamp the bill would provide, and I am satisfied this isn't it. CONNALM WORLD TOUR Copyright 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. "Geerwhiz, John! I just wanted to see if your itinerary included Washington . . . next January If Nixon is going to be defeated, it will be at the polls. If he is going to be indicted, it will be he by his party. If he is going to war crimes, it will be by social sanctions, not legal ones—as President Johnson has suffered the social sanctions that have prevented him humiliation. Johnson is treated Garry Wills Impeaching Nixon is an idea that has been around for quite a while—a fact that should not give any comfort to the idea's authors. Mr. McCloskey began his filated presidential bid with an ill President's Impeachment Wouldn't Solve Problems And that is the trouble with the whole issue—it is just an excuse for everyone to be careless. everybody is perfectly aware that it is going nowhere. The situation would not be happy if it did go anywhere—they would end up anywhere. considered call for Nixon s **until** peachment. He spent the rest of his campaign (if one can call it that) backpedaling from that call. He was not for the idea, he was not for the discussion, but just for discussing the idea. as a liar in a very practical way—e.g., few trusted his fat satirist to purchase it, and those who had to read it write reviews that said it lied). Happily, Mr. Nixon may face the same prospect when he Then why not bring up impachment "as a symbol," to begin the process of social saccharine. Because those who have raised the issue have appealed very rigorously to the Constitution, they will be more seriously concerned with the serious use of the Constitutional machinery—and they realize they cannot—then they are hypotheses arguing that the Constitution is treating frivolously. They want some of the side-effects of an impeachment process without the ability of players to play games with the law. honor some of those who have proposed impeachment, and I understand the sense of despair under this act, as any non-violent instrument to be used against the war. But there are other ways to attack the war, such as by using a powerful pressure on Nixon. This way will just make its advocates look like prey, because frighten off people who may oppose the war but would rather see the President put on trial at number turned into a courtroom. It is the task of serious men to make nothing but serious proposals at a time when the Administration is so careless with whole victim countries. It is the task of focusing of issues, but a distraction, and a needlessly divisive one. I say this with regret, since I Copyright, 1972 Universal Press Syndicate THE SUMMER SESSION THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom—UN-4 4810 Business Office—UN-4 4538 Published at the University of Kansas four weeks weekly during the summer session. Mail submission rates 30%. semester, a year-round postage paid at address mktk@uc.edu. Students who do not wish to receive offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Ognitions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State "—" Editor Campus Editor News Editor Copy Chief Photographers Cartoonist NEWS STAFF News Adviser ... Del Brinkman Rita E. Haugh Linne Schildl Bob Nurgey Reg Annhon Pris Brandsted, Hank Young Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager Doug DeTray Advertising Manager Steve Conner Financial Manager Carol Williams National Advertising Manager Cara Williams Promotional Manager Dave Bennett Marketing Manager Todd Ranieri Griff and the Unicorn ( ) WOULD YOU MIND TOASTING THIS MARSHMALLOW WITH YOUR DRAGON FIRE, OSCAR? WOULD YOU MIND TOASTING THIS MARSHMALLOW WITH YOUR DRAGON FIRE, OSCAR? HOW'S THAT? A LITTLE WELL DONE BUT LUCKILY THAT'S HOW I LIKE THEM By Sokoloff HOW'S THAT? A LITTLE WELL DONE, BUT LUCKILY THAT'S HOW I LIKE THEM A LITTLE WELL DONE, BUT LUCKILY THAT'S HOW I LIKE THEM DANCE "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." l University Summer Kansan Monday, June 12, 1972 5 men to riouses in the foreless entries to the but a lessly J. H. L. Bees Making Beeline for States Kansan Photo by CLAY LOYD By SHARYN BALLARD Kansan Staff Writer The bees are coming! 'It's not a line from a horror movie, but the truth.' The African honeybee is advancing toward the southern United States at the moment. It will be to Charles A. Michener, professor of entomology. If an insect is in the bee family, its sting could be as minor as that of the sweat bee, or cause the same throbbing torment as that caused by a honeybee. If it infests a nearby skin a irritation or it could result in death. A foremost expert on bees, Michener has been studying the social habits of bees for more than 20 years. His recently awarded $35,800 grant from the National Science Foundation is directed to the study of sweat bees but Michener has been doing extensive research on the African honeybee. This bee, which was brought to Brazil in 1967, is far more aggressive than the European honeybee, which thrives in the temperate climate zones, according to Michener. The African honeybees are easily aggravated and attack collectively. They have been known to kill At the request of the United States Department of Agriculture, the National Academy of Science last November and December sent Micheneer and seven others to participate in a study they conducted a study of the African honey bee. livestock, wild animals and humans. The scientists traveled throughout Brazil, interviewing beekeepers and examining the bee itself. That would mean that there are now over three trillion African honey bees in the western brittle. "The African honeybee has spread from the original 26 colonies brought from Africa to about 125 colonies per square mile in some parts of an area the size of the United States," Michener explained. By natural spread, Michener said, the bees as swarming northward at the rate of 200 miles a year. Because the African bee can exist in warm temperature as well as tropical areas, Michener believed that they could survive in the southern part of the United States. "The African bee's sting has the same amount of venom as the European variety, but their coloration is much darker." "However, the disturbing behavioral quality that their aggressive nature causes the bees to attack collectively under little provocation and allow them to move longer moves or get out of their reach," he said. beekeeping," Michener said. All is not lost. In fact, Michelen is optimistic about the value of the African honeybee as a vital pest resource. "It's hard to determine just how many have never killed from the African honeybee. Emotionalism plays such a role that accurate records are not to be found. People have gone out on hunts with an ax and have been taken into a hive. Naturally, the bees would attack, but as any honeybee would react, 'Micheen explained.' In the short run of the situation, things look bad for beekeeping with the African honeybee he said, but in the long run, beekeepers may be able to accomplish what they set out to do in the first place, namely, develop a good tropical-adopted strain of honeybees. Although it is illegal to have bees in Brazilian beekeepers in Brazil are successfully developing strains of the African bee that are not so aggressive. The hybrids of good character, it is hoped, will one day dominate the African honeybee in the western hemisphere. "If this occurred, beekeepers would have increased honey cultivation; and crops would benefit greatly from the increased pollenization of crops." Michener said. "The altruistic behavior of bees and other insects is what makes their study so interesting," Michener said. "The worker gives up his reproductive system to improve the queen bee's reproductiveness. The working together is what is so fascinating. It makes the study of these insects so interesting." While working under his new grant, Michene will be involved in the study of sweat bees, which are at the beginning of social evolution. Willbell Bell, assistant professor of entomology, and Rudolf Jander, lecturer in biology, will also be working on the project. Michiener said of his life's work: "If one knows how and where the bee lives and learns how to kill it off, we can then use the bee more fully for the natural pollenization of vegetation." Sociologist to Counsel Builders Sociology department chairman E. Jackson Baur embarks next month on a year's leave of absence to serve as resident scholar at the University of Hartford for Rivers and Harbors in Washington D.C. The Board, Baur explained, reviews projects planned by the agency and estimates their effects, both good and bad, upon the adjacent The Corps, said Baur, "is increasingly concerned with the human consequences" of its dam-building projects. As a result of the National Environmental Protection Act, the Corps, like all government agencies, must prepare a detailed study of a project's impact on the environment, including the impact on residential areas. Legally, the review board has power. Baur explained. It makes final decisions and can modify appropriately the plans of the Corps. Baur will advise the engineers on the sociological effects of their projects. As resident of the city, Baur will be more personal sociological research, related to Corps projects. Of the past, Baur said, "I would suspect the Army Engineers haven't needed much in the way of public relations." Backed by a powerful lobby of people who asked about what bark called 'per barrel legislation',* empowering them to build dams and reser- "The Corps takes pride in its history, said Baurt. Its imagination has been able to control it 1900 when it was given the job of controlling the floods on the Mississippi." plans were blocked by senators until after the flood of 1951, when north Lawrence was underwater. "You can still see the flood watermark on the Union Pacific Passenger Station." Even in communities like Lawrence, where flooding has occurred, research controversy. Baur have done research on the way public opinion is formed and changed over such a controversial issue as climate change. Docking Says Government Politics Both Need Women "Like any bureau, they like to grow, which for them means to build more dams." Actually, Baur explained, the Army Corps contains very few military men. Baur said, has become aware of its public image as a group of ruthless technologists, without reason spawning dams "Designers and planners are "civilian," said Baur. Only the administrators and the chief of the Corps are in the military. The critics of the Corps, said Baur, "claim they (the Corps) overbuild. But the Corps will be different from the University of Kansas, and Baur is excited about continuing his scholarship in a new By CONNIE PARISH Kansan Staff Writer Gov. Robert B. Docking said he wholly approves the greater weight of the policies wives in his address at the Sunflower Girls State inauguration on Friday. He cited the large number of women now serving in his administration's advisory committees, boards and councils. "It is no longer a man's world, in this day of women' s liberation, and both men and women should be educated to understand government," he said. This amendment will insure equality of the sexes. "I find it stimulating to learn new things," he said. People downstream from a dam, who have lost money from flooded crops, may favor it, said Kevin Hicks, one of the welcome tourists who swarm to the recreational facilities provided by a reservoir. But many people including those who live near the dam, strenuously object to it. Docking told the group of 439 men who were standing there continue to call upon citizens, regardless of sex, to help improve the quality of life in this country. He expressed his pleasure that *Jamaa* was one of the first states to pass the *Amendment* now awaiting ratification of the required number of The governor said it seemed strange that in this country, where the law is rarely equal, it took nearly 200 years for equality of the sexes to be applied. Docking said that he had learned that the strength of mankind is under commitments to each other and to all citizens of the world, and he praised the Girl Staters for their tactical in their mock session. The Corps, said Baur, "takes pride in the fact that they've invited the opposition to meet with them." The ninth man in the 30 years of Girls State to receive such an honor. Docking was named an honorary member of Sunflower All of these people—"the people who live in the actual affected areas"—will be Baur's "army," and they will "sensitize" the Corps to those people's problems, and to draw "the public more effectively into the process of developing and planning the physical programs" Resident scholars of recent years have included a biologist, a lawyer and a historian, who have each broadened the unimaginable of the Corps about the effects of dams upon a community. A note of solemnity marked the mood of the insurgation, though Mr. Mulder had greeted given out the Governor Michelin Maddox as she gave a She reminded the Girl Staters, "Never falter at the snickering of those who criticize you for upcoming up for what you believe." Quoting the Girls State motto, she reminded the throng of citizens they must have "Pride in thy country, faith in thy self." Gov. Docking administered the oath of office to Chief Justice Lese Toussaint, who is being swore in the rest of the newly-elected Supreme Court justices Incoming Gov. Susie Krebhel of Olathe was presented the governor's cap by Ed Newman, state senator. Virginia Lane, department president of Girls State sponsor American Legion Audibility, presenter of Outgoing Gov. Maddox turned over her gavel to the new leader. Gov. Krebiel formally acco- mitted that Mr. Krebiel, office, stating that the real importance of the week was in the chance to actually be involved in the government. With increasing pressure from environmentalists, the Corps, She challenged the delegates to 70 Senior High Journalists Attend One-Week KU Camp By MARY LIND Preliminary enrollment for the one-week session of the senior high school journalism camp on Monday, p. sunday at McCollum Hall. Seventy prospective high school journalists and five advisors of high school publications are expected to participate in the five-day program, which will emphasize areas of high school history from a newspaper, yearbook and photography. The campers will be taking courses under instructors at the American Yearbook Company and the IT Printing Service they have hired to newspaper yearbook entitled the "Junior Jayhawk" which will be available on campus. Midwestern Music and Art Camp has been held during the summer for a number of years, this is the year for the shortened session. "This is more of a service camp to help improve work on the high school publication, than on the college. You can way the six-week camp is." De Brinkman, associate professor of journalism and director of the campus newspaper. Although a six-week journalism camp affiliated with the According to Brinkman, there have been complaints in past years because many students would have liked to attend the six-week camp but could not afford the cost of the extended session. Suzanne Shaw, assistant professor of journalism, will serve as co-ordinator of camp activities. She pointed out that similar abbreviated sessions at the University of Kansas universities in the past. sessions: one for newspaper and one for yearbook," Shaw said. had little effect on the number of students enrolled in the six-week camp and has increased the total number of high school students taking courses in the School of Journalism, she said. Last summer, 260 students in the program was 28. Combined enrollment of the two sessions this summer will be 96. While most of the students are While most of the students are participate from various parts of the country including Atlanta and Virginia Beach. Va., will Some of the students have taken lessons from their own school publicized they will bring back ideas to improve their newspapers and All of the campers will be housed in McCollium Hall and will attend all of their classes in Flint Hall. Athletics, Entertainment Available An extensive program of intramural sports is planned for the summer session. According to Henry Shenk, head of the department of physical education and recreation, the activities will include basketball, softball, tennis, golf, handball, horseshoes and badminton. Just because some student still have to attend classes doesn't mean they can't enjoy a summer vacation. There are numerous sources on the campus for additional activities this summer. The original deadline for signing up for these inframural sports was Saturday, but Shenk has extended the period to today. Anyone wish to sign up may do so within 108 hours (Gym, or by calling 864-3371). "The sooner we have all of the names, the sooner we can make up the schedules and get started." Shenk said. He said he wanted to start intramursal by the middle of this week and have them finish during the last week of classes. Besides organized intramurals, almost all of the campus recreational facilities are open to faculty and administration. The University pool is available to the campus com- The handball courts have always been in great demand. There are three in Robinson Gym and two in the gym. Sign-up sheets for the courts are posted on Monday and Thursday in the gym. During this week, the three indoor handball courts are open at one a time for minor repairs. The University of Kansas has 3 tennis courts which are available to summer students. Four are near the football stadium, four are behind Allen Field House and five are south of house on the campus. The field house and gym are lighted for night play. There are several facilities in A period from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, is reserved for the faculty. A period from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, is reserved for campus families. This summer will be especially entertaining for Shakespeare fans. There is a summer Shakespeare film festival which features the Shakespeare plays, beginning June 11 with "Henry V." The University Theatre is also presenting three Shakespeare dramas: "Twelfth Night," "Hamlet" and "Merchant of Venice." The campus offers more than just physical activity for leisure time, however. The Kansas Union is offering a full schedule of popular and classical films available on campus. Among the films to be shown are "They Shoot Horses, Don't They" and "Monster Park." Softball fields are available near the gym. there is a small court and there is an indoor Inside, basketball, volleyball and tennis as well as a weight training room. and around Robinson Gym. buy their tickets at the door of the Starlight Theatre. There must be a minimum of 25 persons making in order for the trip to be made. The Lawrence area offers such opportunities as golf courses, lakes, boating and other water sports. Three trips have been scheduled to the Kansas City Starlight Theatre for the summer. Air-conditioned buses will take students to shows starring Tennessee "Ernie" Ford, Ed Ames and Jim Nabors. Persons must pay $1.75 in advance for the round-trip and 50¢ Off on Small Pizza LUNCH SPECIAL Monday thru Friday Prices Good Thru June 11:00-2:00 p.m. SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & ye Public house 802-2266 i44 W. 23rd FOR SALE WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Western Cv. Notes—Now. On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them. 2. If you don't. you're at a disadvantage Ellen way it comes to the same things as Jill in *Western Civilization*; Campus Madhouse, 141 West, 141th 7-21 Steve Systems and large discount ones hand in band at MSS Electronics, Sydney. Steve also presents personal Entertainment components. Open 10-7, Mon.-Tue. 10:17-11:30, Mon.-Tue. 6-12 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, 515 Mile St., Bar-B-Que, Barge, Large, Lake Michigan. $20.50-$30. $15.00 to go. $60.00 to eat here.$8.50. Bar-B-Que Plates ($15. -$20). Refreshments. $20. $-30.00. Reef. Brick. Sand. $80. 00 am. 11 to 4 p.m. Flower Boat $25.00. Old French-Poil CROSSSED SHAGGY Old French-Poil PUPPLES MAJGY OR FEMALES $5 C E GOSH MLOUTH KANSA 9/13/87-12 6 78 gallon, all-glass aquarium compartment with fl浸置杯底, hood, filters, drains, stand and two 10 inch graves, grave list 126. Call Susan 3-644-633-613 FATHER'S DAY GIFTS of lasting Value From the unique Christian Bookstore. Cross Reference Malls Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd 11 Bakolon presents summer overrated used jeans - cowboy - & Hawaii sunglasses, yachting jacket, jacket, yachting jacket atlases Couture, 879 Vermont 6-14 FATHER'S DAY CARDS—Half Price Where: Elsay?777? Cross Reference Malls Shopping Center, 711 W. 29th 6:15 POR SALE. Mercedes-Benz 1960 Model 180, Reg. Gas. Call 842-6140 6-12 For Sale -1962 Volkswagen Built- engine built engine, 14,000 miles—would make an excellent camper; 842.8235 6-12 North Side Country Shop. 707 N.2nd Antiques, used furniture, and lots of other items. 9-5 x 7 days a week. 842- 3159. Herb Altenherr. iff For sale. Three matching solid oak antique wardrobes and one old trunk 1961 International jeep seal. Make offer, call 542-3208 6-15 1968 Ponton Tempest 2-door hard- top white, with black vinyl roof, power steering, high-end air cond. hatchback, Jayhawk, VW 2022, 6-15 843-2390 6-15 | | | 1968 Jawhar, 2-door hardtop, white, cylinder 3-gear. $888.00 Jayhawk VW. 2522 Iowa. 843-2200 6-15 New shipment of India prints just in at the Hodge Podge 15th W. 9th. 6-19 Sell cheap 1971 Kawasaki street scrambler in excellent condition with 1500 miles. Call 843-2871-842-6445 ask for Dick C. 6-14 WHY RENT? RIDGEVIEW RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843-8499 3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59) ERN'S CYCLE SALES YAMAH A M A H WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 716 North 2nd FOR RENT STEREO DISCOUNT. Now pay any cost plus 10% of the RAY AUDIO- COST this month only at Sterio Discount House in the Bronx. Free free tea, coffee and Consulting Services. Apartment for rent in exchange for work. Call 843-7863 6-14 Y. Dealer Tie-downs - Skirting - Parts Ample Park Spaces Available 3409 W. thf 847.7200 Joint West St Drive In Theatre New 1, 1/2; and 2 bedrooms. Pool, patio and gas grills. Dishwashers and dispenses. Walk-in closets. Kitchen. Bedrooms 250-61 Sitz, 847-7535 Webster's Mobile Homes COLLAGE HILL MANOR APARTMENT. Available in apartments with furnished and unfurnished apartments, AC pool, and laundry facilities. 19th A-B, call or mail 832-8220. If 19th A-B, call or mail 832-8220. Attractive and comfortable rooms for students, utilities paid, share kitchen, pet cats. Call 842-7080 6-19 ROOM FOR FEMALE in big, well- comfortable home. Free wather and drive, and dishwashers. Suit- ease to leave room. For Debra or Jake for Dedry or Jake. 6-15 Sleeping rooms furnished, with or without kitchen privileges, for males off street parking, barriers KU and near town. No pet. Phone 843-7821. Apartment furnished, some air-conditioned, large enough for two or more, bedrooms KU and near town 633-5576 parking no parks 6-27 NOTICE Available new 2 rm efficiency equip- fitted, cleaned, private entrance, baths; 21 block from campus; $75 to rent; 39 rooms per pet; pets bery- cled. $83-780 For rent for summer. A.C. furnished in private home. Walk to campus. Nice, hot, not reliable. Utilities paid. 843-613-1010 West I9 Terrace Roots & Apts. for students. All classes to campus. 1216 Louisiana. 843-1601 6-18 SUMMER GAY LIBERATION Wives, friends and brothers Meet every week at Union Office, B-112 University, SUMMER DANCE classes now enrolling Liarr Hirn Dance Academy Jazz, bat jazz, acrobatic Ballerina advanced, Ballet Ninja 6-875 6-875 6-15 Sandals handcrafted to your personalized taste at Hodge Podge 15 W 9th. 6-19 HELP WANTED NORTH, NIDS' summer camp, at 10 p.m., 123 West 4th St. ENGLISH TEACHER will do typing and tutoring MA. in English, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; edits sheets and dispersions; NIZ. Responsible couple or single student to live in pleasant air-conditioned house during later part of summer if desired 842-408-688 TEACHER OFFENINGS Current listings of hundreds of California schools in Southern California School Placement. 1971 San Francisco Oaks, Berkeley, 1974 Oakland Oaks, Berkeley, 1974 Good jobs Galore, Colorado booming. Sales jobs to $100,000 per month or $200,000 per year to $500,000 per year. Summer jobs—in- families. Drawer工 Hylote, Laporte, United. Drawer工 Hylote, Laporte. WANTED TYPING Wanted people to share house $65 for food and rent: 843-1919 1340 Tennessee 6-14 Ride needed from K.C. KS to K.U. and back for morning classes. Will pay. Call 299-3144 6-12 MISCELLANEOUS Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electronic typesetter, prompt, accurate. Phone 843-281. Phone 843-281. Phone 843-281. Themes, term papers type, typed accurately, promised IBM SysRetc v11 type IBM SysRetc v12 type REASONABLE RATES Dana Doff DATABASE 872, 493-565. Themes, term papers type, typed accurately, promished IBM SysRetc v11 type IBM SysRetc v12 type REASONABLE RATES Dana Doff DATABASE 872, 493-565. STEREO REPAIR. RMS Electronics. 2742 Mass Management System, Com- patible with Tektronix Tape Machines and Speakers. Lowest price on Tektronix 2672. Online 2672 Online • 6-12 Pipes, papers, and all smoking accessories are available at the Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 6-19 JAROLD'S Diving Supplies 843. 3565 Lawrence, Kansas 843-3539 Lawrence National Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I. Equip. in Stock Certified Instructor RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842-2323 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments reserved. Free breakfasts,WMNFmimosas. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9, Sat til noon Ford OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE • 0 TO M6P 13-1.5 FROST DISC FRONT SEATS • UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL. TONY'S 500 E.23rd IMPORTS- LOVE THAT DATSUN DATSUN 842-0444 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE 043 0500 --- The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS 928 Mass Monday, June 12. 1972 University Summer Kansas McGovern Favored Here By BOB LITCHFIELD Kansan Staff Writer Most local political figures, Republicans and Democrats alike, say they believe Sen. George McGovern will be the Democratic nominee for President in the November election. Many Douglas County Democrats have always supported his candidacy, and the group's recent campaign has reinforced their support. Herman K. Reed, 2019 Kenway, said it was the weaknesses of the other Democratic candidates that led him to support Gov. Scott Walker and committed delegate in the district conventions last month. Mike Davis, 500 Illinois St. Douglas County delegation leader to the State Democratic Convention, said it looked like "smooth sailing" for McGoventry. "Nothing is ever certain until the votes are counted," Davis said, "but right now I'd have to say it looks good for him." Theodore F. Kennedy, R.R. A. a precinct commissioner, said he had always been for McGovern. "I think he will probably be the "They confirmed by trust in him. I trust George McGovern to do what is right," she said. Anna Berger, a Douglas County delegate and another McGovern supporter, said McGovern's had honored her convictions. Democratic leaders all said they believed McGovern was gaining support among the voters in their American additions that make up a McGovern stronghold. Most still believe that McGovern would be the strongest candidate in Douglas County, but were not sure he would be the strongest one. Berger said she thought there were anti-McGovern sentiments in Wyandotte County. "That is one reason why Gov. Docking has been afraid to commit himself," she said. "I don't think his candidacy will hurt the party in the state. I know it will help in Douglas County." Read and The Democrats all agreed that Alabama Gov. George Wallace was not a factor in Kansas politics but would be a factor at he national convention, though hey were unsure what role he could play. "He has a big factor. He has the highest popular vete total in the primaries." Reed said. J. D. King, 844 Broadway Dr., Republican County chairman, said he was certain McGovern will be President. Kelsey November. King said McGovern's candidacy should have no bearing on the state elections because President Woodrow Wilson job so that it is a umbrella "below." king said that he believed McGovern's delegate total did not reflect his popular support. At-Large Selections Complete Minnesota's Demo Delegation The Associated Press Minnesota Democrats chose the last of their national convention delegates Sunday in the state to conventions which saw Sens. George S. McGovern and Hubert H. Humphrey to appear in several ballot votes. With the selection of Minnesota's at-large delegates, McGovern had a total of 951% delegates committed to him for the next election. Beach convention Humphrey had 342%. Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace 328 and Sen. Edmund Muskie 178. Rep. Shirley Chisholm of New York 1. A candidate needs 1,509 votes to win the presidential nomination. Of the 13 at-large delegates elected by the Electoral College, Humphrey gave 7, Mecgan 5 and That gave from Minnesota's 57- member delegation 33 votes for Hemingway, 19 for McGovern, 1 for the Cain and 4 were uncommitted. Docking Wants Answers MANHATTAN (AP)—Gov. Robert Dickert said Sunday he took issue with any person who would vote against him without constructive suggestions for improvement "He has the delegates, but I don't believe he has the grass roots support that number of delegates suggests," King said. Kevin Armold, Kansas City, Kan., senior, is one of several workers preparing for the opening of the Hilltop Child Care Center 1101 Broad, Aug. 21. The center has already enrolled 50 youngsters from Beringue and Benevinge Lawrence graduate student and a Center official. Child Care Center Readied "I believe strongly in the potential of progress to progress and improve the overall quality of life for our children." Dedication. "This is what we want." The governor's remarks were prepared for the annual homecoming at the Berekah-Okad Fellows south west of here. 11 "I am proud of the assets of our state—assets which have come about with Kansans working together," Fellows have worked together over the years to elevate the character of man, "Docking said. "People approve of President Nixon, the general way he handles office, on foreign and home affairs," the poll shows that. "King said." 10 It was the concensus that the major issues in November would be dealing with the tax level and tax reform often mentioned as areas of concern. Construction of Wescoe Hall Nears Halfway Mark Construction of Wescoe Hall is on schedule, according to Keith Lawton, director of Facility Planning and Operations. Lawson said the project will be completed in September. nearing the halfway mark. Workers are now framing what will be the top floor of the building. McGovern Supporters . . Continued from Page 1 A resolution on the Vietnamese war drew a standing ovation from the McGovern forces when they read. The resolution stated: "Who is dedicated to peace and for the total disengagement of American troops from foreign conflict; "The that the American people declare an involvement in the Voivodesse war and that the Democratic party nominate a person for vice president." Who would revamp our national priorities and programs? Would they succeed, or so they would not rise and fall with the fortunes of any foreign country? The Douglas County delegation voted overwhelmingly against the committee report but it was passed as a bill by the chair Davis said. He said that he objected to voting on the resolutions as a block, rather than individually, and was not pleased with the working of some committees. brisoners of war; Anna Berger, Douglas County delegate. said she opposed the KANU Has Special Programs KANU, campus FM-m radio station, is now broadcasting from home with special programs are planned for this week according to Dick Gates. At 7 p.m. Mondays Emily Taylor, dean of women, hosts "Feminist Perspective," a program put together by the dean and her staff in offices on campus by Dean Tayler. The program has been pre-empted this week, however, and next week Ellen Gould, Carole Kline and Jean Lepore have joined Women's Political Campus Every night this week, 7 to 8 p.m., a discussion of the state of the environment will be broadened with presentations by National Public Radio service (NPR). The program, sponsored by the United Nations Environmental Conference, will guests from all over the world. NPR, of which KANU is a member, is similar to a television network or a wire service for newsroom. From 2:05 to 3 p.m., Thursday "Rich Nations vs. Poor Nations" will be broadcast. This is part of an informal program that focuses on contemporary world problems. This week Augustus J. Rogers, professor of economics will be the guest of Wisconsin will be the guest From 4 to 5:30 p.m. every weekday is a program called "All KANU Schedule 7.30 The Morning Show 7.45 News Weather Sports 8:30- Business and 8:30- Campus and Community Review 9- News/Weather Sports 9:15- Germany Today 9-News/Weather/Sports 10- Germany Today 11- New York C P E Bach 9/30- Featured Works: C. P. E. Bach Hanbe New Weather Books Noon - News Weather Sports NBC - News Sports Noon Hour Concert Community Calendar 1- Touch Wrap Jazz and French Musician. 2- New Wave Music and French Music. 3- This Afternoon. 4- Mindless Considered. 5- New Wave Warriors. 6- New Wave Warriors. 7- A Feminist Perpective. 8- A Feminist Perspective. 9- Variations On a Record Player. 10- TBA 11- OFF ON Things Considered." It comes from Washington, D.C., through NPR, and is a "news magazine of the air" program. Wright said. "The Call-in in 'hiring', a program in which listeners can call to discuss current issues, will begin at 10 p.m. 30 p.m. to midnight Sunday. In addition to the talk programs, KANU's regular program includes classical and newscasts throughout the day and evening. "The World of Jazz" follows the "Call-In Thing" from midnight to 2 a.m. Sunday night. Jazz meets from 3 to 4 p.m. everyday. The hours between 7 and 10 p.m. feature 'educational music' according to Warren KANU, the KANU announcer. These program are designed by announcers. Jazz and orchestra music is aired with descriptions of musicians and composers. "To Be Announced" (TBA) underground rock music is presented between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. ruining because she believed the delegates should have had an opportunity to vote on the resolutions singly. "This is supposed to be a forum. The people's last chance to express themselves is in this resolution." she said. In his keynote address, Gov. Docking appealed to Kansas Democrats to "turn homeward" and to "build a two-party state." In other other party regulations had been worried that national politics would split the Democratic party in Kansas, spelling disaster in the state elections in November when Docking will seek a fourth term Harder and Davis both stressed that McGovon supporters have been working for party unity and harmony for weeks. Docking characterized the Democratic party as "the party of 18-year-old voters" and reform, or executive reorganization and of penal reform. He also lambasted the conservatives for their literature, calling it "a stumbling blow to democracy, primarily in preserving the special interests." Fifty-one per cent of the dwellings had screens or screen doors down, broken or missing in violation of the code. Fifty-six per cent of the dwellings did not have an adequate number of duplex units in the wall or outlets that were installed in an approved manner. Twenty-seven per cent of the dwellings contained bathing and kitchen facilities, properly enclosed or had improper ventilation. Four dwellings substituted a kitchen sink for a lavatory in violation of code. "Some McGovern leaders were included on committees at the last minute as a token gesture," Holton said. Montague's report showed there were no violations of minimum floor space or room height required to have 150 square feet of habitable floor space for one person and at least 50 additional rooms, so they occupied. There were here, four dwellings with basement sleeping rooms in which the total area was less than the required seven feet. Only two dwellings failed to meet the lighting requirement for toilets and bathrooms—an overhead or the ceiling on the wall. Dwellings Near Twenty-seven per cent of the units did not have an adequate toilets. Ten per cent of cans and fifty-five per cent of the dwellings had no lids for the trash can. New Setback for Reservoir Doesn't Discourage Chamber In physical structure inspection of the units, the report showed that 42 per cent of the rooms or hallways had walls or "This project was first mentioned in an 1895 newspaper editorial. We can't get frustrated over a few delays," said Bill Woods, committee chair for the foundation. "The new date set for the public Although the opening of bids for construction of the Clinton Reservoir was postponed for the fifth time, the company Corps of Engineers last Friday, the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce is waiting patiently for a decision. ... This and the four previous post- ponements occurred because of the necessity of rate rates involving contractors and the government. Some non-union contractors paid the lower wage rates while union contractors would pay the pre- decessor rate. Various Events Planned For Residents at Oliver About the new date for bid opens, Smith said, "bid we are hopeful, and believe we will be able to open bids on June 27." the Chamber of Commerce. The new date set for the public bid opening is June 27. "The postponement is based on a pending decision from the Wage Commission in Bristol, D.C., and an amendment made upon receipt of this decision." M. O. Smith, chief of public affairs at the University of Engineers, said Saturday. The opening of bids will be held it 11 a.m. June 27 in the Federal building in Kansas City, Kan. Upcoming events include demonstrations by a folk dance group, a lecture by the International Migration and the possibility of films ranging from documentaries to national geographics. Green Hall Overcrowded Under Law School Boom Also available to students are soccer, baseball, basketball and table game equipment. Because Oliver houses both intensive English students and native speakers, the staff groups, the staff has organized a system to work toward meeting Built in 1905 to serve 150 students, the University of Kansas's Green Hall has become a landmark in bloom in Law School admissions. Sexuality seminars and women's consciousness groups, spanning the campus, Coalition, aare also planned. A black women's presentation is held on Saturday. The contract for the Clinton Reservoir may run between $15 million and 40 million to a Corps spokesman, the contractors who are disputing the higher wage rate determinations are Anderson of Holton; Reese of Jackson; Sidney of Cook of Jackson, Miss; Heide Christolear of Smith Center; Hixon Lehnenbaum of Topeka; James Ruffner of Van Pack of Prairie View. Each week over 130 hours of classes and other Law School activities must be scheduled into the three classrooms in Green Bay to accommodate difficult and sometimes impossible to avoid scheduling problems. Sometimes the room is too small to accommodate student demands. Sometimes, students find that course times conflict. Each floor nominated a program chairman to work with the staff to plan activities for the groups at Olive Thomas. said There are 33,000 square feet in Green Hall. Yet for a student living on campus at the University of Colorado's law school occupies 105,500 square feet. To get feedback of what the program chairmen, staff and assistant R.A.'s accumulated, a meeting is scheduled for th Despite the new bid opening date of June 27 announced by the Commission, it remains a possibility that further delays will occur over wage The building contains three classrooms, cubbyhole faculty offices that are too few to accommodate the students and lacks 3,500 books that are a part of its law library because there isn't room to squeeze them. The site for Clinton Reservoir is located 2.5 miles southwest of the dam. The site has proved-for-construction stage longer than any lake of its size in the region. Dickinson learned the best solution to the Law School's problem, which was education, but this would require money—and the University has received no funding for two years. We are also teaching classrooms or library space. Nationally, Law School enrollments rose from 41,499 in For a student body half the size of KU's the University of Idaho provides a building twice as large as Green Hall. early part of this week. For the variety of students living there this summer, there will be a variety of recreational activities. Ms. McNeil, director of Oliver Hall, according to Mary Ann Thomas, assistant dean of women and co-resident director of recreation. To relieve the situation next year, plains have been made to install a temporary building between Green and Dyche Hall to ceiling needing repair. The repairs would involve patching the walls and painting the floors. The floors were in a poor condition, according to Montague's survey, but floor cracks were often old and badly worn. 1961 to 94,469 in 1971 The nation - 147 accredited law schools, including KU's are able to admit students of all that those who want to enroll. If the legislature approves the funding, a new law building could become a reality by 1976 or 1977. The KU Planning Board has drawn up a priority list of facilities needed at the University, which will be requested of the school will be requested of the 1973 session of the Kansas Legislature, but will follow an addition to Learned Hall, and will also provide arts facilities on the priority list. provide space for the school's admissions office, placement office, student organizations and a private room for about 25 persons. According to Janet Reed, secretary to Dean Martin Dickinson, there were 1,850 applications for the 150 available places in AUF's first year class and bringing the total enrollment to 500. Thirteen per cent of the porches and or porch railings needed repair, replacement or removal. These are often premises in violation of the code, did not have the latches removed, and six automobiles stored or parked without license tags or ware tags, were stored in the area. The outides of five units were judged to need repair or paint. Several other minor violations of the code code were found on the properties. All Dress Shirts & Ties 15% Off Reg. $5*38 Kief's discount price $299 Malls Shopping Center on Columbia Records Double Knit Flares Reg. 18.00 to 24.00 Now All 14.99 at P Charlton Yvette Heston Mimieux Father's Day Gift SPECIAL HEATTREN REPORT I LONG THE BODY ELECTRIC Charlton Heston Yvette Mimieux PG SKYJICKED ENDSTUES. Eve 7:35-9:25 Hillcrest August 15 Child 75 Malls Shopping Center SKYJACKED ENDSTUES. Eve 7:35:9.25 Hillcrest April 13 Child 1 Discount Diamond Needles ACADEMY AWARD WINNER Kief's discount records P the Garden of the Finzi-Contini NOW IN ENGLISH Eve 7:30, 9:30 Mall 7:00, 3:00 Twilight 8:00 & Sun. at 5:00 Only Granada TRAILWAY - 13224 SAMSUNG Granada THEATRE • Highlands V13-578P A NOW SHOWING Charles Bronsor · Ursula Andress 'RED SUN' Varsity THEATRE ... telephone V1-1065 DEAN MARTIN BRIAN KEITH something big' AND John Wayne Richard Boone "Big Jake" Honors Technology G Boxoffice Opens 8:00 Ends Tuesday Sunset Made in Ireland THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Supreme Court Extends Legal Aid See Page 2 Tuesday, June 13, 1972 Death Count Reaches 192 in Dakota Deluge RIDCITY P, S.D. (AP) — The death toll stood at 19 on Monday night as rescue vehicles and firefighters tried to help. South Dakota Skies Seeded Before Flood OMAHA, Neb. (AP)—Two cloud seeding experiments were conducted in the Rapid City, S.D. area Friday before a storm unleashed a bleak claim which at least 175 lives, the Omaha-World report in a血ied story printed in its Tuesday morning editions. The story quoted a federal official, Archie M. Kahan, as saying the experiments were conducted by the Institute of Atmospheric Sciences, South Dakota University. The study was designed "for increasing water supply and studying the dynamics of ball production." Kahan was identified as chief of the Federal Bureau of Reclamation. Division of Natural Resources. One of the experiments was made about 5 p.m., an hour before the storm was believed to have begun, the World-Herald reported. The article quoted professor Arnett Dennis, identified as the chief of the institute's Meteorological Analysis Group as saying, "It, (the experiments) had totally and absolutely nothing to do with the storm in rapid City. I would stake my life on that." Dennis was quoted as saying the experiments involving dropped salt from an airplane which has been "the standard equipment in most US homes" in his six years of studying cloud seedling. The article also quoted professor Lewis Grant, identified as professor of atmospheric sciences, Colorado State University, as saying "an unusual atmospheric situation existed last Friday when we gave signal caution with cloud seeding." Grant was quoted, following a technical explanation of the area's weather, as saying, "In a normal situation there is no time to go skiing. So the stuff moves off the hills. But that was a situation you want to be real careful with because there's nothing to push the skis." Grant also said he "couldn't answer but effect the seeding had," the article said. The thrust of his explanation of Friday's weather, as reported by the World-Herald, was that moisture-laden clouds were over the area, while there was a lack of the moist air in the other regions. The moisture is moved back to the east by air flow over the hills from the west." The article said Grant reported he did not know how the seeding was done but said he "would be willing to take a serious look at it. It should definitely be looked at." victims of disastrous flash floods which bit this summer resort city on the weekend. The body count, made by newsmen and officials, represented a downward revision from the 208 figure given by authorities Sunday. The Monday night count included 31 killed. A Civil Defense said it had received final toll to surpass the 200 mark. Earlier Monday, Civil Defense officials had revised the number of dead at 175, but the figure did not include bodies recovered after noon Monday. PAT DIXON , a state civil defense spokesman, said the revision was made because of duplication of reports from various county agencies. "We're not just dealing with statistics at this point, the count will continue to rise"; Maj. Gen. Duane L. Corning, commander of the South Dakota National Guard, said. "Guardmans have been finding bodies in day. It will continue or days and days." Several hundred other persons were missing and thousands left homeless in the country. A RAPID CITY funeral home said it planned to start individual services for the flood victims at 9 a.m. Tuesday. A memorial service is planned Sunday. The death toll includes three National Guardmen. In Chicago, meanwhile, Frank I. Lewis of the American Insurance Association said that only about $1 million of the estimated $120 million in damages from floods and resultant explosions and fires were covered by insurance. He said private and commercial policies would likely cover any damage caused by explosions or fires after the flood but would not cover losses by the flood itself. THE INSURANCE association said that according to the Federal Insurance Administration, less than 50 policies had been sold in Rapid City covering flood loss. The FBI was on the scene helping identify bodies. They reported 16 victims伤亡. "Our biggest problem is finding the dead and the missing." Mayor Donald Barnett said. "Many bodies I'm sure, have already gone downstream to the Cheyenne River for the Missouri, the Mississippi and the Gulf. We'll never recover them." Authorities placed the missing at as many as 400 persons; estimates of damage topped $100 million. Much of the loss was in private dwellings, mobile homes and scores of cars crumpled like tinfoil by the racing wall of water. TWO THOUSAND volunteers and another 2,500 members of the National Guard deployed in 12-hour shifts searched for victims Monday. Under a hot, sunny sky, the guardsmen picked through the muck for the victims. They feared a buried knee of about 15 cars in canyon creek might produce more The floods were triggered when torrential rains flooded Canyon Lake, an earthen dam washed and Rapid Creek rushed out of its banks. The water supply remained off for the third day, prohibiting bathing and making plumbing facilities inoperable. Drinking water was not available. Force Base and nearby communities. A well was reported dry at Custer, one of the cities with water to Rapid City's 43,000 residents. Typhoid and tetanus inoculations were given to hundreds of persons swamped and infected. The Army Corps of Engineers reported a new problem developing in Sturgis, 25 miles north of Rapid City. Engineers said a dam built in 1903 was in danger of burial because it would be reduced to rupture pressure on the dam holding back 22 million gallons of water. NATURAL GAS remained off but telephone and electric service were normal. President of the Black Student Union, Diane Vann, was at the meeting to appeal an earlier ruling by Senate treasurer Bill O'Neill that the BSU could not pay for a meal at lunch. A new convention of the Student Organization for Black Unity out of their fund for field trips Credit Card Fee Plan Draws Banker Support The Environmental Law Society requested a shift of funds also. They wanted to use funds allocated for their publications, subscriptions and research to purchase a subscription to a publication entitled Environment Reporter. StudEx member, David Miller, argued that the National Environmental Law Society was not a functioning organization and that the study should be conducted at Library from student fees. He said that such money should come from the state and not student activity fees. The StudEx overruled O'Neill and approved the use of the $300 in the ISU field W Randy Gould was at the meeting to represent the Legal Self-Defense. He said that he was now a student at KU. Gould was successful in requesting a transfer of funds from the Legal Self-Defense Fund's line item for bail money to one for legal Lawrence bankers seem pleased that students enrolling next fall will be able to use Mastercharge credit cards to delay fee payments. Dennis Barritt, a vice president at the Douglas County State Bank, foresaw no new problems as a result of the new arrangement. Barritt explained that local banks dispensed MasterCharge credit checks on the new applicants. campus organizations requesting internal funding changes was the main order of business at the first summer meeting of the Board, Executive Committees (SBUex). Monday And Vic Johnson, assistant vice president at the University State Bank, said of the MasterCharge credit card, "We haven't pushed it hard." Not all banks in Lawrence rely on the MasterCharge card. The First National Bank dispenses only Bank Americard and expects no changes because of the new arrangement, vice president Bill Lienhard said. (1975) The orchestra is preparing for a concert. The conductor, Mr. Smith, leads the group. MasterCredit central banks in Kansas City do the credit checks, said Barritt. "We're more or less out of it, except we earn a percentage of the profits," he said. Barritt did not think the number of applicants for credit cards had increased by as much as she arranged. But he said, "We had to refill our applications out in the lobby." Al Hack, vice president at the Lawrence National Bank, said "We're delighted, of course, because we're a MasterCharge bank." See STUDEX, page 2 Bill Lebert, assistant vice president at Lawrence National, worked out the details Said Barrett: "I personally think it's a great idea." Music Campers Rehearse for Friday Concert Kansas Staff Photo by HANK YOUNG Junior high school music campers practiced Monday for their Williams, orchestra director at Lawrence High School. The concert grand concert which will wrap up the camp's week-long activities is scheduled in Hoch Auditorium. *Ticket Info:* $10 per student. StudEx Allows Blacks to Finance Trip from BSU Travel Account of the new MasterCharge credit card plan with officials from the University of Kansas. Lebert has received one call from a student about the plan but has otherwise noted no jump in interest in the credit cards vet. There will be a separate application form for students who want Mastercharge cards, said Lebert, because many students are not yet enrolled in the Lawrence National will not be involved in credit checks on student applicants. City National Bank in Kansas City will handle credit checks on new students and revenues from the newly issued cards will accrue to the City National as well. THE PRODUCTION COORDINATOR AND DIRECTOR OF THE MUSICAL "BROADWAY" WAS BACK IN ACTION WITH THIS NEW SHOW, AND THIS PHOTO Capture A Pleasant Encounter Between The Two Actors. Miller Explains Rules David Miller, right, Student Senate executive Committee (StudEx) member, explains to Louis Scott, vice chairman of the Senate Executive Committee, Monday that StudEx should only act when it would be impossible for the entire Senate to U.S. Jets Bomb Reserves SAIGON (AP)—U.S. warplanes struck Tuesday at stockpiling points above the demilitarized zone after heavy raids on the bases of Iraq's al-Qaeda leader that left a swab of fires and explosions. A score of B52s dropped 500 tons of bombs on caches inside the southern俯冲带. North Vietnam in summer supplied 36,762 troops offensive in the South. Most of the strikes were centered to the northwest and south of the enemy's miles north of the demilitarized zone. Thirty B52 bombers struck south of the DMZ against North Vietnamese troop concentrations in South Vietnam's two northernmost provinces of Quang Tri and Thu Thien. Quang Tri province fell to the enemy May 1. THE U.S. COMMAND said an OH6 light observation helicopter was shot down Monday 13 miles southwest of Hue, in the same area where two OH6s were lost Sunday. One crewman was reported missing and one wounded in the latest crash. Four crewmen were listed as missing in the two earlier losses. The command said 73 American planes and 50 helicopters had been lost to all causes in Indochina since the start of the North Vietnamese offensive March 30. TOTAL CASUALTIES reported by the command in these losses are 68 Americans Killed, 121 missing and 2 wounded. Thirty-nine of the planes have been lost over the past week and 40军队 are listed as missing over the Nebraska airbase claimed many of the men were captives. Radio Hanoi said North Vietnamese gunners downed a U.S. F4 Phantom on Monday in the area northeast of the capital city of Saigon. It made no mention of the crew's fate. On the far northern front, the Saigon command reported that North Vietnamese long-range 130mm artillery slammed 20 rounds of shells into the South Vietnamese defensive line at My Chanh, 20 miles north of Saigon, where casualties were described as light. HEAVY FIGHTING was reported on the southern front along the Cambodian border about 50 miles west of Saigon. The Saigon command said South Vietnamese forces repulsed a ground assault on government positions defending the district town of Tuyen Binh and clashed with the enemy in two swirling fight to the fuel fires and ammunition explosions roared across a wide area of North Vietnam on Sunday as U.S. warplanes picked off targets laid bare by previous bombs. AN ORANGE FIREBALL five football fields in diameter marked the spot where waves of Air Force Phantom jets struck a dense field of Hanoi and 25 miles below the Chinese border. Air Force and Navy fliers claimed touching off 27 secondary explosions and 25 fires in the raids Sunday aimed at reaching enemy forces in South Vietnam. Communist China said the American air strikes near its border with North Vietnam were "threatening the security of China." The Foreign Ministry in a statement broadcast by the New China News Agency from Peking, claimed "these frenzied acts of aggression" are not only "new war crimes" against North Vietnam but also provocations against the Chinese people." THE U.S. COMMAND reported Air Force, Navy and Marine fighter-bombers flew more than 280 strikes over North Vietnam Sunday. Neighbors of Naismith Hall have complained about noise created by Ted Owens' summer basketball camp that practices on the courts near Naismith. About 20 Air Force Pionners pounded the northeast rail line to China, leaving a 10-mile stretch of the tracks in flames and destroying the string of freight cars. Many of the cars were said to be loaded with war materials from China. Neighbors Complaining Basketball Camp Noisy According to Jack Rasing, 1801 Missouri St., no written complaint has been filed. But Rasing said many residents in the baskets and whistles the noise of basketball and whistles. "We resist use (of the basketball courts) on two counts," said Rasing. First, he said, is the "overpowering number" of people on the courts at one time. He estimated that the number was often between 60 and 75, and once was as "This is especially disturbing to us in the evenings when we like to sit outside and eat." The second count is that residents of the area resist what seems to be "an open check to use the grounds," according to Rasing. “As far as we know, these courts are not zoned for commercial use.” Raising said. “They are for private use, and as we see it, they do not bump does not exemplify private use.” Another angle to the problem, Rasing said, is that of renting nearby property. The noise bothers tenants, and others may twice before renting property in the area. Basketball camp, which lasts until July 3, isn't the only source of noise, he pointed out. Cheerleading camp, which follows it, provides its share as well. This is not the first year that noise has been a problem for the neighborhood, but until now, Rasing explained, the neighbors protests have been kept at a "low-kow" level. This afternoon at 2 o'clock some of the residents plan to attend a city commission meeting. "Somebody's got to," he said. Ted Owens, KU head basketball coach in charge of the summer camp, said "We're trying to get things worked out now." Owens said the problem had been 'blown out of proportion.' The boys are about as well-disciplined a group as one could find, he said, and he was very confident. "You have to 2 Tuesday, June 13, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Winn Assails Air Terrorism WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., has asked President Nixon to call an international conference on the prevention of political terrorism at airports and on airplanes. The Kansas congressman said the event would be held by the recent slaying of 28 persons at Tel Aviv. "Violence and murder in the air have become so conflicated that they constitute a serious world problem," Winn said. "Anytime extremists can export murder to another nation, they quickly recognise its duty to protect lives of innocent persons." Booze. Betting Berated TOPEKA (AP)—The Rev. Richard Taylor, executive director of Kansas United Dry Forces, said today the Kansas East Conference of the United Methodist Church had approved resolutions opposing liquor by the drink and legalization of part-mutual betting. He said he saw no hands in opposition when the resolutions were voted on Sunday in the closing session of the conference which represents representatives of the Methodist Church in the eastern third of the state. "Such proposals as liquor by the drink are attempts to make more available a harmful drug and would not benefit any but those who sell the alcoholic beverages," said the resolution. Kissinger Soothes Feelings TOKYO (AP) - Henry A. Kissinger said Monday his three days of fence-mendings talks in Japan were extremely valuable and pledged careful consideration of Japanese suggestions to improve strained relations. Japanese officials questioned about Kissinger's views on the war and accused him of blaming the bruised feelings in Japan caused by President Nixon's unilateral foreign policy departures. Voter Hopefuls Ineligible KANNAS CITY (AP)—A Jackson County Circuit Court judge ruled Monday against three 17-year-olds who demanded the right to register to vote. The youth contended they should be allowed to register and vote in the primary election Aug. 8 because they will be 18 before the general election in November. Attorneys for the city election board argue that the youngsters, with the possessions, all qualifications, including having reached the age of 18 by the date of the election for which he registered. Police Guard Daily News NEW YORK (AP) — Helmeted police wielding night sticks moved in Monday to help delivery trucks leave the plant of the New York Daily News, America's largest-circulation newspaper. They joined foot and mounted police who were already on duty guarding the newspaper which has been struck by 65 security guards. Fighting a man with a gun, the police stripped said Sidney Tomassi, president of Local 230 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. "But it won't make any difference after Thursday because they can't get any newsprint." Shultz Rebuffs Favors System TOPEKA (AP)—Lt. Gov. Reynolds Shultz, candidate for Republican nomination for the U.S. House, much as they tried to avoid it, the state's Republican leader Klausna would have to take sides on the question of whether the old political patronage system was better a way to run state government. "If men and women are put on the state payroll for what they need, then the taxpayers will have a better chance to get a dollar's worth of service for every dollar sent to *Tepocha*, Shultz said. "State government can be more efficient and more effective," said Kansas deserve something better than the 19th Century patronage system, but they won't get a job unless they demand it. Shulz said. THE LIEUTENANT governor's remarks were prepared for delivery to a Toneka civil club Shultz said he got into trouble last week with a few editorial writers, much to his surprise, for refusing to backtrack on a state highway director. "What I said was this: A person might be a nice guy and a good newspaper publisher or a good hardasser, but I don't think that gives him qualified to be a governor of highways," Shultz said. "With both the top administration of the highway department and the highway commission appointed by the governor," he said, "it seems to be that you are in charge, the program is too easy subject to manipulation for political motives. "I PROPOSED that the legislature write standards—concerning educational background, technical training and experience—for the director, and that the director be chosen by a bi-partisan panel appointed by the governor, the House and the Senate. Shultz said he believed that by insulating the director from politics, the public interest would be better served. "The Commissioners would still be appointed by the governor, so the highway department would not become just another bureaucracy beyond the reach of the people." Shultz said. SHULTZ SAID one editorial writer said he (Shultz) had attacked John Montgomery and his integrity. Alongside Highway 13 the for ward elements of the South "The politicians would serve as a check on the professional and the professional would serve as a check on the professionals of the politicians," he added. "If Mr. Montgomery was a thing, he would have an addition be based on a new article that opinion might hold some water, the lieutenant governor water." ON HIGHWAY 13, Vietnam (AP) - After 67 days, the seams of the North Vietnamese siege of An Loc are starting to burst. Vietnamese 31st Division, which the Vietcong had sent into the road, continued routing out diehard enemy infantry foot by foot from branches and troops. Seams of Northern Hold Over An Loc Weakening "But Mr. Montgomery isn't a haberdasher and the opinion doesn't square with what I said," Shultz告。 The reference to a hambassador apparently applied to Addison Meschke, Hutchinson, Kan., clothing store executive who served as highway director during the four years John Anderson Jr. was Kansas governor and the term of Governor William H. A trickle of refugees began leaving the devastated province capital at dawn Monday when a couple opened an open to civilians. This trickle soon became a flood of 10,000 people desperately scurrying over broken bridges, past bomb sites and to government vehicles, to government lines. INSIDE THE CITY, Vietnamese airborne troopers, who linked up last week with the embattled defenders, were probing gingerly at the last North Korea border as a rubbery a剖ation planting plant where tanks and infantrymen are still dug in. Porter did not rule out at- tention to no session of the league. She said that it was appeared doubtful that the chief Communities delegates could be signed. U. S. Ambassador William J. Applebarr was returning Paris after an absurd trip to South Africa and said, "We are going to keep trying to negotiate a set of agreements." Speaking in conciliatory tones and referring to the report about Thuy, Porter said President Nixon "is intensely interested in arriving at some kind of agreement in the moment of the Vietnam problem." JOHN MONTGOMERY, Junction City newspaper publisher, highway bringing in the three terms of Gov. Robert Deering. Route 13 is open," said the senior American adviser to the 21st Division. Col. J. Ross Franklin. "If we had incorrect predictions in the past, I feel we have a grip on it at days 1, 2, and 3, then we'll punch through." "That editorial writer never did get around to saying anything about my proposal to insulate the director from political pressure," she said. "He was more eager to deal in personalism than in ideas." North Vietnamese officials here said there was no word from Hand when Thuy would arrive in Paris. The refugees who started out from An Lc at dawn got through and arrived in An Lc. From An Lc south to a fire base near Chon Thanh in about eight weeks. an additional indication of his strong preference and hope that such a settlement can be achieved." In Washington, State Department officials said Porter's remarks indicated that a signal the United States has said it wanted before it would return to policy was not. But later Charles W. Bray, the State Department spokesman, told Washington newsmen no signal had arrived from Hanoi and that the basis for Porter's remarks in the report that Thuy was coming back with new instructions. "we lived 64 days in the bunkers," she said. "we left to go to the toilet, or to collect food we ate there. Otherwise, we stayed underground." She said one enemy rocket scored a direct hit on her bunker and killed her mother and son and two others. Kansan Photo by JOHN REED The airborne troops told the refugees to leave An Loc. Elderly Pham Thi Huea said, "dozen North Vernacularese were on the road south of the city. They did not stop us. Near 'Tan Kai' we found a girl. We wounded some. But we kept going. We were desperate." THEY WERE in a solid block on the highway about a mile long, mainly men and women, with some babies. They were the color of the red earth of Bihn Long Province, and one young wife, Pham Thi. A French press report from France that Mr. Xiu was peace negotiator. Xuan Xiu, that was returning so Paris with that Thuy was quoted as calling him to help. WASHINGTON (AP)—All sentences are entitled to be held by a lawyer represent them at the trial, the Supreme Court ruled. A few young men were among the refugees, but most of the men had been government forces, had been killed or were in North Viet-Tai "I buried my mother and in son the bunker," she said tearfully. OTHERYS SHOOK their heads with fear when asked to talk about the death of their father. PARIS (AP)—Prospects appeared bright morning for an early peace talks, with the possibility of new suppression in both the Vietnamese and U.S. positions. Court Extends Legal Aid Ruling Prospects Brighten For Renewed Talks The 7-2 decision delivered by Justice William O. Douglas guarantees legal aid to millions of courtroom practices in more than half the states, where trial is more likely for the more serious crimes. Budweiser KING OF BEERS ON TAP SANDWICHES gaslight tavern Col. Franklin said, "The refugees got through. That means we'll get through soon." Permanent Lock Threatens Tavern "My return here at this time is in a hearing today in Douglas County District Court, Judge Floy to have the Gaslight Tarm permanently closed as a public misuse Caffman will rule on Kansas Attorney General Vern Miller's request because of drug trafficking that allegedly occurred there in 1971. Unless the defendant is offered a lawyer and specifically turns one down he may not be imprisoned. Douglas said. While acknowledging broader constitutional questions could be raised by such recruitment laws, the court overturned the Kansas law on the ground that indigent criminal defendants were exempted from protections granted other debtors. DOUGLAS'S OPINION extended that decision to wipe out the entire population and misleavemen and petty offenses so far as the right to vote may be extended. The Supreme Court in 1963 first ruled that defendants charged with serious crimes must be provided with a lawyer for their "The requirement of counsel may well be necessary for fair trial even in a petty offense prosecution." Douglas said. IF THE FEES are not paid within 60 days, a judgement is entered against the defendant and a six per cent annual interest fee. trials if they could not afford one of their own cused of a crime be paid back within 30 days. "The statute before us embodies elements of punitiveness and individuality, the rights of citizens to equal treatment under the law," wrote Mr. Blankenship. The attorney general said the Kansas Constitution required a uniform and equal rate of taxation. IN ADDITION TO KANSAS, 17 other states and the federal government haveRecoupment but they differ widely in content. helped break down racial barriers in parks, swimming pools, hotels and restaurants. in the year 1962 "Given the wide differences in the statements any broadense of provisional terms their general validity would be inappropriate." Powell wrote for *The Atlantic*. The plan also called for the refining industry to provide at its own expense specialized police and fire protection. Tax Reform Plan Rapped by Miller TOPEKA (AIP) - Atyct. Gen. Vern Miller said Monday he was of the opinion that an effort by the company to provide a 'stable city tax levy against the property of the oil and gas refining industry' was unintended. The Kansas City, Kan. ordinance sought to suspend all other real and personal property taxes on the refining industry in Kansas and Missouri that would be equal to the city tax levies against such property K. LEROY IRVIS, a black who is the major leader of the lodge, represented Representatives, had argued in a suit that the lodge was required to serve all guests, regardless of race, so it held a state license license. "It is not material to the validity of the exemption or the tax imposed in lieu thereof, that the taxpayer agrees or is insisted on paying certain municipal services such as fire protection," Miller said. JUSTICES DOUGLAS, William J. Brennan Jr., and Thurgood Marshall dissented. guarantee of equality for all citizens. But Rehquist, in announcing it very several, said a license issue would require the state to make the club public in nature and to require it to be licensed. The state of Kansas brought the appeal to the high court after a judge on Friday had ruled in 1970 that the law had a "chilling effect" on the indigent's desire to exercise his right to own property. In a third ruling, the court refused to allow the clusion of Negroes as guests at a Moose Lake in Harrison Pa. . . the decision delivered by Judge Baird. The court can now face rulings that The decision, given by Justice Potter Stewart, could have a nationwide impact since most states provide for automatic reposition when the buyer buys in his installment payments. Justice Bryon R. White, speaking for the three dissenters, predicted that credit may be denied in any event, more expensive. StudEx... Continued from page 1 sultation and research. The chief of the Student Activity Center Board, Gene Roberts, was granted permission to purchase up to $500 worth of new tools and equipment for locks will be used by the new Day Care Center being built there. Discussion of the Senate moving to the Activity Center was postponed until the next StudFx.meeting. Robertss was also authorized to spend up to $75 for an air conditioner for the Curriculum and Assessment Center in the Student Activity Center. Bomb Explodes Aboard Aircraft Although the increase does not bring his salary up to minimum levels, it is important to the job with the idea of making money. The experience I am getting in University affairs and real matters is tremendous." O'Neill was granted an increase of $225 in salary for the summer. DETROIT (AP)—A bomb exploded in the baggage compartment of an American airlines shortly after frometropolitan Airport. Metropolitan Airport Monday night, forcing the plane to make an emergency landing, the law enforcement. Sheriff's Department said. At least eight persons, including two stewardesses, were knotted by Wayne County General Hospital to believe or be seriously injured. Eleven persons were reported injured, deputies reported. The plane ran off the runway after landing. The supervising nurse said all injuries were minor scraps and contusions and "most of them were just jucked up." It was not known whether the injuries were suffered in the blast, or when the plane ran off the end of the runway. Unofficial Air Strikes Confirmed An official in the Air Traffic Control Tower said there apparently was no serious damage on the aircraft, the sherrif's department said the blast in the baggage compartment blew a hole in the tail section. Retired May. Gen. Lavelle told the House Armed Services investigating subcommittee that continuation of the strikes could not have prevented the offensive and have made it more costly." The craft, Flight 96 from Detroit to Buffalo, N.Y., turned back about 15 minutes after taking off. WASHINGTON (AP)—Ousted air commander John D. Lavelle confirmed Monday that he ordered unauthorized strikes against North Vietnam airfields, missiles and artillery unit trying to stop the buildup "for Hanoi's invasion of the South." Lavele said he ordered the strikes begin in January halted March 10 after he learned false reports on three of the missions Gen. John D. Ryan, Air Force chief of staff, told the subcommittee he fired Lavale as 28 missions in indecina because of 28 missions involving 147 planes he said violated rules prohibiting all but "protective reaction" strikes in line with the 1968 bombing kill. "IF I HAD it do over I would do the same thing." Lavelle told a congressman, "but I would check reporting procedure better." Asked by a congressman if had been sent to higher headquarters and he saw no way to continue the strikes with further inaccurate reports. LAVELLE SAID he had ordered the strikes after his pilots saw and photographed a five fighter aircraft MIG jettfighters at three airfields just across the demilitarized zone, along with SAM missile sites, heavy 133-millimeter artillery guns, anti-aircraft guns and tanks. "forcing men to file these false reports" was a factor in Lavelle's dismissal, Ryan replied: "Yes sir. Very Definitely." He said he asked Gen. Cormack, commander in dress, for permission for the strikes and said he knew it was secret. He said he told the reply was for him to prepare a plan for such strikes. his air strikes although he said he doubted that Abrams saw detailed reports. XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Alexander's Specials Everyday Wide Selection of Gifts V12-1320 826 Iowa BEER SPECIAL Light or Dark PITCHERS $ 1 00 2:00-4:00 p.m. Monday Thru Friday Prices Good Thru June SHAKEY'S PIZZA FARLOR & Ye Public house 544 W.23rd 842-2266 The Super Sandal Swingle It's more you than shoe for breezy summer comfort. Authentic design, rugged good looks. Bitter Chocolate leather, with leather sole. B h.i.s h.i.s McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE University Summer Kansan Tuesday, June 13, 1972 3 At Basketball Camp Bud, the Drill Instructor A JOHN EASTON KU basketball ace Bud Stallworth delivers pointers at camp . . . Photos Kansan Staff By Pris Brandsted Not sure of results 5 So Ted Owens basketball campers try again ... And losers get to run a few lans around the field Royals Win Pittsburgh Exhibition, 11-6 PITTSBURGH (AP)—Carl Taylor and John Mayberry sluggled home runs to pace the Kansas City Royals to an 11-6 victory over the Pittsburgh clubbation baseball Monday night. The Royals have 13 bits on three of the Pirates' 'minor league pitchers to victory in the season,' the benefit of amateur baseball In American League action, Pat Dobson outdued Vida Blue with a three-hitter and Don Wood with a two-hit majority only run with a single, leading the Baltimore Orioles past the Oakland A's 1-4 Monday night. DORSON STRUCK out eight and wafted only one in outward bounds. The loss of the Cy Young Award and Most Valuable Player trophy in the 2013 season. Blue, a 24-game winner last season, left after giving up five hits in eight innings including Buford's run-scoring hit in the eighth, that sent him down to his third defeat without a victory this year. In St. Paul, Norm Cash and Mickey Stanley钻 base-empty holes in the field of what they continually pitched out of trouble Monday night as the Detroit Tigers edged the Minnesota Stanley connected off Blyeen, 7-6, for a 371-foot opposite field homeer to right to break a 1-1 tie in the fourth. CASH, WITH HIS 11th homer of the season, sailed a Bert Bleylen pts 385 feet to the right field bleachers with one out in the second to take the Tigers a 1-0 win on the nationally televised game. Niekro, 21, meantime, gave up nine hits before he was relieved after hurling six innings. But the Twins, who ran themselves out of two potential big innings, could only touch him for a single in the second. The victory, Detroit's second and first-hour four consecutive losses prompted the lead in the East Division of the American League over the American. IN NATIONAL LEAGUE gamesMonday, Lou Brock entered in the fifth inning and then robed the Los Angeles Dodgers with a spectacular catch in the seventh. Perquisitions to a 32 victory Monday night. Two innings later, with the Diggers's Duke Sims aboard a walk and two out, Brock raced far to his left past the 390-foot fence. But the game was a possible double off the bat of Los Angeles' Bob Bentine. The fleet Brock singled off the Didgers's Bill Singer, 3-7 to score Dal Mavill and snap a 2-2 tie in the fifth inning. Singer and Cards' right-hander Reggie Cleveland, 64, had duelled on even terms until the light-bitting Maxilluck duned an inside pitch which hit his bat and went into center field leading off the CLEVERLAW, who pitched a four-hitter, who sacrificed Maxwell to second base and Brock the middle for the winning run. Dusty Baker capped a four-run explosion with a sacrifice Fly in the air, and John Corbett crucified New York error as the Atlanta Braves, at home, beat the New York Giants. Baker's fly ball, dropped by batter field Tommie Agee but officially ruined a sacrifice飞球, Darrell Evans from third base Moments earlier, Evans had reached third on an error by third baseman Wayne Garrett that ONE WAY Kansas Photo by BAY TOTTEN Bicyclists Subject to Rules Bikes in some instances may be ticked ... start of the season, allowed the first two Brewers hit, a two-out first-inning single to George Scott and Rick Auerbach in the third. Cox pitched the final two innings for Texas, giving up only a ninth inning single to Scott, to take first victory in three decisions. Bicycle riders in Lawrence are not free moving spirits. They suffer from the same trials as the other cyclists, and follow rules similar to those for Bikes Subject to Tickets In Houston, John Edwardes and Tommy Helms supports Jerrick Reuss's six-hit kit with run-scoring singles in the fourth in the league at Astros at a 31 victory on Montrex Expos Monday night. ISU Leads Conference In Football Ticket Sales Bicycles parked on the street or by a parking meter in which This includes keeping off the sidewalks. motor vehicles Pre-season ticket sales at Iowa State University point to what will probably be the best season in college history. According to Jim Overert, Cyclone business manager at ISU, tickets have been moving upward. allowed two runs to score. "There is no question as to whether this will be our biggest year," stated Overerturf. A police officer said that licensing a bicycle was for the owner's benefit, especially since the rate is high. A stolen bicycle is easier to find if it is licensed. Otherwise it can be made of the bicycle to go on. Licensing of bicycles is required in Lawrence, although it is sometimes a year and may be obtained anytime from the Police Department necessary for the owner to give the serial number and make of money has not been deposited are subject to ticketing. A Lawrence Police Department spokesman said he keystroke ticketing rarely happened. Mike Paul and Casey Cox teamed for a three-hitter and Don Minchner hit a home run and double and knocked in four runs, leading the Texas Rangers past 71-64 at Arlington Monday night. "We still have not sold out any of our books," said Harold "Red. Reid of OU's ticket office, 'but the Oklahoma State game will be a disappointment.'" "We can't be sure of our sales at this point, since many of the orders have not come in," said Novovny EVANS, ATTEMPTING to move two runners along, bunted toward first and Cleen Jones to force play. But the ball got by Garrett, allowing both Hank Aaron and Sonny Jackson to score. Bicycle repair shops in Lawrence range from those that will repair only two brands of bicycles, to those that will repair only those bicycles purchased at other stores. One of the repair shops also rents bicycles for a charge of $2 a day or high-rise" or $4 a day for a tandem. At the University of Kanaa the athletic teams are about the same as the university's soccer team, voty, assistant athletic director, other the Nebraska game appears Baseball Standings The KU-Kansas State game at Manhattan seems to be a sellout but orders are still being taken. This year’s Nebraska game represents the first pre-season sellout in Cyclone football. Colorado game is also sold out. TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE! Offer expires July 1st 1720 West 23rd Street are sold out, but home game sales are not high. AMERICAN LEAGUE Paul, making only his second At the University of Oklahoma advance ticket sales are reported to be up only 2,000 over last year's sales. In recent years, Texas, Colorado and Nebraska W. L. Pt. G.B. Detroit 26 17 43 Baltimore 26 12 52 Cleveland 20 28 63 New York 20 24 53 New Jersey 20 18 47 18 14 64 Oakland 33 15 688 3 Chicago 30 18 625 3 Indianapolis 26 18 625 3 California 23 27 460 12 Kansas City 23 27 438 12 NATIONAL LEAGUE National League St. Louis 3, Los Angeles 2 Texas 7, Milwaukee 1 Arizona 1, New York 2 Houston 3, Montreal 1 American League Detroit 2, Minnesota 1, Oklahoma 1, Oakland 0 Pittsburgh W. 21 L. Pet. G.B. New York 13 18 64 Philadelphia 13 18 64 N.J. Logo 23 29 402 Montreal 20 29 402 Toronto 20 29 402 San Francisco 20 29 402 Cincinnati 31 19 620 Los Angeles 31 12 580 1/9 San Diego 32 22 870 Atlanta 24 26 400 7 San Jose 17 34 380 Tampa Bay 17 34 380 Father's Day Gift SPECIAL Double Knit Flares Reg. 18.00 to 24.00 All Dress Shirts & Ties 15% Off Now All 14.99 Malis Shopping Center THE OMBUDSMAN OFFICE IS OPEN During the Summer Session PURPOSE 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 for action. 3. To seek out intra-University injustices or inequities and initiate appropriate action within the jurisdiction of the University Judiciary or Student Court. SCOPE 1. All areas are open to the Ombudsman Office except the area of faculty promotion and appointment and extra-University litigation. OFFICE HOURS: Monday 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Wednesday 1:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m. AFTER HOURS CALL: Friday 1:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m. 842-4914 842-1961 OFFICE PHONE: 843-9412 864-3607 843-1938 843-7536 842-1505 4 Tuesday, June 13, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. ENTRANCE DO NOT ENTER KANSAN Photo by STEVE CRAIG Ecological Warfare Olaf Palme, Sweden's prime minister, really accused the United States of waging "ecological warfare" in Vietnam at the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment. Predictably, the U.S. State Department reacted quickly, calling Palme's accusation "one-sided," "unbalanced," and "incomprehensible." Furthermore, the U.S. was "deeply disturbed," said a state department spokesman, "that the Swedish prime minister had introduced what we regard as an extraneous matter" into the Conference session. Extraneous matter? Deeply disturbed? The irony is too good to pass up. Daily our B-52's drop huge 500-pound bombs on the Asian countryside, creating numerous craters, which have turned the land into an ugly mess. These craters measure 30 feet across and 15 feet deep, displacing 131 cubic hards of (extraneous) earth. On a routine schedule of four to five missions a day, a squadron of B-52's can create as many as 100,000 new craters each month. These water-filled craters in Vietnam have not only greatly multiplied the breeding areas for disease-carrying insects, but they have also, because of their depth, made the terrain unsuitable for rice cultivation. The Vietnamese, one would think, might be deeply disturbed to hear that our State Department doesn't conference is the place for a discussion of kelia malaria, berbicide and malnutrition. Intraneous matter? Between the years 1965 and 1971, the United States exploded 28 billion pounds of war debris throughout the Indochina countryside. This shocking figure represents an average of 142 pounds of explosives per acre of land, or 584 pounds per square mile. It little larger than the state of Texas. Big things do come in small packages. The environmental effects of these bombing raids are even more shocking. In hilly terrain, the explosions tear up the soil, causing large-scale erosion. The removal of vegetation and soil humus in and around the bomb craters makes the land permanently barren. The trees in Vietnam are riddled with missile fragments, causing infection by wood-rotting fungi. A recent study by the State Department refuses to discuss the facts at a world environmental conference. Such an attitude is both apalling and criminal. To systematically sterilize vast areas of land, causing a permanent ecological imbalance in Vietnam, and then to employ forceful killing of environmental experts, will weight heavily on our conscience at a later date. If the United States sincerely believes in the need to correct certain ecological imbalances, then she should begin by discussing the situation she has created in Vietnam. And what better forum could be offered than the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment to begin the much needed discussion? Mark Bedner NEW YORK (AP)—At least physical or mental or medical treatment or both, caused by lack of iron, a prominent pediatric病a sign preceding By ALTON BLAKESLEE AP Science Editor The majority of victims are adolescents and children who, in their illness, said the professor of pediatrics emeritus at Harvard Medical School and now at the University of Cali- One of the more tragic results of this iron-deficiency is growth failure in children with brain cells in infants who receive inadequate amounts of iron. "Iron deficiency is a systemic disorder in the growing individual, and it is one of the pre-school child, the adolescent in a spurt of growth in the pregnant woman nourishing a young child, who has bounds. New every and growing body need iron to attain its potential; Dr. Diamond said ANEMIC adolescents may have poor appetites, slowed breathing and attentionless, low motivation. In their lethargy they drift into an apocalypse of unrest. Iron Lack Harmful, Doctor Says Adults usually have few symptoms until and unless their anemia becomes severe. Then they may feel breathless, have a rapid heart beat, and a lowered chance for exercise or exertion. BUT LONG before anemia be diagnosed through blood tests, the patient has have loss of apetite, weakness apathy, slowed growth, and other For example, tiny amounts of iron are essential in the formation and action of many enzymes, or chemical governors of life. OTHER symptoms of iron deficiency may be increased irritability, weakness and frequent crying and disinterest in play, all of which "have often been the result of poor nutrition" proved by iron supplementation of food," or by giving medicines to iron-deficient men. Growth of brain cells may be diminished by insufficient iron before birth and in the 18 months afterwards. Dr. Diamond said. Iron deficiency has increased not only in girls but also in boys between the ages of 13 and 17. Dr. Diamond said. Poor diets, with youngsters eating snacks and poorly balanced meals, are one cause of the lack of iron, he said. ANOTHER reason could be ness, loss of ability to concentrate, low motivation and increasingly poor performance in their studies. "This same group, by age 15 and 16, has the largest number of disciplinary problems, of dropouts and delinquents." Foods rich in iron are generally the more expensive ones and therefore less often consumed by children. Fruits and vegetables med explained. These include meats, fish, eggs, green vegetables and fruits whether fresh, or dried. THIS WAS not unexpected in 5 and 6-year-olds, for studies of children with congenital anemia that start revealed anemia to the extent of 13 to 20 percent in the "In a recent survey in a large Eastern city, 27 per cent of 15-year-old girls and 19 per cent of 14-year-old boys were anemic. "The unexpected finding was the same high incidence of anemia not only in girls between the ages 13 and 14, but also in the 13 to 15. The highest percentages And so, curiously, it could be the fact of greater cleanliness in the kitchen than in the ordinary dirt used to contribute appreciable amounts of iron to cookware. state review of pre-school children in the National Nutrition Survey found an incidence of real anemia between 5 and 50, per cent. "AGAIN, THE large majority are black from low-income communities by independent investigators found a close association of illness with poor appetite. The same is true for fatigue, lack of attention." modern refinements of foods. Dr. Diamond said one motivation, and only one, to take up drugs such as heroin was that the drug's physical strength, and for self-protection joined groups or gangs, usages of drugs, and many drifted into drug use. Dr. Diamond said a recent 10- Best Sellers General Telephone & Electronics, and handles about 80 per cent of the nation's telephone calls. Phone Rate Rise Criticized HUMPHREY CHARGES DEM GOV MONKS BURY The "Stop McGavin" With profits from its manufacturing and research subsidiaries, it meted $2.2 billion in earnings last year, a comparison, General Motors, the world's largest industrial corporation, earned $1.9 billion last year. AT&T's first quarter profits were up 6 per cent to $392 million. FROM 1966 through 1971, local telephone charges rose 11 per cent and dropped a little over 4 per cent, while consumer prices rose 8 per cent. Since 1970, AT&T has boosted rates some $1 billion a year, or more. In the last two years, another $1.2 billion a year in 18 separate rate cases around the U.S. developed new ones, the quality of reports increased. The months of 1971 showed a 'significant over-all improvement,' over 1970, the study 11 Harrowhouse-Gerald A. Browne NONFICTION Since then, "Ma Bell's" appetite for new money has increased. AT&T raised $4.8 billion in 1971, accounting for about 11 per cent of all the new capital invested and bonds by American industry. AMERICAN Telephone is a giant holding company which owns or participates in 24 telecommunications companies, long distance division. It operates about 100 million telephones in 48 states and serves 350 million phones of its nearest competitor. Eleanor and Franklin-Josoph P. Lash Report from Engine Co. 82-Dennis E. Smith Despite this, the rate of earnings during the first part of the '60's was climbing. Technological version to the direct dial system for long distance calling, produced sharp economies. Telephone usage was increasing in 1970s and 1980s, handled, explained one industry. Telephone rates are set by local, state, or federal agencies, which balance between consumer demand and reasonable rates and investor requirements for a fair rate of payment. The agency has decided to leave rate decisions in the hands of these agencies within certain boundaries. "The increases are necessary so we earn enough money to provide first class service. F, M, T and AT&T vice president, said. Beginning in 1969, telephone traffic nearly doubled its growth rate from that of the previous couple of years. TO MEET THE unexpected burst in demand, AT&T pumped more money into plant construction. While in inflation was rampant and interest rates were soaring, financing increased for the company per cent. The company gulped A World Beyond—Rub Montgomery Open Openhip—Nena and Oge 'Neil im M.Ok. You O.K.-Thomas Harris be a Uniform-Anne Morrow Lindbergh AMERICAN Telephone said telephone charges had not kept pace with increases in other countries, and had bitten deeply into earnings. This reduces the attractiveness of Bell System stock and bonds, the company said, making it more difficult for users to money to meet service demands. down $2.5 billion from bank loans, notes, and bond issues. Interest expenses in 1971 more than tripped 1966 levels, and wage costs among the 24 Bell company rose 70 per cent, AT&T and others. During the five-year period, it added, increased by about two-thirds. The Game of the Forest - Ladislai Parague The Boys of Summer - Rooftah Kahn Jonathan Livingston Seagull - Richard Barch "The reason AT&T needs so much money is because of poor customer service in a Federal Communications Commission attorney appointed to oversee one rate case. "If regulation merely covers up these mistakes, then the company will lose." SERVICE, which had deteriorated at key cities around the country, began to improve, according to a 20-city FCC survey. Most of the cities still had problems and Atlanta, Milwaukee, and Pittsburgh Compiled by Publishers' Weekly The Defense Never Rests--F. Lee Bailey with Harvey Armson In little over two years Bell companies have won rate increases in 35 areas of the country and 78 in other areas. Fourteen of these areas already have had one rate hike in the same period and Wisconsin has In explaining the need for rate boosts, AT&T & Chairman John D. deButs said recently, "Only by providing reasonable return to their investors can utility companies, our own included, can we expand capacity it takes to expand capacity to meet the public demands." The Witch of War, Harman Wook The Wizard of Oz, W. W. Powell The Exorcist, William P. Matley The Tortoise, Bill Murray The Terminator, Michael Charlton The Godfather, John Galt The Assassin, Eliza Kahana The Maze Runner, Neil Gaiman Critics claim the conventions plantation does not ode to the women who live there where they live; they may also have a harsh word to say about them. HE STRESSED he was not suggesting that correcting the anemia would cure all the maladies and, or steer kids from drugs. NEW YORK (AP) - Telephone rates are going up in most of the country and American Telephone & Telegraph Co., last year the world's top money maker, is the company with $1.2 billion in 18 separate cases. "It may be one handle by which to take hold of the problem of managing the disturbed adolescents or ignored while we tackle the more difficult problems of poverty, crime corruption, unrestricted as wide as local disruption of human civilized law and order." More Books Looked at By DAVID BURKE AP Business Writer By DAVID BURKE Also on hand, though it will be dagebited mightly soon, is B. Zanger's LEAGUE BASEBALL 1972 Player-coach biographies, previews, forecasts, schedules, team-by-team analyses, information on last rookies, anecdotes of last trades, anecdotes, records, trades. Two interesting collections, too. One is edited by Robert Hoskins, WONDER-MAKERS: A LIFE OF SCIENCE FICTION (Premier, 95 cents). Poet, Bierce, H. G. Wells, Kiping, Forster, London, Doyle, Benet are on hand here. The other is edited by Raymond Van Dyke, Littleton, CHINESE LITERATURE (Premier, 95 cents). There's also a valuable new volume out for the student involved in preparing papers for the WEBSTER POCKET DICTIONARY OF SYNONYMS (Pocket, $1.25). Entries are alphabetical and cross-worded, and it's a handy guide. H. R. Hays' THE R. HORSE SEX (Pocket, $1.25) attract many readers. It treats age-old hostilities between the sexes, taboos, homosexuality, and what he sees as men's war on KU Work Study Funding Is Fourth The University of Kannas not only has the largest enrollment in the state, but also the wealthiest. Senator Bob Dole concerning the federal funds allotted for the College program during the next fiscal year. A total of 53 Kansas institutions of higher learning will receive $2,850,289 during the 1972-73 fiscal year, which begins July 1. With a large number of applicants, amount it will receive. Those institutions to receive the largest allocations are Fort Hays Kansas State College with $341,256, Kansas State University with $324,864, State University with $18,684. This program provides federal funds to pay 80 per cent of student employeSalaries, Bernie Taylor, M.D., will be provided at KU, said Friday. The college or university is to provide the re-education through its various departments. By BOB FULKERSON Kansas Staff Writer The Work Study Program is part of the Higher Education Act of 1865, and it is designed to expand part-time employment opportunities for students, particularly from low-income families. AN APPLICANT must be able to demonstrate a real need for financial aid, be a full time student in good standing, and be a citizen of the United States or have the permission of becoming one. Taylor said. "Work Study funds are not being withheld from KU because of past troubles or any government dissatisfaction with KU. KU doesn't have as many students from low income families as some smaller Kansas colleges The federal government follows a complicated formula that rules on how universities shouldOWER another on any basis other than financial need," he said. Recalling the small beginnings of the Work Study Program, Taylor said, "In 1967, we had 33 students on the program. Last year we had 617 out of approximately 1000 who applied. Currently, the size of the program here is less than half of that of federal money coming in." ONE OF THE most important tasks of Taylor's office is determining the eligibility of students to the Work Study Program. "If the applicant's parents' gross family income is over $8,000, their chances for eligibility will be lower," said factors into consideration, such as the number of children in the household or medical expenses," said Tayler. "Our policy is that the student's parents should be involved in their student's education. There are many reasons why this cannot always be the case, beginning with the fact that students occasionally more complicated situations arise, such as conflict between parent and student. "WE TRY TO be as flexible as possible, and still see that those needing financial assistance the most receive it." The 20 per cent of the student's salary provided by KU comes from the individual department where the job is performed. The other students are referred eligible students to the various school departments that have made their requests for student employees based on funds available within that depart- The Office of Student Financial Aid also attempts to direct applicants to jobs that match their areas of interest. One such student is Emily Cohen, a renaissance sophomore. He is majoring in anthropology and has a part time job at the Museum of Natural History. Eakin is in charge of filing mailing requests which the museum receives for its publications. "SUMMER JOBS are very hard come to you, especially Eakin Years," and this job gives me $1.70 an hour, and I'm working around mate-crush. Eighty-five departments at KU are housed in the building with the opening price $390,411 for the upcoming year. Requests are made to the Office of Academic Affairs, 850 W. Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10026. money according to each department's ability to pay the 20 per cent of the student's wage. Most available positions are clerical, but there are also unusual jobs such as museum guards and animal animal care. The library and the KU Computation Center are the largest single employers. The hourly wage, which may vary from company to company, each department. The higher wages are paid to students working on graduate research project. MANY STUDENTS are working at KU this summer through the Work Study Program. Students may amount they may earn during the summer, as they may be during the regular session, but they must sign a paper promising to save 60 per cent of their take-home income to KU as a full-time student during the coming school year. Taylor said this was to provide assurance that the individual was using the Work Study Program for educational purposes at KU. He added that financial promises, financial assistance could be withheld in the future. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN NEWS STAFF News Adviser ... Del Brinkman BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser ... Mel Adams Business Adviser ... Mel Adams ... Doug DeTray Griff and the Unicorn I CAN'T MAKE THIS SPELL WORK. I CAN'T MAKE THIS SPELL WORK I NEED AN INGREDIENT THAT'S JUST IMPOSSIBLE TO GET WHAT IS IT, LUCRETIA? A LOCK OF HAIR FROM HOWARD HUGHES I NEED AN INGREDIENT THAT'S JUST IMPOSSIBLE TO GET By Sokoloff WHAT IS IT, LUCRETIA? WHAT IS IT, LUCRETIA? A LOCK OF HAIR FROM HOWARD HUGHES A LOCK OF HAIR FROM HOWARD HUGHES S "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." University Summer Kansan Tuesday, June 13, 1972 2. h epart 20 per may set by higher work proj- provide was jogram at KU. their instance future. DeTray Sokoloff. ' Manager Justifies May 22 Price Rise 20c DEPOSIT 2 BONDS DIME AND 2 NICKELS OR MONEY CHANGE Put Another Nickle In Price of canned soda on campus jumped in Mav Free Study Is Reviewed The institution will study the purpose and interest of university management. College is in a dormitory college is in a business district college is in a hospital district in one of the same areas. Students in the program selected an area in one of the fields, selected an adviser from the faculty, and studied study project under the adviser. Two of the four students who started in the program at its beginning in the fall of 1970 have participated in more than two persons dropped out, he said. One of the two students to finish the program was Marilyn Parsons. Oklahoma City, Okla., junior. Cobb said the program consisted of independent study projects in the three main areas of education, humanities and a fourth project "Parsons said, 'I'm glad I took the time to study from it. You can study things like that. You can get things done without the sole motivation being yourself." The United States Senate and Irregular conference committee agree to reallocate funds to rebuild multimillion-dollar program to rebuild rural communities Rural Renewal Measure Wins Committee Approva Grants would be provided to improve conditions through such practices, setting up industrial centers, and setting up industrial centers, providing jobs for the unemployed. The Rural Development Act grants $30 million year in grant to extend extensively expand loan authority for intensive rural-development projects. If the bill is passed in Congress, approximately $300 million would be appropriated toward water and waste-disposal projects. It would cost 75 million a year would go for fighting pollution in rural areas. The legislation's goal is to be a catalyst for revitalization of rural America in an effort to encourage economic reversals in many communities currently damaged by business decline and physical The legislation also extends the 10-year conservation program, already in effect for the Great Plains, to the rest of the nation. Senator James Pearson said that he supported the bill. He said that Kanans could expect many benefits from such an act. Congressman Larry Winn said that the bill combined such agencies as the Food and Drug Administration. Housing and Urban Development and the Environmental Protection Agency for rural areas. The bill will reach the floor of the House sometime after July 17, according to Winn. Winn said he would probably vote for the bill, but added he needed to study the bill before making a definite decision. Senator Bob Dole said that he would give his full support to the governor, saying in a report that the senator believed that rural Kansas could benefit from improved water. The program starts with the students first semester and ends four semesters later. The first three semesters, Cobb said, are graded pass or fail. During the second semester, his letter are graded given. Parsons started the program when it began and has taken concentrated courses in psychology, linguistics and biology since project was a biology since that will be her mother, she said. Students in the program substituted the independent study for the regular freshman and junior students. Parsons said. Also, students in the program could audit classes of interest to them without fear of Parsons said that she was glad she was in the program because it enabled her to take course that she wanted, otherwise been afraid to take. "I would have been afraid to take art history knowing that I would have to memorize all those slides." she said. Cobb said that he had some reservations about the program. He said, wondered the program was long time in a student's career and wondered if students should have more, a foundation before taking up the program. As of May 22, the price of canned soft drinks rose from 15 cents to 20 cents in the 70 vending machines on campus. The price change is legal under the wage and price control guidelines, said Forrest Jolly, vending manager. A check with the wage and price board office in Topeka confirmed this. Jolly said he made the decision for the price raise after months of deliberation with other Kansas Union officials. "THE DECISION was made in order to bring the price of canned soft drinks into line with other products from other products," the other products, "Jolly said." The increase did not effect the price of soft drinks in cups, which may still be purchased for 10 cents. Jolli explained that under the Phase II guidelines if more than 10 per cent of a product is sold at the price for that product, the price for all that product sold may be increased to that highest price, and still be eligible for the 5 percent discount. Kansas Union Concession, a division of the Kansas Union Conference, offers vending operation on campus. Jolly said the Union contracted the KU soft drink companies, Coca-Cola, Pepsi, and SevenUp, which supply the "WE OWN 50 of the 70 machines on campus and pay depreciation over a five-year period." Jolly said. Jolly pointed out that a route repair man worked a five-day week whereas the Union main-line major repairs seven days a week. One new machine for the Union building cost $986. A National Automatic Merchandising Association survey of vended prices showed that for the 2013 season, Nebraska and Missouri, 68.4 per cent of canned soft drinks sell for more than 15 cents, and the others were between $1.75 and $2.99. maintenance of the machines. The survey also showed that for soft drinks in cups, 89 per cent are more than 10 cents nationally. Jolly added. FRANK BURGE, Union director, pointed out that the KU campus was one of the last places to raise the price of canned soft Burge said that although soft drinks were available in cups, the cans sold out two or three times faster. Jolly attached this to the fact that most people were not familiar with coffee despite the talk of ecology Jolly said people should remember that the six pack sold for 80 cents in the grocery store and that they can get it at customers and the retailer business, honey at that price." "A case," Jolly said. "and we have to contend with the price of the machines, the labor and maintenance costs and the cost of change for each machine." This is because the Federal government raised the parity to 100% and required processors to raise their price to be competitive with the gover was losing money at that price Jolly said he was "almost sure" the milk price would be raised, but noted that if the price had not been raised the price would not be raised. JOLLY SAID there had been no other price increases for vended products, but he anticipated the rise from 10 cents to 15 cents. "Regardless of the price, the benefit goes back to the students." Jolly said. HE EXPLAINED that residence halls got five per cent of the gross of all vending sales in the fall. They also used for the hall's Library Fund. They also have use of the Union for change with no charge. "All of the profit from the company," he said. "Union to support student activities." Jolly said, "there is no one on marking up a profit-sharing Local Group Studies Trials Of County's Senior Citizens Chaired by Rowena Pine, the committee, made up of spokesmen from various service organizations in the area, agreed that an information center should be established as soon as possible. Two of the greatest problems of senior citizens in the Douglas County area are the lack of an enrolment system and the lack of legal, recreational and employment services and the lack of transportation to make it easier for them to attend. These and other problems were discussed Wednesday during a meeting of the informal county committee on asking. Although there are many programs for people over 60 in this area, there is very little transportation available, and the public has little possibility of a mini-bus subsidized through federal funds. The mini-bus, according to the senior citizen, makes scheduled trips for senior citizens to supermarkets, doctor's offices and recreational centers. The committee on aging was established in March by Al Amin, the former secretary of the aging bureau of the Kansas Department of Welfare. He said he believed there was a need for specialized services to coordinate the existing services for the aged and to secure for them additional help in other areas. The Putt-Put miniature golf course has been offered free for use by senior citizens during morning hours but a lack of transportation has prevented them from taking up the offer. KANSAS CITY. Mo - Mike KANSAK CITY. Mo - Mike WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 716 North 2nd WHY RENT? SUNY New York at St. George RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843-8499 3020 Iowa (South Hous 591 Freebags 10 words for teacher £2.75 each 480th word £3.95 Sheping rooms - furnished, with or without kitchen privileges, for males, off street parking, boarders KU and nearby. New to town. Phone 843-7567. Phone 843-7567. 3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59) For rent for summer at A.C. furnished ap in private home. Walk to camp- nise, not, but reasonable use. 843-651-100 West 19 Terrace. 843-651-200 East 19 Terrace. Available now: 2 tm efficiency apt, Formited, private, private entrance, bq: 2, buck from carport: $750, bq: 1, buck from kitchen: $600, 843-7630 6-15 843-7630 6-15 NOTICE to campus, 1216 Louisiana, 445-1601 & 441-3223. SUMMER GAY LIBERATION Education and friends. Meet every chairman, teacher, librarian, dentist Union, Office B-112 Union, B-434-409, Writer Box 22, B-14, 14-6 Sandals handcrafted to your personalized taste at HODGE PODGE. 13 W. "h" 6-19 Notice Girl's summer earrings at the Hodge Podge 15 W. 9th 6-19 SUMMER DANCE classes now enrolling Lir Hatzin Dance Academy. Jazz, taza, bachata, aerobatics, ballet, adajut. Call #425-3875 *6-0875 6-15 HELP WANTED ENGLISH TEACHER will do willing and fattering M.A. in English, 7 years college experience. Will also edit themes and dissertations. #422 Responsible couple or single student to live in, pleasant air-conditioned house during latter part of summer if desired 812-4088-614 TEACHER OPENINGS Current listings of hundreds of California schools in San Diego, $15, California School Placement, 1974 Thousand Oaks, Berkeley, Calif., 1974 Oakland, Berkeley, Calif. TYPING MISCELLANEOUS Experienced typist will type your term paper, thesis, or dissertation. Electronic typesetting prompt, accurate formatting, and organization. Phone 813-2857. Phone 6-233 Theses, term papers (typed accurately, promised) IBM SIS System elite type TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TEXAS INSTRUMENTS REASONABLE TABLES KOANDA University 842.797-879, 842-5605 ] Pipes, papers, and all smoking accessories are available at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 6-19 Specialized instruction in Classic and Flamenco concert guitar for beginners, techniques, progressive, selected techniques, playing styles, playing telephone. MA-21010. WANTED USE KANSAN WANT ADS Wanted people to share house. $65 for food and rent. 843-1919. 1340 Tennessee. 6-11 JAROLD'S B42.3546 Laurence, Kansas JAROLD'S Diving Supplies Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I. Equip. in Stock Certified Instructor sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches, Strawberries, K to K. Chesapeake. Our there is no substitute in luxury! in good food. 843 8500 Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge Phone 843-1431 Open 4:30 Closed Mondays DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS V 928 6 Tuesday, June 13, 1972 University Summer Kansan Student Likes Roach Study BY BOB FULKERSON Kansas Stuff Writer Bugged by your summer job! Consider the work of Gary Samson, the owner of several thousand live cockroaches in a controlled laboratory. Sams is a research assistants working under the supervision of Dr. William Baldwin, professor in the departments of entomology and physiology and biology. Sams seemed at ease with the insects Monday as he handled and displayed the various types of lichens found around the world. I STARTED working with cockroaches about a year and a half ago. They were nice, but a bit hard to get used to. Now the only thing I think of when I handle them is the possibility of developing an allergen-free cocktail. He explained that it was not the fault of the roaches but rather a natural reaction of the human body to the presence of substances over prolonged periods of time. Sams said he tried to handle the Kansas varieties as little as possible because those were the ones he came into contact with. Sams explained that the roaches were used for various experiments but his area of interest was primarily the study of those cockroaches that had egg layers in the egg pods for experiments. "AMERICAN ROACHES lay eggs." Sams said, "but not all roaches do. For instance the Cuban roach gives live birth." "The American female coach "the American female coach approximately 10 to 15 eggs has about 20 to 30 eggs in it. It takes 20 days for the eggs to batch. It takes 20 months to mature and they may live for as long as two years," he wrote. Some cockroaches have unusual defense mechanisms. Sams showed how to reach were given water in large test tubes with cotton wadded in the middle of each tube and moistened moisture by chewing on the America for instance makes a hissing sound when pushed or attacked. "THIS ONE from the Florida Everglades can spit acid that will burn your skin," Sams said, as he pointed out the cracks on the cones. "Roaches are stupid," Sams said. "They keep trying to get out of their containers when they fly, and then than they ever would outside." "When I first started working here, I used to trap cookeries on the lawns' on campus," Sams said. "Now a few are in the tunnels." The hissing roach from South to make it worth my while." I Kensan Staff Photo by LINDA SCHILD HE TRAPS the cockroaches, he, says. "Galion maya maximale bottom and petroleum jelly around the inside of the neck. They can't climb past the petroleum jelly when they're to get Sams said that cockroaches could live one or two months with no food, but that without water at least once a week they would die. SAMS SUGGESTED that to get rid of aluminium oxide should be sprinkled where the roaches are frequently seen. The aluminium oxide removes the outer covering from roaches' leaves and causes them to retain water and causing them to de diehydration. Sams said that another method of exterminating the insects involved a simple but effective red powder that can be bought in any drugsurge and placing it in pop bottles or bottles should be placed where the roaches are suspected to be. The solution would cause the roaches to die. SAMS IS INVOLVED in the study of the reproduction cycle of the cockroach. Some of the other research being conducted in the laboratory have focused on theigation of the possibility that cockroaches secrete substances which cause them to cluster and enables one reach to follow the migration. Job Doesn't Bug Him "If that substance could be isolated and manufactured, it might be used for trapping roaches," said Sams. When asked whether or not he would be available for trapping he said he'd be fine, but who felt they had more than their share, Sams said he might if it wasn't that important. Headquarters Inc., a drug abuse and personal crisis center, has added 43 volunteers for the summer, raising its staff to 60 Training Program to Begin Monday For New Headquarters Volunteers Ricil Silber, director, said the program would begin Monday. The week training program will include of form and practical experience. "One-half of the training," he 400 Expected to Attend 3-Day Bankers Meeting said, "will be formal and consist of lectures, discussions and role playing. We will have staff members and some professional people giving the lectures. The other half of the training will be followed by a conference on the phone working with some of the problems." Panelists will be Harold Hollister, senior vice president, City National Bank & Trust Co., Senior Vice President,erner, senior vice president, First National bank, senior outfors, The Royal Bank of Australia, President, Mercantile Trust Co., St. Louis, and William Enright, Senior vice president, AmeriBank vice president Other speakers during this clinic will include Sen. Robert F. Bennett, R.I., and Sen. Patrick W. Mitchell, Washington, D.C.; a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; and Leonard J About 400 men and women who serve as officers or directors of the University of Kansas today for a 3rd annual Bank Management by the Bank Management Association in the Kansas Association The session, which will run through Thursday, will feature discussion of state legislation and the potential for interimars, insurance, the payments system and the Federal Reserve's role in the system. The Hunt Commission will consider the economy and interest rates. One of the two nuclear reactors in Kansas is on the University of Kansas campus in a building the Abinger Center. Accessed 15th Street from the Jayhawk towers apartments, the building houses the departments of biophysics, chemical engineering and civil engineering. The department of biophysics has a number of functions. Shaw said the department is responsible for investigation of radiation physics to determine how radiation will affect life. The nuclear reactor itself is a huge blue structure, taller than the average room that houses the reactors. This is which is the source of radiation. Yet this particular reactor is small as reactors go, according to Edward I. Shaw, professor of physics, only for training and research. SILBER SAID that Headquarters maintained a 24-hour staff of usually two persons. Also, important is health physics, in which there is strict supervisory control by well-trained personnel using radiation materials. Other areas covered by the department are general physics and medical physics. The study of heat affects the growth of bubbles is important for the use of air-boiling bubbles in air-planes as refrigerators and air dryers. THE CHEMICAL engineering department is involved in several research projects this summer, and Russell Mesier, professor of chemical engineering One of the most successful Science Foundation, supports selected undergraduates and graduate students from KU and several other campuses in theinking and collageing air bubbles. Sheilding for medical radiation units is designed by persons in biophysics The department also studies radiation effects to see how radiation produces abnormalities, and studies medical physics. This involves research in the development with the KU Medical Center. Nuclear Science Explored Here conditioners. Bubbles formed in a controlled tank of water are filmed by a high speed camera and measured and recorded. This procedure led to the discovery 10 years ago by Franklin D. Moore, Ph.D. (now at KU), that the bubbles emit the most heat at the beginning of their formation and not, as is often thought, after they are fully formed. THE STUDY of cavitation, or cavitation air bubbles, is another important aspect of program. These, too, are filmed by high speed cameras and In an ecozy Oriented program the department is developing a system to develop a fuel similar to natural gas. If the system proves to be economically feasible, it will be used. Msier said. A decrease in feedlot pollution would be possible and the decreasing supply of fuel would improve. fuel would also be beneficial to mankind because it is a clean fuel. The civil engineering department is a graduate program from which students may earn the Masters and PhD. degrees in Environmental Health Engineering or Science with B.S. degree. The studies covered by this department include water pollution control, air pollution control and solid waste control. On the door to the building is a notice, "Warning, do not enter building if siren is sounding." The control of the radiation materials has been so complete that this warning has never been put into effect, except for routine drills, or special drills, according to Shaw. WORCESTER. Mass. (AP)- Police and FBI agents recovered Monday four stolen art works valued at more than $1 million. Thieves Return Paintings Returned to the Worcester Art Museum where they were stolen in a daring daylight hold-up May 19, 2013. Gauguin, one by Pablo Picasso and one by Rembrandt. The paintings were reported in relatively good condition, although Guauguins had a damaged frame. Three men and a woman have been jailed on charges relating to the robbery. All face court hearings Thursday. is hearing evidence on the robbery in which a guard was gunned down. 1020XI Advanced United States Independent Telephone Association: 8 a.m., Kansas Union International Room. Police Chief George D. O'Neill said he would not disclose where they were located or how they were found. FBI agents said release of the information was under control or how they were found. Campus Bulletin Number Orientation 9 a.m. Parlors Physical Education Symposium 9 a.m. Management Clinic 10:30 a.m. Bank Management Clinic 10:30 a.m. Woodruff *occurred NEWA:巾亚.* Walkins Room Bank Management. 12:15 p.m. Ballroom Symposium. 1:30 p.m. Council Room Bank Management. Coffee. 3 p.m. CAUTION CAUTION RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS them and be able to handle the next problem of that type better." he said. Headquarters has operate since last June and has been increasing and expanding since then. For example, last June, Silber said, Headquarters had 200 people on staff, about 823 cases were handled. Silber said that he hoped to draw more community residents into the program. He wants adults to work as the unrecognized volunteers and bandle the increasing amount of adult calls that are coming in Also, Silber said that the type of problems handled was expanding. Drug problems were the biggest organization has expanded and now handles problems such as loneliness, depression, suicide, family and friend problems, birth runaways, draft and others. Radioactive Materials Studied Roger Burkart traces effect on marine life ... Kansan Photo by CLAY LOYD Bank Management Coffee: 3 p.m. Jayhawk Room. Advanced SUNITA: 6 p.m. Walkins Room. Advanced USITA: 6 p.m., Watkins Room. Bank Management: 7 p.m., Ballroom. Haliburton Center: 7 o'clock, Counsel Room. ABOUT 40 TO 50 per cent of the calls are from high school students and younger persons. About the same amount are calls to students, he said, leaving about 20 to 30 per cent of the calls to adults. "We are trying to develop a program to serve the community. We need the needs of the community. If a problem we have, we will problem we will try to refer Silber said that most of the calls came during the evening when he called her. "The number of calls keeps increasing, he said, another phone line will be available." use of the card catalog or reference materials. Santow, New York, vice president and economist, Aubrey G. Lanson & Co., Inc. "The new system is not a way to get out of answering questions as a kind of sageman." As a service organizational main purpose is to serve people. The University of Massachusetts is now using this tour plan. If the system works at KU, it may be expanded with the help of Jaguars. Personally guided tours of Watson are still available. Some local labor unions, Boy scouts and 500 high school students, say they wanted to participate in the camp-in. Rubin, known in the field of education for busing of school children, has organized rallies which have been held by some groups. Library Starts Written Tour Students are given a sheet of paper with the tour of the library detailed. With diagrams and numbers to follow, it is simple to read. This simplicity allows the tour to take the tour unassisted. Adapted as an additional way to simplify orientation, the sheet does not place emphasis on the If a student does not take the car during orientation, he can use his guide sheet or himself. The guide sheet is also expected to help students who are new to driving. Approximately 1,200 fall freshmen who started orientation Monday will try a new library touring system at Watson Library, according to Nancy Kingman, associate reference While Dade County officials have not yet announced what facilities will be provided for the protesters during the Democratic gubernatorial election, Republican Convention Aug. 21, 23, they are expected to establish tent cities on beach areas and in neighborhoods away from the convention site. He sent letter to Miami Beach Attorney Jonick Warren who advised camp members be allowed to camp from the first week of July until the last week of August in Senior High Athletic Field To simplify the hectic orientation routine of getting I.D. cards and taking medical examinations, Watson is trying a new tour system. This system is designed for students who will tour the library if the tour can be taken at their leisure. RUBIN HAS collected some 2,000 signatures of local residents to be provide support for *e* demonstration, and that they can report. "We plan to get there the first with the most and keep these people from usaspring our parks and city," said Elis Rubin, an antiprotester back home with an antiprotesters group backbone. Operation Backone MIAMI BEACH (AP)—Hundreds of hardhats, Boy Scouts and high school students have demanded the right to camp on public facilities that officials said would be needed to house 200,000 protesters expected for the national political conventions. Group Attempts to Block Unwanted Miami Visitors plans to demonstrate at the conventions. They include the Sixth Inter-American War, Yippies, the Gay Liberation Front and Southern Christian University. "IF WE are refused permission to camp, then we will have established legal precedent in getting a permit and get an injunction to keep the protesters from camping," Rubin said. "Allowing protesters to camp on public facilities while denying the same rights to citizens who pay for these buildings by paying us due process of law." The campsites Rubin's group want are the same sites being considered as tending areas for groups that have announced HE SAID Operation Backbone would send groups of campers who would demonstrate for "The War on Terror" in U.S. Forces in South Vietnam, the elevation of poor, old and young people to the highest level ever known, normal and healthy sex relations between married adults, and veterans of all wars or conflicts, so that others man protest." City officials said Sunday they had not received Rubin's letter and could not comment until they read it. The location behind Flint Hall was chosen because of its proximity to Wescow Hill. If the water is piped over too great a height, it may cool too quickly and may cool enough to cool the building properly. Lawton said. Cooling Center Is Being Built Thomas said that the office was now easy to get a budget for and maintain it, the students would be acclaimed as soon as the budget is definite. NERTICA REPORT I SING THE BEST ELECTRIC Reg. $5'98 Kief's discount price $2'99 on Columbia Records at Kief's discount records Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles The building will be a two-story chilling and cooling tower, where the furnaces are located. Wesco Hall, then piped back to the tower to be recycled into the building. The office is still taking applications in Hoch Auditorium. During the hotter summer months, these systems will function independently because the cooling center, because more cool air will be needed to air flow. The policemen now working these boots are needed to patrol the streets, and because there are too many violations that go unchecked, The system will be big enough to handle the proposed air conditioning of Malotl Hall, and that of a law center which may be used for the next 10 or 15 years. Its location would be west of Y Parking zone. Construction of the air conditioning system for Wescoe Hall behind Flint Hall is underway. The project was completed for the 1974 fall semester, explained Keith Hunt, director of operations and facilities planning and operations. enough money in their budget to hire students to work at the control booths at campus entrance roads. The office is also hoping for DEATRE NUMBERT I SHOE THE BEES ELECTRIC Thomas said that each control station would require two persons, each working a four-hour shift. Mike Thomas, director of security, said that the office has had about 25 applications for the 10 proposed positions. The majority of applications, accordingly, Thomas, were made by women. S T W X Y Z Eventually, the Building and cabin will be heated by the cooling system will be maintained periphery of the campus. The space left will be used for more Students to Man Booths At Parking Lot Stations The traffic and Security office plans to hire students this fall to work on new patrols in parking lot and in O zone, if the planned booths are built there HOB NAIL Sale $ $ $ Sandals Flats & Heels $5 & $8 Shoes Dress & Sport $6 & $9 Sale $ $$ he he he one er willt intt t ooin toile to seue eyer THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Child Center Dedicated Today See Page 6 82nd Year, No. 7 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, June 14, 1972 TREDSY'S Kansan Photo by MOLLY LAFLIN Torn Up Street Still Has Its Uses John Tredo, a Lawrence restaurant owner, takes advantage of some uncovered earth on Massachusetts St. to do his own downtown beautification. Tredo filled in a flower box in front of his restaurant Tuesday. And like the machinery down the street, Basketball Drills Ordered Moved Trepo, a former fine arts artist at KU, attracted the attention of passers-by Jamie Roth, center, Lawrence junior, and Clifford Schoenberg. By BOB LITCHFIELD Kansan Staff Writer The Lawrence City Commission at its Tuesday meeting bowed to complaints of staff emanating from the Ted Owens' basketball camp's use of the Naistham bass. The Commission voted to strike Ordnance 4322, relating to permitted recreational uses on residency only zoned land. The Commission recommended that the ball-court can to use the Naismith courts. Owens told commissioners that he understood they were charged with the responsibility of making decisions for all citizens, that the basketball camp had no contact with any staff or other of others and that he thought the residents had "very legitimate complaints." "But," he continued, "the camp is a great benefit to the community and there is also a responsibility to assist people who are benefiting the community, though this shouldn't be done in such a way as to intrigue on others' rights." OWENS SAID LATER that the City Commission's decision denying use of the basketball courts at Naismith Hall to his children, nor not present insurmountable problems. "We can handle it for the balance of this year's camp because there aren't as many boys in the remaining sessions," Owens said. "Provisions will have to be made for next year's camp," he added, "but I'm sure we can work out some arrangements and make the best of the situation." OWENS POINTED OUT that the camp was in its fifth year and had entertained thousands of campers from 27 states and three foreign countries. Commissioner Charles Fisher said his opposition was not based on a lack of appreciation of the basketball camp but appreciation of the coaches had a right to take care of a nuisance. Commissioner Jack Rose said the School Fees Become Due A $10 penalty fee will be charged to students who pay fees between June 14 and 20. Students pay between June 21 to June 25 will be penalized $25 for late payment. Students may pay by check or cash at the cashier's window of the Compromtler's Office in the basement of Carrouhol hall, William Kelly, registrar, said. Enrollment fees are due today in the Comproller's Office to avoid a penalty fee. Agnes Barnhill, assistant registrar, said that if a student dropped or withdrew from a course on or before June 23, part of the course must be made in advance a request at the registrar's office. Payment of fees will not be permitted after July 5. Kelly said. Partial refunds are available because summer school fees are based on hours enrolled in instead of a set amount for the semester, Barnhill said. The credit-no credit option for taking classes ends Friday, she said. residents who pointed out the short- comings of the ordinance had a legitimate point and said that the ordinance should be killed THE COMMISSION put off ruling on a request by C and C Ambulance Company of Topeka for a license to perform ambulance services within the City, taking the request under advisement for one week. Cand Chad filed the required forms, but City Attorney Milton P. Allen ruled the ordinance did not automatically grant a license upon receipt of these forms, but must take into consideration "the required public necessity and convenience." Rose said it was his belief that Lawrence's Citizens Ambulance Service was adequate and that added service was not necessary. Citizens Ambulance Service presently offers ambulance services from the city and county yearly subsidy from the city and county. is saved" and that quality should be the main concern. on a rotating basis, an idea Rose opposed. A C and C, spokesman he said did not know why Citizens was not operating at a profit and asked for a 3-month trial period. Commissioner J. R. Pullman said that he didn't mind the subsidy "if one life a year The C and C spokesman explained that its company was expanding and had a few new staff members, so said that C and C's hospital training was superior to the standard short term training and assured the Commission that the ambulances would be staffed with fully trained personnel. MAYOR JOHN EMICK said he didn't know how two ambulance services could make money, and added, "The City cer-mium won't want to be in the ambulance business." In other business the Commission granted a bid to Coffman and Son, 417 Maple, for the demolition of structures on land purchased in Wisconsin at 12th and 407 Illinois for $1,680, and awarded three contracts for street and sidewalk improvements and sidewalk construction to Mayson, Ransom and Sheets for the demolition of buildings granted New Haven Tavern, 618 W. 12th. Consideration of Ordinance 4317, the human relations ordinance, will be delayed until June 27 at the request of the Human Relations Commission. Nixon Submits Pact; Vows U.S. Security WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Nixon submitted his nuclear-arms pacts with the Soviet Union to Congress Tuesday and assured members that they safeguard American security. Then he scheduled an emergency meeting of his program, with congressional leaders. He asked about 129 members of five key committees of the Senate and House to join in an "in-depth discussion" Thursday morning on the treaty and agreement which he signed with the Soviet leaders in May 26 during the summit conference. House Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the President would open the session and that his top security adviser, Henry A. Kissinger, would brief the legislators and answer questions on the treaty and agreement that require ratification and approval. The President will not be questioned, Ziegler said. Ziegler said the aim of the 10 a.m. CDT session in the East Room was to give members of the important committees the President's thinking on why ratification and approval "will serve the country's interest and the cause of peace." ON PREVIOUS occasions, the White House has balked at permitting Kissinger to testify before congressional committees but this move, in effect will permit Kissinger to go before the committee members on White House grounds. Kissinger will be the lone administration spokesman at the session but Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Gerard Killen are key speakers on testimony on Capitol Hill, Zieger said. The press spokesman added that formal testimony would begin next Monday on the treaty with Rogers appearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Since the broad outlines of the understandings reached at the Strategic Arms Limitations Talks-SALT had been made known in detail before, attention to the President's message to Congress centered on points of real or potential disagreement remaining between the nuclear powers. FOR THE FIRST time, Nixon set down for Congress a listing of major points on which the United States and the Soviet Union have expressed their own interpretations of what the accords really mean. Calling the papers he brought back from Moscow 'an important first step in his career', Mr. Matsui said. "The defense capabilities of the United States are second to none in the world today. I am determined that they shall remain so. The terms of the ABM, treaty Agents Tell of Tavern Drug Buys In Testimony at Gaslight Hearing Two former undercover agents for Kansas Atty. Gen. Vern Miller testified Tuesday that they made numerous drug trafficking operations Tavern from June to September, 1971. The agents, Vikki Shunmenne, 19 Kansas City, Kan., and Marion Lynn Jr., 20, a former KU student, told of drug investigations during a Douglas County District Court hearing initiated by the filing of a petition by Miller and Douglas County officials in seizing a permanent injunction to close the Gadlight as a common nuisance. In the opening statement for the defense, George Melvin, attorney for the Gaslight's manager and its lessee, Harold Stagg and Reginald Scarborough, said evidence would show that no illegal activities were tolerated in the Gaslight by his clients and that until the petition was filed requesting an injunction against enforcement agent made any complaints to Stagg or Scarborough regarding illegal drug traffic at the tavern. In his opening statement, Elwell said the state would show that during the summer months of 1971, 16 illegal drug purchases were made by state agents in the Gaslight or on its premises and contacts were made to explain why they led to other illegal narcotics purchases. Riling said in his opening statement that his client had no knowledge of drug addiction and he petitioned for an injunction to close the tavern was an attempt to end the property's non-conforming use classification and it became uc to be zoned as for residential use. The state's first witness, Shinmenne, said that she made one drug purchase in the Gaslight and made contacts there for two other purchases. She also testified that She also testified that she did not inform Stagg or Scarborough about the drug traffic in the Gaslight and that she was under instruction from Miller not to give any information concerning drug activity to local law enforcement agents. Under cross examination by Riling, Shinnemen testified that in the drug purchase she had been involved in at the Gaslight, the transfer of drugs to her had been made under a table in the tavern "to keep from being detected." on one occasion she had smoked a pipe of marijuana with three other persons in attendance. Lynn testified that he made 16 illegal purchases or contacts for purchases of drugs in his Gaslight or its immediate vicinity. He said the caskassion asked Stagg about the availability of drugs. Lynn said Stagg "mumbled incoherently" in reply and asked as if he did Chief witness for the state was Lynn who said he developed most of the evidence in the summer of 1971 for a major drug raid in Lawrence staged Sept. 24, 1971. During the hearing, the defense called three witnesses, City Atty. Muhlen Allen, Dan Young, former Douglas County Atty, and Dean Burkhead, a law partner of the attorney for the Rock Chalk Cafe with John McCarthy under 17 under injunction by Miller. Lynn then said he did not approach again, fearing Stagg would tell drug use officers. Allen testified that his office had never been contacted by law enforcement officials regarding drug activities at the facility. He also provided provisions for prosecuting drug offences. Young testified that as county attorney, he had been contacted by the attorney for the rock Chalk Cafe, Dean Burkhead, and was told that the owner of the cafe wanted to cooperate with officials in halting alleged drug violations there. Young also said that he had been the owner of the Gaslight was concerned about any possible legal action against the Gaslight and expressed a desire to help law enforcement officials who might investigate the avenir for illegal drug investigation the avenir he relayed this information to Miller. On the witness stand, Burkhead testified that he met with Miller in March, 1971, to discuss Miller's plans to act to close the Rock Chalk. Burkhead said that during the conversation, he asked Miller if there were charges against him, as Alight and Miller replied they were none. Miller was later called to testify and under examination from Melvin said he recalled the meeting with Burkhead but no one else told that Burkhead represented the Gaslight. Under examinations by Riling, Miller repeatedly denied that he knew that Burkhead represented the Gaslight, but he did not mention it so informed and not remembered. Miller added that even if he had been investigating the Gaslight for drug trafficking, he would not told Burkhead that his cooperation in stopping the drug activities. Another state witness, Michael Frame, refused under oath to repeat a statement he made in February 1971. County Sheriff's deputy, Frame said he had been arrested in a drug raid in February, 1971, and was contacted by the police. He also considered a sentence of correction. See HEARING Page 2 and interim agreement will permit the United States to take the steps we deem necessary to maintain a strategic posture and guarantees our continued security." The treaty, requiring a two-thirds majority, in the Senate for ratification, requires agreement to cushion offensive policies expiring in five years, is up for approval by both houses through joint resolution which will require simple majorities for passage. EFFECTIVENESS of the agreement is contingent upon ratification of the treaty. Mr. Mossman, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said hearings on the documents would begin perhaps as early as Thursday but no later than next Mon- Some skepetics have said the Moscow settlements might place the United States at a military disadvantage. Nixon said, in reference to his remarks to limit strategic offensive arms was not followed by a broader treaty or other accord within five years "it would constitute a basis for withdrawal from the United States" U.S. national interests be jeopardized. In the paper Nixon submitted, the Soviet Union and the United States were shown to be far apart on the question of modern submarines belonging to third countries—that could be used in allies in Western Europe—that could be used to launch strategic missiles. EITHER COUNTRY can repudiate the ABM treaty on six months' notice. The Soviet government was quoted as taking the view that should members of its armed forces be required to increase their up-to-date sub fleet within the five-year lifetime of the executive agreement, "the Soviet Union will have the right to a corresponding increase" in member force. The United States replied that it "does not accept the validity of the conventions" and demanded an apology. Coalition Says Aims On Research Ignored Kansan Staff Writer By JOLENE HARWOOD The Haiphong Coalition's suggestions about research being conducted on the University of Kansas campus have been largely ignored by SenEx, according to Larry Sullivan, acting chairman of the Coalition's Tuesday night meeting. The sub-group was formed because all the members of the Coalition who were interested in investigating research of KU students participated in the ruler project by Seiku, Sullivan said. The suggestions embodied in a document presented to SenEx after last week's meeting included policies and committee members. A sub-group of approximately 30 members of the Coalition is now looking into research projects which some may be of interest to medical or in support of the war, Sullivan said. The committee that SenEx has recommended to Chancellor E. Laurence Chatters Jr. for approval is composed of five faculty members, three students and "it's purpose will be to investigate all University research to see if it is in the public interest and then to publish these results." Sullivan said. "We feel that the Haiphong Coalition is not in a good position," he said, "since SenXen has chosen who it wants on the committee and how it will be structured." up at least 50 per cent of the committee. Sullivan said this proposal was rejected because SenEx believed students were too transient. The committee was suggested to SenEx because members of the Coalition thought there was a definite need for the com-mission, but the research being done on campus. Although the Coalition is primarily concerned with research which will effect the war in Indochina, it is also concerned with research affecting minorities. Sullivan said, "There is a lot of research being done here that definitely has political consequences. It includes research that has social implications even though being done under the guise of neutrality." "Many researchers do not realize how their work is being used. We feel that they must be made aware of this and to feel a sense of concern for the consequences," Sullivan said. In explaining to the sub-group Coalition members how to go about their individual investigations, Sullivan said, "Since there is a lack of access to all records concerning research," There is hope among Coalition members that the sub-group will be able to work with them effectively. "If we don't have anyone on the committee which they appoint, however, I don't see how we can possibly work with them," Sullivan said. Planes Bomb Bridges Near Chinese Border SAIGON (AP)—American flyers brought down two North Vietnamese railroad bridges close to the Chinese frontier with laser-guided bombs, U.S. military weapons and helicopters blasted eight other bridges and two fuel deposits elsewhere in the North. Enemy gunners launched 10 rockets into the U.S. air base at Da Nang just before midnight Tuesday and two more rockets fell into populated areas of the city. The Marines and Sagehill were killed and Vietnamese soldiers were killed and 15 Vietnamese and six Americans wounded. No aircraft hit and there was only light damage to four buildings spokesmen speak THE DA NAN BASE IS the only one in South Vietnam from which fighter-bomber strikes are flown against the North. Defense Department sources have said the remaining U.S. forces there were being reassigned to Thailand. The attacks on the pair of bridges on Hanoi's northeast rail line to China marked the second day of strikes within 25 miles of the Chinese border. The bridges 55 and 60 miles northeast of the North Vietnamese capital were knocked out just a week before the attack that raids constituted "grave provocations" against China. Air Force F4 Phantoms hit the bomb ground guided by laser beams. AIR FIRE, Marine and Navy fighter-bombers flew 290 strikes over the North Monday and damaged or destroyed two fuel deposits within three miles of the port city of Vinh, the U.S. Command announced. U. S. B52 bombers pounded enemy supply dumps near the North Vietnamese port of Dong Hoi Tuesday for the sixth straight day. The raids 21 to 60 miles ahead aimed at destroying war supplies destined for use by enemy troops in the South. Hanol's official Vietnam News Agency claimed the North Vietnamese Air Force shot down two U.S. F4 bomber-bombs over the North on Tuesday and captured several American pilots. The U.S. Command did not report any losses. GROUND ACTION was relatively light in South Vietnam and little progress toward breaking the 80-day siege, until he fleeing the provincial capital 60 miles north of Saigon came under enemy fire and a government relief force remained stalled outside the city. North Vietnamese troops along Highway 13 fired on a column of, 1,000 civilians moving south, killing 5 to 10 refugees and wounding 30 to 40. Allied officers predicted the rubber plantation town, which once had a population of 25,000 to 30,000, may be under firm government control by the weekend. But they added Highway 13, the only overland route to An Loc, must be opened and secured before the siege can be considered over. 2 Wednesday, June 14, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Youth Corps Support Told WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Justice announced Tuesday that seven Neighborhood Youth Corps would be located in Kansas this summer. The Labor Department has allocated $606,410 for the project, which will provide summer jobs for 1,556 young people from low income families. The young people will be paid $1.60 an hour. They will work 28 hours a week for nine weeks. The cities with programs are El Dorado, Horton, Junction City, Kansas City, Ottawa, Wichita and Winfield. New Fuel Plant Funded WASHINGTON 〔AP〕-The Interior Department announced Tuesday an increased contract for construction of a pilot plant to produce an experimental fuel called "solvent refined coal." The department said the product was made from ordinary coal, yielding a fuel low in carbon dioxide and with unharmful effects of the process has been conducted by the Pittsburgh and Midway Coal Mining Co. of Kansas City, Mo., under a $7,640,000 contract from the Interior Department's Office of Coal Research. Mitchell's Salary $60,000 WASHINGTON (AP)—Former Atty. John N. Mitchell is earning $80,000 a year as director of President Nikon's re-election effort, the campaign committee said. Fifty-seven other staff members are on the board, and a finance affiliate have take-home pay of more than $1,000 a month, campaign committee records filed with the government show. Edward C. Nixon of Lymmish, Wash., brother of the President, is among them. Records listing salaries paid during that year were among those who supported the accord with the new federal campaign finance disclosure act. Chinese Reprisals Warned WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., warned Congress Tuesday that China would fight if outsiders got too close to its borders. Noting American bombers that flew into Chinese territory, the congressional Joint Economic Committee the Chinese Communist leaders were more interested in what the United States did than what it said. Testifying about his recent trip to China, Mansfield said he believed the Senate Majority Leader had acted by delaying comments there before no chance of further progress in U.S.-China relations until the Indochina war was settled. Envoy Refuses IRA Offer BELFAST (AP)—Britain's top administrator in Northern Ireland, William Whitelaw, Tuesday night turned down an offer from the militant wing of the Irish Republican Army for a seventy cease-fire in return for peace talks. He said he could not "respond to ultimatums from terrorists. As the offer from the IRA Provisional wing was made, violence raged across Belfast. A series of bus hijackings and burnings threw the city into chaos. A 12-year-old girl was crushed when she caught in a gun fight between the British troops. The offered吊罚 on British acceptance of the key demands of the guerrilla organization, including an end to arrests and arms searches. And it warned that if the British refused the offer, the only alternative was an intensified campaign of violence. Workfare Money Asked WASHINGTON (AP) — The Nixon administration plans to require Congress for about 10 million law requiring 1.5 million welfare recipients to sign up for job training or lose monthly benefit. The workforce funding request, less than half the size recommended by federal designers and one-third the amount authorized, to the Senate Appropriations Committee this week or early next week. The spending would be added to the $205 million budgeted earlier for the four-year-old Work incentive (WIN) program designed to remove able-bodied adults from welfare rolls. Informed of the limited implementation plans Tuesday, the law's author and organized labor groups are calling for different reasons. SEN. HERMAN Talmadge, DGa., said his legislation should be funded closer to its $750-million ceiling. 'I favor the government spending because it can on this bill because for me, it spends it saves four dollars by taking people off welfare and putting them into job training.' Cint Fair, legislative representative for the AFL-CIO, was a key figure in pusssion on job placement rather than training for underkilled welfare adults who were not realistic in cent national unemployment rate. "No training means no pay other than working off your salary," she said. "Gang nowhere," he said. "We are opposed to compelling people to take jobs, then subsidizing em-professors for paying inadequate wages." playment," he said. Four Jets Said Downed In Middle East Fighting TEL AVIV (AP)—Israel and Egypt claimed they shot down two of each other's war-planes Tuesday in the first Israeli-Egyptian dogfight since the 1980s. Ease-of-fire bagan 22 months ago. The Egyptian broadcast acknowledged two Egyptian warplanes were hit in the dogfight but did not specify whether they crashed. It said the planes had collided with Mirage pilings plunged into the sea—about 3½ hours later than the clash reported by Tel Aviv. The Israelis denied Egypt's claim its planes were shot down or had entered Egyptian airspace. The US has no mention of the Israeli claims. The military command in Tel Aviv said its fighters blasted two Egyptian MIG12s off of the sky over the Mediterranean in a noontime air battle. A spokesman reported the Egyptian pilots were killing into the sea about 25 miles off the occupied Sinai Desert. Within hours, a communique broadcast over Cairo radio said Egyptian fighters downed two Israeli Mirag jets near the beachside resort of Basel Bar, about 10 miles west of the Suez Canal. The Egyptians claimed the Rasel Bar dog fatigued start when 1923 islandies tried to enter the mouth of the Nile River. But the military command in The workforce provisions were then revised. Nixon's embattled welfare state and quietly slipped through Congress by conservatives late Tel Aviv said the dog fight started when an Israeli patrol encountered the Soviet-built military base the Sinai, occupied by Israel since the 1967 war. The command did not point the dogfight, but the Salat Desal iees lies east of Ras Elsan in the Israeli-held site of the cana. effect July 1 with the goal of immediately placing 75,000 persons in creating 8,000 job positions in emergency jobs. new slots for on-the-job training. ministry source said MIL- zoomed toward the Israeli air patrol and the Israeli opened for the Egyptians in attack "The Egyptians definitely had aggressive intentions," said a senior military source. Although HEW Secretary Elliot L. Richardson said the legislation, "Is not and was not intended to be a substitute for welfare reform," the President signed the amendments and he signaled step in the direction of welfare reform." The Israeli spokesmen declined to say which side fire the opening round or where the opening round was fired. The MIGs He also refused to specify what type of Israeli warplane made the kills or how many made up the patrol. Most planes in the war are American or French-built. Israel's state radio reported the clash began inside Israeli-held air space. But the state television network said it began over international waters near Gaza, an area under Egyptian side of the Suez Canal. By an unofficial count, the MIGs were the 113th and 114th Egyptian planes claimed shot down by Tel Aviv since the war. During the period, the Israelis have admitted 71 losses to the Egyptians. Though the dogfight was the first reported between Egypt and Israel since the American- 44 Kansan Photo by LINDA SCHILD Land Is Cleared for New Health Center on Campus Darrell Smith of the Kansas Construction Co. Lawrence, looks equipment cleared the area Tuesday while surveying continued, over land levelling operations immediately southwest of Robinson There was no groundbreaking ceremony. THE NEW LAW requires one-half of the money to be spent for public-service jobs and on-the job training, and increases the federal share of matching funds from 80 to 90 per cent for training costs and from 75 to 90 per cent for child care and transportation. Rapid City Burials Begin and refound their lives. Civil Defense officials lowered the number of dead by four to 188 There was no explanation. Anton "Vernie" Ziegler, a retail "store" department manager at View Cemetery with 75 mourners present. Graveside services for victims also were held at Mount Olive and Black Hills National Cemetery. ANOTHER 1,000 houses and 300 mobile homes were damaged by floods in which overflowed its banks and spewed walls of water through 80 city blocks Damage was addressed at more than $100 million. and tributaries for bodies and 2.500 National Guardmen dug in ruins closest to the creeks. Army dogs also were used to seek bodies buried in the tons of mine filled through the city late Friday. Scuba divers searched streams The City Council empowered the Army Corps of Engineers to man the dams and begin piling and removing the rubble of more than 700 destroyed sporting clothing and food. Civil defense officials listed the death count at 202 Tuesday. CITY WATER service remained off in most areas of Rapid City for the fourth straight day Tuesday. Of the 385,000 persons enrolled so far, only 61,500 have been placed in jobs. At the flood site, Gov. Richard Meanwhile, a dozen federal agencies coordinated with the Office of Emergency Preparedness started the 'cure' for the severity phase for 43,000 residents. The Red Cross and Salvation Army have collected thousands of articles of clothing and have issued a plea for contributions to enable them to become involved in tapes. The burials were expected to continue for at least a week. A memorial service was scheduled Sunday at a local high school. S. Kneip said Tuesday he had visited the campus of Dauphin Academy of Minnes for a complete report on cloud-seeding projects last Friday in the Black Forest. RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP)—Gov. Richard Kneip said Tuesday he had been assured that cloud seeding near the Black Hills last Friday in no way contributed to the storm that struck the Rapid City area. McGovern Pursues N.Y. Labor Support BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)—Sen George S. McGovenn took advantage of the state's absence from next week's New York presidential primary and solicited support weekly in upstate cities. Kneip made the statement after receiving a detailed report on the cloud seeding from Dr. Richard Schleuener, director of the Institute of Atmospheric Research at the School of Mines and Technology "I take it he attaches a rather priority to the New York print- maker," he said. The lawmaker said of the Minnesota senator in a news conference Report Contends Flood Not Caused by Seeding sponsored cease-fire began in August 1970. ground fire downed one plane from each side last fall. McGevoy, who has no major opponent in the June 20 primary, did just completed the second slanted tour of the day. It was also learnied Tuesday it was a week before the seeding project Friday was first to detect the heavy rain clouds that dropped as much as as expected. Kneip said Dr. Schlesuser's report stated the two cloud seeding projects were east of the storm that caused the flooding. At the Crouse-Hinds stoplight manufacturing plant in Syracuse and the American Standard plumbing and heating equipment company McGovern toured cavernous work areas. He shook hands and greeted employees at each, asking them to vote for delegates to the Democratic National Convention pledged to him rather than those not delegated. Dr. Schleuseren noted there were three previous floods in the Rapid City area on record—the first in 1897, then in 1907 and in 1967. McGovern is expected to win BALTIMORE (AP)—A trial date of July 17 for Arthur H. Bremer on charges of shooting Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace and another suspect, set Tuesday by U.S. DISTRICT Court Judge Edward S. Northrop. Bremer Trial Set for July; Tests Ordered Judge Northrop scheduled the trial at the conclusion of a hearing in which he signed an order to pay Bramer's examinations for Bremer. No decision has apparently been reached on whether the 21-year-old Bremer of Milwaukee is under trial on federal or state charges. considerably more than 200 of the 278 delegates in New York. McGovern again hit at what he termed the Nixon administration's "credibility gap." THE 'ONLY PLEDGE' I'm going to make ... is to try to thevery best and not to advocatebehind it and not to advocateanything in public while I'm following a different coursein private. I hold the Crouse- McGovern also criticized Nikon for failing to end the Vietnam war and insisted that he often has, that would mean the return of U.S. prisoners of war in Vietnam. McGovern also said the administration's credibility was suffering from what he termed an "earned position on the arms race." "PRESIDENT NIXON comes back from Moscow claiming that we're going to reduce the arms race." McGovena said. "Four days later Secretary Laird of the Defense Department goes to the White House and increases the arms budget. Now, we are we to believe?" Humphrey said Tuesday he thought his chances for the Democratic presidential nomination were increasing every day, and he predicted no one would add a first-ballot nomination. After a meeting in Columbia, S.C., between Humphrey and South Carolina's 32 delegates to the Democratic National Convention, Gov. John C. West said that although he couldn't say for sure if the delegates had met almost all the 32 delegates would support Humphrey. In a news conference following a speech to the South Carolina General Assembly, Humphrey said he believed there was a "very good chance" of a Southern being chosen as a president-in-residential candidate at the national convention in July. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate Finance Committee has mandated the minimum bill to increase Social Security benefits 10 per cent and fix tough new work-or-else requirements for many welfare recipients. Committee Approves Benefits,Work Bill The Social Security boost for 27.8 million Americans would apply to the retirement, survivor and disability programs. It would be retroactive to June 1, but probably would not be reflected in monthly checks until next fall. The $1.6 billion bill also would: - give many special Social Services groups of recipients, including widows, the disabled and persons in need. To pay for it, the committee fixed new higher payroll tax schedules. These would mean a $13.14 tax next year for a parent of a student and the same for his employer, as compared with the 1972 bite. - increase monthly payments substantially for nearly all the 3 million aged, blind and disabled on the welfare rolls. —Cover for the first time under Medium a major part of the cost of maintenance prescription by chronically ill aged persons. -Tighten regulations sharply for the 11 million recipients on the —Extend Medicare health protection to about 1.5 million disabled persons on the Social Security and railroad retirement rolls. - Establish controls in an effort to cut back the costs of the two big health programs. The children are aged and Medicaid for the poor. Finance Chairman Russell B. Long, D-La, said it would take about three weeks to complete the report, pages of text in the legislation. largest welfare program covering families with dependent children. —Put into effect a new financing scheme for the welfare programs which would save the cost about $8 billion in annual costs. It appears certain the Senate will revise the 10 per cent general increase on the floor to make it 20 per cent. Well over half of the Senate and the higher figure. The House has voted a 5 per cent boost. A FUNNY KIND OF LOVE STORY! COLUMBIA PICTURES and AASTAR Present To Find a Man GP THIS 5 XM CONTAINS MATERIAL, WHICH WILL TOO BE OUTLASTING OR PRETTY ENTERING Varsity FESTIVAL FOR FEMALE KIDS Shows: 2:30 - 7:15 - 9:30 A FUNNY KIND OF LOVE STORY! COLUMBIA PICTURES and RAYTAT PRESENT To Find a Man GP THE PHILIP FILM COSTUME MATERIAL, ANNOYMENT MAY BE EXPLORED ON THIS WEB SHOW. Varsity THIRTEEN ... 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Continued from page 1 Frame said Elwilel showed him some pictures in which he was receiving money from another person on the lawn of the house. Frame said he originally agreed in Elwell's office to make the statement on the witness stand, but in court he testified that he agreed to make the statement. The photograph Frame then testified that he was not dealing in any drugs at the time the photograph was taken and that the incident photographed was probably a crime. At close of testimony Tuesday, Judge Floyd Coffman scheduled a continuance of the hearing for 9:30 a.m. June 27. BEER SPECIAL Light or Dark PITCHERS $100 2:00-4:00 p.m. Monday Thru Friday Prices Good Thru June SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & Ye Public house 544 W.23rd 842-2266 TRUCK ON DOWN TO OUR SUPER COLOSSAL SUMMER SALE DRESSES SKIRTS RAINCOATS KNIT TOP PANTS BLOUSES SWIM SUITS PURSES 1/3 and 1/2 OFF HOT PANTS All Sales Final — Entire Stock Not Included the VILLAGE SET the VILLAGE SET 922 Mass. Wednesday, June 14, 1972 University Summer Kansan 3 Lawrence Claims One of West's Oldest Paper Products Industries Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of articles on Lawrence industry. By CONNIE PARISH Kansan Staff Writer The next time you use a box or buy something packaged in a box, check to see where the box was made. Chances are good it may have been manufactured by the Lawrence Paper Company. The Lawrence Paper Co., which produces Jayhawk Boxes, was in town. Founded in 1882 by J. B. Bowerse in one of the industries, it claims the distinction of being the first paper mill in operation west of the city. And when methods of corrugating material were developed in the early 1900s, it became one of the first companies in the United States to go into corrugated box manufact- BEFORE THAT, articles had been packaged in wooden boxes, containers made of wire and wood or solid fiber boxes made of thick solid sheets of paper. Corrugated boxes were much heavier and also costed in lower freight costs for shipping products. Crown, vice president in charge of sales at Lawrence Paper C From eggs to candies to vending machines, nearly all products found in retail stores are packaged in boxes at one of the world's largest users are food and allied products, which constitutes approximately 29.4 per cent of corrugated packaging business. OTHER MAJOR USERS are producers of household furnishings and appliances and machinery. Jayhawk Boxes made in Lawrence are mainly shipped within a 200-mile radius of the city. They limit the distribution area, he explained. Most of the boxes are shipped by truck, and the company owns and operates its own distribution as using commercial carriers. National Beef packing Co. in Baltimore, Md., has the biggest second, according to Crown. Many local industries use their machines to TNT Paperco, Tacker Burnett Medical Institutions, the Kansas Color Press and Stokley- THE MAIN VOLUME of the book is about proximately 200 firms, Crown said, though in a year the company may handle as many as 40,000 firms. Presently the company em. ployes 325 persons with a combined yearly wage totalling nearly $3 million. Most of these eminent students help, but in the summer approximately 20 to 25 positions are available, often filled by A branch office located in Freemont, Neb., which makes boxes exclusively, employs 50 persons. The major industry, that of box-making, takes place at the new plant at 2801 Lakeview Road. The company moved into nearly a year ago. THE COMPANY no longer produces all of its own paper, but makes up part of the paper buy from other companies, but some paper-making still takes place at the paper mill where it is made. Though the paper machine is quite old, Crown said, it is used to produce some specialty grades of paper. Because of the huge quantity of water used, paper mills must be located by a river. Crown cocoa is shipped from a million to a million and a half gallons of water each day, and much of it is returned after being dried. From 800 to 1,200 tons of old waste paper are also recycled each month at the old plant. Most of this recycled paper is contained in a small bag, though a small percent of it is sold to companies that produce such specialty items as paper guards for coat hangers and tube winders. record in in using recycled materials. Crown said, and they are constantly working to improve it. Until the recent emphasis on ecology, Crown explained, recycled paper was not well designed and were usually more defects in recycled paper, and in most cases the process used by virgin material resulted in lower costs. In many cases it is actually cheaper to use new paper, according to Crown. Methods of recycling paper, machines and many companies are adding equipment so they can use a higher percentage of recycled A SPECIALITY PRODUCT is a downtown plantation. Jayhawk Fiber Form Company makes concrete-forming materials for concreting buildings. "There are practically no major pollution problems involved in our industry," Crown said. The only potential problem involves the ink used in the paint. It has been caught in special setting basins and burned in a sanitary bandill, Kansan Photo by JOHN REED Workers at Local Firm Trim Recycled Paper Lawrence Paper Co. uses scrap material in paper-making process . . . NATALIE BRAUER KU Preview Offered New Students Shots Given During Orientation . Lynn Thomas of Overland Park gets TB shot . By MARY LIND Kansan Staff Writer McCoy, who was graduated from KU in May with a major in business administration and accumulated grade point average of 3.82 and gained Omicron Delta Kappa honors. He was also a graduate student in the School of Engineering. "It is as many programs as there are students. It's what every student brings to it," said Karen Crawford, director of School Relations. After consulting advisers, students fill out enrollment cards that they will use to enroll in the classes of their choice in the fall. During fall registration and transfer, students pick up class cards at Allen Field House and make any changes DURING THE SECOND evening of their stay, discussion sessions are held with the teacher. The students and other KIU students. Myers said Included in the schedules of the participants of the Previews are meetings with personnel from the Dean of Women and presentations by professional school personnel about programs, courses, job opportunities and to the junior-senior programs. "I like to think that we're lending a personal touch to all the paper work, and trying to give students a better student numbers," said Gorman. "Some students are very Six summer orientation sessions, or KU Previews, are being held, through June 30. Ray Chapel, faculty representative from Oklahoma State University and the chairman of the selection committee, said, "Mike Kerr is outstanding student athletes nominated by Big Eight Confer- Kansan Staff Writer During the two-day session, prospective freshmen register for fall courses, undergo their required physical examinations, complete a medical examination, house plans and visit with students, faculty and KU staff HE WAS AWARDED a $1,750 National Football Hall of Fame scholarship and a $1,000 NCAA Post-Graduate Scholarship. Thus far, feedback from participants has been positive Mike McCoy, the University of Kansas' academic all-American football player from Hawthorne, was named the Big Eight Conference's Post-Graduate Scholarship Tuesday. Commissioner Charles M. Neissas McoY has received many awards for his academic athletic achievements and player and team leader he earned varsity letters his junior and senior years as a center and participated in the 1972 Hula The $500 scholarship, based on academic and athletic excellence, will continue his education in the doctor-of-medicine program at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City beginning next month. McCoy Wins Scholarship BY BOB LITCHFIELD Kanean Staff Writer "It's a guaranteed success. If you advertise what it is, the people who feel it would be needed to them come," said Myers. THE COST for the two days is and allows the program to be self- sufficient. According to Myers, at least 1,200 to 1,000 students are required. concerned as to what the whole college thing is about. This is a chance to get themselves together in relation to others and to find out that other students feel upset by that they do." German said. This summer is the first year for an orientation program since the start of the school in 1969. In the interim, the complexities of enrolling new students has revealed the value of a summer orientation program. McoY decided to enter med- ical school during his junior year, when a neck injury sent him to Miau Clinic in Rochester, Mayo. ence members who were winners of their institution's Conference Medallion awards. "Mike's athletic ability, both within the conference and nationally, speaks for itself. His ability to address a difficult area of study, certainly are outstanding, too. Simply stated, his accomplishments exemplify the qualities we envision the award was established." "A doctor there, who was an electrical engineer as well, had designed a machine to measure nerve impulses, and after talkin' McCoy said that when he was a freshman Bruce Peterson, a senior academic All-American on the Jayhawk football team, told your first year, get your feet on the ground, and you'll be O.K." "I learned how to study in lunch lines, bus terminals and airports," he said, "and I got advise when a doctor advised me as a freshman." "I FOLLOWED his advice and everything has turned out all right," he said. McCOY SAID TUESDAY that he had known about the award for several weeks. "I've been really lucky lately," he said. McCoy claimed that the secre- of his success could be attributed to knowing how to budget time. "I doubt if I would have been drafted anyway, but I told them that I had decided definitely to enter medical school." McGoy MCOYO WAS NOT drafted in the professional football draft, but he was approached by several scouts after the Hula UWL. to him for several days I made up my mind." McCoy said. He will begin classes at the University of Kansas Medical PARAMARIBO, Surinam (AP) — the latest census in this small Latin-American country showed that East Indians had been the largest ethnic group, clearly outnumbering those of African descent. "I'm going into it with an open mind. Since my background is in engineering I am thinking about radiology," he said. Center on July 12 and has no plans of specialization. Scheila Burkett, Norwich freshman, said "I just find out where things are makes you feel more at east about coming back. Fred Robinson of Wichita said, "I feel more confident about coming back now. I won't feel threatened with have a few concerned people." "I would have been over-whelmed if I had come up here without previews," said Barbara Jimson of Salina. It's an ice-breaker." Most of the freshmen interviewed considered the program work environment and the opportunity to get much of the tedious procedures out of the program. Wage Issue Holds Reservoir Project A decision concerning a minimum wage scale for construction workers on the Clinton Reservoir project had not been issued by the state Board of the U. Department of Labor as of 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. The decision was expected to have been made Friday or Monday, according to Gerald Hill, wage specialist for the Employment Standards Administration of the Department of Labor. "As far as I know the Wage Appeals Board is still working on the final decision," Hill said Tuesday. Baseball Standings June 27 is the date set for the opening of construction bids for the Clinton Reservoir contract that has been postponed five times. AMERICAN LEAGUE Three of the postponements have been caused by changes in the wage scale that were produced different groups of contractors. Campus Briefs W. L. Pt. G.B. Detroit 28 26 14 Baltimore 26 22 14 Cleveland 22 23 48 Philadelphia 22 23 48 New York 20 29 14 St. Louis 20 29 14 NATIONAL LEAGUE Atlanta 31 13 68 68 - Chicago 11 63 63 -29 California 23 27 400 11 Kansas City 23 27 400 11 Oklahoma City 23 27 400 11 Cincinnati 33 19 635 1 Los Angeles 32 22 633 2 San Diego 32 22 633 2 Atlanta 25 26 490 11 San Diego 18 34 740 15 Atlanta 18 34 740 15 Consumer Meeting Scheduled **Milton Keynes** Temas 4, Milton Keynes Minnesota 3, Dirstrait 1 Cincinnati 4, Philadelphia 4 Chicago 5, Cleveland 4 California 2, Cleveland 2 There will be a meeting of the Consumer Protection Committee of the Student Senate at 7 tonight in the Governor's Room at the Kettering University. W. 21 L. Pet G.B. Pittsburgh W 21 L. Pet G.B. New York 23 19 65 Citigroup 23 19 65 Ottawa 22 20 434 Munster 22 20 434 Montreal 22 20 434 St. Louis 22 20 434 Awareness Talk Planned Gary Sones, former director of the Resident Fellow Program at Esalen Institute, Big Sur, Calif., will present a workshop, "Sensory Awareness," at 8 tonight in the United Ministries Building, 1204 Oread. There will be an admission charge. Musicians to Present Concert A band concert presented by Local 512 American Federation of Musicians will be held at 8 tonight in South Park. Refreshments will be sold by the Lawrence High School orchestra to raise money for a planned trip to Chicago in December. Patek Sparks Rally in Ninth To Lift Royals Past Boston BOSTON (AP) — Pred Patcket tied the game with a two-run double and then Amos Olsen won it with a two-run single as Kansas City rallied for four runs in the second half of Red Sox 42 Tuesday night. The Royals, unable to break through against Bill Lee with the defense, loaded them again in the ninth with one out to set the stage for the final. Bob Bolin then relieved Lee and with men on second and third was touched for Oi's game-winning hit that helped the Rangers win the ninth straight time at Fenwark Park and the 19th time in the last 22 games. Daddy Cater drove in both of Boston's runs to give starter Marty Pattin a chance and Marty Pattin was taken in favor of Lee when he loaded the bases with one out and the bases pitcher stopped the Royals cold. Cater's sacrifice飞 scored Boston's first run in the fourth inning and then the first baseman on a third. The RBI double in the sixth. In other games Tuesday, Carlos May's two-rom homer in the eight innings broke up a 20-10 victory over New York's Wilbur Wood and New York's Mollestyre and powered the Sweet Sixtea to 2-victory over the Blue Jackets. Hank Aaron belted a one-out home run off reliever Danny Braves on the first pitch of Braves a comeback 6-5 victory in the 10th innings over the St. Lucas Rangers on a Tuesday night. It was Aaron's 650 career first hit two ahead of the Mark Wilson. downed the Milwaukee Brewers 4-0 Tuesday night. City Obtains Sports Hall of Fame Veteran Manny Mota stole home in the sixth inning and then helped Los Angeles build a vital run with a sacrifice in the eighth inning, nipped the St. Louis Cardinals 2-1 in St. Louis Tuesday night. 2-1 Lawrence has become the new home of the Kansas All-Sports Hall of Fame. The Kansas Athletic Commission and the Kansas All-Sports Hall of Fame Advisory Council moved to Lawrence. The All-Sports Hall of Fame was founded in 1961 and now has 31 elected members in it. To be eligible for recognition in the Hall the athlete must have attained recognition in his particular sport. 91.5 FM KANU Radio Members must have been born in Kansas and attained fame in a non-Kansas school, or to be born in another state and received in a Kansas school. Cincinnati's streaking Reds used tight pitching by Ross Grimsley and Pedro Borbon to top Philadelphia 4-2 Tuesday a home sweep of a twi-tw player in the outspacer against the Phillies. WEDNESDAY 7:30-The Morning Show WEDNESDAY Noon—News.Weather.Sports 12:15—Noon Hour Concert-Community Calendar 8-15 Challenges in Education 8-30 Campus and Community Calendars THE FINAL requirement for admission is that the athlete cannot be active in the sport for which he is recognized. 9-18 The Art Scene 9-30 Featured Works Included: Rietclotti 9-40 In Arlington, Pete Broberg hurled a three-hitter and drove in two runs with a fourth-inning double as the Texas Rangers 1:30—Sign Off Future-Part 12" 1:30-Music From Germany Directed Works Include: Rictottb and Pooulcx 10-News 2.05 News/weather/Sports 2.06 Search For Mental Health: "Poor and Body Damaged Increase Your Money "Fiber- Pollutants" and Additives 10:15 - TBA: underground rock music b stereo - Sign Off. and Badly Damaged" 9:30-Managing Y. - TBA Afternoon - 10 All Things Concerted - 4 All Things Concerted Sports - 15 Report From the RU Medical Center - 20 All Things Concerted Sports - 7 KAAN Tour - 8 KAAN Tour - For Love of Music - 13 For Love of Music - 15-TBA: underground rock music in According to Walter Cragan, a naval official board, the Hall is now housed in the Little Theater building at the Fairgrounds in Pittsburgh. He said he was appointed to the board of finding the Hail a better home for more people would see it. He told reporters that the Historical Building in Topeka and no room was available and had been investigating other possibilities. According to Dolph Simons, the Lawrence museum's president of the board of trustees, the Lawrence group heard about the post-bid gathering getting the hall and they applied for it to be moved to Lawrence. learned of the possibility of acquiring the Hall. Simons and Odd Williams, resident of the Board, wrote letters to the Advisory Board of the Hall of Fames and they read by Cra- man. THE MOVE to Lawrence was brought about when members of the Lawrence Historical Society The governing body of the Hall then unanimously approved the move to Lawrence. "HE MAIL of Fame will be Elizabeth. M. Watkins in Community Museum which is being established in the former city hall The major reason cited for the move was that at the Topeka Fairgrounds there was not enough room for the Hall to be displayed adequately. At the new location the board of the Hall has received a Historic Society of having all the space they needed to display. Presently the Hall of Fame consists of only 29 pictures of the eleven women these were mementoes and other paraphernalia collected for the Hall which was not displayed in the room if it would require. The Hall of Fame operates on a 600 budget appropriated by the Kappa Foundation, there have been suggestions that private contributions help support the hall. interest to apply for the Hall of Fame. He said the Society's willingness to work for the project would insure its success. MEMBERS of the board of the Hall, other than Cragan, include, Ernie Barrett, Kansas State University, Eliot H. Johnson, Wellia, Emperor Wadson, Stukenburg athletic director, Jay Dyer Atchison, and Frank W. Boyd Jr. Cragan said he was pleased and proud that the Historical Society in Lawrence took the Former KU athletes in the Hall include F. C. "Phog" Allen, James A. Naismith, Arthur "Dutch" Lonborg, Adolph Rays, Elmer Schake, Glenn Cunningham and Bill Neider. --- TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE! Offer expires July 1st 1720 West 23rd Street A --- DESTINY HOPPARD - A KISS THE BEAT ELECTRIC Reg. $598 Kief's discount price $299 MESSTER KARAWAN - JEWS THE BEAT ELECTRIC WESTERN REPORT - CENT FOR MOST ELECTRIC Reg. $598 Kief's discount price $299 on Columbia Records at Kief's discount records Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles 4 Wednesday, June 14, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Center to Aid Many The Kansas Center for Mental Retardation and Human Development is being formally opened and dedicated this morning. Financed by federal, state and private funds, the Center's activities will span nearly every medical and academic discipline in its study of human development. KU's site is one of three in the state, and the other two, in Parsons and Kansas The Center has two parts: the Kansas Center for Research in Mental Retardation and the Clinical Training Center. In these two centers, retarded children and their parents will be able to get systematic and specialized help. Professionals will divide their time between research and treatment. Graduate students will be able to receive professional training. Many people deserve credit for their work in making the Center a reality. W. Clarke Wescoe, who was chancellor when the project was started, deserves recognition for this part. Richard L. Schiefelbusch, director of the Bureau of Child Research, played a major role in the development of the Center. He worked with Howard V. Bair, who is superintendent and medical director of Parsons State Hospital. Together the two decided research results from the KU Bureau of Child Research should be used to train retarded children at Parsons. Certainly there are others whose efforts were essential, though perhaps not on as large a scale. The Kansas Center for Mental Retardation and Human Development will have an important leadership role in the state. The purpose of the University is to provide education and service to the state. The Center will do all three and will combine them well. -Rita E. Haugh Editor Industry Series Begins Today the Kansan will begin a series of articles on industry in Lawrence in an attempt to answer the frequently voiced question that is there in Lawrence besides KU> readers, many of whom are new to this community. There is a great diversity in the age, size and type of industry in this city. We have chosen to concentrate on businesses that were founded here rather than those based elsewhere. We hope that in publishing this series, we will inform our National recognition has frequently come to Lawrence because of the accomplishments of the University of Kansas We must not loose sight of the fact that our city also can boast of immanent nationality. It will be the chosen this series to describe some aspects of this community that are often overlooked. —Rita E. Haugh Editor Dracula Tour Offered It wasn't too long ago that the grand tour of Europe, whether for a summer or for a whole year, was the dream of students whose parents couldn't afford it and the delight of those who could. And throughout our American literature, from Henry James to "The Unsinkable Molly Brown," a trip to rock off the rough edges from a typical, to culturally impoverished American. Of course, many people have been to Europe more than once, some as often as every year. And when you keep going to Europe, you need to look for different things to see and do. A new European tour has been devised to cater to the interests of those who are getting blase about seeing the usual fare Europe has to offer. It's called "Spotlight on Dracula: An Adventure in Transylvania." Dracula. Two authorities on Dracula will give lectures and explain the sights. For eighteen days, the travel brochure says, you will have a chance to discover for yourself the answers to the many mysteries that surround the name of And what sights they are. At Snagov you visit the tomb of Dracula, which doesn't contain his body. You see Dracula's Palace at Tyrgoviste. Castle Dracula, Brasou, where one of Dracula's most famous massacres took place. Sighisoara, where Dracula was born. Moldavia, where Dracula spent two years in exile. And finally Bucharest, which Dracula founded in 1459. Of course, the tour is making good use of the recent publicity that a man named Vlad Dracula existed in the 15th century. He was able, like other despotes in Europe at the time, to maintain his power at a high cost in human lives. So, for those of you who are more than culturally satiated, there's yet a new route to go in Europe. And for those of you who don't want the culture—here's your chance "to get to the heart of the Dracula mystique." -Rita E. Haugh Editor Readers Respond Vending Service Disputed To the Editor: After having read the June 13 article on raising the price of college textbooks in vending machines, I feel that some question should be raised as to the "service" being offered to students and campus vending machines. To answer this question in Iowa State University and the University of Illinois and having seen the food service facilities at Iowa State University and the Kansas Union and vending facilities very poor in comparison. I even find them poor in comparison with other stores in the market, because they are necessary to raise the prices of Hostess fruit pies above the price printed on the wrapper when other merchants (who are also owned by Hostess) do not find it necessary In the article, Mr. Jolly points out the legality of raising the student to a service in offering a service to the student? Since one-third of the vendors in this region are satisfied with the profits from 15c canned soft drinks, why shouldn't the campus vendors be satisfied as—as a result of these points out that profits are used to support student activities. However, I would ask, "Isn't it more equitable and performing more of a service to leave that model in the student pocket?" —Norman Penny Norman Penny Ames, Iowa graduate student ME GOVERN! "To end the fighting, I would go to Hanoi!" McGOVERN "To end the fighting, I would go to Hanoi." THE COWRIER MUNICIPAL PARK FEUD ... And to Humphrey and Muskie and Wallace and..." PARTY FEUD PARTY FEUD ... And to Humphrey and Muskie and Wallace and ... P Idaho Women Seek Sense of Equality BOISE, Idaho—Idaho's women are tearing down the barriers of sex discrimination. From Kansan Wire Services "They might not put it in terms or women's liberation," one speaker said. "But Idaho's women retain a touch of frontierism, which gives them a deep and sensitive understory of freedom and equal rights." Many women in the sparsely populated states of India are not familiar with the works of K.K. Millett, Germaine Greer, Betty Friedan, Dana Denesworth, Valerie Wilson. But because of their inherent instinct of independence and freedom for all, they may be the object of a masters in the quest for queerness. JUNE HALL, instructor of art at Idaho State University, said she thought women's liberation was more important than some groups were trying to accomplish by collective coercion. She said she maintained the pursuit for individual equality was the most important process" of self-realization. "I am trying to understand who I can be independently, through independent action. In the end, women are going to gain equality in the job market and collective bargaining," she said. Many of those advocating women's rights agree that Idaho was not in the mainstream of coastal to coast and women's liberation may be late getting a hold on. MORE AND more, women in the state are taking action against discriminatory practices in business and state government. annual rate of 50 per cent since 1969. Grimes said she discovered sex discrimination in Boise shortly after the arrived to take directive order from the commission last September. While filling out a lengthy form to downstream bank, an official commented freely on why a bank would never have a female offender. "HE DIDN'T know that I was a lawyer," he joined with the commission, "she couldn't imagine him saying something like that, about a lawyer." Sue Reeens, one of several women on the commission, said Idaho's men were "not so nervous" when it came to sex discrimination. "I think most of them don't even know it is against the law to discriminate against women," she said. "It is the way they have been doing it for years," she said. "It will be a hard habit to break. But it has to be changed." Rose Bowman, one of the first women in Idaho to run for a U.S. senator, traveled through the state she had found few female liberation leaders and understood equality and the changes which had to be made to women's suffrage. She said women were in many cases thought of as voluntary workers and it caused some party members to decide to run for office, decided to run for office. BOWMAN, WHO is running for the U.S. Senate, said the local Democratic party system made women of sex discrimination ROTHWAX SAID he suggested that it was often prudent for the defense lawyer to subpoena all of his clients, including the officer, in the chance that inconsistencies might come in their testimony. He said he was astounded that in the majority of the cases he reported as a person to contradict the arresting "I have been raised a female, and I know all about sex discrimination," she said. "But a liberator activist, I am not." From Kansa Press Services A panel discussion on the press issues in the U.S. in cases, convened in New York city recently by the magazine Dr. Drew Farris and provided several guidelines for the defense lawyer. Here are some of the issues: Panels们 generally agreed that defense lawyers should seek immediate, pre-trial treatment and may argue that attorney Arthur Mass said, "To act as an attorney and close your eyes to the man's main problem—which is drug addiction and other serious issues—but him is—very limiting." All panelists said it was important to know exactly what drug programs were available, and to whom they were suited. Harold Rothwax, judge of the Criminal Court of New York, said, "It really isn't much of comfort whether the defender had a way to envelop the envelope. The important issue is whether or not he needs help." Judge Rothwaas used the use of a motion to suppress a "a drug lawyer's speciality" and it was most frequently invoked for real estate example, when it was the officer's word against the defendant. THOMAS MACKELL, a Queens district attorney, suggested that defense lawyers should have an agreement with the prosecution before doing anything else. In all likelihood, he said, the prosecution would consent to a treatment program and would send a trial would thus be avoided. dion: Another defense tactic is a double-checking the chemist in narcotic cases. Rothwax said many police labs lacked the professional competence to substantiate their evidence. officer had been the defendan Mass recommended sealed envelopes submitted as evidence he opened and examined in court Richard Kuh, former New York county chief assistant District Attorney, said the volume of phone calls upon the prosecutor's office could often benefit the defense attorney if he was willing to put time and effort into covering his defense law counsel could frequently find weak spots "because he is opposing a public employee who has a mass-production business." be opened and examined ... I "FOUND" that by attending to and looking into the envelopes of marijuana cigarette, which was supposedly lying on the floor of the car, which led to the search that led to the five pounds of marijuana, was nonexistent," he said. ROTHWAX SAID he was adamantly against the lawyers who handed him an incomplete short-form probation report and then murmured a plea. Panels said they stressed the importance of specifying from what drugs an ant was an addicted pusher or a non-addicted seller of drugs; whether the addict was 17 or 25; whether they used drugs or whether he used them simply to go along with somebody else who was using it and talked about it. This approach was called a cop-out by Kuh, who said, "The defense bar completely adabicates when it comes to sentencing by saying 'Your Honor has a full right'." The defense lawyer worth his salt should insist on be present at the pre-sentence interview. He STUDIES BY THE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF AND THE DEPT OF DEFENSE INDICATE THAT APPROXIMATELY 52,000 CIVILIANS WERE KILLED BY U.S. AIR STRIKES IN NORTH VIETNAM. B-52 ATTACKS IN SOUTH VIETNAM ALONE MAY HAVE ACCOUNTED FOR 16,000 DEAD AND A LIKE NUMBER OF WOUNDED IN 1968... AND AN IMPLIED KILL RATE OF 1300 PER MONTH IN SOUTH VIETNAM. HOWEVER WE DID NOT SERIOUSLY AFFECT THE FLOW OF MEN AND SUPPLIES TO COMMUNIST FORCES IN SOUTH VIETNAM. AND WE DID NOT REDUCE NORTH VIETNAM'S RESOLVE TO CONTINUE THE CONFICT. CONSEQUENTLY, THE PRESENT AIR WAR SHOULD BE CONDUCTED SO AS TO FREE US OF THE CONFINING CONSTRAints WHICH HAVE CHARACTERIZED THE CONDUCT OF THE WAR IN THE PAST. AND AN IMPLIED KILL RATE OF 1300 PER MONTH IN SOUTH VIETNAM. CONSEQUENTLY, THE PRESENT AIR WAR SHOULD BE CONDUCTED SO AS TO FREE US OF THE CON- FINING CONSTRAINTS WHICH HAVE CHAR- ACTERIZED THE CONDUCT OF THE WAR IN THE PAST. should know his defendant's social history, and should be in a position to point out the strengths The other participant in the panel discussion was Charles Up From Kansan Wire Services dike, an assistant U.S. attorney for the southern district of New York. Helicopters Take Infants To Oregon Med School Any illness or injury during that month can be fatal if the right treatment is not made available quickly. From Kansan Wire Services PORTLAND, Ore. -Crab death is the most publicized case in infantile detritus agreements agree that the first four weeks of a baby's life are the most critical. The University of Oregon Medical School has devised a protocol for treating critically ill newborn infants from almost anywhere in the state to its intensive care unit in Oakland, a Army National guard helicopters. THE PROGRAM was devised because the medical school's preinstal medicine division vanished in 2013. The other equipment necessary to treat an infant en route to the hospital must be provided on 90-mile radius around Portland. find out how long it will take for them to be at the helpad, and meet them there with our equipment." The helicopters have expanded that range. Gerda Benda, in charge of the National Guard school, said, "It is tremendous help." The National Guard unit based on the National Guard unit based A demonstration of the system was held recently with a 40-mile fence of Silverton, where a small hospital serves the rural community THE SYSTEM works like this: The medical school receives a call stating that a newborn infant is hospitalized and is not expected to live without special treatment. The doctors provide guidance, Guard and request assistance. The helicopter and a van from the district school. The helicopter, the helplined vehicle, is by Portland General Electric Co. The medical school personifies the medical mission in necology and a fellow in nectology—board the helicopter. Upon arriving at the hospital, the infant is placed in the incubator, which has all the equipment necessary to treat the infant. The infant is placed in the hospital in Portland. When the helicopter lands in Portland, the incubator and baby are transferred to the medical school van and transported back to the school's hospital. THE TOTAL, procedure will cut down on transport time drastically, and there is no charge to the parents of the infant. By an arrangement worked out between the medical school, the National Guard and the government to transfer infants will be logged as training time, and so there is no additional cost to the Although the medical school never had to say no to a parent, some have gone to welfare to find another job. The charter bill, a spokesman said, Medical school personnel said that in the past commercial airlines have offered care to the infants, and operators normally demanded cash from parishes. The emergency transportation program can be expanded, the system could be used for military aircraft if a helicopter were not feasible because of disorganization. 18 International Ecologists Pick Ten Environmental Problems From Kansan Press Services The ecologists, representing 16 different countries, are part of the program for the symposium for public citizens being held in conjunction with the U.N. Conference on the human Environment. The ten world problems they named are: The ten most serious environmental problems facing the world today have been named by the United Nations in 2014 world. The list was compiled for use during the National Wildlife Federation international symposium, "Uniting Nations for Biosurvival," in Stockholm this year. 1) Too many people, creating impossible demands on all natural resources. 2) Pollution of waters of the world, with effects on marine and freshwater fisheries, economic aesthetic values and human health 3) Pollution of the air, with resultant diseases for man and animals, as well as pollution of the atmosphere with damaging fogs 4) Absence of really significant, long-lasting research in food production to feed the hungry peoples of the world. 5) Lack of feasible programs i) Inability to limit indiscriminate use of persistent toxic substances affecting vast resources and peoples in the region. to preserve and protect the endangered wildlife species of the world. 7) Inability to recycle valuable raw materials effectively, which instead will be lost to the world's future people. 8) Failure to research and plan for alternative sources of energy to improve living conditions for the world's people. 9) inability to invest wisely public and private monies that are available to improve the genetics of a species physically and esthetically. 10) Inability of nations and their political subdivisions to develop workable systems of control and cooperation in ecological and difficulty of establishing ecological programs. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom—UN 4-4810 Business Office—UN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas four times weekly during the summer session. Mail subscription rates 16, a semester, 102 a year. Second class payment paid at campus. Attendance fee $25 for all students offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinion express are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas at the State Board of Education. NEWSSTAFF Editor Editors Editor News Editor Copy Chief Photographers Cameras Nila E. Haugh Linda Scaldari Bob Norka Reg Ackrom Pris Brandtstein, Haak Young Cameras BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser ... Mel Adama Business Manager Doug DeTry Advertising Manager Steve Cave Clinical Manager Linda Dargo National Advertising Manager Card William Promotional Manager Dave Bennett Marketing Manager Doug Bennett University Summer Kansan Wednesday, June 14. 1972 5 Gift Shop Is a Repository Too Sherree Sparks arranges jewelry in Natural History Museum Shop . Gift Shop Is a Museum Itself The Gift Shop in the Museum of Natural History is a museum in itself. A tour through the Museum of Natural History should not fail to include this educational marketplace. "We definitely want to be natural," said Rebecca Myers, Museum Associates coordinator. "We need a dine store or a supermarket." The shop, designed by Thomas H. Sweaterning, museum artist, displays items from several foreign countries including the Paraguay, India, Denmark, Germany, Japan and Mexico. She said that the heritage of a country was often revealed through natural objects. One example is the broochy, by Quechua Indian children. The idea for the embroidery came after a flood killed hundreds of families. The Chinaya village, in Chinaja village, is regarded by the Peruvians as a social function and provides the village with amenities. The Gift Shop also carries the Lowe's selection of assortment of jewelry made by the Southwest Indians and the Mahine. Maine are included in the stock. Myers said, "In the future we would like to have more things from Iowa than from Kansas. Orark made with an apple, pottery made from Kansas, clay or wood." "This gives the people who are just passing through something from Kansas, and yet we still have different things for people who come in again and again." The Cliff Shop "all profits or sales on the Cliff Shop are used to support the Museum's School Service." According to Myers, this program includes Museum Associates and Museum Summer Workshops. The Museum Associates provides a way for people outside the museum to be involved in the museum through various activities, Myers said. Such activities include natural history units and adult education courses. The coordinator described the Summer Workshops program as an opportunity to give young people contact with the natural environment through field experience and specimen literature. Prof Combines Courses In Education and History Kansan Staff Writer By MARY PITMAN Ray Hiner, associate professor of education, straddles two distinct academic worlds in his double appointment to the School of Education and the history of Liberal Arts at the University of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The difficulty of juggling two jobs and having two bosses has been for Hiner negligible in comparison with the rewards. "You get to know so many different kinds of people," explained Hiner, "medieval historian; a teacher in elementary education, too." Specialization is necessary for competence, said Hiner, but also because he has to work apart. The tension Hinner feels between his two specialties has only grown more acute as he discovers the connections between education and history, and to re-verify that learning occurs. THIS INTERDEPENDENCE is nowhere more obvious than in the course Hiner offers each season at the university's few universities, "Culture and Education in America from 1807 to the present," under both education and history. The real innovation of Hiner's M. R. S. RANDON unique course revolves around his broad definition of education and how it defines and transmit their culture. In Hiner's terms, education embraces not only the public but also the private sphere of media, the entire process of child-raising, and the ceremonies and rituals which "subliminally" teach. COURSE READINGS sometimes focus on the "selling" or education of a particular person (e.g., a professor) jamin Franklin, and sometimes zoom out for a broad perspective on the problems of various American communities as they attempted to transmit their culture. Kanan Photo by CLAY LOYI Prof Ponders Two Worlds . . Ray Hiner combined disciplines . . . Hiner thought Daniel Boorstin's book "The Image" was for students possibly the most prominent course. As a companion to the book, students see Marshall McCluer presenting himself in the message," McLuan, said Hiner, believes that the class emphasizes functions not to introduce students to new stimuli but to close them out of a world that bombs with fear. "For an individual," said Hiner, "education is the means by which he acquires his identity." The employment picture for placements brighter than it was at this time last year, according to statistics obtained from placement offices BUT UNTIL, time-traveling devices are perfected, Hiner believes the historian—and the inventor has an edge over electronic media. KU placement directors point to steadily increased job opportunities in major newspaper want sites from small businesses and smaller school systems for personnel and an apparent push by industry to replace inventories of KU equipment at the recent economic slowdown. OF 246 UNDERGRADUATES in the School of Business, 23 per cent found jobs with companies. Sixteen per cent found jobs with schools and 7 per cent had service commitments. Sixteen per cent found jobs with schools and 44 per cent did not report, according to statistics compiled by Milredd Young, secretary in the school. Employment Picture Improves By MARTHA NORDYKE This undergraduate status compares favorably. At the same time last year, 16 per cent of students jobs with company, 15 per cent planned to attend graduate school and 20 per cent had service commitments. Hiner's own favorite text in the course is "The New England Primer" because he thought it off. He was also a teacher, and an historian. Return reports from the 1972 graduating class have not all come in yet, but the job situation is shaping up like this: When students finish his course, "Education and Culture in the American Civil War," said Hiner; "They know what they are studying about important things." Only 1 per cent of the graduate students had service commitments, a drop from the 10 per cent in 1971. Ten per cent of the Ph.D. candidates in the fall and 20 per cent are still undecided. Of 84 graduate degrees con- ceived, 41 per cent of the reported jobs with companies as opposed to 38 per cent in 1971. Hirner thought that his course often surprised students, showing him that he was not the ones them that came from the past. And he thought that it helped to disapel the misconception that he was a superior, respectable intellectual inward. STARTING SALARIES for KU's undergraduate business school stakes in the field range from $788 to $3250 masters of business administration degree holders averageing from $866 to $1,227 The School of Business more than doubled their graduating class, from the 1971 total of 121 students to 246 this spring. "An historical document like the 'Primer,'" said Hiner, "is a window on a culture now gone." The School of Business brought 149 companies to campus this academic year for interviews, and the 146 here the previous year. Six per cent of the graduates plan to travel or get involved in something other than a steady job, according to the returns. Lindquist said two graduates must establish their own businesses. Lindquist indicated that management specializing in engineering school programs for general statistics was partially misleading. He said nine of 13 employees were employed while only one of 22 psychology, said the APC's ac- TWENTY-FIVE PER CENT of FIBER, fewer than the $3 per cm figure of last year. But more than twice as many 1972 students plan to take part in college. The military obligations of this year's engineering graduates is up 3 per cent of 17 per cent over last year's commitments. LINDQUIST ATTRIBUTED to the engineering job situation to what he thought was a slight increase in economy and related industry. Lindquist's figures are based on a return of 81 per cent of the questionnaires he sent out earlier. "new plants, new buildings and a need for inventing or upgrading present equipment is getting much better," the engineers said. He told Tuesday, "The aircraft industry is again taking on professionals, perhaps indicating a new and stronger program of air travel program and space travel." Lindquist also said that there had been a recent demand for engineers in the surveillance ployment and 6 per cent are still undecided. Advanced USITA: B. a.m., Internationa Room, Kansas Union Bank Management Clinic: 6.30 a.m. Woodruff. Campus Bulletin wobshut. University Relations: 8:30 a.m., Walking Room Kansas Cultural Arts Committee: 10 a.m. Kraftlin Speech Pathology: 11:30 a.m. Alone A Advanced USITA: noon. Ballroom Bath Management: 12:15 p.m. Ballroom Education Administration: 12:30 p.m. Bank Management Coffee: 10:15 a.m. Jayhawk Room The recent condemnation of the U.S. War in Indochina by the American Psychological Association's Board of Directors was unexpected by some of Kansas psychology professors. SUA Bridge: 1:30 p.m. Browsing Room ESC: 3 p.m. Oread Room. Bank Management Size Group: 3:30 p.m. Kansas Union **robobiology** 6 p.m., English Room. Advanced UNITA 9 p.m., Walkins Room. Counsel on Academic Affairs 7 p.m., Ballroom. Council on Academic Affairs 7 p.m., Regionalist Room. Consumer Protection Senate Committee: p.m. Governors Room. Antiwar Resolution Takes Some Profs by Surprise "I'm really surprised that they took a stand," said B. Kent Houston, associate professor of psychology. "I don't know if there's ever been an issue of this magnitude Houston explained that the APA coordinated publications, conducted national conventions and issued guides for psychological training. David Holmes, associate professor of psychology, said that "the APA has been traditionally very apolitical." SIMS: 7 p.m. Countle Room. USA Classical Film: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff George Kellas, assistant professor of psychology at UMass Amherst and AFA activist Kellas said the condemnation was 'not particularly strange' for the case. "The concern," said Houston. "has been not to make the national psychological association a football arena." that has come before the Board." Anthony Smith, professor of psychology, said the APA's action of denouncing the war in Iraq is "incoherent," motherhood." But, said Smith, it is always surprising to see organizations involved in politics. Smit cited a previous instance when the APA took a political stand on its stance of national Convention in 1988, Smith said that the APA, like many other professional organizations, instead held its conventions in Chicago. Smith cautioned against interfering from the APA's action that he considered a political party. Although an executive secretary of the APA often testifies before Congress, he explained, the APA has no lobby "Professional organizations," it says, finding it increasingly difficult to connect social and professional responsibilities isolated from other. xxxxxxxxxx JAYHAWKER TOWERS KU APARTMENTS Not more than 5 minutes walking anywhere. JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS K. U. Campus 1603 West 15th Now Leasing for Summer and Next Fall THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION is holding its own leapette the ever-increasing number of planners and teachers. Special problems for schools include the fact that schools pinched by state and federal funding are expanding in营地的aving programs at the rate they were in the past. A spokesman for the Educational Placement Bureau said he telephone interview Monday the day graduates of the School of Education would not be compiled until annual report was made in the fall. Auto parking included equipment field, which he speculated might be the result of findings from major military research projects. Modern kitchen with disposal Tenant Storage Rooms on each Floor 1988 Pontiac Tempo2 2-door hardtop, white with black vinyl tint, power steering, air conditioner, Aiyakhw VW, ZM2-834 - 832-290 6-15 Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see Convenience - Comfort - Safety - Extras Often graduates are limited geographically in their search, most often due to marital problems. To compound problem, interweave systems do not send representatives as far as they have in the Luxurious carpet on all floors Your own thermostat for heat incinerator dump on each floor Modern kitchen with disposal 1968 Javelin, 2-shoot harding, white, cinder 4-身体, 3-spread 8-Jayhawk VW, 2522 Iowa, 843-2200 6-15 Most of the 128 graduating seniors at the School of Medicine in Kansas or Kansas City, Mo. according to statistics released in The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing North Side Country Shop, 707 N. 2nd Antiques, used furniture, and lots of other items. 9-5 7 days a week. 842- 3159. Herb Altenbenrd NI.Brick walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and paint All Utilities paid Complete laundry in each building mrs. Gladys Padget president director for the College of Arts and Sciences, said Monday, statistics were not kept in the office because it served mainly as a lason for setting up interviews One day 35 words or fewer. $1.00 each additional word. $0.01 SEVENTY-EIGHT PER CENT OF the students received their first choice of intern assignments and those who wish to work with their first or second choices. For sale. Three matching solid oak antique wardrobes and one old trunk 1061 International jeep scout Make offer, call 542-3289 6-15 Excellent carpet or air for all your Your own thermostat for heat and air conditioner Dana Liebengoed, assistant professor of journalism and placement director, said Tuesday that employment statistics for journalism graduates would not be compiled for another week or two. For Sail - 1962 Volkswagen Bui-bre- inade engine - has 14000 miles - would make an excellent camper 842-8263 6-15 past. Most interviewers came from Kansas and Missouri school systems. SHE SAID the number of interviews coming to campus this past academic year was down from last year and she said it was more of an employee's market than an employee's. New shipment of India prints just in at the HODGE PODGE, 15th W 9th. 6.19 From 60 to 65 per cent of liberal arts graduates pursue graduate studies the following year. One day Bokomon presents summer overalwear jeans—cowboy and *Hawaiian* jackets, yesterday's clothes at iPhone jackets, yesterday's clothes at 119. Virtue, 6-14 Bath tub, shower, two lavatories each apartment FOR SALE. Mercedes-Benz. 1960. Model 180, Reg. Gas. Call 842-6140. e.15 Forty-six new doctors will stay in Kansas for their 12-month KU Medical Center, 18 in three KU Medical Center, 18 in three Bethany Hospital in Kansas City. STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can choose from: COST plus 10, at ARY AUDIO - only One Night Discount House in only Three Nights at Theater, tea, coffee and Consulting FOR SALE Sell cheap 1971 Kawaii street scram伯 in excellent condition with 1500 miles. Call 843-2871-842-4444, aik for Dick. 6-19 "For Sale-1869 Norton Commando *A* 750 cc. Excellent condition. Must sell. 843-360 or Ottawa, Kansas Ch- 2-1824 after six For sale Tickets to Rolling Stones Right in front 11th row. 842-6623. 6-21 WANT ADS WORK WONDE' If you don't FATHER'S DAY CARD—Half Price Where...Else????? Cross Reference Malls Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd 6-15 Melighen St. Bar-B-Que 515 Mile St. Outdoor patio B-Que Big-Queue 515 Mile St. Outdoor patio B-Queue $150. Stab in go to $300. Stab to cut to $85. Beak Brick plate $185. Beak Brick plate $185. $300. Beak Brick plate $300. $300. Beak Brick plate $300. Open 14 hrs to 9 p.m. Phone 862-784-6211 Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two looks of way at it! 1. If you use them, you visit an adventure you're at a disadvantage. Either way it comes to the same new Analysis of the Western Civilization. Campus Madhouse 140, West 10th. 7-27 FATHER'S DAY GIFTS of losing value. From the unique Christian Bookstore, Cross Reference Mall's Shopping Center, 711 W 23rd 6-15 Leaving the country, must well 1963 Chevrolet II Nova, motor perfect; body & interior bearable, $200, Call Dan, 842-458 Anytime. 6-19 Fourteen doctors will enter the military and the remainder of the class will intern in hospitals throughout the United States. FOR RENT three days 25 words or fewer : $1.50 COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Available now. 1 and 2床 apartment, 3 and 4 bedroom, AC pool and laundry, 5 Bedroom, Apt. 19, B-Ph. Apt. +832-820-7121. KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days each additional word : 5.02 Deadline: 5.00 p.m. 2 days before publication Apartment for rent in exchange for work Call 843-7863 6-14 Attractive and comfortable roooms for students, utilities, pads, share kitchen, no pets. Call 842-7080 6-19 For rent for summer, A-C furnished in private home. Walk to campus. Nice, but reasonable. Utilities paid. 483-613-1013 103 West 19 Terrace NOTICE Sandals handcrafted to your person- alized taste at HODGE PODGE 15 W. 9th. 6-19 Apartments furnished, some air-conditioned, large enough for two or more beds, nearby kitchens, near town parking, no pet beds. 843-5367 6-27 Sleeping rooms-furnished, with or without kitchenPrivileges, for males, off street parking, borders KU and near town. No jets. Phone 343-7877. Notice: Girl's summer earrings at the Hodge Podge. 15 W wthin 6-19 Available now. 2 mw efficiency apf. Purnished, private entrance, blocks 2-3 from campus; $75 for room, no pets, kids boy, ferried. 843-7260 Rooms & Arts, for students. All close to campus. 1216 Louisiana. 843-1601 & 843-1222. 6-19 SUMMER DANCE classes now en- rolling Liz Harry Dance Anaconda. Tag, jaz, ballet, aerobatic. Begin- ning July 6. 842-6875 842-6875 842-6875 ENGLISH TRACHER will do wi- ding and tutoring, M.A in Engl- ish, 7 years college experience. Will am these and orientation. 1982-6-19 1982 ABRAXAS LEATHER — clothes, purses, belts, hats, backpacks. 17 W 9th. HELP WANTED Responsible couple or single student to live in pleasant air-conditioned house during later part of summer if dated. 842-4088 6-14 TEACHER OPENINGS. Current last- school year, 1974-75 with seeking baccalaureate in field 3. California School Placement. 1974 Berkshire, Berkeley. 1975 41477. 41078. Sales Manager--For smart young professionals, the Candidate opportunity for one with good banking in retail field and management benefits. Call Mrs. Doniecke. ABRAXAS LEATHER leather goods-custom orders Competition CSC TOYOTA TRUJILLO LAWRENCE KANAS LAWRENCE KANAS Delicious Food Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, K. C. Steals Our menu is and has always been "There is no substitute for quality Sports Cars Inc. 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 12 Main Street of the Kawai River Bridge Phone: (855) 453-8431 Open 10am Closed Mon-Fri sirloin Five days 25 words or fewer. $1.75 each additional word. $0.3 TYPING Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, or dissertation prompt, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-258-3281. Mails: 843-258-3281 Racine: 6-22 Wanted roommate to share apartment or house for fall. Call Ron at 842-6081 thrown. The term papers typed accurately, promptly IBM Selectric elite type text, and SOUTHWEST BOOKING REASONABLE RATES KINDAVIS 842-0579 842-5625 Stuffers needed. $165 per hour, a.m. Thurs at Print Shop Inquire at 111 Flint Hall Approximately 2 hrs. work 6-14 Wanted people to share house. $65 for food and rent. 843-1919, 1340 Ten- nance. 6-14 MISCELLANEOUS WANTED NOMATIZE WANTED to share half of 3 room house until fall. $33 per month plus utilities. Call Don at 602-842-7928 or 842-7928 for more. 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. PERSONAL Experienced in typing these, dissertation term papers, other type papers and types of briefs. Typical type Accurate and prompt response. Req's Phone 842-3541. Might be relied upon. Phone 842-3541. Might be relied upon. LOST Pipes, papers, and all smoking accessories are available at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th 6-19 Specialized instruction in Classic and Flamenco concert guitar for beginners, progressive techniques, progressive selected techniques, intermediate playing Telephone 841-2910. DIVING Supplies Please Road-Win FREE-FREE-FREE Paid Emergency Paid Ticket to Implantation and/or Maternity Birth Registration duty for registration to WASHING- TON POST OFFICE, BOX 140-SOUTH WEST POST OFFICE JAROLD'S Diving Supplies 143-3565 Lawrence, Kansas Lost. Tortoise framed glasses, Photogre- vies lenses. Area Summerfield to Union. If found call 843-8782. Reward 6-21 843-3635 Lawrence, Kansas Dacor Scaur P.A.D.I. Equip. in Stock Certified Instructor Dealer Webster's Mobile Homes Your Complete Service Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts In-drops - skirting - Parts Aamp Park Pages Available 3409 W. fth 842-7700 Just Wet the Floor Just West of the Drive-In Theatre RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842 2323 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. Toyota Corolla Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 1, Sat. til noon. TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSU 500 E.23rd OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE 0 TO 40 MPH-13.5 RECLINING FRONT SEATS UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL 842-0444 LOVE THAT DATSUN Y 6 Wednesday. June 14. 1972 University Summer Kansan JOHN STENARD CHANDRINS CANTO R. L. Schiefelbusch, Director of Child Resilience, oversees the activities of three centers located in Haworth Hall, at the KU Medical Center and at the Parsons State Hospital, official opening ceremonies for the facility in Haworth Hall will be held today, a laboratory for teachers in education, oceans, and other areas. Mrs. Mary Hobfler, below, along with other teachers, leads classroom activities for retarded children enrolled at the with Governor Robert Docking, former chancellor W. Clare McKinnon and Chancellor James Foster. Our research and educational activities are carried on in the complex work of the department as well as serving as a New Children's Center Provides Space for Research and Training Today's dedication ceremonies for the Kansas Center for Mental Retardation and Human Development will acknowledge the major advances Kansas has made in treating handicaps in children. A series of dedications and open houses in Kansas City will show that Parsons will present six facilities for research and professional training in the causes and treatment of mental retardation and its aspects of human development. THE CEREMONY at Lawrence will be followed by dedications at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City and the Parsons State Hospital. At the KU Center, Parsons, Garcia LaVie, director of the Also presiding at the dedication of the card. Skippa bushe, director of the U.K. Bureau of the K.U. Bureau of Child Re- sponsibility. Vie Chang- William O. Rue. Tours and an open house of the facilities will be conducted from 9 a.m. till noon. Former University of Kansas Chancellor W. Clarke Wesson has returned to Lawrence to be the opening ceremony at 10 a.m. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, will be the speaker in Kansas City at 10 a.m. Tuesday, R-Yates Center, will address the Parsons ceremony at 6 p.m. There will be an open house and meeting on Thursday. These dedications are due in part to the work of Director Schweichbaum (2015), he was awarded the treasury of Child Research at KU. He began collaborating with Howard Bair, superintendent and medical director of Parsons State Hospital, on the idea of using research results from KU in developing a retarded children at Parsons. "IN 1958 there were four researchers, less than a thousand people, and we thought that was all the money in the world," recalled Ross Copeland, director of Research for the Kansas Center. Federal funds became available for the program in 1958 and it began growing. Today the Center has 230,000 square feet in six facilities, 798 employed and $2 million a year for housing. The cost for building the facilities was $7.3 million, most of which comes from state and federal funds. The Kansas Center will be one of the foremost centers of its type in the United States. Its basic mission is to provide education at its conception; research facilities in conjunction with clinical centers for the treatment of mental retardation and related problems in human development in children. THE UNIVERSITY- AFFILIATED Clinical Training Center facilities will be able to train 300 students a year and 1,500 children at a time. The Lawrence facilities alone provide graduate training in special education, occupational therapy, psychology, speech and hearing, development and music therapy. The Center has progressed greatly in the last few years. But it is the future that is what most developers. The Center's developers. "We're now just beginning to learn about how we are a director of communications at the KU Bureau of Child Development. What we're doing won't change." AMONG THE projects the Center is working on is the Juniper Gardens Children's Project, where researchers are trying to develop better education training programs for the environmental community of Kansas City Through another project called Achievement Place, the Kansas Center of researchers are working to develop a program that considered "uncontrollable." The program is designed to improve the academic, social, self-care and work behaviors of students in school. It is in their school or community. While the research goes on, the clinical training buildings will be places where retarded children and their parents can get help. Professionals of all kinds can devote part of their time to working in the centers with graduate students who can teach them. Professionals they will need in their own work. In addition, clinicians and researchers from the Center will go out into the communities to help the retarded and handicapped where they live or work. The state government is committed to assure the future of the center for a least the next 20 years. E Photos by Bill Seymour ADEMIC STUDENTS 10 Many of the areas, above right, are equipped with one way mirrors so that students and faculty can observe activities without disturbing the participants. Most have the capability for listening and observing, but some activities cannot be observed, but can be video taped for viewing by teachers and students. John Trewola, professional engineer pictured at right, keeps the numerous video taping units in operation. Several full-sized classrooms are provided by the College of Human Development shown at right, discusses the coming days plans with two practice teachers, Carol Menelly, Prairie Village senior, and Willie Brown, Kansas City High School Assistant Professor of Human Development shown at right, discusses the coming days plans with two practice teachers, Carol Menelly, Prairie Village senior, and Willie Brown, Kansas City High School Assistant Professor of Human Development shown at right, preparing them to enter the public school system in the future. Mrs. Millie Copeland, right, provides occupational therapy for those students such as Donnie Hurrellbrink, who is working with children in the classroom. She designs activities which will strengthen his muscles which were damaged by cerebral palsy. 10 (Left to Right) CANNOT PLEASANT THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 82nd Year, No. 8 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Government Puts Bars on DDT Use Thursday, June 15, 1972 See Page 2 Also featured at the Lawrence ceremony were Richard L. Schieflebusch, director of the center, and William O. Rieke, vice chancellor of the University. After the dedication ceremonies in Lawrence the dignitaries traveled to the University of Kansas Medical Center and to the Parson State Hospital and Training Center in Parsons, Kan., to attend the dedications there. New Facility Inaugurated On Campus In a brief ceremony Wednesday morning in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, former Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe formally opened the Kansas Center for Mental Retardation, a three-setting, six-building complex costing $7.3 million. Speaking before a crowd of about 60 people Wescoe said that it was "a day of fullfilment of promise, which resulted from patience and hard work." Wesco was credited with helping the project get its start during his administration at KU. After the plan for the center was first presented to him by the department of human development and state funds, he started a state funds necessary for the project The new John T. Stewart Children's Center, located in Haworth Hall, will conduct research and professional training in connection with the causes and treatment of mental retardation and other handicaps in children. According to Wescoe, it was a sentimental journey as he returned to the University and city in which he lived for nine years. His speech Wednesday was his first public appearance at City Hall, where he will join a public maceutical company in New York City. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. called the new center a "unique undertaking which can succeed because of a noble set of goals." He was also instrumental in getting the protein fund that were needed to complete the study. Gerald LaVek, director of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, spoke at the Kansas City ceremony. State Rep. Clyde Hill, R-Yates Center, was to speak at Parsons Wednesday evening. Through its three centers the clinic will offer retarded children and their parents systematic and specialized help where work with special needs evoke part time to research and training. @ Chalmers, Wesoeo Tickled Dear brother, I am very sorry to hear that you are not able to attend the meeting. I will try my best to make it as comfortable and smooth as possible for you. Soviet Leader's Trip Said Tied to Summit CALCUTTA (AP) — President Nikolai V. Podgorny of the Soviet Union showed up in Calcutta Wednesday on his way to an embassy in Hanoi, North Vietnam's capital. Diplomatic sources in Moscow speculated the journey was part of a concerted Russian move to bring a Vietnam peace settlement, a followup to the recent talks last month in the Soviet capital. But they conceded they had no hard facts. "The Vietnam problem should be immediately solved," Podgorny said through an interpreter at Calcutta's airport. An American soldier of the United States should leave Vietnam. Unlike on Podgorny's last trip to North Vietnam in October 1971, Mao made no speech during the tour. Ballots for New Degree Plan Due By PAM VINDUSKA By PAM VINDESKIR Kansan Staff Writer The College Assembly is voting by mail this month on a new general degree program for University of Kansas students. According to Jerry Lewis, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, all ballots have to be in by tomorrow and the results would probably be known within the next week. If the consensus of the ballots is positive, the Bachelor of General Studies (B.G.S.) degree could be regarded as an alternative degree for liberal arts students, a degree for liberal arts students, he said. Lewis said the proposed degree program most closely resembled one begin at the college level, where students In planning for the program, Lewis said, extensive information from the University of Michigan was used because, "their situation is quite similar to our in terms of academic standards and what they expect from each student." MICHIGAN'S PROGRAM eliminates all language, distribution and concentration requirements. The only two restrictions in the B.G.S. program there are that students take the same number of course hours as they would for a B.A. degree and that at least one-half of those hours be in upperclass courses. KU's program, if approved would keep the distribution requirement, and a major or concentration would be optional. Forty upperclass hours should be required within a minimum of 124, the same as for a B.A degree. Also, it is his job to assign his student work or class at the university (B.G.S.) or (B.A) at the unit of enrollment. "This degree would allow a student and his faculty adviser to plan a program individually tailored to his (the student's) needs and aspirations," Lewis said. LEWIS SAID emotions about the program were mixed. "It's true of most college faculties of this age that there is a lack of consensus on whether to pay for their education." According to minutes from the College Assembly meeting, points were made by various members which both favored and opposed the proposed B.G.S. program. Some members said that the degree represented a reasonable compromise reflecting various points of view and that it would fill the student's needs for more autonomy and flexibility in planning an undergraduate curriculum. BUT SOME MEMBERS thought that the B.G.S. degree would provide too much freedom and most students would be inadequately prepared for such a responsibility. Other members presented certain conditions which they thought must be met before such a program could be adopted, for example, that some students were in favor of adoption only if the program were in a separate division of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY has 715 members. This includes all 550 full-time faculty members, 53 teaching assistants and 110 instructors and 110 undergraduate students. Teaching assistants, assistant instructors, juniors and seniors are elected by proportional representation. This is based on the number of persons enrolled in each department. Freshman and sophomores are elected from their respective colleges-within-the college. All are eligible to vote. If the College Assembly votes in favor of the new B.G.S. degree, the recommendation for the program will be sent to the college board of regents for further consideration. Complaints on Deposits Checked By KENT PULLIAM Kansan Staff Writer There has been much said about owners of off-campus housing who do not live up to their obligations to tenants. The owners also have tenants who do not agree with them on how the apartment should be left at the end of the year. The University Daily Kansan recently received some complaints concerning Jayhaw Towers Apartments about the theft of a deposit on a deposit renters made in the fall. Two complaints were made about specific apartments. Kent Wilson, Shawne Mission senior, and George Johnston, Alexandria, Va., senior, apparently believed they left their apartment clean. They each received an itemized statement of damages for which they would be charged. They each thought the charge was unjust. BOTH WERE upset because the 2 thought their apartment was clean when they left it. The cleaning charges amount to $40 for the entire apartment and was split between the four tenants who were there during the year. The Kansan talked to E. H. Martin, manager of Jawahra Tawkens apartments about the charges and found that he had not been charged in assessing students for the clearing. According to Martin, the $50 deposit for security and performance was new this year. Before this year there had been no damage for damages or a deposit on him. Martin said that about six weeks oceane the end of the spring semester a letter was sent to each tenant that explained what kind of help of them before they left an apartment. When each of the apartments was vacated, Niles House, assistant manager, made an inspection of each apartment. His inspection included such things as the oven and range the bathrooms and the kitchen. He cleaned the furniture and any other items which would need to be cleaned before new occupants could move into the apartment. HE SAID THAT in past years the complex itself sustained the losses incurred for cleaning each of the apartments. Last year the costs totaled nearly $22,000 for cleaning the complex, according to Martin. House explained the procedure for billing the occupants for damage or cleaning that needed to be done. He said he made an initial inspection of each room before checking the time it would take a cleaning crew to get the room ready for a new occupant. Health Center Construction Begins After this initial investigation he turned By JOLENE HARWOOD Kansan Staff Writer Construction began Monday on a new Student Health Center that will replace Watkins Hospital and serve the University of Kansas as an out-patient clinic. It is expected that the building will be under construction for approximately 18 months and should be completed sometime around the first of December. The building with Lawton, vice chancellor and director of facilities, planning and operations. Two years ago, after an extensive study, the concept of a new building located southeast of Robinson Gymnasmium and northeast of O-zone parking lot was opened by a hospital committee composed of student and faculty members. The original plan of four years ago was to the out-patient clinic to be an addition to the existing ward. Since then, the student body has more than tripped, Lawton said, and antibiotics have made it possible for a student to be treated as an outpatient. It was built when the student population was smaller and its primary use was as a bed-hospital. There were no antibiotics and students who needed medical attention were generally confined to the hospital for a period of time. decided Watkins Hospital could no longer serve the University efficiently. The need for a bed-hospital is no longer a major concern. The need now is for more treatment rooms to insure greater efficiency and decrease the time a student must wait before receiving attention, Lawton said. LAWTON SAID that the committee THE HOSPITAL committee gave up plans to remodel Wakings Hospital for use as a treatment center. "In the area that Watkins Hospital is located there is very little room for expats." "A survey of the students showed that they needed a clinic that was more accessible, off the hill and where greater parking facilities are available." The Center will b supplied with several new pieces of equipment, according to Dr. Raymond A. Schlegeler Jr., director of the pieces and administrator of the new Center. was more feasible to build a new building to remodel the present hospital. A REVENUE BOND issue supplied $2.8 million of the needed funds for the Center. The remaining $250,000 came from the state of Kansas. Lawton said. "Almost all of our kitchen equipment is being replaced and we're getting a brand new x-ray machine to replace the old one," Schweweller said. The 2-story contemporary-designed Center will have approximately 60,000 square feet of floor space and will include equipment for inpatient service, Schweiger said. They submit a time sheet showing the amount of time it took and also noting House said that his estimates usually were about four hours short of the actual cleaning time, but the charges were based on his original estimate. He cited some costs that were incurred for the cleaning process. He said that the charge for cleaning an oven and range was $10. He pointed out that it would take from two to three hours labor plus the costs for cleaning supplies. Estimates of $10 was low in most cases due to a buildup over a 9-month period of cooking. In an inspection of several randomly chosen apartments the difference between those that had been cleaned and those that had not was easily apparent. What had appeared clean on the surface in the uncleaned apartments was not clean when inspected more closely. House said that each apartment had to be spoilless for new tenants. What probably would have been clean enough for a person to continue with it, not clean enough for a person to be reused to pay a deposit of $50 on it for the year. According to Martin and House, they would have inspected any apartments before the occupants left, but were not asked to do so. The average cost of each apartment's cleaning bill ranged from $20 to $30. There were 558 notices sent out which required partial foreclosure of the $20 deposit for some households, and eight complaints about the failure to receive full payment on the deposit. Meisons which were clean enough to meet inspection numbers about 15 per cent, are being closed. The first confirmation came when Podgorny embarked from the aircraft in Calcutta for what was announced as a one-hour stopover. A Soviet Embassy said Podgorny delayed his departure because of hard-flying weather. Each of the deposits was placed in a bank at the beginning of the fall and the tenants received the interest their deposit accumulated over the year. Podgorny also stopped in India last October on his way to Hanoi, making an overnight visit to New Delhi for talks with the leader of the countries are linked by a friendship treaty. New Delhi's pro-Moscow Patriot newspaper carried a Moscow dispatch Wednesday that said Podgorny was expected to discuss with Vietnamese leaders the possibility of resuming peace talks, but that it was described as a hint from the United States that it would be agreeable to ending its boycott of the talks. The Indian government knew of Podgorny's trip in advance. Foreign Minister Swaran Singh and the chief Indian foreign policy planner, D. P. Dhar, visited Podgorny last week. Podgorny later held discussions with Singh and other Foreign Ministry officials. Pakistan was believed to be one of the topics they discussed. - The Soviet Union operates regular air services between Moscow and Hanol via Calcutta, avoiding flights over China. India was repeatedly denied that the Soviets used the flights to transport military equipment to North Vietnam. The forthcoming meeting meeting between Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and President Pratip Singh Soviet officials in Moscow provided no information on the purpose of Podgoryn's trip. The North Vietnamese Embassy in Paris directed a caller to "telephone Hapal" for an answer. Though Nixon said he and the Soviet leaders had extensive long discussions on Vietnam during his visit, details of what they said have been kept secret. The Moscow diplomatic community, nevertheless, has reached Nixon and the Russians reached some Nixon, so understanding about Vietnam, despite continuing differences. Ted Says Candidacy Possible But Unlikely "But I don't believe that's a reasonable situation, or a foreseeable one," declared the Massachusetts senator, adding: "I think circumstances under which I might accept." NEW YORK (AP)—Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said Wednesday he would consider running for vice president on a Democratic ticket headed by Sen. George McGovern if that was the only way Nixon could be beaten in November. Later, however, the candidate from South Dakota drew a formal statement in favor of the governor. In New York for a fund-raising rally, front-runner McGovenn's first reaction was to say Kennedy "would be a great asset on the ticket. . . I wouldn't exclude Sen. Kennedy from consideration if I become the presidential nominee." "I HAVE long treasured my friendship with Sen. Kennedy. I am sure he and I both agree that it's premature to talk about the nomination, but I think the nomination is decided. There is no question but that Sen. Kennedy would bring great strength to any national interest." Originally, McGovern was looked upon in some quarters as a stalking horse for Kennedy in advance of the Democratic National Convention July 10. But Kennedy has insisted again and again that he would seek the presidential nomination this year. The possibility of Kennedy as a vice-presidential nominee was raised Tuesday in a copyright interview with the Boston Globe. Kennedy and other members of the Kennedy family are believed to favor McGoverson for the presidential nomination, but he has said he will be persuaded to run for vice president to strengthen the McGovern ticket. "IN MY OWN MIND, if it would make a difference, then it would really make a difference," the Globe quoted Kennedy in reply. "The same general principles apply to not accepting the vice presidency as the presidency." In Washington, Kennedy later confirmed his statements to the Globe, but added, that he could not foresee the eventuality in which he might seek the vice presidency. During the day, McGovern learned that Sen. Edmud S. Muskie, D-Maine, was resuming active campaigning for the presidential nomination with a scheduled delegate-seeking tour, with Sen. Harold Hullett, D-Iowa, as his campaign director. 1 Kansan Photo by JOHN REED Spring Showers Come Campus sprinklers are turned off 2 Thursday, June 15, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs By The Associated Press Japanese Jetliner Crashes NEW DELHI (AP) — A Japanese jetter with 48 persons aboard crashed in flames tonight while attempting to land at New Delhi's airport. Police said most of the 78 passengers and 11 crew members were killed, their bodies strown over a square mile farm area 15 miles from the airport. The victims were all of the holy jumbo fruit There. Thirteen survivors under treatment in two city hospitals, medical sources reported. Local Auto Dealer Held TOPEKA (AP) — A 37-year-old Lawrence auto salesman was arranged Wednesday before a federal magistrate on 13 counts of filing false and fraudulent income tax returns to obtain $15,944.0 in refund checks. Magistrate Jerry Hanna placed Edward P. Warner, 37, Lawrence in the office of a US mining submitted information accusing Turner of filing 13 separate returns. 12 of them under aliases and listing bogus addresses. Each claimed a refund of $1,227.30. Space Communicator Orbits CAPE KENNEDY (AP)—A new international communications satellite circled the earth today as a ground station prepared to it toward a stationary orbit 22,300 miles above the Indian Ocean. From this loft outpost, the payload will greatly increase space communication capacity to and from 17 nations. Among its first assignments will be transmission of television images from the Olympic Games in Munich, Germany. Tongtie the奥运卫星 CERP—was one of the Communications Satellite Corps —COMSAT was to command ignition of a spacecraft motor to lock it in stationary position at the high point of the orbital path above Indonesia. Platform Drafting to Begin WASHINGTON (AP)—The Democratic Platform Committee announced Wednesday it would devote the morning of its regional hearing at Sioux City, Iowa, Friday to farming and rural life. The meeting will be the seventh in the committee's series of regional hearings to gather grassroots opinion on plains that should be incorporated into the platform. The hearings will begin on Monday from Sen. Fred Harris of Oklahoma, Serving as chairman in the afternoon will be Reps, Neal Smith of Iowa and Robert Bergland of Minnesota. Desegregation Ordered DETROIT (AP)—U.S. District Judge Stephen Roth formally issued an area-wide school desegregation order in Detroit today involving the Detroit district and those of three other counties. In ordering metropolitan desegregation, Judge Roth rejected all the integration plans which have been submitted to him. Instead, he set up a nine-member panel to draw up a plan for the court's consideration within 45 days. The judge ordered the panel to draw up a plan involving the Detroit district and Macomb districts and Macomb counties. The judge did not, however, order merger of existing school districts, as had been the case in Richmond, Va., where a metropolitan area consolidation of schools to promote integration was recently overturned by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Bomb Flights Set Record SAIGON (AP)—U.S. fighter-bombers pounded North Vietnam in a record number of raids, killing 180 Americans and bridges and knocking out more than 100 supply trucks, barges and cargo containers officials armed Wednesday. One of 10 bridges reported hit in 340 rails Tuesday was a rail and highway bridge at Hai Duong, China. The Haiqiping Haiphong. The attack by Navy pilots from the carrier Midway destroyed the bridge, severing the main rail line between North Korea and South Korea in a port, the U.S. Command said. American jets also swept within 45 miles of the Chinese border to attack the northwest border and bridges with accurate laser-guided bombs. Then the planes roared southward and smashed a pontoon bridge assembly line on one of its bridges in the biggest strike of the day. The pontoon piant, the only known factory of its kind in North Vietnam, was described as one of the largest shipbuilding firms by a senior Air Force official. The factory wqs uncovered by specialists working with aerial communications photos of the New York City area. Phantoms dropped 16 of their 2,000-pound laser-guided bombs, killing more than 30 people. Bomb Threat Received Security officers escorted Gov. Ducking from the Kansas University campus to an anonymous called that said that a bomb would explode in the Union Gov. Docking left the UMN, before his scheduled speech to the Federal Bank Management Club. The 432 banks were not told of the Officials received the phone call at 7:28 p.m. A search of the building failed to turn up a bomb. Doing returned to speak to the bankers shortly after 7:30 p.m. Gov. Docking told the group of bankers that he also came from a family of bankers, and that they too banked in the bank until he entered politics. He said, "Business in this country has continued to grow and prosper, and the banking industry had a great role in this property." Docking said that bankers should work with fairness as their theme and equity as their goal. Enemy Still Holds Road SOUTH OF AN LOC, NECM. (AP) — Between the driest row of President Nguyen Van Thieu's impatient desire to fly to a victory celebration at embattled An- derson about 100 do-or-die enemy troops They are all that remain of a regiment that for a month has feastured Saigon plans to lift the city from siege. They proclaim a massive victory. These remnants are holding a South Vietnamese infantry regiment is fighting on highway 135—the An Loi lifeline—by a combination of sheer gears and master guerrilla tactics. ONLY ONE MILE of MIDWAY 13 remains to be cleared for a linkup of Saigon troops north of Midway. The linkup will entree into the provincial capital. As each day passes with the promised linkup unmade, Saigon's 21st Division, responsible for opening the highway and ending the siege, gets increasingly embarrassed. Reserve Board Member Outlines Banking Change The electronic age may reduce the necessity of money someday, as computer use will become a member of the board of governors of the Federal Reserve Mitchell said, “There are 90 million checking accounts in this country. But 15 percent are written everyday. In one day $50 billion of checks are written. Over 90 per cent of this nation’s checks are being written by checkers. The Federal Reserve Speaking at the sale, Michael Clinton Wednesday, Michel said that there were three major changes in electronics that could alter the way people do business. Board must find new methods for handling these checks." WASHINGTON (AP)—Henry Kissinger, President Nixon's gobettinging national security strategy, fourth trip to the People's Republic of China for a round of meetings at normal relations. The first is the crediting system. Here the employer would generate a tape of the amount entered into the account. This would eliminate the excessive use of checks. Accounts would be generated rapidly and therefore durable. His visit June 19-23 was announced Wednesday by the White House as a follow-up to Nixon's meeting in 1964 with a meeting for a continuing exchange of views on any international topic either side. And it will coincide with a time when Soviet President Nikolai Podgorny is expected to be in France, where he will North Vietnamese leaders. Pontoon bridge making is now a critical industry in the North America. Steel and concrete bridges have been knocked out by U.S. air Presidential press secretary However, Ziegler said, there is no connection with the Podgorny trip, and that Kissinger plans no meetings with him. Ziegler added that no meetings Kissinger to Return to China; Subject of Talks Not Disclosed About a score of the giant bombers attacked North Vietnamese forces in the A Shau Valley near Hue. B52 bombers pummeled enemy troop concentrations and staging areas Wednesday along South Africa's border with Laos and Cambodia. with representatives of other countries in Peking were contemplated. The 18th Century prints chosen by Bill Kuhke, film director, include scenes from "Hamlet," King Lear, "The Tempest," Juliet, and Juliet, "Twelfth Night," "Merchant of Venice" and others. "I the irony is that in military terms, opening the highway is secondary now. We are getting enough troops in by choppers, and enough supplies, to take them out at An Loc," a U.S. pilot said. The Kissinger trip was agreed in principle duringixon's son's first visit to February. Ziegler said, but there was no pinch down only in recent days. Hoa factory in ruins, the official said. The Lawrence Chamber Players will provide the appropriate background with 18th grade music and music beginning at 3:45 p.m. Pamela D. Kingsbury, curator of prints and drawings, said that the prints, a combination of line engravings and stipple, are the same as the engraved-publisher-print English engraver-publisher-printer seller John Boydell. Boydell commissioned well-known English artists Joshua Reynolds, Benjamin West, Henry Knight and others—to do the painting, then from the original. He became particularly interested in making prints depicting scenes from Shakespearean plays, Kingsbury Light action was reported in the South, on the South One American soldier when two patrols of the 3rd Division attacked the Division, accidentally fired on each other 30 miles northeast of Saigon, the U.S. Command base. Thirty prints depicting scenes from Shakespearean plays will go on display Sunday in the Kansas University Museum of museum's 150-piece Boydell collection, was described by Kingbury as "highly dramatic" and "a masterful concept of Shakespeare." Gallery to Display Play Scene Prints Until Boydell helped revive the craft of English print-making in England, a tradition still in England had been imported from Holland. Boydell was able to develop it to such an extend as the business into an export trade. Ziegler said Kissinger would talk also with top officials of the Foreign Ministry but there was no certainty of any discussion with Chairman Mao Tse-tung or Kim Jong-un during the February visit. The exhibit will open at 3:30 p.m. in the main downstairs gallery and continues through Aug. 30. A Hong Kong newspaper reported Wednesday that the head of a charity have been "unofficially and secretly warned by Chinese authorities to prepare for a terrorist attack on the health of Chairman Mao." The works, from the museum's themes, include paintings, prints, prints, scene sets, from plays to be produced and studied at the Kansas Shakespeare university. The prints, chosen from the "He wanted to do for English painting what he did for English engraving—make it a respectable art form," Kingston said. The gallery he established prew from 34 prints in 1789 to 182 n 1802 and provided a popular source of entertainment for the time. She said that English art had been considered a stepchild to continental art." The Hong Kong report said that the Chinese Communist party had apparently to decide on a succession of the 7-year-old chair Kissinger is expected to leave saturday morning or Friday morning, and he will be at Shanghai Monday, China time, and return to Washington June the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts WAKE UP! to the neat summer and fall put-ons "BUT PSYCHOLOGICALLY, we are nailed to the Route 13 bridge. The bridge will not be lifted until the first convoy gets through. And a military vehicle has moved up from the street in away two months," he said. The second change, called pre-authorization, would follow the principle of having accounts charged on the date agreed by both employer and employer. A section of Highway 23 south of An Loc still was held by North Vietnamese troops. Allied officers have said the 89-day siege ended in February and lifted until the overland route to An Loc was completely opened. The third and final change involves the point of sale terminal. A person purchasing a computer identification card in an electric computer an instruct the computer where to transfer funds. This is an excellent system for handling bad checks, Mitchell said. A visit to the foxholes on the front is a stark reminder of the enemy's enormous cost of maneuver in tanks, helicopters and trucks adorn the roadside, turning rusty red as the monsoon rains gather Mitchell旧 the bankers that Mitchell旧 the bankers that the technical know how for producing such computers. It is only a matter of time before they can be used. OVERLAND PARK (AP)—LI FOR Republican nomination for governor, sharply criticized attacked, buried or defended the "As a symbol of unity, the flag represents our hope for and faith in the future of our nation." Shultz said. Muskie announced at a joint news conference that he and the university will mediate on a seven-day, 10-state delegate search in an effort to enter the Democratic convention next month with 200 delegates. Hughes said he thought the trip would put Muskie in line as a viable alternative for the nomination on a second, third or fourth ballot if the convention gets underway. "The time comes and the need arises." Shutz's remarks were prepared for an appearance at Flag Day ceremonies sponsored here by the Elks Club. 9:30-5:30 Mon-Sat and Thurs. night "To attack the flag, to burn it or defile it, is an attack on the faith the flag represents," he said. Chon Thanh, 15 miles south of An Loc, is wrapped in a cordite haze from the constant artillery aimed at enemy positions. "The Communists have sat through 20 B32 strikes, we have encircled them three times in the air and that is up that road," commented a U.S. adviser. "It is greenade for it to be so impevious to the shelling." Shultz Raps Flag Defilers "If we can do that, we are a viable alternative, whatever the odds." Muskie declared. Shultz said he had faith in the young people of this country, in their vision and their idealism WASHINGTON (AP)—Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine placed a party reformer, Sen. Harold Hughes of Iowa, in virtual control Wednesday of the Muskie at a democratic presidential nomination. Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., the front runner for the nomination, said while campaigning in New York: "Senator Muskus and I have been on the job a long time before. We remain good friends, and I welcome this extended friendly competition." Muskie Renews Supporter Hunt Flooded street Kentan Photo by TOMMY DAVENPORT Intersection to Get Signals Intersectional 35212 Installation involving an 19th St. is imbedded in a project involving a half-mile stretch along Iowa St. Rains Wednesday delayed progress on the $16,000 project, which also calls for widening parts of Iowa St. and medians at 15th and 19th St. intersections. Construction, begun last week, is expected to be finished by the beginning of the fall semester. Groundbreaking for two hospital buildings at the Kansas University Medical Center is expected before the end of the Med Center Project Ahead of Schedule EPA Orders Restriction On Domestic Use of DDT WASHINGTON (AP)—The Environmental Protection Agency announced Wednesday that it had used DDT effective next December 31, but the decision was appealed and sides in the prolonged struggle. DDT product formulators asked the federal appeals court in New York to order issued by EPA Administrator William D. Emerson. At the same time, the environmentalists opposing the governor's effort to federal court here, seeking to eliminate from Ruckelshaus's order the last remaining ex-convicts that DDT use may be permitted fight against disease and insect pests since its discovery in 1939. The order climaxed a dispute which Ruckelhaus himself dated back to the publication 10 years ago of the late Jane Carson's research on the effects which warned of the effects of chemicals on the environment. They argued that DDT persisted in the environment, was absorbed by animals and man, and caused cancer. It also posited a potential threat to human health. Miss Carson's cause was quickly adopted by a coalition of conservationists and scientists who were among the mainstays of man's Ruckelhaus agreed with these arguments in Wednesday's order, stating that "the long-range risks of continued use of DDT for crop protection other crops is unacceptable and outweighs any benefits." Ruckelshaub banned all remaining uses of DDT in the United States effective next Dec. 31 with these limited exceptions: -DDT may be used for public dispositions uses unr*r the suspicious purposes. Service. The department of Agriculture, military ser- cery and physical health. - Users and formulators were given 30 days to appeal the ban on only on specific JDT uses on users. - Used peppers and onions in storage. Exports of DDT from the United States are not banned. But the other remaining uses, mahogany and soybeans, were prohibited. Ruckelhuss said DDT probably would be replaced by the use of methyl parathion, a chemical considered highly toxic but which breaks down rapidly not to collect in the environment. Grant Funds Pollution Fight TOPEKA (AP)—Rep. Bill Roy, D-Kan., said Wednesday the Kansas Board of Health had been granted $235,189 by the Environmental Protection Agency in air pollution control in Kansas. He said the Kansas City-Wyandotte County Health Department would receive air pollution control program Roy announced through his Topeka office that the Topeka school district would receive $268,325 from the Office of Education for a program of early childhood education that disadvantaged children who had participated in a Head Start or similar preschool program. The construction date was accelerated after an intensive effort in planning for the expansion, Rieke said. A feasibility study will be completed by September and be presented to the Board of Regents for final approval. Giving the proposed clinical services and basic sciences a new aim of administrative teams who have studied two modernistic approaches Alan M. Thompson, associate dean for graduate studies, and Dr. Michael R. Schroeder research, traveled to LaJolla at the University of San Diego to conduct his research. Russell C. Mills, associate vice-cancellor for facilities and program and resource development at the Masters University Hospital at Hamilton, Ontario, for a preliminary visit. Later this month, Merlin O. Olson, associate director of the Medical Center, Dr. Ralph Berman, medical Center, Dr. Kerrit E. Kranz, dean for clinical services, and Wiek will conduct a study of the McMasters hospital "We want to develop our medical center with a look to the future. We want to take away the experience of being at the aura of a hotel quality," explained Rieke, "With this type of architecture, maybe people wouldn't enter a hospital with that they were going to be hurt." Riverbirds Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price $2.99 on Capitol Records Capitol at KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles Maupintour travel service Telephone 843-1211 Bank location Downtown Malls location South Union location Campus Hillcrest location West NOW WITH 4 CONVENIENT OFFICES THAT'LL SEND YOU University Summer Kansan Thursday, June 15, 1972 3 Profs Think Journalism Camp Success B Journalism Campers learn yearbook writing style Kansan Photo by TY BROWN Girls Study Yearbook Publication Red Sox Swamp Royals, 11-3, to End Loss Skein BOSTON (AP)—Danny Cater leaders, running a 13-Hit Boston Sox attack that buried the Kansas City Royals 11-3 Wednesday The Red Sox, beating the Royals in a game-struck for four runs the first inning and built their lead to 8-0 with a four-run four capped 10th. After Rico Petrocelli's run- sing single in the fourth made it 9-4. Boston tailed two more in seventh on Fisk's two-run-ball John Curtis, sailing along with Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L. Pt. G.B. Detroit 18 70 351 Baltimore 27 22 551 Cleveland 22 21 457 St. Louis 21 21 457 New York 21 21 457 Chicago 21 21 457 NATIONAL LEAGUE Oakland 33 11 673 - Chicago 31 16 873 - Cleveland 31 17 873- California 24 27 471 - Kansas City 22 28 470 - St. Louis 22 28 470 New York W 14 L Pct G.B. 68 Pittsburgh 32 18 18 Chicago 23 20 14 Milwaukee 23 20 14 Minneapolis 23 30 412 St Louis 23 30 412 Wednesday Scores American League Cinnamond 31 14 692 --- Los Angeles 32 22 1042 --- San Diego 32 22 1042 --- Atlanta 25 27 481 85 - San Diego 25 27 481 85 - San Diego 18 30 1042 --- Boston 11; Kansas City 3 New York 3; Chicago 0 Detroit 3; Minnesota 2 Milwaukee 1 National League Cinnamint 2. Philadelphia San Francisco 3. Pittsburgh San Diego 4. San Diego New York 8. Atlanta 3 Houston 5. Montreal Boston 6. Cleveland Nationals 7. Nationals, rates CURTIS PICKED up his third victory in four decisions with a seven-hitter, outhurling four Kansas City pitchers. a three-hit shutout going into the eighth, was touched for three hits. A Scalienbunilm hit a leadoff home run and Jerry Mays delivered a hit. In other American League games, the four-hit pitching of Mike Callison and Bobby Murcer and the four-hit pitching of Mike Callison and Bobby Murcer and the New York Yankees on a 3-9 victory over Chicago, ending the White Sox's six-game winning streak. Callison cracked his second home run of the season in the first inning off Tom Bradley, ending a string of two consecutive shutouts for the Yankees, and Murcer connected in the fifth. 73, 73 struck out nine in five innings before leaving for a pitch hitter. KEKICH, 5-5, collared the White Sox on three hits through six innings but left in the seventh inning, and he with one out and Bill Melton walked. Lyle came on to strike out Mike Andrews and retire Rich Morales on a fy ball. He won in order the rest of the way. virus and Harmon Killebrew's win against the Detroit Tigers squeezed in a seventh innning down in Minnesota Koblebrew's 442-foot smash, following a ninth-inning leadoff single by Ked Carew, was his second win of the career. His moved past Ted Williams into the No. 6 spot among all-time home run hitters in the league. LOLICH, WHO struck out nine to regain the American League strikeout lead with 94 for the first time by a flu virus the last few days. In a Nation League contest, Johnny Bench drove in both legs and siftered fire by the sizzling Reds edged Philadelphia 2-1 night night for their third win on Saturday and 20th in their last 32 games. Mickey Lolich, fighting off a Bench's long homer made it 2-0 in the fourth. It was his 17th home run and 47th run batted in, both tots in the maids. Jack Billingham, 46-retired the first 13 Phillips before he needed help from Carrie after Willie Montanex singled with two out in the ninth for the fifth Philadelphia hit. Barry Lee Recovers for Open PEBLE B BEACH, Calif. (AP)—Le Trevino, his face drawn and his voice a hoarse, rasping croak, winged into Pebble Beach Wednesday to play at Scripps Open, Sage Open Golf Championship. "No, I'm still not feeling very good. I didn't come to the party and added: "But I came to play. That's what I'm here for. I sure didn't come all the way out, here." Trevino, one of the game's greatest gate attractions and most popular players, left an El Toro with his cleavage in a bout with viral pneumonia. By STEVE CRAIG Kansan Staff Writer The first Intensive Journalism Workshop will draw to a close at noon Saturday and, according to Suanne Shaw, assistant professor of journalism and co-facilitator of the workshop, it has gone very well. He was met at the Monterey Peninsula airport by some friends and left immediately for the Pebble Beach Golf Links to practice round over that 6.801 yard, par 72 oceanwide distance. "It's been beetle," Shaw said. "It almost impossible to teach students what public school is." "Legal Aspects of High School Publications" in an hour and a half, Del Brinkman, associate professor of journalism and librarian at the university. Despite the workshop's success, the time limit of one week has caused some headaches. This is the first time the intensive workshop has been offered and there were complaints in the past because many students would have liked to attend the six-week course. The Midwestern Music and Art Camp, but could not afford the time or money for the extended course. "It's been a very frustrating experience." he said. The Workshop is divided into The newspaper lab is taught by Jakeie Raymond, high school science teacher at High School, and Michael Trent, journalism advisor at Winnetown High School in Kansas where the people in this lab is to produce the "Junior Jayhawk," a student newspaper that will be published. three sections: newspaper, yearbook and photography. Each student enrolls in the section of students students attend classes in their chosen area under instructors at the school. An afternoon session is devoted to labs in which students put to use information learned that morning. The yearbook lab instructors are Mary Raye Chandler, publications adviser at Arkansas College, and the school's publications consultant for the Kansas City, Kan., school system, primarily involved in creating primary, with mutating ideas concerning the production of their school's yearbooks. The class studies such topics as writing, copy editing and layout. The photography instructor is Gary Mason, assistant professor of journalism. The purpose of this class is to teach basic photography techniques no experience in photography Printing, film processing and lighting techniques are also taught. All photographs appearing in the "Junior Jayhawk" collection by students in this section. Brent Anderson, Wichita, and Jennifer Lehmann, Escaenaba, both agreed they had gained a great amount of experience. *Jayhawk*'s both agreed they had gained a great amount of experience. *Jayhawk*'s both agreed they had gained a great amount of experience. "I think the teachers here are some of the finest in the country," Anderson said. Lehmann said that she also thought the quality of the instruction was excellent. According to Brinkman, plans include intensive workshops for high school advisers. These workshops would aid advisers in improving student newspapers; bookcases at their high schools. "We've learned a great deal from this workshop, and I think it will aid us in the future," he said. Campus Briefs Club to Meet at Lake Council to Review Demands McGovern Dinner Planned Royals Exec Believes Team Battling Out of Cellar Position The KU Folkforce Club will meet from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday at the Potter Lake pavilion. In case of rain the meeting will be moved to the Riverwalk at 9 a.m. SentEx announced Wednesday that a meeting of the University will be held June 21 to discuss formation of a research center. By STEVE HIX TALIS BELIEVED that the Royals had shown great improvement over the past two weeks. He thought the Royals were on the way up now. MecoGovernors supporters are sponsoring a fund-raising spaghetti dinner from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Lawrence Community Building. The purpose of the dinner is to raise money to send gifts and presents to the children of the dinner is $2.30 per person. Live entertainment is planned. "Pitching is a weakness the Royals must overcome through the powerful bats of the club," he said. Kansan Staff Write Watching a baseball game on a Sunday afternoon is a great way to spend time with thousands of Americans, but for Cedric Tallis it is "silly" Cedric Tallis, executive vice president and general manager of the Royals, said that the major problem of the Royals this year was in timing. He said he had to leave Leaving men on second and third base has cost the Royals $16 million. P. J. SCHNEIDER Cedric Tallis The Royals have been battling Texas and California for the cellar position The farm clubs are looking great this year since many of the younger players are being given a chance to produce, Tallis said. Steve Busby, a pitcher for the Oraha team, is a man to keep an eye on. The trading for younger players has made the Royals an alert, fast moving ball team that is hard studying goes into each trade. The general manager must deal with many of the complexities of managing a sport of baseball. The reserve clause in player's contracts is only one of many concerns the general manager must stand firm on. "TRADIES ARE THE result of good fortune, a bit of luck, and a lot of perspiration and hard work. It also gives you responsibility to know the manner in which my scouts choose the players and then determine the true potential of this in hard-driving sport." TALLIS VIEWS the reserve clause in contracts as being vital. He said that football teams had their training done for them in colleges. Baseball teams must train through their farm clubs. "It doesn't seem fair to invest money in a player to help him develop into major league material, and then lose him." Tallis said. "There are some players who can not just abandon it but we can not just abandon it." "We are facing the most crucial period in baseball history. The situation between ownership and the players, such a manner as to give the fans Impresario Has Sound Booking Business Editor's Note: This is the second in a series of stories on industry and business in Lawrence. By JEANNE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer John Brown, owner of Mid- continent Entertainment, who was born in the area, spreading their songs over a I-5 estate area where there is an apple orchard. Brown's company sponsors seven bands on a full-time basis and 20 others part-time. Most of the engagements the company arranges for the bands are in the west, from North Dakota to Texas. Music is a commercial product does have its problems, according to Brown. He said that recent economy troubles have hit the entertainment field the hardest because when people were faced with budget cuts, entertainment was the first to go. Brown said he believed that musicians should be able to make a living by playing music, rather than just playing week-end dates. He also said the security for the members of seven bands, Rising Sun, Flippers, the Red Dogs, the Young Things, The Tide and Sanctuary. There are 49 bandsmen working in these bands, but Brown said that the turnover rate But his business has picked up this year, Brown said. He thought that it was much easier now to keep the schedules full and to keep their schedules full. MICHAEL B. LEE was high, mainly because most of ANOTHER problem that caused the musicians to leave was that they were most working with a band, perhaps while they were going to school, they reached a decision about whether they wanted to pursue the life of a professional musician or find another. he men were taken by the draft. Marriage also contributes to the turnover. Man Runs Sound Organization John Brown owns Mid-Cintown Entertainment. Brown said that because the bands traveled so much the musicians' role was not very compatible with married life. Brown said that some of the members after playing with a band for a while, realized they were not in the right or the ambition to continue. Several of Brown's groups are quite old. The Blue Things and the Wild Things were the beginnings of Mid-Continent in 1963. He said that because these groups had been taught it was easier for them to get jobs and draw crowds wherever they lived. Brown thought that it was possible to keep the name band, even a new one, the original members had left. The public had seen her, so to see a band whose name was Brown The high turnover rate affected the high turnover rate of a presentation, the kinds of music played, the characteristics that make a band popular. Brown In the office above the Red Dog Inn, once owned by Brown, a staff of five handles the complexities of scheduling bands, writing promotions for the bands' appointees and posting posters ready and helping the bands with their presentations and records. Some of the bands have made recordings of their songs, but none has made it big nationally. And then said was the ultimate goal. Brown started the booking agency by promoting a band on tour in New York. She was an innovative idea in 1963, but as Brown admits, rather com Nonetheless, Brown still does much promotion with radio spots, most of them written and produced by him and his staff. Brown said that the company often used other writers and artists for the promotions, but the bulk was done within the office. Brown has degrees in business administration from Baker University. Promoting the bands is important mainly because they are confidence in the ultimate future of the game." all unique, he said. Some of the groups had dynamical presence while others were audiences while others were more innovative with their Some of the groups have recorded with R.C. and Tampa Bay with their album recorded by Mouth, a Lawrence-based recording Penguin Records Brown said that he preferred using smaller recording companies because they could get the records out when Brown and the assistant manager from the smaller companies gave the groups more individual attention. Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price on Capitol Records $2^{99} "The accent, as far as publicity goes, has got to be on the playing field, and not on legal matters, contract disputes, personalities and character dissertations. The ability as well as ownershipability as a life dawr ownership. at C TALISHA WA VUELLE TALLISHA WAS EXECUTIVE honor last year when he was named "Major League Executive of the Year" by "Sporting News." Kief's Capitol Discount Records The awardpaid tribute to Tallis for building an expansion house in the Bronx three seasons. Outstanding trades have been his greatest accomplishment, and trades that have been termed "unmobileable" by club owners in Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles HE STARTED as a general manager at Thomasville, N.C., for 15 years, then in Jamestown, N.V., F.Lint, Mich. Montgomery, M.D., Seattle, Wash., and served as Pacific Coast League Executive of the Year in 1957. In 1961 Tallis became business manager of the California Angels. He became vice president in charge of operations in 1965. Weekend Scene Junior High Music Camp. The concerts, a culmination of ten days of study, will be at 2 p.m. Friday in Hoch Vassar Playhouse at Pomona Lake: "Guys and Dolls," nightly except Monday and Tuesday. KU Awaits Decision By Chiefs on Camp Asked what the chances were that the Chiefs would accept the offer, Stinson said, "I just don't know." Sirinson would not specify the price that KU had proposed to the Chefs, but he said Wednesday he was not a spokesman for the offer and they were "weighing in." Currently the Chiefs are training at William Jewell College in Liberty, Mo. but said Sifonian will take his college runs out this summer. Athletic director Wade Stinson is still guessing about how the Kansas City Chiefs will respond to the price that the University of Kansas is asking for use of KU training camp next summer. Training at KU would be advantageous to the Chiefs, said Scully, because he was practicing on the same kind of artificial turf that they will be using in practice. Maintaining the team would be costly to-the University, said Stinson. The Chiefs would be housed and fed in a KU dorm. Another advantage of training Lawrence, Stinson explained is the ability to respond quickly of Kansas City, "away from phone calls from their girlfriends Being in Lawrence would force them to "think football," he said. He also explained the advances made by Chiefs accepted the price figure. But, he said, "We're not interested in doing it without a substantial profit." "We're running in the red," stated Stinson. Any profits would be channeled into the athletic department, he said. If the Chies accept the KU offer, "it would help us show a little more toward the breaking-even picture," he said. CRUISING KNITS... Bicycle Mechanic Whether you're cruising on your ecology machine or in the back seat of your car, you'll enjoy the comfort and color of the bicycle shirt. Breast and rump pouches make it easy to stash loose ends. Bicycle shirts come in a variety of colors, racing strips and patchwork designs. Cruise by and try it on. The bicycle shirt, from $11.00. ГООЯВАН MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Monday-Friday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 4 Thursday, June 15, 1972 University Summer Kansam KANSAN comment materials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Tomorrow Is Different In the first editorial in the Summer Session Kansan, June 5, we called attention to the fact that the Kansan would be printed only four days a week. Monday through Friday issues would be produced by the members of the Journalism Camp. Tommorrow's paper will be different in several respects. The first Friday paper this summer, it is also the first of several issues prepared for school students. And it will be distributed solely to journalism campers. The issue tomorrow will be unique in another way. It will be the only issue of the Junior Jayhawk, an eight-page tabloid produced by some of the 64 students in the camp. Actually, students in the newspaper laboratory provided the copy for the paper and students in the photography section provided pictures. The production of the newspaper was, for them, a practical application of what they learned in their morning class sessions. In a sense, the one week workshop this summer is also unique. It has given a number of high school students a chance to get a more hands-on experience than is available in most high schools. Instructors for the camp said it was offered this year to enable more students to attend than could the five-week camp, which begins next week. Apparently this was effective, since more than twice as many students chose to attend the session for one week rather than five. If the one week camp is a good idea, it might well expand in several directions. Del Brinkman, director of the five week camp, said plans included a workshop for high school advisors to improve student newspapers and yearbooks. Some have suggested holding two different sessions—one for yearbook and one for newspaper. Others say there should be more than one camp for a one week session. One purpose of the university is to provide service for the citizens of the state of Kansas, who look to their state school for leadership and help. Much good can come to both these students and their schools through this intensive course in journalism. They, too, enrich the university by providing community with wider access. Perhaps some future editor of the Kansan will be published on the pages of tomorrow's Junior Jayhawk. It wouldn't be the first time the camp produced one. -Rita E. Haugh Editor STOP SCHOOL BUSING "Thank goodness we'll have it erected before the election. I mean, before schools re-open." Cocaine Arrests Increasing in East From Kansan Press Services Although marriages prosecutions have diminished considerably in the New York metropolitan area within the past six months, they are still on the rise. However, he added, there is a higher incidence of cocaine arrests. This was the conclusion reached by a panel of prominent attorneys and a judge convened by the Journal "Contemporary Drug Problems" to discuss both the prosecution and defense of drug cases. Thomas Mackell, Queens District Attorney, said unless an exceptionally large amount of marijuana, "up in the pounds," was involved, current prosecution of marijuana cases rarely "goes the whole route." New York City may be on the verge of a cocaine epidemic. Charles Updike, assistant U.S. attorneys for the southern district of New York, said cocaine was almost already as prevalent as heroin in the city, and about two-thirds the volume of heroin traffic in New York City." Arthur Mass, New York City attorney, underscored the threat of cocaine addiction, saying cocaine was more costly than heroin and just as lethal. He estimated a spounal of the drug, equivalent to one or two days' supply, brought a street price ranging from $50 to 600. The street value of an average bag of heroin runs anywhere from $3 to $7. Robb丈was the judicial attitude toward marijuana possession had now gone full circle. He said in cases involving a misdemeanor quantity of marijuana, the District Attorney in Manhattan always moved to adjourn in contemplation of dismissal. The motion amounts to an automatic dismissal after six months if there has been no further violation of the same nature. The New York State Legislature has expanded the New York City Youth Council Bureau approach through the state. Richard Kuh, former chief assistant District Attorney of New York County, said this legal stance meant that through the state all cases involving small amounts of marijuana, in effect, fall within the jurisdiction of probation departments. Mackell, who said he would like to see the State Legislature reduction the possession of marijuana from misdemeanor to violation status on the law books, said the general change in attitude toward marijuana would be the police department, where marijuana arrest figures are down. "Most judges and most prosecutors themselves, nave treason, or themselves, who are smoke marijuana. There is a tolerance of byproducts of tobacco." A case may be referred to these departments and be eligible for dismissal after six months if no further infraction is on record. Summit Visits Cause Changes, U.S. Officials Believe EDITOR'S NOTE: The summary in the interview who have they really changed? In this article, the post-summit outlook is summarized, and the survey results are reported. By LEWIS GULICK WASHINGTON (AP) — The world is likely to be a safer place in the years following the 1972 summary, and in the more immediate future it will see a step towards widespread U.S.-Soviet dealings. An Associated Press survey since the Moscow and Peking talks finds this view widely held. One survey found that a view tempered by caution against expecting speedy response to deep East-West differences In Asia as in Europe, officials see prospects improved after the summits for avoiding any new, ill-fated trade agreements, though the Vietnam war goes on. Some forecast a new frictions, and the global of the cold war and two superpowers thaws into a more fluid but complicated multipower system. Some sources voiced disappointment at the lack of discernible progress on Vietnam, an issue President Nixon took up with Chinese leaders in February and with the Soviets in July. BUT THEY expect fund-raising major agreements in Asia to evolve only over the years. They believe Nikon is journeys as primarily psychological, creating an atmosphere of oning down old cameras. "Today the President speaks of going to Peking and Moscow for achieving peace," said W. Averill Herrmann, a Democrat whose past posts include an American negotiator at the Paris peace talks, "and yet the war on goes in Vietnam with increased fury." High U.S. officials say the key to a Vietnam peace still lies with Hanoi. Here are some specific things coming up in the wake of the agreements announced in Moscow: IN CONTRAST with the Peking opening in U.S.-China contacts after years of shut-off, the broad range of U.S. Soviet dealings already under way, as well as taking up some new Meanwhile, Nikon will push for congressional approval of the new system. It would 183.4 billion in military appropriations for the coming year. SALT—The U.S. negotiating team is gearing up to return to the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) with proposals for using arms control beyond the safety zone against Moscow. SALT negotiator Gerard Smith said the U.S. proposal would include a call for curbs on strategic bombers, and restrictions on missile forces. SALT PLACED ceilings on defensive and defensive missiles of the U.S. Army restricting already planned programs for weapons im- Smith and Defence of Defense Melvin R. Laird agreed that plain-clothed weaponry would be used in weapons as the Trident missile submarine and the B1-long-range bomber must proceed pending a mutual arms control pact with the United States. Trade-Secretary of Commerce Peter G. Peterson will fly to Moscow next month for the first round of the U.S.-Soviet Joint Commercial Health Officials Blame Gaps on Social Security DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — North Dakota, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and met Wednesday and agreed that elderly people are being denied priority in some areas. The blame for the situation landed on the Social Security Administration. The representatives said they hoped to enlist the help of officials from Congress down to state and local leaders, "serious problem of adequate care for the aged," said Arnold Cook, a health commissioner. The problems were linked to handling health services for older people under Medicare. Commission. The aim is to work out a comprehensive trade agreement by late this year. E. D. Lyman, executive secretary and health director of the Kansas State Department of Health, said "Social security has provided de-emphasized services and has de-emphasized pre-service" work. HOWEVER, A web of issues must be resolved before U.S.-led allies agree. U.S.-Soviet negotiators have yet to agree on the size of a Moscow payment for Russia's aid in World War II debt deals. The meeting stressed the importance of services in the home rather than care in hospitals and nursing homes. The organizations were such services as nursing, homemaker, aid worker, and caregiver care below the护理 level. The Soviets want most-favored-neutral trade treatment from the United States. This will require the U.S. to allow the Nixon administration does not want to grant until a lend-selease settlement. A similar situation applies to Soviet desire in its Export-Import Bank credits. It was reported that in the four states, two-thirds of the counties and 40 per cent of the elderly have any home health-care programs. "We aren't trying to advocate any new concepts; all we are trying to say is that what everyone has agreed the elderly need done," said Herbert Dombek, counselor of the Missouri Division of Health. Peterson predicted U.S.-Soviet commerce in time would surge far above its current flow of a $3 trillion dollar a year. Difficulties over trade and credit terms, marketing problems and the like, in his opinion, will prevent the volume of imports from the billion-dollar mark by 1975. He added: "A little bit of care makes it possible for some old persons to stay in their homes, and if they don't have that little care for the women and they are forced to go to a hospital or an institution." SPACE-U.S. and Soviet forces up a program for the space which, in 1975, will feature a test rendezvous by American astronauts. Environment-Specific projects under the new environmental agreement set forth at Moscow have yet to be worked out. A two nation environment committee will get on the job this summer or up space ships. The U.S.Soviet talks looking toward cooperation by the two space powers have been under way since 1970. Perhaps there will be a joint effort for preservation of polar bears. There may be joint efforts to protect seals and water projects do the climate. RUSSELL TRAIN, chairman of the Council on Environmental Quality, called the endeavor "a whole new ball game" in U.S.-Soviet cooperation. He envisaged a step beyond that, but a very strong step beyond that into actual joint work on joint projects." Science—Under the new accord on science cooperation signed in November, delegations exchanged under the current U.S.-Soviet exchange agreement, and President's science adviser, Edward David, plans to head for Moscow. On the major issue of Europea- security, U.S. and West European officials both apo praised the Moscow summit as a plus in the movement already well under way to narrow the continent's East-West division. PARALLEL TALKS are planned on mutual force between Europe and Canada. An agreement could bring home least of the 300,000 GI's in Europe. Presidential adviser Thomas Perez newsmen that, like SALT, European force cut negotiations were likely to be long and complicated. Secretary of State William P. Rogers said he expected preliminary East-West talk to begin in Heinlski this fall, looking at the pace on European Security and Cooperation next spring. Supreme Court Justices Refuse Club Segregation In West Germany, Chancellor Wolfgang Koehler visited a viewing the U.S. Soviet con- tinent as a total vindication of his policy of normalizing Koehler's relations with the U.S. An AP News Analysis by All Ai TN Analysis by BARRY SCHIED, Associated Press Writer In London, the Edward Heath government "unreservedly" said that it would force Paris, government officials felt the missile pacts didn't go far enough, that the real need is to deal with them and the means to deliver them. WASHINGTON (AP)—The private social club, a last preserve of racial exclusion, has surpassed a critical test in the Supreme Court because six of the nine Justices are unwilling to stretch the concept of "state action" further than ever before. The constitutional argument advanced by K. Leroy Irivis, the black majority leader of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, was that by granting the Moose lodge in Harrisburg a Senate seat it would be more centrally aligned with the club's all-white policy for numbers and guests. A THREE-JUDGE federal court in Harrisburg agreed with Irvine. The reversal by the Supreme Court on Monday snaps a string of integration rulings and implicit supports a right of individuals to form private clubs for persons of their choice-only. Whether the court is in retreat should become clear next term when the justicears hear a suit against a swimming pool association in Montgomery County, Md., that excludes Negroes as members and guests. That link, Ivris maintained, brings the 14th Amendment's guarantee of equal protection into play and the club would either accept it or reject it. Almost without exception over the past quarter-century, the court has broken down racial barriers in real estate and in restaurants, schools and parks on the legal theory they were entrusted with the state and thereby covered by the 14th Amendment. PART OF THE answer may lie in a suit brought by a teacher of black history in Portland, Ore., backed by the American Civil Liberties Union, to deny tax benefits to fraternal organizations that exclude Negroes. Significantly, perhaps Iris reviled entirely upon the 14th Amendment. Some of the court's more recent anti-segregation decisions have been based on other grounds: an 1866 federal civil-rights law that banned discrimination in places of public accommodations. In 1969, the court prohibited racial discrimination in community recreational facilities in Fairfax County, Va., by invoking the 1964 law. A year earlier, it vitalized the 1868 law by banning housing discrimination in a case from the St. Louis area. The appeal, supported by the Justice Department, contends the Wheaton-Haven pool is not entitled to an exemption under the 1964 law and its all-white policy violates the equal rights of blacks to make contracts under the 1866 law. TWO LOWER federal courts have held the association is private and can keep out Negroes. Where is the Court headed now? The theme that the danger of war is diminishing, found among American soldiers based not only on the Moscow and Peking simulation but on a view of the world occupied by cautions that deepested differences will not be ignored. NIXON HIMSELF reported to Congress that the war threat had been called upon by the Prime Minister William McMahon saw the balance swung "away from the walls" of conclusions and detente. WHILE THE French were obviously unhappy about what they regarded too-skimpy the Mosaic Mosque they and other West Europeans saw the U.S.-Soviet get-to-gether proof for their Common Markets. Britain's foreign secretary, Sir Albert House--Mla, Soviet Russia, has shown hard evidence of abandoning expansion at the expense of the Undersecretary of State John N. Irwin II rated the Peking summit as the opening of a meeting between Putin and Moscow summit "may be seen by historians as the symbolic end to the cold war." As the superpowers swing into more arrangements between countries, view it, becomes more necessary for the European group to develop its own big power system. The European interests effectively. PROJECTING TO the end of this decade, Irwin saw this as the new world; By 1890 China and the Soviet Union had one another, like one another, under the United States, their principal antagonists. If indeed they do not the capitalistic world in such fields as science, trade and arms control. or circumstances might arise, the officials speculate, in which Washington and New York might eventually agree to expand European Community or Japan. They also are likely to have more influence abroad, so despite improved *Moscow-Moskovski* relations, the number of areas in which we will compete with both Chinese and Soviet influence For example, even with a Western Europe united against terrorism, we must foresee a dispute* in which the Russians and Europeans join forces to stop the terrorist "THIS POWER and dominance of the two superpowers (the The Communist giants may by then see the United States as far less of a threat than now, and at least they will be able to advantage in cooperating with United States and the Soviet Union) should decline in relative importance. "Both powers will not only have to continue to get along with each other but also pay even more attention to getting along with the emerging power centers in Western Europe, Japan and China." will produce strange alliances on specific issues. American officials expect the more complex, shifting international pattern of the future '72 Higher Education Act To Extend Student Aid Through new or existing programs, the law authorizes $18.5 billion in federal aid to education. Many regard the act of the landmark pieces of legislation of this congressional session. By RALPH NICOL On June 8, Congress finally approved the Higher Education Act of 1972. Five months of the legislation were delegation, however, overshadowed the fact that the law required the measure on behalf of education. Authorization and the actual handling of the program are two different directors, and the Director of the Office of Student Financial Aid, said he believed that Congress should have 'asbase' about busing before Congress could appropriate the program. "It won't be in effect by the fall." Rogers said definitely, "and quite probably won't be ready for next spring, either." the $1,400 figure, however, is a maximum. The amount each student can receive the fees for the particular institution and the amount the student's family could be expected to contribute to his Although the administrative details of the Basic Education Officer have not been worked out yet, Rogers said he hoped the new program would work in com-munication with existing student aid programs. Currently, the existing Education Opportunity Grant (EOG) program can fund up to half of a student's college costs. Students may met through student loans, usually from the National Defense Student Loan program. Rogers said he hoped the two grant programs working together would amount students had to borrow. It is not known yet whether the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant will be ad- directed directly or through the schools. Another section of the education act authorizes $1 billion annually in direct aid to both public and private institutions. it also authorizes another $40 million per year in emergen- tial funds in "severe financial distress." While the phrase "severe final chance" further defined, Rogers was fairly certain it would not apply to the University of Kansas astronomy department. The act also authorized a variety of other new programs. It established a three-year, $850 million design, establish and operate vocational education programs. It authorized $85 million for a new teacher education for Indian children through grants to local education agencies. It authorized grants to provide new programs to help veterans. The bill established a National Institute of Education, which will have the responsibility of fostering education in schools and the learning process. A Democratic party study group of the act called the new agency a "legislative task force." The amount of aid to a particular institution will be decided by a formula involving the number of grants at that school, the amount of money from the grants at that school, and the percentage of graduate students at that school. While the controversy about social desegregation received much attention, the bill calls for an end to discrimination on the basis of With the exception of military schools and those private institutions that have traditionally had a student body of one sex only, all schools must have equal opportunities for both sexes. A section of the act provided $2 billion over a two-year period to help elementary and secondary schools desigrate. It was this section that drew the longest controversy about racial busing. Most of the attention was focused on that debate, but it is more likely that the other half of the act will have a much greater effect on American education. 7 Alti divis langu year enrol journ drama opera MU divis enrol nesd и U Published at the University of Kansas four times weekly during the summer session. All subscription rates be $12 per semester, year. Second Class mail paid at L.A. Philips University. Mail with enclosed resume offered to all students without regard to color, creed or origin. Opinions express are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Agriculture. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom--UN-4 4810 Business Office--UN-4 4358 An a civ studio parti Scho Educ admi Rita H. Eahug Linda Schuld Barbara Weiner Reg Adam *Brandsted, Hank Young* *Rita Brandsted, Hank Young* NEWS STAFF News Adviser ... Del Brinkman CoC Educ profe coorc Phar dean BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser ... Mel Adama Editor Campus Editor News Editor Copy Chief Photographers Cartoonist An bitur used Moss who in the from cause Doug DeTray Steve Conner Laura Dyntail Carol Williams Dave Bennett Todd Brown A. by th Crim held cami Business Manager Advertising Manager Marketing Manager National Advertising Manager Promotion Manager Sales Manager P R A deperpicien was count Ray count the re Member Associated Collegiate Press Sm betwe would Jin sophie Red reque public site o festive plann eveni functi parke could A Ice, area cause roads REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READERS' HEADQUARTERS SERVICES, INC. 340 Lexington Ave. New York, N.Y. 10017 "A festiv else, every An thoug runni troub Ref and I stude could 7:30 7:45 8:15 8:30 9:Nr 9:15 College 9:30 William University Summer Kansan Thursday, June 15, 1972 750 to Attend Five-Week Camps Ma By MARY LIND Kansan Staff Writer es 01 When the Midwestern Music and Art Camp began 35 years ago it consisted of a small group of students, but the big enough to be called a band," according to Russell Wiley, director and founder of the camp. The students are from school students will register at McCollum Hall and begin a five-week intensive study session in their journalism or speech and debate. Although the camp once had 11 divisions, the science, ballet and language camp will not open this spring. Students are enrolled, but the music, art, journalism and speech and drama camps will be in full MUSIC, THE LARGEST division of the camp with a total enrolment of 488 as of Wednesday will be under the direction of Wiley. Students will take courses in music theory, and conducting as well as private classes for the KU School of Music. The rest of the participants' day will be taken up by rehearsals. "It's a summer activity for gifted students to make of them more mature musicians and to really want to do," said Wiley. The Art Camp, directed by Joel Jackson, uses visual art, and ivid Jacobson, professor of design will celebrate wennight anniversary this year. The camp offers high school students a concentrated program of study at the university level in workshops taught by regular faculty select three courses from eight electives including figure painting, painting with water colors, painting with acrylics, sculpture, The purpose of the program is to stimulate young people and to introduce them to aspects of art that are not offered in high school. EXHIBITS OF their work will be displayed in Murphy gallery June 30 through July 14 The School of Journalism will enroll 25 students Sunday for the week session, directed by Dr. Jillian Schatz, associate professor of journalism A drug abuse workshop funded by the Governor's Committee on Criminal Administration will be held at Kansas campus June 19-30. An elementary school teacher, a civic leader and a high school student from 50 communities will participate in the workshop. The Schools of Pharmacy and medicine are training in administering the workers. The session will include high school publications and will provide students with overall field of journalism. Courses taught by the regular faculty will include reporting, writing, editing, broadcasting, law and ethics, the press and society, the yearbook, graphics and magazine. University Will Host Workshop on Drugs Coordinator for the School of Education is Earl Carr, assistant professor of special education coordinator for the School of Pharmacy is Howard Mossberg, The program is designed as an educational process to interrupt drug abuse among children. Drug abuse generally begins with fifth and sixth grade children experimenting in glue sniffing, Strong peer influence encourages other children to experiment. to escape from the pressures of life. Amphetamines and barbiturates are the most widely used drugs in children. Mossberg agreed with education who believed drug abuse, in which the past few years has spread to adults. This is caused by boredom and a desire "No community is immune to this problem," stated Moses from Israel, who differed in whether the home is intellectual, white collar or blue Students will elect any of three areas, newspaper, yearbook or photography, to work on in the afternoons and evenings. This will be the third presentation of the workshop. Plans are to continue the program annually. JACKSON HARRELL assistant instructor of speech and drama, is the director of the speech and drama division. The Kansas Geological Survey confirmed Wednesday its recommendation that an area including the town of Elkhorn Ellsworth counties was the region with the best potential for reactive waste disposal in Kansas. Students working in the edition will paint a edition of the book called Kamper Kansan every Friday throughout the session, covering the subject matter of the camp. Yearbook students will put out the camp yearbook. Survey Studv Is In The site was one of eight in Kansas that the State Geological Survey examined for the U.S. energy Commission last December. Raymond Ice and Arthur Heck county commissioners, denied the request. A permit request for an In- dependence Day concert and picnic in rural Douglas County by the county commission. Permit for Concert Rejected by County The curriculum provided by the speech and drama camp. Smith had estimated that between 5,000 and 10,000 people would attend the festival. "Last spring during a similar function, so many cars were parked along the roads that cars couldn't get through them." Heek said the board's decision was unanimous that the festival would not be compatible with the heavily tzoned neighborhood. In March, the AEC asked the Geological Survey to further investigate parts of Lincoln, Logan and Wichita counties. The results "A festival of this sort," said Ice, "in an agriculturally zone area would be noisy and would disruption of traffic on the roads. Jim Smith, Overland Park sophomore, was awarded a Lawyer's club request the permit to hold a public concert picnic at the Big Egg festival held last spring. He planned the event for the day and had Another student said he thought the authorities were just running scared from possible trouble. "I think they should go ahead and have their festival," one KU student said Tuesday. "What it could hurt?" "All I'm going to say is that the festival will be held somewhere else, with big bands and everything," Smith said. Heck said that although the possible use of drugs and alcohol beverages figured in the commission's decision, that was not enough for the denial. The zoning problem has been the primary issue. Refusals of this kind serve only KANU Schedule THURSDAY No. 20 - Featured Works: Griege; Vaughn Williams Noun - News/Weather/Sports 9:15-Report from Haskell Indian Junior School, Northfield, California 8.12 Flimcast 9.0 - Family & Community Calendar 9.0 - News Weather-Sports Noon Hour Concert Communities Calendar THURSDAY 7:30-The Morning Show National Weather Calendar 9-News Weather Sports 15-Report from Haskell Junior 1:30 Dutch Solistals and Ensembles: Hans Dercksen, Plano 4. New York City 1: The Short Stories of Morley Callaghan: "Two Fishermen" 1: 30- Dutch Solistes and Encombrates 2. 03—Contemporary World Problems Rich Versus Poor Nations to discourage students and others from using the proper channels, one student said. "If they get turned down one, then next time they won't bother to ask. They'll just go ahead and do it," he said. confirmed the Survey's earlier recommendation of the area in Lincoln, Russell and Ellsworth counties. Maks Mengers Cooper 30-Norman Duncan 30-Jayhawk Locker Room 6-Muse by Candleigh Sports - KANU Sports KANU Special Of the eight areas, the Survey rated the Lyons site "the poorest candidate for future study." 8-Boston Symphony Orchestra Concerts Bach, Del Tredicil, Pres Sports; Messiaah 10-News.Weather Press 10:15-TBA The Survey chose areas in Harper and western Wichita县 to test the effect, but it was the Lincoln-Russell-Ellsworth county area that the Survey rated as the best prospect for a radioactive waste site. Among the factors that were considered in judging each area's suitability for waste disposal facilities, including land and gas development, pipelines, thickness and depth of salt beds, proximity to population centers, and the potential for future mining resource developments in the area. A six-mile radius was arbitrarily chosen as a safe buffer zone around each population center. As the result of its investigations and recommendations, the Kansas City Children's Hospital awarded the Good Earth Keeping Award by the Citizens for Enviro- taught by regular faculty, will attempt to develop each camper's proficiency in speech activities. QUIRKSILVER THE STUDENTS will attend classes every morning and workshops in the afternoons. The session will wind up with a speech and debate tournament, to apply students to what they learn. Boys will be housed in Lewis Hall and girls in McColum. A crew of 22 counselors employed live and work with the campers. $2^{99} Leslie Friend, assisted *Miles Range*, will supervise the *Young*, and *Young*, assisted by Jim Murphy. will supervise the boy's residence on Capitol Records Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price at KIEFS C Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles Discount Records Capitol Student Health Insured? Get Fast, Convenient Service On Your Insurance-Covered Prescriptions You needn't pay any money to get the prescription either. You simply complete the Student Health Form available at the store or take a prescription with you. It's as simple as that! Why wait in line when you can get your student insurance covered prescriptions filled immediately by the trusted pharmacists at Raney's. While you're there, apply for a Raney Check Cashing Card. Cards already out need to be rewed. We offer convenient locations to cash your checks for as much as $20. KILLCREST 914.652.8733 RANEY PIAZA CENTER 914.652.8733 DRUG STORIES FOR TAL 705 DOWNTOWN 914.652.8733 914.652.8733 ToFind a Man A FUNNY KIND OF LOVE STORY! COLUMN PICTURES and ADAM Porter To Find a Man GP PUBLICATION CONTENT MATERIAL, AUTHORIZED BY Vorsity WHERE ... TOLL FREE 1-800-365-7455 Hillcrest 1.50 Adult Child Shows: 2:30. 7:35. 9:30 BELITT 2014 Adults $1.50 Shows 3:00, 7:30, 9:30 Twilite Sat. Sun. 5:00 CLINT EASTWOOD DIRTY HARRY Granada THEATRE ...telephone V13-5786 "STRAW DOGS" Dustin Hoffman Susan George Johnny Got His Gun Eve 7:40 & 9:45 GP "THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY?" DON'T THEY?! Box office opens 8:00 WORK WONDERS George Peppard Michael Sarrazin Christine Belford only if you like gripping suspense and surprise endings.. Sunset Henrys DIVE IN THE AME - West on Highway 40 WANT ADS French Fry's HEAD FOR HENRY'S "The Groundstar Conspiracy" Eve 7:30 & 9:20 Matinee Sat-Sun 2:30 & 4:15 Just a person who protects children and other living things BILLY JACK Elev 7;30 & 8:35 Rwv 7;30 & 8:35 GP Hillcrest 1 Adult 50 Child 50 LAWRENCE'S LARGEST MENU Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannon are offered on campus. Applicants must be color, cried or national orange. FOR SALE only 10¢ This Weekend 1/2 lb. Golden Crisp Thu s., Fri., Sat., Sun. June 15, 16, 17, 18 (with the purchase of 2 Big Henry's) Fivedays 35 words or lower $1.75 each additional word $.03 Earlier way it comes to the same thing. "Campus Madison, Wisconsin Civilization;" Campus Madison, Wisconsin 14th. 7-27 Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it. 1. If you use them, you are to an adult. PG Adult 1.50 Hillcrest FATHER'S DAY CARES - Half Price "Where Else...?" Cases, Country Mall's Shopping Center, 711 W. 2nd c-25 35 words or fewer $1.00 each additional word $.01 Michigan St. sl-her-H-Quo. 513 Mildly Distressed. Outfitted with Blox-Qur-Quo. Offshore St. sl-her-H-Quo. $200-$400 $150 Sl-her to go $260 Nib to go $180 Sl-her to go $180 Nib to go chicken $180 Buffalo Sand $180 Buffalo Bertrif Buffalo Sand $180 Open Buffalo Open Phone $182 Closed Sub-Tilt $180 4. If you don't. FOR SALE Mercedes-Benz 1960 Model 180 Red Gas Car 842-6140 6-15 FATHER'S, DAY GIFTS of an unseen value. From the unique Christian Bookstore, Clifton. Retailer: Mallia Shipping Center, 311 W. Width, 23·65 For sale. Three matching solid sake antique wardrobe, one old trunk. (961) International jeu souci. Make offer. Call 342-5399. 6-15 For Sale - 1962 Volkswagen this- building reguire - 11400 sq. ft. would make an excellent camper. #825-8623 6-12 843-2139 1968 Portola Tremont 2-door hardtop, white with black vinyl roof, power steering, air conditioner, 452-2200, VW, JZW 4422-2800 6-15 1968 Javelin, 2-inch hardball, white, black and yellow; capacity 3500 lbs. Jayhawk VW. 2222 Iowa. 813-2290. 6-15 New document of India prints just in at the HODGE PODGE 150, W 9th 6-19 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Sell chap. 1871 Kawaukee street ramblem in exterior condition with 100 miles. Call 431-2871-842-444- kait for Dick STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can enjoy 30% off all TVs at RAY AUDIO. Cost plus 10 at RAY AUDIO. Only via Micro Discount House in New York City. Free tea, coffee and Canadian cream. For sale Tickets to Rolling Stones. Right in front 11th row 842-6623 6-21 Leaving the country, must sell. 1963 Chevrolet II Nova, motor perfect, body & interior bearable, $200 Call Dan. *8088 Anime. 6-19 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days 25 words for lower $1.98 each address for $1.99 adress 10 p.m. @ public library For sale 15 by 7 custom clothed chrome revive wheelers with G60 by 15 Firestone wide oval wheels. Excellent Carry Bump Kit, $99 Call Gary, $83-322 or M34-015X FOR RENT COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Available now, 1 and 2 bedrooms apartments. AC, pool and laundry facilities. AC, pool and laundry facilities. 4P, Apt 5-8 or 832-820 **GOOM FOR FEMALE in big, well** comfortable house. Free wacker and dryer and dishwasher. Sum- mer cover. Wash machines for Deborah or Judy. 6-15 JAROLD'S Diving Supplies Attractive and comfortable rooms. for students, utilities, paid, share kirchen, nu pets. Call 842-7080. 6-19 Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I. Equip. in Stock Certified Instructor Apartments furnished, air-conditioned, large enough, for two or three beders. RU and near town to bedroom on porch. 6-278. 815-3576 Sheping rooms, furnished, with no without kitchen appliances, for males, off street, bedrooms, kings R2 and town, not cars. Plates 418-3007. Webster's Mobile Homes TREVAILING COURSE Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts Your Complete Service Dealer Ample Park Spaces Available 3409 W.4th 842.7700 Available now 2 cm. efficiency and Formulated, clean private entrance buffets from campus. $70- total, billable to pet $69. -813-7258 Notice Girl's summer earrings at the Hedge Pidge 15 W 9th. 6-19 Salmine and Fall rivals, Formulated 1 to 4 bedrooms. Amount from $68 = Rooms with kitchen privacies. $250, Utilities paid. $317,507 6-29 SUMMER DANCE classes now on rolling. Liz Dance Dance Academy, archived through time, advanced call 845-323-6155 412-6475 NOTICE Sandals handcrafted in your personalized taste at RODGE PODGE. 13 W 9th. 6-18 Biomed & Arts for students. All close to campus. 1216 Laurentia, 843-1601 & 841-1321. 3409 W. 61th 842-7700 Just West of the Drive.In Theatre ABRAXAS LEATHER — clothes purse, hats, hats, backpacks. 17 W 90h. 6-21 ENGLISH TEACHER will do typing and teaching M.A in English. 7 years college experience. Will also teach English and dissertations. 6-10 HELP WANTED Competition Sales Manager-For smart young managers who need a effective opportunity for one with good buildup in retail field and naive knowledge. Call Me, Duckie, Call Me, Duchek. TEACHER OPENINGS. Current listings of honors of California schools include: California School Placement, 1974 California School Oak, Berkeley, 1975 1877 CSC TOYOTA 18LUMM Sports Co. Inc. 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 ERN'S CYCLE SALES YAMAHA X WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 716 North 2nd LAWRENCE KANSAS Fine Eating Food Delicious Food and Superb Bread with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to C.K. Steaks Our menu is and has always been "there is no substitute for quality 11. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge TYPING Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Job position: coordinate accurate work Phone: 415-2389; Mr. Rizzolio Phone: 861-2388 6-22 Towers, ten paper types used accordionally, primarily IBM慕林, wide type used by ATREASON BATLES, Kwanton BEAR REASONABLE BATLES, Kwanton BEAR 842-7977, 842-5605 Experimented in typing films, discussion items papers, letter type, typed documents, computer typesetting, type Accelerator and prompt typesetting. Received Phone # 845-9354. Ms Wright Wanted roommate to share apartment or house for fall Call Ron at 842-6681. 6-21 WANTED LOST ROOMMATE WANTED to store: of 5 room house until fall $33.35 per month plus utilities. Call Dau at 8429 or 8743 after 8:00 p.m. - 6:15 p.m. Specialized instruction in Classic and Plainen concert guitar for beginners, including advanced techniques, progressive selected techniques, slaying techniques, singing Telephone 841-2900 Pipes, papers, and all smoking accessories are available at the HODGE PODGE 15 W 90h 6-19 Want to take turn driving from Topeka to Lawrence, 6-5 Monday-Friday. Call Clay Loyd, 357-1619. Topeka, 6-20 Last: Tortoise framed glasses. Photogrey lenses. Area Summerfield to Union. If found call 852-8782. Reward. leather goods—custom order TONY'S IMPORTS- DATSU ABRAXAS LEATHER 17 W. 9th 500 E.23rd WHY RENT? RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843-8499 3020 Iowa (South Hwv. 59) Museum OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE 0 TO 60 MPH-13.5 FORTH DISC SEATS UP TO 25 MILES FOR GAL FORD 842-0444 LOVE THAT DATSUN RAMADA INN Tigua Salen 842 2323 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE 043 0500 The Stereo Store AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR 6 Thursday, June 15, 1972 University Summer Kansan PARKS 1 Leo Buerman Bo Leuerman, at the age of 70, although deaf and blind, is a man who does exist—not on his physical being, but on a love of life and people. On the learn to become a lawyer, he was as did Lancaster, Lawyer junior. Lee and Rayna met on a day that would have otherwise been gloomy for both, Rayna, because the depressing elements of their relationship vaded her day. Lee, oblivious to such things as weather, because that day, like so many before, held no promise of the joy a visitor brings him. But, as he was, he didn't want to bother other's warm, joy and love. Leo, born with acute myopathy and a bone disorder which resulted in dwarfism, has not let his handicap keep him from an active life. Because of his handicap, school was virtually impossible, but through his family, he learned to be good. Before going completely blind late in life, he started writing an autobiography, but it was never Leo has used many forms of transportation in his lifetime to give him mobility. One of the things he loves is watching which he crafted himself, complete with baby-buggy wheels and display case It was in this cart that Leo used to sell merchandise on Massachusetts St. Lee is known not only in the Lawrence area, but also all over the country Catherine Weinaug, a professor of English at Centron, Inc., a Lawrence motion picture producer, that they make a film telling Leo's story of being kidnapped and as a result Leo's guest book contains the names of people who helped him. Leo, with the majority of his life now behind him, sits in a cubical room in a rest home. He is awake and mind active, and waiting. A visit to a rest home can be a depressing experience: the cold stare from a nurse, looking at you with an indifferent sclerite, the sterile hallways and rooms, the melancholy atmosphere all come down at once. An hour with Leo Buermann, however, is far from depressing. He can sit and laugh and he possesses is overwhelming, like the man himself. 1915 1923 Photos and Text by STEVE CRAIG The light dies in the low clouds. Falling snow drank in the dusk. Shrouded in silence, the branches wrapped me in their peace. When the boundaries were erased, once again the wonder: that I exist. —Dag Hammarskjold Here rolled f The stu cation, denote Babah Babah 1972 KU Summer Session Directory Here is the listing of students who had enrolled for the summer session by last week. The student's name is followed by his classification number. Afterkids are married students. Airdriek, Amherd, G4 Adberahead, C10, 212 N. Michigan Abdurrahim, C19, 120 W. Oklahoma Abdurrahim, C30, 1600 W. Overland Park Abderrahim, B2, 178 W. Illinois Barnarowk, Thomas A. G, 5008 Fontainah, Sb Mv Berkshire, Eleanor O., 2129 Ohte II Barkernham, R. H., 1236 Ohte III Barkernham, R. H., 1236 Ohte III Barger, Michael F. G, 1115 Tenn Barger, Michael F. G, 1115 Tenn Berg, Michael F. G, 1115 Tenn Berg, Michael F. G, 1115 Tenn Berkshire, D. W., 1240 Ukr, Apt 1 Berkshire, D. W., 1240 Ukr, Apt 1 Albert, Robert D., 248 Ukr Albert, Robert D., 248 Ukr Albert, Robert D., 248 Ukr Albert, Robert D., 248 Ukr Albert, Robert D., 248 Ukr Albert, Robert D., 248 Ukr Albert, Robert D., 248 Ukr Albert, Robert D., 248 Ukr Albert, Robert D., 248 Ukr Barr, Edward W. G, 221 N 1844 Kc Bollinger, Richard M. A, 1441 Stewart Bollinger, Amanda C. M, 1441 Swerton Bollinger, Annabel L. A, 1442 Osborne II Bolton, Jonan E. G, 2713 Bowdoin Bolton, Carl D., 2713 Oakland * Bolton, Susan A. M, 2841 Pawlaski, LKA Bolton, Michael J. A, 2841 Pawlaski, LKA Boucher, Jane L. F, Olive Hill, 419 Boucher, Richard H. A, 2691 Fur Boucher, John D. A, 3101 Pfuscine Boucher, Edward H. A, 3101 Sherrifle I Bowman, William A. J, 1941 La, BD Bowman, William A. J, 1941 La, BD Bowman, Joseph E. J, 1824 BDA Burke, Jean E., I. 16, 912 Ala. Burke, James R., I. 16, 912 Ala. Burkart, Gary P., I. 40, 1017 Afton. Burkart, Barbara J., A. 29, 1034 Towers Burkart, J. M., A. 29, 1034 Towers Burkart, James R., I. 40, 93 W.Ave, KC Burkart, James R., I. 40, 93 W.Ave, KC Burkart, Mary M., A. 30, 1081 University Burkart, Mary M., A. 30, 1081 University Burkart, Herman L., I. 40, 1017 Afton Burkart, Herman L., I. 40, 1017 Afton Burkindin, Thimothy S., A. 51, 1049 Rainbow, Roofed KC Burkindin, Thimothy S., A. 51, 1049 Rainbow, Roofed KC Burkard, Carter L., A. 30, 1034 Nervenage, Olathe Burkard, Carter L., A. 30, 1034 Nervenage, Olathe Burkard, John U., A. 68, RR) , Box 78 Burkard, John U., A. 68, RR) , Box 78 Burkard, Lorraine A., D. 41, Oliver Burkard, Lorraine A., D. 41, Oliver Burkard, Maurice P., A. 80, Hayman, Vinifand KC Burkard, Maurice P., A. 80, Hayman, Vinifand KC Burkard, Mooresda, C. A. 40, Grendley TK Burkard, Mooresda, C. A. 40, Grendley TK Burkard, James N., A. 60, 1081 University Burkard, James N., A. 60, 1081 University Burkard, Nancy H., A. 25, 1058 Olathe Burkard, Nancy H., A. 25, 1058 Olathe Burkard, Donna W., A. 3004 W.Ave, KC Burkard, Donna W., A. 3004 W.Ave, KC Burkard, Barry L., A. 7745 Brahms, Sh Mc Burkard, Barry L., A. 7745 Brahms, Sh Mc Burker, Bertier C., I. 51 Cadena, Augusta A, 421 G. Stuart II 842-4133 Cadden, Bruce B, 641 I. Ind 842-4078 Cadden, Bruce M, 641 J. Ind 842-4078 Calhoun Shary A, 150 Ten 842-3976 Cavanier, Petrina J. P, 9011 W 54 Sb Mh 302-768 Coleman, Terry J. P, 9011 W 54 Sb Mh 302-768 Cogge Kawen R. I., 11 Shannon 841-3668 Cogge Kawen R. I., 11 Shannon 841-3668 Conglutino, Judith A. N, Student University Derm, KC 861-3159 Conglutino, Judith A. N, Student University Derm, KC 861-3159 Chickler, David G. G, 121 Remm 843-1519 Chickler, David G. G, 121 Remm 843-1519 Cooper, Bernard G. G, 1709 Abel 843-1581 Cooper, Bernard G. G, 1709 Abel 843-1581 Coyat, Helen M. I., 3068 China, KC 715-1663 Coyat, Helen M. I., 3068 China, KC 715-1663 Coutte, Lerelle B. J., 151 Nimuth 843-6832 Coutte, Lerelle B. J., 151 Nimuth 843-6832 Coutte, Marissa F. P., 1491 Remm 843-2032 Coutte, Marissa F. P., 1491 Remm 843-2032 Coutfrant, Jeanine A. N., 1214 Remm 843-6788 Coutfrant, Jeanine A. N., 1214 Remm 843-6788 Coutfrant, Lakshmi B. N., 1109 W 1118 843-1042 Coutfrant, Lakshmi B. N., 1109 W 1118 843-1042 Coutfrant, Ibrahim D. M., 1068 Murgall Hall 843-5115 Coutfrant, Ibrahim D. M., 1068 Murgall Hall 843-5115 Coutfrant, Mac M. O., Other Hall I, KC 801-6966 Coutfrant, Mac M. O., Other Hall I, KC 801-6966 Cuffo, Hick. G., 904 Arrival 843-5632 A Dalhcroft, Jennifer L., 16, 180 Engel Dalhcroft, David L., 23, 241 Delaware Dalhcroft, Michael J., 15, 163 Dearborn Dalhcroft, Mark S., 18, 193 Delaware 688 Dale, Thomas L., FB, 60, 164 J. Joseph, MG 2 Thursday, June 15. 1972 University Summer Kansan ...rrenned L., HD 3020 W 27th ... 842-6098 Damnage, Kempeter J., 430 W 123唐 ... 842-6098 Damnage, William G., 1M, 1420 Tsw ... 842-6098 Damnage, William G., 1M, 1420 Tsw ... 842-6098 Damnage, James L., 1M, 930 Valley Falls ... 842-6098 Damnage, James L., 1M, 930 Valley Falls ... 842-6098 Damnage, Daniel A., 4A, 110 Tsw ... 842-7413 Damnage, Daniel A., 4A, 110 Tsw ... 842-7413 Damnage, Gary H., 0G, 2530 Ridge Cl ... 842-3801 Damnage, Gary H., 0G, 2530 Ridge Cl ... 842-3801 Damnage, Daniel R., 3M, 8183 Magpie Place ... 842-3808 Damnage, Jeffrey A., 4B, 187 Tsw ... 842-6173 Dunn, John E., 4B, 187 Tsw ... 842-6173 Dunn, John E., 4B, 187 Tsw ... 842-6173 Dunn, Mary J., 3C, 210 Wn ... 842-7784 Dunn, Mary J., 3C, 210 Wn ... 842-7784 Durram, Louis G., 9C, 1010 Brent Tsw ... 842-1683 Durram, Louis G., 9C, 1010 Brent Tsw ... 842-1683 Durram, Hendrik D., 210 Wn ... 842-1683 Durram, Hendrik D., 210 Wn ... 842-1683 Devan, Sawavak J. ... 842-5171 Devan, Sawavak J. ... 842-5171 Dwanga, Cary M., 1M, 1E, 24th ... 842-5171 Dwanga, Cary M., 1M, 1E, 24th ... 842-5171 Dwyddel, Daniel D., 1F, N Weindal, Olathe ... 842-5033 Dwyddel, Daniel D., 1F, N Weindal, Olathe ... 842-5033 Dwyddel, Daniel D., 1F, N Weindal, Olathe ... 842-5033 Dwyddel, David J., 3L, 618 Ai ... 842-6098 Eaga, Joseph J., A13, 2119 Drive, Dr. M5, Ms Eagan, James M., JA 4, 1310 Tinnn Eagans, Janice B., JA 4, 1310 Tinnn Krevet, Kevin R., SM 250, W 738 Tern, Pr VIII Krevet, Kevin R., SM 250, W 738 Tern, Pr VIII Kramer, William C., Michaels WG 306, KC Kramer, William C., Michaels WG 306, KC Kramer, William C., Michaels WG 306, KC Santon, Jason L., M 4, 1600 Bath, FC Santon, Jason L., M 4, 1600 Bath, FC Santon, Jason L., M 4, 1600 Bath, FC Santon, Jason L., M 4, 1600 Bath, FC Warren, Matthew J., AD 13, 1010 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 Warren, Matthew J., AD 13, 1010 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 Warren, Matthew J., AD 13, 1010 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 Wells Fargo, W. AM 150, Holly CA, Mo VI 313 Wells Fargo, W. AM 150, Holly CA, Mo VI 313 Wells Fargo, W. AM 150, Holly CA, Mo VI 313 Wells Fargo, W. AM 150, Holly CA, Mo VI 313 Wells Fargo, W. AM 150, Holly CA, Mo VI 313 Dickinson, Jeff R., JA 3, 130 Lau Dickinson, Jeff R., JA 3, 130 Lau Dickinson, Jeff R., JA 3, 130 Lau Christard, Andrew J., DJ 1210 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 Christard, Andrew J., DJ 1210 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 Charles, David G., JQ 300, Kentucky CT Charles, David G., JQ 300, Kentucky CT Eigenberg, Joan G., QM 31, 115 Wakehurst Terrace Eigenberg, Joan G., QM 31, 115 Wakehurst Terrace Carlson, J. Carlo J., MA 3, 1010 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 Carlson, J. Carlo J., MA 3, 1010 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 Lewiner, Fleur J., SG 33, NE Montclair RT, Tropes BN 300 Lewiner, Fleur J., SG 33, NE Montclair RT, Tropes BN 300 Baldwin, John B., JM 120, Ohio Baldwin, John B., JM 120, Ohio Michaud, Michael G., LG 750 Soufier Michaud, Michael G., LG 750 Soufier Michaud, Michael G., LG 750 Soufier Williams, Virginia J., A2, 1010 W 808, St Campus RB 343 Williams, Virginia J., A2, 1010 W 808, St Campus RB 343 Williams, Virginia J., A2, 1010 W 808, St Campus RB 343 Darrenston, Daniel A., JM 4, 1600 Francis, RC Darrenston, Daniel A., JM 4, 1600 Francis, RC Egman, Philip J., GA 100, Nimitz Drive, Dr Egman, Philip J., GA 100, Nimitz Drive, Dr Brett, Travis J., GA 100, Nimitz Drive, Dr Brett, Travis J., GA 100, Nimitz Drive, Dr Joyce, Gray JG 738, State College, NY 342 Joyce, Gray JG 738, State College, NY 342 Laurance, Laura A., JG 127, Harper Park, NJ 342 Laurance, Laura A., JG 127, Harper Park, NJ 342 Inglenhead, Susan L., JP 160, Collium Hall Inglenhead, Susan L., JP 160, Collium Hall Eitler, Margareta J., JP 180, Old River Mall Eitler, Margareta J., JP 180, Old River Mall Patrick, Patrick J., JP 250, Training Center, PA Patrick, Patrick J., JP 250, Training Center, PA Paul, Paul L., WI 111, WI Nest Tern Paul, Paul L., WI 111, WI Nest Tern Daniel, Rose E., GQ 162, Locusta, MC Daniel, Rose E., GQ 162, Locusta, MC Daniel, Rose E., GQ 162, Locusta, MC Daniel, Rose E., GQ 162, Locusta, MC Linnae, Darleyo L., GQ 150, Linney GW, Lw Chk Linnae, Darleyo L., GQ 150, Linney GW, Lw Chk Linnae, Darleyo L., GQ 150, Linney GW, Lw Chk William, William J., A13, 110 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 William, William J., A13, 110 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 Jeffrey, Jeffrey L., WI 111, WI Nest Tern Jeffrey, Jeffrey L., WI 111, WI Nest Tern William, William J., A13, 110 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 William, William J., A13, 110 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 Jennings, Jeffrey L., WI 111, WI Nest Tern Jennings, Jeffrey L., WI 111, WI Nest Tern William, William J., A13, 110 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 William, William J., A13, 110 W 808, St Ct Owkirn BV 321 Ellen, Pamela L., JP, 1603 W 150 bh * Ellen Billie, DW, 1298 Kevett, CK * Ellen Kathleen B, DG, 1012 G 14 * Ellen Bennett M, G, 0523 Nogacy, KR * Ellen Benjamin M, G, 0523 Nogacy, KR * Ellen Timothy H, G, 0521 W 25 * Ellen Timothy H, G, 0521 W 25 * Frank, James M, G, 1728 Brown KU * Frank, James M, G, 1728 Brown KU * Ellenerman Floyd L, M, Box 154 Route 3 * Ellenerman Floyd L, M, Box 154 Route 3 * Ellenman Thorne D, M, Box 154 Route 3 * Ellenman Thorne D, M, Box 154 Route 3 * Joseph, Jacquel L, A, 120 Minusmu Dr * Emerson, John A, B, 1229 West Drive * Emerson, John A, B, 1229 West Drive * Emerson, James D, G, 1723 Miller * Emerson, James D, G, 1723 Miller * Emerson, Kenneth M, G, 510 W Third Tyr, SBm2 * Emerson, Kenneth M, G, 510 W Third Tyr, SBm2 * Emelson, Judith J, M, 120 Minusmu Dr, SBm2 * Emelson, Judith J, M, 120 Minusmu Dr, SBm2 * Emperado, Ligaya, N, 728, Brown KC * Emperado, Ligaya, N, 728, Brown KC * Emperor, George J, Jr, G, 1727 W 150 bh * Emperor, George J, Jr, G, 1727 W 150 bh * Enders, Royel D, G, 1423 Miller * Enders, Royel D, G, 1423 Miller * Enders, Royel D, G, 1423 Miller * Englerville, A, A, Summer Abroad * Englerville, A, A, Summer Abroad * Engleman, Martha A, D, H2, Hallowad * Engleman, Martha A, D, H2, Hallowad * Engleman, James W, J, 310 Crestview KC * Engleman, James W, J, 310 Crestview KC * Douglas, Dougain J, M, 040 Jna Doe Jr * Douglas, Dougain J, M, 040 Jna Doe Jr * Stromt, Krathlin J, 1210 MW * Stromt, Krathlin J, 1210 MW * Steven, Kevin S, M, 4123 Tianpan KC * Steven, Kevin S, M, 4123 Tianpan KC * Cyane, Yunel, G, 1000 Natinith M * Cyane, Yunel, G, 1000 Natinith M * Leonard, Louis F, J, 425麦马 * Leonard, Louis F, J, 425麦马 * John, GJ, F, M, 4141 Heeder OVRpK * John, GJ, F, M, 4141 Heeder OVRpK * Branfried, Franctois J, U, 1815 Natinith M * Branfried, Franctois J, U, 1815 Natinith M * John, D, G, 3287 Dianping LYrwch * John, D, G, 3287 Dianping LYrwch * Email, David M, G, 3041 W 79 OrkpV * Email, David M, G, 3041 W 79 OrkpV * Jesen, Jeremy K, J, 1474 Tenm * Jesen, Jeremy K, J, 1474 Tenm * Norman, C, M, 6631 Ndal Dr, Mission * Norman, C, M, 6631 Ndal Dr, Mission * Tranhorse, Mortell, G, 1440 Mass * Tranhorse, Mortell, G, 1440 Mass * Jesen, Jeremy K, J, 1474 Tenm * Jesen, Jeremy K, J, 1474 Tenm * Dan, Van H, A, Regency K26 * Dan, Van H, A, Regency K26 * George, P, A, 623 Canberra KC * George, P, A, 623 Canberra KC * Jeffrey A, P, A, 6113 Adama, KC * Jeffrey A, P, A, 6113 Adama, KC * Lawrence, W, E, B, 811 Tenn M * Lawrence, W, E, B, 811 Tenn M * Mary, W, G, 3087 Wost W * Mary, W, G, 3087 Wost W * Robert, T, D, A, WBspg KC * Robert, T, D, A, WBspg KC * Sarah, H, G, 2708 KMVC KC * Sarah, H, G, 2708 KMVC KC * Everlyn, Evelyn, P, A, 1012 Emery * Everlyn, Evelyn, P, A, 1012 Emery * Ewing, Thomas F, G, W, 60 W 29 Ter * Ellen, Pamela L, JP, 1603 W 150 bh * Ellen Billie, DW, 1298 Kevett, CK * Ellen Billie, DW, 1298 Kevett, CK * Fasser, Harry D, G, 3214 Kayline DR, SBm2 * Fasser, Harry D, G, 3214 Kayline DR, SBm2 * Faser, Margarita G, G, 1229 W * Faser, Margarita G, G, 1229 W * Delibor, Davish D, A, 1105 Okhill * Delibor, Davish D, A, 1105 Okhill * Paley, Kelsey, R, P, KLM CMC Dorn * Paley, Kelsey, R, P, KLM CMC Dorn * Faisen, Christopher H, J, 1789 461-3688 * Parson, Jon B., M, 3748 Booth, KC 423-7531 461-3690 * Parson, Joel R., B, 3750 Booth, KC 423-7531 461-3744 * Farker, James L., B, 2100, E1864 423-7531 461-3754 * Farker, James L., G, M, 7009 Lowell, CVPk 442-9142 461-3764 * Farker, James L., G, M, 768 Minneapolis Park 25 Apartments THE POOL Hurry—Make Fall Reservations Now PARKSIDE LODGE Typical 2-Bedroom Apartment 1012 sq. ft. BALCONY OR PATIO Typical 1-Bedroom Apartment BALCONY OR PATIO 748 sq. ft. Park 25 Offers: TURBINE PIPE No. No. NO 17 KU Engine T3-4 ZCRM - 2 swimming pools - fully draped apartments - central air conditioning - complete electric kitchens - optional furniture - parking at your door - convenient location with Gibson' Falley's, and Mother Mary's within easy walking distance. For More Information Call Mrs. Betty Nelson 842-1455 —distinguished apartments for every taste— Fluke, Theorese B., 1417 Temr Flocker, James W., 8427 Temp John, Joseph V., 8428 KCUsimetry John, Joseph V., 8429 KCUsimetry Poole Jerry B., YX3D Daver Sa Poole Jerry B., YX3D Daver Sa Poole Jerry B., YX3D Daver Sa Poole Jerry B., YX3D Daver Sa Pord, Richard P., G1, 7278 Bankrem Pord, Richard P., G1, 7278 Bankrem Pord, Richard P., G1, 7278 Bankrem Pord, Richard P., G1, 7278 Bankrem Pord, Robert A., 41, 2008 M1Mm Pord, Robert A., 41, 2008 M1Mm Forman, Leand R., G1, 717 N1 Lewworth Forman, Leand R., G1, 717 N1 Lewworth Forman, Leand R., G1, 717 N1 Lewworth Forman, Leand R., G1, 717 N1 Lewworth Forman, M, Kar K., 1002 W28 Forman, M, Kar K., 1002 W28 Forman, R. Robertsen, T.M. 730 East, Baytown, Mo Forman, R. Robertsen, T.M. 730 East, Baytown, Mo Forman, R. Robertsen, T.M. 730 East, Baytown, Mo Fortin, D. G., 1810 W7 KC Fortin, D. G., 1810 W7 KC Fortin, D. G., 1810 W7 KC Fortin, S., 1810 W7 KC Fortin, S., 1810 W7 KC Donna, R. Z., 1800 Nathaliem Donna, R. Z., 1800 Nathaliem Donna, R. Z., 1800 Nathaliem Robertson, D. L., 4149 Cambridge, KC Robertson, D. L., 4149 Cambridge, KC Robertson, D. L., 4149 Cambridge, KC Robertson, D. W., 1015 Prairie Glatze Robertson, D. W., 1015 Prairie Glatze Robertson, D. W., 1015 Prairie Glatze France, Joseph A., 6280 Baytown France, Joseph A., 6280 Baytown France, Mark A., 1210 W8 KC France, Mark A., 1210 W8 KC France, Mark A., 1210 W8 KC France, Mark A., 1210 W8 KC France, David D., 24, 1537 Temn France, David D., 24, 1537 Temn France, David D., 24, 1537 Temn Frederick, C., 1200 KC Frederick, C., 1200 KC Frederick, C., 1200 KC France, Jeremy J., 1014 M1Mm France, Jeremy J., 1014 M1Mm France, Jim W., 1341 A41 Mo France, Jim W., 1341 A41 Mo France, Anne I., 1018 Owner Heil France, Greigler J., 9249 Sumerset, Ovind K12 France, Greigler J., 9249 Sumerset, Ovind K12 842-7900 Preteen, Daniel E., 4B, 227 Kansas 842-8371 Gale, Nate Layney, D, 9100 Revrey, OvP 842-6998 Galerie Brida Brida 910 Kentucky VT 3-0826 Calorie Bridal Bridal Close Out Sale 50% to 75% off 910 Kentucky --lynn BANKAMERICARD welcome here TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE! Offer expires July 1st 1720 West 23rd Street WIDE TOUGH WIDE TOUGH STEVADO KV4825 235/60R18 Firestone B730 1 (5.60 T) Blackwalls 2 for $3950 Plug $18 per Fed. Fee. Pick up at: vac, car Original price F8/16 (7.75/16) FP18 F18s Plus F20 Free Wi-Fi Pass Ex tax and 2 free visits Ex tax and 2 free visits $47.50 Original price Whitwells add $5 per car 2 for $43.50 B718 (6.50-3) Blackwalls Plus 14.95 per fed, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Whitwailer add 5 per pair B718 (7.75-16) Blackwalls Plus 20.95 per fed, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Whitwailer add 5 per pair B718 (15.75-16) Blackwalls Plus 20.95 per fed, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Whitwailer add 5 per pair B718 (14.85-3) Blackwalls Plus 32.75 per fed, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Whitwailer add 5 per pair L718 (15.85-16) Blackwalls Plus 13.95 per fed, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Whitwailer add 5 per pair L718 (9.15-16) Blackwalls Plus 13.95 per fed, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Whitwailer add 5 per pair 2 for $39.50 Original price 2 for +$42.50 2 for $47.50 Original price 2 for +$63.50 2 for $55.50 Original price 2 for +$74.00 2 for $74.00 Original price 2 for +$98.50 STRAVA STRIKK P0 H78 14 (8 B/55) Blackwalls $2 for $55.50 Euro Excise 2 free on top Euro 2 free on bottom Whitwalls add 7 per pair L78 15 (8 B/56) Whitewalls Plus 33 Euro free on top Plus 33 Euro free on bottom your car 2 for $74.00 Original price 2 for $98.50 the people tire people L 19/59/19 (8) 2 for $7400 Plus $16 per the Tad. Ex. tax and 2 cries off your car. Original price 2 for. $95.50 E7B4 14 (7.35 A) Blackwalls 2 for $4 350 Plus $2.24 on Fed. Fee. Original price Firestone Strato-Streak Wide, 78 Series, full 4-ply nylon cord tires G17 44 (8.25 A) Bike/wheel 2 for $50 50 Pick up $50 per person off the bike wheel Original price 2 for 165.00 E714 A (7.35 A) *Bleakwalls* 2 for $7.50 Plus 12.49 per person Original price 2 for -$68.00 G104 A (8.25 A) *Bleakwalls* 2 for $50.50 Plus 12.56 per person Original price 2 for -67.50 H18 A (8.55 A) *Bleakwalls* 2 for $57.00 Plus 12.81 per person Original price 2 for -76.00 F18 M (2.75 A) Blackwalls 2 for $4600 Plus $3.29 per fett fee Original price Whitewalls add $8 per pair. 2 for $61.50 G18 M W (2.65 A) Blackwalls 2 for $5200 Plus $2.59 per fett fee Original price your car. Whitewalls add $6.50 per pair. 2 for $69.50 G18 M R (2.55 A) Whitewalls 2 for $7150 Plus $1.09 per fett fee, 2 off your car. Original price 2 for $95.00 3 ways to charge Firestone UNI-CHARGE master charge THE INTERNATIONAL CARD
SIZEBLACKWALLSWHITEWALLSFat.Et.10g
6.50/132*ft 23.992*ft 29.901.15
6.50/152*ft 33.902*ft 39.901.73
7.35/142*ft 34.302*ft 40.301.20
7.35/152*ft 34.302*ft 40.301.20
7.75/152*ft 37.902*ft 43.902.13
8.25/142*ft 40.302*ft 46.302.19
8.25/142*ft 41.902*ft 47.902.32
8.55/142*ft 45.902*ft 47.902.51
8.45/152*ft 45.902*ft 51.902.51
nylon cord tire 2 for $19.90 6.00-13 Blackwalls This 1 wire set in felt. Exc. size and 2 tires off your car. Whitewails 2 for $27.90 Pirelli FRONT END ALIGNMENT Precision alignment by skilled mechanics. $588 Most American Cars (Excludes cars with air cond) Parts extra, if needed. LUBE and OIL CHANGE Includes up to 5 quarts of oil. $388 Call for appointment to avoid delay. BRAKE Adjustment 88¢ Jack Nicklaus GOLF BALLS Powered for distance. Built for durability with a tough halata cover. 3 $ 39 FOR Limit 3 Additional $1 each Firestone OPEN 8:00-5:00 Daily Firestone Prices effective to 21 June 72 Thurs. till 9:00 1008 W. 23rd Phone 841-2411 P University Summer Kansan Thursday, June 15, 1972 09080 09093 19533 1231 04922 04929 07081 07091 07161 07231 07301 07381 07391 07461 07531 07557 07567 07574 07584 07594 07644 07654 07664 07674 07684 07694 076A4 076B4 076C4 076D4 076E4 076F 3 The Alley Shop IS OPEN! 843 Massachusetts For your long wearing heavy leather sandals try a pair of Safaris McCall's Doll y smarty on their shoes 829 Mass. Go A-Wheeling VISTA --- INA KENNINGTON BICYCLE SHIRT From the Bootlegger Enjoy Coca-Cola Trade-mark ℮ Enjoy Coca-Cola Trade-mark ® Compliments of Coca-Cola Bottling—Kansas City, Lawrence 10:00-10:00 Mon.- Sat. 523 W. 23rd 12:00-6:00 Sun. : HOURS Use Kansan Classifieds 4 Thursday, June 15, 1972 University Summer Kansan Gauthier, Anthony P., 05, Q21 EJ 35 Gauthier, Alison M., 05, Q21 EJ 35 Gauthier, Benjamin S., 05, Q21 EJ 35 Gearer, Miriam R., 06, Sufiac Dorn, KC 200-414 Gearer, Wimilien R., 06, Sufiac Dorn, KC 200-414 Gearer, Denald M., 04, Oakland, KC 843-2710 Gearer, Donald M., 04, Oakland, KC 843-2710 Gempel, Geoffrey J., 31, 900 Matteo Gempel, Geoffrey J., 31, 900 Matteo Gemman, T. Amy P., 22, 190 H Gemman, T. Amy P., 22, 190 H Gentry, Carlo D., 91, D1103 Brent Terre Gentry, Carlo D., 91, D1103 Brent Terre Gentry, Daryl D., 91, D1020 Catterbury Gentry, Daryl D., 91, D1020 Catterbury George, Brewster W., 32, 131 Kj George, Brewster W., 32, 131 Kj George, Brewster W., 32, 131 Kj Germain, Barbara F., 14, 100 Tenn Gilbert, Ross B., GQ, 794 S. Main, Ottawa 824-5088 Gilmour, Shirley C., GQ, 1037 R. I., Kitchener 824-5088 Gilmour, Shirley C., GQ, 1037 R. I., Kitchener 824-5088 Gilmour, Shirley C., GQ, 1037 R. I., Kitcheng Gold, Larry A., 23M, 300 Romaine Pkwy, KC, Mo 752-808 Gold, Christopher A., 23M, 300 Romaine Pkwy, KC, Mo 752-808 Gold, Caryla B., 23M, 781 Masonville, MO 843-797 Gold, Gracepearl S. B., 23M, 781 Masonville, MO 843-797 Gold, Gregory A., 23M, Summer Abroad 843-1437 Containan, Maureen A., 300 W Bkn, KC 843-1737 Gould, Howard A., 198 W Bkn, KC 843-1737 Gould, Geralyn A., 198 W Bkn, KC 843-1737 Gould, Gerald A., 198 W Bkn, KC 843-1737 Goodrich, Claire A., 198 W Bkn, Wichita, KC 81-1044 Graber, Robert R., 60, AG3 Ohio Graham, René M., 71, W37 Walton, Priley V. Graham, Richard L., 53, W19 Ware, Priley V. Graham, Maurice H., 90, G18 Nashville, Rc. Graham, Charles H., 30, G0, 182 Nashville, Rc. Graham, David E., 104, H38 Milwaukee, Rc. Graham, David I., 108, H38 Milwaukee, Rc. Graham, Malster J., 93, G19 Fairway, Priley Vii. Graham, Homer B., 90, S10 Winnipeg Ft, Graham, Bergeron K., 41, A14 Tennie Graham, Bergeron K., 41, A14 Tennie Gray Scott E., 146, H98 Milwaukee Grayill Robert V., 146, H98 Milwaukee Grayill Robert V., 146, H98 Milwaukee Greybrow G., 90, H21 Nashville, Mo Greybrow G., 90, H21 Nashville, Mo Freedb. G., 128, N92 New Jersey Green, John W., 24, 2021 Stewart Green, John W., 24, 2021 Stewart Green, Louis S., 39, 398 Bell, Mc. Mo Green, Lewis M., 24, 2021 Stewart Green, Ronald M., 24, 2021 Stewart Green, Ronald M., 24, 2021 Stewart Green, Olive Hail, 24, 2021 Stewart John W., 06, Summer Abroad Greensmith, Fred M., 24, MJ Grandeg Place Greensmith, Fred M., 24, MJ Grandeg Place Janus K., 28, K13, W37 W Court Graham, Carl L., 18, 183 National Dc Alpina, Erick E., 14, 184 Grandview Tennie Graham, Steven A., 14, 184 Grandview Tennie Graham, James E., 14, 185 Wyoming, Mc. Mo Griffin, James E., 14, 185 Wyoming, Mc. Mo 842-1288 **Griffin, Sunari, M4, 503M, 73, Prize VII** 328-794 842-1290 **Griffin, Sunari, M4, 503M, 73, Prize VIII** 434-866 842-3698 **Griffin, M4, 11, M11 W, 111 F** 434-866 842-3155 **Grigg, Demetis T., 11, 857 P, Lemara** 880-013 842-1155 **Grigg, Demetis T., 11, 857 P, Lemara** 880-013 842-6941 **Grigg, Gail A., M4, 1100 County Line, KC** 705-828 842-6941 **Grigg, Gail A., M4, 1100 County Line, KC** 705-828 842-8146 **Grigg, Gastad, Dan S., M4, 2000 AW, Wk CJ** 803-173 842-8146 **Grigg, Gastad, Dan S., M4, 2000 AW, Wk CJ** 803-173 842-7617 **Grigg, Kjit, F** 804-738 842-7617 **Grigg, Kjit, F** 804-738 842-8097 **Groenean, John M., 16, 411King Nawdahm, RJ** 812-944 842-8097 **Groenean, John M., 16, 411King Nawdahm, RJ** 812-944 842-6068 **Groenean, Tim J., 21, 711 MO** 843-751 842-6068 **Groenean, Tim J., 21, 711 MO** 843-751 842-9794 **Groenean, Harvey M., M4, 2000 Koate, KC, Mo** 830-908 842-9794 **Groenean, Harvey M., M4, 2000 Koate, KC, Mo** 830-908 842-9794 **Groenean, Harvey M., M4, 2000 Koate, KC, Mo** 830-908 842-1002 **Groenean, Robert M., M4, 2000 Lnk, Ct, Mo** 834-750 842-1002 **Groenean, Robert M., M4, 2000 Lnk, Ct, Mo** 834-750 842-1794 **Groenean, Diana M., M4, 7001 Leuk Ladr, RLexea** 834-750 842-1794 **Groenean, Diana M., M4, 7001 Leuk Ladr, RLexea** 834-750 842-9426 **Groenean, Gmpa, M4, 64, 54h, Ma** 725-944 842-9426 **Groenean, Gmpa, M4, 64, 54h, Ma** 725-944 842-9426 **Groenean, Gmpa, M4, 64, 54h, Ma** 725-944 842-6045 **Goyle, rhoero, Hao O, M4, 2023 FJ** 834-750 **Gwin, Edward**, MD, 10320, W17, Shawen **631-4077** **Lawrence, Dawn**, MD, 10320, W18, Hush **631-4078** 4812 Haack, Roger B., 3B, 25 Stoffler 4813 Haack, Lester, 3D, 25 Stoffler 4814 Haack, Lawrence J., GQ, 921 Del Tongonake 4815 Haack, Lawrence J., GQ, 921 Del Tongonake 4816 Haack, Wen J., GQ, 2020 Freemark, MC 4817 Haack, Wen J., GQ, 2020 Freemark, MC 4818 Haack, Jacob C., GQ, 118 Plone Cone 4819 Haack, Jacob C., GQ, 118 Plone Cone 4820 Haack, Albert E., D4, 152 W9 4821 Haack, Albert E., D4, 152 W9 4822 Haack, Pengy A., I, 173 W25 4823 Haack, Pengy A., I, 173 W25 4824 Haack, Earl L., I, 181 S9 4825 Haack, Earl L., I, 181 S9 4826 Haack, Michael S., GQ, 212T7, KC 4827 Haack, Michael S., GQ, 212T7, KC 4828 Haack, Carvany S., GQ, 160W3 4829 Haack, Carvany S., GQ, 160W3 4830 Haagmann, Margarette, M, 30BrChRK, Mc 4831 Haagmann, Margarette, M, 30BrChRK, Mc 4832 Hoggett, Stephen C., GQ, 300W3 4833 Hoggett, Stephen C., GQ, 300W3 4834 Hoggett, Christopher, D3, 50P1Hter 4835 Hoggett, Christopher, D3, 50P1Hter 4836 Hoggett, Larry A., 42B, 211B4 4837 Hoggett, Larry A., 42B, 211B4 4838 Hogman, Kate, 240W3, Iowa 4839 Hogman, Kate, 240W3, Iowa 4840 Hirn, Wm. D., 2M, Box 573o DeSto 4841 Hirn, Wm. D., 2M, Box 573o DeSto 4842 Hirn, Ally A., III, 135 Lindweed 4843 Hirn, Ally A., III, 135 Lindweed 4844 Haderden, Dean W., GQ, 340W Harvard 4845 Haderden, Dean W., GQ, 340W Harvard 4846 Hdogs, Douglas C., GQ, 302W3 4847 Hdogs, Douglas C., GQ, 302W3 4848 Haley, James R., 21, 1408 Ry 4849 Haley, James R., 21, 1408 Ry 4850 Harbaugh, Barbara A., 131A, ILa 8424 8424 Welcome Incoming Freshmen May we help you with your housing needs JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS 1603 West L 15th Surrounded by the K.U. Campus 300 2 Bedroom Apartments Not more than 5 minute walking anywhere. 1603 West 15th Now Leasing for Summer and Next Fall All utilities paid—Auto parking included—Heated swimming pool—Tenant storage room on each floor—incorrigerator on each floor—Modern kitchen with microwave for heat and air conditioner—Thermostat for heat and air conditioner—Two elevators in each building—All brick walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and quiet—Complete laundry in each building—Oxygen exposure room—Bath tub, shower, two lavatories each apartment --- The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see Convenience - Comfort - Safety - Extras LA PETITE GALERIE CLOSEOUT SALE Spring and Summer PANTS TOPS 1/3 to DRESSES SWIM-WEAR SLEEP-WEAR 1/2 off O PANTS TOPS 910 Kentucky Lower Level BOOTS Many Off Season Items 75% off HOURS: COORING BOOTS plus List $5^{98} Capital LIST $2.89 MORE SPECIALS $2.89 from $2.89 BUDGET TAPES & RECORDS Elton John "Honky Clateau" on uni records Elton John "Honky Clateau" on uni records Albums $2.99 All Labels Tapes $4.99 All Labels Specializing in Heavy Rock Constant EVERY DAY PRICES Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price $2.99 on Capitol Records at Capitol. KIEFS Discount Records MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Discount Diamond Needles $2.89 Specials All Week Every Week MORE SPECIALS BUDGET TAPES & RECORDS 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. M-S 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday 628 W. 12th (Next to New Haven) KEEP IT COOL FOR ONLY F 3. 98 Men's knit shirts in a polyester and cotton blend. Chose from patterns and solids, zipper or button styles. S-M-L-XL Sporting Shirt JCPenney The values are here every day. MARTINS BROOKS Things to Have Fun by for the Summer [Artifact] 1029 Mass. HAAS IMPORTS SEA TORNEY WIND CHIMES MUGS CANDLES TIFFEN LAMPS CLOTH BASKETS & LOTS OF FUN VOLTA AUGUSTI Patronize Kansan Advertisers A B B A Backless Briefies Are In! • KNIT TOPS • BODY SHIRTS • HOT PANTS • LONG DRESSES everything is GO for DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE See Them Today at Jay SHOPPE Downtown 835 Mass.—843-4833—Lawrence, Kans. 66044— Free Parking Project 800 IIIIIIIIII everything is GO for Jay SHOPPE Downtown Free Parking Project 800 Thursday, June 15, 1972 University Summer Kansan 5 Hall, Franklin D. G, 1900 W 22 Terry Hall, James M., 1904 W 36 Shawnee, Shawnee Hall, Linda M. G, 1921 L10 Wilson, KC Hall,玛丽·M. G, 1921 L10 Wilson, KC Hall, Matthew B. M, 1950 Warwick Blvd, KC Mo Hall, Thomas B. M, 1950 Warwick Blvd, KC Mo Hall, Gordon J. H., 1951 Seward W 29 Hall, Godwin J. G., 1951 Seward W 29 Hall, Matthew K. M, 1903 Emery Hall, Michael B. M, 1904 Diagram, DLwr, Lewis Mo Hall, Michael B. M, 1904 Diagram, DLwr, Lewis Mo Hall, Daniel M. G, 1924 Redbud Hall, William A. G, 1944 Nora Ridgway, Near Shawnee Hall, Matthew M. E, 1950 Maple Ave, Lwr, Lewis Mo Hall, Matthew M. E, 1950 Maple Ave, Lwr, Lewis Mo Hall, Matthew J. M, 1946 Nora Ridgway, Near Shawnee Hall, Paul F. M, 1946 Nora Ridgway, Near Shawnee Hall, Muhammad F. M, 1946 Nora Ridgway, Near Shawnee Hall, Muhammad F. M, 1946 Nora Ridgway, Near Shawnee Hall, Mary A. M, 1908 Ala Hall, Mary A. M, 1908 Ala Hall, Charley H. A, 1917 Topper, Topeka Hall, Sandy M. B, 1948 Locust, KC Mo Hall, Sandy M. B, 1948 Locust, KC Mo Hankerson, Jeanne K. D, 1951 Souffleur Hankerson, Jeanne K. D, 1951 Souffleur Hankerson, Cynthia A. D, 1951 Rknowht, KC Mo Hankerson, Cynthia A. D, 1951 Rknowht, KC Mo Fatteine R. S, 1900 Skokane, Reston Pk Fatteine R. S, 1900 Skokane, Reston Pk Johnson, K. E, 1951 Lawrence Ave, KC Johnson, K. E, 1951 Lawrence Ave, KC Johnson, Roger J. A, 1238 Murphy Dr Johnson, Brendan J. O, 1917 Olver Johnson, Brendan J. O, 1917 Olver Harden, Partition A. A, 1951 Topper, Teresa Harden, Partition A. A, 1951 Topper, Teresa Harden, Clement J. A, 11 & 14 Mo Harden, Clement J. A, 11 & 14 Mo Harden, Richard E. D, 1794 Kage Harden, Richard E. D, 1794 Kage Happy, Polly, G. I, 1910 University Dr Happy, Polly, G. I, 1910 University Dr Garry, L. Y, 1411 Marligh Salina Hardman, Diana S. G, 11 & 14 Mo Hardman, Diana S. G, 11 & 14 Mo Dreifeld, Creighton A. I Dreifeld, Creighton A. I Dhardman, Melvin G. A, 1240 Mc Dhardman, Melvin G. A, 1240 Mc Johnson, W. J. M, 1119 & 1119 Mc Johnson, W. J. M, 1119 & 1119 Mc Burrow, Barbara J. A, 1232 Tongande Burrow, Barbara J. A, 1232 Tongande Terry B. Y, 1423 Nih Terry B. Y, 1423 Nih Bach, John B. G, 1142 Idh Bach, John B. G, 1142 Idh 德布埃, Johnache C. J, 1917 Princeton 德布埃, Johnache C. J, 1917 Princeton Jacqueline S. M, 1906 Acu Jacqueline S. M, 1906 Acu Jacqueline S. M, 1906 Acu Jacqueline S. M, 1906 Acu 433723 Harper, Rhonda M. D., 43112 Harvard 433726 Harper, Diane L., 43129 Whitla 433728 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433729 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433730 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433731 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433732 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433733 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433734 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433735 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433736 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433737 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433738 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433739 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433740 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433741 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433742 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433743 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433744 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433745 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433746 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433747 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433748 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433749 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433750 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433751 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433752 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433753 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433754 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433755 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433756 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433757 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433758 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433759 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433760 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433761 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433762 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433763 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433764 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433765 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433766 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433767 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433768 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433769 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433770 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433771 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433772 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433773 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433774 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433775 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433776 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433777 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433778 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433779 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433780 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433781 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433782 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433783 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433784 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433785 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433786 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433787 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433788 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433789 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433790 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433791 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433792 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433793 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433794 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433795 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433796 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433797 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433798 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433799 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433800 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433801 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433802 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433803 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433804 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433805 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433806 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433807 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433808 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433809 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433810 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433811 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433812 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433813 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433814 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433815 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433816 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433817 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433818 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433819 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433820 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433821 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433822 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433823 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433824 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433825 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433826 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433827 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433828 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433829 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433830 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433831 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433832 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433833 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433834 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433835 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433836 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433837 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433838 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433839 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433840 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433841 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433842 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433843 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433844 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433845 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433846 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433847 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433848 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433849 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433850 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433851 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433852 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433853 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433854 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433855 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433856 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433857 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433858 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433859 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433860 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433861 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433862 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433863 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433864 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433865 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433866 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433867 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433868 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433869 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433870 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433871 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433872 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433873 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433874 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433875 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433876 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433877 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433878 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433879 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433880 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433881 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433882 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433883 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433884 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433885 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433886 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433887 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433888 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433889 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433890 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433891 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433892 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433893 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433894 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433895 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433896 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433897 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433898 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433899 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433900 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433901 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433902 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433903 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433904 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433905 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433906 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433907 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433908 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433909 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433910 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433911 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433912 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433913 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433914 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433915 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433916 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433917 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433918 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433919 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433920 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433921 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433922 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433923 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433924 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433925 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433926 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433927 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433928 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433929 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433930 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433931 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433932 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433933 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433934 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433935 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433936 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433937 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433938 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433939 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433940 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433941 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433942 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433943 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433944 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433945 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433946 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433947 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433948 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433949 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433950 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433951 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433952 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433953 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433954 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433955 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433956 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433957 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433958 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433959 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433960 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433961 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433962 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433963 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433964 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433965 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433966 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433967 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433968 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433969 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433970 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433971 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433972 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433973 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433974 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433975 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433976 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433977 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433978 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433979 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433980 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433981 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433982 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433983 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433984 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433985 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433986 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433987 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433988 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433989 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433990 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433991 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433992 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433993 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433994 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433995 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433996 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433997 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433998 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433999 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433900 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433901 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433902 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433903 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433904 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433905 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433906 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433907 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433908 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433909 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433910 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433911 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433912 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433913 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433914 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433915 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433916 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433917 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433918 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433919 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433920 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433921 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433922 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433923 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433924 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433925 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433926 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433927 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433928 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433929 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433930 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433931 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433932 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433933 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433934 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433935 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433936 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433937 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433938 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433939 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433940 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433941 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433942 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433943 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433944 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433945 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433946 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433947 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433948 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433949 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433950 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433951 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433952 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433953 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433954 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433955 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433956 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433957 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433958 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433959 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433960 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433961 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433962 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433963 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433964 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433965 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433966 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433967 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433968 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433969 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433970 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433971 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433972 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433973 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433974 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433975 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433976 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433977 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433978 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433979 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433980 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433981 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433982 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433983 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433984 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433985 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433986 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433987 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433988 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433989 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433990 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433991 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433992 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433993 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433994 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433995 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433996 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433997 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433998 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433999 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433900 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433901 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433902 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433903 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433904 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433905 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433906 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433907 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433908 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433909 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433910 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433911 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433912 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433913 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433914 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433915 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433916 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433917 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433918 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433919 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433920 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433921 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433922 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433923 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433924 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433925 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433926 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433927 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433928 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433929 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433930 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433931 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433932 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433933 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433934 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433935 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433936 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433937 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433938 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433939 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433940 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433941 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433942 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433943 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433944 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433945 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433946 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433947 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433948 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433949 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433950 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433951 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433952 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433953 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433954 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433955 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433956 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433957 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433958 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433959 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433960 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433961 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433962 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433963 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433964 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433965 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433966 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433967 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433968 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433969 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433970 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433971 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433972 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433973 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433974 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433975 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433976 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433977 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433978 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433979 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433980 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433981 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433982 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433983 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433984 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433985 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433986 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433987 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433988 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433989 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433990 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433991 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433992 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433993 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433994 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433995 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433996 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433997 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433998 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433999 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433900 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433901 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433902 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433903 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433904 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433905 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433906 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433907 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433908 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433909 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433910 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433911 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433912 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433913 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433914 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433915 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433916 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433917 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433918 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433919 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433920 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433921 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433922 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433923 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433924 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433925 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433926 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433927 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433928 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433929 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433930 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433931 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433932 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433933 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433934 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433935 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433936 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433937 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433938 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433939 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433940 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433941 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433942 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433943 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433944 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433945 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433946 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433947 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433948 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433949 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433950 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433951 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433952 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433953 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433954 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433955 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433956 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433957 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433958 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433959 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433960 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433961 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433962 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433963 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433964 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433965 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433966 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433967 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433968 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433969 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433970 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433971 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433972 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433973 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433974 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433975 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433976 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433977 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433978 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433979 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433980 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433981 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433982 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433983 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433984 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433985 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433986 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433987 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433988 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433989 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433990 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433991 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433992 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433993 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433994 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433995 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433996 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433997 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433998 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433999 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433900 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433901 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433902 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433903 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433904 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433905 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433906 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433907 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433908 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433909 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla 433910 Harper, David H., 43129 Whitla Hays, Carroll A., 28, 107 Matheson Hayes, Rowan W., 262, McLahon Hayes, Thomas C., 259, McClarellan Hussey, Susan J., 264 Huang, Jiang G., L, 903 Holtampton, St Jó Huadell, Station A, ID, 1033 Winterbrook Huadell, Craig G., L, 903 New Haven Huadell, Craig G., L, 903 New Haven Huckleboro, Douglas G., 167, 179 W 4 482-7386    489-798 * Hoff, Richard L., TM, 410 Thompson, KC* 490-799 * Hoff, William D., FM, 315 Fire Work* 511-804 * Hoffman, Constantine C, G, 711 Ind* 511-804 * Hoffman, Joseph E, G, 711 Ind* 487-678 * Hoffman, Joseph E, G, 711 Atamia KC* 482-613 * Hoffman, Leah, 22, 15 W, M* 482-613 * Hoffman, Leah, 22, 15 W, M* 482-613 * Hoffman, Sally A, 940 Mass, JP* 482-619 263-4730 Habshard, Charlotte A., 22, HRL Box 86 263-4738 Habshard, Conn. J., 11, HRL Box 86 264-3240 Habshard, John M., 15, HRL Box 86 264-3230 Habshard, Provon III, 63, 2440 Cedarwood 264-3200 Habshard, Barbara L. Garage A., 73, 92 Wiley T. Shawnee 261-764 Service Tradition Atmosphere Beer Lasses Excellence Specials ALL THIS AT . . . THE STABLES 7th & Michigan 7th & Michigan HOURS: Mon.- Sat. 2 p.m.-12 SPECIALS: Mon. 8-9 50c Pitchers Thurs. All Day 80c Pitchers Sat. 3-4 50c Pitchers Specializing TUNE-UP AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC Kersley-Bill AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIANS Sunscope Distributor Syncograph FREE PICKUP & DELIVERY IN LAWRENCE 843-9069 We've got When it comes to Jeans— We don't take a BACK SEAT LEVI'S to Nobody! 50' Off on a Double or Family Sized Pizza You know the fit! - Bush Jeans • Shrink-to-fit -Pre Shrunk - Bell Bottoms • Flares • Straight Legs - Twill • Sta-prest • And on and on LAWRENCE SURPLUS for - Corduroy • Brushed Denim • Denim THIS WEEK END! Bring this Coupon to SHAKEY'S NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Thousands to choose from You know the quality! You know the fit! SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & ye Public house on a Pitcher (Light or Dark) Sale $ $ $ $5 & $8 $6 & $9 50° Off HOB NAYL Dress & Sport Shoes 544 W. 23rd 842-2266 Offer Good Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. Only Sandals Flats & Heels Live Music 6 Nights YUK UP — YUK DOWN Tuesday & Thursday Ladies Free 20 POOL TABLES LIVING COLOR Mr. Yuk SUN WEDNESDAY NIGHT PITCHER NIGHT HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 9th & Iowa Che Ball Park Featuring: ★ A Sandwich special every day including our Home Run Special— A triple decker Ham with German Potato Salad $1.50 (for carry out orders call 841-3468) ★ Pitcher night every Wednesday From 7-12 $85^{\circ}$ - Ball Park Baseball: summer leagues now forming - Practice for City Tournament and Cash Prizes in July HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER OPEN 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 2:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. Sun. Patronize Kansan Advertisers J. M. Public Mandy Public 111 University Lawrence, Ks. --- 83-148 1011 PAY TO THE ORDER OF University State Bank Lawrence, Kansas 66044 The ultimate in personalized checking The Ultimate in Personalized Checking pic check The first really new checking idea in years. Your picture right on your checklist! Instant identification! Makes a big difference for the merchant. Designed for individual or joint accounts. Have your picture taken free of charge at our bank. Pic Chek. The ultimate in personalized checking. Available only at UNIVERSITY STATE BANK. Open your Pic Chek Account Today! Available at NO Extra Charge! only at . . . University State Bank Member F.D.I.C. 955 Iowa 842-4700 6 Thursday, June 15, 1972 University Summer Kansan Dikhilkar, Trajan D. G, 130 Mass Karwan, Karen D., 125 Mackenzie Rd. Lewis, Kevin B., 126 Milwaukee Rd. Ivory, Carolyn B., 130 Chryslyn Rd, KC Ewenna, William M., 141 Milwaukee Rd. * *Abraham, Twinkl G, 9282 W38, Mint Abraham, Daniel D., 9282 W38, Mint Abraham, Kate J., 9282 W38, Owl Dr. V74 Abraham, Gary J. H., 325 Mick Abraham, Howard P. G, 121 W39, Tampa Rd. Abraham, Howard P. G, 121 W39, Tampa Rd. Abraham, James H. A., 123 Hidler Ct. Abraham, John E. B., 124 Hidler Dr. Abraham, John E. B., 124 Hidler Dr. Abraham, Mary C. L., P0 Box F12 Abraham, Paul C. Z., 130 Emergence Tpke Abraham, Steven D. A., 135 Lindwood Rd. Abraham, Thomas H. B., 127 Owl Dr. V74 Abraham, Thomas H. B., 127 Owl Dr. V74 Abraham, James S. M., 130 Boots, KC Abraham, William A. I., 124 Owl Dr. V74 Abraham, William A. I., 124 Owl Dr. V74 Abraham, Cypher R. H., 12 Jenkins H. A. Abraham, Cypher R. H., 12 Jenkins H. A. Abraham, Norman R. M., 123 Booth, KC Abraham, Jenny Karley, Dean A. J., 21, 1823 Nailithm H. Karley, Kevin M., 21, 1823 Nailithm L. Karney, George B 843-1077 Kelly, Franice P. G, 824-1343 Tenn. 843-1079 James L. G., 824-1068 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1080 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1081 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1082 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1083 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1084 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1085 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1086 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1087 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1088 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1089 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1090 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1091 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1092 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1093 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1094 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1095 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1096 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1097 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1098 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1099 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1100 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1101 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1102 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1103 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1104 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1105 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1106 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1107 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1108 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1109 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1110 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1111 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1112 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1113 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1114 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1115 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1116 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1117 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1118 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1119 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1120 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1121 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1122 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1123 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1124 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1125 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1126 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1127 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1128 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1129 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1130 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1131 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1132 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1133 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1134 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1135 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1136 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1137 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1138 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1139 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1140 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1141 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1142 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1143 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1144 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1145 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1146 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1147 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1148 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1149 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1150 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1151 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1152 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1153 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1154 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1155 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1156 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1157 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1158 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1159 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1160 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1161 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1162 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1163 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1164 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1165 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1166 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1167 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1168 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1169 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1170 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1171 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1172 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1173 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1174 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1175 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1176 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1177 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1178 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1179 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1180 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1181 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1182 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1183 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1184 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1185 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1186 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1187 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1188 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1189 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1190 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1191 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1192 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1193 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1194 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1195 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1196 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1197 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1198 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1199 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1200 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1201 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1202 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1203 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1204 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1205 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1206 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1207 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1208 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1209 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1210 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1211 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1212 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1213 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1214 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1215 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1216 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1217 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1218 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1219 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1220 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1221 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1222 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1223 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1224 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1225 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1226 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1227 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1228 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1229 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1230 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1231 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1232 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1233 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1234 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1235 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1236 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1237 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1238 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 843-1239 Katherine J. G., 824-1069 WK, 843-1069 MK 844 - Laurence, Diane H. 64, 2003 Emerald 842-7302 * Lawrence, Mary A. 64, 1998 Limewow 842-9787 * Lawrence, Janetta E. 64, 1998 Ala 842-9787 * Lawrence, Juanita E. 64, 1998 Road 842-1758 * Lawrence, Davide H. 64, 2007 Wakehurst 842-6678 * Lawrence, David H. 64, 2007 Wakehurst 842-6678 * Lawrence, Martha P. 64, 1998 Lake, KC 842-1758 * Lawrence, Martha P. 64, 1998 Lake, KC 842-1758 * Lawrence, Martha P. 64, 1998 Lake, KC 842-1758 * Lawrence, Jeffrey M. 64, 2008 Lekor, NCMo 842-5683 * Lee, Annelia H. 18, F11 842-5683 * Lee, Annelia H. 18, F11 842-5683 * Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 * Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 * Lee, Chee J. 29, F11 842-5683 * Lee, Chee J. 29, F11 842-5683 * Lee, John R. 64, 90 W 29 842-778 * Lee, John R. 64, 90 W 29 842-778 * Lee, Sharon L. 64, 2003 Belfast KC 842-5683 * Lee, Sharon L. 64, 2003 Belfast KC 842-5683 * Lee, William H. 64, 900 M Smon 296-890 * Lee, William H. 64, 900 M Smon 296-890 * Lee, Philip N. 64, 900 Calf 296-890 * Lee, Philip N. 64, 900 Calf 296-890 * Lee, Lindha L. 11, 012 Emery 842-700 * Lee, Chiang H. 12, 012 Emery 842-700 * Lee, Chiang H. 12, 012 Emery 842-700 * Lee, Lorraine J. 11, 012 Emery 842-700 * Lee, Lorraine J. 11, 012 Emery 842-700 * Lee, Jon E. 29, 005 M Boom 842-23 | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 2 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 3 | Lee, Chee J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 4 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 5 | Lee, Chee J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 6 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 7 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 8 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 9 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 10 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 11 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 12 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 13 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 14 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 15 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 16 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 17 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 18 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 19 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 20 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 21 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 22 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 23 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 24 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 25 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 26 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 27 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 28 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 29 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 30 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 31 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 32 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 33 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 34 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 35 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 36 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 37 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 38 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 39 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 40 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 41 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 42 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 43 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 44 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 45 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 46 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 47 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 48 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 49 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 50 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 51 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 52 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 53 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 54 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 55 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 56 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 57 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 58 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 59 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 60 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 61 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 62 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 63 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 64 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 65 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 66 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 67 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 68 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 69 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 70 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 71 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 72 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 73 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 74 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 75 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 76 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 77 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 78 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 79 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 80 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 81 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 82 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 83 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 84 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 85 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 86 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 87 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 88 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 89 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 90 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 91 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 92 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 93 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 94 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 95 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 96 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 97 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 98 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 99 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 100 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 101 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 102 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 103 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 104 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 105 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 106 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 107 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 108 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 109 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 110 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 111 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 112 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 113 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 114 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 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29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 135 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 136 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 137 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 138 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 139 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 140 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 141 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 142 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 143 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 144 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 145 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 146 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 147 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 148 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 149 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 150 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 151 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 152 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 153 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 154 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 155 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 156 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 157 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 158 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 159 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 160 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 161 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 162 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 163 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 164 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 165 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 166 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 167 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 168 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 169 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 170 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 171 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 172 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 173 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 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Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 194 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 195 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 196 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 197 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 198 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 199 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 200 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 201 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 202 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 203 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 204 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 205 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 206 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 207 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 208 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 209 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 210 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 211 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 212 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 213 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 214 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 215 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 216 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 217 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 218 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 219 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 220 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 221 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 222 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 223 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 224 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 225 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 226 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 227 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 228 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 229 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 230 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 231 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 232 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 233 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 234 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 235 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 236 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 237 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 238 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 239 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 240 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 241 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 242 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 243 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 244 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 245 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 246 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 247 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 248 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 249 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 250 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 251 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 252 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 253 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 254 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 255 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 256 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 257 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 258 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 259 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 260 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 261 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 262 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 263 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 264 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 265 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 266 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 267 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 268 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 269 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 270 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 271 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 272 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 273 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 274 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 275 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 276 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 277 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 278 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 279 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 280 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 281 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 282 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 283 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 284 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 285 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 286 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 287 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 288 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 289 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 290 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 291 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 292 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 293 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 294 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 295 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 296 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-5683 | 842-5050 | | 297 | Lee, Chao J. 29, F11 842-56 Lamarer, William K., 128, IWU 5 Campus Lamarer, William J., 128, MMI 806, Church Lamarer, Robert J., 128, MMI 806, Church Lamarer, Patrick A., 16, 101 Michigan KB Lamarer, Patrick A., 16, 101 Michigan KB Lamarer, Barbara G., IRD, Bur Spg Lamarer, Barbara G., IRD, Bur Spg Lamarer, David H., 158, MMI 806, OvPK Lamarer, David H., 158, MMI 806, OvPK Lamarer, Judah B., Air Ptorm Model Lamarer, Judah B., Air Ptorm Model Lamarer, Kaiva Y., 103, WIU 5 Campus Lamarer, Kaiva Y., 103, WIU 5 Campus Lamarer, Jill F., 26, HMU 806, Overcrowd Lamarer, Jill F., 26, HMU 806, Overcrowd Lamda, Kenneth A., 49, 900 Illinois KB Lamda, Kenneth A., 49, 900 Illinois KB Lamda, Sandra M., 14, 128 NH Lamda, Sandra M., 14, 128 NH Lamda, Richard C., 10, 128 NH, KC Lamda, Richard C., 10, 128 NH, KC Lamda, Jason W., 14, 128 NH, KC Lamda, Jason W., 14, 128 NH, KC Lamda, Hunter R., W. K., 10, 128 NH, KC Lamda, Hunter R., W. K., 10, 128 NH, KC Lamda, Hunter R., W. K., 10, 128 NH, KC Lamda, Hunter R., W. K., 10, 128 NH, KC Lamda, Hunter R., W. K., 10, 128 NH, KC Lamda, Kevin G., 100, WIU 5 Campus Lamda, Kevin G., 100, WIU 5 Campus Lamda, Marta Ann A., 64, Summer Abroad Lamda, Sarah K., 071, Ludwikshire Lamda, Sarah K., 071, Ludwikshire Lamda, Stephen P., 12, 100 WIU 5 Campus Lamda, Stephen P., 12, 100 WIU 5 Campus Lamdy, Shilby H., 92, 901 OvPK, KPvpk Lamdy, Shilby H., 92, 901 OvPK, KPvpk Lamda, pasapassio, Praxy, I., 118, Ohno MB Lamda, pasapassio, Praxy, I., 118, Ohno MB Laminer, Michael K., 125, Dewen Laminer, Michael K., 125, Dewen Laminer, Brian E., 90, N72, KC Laminer, Brian E., 90, N72, KC Laminer, Daniel L., 14, 154 Msu Laminer, Daniel L., 14, 154 Msu Laminer, Martin M., 602, Highland, KCMo Laminer, Martin M., 602, Highland, KCMo Laminer, Martin W., 125, Dewen Laminer, Martin W., 125, Dewen Laminer, Karlin A., Field Work Laminer, Karlin A., Field Work Laminer, Karl F., Field Work Laminer, Karl F., Field Work Llamda, Anthony M., 600, WIU 7, TerM, Man Llamda, Anthony M., 600, WIU 7, TerM, Man Llamda, Jeanine G., 602, Perry, ShMk Llamda, Jeanine G., 602, Perry, ShMk Llamda, Laurent J., 44, 732, Torthe, Oratge Llamda, Laurent J., 44, 732, Torthe, Oratge Llab, Karban W., 30, 153, Terr Llab, Karban W., 30, 153, Terr Llab, Jagden W., 61, 145, Maple Llab, Jagden W., 61, 145, Maple Llab, Jagden W., 61, 145, Maple Llab, Jagden W., 61, 145, Maple Llab, Jagden W., 61, 145, Maple Llab, Jagden W., 61, 145, Maple Llab, Jagden W., 61, 145, Maple Llab, Jagden W., 61, 145, Maple Llab, Jagden W., 61, 145, Maple 842-9178 Maureen Dale F, Jr. 728 W 27th 842-9179 Micah Wayne F, Jr. 514 M 44K, Ovldr P 841-9073 McDonald J.M., 514 M 44K, Ovldr P 843-9178 MacDonald James M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 843-9179 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9180 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9181 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9182 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9183 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9184 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9185 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9186 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9187 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9188 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9189 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9190 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9191 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9192 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9193 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9194 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9195 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9196 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9197 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9198 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-9199 MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919A MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919B MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919C MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919D MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919E MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919F MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919G MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919H MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919I MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919J MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919K MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919L MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919M MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919N MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919O MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919P MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919Q MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919R MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919S MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919T MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919U MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919V MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919W MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919X MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919Y MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919Z MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919A MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919B MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919C MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919D MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919E MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919F MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919G MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919H MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919I MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919J MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919K MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919L MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919M MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919N MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919O MacDonald Margaret M, 64 102 Enkrid Rd 842-919P 2 3792 Marshan, Jean M. G., 01 Stoffler 4 3809 Marshan, Michael D. B., 22 Main Hill 5 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 6 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 7 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 8 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 9 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 10 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 11 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 12 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 13 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 14 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 15 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 16 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 17 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 18 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 19 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 20 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 21 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 22 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 23 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 24 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 25 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 26 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 27 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 28 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 29 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 30 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 31 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 32 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 33 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 34 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 35 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 36 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 37 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 38 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 39 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 40 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 41 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 42 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 43 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 44 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 45 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 46 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 47 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 48 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 49 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 50 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 51 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 52 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 53 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 54 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 55 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 56 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 57 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 58 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 59 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 60 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 61 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 62 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 63 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 64 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 65 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 66 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 67 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 68 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 69 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 70 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 71 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 72 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 73 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 74 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 75 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 76 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 77 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 78 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 79 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 80 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 81 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 82 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 83 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 84 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 85 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 86 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 87 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 88 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 89 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 90 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 91 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 92 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 93 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 94 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 95 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 96 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 97 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 98 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 99 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 100 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 101 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 102 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 103 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 104 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 105 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 106 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 107 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 108 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 109 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 110 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 111 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 112 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 113 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 114 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 115 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 116 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 117 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 118 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 119 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 120 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 121 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 122 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 123 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 124 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 125 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 126 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 127 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 128 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 129 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 130 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 131 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 132 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 133 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 134 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 135 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 136 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 137 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 138 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 139 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 140 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 141 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 142 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 143 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 144 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 145 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 146 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 147 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 148 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 149 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 150 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 151 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 152 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 153 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 154 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 155 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 156 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 157 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 158 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 159 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 160 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 161 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 162 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 163 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 164 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 165 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 166 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 167 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 168 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 169 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 170 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 171 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 172 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 173 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 174 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 175 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 176 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 177 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 178 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 179 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 180 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 181 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 182 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 183 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 184 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 185 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 186 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 187 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 188 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 189 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 190 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 191 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 192 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 193 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 194 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 195 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 196 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 197 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 198 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 199 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 200 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 201 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 202 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 203 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 204 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 205 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 206 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 207 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 208 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 209 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 210 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 211 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 212 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 213 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 214 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 215 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 216 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 217 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 218 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 219 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 220 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 221 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 222 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 223 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 224 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 225 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 226 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 227 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 228 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 229 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 230 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 231 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 232 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 233 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 234 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 235 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 236 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 237 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 238 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 239 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 240 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 241 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 242 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 243 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 244 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 245 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 246 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 247 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 248 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 249 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 250 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 251 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 252 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 253 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 254 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 255 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 256 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 257 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 258 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 259 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 260 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 261 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 262 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 263 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 264 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 265 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 266 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 267 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 268 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 269 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 270 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 271 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 272 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 273 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 274 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 275 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 276 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 277 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 278 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 279 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 280 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 281 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 282 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 283 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 284 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 285 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 286 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 287 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 288 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 289 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 290 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 291 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 292 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 293 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 294 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 295 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 296 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 297 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 298 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 299 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 300 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 301 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 302 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 303 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 304 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 305 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 306 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 307 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 308 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 309 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 310 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 311 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 312 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 313 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 314 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 315 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 316 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 317 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 318 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. 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G., 1532 Delaware 403 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 404 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 405 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 406 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 407 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 408 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 409 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 410 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 411 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delaware 412 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 413 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 414 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 415 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 416 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 417 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 418 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 419 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 420 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 421 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 422 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 423 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. 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G., 1532 Delenda 445 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 446 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 447 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 448 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 449 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 450 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 451 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 452 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 453 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 454 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 455 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 456 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 457 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 458 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 459 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 460 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 461 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 462 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 463 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 464 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 465 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 466 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 467 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 468 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 469 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 470 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 471 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 472 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 473 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 474 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 475 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 476 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 477 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 478 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 479 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 480 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 481 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 482 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 483 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 484 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 485 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 486 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 487 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 488 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 489 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 490 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 491 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 492 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 493 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 494 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 495 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 496 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 497 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 1532 Delenda 498 3809 Marshan, Barbara A. G., 15 STEREO DISCOUNT Factory cost +10% Now you can buy the finest in stereo at ★ Selected lines ★ The best buys at 842-2047 1205 Prairie Ave. RAY AUDIO Coussinting—Friee tea & coffice—Factory serycieng Coussinting—Friee tea & coffice—Factory serycieng Use Kansan Classifieds GRAND BUNK Solid GRAIL Mark, Don & Mel 1946-71 Reg. $6.98 Kief's Discount Price on Capitol Records $3^{99} Capitol at Kief's DISCOUNT RECORDS MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Discount Diamond Needles Kirsten's at HILLCREST The Greatest Look on Camqus Mc Country Set Junior House Miss Pat Thermo-Jac Lady Lee Jeans Lounge-Craft Maidenform Joyce Sportswear Jack Winter Jerrell of Texas University Summer Kansan Thursday, June 15, 1972 - Mottodell, Carol A, 58, Mailue L, Peculiar Mo. 842-326 * *Mottodell, Carol A, 610 842-3205 Morgenthaler, Susan, 31, 140 Tenn 842-6403 842-3206 Morris, Erik D. 842-6826 842-3207 Morris, Emmanuel M. 842-8067 842-3122 *Morris, Gary R.* G, 9202 Wmh 842-1298 842-3123 *Morris, Gary R.* G, 9202 Wmh 842-1298 842-3024 *Morris, Barbara J.* I, 1298 Wmch 842-1713 Murray, Mishael D. A., 44,142 Ohio Murray, Murray, A., 44, Summer State Muskell, Katie G., 60, Jersey City 842-2448 842-2468 842-2478 842-2498 842-2508 842-2518 842-2538 842-2548 842-2558 842-2568 842-2578 842-2588 842-2598 842-2608 842-2618 842-2628 842-2638 842-2648 842-2658 842-2668 842-2678 842-2688 842-2698 842-2708 842-2718 842-2728 842-2738 842-2748 842-2758 842-2768 842-2778 842-2788 842-2798 842-2808 842-2818 842-2828 842-2838 842-2848 842-2858 842-2868 842-2878 842-2888 842-2898 842-2908 842-2918 842-2928 842-2938 842-2948 842-2958 842-2968 842-2978 842-2988 842-2998 842-3008 842-3018 842-3028 842-3038 842-3048 842-3058 842-3068 842-3078 842-3088 842-3098 842-3108 842-3118 842-3128 842-3138 842-3148 842-3158 842-3168 842-3178 842-3188 842-3198 842-3208 842-3218 842-3228 842-3238 842-3248 842-3258 842-3268 842-3278 842-3288 842-3298 842-3308 842-3318 842-3328 842-3338 842-3348 842-3358 842-3368 842-3378 842-3388 842-3398 842-3408 842-3418 842-3428 842-3438 842-3448 842-3458 842-3468 842-3478 842-3488 842-3498 842-3508 842-3518 842-3528 842-3538 842-3548 842-3558 842-3568 842-3578 842-3588 842-3598 842-3608 842-3618 842-3628 842-3638 842-3648 842-3658 842-3668 842-3678 842-3688 842-3698 842-3708 842-3718 842-3728 842-3738 842-3748 842-3758 842-3768 842-3778 842-3788 842-3798 842-3808 842-3818 842-3828 842-3838 842-3848 842-3858 842-3868 842-3878 842-3888 842-3898 842-3908 842-3918 842-3928 842-3938 842-3948 842-3958 842-3968 842-3978 842-3988 842-3998 842-4008 842-4018 842-4028 842-4038 842-4048 842-4058 842-4068 842-4078 842-4088 842-4098 842-4108 842-4118 842-4128 842-4138 842-4148 842-4158 842-4168 842-4178 842-4188 842-4198 842-4208 842-4218 842-4228 842-4238 842-4248 842-4258 842-4268 842-4278 842-4288 SPIDER ASPDER Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price $299 Capitol on Capitol Records at KIEF'S Discount Records SPDER Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price $2.99 on Capitol Records at Capitol KIEF'S Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles ZIP DISCOUNT SCHOOL CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management GET ACQUAINTED COUPON $1.50 Cash Coupon NOT good on cigarettes, candy, magazines or prescriptions. offer expires after June 18 ZIP DISCOUNT DRUG CENTER 747 MASSACHUSETTS Now Under New Management THE OMBUDSMAN OFFICE IS OPEN During the Summer Session PURPOSE 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 for action. 3. To seek out intra-University injustices or inequities and initiate appropriate action within the jurisdiction of the University Judiciary or Student Court. SCOPE 1. All areas are open to the Ombudsman Office except the area of faculty promotion and appointment and extra-University litigation. OFFICE HOURS: AFTER HOURS CALL: Monday 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Wednesday 1:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m. Friday 1:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m. OFFICE PHONE: 864-3607 842-4914 842-1961 843-9412 843-1938 843-7536 842-1505 Make Church A Part of Your Summer 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 Service 11:00 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. Nursery provided during church school and worship C.H. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. M.C. Allen, pastor Rev. V. L. Patten, 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 ST. LAWRENCE STUDENT PARISH 1434 Engel Road Rev. Donald Redmond, O.S.B. Masses: St. Lawrence Chapel 1910 Stratford 8:00, 9:30, 11:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Weekday Masses: 4:45 at chapel Saturday Mass: 5:00 p.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. TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH 1011 Vermont Rev. Harvard Wilbur Rev. C.F. Stolz, campus minister Sunday Worship: 7:30, 10:00 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. Vacation Bible School, June 19:23 6th grade and under 9:00-11:00 a.m. 7th grade-adult 7:30-9:00 p.m. For transportation call 843-0770 --- 8 Thursday, June 15. 1972 University Summer Kansan Normchuck, Patricia L, 0G, 298 Aba Newbury, A. D., 0G, 301 Il, Norton, A. D., 0G, 301 Il, Notshit, Kevith B, 0G, 400 Il, Neumuth, Lasker W Nenekuak Amarro, 6G, J62 Scoorer KC Nikolaiuk, K. 6G, 1821 Nismath RK Nikolaiuk, K. 4G, 1815 Nismath RK Nibsada, Takaki, M. 6G, 2409 W 18 KC Nibsada, Takaki, M. 6G, 2409 W 18 KC Nishida, Dana J. 4G, 1815 Nismath RK Nishida, Dana J. 4G, 1815 Nismath RK Niraucho, Larry K. 4G, 701 Ohio Niraucho, Larry K. 4G, 701 Ohio Nobray Sherif, J. 4G, 1828 Muskota Nobray Sherif, J. 4G, 1828 Muskota Nobray Sherif, J. 4G, 1828 Muskota Notling, Larry W. 1311 W 4 KC Notling, Larry W. 1311 W 4 KC Notley, Grant O. 4, 1228 Tem Notley, Grant O. 4, 1228 Tem Nykene Matrja, M. 4G, 1919 W 19 St Nykene Matrja, M. 4G, 1919 W 19 St Nykene Matrja, M. 4G, 1919 W 19 St Northjoe, K. 6G, 1821 Nismath RK Northjoe, K. 6G, 1821 Nismath RK Northjoe, K. 6G, 1821 Nismath RK Northjoe, J. A. 6G, 1647 Gallup Northjoe, J. A. 6G, 1647 Gallup Northington, Ja. A. 6G, 1647 Gallup Northington, Ja. A. 6G, 1647 Gallup Northington, Ja. A. 6G, 1647 Gallup Northington, Ja. A. 6G, 1647 Gallup Northington, Ja. A. 6G, 1647 Gallup Northinton, K. 11, 110 Term Northinton, K. 11, 110 Term Northinton, K. 11, 110 Term Northinton, K. 11, 110 Term Northinton, K. 11, 110 Term Northinton, K. 11, 110 Term Northinton, K. 11, 110 Term Northinton, K. 11, 110 Term Northinton, K. 11, 110 Term Northton, Marla J. 3 Olberg, Joseph M. 48, 102 w 39th Tcr. 862-7516 Olberg, Sirius M. 48, 102 w 39th Tcr. 862-7516 Olberg, Sirius M. 48, 102 w 39th Tcr. 862-7516 Brien, Simpson M. 319, 710 w 38th St. KC 852-7504 Brien, Simpson M. 319, 710 w 38th St. KC 852-7504 Brien, Cindy, P. Jr. 482, 185a Prunzman 862-7504 Brien, Cindy, P. Jr. 482, 185a Prunzman 862-7504 Brien, Cindy, P. Jr. 482, 185a Prunzman 862-7504 Brian, James J. 381, 870 w 76, Pf. Vil. 641-8514 Kaufman, Kathleen 060, 974 W 100a Dr. Cr. 891-8571 Kaufman, Kathleen 060, 974 W 100a Dr. Cr. 891-8571 Connor, Thomas 605, 829 W 32, Ttk 862-7504 Connor, Thomas 605, 829 W 32, Ttk 862-7504 Mary,浆M. 389, 880d Hired Dr. Crist, 791-8571 Mary,浆M. 389, 880d Hired Dr. Crist, 791-8571 Dornell, T. J. 382, E10 W 382, Ter. KC 862-7514 Dornell, T. J. 382, E10 W 382, Ter. KC 862-7514 Adleuca, Adleuca A. 920, Ahlin 862-7504 Ortmann, W. G. 426, China 319, Ttk 862-7504 Ortmann, W. G. 426, China 319, Ttk 862-7504 Olander, Roger D., 620, Ward 2, North Wc 862-7514 Olander, Roger D., 620, Ward 2, North Wc 862-7514 Oglengay, Elw. Floor 228, Nnamit Hall 862-7504 Oglengay, Elw. Floor 228, Nnamit Hall 862-7504 Ohnaboda, Dorpha D., 44, 255 NMCH 862-7514 Ohnaboda, Dorpha D., 44, 255 NMCH 862-7514 Ogrendreg, Roland, 00, Jovie, 00, Osaka 862-7504 Ogrendreg, Roland, 00, Jovie, 00, Osaka 862-7504 A. F. G. 484, 8914 W 904, Ter. KC 862-7514 A. F. G. 484, 8914 W 904, Ter. KC 862-7514 Awawaya, J. A. 00, 263a Topping, KC 862-7514 Awawaya, J. A. 00, 263a Topping, KC 862-7514 Linda, Linda K. 00, 162 W 22nd Tcr. 862-7514 Linda, Linda K. 00, 162 W 22nd Tcr. 862-7514 Oren, Date R. 464, 176a La 862-7504 Oren, Date R. 464, 176a La 862-7504 Sata, J. C. 263, Japan 862-7514 Sata, J. C. 263, Japan 862-7514 Olivier, Trimley J. 20, O.K. Hall Haskett 862-7514 Olivier, Trimley J. 20, O.K. Hall Haskett 862-7514 Overmayer, Larry H. 42, 302a Won 862-7514 Overmayer, Larry H. 42, 302a Won 862-7514 Justine, K. 16, 255 NMCH 862-7514 Justine, K. 16, 255 NMCH 862-7514 Phillip, S. M. 384, Biancki 862-7514 Phillip, S. M. 384, Biancki 862-7514 Olsen, Ellen L., 4D, 945 Ky Olsen, Kenny L., 4D, 945 Ky Olsen, Omar O., 4D, 945 Ky Olsen, Linja L., JG 64, 938 N St Olsen, Lisa L., JG 64, 938 N St Olsen, Mercelon D., JG 1758 Ky Olsen, Merelon D., JG 1758 Ky Olsen, Neal Diane L., 4D, 901 Club Place 1-10 Olsen, Neal Diane L., 4D, 901 Club Place 1-10 Olsen, Vincent P. J., 4D, 306 W 2 J Olsen, Neil Patterson, Olsen, Neil Patterson, Olsen, Oberstorf Albert C., 64, 1622 W 9er Olsen, Oberstorf Albert C., 64, 1622 W 9er Olsen, Deyouke, Douglas G., 60, Box 254, Desoto Olsen, Deyouke, Douglas G., 60, Box 254, Desoto Olsen,phr Jonathan B., 143 Melnore Fee Olsen,phr Jonathan B., 143 Melnore Fee Olsen, Jr. Jerome M., 4D, 901 Club Place 10-12 Olsen, Jr. Jerome M., 4D, 901 Club Place 10-12 Olsen, Richard J., 16, 2525 Chianwood W 73-6280 Ort, Barbara Sue N., 1011 Emery E Ort, Barbara Sue N., 1011 Emery E Orthrose, Gary S., 3A, 240 North St Orthrose, Gary S., 3A, 240 North St Orthrose, Rohan B., 3B, 240 North St Orthrose, Rohan B., 3B, 240 North St Augliw, Marilyn L., 3A, 2959 W 43 A, Veck KY Augliw, Marilyn L., 3A, 2959 W 43 A, Veck KY Ortsherolin, G. 6M, 4139 W 34 Rd, Fri 26-493 Ortsherolin, G. 6M, 4139 W 34 Rd, Fri 26-493 Elizabeth,艾丽丝 L., 1615 Nashville Elizabeth,艾丽丝 L., 1615 Nashville Ottmann, S. A. GU848 Black Jacket O F Ottmann, S. A. GU848 Black Jacket O F Joseph, Andrew A., 16, 114 Laila Overherr, Armand C., 6D, 850 Roe Ov, 649 KY Overherr, Armand C., 6D, 850 Roe Ov, 649 KY Wavers, Charles S., Summit Alto, Leasingland Wavers, Charles S., Summit Alto, Leasingland Roy, King K., 3A, 1754 W 2 J Roy, King K., 3A, 1754 W 2 J Park, Gary L., TM 411, Armour KC, Mo 752-3383 Pauline, Lucille L., VU 604, 16 W 234 Lucille, Lucille L., VU 604, 16 W 234 Pasig, Sue M., MO 60, 6 Stuart 2 Pasig, Sue M., MO 60, 6 Stuart 2 Page, Rebecca B., VM 101, 10 W 51 Page, Rebecca B., VM 101, 10 W 51 Pager, Donald W., WB 230, 26 Kravayan, Froncch, VM 1128, Oshaw KC 842-6793 Dalpazawa, W. A, 34, Summer Alred, Paris KC 842-6793 Dalpazawa, W. A, 34, Summer Alred, Paris KC 842-6793 Pampeng, Berg K, SM 260, Rohrwood KC 842-7436 Pahmer, Jerome E., MO 81, Incd Pahmer, Jerome E., MO 81, Incd Pahmer, Lawrence, GOW 17, Effingham KC 842-6548 Pahmer, Lawrence, GOW 17, Effingham KC 842-6548 Pandik, Park K, MO 250, N 37, KC 842-8550 Pandik, Park K, MO 250, N 37, KC 842-8550 Michaud, Michael L., MD 245, Redmond RIu 842-6560 Michaud, Michael L., MD 245, Redmond RIu 842-6560 Panzone, Susan L, 21, 283 RIu 842-6560 Panzone, Susan L, 21, 283 RIu 842-6560 Suriendre, Suriendre L, MO 135, VIu 842-5506 Suriendre, Suriendre L, MO 135, VIu 842-5506 Sharron, JJ, SM 231, Marty KC 862-9420 Sharron, JJ, SM 231, Marty KC 862-9420 Dekraa, Lerak L, VU 604, Orgue Dr Pk 851-5177 Dekraa, Lerak L, VU 604, Orgue Dr Pk 851-5177 Janey, James W, 129, Temp KC 842-3099 Janey, James W, 129, Temp KC 842-3099 James, Weson K, 1 & Mth 842-8581 James, Weson K, 1 & Mth 842-8581 Mary, Victor J, 410, 10 Energy RIu 842-1564 Mary, Victor J, 410, 10 Energy RIu 842-1564 Emene, Enno E, 214, Glauer Dr 842-7653 A Lege, L. AGU, 1507, WO 842-0060 A Lege, L. AGU, 1507, WO 842-0060 Parr, James S., A4, 121 Providence Place B41-0925 Jarach, Joseph V., 62, 2027 Fort Washington P42-4037 Parrish, Pancho H., 4D, 810 Stouffer Place B42-4037 Parrish, Donna M., 4D, 4126 North Place, KB42-4037 Pawaii, Dell H., 4D, 2237 Murray U. B41-5917 Pacifica, Delilah H., 4D, 2237 Murray U. B42-5917 Pacifica, Donald H., 1D, 13 Shower Place 10 B42-5917 Pacifica, Donald H., 1D, 13 Shower Place 10 B42-5917 Pacifica, Robert K., 4D, 1803 Wood KC B42-7753 Pacifica, Bruce, MA, 2912 W 44, KC B42-7753 Pacifica, Bruce, MA, 2912 W 44, KC B42-7753 Pacifica, Carolyn G., Sum Abad Barcour B42-6373 Pacifica, George F., 3L, 3020 Iowa B42-6377 Pacifica, John T., 60 J 1900 Tenn B42-7119 Pacifica, Robert O., AA 813 Tenn B42-7182 Pacifica, Robert O., AA 813 Tenn B42-7182 Pacition, John J., GG 1010 Sunset Dr B42-7374 Pacition, Primis V., GG 63 W 25 B42-6553 Pacition, Primis V., GG 63 W 25 B42-6553 Pacil, R. P., 1R, 9610 Lawndale 262 KC Mo B42-5610 Pacition, Richard W., 1D, 1031 Emergence B42-5610 Payne, Joel D., 2E, 6283 Georgia KC B42-9977 Payne, Joel D., 2E, 6283 Georgia KC B42-9977 Payne, Olivia J, 2F, 3287 Madison KC B42-9719 Paderskirk, Thomas L., TM, 1641 VI B42-2187 Poorney, Christian D, 4D, Numan Hall B42-1690 Peal, Neal H., 3A, Santuery Abod, Phorum B42-1490 Poerny, G. M, 6061 W 17 WO, Op. Vi 3216 P42-5610 Poerny, Hoekstra L., AA, 1388 MN B42-6190 Poerny, Hoekstra L., AA, 1388 MN B42-6190 Poerny, Caramack A., 6M, 9835 Juvenile Ave, KC B42-4874 From Sweden with Love Olof daughters Bunny Black Royal College/ Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Blue suede, Brown Suede Gold suede, Yellow patent Purple suede, Pink suede Home of The Aztec Calendar CASA DE MONTEZ VII VI X XI XII XIII XIV XV XVI XVII XVIII XIX XXIX WELCOME SUMMER STUDENTS The Aztec calendar reminds you that memorable dining in centuries-old tradition awaits you at Casa de Montez. We invite you to share our proud heritage. DINE IN THE TRUE MEXICAN VILLAGE "HUTS" Immediate Carryout Service - ENCHILADAS • TACOS • TAMALES • BURRITOS - GUACAMOLE - CHILE RELLENO - GUACAMOLE - STEAKS - CHICKEN - CHILE VERDE - SHRIMP Special Luncheon and Children's Menus 12 Combination Dinners Cold Beer Served in Frosted Glasses 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Tues.-Wed.-Thurs. 11 a.m.- 1 a.m. Friday-Saturday 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday Closed Monday 807 Vermont 842-9455 --on Capitol Records Clip this Coupon for 50° OFF any one Mexican dinner CASA DE MONTEZ Good thru June 30 SHEPHERD GREEDY $2^{99}$ at Reg. $5.98 Kieft's discount price Capitol Capitol KIEFS Discount Records Malls Shopping Center JAYHAWK VOLKSWAGEN VW Your Local Authorized Dealer Sales Service Parts Body Shop - Needles & accessory items The SOUND'S own two and three-way speaker systems THE SOUND HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 925 Iowa VI2-6331 - Fisher speakers 2522 Iowa Now in stock . . . Coming Soon! 843-2200 - Discount records - Sansui stereo - Dual changers - 45 RPM records - BSR changers - Discount stereo LP's EVERY TUESDAY EVERY TUESDAY HAMBURGERS 15¢ Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONAL ORIGIN 10 a.m.-1 a.m. Monday thru Thursday 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday and Saturday 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Sunday 1618 W. 23rd HOTEL SUNDAY Spring Sportswear Spectrum Mister Guy has put together a rainbow of color in a collage of solid and pattern clothing for spring. We have surpassed all hopes and expectations with an unlimited selection of color co-ordinated knit shirt and slack combinations for the college minded man. For all your Spring and Summer clothing needs visit the Sportswear Spectrum at 920 Mass. MISTER GUY The Clothing Consultant 842-2700 81-3065 82-2327 82-9921 82-4637 Thursday, June 15, 1972 9 84-8471 102-1064 122-1266 142-1498 202-2068 242-2508 282-2868 322-3268 362-3668 392-3968 432-4368 472-4768 512-5168 552-5568 602-6068 642-6468 682-6868 722-7268 762-7668 802-8068 842-8468 882-8868 922-9268 962-9668 1002-10068 1042-10468 1082-10868 1122-11268 1162-11668 1202-12068 1242-12468 1282-12868 1322-13268 1362-13668 1402-14068 1442-14468 1482-14868 1522-15268 1562-15668 1602-16068 1642-16468 1682-16868 1722-17268 1762-17668 1802-18068 1842-18468 1882-18868 1922-19268 1962-19668 2002-20068 2042-20468 2082-20868 2122-21268 2162-21668 2202-22068 2242-22468 2282-22868 2322-23268 2362-23668 2402-24068 2442-24468 2482-24868 2522-25268 2562-25668 2602-26068 2642-26468 2682-26868 2722-27268 2762-27668 2802-28068 2842-28468 2882-28868 2922-29268 2962-29668 3002-30068 3042-30468 3082-30868 3122-31268 3162-31668 3202-32068 3242-32468 3282-32868 3322-33268 3362-33668 3402-34068 3442-34468 3482-34868 3522-35268 3562-35668 3602-36068 3642-36468 3682-36868 3722-37268 3762-37668 3802-38068 3842-38468 3882-38868 3922-39268 3962-39668 4002-40068 4042-40468 4082-40868 4122-41268 4162-41668 4202-42068 4242-42468 4282-42868 4322-43268 4362-43668 4402-44068 4442-44468 4482-44868 4522-45268 4562-45668 4602-46068 4642-46468 4682-46868 4722-47268 4762-47668 4802-48068 4842-48468 4882-48868 4922-49268 4962-49668 5002-50068 5042-50468 5082-50868 5122-51268 5162-51668 5202-52068 5242-52468 5282-52868 5322-53268 5362-53668 5402-54068 5442-54468 5482-54868 5522-55268 5562-55668 5602-56068 5642-56468 5682-56868 5722-57268 5762-57668 5802-58068 5842-58468 5882-58868 5922-59268 5962-59668 6002-60068 6042-60468 6082-60868 6122-61268 6162-61668 6202-62068 6242-62468 6282-62868 6322-63268 6362-63668 6402-64068 6442-64468 6482-64868 6522-65268 6562-65668 6602-66068 6642-66468 6682-66868 6722-67268 6762-67668 6802-68068 6842-68468 6882-68868 6922-69268 6962-69668 7002-70068 7042-70468 7082-70868 7122-71268 7162-71668 7202-72068 7242-72468 7282-72868 7322-73268 7362-73668 7402-74068 7442-74468 7482-74868 7522-75268 7562-75668 7602-76068 7642-76468 7682-76868 7722-77268 7762-77668 7802-78068 7842-78468 7882-78868 7922-79268 7962-79668 8002-80068 8042-80468 8082-80868 8122-81268 8162-81668 8202-82068 8242-82468 8282-82868 8322-83268 8362-83668 8402-84068 8442-84468 8482-84868 8522-85268 8562-85668 8602-86068 8642-86468 8682-86868 8722-87268 8762-87668 8802-88068 8842-88468 8882-88868 8922-89268 8962-89668 9002-90068 9042-90468 9082-90868 9122-91268 9162-91668 9202-92068 9242-92468 9282-92868 9322-93268 9362-93668 9402-94068 9442-94468 9482-94868 9522-95268 9562-95668 9602-96068 9642-96468 9682-96868 9722-97268 9762-97668 9802-98068 9842-98468 9882-98868 9922-99268 9962-99668 10002-100068 10042-100468 10082-100868 10122-101268 10162-101668 10202-102068 10242-102468 10282-102868 10322-103268 10362-103668 10402-104068 10442-104468 10482-104868 10522-105268 10562-105668 10602-106068 10642-106468 10682-106868 10722-107268 10762-107668 10802-108068 10842-108468 10882-108868 10922-109268 10962-109668 11002-110068 11042-110468 11082-110868 11122-111268 11162-111668 11202-112068 11242-112468 11282-112868 11322-113268 11362-113668 11402-114068 11442-114468 11482-114868 11522-115268 11562-115668 11602-116068 11642-116468 11682-116868 11722-117268 11762-117668 11802-118068 11842-118468 11882-118868 11922-119268 11962-119668 12002-120068 12042-120468 12082-120868 12122-121268 12162-121668 12202-122068 12242-122468 12282-122868 12322-123268 12362-123668 12402-124068 12442-124468 12482-124868 12522-125268 12562-125668 12602-126068 12642-126468 12682-126868 12722-127268 12762-127668 12802-128068 12842-128468 12882-128868 12922-129268 12962-129668 13002-130068 13042-130468 13082-130868 13122-131268 13162-131668 13202-132068 13242-132468 13282-132868 13322-133268 13362-133668 13402-134068 13442-134468 13482-134868 13522-135268 13562-135668 13602-136068 13642-136468 13682-136868 13722-137268 13762-137668 13802-138068 13842-138468 13882-138868 13922-139268 13962-139668 14002-140068 14042-140468 14082-140868 14122-141268 14162-141668 14202-142068 14242-142468 14282-142868 14322-143268 14362-143668 14402-144068 14442-144468 14482-144868 14522-145268 14562-145668 14602-146068 14642-146468 14682-146868 14722-147268 14762-147668 14802-148068 14842-148468 14882-148868 14922-149268 14962-149668 15002-150068 15042-150468 15082-150868 15122-151268 15162-151668 15202-152068 15242-152468 15282-152868 15322-153268 15362-153668 15402-154068 15442-154468 15482-154868 15522-155268 15562-155668 15602-156068 15642-156468 15682-156868 15722-157268 15762-157668 15802-158068 15842-158468 15882-158868 15922-159268 15962-159668 16002-160068 16042-160468 16082-160868 16122-161268 16162-161668 16202-162068 16242-162468 16282-162868 16322-163268 16362-163668 16402-164068 16442-164468 16482-164868 16522-165268 16562-165668 16602-166068 16642-166468 16682-166868 16722-167268 16762-167668 16802-168068 16842-168468 16882-168868 16922-169268 16962-169668 17002-170068 17042-170468 17082-170868 17122-171268 17162-171668 17202-172068 17242-172468 17282-172868 17322-173268 17362-173668 17402-174068 17442-174468 17482-174868 17522-175268 17562-175668 17602-176068 17642-176468 17682-176868 17722-177268 17762-177668 17802-178068 17842-178468 17882-178868 17922-179268 17962-179668 18002-180068 18042-180468 18082-180868 18122-181268 18162-181668 18202-182068 18242-182468 18282-182868 18322-183268 18362-183668 18402-184068 18442-184468 18482-184868 18522-185268 18562-185668 18602-186068 18642-186468 18682-186868 18722-187268 18762-187668 18802-188068 18842-188468 18882-188868 18922-189268 18962-189668 19002-190068 19042-190468 19082-190868 19122-191268 19162-191668 19202-192068 19242-192468 19282-192868 19322-193268 19362-193668 19402-194068 19442-194468 19482-194868 19522-195268 19562-195668 19602-196068 19642-196468 19682-196868 19722-197268 19762-197668 19802-198068 19842-198468 19882-198868 19922-199268 19962-199668 20002-200068 20042-200468 20082-200868 20122-201268 20162-201668 20202-202068 20242-204268 20282-208268 20322-203268 20362-203668 20402-204068 20442-204468 20482-204868 20522-205268 20562-205668 20602-206068 20642-206468 20682-206868 20722-207268 20762-207668 20802-208068 20842-208468 20882-208868 20922-209268 20962-209668 21002-210068 21042-210468 21082-210868 21122-211268 21162-211668 21202-212068 21242-214268 21482-214868 21522-215268 21562-215668 21602-216068 21642-216468 21682-216868 21722-217268 21762-217668 21802-218068 21842-218468 21882-218868 21922-219268 21962-219668 22002-220068 22042-224268 22482-224868 22522-225268 22562-225668 22602-226068 22642-224268 22822-228268 22922-229268 23062-230668 23102-231068 23142-231468 23182-231868 23222-232268 23262-232668 23302-233068 23342-233468 23482-234868 23522-235268 23562-235668 23602-236068 23642-234468 23682-236868 23722-237268 23762-237668 23802-238068 23842-238468 23882-238868 23922-239268 24062-240668 24102-241068 24142-244268 24482-244868 24522-245268 24562-245668 24602-246068 24642-244468 24682-246868 24722-247268 24762-247668 24802-248068 24842-248468 24882-248868 24922-249268 25062-250668 25102-251068 25142-244268 25482-254868 25522-255268 25562-255668 25602-256068 25642-244468 25682-256868 25722-257268 25762-257668 25802-258068 25842-258468 25882-258868 25922-259268 26062-260668 26102-261068 26142-244468 26182-244468 26242-244468 26382-244468 26482-244468 26522-244268 26562-245668 26602-266068 26642-244468 26682-266868 26722-267268 26762-267668 26802-268068 26842-268468 26882-268868 26922-269268 27062-270668 27102-271068 27142-244268 27482-274868 27522-275268 27562-275668 27602-276068 27642-244468 27682-276868 27722-277268 27762-277668 27802-278068 27842-278468 27882-278868 27922-279268 28062-280668 28102-281068 28142-244468 28182-244468 28242-244468 28382-244468 28482-244468 28522-244268 28562-245668 28602-286068 28642-244468 28682-286868 28722-287268 28762-287668 28802-288068 28842-288468 28882-288868 28922-289268 29062-290668 29102-291068 29142-244468 29182-244468 29242-244468 29382-244468 29442-244468 29582-295868 29662-296668 29702-297068 29742-297468 29782-297868 29802-298068 29842-298468 29882-298868 29922-299268 30062-300668 30102-301068 30142-301468 30182-301868 30202-302068 30242-304268 30482-304868 30522-305268 30562-305668 30602-306068 30642-304268 30682-306868 30722-307268 30762-307668 30802-308068 30842-304268 30882-308868 30922-309268 31062-310668 31106-311068 31202-312268 31242-314268 31482-314868 31522-315268 31562-315668 31602-316068 31642-314268 31682-314868 31722-317268 31762-317668 31802-318068 31842-314268 31882-318868 31922-319268 32062-320668 32102-321068 32142-314268 32182-314868 32242-314468 32282-314468 32322-323268 32362-323668 32402-324068 32442-324468 32482-324868 32522-325268 32562-325668 32602-326068 32642-324468 32682-326868 32722-327268 32762-327668 32802-328068 32842-324468 32882-328868 32922-329268 33062-330668 33102-331068 33142-314268 33182-314868 33242-324468 33282-328868 33422-324268 33482-324868 33522-335268 33562-335668 33602-336068 33642-324468 33682-326868 33722-337268 33762-337668 33802-338068 33842-324468 33882-326868 33922-339268 34062-340668 34102-341068 34142-314268 34182-314868 34242-314468 34282-314468 34322-3333333333 University Summer Kansan Percy, Lorraine D, 2504 N Worth St, KC 371-9642 Penny, E, 4D, 1009 N Pearl Street, KC 888-7029 Penny, E, 4D, 1009 N Pearl Street, KC 888-7029 Penny, A, 6G, 1151 W 19 Penny, Rohman B, 6G, 1151 W 19 Penny, Rohman B, 6G, 1151 W 19 Pennsylvania, Fortress M, 7M, 1008 Rainbow Dr, KC 842-9283 *Prinzip, Bryce B. OG, 16 Shannon II. P42-7814* *Prinzip, Robert B. OG, 16 Shannon II. P42-7814* *Prinzip, Believe B. OG, 16-11 Shannon II. P42-7814* *Pro J. D. M. A. 4329 Honey Bay, RC, MK. P53-10899* *Pro J. D. M. A. 4329 Honey Bay, RC, MK. P53-10899* *Proctor, G. B. D. 1899, 1899-1941 MK. P42-6291* *Prott, Robiney B. B. D. 181, 1899-1941 MK. P42-6291* *Prott, Robiney B. B. D. 181, 1899-1941 MK. P42-6291* *Prott, Edward B. C. D. 300, 300-376 M. T. Serr. MK. 98-8887* *Prott, Edward B. C. D. 300, 300-376 M. T. Serr. MK. 98-8887* *Prinzip, John C. 3M, JN. KC, 4KC, MK. 36-1026* *Prinzip, John C. 3M, JN. KC, 4KC, MK. 36-1026* *Prinzip, Bryce B. D. 22, 1209 MK. P42-6295* *Prinzip, Bryce B. D. 22, 1209 MK. P42-6295* *Prinzip, Jonathan M. SA, 1499 Tm. P42-7814* *Poham, Kurt J. R. 3JT, 1039 Kusan Union. P42-7814* *Punenney, Mary G. Lake Forest B. JR. 42-5047* *Punenney, Mary G. Lake Forest B. JR. 42-5047* *Punenney, Allen R. L. 18, 318 Korddal Ui. P42-8533* *Punenney, Allen R. L. 18, 318 Korddal Ui. P42-8533* *Punenney, Patricia. DL. 318 Kordal Ui. P42-8533* *Punenney, Patricia. DL. 318 Kordal Ui. P42-8533* *Punenney, Robert B. A. AG, 425 Ohn. P42-4296 Q Quinton, James F. MJ, 1968 Nationality: United States of America Education: High School Diploma & GED 412-1028 College Diploma & GED 543-1128 Graduate Diploma & GED 612-1188 R Rubin, Sandra S. 3D, 1737 W 21 Rudolf, Dennis A. 915 W 100 St Rudolf, Dennis A. 915 W 100 St Reddison, Donna M. 4252 Grindall D Redford, Richard A. 6241 Baldwin D Redford, Richard A. 6241 Baldwin D Reddy, Katherine E. 5243 E Gleeman D Reddy, Katherine E. 5243 E Gleeman D Reddy, Katherine E. 5243 E Gleeman D Reddy, Katherine E. 5243 E Gleeman D Rainey, Benjamin M. 1640 Lakow St Rainey, Benjamin M. 1640 Lakow St Rainey, Benjamin M. 1640 Lakow St Rainey, Benjamin M. 1640 Lakow St Rainey, James S. 60, 1423 Orton R Rainey, James S. 60, 1423 Orton R Rainey, Steven S. 924 W 914 R Ramana, M. 60, 1983 Gladstone KC Ramana, M. 60, 1983 Gladstone KC Ramarine, Tegan G. 261 J 2 staircase F Ramarine, Tegan G. 261 J 2 staircase F Ramarine, Shannon G. 605 Middle St L1 Ramarine, Shannon G. 605 Middle St L1 Ramarine, Grace D. 653 Hibbard L1 Ramarine, Grace D. 653 Hibbard L1 Ramarine, Tegan G. 261 J 2 staircase F Rice, Grapey K., 85, 2020 kowa Rickard, Charlotte A., 3148 Knight Dr. Richardson, Michael D., 1699 Merrill Dr. Richardson, David F., M, 12 Squirrelty Rd. Richardson, Robert M., 6DW W. 72 W. Pt. Vi Richardson, Robert M., 6DW W. 72 W. Pt. Vi Richardson, Gloria D., 1064 Tinka Lawn Rd. Richardson, Mary J., 1022 Olney, Olney Richardson, Mary J., 1022 Olney, Olney Richardson, Katherine M., 4128 Bell KC M. Richardson, Katherine M., 4128 Bell KC M. Richardson, J. E., 1621 Squirrelty Rd. Richardson, J. E., 1621 Squirrelty Rd. Richardson, Richard B., 1064 Tinka Lawn Rd. Richardson, Richard B., 1064 Tinka Lawn Rd. Richardson, Michael S., 21, 260 Indu Richardson, Michael S., 21, 260 Indu Richardson, Lori L., 6E, 2909 W. HI Richardson, Lori L., 6E, 2909 W. HI Richardson, Catherine B., 27F, Oxford Road Rd Richardson, Catherine B., 27F, Oxford Road Rd Richardson, Martha D., 208 Squirrelty Rd Richardson, Martha D., 208 Squirrelty Rd Richardson, Kyaas K., 6DW W. 72 W. Pt. Vi Richardson, Kyaas K., 6DW W. 72 W. Pt. Vi Richardson, Larry D., 1H, 801 Mo Richardson, Larry D., 1H, 801 Mo Richardson, Michelle M., 3A, 1148 Bl Lau Richardson, Michelle M., 3A, 1148 Bl Lau Richardson, Bevery J., 6H, 1188 Lukowel Dr Roznanoff, Dale W. 21, 3209 Iowa Rogers, David W. 26, 3204 KC, Minneapolis Rogues, Herbert H. 26, 3205 KC, Minneapolis Rogues, C. W. 38, 3208 State Line, KC Rogues, Carl A. 40, 3208 Forest KC Rogues, Paul A. 40, 3208 Forest KC Rognier, Gwendolyn J. 3F, 2023 W1h S fine leather goods Nashville, Chucky J. 901 1012 Entry 843-0560 Nashville, Dennis M. 903 109 W吊 843-0609 Nashville, Vinewantham F. 1149 La 843-0620 Nashville, Vinewantham F. 1149 La 843-0620 Nashville, David B. 697 G吊 843-0701 Craftsmen of 812 Massachusetts Schwarenverdit, R. G, 4523 Bellow, Taikai 266-3096 Schwarenverdit, Cindy L, R. G, 4523 Bellow, Taikai 266-3096 Schwarenverdit, Sandra K, M. I 1220 Grove 283-2135 Schwarenverdit, Jame E. F, M. I 921 W250 283-2135 Schwarenverdit, John M. E PRIMARILY LEATHER Patronize Kansan Advertisers **Shirner H, M. 1985 W 309 Ter, Shir. Mc. 889-902** **Shriver H, M. 1986 W 400 Ter, Shir. Mc. 889-902** **Shirley H, M. 1987 W 400 Ter, Shir. Mc. 889-902** **Shult, Ronald K. G. 255 Mach. B. 843-777 1950S Hiking Boots HIKING BOOTS . . . Pictured are several of the styles of hiking boots we carry for men and women. Both feature a padded lining and arch support. Unlike many of the hiking boots made, all of our boots have a sturdy midsole so a new vibran sole can be attached if you wear out the first sole. We feel our selection is the finest in the area. Please stop by. WELCOME SUMMER STUDENTS 1111 Mass. For all your summer cleaning and laundry needs visit one of our three convenient locations 925 Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center Malls Shopping Center 711 W.23rd Free pick-up and delivery when you call 10% 843-5155 when you bring in your laundry and pick it up. Acme Cleaners Launderers and Dry 150 LEVI'S® CORDuroy BELL BOTTOMS The look is wide and well - the fabric is midwave cotton condority in rich colors that blend beautifully with the new shirts. Basic jeans construction that is traditionally Levi's. Slide into a pair or two - today! LEVI'S general jeans 1000 Mass. LeVI'S® 8 9 to 5 Saturday 10 Thursday, June 15, 1972 University Summer Kansan **Strong**, Christopher, M. 1023 KN B42-4067 **Strong**, Martinez C., 229 KN B42-4061 **Strong**, Carrera A, 226 KN B42-4058 **Strong**, Robert G. W I 1618 Nauenth **Strong**, Raimn A M, 604 Avon **Strong**, Sainte-Francaise, M. B42-4069 **Strong**, Strain Jane F, 90 D 1329 W 90 **Strong**, William C, 90 G 1301 W 90 **Strong**, William C, 90 G 1301 W 90 **Strong**, Suberault, Fred J. 2F 460 Ouco **Strong**, Franx, 4X 1091 Dover Vil **Strong**, Murray, 4X 1091 Dover Vil **Strong**, Kursey K, 4X 1091 Dover Vil **Strong**, D. G, 4R1 Williamsburg **Strong**, Stuckenburg, Johann E. B42-4058 **Strong**, Stuckenburg, Johann E. B42-4058 **Strong**, Greiner T, 1J 419 Orchard Ln **Strong**, Stump, Gregor J. T 1J 419 Orchard Ln **Strong**, Lawniers, M. 3M 1441 Monroe Ln **Strung**, Straus, L. E 1S 419 T Tuber, Sandra J, BF 1527 Leuver Rd KC 299-2370 Tuber, Chung H, IG 144 Squirrel Rd KC 299-2370 Takayama, M. TK 3127 11 Pk CU 296-2373 Takayama, M. TK 3127 11 Pk CU 296-2373 Taijima, J. Ma K 3127 11 Pk CU 296-2373 Taijima, J. Ma K 3127 11 Pk CU 296-2373 Talga, Jia M. S 4127 1 W K 343-270 Talga, Jia M. S 4127 1 W K 343-270 Tanbeth, Louis A. S 404 127堤船 Sh Mt KC 284-692 Tanbeth, Louis A. S 404 127堤船 Sh Mt KC 284-692 Tanbeth, Louis A. S 404 127堤船 Sh Mt KC 284-692 Tanbeth, Louis A. S 404 127堤船 Sh Mt KC 284-692 Tate, James H. G 5229 Disc Ck CU 287 Thompson, Van E. 86, JR & R Anderson 542-3373 Thompson, Kerril M. 86, PJ Set Sol 104 Thompson, Roger F. 86, JR Set Sol 104 Thompson, Roger F. 86, JR Set Sol 104 Thornley, Larry D. 120, 185 Naturally 841-6044 Thornley, Carol I. 4D, 109, 14 St 841-1166 Thornley, Carol I. 4D, 109, 14 St 841-1166 Thornley, David J. 62, MG 831-1423 Thornley, David J. 62, MG 831-1423 Thornley, Sandra L. D, 110, 15 Sunset 841-9038 Tekemeyer, G. 65, 501 Wrld, Wrngd. 741-9038 Tekemeyer, G. 65, 501 Wrld, Wrngd. 741-9038 Tigheman, Bonnymel A. D, 163, 160 W 15 841-8250 Tigheman, Bonnymel A. D, 163, 160 W 15 841-8250 Tigheman, Carolina A. D, 165, 165 Harper 841-8250 Tiber, Lowell L. IM, 132, 102 Orc Dr 841-6042 Tiber, Lowell L. IM, 132, 102 Orc Dr 841-6042 Tiederlehner, Smarion M. 363, 362 Br Vr Dr 841-6042 Tiederlehner, Smarion M. 363, 362 Br Vr Dr 841-6042 Toena, Nicolas G. 85, 912 W 13 841-6049 Toena, Nicolas G. 85, 912 W 13 841-6049 Tohson, Mercerith A. D, 163, 160 W 13 841-6049 Tohson, Mercerith A. D, 163, 160 W 13 841-6049 Tongray, Martin J. 62, 410 Pinerescence 841-5078 Tongray, Martin J. 62, 410 Pinerescence 841-5078 Tongray, Patringa. G. 437, 430 Skyline Wm 824-9045 Torturee, Mary A. I, 123, 102 Orc Dr 841-6024 Torturee, Mary A. I, 123, 102 Orc Dr 841-6024 Towne, Joah B. I, 124, 109 Coy KC 841-2814 Towne, Joah B. I, 124, 109 Coy KC 841-2814 Towne, Joah B. I, 124, 109 Coy KC 841-2814 Trowne, Joe D. A, 125, 109 Indian 841-8250 Ukipson, Ukipson E. 11, 1239 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 41, 4206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 43, 4206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 51, 5206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 54, 5206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 57, 5206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 59, 5206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 61, 6206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 63, 6206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 65, 6206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 67, 6206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 69, 6206 Ohio Ulverstone, Ulverstone E. 71, 6206 Ohio Underwood, Douglas J. 3M, 3406 BC Underwood, Martin J. 4J 1401 Hilltop Underwood, Martin J. 5J 1401 Hilltop Underwood, Douglas J. 4D, 1621 Elizabeth Underwood, Douglas J. 4D, 1621 Elizabeth Underwood, Johnson JM, 3289 NJ 48 KB Underwood, Johnson JM, 3289 NJ 48 KB Uprichford, David C. GG, 720 W. Vil. Uprichford, David C. GG, 720 W. Vil. Uprichford, David C. GG, 720 W. Vil. Uprichfield, Barbary A. BJ, 5L 1518 Lindenwood Lit Uprichfield, Barbary A. BJ, 5L 1518 Lindenwood Lit Uprichfield, Barbary A. BJ, 5L 1518 Lindenwood Lit Uprichfield, Leo R. BJ, 31 230 W. Wt Pt Vil. Uprichfield, Leo R. BJ, 31 230 W. Wt Pt Vil. Uprichfield, Hardim MG, 10 S9梨木 Uprichfield, Hardim MG, 10 S9梨木 Vachanawati, V. G, 3547 Beach KC Vachanawati, C. J, 0912 Bridges BN San Jose Vachanawati, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose Vachinett, T. N, 1919 Alpine KC Vachinett, J. N, 1919 Alpine KC Volk, Joan W. G, 2224 Macon KC Volk, John W. G, 2224 Macon KC Valdon, M. Genevieve, G. 1643 Natlstedt KC Valdon, M. Genevieve, G. 1643 Natlstedt KC Valdon, Mary, G. 1729 Hewlett KC Valdon, Mary, G. 1729 Hewlett KC Vandivie, Dale, A1D 1527 W Vandivie, Dale, A1D 1527 W Vandivie, Dale, A1D 1527 W Vandivie, Dale, A1D 1527 W Vandivie, Donald, F. G, 6089 University Vandivie, Donald, F. G, 6089 University Vandivie, Donald, F. G, 6089 University Vandivie, Donald, F. G, 6089 University VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, F. G, 3654 Oakland BN San Jose VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Robert, G. 6089 University VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Wanda, A. G, 9627 Bridges Pt VI VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jane S. G, 59 Box 21 VanMeter, Jimary L. B, 489 Florida KC **Visión**, Frank H. A, 42, 1329 Wyomerton 845-0155 **Vision**, Suzanne J. M., 2318 Whitman St. C, 845-0155 **Vision**, Suzanne J. M., 2318 Whitman St. C, 845-0155 **Viva**, Douglas J. J., 64 Walsh, William K. 4D, 3029 Iowa Walsh, Greg D. N 4D, 3029 Iowa Wadon, Gregory D. 2K, 3029 Sum Abit Kathen Wadson, Delethan R. 2K, 3029 Sum Abit Kathen Wadson, Camille L. 9B, 1417 E 35 Wagner, John G. 10C, 1026 Rhode Island Terrace Wagner, James J. 60, 1026 Rhode Island Terrace Wagner, Kevin A. 1414 Louisiana Terrace Walsh, Joel L. 2M, 6248 Beards Dr Minneapolis Walsh, Norman M. 6M, 1973 N W Terrace KC Walsh, Jonathan C. 6M, 1973 N W Terrace KC Walsh, Susan E. 4F, 1744 W 20 Torrens Walsh, James C. 4F, 1744 W 20 Torrens Walsh, Susan E. 4F, 1744 W 20 Torrens Walsh, Gary A. 7A, 1725 Mississippi Terrace Walsh, Eary P. EM, 5154 Falker KC Walsh, Daniel T. EM, 2M, 6011 Washoula KC Walsh, Floyd M. 4D, 3114 Washoula KC Walsh, Howard F. I. 3I, 2045 Wellsville KC Walsh, Heward F. I. 3I, 2045 Wellsville KC Walsh, Baden J. 7G, 615 W 27 Torrens Walsh, Lawrence L. MM, 6001 Sha Shm St KC Walsh, Richard K. I. 15S7 Rhode Island Is Walsh, Richard K. I. 15S7 Rhode Island Is Walsh, Richard K. I. 15S7 Rhode Island Is Walsh, Lawrence D. A 132E Tennessee KC Malath, Martin I. 16G01 E 15 Malath, David B. 2R, 2449 Oakland KC Malath, Jeffrey L. I Malath, David B. 2R, 2449 Oakland KC Malath, Sarah S. 3F, 2828 Indiana KC Malath, Sarah S. 3F, 2828 Indiana KC Malath, Edward P. 1649 Illinois KC Malath, Edward P. 1649 Illinois KC Malath, Lawrence D. A 132E Tennessee KC Malath, Jennifer Mann. 11G02 Compo Washington, John J. 42, 2001 W 23 Washington, Patricia L. A, 180, 2000 Nathanish W 83-687 Washington, Patricia L. A, 180, 2000 Nathanish W 83-687 Wenger, Patricia S. A, 48, HR1 Box 12 Wenger, Kathleen F. A, 149, 1998 Ternermann W 84-324 Wenger, Kathleen F. A, 149, 1998 Ternermann W 84-324 Werthman, Katherine L. A, 149, 1998 Ternermann W 84-324 Werthman, Katherine L. A, 149, 1998 Ternermann W 84-324 Werthman, R. K. G, 1309 Plass, Topeka W 84-296 Werthman, R. K. G, 1309 Plass, Topeka W 84-296 Werthman, D. R. G, 1309 Plass, Topeka W 84-296 Werthman, D. R. G, 1309 Plass, Topeka W 84-296 Werthman, D. R. G, 1309 Plass, Topeka W 84-296 Westgarth, Heilam H. A, 2652 McCumby KC, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Cynn S. A, 6420 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Cynn S. A, 6420 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Jacqueline B. A, 814 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Jacqueline B. A, 814 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Jacqueline B. A, 814 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Jacqueline B. A, 814 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Jacqueline B. A, 814 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Jacqueline B. A, 814 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Jacqueline B. A, 814 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Jacqueline B. A, 814 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Westgarth, Jacqueline B. A, 814 Korn CK, 3614-1421 Werthman, J. A. G, 190, 1998 Ternermann W 84-324 Wise, J. A., 94, 618 Homestead, Sh Mk 362-9419 Wise, J. A., 94, 380 Wukamu, KM 362-9419 Wiseman, S. P., 380, 594 Y Lackle, Werry W. 31, 1106 Ohio Yang, Bruce G. 31, 781 Hamilton Yang, Bruce G. 31, 781 Hamilton Yarbrough, Aima F. 43, 536 Ohio John Haddi, former University of Kansas All-American football player, will be honored at a testimonial dinner June 24 in the Kansas Union ballroom. According to Larry Hatfield, head of the special committee organizing the buffet, movie highlights of Had's career will be displayed. Other teammates and coaches will attend. Hadl to Be Honored At Testimonial Dinner Monte Johnson, former KU assistant athletic director, will be master of possession. Tickets for the dinner are $3.50 and may be obtained at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Rumbers Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price $299 Capitol! on Capitol Records at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Mall Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles LAWRENCE ICE CO. Redy-Pak Ice Taste Free Crystal Clear OPEN DAILY 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. 616 Vermont 843-0350 Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price $2'99 on Capitol Records at Capitol! KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Mall Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles MOTHER MARY'S "A BEER JOINT" 2406 10WA Patronize Kansan Advertisers MOTHER MARY'S "A BEER JOINT" 2406 10WA FREE COCA-COLA McDonald's McDonald's 901 WEST 23rd One Coke Free With Purchase of a Double Cheeseburger Right now McDonald's is serving up oceans of free Coke and there's one waiting for you. What's more refreshing than an ice cold Cake? A free Coke at McDonald's. University Summer Kansan Thursday, June 15, 1972 11 Grants, Awards Algebra Research Funded The University of Kansas has received a $9,000 research grant from the National Science Foundation for the continuation of a study on topological algebra under the direction of Paul S. Mostert, professor of mathematics. The funds provided by the NSF are intended to support the project for an additional 12 months. The project originated in 1970. The evolutionary development of bee colonies is the subject of the current phase of a continuing study on social insects by Charles D. Wiley. Grant to Aid Bee Study The National Science Foundation recently awarded Michener a $328 thousand grant to support his research for the coming year. A member of the National Academy of Sciences and recognized nationally as an expert on bees, Michener has been studying the behavior of bees and was a contributing author. Belgian Study Is Funded Bruce Molhott, assistant professor of microbiology at the University of Kansas, has been awarded a fellowship by the Belgian-American Educational Foundation for 10 months of study in Belgium. Molhott will continue his study of DNA restriction at the University of Ghent. He will be on leave until February 1973. There is no central lost and found office for the University of Kansas. Most items found inside buildings on campus are taken to main offices in each building, where someone comes to claim them. Several Items Still Unclaimed At Traffic and Security Office If you have lost something on camps and don't know where to find it, one place to look is the Traffic and Security office. The Traffic and Security office files a police report on all items that are brought to the office, explained Lt. E. W. Fentemaker Most of the items brought in for their use are boxes and wallets. If there is some kind of identification with them, the owner is notified, fenstemaker items are kept for six months to a year. If they are uncleared, they given away or taken to the Lawrence police department to report. of Parking and Traffic Services. Items are then tagged and put in a locker. M. M. Eyegasses and clothing are sometimes given to charitable organizations. Salvation Army, Keys are melted down and given to jewelry and dress. TREDO'S RESTAURANT & DELICATESEN Valuables such as bicycles, stereos and suitcases are sold at the public auditions held approximately twice a year, exhibited by Vernon Jarlrell of the admirals' office. The Lawrence police department "If people would put some kind of identification on their belongings, said Lt. Fenstermann, "they would make our work a lot easier." Stop By. We're only a half block from the downtown theaters. Good Food, Good Beer Open till i.a.m. Fri.-Sat. 844 Massachusetts 842-9577 RIDE-ON BICYCLES Quality three and ten speed bicycles in stock at all times. 1401 Mass. Kansas' largest bicycle company. Kansas baseball coach Floyd Temple announced Tuesday that Charles Hammond and Robert Dobson prospects from the Kansas City metropolitan area, had signed national letters of intent with the Two Pitchers From Missouri Sign to Play This past season Hammond, a left手, led Lee's Summit to second place in the Missouri state tournament, where batters in 63 innings on his way to an 11-2 record and a sparkling start. He posted a .986 batting average. Hammond of Lee's Summit, Missouri. High School in Independence, Mo., are both pitchers who can also play first baset or the out In announcing his first two signings for the coming year, Temple said, "I am tremendously impressed with these players and will probably have good opportunities to play for us next year." Allinder is a righthander who fashioned a 1-stream and a 1.44 ERA for Truman in 1972. In 1982 he struck out 64 innings pitched in a 177 average with three home runs and 21 stairs-batted-in. KANSAN Classifieds reach the campus community - call UN4-4358 4-4358 Use Kansan Classified C. W. MURRAY "The King of Diamonds' McQueen Jewelers your jeweler for Keepsake Diamonds, offers you a secluded diamond area for your privacy and comfort. Everyday we are receiving new merchandise for our Bridal Department. Our Towle line includes, sterling flairware, stainless steel, halaware, and pewter. We feature fine china including such fine lines as Royal Dautlon, Lenox, and Royale Limoges. For your crystal glassware we offer Fostoria, Lenox, and Royal Dautlon. Visit our Bridal Department, browse around and let Mrs. Payne our Bridal Consultant, help and advise you. We would be happy to register you in any of our fine patterns. formerly Ray Christian McQueen JEWELERS 809 Mass THE UNIVERSITY SHOP The University Shop Conveniently located at the west end of campus, across from Lindley Hall. We offer a great selection of clothes—from the most casual jeans and tops to the most fashionable suits and sportcoats, with an abundance of accessories to go along. Don't forget that we are also a wedding specialist, able to offer more than fifty outfits for the groom to select from. Drop by soon and take a look. We're just a short walk from where you are now. THE University Shop Next to Discount Records 1420 Crescent Rd. Hours: 9:30 - 5:30 discount rec. TULL ST NEVE CHROMILE & LEWIS ALLERSON JETHRO TULL THICK AS A BRICK JUDGE'S DIECQUALITY "LITTLE MILTON" IN LAST MINUTE RUMPUS ANT DEMO FOR CICSINE IN THE WEEKEND OF JULY 10TH JETHRO TULL THICK AS A BRICK AT A THIN PRICE ALL 50% $ \frac{2.97}{4.97} $ OFF ROLLING STONES (2 record set) r LABELS EVERY DAY list 4. 98 & 5.98 only 3. 69 records THUR FRI 10 TO 6 ON SAT- cords 12 Thursday, June 15, 1972 University Summer Kansan GIBSON'S "WHERE YOU ALWAYS BUY THE BEST FOR LESS" GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER Lawrence's Largest Store 25th & Iowa, Lawrence, Kansas Open 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.Daily----9 a.m. to 7 p.m.Sundays 72,000 Sq. Feet — Parking for 800 Cars Advantages of Shopping at Gibson's: Every Item is First Quality . . . Never a "Second" at Gibson's . . . No Limits on any Item, on sale or regular stock . . . Free Parking. GIBSONS DISCOUNT WHERE IS GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER LOCATED? WHAT DOES GIBSON'S SELL? HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS Most Complete Line in Northeast Kansas. All Major Brands! All Low Discount Prices! HOUSEWARES Lamps, Small Furniture Pieces, Pictures Kitchen Gadgets, Irons, Toasters, Vacuum Sweepers Thousands of Others. STATIONERY Complete Line of School and Office Supplies. Artist Supplies. Drapes, Curtains, Towels, Rugs, Sheets, Bedspreads Everything for Your Home. Large Selection of Sewing Notions! HOME FURNISHINGS CAMERA AND JEWELRY Cameras, Film, Projectors, Cassette Tapes, Records Paperback Books, Film Developing, Wigs, Televisions Tape Recorders and Players, Typewriters Adding Machines, Jewelry, Billfolds. Colognes and After Shaves. SPORTING GOODS Hunting and Fishing Supplies and Licenses, Basketball Football and Baseball Supplies, Camping Equipment Most Everything for the Sportsminded Person. TOYS Some of the Brand Names at Gibson's are ... HOOVER SUNBEAM WESTINGHOUSE DU PONT WEST BEND VAN WYKE THERMOS SAMSONITE TUCKER RUBBER QUEEN ANCHOR HOCKING REGAL ECKO MINOLTA EASTMAN KODAK POLAROID PANASONIC CLARICON FABERGE CHANEL ENGLISH LEATHER LANVIN SCRIPTO SHAEFFER STUART HILL DURO ART SUPPLIES WILLIAMSON-DICKIE ST. MARYS CURITY CHICOPEE ENDCITT JOHNSON ACME BOOT RUBBER MAID DUPONT SIMONIZ FRAM ZEBCO COLEMAN SHAKESPEARE GARCIA WILSON SPALDING KRAETER WELLER MASONITE AND MANY OTHERS All Latest Name Brand Toys at Discount Prices. KANSAS TURNPIKE WEST EXIT 6TH STREET EAST EXIT CITY OF LAWRENCE TOWA-HIWAYS KU University of Kansas 19TH STREET 23RD STREET Gibson's 25th & Iowa CLOTHING WOMENS CHILDRENS Lingerie, Purses and Accessories, Coats, Blouses Sports Wear, Sleepwear, Hosiery Play Clothes, Dress Clothes, Baby Needs, Sleepwear MEN'S Slacks, Shirts, Work Clothes, Ties, Belts, Under Wear, Etc. SHOES Gibsons Has One of the Largest Selections of Shoes in Lawrence. Come in and Choose from Our Huge Inventory of Shoes for the Family. AUTOMCTIVE Car Parts, Name Brand Oils, Waxes, Tires, Wheels Thousands of Car Accessories. HARDWARE Tools, Shelves, Foam, Electrical Tools, TV Antennas, Paints, Varnishes, Window Shades. Something for Everyone. Ka In Is State schedul today t Kay, since J, the GC expecte mally s Alre are lt. former and Resiguiat bighite Only district Lawre So Low discric Senate Senate O'Ne in the needed hold p F F CLIMING THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN BLAZING 82nd Year, No.9 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Storm Threatens Florida Coast Monday, June 19, 1972 See Page 2 29 Americans Aboard Kay's Entry Into Contest Is Expected State Rep. Morris Kay R, Lawrence, has scheduled a conference Press at 9:30 a.m. Kay, who has been publicly mentioned since January as a potential candidate for the GOP gubernatorial nomination, is also likely to present his candidacy formally at the meeting. Already seeking election as governor Lt. Gov. Reynolds Shultz of Lawrence and Ray Friisib of McDonald, who is resigning as assistant of the Kansas Farm Only one candidate is thus far seeking election as representative from Kay's 45th district. He is Richard E. Keithley, Lawrence second-year law student. The 48th district was one of those affected by repositionment by this year's legislature. 118 Die in Crash of British Jetliner It was Britain's worst air disaster. British European Airways withheld the names of the victims until next of kin could be informed. LONDON (AP)—A British jetliner plummeted into woods near a busy market town Sunday minutes after taking off from London's Hawthrow airway in a drizzling rain. All of the 118 persons aboard including 29 Americans were killed. The plane, a BEA Trident, was bound for Brussels. It carried 109 passengers, including a baby, and a crew of nine. A child and an Irish businessman were pulled alive from the wreckage, but died later of injuries. THE CRASH WAS the third in a week involving heavy loss of life. A Japan Airlines DC8 crashed in flames in New Delhi, killing 50, and another 81 persons died when a Convair 880 airliner亡于 the Vietnam war zone, near Pleiku. Senate Bias Charged The vice president, who is said work for six weeks, is paid $40 per month, or $600 per week. The aircraft split in two on impact, sending chunks of metal flying across a nearby highway and flinging some bodies over the street as bursig hung from trees like Spanish moss. Lower income students are being discriminated against in the Student Senate, according to Bill O'Neill, Student Senate, treasurer. "Nothing had been heard from the captain which would indicate anything was wrong with the aircraft," said BEA Chairman Henry Marking. The student body president is being paid $85 per month of $1, 050 per year. He puts in an average of 40 to 50 hours of work per week, according to past presidents. SenEx members are paid $100 per month for the summer only. They spend two hours a day in the Senate office and three to four hours in meetings on Wednesdays. They are also expected to spend several hours during the week discussing issues The big plane wheeled in the sky over nearby Windsor Castle and plunged to the ground, narrowly missing a line of electric wires and the densely populated community of Staines, about five miles from the airport. O'Neill said that the salaries for officers in the Senate were so low that students who needed a summer income were not able to hold positions in the Senate. with faculty and administration members. The Student Executive Committee chairman is paid $100 per month during the summer months. He is required to complete a minimum of four weeks as doing research for the weekly meetings. "It is the responsibility of the Senate to raise concerns against lower school students," O'Neill said. "There is no reason to suspect sabotage," another airline spokesman added. Witnesses said there had been no explosion before the crash. "THE PLANE dropped like a stone," one witness said. The treasurer is paid $158.50 per month for the summer months and $35.50 during the school year. He works 30 hours a week. His hourly wage would be $1.20 per hour. BRITAIN'S PREVIOUS worst air disaster took 81 lives in March 1990. An Avro Tudor V plane crashed in South Wales when taking rugby football fans to a concert. Queen Elizabeth II and Prime Minister Edward Heath sent condolences to her family. Airport officials said many of the passengers had taken the flight earlier than planned to avoid the worldwide pilots' strike for Monday to protest skivacking. Common Market. But no government ministers were aboard. BODIES OF THE VICTIMS were lined up beside the Trident wreckage and then carried away through a gray drizzle to a dead mortal mourning set up at the nearby airport. One airport spokesman said it was possible that government officials were on the plane en route to routine talks in the Belgian capital about the European The wreckage, some of it ablaze, lay just a quarter of a mile from the main street of Staines, a market town always busy with weekend holiday traffic. The British-built Trident crashed in woods near the King George V reservoir on the Isle of Wight. BEA's last major crush was in October last year when a Vanguard plunged into a field near Ghent, Belgium, on a flight from Paris to Austria. All 63 passengers were killed. One policeman pulled a little girl from the wreckage, but she died before ambulances arrived at the crash scene, west of the capital. THE CRASH BROKE the plane's back A spokesman for the British Airline Pilots Association said: "According to eyewitnesses the pilot had got his underr弯载 up. This indicates he made a good takeoff. It'a a complete mystery what could have gone wrong." THE ROYAL Automobile Club reported chaotic conditions over an 18-mile area around Staines. Thousands of sightseers drove toward the scene, jamming every The tail section snapped off on impact and the rest of the fuselage plowed on another It was the first crash involving a Trident carrying passengers in eight years of service. One crashed on a test flight, killing a crewman. Gerymen from all over the district jersey was clawed at the smoldering wreckage The 600-mile-hour Hristion airliner is built by Britain's Hawker Sidney Co. It is powered by three Rolls Royce jets—one placed in the tail and one at each side of the rear fuselage, a design similar to the rear of a Boeing 727. It can carry up to 180 passengers. road with their cars. One major highway was closed to all traffic. They are primarily used by BEA, which has 65 of the planes. THE HEAVIEST LOSS of life in a British-operated plane was in March 1966. A British Overseas Airways Corp. Boeing 747, with an enriched fuel, landed in Japan, killing all 124 passengers aboard. Many U.S. Flights Are Curtailed By International Strike of Pilots WASHINGTON (AP)—Three domestics and at least 18 foreign airlines announced suspension of flights in the United States on Monday, the day scheduled 24-hour worldwide pilots' strike. The strike, called by the International Federation of Air Line Pilots Associations in hopes of forcing governments to adopt more stringent air piracy measures, was Podgorny Predicts Renewed Talks stalled scheduled despite a federal-court barring American pilot from participating. Eastern Airlines in Miami and Northeast Airlines in Boston both announced all their flights would be canceled from 1 a.m. CDT today to 1 a.m. CDT Tuesday. CALCUTTA, India (AP)—Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny, his three-day mission to Hanoi completed, predicted Sunday the stalled Paris peace talks would resume soon and indicated the Kremlin would work to ensure their success. "The Soviet Union will do everything Practice Lengthened For Student Teachers The School of Education will initiate a program this fall to extend its eight-week student teaching block into a 16-week Professional Semester, according to I. N. Bowman, professor of education and student teaching coordinator. By DEANNA VANDERMADE Kansan Staff Writer PETER G. SMITH This sixteen week program was used on an experimental basis in the Lawrence and Shawne Mission during the past five years. The school intends to expand it in the future as a requirement for all education students. Multi-Institution - Teacher's Education-Center, as the project is called, involves approximately 200 students from both elementary and secondary teaching levels at Kendall County State University, Kansas State Teacher's College at Emporia and Pittsburg State Teacher's College. The semester block is good for 16 hours of credit and fulfills state certification requirements for student attending the School as a Social Institution. KU initiated the 16-week program on an experimental basis several years ago in an attempt to bridge a breakdown between theory taught in the classroom and the actual practical experience needed to be a proficient teacher. developed as a result of students desires to become acquainted with all aspects of educational organizations which an eight-year-old can attend in a classroom did not always provide. "They were involved in the planning of the program, and for the most part cooperating teachers consider it an asset having a student teacher for a whole semester. The student teacher has the ability to provide an effective resource person." Cormack said. At Kennedy airport in New York, they 18 foreign airlines announced they had canceled their scheduled flights into and out of Kennedy for today. BOWMAN said the program was I. N. Bowman It is hoped that the students can get a more realistic picture of the public schools in their own environment. The student teachers are invited to attend all school meetings as well as to get acquainted with any special programs within the district. In addition to the other activities, students during the course of the semester pursue self-directed activities such as attending student activities like student council meetings or speech and debate tournaments. Or, students may attend board meetings or work on faculty committees. In order to understand the importance of the students in their district by making home visits or studying personal records. THE REMAINING time is spent getting acclimated to the classroom and taking a break from uninterrupted classroom teaching. The last two weeks of the semester involve more orientation sessions, evaluation sessions and completing classroom ac Two teachers in the classroom allow for a greater number of individualized procter. The success or failure of the program will be determined by the results of future studies to see whether the student teachers actually are better prepared to enter a teaching position for the first time. At this point everyone is optimistic that the plan is an effective one and will be developed more fully in the future. Cormack reacted enthusiastically to the semester program. Cal Cormack, coordinator of MITEC in the Shawne Mission, Kansas City, Kan. are, explained that student teachers need to attend workshops a few afternoons of the first seven weeks in orientation sessions with guidance counselors, school administrators, special education and multi-media personnel, association leaders and other specialists. possible for a de-escalation of the Vietnam war," a smiling Podgoryn told newsmen on a 30-minute stopover here on route to Cambodia, with day visit to the North Vietnamese capital. His remarks came four days after the United States rejected a Communist request to resume the peace talks. They were indefinitely suspended May 4 when the U.S. side charged the Communists with failing to negotiate seriously. IT WAS PRESUMED that Podgorym may have succeeded in getting Hanoi to agree to U.S. terms for reopening the talks. Reports from Paris last week said that Podgorym would be a return to Paris of the chief Vietnamese delegate, Xuan Thuy. The left Peking on the eve of the arrival Podorny's announcement came as Xuan Thu's special adviser, Le Duc Tho, flew to Hanoi after conferring with Premier Chou En-Lai of China in Peking. would tell members not to fly, no matter what the courts ruled. A spokesman for Eastern said the cancellations would cost the airline an estimated $2.5 million in revenues and a decrease in convenience about 75,000 passengers. of President Nixon's national security plan to respond for a four-day visit to the Chinese capital. THE ONLY announced purpose of Kissinger's trip is to have "concrete evidence that we can further the normalization of relations between the Peoples Republic of China and the United States and continue the exchange of views on issues of common interest." But it is considered likely the war in Vietnam will be discussed. Holding a rare new conference, the 69-year-old Soviet leader appeared happy and euplenient over his trip to Hanoi, which had been linked by diplomats in Moscow with President Nixon's summit talks in the Soviet capital last month. PODGORNY described Hanoi, around which the United States had called off bombing attacks during his visit, as "quite safe." BURGER LET STAND the temporary restraining order issued by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. A SPOKESMAN for the U.S. Air Line Pilots Association said there had been no talk of any taking by the pilots but did it matter, as some pilots might picket on their own. ALPA announced late Sunday the strike was on an imminent injunction against U.S. policy in Iraq. "There is no way under our control that we can roll back the suspension of service tomorrow," said ALPA. "We expect the overwhelming majority of pilots and flight attendants not only in the United States but around the world to participate." "It is on," said a statement issued by ALPA a few hours after Chief Justice Warren E. Burger refused to overturn a case of fraud from taking part in the work stoppage. The International Federation of Air Line Pilots Associates has scheduled a one-day shutdown of air services starting at 1 a.m. CDT today to dramatize a protest by pilots and other consider inadequate international cooperation in stopping aerial piracy and extortion. A U.S. District Court in Washington refused Saturday to halt the strike but the three-judge circuit court ruled 2 to 1 and circuit and its members could not strike Monday. The ALPA president, Capt. John J. O'Donnell, had said earlier Sunday that he THE DECISION of the circuit court, and Burger's refusal to overturn that decision, had no effect on foreign pilots or airlines who had indicated they would obey the strike call of international president Ola Forsberg. THE INTERNATIONAL stoppage could affect 31,000 U.S. pilots and 50,000 worldwide and up to a million travelers, and cost airlines millions in lost revenues. But even before the U.S. court rulings Sunday, effectiveness of the plan was in doubt. The panel agreed to the voluntary refusals of many pilots and of some nations to join the demonstration. Delta Airlines, for example, announced that it had agreed to abide by the court decisions. "A court order not withstanding, in my opinion service tomorrow will be curled." Raids Above 20th Parallel Resumed SAIGON (AP)—American fighter-bombers resumed attacks today in North Vietnam's heartland above the 20th Parallel after a four-day suspension V. the Soviet President Nikolai Vi. Podgorny to Hanoi, U.S. military sources disclosed. Below the demilitarized zone, nearly 3,000 South Vietnamese marines battled the North Vietnamese in enemy-held Quang Tri Province. In Saigon, President Nguyen Van Thieu announced a three-month campaign to regain all territory lost to Hanoi's spring offensive. "We're back to normal," one source said of the new strikes. We're back north of the 20th parallel. We'd need to detail specific targets or specific locations. From last Thursday through Sunday, American bombers had stayed well below Hanoi, concentrating more than 1,000 and the southern half of North Vietnam. The marines, backed by U.S. air and naval forces, killed 110 enemy troops Sunday during the Quang Tri drive, the Saigon command reported. Government losses were listed as six killed and 25 wounded. The suspension was put into effect to avoid any incidents with the Soviet Union, and to prevent the Russian invasion. "Today I start a new campaign for the next three months to rise up and reoccupy our territory and to chase the enemy out of our country forever. THEU, IN A radio address on South Vietnam's Armed Forces Day, said: "After three months, the Communists are being bogged down here. The more troops they bring to the South, the more they face a serious problem of lacking supplies...They are bogged down because they start so many fronts." Thieu said territory was abandoned earlier in the offensive "because we wanted to save lines," and added that the temporary loss of Quang Tri Province "doesn't mean that we lose our entire country." HE SAID the South Vietnamese were holding at Kostum on the central front and in the western outskirts of Saigon. On Sunday, the marines were spearheaded by an armored column that advanced three miles north of the defense line at My Chanh. My Chanh is 28 miles north of Hue. It was the fifth drive into the North Vietnamese- held region in a little more than a month. Quang Tri, South Vietnam's northernmost province, held army troops May 1, after the invaded across the demilitarized zone. THE NEW South Vietnamese sweep was preceded by a 6,000-round barrage from the US Army's B52 strikes. The bombers dropped 300 tons of explosives on the sector east of Highway 1 controlled by the North Vietnam soldiers fired at position 478. One U.S. light observation helicopter was shot down supporting the South Vietnamese drive and two other aircraft by bomber fire, but there were no American casualties. for the fourth successive day, U.S. fighter-bombers stayed well south of Hanov and Genoa below the 20th century bombing campaign against North Vietnam. INFORMANTS SAID the suspension was due to the visit to the Communist Capital of Kherson, president Nikolai Podgorny, ended his visit Sunday and flew home. U. S. military sources here said they did not know how long the suspension of American bombing in the Hanoi-Haiphong region would continue. Reporting on Saturday's air action, the U.S. Command said Air Force, Navy and Marine fighter-bombers flew more than 300 strikes over North Vietnam. This includes a number of bombs flown over the southeastern coast of North Vietnam in the past three days, one of the heaviest periods of air attacks since the resumption of the bombing April 6. Bernadette Asks IRA Ceasefire BELLAST (AP)—Civil rights leader Bernadette DeVlin asked Irish Republican Army militants Sunday to stop the bombing in Northern Ireland for seven days. Hours later, a booby trap bomb near Lurgan, County Armagh, killed two British soldiers and badly injured three, the British army reported. Devlin said in an interview over the Irish state radio that she was not asking the militant Provisional wing of the outlawed IRA to halt all opposition to British rule. The bomb was planted in a house the soldiers were searching. The death toll in nearly 34 months of strife in Ulster now stands at 371. But during a temporary truce the IRA could present its demands to William Whitale, Britain's administrator in the troubled six counties, she said. Her call came amid reports of a split between leaders of the Provisionalists, the latter of whom had been charged with the Both the Dublin and Londonderry nationalist Providail won denies the violence in Northern Ireland in the past three years. Devlin's appeal to the IRA, however, appeared to indicate a dramatic step up in But O'Connell himself telephoned the Broadcasting Corporation to deny the request. Devin, a member of the British parliament, has long backed the Provisional wing's campaign of violence designed to outstay the British from Northern Widespread reports of the Provisional split were published in both Dublin and Belfast Sunday newspapers. They said David O'Connell, chief factician of the Provisional IRA, was taking over in a policy dispute from the organization's Londonborn chief of staff, Sean Mac-Stifion. pressure on the Provisionalists to join the IRA's other wing, the Marxist official group, in calling a ceasefire, even if limited, to give peacemakers a chance to work out a settlement that would satisfy the protestants and the minority. Roman Catholics. The Officials called a 28-day truce to violence last month in response to a growing chorus of appeals from Roman Catholics in Belfast and Londonderry. Differences between the two wings were pointed up in interviews with their two co-workers. One published Sunday, "On Our Knees," by 24-year-old Irish journalist, Rosita Sweetman. The two interviewed were Macaulay Goulding, chief of staff of the Officials. MacStifain told the battle was between the ruling Protestant establishment in New York and the Catholic Church, said the issue was a class struggle between the upper and lower classes. 2 Monday, June 19, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs By The Associated Press Mayors Support Nixon NEWORLEANS, La. (AP)—A committee of the U.S. Conference of Mayors backed President Nixon's Vietnam policy Sunday, declining to propose a specific withdrawal date as the conference did last year. Earlier in the day, in a surprise move, the resolution ordered that the United States should be killed without debate resolutions favoring and opposing the practice. By a 10-7 vote, the committee urged that "all United States air, land and sea forces shall be withdrawn from South Vietnam by a date certain and not later than four months after the conclusion of an internationally supervised cease-fire, through which all prisoners, and an accuser, will all those missing in action." Panties Too Hot PHILADLPHAII (AP) — Alice Cooper thought panties covering a record in an album was a hot promotional idea, but U.S. Customs here deduced the plan as too flammable. Alice Cooper, a five-member rock group,包装 their latest album record, "School's Out," in disposable underpants that failed to pass a Federal Trade Commission's Fibramatic Fables Test. Consequently, local Customs refused to permit the shipment of English-made paper panties to enter the country. Bad Sentence, She Says NEW YORK (AP) - Edith Irving, who goes to jail today for helping her husband sheal $750,000 from the McGraw-Hill publishing firm with a phony autobiography of Howard Hughes, has now been interviewed in an interview published in the Daily News that when they hatched their complex scheme of Swiss bank accounts under fake names to appropriate money the publishers intended forillion Hughes, she never dreamed she might go to prison. "At that time I thought, 'Why should I be so a hoax,' she said, 'why, why he gives the money back.'" Pat Attends Services RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP) — First Lady Pat Nixon stopped briefly in Rapid City to attend a memorial service Sunday for the more than 200 persons killed 10 days ago when a flash flood devastated the Black Hills resort town. Mrs. Nixon was not on the program, but shooted and hands and feet in search and rescue efforts after the storm that left 216 known dead and thousands homeless. The 17 who spoke with Mrs. Nixon were representatives of hundreds who had assisted survivors during the flood. They ranged from Brig. Gen. Donald A. Rose of the Salvation Army to 19-year-old Mike Gorrell, who seriously saved eight people by backpacking into the flooded area. McGovern Is 453 Short Of First-Call Nomination NEW YORK (AP)—Sen. George S. McGovern, his dellegate support for the Democratic presidential nomination continuing to grow, waged a New York primary and helped other observers saw as a warmup for a race with President Nixon. MeGoven is the only major candidate in Tuesday's primary, and his leading opponents for the Democratic nomination were not in New York over the weekend to face the South with the South Dakota Senator. McGovern is the party's front-runner and new support in four states over the weekend we gave刃1.066 of the 1.508 delegates votes needed to win the nomination at Democratic National Convention. IN NEW YORK McGovern attacked in advance any Nixon peace effort in Vietnam that McGovern said would be timed only to fit the President's domestic timetable. And at a time when some observers believed U.S. Jews may defect from the Democratic party, they stressed his support of Israel. McGovena has been hitting the nation's administration's defense spending in general, its connections with big business and what he called "the truth." TUESDAY'S primary is the final one of the year and 248 convention delegates are to be elected. Thirty more delegates will be picked the following by the Democratic state committee McGovern, expected to pick up 20 or more delegate faces, faces Tuesday in about a half dozen of the state's 39 congressional districts. In the Albany and Buffalo areas particularly, so-called uncommitted slates of delegates running against McGovern's delegates could win. Should McGovern get 200 delegates here, he will have more than 1,200 for the July convention or so away from the nomination. THOSE UNCOMMITTED slates are thought to favor Sen. Edmund S. Musk of Maine or other candidates in Minnesota for the nomination. in another development Society was lifted that one of five memebers of the committee breaking into the offices of the Democratic National Committee to try to dismantle McCord Jr. and McCord McRison, the security coordinator for Nixon's chief cam-mitrator. Authorities said McCord and the others were planning to bug the office. President Nixon's campaign chief, former atty. John G. Nelson. Mitchell, said in Los Angeles meeting with the beaufish or with our consent." SenEx to Hold Special Meet Responding to a request from the Council, the Sean Ex Committee has called a special meeting for 2:30 p.m. Wednesday in 108 Blake The purpose of the meeting will be to discuss the desirability of a committee to investigate research activity, accuracy, and Ronald Cauley. SenEx chairman Members of the Hallowing Cooperation suggested the committee to Share in what they thought there was a need for the community to know about recreation. Calgaard stressed that the meeting was important and that the attendance of all the members of the committee if a quorum was to be obtained. TREDO'S RESTAURANT & DELICATESSEN Stop By. We're only a half block from the downtown theaters. Good Food, Good Beer Open till 1 a.m. Fri.-Sat. 844 Massachusetts 842-9577 Wallace Will Regain Partial Use of Legs SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP) — After surgery to remove a bullet from his spine, doctors reported in the news that Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace to be able to move about with aid of braces and crutches within six months. Wallace has been paralyzed from the hips down since he was sheared in 1984. Mr. Md., after finishing a speech in his campaign for the Democratic nomination, was hospitalized. Dr. Stacy Rollins, a neurosurgeon who headed the five-man operating team, told newsmen there was a 'ray of water' that Wallace may eventually resume walking without aids. Killer-Hurricane Agnes Sets Path for Florida Panhandle Rollins made his report at an afternoon news briefing after a 1½-hour Sunday morning at Holy Cross Hospital. BUT HE SAID it would be six to 18 months. He also added and he added there was less than a 50-50 chance that the governor would walk nor MIAMI (AP) -- Residents of a flooded Florida Floridaiana were urged to evacuate Sunday as Hurricane Michael with winds of up to 100 miles and tengromes that have killed one person and injured at least As the season's first hurricane plodded north at about 12 m.p.h. from a position 310 miles south of Tampa, Florida, the Hurricane Center recommended evacuation of the offshore islands and low-lying beaches along a stretch of coastline. At the outset, Rollins said the bullet had been successfully removed from the spinal canal but added immediately that doctors could not tell whether he recovered ability to walk normally. "Evacuation roads in this area are low, and some escape routes may be cut off by rising waters that reach the coast. early Monday afternoon," the center's 6 p.m. advisory said. POLICE in the agricultural northwest of Miami, said one person was killed and several were injured when a storm tore into buildings. to the local Civil Defense chief, Richard Lancaster. Civil Defense officials in Port au lae and 700 to 800 residents of wetlands were being evacuated. Many of them were preparing to spend the summer in wetlands. He added that persons would be evacuated inland Monday to Mariana if conditions became worse. THE HURRICANE center said their staff had been Pandheande coast near Apalachiola- carly early Monday afternoon if she maintained her course and "Everybody around here is boarding up their houses, and the officers are safe harbor," said Nick Forlack, an officer of the Apalachi- "It's lucky that not too many people here live in low-lying areas." Fortunas added. Apalachicola is a coastal town of about 3,500 persons. AGNES, WHICH developed in late September, also was blamed for three more deaths in Cuba, bringing the storm to toll there to 18,000. President Nixon, meanwhile, was at his Florida home at Key Biscayne, which was in the fringe area of Agnes. He flew there two days before and two days of relaxation at Grand Cay Island in the Bahamas, where Director Robert Simpson of the National Hurricane Center in Miami said that if the storm were to reach at about 12 miles an hour, it would "move inland over the Florida panhandle shortly after noon HE SAID THAT after the operating team had removed the bullet which was lodged in Wallace's spinal canal they found that his spinal cord was not partially severed but only pulsating. weather was overcast and threat ening. THE CENTER extended its hurricane watch warning to include all of northwest Florida from Cedar Key to Pensacola. He said the 'ray of optimism' that Wallace eventually might be able to walk freely was based on the fact that elements of the nervous system, including the spinal cord and a network of nerves from lower end, were found to be intact and not disrupted. ASKED WHAT activity Wallace would be capable of at the convention, the doctor (think I think) should help build skills to ask in陷害 ... make an appearance on the convention floor." "If he is nominated he could stay as long as need be," Hutchinson said. Vote on Revenue Sharing Expected in House Soon If the President's revenue sharing bill passes through Congress, Lawrence can expect a grant of $275,134. Congressman Larry Winn said that passage of the bill could be expected early this week in the House if all went well. As the bill stands now, Douglas County will receive $682,474 for all its governments. Townships will receive $90,425. Baldwin will be allocated $16,832. The bill will be debated in the hall on Monday. The vote will be taken Wednesday. The four- Sen. James Pearson, R-Kan, co-sponsor of the bill, said that Kansas would receive $47.8 million. Approximately $34 million will be allocated to governments, and $13.8 million to the state government. Winn introduced a bill similar to the President's revenue sharing bill earlier this year. Winn's bill would have given Kansas K54 that said he was still planning to vote favorably on the measure. hour closed rule will keep the bill from any amendments. Pollution Fight Endangered John R. Quaries, Jr., top legal counsel for the Protection Agency, said in an interview he was worried that help from Congress may not be available. WASHINGTON (AP) —The government's effort to fight water pollution with an 1899 law now because of legal complexities. Early last year, in an effort to get up some speed, President Nixon told EPA to dust off the 1899 Reform Act which prohibited discharges to waterways without from the Army Corps of Engineers. "If this situation should last for too long, the school would Quieres said. It could severely undercut our national program to control industrial waste. That's what I do." Since 1965, federal water authorities authorize to prosecute industrial polluters, but first had to arrange窄部位 regulation a stipulation requirements and then give industries 180 days to correct a But last December a federal court here ruled that the Corps must ensure that each individual permit it proposed to environmental impact of each individual permit it proposed to. IF THE VIOLATION remained uncorrected, they could begin a court prosecution. Over the next few months the Corps received applications from some 20,000 industries for permits to discharge wastes. Legislation now pending in Congress would give EPA alone the clear authority to run a permit program. Last May 30, a federal appeals court in Philadelphia, reversing the Pennsylvania Railroad's conviction to the Pennsylvania Industrial Workers Union that it was not convicted of lacking "fairness." ask preventing the issuance of my permits at all, and they appealed the decision. For a while, EPA prosecuted polluters for lack of a permit. EPA AND THE CORPS decided that was an impossible AND WITH THE issuance of permits blocked, he conceded, "the lack of a permit is the only handle we have. Right now it is the foundation for virtually our whole enforcement program." Quarles said that 'causes previously opened and-ended courts now be the legal grounds, even where there is no contest concerning the case.' would include not only a new permit program but also a tougher enforcement mechanism. You must issue notice, authority to issue clean-up orders, and direct authority for EPA to impose a fine up to $10,000 or seek prosecution with an insurance of $25,000 for each day of violation. permit if the permit was not available. The bill pending in Congress The House and Senate have already agreed on these enforcement provisions, but the House, in their disagreement over other issues. The Alley Shop IS OPEN! 843 Massachusetts EARLY SUMMER SALE SALE NJQ SPACE FLADE ELSEVIER 40 All LP's at 40% Off $5.87 for $3.59 $4.98 for $2.99 Imports and Bangladesh Excluded Straight Up BADFINGER Capitol. O All Stereo Tapes on Sale *$6.98 for *$4.65 *$7.98 for *$5.25 O MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY, 19th & 20th iscount records master-charge America's Largest Coast to Coast Record Stores 1420 Crescent Rd. 842-4626 Store Hours: 10-8 Mon-Fri 10-6 Saturday your BANKAMERICARD welcomes you - . . o . . e . . - . . e . . t . . l . . Monday, June 19. 1972 University Summer Kansan 3 Jack Bags Open, Titles Record PEBLE B BEACH, Calif. (AP) - Jack Nicklaus, his golden mane touled by the chilly, snowy conditions, the hopes of all challengers, took another giant step toward a Grand Slam of Golf when he won the United States Open Sunday with a two over par 74 in the final round. The 32-year-old Nicklaus won the record-matching 13th major title of his career by three strokes with a 72 hole total of 290. It was the third American nation in the championship for Nicklaus, championship for the finest player the game has begun. Masters victory at Augusta, Ga., this spring to give him two legs on a never-accomplished one-year sweep of all the world's major championships. The British Open in Scotland next month and the PGA National Championship remain. THE VICORY went with his collection of four master's titles, a pair of U.S. Amateur crowns and two victories in the PGA tournament. The record total of 13 major titles held by the late Bob Jones. Australian veteran Buree Crampleton, one of three players tied for second, a stroke back of Nicklaus when the day's play started, finished alone in second with a 76 and 293. Vault Record Falls SEATTLE (AP)—An 18-foot pole vault by Dave Roberts and an American record in the 10,000-meter run by Greg Fredericksen was 24-3-6. The Athletic Union track and field championships, tarnished when some top stars decided to compete and others threatened a Roberts, Rice University juni- cle, cleared 18 feet, one-quarter inch Saturday and became only one of the first in history to pass that height. "This is nice," he said, "but it's nothing like winning the Olympics. That's what I want." It took Roberts three jumps even to qualify for the pole vault finals. Then, the left-hander had to reach 17-4 and made three times for 17-4 and made 18 KANU Schedule 7- The Marmoset Show 8- The Winter Show 9- Campbell and Community Calendar 10- Campbell and Community Calendar 11- Germany Today 12- Germany Today 13- New York Weather Sports 14- New York Weather Sports 12:15—Hour Concert-Community Calendar **10- French Music and French Musician** **12- French Dance** **14- Keyboard Immortals** **16- This Afternoon** **18- Things That Considered** **20- News-Weather-Sports** **22- News-Weather-Sports** **24- A Primistrial Perspective** **26- Variations on a Record Player** **28- Variations on a Record Player** **30- To Be Announced** feet on the third attempt. He failed in three tries for a world record at 18-5. Fredericks, of Penn State, who set the American 10,000-meter record of 28 minutes, 8 seconds Friday, was named athlete of the meet Saturday. His time shot collegiate and meet records. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East W. L. Pet. G.B. Detroit 30 12 56 78 Baltimore 30 22 56 66 Cleveland 23 28 58 41 Boston 23 28 54 77 Ukraine 23 28 43 12 Oakland 36 17 679 719 Chicago 33 21 679 34 Denver 28 11 679 10 Kansas City 25 29 463 11 California 25 29 463 11 NATIONAL LEAGUE New York...W. L. Pet. G.B. Pittsburgh...25 30 60 18 Chicago...32 22 39 58 Montreal...32 22 39 58 Montreal...32 22 39 58 Montreal...32 22 39 58 Sunday Scores American Lions West Cincinnati 35 21 625 1 Houston 35 21 895 -16 Los Angeles 27 29 482 1 San Diego 27 29 482 8 San Francisco 20 37 351 15 Milwaukee 3, Kansas City 0 Detroit 2, California 0 Washington 1, Oregon 1 Minnesota 4, Baltimore 3 Chicago 8, Boston 4 Houston 10, Philadelphia 2 Montreal 2, Atlanta 1 San Francisco 3, Cleveland 2 Chicago 5, Los Angeles 4 San Francisco 4, San Francisco 4 Nashville 0 Museum Displaying Play Scene Prints Approximately 125 persons attended the opening of the Boydell collection exhibition of art at the University of Sulasky at the University of Kansas's Spooner Museum of Art. Chamber music was presented by the Lawrence Chamber Players in the museum gallery. William Kuhke, academic advisor for the Shakespeare concert were part of the Shakespeare Festival and Institute now being held at KU. The concert was Aug. 30 at the Museum of Art. Pamela Kingsbury, curator of prints and drawings for the museum, gave a lecture tour of the Boydell prints for members of the Shakespeare Institute. The prints came from the collection of John Dwyer Thayer, one of the first contributors to the Museum of Art. The prints, selected by Kubike, concise with plays and movies that have been performed at the in- tation at KU this summer. In- cudes a selection from "MuscleBell, "Twelfth Night," "King Richard the Throne," "Tempest" and "Macbeth." Kingsbury said John Boydell, an engraver of English land- mark engravings of Shakespearean play scenes in 1786. Boydell hired famous English artists to paint the paintings and purchased the paintings and Arnold Palmer was next, also, while the Clippers won champions Lee Trevino and Homerilo at 295. Trevino, still fighting the line, was pounced on by no infectious, struggled in with a 78 than included only one birdie. Blancas engraved them. Following the lecture tour, the Lawrence Chamber Players presented a concert of music by six players, under the direction of Karel Blaas, performed selections including a sonata for trumpets and strings, an oboe and a sonata for flute and bass. Jessie Branson, a coordinator for the Lawrence Chamber Players were from the Lawrence area players for their own enjoyment. Scores were indrebbly high in Scarborough and East Sussex, existed on the 681rd Pebble Beach Golf Links. Winds whipping off the Pacific Ocean gusted the rocks. IN ALL, 28 men in the final field of 70 failed to break 80 on the last 18. Nickiais nailed down the $8,000 first prize with the 1984 Olympics. She hobbles, almost making an ace on the next to last hole of 5-3. Nicki is a whopping four strokes in front and the three-pult bogey on the 18th had no But it was on the 10th through 13th holes, where he seemed on Nicklaus made double bogey six on the 10th, bogey four on the 12th and par four on the 13th—but he could have played them at 15. the verge of collapse, that the power-hitting blond may have really clinched it. HE HIT HIS drive off the toe of the club on the 10th with the ball squirring off the right and down on the rocky beach. He took a drop, then hit his next again to reach the bottom by the side of the green. The 11th was a routine four but he hit his tee shot over the green and down a steep embankment on the par three 12th. He pitched on in four and two- putted for double bogey. Nicklaus got it only part of the way up the bank on his next shot and had a difficult, delicate little need, needing to stop the ball quickly. HE WENT SOME 15 feet past the flag but made the putt coming back for bogey. On the next, a par four. his drive found some by the side of the road and he miraculously miracle shot out of trouble to within some 15 to 20 feet of the pin on the ground. He lost three stakes to par on the 10th through the 12th, but still retained the lead as everyone else did. In the first eight finishers, none made better than bogey on the 10th and Niclaus escaped with the lead. HE STRETCHED it out with a 20-foot birdie putt on the 15th, raising his putter aloft in the attempt as the ball ducked into the cup. And on the 17th, a 218-yard par three that may be one of the toughest, most spectacle holes northeast, Nicholas went for the flag. He almost holed it The iron shot came to rest just a couple of inches from the cup and Nickiaa tapped in for the one that clinched it. Sports Editor Has Suggestions For Selecting All-Star Teams Editor's Note: This is the first of a bi-weekly sports column by Kansan Sports Editor Jim Galvin. Galvin will be taking a personal look at sports and invites readers to join. In regularly galvin's column will be Galvin's at testing your sports, memory. By JIM GALVIN Kansan Sports Editor The present method of letting the fan select the baseball all-stars has my approval, although there are a few things I would like. The selection process more enjoyable. Are you listening, Mr. Kuhn? The first thing I would recommend would be to allow the fans to pick the pitchers also. The fans now is only 8-8 for fair to the fans. players to be on the ballot and listing them by position, they should list all of the players. The players who deserve deserving rookies (like Ralph Garr of the Braves, last year) and veterans who are having much better seasons than their peers (like Rico Carty, last year). Second, if the commissioner's office insists on naming the ANOTHER THING the commissioner might think about is limiting the number of ballots in each city so that balloting would be less difficult. The argument against this might be that when a well-drawed club runs out of ballots, attendance and turnout would almost certainly prevent fans from flooding the ballot box with the names of their hometowns. But booster groups who boosters did when the method was first tried. The starting line-up that year looked like the Reds on American League. Royals Tipped by Brewers, 3-0 MILWAUKEE (AP) -George Scott scored twice and Skip Lockwood scattered five hits Sunday. The two players, a 3-victory over the Kansas City Royals that broke a nine-game Arena League losing streak in May. John Briggs drove in Milwaukee's first run with a saffron fly in the fourth inning after Scott Burton played on a double by Billy Conciarza. Bob Helse beat out an infiltrid to Bob open the fifth, reached second on a sarcifery, took third on a wild and sudden on a single by Ron Theobald. Scott fanned to start the Brewer sixth, but went all the way to second when catcher Jerry May dropped the third strike pitch, then hit Scott with the baseball bolt while trying to throw the ball. Scott stole three and scored on Ellie Routledge's second double. The A's collected 16 hits off four Cleveland pitchers including MAY ENTERED the game after Ed Kirkpatrick, the Royals'starting catcher, was LETTING THE PLAYERS pick is not too bad an idea, either, but with the present system the fans, the ones who ultimately decide the success or failure of a team, will probably have a say in one game a year. A true sports editor can't earn his strips until he goes on out a limb and makes predictions, so are here my picks for this year's In other American League games, Jirnorth Naurop and Norm Lewis won the Mickey Lloyd lichen his 11th game with a strong seven-hit assists as the team defeated the formia Angels 1-0 and took over sole possession of first place in the league. Northrup broke up a scoreer with Norah and Nolai, 7-5, with his finer homer of the year in the seventh inning. Cash connected with his LOLICH STRUCK out seven and did not walk a batter in running his record to 11-4. Vida Blue won his first game of the season with a four-hitter at Oakland battered Cleveland 9-0. Blue, who missed the first six weeks of the season because of a sack, lost and lost his last three decisions. The triumph snapped a nine-game winning streak for the defending American League champions. Williams was hated by the writers and consequently managed to lose the Most Valued award, which the writers vote for, at least once in his career when he was deserving. In National League action, Tom Seaver became the National League's first nine-game winner when he pitched and batted the New York Mets to a 2-1 victory in the Division Leader Cincinnati. home runs by Mike Epstein and rookie George Hendrick. The baseball triumph pulled American Lager W. Chip. Chi. C. Kirkpatrick/C. B. Carew. C. K. Carew. M.C. SS. Brain, Minn. SS. Brain, Minn. BR. Brain, Minn. R. Oak, Oak. O. Oak, Oak. OAKLAND BROKE the game with six runs in 10 batters went to the plate in the sixth All of the runs scored with two out. Rick Reichardt greeted relief pitcher Luciant Tsui with a three-run homer that capped a five-run fourth inning and the Chicago Cubs to an 8-4 American League win over the Boston Red Sox. Harmon Killebrew baked a pair of run-scoring singles and the Minnesota Twins survived a late Baltimore twals for a 4-3 victory. the Mets back into first place in the NL East Dvision, one-half game ahead of Pittsburgh. Seaver 9-3, cracked a 3-2 pitch of Rosario. He struck the ball and fielded in the seventh to break a 1-1 life. It was his second homer of the year and the first of the season. Loever Bruce Kison, 21, who was injured in the third-hitter before leaving for a pinch hitter, surrendered the game's only run in the first inning. National League Sultana, L.A. Pittsburgh, Pitta, M. AouL. Sun, M. AbouL. Sun, Torre, St.L. Speer, S.F. Clemente, Pitta, O. Alver, Pitta, A. Olver, Pitta San Diego's Steve Arlin pitched out of a bases-loaded jam in the eight inning to preserve a two-hit victory. The League victory over the Pirates. Jerry Morales led off winn- threed to left-center, took third on an inflicted out by Fred Stanley and Loren Lee bounced on first Kansas Photo by LINDA SCHILL Orchestra Puts Shakespearean Print Viewers in the Mood . . . Karel Blaas leaves Lawrence Chamber Players at Spooner Art Museum Sunday . . . THE NEW YORK MUSEUM OF ARTS, CITY OF AUGUSTA Despite its shortcomings, I think the present method of gameplay is better system than allowing the sportwriters the privilege; more people are allowed to vote and play a game toward an individual player. To prove my point look at the case of game's greatest players. Sports Stumpers 1. Can you name the three members of the Detroit Red Wings' famous Production Line of the 1950s? 2. Everyone remembers Tom Dempsey's thrilling, record 83-yard goal last year, but do you know whose record he broke? Welcome Incoming Freshmen May we help you with your housing needs JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS Surrounded JAYHAWKER TOWERS KU APARTMENTS Surrounded by the K.U. Campus 300 2 Bedroom Apartments 1603 West 15th Not more than 5 minutes walking anywhere. Now Leasing for Summer and Next Fall All utilities paid—Auto parking included—Heated swimming pool—Tenant storage room on each floor—Incubator dampen on each floor—Modern kitchen with a dishwasher for heat and air conditioner—Two elevators in each building—All brick walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and quiet—Complete laundry in each building—Exposure outside—Bath tub, shower, two lavatories each apartment. The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see Convenience - Comfort - Safety - Extras Profs Researching Shakespeare Plays Charleton Himman and Paul Kendall, professors of English and scholars in residence at KU this summer, are working on an complete works of Shakespeare based on older, foliage collections. "We hope it will be a more useful edition in general and will come closer to what we mean in the text," Kendall said. Computer Institute Starts; 25 to Train at University Training in the use of computers will be profided during the summer. She will serve a statute for Humanistic Computation which begins today, according to Floyd Horowitz, associate professor of computer science. Twenty-five teachers, researchers and administrators colleges have been awarded fellowships to attend this conference to study the relationship between computers and the internet. Walter and Sally Sedelow, professors of computer science, and the Department of Science, which was formulated by the Committee on Information Sponsored by the American Council of Learned Societies and National Endowment for Science, the American Society will continue until July 28. "Participants will learn programming language and will be provided background experience in their fields of interest as they work on computer." Horowitz explained. John Smith. Pennsylvania State University, will be the host for several sessions. Visiting lecturers are: Robert Boyden, University of Illinois; Dan Buzzer, Boise Universi- Buses;" Dan Buzzer, University of Illinois," Teaching Use of Terminals"; and Charles Scuri, University of Graphic Capability. "The results of this success has implications for all educational institutions because the need to change the balance of support of teachers and humanities has been seen and acted upon." Horowitz said. This is the second such summer institute at Kansas University. The first in 1970 was successful, according to Horowitz. Himman published the authoritative text on "The First Folio of Shakespeare" in 1963. In the course of his research, he invented the Hinckley electronic device which scans one folio at a time and immediately reveals any differences between the original and one compared a large number of the surviving folios in Folder Library and from the comparison he gave us of how the first folio was printed. Himman is creating the text of the edition. Kendall is the general editor. He is writing the introductory book, the edition and is also doing the footnoting. They have been working on the edition since 1964 and are now in its fourth edition, 1633, seven years after Shakespeare's death, a collection of plays known as the first folio was published. It is believed that Shakespeare wrote except *Pericles.* "About 200 folios, mostly in the Folger Library in D.C., are in existence." In the Elizabeth printing process no copies were thrown away, not even those that needed them, and all folios are different. While working on the edition, Himan prepared "The Norton Facsimile of the First Folio of Shakespeare." "It has been universally proclaimed as the best in the world," Kendall said. the University shop MEN'S APPAREL Announces A FANTASTIC SUMMER SALE Stop By and Discover Bargains Like These: SUITS Entire Stock Reduced 10-50% SPORT COATS Entire Stock Reduced 10-50% DRESS SLACKS Mainly Double-Knits 25% Off JEANS Many Styles and Colors 25% Off DRESS SHIRTS Long & Short Sleeve 25% Off SHOES AND BOOTS Entire Stock Reduced 10-50% One Large Group of TIES Now $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price SWIMWEAR All Reduced by $ \frac{1}{3} $ Stop by Soon While the Selection Is Still Very Good Next to Discount Records the university shop Hours 9:30-5:30 1420 Crescent Rd. 4 Monday, June 19, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Welcome to KU Once again the University of Kansas plays host to 710 high school students from all parts of the nation for its 35th annual summer Midwestern Music and Art camp. In a sense, this title is a misnomer, for there is more music and art included in the program of study. In addition, there will be sessions in journalism and speech and debate. To the 496 music students, the 131 in art, the 25 in journalism and the 58 in speech and debate, the University of Kansas bids you welcome and hopes that you will not only enjoy your stay with us but also that you will learn a great deal and go back to your schools more proficient in your art and inspired to do a better job than ever before. to have so many fine high school, students for so long a period of time on their campuses. So when you university students see the "younger generation" frequenting our buildings and enjoying the comforts of our Union, look upon them with favor, for they are an important part of our university community this summer. There are not many universities in the United States that are privileged It is not unusual for students to come to the University of Kansas during the summer and find the instruction so superior and the people so friendly that they want to come back. All of us at KU have long since learned that you get out of your school and go home and yourself put into it. This year's camp can be a great opportunity for all of us. Let's make the most of it. Rita E. Haugh Editor Cut Out the Theatrics Vern Miller is said to be girding himself for new heights of law enforcement following a Supreme Court decision upholding raids on private clubs without benefit of search warrant. It's hard to fault law enforcement. Laws are laws, and they ought to be enforced. If they discomfort a majority of the citizens, then the legislature should give thought to repealing them. Still, there's a world of good sense in the reasoning of Justice David Prager of the Kansas Supreme Court, who wrote in dissenting opinion in the private club case. Said be: "I would have no complaint if a police officer had gone to the club and exercised his right of entry to make a reasonable inspection in a building, as required by manner. I do object to the subjection of the members of the club and the club manager to a showy, obtrusive and distruptive raid, which went far beyond the bounds of a reasonable crime. On behalf of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act." The majority opinion of the court was essentially that in accepting a private club license the licensee is consenting to entry by any peace officer for the purpose of inspecting the premises, and not for any violation, which amounts to a violation of any provisions of the act—which includes gambling. Good enough. Let the laws be enforced—all of them, impartially and as fully as personnel and budget permit, But come on, Vern, cut out the theatrics. Your name is a household word now. You don't need the publicity and neither do the occasional innocents who find themselves in the glare of it while you're doing your duty. —Reprinted from the Wichita Eagle McGOVERN 1972 A. TIMES STUDIO ... No, no! 'Cheese' . . . not 'Geez'." Plight of Black Composer In U.S.Examined Tonight known to most Americans, both black and white, who tend to think of black music solely in terms of jazz and blues. Television will examine the world of the black composer—the influence of his society and culture on his work and his contemporary serious music tonight at 7 on channel 1 KTWU. The special will focus on the work of four black composers, Stephen Chambers, Ulysses Kaye, Mark Stevens and Kate Walker and will feature performances by the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and Bishop College Chair of D耳斯. In each of the program's four segments, a performance of the composer's work will be followed The 90-minute color documentary, titled "The Black Casting Service Special of the Week. Although there are more than 3,000 black composers of all ages around the world, they are little by his comments on the achievements and problems of the black composer. George Walker says that, in general, the major symphony orchestras have failed to consider the value of music composing. The best composers, Still, who at 78 is probably the dean of black composers, comments on what constitutes black music and notes which well-earned composers have not encouraged black composers to develop their music. Bill May Pay Schools for Vets By BOB LITCHFIELD Kenyan Staff Writer An amendment to the Higher Education Act affecting uninsured students passed Congress June 8 and is swaiting signature by President Obama. The "Veterans" Cost-of-Instruction Payments to Institutions of Higher Education" amendment, proposed by Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., would have authorized vocational-technical schools $600 per semester for undergraduate veteran attending the institution. Ed Bruns, Leawood freshman and Campus Veterans president, said Wednesday he estimated the University of Kansas could pay him $150,000 for this program, if the university met the eligibility criteria. Bruns said the Campus Veterans organization at KU had been instrumental in getting the drafted and passed by Congress. He said that he was the amendment, at least one half of the funds received by the in- THE BILL stipulates, "The applicant institution will make an adequate effort . . . to maintain a appropriate set of duties, fairs, which has responsibility for veterans' outreach, recruitment, and special education programs, including the provision of educational services and psychological counseling for veterans." Payments would be made to the institution in "not less than three" installments during each academic year. situation must be used to administer programs for the benefit of veterans on campus. One eligibility requirement the institution must meet is a 10 percent increase in the veteran student enrollment and an academic year. KU had 1,048 veterans enrolled for the fall 72 semester. KU has 72, including graduate students. Bruns said he was sure there would be no problem meeting the 10 per cent increase in view of the war. Mr. Browne had provaled in Congress and the large Bruns said there were 56,000 Vietnam veterans in Kansas and only 12,000 of them were enrolled in educational programs. number of Vietnam veterans in Kansas. "OF THE remainder, 18,000 or a *welfare* or *payment* payment Bism said, "and this is the group we need to contact, through an organization." Bruns met Wednesday with Karen L. Mitcher, vice chancellor of business affairs, to discuss establishment of an Office of Veterans and to seek funds to begin implement several programs for veterans. Nichler said he lacked both the money to pay for personnel or to appropriate money and pointed out the proper organizational channels did not work. Two things were involved, Nicher said. First, Campus Veterans would provide division would act as its liaison. Second, the contractual relation would be based on the agreement. in writing and approved by Research Administration and Charles Oldfather, university attorney. Nichter said the Office of Veteran's Affairs, as with any affairs department, must consider interests, had to find its place in the organizational order of the university. The Bruns contact William L. Baldwin, vice chancellor of student affairs, "WHEN THE federal government is involved, KU has to have a formalized signed agreement," Nitcher said, adding the bill had not been signed into law nor had it been appropriated by Congress at this time. LAWRENCE ICE CO. Chalmers Jr. and would also private funds to enable the Office of Veterans Affairs to begin with at least a part time staff. Bruns said that he would meet with Chancellor E. Laurence Redy-Pak Ice Taste Free Crystal Clear PIKCHIP BUFFETS OPEN DAILY 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. 616 Vermont 801-0350 Pope Paul VI Completes Nine Years Leadership By EDWARD MAGRI He will be 75 Sept.28. That is an age at which he expects all other Nine years ago Wednesday wipes of black smoke came from a tiny stovepipe in a window in the apostolic Palace. Thousands in St. Peter's Square roared with joy and cheered as a new Pope had been elected. VATICAN CITY (AP)—This week Pope Paul VI completes nine years of a troubled papacy. He faces new challenges in faith, birth control and priestly celibacy despite challenges to his teachings, hernia pains haunt him many times. A few years later he started the "immense burden" of being the spiritual leader of 600 million Romanholic in a fast- moving world. --- A FEW MINUTES later lafr,希y gihouvani Monti, arion,arroyno on a balcony decorated on a balcony decorated in damask. He was Pope Paul VI,succeeding the widely beloved John XIII who died 18 days His 1968 encyclical restating the doctrine of contraceptive denation of contraceptive devices has been "torn to pieces" by a Vatican theologian who puts it. Close associates have said the Pope was so deeply affected by the revolt in the ranks of laymen and prelates that he would like to leave the care of his office. But Pope John XXIII can abdicate but Boves cannot. CONSERVATIVES have attacked him for abilisating Latin women by changing the rites. Blistering attacks have come from sectors that would like radical changes in the church stands on murals and faith. For the past year and a half the pontiff has not traveled more than 20 miles away from the Vatican. Some observers say he may never again go abroad. This is a good reason he has been experienced in mixing with crowds in India, Africa or the Americas. prelates to resign. But the Vatican has repeatedly denied that the pontiff planned to step down from his papal throne. Pope Paul is pictured as a man who was widely controversial his uncompromising stands on birth control, prizefully celibacy DESPIE HIS NINE trips to six continents, thousands of audiences, and the pressure of his hospitality, his health is holding up. For years doctors and aides have been urging him to refrain from the strenuous more pressing after Benjamin Mendozza, a Bolivian painter, lunged with a knife at Pope Paul II in 1970. The Pope was unhurt. 27, 1970. TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE! Offer expires July 1st 1720 West 23rd Street June 19 - August 18 9:30-12:30 Monday-Friday --- 1720 West 23rd Street New Summer Hours Mrs. Case 748-0830 after hours call Mrs. June Couch 864-4784 NOTICE KU Federal Credit Union THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper Member Associated Collegiate Press Charles Wright 864-4770 Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-4810 Business Office—UN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas four times weekly during the summer session. Mail to: University of Kansas Press, 201 W. 45th St., Lawrence, KS 68032. Accommodations, goods, services and employment offered to all students without regard to烛, marshal or national origin. Oignons expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Education. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READERS DESIGN SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 Doug DeTray Steve Conner Laura Dysart Carol Williams Dave Bennett Mark Bedner NEWS STAFF News Adviser ... Del Brinkman Rita E. Haugh Lily Swain Bol Northpike Rik Acknow Prize Brandon Dave Sakoff Dave Sakoff Editor Campus Editor News Editor Copy Chief Photographers Poets Sports Editor BUSINESS STAFF Business Advisor Mel Adams Business Manager Advertising Manager Marketing Manager National Advertising Manager Promotion Manager Principal Agent KIRSTEN'S AT HILLCREST 40% OFF on Spring and Summer Merchandise Sportswear Dresses All the Beer You Can Drink for $2.00 at the STABLES Tuesday-7-12 Help Celebrate Founders Month with RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE CO. University Summer Kansan Monday, June 19. 1972 5 P. E. BURTON Kansan Photo by C.LAV LOVE Education Lures Several Back to KU . She once hated school . By BECKY PAGE BY DEANNA VANDERMADE Konson Staff Writer One aspect of college which was new was finding that a classmate who was not in the school enrollment. She had thought if a student had the time and money. Free University Courses Let Students Make Rules would be open. Her main worry now explained, Levi, is that her career will withstand the daily trials from Kansas City to Lawrence. Although the summer selectors is much smaller than in a regular term, THE Kansas Free University is offering some thirty this summer for those interested in learning for learning's sake. If any students have been worrying that the pressures of school may result in premature graduation, their classmates, they can forget their worries. For some of those students who aren't premature. More middle-aged adults are coming back to school and not just as graduate students. The courses vary in content from summer classes taught to a course called Woman Liberation vs. The Married Woman, and in size from short to as many as six months. HER FAMILY is in favor of her attending classes, said Levit. Since her husband is a professor at the University of Missouri in college atmosphere has not been anything new to her two children. One such person is Marger Levit. She came to the University of Kansas this summer to begin a career toward a degree in journalism According to Chuck Hand, director of the project, when the team in 1969 with 10 courses, many were skeptical about whether the equipment would work. But every year they added and more people involved until last semester there were 60 students with no facilities have not been completed, the organization for facilities have not been completed, the room in the Wesley Foundation Levit held temporary jobs in the field of journalism while her husband earned his doctorate in education. She has worked as a reporter for a small town daily weekly advertising trade journal, and was a junior account executive for a public relations firm. "It's like driving a car." she Her main reason for getting her degree is that it is something that she has always wanted The Free University operates a network of people who want to know about subjects not offered in the regular curriculum just as they are. Her most recent job was as executive director of the Western Missouri office of the American Liberius Union. Because of her leadership, she has been given credit for some journalism courses, such as Reporting I. UNTIL THIS SUMMER classes have been held wherever there was space, in faculty houses, apartments, churches or other addition of a classroom is representative of the project's success. share their knowledge of a subject with others. "Our purpose." Hand said, "is to act as a laison between the two groups, those who want to learn those who are willing to teach." "As long as they have something to share, they may do so," Hand said. THERE IS NO tuition in the parish. You may anyone sign up for any class anyone can teach any class he wants. The key words are in verse 15. The classes generally are held once a week for eight weeks during the summer and usually are in the evenings, but this season may vary from class to class. No one is required to go to classes. "The classes exist by an evolutionary process," Hand said, "the good ones last, the bad ones old; people just stop going." SOME OF THE COURSES being offered are academically based, such as Language and Meaning, the Social Uses and semantics, the Social Uses and Misses of Science, or The Law, Civil Rights, and " criminal Law." One course that Hand said, could be helpful to the undergraduate student is a course called CRA Detecting, which is a tool for students to help students weed out what is factula information from in- UNTIL THIS SUMMER, Walter D. Braun, a retired leutenant colonel in the Army, was named a special student. He was working on doctorate in history, on college in officially a candidate for a doctorate. said. "You don't need a license to drive, but you feel a lot better if you have one." Braun, unlike Levit, is a resident of Lawrence, and has two sons who are students at KU and Boston University in same classes, but they were enrolled in different semesters that this had both helped and helped her. A class project that is particularly unusual is one designed to organize a study in Lawrence. It is slowly d'ing for lack of support. formation built on illogical conclusions. One instance which Braun did not care for was when a former instructor told one of his sons that he had killed his father in the class as his father had done. When one of his sons had mononucleosis, Braun was able to go to the instructor, whom he studied and explain the situation. "NO ONE WANTS to do anything about it." Hand said. But he added, "that is a part of the Free University process." BRAUN HAS encountered no difficulty with other students because of age differences. He learned that kids expressed surprise at the kind of shoes Braun wore. Apparently, the student thought that brown suede Bass tools with rubber wearers weren't exactly Braim's style. The listings, which are available in the SUA office, include the name of the initiating equipment, availability, equipment needed, approximate cost, maximum number of participants, experience necessary, deadline for arrival and time and place of departure. The individual who initiates the trip does not lead it. Mosiman said. Each participant is expected to lead himself and the other one time. These are not escorted by someone else rely on the participant to help in a cooperative fashion by doing his share of the original planning. The types of trips are mainly backpacking, climbing and boating and are available at various times throughout the year. You can originate at various locations in the West and Canada, he said. The advantage to the flexible system, said Hand, is that it offers room for experimenting with class structure. "I probably wouldn't have bought them on my own, but my wife talked me into it," Braun said. "Now I like them." Braun has had some instructors younger than he, but he thought this was to his advantage. "They realize that I have family ties and obligations that the average student does not have." Although the listing has been used elsewhere in previous years, this is the first year that it has been available in Lawrence. For a Friesen, Wichita senior, informer, former staffer, and the姑卧, Mossman said, and she was the only person who indicates an interest thus far. For the moment, Braun has discontinued work on his doctorate. He was not sure that he would attend any classes this fall, but he hoped to enroll in classes he future just for his enjoyment. organizing and decision making throughout the entire exercise There is no paid member of the group. The only expenses are those incurred by the group for preparation and equipment costs. Further information may be obtained at the SAU office in the U.K. Union. There are deadlines for registration for most trips. HE BELIEVED that students today were under so much pressure that they had few opportunities to explain the education they were getting. Dorothy L. Callahan's reasons for attending KU this summer are common to those of many others. She is a teacher and is also an educator to school periodically to keep her state teaching certificate. Outdoor Trips List Is Available at SUA Callahan, who provides the only support for her two children, explained her reasons in different terms. "I'm here for survival," she said. She has worked since she was 14 years old, and has supported her education. She graduated from high school she dropped out of high school during her senior Wilderness trips at minimum expense is the aim of a cooperative venture of various colleges and universities in the western states and Canada, such as Muskogee, Mosiman, SUA travel advisor Alcohol and tobacco will be among the drugs considered, as well as alcohol, "hard" drugs and marjuana. The seminar will attempt to eliminate some of the confusion associated with drug controversy on marijuana. AFTER THE SERVICE, Callahan went to college on the GI Bill of Rights to become an English teacher. She discovered after a few years of teaching that she had been taught on the high school level, so she returned to school and received her master's degree in English. The various schools have recently completed a listing of "Coperative Wilderness Ad- dventure" and "Outdoor Program" of the University of Oregon, Eugene, has acted as coordinator in planning trips to different wilderness trips, Mosiman said. The schools act only as clearing houses to put individuals in touch with each other. The basic format for the program starts with a four-day course in the basic background and abuse of drugs by the School of Pharmacy, according to Carr. The School of Education will then teach students how to develop psychological and sociological aspects involved in drug abuse. "When my students are having a hard time, I tell them that it wasn't easy for me, either. I learned early that no one was going to take care of me but me. I knew that I'd have to be the one to get it!" Dorothy thought that her experiences had helped her to be a better teacher. Clayton a Loyd Jr. is at KU to begin his studies for a Master's degree in journalism. HIS REASONS for wanting the degree are because his fellow workers have master's degrees, because he will get an increase in because it will help to organize and refresh his knowledge. INCREASING ALCOHOLISM certainly makes alcohol the most abused of drugs," said Carr. Even though he had previously taken a course in law of communications, the law had not been so well said he needed the course. brain Loyd now works as assistant director of the KFC for the Association. His employers have given him full salary and benefits Carr said that "recent figures of the Gallup Poll showing over half of the youth have tried drugs have no meaning." At 19, she decided to join the Women's Air Force, in which she served for three years. Loyd's wife has given him a lot of encouragement, but his sixth grade son can't understand why he doesn't learn to such an obligerly task, year because she had enough credits to graduate and because she hated school. Such reports lead to the assumption by many that over half of the youth are confirmed Approximately 150 people from 50 communities are expected to attend the two-week Drug Abuse Workshop offered by the Schools Partnership which begins today, according to Earl Carr, assistant professor of Education. The Governor's Commission on Criminal Abuse funds the program through the Carnegie curriculum, headed by Carl Haney. Drug Workshop Begins Chancellor E. Laurence Calmers Jr. and chancellor Chancellor Stephen B. program of the 1972 annual meeting of the National Association of College University Business Officers which will be held July 9-11 at Drug Abuse Workshop 8 a.m., Kansas Union Forum Room. Teams of three people, including a teacher, a high school student and a civic leader or other community minded person, participate in the seminar to attend the seminar. In addition to the teams from the selected communities, other people interested in the seminar may assist at their own expense, Carr said. Chalmers will speak on formula budgeting and Nitcher, the head of the University's Business Department, at a panel on complex institutions. Campus Bulletin Iron Forum Room Summer Orientation: 1:30 p.m., Woodruf Auditorium During June, when you purchase any dinner item you will get the second dinner for $ \frac{1}{2} $ price. All you do is present this coupon. Sambo's JUNE SPECIAL Summer Orientation-Dean of Women: 2.30 n.m. Blie Flight Room Buy one dinner, second purchase of same item 1/2 price o. ederason 3:30 p.m. Rig High Room Business 3:30 p.m. Jahyawk Room Parkway 3:30 p.m. Room 500 Journalism 3:30 p.m. Council Room Journalism 3:30 p.m. Council Room Social Welfare: 3:30 p.m., Pine Room Journalism: 3:30 p.m., Councell Room. Law Students: 7 p.m., Kansas Room. COUPON drug abusers, he said. Accordingly, the workshop will discuss some of the many myths surrounding drugs. COUPON A featured speaker will be Dr. William McKenelley from the University of Kansas Medical Center, who also includes social welfare workers and teachers who have survived an earthquake technique in working with their students. The workshop will be held through June 30, approximately seven hours daily. Graduate students receive by those attending who already have a baccalaureate degree. Others in attendance will be considered auditors. Class attendance may be housed in Ellsworth Hall. THE PROGRAM IS aimed at those people who have good rapport with young people. The goal is to provide for children a person close to them with whom they can communicate information when they are considering being involved in some activity. A FUNNY KIND OF LOVE STORY! COLUMBIA PICTURES and RAYTIME Pictures To Find a Man GP THE FILM COMEDY MATERIAL, UNIT 1400 MAYS BANK, CINEMAS AND HOTELS Varsity PETER KORBERTS ToFind a Man Varsity POLICE DEPT. adults $1.50 shows 3:00, 7:30, 9:30 wilite Sat. Sun. 5:00 Granada TELAURE...Telephone VI 3-5782 Johnny Got His Gun Shows: 2:30, 7:35, 9:30 CLINT EASTWOOD "THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN" Arthur Hill Kate Reid "RED SAY MORNING" Richard Thomas Boxoffice opens 8:00 worn, as long it was clean. When it comes time for him to readjust, to the establishment of a new business, mind getting into a suit and tie but he will, with some regret, Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on highway 60 Hillcrest ve 7:40 & 9:45 George Peppard Michael Sarrazin Christine Beljord only if you like gripping suspense and surprise endings. 15 18 THERE WAS SOME ap- prehension at first, admitted Loyd, about coming back to school again. ture as school "Everyone has been great about helping me," said Loyd. 25 words or fewer: $1.00 The people in the Journalism School's photo lab have taken the time to show him around and help him out, he said. Accommodations, goods, services ad employment advertised in the inventory Dlayty Kauan are offered and are available in regard to clot, creed, or regard to 27 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $0.01 Western Cv. Notes-New On Sale There are two ways of looking at it 1. If you use them, you're at the end. Loyd appreciated the casual dress worn by students, and didn't mind if clothing was too FOR SALE WANT ADS WORK WONDER Either at a disadvantage or enthusiasm, the authors of Western Civilization" Campus Madhouse 411, West 14th 7-27 Michigan St. Bar-B-Qe, 315 Mich, St. Outdoor St. Bar-B-Qe, Large St. Outdoor St. Bar-B-Qe, Large $19.50 Skip to go $26.00 Skip to $19.50 Skip to go $26.00 Skip to $19.50 Skip to go $26.00 Skip to $19.50 Chicken-ile $18.50 Chicken-ile $18.50 $19.50 Beef Brisket Sand-$8.00 $19.50 Beef Brisket Sand-$8.00 3010 Class Size/Turns 7:27 you be at an advantage If you don't. "The Groundstar Conspiracy" North Side Country Shop, 70 N. Zena Audrey, used furniture, and jobs of other items. 9-9-7 days a week. 862- 319. Herb Alchenbach. Sell chicket. 1871. Kawasaki street carmen in excellent condition with 1000 miles. Call 843-2817-862-4444 ank for Dick New shipment of India prints just in at the RODGE PODCK, 15th W 29th 6-10 For Sale -1948 Norton Commande- sor 750 cc Excellent condition. Must sell. 843-9690 or Ottawa, Kansas C-3-2481 after six For sale. 15 by 7 custom slothed chrome reverse wheelsets with G60 by 15 Firebreath wide oval Excellent Call: Gary G89; 34-9165 - 6-22 STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can buy your favorite TV set at a COST plus 10 at RAY AUDIO. Only One Store Discount House in Boston, MA. Free tea, coffee and Consulting services. Bokomoko.com/bokomoko.com $1.00 Bokomoko.com/bokomoko.com Summer jackets. Temporary. Attendance. Summer jackets. Attendance. Summer jackets 10-20. 5-20. Summer jackets. Bokomoko.com Used Cash. For sale: Tickets to Rolling Stones. Right in front 11th row 842-6623 6,21 1969 VW deluxe bus. 7 passenger 100% warranty. $395 JAHWAK VW 2522 lkw. 843-220-6-22 6-22 For sale: 250 Sunaki X6 Scramble in good condition, "OID's" Trump- tet 8 years old in good condition B43-0036 6-28 1969 Chevy Nova. 6 cylinder, auto-matic power steering, new tires, excellent condition. JAYHAWY VW 2522 Iowa. 843-2200. 6-23 TECHNICOLOR "PANAVISION" PG 2 Eve 7:30 & 9:20 ""Ends Time." FOR RENT Just a person who protects children and other living things BILLY JACK GF "Ends Tues." stillerals Adult 10.95 Child 7.5 Adult 1.59 Hillcrest CHIC 75 COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Available now. 1 and 2 bed apartments. AC pool and laundry. Bathroom. Apt. 5-1, Bpt. 8-13 or Bpt. 8221 Sleeping rooms furnished, with, or without kitchen privileges, for males, off street, patios, borders KU and near town. No pets. Phone 6-872- Apartments furnished, some air-cou- ditioned, large enough for two or more, burders KU and near town, no parking on campus. 6-27 843-576-7 For rent for summer. A.C. furnished apt. in private home. Walk to campus. Nice, but reasonable. Utilities: Bath. 843-631. 10 West 19 Territory. KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES three days 15 words or fewer $1.00 each additional word .02 Deadline 1:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Available now. 2 mr. efficiency equip- fied, furnished, private entrance, bids: 2 books from campus, $55. Bids: 4 per pet, boy, girl, furnished, $43,750 6-19 Attractive and comfortable rooms for students, utilities paid, share kitchen, no pets. Call 842-7080. 6-19 Rooms & Apts. for students: All close to campus. 1216 Louisiana. 843-1601 & 841-3323 Summer and Fall rentals. Furnished to 1-4 bedrooms. amt From $65. Rooms with kitchen privileges 97-125. Utilities paid. Wear- 843-507-698 CAMPUS AFAPMENT LIVING with Sage. Apt. 4, includes. A.C. two bedrooms and one bathroom and two bedrooms furnished and 1123 Bedroom. 833-2116 Apartment for rent. AC—angle bedroom. Available now. 19 W. 10th. Call Henry after 6 p.m. at 842-9153 Sandals handcrafted to your person- alized taste at HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 6-19 Un-furnished and no trips. Help unfurnished your home for travel or more. No appointments necessary. Have a private residential Indian Hunk reception room, parking. $15 per mo. $25 per mo. NOTICE One and two bedrooms apartment, turned and infurnished at Ridgeline, 24th & Gushul. Summer rates for Fall. Phone 815-745-1116 Notice Girl's summer earrings at the Hodge Podge 15 W.9th. 6-19 ABRAXAS LEATHER — clothes, parsels, belts, hats, backpacks. 17 W 9ft. 6-21 ENGLISH TEACHER will do typing and tutoring M.A. in English. 7 years college experience. Will teach language and illustrations. 62-1982 62-1982 FREE- 4 kittens, 7 weeks old, box trained 1 pure stamalee, see at 519 Ohio St. 842-3745 6-26 WANTED Chaulleur water 15t ski boat rental and lemmas 135 ihp 16t ski boat Call 841-2576 for details. 7-10 ROOMMATE WANTED to share half of 5 room house until fall $33.35 per month plus utilities. Call Don at 843-2097 or 843-7629 after 6 p.m. 6-11 Want to take turns driving from Topeka to Lawrence. 8-5 Monday-Friday. Call Clay Loyd, 357-1619. Topeka 6-28 Two guys to share large house for the summer. Furnished, electric dishwasher, five-minute walk to campus and all utilities paid.驾车 842-668-604 6-26 YAMAH ERN'S CYCLE SALES - WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 734 North 2nd 716 North 2nd Competition Sports Cars Inc 2300 W. 29th Terr. Worcester, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 CSC TOYOTA TOYOKU 3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59) $70.00 Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 Wanted roommate to share apartment or house for fall Call Ron at 842: 6681. 6-21 Over 200 Fabrics and Patterns Wool, Polyester, and Other Wool, Polyester, Knits and Many More SATISFACTION GUARANTEED FOR Measurement Imgement For Measurement Imgement RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843.8499 TYPING WHY RENT? TEACHERS WANTED: Contact Southwest Teachers Agency Box 4237 Albuquerque, N.M. 847106 Our 280th Classroom and a memorial NAT A Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation Electric typewriter prompt, accurate Phone 843-2821. Mains: 6/21 Phone 843-2821 1 Pair Matching Slacks $70.00 HELP WANTED UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Experienced in typing these diss., briefings, term papers, other typed types of documents. Specialty type Accuracy and prompt response. Req's Computer Science or related Phone # 423-5676 Mrs. Wright Experienced typist for your Theses. Dissertations, misc. work. Call: Mrs. Troxel, 2409 Ridge Court. 842-1440; tf LOST Threes, term papers typed accurately, promptly IBM. Selective eltype type reasonable for use in KNIPREASONABLE RATES. Klonga Da 842-7097. 842-5605 Webster's Mobile Homes MISCELLANEOUS fie-downs—Skirting—Parts SUMMER PACKAGE SPECIAL 1 Knit Suit Specialized instruction in Classic and Flamenco concert guitar for beginners, including advanced techniques, progressive, selected arrangements, interpretation and artistry of playing. BRANDYWINE CUSTOM TAILORS Dealer Your Complete Service Dealer Sales Manager~For smart young students with excellent opportunity for one, who will be ready to gain valuable ability and many other abilities. Mme Dauchie, 845-100, Village B43 REWARD for ring to 18 silver band- made ring with initial TSL. Lost during enrolment. It means a lot to tickle it. Please visit https: lckit@824-7671. Pipes, papers, and all smoking accessories are available at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 6-19 Mens Sport Coats— $40 Mens Knit Suits— $60 Mens Slacks— $18 TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN **CARRIER OPPORTUNITY** Immensely, at opening for Business Travel work to wards an excellent management position and 2 days a week. Send a resume or cv to Leafwear, 9 pm, weekdays at Leafwear Westport, Leafwear North, Kansas. No Phone only. TONY'S Hedlows—Sailing—Parts Ample Park Spaces Available 3409 W. 6th 842-7700 Permanent Location in LAWRENCE Custom Tailored-Custom Styled 500 E.23rd 09 W. 6th 842-7700 Just West of the Drive In Theatre Lost: Tortoise framed glasses, Photogrey lenses. Area Summerfield to Union. If found call 843-8782. Revard 6-21 FIAT 842-0444 OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE • O TO 60 MPH -13.5 • RECLINING FRONT SEAT • UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL LOVE THAT DATSUN RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842-2323 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming grilles. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily # 9 to 10, Sat. till noon. DISCOUNT The Stereo Store 003 0000 PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE UDIOTRONICS 928 Moass. 6 Monday, June 19, 1972 University Summer Kansan JAMES HOWELL Workers Listen to the Heart of the Organ Craftsmen build organ at Reuters Organ Co. of Lawrence REUTERS IS THE ONLY major builder west of the Mississippi. Though their business largely comes from the Midwest, they have shipped organs all over the United States. "We build everything right here," he said, rather than buying parts from distributors and assembling them. By CONNIE PARISH Kancan Staff Welter Reuter Organ Co. is one of the eight major buildings of pipe organs that actually fabricate from scratch, Frank said. "We have organs in every state Mass production will never be a key word for factories producing custom-built pipe organs—including the Reuter Organ Co. of Organs Are Vital in City Production methods have changed little since the 13th and 14 centuries, and nearly every machine is based on according to Herman Frank, director of public relations and advertising at Reuter Organ Co. in Stuttgart, where he produced in the same sense that automobiles are, he said, since practically two no organs are constructed to last from 50 to 70 years. Editor's Note: This is the third in a series on local business and industry. A small corporation, its stock is mainly held by the family or by people in the corporation. Presently the firm employs 80 persons, including the secretarial engineers, artists and 45 factories. Rail transportation had been a problem in Trenton, so Reuter Organ Co. moved to Lawrence in 1936. He was joined by Albert Sabol and H. T. Jezey. Albert Sabol and H. T. Jezey. Frank explained that in pipe organs the tone was produced by pipes rather than electronic calls. Pipes are consists of from one to many sets of pipes sounded by compressed air played by means of keyboards. THE COMPANY was originally founded in Trenton, Il., in 1917. Three years later the firm will build the Masonic宫 in Lawrence. The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce was eager to promote new businesses in the city, and urged the firm to relocate in Lawrence. "It's impossible to say how many organs it is, since the number of ranks varies ac-1000 size of the organ." Frank said. An average size organ consists of 25 ranks of pipes, Frank said, but the size varies greatly. The organ was contracted by a Methodist Church in Ft. Worth, Tex., consisting of 110 ranks of pipes. Another large organ was constructed in Boston composed of 190 ranks. Each rank costs approximately £1,000, so the cost of an average worker is about $25.00 of an organ is labor, Frank said, since everything is made by EACH ORGAN is contracted and built to the specifications of the buyer. Churches constitute 80 per cent of their customers, while schools and an occasion individual comprise the rest. Space, Longer Hours Bring Microfilms Collection Move Business is conducted directly through their lawrence office and any other representatives throughout the firm's sell on a commission basis. and quality, one pipe for each key. Organs are usually contracted from twelve to fourteen months in advance, he explained, though actual construction time for an organ is often much shorter. Factory workers usually work on three or four organs at a time. They have also sold organs in Canada and Hawaii. The type of organ that is contracted depends on the skill of the person, said money available, Frank said, customer will send a description of the floor plans, for example, of the building. If the customer it has to work with. On the basis "We produce approximately 1,000 ranks of pipes a year," Frank said. The need for more space and longer hours are two of the reasons for the relocation of the microforms collection that is housed in the Library, according to Judy Castle, library assistant. The biggest section of the microform collection is on education and space for additions averages 36 feet per year. in the continental United States except Nevada," Frank said. Increasing numbers of materials are filling the microforms collection. Most newspapers are on film because most publications long and is bulky, according to David Heron, director of libraries. of this, artists prepare sketches of what the completed product will look like. NEW HOURS have been established for the microform collection to eliminate a previous restriction with the existing main library hours. Microform section hours are 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday. 9 a.m. to noon Saturday. This sketcher plus the estimated coat is sent to the theater. Once a cotton t-shirt is prepared, the tender blue prints of the organ are prepared and actual construction begins. The reading room, which requires relative darkness to read microforms, and the shelving room, which requires lighting. The materials, have been moved to the former smoking room, a larger room with a partition between the two areas. More electrical outlets are available in the Pay Simms, student assistant. The relocation of the materials started May 30. The lack of sufficient amount of transporting materials from them in transferring the materials. THE FACTORY is divided into four departments, according to Frank. In the console department, the wooden console or key desk is constructed. Another department contains windchests, which contain theanium controlled by the keys for causing individual pipes to sound. By Yvonne Chatman Kansan Staff Writer What is now the smoking room in the basement of Watson will be transformed to accommodate the collection and reading machines. The pipe shop constructs various sets of metal and wooden tree and reed pipes. These differ in size, shape and color according to their shape, size and material. In the voicing department, tuning takes place. The pipes are often made of all of whom are required to have a degree in organ, Frank said. Several production problems have been explained. All the wood must be klined and carefully checked for stability. The factory also uses own metal for pipes, and imprints in the metal must be avoided. Tuesday's completion of the moving re-assembling and stocking of shelves which housed a collection of books. Times from 1821 to 1833, ended the hardest part of the move, the building. Schwab, student assistant. anthropology, the human relations area files encompass any anthropological culture studied. Through the placement of numbers on a world map, it is possible to understand the world and study its culture. A RANK IS a series or set of pipes all of the same construction WEIGHING APPROXI- mately 10 lbs., the volumes are 24% by 1/4 in perimeter, two inches thick, and number 640. "Pricing is also a problem from the sales standpoint," Frank added. Yet to be moved are both the foreign and domestic periodicals, along with the total collection of magazines and literary publications. Castle, Schawb, three persons from circulation, and one or two persons from security and delivery are working to complete the Of special interest are the collections of underground newspapers, black newspapers, newspapers, and human relations area files. INFORMATION from 1965 to 1970 may be found in the 68-creel collection of underground newspapers in the collection, the newspapers originate from all over the world. Both large and small towns are in the collection including KU's ground newspaper, the Vortex. English collections are exhausting enough to contain all the books printed in England from 1475 to 1700, "Time," "Sports Illustrated" and dissertations on order, are also available. Dating from the late 19th century to the early 20th century, the black newspaper collection of the journals most from the 50 states. African colonization of Brazil makes Great Britain, Raly and Portugal are just a few of the subjects that are available for study in the field. Other topics available are African Missionary Societies Personal Narratives, Discovery and Exploration in Africa to 6D discovery and Exploration in Africa to 18D discovery and Exploration in Africa and Islam in Africa. The contract including the final cost is signed nearly a year before the product is built and delivered. In the meantime, the labor may go up, but the contracted price remains the same. GEORGE GRIFffen, regional lists the materials for the underground newspaper, the black newspaper and black newspaper. Handled by the department of ALEXANDRA GONZALEZ TIMOTHY DURAN Tim Johnson Goal of Film-Making Student Is to Become Feather-Brained By SHARRON BALLARD Kansan Staff Writer Hallucinations? No, just the process that Johnson. graduate "I hear the music and then see pictures in my head," Tim Johnson said. Lawrence High Has Work-Study radio-television-film student, uses to set his creative powers to work. In addition to the vocational training, the student takes the courses necessary to graduate from high school. Students one slight twist. Classes like By PAT RUPERT TRADES stands for Training and Related Academic Design for Economic Security. The program is offered through the public school system at no charge. Mrs. Mishra is the director of the program. The TRADES Program is a sequence of study offered to students at Lawrence High School and with the required classes needed to graduate with a diploma from Lawrence High School and also provide him with a vocational or time job in his area of interest. A program unique to Kansas, TRADES has been in existence at Lawrence High School for 2 years. Approximately 70 students participate yearly. They come from TRADES Program by choice. The earliest a student may enroll in TRADES is at the sophomore level. He may continue in the program for three years. TO BE ADMITTED into the program, the student must be in need of financial assistance to pay for their tuition. His name is referred to the TRADES staff by his teachers and counselors. A conference is held with the student's parents and teachers for TRADES is then evaluated. English and history are taught with a vocational emphasis. There is also an emphasis on oral and written communication. For example, students taking a course in government will read the newspaper aloud rather than study from a text book. Jehle said this program and gained greatly in reading and vocabulary. BECAUSE OF THE LACK of space at the high school for the equipment needed by TRADES, the vocational classes were moved to the First Southern Church at 1140 W. 19th St. Ter In food service the students prepare lunch for the TRADES student body. They learn on the job how to serve food, the church and operate on their own budget. Lunches cost 40 cents and food is bought at a local store. The cafeteria is self-sufficient. The students also assume roles in cost control and management and rotate in these jobs weekly. Food preparation is a new occupation opening up especially in industrial areas. Three major vocational areas are covered by TRADES. food service nursing aide and carer, hospitality course may be taken as an elective. Students to go to school for three hours in the morning and the evening; students placed in part-time jobs after nine weeks of school. The program is set up with Lawrence and the TRADES staff co-ordinator The money for the program comes from the federal government Monetary Fund, which is then used to each school. The program is under Students work with grammar school children. They tutor, grade papers, run dumbo machines, play computer games. In the program, the student usually works about two hours a day and receives $1.60 a day for his service. PRIDE INC. is the carpentry area of the program (PRIDE was hired by Lawrence area whose purpose was to buy a house for the carpentry team to remodel. The team built Barker streets. Students are remodeling it on a profit-sharing plan, plumbing, wiring and roofing. Those not working on the house have jobs on the market where they can work. Nursing aide is the oldest area in the TRADES Program. It is a must for nursing students to nurse. Students learn basics in geriatrics, pediatrics, obstetrics, and also study Theory of Kinesiology outside experience at Lawrence Hospital and Valleyview Home. Students work up eight hours a day JEHLE SAID that the TRADES Program has had its past, and will have one by the time a student must be class, and not as many students are able to participate in the training of the lack of space and money. "Ilisten to a song over and over, and gradually. I see what goes with the music," Johnson explained. Student's reasons for entering the program are varied. Some selected TRADES because they were more eager than those at the high school, some couldn't get along in the atmosphere at Lawrence High School and others were not as enthusiastic. Whatever their reasons for selecting TRADES, they appeared happy with the TRADES program, one they were in it. Others didn't. Students were still on the job. BECAUSE OF ITS success during the school year and due to pressure from the state department, which wanted students to become acquainted with different subjects. THE TRADES program is being tried for the first time this summer. It is called The Career Explorer Work-Study Program and gives the student the opportunity to work in the job. These fields include electronics, office and business occupations, construction and carpentry, mechanics and repair, commercial food service industries, economics and data processing the direct supervision of the state. The student may pick four of these areas and concentrate on each for two weeks. He learns no job skill but goes on field trips, meets people that work in these areas, goes to the area in the area, learns where jobs are and what education is needed to hold these jobs. "I plan to film it as a semi- directed movie," she commercial that depicts the long- haired girl with the big amuse- ble smile. "And then there's that there is no plot. It will look like something is going to happen—a big build up—yet now we're moving on." 'YOUR FATHER'S EMPHASIS' the rumping score that sounds like the background to a gum commercial on television, Johnson He likes to work with this free form, as in the Manicin film, yet he is more interested in documentaries. Johnson's master's thesis in radio journalism for the job Corpse. He is now about another film for that agency. His first film for the Job Corps took him to Utah. At this Job Corps boy's camp, Johnson filmed, recorded conversations viewed boys and staff members training in action. THIS FILM, according to Johnson, was basically for Kansas groups that come into contact with the students, refer them to the training center. Johnson is currently editing his second Job Corps film which is presented at their parents in Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa and Missouri. "I used the same basic idea as in the Utah camp, but shot the film at the woman's center in Excelsior Springs, Mo., " Johnson said. Johnson's interest in filmmaking was first realized when he was teaching English at Kent State University. **AT THE ATT ANN ARBOR Film Festival** I saw several remarkable films and the film that could be done with the camera. he said, From this introduction into the world of cinematography, Johnson has made several contributions. . . For Patinkin . . . PETER FERRARO As far as his future is concerned, Johnson was certain that he wanted to continue his filmmaking ventures. As a part of a class assignment, he shot a nine-minute film of the traffic-control system on campus. IN A FREE FORM, Johnson has done films for the Free School in Lawrence. By using this approach, the freedom of movement and awareness taught by the instructors. This film has been used as a public relations tool in interviews throughout the state. Johnson said Other Johnson-made films include a line-by-line presentation to accompany the song, "I Wonder Why" and a scene on a playground. A seventeen-year-old girl romped and played on the equipment. By using various camera angles and ledges, she produced a different type of film. "I wasn't trying to make a statement or create a plot; the film was just something pleasant to see." he said. "I would like to teach film- ing and also be able to make films. It is a fascinating field, and it will be to my life a work," he said. "I always wondered what they did all day. I followed one man through his routine. It was a diary-type documentary." "I found out that he had very few breaks in his eight-hour Patinkin, a chicago native, will be entering a four-year program at the Chicago department. The first three years will have 150 hours of training and in the fourth year he will join an acting company affiliated with the school and his work will begin. Mandy Patkin, star of 7-Up commercials and KU student for the past two years, will not be the one to win. Students begin instead an intensive course of study in the drama department at the university Conservatory in Manhattan. The Julland school is very selective. From about 800 applicants, they choose 25 students from the United States and Europe. "I found that I wanted to make a 'total commitment to theater. I wanted to be a teacher. I needed an education. I needed a professional conservatory,' said Betty Lou and KU Lose Uncola King Patinkin thought that the KU theater department was one of Beyond the commercial, in which he appears as the ghost of Mr. Brown, a teenager from the 50s, Patina is included major roles in many KU theater productions. Some of her roles are "Indians," "Lysistrata," "Fiddler on the Roof," "Roserena" and "western are dead," and "Hamlet." "They (instructors in the school of theater) are doing all they can and still working within the system," said Patkinin. He believed, however, that graduation from a liberal arts college was not enough to toward an active career. He said that even if he had graduated from such a program, he would be warranted to enroll in a conservatory. the finest departments he had seen within a liberal arts program. "I thought that KU was good for me, I just realized it wasn't the right thing for me," said Patinkin. Kansan Photos by Hank Young NO MOTO ... Things have changed . . . Z PLEASANT THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Rogers Disputes Arms Restrictions The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 82nd Year, No.10 See Page 2 Tuesday, June 20, 1972 Judge Strikes Down Rule for Delegations WASHINGTON (AP)—State delegations to the Democratic National Convention do not have to be proportioned by race, sex or race. The U.S. Court district judge ruled Monday. Neither individual delegates, groups or slates of delegates shall be barred because of race, age or sex of individual delegates, groups or slates, said judge George L. Hart Jr. He ruled that persons who formed a slate on the floor, the right to put anybody on it they were. Democratic officials immediately began appeal procedures. It was not known how the ruling would affect the party's control which opens July 10 in Miami Beach, Fla. The ruling came on a suit filed by Chicago Alderman Thomas E. Keane, one of 59 uncommitted Illinois delegates to the Chicago Mayor Richard J Daley. A Chicago group, headed by civil-rights activist Jesse L. Jackson, challenged the 59-member uncommitted delegation on grounds it did not have the proper tools to conduct the charged the party officials picking the delegation were elected before Jan. 1. Hart struck down two party reform rules requiring delegations to be fairly proportioned and also ruled against a third guideline which required all party officials choosing delegations to be elected in the year of the convention. Under Hart's order, Democrats may require state policies to "take affirmative action" to increase participation in the political process by blacks, women and minorities, specifically ruled out any challenge to a delegation on the basis of race, sex or age. Party guidelines, adopted since the 1968 convention, had required that convention delegates include blacks, women and young people in 'in reasonable relationship Tass Says Soviet Aid To North to Continue MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet government dampened rising Vietnam peace hopes Monday, reaffirming its hard line by demanding that the United States stop military action against North Vietnamese ports and return to the Paris peace talks. A report on Moscow radio annu- ncial news agency Tass said the Soviet There are at least 54 different challenges to convention delegates affecting 25 states. According to the Democratic National Committee, of the 2,512 delegates already selected, 43 per cent or 1,082 are under challenge. ity Yawn to the group's presence in the state population." Most of the challenges are based on delegations not having enough women. Many of the others involve blacks or young people. Union would continue to give North Vietnam "all necessary aid." President Nikolai Y. Podgorny triggered renewed peace hopes Sunday by saying the Paris talks would resume soon and that the US would be willing to take a role for desecration of the Vietnamese war." MONDAY'S radio report was the first disclosure to the Soviet people that Podgorny had gone to Hanoi. The previous silence perhaps indicated Moscow's desire to keep Russian diplomatic efforts on Vietnam in low key. Podgorny spoke during a stopover in Calcutta after four days of talks in Hanoi. He conferred with Xuan Thuy, North Vietnam's chief negotiator in Paris. A flurry of diplomatic activity preceded the weekend optimism. President Nixon's advisor, Henry A. Kissinger, was heading for Peking. North Vietnam's representative, Norbert talks with Kissinger, Le DuC, returned to Haitian to meet Podgorny. New Degree Is Approved New restrictions were placed on Kansas pawnbrokers under a bill recently passed by the state legislature. A local pawn-brokers' reaction is featured in a story on page 5. A proposal for a Bachelor of General Studies degree has been approved by members of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Assembly for recommendation to Chancellor Chalmers and the Board of Regents. [Image of a woman walking into a building] Since the recommendation will not come before the Chancellor or the Board of Regents until the fall semester, Jerry Lewis, dean of Centennial College, said that even if the degree was approved, it would not become effective before the fall of 1973. In an mail ballot, 273 voted for and 189 were against it. Ballots on the receiving end werewegged. If the degree is approved, said Lewis, a year would be needed to complete plans. Lewis did not foresee, any financial difficulty in implementing the program, since he was unable to implement it. He said that the degree program would be of no additional cost to the state or the city. But if the degree is approved, Lewis said that advising policies in the College would have to be strengthened. A special subcommittee of the Educational Policies and Procedures Committee in the College Assembly has already been given the task of finalizing advising procedures in the College and recommending improvements. Advising must be strengthened, Lewis said, because the requirements of the new degree are minimal. A student will have many more questions, he said. 一 Kansas Photo by RAY TOTTEN Dog Days at KU A dog found the heat Monday too much Omega fountain at the west end of to endure and took a cool dip in the Chl Javahawk Blvd. Parking Fee Will Remain Unchanged Student residence parking and parking in University of Kansas will cost £25. Student residence parking is also available. Parking permit prices will not be increased this fall despite earlier projections for increases, Chancellor E. L. Laurence Chalmers Jr., said Monday. Chalmers said that the only real change proposed in the parking pattern for this fall was the use of color zoning, which allows companies to park their full to park in another lot of the same color. This modification is all that remains of the controversial proposal made by the Parking and Traffic Board at the University of Kansas last fall. The original proposal also proposed parking meters at certain campus areas and the tran- porting facility of Jayhawk Blvd. and Memorial Drive into one-way thoroughfares. The diluted proposal was developed at a meeting called last week by Chalmers, and attended by the University Senate Executive Committee, the executive board of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors and others concerned with changes in traffic and parking patterns at KU. Chalmers also mentioned that a committee to investigate safety conditions on the campus had recommended that ad hoc investigators work on the area of carcass injuries to work on the area of carcass injuries. Those ideas were dropped, however, after they generate the opposition from a higher point of bearer. Said Chalmers: "They encourage us to build into our budget requests for additional positions related to campus safety but the question is whether to pull positions from other activities to make this possible." Honeycutt Gets Life Term By MARY PITMAN Kansan Staff Writer "I still prefer the death sentence," Drury Honeycutt said moments before Douglas County District Judge Frank Gary sentenced him to life imprisonment and a fine of $10,000 for slaying of his 11-year-old cousin and Ivy Marie Honeycutt, last October. Kay Joins GOP Governor's Race Bv BOB FULKERSON Kansan Staff Writer State Rep. Morris Kay, Lawrence Republican, announced his candidacy for the GOF gubernatorial nomination Monday at the Downtown Dammann Inn in Topeka. The 38-year-old House majority floor层 he planned to run "a positive campa- gism." "Kansas people want strong, courageous leadership," he said. "This is why today I am announcing my candidacy for Governor." Wearing a red, white, and blue tie, Kay entered the press conference to the sound of "Ruffles and Flourishes" and the applause of about 100 supporters. Kay spoke of two factors that helped him make the decision to run. Kay said he had instructed his campaign staff to re an aggressive and high level campaign. "Men and women from virtually all of our 105 counties tell me it's time for a change," he said, in announcing for the county to take this encouragement and thus need." His second reason for entering the race, he said, centered on a survey conducted by Civic Service Inc., a St. Louis firm. Accessibility questions were stuff at the press conference, the survey indicated in interviews with $30 Kansas voters "who vote in a Republican Primary, nearly two-thirds were uneducated" and of a Republican nominee for Governor." About the results of the survey, Kay said it indicated to him that the candidates "who were announced did not turn the people on." Kay said he planned to file before today's noon deadline. Kay said he waited to file because he wanted to give the people what they wanted and not add the "people do not want" word. After his prepared statement, Kay answered questions. He revealed that he had authorized the survey and that it had distributed to the publicans, Democrats and Independents. After the press conference, Kay said he was not prepared to support any candidate in particular for the representative spot he will be vacating. When asked what kind of campaign he would wage, Kay repelled, "I plan to run a team." Kay is the fourth Republican to announce his candidacy for governor. Others who have already filed are former Gov. John Anderson, Deslote; LG. Reynolds Shultz, Lawrence; and former State Farm Bureau president Ray Frisbie, Manhattan. Gov. Robert Docking filed Monday in his bid for a fourth term as governor, Druy HenryCruitty, 20-year-old resident of Haven, Kens., plumbed Friday's Friday to a new home. The Honeycutt girl disappeared Oct. 29 from her rural Lawrence home. Six days later, her body was recovered from a wooded area west of Kansas City, Kan. By switching his plea to guilty, Honeycutt waived his right to a jury trial. But before sentencing the defendant Monday, Judge Gray heard the testimony of two witnesses, including a psychologist from Topeka, to determine the severity of the penalty. THROUGHOUT the hearing Honeycunt sat slumped in his chair, sometimes leaning his head against the railing behind him. Kansas Bureau of Investigation agent James Woods and W. D. Davidson, a criminal investigator from Arkansas, both testified that Honeycutt had confessed to hitting the child but could not remember killing her. Davidson told the court that Honeycunt had confessed after being fully advised of DAVIDSON quoted Honeycott as saying that on the night of Oct. 29 he visited the home of his cousin Ivy Marie, hoping to learn the whereabouts of his wife Susie. Ivy Marie's mother, Mrs. William Honeycutt, testified that she had refused to Ivy Marie echoed her mother's refusal to tell Honeycutt the whereabouts of his wife. But Davidson told the court that on the basis of his interview with Honeycutt, it was learned that the little girl arranged with her cousin to show him where his wife lived. BUT WHEN Honeycutt picked up the child later that night, he told her that he wanted to kill his wife, Davidson related. Honeycutt told Davidson, his testimony continued, that the girl refused to show him where his wife was. Davidson told the court that Honeycunt had confessed to knocking the child unconscious but could not remember killing her. Coroner James G. Bridgers of Kansas City, Kan., testified that an autopsy evidence of sexual intercourse and fixed evidence of sexual intercourse and fixed the cause of death as strangulation. THE SOLE defense witness, Dr. James Nelson, psychologist from Topeka, told the court that his four hours of testing and interviewing the defendant had indicated that he might easily be "over the vague line where we divide neurosis from psychosis." In his closing statement, County Attorney Mike Elwell explained that if Honeycutt received a life sentence he would be eligible for parole in 15 years. Elwell asked the court to invoke the death penalty. He said that although the penalty would likely not result in death for the defendant, it was the only penalty that would ensure you receive a sentence of life imprisonment and the opportunity to commit another crime. Baby Boom, Specialization Ail Teaching Opportunities By DEANNA VANDERMADE Kansan Staff Writer the 1971-74 school year, of the 2,316 certified teachers from KU who applied through the Placement Bureau for the 1971-72 school year. Many persons were placed in teaching positions. Although the annual report for the 1971-72 school year will not be published until August, Lodhi Newcomb, assistant director of the program, will show that the problem had increased. Like many other occupational areas, education is feeling the effects of the Post World War II baby boom and over-specialization. In the last two years the University of Kansas's Educational Placement Bureau has experienced more difficulty than ever in placing its certified applicants in teaching positions. The difficulty in placing teachers is most blamed upon the sudden population shift. the bumper crop of babies was growing up, schools increased enrollment and expanded facilities, and the demand for teachers was great. Many future job holders looked toward a vocation in this field. NEWCOMB explained that many schools were having to cut back on the number of teachers who had decreased rapidly and funds were tight. At the same time, the number of teachers applying for jobs has reached an alarming level, particularly true of the elementary schools. BUT AS population leveled off the number of students decreased. Schools have fewer students, funds and positions just as the peak of post-World War children are being hurled into the job market. In the 1970-71 Annual Report, director of placement Harold Reger said, "Since the death of Mr. Reger in 2004, we have been very during 1970-71, candidates had fewer opportunities than previously and had to be quite aggressive to secure positions. In the past, students geographically were unable to secure teaching positions and resorted to seeking other kinds of employment. Some prospective teachers employed in non-profit organizations, and made applications until school began in August. Eighty certified teachers reported to the bureau that they were employed in non-office positions. Finding a job, could not relocate or had another job preference. The positions taken ranged from secretaries to cocktail servers from camp counselors to lab technicians. BUT THE BABY boom is not the only problem facing the prospective teacher. Part of the problem, Newcombs said, is that the students are also becoming too specialized. She said that concentration in a particular area reduced a teacher's chances of making good grades. There is an over-abundance of teachers on the elementary level as well as language arts teachers and social studies teachers on the secondary level. People in these fields have found competition for teaching positions, so they demand for reading teachers, speech therapists, physical science, industrial arts and math teachers. The increase in the number of teachers applying for jobs should be an asset to the teaching profession. It should cause teachers to be more concerned about their positions and therefore be more qualified. But some fear this will not happen. teacher with experience or a higher degree. WITH FEWER children in the schools to teach, there is also less money in school districts. Many districts are forced to hire teachers for these students and teacher before they hire the more qualified Regler say that a higher degree or specialization in education may be necessary. In the 1970-71 Annual Report, he said, "The undergraduate students who selected one of these fields and launched on a doctoral program found in 1971 that there were few vacancies and much competition. This may cause a switch in the philosophy prevalent a few years ago that all teachers would be required to have a master's degree to keep their jobs. "The demands for PhD graduates appear to be limited. From this report one can conclude that the number of graduates who are admitted should be carefully considered. It is also made it extremely difficult for the master's candidate and the PhD candidate just starting a dissertation to find employment." NEWCOMBA SAID that it did not seem likely that the over-abundance of teachers in Newcomba may take several years to strike a balance. The School of Education has discussed several ways of working out the best remedies are still in the talking stage. The School has discussed making stricter the requirements to obtain certification. One idea is initiating a new screening process. Some screening is done now, but it is mostly on the basis of grade point averages. Anyone making the grades and fulfilling all of the requirements will be evaluated in the future. In personal qualities, classroom rapport and professional attitudes will be examined more closely in an effort to get the best possible teachers applying for the limited number of jobs. 2 Tuesday, June 20, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Alioto Acquittal Ordered TACOMA, Wash. (AP)—A federal judge said Monday he would only a jury to acquit San Francisco Mayor Joe Ahloto and two former Washington state officials of charges they conspired to bribe public officials. U.S. District Court Judge Ray McNichols said that after reviewing the evidence presented in the five weeks of trial that he was convinced a jury considering such evidence would acquit the defendants. As the judge finished, codefendant John J. O'Connell, former Washington attorney general, jumped to his feet, tears in his eyes, a smile on his face, and raised his arm in a victory salute. Japan Looks to Atom KANAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Japan is looking to nuclear power in an effort to fight the carbon monoxide pollution plaguing the nation, Dr. Masaka Naito of Kyoto University said in a seminar Monday. Only 3 per cent of the power in Japan now is generated by nuclear power, he said, but within 15 to 20 years it will provide much more. Naito, Dr. Iori Hirai of Kyoto University and Masakatsu are national engineering department at Kyoto University. They took part in the seminar at Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City. Land-Grant College Hit WASHINGTON (AP) — The nation's 110-year-old land-grant college system was accused by a series of Senate witnesses Monday of placing farm technology ahead of farmers and consumers in a virtual selling platform. The colleges were founded in 1823 by a grant of federal lands and still receive much of their support from federal cash and loan assistance. Witnesses before the Senate's migratory labor subcommittee, led by Steven Svenson, DIII, blamed the colleges and their philosophy for mutilating them; they said she had gone wrong in American agriculture. Outlaw's House No Steal ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) —The Jesse James house is for sale. The price tag $53,000. Ray Miller, the owner, said that included only the house, not the land on which it stands at 807 South Belt Highway as a tourist attraction. The little four-room frame structure was at 1328 Lafayette street when Jesse was gunned down April 3, 1882, by Bob and Charlotte Ford, fellow outlaws. Military Justice Review Set WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court today agreed to settle a legal question that could clear the records of thousands of former servicemen. It concerns whether to give retractive effect to a 1969 ruling that military courts may try servicemen only for "service-connected" offenses. Otherwise, the court said, they are to be turned over to civilian authorities. Supreme Court Rules Wiretapping Of Suspected Subversives Illegal WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court Monday ruled unconstitutional wiretapping of a California doctor without judicial permission, and the Nixon administration moved to force such electronic surveillance. Within hours after the decision was handed down, Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst ordered the termination of electronic surveillance in domestic security cases which conflicted with the law. Future wireset in such investigations will be placed only in accordance with the decision, he said. But, Kleindienst added that the administration would work with the federal legislative standards for such surveillance. He said the court had a good case to file. Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., an administration appointee and a former unchecked surveillance power in a case involving a White Panther accused of dynaming a Central Intelligence Agency branch of Describing telephone taps and listening devices as "constitutionally sensitive" and not entirely welcome, the firm must ensure that a judge has approved in advance by a judge in order to safeguard privacy and security. in the wristwriting case. Powell said in the constitution required "a law that would ensure that the 1988 federal Safe Streets Act did not authorise eave-dropping." The administration contended exactly the opposite: that tapping and bugging against suspected subversives was permissible under both the Fourth Amendment and the 1968 law. by requiring a warrant before surveillance. The decision expressly leaves open the question of wiretapping without warrants against it. Similarly, the court left to another law itself which was declared unconstitutional recently by Federal Judge John Lord III of Philadelphia. Powell said the court did not reject these arguments lightly, "especially at a time of worldwide ferment and when children are more prevalent than in the less turbulent periods of our history." But, he said, the needs of citizens for privacy and free speech. WASHINGTON (AP) - James W. McCord Jr., a former CIA agent seized during a weekend break in North Carolina headquarters, was hired as a Republican security coordinator on the recommendation of a ranking Secret Service agent, sources said. The sources identified the GOP Official Caught Bugging Demo Office Ex-CIA Agent Agnes Smacks Florida; More Storms Possible The National Hurricane Center APALACHIOCILA. Fla. (AP)—Hurricane Agnes smokes the Florida Panhandle with 80-mile- an-hour winds, heavy rains and raging seas Monday, but its fury started to subside as it churned SAIGON (AP) - South Vietnamese marines battled tanker attackers in enemy-held Quang Tri Province in the far north morn day following a diplomatic order for a counteroffensive to rout the North Vietnamese from Saigon. At least 12 persons were left in the wreck in October's 1972 hurricane season, first storm. Forecasters said more deadly tornadoes or flash floods Five deaths, and injuries to more than 100 persons in Florida, were attributed to tornadoes. About two-thirds of those northward in the Gulf of Mexico. Saigon army troops also to join stiff resistance in a pash in the An Loc sector just north of this capital. But another unit in Miami downgraded Agnes to a tropical storm Monday evening when its winds dropped below 85 mph, and sustained winds were reported at 50 m.p.h. as the storm spent its energy in the Pahandie's pine滩 But forecasters said Agnes threatened to spawn more tornades to the east as it moved north-northeast at 15 m.p.h. made a breakthrough in the central highlands, pushing an armored column through to Konstu The U.S. Command announced demanded about 200 soldiers to defense equipment in North Vietna southern's pannahide in four Sheriff Lee Wilson of Brevard County said damage from tornadoes there would be more than $10 million. Wilson said 60 homes were damaged. About half of them were demolished. New Quang Tri Drive Launched Other American warplanes resumed strikes around Hanoi after a four-day layoff because of the Hanoi radio claimed that four U.S. planes had been shot down in North Vietnam Saturday and Sunday. It made no mention of the attack. visit there of President Nikolai V Podgorov of the Soviet Union. Thieu declared the start of a three-month campaign to retake areas lost to the North Vietnam War, and to expand southern sectors. But it seemed there was little Thieu's forces could continue with them were not trying already. The treaty requires a two-third Senate majority for ratification. The agreement on offensive weapons requires only a simply majority vote in each chamber. It does not require approval no later than Sept. 11. An enemy artillery barrage pump end to a northward thrust that tank-supported rangers were kicking off 10 miles behind An Loc. A soldier, an adviser was killed in the shelling and many rangers were wounded. WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of State William P. Rogers told senators Monday their rejection of new American laws that would wake of the U.S.-Soviet arm accord could lead the Soviets to believe no further arms-conflict agreements were necessary. "It is important at this time," Rogers said. "that we should not indicate to the Soviets that we will unilaterally undertake arms that will make Phase Two of the slim-impaction talks unnecessary." But Rogers said Soviet Com Weapons Rejection Argued by Rogers On Highway 13 north of Saigon heavy fighting was reported as South Vietnam troops tried to stop the attack forces blocking the road to besieged An Loc in two places. Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D Ark., called the Trident an army and told Rogers: "For you to come in and say you don't get the treat unless you give us the treat, unless not quite playing fair." Near that spot, known as "The Anthill," dug-in enemy have stymied Vietnamese advances for more than a month. Rogers pressed the argument under objections from a majority of the committee members that development of a new $1.8 billion construction project and advanced B1 bomber was inconsistent with the arms freeze. They argued that each team had its own merits apart from the accord. "This is no time for unilateral Senate Foreign Relations Committee as the administration began its testimony in support of Mr. Trump." Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania said he didn't know whether the vote could come that soon but said the governor would be better than during its session between the two national conventions. minist party leader Leonid I. Breshnev told U.S. officials the Soviet Union planned to continue the war under the accords, and Rogers contended it would be a mistake for the United States not to do so. On the central front, a convoy of 30 South Vietnamese tanks and armored personnel carriers pushed through to Kontum from the rear. The group stripped of road that substituted for the enemy-cut route from Pleiku. Senate Democrat Leader Mike Manfield of Montana said he hoped the Senate could vote on the treaty covering defensive兵 ments. The June 30 recess for the Democratic National Convention. Extended Aid for Jobless Allowed by House Panel WASHINGTON (AP) — The matter agreed Monday on a six month continuation of an unemployment PRICE agent as Al Wong, head of the Secret Service's Technical Security Division. Without congressional action, the program would expire June 30. It has provided, since 2014, additional unemployment compensation payments to long-term unemployed particularly high unemployment The bill tentatively approved for House consideration, subject to a formal vote Tuesday, would require employers to install employment insurance tax on employers from .5 to .58 of one per cent. The tax applies on the employee and employer. The increase would apply during the calendar year 1973 only. This financing method follows a recommendation by President George W. Bush to object to the use of general Treasury funds in the earlier years. Both Wong and an official spokesman for the Secret Service recommended that Kweng knew McCord or recommended him to the Republican Party to nominate President Nixon's campaign committee the Committee to Re-evaluate The Labor Department estimated that 300,000 to 400,000 persons would benefit from the program, with more than $120 million and $220 million. The extra benefits—above a maximum of 39 weeks permitted under previous law and Puerto Rico Rules in general, an adjusted unemployment rate of 6.5 per cent program in a particular state program in a particular state KU Federal Credit Union NOTICE New Summer Hours June 19 - August 18 9:30-12:30 Monday-Friday Mrs. Case 748-0830 after hours call Mrs. June Couch 864-4784 Charles Wright 864-4770 THE SECRET Service is charged with protecting the life of presidents, among other duties. McCord was on the payroll of the Nixon committee, a separate entity from the GOP National Committee, when he and four other men identified as having ties to Malibu's Cuban exile were seized inside Democratic headquarters Saturday night. Top Republican officials have vigorously denied any knowledge of or part in the break-in, called it "political espionage." The official Secret Service spokesman refused to provide any background information on the attacker, he had been with the service. THE SPEAKERMAN, however, in response to a question; said there was no record McCord ever full-time for the Secret Service. security coordinator for the GOP National Committee after he was convicted of a crime. The director of administration for the Nixon committee. Odile could not be re-elected. McCord, 53, a former FB1BI specialist and Central Intelligenc- telligence specialist, retired two years ago, was first hired last fall as McCord, a resident of nearby Toronto, was arrested inside the sixth floor headquarters of the Democratic National Committee on Wednesday. Campus Bulletin Personal Training 9 a.m. Coaching Room, Campbell Training 10 a.m. Summer Orientation and ID Photos, Personnel Training, 1:30 p.m. Coaching Room, Campbell Training, 7 p.m. Coaching Room, Campbell Training, 7 p.m. Coaching Eavesdropping Of No Interest To President "This is something that he wouldn't get involved in," said Ronald L. Ziegler, Secretary, White House press secretary. At a briefing for newsmen, Ziegler at first repeated his earlier statements that the White House had been planning an early Saturday morning Washington incident in which five men, including a salaried Nixon-campaign security expert, were detained and charged with the Reelection Committee. Zeieler said that Nixon had not considered anyone, including former ATT, as a candidate. N Mitchell, chairman of the Committee for the Reelection of Senators, KEY BISCANYNE. Fla. (AP) — President Nixon was depicted by the Florida White House Monday as taking no interest in the break-in at the National Committee headquarters and is ignoring the incident. Then, when pressured, Ziegler said: "I'm not going to comment on this ruling," and the rate rurgiality attempt . . . I don't see that. He says before the lower district courts." Five Alumni of KU Seeking State Office Five students or former students of the University of Kansas have announced their candidatures for state offices. Michael Glover, a former KU student, is the only declared Democratic candidate in the race. He was nominated by nearly created by reapportionment Barry Albin, a third-year law student at KU, will oppose Von Ende in the Republican primary election. Richard von Ende, 30, assistant to the director of University relations and development, and Michael Hammond, 30, assistant to run for the 44th District legislative seat. Von Ende held various positions in student affairs and government. He served two years as vice chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee and was appointed university planning board for a year. David Müller, former student; body president of KU, announced Monday that he would be a candidate for the 48th District legislative seat. Müller is the Democrat County Young Republicans and was a delegate to the Third GOP convention this year. Sambo's JUNE SPECIAL During June, when you purchase any dinner item you will get the second dinner for 1/2 price. All you do is present this coupon. COUPON COUPON Buy one dinner, second purchase of same item 1/2 price Offer good Mon.-Thurs., expires June 30 TWELFTH NIGHT kansas Shakespeare 1978 With ANN THOMPSON AS VIOLA Directed by STUART VAUGHN JUNE 24, 26, 27, 28, 30 and JULY 1 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE ALL PERFORMANCES AT 8:00 P.M., MURPHY HALL TICKET PRICES: $2.00 KU STUDENTS $1.00 WITH ID Summer Season Coupon $5.00 Box Office Opens June 12 Phone UN4-3982 the sandal thats really a shoe McCall's Pick Yourself on our Shoes 829 Mass. FANFARES SPORTACULAR! Tuesday, June 20, 1972 University Summer Kansar --- Court Upholds Reserve Clause WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court today upheld a lower court decision and refused to allow national baseball's reserve clause. The decision was made in the celebrated Curt Flood case on a 5-3 vote. In its decision the court did, however, conclude that basketball was a business engaged in interstate commerce. The decision, delivered by Justice Harry A. Blackmun, said, "If there is any inconsistency or inconsistency in that it is inconsistency longstanding that is to be remedied Congress and this court." THE SUIT was argued in the court by former Justice Arthur J. Goldberg. He said there was no logical reason to treat baseball as a professional sport, and professional sports which have less-rigid player contracts and were subject to antitrust laws. Blackmun agreed that the exemption granted baseball was "the exception of an an exception and an anomaly." But, he said, Congress has had a long time to do something about the issue of affirmative defenders more than "more congressional silence and disrespect." In fact, he said, the Court 'has concluded that Congress has had no intention to subject baseball's Jack Is Halfway to Slam PEBBLE BEACH, Calif (AP)—The next stop is Muirfield outside Edinburgh, in Scotland He's half way home. There, on that ancient course, in the British, open four weeks in August and December, he resume his quest of the unprecedented Grand Slam of goif. He won the Masters for the honor time at Augusta, Ga., in April, then took his third United States Open Championship Sunday with wind-swept pebbles on Pebble Beach. HE WON THE Open with Bobby Jones, whose record of winning was tied by Nicklaus Sunday, had won all of it—the American and British championships of the two countries. "I never saw Jones play and I never saw a great man," said Lee Trevino, who made a gallant effort to defend his Open 34 Leisure Goes to Work LEISURE GOES TO WORK It's all in a day's work for John Leisure of the Athletic Department as he sets about applying a fresh coat of paint to the 55,000-plus seats in Memorial Stadium Monday. "BUT ILL tell you this. If Jack and stayed an amateur he did that, and he lost in the amateur amateur championships and he'd have won 18 of them. Trevino "The man's a freak. He's a legend in his own time. He's the greatest player ever to hold a club in his hands." Trevino said. crown, despite a recent attack of pneumonia and bronchitis. Some of the game's great players thought the goal was too high, that it was an impossible win. It led to wins and won all four in a single season. And, Palmer warned, the pressure is just now starting to build. SINCE THEN, no one has been able to win the first two in the same year. Ben Hogan, won the Masters, U.S. Open, and the British Open. U.S. players won the PGA National Championship, the last leg on the professional But they're unanimous in one opinion and have voiced it in identical words over and over: NICLAKUS, though reluctant to talk about it, admitted the odds against it were high—but dwindling. "I said at the start of the season the odds were a million to one. Now they're lower. A hundred to one." Pick your own word, "he said." THE OFFICE of Financial Aid displays a list of jobs on a bulletin board in Strong Hall basement. The office of Aid is concerned mainly with the work-study program, some job openings are reported to the office. It is up to students to complete the course. no student listing is available. Bernie Taylor of the Office of Financial Aid, said that the non-warranty departmental jobs 8 to 10 work-study jobs. He said, however, that there was no list of jobs available in the various colleges and universities students, he said, to find the jobs. Work-study jobs for departments are listed by the Office of Non-Warranty Aid, according to Taylor. He had said last year that his chances this year probably were the best they ever be. At the age of 23, he possibly at the peak of his game. "If it can be done, Nicklaus is the only man alive who can do it." A notebook containing the Lawrence Journal World wants ad is also provided by the office. Many times the office will receive pamphlets and brochures advertising summer jobs. Agencies Offer Help to Find Summer Jobs for Students "And the four championships are on courses I like and generally play well," he said. Summer jobs for college students are scarce in the Lawrence area. Sweeney said that the job market was fairly tight but that she had never worked. She said most of the jobs listed were babysitting or light housecleaning. The are, however, jobs as nurses aids and nurse assistants. By VICKI MONNALD Taylor said, "It is just a matter of being in the right place at the right time. The jobs on campus are different. Are we few and far between." Along with the job file, the dean's office also has a list of students who are looking for jobs. The student is available for employers. The Office of the Dean of Women has a job listing file as well as a database that contains job openings and information about the job including requirements. reserve system to the reach of the antitrust statutes." According to Karen Sweeney, assistant to the dean, it is up to the student to contact the em-ployers about the job. The University of Kansas has two offices that are concerned with securing jobs for students. The two offices, in Strong Hall, are the Office of the Dean of Students and the Office of Financial Aid SWEENEY said, "It is im- mportant to find out their interests and needs. Then if we can't help them, maybe we can refer them to them." The Job Opportunity Center is an off-campus office that may allow students to job The office at a 839 Kentucky more than 800 applications for summer jobs, according to Deborah Barker, coordinator for THE STUDENT should come in and fill out an application, and then we will call them if a job is available. "Barker," we be interested in." Barker said. The Center has contacted Lawrence merchants about employing students and a letter urging employment from Gov. Robert Docking was sent to the 25 grocery stores, according to Barry. The center should not be the only means of trying to get a job, but the fact that students should also answer want ads and knock on doors if they are ready. It is the homeowner who provide many of the jobs for summer school students, she said. than for female students. She said that this was because few, if any, jobs were available for typing and clerical work. FLOOD, backed by the players' union, brought his damage suit against baseball pitchers in the 1968 Philadelphia Phillies in 1969. He wanted to be made a "free agent" and play for a position on his copious list. Barker said that jobs for male students were much easier to find The target of Flood's suit was the reserve system which binds a player to the team which holds his contract. If a professional ballplayer refuses to agree to the contract, he cannot play for any other. Flood, a former All-Star, is now out of the game and living abroad. UNTIL THIS HOUR, in fact, he would have to sit out the season. He was a candidate for Ted Simmons caused an incident and should continue with the test without an agreement about a salary offered by owner August Miller. The Justice also footnoted his opinion with quotes from Ring Lardner and an excerpt from the poem "Casset at the Bat." Blackmun did not give a specific name including the names and excerpts. In speaking of Flood, Blackminton pointed out that Flood's salary had climbed to $90,000 by 2014, when he earned in nine major league seasons was supplemented by World Series shares and "fringe Blackmun's opinion lists the names of 88 former players, some of the relatively unknown performers who had interesting roles. "Suffy" Melnius, "Sad Sam Jones," "Germany" Schaefer, "King" Kelly and "Rube" Bressler as well as such well known luminaries as Ty Cobb Speaker and Walter Johnson. "it (the reserve clause) is an assertion that has been with us since the dawn of commerce, hereafter deemed fully entitled to the benefit of Stare Decisia, and one that has survived the advent of interstate commerce. It rests on a recognition and an acceptance of baseball's unique charac- had won the court's protection in five cases stretching back to 1922 Joining with Blackmur were Joining Justice Warren E. Burger and Justice John R. White and Bryon R. White and William H. Rehquist. Justices William O. Bechtel and Thurgood Marshall and Thurgood Marshall dissented. Justice Lewis F. The phrase, Stare Decisio, is a legal one which means past decisions are to be given precedence. Douglas said the 1922 high court ruling that first granted a criminal charge for her derelict in the stream of the law that we its creator, should THE JUSTICE said baseball HE ADDED: "Only a romantic view of a rather dismal business account over the last 50 years should keep that derelict in mid- Marshall, in another dissent, the arrest of the activist 'law are similar to the arrest of the they are to football players, lawyers, doctors or members of He said. "Baseball players cannot be denied the benefits of playing baseball, but owners view other economic interests as being more important." Burger cast his vote with the majority with some expressed disappointment in granting baseball an exemption in 1922 was in error, it "was one in which the affairs of a great many people have rested for a BOSTON (AP) -- Riegle Smith wheaked a pair of home runs and drove in five runs pacing a four-run N.Y. Giants as Boston Red Sox to a 12-9 victory over the Texas Rangers Monday at Minute Maid. Sieber's three-hit pitching. Hadl Night Tickets Available Hadl will be on hand about 6:30 p.m. to visit with early arrivals and meet young football fans. Had'I'd wife, Charmell, and their son and daughter, John and Karen, as well as along with several of his teammates and playing rivals from Boston. Oakland 31 67 1879 ...39 Chicago 33 21 6739 ...36 Kansas City 25 39 463 ...12 California 25 39 463 ...12 AMONG THOSE who have accepted invitations are Steve DeLong of the Chargers and Joe Johnson of the Kansas City Chiefs. W. L. Pet. G.B. Detroit 10 21 15 Baltimore 30 23 56 New York 34 29 43 Houston 34 29 43 Rockford 32 28 54 Chicago 1, San Francisco 0 Montreal 2, Chennai 0 Houston 3, New York 6 San Diego at St. Louis, postponed, rain Boston 12, Texas 0 Cleveland at Minnesota postponed; rain Hadd'i junior high, high school and college coaches will also be in Davenport. Duver, who started Hadd'i on his college baseball team, Junior High, Al Woolard, who The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring the affair with the mitte headed by Larry Hatfield. About 500 of the $3.50 tickets have been sold so hoping to sell another 100. Reserve before he accepts There are still tickets available for the John Hadl Recognition Buffet, which will be held at 7 p.m. on Tuesday in the ballroom of the Kansas Union. Monday Scores American League East coached him at Lawrence High. and Jack Mitchell, former University of Kansas head coach. Red Sox Blank Rangers,12-0 Baseball Standings Pittsburgh W. L. Pit. G. B. New York 36 20 14.68 Chicago 31 22 400 Houston 31 22 400 N. Los Angeles 32 22 429 S. Los Angeles 32 22 429 Milwaukee 31 22 429 Another prominent football figure who will appear on the program is Don Klosterman, general manager of the N.C. Huskies, who signed Hadl to his first professional contract immediately after the husky took college and collegiate career by leading the Jayhawks to a 33-7 victory over Rice in the 1961 Bowlbetton Bluebird game. Smith started the Red Sox's onslaught with a two-run homer against off loser Pete Brogerg, 5-5. after having had singled. Smith connected again with two runners aboard as Casey Cawker was rapped for four outs. DON FAMBROUGH KU football coach, along with Duver and Wooldill will jointly retire In National League games Beckert doubled home Dor --deadlock with a sacrifice fly in the seven inning and Bill Stoneman blanked Cincinnati on Expos downed the Red 20. Siebert, 7-3, kept the Rangers hitless until Ted Kubik, a pinch lash, lashed a double down the right side of the leading off the sixth inning. NATIONAL LEAGUE Hadi's number 21, the numeral he made famous at all three Lawrence schools. The dinner will provide a reunion of KU's 190 backfield. That was the year Mitchell went from running back to quarterback. Hadl's spectacular career will be shown in movie excerpts of Lawrence High and KU games in San Diego Charger highlight film. Hadi was KU's first two-time All-American in football, earning that honor in 1960 and 1961. He then played all three at KU. + TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE! Offer expires July 1 100 1720 West 23rd Street --deadlock with a sacrifice fly in the seven inning and Bill Stoneman blanked Cincinnati on Expos downed the Red 20. Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price $2.99 on Capitol records Capitol. at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE CO. Help Celebrate Founders Month with All the Beer You Can Drink for $2.00 at the STABLES Tuesday----7-12 Kessinger in the 13th innning Monday, lifting the Chicago Cubs to a 7-6 victory over the San Francisco Giants. Kessinger singled to right on San Francisco relief pitcher Jerry Johnson. 3-Becktor left, driving in the winner. Jack Aker, 2-0, got the win for Chicago by pitching two innings of shutout relief. Tim Foli broke up a scoreless Stoneman had the Reds to singles by Joe Hague and Denis Gouffre, both fond inning, a bantle single by the fourth and a leadoff single by Pete Rose in the ninth. The Stoneman's sixth against five losses Bahad had 130,823 votes to 88,688 for Sangulani, according to figures released by baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. Bench Leads Voting For Catcher's Role NEW YORK (AP) — Johnny Bench of Cincinnati replaced Manny Sangullett of Pittsburgh in a 35-24 loss to Spelunkt and Willie Mays of the New York Mets climbed to third place among outfielers in the second week of voting for the National League champion, it was announced Monday. Hank Aaron of Atlanta led Mays, who seems to have gotten a new lease on his base ball life since joining the Mets from Francisco, totaled 107,178 runs. The balloting will end Saturday, July 15, and the National and American polls will be announced July 18. The game is scheduled for Tuesday. outfielders with 153,400, followed by Roberto Clemente of Pittsburgh with 128,390. Hustab Stuub and Mets were fourth with 87,388. First baseman Lee May Lee of Houston, second baseman Brandon Cubs, third baseman Joe Torre of St. Louis and shortstop Bud Durand comfortable leads at their position and all vote with 154. --by the K.U. 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COUNTRY PICTURES AND MOTIVATION To Find a Man GP THIS IS THE ONLY MATERIAL YOU NEED TO FIND A MAN Varsity TBD TIME | telephone 1-865-402-3781 The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX. A CLINT EASTWOOD DIRTY HARRY DIRTY HARRY Adults $1.50 Shows 3:00, 7:30, 9:30 Twilite Sat. Sun. 5:00 Granada TRAIMÉE - Bibliothèque V13-5780 "ENDS TONIGHT" Johnny Got His Gun 971-230-6454 GP Hillcrest Adult 1.50 Child 7.5 Shows: 2:30, 7:35, 9:30 "THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN" Arnold Hill Katie Reid "RED SKY AT MORNING" Richard Thomas Boxoffice opens 8:00 Sunset NIGHT IN THE STATE on August 9th Sunset DIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 69 George Peppard Michael Sarrazin Christine Belford only if you like gripping suspense and surprise endings. "The Groundstar Conspiracy" TECHNICOLOR "ANIMATION" PG Eve 7:30 & 9:20 "ENDS TONIGHT" Adult: 1:50 Hillcrest Childs 13 Just a person who protects children and other living things BILLY JACK "ENDS TONIGHT" GP Hillcrest Childs 13 Just a person who protects children and other living things BILLIY JACK KENNETH TONIGHT GP Hillcrest Adult 19.9 Child 7.5 4 Tuesday, June 20, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. On Kay's Candidacy An old political joke says that it is hard to tell the difference between a Democrat and a Republican in Kansas. The entry of Lawrence legislator, Morris Kay, into the field of candidates seeking the Republican nomination for Governor has put a new twist on the old joke. This year Kansans will need a tally card to keep track of the Democrats on the national level and the Republicans on the state level. Although Kay joined the other three Republican candidates a day before the filing deadline, he has been looking at the gubernatorial campaign for some time. His name was tossed about during the recent legislative session, but Kay refused to make any declaration of intent. As majority leader in the Kansas House, Kay gained prestige among his Republican colleagues. Yet the delay in throwing his hat into the ring suggests that many state party leaders have been slow in encouraging his candidacy for Governor. Another obstacle, money, has been added to the delay of Kay's announcement. With the abundance of Republican hopefuls, it would seem that Kay's chances for winning the nomination for Governor are exceedingly slim at this late date. Certainly when one has to compete with another hometown boy, in which case she will shultz as Kay is for financial backing, those chances seem even slimmer. Given the obstacles, only a few of which are mentioned above, that face Morris Kay as he announces his candidacy for Governor, one might think it reasonable to suggest he schedule his withdrawal announcement Tuesday morning. By withdrawing before the filing deadline, he could save $200. The money would go a lot further and represent a better investment if it were spent on a state legislative campaign. Besides, a Docking-Anderson race has a desirably nostalgic走. Mark Bedner Killings Down Under It is difficult out on these plains where the deer and the antelope once played, and the buffalo roamed by the thousands, and bucked up about the fate of the kangaroo. Yet, in view of what happened to our buffalo, the kangaroo is worth a passing thought. Life will go on without life; the bear is gone on without great herds of buffalo. That's stupid. Australia apparently thinks more of getting the cash for the kangaroo than in preserving the animal for other generations. But such a loss is for a silly purpose. The kangaroo is being slaughtered, partly by "sportsmen," but mostly by hired shooters to provide U.S. buyers with skins for upholstery, shoes, wallets, coats, rugs. The solution is for the U.S. to declare the kangaroo an "endangered species," which it is. That would ban it from our import lists, and lead the way toward preservation. It is difficult to think of a new national park in kangaroo, but once it was undreamed that our rapacity would be so huge as to destroy the buffalo. —Reprinted from the Hutchinson News 20 Per Cent KU Reduction Unrealistic, Nichols Says BY BOB LITCHFIELD Kansas Staff Writer Nichols said the reduction would be impossible for three reasons. The 20 per cent reduction in the cost of higher education recently recommended by the Carnegie Commission report is unrealistic. Raymond Nichols, secretary, said Monday A reduction of 20 per cent in the working budget at KU would mean trimming millions, a million, of salary paid would be impossible to reach. "Second, statistics of the U.S. Office of Education show that college enrollment has not yet reached its peak, and finally, I doubt that the public will accept communications." Nichols added. "First, with inflation conditions, we have to slowdown a 20 per cent reduction would actually be very much greater than 20 per cent, he said. Nichols said that if all research were halted, extension programs slashed and maintenance programs would be reduced, would amount to only $4 million, leaving the other $4 million to come directly from teaching and research. "It would be ridiculous to cut research programs because they are supported mostly by grants," she said. "You're gone to cut $8 million." "The Kansas public is determined to have the best schools that they can afford. They are educated, educational system in the state." Nichols said, short of total economic collapse, he did not believe the University would Nichols said he believed the Carnegie Commission's recommendations were the result of interest to the country's tax problems. "People are the key," he said, and "I don't believe they would stand for a huge cutback in higher education. Army Orders Release Of My Lai Information OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—The Oklahoma City first responders, previously withdrew records of units involved in the MLI airlift in Vietnam, it was learned. This reversal of the Army's previous position came in response to an appeal by the Daily Okayman newspaper and was hailed by two major freedom organizations as a breakthrough in public's free access to information from the government. The Army's change of position which may have a wide-ranging effect on future classification and censorship by the Army, was conveyed in a letter from the Army's general counsel. It ordered releases to the Daily Oklahoma morning newspapers three infrared panels and an aviation company involved in the 1988 M&M Lai Inc. That censorship, involving 401 separate items ranging from killed in action to AWOLs, was never made public. The secretary of the Army on May 12. have to meet this problem The appeal was based on the Freedom of information Act and the Army's own regulations. The Commission also, recommended accreditation and educational standards and reducing the number of years of student training. Nichols said acceleration could only come in schools or by year-round classes. "If the teaching of English, languages and mathematics is difficult for them in schools, and if colleges have to continue with them, the only way programs can be accelerated is through sound study," Nichols asserted. KEEP OUT TOP SECRET $10,000,000.00 "ANONYMOUS" MIXON CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS "Gee, why so defensive? 'Fraid you'll let the fateats out of the bag?' Summer Studies First Held in 1903 Historical Feature- Editor's Note: While cleaning out his office in Strong Hall, George Baxter Smith, former vice chairman and director of institutional research, found a copy of a brochure advertising KU's first summer session. It has been placed in the University Archives. By RALPH NICOL Kansan Staff Writer In Kansas it began in 1903. The University of Kansas, after developing for 37 years, announced a projections for Summer 2015 as the location of the leading Logging Facility. Have you ever wondered, while pouring over your last 150-page assignment, trudging up and down the hill in 90-degree heat, waiting for a two-hour class to end so you can get to a swimming pool, and generally deciding that summer school is certainly a terrible mistake, how the idea of going to college in the middle of the summer got started? To go to summer school in its first year meant an outlay of a $10 incidental fee, and upwards of $3.50 per week for room and board. However, the advantages of summer school supposedly outweighed the freeze location; small classes; concentration upon one subject." KU offered two general types of courses for the summer in 1903. Popular courses were open to all enrolled students, but gave no credit. Credit courses were open only to "regularly matriculated students." Students were only allowed to take one course for credit In its first year, the KU summer session lasted six weeks, from June 11 to July 22. There were 28 instructors present for the summer, eighteen of which were heads of departments. They taught 75 courses in 24 different subject areas. The Guide recommended the summer session to "college instructors, city and county superintendents, high school principals and teachers, high school pupils wishing to complete their entrance requirements, college students wishing to do extra work, graduate students; all who wish further educational advantages and can profit by the courses offered." The most interesting features of the 1903 summer session were the special popular lectures by members of the KU faculty. Among the lecturers were Chancellor Frong Strong, Prof. W. H. Carruth, Prof. R. D. O'Leary, Prof. J. Naismith, and Prof. F. O. Marvin. A sample of the topics of the lectures was equally fascinating: "The Development of Free Schools as a System," "Physical condition of the Typical Student," "Roads-Good and Bad," "Families," "or something from current events like" the Trust Problem. This summer marks the 70th anniversary of KU's summer school sessions. At Lawrence alone, more than six thousand students are taking several hundred courses in more than 80 subject areas. While the "cool, breezy locations" may be more the result of air conditioners than nature, the main advantages of summer school remain. Few Remain Neutral in Ulster By RODNEY PINDER Within the untouched areas and AMERICAN PRESS BELFAST (AP) - Few people walk the middle ground in Northern Ireland. Three years of violence in a community of 1½ million people have left their mark. Bomb blasts driven many into rigid stands. Some have seen relatives killed or crippled, a favorite shop go up in flames. All confront daily the soldiers patrolling their streets. BUT SURELY the visitor may ask you to be silent, not everyone is committed; there must be a 'silent majority' or minority, with the single highest number. The sight of quiet residential neighborhoods untouched by violence, contrasting sharply with the scanty housing and buildings of much of Belfast, makes one think that here must be people who have avoided the violence. villages, often mixed communities, there are in fact people who say they are moderates, opposed to violence. Yet most have strong ties. Lindsay Smith is a Protestant who lives in a comfortable suburb of Belfast a few hundred yards from Newtonards Rd, scene of street is unscathed, and Catholic friends live across the way. HE HAS lived in Belfast all his 49 years Smith is concerned that the force Northern Ireland, where Protestants outnumber Catholics, into union with the Irish Refresher program. Smith considers himself part of the antiresternist senior majority, but his outlook clearly reflects the Protestant view. The Smyths are determined, he says, to see the Northern Ireland remains British. THAT, HE said, would mean a surrender to blackmail by gun and bomb and an invitation to more trouble. He is angered that the Catholics mean that soldiers will not invade IRA strongholds like the Germans. He said: "You can't expect the majority community to abide within the law while part of the community is a pertinent demand that those who have committed crimes will have an amnesty. This means that citizens have been brutally murdered and those responsible go free. "UNTIL, THE British government is prepared to put down this armed rebellion in its own hands," he said. There is much talk of what the minority wants to do, to switch violence on or off. You forget the majority. We are not prepared to sit down and talk with gangsters Smith said he believed any discussion of concessions that one side or another could make to achieve a united Ireland was irrelevant: "You cannot take away from a man his birthright. I believe in the British way of life and you can't cast that aside. The English are much easier to come to Ireland would be to bring the whole island under British rule." SHE IS encouraged by Catholic revolution at the methods of the IRA gunmen and by London's taking over of direct rule of Ireland inland droms to the Protestant-dominated provincial government. "I was born here," she said. For the first time, she met a man who directive rule I always underdo. But there is a hard core of stupid bigots on both sides keeping the other side in mind that can destroy everything." Holland, 35, is the only Catholic on her street, but "there never has been any trouble." She visits her mother in a more militantly Protestant area "and we just keep quiet and don't bother anybody- SHE IS saddened by the wounds three years' violence has left on children. "I think all kids are not alone," she says, "is worst are a lost generation." The Rev. Patrick Mille runs St. Patrick's Church in a relatively unscarred area of London and is surrounded by shioners who were trickling up to his door to sign a peace petition partly organized by the church. Father Muliev said 2,500 of the eligible in his parish had signed. "The Church stands in the middle," he says gently, "The Church does not believe in bombing or shooting. Kansan Staff Writer By JOLENE HARWOOD Korean Staff Writer Group Studies Campus Safety The University of Kansas safety committee has submitted its recommendations to Chancellor Dr. Murray Koch after a thorough survey of safety problems on campus and related programs at the university, and programs of other universities. The five-man committee was appointed by the chancellor and has been meeting regularly since March. The administration saw the need for a safety program to reduce occupational Safety and Health Act, according to Elmo L. G Lindquist, committee chairman and director of mechanical engineering. "The committee does not have the authority to correct problems," Lindsquist said. "We can only make suggestions." "I THE IRA would like to say it is acting for the people. If the people really have had enough courage, they will face violence, then however tightly the IRA holds on to power, they will be forced to give it up. This may happen if the peace movement maintains its moment." the operations of the building and grounds department, the food service department, housing and traffic on campus. The committee sent out 2,000 surveys covering every department on campus. These surveys collect comments on safety problems. THESE SUGGESTIONS cover More than 200 have been returned, Linglust said, and these are now being categorized under "other needy students." OTHER INVENUES including the University of Minnesota, the University of Illinois and the University of Kentucky, were contacted as to the type of safety programs they had. During this time the committee discussed how these programs could benefit KU, Lindquist said. Several universities have incorporated safety manuals. Students who want to study these manuals and then consult with the sub-instructor are in good grounds, handling hazardous materials and human and animal risks. Chinese Economy Tops UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)—The first official figures show that China in more than a decade place its economic growth rate among the highest in the world, according to the Economic Survey revealed Monday. The survey indicated China's growth rate was exceeded only by Romania, Brazil and Iran and tied by South Korea. Romania had the highest cent. selected data on its 2018 economy as a whole were The same rate was given for the growth of industry, implying a parallel increase in the output of agriculture. published officially for the first time more than halfway rate of 30 percent for the combined production industry and agriculture," the report reads. per cent in China, against 6.1 per cent in Japan, 6 per cent in the Soviet Union and 2.7 per cent in the United States. The 101-page book on current economic conditions reported that in 1971, production rose 10 The main goal of the committee right now, if given the go ahead, is to build a team that can run for KU using these other manuals as a basis. Lundquist said, “but I have to work on something.” HE ESTIMATED that it would take about three years to establish an acceptable program. The University has never before promoted safety on campus. Lindquist said that he knew of no deaths attributable to accidents on campus but added, "It is just lucky that there have been so few accidents. there are danger areas on campus, and there is always the possibility of a disaster such as a fire or a tornado." "BUT EVEN then it isn't the end of the road. You have the right to walk, but going to turn their boys out into the streets. The Protestants won't see the people trundling truck-ridden streets up to the local police station." THE SAFETY manual would include instructions on what to do and where to go in case of such a disaster. **The organization is a** A united Ireland is the long-term answer for Father Mulvie. term answer for Father MUVINI: "The border must disappear and the Northern Province must be the Dublin Protestants have found, that they will have a very large share of the cake," he said. Before then, he believes, the IRA hold over rank-and-file Catholics in the North must be broken. "Some will tell you," he said, "that their boys are fighting for freedom that means a bomb was a car, not attacking the army base down the road." Griff and the Unicorn THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN America's Pacemaking college newspaper By Sokoloff JUNE 1983 America's Pacemaking college newspaper ALRIGHT! TURN IT OFF! DO WE HAVE A CHOICE? OH YEAH. SURE. IF YOU DON'T TURN IT OFF, YOU CAN BE STOMPED INTO THE GROUND, BEATEN TO A PULP, OR RIPPED TO SHREDS. Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom-U-N 4-4810 Business Office-U-N 4-4358 ALRIGHT! TURN IT OFF! "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." DO WE HAVE A CHOICE? OH YEAH... SURE. IF YOU DON'T TURN IT OFF, YOU CAN BE STOMPED INTO THE GROUND, BEATEN TO A PULP, OR RIPPED TO SHREDS. Publicized at the University of Kansas four times weekly during the summer session. Mail subscription request to: University of Kansas, 6043 Adminside Drive, Kansas City, KS 66125. Accessed online goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creat or national origin. Oignons expressed are not necessarily the University of Kansas or the State Board of Education. NEWS STAFF News Adviser ... Del Brinkman News Editor | Del Brantley Editor R. Eileen Hugh Campaign Editor Linda Hollis News Editor Bob Norrlands Copy Chief Rob Adaun Photographer Kevan Gouw Artfiehl Dave Bokholt Ivan Cannon BUSINESS STAFF Business Advisor .. Mel Adams Business Manager Dog DeTray Advertising Manager Steve Conner Campaign Manager Lara Denny National Advertising Manager Promotional Manager Dave Williams Marketing Manager Mark Beddard Member Associated Collegiate Press REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIRECTORY SERVICES, INC. 380 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 University Summer Kansan Tuesday, June 20, 1972 JIMMY CLOSE C Kansan Photo by CLAY LOYD Lawrence Has Own Bit Of Hollywood in Centron Albert, Gobel and Ames Among Them . . . Centron films have featured Hollywood stars . . . Kaiden Sailor WRITE Centron adds a touch of Hollywood without the tinsel to Lawrence. By JEANNE ELLIOTT BY JENNIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Write THE FIRST film the company made was a recruiting film for KU in 1948. Both Wolf and Mosser are KU graduates. They returned to Lawrence after finding life life not to their taste. The walls of the company's offices are lined like all studio offices with pictures of the stars of movies nast. Arthur Wolf and Russ Mosser, co-owners of the film company, started making educational films in 1947. Their first office was in what is now Zercher's camera shop at 1107 Massachusetts St. and 1320 Washington Ave; the theatre and the auditorium was a big asset, according to Wolf. WOLD SAID that the movie would begin from the earlier days. They shoot almost all their film on location and use their big studio for it. By shooting the films on location there is more reality in the films, Wolf said. Shooting on location captures the area's Wolf said that it was difficult to get established because they did not have a product to show FRIEND IS a recent graduate of KU with a degree in music education. She was a camper for From 8 o'clock in the morning until late afternoon, the high school students from the Midwestern Music and Art Camps swarm over the campus, involved in courses and workshops in the Schools of Music, Art, Speech and Drama and Journalism. Camp Counselors Have Homework In making their educational decisions, they need to consult, who pick the areas that need more visual aids and try to help the company in prospective clients. They were associated with Young American Films, an educational film company, who now a part of the McGraw-Hill Co. By MIKI BLANK Kansan Staff Writer After the KU film, a similar film was made in Mississippi, and the company was on its way. Its next film was for Spencer Chemical Co. of Spencer, Arkansas. By MARY LIND five years and since has been employed by the camp as a counselor and assistant supervisor. The total camp experience however, goes beyond into McColum and Lewis Hills, where tumour and their five-week taste of college. "I can think of many instances wi- they've helped campers with problems and helped us do a better understanding of people from all parts of the country," She camp back to work at camp because she liked her camp experiences and she wanted to work there. She said that working at the camp had helped her broaden her own horizons as well. And she thought that her ex-supervisor was smart, wise and edge when she began to teach. Paul Young, supervision of the Lewis boy's residence hall, which is staffed by 11 counselors, has worked at camp for 10 years. During the school year he teaches vocal music at Shawnee Mission North High School. "I'm a teacher because I enjoy working with young people. I'm in music because I enjoy working with animals." The camp can I do both," said Young. THE MAJOR reason that Young returns to the camp every summer is his respect for Russell founder and director of the camp. Two U.S. Airlines Join Pilot's Strike "I have never known a man who gave so unselfishly of his time to college students, college people. I doubt that there is a city in the United States where people are stranger because there are men and women working in every city that have been touched by Mr. Wiley, through the camp or KU." By The Associated Press But Eastern and Northeast together employ only about 4,100 of the 31,000 pilots in the United States. Only two major U.S. airlines—Eastern and Northeast—were grounded Monday by a one-day emergency strike of airport carriers, principally in the Western Hemisphere and Western Europe, were shut down or crippled by the walkout seeking blackers. In London, the IFALPA said it believed the pilots had made their point and that "really effective hacking" against blackjack on the way. There was no immediate explanation from either the airlines or the Airline Pilots Association in Washington as to why the two pilots were shot down domestically. A third U.S. line, Southern—was hit by the strike when it started at 1 a.m. CDT, but its 300 pilots voted to return to work, complying with a court order. Sunday by the Supreme Court. The International Federation of Airline Pilots Associations (IFALPA) said in London that about 75 per cent of European pilots answered its strike call, and about 30 per cent in the United States. The association of pilot groups from 64 nations said that since its campaign for tougher measures against transnational governments had agreed to adopt an exiting international organisation, the US government More important, IFALPA said, were assurances of backing from a number of governments for even tougher laws that could require air boycott of countries offering sanctuary to hijackers. The federation said assurances of support had come from Australia, Canada, India, Sudan, the United States and Britain. Meanwhile the United Nations Security Council, which had been elected in 2015, that the strike would take place unless there was effective U.N. action by then against hijacking, he or a private meeting during the event. One diplomatic source read the statement put forward by the United States confidentially last Wednesday. The statement urges the state to prevent hijacking and ensure protection of hackers Bob Hollowell and Dick Brummett are the men behind the scenes at the camp. They work with staff assistants to Mr. Wiley. They are responsible for residence hall maintenance and cafeteria The strike was joined by large numbers of flight engineers around the world as well as pilots and ground crews. "YOU MEET some top kids here. Those are the kind that come to this camp," said Holwell. Hollowell is a teacher of music in junior high school and considers the music camp an excellent one. He enjoys the music classes and teaches the music students and said he too was impressed with Wiley. IN RECENT years Centron has shifted toward educational films, according to Wolf, because he had never seriously depressed the industrial film market. Wolf said that the situation had been imminent. Murphy thought that one of the most valuable aspects of his job was to broaden him as an individual and helped him to learn more. MURPHY of Tahquah, Okla. teaches oral communications at Northwest State College during the school year. "If people aren't careful thet end to isolate themselves within their own little world. I think that I am becoming more sensitive to people from different en- tities and their needs," said Murphy. The company currently has been making a series of educational films on ecology. PHYLLIAS RANGE, assistant physician who believed that her car came off as a camper, counselor and girlfriend. She increased her understanding of man- agement. "I hadn't worked with junior ROBERT WHITE, owner of the Massachusetts St. bank, 1339 Massachusetts St. with the new legislation. He has been charging a 10 per cent rate of interest on the money he lends, and he will be charging the pawn shop business was because of the high rate of interest on the money we were charging our customers. New Law Checks Pawnbroker A FORMER construction worker. White got started in the business and traded it. He also liked the idea of not taking inventory when he started the business. He just ordered for people with items to pawn. The company's location in Lawrence has been both an advantage and disadvantage, according to Wolf. "It's fun, not work," he said. "White said he found his pawn saw on the floor. But there was no day of the week particularly good for doing About half of White's customers are students. He had thought that during summer his business would drop from summer have come greater demands for cameras and luggage WHITE DOES have regular customers that visit shop when they buy a new jewelry. Has a retired jeweler also comes in once a month and purchases White has been in business since August. Toasters, clock radios, power tools, cameras, television sets, cameras, rings or in glass cases in White's small items. He likes to deal in small items "Someday only two or three people will come in. On others maybe there'll be a hundred," he said. The bill made illegal storage, imbalanced storage, tacked onto a pawned item. The laws go into effect for pawnbrokers as soon as yearly The state legislature recently passed a bill regulating the pawn broker's business. Under the new law, the maximum interest of 10 per cent interest during a 30-day period on items pawned. Also, the property owner now gets a grace period of 60 days to redeem the goods it means that the broker cannot sell the pawned item for 90 days. If the property owner wants to redeem the pawned item, he may interest for the 90 day period. and anything will sell," he said. Presently, there's a great demand for watches. Tape cups are often given eight-track tape tapes as fast as they come in. White said. There is a huge demand for guitars and amplifiers. wanting to borrow money on them, but I had no place to store them," he said. White has had no trouble getting rid of merchandise. These and 23 counselors are the ones who will take over when your counselor's work day begins at 5 p.m. and ends at 8 a.m. It really is a job right for you. The days of the free wheeling, dealing pawn broker are over—at least in Kansas. high or senior high kids before. It really helped me with my student teaching," said Range. "I had the opportunity to handle cars. People came in It was learned from other sources that the owner of Trader's Pawn店 shop charged a 15 percent on pawned items per month on pawned items. Lawrence, Trader's Pawn Shop at 822 Massachusetts St., a pawnbroker refused to talk about the new law. getting rid of merchandise. "CHARGE A reasonable price and neither will be charged." By PAT RUPERT School Will Change Period for Master's He said that some executives could not believe that there were capable people in "Hicksville." At another pawn shop in A new pawn shop is scheduled o open July 5 in the vicinity of ninth and Mississippi streets. The School of Social work, this summer is accepting students for a master's program of less than two year's work. The School of Social Welfare began restructuring its undergraduate program three years ago. Now a student can for the first time receive all of the two-year master's program during his senior year. The National Association of Social Workers, a professional organization, decided two years ago to accept in full membership those with a bachelor's degree in social welfare from a school that offers such degrees, usually only those with a master's degree could be admitted. The CSWE was operating on the assumption that a student had taken the undergraduate program. Previously, any major was admitted as an undergraduate master's program, and everyone in the program followed the same course. work two years in a master's program. Until two years ago, the Unil Council of Schools and Social Education (CSWE), a national organization that accredits the programs of Schools of Social Education. Fourteen students at KU are enrolled in the continuum programs. A begin work on their teacher's degree will continue in school for one calendar year, at which time they complete their Master's degree. JET TRAVEL has been he/ful to the company by getting new clients and adding to the company's mobility. Another problem that Wolf a new film, "John's Train," such a film. Wolf said that someone decided to travel around the area photographing old abandoned train cars. The film follows a boy on railroads, according to Wolf. Dennis Hess . Centron film editor. Wolf said that his staff knew each other's capabilities and limitations and that they worked well together. One of their better-known films was about a Leo Burerman of lawrence. The film won many nominates for an academy award. The biggest advantage in Centron's location is that it can also offer other film companies who keep skeleton crews and use different people as cast members. Staff members suggest most of the film was directed about Beau Brunet. Wolf said many times, if someone had an idea like that, one the company would be able to adapt. mentioned was that many of the companies, advertising agencies and the media were making efforts would rather go to one of the coasts than come to Although the company has used some big-name film stars like Eddie Benton, Centron prefers to move from Kansas City and Chicago. Most films take from two to six months to be completed, but Wolf said that they did a film for an automobile firm in 13 days. THE 35-MEMBER staff is team-oriented, according to Wolf. The Federal government has awarded Kansas money to fund 6,728 Lawrence is 65. Tubbs said that 50 students had been placed by June 14. Other applications have been 'already to meet requirements.' Youths Get Job Training Tubbs also handles applications when the student had been placed, Johnson County and Lawrence are part of a law firm. The idea that having their own money motivates young people to attend a college and mentorship-sponsored program called the Neighborhood Youth Corps (NYC), according to the College for the Lawrence program. The NYC program involves teenagers from lower income families in training for jobs under Federal government sponsorship division of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. The family income requirement and age limits are the only restrictions on ap- Students age 14 through high school and school dropup to up to 8th grade fall below certain standards are hired to work in jobs ranging from janitorial to clerical, architectural or maintenance minimum family wages for a family farm family and $4,000 for a farm family. Minimum family wages for a family of 14 would be one-farm and, $8,500 farm income. Douglas, Coffey, Franklin, Lyons, Anderson, Johnson, Osage and Miami counties, that has a total allotment of 250. L. Lewis Wall, class of 1972, received an undergraduate degree from the University of Kansas history department for his paper on "The Gnostic Problem: Christianity in Later Antithesis." Awards Given Special letters of commendation, seven concordance memorials to Meirland and Topeka senior, for his study of "Great Britain in the Persian Gulf, 1892-1915, and to Robert Prentice, 1916," and for the "America Reacts to the Evacuation and Internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II." Each year the department for the best research paper compares the year in either senior seminars or enrollments in departmental programs. pilcants. Those students accepted come from both broken homes and those in which the father is a nurse, and those students are in special education. The NYC program is continued during the school term under a teacher who supervises students according to Tubbs. The students go to school and work part-time. They are paid $1.00 an hour for up to 24 hours of working time per week. --on Capitol records Tubbs is enthusiastic about both programs. "They get the students off the streets and keep them occupied," she said. MEDICAL COLLEGE OF HUNGARY WHY RENT? 843-8499 RIDGEVIEW We have just remodeled and are now open for business in our new location at 939 Mass. We invite you to stop by and see why we are so proud of our new building. Weekend specials. 3020 Iowa (South Hwy.59) WE'RE OPEN Nye's Flowers AND Picture Framing 8:00-5:00 843-3255 Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price Capitol. at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS FOR SALE WANT ADS WORK WONDERS First day Three days First day 11 weeks 0.98 25 weeks 1.34 10 weeks 0.76 additional weeks 0.98 additional weeks 0.98 Malls Shopping Center Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the job advertisement. Kansas are offered to all students to color, creat, or national origin. you're at an advantage. If you don't, you're at a disadvantage. Ekstra comes to the same corner as you. Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 14th. 7-21 Discount Diamond Needles Western Civ. Notes-Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, 2. For sale 15 by 7 custom sloted chrome reverse wire with G60 by 10 Firestone wide ovals Excellent Call B Gary Call, B84-8035, B84-8035, 6-22 STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can COOPLID plus 10 at RAY AUDIO, 600 North Park Ave., only true Stereo Discount House in Burlington, tea, coffee and Consulting service. Foat Sale-1989 Norton Commandos s' 750 x 750 excel. Condition must heat 813-4900 or Ottawa, Kansas Ch -3848 after six. 6-28 North Side Country Shop, 707 N. 2nd, Antiques, used furniture, and lots of other items. 9-7 7 days a week. **842- 3159**. Herb Altenbernd. For sale: 250 Suzuki X6 Scrambleer 8 in good condition. "Old's" Trumpet 8 years old in good condition. Call 843-7063. 6-26 Michigan St. Bar-B-Ques, $15.16 St. Outdoor St. Large Bake Pan, $20.99 $15.00 Slab to go $30.99. Slab to go $40.99. Chicken to go $50.99. chicken to go $40.99. 1.4 lb. Ib. cat bread $80.00. Beet Bread Sand $80.00. Beet Bread Sand $80.00. Closed Sun-Tunnel 7-27 For sale: Tickets to Rolling Stones. Right in front 11th row 842-6623 6-21 1969 VW deluxe bus. 7 passenger. 100% warranty. $2095 JAYHAWK VW. 2522 Iowa. 843-2200. 6-22 bokomkommunity.bokomkommunity $1.00 bokomkommunity.Jerome, Leslie bokomkommunity.Jerome, Leslie Retrogrative, Contraintive. Retrogrative, Contraintive. Saturday, bokomkommunity.Bokomkommunity Used Saturday, bokomkommunity.Bokomkommunity Used Apartments furnished, some air- conditioned, large enough for two or- more rooms. KNED and near town or nearby parking. JACKING up. 843-5767. p. 6-27 1969 Chevy Nova 6 cylinder, automatic power steering, new tires, excellent condition. JAYHAWK VW. 2522 lowa. 843-2300. 6-22 FOR RENT COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS, furnished and furnished apartments; AC room and laundry; 401- 95th Apt. call or 843-8220, tfo 19th Apt. 5-B call or 843-8220. Sleeping rooms—furnished, wiw. or without kitchen privileges, for kids off street parking bodies KKM 547-6827 No. ppls. Phone # 848-567-27 Summer and Fall furnishings 1 to 4 bedroom apts. From $80 to Rooms with kitchen privileges 1 to 3 bedroom apts. Utilities paid $625-8007 842-5007 Un-furnished apt in triplex. Help me move into this beautiful residence. I need someone to take over the home and rent. Residential Indian Hills Hill property, private parking, $150 per month, 2 car garage. Call (804) 367-9111. LOOKING FOR A TWO-BEDROOM GARDEN apartment adjacent to the creative shopping center and public restaurant with the space of most two-bedroom 公寓, plus a separate room. FI02A-Harvard Road No. 822-349. You rent your units in a wide range of features and features, all being managed by us. See Mrs Ponieważ today, you see Mrs Ponieważ today, you see Mrs Ponieważ today. CAMPUS APARTMENT LIVING winter pool, pool cab, winter pool, cable TV, and one and two bedrooms furnished and equipped. 1122 furnish. 82116 One and two bedrooms, apartment, furnished and unfurnished at Ridgeway 24th and Oudhall Summer running for Palm. Phone 843- 754-6100 Apartment for rent. AC—single bedroom. Available now. 19 W. 14th Call Henry after 6 p.m. at 842-9513 THE sirloin LAWRENCE KANES LANDING Delicious Food and Sauces with Complete Menu Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks Our menu is and has always been with us. 10:30 Mike North of the Kaw River Bridge Phone 855-276-4911 Square Open 10:30 Closed 11:00 BEAUTIFUL ONE AND TWO-BEDroom garden apartments are being furnished by Hardwick, Argo, Ilya and Maitreau Streets. These fine apartment features dishwashers, water and gas utilities, carpets and drape spaces quacked nished or unfinished. One call or email will confirm the details of Road No. M-234-258 during daily service and get all details on Lawn and Garden units. 2:00 P.M. on weekdays we invite you to see the property. You will be pleased to see our atrium. You will be pleased to see our atrium. NOTICE ABRAXAS LEATHER = emu- purses, bolts, hats, backpacks 17 W. 9th. 6-21 Chauffered water ski boat rental and lessons. 125 hp 16 ft. ski boat. Call 41-2576 for details An Oasis in the desert of life. Vista Restaurant. 1527 W. 8th. 842-4311. 6.29 FREE- 4卫琳s, 7 weeks old, box trained, 1 pure stares, see at 519 Ohio St. 842-3745. 6-26 WANTED Want to take turn drives from Topeka to Lawrence. B-5 Monday-Friday. Call Clay Loyd. 357-1619. Topeka. 6-20 Wanted roommate to share apartments, or house for fall. Call Ron at 842- 6681 6-21 Two guys to share large house for the summer. Furnished, electric dishwasher, five-minute bath to canopy bed, all utilities paid. 422-6811 6-26 TRACHERS WANTED Contact Southwest Teachers Agency, Box 4057, Albanyburg, N.M. #81706. Our 2018 BAND-NAM and a memorial of N A T A TYPING Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typing prompt, accurate Keyboarding skills. Phone 432-3281 Gate number 6-23 threshold, term papers typed accurately, promptly IBM Sysetec elite type tables, term papers typed accurately REASONABLE RATES Klenza Davi- k, 842-7097, 842-5605 Experienced in typing these, dimmer lighting, and haze. Have electric typewriter with pies type. Accurate and prompt typing. Phone Number: 843-2656. Mrs Wright Experienced typist for your Theses, Dissertations, mork. work. Call Mrs. Troxel, 2409 Ridge Court, 842-1440. tf REWARD for it in return of silver hand-ring with initials TM. Lost during enrolment. It means a lot to Vicki at 842-4761. It means 6-26 LOST Lost 4 keys with nail cup. Please leave word at dept-864-3819 or leave at Russian Dept.-Marvin Annex. 6-27 HELP WANTED Lost: Tortoise framed glasses. Photogrey lenses. Area Summerfield to Union. If found call 843-8782. Reward: 6-21 CARRIER OPPORTUNITY Immediately graduate who is willing to work to train graduate who is willing to work to train graduate in our new store, open 5 nights a week. Applicants must appear in person between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. at our office or furniture. March 6th and Delaware. Leavnorth, Kanao No Phone at 943-287-0688. MISCELLANEOUS Specialized instruction in Classe and Flamenco concert guitar for beginners, progressive techniques, progressive, selected techniques, playful playing. Music 841-2901. ABRAXAS LEATHER leather goods—custom orders 17 W. 9th YAMAHA ERN'S CYCLE SALES A M A H Wrench WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 716 North 2nd DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE 843 8500 The Stereo Store LUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass 6 Tuesday, June 20, 1972 University Summer Kansan 1987 THE FIELD GAME Kansan Staff Photos by Pris Brandsted and Hank Young - FEDERAL MARRIAGE ASSOCIATION 1 (1) Concerto By MARY PITMAN Kansan Staff Writer For homemade ice cream and old-fashioned mosquito bites, come to a band concert in South Park on Wednesday night this summer. The concerts, which last from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m., probably take place in theaters, where they music and compete good, according to Jerome Woolson, secretary of local union S12 of the American Federation of Musicians. Even if it's warm, there's still "a good breeze down there," Newsom said. About two hundred people went to Wednesday's concert, Newswom estimated, but there should be good crowds by the end of July. The audience includes some long-time attendants. "They, their 'faces'," said Newsm, "and I don't know who they are." CHAIRS ARE PROVIDED by the Lawrence recreation department but, as Newsworn explained, the chairs are fitted with handles and stretch out on the grass. People from the audience call people to play their instruments and the versatile band can play anything from overtures to popular songs, and show music and songwriting. Band members vary in age and experience. Some, like former Lawrence mayor John Weatherwax, have been with the band since 1983. The band's members are drawn from the faculty, administration and student body of the University of Kansas explained Newsom. KU REGISTRAR William KU SUMmer. Other band players include public school band teachers and even high school students Saxophone player Clyde Bysom, a long-time member of the band, explained in an interview at his home that band concerts were a tradition here and back to Lawrence's earliest days. "they tore a bandstand down downstairs." Byson remembered inscribed on one stone of the present band shell is the date Byson, a Lawrence resident since he was in the third grade, played in South Park band concerts as a member of a Boy's Band 40 years ago. He later played there in a high school FIETTEEN YEARS AGO FIETTEEN YEARS AGO a bass with a 8-piece band, according to Bysom. At that time the South Park band shell was "It wasn't strong enough," said Bysom "to hold up a hand." But with repairs and the addition of an outside stairway, the wall was put in use. Through the years, said Bysom, the number of concerts and the size of the band has continuously grown till it can do seven or eight concerts (each summer) with a 40-piece band. But the band still has no one to play the bassoon, and often no oboe-player, said Bysom. STILL, THERE'S "a lot of talent" and the music is good. "We get into some pretty deep music sometimes," said Byson. "The director does that to keep you on your toes." Bysom himself started on the clarinet and later switched to the saxophone. He likes all kinds of instruments and blood, Sweet, and Tequila. one long band music of the 40% "MUSIC IS so important in the Bysom household that a brass musical note is enlaborated on by his father." Bysom's regular employment with the Reuter Organ Co. does not involve his talent for the saxophone at all. He must play every instrument whose instrument is an avocation, try to keep his embouchers in shape during the winter in order to play in the summer. But, said Bysom, "My first love is the big hand of your life." Bysom praised highly the homemade ice cream sold at the concerts, but he warned sadly, "If you're a drummer, play. If you're a drummer, you've got it made." But if you play a bass, you have to wait till "Musicians are pretty much hums," says B阪. "They like to play whenever they get an opportunity." But playing in the band, though fun, is not really relaxing. Sometimes after a concert, it's hard to find a place where you feel. Said Byson, "It 'tives you up." TREASURES EVERY DAY. PARK THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Senate Passes Child Care Bill See Page 2 82nd Year, No. 11 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, June 21, 1972 HARRY WILSON AND HYDNEY BURTON "Twelfth Night" Rehearsed versation. Both are drunk in the scene from Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," currently in rehearsal. The play opens at p.m. Saturday in the University Theatre Sir Andrew Agueckeet (Earl Trussell, Sir Lawrence graduate student), left, and Sir Toby (Tom Dickman, Lawrence graduate student) attempt to carry on a con- Appeals Court Upholds Demo Delegation Reform Ballot Count Continues WASHINGTON (AP)—A U.S. Court of Appeals Tuesday held that reform measures aimed at sending more minority-group members to the National Convention cannot be ruled out by the court they are put into effect. The decision by the three-judge panel reversed a ruling Monday by U.S. District Court. Hart had said, in effect, that to reshape delegations to reflect the state's proportion of blacks, women and young people under the constitutional rights of slated delegates. The Democratic National Committee asked the appeals court to reverse the ruling. dashed long-planned hopes of many reformers in the Democratic party, would cause a major tragedy at the convention scheduled to start July 10. Over 40 per cent of the delegates are being challenged by reformers. The appeals court ruled: "The result of the Court's decision is sufficient likelihood of injury to the constitutional rights of plaintiff to warrant action by the court in the absence of their claims." Hart, a former Republican chairman in the District of Columbia, said the Democrats had no right to require any nonviolent group membership or minority-group members. Those who sponsor a delegate slate can "put anybody on it they want," he said. McGovern Camp Sees Win NEW YORK (AP)-Sen. George McGregory claimed victory "beyond our wildest expectations" in New York's Democratic presidential primary Tuesday night and said it put him on the threshold of first ballot nomination. A complex system and a confusing ballot slowed the count of votes in a primary that chose 248 members of the 278-vote New York delegation. The hungary tall showed McGovern had won 95 delegates, including 41 unqualified players. more in New York City, for example, Motown had captured 16 delegates, and Miley Cyrus was the lead singer. McGoventry's organization projected that his overall count of elected delegates would swell past the 205 mark. Pat Caddell, a former state senator from Dakota senator would gain 265 or 206 of the elected delegates. The 30 others are to be awarded in proportion to the primary outcome, and if the Caddell projection is correct that would give McGoventry at least 230 $1 Million Suit Filed Over Bugging Attempt WASHINGTON (AP)—Gilling the break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters a "blatant act of political espionage," party Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien said the Committee President and others Tuesday for $1 million. The civil suit, filed in U.S. District Court, contends that the break-in at Saturday was an invasion of privacy and that the Democrats' civil rights were violated. O'Brien said also the alleged attempt to plant bugging devices during the break-in was in violation of laws against wiretapping. O'Brien said the Committee for the Reelection of the President was requested in the complaint to open its records and divulge its exact ties with McCord. The Democratic chairman wants listed all payments made to McCord and reasons for FIVE MEN, including James W. McCord, chief security officer for both the Republican National Committee and the Democratic re-election campaign, were arrested Saturday at the Democratic national headquarters in the Watergate apartment-hotel complex. Both GOP committees announced Monday that McCord had been Former Atty, Gen. John N. Mitchell, chairman of the committee for the Re- search Center at Columbia University. Treaties Aimed at Protecting Birds Kansan Staff Writer Named in the lawsuit are McCord and McCord Associates Inc., a Mar-yland security firm, and the Committee to Re-evaluate the safety of individuals charged with the break-in. "represents another example of sheer demagogy on the part of Mr. O'Brien." They are named in the suit as Bernard Parker, Eugonio R. Martinez, Frank Burke and Jim Kramer. "If the present election trends continue, and I am confident they will, we will have elected delegates here in New York today beyond our wildest expectations," McGovern, his hair flecked with conflitex, supported in a New York hotel hallway. welfare and defense spending cuts were so unpopular that they would lead to Democratic defeat in the November election. The projection and the candidate's victory claim were based on returns from sample precincts tallied by McGovern campaigners. THE AMERICAN and Arctic peregrine falcon, brown pelican, California least tern, California condor, Hawaiian crow, owl, emperor petrel and the Florida everglade kite. Most of the birds migrating to Japan from the United States are from Alaska. Among the endangered species that fly the route over the Pacific are the albatross, the peregrine falcon and the Aleutian Canada goose. It is believed that without the treaties many of the birds found in North America would be endangered, and those that survived were as endangered could become extinct. THAT WOULD put McGovern with 20 votes of the 1,599 it will take to choose him. According to Johnston, the birds have no choice other than to leave the northern country during the winter, as the extreme cold would not allow the birds to live. "They have nothing to be alarmed about," he said. "We want harmony and justice, not bitterness and special privilege . . ." IN NEW ORLEANS, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey described McGovern as the candidate of the establishment, and asserted anew that his positions on taxes, WHILE THE votes were cast in New York, the last of the 23 presidential primaries, McGovens's campaign rivals asserted from a distance that misgivings about his programs could jeopardize a ticket headed by the South Dakota senator. At his Manhattan victory rally, McGovens expresses a new coalition of political forces in this country are some who have expressed fears about us. Johnston listens 410 different varieties of birds that can be found in Kansas, with almost all of them being protected by the new treaties. Only some species, such as the crow and magpie, are not fully protected by the amendments. Included in the protection are the six families of birds of prey. The U.S. government can now arrest persons who have been labeled endangered which have been labeled endangered; At that point, only a handful of returns had been independently tallied. Frank Mankiewicz, national political director of the McGovern campaign, said Tuesday night the returns indicated "well over 200" of the New York delegates would vote for the South Dakota senator on the first ballot. AFTER NEW YORK, only 42 delegates remain to be selected. McGovain heutenants hoped to pry loose enough delegates now uncommitted or aligned to the committee tosemble a first-ball majority before the democrats convene in Miami Beach July 10. JAPAN's industrial growth has reduced the bird population significantly. For instance, the Japanese government's environmental agency reported that only 5,000 wild geese had been sighted in 1971, one-tenth of the number recorded in 1963. The growth has also reduced the number of wwings places of the birds from 149 to 27. By TIM WINTERS McGovern had set as his target a minimum of 200 of the New York delegates. He captured 41 of them unopposed. Group shooting is the term used for hunters who gather in a group to shoot the birds as they fly into nesting grounds. The groups often number in the thousands. "Right now you can't go out and shoot a bird such as a robin, but you can still spray with chemicals the tree in which it nests, killing the young. This type of killing is not against the law. In March of this year the United States signed treaties with Mexico and Japan that will extend protection to various migratory birds which inhabit the countries. Many of the birds protected by the new treaties are found in Kansas, and are protected by the North American, according to Richard Johnston, professor of systems and ecology. Faulty voting machines at more than 200 polling places in the Buffalo area led to a court order that extended the bailout in the 37th Congressional District until 10 March. The order also barred release of any result, in two adjacent districts until that hour. In view of the hours and a complex and confusing primary system, a long count was in prospect to determine the outcome, with the exact lineup of the New York delegation unlikely to be clear until later in the week. The treaty with Japan, signed by the U.S. State Department March 4, will protect 189 species of birds, mostly shore birds and migratory fly between Japan and the United States. THE TREATY with Mexico, signed March 10, extended agreements under the 1938 Migratory Bird Convention to protection of 32 more families of birds. The agreement is against wanton shooting. Group shooting has long been practiced in Mexico. "But problems still exist in the protection of the birds," said Johnston. It is hoped that the new treaty will help to stop the decline of migratory birds in Japan, Johnston said. It provides for the preservation of migratory habitats and sets a ban on the import and export of birds that are considered endangered. According to Johnston, much of Japan's bird trouble is caused by industrial growth which has reduced the amount of traditional wintering places for the birds. Without wintering places, the birds cannot reproduce. New Ambulance Service, Ordinance For Garage Sales Denied by City Citing a lack of necessity for additional ambulance service, the Lawrence City Commission Tuesday denied a request by a woman to seek a copa for a license to operate in the city. By BOB LITCHFIELD Kansan Staff Writer The Commission turned down the Topeka firm's request after hearing a statement by Larry Marcum, operator of Citizens Ambulance service of Lawrence. Marcum repudiated the argument of Cand C that there was a need for increased ambulance service and that more people were ambulances if they were available. C and C had contended that they could increase business from hospital and convalescent home transfers, that these services would be paid for by various government of insurance health care plans. MARCUM SAID that these programs would only pay for the ambulance service when the service was absconded and not to pay for the patient from physician to that effect was required. He also pointed to the great number of unattended patients, in unaccounted from non-emergency service. The Lawrence average of 6.4 calls per day was in line with the national average, although the difference in service was adequate. A drop of nearly 100 per cent in the number of injury accidents More Black Engineers Is Objective Of Council for Minority Students By STEVE CRAIG Kansan Staff Writer There are 14 high school juniors and seniors currently enrolled in the program, which gives students an intensive exposure to courses which deal directly with engineering. Darton said. The program is designed to help students to pursue an engineering degree. An accelerated output of engineers of minority races is the goal of the Student Council on the Recruiting, Motivating and Educating of Black Engineers (SCoRMBE), according to Andrew Durton, head of education and director of SCoRMBE. The program was started in 1970, but not until recently, under the direction of Durton, has there been a great effort to train students in the job that staff wrote many letters and placed several long distance phone calls during recruiting this spring. As a result, students in the workshop come from Kansas, Alabama, Florida, Georgia and Louisiana. STUDENTS ARE accepted, Darton said, on the basis of three criteria: interest in engineering, recommendations from high school teachers and teachers and grade point average. "However, the most important consideration is the student's interest in A new approach to college orientation is also being implemented through the program by Darton. Most students when entering KU familiarize themselves with the campus and its procedures. The course is SCIMRME, however, receive packets with maps of the campus and Lawrence and other information about the school. engineering. If a student's G.P.A. isn't very high, but he expresses great interest in becoming an engineer, we'll accept him," he said. The heads of each department in which students are enrolled lecture on expectations of each department and provide information to them, gives lectures, dealing with such things as buying books at the bookstore and notetaking techniques for classes. They may seem basic, but, as Darton points out, they need to be taught or become oriented to in order to survive. THE COURSES offered to students are math 21, math 3C, physics I and II, chemistry seminar, computer science seminar and slide rule. The academic status of the students is decided through a special arrangement with the department heads. Students in SCoRMEE audit the classes of their choice, but are expected to participate in the class by asking questions, doing all homework assignments and by taking all exams, including the final. At the end of the session, the student may elect to receive credit for the course. If he elects not to take credit, there will be no record of the course on the student's transcript. If a high school student has college credit before he graduates from high school, there is a great sense of success. It is a great motivating factor, Darton said. At present, all 14 students in the program are blacks. Plans are to recruit students from other minorities, Darton said. in Lawrence in the past two years also made additional services impractical, he "WE PLAN to do extensive recruiting at Haskell and high schools across the nation to involve Indians and Chicanos," he said. While attending the workshop, SCORBEE participants are living in Oliver Hall. All student living expenses, books, supplies and tutors, if needed are financed through the SCORMEF Fund. Fund receives contributions from large corporations that have an interest in the education of engineers, such as Mobil Oil, Humble Oil, General Foods and Atlantic Richfield. "IHOPE you realize the implications of having two ambulance services fighting crises." Marcum said that his study showed no community of less than 75,000 in the United States had a competitive ambulance system. But it did not change, as was Citizenza, or publicly operated. Darton believed the program was very important. Urban renewal needs black engineers, he said. The white engineer doesn't understand the social background of blacks and other minority groups of the inner city, he said. Dr. George Learned, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, commended Citizens for its service and expressed his doubt of need for additional service in Lawrence Jan Carpenter, Topeka, an owner of C and C, defended his firm's service and training programs and asserted his belief that competition was desirable. 'THERE is no reason why an am-balance set so far is making it better, be told the Commission.' Mayor John Emick said that the denial was in no way attributable to inadequacies in C and C's service, but that the service was just not necessary now. Emick signed a resolution submitted by Bob Nelson, chairman of publicity for the John Hald Day Banquet, proclaiming the 19-10 "John Hald Week" in Lawrence. Watson said that he would watch for repeaters who may be violating zoning laws and operating a business in a residential area. But, he said, the existing law required insurance and zoning laws were not a problem requiring licensing of garage sales. THE COMMISSION decided that an ordinance regulating garage sales was not needed. City Manager Buford Watson said that a study made by him showed there were only 14 garages in January to May of this year, and that only five of those were at the same location. In other business, a contract for construction of a chain link fence at the Water Plant was awarded to the Davis Fence Company of Topeka on a bid of $4,518.70. The Commission approved raising the curb between Alabama and Illinois streets near Hancock Boulevard. M. A. KING Andrew Darton Kansan Photo by STEVE CRAIG 2 Wednesday, June 21, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Thieves Strike at KUMC KANAS CITY, Kan. (AP)—Two men, one of them armed with a small caliber revolver, held up the outpatient business office of the University of Kansas Medical Center late Tuesday, tied up two women employees and escaped with little merit the bullet that struck her. The robbery occurred after the officer closed at 4:30 p.m., and the men gained entry by forcing a lock bolt on a second floor hallway door. Abrams to Head Army WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nikon announced Tuesday that he would nominate Gabe Creston, W. Abrams, now the commissioner of the United States Air Force. Abrams is to replace Gen William C. Westnoreland, 58, who is retiring June 30. returning June 30. Nixon also announced that he was reappointing Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, 60, for another two-year term as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. All F111 Planes Grounded WASHINGTON (AP) — The Air Force grounded its entire fleet of U.S. based F111 tactical flighters Tuesday following two crashes of the $8-million planes. The Air Force said in a brief statement the grounding was ordered as "a precautionary measure" and would remain in effect until the cause of the accidents was determined. Two aircraft when their plane plunged into Chaochwatheu Bay shortly after taking off from Alphab AFB, Flia. The nature of the trouble was not known. Draft Ceiling Raised WASHINGTON (AP) - Selective Service announced Tuesday that 8,000 men with lottery numbers up through 75 would be called in August, raising the caliphy ceiling from No. 50 set for July. At the height of the numbers, 9,200 men would not reach beyond No. 100 this year and was unlikely to reach that number next year. Those to be called in August will get their notice in the mail starting July 3. The August call will bring the number to 50,000. A total of 31,400 men would not reach beyond No. 60,000 Secretary of Defense Mo. R. Laird has set as the ceiling for this year. UN Council Attacks Piracy UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)—The U.N. Security council approved a decision Tuesday condemning acts against the safety of civil aviation and calling for "effective measures to deal with those who commit such acts." The unanimous decision of the 15-nation council was reached after an intensive round of private consultations and announced by the council president, Ambassador Bashir George Baush said the declaration was not as strong as the United States had desired but he said he welcomed the decision. Demo Candidates Give Mayors Word on Cities NEW ORLEANS (AP)—Three Democratic representatives advocate conference mayors that the future of the nation depended on the future of Democrats. Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, and George McGovern of South Dakota addressed the mayors and representatives of the U.S. Conference of Mayors The conference's president, Major Henry Maier of Milwaukee, seeks to increase the number cicized both political parties for not speaking enough about urban issues. "I don't think either of the major political parties has faced up to the realities of the urban crisis," Humphrey said. "I suggest we quit talking about the urban crisis and put it as the crisis, because America is essentially urbanized." "WHAT some people once thought to be a comfortable existence in the suburb is becoming more pronounced, sanitation, transportation, and the tax rates are going up and the schools are having Humphrey received an over-wel- lmingly favorable reception. He was given a standing ovation of applause and repeated the trenched 12 times by applause. He was given a 1½-minute standing ovation of cheer as shes By contrast, Muskie was interrupted only once by applaure and no one stood when he entered or when he left to 15 seconds of "The urban problem is the nation's problem." Muskie told the newspaper the concentration of all the pressure and problems and unmet needs of our society. We cannot abandon the cities without development. McGOVERN discarded most of his prepared text to attack the war in Vietnam and to defend his proposals to cut the defense budget by 1975, and to discuss his tax reforms to close loopholes. In support of his defense budget, he said, "We need a new definition of national defense, which goes beyond the size of our country. We need a definition which understands that the defense of a city, the defense of a country, is as closely tied to the quality of its goals, the health of its people, the services that are provided." On the war, he said, "Ending that war is the precondition of any hopes for our cities here at home." McGOVERN was applauded All three men pledged to develop coordinated national fire and rescue services in rural areas, with Humphrey making that the major thrust of their work. six times, mostly when he talked about the war. All three called for a series of tax reforms to make the system fairer All three strongly endorsed the revenue sharing bill coming up for a vote in the House this week. The bill would provide cities with more money to spend over five years in federal money, with few restrictions on use. WASHINGTON (AP)—In an attempt to help grocery shopers get more for their money, the Food and Drug Administration will force disclosure of how much seafood is in food cocktails. The federal agency said its new proposal, if implemented, could shortcut by up to 10 years the present bureaucratic procedure that requires an amount of a prime ingredient, rather than percentage labeling. But, in its closing votes, the Senate beat back several Republicans and pushed the administration views. Some GOP senators said they believed another veto was likely if the bill was approved by the White House in its present form. The measure was substantially modified from a 1971 version in an effort to meet objections of the governor and last year's measure with a veto. Senate Passes by Wide Margin $3 Billion Day Care Measure The Senate vote forwarded the legislation to the House. So far it has been approved by a committee in that branch has given no indication of when it plans to be passed. "Complaints from consumers and others have convinced FDA that labeling of some food products suggests that those products are not being consumed than is actually present," said FDA Commissioner Charles WASHINGTON (AP) — The $2.95 billion child development bill designed to fund the biggest program of federally backed day care. SPONSORS said the bill should fund 700,000 new day care spaces Campus Bulletin TOLLOY English Rotarian, room. English Room English Librarian SUA Bridge: 1:30 p.m., Pine Room. Folk Dance Club demonstration: 7 p.m. Oliver Hall. SUA Classical Film: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff SAIGON (AP)—A North Vietnamese regiment backed by tanks counterattacked South Vietnam's Tucson Tuesday, triggering a dawn-to-dusk battle that left 288 men dead, military spokesman said. Seafood Ingredient List Asked The Saigon command said Wednesday that 237 North Vietnamese troops, a few of whom were military sources said at least 50 other marines were wounded. The North Vietnamese regiment was said to number up Vietnamese tanks were knocked out by light antitank weapons and air strikes. The South Vietnamese were in their third day of a sweep into occupied Quang Tri Province, adjacent to Vietnam's northern Battle Claims 268 Lives OFFICERS said the North Vietnamese counterattacked the marine positions at four different points. Hue in the southern and eastern sectors of the province which fell into North Vietnamese control Field reports said 10 North produces 100 million tons of the gas through the world each year. This compares with an estimated 270 million tons produced by man-made sources, and automobiles and factories. U. S. Air Force fighter-bomb The research at the Atomic Energy Commission facility here is to determine the amount of carbon monoxide in the atmosphere as a step toward The work is sponsored by the Coordinating Research Council, jointly directed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the automobile Manufacturers Association, and American Petroleum Institute. But the homeowner mowing his backyard worries about, according to the scientists, unless he's planning to fill a giant room full of decaying wood. ARGONNE, III. (AP) — Chlorophyll, the stuff that makes grass green, produces large amounts of carbon monoxide, an explosive and a fuel. Scientists at Argonne have found. Laboratory have found. Chlorophyll Discovered To Produce Lethal Gas Chlorophyll is essential to photosynthesis, the process by which plants use sunlight to manufacture carbohydrates. The scientists estimate that the naturally occurring chlorophyll ers attacked a big North Vietnamese ammunition depot west of Quang Tri City and plots reported it went up in flames with more than 200 explosions. Several were reported nearby. B525 ALSO struck south of the DMZ in the continuing aerial campaign to forestall an attack on Guatemala's capital south of Quang Tri. Five waves of U.S. B52 bombers—15 planes—struck above Quang Phu Prevince inside Ninh Dong, leaving 30 depts in the region of Dong Hoi. 45 miles north of the city, the Hue Hot Hai is 96 miles north of Hue. Nearly 3,000 marines, backed by U.S. air and naval power, launched a spelling operation on the island which was captured by the North Vietnamese May 1. South Vietnam's northernmost province now is considered an extension of North Vietnamese territories and has no land border to the could be used in an assault on Hue. 25 miles southeast. Associated Press correspondent Richard Blystone reported from the southern front that South Vietnamese troops trying to reopen Highway 13 to An Loc airport were overrun of the provincial capital IN THE AIR war over North Vietnam, U.S. Air Force Phantoms attacked battle area near a major airport on fifth day and reported destroying The command also announced the loss of three more aircraft. It said a Navy F4 fighter-bomber named A150 had been deployed Vietnam, 90 miles northwest of Vinh. The two crewmen were back in the Gulfinb out in the Tonkin Gulf. nearly 100 pieces of surface-to-air missile equipment. The equipment includes 25 missiles above the demilitarized zone included two SAM missiles. They said that millions of mothers now worked either through income or because two income were essential for their in its first year of full operation which would double the number now available. C. Edwardx THE BILL'S managers were overwhelmed with the need for a an amendment to permit the gov- ernment to turn control of the new day care projects over to the staff. Often small children are left to fend for themselves now because no arrangements can be made for their care. Nixon, last year, objected to provisions that would have authorized groups to allow groups in towns of 5,000 or more to qualify. He complained that the plan for thousands of local sponsors was invalid. As the bill was originally written, it gave local sponsors such as school systems and churches the primary right to set up and run the day care centers. The plan was also an institution which was carried with votes of Republican and Southern Democratic senators. ★ A Sandwich special every day including our Home Run Special— A triple decker Ham with German Potato Salad $1.50 (for carry out orders call 841-3468) Che Ball Park - Ball Park Baseball: summer leagues now forming He sought to do this by making only groups in cities of 50,000 or more population eligible, instead of the 25,000 as the bill provided. WASHINGTON ★ Pitcher night every Wednesday From 7-12 85° Featuring: But a few senators strongly opposed to the legislation insisted that it would accelerate tendencies of families to break up and deprive children of a mother's care at the time they needed it. Some shrimp cocktails contain less than 50 per cent shrimp, officinals depending upon whether they are used, are used, but consumers have difficulty in judging the amount because the cocktail is covered with oil. HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER— Virgil I. Wodicka, director of the Bureau of Foods, said that percentage labeling could be applied to the thousands of non-standardized foods without going into the process of adding them to the select list of about 400 standardized foods. OPEN 11.00 a.m. to 12.00 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 2.00 p.m. to 10.00 p.m. Sun. ★ Practice for City Tournament and Cash Prizes in July Defeated by 49 to 36 was an amendment from New Hampshire that raised the number on the number of potential local sponsors of child development programs. THE SENATE rejected, 40 to reject. Peter O'Brien, Dominiek R-Golo, to funding in the bill. He said Nixon had objected strenuously to the rejection. TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE! Offer expires July 1st 1720 West 23rd Street Domincik said that, in most cases, states could handle the program better. In any case, he said, the state should go up to the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare to choose the states and local sponsors. PRAGUE (AP)—Scientists using X-rays determined that an ancient Egyptian who mummy was infected with the childhood diseases and probably died of a lung complication at an event in the news agency CTR reported. Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price $2'99 on Capitol records Capitol at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles kansas Shakespeare TWELFTH NIGHT Irene A. With ANNE THOMPSON AS VIOLA Directed by STUART VAUGHAN JUNE 24, 26, 27, 28, 30 and JULY 1 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE ALL PERFORMANCES AT 8:00 P.M. MURPHY HALL TICKET PRICES: $2.00 KU STUDENTS $1.00 WITH ID Summer Season Coupon $5.00 Box Office Opens June 12 Phone UN4-3982 From Sweden with Love Olof daughters Blue suede, Brown Suede Gold suede, Yellow patent Purple suede. Pink suede Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Wednesday, June 21, 1972 3 Yankees Top Kansas City, 4-2 NEW YORK (AP)—Bobby Murcer lauced a two-homer and Sparky Lyle chalked up his season. The New York Tuesday night as the New York Yankees trimmed the Kansas 4-2 in an American League game. University Summer Kansan Murcer, who also drove in a seventh innning run with a sack for Billy McGee and with homer of the year following Bernie Allen's headless double in 1985. The Yankees, who won their fifth straight, had nicked Kansas City starter Dick Drago for a run in the second when Johnny Cain singled, stole second and home on Thurman Munson's hit. Murcer's homer made it 3-0 but when Mike Kochich surrendered in the first inning, Carl Taylor and Fred Patek for a run in the seventh. Lyle was able to score on three. Amos Otis, leaving two runners stranded. THE YANKS added a wrapup run in the seventh. The Royals got a run of Lyle in the eighth on Cookie Rojas's two out and double, and a single by John Mayberry. In other American League games, Dick Wood fired a solo shot that defeated the Cleveland Indians 3-1 in the nightcake for a sweep of the NL. Harmon Killebrun and Eric Soderholm laced fourth-inning home runs as the Twins took an opening 7-3 behind Jim Kaei's six-three. THE TWINS, stretching their winning streak to three straight, staked Woodson, 5S, to a three-shot victory. Toovar driving in two runs and Danny Thompson one with a three-shot cracked a solo homer for the Indians in the ninth. Kaat, 8-2, survived a two-run Cleveland first in the opener, and the Twins went ahead in the second on three walks by loser Vince Colbert, 1-5, a two-run victory. The Giants and Tovar's run-scoring single. SODERROLM, on a 3-0 count then lofted his sixth home run into the left field seats. With two out, Killebrew clouted his eighth homer of the season to the opposite field with the bases empty in the fourth. Tony Oliva Tracy and Adam Colbert's wild pitch and Jim Nettles was intentionally walked. Jim Lenborough outdued Jimc's Wilbur Wood and plantation players to a 7-1 American League baseball victory over the White Sox. Lonborg, 4-3, scattered nine hits for the victory. It was only the second loss in 12 career decisions against the Brewers for Wood, now 11-5 for the season. The White Sox's knuckleballer July 7, 1970. In National League action Tuesday, Lee May clubbed a twowoman and Bob Watson hit a two-run single to fuel big innings for Houston and vault the Astros into first place in baseball's West with a 7-4 victory over the New York Mets Tuesday night. HAND, 4-4, received late-in-help relief from Paul Liebman, who recorded his ninth save. Pina got out the last two Boston batters in a win. Dalton Jones crashed a two-run Hamilton on the fifth inning and Rich Hunter on the sixth. They gave five hits as the Texas Rangers beat a 82-AN American League The Astros moved one-half Small Towns Share Drug Problem By BARBARA STROH Kansan Staff Writer What is the major source of drug abuse among young people in Erie, Kan. ? Alcohol, say two members of the three-man team charged with abusing Abuse Workshop at the University of Kansas this week. The Rev Norman Rogers, however disagrees with that conclusion, saying many children refused to use alcohol in rebellion to standards Prof, Student Enter Contests For Fall Vote Stephen Douglas Jackson and Robert C. Casas, both affiliated with the University of Kansas, as political offices in the fall elections. of their elders and turned instead to the use of marijuana. Casad, professor of law at KU, announced Tuesday his candidacy for the position of judge of the Division 2. He is a Democrat. Casad received his A.B. and M.A. degrees in economics from KU. He has been teaching at KU since 1959. Jackson, Lawrence senior, majoring in political science and American studies. He filed for precinct committeeman of the Jackson. Jackson will be graduated at the end of the fall semester. The Rev. Mr. Rogers minister for the Eric Christian Church has worked for the past three years to help people who become drug addicts. He thought that there was as much drug abuse in smaller towns such as Erie, which has a population of 100,000 in any of the larger communities. Nevertheless, the Rev. Mr. Rogers concluded that drug abuse made up a very small percentage of young people had come to him. The youths who come to the Rev. Mr. Rogers are those who have become desperately concerned about their use of drugs and feel the need for courage to quit. Sometimes he works with the youngster and his parents. At other times the parents refuse to become involved, so Mr. Rogers does not want his parents involved. Mr. Rogers said that parents never came to him concerned that their child might be using drugs. Apparently, the parents apparently have symptoms to look for, he said. In contrast to the opinions of the Rev. Mr. Rogers are those of Monty McCoy, a 15-year-old high school sophomore from Erie. He believes that alcohol is one drug used in the town. The sophomore abuse he has heard of is of several instances of glue sniffing. "Everyone will go out and get booed up on Friday nights," said McCoy. But he believed that youths would stay away from other drugs unless under an extreme temporary pressure or a parent's supervision they might resort to getting high on such substances as gasoline. McCoy thought that the smaller community lacked the pressures which young people in larger cities endure driving them to drug use. Rowland also agreed with McCoy in the opinion that the most widely used drugs by young people are opioids. She thought that the example set by parents strongly influenced many young people to use drugs. She said there was as much of a problem of drug abuse among them as there was with her. McCoy thought that the less popular students and those doing drug use they could use drugs. He also thought that much of your friend's drug use is due to alcohol. The other team member, Lenoir Rowland is a junior high school teacher who agrees that drug abuse would be most apparent. She said she had seen no evidence of drug abuse even though she taught eight grade physical education where she believed drug abuse would be most apparent. "I know I did and so did my husband." she said. The mother of two children, Rowland would hate to see them become involved in drug experimentation, but thought they probably would She said that people who declared their children never used drugs were crazy. She came to the drug workshop hoping to learn more about the drugs and their psychological impact. Because she is in constant contact with young people she said, she must, all above, be开放 and honest, to keep open the between her students and herself. The KU Folk Dance Club is giving a demonstration at 7 p.m. today in Oliver Hall. Linda Lassman, Lawrence junior, said that the demonstration would include an art exhibit at the gallery of the dances to those interested. Folk Dancers Will Perform Lassman, president of the club, said there would be six persons performing several folk dances in Bremen. The city is home to Massachusetts, Russia and Israel. game ahead of the Cincinnati Reds, who lost to Montreal 7-2 Watson batted in two runs in the third inning as the Astros took a 3-10 lead. The other run scored on Cesar Gordon's saxerfive fiv THE ASTROS took charge in the first four more runs on May 4's little victory and the others on a double by Tommy Heins and a single by Tommy Heins. The Mets chased Astros' starter Ken Forsch with four straight hits and three runs in the game. The ball was held only three hits until The Astros banged out 13 hits against the Mets to give them 54 hits in the past four games. RELIEVER Jim Ray replaced Forsch in the seventh and earned the save. Ron Fairly and Bob Bailey cracked home runs as the Montreal Expos ripped Cincinnati 2-1 in the second half, year after Tim McCarver's fourth inning leadoff single and broke a 1-1 deadlock. Bailey had his sixth inning one earlier with his sixth inning season, off Jim McGlothlin, 3-5. Montreal broke the game open in the fifth when they scored two runs and knocked out McGlothlin. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pdt. G.B. Detroit 28 14 561 Rattnell 24 29 453 New York 24 29 453 Cleveland 23 38 451 Cleveland 23 38 451 West Oakland 27 17 6815 4 Chicago 23 17 6415 4 Cleveland 20 17 6395 4 Kansas City 25 29 6433 12 California 26 21 6313 14 NATIONAL LEAGUE W 10 L 1 Pet. GBR Pittsburgh 36 21 612 New York 36 21 612 Chicago 34 22 607 2 Detroit 34 22 607 2 St. Louis 23 32 432 9 San Diego 23 32 432 9 Cincinnati Houston Texas Atlanta San Diego San Jose Milwaukee 35 22 614 35 22 614 35 22 622 27 29 482 20 37 315 37 31 352 Tuesday Scores New York City 4, Kansas City $2 Phoenix 5, Houston $1 Milwaukee 7, Chicago 1 Minnesota 7, Cleveland 3, 1st game Minnesota 3, Cleveland 3, 2nd game **National League** Montreal 7, New York 4 Houston 10, New York 5 London 6, Seattle 6 Chicago 5, San Francisco 8 Alabama 10, Philadelphia 9, Baltimore Flood had challenged beaches but the series of statements that not only bind a player to one team and restrain power at the tables wastable. In its decision, the court admitted that baseball was a interstate commerce, but the court maintained that baseball had "unique character," which they failed to identify. In a very weak majority opinion, Justice Harry A. Blackmun admitted that the reserve clause was "inconsistent and unjustified" and that it "an exception and an anomaly." He then proceeded to pass the buck, saying that it was Congress's problem and that the congress had not done anything further. The decision was an indication of approval. CHIEF JUSTICE Warren E. Burger backed up this up with an equally regressive opinion, saying that the reserve clause is not the best protections of the affairs of a great many people have rested for a long time. What Blackmuck and Burger failed to realize is that in the 50 years since the Holes decision, baseball has grown from a game to a big business. The Holes decision of 1822 was the first season under the league upholding major league baseball's reserve clause. As expected, the Supreme Court ruled Monday, in a S-3 decision, against former St. Louis minor baseball star Curt Flood. Change is on the way, and neither conservative courts nor "fat cat" owners can keep it away much longer. Other sports have been forced by judicial decisions to loosen their bonds and give players the autonomy to play against team they will play for, but if a baseball player does not agree to the salary offered by his team, he must win. IN SPITE of the decision, the vote was close enough to keep Marvin Miller and player John McCormick in the MILL pledged to continue their efforts "to remedy the inequities through collective The suspension of golfer gale Blalock by the Ladies Professional Golf Association and the resulting $5 million suit MAYOR OF THE PAPUA NEW GUINEA Kansan Photo by JOHN REED Prof Recalls Expedition with Heyerdah' Prof Wears Get-Up from the Go Carlyle Smith displays garb, carvings from Easter Island. 910 Kentucky VT 3-0826 Bridal Close Out Sale 50% to 75% off 910 Kentucky Court's Reserve Clause Ruling Said to Overlook the Business By JIM GALVIN Kansas Sports Editors By BECKY PAGE Kenyon Staff Writer Smith was one of four professional archeologists who supervised the five months of logging on the island from 1855 to 1860. For the first hand narrative or Thor Heyerdahl's Akau-Aku expedition to Easter Island, Carlyle Ward explores anthropology is the man to talk. The island, which is the most southern part of the island, long and nine-miles wide, and is covered with about 1,000 statues ranging from six- to 70-feet in depth. The statues, with a crematorium at the base of each, inhabit the ancestors. All of the statues were toppled during the Late Period, from 1680 to 1868, because of wars between two nations. "IT WAS great sport to knock over someone else's ancestors," said Smith. one of Smith's most important finds on the island was a stone spear head, more evidence of the way he hunted. Smith, a teacher, a behavioral scientist, also studied the customs and dances of the island's present inhabitants. possession of Chile, Spanish is the language Smith spoke with them in Spain because he knew only a few words of their Polynesian languages. Because the island is a The script, which looks like hieroglyphics, was fed into a computer to break German codes, but even it was unsuccessful in deepening THE EXPEDITION supplied three Russian scientists with information about the language and script found on the island. Only five months of the ten-month expedition were spent on Easter Island. The rest of the expedition was spent among people on other islands in the Pacific, including Pitcairn and Tahiti, which Smith referred to as "the land of secrets." SMITH HAS returned to the island four times since the expedition as an archeological team, and a travel service from New York. "The people thought they'd never see me again," said Smith. He received a hero's welcome and lifted and carried from the plane. The air strip was not on the island during the expedition's stay there. If tourists wanted to Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price on Capitol records Capitol $2.99 Reg. $5.98 Kief's discount price $2.99 on Capitol records Capitol. at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles go to the island, they had to go by boat, which went only once a year. Tourists could stay for 10 days or return to the sea until the next boat came. Heyerdahl's income is from royalties on his books. The Amorales sold 80,000 in the $250,000 in royalties from Heyerdahl (a biography) and it is ingested in Merken's SMITH said that Heyerdahl as a seasn anthropologist had taken an orate from the Norwegian Academy of his for his research. 0.10,08967. finishing his book on the Ra expedition. After the Aku-Aku expedition was ended, Smith and his colleagues began working on the island, with volumes, about the岛. The final volume was finished nine years after the expedition was completed. Smith has written books in archaeology since 1942. Smith has taught at KU for 25 years, and has served as part-time curator of the Natural History Museum. May we help you with your housing needs Welcome Incoming Freshmen JAYHAWKER TOWERS KU APARTMENTS 1603 West 15th JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS S. c. bounded by the K.U.C. Campus 300 2 Bedroom Apartments Not more than 5 minute walking anywhere. All utilities paid—Auto parking included—Heated swimming pool—Tenant storage room on each floor. Incarcerator dump on each floor —Modern kitchen with gas stove and refrigerator. Thermostat for heat and air conditioner—Two elevators in each building—All-black walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and quiet—Complete laundry in each building—Outdoor exposure Bath tub, shower, two lavatories each apartment. Low Leasing for Summer and Next Fall The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see Convenience — Comfort — Safety — Extras XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX by Miss Blalock are certainly humbling events for a game that was working hard to strengthen its image. MISS BLAIACK was accused of cheating by moving her ball, and was consequently put on probation and disqualified from a tournament she was pleasing in at the suit. She counted by tining the suit. There is another point to be observed in this matter, however, and that is to examine the view of these students placed on pedestals and stereotyped them as good, clean cut. All-American boys and girls early-to-bed and early-to-ride body and a healthy mind etc. Fortunately, this image of jocks as supermen began dissolving a few years ago with the acquisition of a new team, such as Cosell and Boston Oliver. Sauer and company have followed, and finally some people are seeing athletes as honest-to-account beings, just like you and me. Such revelations were a slap in the face for sport, however, which has suffered through many recent challenges. These authors revealed the drinking habits, drug habits and (b) sexual habits of our THE SPORTS world set out on an immediate crash campaign to clean up its image, but it is almost funny (in a sandstay way) to look closely at what's going on. Every year college breaks back on the campus, etc. The NCAA puts its sneakers down on one of two colleges every couple of years, as if to say, "See doing cleaning up our mess?" Snorts Stumbers Sports Stumpers 1. Can you name the oldest man ever to win the heavy-weight boxing championship? Does it help any? I hardly think so. It is useless to *stay* in stand of front society (sport) and hide the reality. I would rather the realism actually doing something about it 2. Can you name the three men who have won the Indianapolis 500 three times? it would be interesting to check it on institutions that have been involved in the process of recidivism is, and if colleges or back on or stop them. 2 Tom Dempsey's 63 yard field goal drive he record of Bert Reichhar of the Baltimore Colts, who kicked a 50-yard. THE POINT is that sport is both a segment of our society and at the same time a separate entity. I know there are unethical Answers to Monday's Stumpers The Detroit Red Wings' "Production Line" continued Howe. Howe, Lindsey and Sid Alea* WIMBLEDON, England (AIP) - Stan Smith and Evoanne Goolagong were named Tuesday's winner of the Wimbledon Tennis Tournament. Wimbledon Tennis Tournament. Billie Jean King of Long Beach, Calif., a three-time winner. Smith, the big U.S. Davin Cup star from Pasadena, Calif., is favored for the men's title in a weakened entry list.The 32 contract pros of the World Cup are banned from the tournament. Tennis Seeds Told The seedlings They include Australia's John Newcombe, who beat Smith in the final last year. Miss Goolagong, Australian holder of the women's title, was given the top seeded place over Men's singles: 1. Stan Smith, Passandne Cailf, 2. Ilia Nastase, Pasandne Cailf, 3. Ilia Nastase, Spain, Andrew Someru, Spain, Jankos Kodes, Czechoslovakia. U. S. Davis Cuppers Tom Gorman and Clark Graebner were left out. Alexander's Specials Everyday Wide Selection of Gifts V12-1320 826 Iowa JOSEPH E. LEVINE MIKE NICHOLS LAWRENCE TURMA ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST DIRECTOR MKE NICHOLS NY THE GRADUATE Now you can see"The Graduate again or for the first time. THE GRADUATE Now Showing NOW SHOWING Hillcrest Adults 1:50 Child,75 "THE ABDUCTORS" G TECHNICOLOR* Eve, 7:50, 9:40, Mat Sat Sun, 3:00, 4:40 Twilight Prices Good For 4:40 show only Eve, 7:30; 9:30 Mat, Sat 5:30; 2:30; 4:20 Twilight Prices Good At 4:20 Show Only Hillcrest Adults 1:30 Chato's Land WALT DISNEY'S SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON Hillcrest Mateeer Sat-Sun 7:45 & 4:30 ONE WONDERFUL SHOW! AND TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION WALT DISNEY'S ALL CARTOON FEATURE 101 Swiss 2:00, 8:27 101 4:06, 7:20, 10:33 Adults 1.50, Child. 75 Granada THEATRE...Telephone 1-3-5788 Ginger is back She's more EXCITING more EXPERIENCED more EVERYTHING! PETER M. WOODY ALLEN Diane Keaton "PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM!" Showtimes: 2:30, 7:35, 9:30 Jarsity TREATMENT ... Telephone 81-7465 FONDA DONALD SUTHERLAND 'klute' AND In everyone's life there's a SUMMER OF '42 Starring: Jennifer O'Neill Gary Grimes Box Office opens 8:00 Sunset WE ARE IN LAKE HARVARD West on Highway 91 4 Wednesday, June 21, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. VERMONT ST. ONE WAY ONE WAY ONE WAY Kansan Photo by STEVE CRAIG Angela in the Red Press One of the prerogatives of being editor of the Kansan, along with sleepless nights and irate phone calls, is being on the mailing list of many different organizations. They range from TV Guide reprints to PR releases from Eastman Kodak. Perhaps the most interesting, however, are the varied types of propaganda: Gramma, the official organ of the central committee of the Communist party of Cuba, posters from Czechoslovakia supporting the "day of solidarity with youth and students struggling for nationalism, for independence and peaceful coexistence." This week I received the March issue of the International Union of Students magazine, which is published in Prague each month. Scanning through it, I found some rather interesting statements, which I quote: "The Free German Youth of West Berlin, at its Fifth Congress held last December 18-19, called for . . . the freedom of Angela Davis." "Young workers and students of Ulan Bator (Mongolia) recently attended a mammoth meeting to protest the illegal prosecution of Angela Davis. . . Participants in the meeting expressed warm solidarity of the Mongolian youth with Angela Davis and passed a resolution demanding that the United States immediately release her from prison." And yet another: "The Secretariat of the International Union of Students, in the name of millions of students throughout the world, wishes you all the best on the occasion of your birthday. Employing all efforts to mobilize world student movement for denouncing the imperialist conspiracy against you and all democratic and progressive forces in immediate release. Militant Greetings." (This telegram was from Warsaw to Davis on her 28th birthday.) Since it took until June for the March issue to arrive, I'll be up in the air until September waiting for the June issue. I'd like to find out how the Communist youth of the world reacted to the discovery that the imperialist conspiracy acquitted Angela Davis. -Rita E. Haugh Editor Editor The Impossible Mission The black sedan drew up to one of the corner soft drink stands that serves Washington tourists during the summer. It was night; the stand stood unattended. (Naturally.) A sinister figure, wearing a dark suit, jumped from the sedan and approached the stand. He inserted a dime in the slot and looked around, then pulled the tab from the aluminum can. He slowly raised the can to his ear. "Mr. McCord," the voice from the can ask for your mission, should you decide to accept it. A slight smile crossed the man's face. "no," he thought, "but it makes the direction hopeful." The voice from the Pepsi can, no doubt donated to the re-election committee prior to April 1, continued . . . "is to gair entrance to the Watergate Apartments and proceed to the sixth floor. Should you encounter any difficulties, you are to call the Watergate phone and is prepared to swing weight with the management if you need her." "Once you gain entrance to the floor (unconventionally?), you are to proceed to the office of the Democratic National Committee. You can't miss it; it's the only janitor's closet on the floor," the voice said. The man looked nervously over his shoulder. "This is a bigy." he thought. "Good old Martha," the man thought, she really taken the country into her bosom. "After you have entered the D.N.C.," the voice directed (not unlike the old D.M.Z. days, chuckled the man), "you are to locate the file labeled 'Project Concern.' It has come to our attention that the Democrats are staging a convention in one month. You are to find out who the promoters are and who the honored guest is to be. No one seems to know around here, and it is imperative we find out soon," the voice said somewhat Dolefully. "Pay particular attention to the files marked N.C. (for non-candidates), S.C. (for skeleton closet) and A.C. (for accounts closed) if there is one. It is our hope they will provide some information." "Also you are to remove a file marked 'The Yellow Rose of Texas' and return it to headquarters. We have reserved a new cabinet for it here. It is a rather large file, so you may need a wheelbarrow," the voice said Agnewstically. "Lastly," the voice was fading, "you are instructed to leave behind a copy of 'Six Crises' for the chairman of the D.N.C. Remember the purpose of your search and destroy but to begin building the bass for a generation of lasting peace." "And McCord," said the voice, "should you or any of your agents be captured, the director will disavow any knowledge of your mission. Good luck, James." The man jumped to attention, his hand over his breast, tears streaming from his As the black sedan drove off, the Pepsi can began to fizzle and soon self-destructed. All that remained was a black spot on the side of the wastebasket, near the sign which read, "Please keep Washington clean." "Dumb de dumb Dita," the man whistled as he placed the can in a nearby room. Mark Bedner Vice President Quiz This year two national con- ferences are planned, and inter- esting parties to promote the office of vice president. How much do know about the msz who will be in charge? 2. Who was the only vice president from office? Who was the president to be nominated by a congressman, than by congressional candidates? 1. What vice president presided over the Senate while under an indictment for murder? 4. What vice president managed a hotel on the side while holding office? to confirm his nomination to the Supreme Court? 7. What man was the only vice president to ever take the oath of office in Havana, Cuba? 6. What vice president had a city named after him? 5. What vice president had the shortest term in office? 11. WHAT VICE president once met him, the more I have thought over it, the more I would would a great deal rather be would a great deal rather be of history, than vice president." 10. What vice president found himself presiding over a Senate that had not long before refused 8. Who was the youngest man ever to become vice president? 9. What was the name of the person up drunk at the inauguration and announced that he didn't know what procedure (about the only thing a vice president is obliged to do) 12. What state has given the country the most vice presidents? 13. Who was the last vice president to be born in a log cabin? 14. Who was the first vice president to be married in office? 15. What vice president was the first vice president he graduated from law school? 1. Aaron Burr, V.P. under training in New York and was under induction in bark New York and New Jersey for the death of Alexander Hamilton, the first U.S. president. 2. John C. Calhoun, V.P. under both John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson, 1825-December 28, 1832. Calhoun had supported the Nullification Dostine, an anti-slavery leader with Senators friendly with Jackson. These Senators began insulting Calhoun indirectly in ANSWERS their congressional speeches, and he got fed up and quit. 3. Martin Van Buren, V.P. under Andrew Jackson, 1833-37 4. Richard M. Johnson, V.P. under Martin Van Buren, 1837-41. He was also the first of three southern vice presidents to be 5. John Tyrler, V.P. under William Henry Harrison, March 4, 1841-April 6, 1841. He became officer when Harrison died in office. 7. William Kim, V.P. under Franklin Pierce, March 4, 1853 reopening from tuberculosis, which killed him a month later. 8. John C. Breckinridge, V.P. under James Buchanan, 1868. 6. GEORGE M. Dallas, V.P. under James Polk, 1845-49. Citizens tired with his help in setting them into the Union 9. Andrew Johnson, V.P. under Johnson, March 14th. 8. Lincoln, March 14th, which became president after Lincoln's assassination and was im- perial. 10. Adalai E. Stevenson, V.P. under Grover Cleveland, 1838-97; 11 Theodore Kroosevelt, V.P. under Grover Cleveland, 1838- 41; September 14, 1901, With McKinley's death he became the youngest president—he was 42. 12. New York with nine. 15. Richard M. Nixon, V.P. under Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1953-61. 14. Alben W. Barkley, V.P. 15. Eleanor M. Blankey, Barkley married Jane Haladey of St. Louis in 1940. He was also our olds V.P.-72 when he took SCORING 13. John Nance, Grace V.P. under FDR, 1933-41. He was born on Nov. 22, 1868, in Blossom northwest Texas. Grace, the first to be sent abroad on official business, represented the U.S. in 1935 at the inauguration of the Quezon on the Philippines. 0-1 Average 2-3 Good 6-1 Average 2-3 Good 4-12 You must teach political science over 13 Have you ever thought of running for office yourself? This information is taken from "Not Exactly a Crime" the Our Vice President Agnew* by Richard Curtis and be published to be publish by Dial Press on ill. Environment Needs Complex Solutions By RUSSELL L. ACKOFF Professor of Systems Sciences University of Pennsylvania As awareness of the extensiveness and pervasiveness of our environmental problems has increased, public pressure to find solutions has also increased. Problems have also increased. Perhaps in no other social problem-area are we as prone to seek panacas as we are in the environmental area; but com- plaining seldom have simple solutions. Even simple proposals for handling environmental problems can be spread support. Few people are willing to incur any part of the cost or inconvenience that they want. Hence there is more interest in helping people pay for than in finding ones that work. Proposed solutions tend to be aimed more at punishing people, improving the environment. Although we have, or can easily obtain, solutions to most of the technological aspects of environmental problems, we do not know how to solve them with solutions to the social, economic and political aspects of these problems. There is a critical lack of relevant problems. There is a critical lack of relevant information required to find such solutions. WHEN AND WHERE panaceas have been tried, they have failed. Little has been learned from these failures with the intention of learning anything from them. In fact, such efforts are not even conceived as trials, let alone tests, but rather as implementations of solutions effectiveness is not in question. Therefore, it is doubtful that there is any one solution that will work in every community. For this reason any solution that is adopted should provide a process to which it will be proved systematically with experience and (2) of adapting to the conditions in which it must operate. More precisely, a proposed solution should have at least the following characteristics: 1. THE CONDITIONS to be corrected should be specified and measured before the proposed solution is implemented. 2. the intended effects (exposed in measurable quantities) to be achieved by they are expected (the 'due' specification is specified before implementation). 3. Determination of the actual effects should be made at the "due dates" and compared with the intended effects. (Interim progress should also be made to aid in system management.) In brief, every proposed solution should provide for learning and adaptation based on experience, a periodic, if not continuous, evaluation and feed-back control. Proposed solutions should be flexible enough to be modified to suit different needs and assure objectivity, the evaluating body should be completely independent of those either who are beneficiaries or those plebangement the program or who stand to benefit or by lose it. 4. The "due date" measurements should be disseminated to facilitate public discussion and a decision should be made on the need to modify, or terminate the program. Discontinuation (not continuation) should be automatic unless there is a positive intervention by the testing body that initiated the program. VIETNAM "We're winding down the hot war." ARMS TREATY "And winding down the cold one, too." CHICHE HAGGIE The Counter Journal "Thus it follows that we must crank UP the of Pentagon budget." Historical Feature Dress Codes Persisted in 1968 Dress codes are not something far in KU's past. As recently as 1968, women were revising them. An article in the April 18, 1966 Kansan detailed the changes in the dress code being made in different living groups. The office of the dean of women had prescribed a dress code in a book. The Official Policies for Women's Halls "The code was: Lunch—slacks and bermuda may be morn. No curlers allowed. Dinner, Monday through Thursday—campus clothes, cleaning skirts and sweaters or bermuda shorts Friday and Saturday—slacks or bermuda and covered curlers are permissible. Sunday dinner BREAKFAST-HOUSE or coffee coat except in coil beds, where campus or casual clothes are worn. Covered hair curlers may be worn. requires dressy clothes and heels and hose. The code was changed, mainly in the residence hills, after the ruling body of the living group and the office of the dean of law. In GSP, Corbin, Hashinger, Lewis, McCollum, Oliver, and Miller the code was changed. Douthart was in the process of the code, and none of the sorts had changed their codes. BASICALLY, THE change allowed slacks, shorts or other "casual clothes" at dinner. Hashinger and GSP provided for "casual clothes" at lunch and "nice" slacks and shorts at dinner. Both lunch and dinner were permitted accept on Friday and Saturday. Miller Scholarship Hall permit- ment or shorts at a college or university. Bidden. "Grubbies night" were Friday and Saturday, and then would be the next day. Lewis and McCollum allowed curlers during Saturday lunch, if they were covered. The rest of shorts for lunch and dinner but not curlers. Douthart's revised code, which had been sent to the dean of women, would allow slacks and OF the sororites, Alpha Ch Omega, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Omicron Pi, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Chi Omega and Delta Gamma allowed slacks and skirts (dresses, skirts and sweaters or blouses) were required for all evening meals except Friday and Saturday and a dress-up meal in the middle of the week. The other sororities required dresses for lunch. Today, there are no dress codes in college and many students attend scholarship halls, although there may be a specified meal at which members are expected to come. 25 Years Ago, U.S. Advised France to Get Out of Vietnam WASHINGTON (AP)—The United States told France 25 years ago the Vietnam war was playing into Communist hands. Parts to be “most generous,” in seeking an early solution. Griff and the Unicorn IT'S CRAZY TO HAVE NO PANELS BESIDES, WHO DOES IT BENEFIT? IT' BENEFITS SOKOLOFF HUH? YOU KNOW HOW HARD IT IS FOR HIM TO DRAW A STRAIGHT LINE... IT'S CRAZY TO HAVE NO PANELS By Sokoloff BESIDES, WHO DOES IT BENEFIT? IT BENEFITS SOKOLOFF HUH? YOU KNOW HOW HARD IT IS FOR HIM TO DRAW A STRAIGHT LINE.. "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." This was disclosed Tuesday when the State Department removed the secrecy label from a batch of official documents. He urged France to be "most generous in the attempt to find an "We fear continuation of the conflict in the region, and we are faced with real Western democratic powers in Southern Asia and lead to the very eventualities of which we have been unable to handle." DECLARING THE UNITED States had "no solutions or plans to intervene," then Secretary of George C. Marshall predicted: THE CEASE-FIRE offer was reported to have been sent by a Vietnamese messenger bearing a letter of invitation for French Overseas Minister Marius thet Messenger. The messenger disappeared and the French said the letter from Ho never was received. early solution which, by recognizing the legitimate desires of humanity, provides peace and deprive anti-democratic forces of a powerful force. According to the U.S. consul in Hanoi, James O'Sullivan, Ho at al-Asad, said he propose a cease-fire on all fronts with troops returning to positions defined by an agreeable agreement and been reached on April 3, 1946. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN News Advisor . Del Brinkman Editor . NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . Del Brinkmae BUSINESS STAFF Rita E. Haugh Business Manager Business Adviser ... Mel Adams Doug DeTraz University Summer Kansan Wednesday, June 21, 1972 5 图10-23 印刷工区作业 Karan Photo by CLAV LOVD Women Prepare and Package Medical Equipment Burnet Instrument Co. 700 E. 22nd St. supplies physicians . . . Acupuncture Puts Scientists On Pins and Needles Study By SHARYN BALLARD Kansan Staff Writer In a few years, being "on pins and needles" may no longer be a worn-out clinic about a state of emergency. A someday refer to relief from pain From behind the bamboo curtain has come the news of a mysterious anesthetic—acupuncture. Anesthetists and medical scientists are beginning careful study of this Chinese pain-killer by which surgery can be per-fered, in some slender needles inserted in particular places in the body. Western medical men are often accused of but the public leaped onto the idea, according to Dr. Kasuki Arakawa, associate professor at UCLA. "EVERYTHING that's new and makes such great ideas by the pulpit comes from hypnosis a few years back, has caught the public eye," said Cynthia. "A new bride is always nice and sweet when she is first married. In a few days, the husband finds out whether he has a special gift or a nagging shrew. Acupuncture is the same. It is hailed now by the public as a great new anesthetic which will cure all. Medical people will study the bone and remain skeptical," he said. Acupuncture seems to have some effect as a pain-reliving remedy. Akraka said, although the practice it does not work for everyone. "APCUPUNCTURE is practiced in other Southeast Asian countries, but was considered quackery. We did not even study in medical schools and are not chiropractic healing is in the United States," Arkawaka said. He plans to go back to Tokyo to further investigate the technique at the College of Acupuncture this summer. The art of acupuncture has been practiced for 5,000 years, but only since 1963 has acupuncture been accorded an official accord according to Chinese reports. "AT AIST," it thought maybe hyponasis was behind the no-pain step. "You can jump from China where they acupuncture on a horse, and the horse showed no pain. That man should have been hyponasitic you couldn't hypnotize a horse." The Chinese have a theory that the needles act through 12 pairs of meridians or ducts that lead to specific internal organs, and that they flow from the needles acts to restore a healthy balance of life fluids. But no meridians or ducts show up under the best electron microscope, and most doctors have generally reputedly good effects from medical acupuncture to suggest that someone cares to help you. "Some doctors believe acupuncture may be an electrical anesthesia." Arakawa said, "but there are many other theories." the major factor in any illness is what we must not be misguised. chiropratologists might start using acupuncture on people who have not been properly diagnosed. What seems to be a chronic pain thoroughly research and find out all we can accord to acupuncture, he said. "After all, pain is a very important factor in any illness." HOWEVER AMAZING and astonishing this pennemonon is, Arakawa warned against a tool that can cause acceptance of acupuncture. "Perhaps the cancer could have been removed if it were caught in time, but instead of being properly examined and treated, the patient might have needed lessly the treatments and die needlessly." 'First of all, we must "Even though there are risks involved in any use of anesthesia, it is the most important and safest method for the avoidance of pain." Editor's Note: This is the fifth in a series of articles on industry and business in Lawrence. By MARTHA NORDYKE Kansan Staff Writer it takes more than people to support a community. The amount of industry located in a town often can make or break it. Burnett Instruments, a unique product of hometown entrepreneurship, contributes to the lawrence stability of Lawrence. Medical Supplies Made in City Disposable plastic medical instruments from this Kaw River town company are used daily by a physician in Bangkok, Thailand. The team checks the burners in Canberra, Australia, a doctor uses Burnett equipment to set an athlete's fire. They move the patient away in Capetown, South Africa, a patient blesses the moist mechanical warmth applied to his arbital hands during weekly exercise. His burnett equipment is used. Nearly $1.25 million worth of equipment will be shipped this year to markets that include Japan, Thailand, Australia, South Africa, most European countries and in the United States. Burnett Instruments, since 1970, a division of C. R. B. Card, N.J., manufactures three sets of instruments for the instruments for one-time examination use, orthopedic equipment that makes hospital cast rooms' obsolete and more accessible, also primarily disposable. BY FAR, the bread-and-butter beetle is equipped with a species speculum for use in all routine vaginal examinations. According to Jim Macdon plant manufacturer, all these plastic instruments are shipped from Burnett's plant at Sacramento. Burnett produces the SPECLITE, a light source for CORET, which provides 360- degree anal inspection; and a NASA-SPEC, a nasal diagnostic examination tool. Other products burnett offers. The disposable line of plastics is designed to prevent cross infections and free skilled personnel from coming in contact, and the lastic allows more patient relief from thermal heat than do traditional metal instruc shields, toe caps and cast-related equipment. Martin said in a recent interview that the company was founded in 1961 by Gene Burnett, a former representative for a manufacturing concern. Burnett grew up in Lawrence, attended public schools here and decided to start this family enterprise at home. The company's local orientation is characterized by close ties to the KU, both of which are on the receiving end of the Burnet's enterprise. Although Burnet Instruments banks only operating capital in Lawrence, because it is a division of the company, about $4.000 worth of business per month with the Lawrence training firms of Graham Ship Lawrence and Lawrence Freight Line, Inc. Martin declined to reveal Burnet's share of property taxes to support the City of Lawrence. A Topeka contractor built the ocean shell for the squash but it was an all-local effort of Lawrence builders that completed the building. All 30 Burnett employees live in Lawrence or the Lawrence trading area. The majority of the non-union workers are women. Martin said the routine, quality control plastic assembly seemed to be the best in Iowa. Five men have been interested in jobs on the assembly line. THE employ cafeteria in the new 12,000 square foot addition completed last January is stocked with food purchased from Lawrence grocery stores and restaurants. Packer Plastics, inc., another local company, supplies a large portion of the raw material Council Meeting Planned A University Council meeting meeting at 23 p.m. today in 108 Sheldon to discuss desirability of an ad hoc committee to investigate University "We don't know why the Council should reconsider a committee that proved but whatever their reason we maintain our commitment to ensure that we are a mattee," said Michael Bradley, member of the Haiphong group. The Sen-Ex worked with the Hapathong Coalition to establish and investigate research projects on their social implications. At the meeting the Haiphong Coalition will attempt to present a plan for enhancing their demands for an investigation of University violence. Coalition though had been dissatisfied with the progress of Sen-Ex concerning the research committee. The Coalition thought that some worthwhile plans had been made for the research committee. They made it clear however that any reduction of the committee's function or its size would be considered an example of bad faith on part of the University. "We hope to be able to participate in the deliberations of the University Council," said Professor Richard Sack, who it that it is imperative to careful study research which is taking place on campus and feel that researchers and other concerned members of the University Council benefit from a careful study of the implications of that research." goal of the research committee was "to assist in the utilization of research in the interest of mankind." Bradley said that the broader KANU Schedule 9- News-Weather-Sports 10- The Art Scene 9-15 The Art Scene 9-15 - Features Works. Vachon Noam-News Weather Sports 12-15 - Noam Hour Concert-Communiti 1—The Future of Physician-Patient Relations 1- 30 - Musk from Germany 2- 30 - Musk from Germany to Work Again 3- 31 - This Afternoon 4- 31 - Music Descended 5- 30 - News Weather Sports 6- 30 - Music by Candlelight 7- 6 - KANT Special 8- 7 - News Weather Legacy 9- For Love of Music 10- 15 - To Be Announced 11- 15 - To Be Announced Campaign for Donations To Fight MS Underway The Douglas Chapter of the Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Association is finishing a three-year campaign to raise funds to fight MS. Last night was the focal point in the effort, when more than 390 house canvas for contribution. Larry Beeh, chairman of the local chapter, said he expected to mount collected later this week. More than 393 block workers volunteered through telephone solicitations. Heeb said. Most of the volunteers are house-to-house campaign. They left self-addressed stamped envelopes so contributions could be mailed to Mrs. James Huff, UMS chief officer, UNM MS associator treasurer. HEEB ALREADY has some encouraging results. Edgar Wolfe, professor of English, was in charge of collecting conference materials for Kansas faculty and staff. More than $700 has been sent by KU people so far, surpassing the amount donated last year. THE THIRD portion of the fund-raising effort consists of MS 'treasure chests' placed in more than 20 law offices. Lawrence. Next week, those banks will be picked up and donated in them will be counted. Hebre reported that there were two more phases of the Douglas County chapter's campaign still in progress. Corlett Cotton, making an effort to get contributions from commerce and industry. According to Heeb, 60 per cent of the collections will remain in the local area to help fund perennials for victims. The MS Association's Home Service Program helps provide for persons confined in wheelchairs therapy in their homes and at an MS center in Topeka. The other 40 per cent of the donations goes to the national organization, where it will help finance research by such groups as the American Psychological Associations in finding cures and therapies for multiple sclerosis. Sambo's JUNE SPECIAL During June, when you purchase any dinner item you will get the second dinner for 1/2 price. All you do is present this coupon. Buy one dinner, second purchase of same item ½ price COURON KU Federal Credit Union NOTICE COUPON Offer good Mon.-Thurs, expires June 30 New Summer Hours Charles Wright 864-4770 June 19 - August 18 9:30-12:30 Monday-Friday after hours call Mrs. June Couch 864-4784 The Alley Shop IS OPEN! 843 Massachusetts Burnett fashions into medical instruments. The products are packaged in cellophane sacks, filled in part, by a Lawrence firm. Burnett is active in the Lawrence High School on the job training program of industry-oriented curriculum. The instructional focus of high school students in this half-day school, half-day training course. Affiliations with KU include product and development research often contracted through the Center for Research at Campus Kansas University has conducted investigations specifically on clad products used in cast aluminum employs KU engineering students as part-time drafman. THE KU Medical Center had been able to conduct research and development advice and in running feasibility studies on WANT ADS WORK WONDER One day 35 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $0.01 A portion of the success Gene Buret has enjoyed from his internship back into the community and KU, including a yearly amount budgeted by the Burcet Community donated a large sum to make possible a large program for a bus tour treat for the KU Medical Center in Kansas. The center, named in Burcet's honor, is be operated by mid-summer. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered in the following regard in color, creed or gender. FOR SALE 2. If you don't Western Civ. Notes-New On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, 2. Do not use them. Either it is a disadvantage. Elsewhere it comes to the same name—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madhouse, 14th West, 7-27 For sale. 15 by 7, custom slotted chrome reverse wheel vents with G60 by 15 Firestone wide ovals. Excellent Kit. Call Gary G49, 843-8165, 843-8165. 6-22 For sale. 250 Suzuki X6 Serman- brin 9 in good condition. "Old's" Trumpet 8 years old in good condition. Call 843-0306. 6-26 Bokomunikomunikomkomon $1.00 Saturday jacket, jacket, dress, jacket, jackets, jacket, jackets, jackets, jacket, jacket, jackets, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, Saturday hours 10 a.m.-3 o.c. Saturday jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, jacket, Saturday hours 10 a.m.-3 o.c. STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can COST plus 10 at RAU AUDI. Your choice of either a classic or other Sterio Discount House in Sydney, Australia. Free tea, coffee, and Consulting Services. Michigan St. B-Bar-Be, 515 Mich Hamburg St. B-Bar-Be, 515 Mich Rhode Island RB Plate-$1.50, Small Rhode RB Plate-$1.50, Go to $3.00, Slab to eat $1.50, Chicken $1.45, Chicken $1.45, 'chicken' $1.45, Beer Bratfruit -$2.00, Beer Bratfruit Sand-$2.00, 9510 Closed Sundays, 7-27 9510 Closed Sundays, Tues 1968 Chevy Newiva 6 cylinder, automatic, power steering, new tires, excellent condition. JAYHAWK WK 6252 Iowa 843-2200. 6-25 1969 VW deluxe bus. 7 passenger. 100% warranty. $2955 JAYHAWK VW 2522久良. 843-2000 6-22 North Side Country Shop, 707 N.2nd, Antiques, used furniture, and lots of other items. 9-7 7 days a week. 842- 3159 Herb Allenbernd. tff For sale: Tickets to Rolling Stones Right in front 11th row. 842-6623 6-21 35mm SLR camera cannon QLFHT thru the lens lightometer. Like new. $150.00. 825 Alabama at 4 p.m. Sorry no phone. 6-26 For sale. 14 speed bicycles. Bicycle store. Cafe, restaurants. Bakery, Kalahome. Manufacture. Failon and bicycles. professional mechanics and bicycles. 14th Avenue. 83-844-9400. Bike Shop. 14th & Manuscriptus. 83-844-9400. 60 VW Black w sunflow. Needs repairs. Body in rough shape. Make an offer before June 27. Day 864-37-6 Eve 843-5835. Tony. FOR RENT COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENT, room, furnished and unfurnished apartments. AC, pool and laundry. Room, furnished. 19th Apt., 9th B- Apartment. 19th Apt., B or call 843-822- 8100. Apartments furnished, all air-conditioned, large enough for two or three, more borders RU and near town, no parking no parks 6-27 843-5767 Sleeping rooms—furnished, with male or without kitchen privileges, for males, off street parking, borders KU and near town. No pets. Phone 847-587-3261. Unfurnished apartments in triplex. Help me to find the best room for you. I need someone to take over the guest, residential Indian Hills lodge, affordable parking, $150 per room, parking space. Apartment for rent. AC—single bedroom. Available now. 19 W. 14th. Call Henry after 6 p.m. at 842-9153 6:36 Webster's Mobile Homes TRESTRIES Your Complete Service Dealer Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts Ample Park Spaces Available 3409 W. 61h 842-7700 Ample Park Spaces Available Just West of the Drive.In Theatre in THE sirloin Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication LAWRENCE KANSAI Five Great Places LAWRENCE BAYARD LANDING MENU Delicious Food and Strawberries Complete Menu. Sweat Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K. C. Steals. Our menu is and has always been perfect. 11) Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge 39 Phone 843-1431 Open 4:30 Closed Monday KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days 35 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Summer and Fall rentals Furnished 1 to 4 bedroom apts. From $58 to Roooms. Rooms with private priv- ly rooms. Utilities付费. New- 629-845-5007 For Rent: Princess home mobile, bedrooms, furnished, completed, with all appropriate amenities or coords. July 5. small demand required, 913-286-2426 or 316-878-0010 **AUPMS APAFMENT LIVING** with Santee Apts. includes A/c, bath, laundry, and two bedrooms furnished and two bedrooms furnished and two bedrooms furnished 1123 Avenue, 843-716 BEAUTIFUL ONE AND TWO BEDROOM garden apartments are building and Harvard; Argo, I10 and Misty Streets. These five apartment features a soundproof construction, daiswaters, acoustic panels, carpet and draps, spacious rooms named or unnamed to accommodate a naked or unfurnished One call or two, and Road No. 843-2648, during daily use at LOOKING FOR A BOTTLE-BEDDEN garden apartment, adjacent to the cozy retail shopping center and public street with the spice of mint two-bedroom unit, 2107A Hardwood Road. Nq. No. 842-2548. Show you rental units in a wide range of styles, features and features, all being managed by Ms. Pereira. Meet Mrs. Pereira today, your favorite look! One and two bedroom apartment, furnished and infiltrated at Ridgene- bury, 24th and Guadalupe. House for Sale for Fall. Phone 845-751 1116 ABRAXAS LEATHER — clothes purses, belts, hats, backpacks. 17 W. 9th. 6-21 NOTICE FREE-4 kittens, 7 weeks old, box trained. 1 st. pure siamese, see at 519 Ohio St. 842-3745 Chaunfeder water ski boat rental and lessons. 135 bp 16 ft ski boat. Call 841-2576 for details. An Oasis in the desert of life. Vista Restaurant. 1527 W. 6th. 842-4311. 6.29 CANTERBURY HOUSE Epicopal CANTERBURY Epicopal 2 Holy Cross Hospital Monat p.m. Tues. 9:00 p.m. Thurs. 3:15 p.m. Fri. 10:45 p.m. Firesure Fire open Friday, and Sat. Please read-Win FREE-FREE FREE Please trip to Iguacuay and Iguacuay registration WASHINGTON COOPERATIVE ORGANIZATION OF CAMPUS OF OAKLAND SOUTHERN COOPERATIVE ORGANIZATION For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary contraception Center at 864-4441. If no answer is received at information at 864-3506. Call 24 hours. Announcing an opportunity to meet the Candidates at Carnegie- Broken Arrow Park--Sunday. June 25. The Candidates -- Game 6 Speakers. Wanted: 10-speed man's bike. For sale: 3-speed man's bike. Call Dale at 864-8220 or 841-3607. 6-28 CSC TOYOTA TRIUMPH Competition Sports Cars Inc. 2300 W. 29th Tr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2192 Fivedays 25 words or fewer; $1.75 each additional word; $0.3 WANTED Two guys to share large house for the summer. Furnished, electric distiller. five-minute to campus. All utilities included. 842-681-6. 6-26 Roommate Wanted: Fine country living for only $45.75 per month. Private room, 35 acres yard, good condo in a quiet neighborhood. Bison 819, Vermont. 6-28 Wanted roommate to share apartment or house for fall. Call Ron at 842-6081 6081 Experienced typist will type term papers, theirs, or dissertation. Electronic typesetter, prompt, accurate. Mrs. Muskauan, Mrs. Hackman. 3281. 7-27 TYPING TRACHERS WANTED. Contact Southeast Teachers Agency. Box 4337, Albquegua, NM. 87106. Our kids will be a "morning out" at VAT.A those term papers accurately; promptly IBM Selectric elite type research paper; and REASONABLE RATES. Kloenda Dav- 142, 847-7097, 842-5665 Experienced in typing tissues, dissection and imaging. Have electric typewriter with pixe typetool. Accurate and prompt typing. Contact Phone 845-3520, Ms Wright. Phone Number: 845-3520, Ms Wright. Experienced typist for your Theses, Dissertations, misc. work. Call Mrs. Troxel, 2496 Ridge Court, 842-1400. tf LOST HELP WANTED REWARD for return of silver hardware ring with initials TRM. Lost my ring, so make a doat to me, so if you have it. Please Vicki at 824-7671. *picture* 6-26 Lost: 4 keys with nail cup. Please leave word at 864-3819 or leave at Russian Dept - Marvin Annex 6 Lost: Tortoise framed glasses. Photogry lenses. Area Summerfield to Union If found call 843-8782 Reward 6-21 CARRIER OPPORTUNITY. Immediate graduate who is willing to work to warden an excellent student position and graduate who is willing to work to warden an excellent student position and 7 days a week, send a resume or work letter, workday, at Leaverworth, 9 p.m., workdays, at Leaverworth, Leaverworth, Kansas. No phone or email. Help wanted. Experienced bicycle mechanic needed part time. Apply in person. Ride-on Bike Shop. 14th & Massachusetts. 6-28 ABRAXAS LEATHER leather goods—custom order 17 W. 9th BRANDYWINE CUSTOM TAILORS Custom Tailored-Custom Styled Mens Sport Coats— $40 Mens Knit Suits— $60 Mens Slacks— $18 SUMMER PACKAGE SPECIAL 1 Knit Suit 1 Pair Matching Slacks $70.00 Over 200 Fabrics and Patterns Available Including Kit, Cashmere, Wool, Polyester Knits and Many More SATIFICATION GUARANTEED SATISFaction GUARANTEED FREE ALTERATIONS PREALTERNATIONS For Measurement Appointment Call 842-2514 Anytime RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842 2323 Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9, Sat. till noon. --- TONY'S 500 E.23rd IMPORTS-DATSUN OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE 0 TO 40 MPH--13.5 RECLINING FRONT SEATS UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL. LOVE THAT 842-0444 DATSUN --- 6 Wednesday, June 21. 1972 University Summer Kansan The Other Side of Main Street The Other By MARY PITMAN Kansas Staff Writer Trees will some day pleasantly interrupt the main drag of Lawrence, Massachusetts St. Lawrence Park. Beautiful but needy needs plant trees on New Hampshire Street, adjacent to Massachusetts St. Weeds sprawl out of the sidewalks on New Hampshire. A visitor driving in downtown Charleston finds an AHPampa Hampstead sees a face of the city very different from the one on the main drag. On New Hampshire he sees the rear ends of thriving businesses, the need for construction demolition, parking lots and the abandoned buildings of former warehouses. No beautification is planned for streets adjacent to downtown Massachusetts St. Don Schaake said Friday. Schaake, who held a developer's development Plan in Lawnfield said that sufficient funds were simply not available for further improvements. A lone tiger lily curls from the weed-filed yard of one house marked "Condemned" on New York streets. From it is an abandoned Goodyard station piled with storage. Facing New Hampshire are windows, soaped or boarded; other such abandoned businesses. At the old empty Firestone station down the street, the door of the ladies' room still yawns open. Inside spiders lainy hang himself through the building's street from across the street in 1950s vintage, resplendent with fins; waits with a group of well- known spiders. The City of Lawrence will soon complete extensive improvements on the downtown area on Massachusetts St—new parking lots, new landscaping, new sidewalks, new street lights, and new curbing. The streets adjacent to Massachusetts lack attention. METAL MILKSHOP MARKET Photos by John Reed 18 m'coya's shoes · bags I Do of De I was the Na as Hi Mu L be ke de A --- FANTASTIC THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN FANTASTIC 82nd Year, No.12 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 1973 KU Budget Asks for Increased Student Wages See Page 2 Thursday, June 22, 1972 Ted's 'No' Ends Rumors McGovern Just Shy of Call Rv The ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. George McGovern marched to the threshold of the Democratic presidential nomination Wednesday with a near-awe-inspiring in New York's climatic presidential Sen. Edward M. Kenneley declared flatly and "as finally as I can" that under no circumstances would he accept a spot on the national ticket in 1972. And Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, sharply opposed govern positions he has said could impel governors he has said could impel governors he has said South Dakota senator a 3-1 favor for nomination, but maintained that his nominee was correct. The outcome that took shape Wednesday after a long, lagged count of the complex and confusing ballot in the Tuesday New York primary is expected and confirmed 225 delegates of 248 at stake. THAT MEANT his supporters had won all but 12 of the delegate races they contested, and it also meant McGovern would gain another bloc of New York delegates Saturday, to push his state total to at least 250. Rabid Skunk Was Alone, Official Says Kansan Staff Writer By BOB EVANS There is no threat of a rabies epidemic in Douglas County, Dr. Dale Clinton, director of the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, said Wednesday. Dr. Clinton's statement came after it was reported Tuesday that a live skunk at the University of Kansas Museum of Natural History had rabies. Steven Edwards, administrative assistant at the Museum of Natural History, said two baby skunks, pets of a deer, were born to Lawrence brought to Lawrence from Hutchinson. One of the skunks died and the other became ill. Edwards said. It was reported that the skunks were kept at a house on Indiana St, and that the deers were kept at the Ranch. See RABID SKUNK, page 6 The Democratic State Committee will choose 30 delegates then to complete a 278-vote delegation, biggest at the Democratic Convention, with the selections to be in After that, only 42 Democratic delegates remain to be selected. THE NEW YORK competition, in which McGoventry was the only major candidate and his opposition came largely from uncommitted entries turned out this way: Uncommitted. 17 delegates. Rep. Shirley Chisolm of New York, four delegates. Edmurd S. Muskie of Maine, one delegate of A Muskie supporter was ahead in the debate. McGovern forces said at least five of the committed defenders would return in a vote, but no one has signed off. McGovern himself said in Washington that by midnight Saturday, he expected to have 1,407 first-ballot nominating votes. It will take 1,509 to nominate when the Democratic National Convention begins balloting in Miami Beach in three weeks. THE ASSOCIATED Press count of nationwide the delegate strength as of Wed- day. McGovern 1,300.3 Gov. George C. Wallace 371 would accept a nomination for any national office this year." Uncommitted 5064 The McGovern forces hoped to pry lowe the delegates for first-ballot nomination by seeking delegates not uncommitted, or aligned with other entries. Kennedy, who had left open the possibility he might accept second place on a McGovern ticket if he was convinced that Mr. Trump had closed it with a statement in Washington. He said it was issued in response to a New York Times story on the call of Matthew Troy, a Queens Democratic leader, for a "legitimate, full blown" vicepresidential draft of the Massachusetts senator. Manhattan's rep. Bella Abzug lost her House seat to Rep. William F. Ryan in a primary contest of Democratic interest into competition by reboundment. THE KENNEDY statement; "Because of a story which appeared in the New York Times this morning, and in evidence of it, we are on the part of the press or any doubt in the minds of the delegates to the Democratic National Convention, or the public, I wish to thank you for your support. There are no circumstances under which I McGovern told a New York news conference he wouldn't make any judgments about a vice-presidential candidate until the convention. Humphrey, in Washington said McGovern probably would fall short of first-ball victory. Humphrey, who was the 1968 nominee, rated his own chances of winning the nomination at one in four. McGovern's at three out of four. Celler said Wednesday he would demand a recount of the returns that showed him the loser by 562 votes. He said he hadn't decided to whether to run in November as the Liberal party candidate should he lose the recount. IN A MAJOR New York primary upset, Rep. Emanuel Celler, dell. of the house at 84, was defeated for renomination by Miss Elizabeth Holtzman, a lawyer and Daley Speech Brings Mayors' Viet Support Some 350 mayors and city representatives at the U.S. Conference of Mayors annual meeting also voted without debate, allowing a majority of school busing to achieve racial integration. NEW ORLEANS (AP)—A conference of the nation's mayors overwhelmingly reversed its stand Wednesday and endorsed President Nixon's policy on Vietnam after a passionate appeal by the Mayor Richard Daley of Chicago. And, for the first time in its history, the conference adopted a stand on gun control legislation, urging Congress to pass tough laws to dry up the hand gun market. The mayors cheered, stomped their feet and shouted as Daley climaxed the Vietnam debate by saying, "In the name of God we have been born to hope and pray he can end it tomorrow." Red-faced and shouting at the top of his voice, Daley had said, "No one will do more to work against a Republican candidate than think when a man is president—we have him, as we've seen in this country, in the despicable condition of taking him in the back door of hotels, afraid to come out in front of you," he said on because of this situation in Vietnam. It was a rare and dramatic appearance by Daly on the floor of the conference. He was not present last year when the mayors voted for the first time in their history to call for U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam by a specific date—Dec. 31, 1971. A group of liberal big city mayors tried to update that resolution by changing the date to Oct. 1, 1972, and adding a provision allowing the U.S. to be part of U.S. prisoners of war by that date. Instead, the mayors adopted by a vote so large that the chair did not count it a resolution that "All United States air, land and sea forces are in South Vietnam by a date certain and not later than four months after the conclusion of an internationally supervised cease-fire throughout Indochina, the release of all prisoners, accounting for all those missing in action." KU Engine Trouble Foils Airlift KU plane, flood relief grounded . Kansas Photo by JOHN REED Flood Supply Flights Are Slowed Chancelor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. authorized the use of the University's airplane for cargo flights for the American Indian Movement (AIM) last Sunday. Transportation of supplies from Lawrence to Indian victims of the Rapid City, S. D., flood is slowing down and is almost at a standstill. Norman Heecker, the pilot, had the seats removed from the airplane in order to load a plane into a hangar. Director Adds KU to List of Credits By MARY PITMAN BY MARTY PHIMAN Kansan Staff Writer Sometimes called the Johnny Appleseed of the American theatre, Stuart Vaughan has left vital theatres in his wake from New Orleans to Seattle to New York City, where he was the first director of the now-famous Newark Shakespeare Festival in Central Park. Vaughan, guest director at the University of Kansas Shakespeare Festival this summer, is currently applying finished touches to "Twelfth Night," to open this Saturday with Vaughan's wife actress Amy Thompson, in the lead. Described by Vaughan as "robust and virile and colorful." Shakespearean plays have been Vaughan's fundamental resource as a director. VAUGHAN, who grew up in Indiana, loves history and made his first discovery of Shakespeare through the historic plays. He's a big fan of the three plays Vaughan's own two plays, "Assassination 1865," about the murder of President Lincoln, and "Ghost Dance" which deals with the story of a slave. Of Shakespeare's plays, Stuart Vaughan has acted in an directed "Taming of the Shrew" most often. But "King Lear" is his favorite. American Indians fascinate Vaughan, who chanted a Zuni corn-ground song at onsite in 2014, and he hoped at some time in the future to play a write base on an Indian-creation camp. It is a real switch from Shakespeare—as it is Vaughan's next project, directing June Havoc in Neil Simon's play "The Gingerbread Man." BUT THE inestable imagination of Shakespeare engages most of Vaughan's energy. Vaughan thought that Shakespeare's closest relative among modern composers was Rhecht, who inserted songs into his plays. Much of modern art leaves Vaughan cold. "There's no correct way to do Shakespeare," Vaughan said. Still, Vaughan admires contemporary and innovative productions of Shakespearean plays, like those of Peter Brook. "It is so difficult now," Vaughan said, "to extract art from fashion." But in directing "Twelfth Night." Vaughan is not relying on modern tools. HE SAID that Shakespeare was big interpreter to surmount any particular interpretation challenge. "Why polish off all the patina of age?" Vickiann said, "Because that's marvelous." VAUGHAN hates machines "I've forgotten to drive," he said. Theatre, Vaughan believed, reminds people of the world apart from technology, the world "of human-sized thins." Shakespeare, Vaughan said, doesn't require any scenery and barely requires electric lighting. Shakespeare depends on people "people reflecting people to people," Actors, Vaughan said, are people who can use their emotional problems, who can transfer their participate grief or rage, and who can experience the power of personal energy a new character. only feel alive when they're connected with the imaginative context that is the play, the moment-to-moment responsibility." OF ACTORS, Vaughan said in his directing class on Tuesday, "Maybe they would like to be a comedian." In the theatre actors and directors find a family, Vaughan said. He described the theatre as "the communal existence that beats any of them." For producing, a play generates an extraordinary camaraderie. When a play is finished, Vaughan said, "we're really all done something very dangerous together. We're blood brothers in a very special way." P. A. S. H. Stuart Vaughan Watches Rehearsal Director prepares for "Twelfth Night" opening . . . Kansan Photo by 1 INDA SCHILD however, because of engine trouble on the return vehicle, may be to several weeks the airplane. Gary Crawford, a Haskell student who is helping AIM, said that supplies were backing up. No supplies have left Lawrence since last Sunday. A spokesman for the Erhart Flying Service, which has made three cargo flights to the area for AIM, said the service could respond to neglect its own business at this time. Bob Wilson, general manager of the flying service, said Wednesday that he and two other pilots had donated their time to help estimate that each had bud cost $300. Chris Wilkinson, Coffeille sophomore, and Doug Rogers made flights last Friday and Saturday, each carrying 1,000-pound loads. Wilson said that he had asked the Air Force and the Air National Guard to carry out a mission. On Saturday, Rogers was caught in a storm and was forced to spend the night in Rochester. Wilson made the first flight last Thursday, taking 1,000 pounds of supplies to the area. Aerial photos of the city were also taken from his airplane. "It was worse than we were led to believe," Rogers said. The storm that grounded Rogers caused some minor flooding in the area. AIM is trying to find people who will transport goods to Rapid City by truck. Items still needed are clothing, paper cups and disposable diapers. Council Fails to End Debate over Research Rv STEVE HIX Kansan Staff Writer A motion to disband the Haiphong Coalition's demand for a committee to study research on campus still lingers on the issue of a floor after much debate Wednesday. The 37 members present voiced their views about the SenEx proposal during the two-hour meeting. Representatives of the Haiphong Coalition were not allowed to speak, but were allowed to observe the meeting. A motion was put to discussion asking that Senixx not appoint a committee as chair of the board. IT WAS noted that only Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers J. had right to form the committee to study research on human development, and make recommendations to the Chancellor. The councilman putting forth the motion argued that such a committee would be unprecedented across the nation, and should not take place on campus, and put forth the question of whether the funds from the Department of Defense were objectionable to the University. He said there was no objection, and our research was for the good of society. A COUNCIL member said that students would abuse the information they received. He said that they would use the information to harass the administration. The use of the results is an impossible feat, remarked another council member. Actual findings can not be absolutely correct. One council member pointed out that attempts were made at Massachusetts School of technology and Columbia to retort research, but in both cases they failed. One member of the council said that the study of researchers would have some unfavorable affects. The individual scholar might be driven away from this University if committee members get nosy, and it would lower faculty morale. If the solution was to have no committee at all. It was pointed out to council members that there was already a committee investigating research, the faculty research committee. Speaking for the establishment of the ad hoc committee to study the research on campus were several student representatives on the council. One member said that the information asked for by the Haiqhong College faculty committee had not provided the study on research that students are demanding. A STUDENT representative said that it was time for the Council to look at what SenEx was saying rather than attacking the Hailong Coalition. He said that research was public information, and that if researchers were doing research for a private interest only, then this public interest should not support his investigation. A faculty member criticized Chancellor Chalmers and SenEx for reacting under pressure. He said that the rights of the scholar would be infringed upon and that the committee should be rejected on the basis that students would abuse the information. ONE councilmember said that research should not have to be revealed. It might be research that is considered dumb to the public and could hurt the researcher's character. Any commissioner "must check the progress reports of researchers," he said, but should consist of only faculty members. 2 Thursday, June 22, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Pope Talks of Burden VATICAN CITY (AP)—Pope Paul VI said in an emotion-charged speech Wednesday he felt God had chosen him to suffer in a Church troubled by protest and change. Speaking on the ninth anniversary of his election to the papacy, he said he never wanted to be Pope and shoulder the "enermious burden of duties, difficulties and needs" as ruler of the world's 600 million Catholics who looked in good health as he spoke for half an hour to a chorea crowd of 8,000 in the Vatican's modernistic audience hall. Fulbright Disarming WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. J. W. Fulbright asserted Wednesday that approval of President Nixon's requested offensive weapons in the wake of the U.S.-Soviet arms-limitation agreement would "only trigger another arms spiral." The chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said also congressional support of the new Trident submarine, B1 bomber and other systems would tip what he called U.S.-Soviet arms parity "and very likely destroy the agreements themselves." Living Costs Still Rising WASHINGTON (AP) – Higher living costs in May continued chipping away the value of the dollar so far this year at an annual rate of a little more than three cents on every dollar, the government reported Wednesday. Prices for everything but food rose last month and pushed the Consumer Price Index up three-tenths of one per cent to 124.7. The figure means that every $10 worth of food, housing, clothing, transportation, medical care and recreation in the base period five years ago now cost $12.47. Senate for FDA End WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate Wednesday voted to abolish the Food and Drug Administration and create an independent consumer-safety agency. The new agency would incorporate all existing consumer-safe programs and be responsible for ensuring the safety and efficiency of food, drugs and other products. It would have authority to remove unsafe products from the shelf but ban them from entering the country until safe risk is deemed. The bill creates what would be known as the Food, Drug and Consumer Product Agency. The bill also, for the first time in consumer legislation, provides criminal penalties for the manufacture and sale of unsafe products. Wage Increases for Students Included in Proposed Budget By TIM WINTERS BY HIM WHITE LENDS Kansan Staff Writer The 1973-74 budget request to be submitted to the state Board of Regents in Topeka today includes $280,000 for students employed by the University to meet the expected rise in the minimum wage to $2 KU will request $402,103 of the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1973, an increase of $483,843 over the 1972-73 budget. The budget is set at $438,861 for the 1972-73 fiscal year. The Board of Regents meeting scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. on Friday is the most important of the year, according to Chancellor E. Woods. Budget requests must be based in part on several guidelines pre-defined by the University of Nichols, KU executive secretary, said the guidelines will ensure all staff workers and faculty members, as well as increase for projected costs. KU'S REQUEST is for general revenue funds for state support. This does not include federal and state-Supported colleges and universities will present budget requests today and the Regents will announce their recompensations to the legislature Friday. Civil service workers are eligible for one-step increases under the guidelines, while those receiving an increase of up to 3.9% per cent. THE GUIDELINES also include funds for hiring additional personnel to handle the projected needs of our students in positions are for teachers, one for A 5 per cent increase in the operating expenses for each employee will help set guidelines to account for inflation. The operating expense is calculated as follows: every 15 students, and for classified personnel, one for every three faculty members. Of the requested increase, $1, $10,907, or 30 per cent, is for improvement in program. In the state Geological Survey, for the State Geological Survey, a disability program for the faculty of the biological survey and related programs. NICHOLS said that he was hopeful the Regents would approve the University's request to employ a safety engineer is needed if the University is to comply with a safety program, he said. Funds will again be requested for overtime pay for employees. Federal law requires overtime payment, but the state has never provided the funds, which are currently paid by the University. The budget request also includes funds for physio therapy and is hoped that the maintenance service can be improved by the addition of an KU's budget would require an increase of 20.1 per cent from the state. Increases from the guidelines account for 13.7 per cent of the total guideline request will be passed officials are not sure how much of the remainder will be approved. Increases covered by the guidelines amount to $2,907,623, over which the total increases requested Budget requests are made for some programs that are presently federally funded, in the form of the federal grants should end Army Troops Will Back Policemen at Conventions MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Federal troops will back up local police in maintaining order at the national political conventions this week out of sight unless trouble develops, officials said Wednesday. The joint statement by Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst and Florida Gov. Andrew Juback asks the legislature to send on indications "that additional resources may be necessary to ensure that orders and public safety." However, a spokesman for Askew said the deployment of troops was "just precautionary" and the military personnel wouldn't even be seen unless things got out of control. "There won't be any soldiers walking the streets of Miami Beach," said Don Pride, Askew's press secretary. Pride said the move did not signify an escalation of security preparations for the political conventions. Israel ground and air forces attacked Lebanon in two places during the war, and capturing a Syrian general commander along with a Lebanese border force. By The Associated Press Israelis Strike Twice in Lebanon Warplanes and artillery pounded the farming town of Kelso, N.C., toppled Mt. Hermon for four hours. Announcements in Beirut by the government and Palestinian guerrillas said 48 persons were killed. The Syrian officers were captured 24 miles to the southwest, 60 yards inside Lebanese territory. the Israeli military command said. Israel gave no estimate of Arab casualties. said. THE LEBANESE government reported 14 civilians were killed and 25 wounded in Hassaba. Palestinian guerrillas, whose leader was killed, attacked, said 30 of their men were killed and 30 wounded. One witness in Lebanon described the attack on Hasaya as causing more damage and casualties. The raid a Guerrilla base on the outskirts of the town took a direct hit and was destroyed, witnesses THE BEIRUT announcement said a Lebanese military delegation accompanied by a group of visiting Syrian officers had been arrested and warned force in the central sector of the border. Nine men were captured, it said, including the five Syrian officers and four Lebanese, one of whom was not arrested no explanation for the 10th prisoner reported by the Israelis. "The governor had been thinking of asking for back up military support since we found a bullet that could with conventions," Pride said. Wednesday's action was the first season Lebanon since major four-day February and an air attack in March. All troops had withdrawn from the war. SYNIRA supports the Palestinian guerrillas but usually does not allow them to operate from the embassy. They opposed to border operations by the guerrillas and have recently been reported attempting to officers together "indicated they were doing some joint planning, although I don't know what they planned." Israel went into action, the IS- officer said about information of the airport planned to perform "spectacul new missions like the Lod airport This was a reference to an attack by three Japanese terrorists at Tel Aivir airport on May 30 in which 28 persons were killed. The statement followed a private meeting between Askew and D.C. Tuesday. It was decided there, said Pride, to back up local police and National Guardsmalice in the Army troops at the convention. The Defense Department did not specify how many troops would be sent to the Miami area. State and local officials already know that 4,000 troops will force of some 4,000 men, including 3,000 members of the Guard. Commenting on the Klein-identist-Askew statement, a leader of the Youth International Movement move to U.S. policy in Vietnam. Jeff Nightbird, chief negotiator for the Yippies, said, "Close to $1 million has been spent on military and police forces," he added, nothing for the human needs of nondelicates. It was a disastrous policy in Vietnam and it's a disastrous policy in Miami The Israeli officer claimed the presence of Syrian and Lebanese American military sources said North Vietnam has been trying with only limited success to circumvent the U.S. mines by unloading supplies on islands off the coast of Louisiana, putting them inland aboard barges. The raids at Vinh, 145 miles north of the demilitarized zone in Sao Paulo, were aimed at stopping transhipment of enemy war supplies from the Chinese vessels, blocked from entering the port by U.S. forces. reported two secondary explosions. The enemy campaign began about 10 days ago. American pilots flew more than 220 strikes over the North Tuesday and damaged or destroyed 11 bridges, 13 warehouses, 30 trucks and eight tanks, the U.S. Command announced. Hanoi's official North Vietnam jets had been shot down north of Hanoi Wednesday and said no shots had been taken. The airplane was captured. Two other U.S. were downed last week over Ha Tinh and Ngau An provinces the Hanoi Air Force said. The U.S. Command did not comment on the claim, its usual policy. ANNE THOMPSON AS VIOLA Directed by STUART VAUGHAN JUNE 24, 26, 27, 28, 30 and JULY 1 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE PANELA JORDAN Jets Hit Northern Ports TWELFTH NIGHT With ALL PERFORMANCES AT 8:00 P.M., MURPHY HALL 12:30 P.M. KU STUDENTS $1.00 WITH ID Summer Season Coupon $5.00 Box Office Opens June 12 Phone UN4-3982 The bill would allocate in its first year $1.8 billion to states and $3.5 billion to cities and other local governments. The state share would be divided according to the effort SAIGON (AP)—U.S. jets attacked two more North Vietnamese navy bases near Inh, in northern Vietnam, and struck war supplies from Chinese ships anchored off the port, U.S. spies announced Wednesday. The bill, for which governors, layers and other local officials ask that the president lobby lobbying tirelessly, is a substitute for President Nixon's revenue- cuts. But his administration has accepted it and it has the support of leaders of both parties in the House. Mills, handling the measure as chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, predicted Thursday. The Senate was as yet to act. The House voted 223 to 185 against permitting amendments. If the move to open the bill had succeeded, Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Aark, said, he would have withdrawn and measure at least temporarily. WASHINGTON (AP) -- A year ago, the program of aid to states and cities won a key procedural vote in the house today, pointing to the need for change. Revenue Sharing Gets House Boost Navy fighter-bombers also attacked two area storage areas about 30 miles northwest of the main port of Haiphong and pilots Sporesmen for the 7th Fleet said Navy plots in the raids Tuesday had destroyed a pier at the Vinh boyatank four miles north of Van Leuven and damaged a pier at the Hai Yen naval base two miles away. Some Time John & Yolks! Plastic Ono Band With Grappler & Woman ANGELA on Capitol records Capitol. at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles Kief's discount price $399 VIENNA (AP)—A 1971 yearend report said 172,205 foreign workers, most of them were employees in Austria. each state makes to raise its own revenues, with emphasis on state income taxes. The local portion would be shared on a more complicated formula, taking into account concentration *p*rel.inh. *p*rel.inh. *PCT.rel.inh.* On the key procedural test, 110 Democrats and 113 Republicans voted to air investigations. 128 Democrats and 57 Republicans against. The opposition included members who objected to the principle others who said they did so. A small group and still others who objected to a single measure appropriating nearly $30 billion over five years, without the usual annual review by the Appropriations Committee. The state share could be increased by up to $300 million each year after the first year. kansas Shakespeare --- --- TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE! Offer expires July 1st 1720 West 23rd Street Available in any size and numerous widths for men and women, starting at $6. Pictured are four of our 50 styles of BELTS and BUCKLES. 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Fisher 202 ... 269.95 Fisher 102(2) ... 180.00 Fisher 310x ... 80.00 with Base with Shure M75CS with dust cover Separately ... 529.95 $349.95 Special Purchase Special Purchase Deluxe styling, padded air cushions, dual headband, and frequency response, 25-18,000 hz. $19.95 "Erasette" 300B The "ERASETTE" 300B is a remarkable battery powered degaquasine and erasing unit that will in an art, completely erase any car EQUAL to, or BP 15.95. Sr iO IEW. Reg. 1 BANKAMERICARD A THE STEREO STORE AUDIOTRONICS 928 Massachusetts 843-8500 master charge master charge Thursday, June 22, 1972 University Summer Kansan 3 Upset of Tigers Hadl's Best Day By JIM GALVIN Kansan Sports Editor John Hadi, ex-University of Kansas quarterback now with the San Diego Chargers, will be Lawrence's favorite son this Saturday night at a recognition in his behalf at the Kansas Union. Kansan reporter Tim Winters found hei灯 at the Alavar Hills pro shop, and talked to him about football and his future. On the subject of KU football, Hadi cited the 1960 upset of the college's greatest moment in his career. The Big Ten Tigers were 9- and ranked first in the nation coming into the game and the Jayhawks rolled to a victory. WHEN ASKED to compare the college game now to his days at KU, Hadi answered, "No, it hasn't changed that much and probably never will. You'll have guys who have like to play." Hadi called KU's Don and said as long as famBrought the support he needed the KU football program would continue "The players like him, he knows football and he's a very good recruiter." Hadl said. The subject turned to Hadi's professional career, and the 1971 NFL Man of the Year said he would play "until my arm falls off," which he figured to be about 10 years, barring a major injury. WHEN HIS pro career does come to an end, Hadi would consider a coaching career, particularly on the collegiate level. "The college player is eager and ready to learn, so coaching at this level can be very exciting." Hadi said. Hadi indicated that watching the players improve was what offered the excitement. The husky quarterback, who lives in the San Diego area with his wife, Jennifer Jobson and Jackie, said he had been working out for the past two weeks in preparation for his upcoming camp, which opens July 12. "IVE BEEN running and throwing regularly, and playing golf whenever I get the chance," Hadi said. At this point Hadi was called to tee off, and as he left, Winter asked Hadi for a prediction on the upcoming season. Hald didn't disappoint him, saying that he would sure like to go to the Super Bowl and that the Chargers would be greatly im- pended this year, in light of certain trades and team experience. CINCINNATI (AP) — Pete Reste tripped home two runs in the second tining and then triggered a leadoff single in the fifth as the Reds bounced from behind for a 6-4 baseball victory over Monterrey. Reds Take League Lead With one out in the eighth, Tomnie Agee ripped a double off the glove of three basement Dong Kee, who rested on tk on Ken Boswell's single. David Marshall knocked a perfect double play with the boots he booted it as Age scored. Milner then singled what home proved to be the best. In other National League games, the New York Mets broke in the eighth inning on Tommy John, and John Minker's single to snap the Houston Astros' six-game League win streak 5-4. The victory moved the Reds back into first place in the National League's West Division. Gus Wolff earned the victory, his team the season, with latening help from Tom Hall and Clay Carroll. NEW YORK's Jerry Kooman, 4-3, and Houston's Storm Griffin, 2-1, traded four-hiters through the Nets and were locked in a 3-12 tie. Jim Lefebvre拍 a two-out, two-run pinch single in the 10th inning and gave Los Angeles a 5-3 Dave Giusti relieved. Moose wrote Sigma game notes as the runners drove to the end, Lefevre then batted for Steve Garvey and singled, scored Robinson and THE SETBACK trimmed the Pittsburgh lead over the New York Mets in the National League East to five percentage points. Frank Robinson and Wes Parker started the winning rally with singles off Pittsburgh starter Bob Moose. victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. Bob Gibson pitched a three-hitter through seven innings and slammed a three-run homer in leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 5-1 victory over the San Diego Padres for his 21st career baseball triumph. Gibson struck out seven and walked none in recording his fifth straight win in following five straight season-opening losses. Left-hander Ron Bryant hurried a two-hitter enticing the San Francisco Giants to snap a seven-run winning streak 4:41 Wednesday. THE DEPARTED by Gibson, who departed in the eighth inning with a sore leg, elicited the old St. Louis record of 210 career victories. Bryant, 4-4, yielded a game double to single on Dana Kingser with three goals, although yielding five walks and having Dana's two-out single in the eighth. MIKE RYAN crashed a baseboard, two-dual, double in the air before lifting the Philadelphia Philias to a 1-2 victory over the Atlanta Saints. OU Wins 3 Berths Jack and Todd were unanimous selections. Bastable got seven of the eight votes. Jack, who batted .391, was a repeated from the 1971 all-conference team. There were two other holdovers, outfielder Bill of Kansas State and third baseman Jack Bastable of Missouri. KANAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Three members of the Big Eight Conference champion Oklahoma Bobbie Todd, sophomore pitcher Jackson Todd and outfielder Jim Simpson, were named Wednesday. In the American League, Dick Allen started an eight-run eighth inning rally with a walk and capped it with a baise-laden single and moved the Chicago White Sox to a 9-9 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers. The team is selected by the Big Eight baseball coaches. Construction of the Burn Unit is scheduled to begin this summer when he begins his early spring, according to Dr. Mauro Masters, professors of surgery. Gaylord Perry, backen home runs off the bats of Ray Graig Grain Nettles, hurried the Cleveland in a 42- in victory over Minnesota About $400,000 of the $500,000 needed to build and equip the center has been raised. The sorority group hopes to add at least $10,000 to that figure from all of circ tickets, Owens said. Todd led the conference with a 6-1 pipping record and a 1.26 earned run average. Marine Life Under Study at KU John Stearnes of Colorado, numerator in League with a half-century. Corrigan of Iowa as the catcher. Corrigan had been a first team BY MARK LENG Kansas Staff Writer The laboratory consists of 11 experimental ponds, each with a surface area of one-diameter of an aquarium. The water supply for storage of the water supply for the ponds, a laboratory building for aquarium experiments and a laboratory building for laboratory experiments. The University of Kansas Fisheries Laboratory, situated west of Kansas City, has more than just a fish hatchery, according to Frank Cross, director of the laboratory. The laboratory also serves as a training ground for graduate students in various fields of biology. Rv MARY LIND Tickets are $2.50, $3.50, $4.50 and $5. Children's tickets are reduced by $1. Tickets may be purchased from any Beta Sigma or at the medical center's information service department. Basically the KU Fisheries Laboratory is involved in general studies in aquatic biology, with an emphasis on fishes and development of better methods for building ponds or small reservoirs. Donald Hugins, fish and game biologist, supervises normal operations, and this summer the team runs the Rickett, James Triplett, Ray Drenner, Howard Jackson and Chi-Haiang Li, all graduate students working on their doctrines in systemsatics and ecology. Several other faculty and students use the facilities occasionally in connection with various activities, such as the According to Cross, teacher and children's workshops in natural history are being conducted there. The opening night performance of the Ringling Broo, Burnum and Barnacle Funds for the Gene and Barbars Burnett Burn Center at the Museum Center, according to Priscilla Owens, publicity chairman for the Funds. "Most of the research is plied, in that we're looking for practical information in the present context or ecological studies." Cross said. The function of the laboratories is mainly that of a research facility. Sponsored by the Kansas City area chapters of Beta Sigma Phi, a women's service, cultural and social sorority, the fund-raising show is scheduled for July 25 at Capital Auditorium in Kansas City. Current projects at the laboratory and ponds include the production for study of three species of fish, bass, black bullhead and channel catfish. Also under study are population dynamics of Daphnia ambigua, a species of plankton, and studies of fishes in various streams and reservoirs in Kansas, including Mud Creek and La-Cyne Lake and aquatic studies in environmental studies project. Circus Night Will Benefit Burn Center the KU Fisheries Laboratories are funded by the State Biological Survey, operated at KU. The laboratories offer a store of information about native plants and animals of Kansas and to make that information available through publications to those who need it. ful to the surrounding community in solving problems for owners of ponds and small impoundments. were built in 1954 and 1955 from state appropriations to KU because research in this area was needed. The KU Laboratories were one of the first to produce computer chips, channel catfish, and thanks to those beginnings, channel catfish today, more than any other fish, commercially in the United States. Rounding out the first team are Sam Sharpe of Nebraska, a. 273 The ponds and laboratories The SBS has just finished a major survey on pollution, and various other projects are underway. "We're not only a fish hatchery, we carry our research projects beyond this. We're studying more than just fish." Cross said. KANSAN Photo by STEVE CRAIG Laboratory at KU Focuses on Aquatic Life . Don Hugups, state fisheries biologist, studies parrife life List $5^98 $2.89 MORE SPECIALS 2.89 from $2.0 BUDGET TAPES & RECORDS PINK FLOYD "Obscured Clouds" PINK FLOYD "Obscured Clouds" Albums List 4.98 Now always 2.99 Tapes 4.99 All Labels Specializing in Heavy Rock Constant EVERY DAY PRICES $2.89 $2.89 Specials All Week Every Week HOURS: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. M-S 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday BUDGET TAPES & RECORDS 628 W. 12th (Next to New Haven) Baseball Standings W. L. Petr. G.B. Baltimore 10 29 564 Detroit 31 24 564 New York 22 29 463 Indiana 20 29 463 Cleveland 28 29 454 7 Tampa Bay 28 29 454 7 Oakland 38 17 691 5 Chicago 33 22 609 1 Kansas City 25 30 450 13 Kansas City 25 30 450 13 Boston 24 34 413 14 National League W. L. Pet. GBR. Pittsburgh 32 62 121 New York 32 62 121 Philadelphia 25 32 498 Montreal 25 32 498 St. Louis 25 32 498 Houston 25 32 498 Routed Cincinnati Detroit Atlanta San Diego Nashville 26 33 621 610 % 35 23 123 634 % 35 23 123 634 % 29 29 482 719 % 29 38 342 719 % 23 33 123 719 % American League Cleveland 10 Houston 10 Toronto 9 Kansas City 10 New York postponed, rain San Francisco 4 Chicago 6 Philadelphia 5 New York 5 Houston 4 Milwaukee 6 Philadelphia A defense 3 Atlanta 2 hitter, second base; Mike Cress of Oklahoma State, who batted 31, shortstop; Gene Stohs of Nebraska. 358 outfielder; and Kansas State, a pitcher who had a rank and 1.85 earned run average. The second team: Bob Wolf, Kansas, first base; Keith Hungate, Kansas State, second Kansas State, Oklahoma State, third base; Kelsey Kansas State, shortstop; Max Cue and Dale Kambayashi, both of Colorado, and Ben King, outfielders, Corrigan, catcher, Gary Weese, Oklahan and Ben Tensing, Missouri, pitchers. LA PETITE GALERIE ↓ CLOSEOUT SALE Spring and Summer PANTS TOPS 1/3 to DRESSES SWIM-WEAR SLEEP-WEAR 1/2 off BOOTS plus Many Off Season Items 75% off 910 Kentucky Lower Level Patronize Kansan Advertisers FIND POOBAH! Let your fingers do the walking through Lawrence's finest and most complete selection of SUMMER GARB 15% Off with this ad. Offer expires July 1st. BOOBAH COLORADO - WYOMING - MISSOURI ILLINOIS - TEXAS MANHATTAN - EMPORIA - LAWRENCE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER-23rd & Louisiana The PENETRATIONS The Penetrations are playing this week in Lawrence JUNE 23, 24 If you know where, you will be rewarded with the best rhythm 'n' blues dance band sound in the midwest. Flip, Flop or Fly on over and see for yourself. This hardworking band has proven itself the best of the new groups in the entire area. Any Questions? 842-6623 4 Thursday, June 22, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. See the Bard One of the fringe benefits of going to summer school at the University of Kansas is the opportunity to take advantage of many educational offerings. One that is particularly outstanding in the 1972 summer session is the Kansas Shakespeare Festival. Saturday one of the major events of the Festival will begin: the KU production of "Twelfth Night." It is the first of three plays that will be presented this summer as part of the Festival. Other events include showings of famous Shakespearean movies each Sunday evening. For those attending the Festival for academic credit, these are educational opportunities unparalleled —Rita E. Haugh Editor almost anywhere in the world. Those of us going to summer school or living in Lawrence should realize the quality of investment and enrichment opportunities. A Shakespeare play has been presented almost every year at the University of Kansas. This is the first time the entire summer session schedule of drama has been devoted to a single author. Here is your opportunity not only to learn more of Shakespeare, but also to enjoy good literature and experience that truly merits it so that the department of speech and drama will be encouraged to continue the Festival. Parking Permit Prices... Readers Respond May I call your attention to an announcement of the June 20 issue in your reportage of the Chancellor's decision not to increase parking permit prices The Chancellor's decision was an entirely independent one made by him after receiving the approval of the Trade Board and of the KU Senate Executive Committee, both of which proposed increases in the present permit cost for universities representing representations from the Executive Committee of the KU Chapter of the American University Professors, who urged the Chancellor to eliminate all charges for parking at KU and, if this were not immediately possible, to freeze the costs at the present level. Thus, it is in error to deny that the decision resulted from a meeting "attended by the University Senate Executive Committee, the University Professors and the concerned chapter of the American Association of University Professors and the concerned chapter of the American Association of University Professors and the concerned parking patents at KU." (UKD, June 20) If such a meeting was held, the Executive Committee of the University was not present. That the Chancellor was responsive to the position of the Executive Committee of the University to his credit, and his decisions reported accordingly. To the Editor: The omission referred to above is that, again at the behest of the Executive Committee of the KU-Institute, faculty members that during the coming academic year, faculty members may secure their parking permits by sending a written solution to the time-wasting procedure of faculty members standing in lobby before a single meeting in the lobby of Hoch Auditorium. The Executive Committee of the KU-AUAW wishes to express its appreciation to the Chancellor and to response to its representations. Grant K. Goodman Vice President KU Chapter, AAUP A man is reading a book. CLASS SEE THE PRESIDENTS SEE THE PRESIDENTS SEE THE PRESIDENT. SEE THE PRESIDENT'S ADVISORS. SEE THE PRESIDENTS ASSISTANTS. SEE THE PRESIDENT'S GENERALS. SEE THE PRESIDENT AND HIS ADVISORS, ASSISTANTS AND GENERALS DECIDE THE FATE OF MANKIND. SEE THE CONGRESS. SEE THE PEOPLE. WHERE ARE THE CONGRESS AND THE PEOPLE? SAY 'BYE' 'BYE' MANKIND. --- SEE THE PRESIDENT AND HIS ADVISORS ASSISTANT AND GENERALS DECIDE THE FATE OF MANKIND. SEE THE CONGRESS. SEE THE PEOPLE. WHERE ARE THE CON- GRESS AND THE PEOPLE? SAY BYE BYE MAUKIND. WHERE ARE THE CON- GRESS AND THE PEOPLE? Dale Pollitt and Mike Schmidt Recycling Relies on Scrap Use BY FRED BERMAN, President Institute of Scrap Iron and Steel Although the concept of recycling is not new, we believe we would benefit greatly if this concept was now firmly entrenched itself in the United States. It is probably fair to say that most public is concerned, is beginning to give way to the realization that reclamation of land will be common. PRIMARY elections already have been unusually rough on Yet, at this point in time, there is a policy that the company policy that place an unworkable burden on those engaged in the day-to-day business of converting materials into products. Those concerned with the quality of our environment, from an international perspective, readily acknowledge the validity of rectification as the objective in the context of climate change. The general elections in No- numberements in the memoirs to the "lamer duck" list and may produce a bumpier crop of freshmen for do we find accumulations of metallic solid waste? The basic answer to that question comes in the form of one word—markets for the processed commodity, there is no recycling. 50 Congressmen Bow Out The act of waste being collected in one or a group of locations cannot be construed as recycling. The act of converting waste into scrap which remains in the scrap processor's plant cannot be construed as recycling. Nothing is recycled until it is used as a product. Nothing is recycled until it is used as a product which then is sold in final form in the marketplace. The The list of those who won't be on hand when the 93rd Congress convenes next January is bound to be a tricky question, priming primary elections are held. WASHINGTON (AP) -Retreats, defeats and resignations have assured the 1973 Congress of a full recovery and an infusion of younger blood. FOR THE CONCEPT of recycling to function properly, a closed cycle is required. The process requires accumulation of metallic solid waste is that there exists a rather large gap in the cycle—the link between the scrap processor and the sink—that is not as strong as it should be. scrap recycled would conserve a limited natural resource, namely iron ore. By WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST AND WHAT ABOUT steel cans and other small forms of metallics which find their way into the world can that generates a total of nearly one ton of household waste per person per year? Our ability to control waste is increasing. A recent survey by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare indicates that by the end of the century the one ton of waste generated Nearly 50 present senators and representatives won't be back, for one reason or another, when the new Congress is seated. The New York Democratic voters also defeated Mrs. Bella Abzug, 52, a first-termer who made her voice heard if not heeded by her opponents. A victim of redistricting which forced her to run against If steel mills and foundries steel iron and sand can the available iron and steel scrap material, the scrap processor would obviously reduce his costs. These somewhat frightening statistics emphasize the validity of the recycling objective. Why then, in the case of iron and steel, The dean of Congress, both in age and length of service, lost his for nomination in New York's Democratic primary on November 6. Emanuel Celler, who heads the House Judiciary Committee and will have completed 50 years of service if he finally is forced out. He is expected to be on the ballot in a liberal in the November election. some of the better-known senior citizens in Congress. used as a raw material for making new products. THE IRON AND steel scrap processing industry dates back to the 1800's in the United States. It is established by Insta Iron Scrap Iron and Steel was formed. The 1300 member firms which make up the Institute today are some of the most successful steel discards—the effluents of our affluence—and processing them into grades of scrap for remelting into new products by the iron industry. CELLER IS the second House committee chairman to lose his bid for renomination. another incumbent Democrat, Rep. William F. Ryan. George P. Miller, chairman of the George P. Miller and Astronautics Committee, was sworn in this month in California. The 81-year-old Miller has been in the business for over 40 years. Rep. James A. Byrne, 66, D-Ark. Va: Rep. Cornelius E. Gallagher, 51, D-NJ. Rep. John G. Davior Prater, 3D. Ark. Other incumbents who have been defeated in primary elections include: AMONG THE 28 representatives and five Senators retiring voluntarily to private life at the end of this session are two House committee chairmen, both Democrats. They are William M. Colmer, of Mississippi, 82, head of the Rules Committee, with 40 years of service; and William D. Browning, head of Maryland, head of the Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, with 26 years of service. WOMEN'S LIB no on waysie The Country Journal Whistler's Ms. Sen. B. Everett Jordan, D-North Carolina, who is chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, is another primary casualty. Swelling the list of new faces for the House is the face that nine of its members are running for the Senate. THEY ARE Ed Edmondson, D-Doka, William L. Scott, R-SV, Roman C. Pucinski, D-III, Nick Galfianakas, D-N.C.,李 A. McClure, R-Idaho, William D-Hathaway, D-Maine, James S. Thompson, B-SD), Ray Blanton, R-Ga, and Ryan Blanton, D-Tenn. "... Right On ..." With scrap processing plants located throughout the country, representing tremendous investments in equipment and machinery, metals, you may wonder why General Motors estimates there are 800,000 automobiles abandoned annually despoiling the earth. These stockpiled in auto wrecker's vards and auto graveyards. Eight other House members who have called it quits would be chairmen of committees. If they were wrong, Republicans won control of the House. There has been no set age pattern in the primary election defeats to date. New Yorkers who were in the 1980s Celler with a 30-year-old woman, Arkansas voters refused to unseat the veteran 76-year-old John Diem, Democrat, with a young Democrat, Rep. David Pryor, 37. All Republicans, they include pro- tectionists. Agriculture Committee. Other House members who have announced their retirement at the end of their term. Clinton P. Anderson, D-N.M. John Sherman Cooper, R-K. 70; Fred B. Harris, D-Oklas, 72; Karl M. Gardner, 72; Karl M. Gardner, R-SJ, 72 W. R. Hull Jr., D-Mo, 65; John Dowdy, D-Tex, 60; Durward G. Hall, R-Mo, 61. Not to be overlooked are the untold numbers of abandoned refrigerators, stoves, washing machines, farm machinery and the other stuff. The late automobiles alone represent more than $1 billion worth of FIVE SENATORS not seeking re-election are: Changes in Legislature Discussed by Committee TOPEKA (AP)—Several major changes are being considered by the Kansas Legislative Budget Committee in discussion Historical Feature Prohibition Party Sought Support In 1964, a third party was attempting to gain votes on the KU campus. The Prohibition Party began a movement to contact all students interested in forming a Young Prohibition Association at KU, and brought the issue to the attention of the national media. The Rev. Rolland E. Fisher, state chairman and vice chairman of the national executive committee of the Prohibition Party, said, "If the part is needed anywhere, it is needed on college and high school students, young people are thinking seriously about the problem of liquor." E. HAROLD Munn of Hildalea, Mich., was the party's candidate for president. He had previously run for six offices on the Prohibition Party ticket. His running mate was the Rev. Mark R. Shaw of Melrose, Mass. A section of their party platform concerning KU was, "Teachers must be selected on the basis of high moral character." "The Kansas Prohibition Party is about as strong as any in the nation. Election laws have been so severe on minor parties in other states it has been difficult to get our slates of candidates on the ballots," Fisher said. The Party placed advertisements in the Kansan, but the Oct. 8 issue reported that only one person had responded. "ALL CANDIDATES should be given an equal opportunity to be heard," he said. "The American people should hear the views of all candidates." A KU student, Dave Pomeroy, whose hobby was collecting information about lesser known political groups, said then that the Mun visited the KU campus for the SUA Minorities Forum, and, in Kansas reported that he would change the party's name to America. "Many people think we are a one plank party. We have 28 planks and only one of them deals with the alcohol problem. The other one deals with the drug problem." He said the major areas his party stressed were strengthening constitutional government, watching government spending, balancing the budget, reviewing foreign aid and opposing communism. of a proposed new legislative article for the state Constitution The committee gave tentative approval Wednesday to provisions to be included in a "first draft" of the proposed article. This draft would be used as a starting point for further discussion and changes, and the final conclusion could be radically different. ONE MAJOR departure to be in business was the concept of making the legislature a "continuous body" for the two years of the term of House Speaker. Under the continuous body condemnation subject only to law. In effect, this would allow the legislators to meet pretty well whenever they need it. "It does not mean the lawmakers would be in session continuously," said a committee staff member. "They could meet, go home, return. "FOR EXAMPLE, the legislature could meet early in January, as it does now, have introduction committees to make a stateate for a while. Committees could meet and then the legislature come back into session." It might mean that the legislature would choose to meet for a month, go home for three monarchs for another month, and so on. The first draft of the proposed article will include revised provisions governing the signing of bills and vetoes by the governor. A major aim is to give an older more time to consider bills. The so-called pocket veto, an indirect veto where the governor merely fails to sign a bill after the governor has gone home, was be abolished. WASHINGTON (AP)—The Price Commission, deciding Wednesday that "firm and immediate action" was necessary to halt the sharp rise in food prices, recommended that the Cost of Living Council impose controls over agricultural products. The commission made the decision during a day-long meeting, but a spokesman stopped short of recommending the precise recommendation. Price Commission Seeks Stabilization Of Food Prices "they feel the problem exists because of the lack of control of raw agricultural products," the smokeman said. THE COST of Living Council Air Controllers Get Most Ulcers By C. G. McDANIEL CHICAGO (AP)—Air traffic controllers have the highest incidence of peptic ulcers of any known group, said a physician he studied these workers. He blamed it on one factor: stress. Grayson, of suburban St. Charles, is president of the American Academy of Air Traffic Control Medicine. This stress, said Dr. Richard R. Grayson, grows out of the controller's fear of causing a collision of airplanes. HE REPORTED at a recent envy and the department of psychiatry of Northwestern University in all 11 air traffic control zones. He examined these men in the year after a sickout staged in March 1970 by the controllers in dispute with the Federal Aviation Eighty-six of them had symptoms of peptic ulcer serious and they were referred to radiologists. Sixty-six were found to have some sort of gastrointestinal illness, including 36 with peptic ulcer. THIS RATE OF 32.4 per cent with peptic ulcer represents the highest incidence of any group of diseases in this historical literature, Grayson said. Administration, their employer. For this group of workers, the physician said, "in a sense there is only one stress—the cone of fear of causing a midair collision." He said estimates of near-collision on inflight planes ranged from 2,500 to 7,500 a year in the United States. After one close one, the controller was quoted as saying, "I felt bad when I got out of my automobile accident and had come out of it unscathed. I was nauseated, felt weak, my heart was racing and my hands were wounds." ONE CONTROLLER R at a busy airport, whose case was cited, estimated that he was involved in at least 50 near collctions in two Grayson said, "A narrowly middera alight collision caused by one of these conscientious, punctilious young men has the same effect on him as if he had been captured death by a hair's breath." The symptoms that follow include anxiety, insomnia, shortness of sleep, and "plus their spin-off effects of other sensory animals, and the interpersonal animosity. THERE ARE not enough contests, and those who are working are fatigued from the lack of rest periods, too much overtime work, too little training. Frequent shift rotation throws the controllers' biological rhythms out of equilibrium, the physician said, and noise, poor lighting, crowded working conditions for rest and recreation during breaks further contributes to the symptoms. meets this morning to consider the commission's recommendations. The council has authority to extend controls to raw agricultural products, which by government and with live animals and vegetables. Asked if the commission is anticipating a decision by the council on food prices, the spokesman said. The council definition is definitely hoped for some. The commission spokesman said the seven-member agency "is not currently recommending a food price." on food prices. THAT WAS among discussions discussed at the session, along with removal of the example from the price increase, limiting price increases to a dollar-for-dollar past rule of cost, and reducing prices to hold down food prices. Since President Nixon imposed a wage-free freeze last Aug. 15, raw agricultural products have been exempt from controls. One reason is that the government feels that controlling a volatile market might adversely affect supply and demand. The commission declined to disclose its recommendations on the recommendation study by the staff, the spokesman said. But pressed on the issue, he said the commission wanted to see if it considered the recommendation. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN News Adviser . . . Del Brinkm News Adviser ... Del Brunham Editor ... NEWS STAFF News Adviser ... Del Brinkman BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser ... Mel Adama Business Manager Business Advisor ... Met Adams University Summer Kansan Thursday, June 22, 1972 5 National Magazines Printed Locally Editor's Note: This is the sixth in a series of stories of Lawrence business and industry. By CONNIE PARISH Kansas Staff Writer The next time you flip through the pages of "National Lampoon" to enjoy a satiric look at the United States or check the program section of your library, watch instead of studying, keep in mind that these magazines were printed in Lawrence. These are only two of the 20 different national magazines printed, bound and mailed from the Kansas Color Press. Approximately 19 million magazines are printed monthly. Charles Willis, director of manufacturing at Kansas Color OTHERS INCLUDE "Weight Watchers," "Flower and Garden," "Baskets," "Dinners" and Signature Foods, "Kansas Farmer," and publication for organizations like the Elks, Lions, VFW and Moose. Better Service Said Expected For Watson Better service to patrons and seniors. The results of a reorganization in Watson biology beginning this summer will be to Nancy **RECESSONS** The company, now more than 50 years old, began operation in The procedure for checking and returning books will stay the same, but the time it takes will be cut from about four seconds to less than one second when new machines are installed this fall. The quiet new machines, which will accept bent and mutilated cards, will be placed at the main circulation desk, the auxiliary card is used for overflow and complications) and the return chute. The circulation desk will be recalled and visible to patrons from the stairway and the reference desk. Books that are briefed and those on hold, in particular, are stored room behind the circulation desk. The new entrance to the stacks will be to the right of the circulation desk. Doors and windows allow access to the entrance. The old entrance caused no problems when only faculty and staff were allowed to use the stacks, but when the policy was changed to include stacks for all students. The center and west sections of level 7 will be reorganized for use in the next year, and department hopes to get an office and telephone for the conveyance of information. Liberal They relocated in Lawrence in 1835 during the Dust Bowl days. Warren Zimmerman, the man who created the law of Liberated and liberalized in Lawrence what is now the largest publication printing operation in the country. THE FAMILY corporation moved to its present location, 2021 Haskell Ave., in 1949. "the operation prints only magazines and does no job with real books," unique in that it is a total plant. That means we can do all the processes necessary to produce a magazine, make up a maillist to mail them. The organization employs approximately 350 persons ranging from untrained to skilled employees of the three permanent full-time workers. "WE DO employ some part-time workers. Willis said, "but it is difficult since even the unskilled jobs require several months of work." Both letterpress and offset printing methods are used, according to Willis, depending on the paper. The company uses a high-speed web rotary press and a high speed machine of which all of which utilize multi-color. Computers are becoming increasingly important in the tech world. Willis said, Some lineotypes, or type-setting machines, are tape-operated from material fed into computers, although some are not. COMPUTERS are now widely Campus Bulletin Adult Care Administrators: 10 a.m. Kansas Room. Personnel Training: 1:30 p.m. Council Summer Orientation and Dean of Men: 1:30 p.m., Woodruff Room. Room. Summer Orientation and Dean of Men: Summer Orientation and Dean of Women: 2:30 p.m. Big Eight Room. Business Orientation: 3:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room. Administrative Orientation: 3:40 p.m. Forum Journalism Orientation: 3:30 p.m., Forum Room. Sunday, June 25 L. JOHN YOUNG International Club Committee: 7 p.m. International Club Committee: Pharmacy Orientation: 3:30 p.m., Room 305. Social Welfare Orientation: 3:30 p.m. Pine Room. Midwestern Music & Art Camp Blue Band Concert, 7 p.m. , london Dilming Room. USA Popular Film, "Targets," 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. THE SLIGHT full gives them time to repair and upgrade equipment. lowervers Rooms. Gay Liberation Front: 7:30 p.m., In- terment. SUA Film (Hitecock): 7:30 p.m. Woodruff. Midwestern Music & Art Camp Concert Orchestra, concert Symphony Org Midwestern Music & Art Camp Red Band Concert & Art Band Concert 7: p.m. "This is because most publications put out only 10 or 11 issues yearly," he said. Ulster Ballet Theater...202 Berkshire Theatre...196 Green Welles' Mercury Production of "Macebeth." ...7:30 p.m. . Woodruff Auditorium. used in the accounting and production offices and in mailing subscriptions. Subscribers are sent to Kansas Color Press by the companies. Magazines are mailed to major distribution centers from "All Prices Reasonable" ANTIQUES Antique Desks, Tables, Chairs, China Cabinets, Ice Box, Lamps, Telephones, Glass, Collector & Christmas Plates. Welcome Incoming Freshmen Olathe, Ks. 66061 JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS Summer months are somewhat slower than the rest of the year, Willis said, though the corona is by no means shut down. May we help you with your housing needs 1108 W. Elm Now Leasing for Summer and Next Fall JAYHAWKER TOWERS KU APARTMENTS 1603 West 15th Surrounded by the K.U. Campus 300 2 Bedroom Apartments of more than 5 minute walking anywhere Not more than 5 minutes walking anywhere. The busiest seasons come The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing All utilities paid—Auto parking included—Heated swimming pool—Tenant storage room on each floor—inceramate inc炉房—Modern kitchen with microwave for heat and air conditioner—the thermostat for heat and air conditioner—Two elevators in each building—All brick walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and quiet—laundry in each building—Exposure exposure for each bedroom in each building—Two lavatories each apartment. between September and December and in spring, Willis said. It varies according to advertising. "Especially since we print some farm and craft magazines, advertising is seasonal," he said. COUPON XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see Convenience - Comfort - Safety - Extras THE NUMBER of magazine printed during the busy months remains constant but does not change. It is not a Magazine which normally has 120 pages may go to 140 for advertisement purposes. Willis Meeting deadlines is the biggest production opportunity, especially for new publications are dated. The company presently operates on a contract basis. COUPON Sambo's JUNE SPECIAL During June, when you purchase any dinner item you will get the second dinner for 1/2 price. All you do is present this coupon. Buy one dinner, second purchase of same item ½ price Offer good Mon.-Thurs, expires June 30 John & Yoko/ Plastic Ono Ban Some Time. THE LIGHT OF DREAMS BY THE WORLD'S MOST Famous Painters ELECTRIC FURNITURE Kief's discount price Q3 on Capitol records $3^{99} © Capitol $_{\pi}$ at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles Commonwealth Theatres. Now you can see'The Graduate again or for the first time. JOSEPH E LEVINE MIKE NICHOLS LAWRENCE TURMA THE GRADUATE PG Hillcrest Adults 1.50 Child.75 Eve. 7:50, 9:40, Mat Sat.Sun. 3:00, 4:40 Twilight Prices Good Eve. 4:40 show only ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST DIRECTOR MIKE NICHOLS Eve, 7:30; 9:30 Mat. Sat, Sun 2:30; 4:20 Twilight Prices Good At 4:20 Show Only ABDUCTORS" "THE Hillcrest3 Diana Swiss 2:00, 8:27 1014:06, 7:20, 10:33 Adults 1.50, Child 7.5 G TECHNICOLOR* Ginger is back! She's more EXCITING PETER BROADWAY AND TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON EXPERIENCED Chato's Land WALT DISNEY'S ALL CARTOON FEATURE 101 Granada THEATER...at highland VI 3-5784 more EVERYTHING DALMATIANS WALT DISNEY'S Hillcrest Matineen Sal Sun 7:45    4:30 WOODY ALLEN "PLAY AGAIN SAM" PG-13 Showtimes: 2:30, 7:35, 9:30 Varsity TRAILER #1076-865 Merit Finalists Will Attend KU In New Plans The number of outstanding high school students who have qualified as National Merit finalists entering the University of Kansas will double at the beginning of the 1972-73 academic year, and becomes a participant in the National Merit Scholarship Program. FONDA 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 One day 1989 Chevy Nova. 6 cylinder, automatic, power steering, new tires, excellent condition, JAYHAWK VW. 2524 Iowa. 843-2200. 6-22 1969 VW deluxe bus. 7 passenger 100% warranty $2095 JAYHAWK VW, 2522 Iowa, 843-2200 6-22 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, 515 Mich. St. Outdoor Park B-B-Q, Large Kitchen $130. Ski to go $60. Ski to eat here-$80. Ski Plate B-Its $18, Ski Bowl B-Its $18, -$100. Belt. Beet Belt. Sand.-$80, $140. Clift San-Tue. 7-27 9150. Clift San-Tue. Bokomotoko-bokomotoko.com $1.00 Bokomotoko-bokomotoko.com jacket jackets. Tank, Jersey, and jacket jackets. Lace-up. Religious. Conventiative. Saturday. Bokomotoko's Bookmarked Saturday. Bokomotoko's Bookmarked Jerry Rogers, director of the student financial aid and awards office, said that the National Merit Scholarship awards were designed to recognize Berger for women and the Summerfield scholarships for Thirty-two scholarships to National Merit finalists have been awarded for next fall at KU! Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, you're at an advantage. For sale 250 Suzuki X6 Scramber @9 in good condition. "Old's" Trumpet 8 years old in good condition. Call 843-7061. 6-26 you're at a disadvantage. Every way it comes to the same issue, "Analysis of Western Civilization," Campus Madhouse, West 14th, West 14th 7-27 35mm SLR camera cannon GLFT thru the lens lightometer. Like new, $150.00, 825 Alabama after 4 p.m. Sorry no phone. 6-26 FOR SALE Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered in the building for color, creed, or national origin. North Side Country Shop, 707 N.2nd Antiques, used furniture, and lots of other items, 9-7 days a week, 842- 3139 Herb Altenberndt. WANT ADS WORK WONDER NEBRU DISCOUNT. Now you can cost $30 per hour at BAY AUDI, or just one more than one. Also true Sierra Discount House in San Francisco with Free tea, coffee and Consulting Services. for sale. Quality 10 inches Bicycle Made in the USA. New York, New York. Kalifax, Manitouville, Falmouth, Pittsburgh, Columbus, Boston and bicycle professional mechanics and bicycle repair shops. 18th St. London, 18th St. Massachusetts 822-344- 7936. For sale 15 by 7 custom-chrome reverse wheels with G606 by 15 Firestone widen wheels Excellent C84-N015. Call Gary Cull, #841-0155. 6-22 DONALD SUTHERLAND KOMPUTERPAPER klute' 91 Starring: Jennifer O'Neill Gary Grimes Box Office opens 8:00 Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40 60 VW Black w sunroof Needs repairs, body in rough shape. Make an offer before June 27 Day 864-3477 Eve 845-5838 Tony KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES FOR SALE. 1963 Ford, A.C. Excellent condition. Call between 8:00 and 8:40. 783-809. 6-22 In everyone's life there's a SUMMER OF'42 Must Sell 1966 Suzuki 1800cc cycle Good cond. Heldens included $290.00. Call Gary, 843-0165 or 864-3322 6-29 THE 32 students will be eligible for a yearly scholarship averaging $400, according to the U.S. Commission for four years at KU. The KU participation in the National Merit Scholarship Program was made possible by a £2.5 million bequest to KU by the olimar James Davis, Jr. The scholarships will be named for him. Pipes, papers, and all smoking access- sories are available at the HODGE PODGE, 15 W. 9thh 6-29 According to Rogers, KU and Wichita State University, which awards one National Merit Scholarship, are the only Kansas men, the highest honor the University bestows on incoming shmen. Webster's Mobile Homes Dealer Three days 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $0.20 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Your Complete Service Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts Ample Park Spaces Available To be eligible for a James Davis, Jr., National Merit Scholarship, at a high school in Texas. As the finalist on the exam conducted by the National Merit organization through his local high school. Just West of the New shipment of India prints just in at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W 9th 6-29 Sandias handwritten to your personallized taste at HODGE PODGE 15 W. 9th. 6-29 FOR RENT K-A-T Sunkis, 61 Main, #429-0990 Feel free to contact our staff of working on all major brands of vehicles. Send your inquiries to Ford Handling or our motorcycle dealer or you and your motorcycle dealer's $165 save price plus $1250 Above. Honda dealers are $165 save price plus $1250 Above. Honda dealers are $165 save price plus $1250 Above. 1979 USA Basket 1979 USA Basket 1979 Swedish Keevler 1979 Swedish Keevlers 1979 Swedish Keevlers And watch for our 40% off promotion. And watch for our 40% off promotion. Drive-In Theatre For sale. 1969 BSA 441 Star shooting- excellent condition. Will well-lase- counting. Ask for Clay at Cindy L. Gates, Clea Gristle, 302-7387 302-7387 6-29 Apartment furnished, all air-conditioned, large enough for two or more bedrooms RV and near town, free parking no pets 6-22 843-597-6 Un-furnished apart, in triplex. Help us to furnish your apartment. I need someone to take over the quiet residential Indian Hills Hills apartment with private parking. $150 per month. Call 212-843-1276. COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTs Available now. two and 2 bedrooms apartments AC pool and laundry apartments ACF housing 19th Apt. 5 B or call 843-8220 fax 843-8220 Sleeping rooms-furnished, with or without kitchen privileges, for males off, street parking, borders KU and KU near. No pets. No phone 343-7576. Apartment for rent AC—single bedroom. Available now 19 W. 14th Call Henry after € p.m. at 842-9123. 6.98 LOOKING FOR A TWO-BEDROOM garden apartment adjacent to the Hilton shopping center and public space of most twentwenty-one-street apartments, with the space of most twentwenty-one-street apartments. 2107A - Harvard Road. No. 442-258. Attend rental units in a wide, well-lit room with features and features all being managed by the company. See Mrs. Forrester today, your guest at our Marina. Summer and Fall rentals. Furnished to 4 bedroom rooms. From $38 to Rentals with kitchen privilege $38 to Utilities paid. Avail 6-29 842-507-96 CAMPUS APEMMENT LIVING Santos Suite Apartment includes living room, one and two bedrooms furnished and one and two bathrooms附配 132 公寓 89-216 2116 One and two bedroom apartment, furnished and unfurnished at Ridgway, 240 & Douglass. Summer rates run for Fall. Balloon 8-75- 1116 universities sponsoring the program to recognize National Merit finalists with National Merit Scholarships. "NOW THAT KU has become a participant in this scholarship program," Rogers said, "we hope to attract more of the out-going high school students to pick KU as their number one choice." Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches. Our motto is and has always been There is no substitute for quality sirloin CSC U TOYOTA Phone 843.1431 Open 4:30 Closed Mondays 11. Mines North of the Kaw River Bridge Competition Sports Cars Inc. 2300 W. 29th Terr. Washington, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2911 Chaiseled water ski boat rental and lessons. 125 lhp 16 ft. ski boat. Call 841-2576 for details. 7-10 For Rent- Princess mobile home, $2,500. Payment due within 12 months. completed, window a.c. available to couple or couple. July 5, small de- partment. 913-296-2848 or 753- 272-4100 NOTICE BEAUTIFUL ONE AND TWO BED room garden buildings are being rented and hardwood, Arapahoe, and Mix streets. Three five apartment features include daintiest floors, water and gas utilities, cloak rooms, large rooms, and spacious closets. All rooms are furnished. One call or visit to Mr. Mackenzie's Road No. 422-234 during daily sport and get all details on Lawn care. After 5:00 P.M. on resident managers at each location rent their accommodations to tactive planters, or act as room-makers. ROOM FOR FEMALE in big, well- comforted, comfortable house. Free wa- her and liver, and dwindler swash. Suitable for room size: 84'H, for Debry or Jabrish. **6-29** An Oasis in the desert of life Vista Restaurant 1527 W. 6th 842-4311 6.00 FREE—4 kittens, 7 weeks old, box trained, 1 pure sawl, see at 519 Ohio St. 842-3745 6-26 SUMMER GAY LABIERATION attendees, and brothers. Meetings every saturday in the Union Office. 112-112 University Office. 864-735-1010. Tel. 864- 735-1010. Saturday, July 24 party coming CANTERBURY HOUSE Episcopal Church 1104 Louisiana — summer 6 p.m. — Sunday p.m. — Tuesday p.m. — Wednesday 9:30 p.m. Thursday Thurs. 5:15 p.m. Fri. 8:00 p.m. Sat. 11:35 p.m. Sat. 11:35 p.m. for counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization calls. Center at a local community answer center, answer format at 864-306-506, Call 24 hours. Wanted 10-speed man's bike For sale 3-speed man's bike Call Dale at 844-4220 or 841-3607 6-28 Announcing an opportunity to meet candidates Candidates for public office will be held at Arrow Park-Sunday. June 25, 2016 Stark's Games 6-22 SUMMER GAY LIBERATION Fund Summersville brothers. Marriage every Thursday at brother's home. Volunteer with activities of youths. Offer of employment B1-12 Union, 840-4099, Wife Box 24, 840-4099, Wife Box 24, 6-29 Notice Girl's summer cararrings at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W 9th. 6-29 YAMAHA ERN'S CYCLE SALES A M A H Mens Sport Coats— $40 Mens Knit Suits— $60 Mens Slacks— $18 Permanent Location in Lawrence Custom Tailored-Custom Styled 1 Pair Matching Slacks $70.00 BRANDYWINE CUSTOM TAILORS WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 716 North 2nd Over 100 Fabrics, and Patterns Over 100 Fabrics, and Patterns Polyester, Polyurethane and Many More SATISFACTION GUARANTEED For Measurement Appointment For Measurement Appointment Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 9. Sat. fil noon. 842-2323 RAMADA INN Fivedays 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each word: $0.03 Spaceous new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. TYPING Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Elective typewriter prompt, accurate. Elective M. Hauskrantz, Phone: 7281 2281 Them, these paper types accurately, prominently. IBM Selectric elite type will also do editing at reasonable raises. Kinda Davis 2014; 852-847 852 Experienced in typing these dishes, dinner terms, paper term, other type term, and other types of menu types. Accurate and prompt communication. Received Phone #81-9542 Mr. Wright LOST Experienced typist for your Theses. Dissertations, 690 work Call Mrs. Troxlex, 249 Ridge Court. 842-1440 11 REWARD for return of silver hand- made ring with initials TIRM. Lost during entrolment. It means a let to pass the ring. Phone: 6-266 at 842-4761 Lost. 4 keys with nail cup. Please leave word at 864-0810 or leave at Russian Dept—Marvin Annex 6-27 WANTED Small notebook containing notes in the 1100-1500 block of Mis- nature Call Gregy Glynn at 843-7690 e.97 WANTED ONE ROLLING STONES TICKET BALL 842-9749 6-22 Roommate Wanted Fine country living for only $48.75 per month. Private room, 35 acres pets, good comforter, laundry, gym. Bison 109, Vermont 6-28 HELP WANTED Two guys to share large house for the summer. Furnished electric dishwasher. five-minute walk to campus. Warehouse of all utility rooms. Bass, 842-6681. 6-26 ABRAXAS LEATHER CARRIER OPPORTUNITY Immunized graduate who is willing to work to help graduate student who is willing to work to help graduate student in our new store at 5 nights and 7 days a week. Send a resume or CV to Leaveworth, 9 p.m. workday; at Leaveworth, Leaveworth, Kansas. No Phone calls. leather goods—custom orders 17 W. 9th WHY RENT? THE MUSEUM OF ARCHITECTURE RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843-8499 2020 SQUARE 614 SANTA ANA, CA 95071 TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN 3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59) 500 E.23rd 842-0444 OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE 0 TO 60 MPH -13.5 RECLINING FRONT SEATS UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL. --- 843 8500 LOVE THAT DATSUN DISCOUNT The Stereo Store LUDIOTRONICS PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE 928 44-196 6 Thursday, June 22,1972 University Summer Kansam Play-Goers to Get Real Taste of Olde In Elizabethan times, going to a Shakespeare play was a major night on the town. Even before the show started, the theater-goers could enjoy music and dance, perusing the colorful skills outside the theater and purchasing flower tars and books. Beginning with the first presentation Saturday of this summer's Shakespeare Festival, "Twelfth Night," the University of Kansas's theater department embraces the sphere of the original productions. Starting at 7:30 p.m. before each production, the main lobby outside the University Theatre will be converted into an market place, complete with music, dancing and flower shopers. According to William Kuhke, professor of the theater and one of the organizers of the pre-show, the re-creation will include baroque music, dancing on the green, flower sellers, a book stall and the serving of punch and tarts. "We tried to capture the atmosphere surrounding a play from that period," said Kuhikle. "We hope the audience will soak up the atmosphere and that it will allow them to their enjoyment of the play." "Twelfth Night" opens Saturday night in the first of six performances. "We hope the audience will really get into the spirit of the play," Kuhke said. "We want them to feel free to join in the dance with us." You are a sonnet. If you buy a tart, you'll give you a song." A book stall will be set up in the lobby. It will be selling works by and about Shakespeare, as well as other works. In which Shakespeare lived. JUDITH Twelfth Night's' Viola Fitted Prof. Chez Haehl tailors costume If some of the hundreds of high school students who arrived at the University of Kansas this summer, for instance, western Art Camp appear to be a little lost, it is understandable. At least three of them are a long way away. By JOLENE HARWOOD Judy Smith returned to the United States only 10 days before camp started after spending two years with her family in Guam. She was a graduate of the American International School near Tel Aviv and will return there for at least two more years when the summer vacation has ended. And Debbie Burchell has journeyed from Bethel, All of them are young, vivacious and dedicated. They are eager to learn and filled with experience, imagination, emptiness and its instructors generate During her stay in Guam she was enrolled in an independent art study program which she thought benefited her more than regular art courses "which most taught" and took just as an easy elective." SMITH, whose father is in the forrest. He has lived in many parts. For the past several years in Canada, Guum, however, was her first mother. she would want to base everything for awhile," Smith said. "The classes are good and the older ones also keep me interested." Campers Come from As Far As Israel She liked the freedom she had with her art work there and gave as an extension to her desk, she shared on the library wall. Smith said that she loved Guaim and really missed it. She's having a life of life to live here in camp, however. THE KIDS and everyone are just great," she said, "and I've been meeting so many people from all over the United States. "I like living in a dorm and the campus is so beautiful. Besides getting to know people, I've spent my spare time just walking "At first I was a little skeptical, but then I decided if it were connected with a big university it must be good." she said. Smith found out about the Art Camp through a pamphlet forwarded her by one of her former teachers. AFTER CAMP is over Smith plans to join her family in Missouri Her father will be done with her and wants to do some farming. Smith isn't sure what she wants to do after finishing high school, but she is fairly certain that she wants a career connected with "I've taught ceramics before but I'm too much of a perfectionist to teach," she said. John Button learned about the Air Camp through relatives who were there. He said he heard he would be back from Tel Aviv and living in Lawrence this JUDY SMITH likes camp and if given the chance she will return next summer. Button, who is mainly interested in painting and drawing, has hopes of learning a lot this summer, and said he believed "I just wish they offered an oil class," she said. "I brought all my oils with me." Dr. Clinton said that if a person had been bitten by an animal believed to be carrying rabies, the animal should be captured. Dr. Clintonis that he was not officially contacted by the state department but had come from Hutchinson and because the problem was in Dr. Clinton said that treatment for rabies consisted of a series of shots, including intramuscular stomach muscles. After a few shocks, he said, a local itch developed. Dr. Clinton emphasized that the animal should not be killed or murdered, he said. It should be dead, he said. It should be subjected until authorities have approved and the animal sent to either Kansas City or Manhattan for processing. If a person has been exposed to rabies or thinks he has been exposed, Dr. Clinton said, the doctor do was to wash the exposed area. Role of Viola Step Up for Actress Ashton then contacted the persons in Lawrence who had kept the animal and advised them to see a doctor. Ashson said that he called the person in Hutchinson who had been accused of assaulting him and advised him of the situation and then called the public health department to investigate. According to the Lawrence Sanitation Department, the trash was dumped at the city landfill. Natural history材料 been said. Continued from page 1 was dumped at the city landfill. He became involved, Edwards said, when the owner of the dead skunk described its symptoms to Hay sent out by the Art Camp. Bur- ship, she went to college, a scholarship and came to camp. She liked it so much she's back this summer, again on a camp. worried about the distance between them because she had traveled so much before. She said that she was surprised when she saw the campus last year. He was contacted and told that a test for rabies was positive and that he should notify the owners of the skunk. Ashion said the symptoms resembled either rabies or encephalitis and had the animal anphanat Saturday for diagnosis. Viola, the heroine of Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," was a part that Anne Thompson, the daughter of a teacher, mered, said she had wanted to play ever since she understudied the part several years ago at the university. Continued from page 1 container which sat in front of the house overnight. Rabid Skunk Alone... "I'm just not used to such a big system and so many people," he said. "The American Infirmary," the school, only around 400 students." THIS IS Thompson's second event at the University of student university, in the spring of 1970 she played the part of Charlotte in "The Contrast" at the University of Arizona. "The camp is good taken only on the condition that the student is into art," hutton said. "I think it could be a really bad experience for any student whose parents just want to hear their parents just want to hear their parents." "There were more hills than I expected and I loved the trees. We have very few of them around Bethel," she said. Thompson said she liked to work in a university atmosphere. "Twelfth Night," which will be opening Saturday night at the University of Tennessee, by Stuart Vaughan. Thompson's husband. The play, starring Thomson as Viola, is the Kansas Shakespeare festival. Burchell has met several students she had made friends with last year. BUTTON so far likes the camp but he finds it a little strange being back in America. "I admire Vola. I guess that's what I wanted to do the part. I'm afraid he will give Shakespeare. One always goes back to Shakespeare, when one does." camp was a good learning experience. Button wants to go on to college but his plans after that are uncertain. "I enjoy Shakespeare because his poetry is marvelous and the plots are so cleverly worked out," Thompson said. work in a university atmosphere. "Most of the young people here are eager to learn and that makes it a joy," she said. "As You Like It" at the University Theatre, Thompson, who came with him, was apologetic about acting here this summer. "That's one reason I like it here. I meet so many people," she said. Thompson and Vaughan, who have been married since 1965, enjoy working together. Thompson directed plays which Thompson has appeared in at the Seattle Repertory Theatre, the New York Shakespeare Festival and the Orange Theatre at New Orleans. By JOLENE HARWOOD Kansan Staff Writer When fall comes Button and his parent came to visit the Button will finish his remaining two years of high school there where his parents work with the teacher. "I really enjoy the theatre and do playing rotating repertoire," he says. "I don't want the different play for three or four nights in a row and then starting again." "BOTH Stuart and I are interested in the kind of theatre where you can do the classics," said Thompson. Last year Vaughan directed "I have some really negative and some positive feelings about America. I just not sure I want all my whole life here," he said. THOMPSON has a wide range of experience in the theatre. Her first professional part came when she was 16 years old and working with a new company in New Hamphire. She played the part of the debutante in the show LAST YEAR Debbie Burchell's art teacher gave her a pamphlet "It's a completely different experience and the interrelation with the other actors is fantastic. "It was a perfect experience," Thompson said as she talked about that summer she spent acting, painting scenery, working with the art and, when it was discovered she could sew, making costumes. acting in two movies: "Little Murders," directed by Alan Arkin and "Steagle," starring Richard Benjamin. "A part is only a corner of one's personality." And one part is so different from all the others. That's what acting is all about." She joined the actor's union in Seattle. Since then she has starred in various plays including "Taming of the Shrew" and "The Importance of Being Earned." She also stars in "Town," "Midsummer Night's Dream," and "Arms and the Man," in New Orleans. it was while I was attending an all girl's high school in Boston. Thompson said, "I had a little problem with "Arsenic and Old Lace." "I was new in the drama club and just didn't think turning the part down would help my reputation any," she said. THOMPSON could only recall one part for which she held a passion dislike. Although Thompson said New York held no attraction for her, she has worked there. She did a video call with her husband and series "Series Storm," as well as Dr. Clinton said that there had not been a case of rabies in Douglas County for a long time and it has not occurred since 15 years ago in Tonganoxie. Ashton said that the symptoms or rabies were frothing at the throat. He was not madness. He said a rabies virus attacks the brain and the heart, which causes the madness. Ashson said the rabies virus should be transmitted to young animals through nursing if the mother was a carrier. Also, he said, skunks can survive longer in other animals with rabies. "If you can handle a wild animal, something is wrong with it. You should leave it alone," said Edwards. In young animals, Edwards said, the symptoms of rabies can be prolonged for up to nine weeks. The animal that died from rabies did occur it was then late to do anything about it. "People should leave baby raincoats and rabbits; it is easy to feel sorry for them and want to mother them. They are cute when they are wet, but a problem to take care of later. After they have been raised, you must throw them loose to survive." Ashton Dr. Clinton said that reptiles could carry the virus and that some rodents may also be carriers. for as skunks. Ashton said that after they had been desecured, they could not be released because their means of defense taken away and they could not end offensives except by bluff. Ashton and Edwards both emphasized that wild animals should be left wild. They do not need pets. Ashton's pets, Edwards and Edaws said. THIS WEEK END! Bring this Coupon to SHAKEY'S for 50° Off on a Double or Family Sized Rizza Pizza 50° Off on a Pitcher (Light or Dark) SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & ye Public house 544 W. 23rd 842-2266 Offer Good Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. 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THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN CLOUDY 82nd Year, No.13 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Shakespeare, Stones Reviewed Monday, June 26, 1972 See Page 6 Demo Platform Calls For Job Guarantees WASHINGTON (AP) -The Democratic party's platform drafters Sunday called for a guaranteed job for all with federal payments to assure income above the poverty level, plus broad tax reforms and approval of the present welfare system. The first drafts of the platform to be presented for approval to the national convention opening in Miami Beach July 10 were hammered out by a 15-person drafting committee that worked until 3 am, CDT Sunday. The three planks they produced, out of an anticipated eight, pledge sweeping domestic reforms but stop well short of the specific share-the-welfare proposals of Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota, the former Democratic presidential aspirant. 'SET THE language was broad enough to seem acceptable to most McGovain backers, and not so drastic as to precipitate a floor fight by delegates backing Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey of Detroit and Edmund S. Muskie of Maine. The Vietnam and foreign policy planks remain to be drafted. Representatives of th candidates generally indicated approval. Mayor Kenneth Gibson, Newark, N.J., chairman of the drafting subcommittee, told reporters: "I personally predict this will be the party platform." "A first priority of a Democratic administration must be eliminating the unfair, bureaucratic Nixon wage and price controls," said the draft planks, which still must be approved by the full 150-member Platform Committee before submission to the convention delegates. THE ANTI-CONTROL plank, however, did not suggest a quick end to pay and price ceilings if Democrats win the White House. Instead, the platform draft called for "a truly fair stabilization program" with curbs on profits, dividends, executive salaries and prices as well as wages. "The Nixon controls do not meet that standard," the drafters said. "They have forced the American worker who suffers from low wages to pay the price of trying to end it." The economic plank was titled Jobs, Prices and Taxes. The other two planks finished in the marathon drafting session were: RIGHTS, Power and Social Justice; this plank calls for national health insurance, no-fault auto insurance and the level of protection to protect consumers, rights, and safety. Cities, Communities and the Environment; this plank endorses general revenue-sharing, to provide funds that would roll back steep property taxes; a single transportation fund to replace the existing transportation development would be coupled with highway building; and six pages of environmental recommendations designed, the plank says, to protect the air, land and economic growth or workers' jobs. Eastern Floods Stop; Huge Cleanup Begins The draft platform endorses neither McGovern's demand that the federal government become 'the employer of last resort' nor his frequently stated proposal for income payments of $1,000 per person to the McGovern administration. INSTEAD, the draft plank approaches the McGovern proposals in these more general terms: GOVERNORS of seven states, or their representatives, met in Harrisburg, Pa., to assess the damage and plan action. They will ask for more federal help. Flood waters receded in the devastated East Sunday and the massive task of cleaning up and rebuilding began. The flooded storm that began a week ago stood at 108. PURE drinking water and sewers were restored to populous northern Virginia. Most of Richmond still was without water in the fall, but doing it out in fivegalon quantities. "The next Democratic administration must end the present welfare system and replace it with an income-security program which places cash assistance in an appropriate context with all of the measures outlined above, adding up to an annual income of $10 billion for each family an income no less than the poverty level officially defined in the area. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rep. H. John Heinz III, R-Pa., said he would seek a congressional investigation of why the National Weather Service failed to predict the flood earlier. Property damage was estimated at well over $1 billion in Pennsylvania alone, with only a fraction of the loss insured. A state insurance official said there were about 20 million dollars in the entire state and only two in Wilkes-Barre, a brutally damaged city of 60,000. PAUL Jacoby, chief meteorologist for the NWS, rejected the blame. He said tropical storm Agnes took a capricious turn which nobody could have predicted. The storm hit the Florida coast with hurricane force last weekend. Thousands of homes and businesses from New York to Virginia and west to Ohio were destroyed. Vast tracts of farm land were under water, their crops destroyed. In Harrisburg, the Susquehanna was receding, but few of the 7,000 displaced people were allowed back in their homes. Some were friends or in two evacuation centers. The NWS issued a new flood warning for northern and central New Jersey Sunday because of the new rains, but Civil Defense said they expected no serious flooding. "Federal assistance, according to need, will supplement the income of working people and assure an adequate income for those unable to work." Food, cots and clothing were being arriated to Wilkes-Barre, where debris had been removed. Susquehanna River still covered the city. More than 100,000 people had been evacuated from the area. The food situation there was described as "pretty good." The Ohio River crested early Sunday morning and was receding at about two inches an hour. Officials said the worst damage in Ohio was from $5-mile winds that struck areas northwest of the city, which caused an estimated $1 million damage to boats docked in the Cleveland area. THE PLANK-by-passes the few specifics of McGovern's tax-reform proposals and simply endorses the entire Mills-Mansfield legislation which calls for repeal of all tax laws. The PLANK also means that means of compelling Congress to review all loophole, favors and preferences. However, the platform does mention as potential candidates for elimination or reform the percentage oil depletion and other oil industry provisions; the special rates and rules provided for capital gains; the benefits provided to farmers for real estate and industry; the "easy-to-buse expense-account deductions", and the present minimum tax. The policy body proposed that Social Security be made a progressive tax by substantially increasing the ceiling on payroll which it attracts the payroll deduction was applied. "TO REDUCE the local property tax for all American families, we support equalization of school spending and substantial increases in the federal share of education costs and general revenue-sharing." the draft plank said. The party's responsiveness to AFL-CIO influence was shown not only in the demanding ceilings on profits and dividends, but in a promise of continued support for free collective bargaining and subsidy. The party's substitute commungy arbitration for it. "We therefore oppose the Nixon administration's effort to impose arbitration in transportation disputes through its last offer selection bill," this plank said. The platform is to be completed so it can be placed in the hands of all delegates 10. 图 2-13 树冠上的黑斑点 FREE KITTA one young lady took a good look at some kittens being given away free outside the She Can't Quite Decide Kansas Union Sunday, but she couldn't make up her mind. Konsan Photo by FELICIA SMALLWOOD Gay Group To Publish Voter Guide Members of the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front (GLF) are currently collecting material for *Gay Voters' Campaign* David Radd, the GLF education coordinator. Questionnaires are being sent to candidates who filed for state and local elections asking their position on issues involving homosexuality. The replies will be noted in the "Voters' Guide" along with a listing of those who do not reply. Several GLF members will attend a session of the American Library Association association meeting on Tuesday, March 3. The ALA has instituted a task force to urge libraries to conduct this meeting. The Lawrence GLF is compiling an annotated bibliography of gay literature. Alleged discrimination against gays in renting procedures by a Lawrence real estate agent was discussed at the Thursday night meeting. The GLF has written to the agent asking that he consider their complaint. The Lawrence GLF celebrated Coca-Cola with a piece at Lone Starleaf's Spring According to Radd, "Christopher St. Day marks the incident that sparked the gay liberation movement as we know it." A police officer and a man were arrested Christopher St. in New York was stormed by police. A violent confrontation followed, the first time homosexuals had actively protested harrassment, and gay groups in New York had been event annually, the coordinator explained. Regents Approve Fee Increases By BOB LITCHFIELD Kansan Staff Writer Fees at the University of Kansas will be increased by $25 per semester for Kansas residents and $123 per semester for non-residents for the fall 1973 semester. Higher student fees and approval of guideline increases in the general revenue funding requests for fiscal year 1974 through FY 1975, as well as meetings Thursday and Friday in Topoka. Max Bickford, executive officer of the Regents, recommended that the fee increase be made in order that Kansas' stay at the university be preserved. Midwestern colleges and universities.[43] He warned that the increase in non-resident fees may have some effect on enrolment. KU had estimated an overall increase of 383 for the 1974 fiscal year. 10 Said Killed in Pre-Truce Fights BELFAST (AP)—British troops claimed to have hit 10 guerrillas in running gun fights across Belfast Sunday, only 36 hours after a truce with the Irish Republic Army. The prolonged gun battles raised fears about whether the truce would begin as scheduled to halt, at least temporarily, during the period that has lasted 383 dead in Northern Ireland. Security authorities said they had no way of telling whether any of the 10 guerrillas were killed or how seriously they were wounded. In usual IRA fashion, dead or wounded comrades were spirted dead. There were no British casualties. An army spokesman said Irish military gunners reportedly attacked a military base in Greece. area of the Roman Catholic district of Andersontown. Gummen also attacked a post in Horn Walk in the neighborhood district of Suffolk. The attackers opened fire from alleyways and from passing cars. A huge bomb rocked Strabane, a market town near Londonderry. The blast, which the army said was set off by 120 pounds of gelignite, wrecked a bar. The guerrillas gave 30 minutes warning and troops moved into the area. There were no casualties. More than 700 rounds were shot at the two posts. The cease-fire, called by the Provisionalists last Thursday, was due to start at midnight Monday. There were fears that fanatics would defy orders from IRA superiors and continue the bomb and bullet campaign to expel the British from The Bellfast street battles came after the police responded. Six persons were shot at 48 hours. The IRA itself insisted the cease-fire would be obeyed. Seamus Twomey, the Belfast Provisional commander, said he had inspected the collecting guns from the city's guerrillas. Security forces, however, said the shooting was coming from "regular" machines. But there also were signs of reluctance from some cadres, notably in Anders洞sonn, where the local commander named a "military" of his men surrendering their arms. NON-RESIDENTS will pay $38 per semester in fees this fall. This figure will jump to $63 for fall, 1973. Resident fees from raise from $243 this fall to $384 a year later. Bickford said that as a result of the student fee increase the board staff had to move out. The school would be available to reduce the general revenue requests of the six state schools. KU is expected to generate half of this amount, Kansas State University one- Requests to the Regents from the state institutions for fiscal year 1974 totaled $105.7 million for general revenue funding. KU requested $29,123,846, an increase of 20.1 per cent over the fiscal year 1973 budget appropriated by the legislature. The request of KU for Federal Funds was a request for $15,983,866 was a 37.6 percent increase. THE BOARD Friday agreed to adopt the budget guideline increases recommended by the Council of Presidents of the state schools. Of the $4.8 million increase requested by KU Thursday, $2.8 was covered by the board's guidelines. Included in the guidelines was a 5.5 per cent pay increase for civil service workers and faculty, and a 25 per cent raise for student employees of the University. Also included were: funding for a group death and disability benefit program for the faculty, $7,614; an increase in the state's contribution to the faculty retirement fund, $7,614; additional funds for the coordinated computer plan, planning, and management amounting to an additional $13,540; also approved for the Medical Center. A total of $1,312,743 was allotted for the faculty and civil service pay raises. The student rate increase $350 was made to compensate for the increased rate increase in the minimum wage to $2 an hour. BEFORE the budget review Friday, the board approved a motion by Regent Henry Bubb of Topeka that the presidents of the state schools be given 5 a per cent salary increase, effective July 1. Chancellor E. Chalmers Jr., would receive $42 million to residence and use of a state car. Requests for increases not covered by the guidelines were listed in order of priority by KU. The first priority, an occupational safety and health officer, was approved Thursday when the board reviewed the recommendations of persons, with supporting staff, to work in the areas of safety, affirmative action and employ relations. increased benefits for 29 KU staff members who retired between 1951 and 1982, listed second, was deferred until 1976, and the other institutions could be compiled. Requests for the next four priority items were approved: physical plant improvements, $791,153; Geological Survey, $694,250; Biological Survey, $787,870; and Biological Survey, $43,954. REMOVED from the guidelines, but approved by the board, were two educational programs for KU: a doctoral program in aeronautics, in conjunction with Wichita State University ($9,313 and $6,250); a doctoral program in Physiology with Kansas State University ($10,000. The board rejected requests for overtime pay, $7,718; funds for moving into Wesco Hall, $30,000; Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center, which the board thought was successfully to move to Wichita, $153,900; and an audiovisual technician, $6,568. Medical Center requests not covered by the guidelines but approved by the board included restoration of funding, reduced by the budget division, to hire more interns, $235,000; expansion of the educational program, $349,100; increased See REGENTS, page 6 By TRISHA TEETER Kansan Staff Writer Local Attempt at Communal Living Is in Third Year Experimentation in communal living has been in vogue for the past few years, but most communes have failed, acclimated to the stress, graduated student in human development. At least one Lawrence group, however, has succeeded in developing an on-going cooperative community. It is the Campus School of Association, (CIA), 1466 Tennessee St. The CIA house stemmed from a fraction of the first house as it is organized now begun in 1890. "The purpose of the house is to get people to live together successfully," said a young man who was new to the house in June. "Each must share in the required tasks of cleaning, cooking, inspecting and repairing." SEVENTEEN persons now live in the house, which has room enough for about 30. The members observe a system of work with the help of the work they do to maintain the house. At the beginning of each week a sign-up sheet is posted listing various tasks, each delegated a certain number of points. Each week, residents of the house are expected to compile at least 100 credits (approximately five hours of work). THE POINT system was initiated in January because there had been some problems for the first two years involving the duties, according to Keith Miller, professor of human development. He is a member of the Co-operative Improvement Association, which is also involved with the house. Residents are fined ten cents for each unearned credit because the point system is related to the payment of monthly rent. The rent contract allows for the resident to earn 400 credits a month, which equals $40, that is subtracted from their rent. Rent includes utilities and meals six nights a week. Rent ranges from $15 to $70 a month, depending on the size of the room. The house has four halls of six to seven rooms, a lounge, recreation room, a large utility kitchen, a smaller kitchen on the ground floor and a dining room. Members are required to eat evening meals together six nights a week. Anyone who cannot arrange to be at an evening meal will not be admitted as a resident. "The reason for this is that mealtime is the best time for the residents to get to know each other," said Fearlock, "and that is the purpose of the house." FEALOCK SAID that there had been invasion toward the house by the community. Atty. Gen, Vern Miller raided the house last August, but found no evidence of him. "Whenever you are changing something, you immediately become suspect," he said. "We have been watched for drugs and subversive actions since the 1970s." "The experience of learning how to cope with these situations on an individual level and in relation to the community is what we are all about." Feaillock said. THE HOUSE is regulated by residents, who can change the rules by a voting committee weekly. A lack of personal involvement and organization were the causes of the ineffectiveness of the causes of the ineffectiveness of the original movement, according to previous residents. The original houses had to be sold in 1965. Rules prohibit the use of drugs, stealing, pets that rare not housestrained, excessive noise and criticism that is not constructive. They also include the suggestions that complaints be taken directly to the cause and that persons who have done something to benefit the house be complimented. house meetings. At those meetings members air complaints and discuss solutions. Feaillock said that the house began with very few rules and that rules were adopted as they were needed. The residents created most of the rules. THE MOVEMENT was revived in 1989 by movie veteran he heard about the grant bounty on his head. He also "I was interested in the idea of starting an experimental co-op," he said. He approached Jerry Lewis, associate dean of liberal arts and one of the original founders, and the result was the current CTA house. The University of Kansas Student Housing Association owns the house. The board consists of Miller, Lewis, John Wright and Jim Sherman, professors of human development; Fealock, the representative from the house; and Irvin Stoneback, a local farmer and NFO organizer. The house is being studied by a team of human development researchers for the study of how to reduce violence. 2 Monday, June 26, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs By The Associated Press Nixon Still Popular PRINCETON, N.J. (AP)—Public approval of President Nixon appears to have sustained the increased popularity that followed his visit to the Soviet Union, the Gallup Poll reported Sunday. The Gallup organization's latest survey, taken between June 16 and 19, showed 60 per cent of those interviewed responded favorably when asked whether they approved or disapproved of the President's performance. Another 32 per cent said they disapproved and 8 per cent had no opinion. Army Dropouts Ebbing WASHINGTON (AP) — The Army said its worldward desertion rate, sent spiraling by the Vietnam war past the peak set in World War II, had begun to drop for the first time in seven years although it remained relatively high. According to the Army, there were 40,927 cases of desertion during the first three quarters of the 1972 fiscal year which ends June 30. This is nearly 22,000 fewer than the number of casualties that the U.S. officials saw this as a trend that would continue as the service withdrew from an unpopular war. They also said that fewer draffees, higher enlistment standards and measures to speed the processing of discharges were helping. Bomb Blamed for Crash SAIGON (AP) — Investigators of the crash of a Cathay Pacific Airways jetliner that killed 81 persons are nearly convinced the plane carried a bomb that destroyed it in the air, informed sources reported Sunday. The sources, familiar with the inquiry into the June 15 crash, said all other possibilities had been virtually ruled out by investigators. One source reports that activity ruled out completely. "The investigation is concentrating on one strong probability, and that is a bomb exploded aboard the aircraft," one source said. Planes Attack Steel Plant SAIGON (AP) - U.S. jets dropped laser-beamed 2,000 pound "Smart" steel bogs into the Thai Nguyen steel plant's open hearth furnaces 30 miles north of Manila for the world'snamestreel steel producing capacity, the 7th Air Force announced Sunday. Other Air Force F4 Phantoms with laser bombs ranged 120 miles north of Hanoi to within 30 miles of the border with China in the south, a small railroad bridges on the northwest line, the Air Force said. These were among more than 20 strikes that U.S. tactical fighters conducted in North Vietnam Saturday, B52 strategic bombers mounted a strike on the city's raids across South Vietnam's northern front Sunday with firepower that was far outweighing THE ATTACK on the Tha Nguyen steel works was the most destructive since the resumption of the company's operations April 6, officer said. It was considered a major target and hadn't been bombed since the 1985-86 campaign when it was rebuilt in recent times. It was later ruled The complex, two square miles in area, is the biggest industrial facility in the country and provided its entire domestic railroads. It also serves railroads, bridges and buildings. While four of the Phantoms dropped the pinpoint accurate laser bombs through the roof of a building, two of the buildings, the rest of the flight blasted the plants storage area with unguided, 500-pound bombs and flares. The planes reported destroying or damaging numerous warehouses. THE AIR FORCE said that by knocking out the open hearth of a tank, the crew "destroyed North Vietnam's entire capacity for producing steel" and the other sections of it were crippled automatically. The command made no mention of any American plane losses in the raids Saturday. The Navy said P4 Phantoms were shot down north of Hanoi in Vinh Phu Province. The northwest rail line runs through the province and the east steel plant is just east of it. In other raids Saturday, Navy fighter-bombers from the carrier Coral Sea attacked a series of targets south of Hanoi. U. S. Command policy is to withhold announcement of plane losses while search-and-rescue operations are in progress. PILOTS reported smashing two large supply buildings at the Phu Ly trans-shipment point, 12 miles southeast of Hanoi, triggered explosions and fires among black smoke rising to 1,000 feet. A raid on a trans-shipment point 30 miles south of Hanoi set off eight big sustained fires, pilots reported. The B52 heavy bombers staring across South Vietnam's northern coast, 2,500 tons of explosives on North Vietnamese troops, some of them retreating after an assault Saturday on the My Chanh River, and on areas that could be used for staging an attack on Hue. The Saigon command and reported one battle near Fire Base King, 105, and Spokesmen said South Vietnamese troops had battled 100 or 80 in North Vietnamese troops and 63 in South Vietnamese troops, killed, half of them by air and the command reported two South Vietnamese soldiers wounded. Wallace Improving beginning of the field army's phaseout from Vietnam and its integration into the U.S. military command, sources said. The command, which has overall responsibility for all branches of service in Vietnam, said the oveh had been planned even before the collapse controversy and the timing was purely coincidental. The move downgrades it to a support unit with the primary focus on providing them rather than just the army alone. It now becomes less of a tactical headquarters and unders more control of the U.S. Command. At least three Air Force geogs and there have been moved to the Command's "Pentagon East" headquarters at Tan Son Tao Airport. SAIGON (AP)—The U.S. Command discharged Sunday major changes in its Indochina operations, including more direct control over 7th Air Force and Strategic Air Command bombing Military Groups Merged Sense Time John Yok of Plastic Ono Band With Duquesn and Muse THE NIGHT OF THE WORLD NEW YORK, NY AT 10 P.M. ANGELA Another change makes the U.S. Army, Vietnam, a support force. The restructuring of the U.S. Army, Vietnam, marks the Some Time John & Yoko Plastic Ono Band at Capitol Records Kief's discount price $3.99 on Capitol records Capitol. at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP)—Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace is showing some signs from the effects of bullet damage to his spinal cord and now has some feeling in his thighs, doctors reported Sunday. In noting this, they said it was cause for "cautious optimism" on the chances for further recovery from the bullet injury. The hospital said Wallace had shown "definite evidence of some neurological recovery." He has sensation now in the thighs that was not present one week ago." Patronize Kansan Advertisers Hijacker Hunt Continues PERU, Ing. (AP)—A manhunt for a young hijacker resumed Sunday and the FBI called on an expert skydriver to try to pinpoint the flight of the bandit who either parachuted or fell from a commandered jet with more than $500,000. About 170 men joined the search, which centered on a thickly wooded, 25-square-mile coastal landscape known as Desert Island. It was over that area that the hijacker was believed to have left an American Airlines 727 early Saturday. Jim Martin, FBI agent-in-charge in Indiana, said the skyjacker had not been identified and it was uncertain whether his parachute had opened, leaving the possibility that he may be dead or injured. McGovern Gets 20 Votes In Nebraska Convention LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - George McGovern picked up two more national convention delegates to attend the Democratic, winding up a two-day state convention, elected a South Carolina national committeewoman pledged to support the South Democratic party for the presidential nomination. The development assures McGee- lon of the 20 state's 24 first baile- ron ballots in the first four de- mainining four delegate votes are commitited to Minnesota Sen- turators. ywwwwwwwwww Frances Ohmstede of Guide Rock, a long-time campaigner for McGovney, was elected national委員会候鄉, easily defeating Ruth Short of Omaha, a Humphrey backer, and Nancy Childs of Lincoln, to win the post. unofficially tailed gave Mrs. Omstede 304 votes; Mrs. Short, 63, and Mrs. Chids, 31. Mrs. Osmethid succeedes Mrs. Maurine Biegert of Shickley, who chose not to seek re-election after 12 years as committeewoman. Kotley Kollea of Omaha was reeled national committeeman for the 1982 convention, sounding of convention senate vowed to support McGovern LUXEMBOURG (AP)—Cab- lionian universities in the european continent are look for a way out of the in- ternational monetary midway after the eurozone's financial crisis. Officials Seek Resolution For Monetary Problems The ministers of the future enlarge Common Market will seek to save their planned October summit meeting in Paris. They will address monetary problems, because the summit's prime aim is to get the European economic and monetary union off the ground. Luxembourg's foreign minister, Jean-Bernard Cornil, will preside at the meeting. At the same time, Premier and Finance Minister Pierre Werner wrote a letter to the commission meeting of six finance ministers of the present Common Market, and to the Commission. ALL, with the possible exception of Italy, want to maintain the present system of narrow fluctuation margins for community currencies in this new crisis, according to a statement from the bank on this first step to wade economic France dislikes the idea of a devaluation of the hairai, if only beware of the goods cheaper in markets where France is competing with similar and monetary union in March. Community sources are concerned that the floating of the pound on the currencies, notably the Italian lira. Many here believed that possible devaluation of the pound would be followed by that of the Irish coin, the Danish krona and the lira. products, mainly automobiles. IT WILL be hard for the six to agree on stronger monetary cooperation, as long as West Germany does not go along with stronger economic cooperation. They refuse to cooperate in a European monetary cooperation fund as it is not well managed by managing the other member states' economic policies. It also is doubtful if Thorn can succeed in bringing the 10 closer In an unusual move, Kelley asked convention delegates to insult McGowan by poll showing 221 favoring McGovern, #80 for Humphrey, #34 for Gates, #56 for Edmund Muskie, three for Edward Kennedy and one each for Shirley Cisholm, George O'Neill and North Carolina's Terry Sanford. Kelley accepted the mandate and said he would support McGovern to two ballots, until he was approved 35 per cent of the vote, or until released by the candidate, which ever comes first. Similarly bounded in 1982, Humphrey delegates elected at the May 9 Nebraska primary at Reno; also won the non-banding presidential preference race. Sen. Stevenson Raps Nixon By RALPH NICOL Kansan Staff Writer TOPEKA—Sen. Adlai Crawford had failed to saturday that the Nixon administration had failed to the country a sense of "national fraternity." In a speech at a fund raising dinner for Bill Roy, Second District congressman, Stevenson declared that current leadership But Gov. William Guy of North Dakota said states sometimes have the federal government that "small disasters" could mean big disasters. "We've found in coping with disaster that communications is our precarious link," Guy said. He said the North Dakota危机中心 handler handled 5,000 messages with the Rapid City flood. BOTH governors were interviewed on the eve of the event, and they will include which will include a Tuesday discussion of emergency communication. had shown a lack of moral commitment in rural and domestic affairs. Guy said that smaller floods, causing perhaps $100,000 in damage, were devastating for millions of people, recognized by the federal Stevenson accused Republicans of encouraging large corporate farming while ignoring the saml farmer. "One and a half million farmers are now in poverty." State administration threats to control farm prices so that the government can STEVENSON questioned whether the Department of Agriculture was protecting farmers. He said there had been too many subsidies, tax breaks and grants that helped grow crops at the expense of the small farmers. Docking said Kansas had hips" with the federal government in disaster situations. Hess DyaS of Lincoln was resisted to the fulltime paid postmaster before a mation after his lone challenger, John Kemp, withdrew from contention. "WE'VE HAD tornadoes and floods and I think we are about set up as you can be to react to the emergencies." Ducking said. Neither governor was critical of the federal role in massive flood disasters, such as now occurring in the East. "Once a disaster designation has been delicated by the President, then the OEP works well," Guy said. Guy termed it "essential" that the federal government channel its emergency funds through the federal agency directly with local governments. "The primaries reflect much of what is worrying Americans today," Stevenson said. He said that in the past three years, unemployment reached 20%. In many of people were on welfare and that the country had suffered a real decline. Guy said federal funds to help replace governmental losses, such as roads and bridges, had been provided by those cases are handled by the federal Office of Emergency Preparedness (OEP). Delegates spent 4½ hours Sunday afternoon and early evening, hammering out a state platform before adjourning the convention. "Something is wrong," he said, when Congress is asked to increase military spending, but is also under education bill "big spending." Stevenson also denounced incentives for the businesses and businesses such needs as pollution, child care and help for cities were Ducking, a Democrat, is the governor of Iowa, a governmen group GU, also a Democrat, is the senior member and was instrumental in founding the State Republican Party. Stevenson said that the administration's foreign policy was based on the "minteneth-century concept of balance of power." He called for a policy "did not square with the realities of a pluralistic world." Stevenson accused President Nixon of supporting corrupt governments in Greece and other nations, alimenting our former fiends. Stevenson said he was damnied the day before, when a small buddle in the White House, protected people by Executive Privilege, people by Executive Privilege. ABOUT FOREIGN affairs, Stevenson accused Nixon of having "no real policy." Ex-Governor, Of FDR Era, Died Sunday Approximately 500 persons attended the speech, which was held in the municipal auditorium. One of Huxman's decisions was his participation in a ruling of a three-judge federal court on the same issue, a statute in Topeka school board case. The case later was appealed and Kansas was one of the four states and District of Columbia which joined in the case. In a Supreme Court ended segregation in public schools. concept which has no foundation in law." Defeated in his attempt for a second term as governor after serving in 1937 and 1938, Huxman was appointed by Roosevelt to the U.S. Senate to appeals. He served 17 years in the post until his retirement. TOPEKA (AP) - Walter A. Huxman, a Dovecraft ushered in the Franklin D. Rosewell landfill. He was also a topeka hospital. He was 85. "Regretably, it's something you have to react to—it's not something you can divert," Docking said. "I THINK the federal government is a little insensitive to that occur in the underpopulated areas of the country," Guy said. He later said, "I felt I had no choice, in the light of past decisions, to uphold the Kansas law," he added. "And we would preme Court, I would vote to overrule the decision I had made. I do not believe in segregation." All services were scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at Topeka. Gov. Robert Docking of Kansas said most Midwest states were as vulnerable to flooding as notwithstanding floods such that one that struck Rapid City, the BISMARK, N.D. (AP) - State and federal agencies good job of coping with floods and other natural disasters two midwestern states have been hit. Bleed TWELFTH NIGHT kansas Shakespeare Docking Says States Ready for Disasters ANNE THOMPSON AS VIOLA Directed by STUART VAUGHAN JUNE 24, 26, 27, 28, 30 and JULY 1 With government as serious. JUNE 24, 26, 27, 28, 30 and JULY 1 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE ALL PERFORMANCES AT 8:00 P.M., MURPHY HALL REFRESHMENTS AND ENTERTAINMENT IN THE MAIN LOBBY AT 7:30 TICKET PRICES: $2.00 KU STUDENTS $1.00 WITH ID Summer Season Coupon $5.00 Box Office Opens June 12 Phone UN4-3982 The University Shop CONTINUES ITS ANNUAL SUMMER SALE Stop By and Discover Bargains Like These: SUITS Entire Stock Reduced 10-50% SPORT COATS Entire Stock Reduced 10-50% DRESS SLACKS Mainly Double-Knits 25% Off JEANS Many Styles and Colors 25% Off DRESS SHIRTS Long & Short Sleeve 25% Off SHOES AND BOOTS Entire Stock Reduced 10-50% One Large Group of TIES Now $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price SWIMWEAR All Reduced by $ \frac{1}{3} $ Next to Discount Records University Shop 1420 Crescent Rd. Hours 9:30-5:30 Monday, June 26, 1972 University Summer Kansan 3 Royals Swap Wins with Twins KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) —Upon invading and John Maysley each year seven-ran fifth-finning out-burst, giving the Kansas City Royals an assault on Twin Falls and a split of their Twins and a split of their baseball doubleheader Sunday. Harmon Killebrew's three-run home run, his ninth of the campaign, produced the e3-5 hit for the Twins in the opener. The trailing 3-0 in the nightcap, the Railings got even on a Pinellis's back to take control with Maybery's took control but run, his seventh of the season. Minnesota got an uneared run in the second on an error, a walk and George Mitterwald's single. THE TWINS made the score 3-0 in the third on singles by Rod Carew and Steve Braun and Rich Reeve's triple. Killebrew's home run in the third inning of the opener came off Dick Drago, 5-6, after a lead from Thompson and a walk to Carew. In other American League games, Jim Palmer of Baltimore won the Mets' baseball victory as the Orioles edged Detroit 2-1 on Brooks Robinson's hit and led the Tigers in the American League East lead. Hadl Is Honored By 700 at Dinner "This is the biggest night of my life. In John Hall I attended an audience of more than 20,000 at the ballroom of the Kansas Union Saturday night to recognize his work." By JIM GALVIN Korean Sports Editor On the whole, the event came off as one might expect—it was a man with a serious injury (three hours and 15 minutes), there were too many jokes which weren't always funny and a woman who recognized every body who 'started John on his way' except the obstetrician who delivered him. All that saved the evening was the fact that the CHS of Lawrence was so strong that it is its greatest athletic product. With that hometown spell cast upon it, the audience wouldn't mind it if the affair had lasted all night. The highlight of the evening, as far as I was concerned, was the speech given by Wilbur "Nanny Hard," Hail's junior high coach. DUVER SEEMED most sin- cible, and Hadi's success, Hadi's success, noting that the closeness of Hadi's family and Hadi's own competitive drive has been increased. Duver, Ail Woolard of Lawrence High School, and Jack Mitchell former University of Kansas high coach, individually retiree the three of them 23 jerseys which Hadd wore at their schools. Lawrence High and KU football highlight films provided some interesting relief from the speakers, although they did not always single out Hadl. **HOME OF HADl’ achievement of which his number five standing on the KU total offense list, his selection as pro football’s “Man of the Year” in 1971 as the player whose seasons in which he has thrown for more than 3,000 yards and eight consecutive 2,000 yard games ranked among all-time leading NL passers in yards gained; the one that he has never missed a game with; the entire football career; his 18,300-yard-plus games; twice All-Civilian three times All Big Eight at KU Monte Johnson, former assistant athletic director at KU, helped lead the NCAA and he presented Jim Hudson, former New York Jets safety, and Johnny Robinson and Len Sheffield in City Chefs for brief remarks. Mayor John Emick of Lawrence then presented Hadi with a key to the Woolard presented the Hadi family with the raising the mascotte Lawrence High (Lions) and KU Jayhawks. Hadi led the evening with his remarks, ssinging out Doyle Schick, another high school All-American at Lawrence High, for his teamwork, and thanking all those who helped him be possible. "That's what life's all about—people that care about other people," he said. ROBINSON'S single scored Terry Crowley, who had opened the game with a 3-1 loss to loser Tom Timmerman. 6-6, Crowley held up to make certain the hit got past the infield, but Gates Brown's 7-0 to the plate. Palmer, 10-3, yielded a first- imming home run to Brown and then pitched out of trouble in the fourth and fifth innings. Catfish Hunter, Blue Moon Oloham and Diane Bonnevail, the California Angels to nine hits for the afternoon as the Oakland A's swept over the Cincinnati. Jim Northrup was stranded after doubling with one out in the first half. Rodriguez and Brown were right on their feet on first and third in the fifth. ODOM AND Knowles blanked the Angels on six hits after three games in the first game. The double victory lifted the A's to a four-game lead over the Chicago Cubs in the American League West. Gene Tennesse whacked a three- run homer and Sai Bando hit a strike-out, making it easy for Odom, 4-2, who need help from Knowles in the ninth. Earl Stephenson, making his first major league start, hurled seven scorele innings and Ken Sanders competed a seven-hit outing. The Brewers beat the Boston Red Sox 2-4 and gained a split of an open, six-game tie. THE RED SOX won the opener 8-1 behind Maddy Pattin's six-hit pitching with Reggie Smith's sixth run, a fixer-even seven innings. Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE Final W 11 L 1 P G.B. 38 Pittsburgh 37 25 49 68 New York 37 25 49 68 Cincinnati 37 25 49 68 St. Louis 29 32 473 104 Montreal 29 32 473 104 St. Louis 22 38 473 104 Cincinnati 38 25 601 7 Houston 38 25 601 7 Los Angeles 35 25 601 7 Atlanta 29 32 475 9 California 29 32 475 9 San Diego 21 41 380 12 Baltimore W 13 L Pct. G 8 Delbore 33 26 16 Deloitte 33 26 16 New York 26 31 436 Boston 26 31 436 Boston 21 37 162 American League The Cleveland Indians, behind strong pitching by Gaylord Perry and Eric Davis, beat the American American League doubleheader from the New York Yankees, 4-2. Perry, 12.6, became the fist 12-game winner in the majors with ninth inning relief help from Ed Farmer. Sunday Scores National League Oakland 40 20 667 Chicago 30 26 564 Cleveland 19 27 602 California 29 17 440 Kansas City 29 14 400 Miami 26 36 118 St. Louis 7, New York 12 Philadelphia 1, Montreal 10 Cleveland 8, Pittsburgh 1 Cincinnati 5, Houston 4 Pittsburgh 6, Chicago 2 Cleveland City 8-4. Minneapolis 10- Cleveland 45. New York 3-1. Milwaukee 6-10. Milwaukee 12. Baltimore, Detroit 12. Rochester 12. The Indians won the opener when they broke a 1-1 tie in the eighth on Ray Rousse's single and fourth. The Rousse pitch hitter John Lowenstein. ALMAS May's grand slam hom run high ranked a seven-run shirt in the playoffs, intending as the White Sox beat the Boston Red Sox in an American League game. NEW YORK (AP)—Ken Buchan, the world lightweight champion, is favored to beat Roberto Duran tonight in a title fight the 21-year-old Panamanian win by a knockout. The Scot, a master boxer who rated a 2-1 favorite, and Duran, a punishing hitter, will meet in a Squire Garden. The handler at Madison Square Garden. TitleContest Set Tonight Buchanan is guaranteed $125,000, a reward purse for a call to the mayor of the title he won in Puerto Rico on a decision from Isaiah Lao-ra on a decision from Isaiah Lao-ra. Duran will get 15 per cent of the title for his bill which will be given to students at Madison high school, p.m. CDT, on a 50-city network put together by Madison Square Garden Television Productions. Students might fight would not be seen in the Southeast and would not be in New York area until Tuesday night. May's horner, a blast into the right field seats, came off Jim Panther, the second of five Texas pitches. Buchanan, outwardly annoyed by Duran's brashness, answered the challenger's predictions of victory with sarcasm: "I'll knock him out in nine rounds," said Duran, who displayed championship confidence while training for the fight. Rich Morales opened the fourth with a walk off starter Rich Horns and then Bradley sacrificed Morales to second. Pat Kelley walked and Luis Alvarado reached first on his error, loading the bases. "Well, it was nice being champ while it lasted." DICK ALLEN walked, driving through the field. May he remem- ered, "I'm going to stay in Andrews doubled for the sixth run and Bradley's single scored." In the National League, Denis Menke's 10th-inning double homer in the ninth was winning run as the Cincinnati Reds tipped the Houston Astros 3-4 and regained first place in the National League West Division. JOE MORGAN belted his ninth home run of the year Off Astro relief specialist Jim Ray, scoring 17 home runs at age 4- in the seventh innning. Perez had singled with one out against Fret Gladding, 1-3, the second Gladding struck out Cesar Geromio for two. The winnings were $64,900. Ted Simmons raced home from third base on pinch hitter Donn Dillen, then scored the winning run in the ninth innning, giving the St. Louis Cardinals and Rick Wise a 2-1 victory over the New York Mets in their baseball doubleheader. The Cards took the opener 7-1 behind Scipio Spinks. WIMBLEDON, England (AP) - Chris Evert had a new halo around her head Sunday. In a game Pancho Gonzalez was in trouble. Crisis, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., who at 17 is the youngest Wimbledon player and the first overnea tournament by winning the women's title in the London Grass Court Championship at the Queen's Club Saturday. Gonzalez's of Las Vegas, New, and at 44 the oldest Winnings- ing scion, could possibly discipline action after being disqualified in the same tour- THE QUEEN'S Club tourney ended in a blaze of glory for American youth. Miss Ewert won the women's singles and Jim Lowe won the year-old left-hander from Belleville, Ill., took the men's title. for Gonzales, it meant to treat the British Lawn Tennis Association from Queen's Club and could suspend him from the Wimbledon championships if it carried out a threat to step up discipline. Gonzales was disqualified at Queen's Club by a woman reference after he staged a scene over line calls. Pancho, who never had previously been desquamated by the independent and blamed officials of Queen's Club for what he called bad leadership. "AN UMPIRE is only on court to see justice done," Gonzales said. "Unlike the players they are not in the game. They don't have to suffer our cruelty." First Golfer's First NORTHBROOK, III. (AP) NORTHBROOK got off to a shaky start, and the team lost Sunday and score his first professional victory by a whopping six strokes in the 69th Open Golf Championship. Gonzales's Hand Slapped Jamison, a four-year tour regular who came to U.S. for the surprise challenge in the Masters earlier this season, had staked himself to win, and then cruised home with the biggest victory margin of the The 29-year-old Jamieson, canded on a mob of homesteaders hole total of 271, 13 under par on the 6,716-kilometer Sunrise Ridge He never was in real trouble, but had to overcome a bad start. Harris had to match the course record with a six-under-par 65 to do it and was second at 277. But the goer got closer than four strokes. He bagged two of the first three holes he played in the warm, sunny weather, but only Labron Harris could keep him in sight. Weichers tied for third at 280, a distant nine strokes behind. Irwin did not get to the finals. 69. None ever were in contention. The group at 281 included Tom Weiskop, J.C. Snead and Australian David Graham. The group at 67, Weiskop, 68 and Sead 70. The 1971 champion, Australian Bruce Crampon, finished far back in the pack. frustrations." "When I run a tournament at Caesar's Palace (Las Vegas). I train the umpires and the ball boys properly beforehand, and it involves impatiens. Here nobody has been properly instructed," he said. The association had the weekend in which to ponder Gonzales's case. If they ban him from Wimbledon, they will be depriving the fans of one of the most colorful nominations in a weekly event link. THE 32 contracted professionals of World Cham- plionship Tennis (WCT) are not competing this year. Miss Evert has led the United States to victory in the Wright brothers Club title. She is certain to be one of the big attractions at Wim She deflected Karen Kranktzee of Australia 64, 62 in the two-hit victory. Connors downed Britain's John Paisch 62, 6-3 for the men's title. The last year Americans took both Queen's Club titles was 1947, when Bob Falkenburg and Louise Broun won. XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Welcome Incoming Freshmen May we help you with your housing needs JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS JAYHAWKER TOWERS KU APARTMENTS Surrounded by the K.U. Campus 300 2 Bedroom Apartments Not more than 5 minute walking anywhere. 1603 West 15th Now Leasing for Summer and Next Fall All utilities paid—Auto parking included—Heated swimming pool—Tenant storage room on each floor—Incubator rack on each floor—Modern kitchen with refrigerator for heat and air conditioner—Two elevators in each building—All brick walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and quiet—Complete laundry in each building—Outside exposure –Bath tub, shower, two lavatories each apartment. The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see Convenience - Comfort - Safety - Extras XXXXXXXXXX SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE 20% Off ENTIRE STOCK! Pants by, MALE LEE CARIBOU LIVE-IN KENNINGTON FORUM ALPS BRENTWOOD Tops by, Belts by, CANTERBURY HARNESS HOUSE RAM TORINO Sale Ends July 3rd Bootlegger 523 W.23rd 10-9 MON. THRU SAT. Pigeon Man 4 Monday, June 26, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Is It Only Academic? Probably the most important recent event that will affect KU was the hearing that took place last Thursday and Friday when the Board of Regents considered the 1974 budget. It was plain to see from the complexity of the total request that KU is concerned with more than just those items that might be classified as strictly academic. Items such as overtime pay, moving funds, sidewalks and lighting improvements may not be considered "academic," but they are vital to the operation of a school such as ours. At the present time it appears that most of KU's requests were honored, indicating that an honest, rather than a padded, budget was presented. Among the items that were not immediately accepted were overtime pay for security officers, which may be pennywise but poundfoilish if a real emergency should arise. Comparing one state school to another with the idea that "what we do for one we must do for all" doesn't make much sense, either, if we accept the concept that each school is different and that even academic programs are not to The biggest question is this: What will the Legislature and the Governor do with the budget after it has passed through the hands of the Board of Regents? Many changes will no doubt be made by those who feel they have greater knowledge and are more informed than the twenty-one governors in our situation and the Board of Regents, who should represent some professional know-how in this business of education. So, a budget is proposed and then it is revised, only to have some items slashed and others decapitated. Such prodecures have resulted in dishonest budget making in some states where a great deal is wrong. But we must also and that what is left over will be adequate to finance the operation. Let us hope that KU will not have to provide inflated budgets in the future to protect itself from the legislative paring knife. be duplicated, whenever possible. But maybe raising such a question is only academic. Rita E. Haugh Editor The Sporting Life Everything's no longer up to date in the latest version of the vulnerable cow town is trying to get there. How? By out-sporting every other prairie metropolis. What Tom Pendergast did for the town by providing red light districts and open saloons, the city is trying to do with games. This may be more wholesome; it also is more chancy. with Omaha to provide professional basketball at the aging and cramped municipal auditorium. The Mo-Hawks, who play hockey or would like to, are trying to get a new palace across the border in Johnson county. By some unfathomable logic, the town is building a new baseball park to replace an old baseball park that was more than adequate for the attendance, and that was one of the most pleasant in the American League. The football Chiefs hope to move into their glamor stadium this fall. The pros have worked a deal One question is; who will go to all these games? And still have time for the traditional attractions offered by state universities at Columbia and Lawrence? Another question is: how come Kaycey can plot all this, and still tolerate a crumbing school system, a deteriorating retail establishment, and a steadily gaining quality of entertainment for the rubs from the country (non-sport fans, that is?) —Reprinted from the Hutchinson News Party Reform to Force Examining of Credentials WASHINGTON (AP) — The Democratic Convention Credentials Committee plunges today into a battle of rules as it starts weighing a record number of seating challenges ripe with controversy. The panel's decisions over the next two weeks will affect the makeup of about half the convention delegations and could influence not only the selection of a candidate for the President, Nixon in November. One case, the challenge against Mayor Richard Daley and 15 other uncommitted delegates from Chicago, has been acknowledged by the Democratic Nation as "the highest political issue facing the party," outside of naming it to White House ticket. some sessions from 9 a.m. until nidnight. THE COMMITTEE TIFEES a massive workload in which it passes seven to ten separate challenges involving delegates from 28 companies, each of whom convention, itself a lively credential affair, dealt with only 17 members. the committee's 150 members, many of them under challenge themselves, pored over staff reports at the organizing committee and bearings through at least the remainder of the week, including Most of the challenges are being lodged under reform guidelines aimed at making the convention more representative of women and minority groups, and older people. Old Guard party elements. EVEN IF NONE of the challenges is unpledge, the convention already is assured of three times the number of women and blacks five times the number of youths who attended four years ago. Some of the challenges are so legally complex and politically contentious that a settled settenet by floor fights at the full convention or through an independent committee would be THE CHALLENGERS pose a special dilemma to supporters of front-frunning Sen. George McGovern, the chief promulgator of the reform rules. By refusing to comply with the rules, he could deny their man the votes he needs for a first-ballot nomination and alienate Daley and other party leaders whose support could be crucial in swinging Illinois and key southwestern states in the general election. Daley's forces are clearly worried about their chances, as evidenced by their unsuccessful attempt to block the committee from even considering the case. They are accused of having too few minority representatives, along with the same parties in the state-making process. ALTHOUGH THE likelihood may be slim, a coalition of McGovern idealists with credentialed lawmakers and other candidates could conceivably cost him enough money to negotiate to imperil his nomination. McGovern's 271 delegates from California are being challenged on the issue of all primary in that state violated his reform commission's rights. Preliminary hearings by staff examiners were scheduled for Monday on the California case. On Friday, the team met with the Chicago case, and several favorable to challengers have been completed for other states. Each case will be considered by the full court sometime this week or next. UNRESTRICTED "SECURITY" WIREtAPS SPEEMECT. "Oh, m'Lord! You've gone and killed Snoopy, my pet bug!!!" Historical Feature KU Bell Rang For Victories In an early March meeting at the university, she invited visitors to their place, but one young man warned: "You may not be able to make it; the hostess is too smart." A bell at the north end of Memorial Stadium once rang out KU touchdowns and victories on football game days. In 1962, overneutral Nebraska Cornhusker fans stormed the bell to铃 out their delight at their victory over KU and a nidiot followed. This resulted in the banning of the bell at Kansas in the 1985 grid season, according to the Oct. 7, 1964 Kanada. The Tasaday, who live in caves, use stone tools, wear orchid leaves and know no enemies, said no outlaw had ever seen their homes in a valley of the undulating forest. They said their ancestors had lived there and their knowledge of time began The five and one-half foot, 3,000 pound bell rested, at that point in the TKE front yard. It had "TKE" on it, but the fraternity did not own it. The members rented it from an Ottawa scrap metal dealer for $60 a year. Arthur C. Lonberg, then athletic director, said the decision was based on security reasons. A petition with 2,500 signatures was submitted early in the fall, 1964 semester to Wade Stinson, athletic director, to return the bell to the court. The petition was rejected. A second petition was signed, but the originators did not submit it because they feared it would be useless. Shumaker said the bell was not a TKE bell but a University symbol. Tom Shumaker, Russell senior and TKE president said, "We feel better school spirit is needed. In fact, almost everyone admits this, but nothing is being done about it." He said the TKE members thought their bell might help generate enthusiasm at games and that was why they were still trying to get it returned to the stadium. He said the fraternity didn't paid the rent on the bell for the year yet, and they probably wouldn't unless something happened soon. He planned to send it back to Ottawa unless the bell was going to be used in the stadium. "We even told the administration we would take 'TKE' off the bell and put 'KU' on it," he said. He said he expected another request to use the bell would be turned down. "I personally feel the idea is fine, however anything like that should be representative of all students and not just one house." Stinson said. "If we let one house do it, we should let them all." Expedition Visits Tasaday Tribe He said the possibility of riots was not the determining factor, and efforts were being made to cultivate student confidence. EDITOR'S NOTE: On the edge of the impenetrable rain forest of the southern Philippines lives a man who became known only last year. Numbering only 25, the Tasdays live much as anthropologists believe the world was once lived. A newsman who accompanied the expedition to the Forest of the Tasdays recounts the first contact of scientists with the people who time forgot. Air blasts from the rotor blades rocked their small landing pad like a canoe in choppy water. Rv JOHN NANCE The men peered over the edge, then looked down below as a rideline no longer under their control which plunged immediately into thick jungles as it slanted down on them. TASADAY FOREST, Philippines (AP)—The jet helicopter, a 4,000-foot-high mountains and four leapeed on, spraining clinging and clinging to a wooden platform tied into a The men were headed for the time of the Tassaday, the tiny band of rockers discovered last year at the edge of this vast and rugged southern landscape. The helicopter whirred into forest the misty morning of March 23rd. As the aircraft emerged between two peaks, a dot of yellow-brown appeared in the dark jungle below. The chopper dipped and the dot grew, revealing the mane of branches and saplines. Minutes after the helicopter delivered the first of its three The plot circled once, nosed his helicopter up to the 12-by-14-foot pad and the doors were opened. Manuel Eizalde, Jr., president andaminum minister support foundation for assisting Philippine minorities, and Leif Saeed leaped first, opening the largest and most exciting phase of discovery since he first contacted the island. Charles A. Lindbergh, the American pilot and conservationist who is a director of Panamain, joined the expedition loads, a young Tasaday man named Balayam arrived, hugged Elizade and led the expedition down the steep ridge. Balayam led the party on an hour's hike to a slope where the jungle thinned. Through the leave the mouth of a cave was He poked from ledges and two higher caves. The Tasadas were shouting greetings and bounding down a dushy path to cluster around the visitors. The Tasaday nuzzel and embroidered themselves with their ancestors; had foretold would one day come to them. "He would just love us and help us, we were never told how," said Mahayag, a robust Tasaday man. The handsome men, women and children wore only earrings and leaves and their tan skin was streaked with soot from their hands. Whether the caves have been the Tasaday's homes for a few generations or thousands of years is not known Scientists last year said the 'asaday' language and technology suggested they had collaborated more than 1,000 years. The Tasaday grew increasingly friendly during the expedition's visit and the sheyst women and men and穿oke through interpreters. The people displayed the sparse possessions in their main cave, which has a 10-foot-tight wall that extends 30 feet deep and 25 feet wide. It contained a mural of mark, beer horns for digging edible roots and two favorite stone tools and collection of items—knives, a vise, a case, an angle held crackers and a battyless flashlight—origin No drawings marked the walls A surprise was the small area over which the Tasaday range in their food quest, the main activity of the band. The jungle provides abundant food, river life, plants, insects, flowers, roots and the pith of trees, near the saves. Dafal, a hunter who gave the tassaday their first metacute in the minima part of the Tassaday diet because their animal traps were not ef- The jungle appeared virtually untouched by the Tasaday and they lived in harmony with it. "They are creatures of this environment." Elizalde observed, "as much as the birds and trees." The apparent happiness and harmony of Tasaday life was one of the outsiders. Panamin insists this not be upset, and its policy is to protect the Tasaday, limiting their contact with the 28th cent. Panamin decided on the March expedition because farmers were already encroaching on the forest and they had already acquired claims on it. Mentally Retarded Can Be Helped By BARBARA STROH Kansan Staff Writer When I first saw him I felt disgusted. The shrunken body and the dull eyes frightened me. I understood, but it wasn't his fault. As I think back to that day I am disgusted with myself. He is a man, but he was mentally retarded. He was born during the depression. At birth something went wrong. Somehow he had a permanent damage. The beautiful woman, his couple, was mentally retarded. The extreme heat of His parents took him home and tried to raise him. At first it was hard, but after three healthy children were born, it became difficult to give him the love and attention he needed. He had been forced to领疼 him in an institution. THE DEFENDANT IS CHARGED ON FIVE COUNTS OF BEING SELFISH DISOBEDIENT. IN CONSIDERATE. MEAN-SPIRITED. AND ACTING LIKE A BABY. THE DEFENDANT WILL COME FORWARD AND FACE THE BENCH. HOW DO YOU PLEAD? GUILTY. I REMAND YOU TO THE CUSTODY OF YOUR PARENTS AND SENTENCE YOU TO PAROLE FOR LIFE. 5-14 @M72 JULY 1972 Dist. Publishers-Hall Syndicate HE HAD plenty of friends, but his family missed him. His littlest sister often asked, "When is Junior coming home?" that July day (no air conditioning then) and the baby was handicapped for life. S Now he plays ball with his young mates often. Many times each day he reaches out his hand and I love you Daddy" or "Mommy." THIS STORY was written by Jeanne Stroh, a ninth grade student at Milburn Junior High School. He is the man in the story is her uncle. The years passed by but Junior remained the same. He's still like a three- or four-year-old. He's very well behaved, but people are afraid of him. Because he's his Mommy and his Daddy. The other day I heard his Daddy say, "He needs love, that's all he lives for." Maybe as not unfortunate as we think. Junior was born at a time when having a mentally retarded child was considered a disgrace and these were the so-called "attic" There, conditions were much better. He received love and kindness, but no attempt was ever made to challenge him to Because he would wander away from institution in a put was taken for retarded. Conditions in that in another took him back home, but eventually forced to put him in another institution in another NO ONE REALLY knows why Junior was born severely handicapped, but his parents have speculated on a number of reasons. He was born on a day when the temperature rose well above normal, and he breech birth, forbly delayed by nurses awaiting the arrival of the doctor. His mother had served in the military, and the technician, and this was before doctors realized the gross damages of too much radiation. It has been proposed but not what he might be a monogamous. Acc Dicki Univ Schoo turner Kansi we're we're suppe Thi law plicat Only could to a 1 To numl Dicki Schoc The its su more summ 1751 Scho enrol this his Jsum years full The picture for those "Juniors" born today is much more enlightened. She is Rosemary Kennedy, retarded sister of the late president John Kennedy, and about the same president and Mrs. Hubert Humphrey has helped to focus national interest and to bring attention to her. One of the places where the retarded and parent for the Kansas campus is Kansan Center for Mental Retardation and Human Development, formally opened June 14. The center has a building on the campus, one of Kansas campus, one at the University of Kansas Medical Center, and another located at THE CENTER works with retarded children, both as outpatient and inpatient, according to a recent publication put out by the center. The staff at the center uses the B.F. Skinner system to train children to take care of "If 1974 chite const mean by o the 1 themselves, said Robert Hoyt, editor for the center. Dic new high subm Legiti not b five A child receives intensely with such rudimentary skills as toilet training and eating. Bad behavior is rewarded by whatever the child responds best to. This may be something to eat, like a hot dog. Many retarded children lack motor skills and coordination. These, also, get intense attention. Parents, too, can get training in how to work with their children. Retarded and their parents are the only a simple form of sign language they may communicate. ONE OF THE ultimate goals of the center is to refine the retarded from traditional institutional training, so that the most severely retarded can learn what it takes to hold living jobs, live alone and supply their own needs. F I Discoveries made while working with the retarded can sometimes be generalized and used without judgment in improving their education. Perhaps the most vital role of the center is research. In research projects are conducted in laboratories in both the Kansas City and Parsons centers. The students must learn the causes of retardation and ways to prevent it before birth or death, it in very young children. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN News Adviser ... Del Brinkman NEWS STAFF New Arrival ... Do Not Mail Rita E. Haugh BUSINESS STAFF business Manager Doug DeTray Monday, June 26, 1972 University Summer Kansan 7 Space Limits Law School By JIM GALVIN Kansas Staff Writer According to Martin B. Dickinson, the dean of University of Kansas Law School, the school this year turned down some 400 to 500 law students. "We're doing them wrong because we're Kansas only state-authorized." This year, Dickinson said, the number of applications for the first-class class Only 150, or 9 per cent, of these could be lost, due primarily to lack of students. To help meet the expanding number of applications, Dickinson said that the Law School was doing two things. First, the Law School will have a temporary annexure this fall that will have one classroom and some faculty offices. The School has also expanded its summer program to permit more people to enroll. This summer there are approximately 160 students enrolled in the School, about one-third of the fall enrollment. Dickinson said that this enabled a student to receive his Juris Doctor degree in three summers and two academic years ahead of the usual three full years. Dickinson said the need for a new Law School building was high on the list of priorities to be submitted to the 1973 Kansas law school, but added it could not become a reality for at least five years. "If the legislature passes it, in 1747 they would set up an architecture budget and in 1793 a construction budget. The latter would probably be occupied at the beginning of the 1778-78 school term," he said. The size of a new Law School building has not been determined yet, he said. KANU Schedule TODAY 7:30 a.m. - The Morning Show. 7:45 a.m. - News-Weather Sports. 8:15 a.m. - Business Review. 8:15 a.m. Business Review 8:30 a.m. — Campus and Community Calendar a. 9 a.m. — News-Weather Sports 9 i. 15 a.m. — Germany Today 9.15 a.m.—Germany Today. 9.30 a.m.—Featured Works; C.P.E. Bach and Handel. 9.40 a.m.—New York Weather Noon - News-Weather-Sports. 12:15 p.m. - Noon Hour Concert— Community Calendar. 1. p.m.-Book Beat. 2. 10. p.m.-French Music and French Music. "We would have to project 20 and 30 years into the future and see what enrollment will be then, and then plan the building with this in mind." 2 p.m. - News Weather Sports. 3 p.m. - TBA. 3 p.m. - This Afternoon. 4 p.m. - News Weather Sports. 5 10 p.m. - News Weather Sports. 5 10 p.m. - News Weather Sports. 5 10 p.m. - News Weather Sports. 5 10 p.m. - News Weather Sports. 6 10 p.m. - Variations on a Record Player. 7 10 p.m. - TRA. 8 10 p.m. - This Afternoon. Dickinson indicated that this might cause a dillemma in trying to keep enrollment small enough to guarantee quality education and at the same time offering an in law to all qualified applicants. Dickinson pointed to the fact that more minority groups were being represented in the Law School. "In the 1971 and 1972 entering classes we have had about 15 per cent females, four or five times more than ever before," he said. He also mentioned that the 1972 game was played with blacks, blacks, four or five chicanos and possibly one or two American players. Dickinson offered two reasons for the recent boom in applications for Law School. The main reason, he said, was the poor job market. "There just aren't enough jobs in most other fields. People out of college, even with graduation, are not employed." Dickinson said. "While it's true the number of lawyers has more than doubled in recent years, the demand is still Jonathan M. Lander, professor of law, has been helping imitates of a New York school, sending them old law textbooks. By JIM GALVIN Kansan Staff Writer "One morning my wife showed me an awful book I had been reading, and the ditions in the Manhattan House of Detention for Men. At the end of that book, she said where interested readers could send materials which the inmates would read." Inmates Get Books From KU Law Prof Landers had a special interest in the story, since he was originally from New York, and he brought old books and shipped them away. A few days later he received a letter of thanks from the university, the institution, and kept the project going by putting up a note on the Law School bulletin board, asking students to help in the there, and this can be seen by noting that starting salaries have grown larger proportionately to the number of lawyers," he said. To date, Landers estimated that 100 books had been donated. The project began about 18 months ago, Landers said, when his wife noticed an article in the newspaper concerning prison conditions. Green had explained that the institution was receiving no funds for the library, and that in order to attract like Landers were its only home. The price of new law books starts at around $12 or $13, with many books costing much more. In his most recent letter to The School of Pharmacy is co- nominated by the University, funded by the Governor's Commission on Criminal Abuse, dealing with rapid analyses of epidemiologic data. Research Program Investigates Drugs Starting salaries for a person coming out of Law School he is employed at $17,000, depending on the part of the country in which the lawyer works. Dickinson also noted the changing image of lawyers in society, and he told television "The Lawyers" and "The Bold Ones." He believed such programs gave a realistic look at the law. James McChesney, associate professor of the School of Pharmacy, said that the research department was looking at a new method of drug analysis called X-Ray. D r u g Chromotography. The machine which performs the analysis is among the fastest systems developed in analyzing the type of drug in a given sample. The types analyzed are analyzed in the research project this summer are those commonly seized in drug raids and include such specimens as heroin, LSD, and PCP. The machine gives a printout of the rate of absorption. Members of the department were hopeful that the new equipment would perform quantitative analysis also. One advantage of this type of anneal is that the metal turned in its original mechanical state. McChessen said. Most types of analysis change the anneal configuration. The machine has a long column into which the drug sample and an absorbent, called the active substance, are measured. Thechine measures the time it takes the drug to be absorbed through the skin. The time is different for each drug. But the method is useful to pharmacological companies too, so they can produce. This enables them to check more accurately the qualification of products. Rapid analysis of drug content is useful in several settings. For example, the substance used in a method will be in legal cases involving substance misuse and that the person whose substance was taken from will be criminally prosecuted, and as a result the substance used in the case Another method of drug analysis which had been used was 35 Chromatography, but it reagent and changed drug samples. man looking up a point of law, pertaining to his own case, might find something pertaining to another's case, and the stimulation of the mind, while irritated, is vital." Green wrote. Santa Tune John & Yoko/ Plastic Ono Band Music of the World ANGELA on Capitol records Capitol. at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles Kief's discount price $3'99 Landers said that besides possibly offering a precedent to their own cases, the books could give the inmates "a sense of how hard they are going on around them. They might also have legal problems not related to the reason they are in prison. Landers cited divorce and financial problems as instances where this might be true. "The profession has broadened in recent years, and these programs reflect some of the changes." he said. Dickinson said that a larger percentage of older students were coming to law school. "They leave school and work for a few years, and then they realize the advantages of a legal education," he said. Health as a form of education to Kansas students will be tested in a new Kansas Health Museum summer workshop July 10 to August 11 at the museum. M. A. H. S. M. P. R. E. I. N. O. The average age of the first year class is 24. Workshop director will be Herold Regier, associate professor of education. Other faculty will be from the Kansas Health Museum, Hertzler Clinic, and the State Department of Health Participants will be able to develop units of instruction for their grade level as they earn two or undergraduate grades. Health Studies At Workshop The workshop is a cooperative program of the School! of Education, and the Kansas Health and the KU Division of Continuing Education. Lectures, demonstrations, individual and group study and laboratory experiences, with activity, will be presented Jonathan Landers Campus Bulletin TODAY USITA: 8 a.m. Jayhawk Room. National Public Radio: 8:30 a.m., Pine Barr Math Project! 11:30 a.m. Alcove A. USITA! 12 p.m. Kansas Room. 12 p.m. Kahana Room National Public Radio 12 p.m. Kawaii Room. Room. Chemical Engineering: 12 p.m., English nurientralization—Dean of Men: 1:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium Chemical Engineering: 12 p.m. English Room Department of Data and Managemen Room: Education: 3:30 p.m., Big Eight Room. Pharmacy: 3:30 p.m., International Room. Social Welfare: 3:30 p.m., Parlor A. Journalism: 3:30 p.m., Council Room Business: 3:30 p.m., Forum Room. USFA: 3:30 p.m., Kansas Room. Commonwealth Theatres Now you can see"The Graduate again or for the first time. Now Showing THE GRADUATE NOW SHOWING Hillcrest Eve. 7:30,9:30 Mat. Sat.Sun.2:30,4:20 Twilight Prices Good At 4:20 Show Only Adults 1.50 Child .75 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST DIRECTOR MEES NICHOLS 1981 An AVCO EMBASSY Release Eve, 7:50, 9:40, Mat Sat-Sun, 3:00, 4:40 Twilight Prices Good For 4:40 show only "THE Ginger is back! Chato's Land FC The Hillcrest Maineen Sat/Sun 2:45 & 4:30 Hillcrest AOULTS 1.50 more EXPERIENCEFN Swiss 2:00, 8:27 1014 4:06, 7:20, 10:33 Adults 1.50, Child. 75 G TECHNICOLOR* WALT DISNEY'S 101 ALL CARTOON-FEATURE Wed 7:30 AM 9:30 EVERYTHING Granada THRAZE...hiphops V13-5780 AND TECHNICOLOR $ \times $ PANAVISION SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON "PLAY IT AGAIN. SAM" PG-13 She's more EXCITING ONE WONDERFUL SHOW! WALT DISNEY'S WOODY ALLEN DALMATIANS FOR SALE BGS Degree Will Require More Review Diane Keaton One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 MAN IN THE WILDENESE Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered without regard to color, dress, style. One day you're at a disadvantage. Eating. Way it comes to the same Analysts. Campus Madhouse, Western Civilization. Campus Madhouse, 14th Wal 14th 7-22 Showtimes: 2:30, 7:35, 9:30 Western Civ. Notes-Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, 2. no, they aren't there. for sale. Quality 10 speeds. Bicycles and bicycle accessories. Kallibon, Manufacturer, Falcon and Kallibon. Professional mechanics and bicycles, professional mechanics and bicycles. Shop 148, Minnesota; 842-844- 3018, 148, Minnesota; 842-844- 3018. Must Sell 1966 Suzuki 150ce cycle Good cond. Heddles included $200.00 Call Gary, 843-0165 or 864-3232 6-29 NEBOE DISCOUNT. Now you can CONDITION 10 at ARAY RAUDI- COST plus 10 at ARAY RADIO. Your Store Discount House in the NeBoe District offers: Free tea, coffee, and Consulting Michigan St. Bar-Bar $15, Mile 51. Outdoor pit bier Bar-Bar Large. $16. Bier to go $30, $16. Bier to go $30, $16. Bier to go $85, Beer Plate Briet $16. -$10. Beer Plate Briet $16. -$10. Beer Brick Sand-$80. 0g. 11 a.m. 8 p.m. Phone 842- 296-7333. 7. 105 / 7. 35 / 7. 50 Varsity THEATRE · VICTORIA ST · 104-665 69 WV Black w umorrow Need repairs. Body in rough shape, make an appointment before June 27. Day 864-3478. Eve. 843-3881. Tony. The chancellor is expected to give the complete study of the degree to the Regent's Office. RICHARD HARRIS 2. If you don't at a disadvantage For sale 1969 BSA 441 Starling, Star- light excellence condition Mantel sell- leading country. Ask for Cindy at 107-285-3478 Gleason Chestnut, 107- 3478 6-28-29 35mm SLR camera cannon QLFT thru the lens lightmeter. Like new, $150.00 825 Alabama after 4 p.m. Sorry no phone. 6-26 Bokomunikomunikomunikomunikom $1.00 Cash: $2.00 Leather: $2.00 Clothing: $4.00 Retrogressive: Contraintative. Saturday Bokomunikomunikomunikomunikom $1.00 Saturday Bokomunikomunikommunikomunikom $1.00 North Side Country Shop, 707 N.2n Antiques, used furniture, and lots of other items. 9-7 9 days a week. 842- 3159 Herb Albertenbred. Although the new Bachelor of General Studies degree was recently given approval by mail ballot of the College of Liberal Education faculty, it will be at least two years before degree receives final approval. THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 Pipes, papers, and all smoking accessories are available at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 8th. 6-29 WANT ADS New shipment of India prints just in at the HODGE PODGE 15 W. 9th. 6-29 James Garner RICHARD HARRIS According to Francis Heller, chancellor for academic affairs, the mail roll is only the second of three approval of the new degree. Box office open 8:00 Sandals handcrafted to your personalized taste at HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 6-29 Skin Game Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on highway 40 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES K-A-T Suncki 634 Mau. 842-0998. Draper Hundred fundraiser to the staff of working on all major brands of motor- vehicles, including the care and you motorcycle. The annual sale price is $165 sale price $150 Also a Honda 250c sale price $190 Also a Honda 250c sale price $190 USA Basketball sake $150 Suncki 1975 Suncki 1960 Suncki 1956 Suncki 1960 Suncki 400 Reezer routines and Watch for the 4th of months ROKONISTI'S REVIAL. New shipment of Western and Hawaiian shirts on Friday. Overalls, jeans, caboose, capris. 831 Westport Road. 7-591 Vermont. 431 Westport Road. 7-592 Saint, Bernard puppies. A K.C. Sainty, and doggy cruisers. 30-21-2005. Air conditioning. insurance plan available. Mont Rive Saint Zébry. H. 2, Box 281. Phone #-733-2663 Persian kittens, champion wired, reg- istration with papers; pets or show; beautiful copper eyes. These long hairy cats require copper eyes. Removing Copper. B4-123-110 7-5 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $0.2 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication 1961 HARLEY 74, full-dress, excellent condition, new tire and battery, 18,000 ml., $1085, 842-8039 6-28 where it will be studied in detail. The committance will go to the Committee of Academic Affairs, where it will again need ap- plications. TOYOTA Competition Each of the steps will take approximately one month. According to Heller, the earliest If the plans draw an affinity between them, they will be forwarded to the Council of Presidents and then finally to the Academic Com CSC TRIUMPH Sports Cars Inc. 2000 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 Jerry Lewis, director of Centennial College and associate, dean of the College, said that he would have to be improved if the plan were approved. This would include better advising procedures in the College, since students in the new college are faced with questions because of the minimal requirements of the degree. All Blue Jeans $6.50—now and forever! EARTHSHINE 12 E. 8th. 7-3 LEATHER FOR SUMMER- half-tops, shorts 18-inch over all-shorts framed and plain tops-now at EARTHSHIP 12 E. K. 8th 7-3 1967 Ingula Super Sport, Power steering, power brakes, Air conditioning, AM/FM radio Excellent combination 522 low 843-2200 7-29 1965. Ford Galaxie 500. 2 door hard- top. V-8automatic power steering. This week only-$550. JAYHAWK VOLKSWAGEN 2252 Iowa. 843-2200 Two 600 X 15 tires for Volkswagen square-back. Very good condition. $15 for both. Call UN 4-3097 7-3 1971 Yamaha Enduro, 2200 miles—Excellent condition. Call 842-9320 after 6 FOR RENT COLLEGE HILL MANOR APART- MENTS furnished and unfurnished apartments AC. pool and laundry. Bathroom, toilet, laundry, Apr. 5-B or call 812-822-1101 Apartments furnished, all air-cen- conditioned, large enough for two or more, bureds KU and near town parking not parking no. 6-27 431-576-7 Un-furnished apts in Irving, Help us furnish you a new bedroom. I need someone to take over the quiet residential Indian Hills Ranch. Please contact me for private parking $150 per person and for private car parking $300 per person. Sleeping rooms - furnished, with or without kitchen privileges, for adults, off street markets, borders KU and new low. No pets. Phone 843-587-367. Apartment for rent. AC—single bedroom. Available now. 19 W. 14th Call Henry at 6 p.m. at 842-9153 6.96 Summer and Fall rentals. Furnished to 1 or 4 bedroom units. From $8 to $15 with kitchen private privacy $30 to $75. Utilities paid. New-629 842-5007 LOOKING FOR A TWO-BEDROOM garden apartment in the Hillside neighborhood, Hopper Management will be one-bedroom apartment for you. One call or Ms. ForryMorty, 2107-A Harvard Road, NW. We can show you rental units in a wide range of spaces and features all being managed by Ms. ForryMorty today. You can also see Ms. ForryMorty today. CAMPUS APARTMENT LIVING WITH Sanitee PAC, TV and PC living in one and two bedrooms furnished and un-furnished rooms 1122 Burlington, NJ 843-726-5900 possible date the new degree could be put into effect would be the 1973-74 school year Your Complete Service Dealer Webster's Mobile Homes Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts BILLET TRAIN NOTICE The Downs - Skirting - Part Ample Rest Spaces. Available Chauffered water ski boat rental and lessons 135 hp 16 ft. ski boat Call 841-2576 for details. 7-10 ROOM FOR FEMALE in big, well- comforted home. Free wah- wer and dryer, and dishwasher. Two bedrooms, total month: 84th for Deborah or Dorothy. 6-29 For Rent: Princess mobile home, located on 3rd floor. Completed, completed, window a/c, available for couples or July 5, small deck, 912-296-3048 or 73- 327-4101. Ample Park Spaces Avenues 3409 W. 4th 842-7790 Ouie and tue btw education at RIgge- ness, 24th & Ouiuald. Summer军人 811119 for Fau. Railer 815812 For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization call Women's Center at 864-306-3256 or visit www.women'scenter.com at 864-306-3256. Call 24 hours BEAUTIFUL ONE AND TWO-BED room garden apartments are being rented on Beverly Ave. and Harvard. Argo, 119 and Muskegan Streets. These five apartment features central c.3, soundproof construction, carpeted floors, large windows, carpet, paint and draperies, spacious hallways and infirmarized one call or email to Randy Wood, No. 842-2348 during daily appointments and get all details on Lawn and Vard Roa Wanted 10-speed man's bike. For sale: 3-speed man's bike. Call Dale at 864-4220 or 841-3607. C-6/28 FREE—4 kittens, 7 weeks old, box trained, 1 pigeon slamsee, see at 519 Ohio St. 842-3745 6-196 Notice Girl's summer earrings at the HODGE PODGE 15 W 9th. 6-25 SUMMER GAY LIBERATION Fund Supports meetings of gay women at the University. Meetings are on the offices of activity B-12 University Tel: 644-0859 Wide Box 242 Law Office CANTEBURY HOUSE Episcopal Church of the Holy Trinity Holy Communion Mon. 5:15 p.m. Tues. 9:00 p.m. Thurs. 3:15 p.m. Fri. 9:00 a.m. Sat. 11:15 a.m. Purty Fee $20 per person 1527 Fry Harder; Vista Restaurant, W 6th W: 842-4311 6-28 PILOTS Do you want TAILDRAUG Support Super Survival 812, 142, per unit in Valley, Valle Aurodrone 4 miles north of Baldwin. Private. Private and Commercial course SAVE THIS AD! Want something knitted or crocheted? Rib tickers, blouses, vests, bikinis, ponchon. You name it and I will: 843-138-746. Just West of the Drive-In Theatre INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-7629. Professional care for children in 1 mo-12月 Max or part time 1 mo-12月 Specialized design offered 7-27 AM AH H X YAMAHA ERN'S CYCLE SALES BRANDYWINE CUSTOM TAILORS Permanent Location in Lawrence Custom Tailored-Custom Styled Mens Sport Coats— $40 Mens Knit Suits— $60 Mens Slacks— $18 SUMMER PACKAGE SPECIAL SPECUL 1 Knit Suit 1 Pair Matching Slacks $70.00 Over 300 Fabrics and Patterns Wool, Polyurethane, and More! Wool, Polyurethane and More! SATIFICATION GUARANTEED FOR Measurement Appointment FOR Measurement Appointment Measurement Appointment Call 842-2514 Anytime Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 10, sat. til noon. Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free hourensure. Swimming privileges. 842-2323 WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 716 North 2nd Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: 5.03 TYPING Experienced in typing theses, dissertations and research papers. Have electric typewriter with pica type. Accurate and prompt typing of technical documents. Phone 845-9543 Mr. Wright those, term papers type accuracy up promptly. IBM Selectric, elite type I will also do editing at reasonable Klonda Davis, 842-971. cf. Experienced typist will type your term papers, the letters, or dissertation. Electronic typewriter, prompt, accurate. Mrs. Huckman, Mrs. Hawkins. 7-7-7 LOST Experienced typist for your Thesis Dissertations, mter work. Call Mr. Troxel, 2409 Ridge Court, 842-1440, ff. Lost. 4 keys with nail cup Please leave word at 684-3819 or leave 64 Russian Dept — Marvin Annex. 6-27 REWARD for return of silver hand-made ring with initials TRM. Lay during embellishment. It means a gift. Vicki at 842-4761. It means a gift. Vicki at 842-4761. Small spiral notebook containing notes in the 100-1500 block of Mississippi. Call Peggy Glynn at 841-780-627. Prescription Sunglasses. Brow wig frames and case. Union. Call Adams. 842-1128. 864-4103. 6427 WANTED Roommate Wanted: Fine county living for one or more $875 per month. Job duties include food copiaing, Call 843-6446 or inquire at Bokonon, 819 Vermont 6-28 Two guys to share large house for the summer. Furnished. electric dishwasher. five-minute walk to campus. Dining room. 642-6811. Davie, 842-6881. 6-26 Wanted: students to do part time farm work. Call 842-8153 or write Mr. Hoover, 1419 Ohio, No 12 7-3 HELP WANTED College Freshman (girl) needs full or two part job. Master help, companion-secretary, reader for handled, housework. Resources 843-697. CARRIER OPORTUNITY Immediately, graduate who is willing to work to support graduate who is willing to work to support our new store, open 5 nights and 7 days a week. Send a resume of your interest to Leaverworth at 9 p.m. at Leaverworth at Leaverworth, Kansas. No Phone call required. Help. wanted. Experienced bicycle mechanic needed part time. Apply in person. Ride-on. Bike Shop. 14th & Massachusetts. 6-28 WHY RENT? LIBRARY CENTER RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843-8499 3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59) NISSAN SENTRA TONY'S 500 E.23rd IMPORTS- DATSUN OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE 0 TO 60 MPH -13.5 RECLINING FRONT SEATS UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL 842-0444 LOVE THAT DATSUN 841 8500 PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS 928 6 Monday, June 26,1972 University Summer Kansam travel MAUPINTOUR Caravan coach master Kansan Photo by LINDA SCHILL Rolling Stones Get Crowd's Approval By NEIL NEHRING Kansas Reviewer Maupintour Offers Travel Assistance After a good performance by Stevie Wonder, the lights went out, and the announcer said in a calm tone to the crowd: "I'm in love with the Rolling Stones." The Stones opened up with "Brown Sugar," and followed old hits and songs from "Exile on Main Street." Two or three songs didn't really make it, although one cared more about the music. "Rocks Off," "Rip This Joint," "Gimmie Shmee," "Love in Happy," "Sweet Virginia," "Johnny B Goode," "You Can't Always Get What You Want," "Jumping Jaws," and "Man Man." The music was superb, and the addition of Bobby Keyes on saxophone, Danny Sullivan on trumpet, and Nicky Hopkins on piano gave the music a sound that at times used its studio predecessor as a duet in this concert, sitting in a dark corner of the stage like an airplane on the piano out front. Keyes was the most impressive of the three, especially on a noisy sax solo in the second. Barbara Boozer, Lawrence sophomore, considers a trip . . . The Stones themselves played like the world's greatest rock 'n' roll band. The highlights of the concert were "Gimme Shutter," "Mindy," and "Jack Flash" and "Flooding Jack Flash" and "Jumping Jack Flash" with the best reaction and was the high point of the concert. They also have been the high point, but the crowd sensed it was the last song Despite great instrumental performances (as well as vocal), everyone came just to see the Stones in the flesh. The feeling that one has upon seeing Mickey Mouse is communicated, unmunicated. After a few songs you can finally believe you've got music in the studio's over concert. The rest of the Stones ceded the spotlight to Jagger and Richards, content to back them with strong verses on his passion for music's manbass and Charlie Watts's drum, while Mick Taylor often played with some great guitar work. Keith Richards is also very active on the stage, but his guitar limits his mobility. Thursday night he was having trouble with broken guitar strings, but it improved his performance in any way. and was disappointed at seeing the concert end. concert' is that Municipal Auditorium's balcony is too steep for much audience participation. On the Stone's last tour in 1969, many people suggested that a Stone's concert was the Rochester Auditorium. Friday wasn't the Rock Apaleystone, it's probably as close as anyone's going to get. The Kansas City concert was also at Madison Square Garden, its tour album comes out, it will probably consist of material from Madison Square Garden. But who cares? I've seen the Stones in the flesh, and I can't think of too many other things that I'd rather do. By MARY PITMAN Kansan Reviewer 'Twelfth Night'Delightful Shakespeare is chief magician, his spinning texture of words compels admiration in any audience. Shakespeare can only intimate the characters, whose total power — the theatre— is beyond his control. Aectors and director Stuart Vaughan admirably realized the rich text of "Twelfth Night" in the performance. The plot turns on a familiar device in Shakespearean comedy. Believing her twin brother Sebastian drowned, Viola poses as a woman in a play called *Illyra*, and falls in love with the duke. Orsino sends his boy as The play's language, the reson- voices, the rhythm, the plymouth nouns, the colorations, the light- ings and costumes collaborated for the audience in the sensuous a messenger to declare his love to a countess, who rejects the duke and falls in love with his envoy His comrade, Sir Toby Belech, played by Thomas Leigh Dicke- mann. The act was a centralization of all actors at any moment in the play was excellent. The play was full of well-used words and phrases, the priest, played by Frank Tower, is excellent small touches, like the smile of Sebastian, played by John Green, as he was invited up to the house of Ollivier, made the The set, which at first seemed cluttered and overwhelming, was suddenly on the characters, who moved about the set in constellations skillfully orchestrated by her husband, blocking, manifest in the fencing duel between Sir Andrew Woolley and Viola, drew us with movement and sound here and there on the fast-paced play is never tedious. But the twain Sebastian finally arrives to hapazharthy untangle the deceptions and self-deceptions of the play, which is complicated by a humorous subplot in which the character Sir Andrew Agucheek. of an old man in his role of Feste, whose whimsical movements again evidenced the skillful directing hand of Vaughan. Stuart Vaughan, actors, crew and musicians, along with William Shakespeare, are to be complimented for a festive evening. Earl Tursell, member of the resident Acting Company, who had a successful Agquechee, whose pink costume, subdue face movements and lack of control. Regents Approve... Continued from page 1 hospital operation funding, $1, 041.892, and new programs in medicine, nursing and clinical pharmacy, $2,963. request. The changes, based on a new formula being applied to all state schools, was a reduction of $31,640 in the $68,169 request for supporting expenses for serving students in New York and $19,771 in the request for new positions due to enrollment increases and a cut of $105,029 from the $388,528 requested for servicing new building KU's campus. The board had agreed upon business office formula, which the board had never agreed upon. Requests for capital improvements from all schools, including a $2,047,000 request were deferred until September. and business officers weren't informed of the decision to use a formula, but that the formula was being applied on a systematic basis, as he The $205,470 request for theku teaching at KennedyU is scheduled Thursday until a coordinated plan with allinstitutioncould be developed thisweek. AT THE KU presentation AT THE KU presentation Randwick Nichols, KI executive secretary, were informed by Bickford of three changes in the curriculum. Chalmers said that he was disappointed that the presidents Regents Authorize Improvements For the fourth year KU's request for state funding for the program was Regent Jesse Stewart of Wamogo inquired how the other institutions got the money for the program, which was unique in KU's line budget. By BOB LITCHFIELD While budget requests stole the spotlight at the June meeting of the NCSA board, the last week, other projects and requests of the University also received funding. The Regents authorized architects to proceed with preliminary plans and specifications for an addition to Learned Hall to house the electrical engineering department Several improvement projects on campus were approved: renovation of library area in Pearson Hall; purchase of Park Hall, Estimated $1,155, payable Agency Offers Aid to Travelers THE "SAME way we do, by taking it from something else," Nichols answered. "I think it's important to provide for it in the budget." Editor's Note: This is the seventh in a series of articles about Lawrence business and industry. The board also deferred a request that Haskell Indian University considered Kansas residents for fee purposes at KU. Bugg argued that the board decision should be reviewed by the Board, handed down concerning residency requirements, in light of the opening of the majority age to 18. By KENT PULLIAM Kansan Staff Writer Maupintour Associates have had the largest growth period of the company's history in the last decade. Hook, general manager of travel service division. Along with the agency's physical growth, the travel arrangements the agency offers have also grown and im- By 1949 Maupin had moved to Kansas City to agent to his own best quarters in the Kansas City. In 1951 Maupin investigated and purchased a hotel. The company was started by Tom Maupin in 1948 with a single desk in the back of his father's office, where he only employ of what would eventually become one of the leading travel agencies in the country. Lawrence. He kept his main headquarters in Kansas City until 1953 when he moved to Lawrence. He stayed there and became Mecaskey in 1955 and the company name was changed to Maupintour Associates. Mecaskey, a boyhood friend, has been a full partner with Maupin With two partners, the agency became too large for the downtown office in Lawrence and the downtown office in Boulder to residence on the fringe of the business district in Lawrence. Seven years and two annexes later the company moved to a building in the Malls Shopping Center. At the Mall's location the local staff grew to 40. Twenty other staff members were located in the rest of the United States and Europe. The firm currently employs more than 80 persons in Lawrence alone. The initial move to Lawrence was based on two motives. The University of Knaas provided a steady core of travelers, much or the Lawrence retail business from students, faculty or alumni members, and Maupin had gone to school here and liked the city. One of the company has expanded into two operations. One is in creating tours and the operation of tours all over the world. Maupin and Measkan are involved in this business. from residence hall fees; improvement of the lighting in Templin Hall, $1,415; from residence hall expenses; increase for replacing the roof of the heating plant from $7,500 to $11,204; and modification of a portion of the mechanical engineering schools for use as temporary classrooms by the visual arts department. The other area is local sales, airlines tickets and tours offered by Louisville-based companies. Houk is in charge of the sales division, which sells the aircraft. The company has four sales division offices in Lawrence; 600 dasshauettesch St. the Mallia shopping Center; and the SUA shopping Center and the SUA Travel Service in the Kansas City and Topeka in Kansas City and Topeka. Houk said that Maupin and Mecaskey were involved in the entire operation of the company, but dealt with the promotion of The company has four branches that deal as outlets for the companies in Kansas City, Mo. San Francisco, Washington and New York. The European outlet is located in London, where it chose because it is the center of the Common Market and is an all major European cities. Events Planned to Help Foreign Students Adjust The Center's approximately 80 students enrolled in the summer program are in the United States and do not have a formal program coming into the program with a beginning or intermediate command of the English language, they do not know what is required of them in form of extra-curricular activities. Language problems, home sickness and the reluctance to try new ideas are just a few of the problems considered in planning the extracurricular activities for intensifying English students, as directed by E.T. Erasmus director of the Intensive English Center. Being in a strange culture, the students tend to withdraw and seek communication among students of university community. The extracurricular activities offered bring the student closer to the University community while developing of the language and culture. sales copy and arrangements for the tours rather than the tours directly. "The problem is not creating new activities but getting them involved in the present activities," said Erarmus. The Lawrence operation is responsible for arranging all of our tours, including air, air or sea tours includes housing, air or sea sight see tours and Tentatively scheduled is an outing to Lone Star Lake which includes a hike and possibly a cookout. A visit to a local factory or business along with tours of museums are recommended. The student body to participate in the "They have very little time because of the amount of work they do arranged the tours. They don't getting into the tours," said Houk. As the summer progresses, the students will develop a wider knowledge of the activities. An outing at Perry Lake is planned today. [Image of three individuals seated in a room, wearing headphones and looking to the right. One person is partially obscured by a chair.] geography of Kansas and this region are available. Campus students will have the students through bulletin boards, announcements, and the KSU Press. Films offering both the history of the University and campus along with films on the One of the important firsts established by Maupontour was the arrangement of the offices they learned of the opportunity to take a tour into Russia and Mecaskey himself went as guide for the fireworks display at the stadium is another program under consideration Maupin and Mecaskey make the arrangements with the airlines and the hotels for accommodations and then turn the entire tour over to the retail operators who make the sales to hotels. Kansan Photo by JOHN REED The agency prefers to make the arrangements for smaller groups, but if there is interest for large tours they will make the arrangements. According to Hook, if the tours became too crowded, the customers would probably not enjoy their trip as much. Students Brush Up on English ... Eighty enrolled in Intensive English Center ... During the first few years Mapuiputron shared the Russian trade with several African countries and the American Express started booking tours to Russia. As American Express began bookings all criticism They booked the tour into their brochures that year and waited for the reaction. There were 150 applications for the 30 openings The agency in the Kansas Union handles trips for all University of Kansas students and any other staycations and most of the alumni flights. According to Gerry Goetsch, director of SUA Travel Service, the agency will make any kind of travel arrangements. They will be available from trip reservation to a complex tour with guides included. handles and offers the same tours. They do not add any charge for their airline services. On the sales side of the business, each of the agencies On the complete tours, there is a Maupintour agent who goes on the tour with the group. He is available day or night. His job is to make sure the customers are satisfied and that they aren't. Maupintour guides place a premium on their service and their reputation for service. conduct research in the Applied Physics Laboratory of John Hopkins University, fall semester; Richard Hetherington, associate professor, mathematics and computer science, academic year; Wallace S. Johnson, assistant professor of oriental languages, to continue his studies in Germany, with wife Rita Whelan, professor of special education, to serve as director of the Division of Training in Handicapped, U.S. Office of Education, academic year; The KU Alumni Association received the 1972 Alumni Administrative Committee. The Commission Excellence Press conference by the American Alumni Council of Washington, DC. Steve Clark, president, KU Alumni Association, said. THE AWARD is the second national honor received by the University of Virginia last year. Last July, the Alumni Association received the Time-Lifelong Award from the University of the Year award for its membership promotion activities. Alumni Group Wins Award The award if the highest honor the national organization of 1,300 players in the United States, upon an alumni association. Kansas is the only Big Eight school to be awarded the honor in the seven years of competition. “这奖 awarded the finest alumni programs in the University of Kansas is a recipient, indicating the scope and size of the program.” Warren Gould, president American University Council said. Authorization to serve as consultants to other colleges or universities in the Regent's system was granted to: THE CITY of Lawrence was the permanent right way of life purpose of widening and improving intersection of 19th and 20th century FLOYD HUDSON, assistant professor of education, for a summer workshop at Wichita State University; Construction of a pedestrian bridge over the Kansa River, at the Kansas Center to connect the proposed Clinical Research Building to Wahl Halt East was authorized. The bridge will be as well as the connecting bridge, will be constructed by the Kansas Association on Endowment Association land north of 39th St. and the facility donated to the Kansas Center. Ogden Lindsley, professor of education, for a summer workshop at Wichita State; During June, when you purchase any dinner item you will get the second dinner for ½ price. All you do is present this coupon. Roger Kroth, assistant professor of education, for the Special Training Institute at Wichita State. --and BOB SEEGER COUPON Buy one dinner, second purchase of same item $1.99 price. James A. Davis, firemanship program, for a workshop at the Institute for Law Enforcement and Criminal Officers at Wichita State. James Stachowiak, professor of psychology, for a summer workshop at Wichita State; Sambo's JUNE SPECIAL LEAVES WITHOUT pay were granted to Thomas Armstrong, associate professor of physics, to Offer good Mon.Thurs., expires June 30 Norman Paige, associate professor of voice, fall semester; Hex Martin, associate professor of speech, fall semester; Fulbright Research Fellow at the University of Helinki, Finland, spring semester; Barry Wellar, assistant professor of geography, fall semester; Officer in the Ministry of Urban Affairs, Ottawa, Canada, academic year; and a sabbatical teacher for two years granted to Michael D. Cherniss, associate professor of English. LAWRENCE ICE CO. Redy-Pak Ice Taste Free Crystal Clear PICNIC SUPPLIES MEETING OPEN DAILY 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. 614 Vermont www.vermontcoast.com 00 Tickets $4 and $5. Available at Memorial Hall, all Burstein-Applebee Stores and LENNY ZEROS KBEY Presents B. B. KING July 22, 8:00 p.m. Memorial Hall, K.C. Bu freez medi sure off out a other imp prod mea NI FIND POOBAH! Let your fingers do the walking through Lawrence's finest and most complete selection of SUMMER GARB 15% Off with this ad. Offer expires July 1st. CEO POOBAH COLORADO - WYOMING - MISSOURI ILLINOIS - TEXAS MANHATTAN - EMPORIA - LAWRENCE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER-23rd & Louisiana HAIRY SUN BLAZING THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 82nd Year, No.14 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Democrats Shape Pro-Busing Plank Tuesday, June 27, 1972 See Page 2 Quota on Import Of Meat Ceased WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon acted Monday to dampen surging meat prices by removing all restrictions on meat imports. But he shunned any general food-price freeze and said there would not be immediate reductions in meat costs at the supermarket. Officials said that while Nixon had ruled out a temporary price freeze on meat and other farm products, controls still could be imposed on now-exempt agricultural products such as fruit, vegetables and meat. NIXON SAID the lifting of meat-import quotas for the balance of 1972 should ★★★ Cattlemen Doubt Value Of No Quota Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Agricultural associations, meat packers and ranchers express doubt Monday that the lifting of quota restrictions on cattle from Argentina slow the upward spiral of meat prices. One group, the American National Cattlemen's Association, said the lifting of quotas by President Nixon could backfire because the price of meat to go even higher. "We think that competing products come in and raise their prices, and Mrs. Houseley wants to wind up paying more than she is now," said Trotman, president of the firm. The president of the American Farm pureau Federation, William J. Kunfus, of Burlington, Vermont. "We don't think that lifting import levels will significantly lower beef prices at this time," Trotman added. "We are very happy and upset at the President's action." "Farmers and ranchers are relieved that a decision has been made to avoid imposing price ceilings on raw and commercial corn; their losses are deeply concerned at the continuing reluctance of the Nixon administration and Congress to deal with the root cause of crop failure." Kuhfuss urged Congress to "move vigorously to reduce federal spending." Two of the country's larger meat packing firms, Swift Fresh Meats Co. and Wilson Certified Foods, said they expected an action to have little effect on meat prices. Noel L. Ikel, president of Swift, said the effect on prices "will depend entirely on the amount of meat available from other countries." overcome “a short-term shortage” but “may not fully solve the problem” of rising prices. He vowed, however, that he would “take whatever further measures that are necessary to prevent increases in the cost of food.” His quota removal decision was prompted by recent rapid rises in wholesale meat prices, the third surge in the wholesale level in five months. It appeared aimed at reducing pricing costs to offset retail meat counters this election-year. "I intend to monitor this situation closely, and I want to assure every American housewife that this administration is firmly determined to prevent unjustified increases in the cost of housing and insurance," he then statement issued at the White House. In A BRIEFER statement he read for television cameras Nixon said meat prices had been rising because increased demands not yet be matched by in-store sales. Most of the meat imports arrive frozen in refrigerated ships and are processed for such products as hamburger, frankfurters and luncheon meat. Little of it is placed on the counter as higher-cost cuts such as steak and roast. At about the time the President was acting, a House Agriculture subcommittee voted 10 to 3 in favor of keeping livestock prices uncontrolled. BUT THE subcommittee recommended also that the General Accounting Office and the Federal Trade Commission inquire into the retail meat-pricing system. And it urged intensified efforts to improve productivity in the meat industry. Under the 1972 voluntary quota program, imports of 1.24 billion pounds of meat were to be allowed, an 11 per cent increase from 1971. Nearly three-fourths of the imports come from Australia and New Zealand. Secretary of State William P. Patterson, Australian officials about increasing the level during his current visit there. Secretary of the Treasury George Shultz, who heads Nixon's cost of living council, said there were no ironclad assurances that other countries would be willing to send larger quantities of meat to America since demand was high in Europe and because it would have been flow "may well be possible" because U.S. prices historically were higher. Under the now-suspended quotas imports would have amounted to a little over $200 million. VOTE VOTE Kansan Photo by STEVE CRAIG State Secretary Candidate Speaks Mike Manning addresses Labor Town Hall meeting Killing Continues Until Cease-Fire BELFAST (AP)—The hour of Northern Ireland's first full truce in three years came at midnight Monday but blood flowed down to the deadline. A British soldier was shot dead minutes before the ceasefire was defiled the cease-fire in the early hours. Gummen killed a policeman and another soldier in a rash of shootings, bombings and robberies during the last hours before the truce, declared by the outlawed Irish Republican Army. At least nine persons were killed in the attack, including as many as 17 guerrillas. A massive bomb damaged Queen's University just before the truce took effect. Bursts of automatic fire were heard from across the bay and in a fire in East Belfast. Barricades were reported being thrown up in the Duncanium Gardens sector of Belfast, scene of force which led to evacuation. Security sources speculated that the shooting came from trigger-happy guerrillas of the IRA's Provisional wing, which ordered the truce, and from Provisional "police squads" bent on enforcing the ceasefire. "There is still a lot of running" on a British army soxman said early today Voter Registration Becomes Issue By MARY PITMAN Kansan Staff Writer Taverns and firecrackers stands were jokingly referred to as good outposts for firefighting, but the group attended an otherwise serious discussion of ways to reach and register more Kansans eligible to vote, at a Labor Town Hall meeting in the Douglas County State Bank Monday. Featured speaker Mike Manning, candidate for Kansas secretary of state and graduate student in political science at the University of Kansas, called for "simpler and more convenient voter registration." Jack Briar, assistant secretary of state in Kansas, also was a featured speaker at the meeting. Briar represented Kansas Secretary of State Elwil Shanahan. Manning called cumbersome methods of voter registration "an impediment to voter participation." He said he advocated the use of voter education outpost centers in department stores, on college campuses or in any "high-traffic" area. Volunteers from the League of Women Voters and the Chamber of Commerce could serve as deputy registrars, Manning said. Briar, who saw several problems involved in increasing the number of outpost centers, objected to the use of volunteers to register citizens. Briar said that inept volunteers had been known to lose registration cards. "The people that get the job done are the paid professionals that are on the job to do Manning also suggested postal registration as a means of making registration more convenient. Brian said he will consider such a proposal this year. The burden of registration is currently on the individual, Manning said. He advocated that the burden be placed on the state. Manning and Briar disagreed about whether the Kansas secretary of state is the chief election official in the state of Kansas. Briar explained that county clerks handled registration in 101 counties in Kansas and election commissioners in the other four counties of Kansas. Briar said that the secretary of state held election seminars to train the county clerks in registration procedures, and he estimated that these seminars were regularly attended by 75 per cent of the clerks. Manning said that the secretary of state in Kansas should be a strong advocate of measures to facilitate voter registration. Lobbying and working for the removal of poor election officers should be among the duties of the secretary of state, he said. Manning said he hoped that voter registration outposts would be placed at the end of enrollment lines on college campuses this fall. Brair said his office had been approached about the matter but would probably approve such a proposal. McGovern Eyes First-Ballot Win said he had gained the support of enough black delegates to swell his past past a convention majority, but his strategists in the union and later in the day they were wrong. They claimed 1,492 votes for a nomination that will go to the Democrat who can assemble 1,509. Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS George McGovern claimed Monday he was within a handful of votes of locking up the Democratic presidential nomination, but rivals challenged his claim to two blocs. The South Dakota senator at one point DISSENTING blacks and aide to Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota disputed McGovern's claim that the endorsement of some black political leaders would deliver him 96 previously uncommitted黑 male delegate votes. McGovern and his allies claimed to have gained the support of seven of 11 black leaders in the war. out and I'll have to say someone's playing games." Humphrys also challenged the winner-take-all system under which McGovern won the entire 271-vote California ballot. The state's presidential primary election. SEN. HENRY M. Jackson of Washington and Rep. Shirley Chisholm of New York sent a delegation in statements filed at a hearing of the Democratic Credentials Committee. But one delegate said, "I've checked this The soldier was killed and another wounded when gunmen opened upon a foot patrol in East Belfast. The other dead soldier was cut down by a burst of submachine gun fire in Londonderry. The policeman was killed in Newry. Eight persons were wounded in a crowd fighting in the Garden of Givens in Montserrat gardens. At least 386 persons have died in three years of sectarian strife that have toppled Three Uster prime ministers, smashed the seemingly unbreakable rule of the Protestant Church and forced the British to assume supreme powers over the rebellious six counties. The truce was announced last week by the nationist Provisionalis, but they warned Monday that the battle would begin anew if necessary. The Provisionals said they were prepared to mete out summary justice to any dissidents who refused to observe the cease-fire. "We shall be keeping a close watch on some people," a Provisional leader told newsmen in Londonderdy. "They will be with very quickly if they step out of line." But a statement from Provisional headquarters in Dublin added that the group "stands on full alert to take defensive action should the need arise and ready to resume offensive activities if the leadership decide this is necessary." It is said the IRA was "stronger and better equipped than ever before." Members of the group said they had formed a Region 7 American Indian Council Saturday as an Indian counterpart for programs in the four states. Indians Seek Faster Action On Programs KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP—Representatives of Indian groups in Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri met here Monday to seek faster action on funding programs for the estimated 56,000 Indians living in the four states. The Indians said they had asked federal officials to recognize their regional council as a reviewing board. The council would then take proposals from local Indian organizations and funnel those proposals to the appropriate federal agencies. Federal agencies included were the Office of Economic Opportunity, the Environmental Protection Agency and the departments of transportation, housing and urban development, justice labor, and health, education and welfare. LAWRENCE GAT LIBERATION PROTECT DEMANDS FAIR HOUSING PRACTICES EDMONDS Gay is GOOD Each were asked to establish an Indian affairs position within their departments. Douglas Gradipe, treasurer of the Nixon administration, distribution of federal funds had been too slow, despite President Nixon's call in 1970 for greater attention to Indian problems. Kansan Photo hv KEVIN RAGAN Gay Liberation Front Pickets Realy Firm Leonard Gray, Lawrence senior, left, and Reginald Brown, Lawrence junior, protest . . . Real Estate Agency in Lawrence Picketed by Gav Liberation Front Two members of the Front, Dick Perrin, former graduate student from Corning, N.Y., and Joe Prado, fifth year architecture student from San Juan, P.R. san they were evicted from a house which had rented in January from Edmonds. By CONNIE PARISH Kansan Staff Writer Members of the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front picketed Edmonds Real Estate Co. at 1903 Massachusetts St. Monday, charging that the firm's rental procedures discriminate against homosexuals. According to Prados, they lived in the house at 1147 Ohio St. approximately 10 blocks north of the house. The Front's official position paper, which Perrin and Prados said spoke for the movement, said eviction was "that their involvement in Gay Liberation, especially in the Court case ("Lawrence Gay Liberation Front et. al.") had been made, they made them admissible as tenants." The Front's position paper stated that in Prados is a co-plaintiff in that case which asks that the University recognize the Front as a legitimate campus organization. May, Edmonds also "inquired as to the sexual orientation of two men seeking tenancy in a house for which he was the rental agent, with the explicit statement that he did not desire to 'get into the same house' as with the previously evicted tenants." 'I can't tell you the real reason the two were excited.' Edmunds said. "because it was a personal moment." "I did not discriminate against them," be said. Edmonds said that he knew the two were members of the Gay Liberation Front. Last week the Front wrote a letter to Edmonds asking that he consider their complaints. In the letter, the Front said he had otherwise picket his business Monday. "That's what makes it so ironic that now we're discriminated against them because of us." Mark Edmonds, reallor, said Monday before the picket began that he had received their letter, but had not replied to it. Perrin said, "I'd be glad to hear his reasons for evicting me so I could defend Prados, said, "He (Edmonds) complained that I was gay. The only other thing I know of that he complained about was that I took 20-minute showers." Pointing to a placard reading, "We want to rent houses, not closets," Leonard was asked if he had not ashamed of his hornosexuality as some people are. We'd like Edmonds to give a pledge in writing that the won't have any property Obeyed when we are prepared to take further action." The Front is basing its argument on the Kansas AntiDiscrimination Act, according to its position paper. The act, which will go into effect July 1 and will be retroactive, prohibits discrimination in housing because of sex. Four and sometimes five Front members walked in the picket line from 1:30 to 4 p.m. Monday. Reggie Brown, education coordinator and Kansas City sophomore, said that the reaction of passersby had been favorable. "Most honked and yelled 'right on.' Only a few leered," he said. During the picket, Edmonds issued a written statement: "This picking is unjustified and based on erroneous and unfair factions have no further statements at this time." 2 Tuesday, June 27, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Ted Picks McGovern NEW YORK (AP) — Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said Tuesday he thought Sen. George S. McGovern could win the Democratic presidential nomination and reiterated his decision against running for vice president. "I would think that a review of history would show any candidate that close won the nomination," the Massachusetts Democrat said. Farmers Beef About Import DE MINES, Iowa (AP)—The National Farmer's Organization labeled President Nixon's lifting of meat import restrictions Monday as "inexcusable and indefensible" and said it set a precedent that was "extremely omnious in the face of farm control." The Iowa Farm Bureau disappointment with Nixon's action and U.S. Sen. Jack Miller, R-Dowa, said he was "not happy" with the Nixon decision. National Farmer's Organization President Oren Lee Staley called the restriction removal "a very great disappointment." Secretary of Agriculture's repeated assurance that he would livestock prices be price controls "like a wound steer." * Israeli Attacks Condemned UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)—The U.N. Security Council condemned Israel Monday night for last week's attacks on Lebanon while "profoundly deploying all acts of violence" in the area. The vote on the compromise resolution, sponsored by Britain, France and Belgium, was 13.0, with the United States and Panama abstaining. U.S. Ambassador George Bush said the resolution did not meet the criteria of fairness and balance he had set forth Saturday and for this reason the United States was obliged to abstain. Agnow Blasts Frontrunner ST. LOUIS (AP)—Vice President Spiro T. Agnew assailed Sen. George McCormick Monday night, calling him a candidate who stood for "the doctrine of retreat overseas and radicalism at home." Agnew said McCormick, who earlier in the day claimed to be within a few votes of clincing the Democracy on a program nomination, had been involved in a program of hostility and leaving defenseless the people of Vietnam and Southeast Asia." His speech was prepared for a Republican fundraising dinner in St. Louis. War Vet Welcomed Home SALINA (AP)—A Santa Cruz, Calif., man who hadn't seen or talked to his formally joined the Merchant Marines in 1941 surprised everyone recently by knocking on his mother's door. George Reilger left his Salina home during World War II and afterward "sidet of lost contact" with his family when his wife decided to use her phone for a trip to Salina to his daughter had wrought. His 85-year-old mother, Mrs. Sarah Swanson, and his two sisters and one brother still live in Salina were shocked, but happy to see him. WASHINGTON (AP)—Democratic platform writers Monday rejected overwhelmingly an effort by supporters of Alabama Gov. George Wallace to pledge the party to a constitutional amendment outlawing busing to college and racial balance in the schools. Anti-Busing Plank Vetoed The Platform Committee voted 78 to 16 against the Wallace move after a 90-minute debate. committee's 15-member sub- committee. The effect of the new wording was that it was seen as well as quality of education as a justification for busiling while still saying that busuing was only one of the methods of learning. The language finally adopted was stronger in support of busing than the one-paragraph statement drafted Sunday night by the THOUGH soundly defeated here, the issue is sure to precipitate a strong rivalry. Convention in Miami Beach. It takes only 13 dissenting members to produce a minority party in Congress, and then be considered by the full Earlier, the Wallace forces were defeated in a largely sympathetic manner by increasing prices and taxes section of the platform draft along lines advocated by other parties. Both issues seemed certain to be brought by minority reports to the convention floor, along with reports of Vietnam and defense spending. THE PLATFORM draft sent by a subcommittee to the full 150-men body pledged "an immediate and complete withdrawal of convention. That, he said, is a job for Congress BURGER said they evidently wanted to use the courts to probe The surveillance, conducted by some 1,000 agents beginning in the early 2000s, was brought by four individuals and nine groups, some of them war Army Surveillance Trial Denied by Supreme Court WASHINGTON (AP) - Led by Randy McCarthy, a narrowly divided Supreme Court Monday barred a trial of Army's surveillance of civilian pilots. A companion proposal sent to the committee promised a cut in U.S. troop levels in Europe. Burger said in the 5-4 decision that courts could not serve "as virtually continuing monitors of police and soundness of executive action." all U.S. forces in Indochina," echoing the观向 Sen. George McGovern if he becomes president. the Army's intelligence- gathering activities, with which they disagreed. Instead of showing their freedom of speech had been injured or even threatened, Burger, said, "It is a kind of segregation of a subjective nature. Therefore, Burger said,the suit could not be considered. The ruling, reversing a federal appeals court here which had ordered that the university be directed by the four Nixon administration appointees plus Justice Robert S. Kennedy. JUSTICE William O. Douglass, JUSTICE W. Brennan Jr., Potter Stewart and Thurgoof Marshall Stewart and Thurgoof Marshall, whose ruling was by another administration-named judge, Malcolm R. Willkey. The liberal tinge of committee thinking was reflected in a surprise vote to oppose the pending legislation. The plank now is an embarrassment to many Democratic members of Congress who voted for the measure, which contains a bill that would as a condition of welfare aid Douglas said no law authorized surveillance over civilians and that "one can search the Constituent Assembly for any such authority." In a second major, 5-4 ruling, the Court granted jury witnesses the right to challenge the judgment of the wretening before testifying. Set aside, as a result, were the contempt convictions of Sister Joques Egan and a fuler nun. Mr. Egan and his grand jury investigate an alleged kidnap plot against presidential adviser Henry A. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare is offering scholarships averaging $200 to secondary teachers to attend summer camps in Arcata, Calif., with preference to teachers who have contracts for Grants for Courses In Intelligence Told Floods Leave 123 Dead in East The death toll climbed to 123, the greatest to occur in multi-state flooding in 35 years. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Swollen rivers receded toward their banks in eight eastern states Monday, and the worst floods in the seashed history of a few months except for a few pockets of crisis. an inflation era of offsetting more than $1 billion in flood damages. Drinking water was the gravest problem still confronting many of the more than 100 flood-striken communities. Water supplies were intermittent, unchained, and fresh water was being trucked in and rationed out. Among the latest victims were three newsmen covering the fights who were killed in the shooting at Bradford, Pa. They were Sid Brenner, 45, and Louis Clark, 51, of Philadelphia station WCAU, and Del Vaughn, a CBS newsman who was riding a ride with the WCAU crew. PRESIDENT Nixon promised new infusions of federal rebuilding aid where needed, after the 1970s. From Washington fell far short in "We don't need any more cots. I don't know where you should take them." Tens of thousands were returning to shattered and sodden homes. One such house lay across a high wall, the walls enclosed by areas, forcing motorists to inch by on either side. At the height of the floods in 2015, 350,000 people were evacuated. As waters fell, a flood of help began to inundate many sectors. The floods brought in by well-meaning but over-eager volunteers. One such showed up in upstate New York with a truckload of oats, only to be overwhelmed. "WE JUST don't have the room for this," said Welisville, N.Y. Mayor Robert Gardner, referring to the unregulated flow of volunteer workers. Most private property owners have no flood insurance, since it was built under a public subsidy terms that required stiff community flood control measures. HE SAID President Nixon had ordered federal agencies to "cut through red tape and get the job done." Nixon last week designated New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia as disaster areas among eastern states affected by the floods. making them eligible for massive federal aid. Aid for Disasters Asked IT WAS sponsored by Gov. Richard Knopf of South Dakota, Dakotas, and the ravaging series of floods across the nation recently. Kniep works to day to a subcommittee of the House Works Committee on flooding. "Where additional funds are necessary we will seek and provide them," responded the White House secretary, Ronald L. Zagiel BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — The Midwest Governors Conference asked the federal government Monday to do more for private individuals whose lives and property were shattered by flood灾害。 "The money the federal government has appropriated for this won't be a drop in the bucket," he said. "I told Maryland's Democratic Gov. Marvin Mandel, estimating the chore ahead, 'is going to be the biggest as far as money is concerned in the history of this country.'" "We're taking the big brother approach as far as the federal government is concerned. We're trying to make sure we out," said Exon, a Democrat. Gov. Warren Hearnes of Missouri also voted for the resolution but said the governors ought to take the specific ideas at Congress. EXON WANTED the governors be specific, perhaps suggesting some role in the assurance that could be purchased by homeowners and busi- But the governors were less than spared on what ought to be done. The governor's red tape be slashed and interest free loans be considered among the governors. The governors turned to social events after their opening business session. The conference runs through Wednesday. The resolution asks both Congress and the administration to "take immediate action" to assist private citizens. Gov. J. James Exon of Gov. J. James exon of concern said concern for "human needs" ought to be separated needs over business damage. THREE governors warned that states must press forward to develop new energy sources that would meet both demands for electrical power and criticism from environmentalists. Gov. Robert Docking of Kansas is in a major battle with the Atomic Energy Commission over disposal of nuclear wastes from Docking said the AEC had proposed dumping nuclear wastes into abandoned salt mines but had done little research on the potential effects. Docking said now was being done by the AEC. unless electrical use was curtailed, and those who claimed that technology could solve the problem. "The future of our nation and mankind depends upon a realistic path somewhere between those two extremes." Docking said. Ray said that 45 per cent of the nation is coal reservoirs were in the country, and much of it was high-sulphur coal that causes contamination DOCKING SAID he disreaged both with "doomsday environmentalists" who forecast crisis Italy Gains Pledge From Finance Chiefs Training courses in teaching the science of creative intelligence, the systematic study of the nature, origin and development of creative intelligence for four weeks. Up to eight quarter-credits from Humboldt State can be earned. Govern. Robert Ray of Iowa said we have to supply part of the water he would be able to meet only the basic electrical needs of the city. the fall and who show need, according to Kevin Condon, Kansas City senior. Another reported part of the network is the current Common Market members must intervene with support buying of the lira if it should be sold. The agreement permits Italy to use weakened dollars until July 15 to repay countries that have been affected by the falling lira. The gesture apparently is aimed at keeping Italy from leaving the Common market monetary agreement. It will be temporarily by floating sterling. Sources said the crisis agreement calls for central bankers to come up with a return put into effect in three months. Belgian sources said all common market foreign currency funds and reopen the European Union. The Tiberius reopened Tuesdays. Britain's chancellor of the exchequer, Anthony Barber, announced that Monday night after meeting future Common Market partners. LUXEMBOURG (AP) — Common Market finance ministers seeking to restore stability and European monetary unity following Britain's floating of the pound ended their meeting early Tuesday with agreement on a new currency. The bank and avert a further crisis. Applications are due Wednesday. Further information and applications may be obtained at Oak St, Kansas City, Mt. 6412 The Students International The Students International is offering beginner courses in free meditation to those receiving the scholarships, although it is not required. The traditional Common Market monetary agreements keep members' currency functuations within a narrower range. December's Washington agreement for major world currencies. The SIMS course includes special instruction, meetings with a maharishi and a staff of distinguished educators trained in computer science and creative intelligence in high schools, according to Condon. Three graduate students will begin serving as assistants to the dean of men July 1, according to Donald Alderson, dean of men. Three Students To Help Dean Hanson has served as resident director of Ellsworth Hall for the past two years, as the executive director and work part-time in the dean's office in the general administration of the university, and as a professor in political science at KU in 1970. Loewen will represent the dean of men's office in Oliver College. He is a second-year law student. He earned a bachelor's degree in political science in 1970 and a master's degree in education in 1971. BRENNAN, delivering the decision, said the 1968 Safe Streets Act was designed to protect privacy and strict limit wrestapping, and bar contempt of the wrestapper shows he acted legally. The students are Ellen Hanson and Louis Stumms of Lawrence and Ronald Loewen of Phoenix, Ariz. The rebellion against the welfare bill was sparked by the National Welfare Rights Organization, who had two mothers, with McGovern backing. The NWRO wants federal funding a 50-year a year for a family of four. An attempt to sharpen the drafters' tax-reform proposals—which merely endorse the Mills-Mansfield bill for three-years, and all of their department down to defeat. The proposed drastic substitute called for killing the present industry in order to graduated tax on gross income with $1,200 tax credit per dependent, eliminating all tax loopholes and subsidies and providing tax rates on big corporations. THE DELEGATES voted down the $6,500 provisions but concurred in opposing the bill. In response, the SEC said Security provisions of that bill would end the public policy if adopted in Congress, would endanger Social Security benefit increases already approved by the House and pending legislation. Sturns will be working with black students. He is a second year law students. This time the four Nixon administration nominees, Burger and Justice Harry A. Blackmun, Jr., and Justice Patrick H. Rehnquist were isolated in dissent. Rehnquist accused the majority of utter disregard for the Constitution, about a critical change in the operations of grand juries. A man is standing inside a large tent with its entrance open. He is wearing a long sleeve shirt and pants, and has a bald head. In the background, there are trees and a wooden ladder leaning against the tent. The ground is covered in grass. Kansan Photo by SANDY KNOWLES Student Tries Roughing It Randy Greenbaum, Kansas City architecture student, checks out a treepeel-like structure he designed and built as part of an architecture project. Greenbaum, along with other architects, completed the test the tent during a campout at Lake Perry last weekend. SAIGON (AP) - South Vietnamese forces were able to B2 bombers fought off a North Vietnamese attack on the northeast from Monday and found themselves under attack. A change will be made from hot type to cold type composition, which is a faster system, and can also be used for the new printing system. Courses in three areas of printing will be offered. These areas Haskell Completing Vocational Buildings Enemy Assault Repelled By BECKY PAGE Kansan Staff Writer Construction of a new electronics building and a new graphic arts building is underway at Haskell Indian Junior College. The electronics building is expected to be completed this fall in the summer. August, said Jack Naylor, dean of instruction and vocation. The construction of the $802,200 graphic arts building will be completed on schedule, but there are several delays and receiving printing equipment. If the equipment doesn't arrive in spring, the project schedule is scheduled until the facility will not be offered until the fall semester of 1973. The four classrooms, with space for 80 two-room will be used for other courses. After the completion of the electronics building, training as electricians, radio and television electricians and some training with computers will be available. Training in these programs will be offered in two-year programs. The building will provide space for six classrooms that will accommodate a total of 120 students. THE COST of the electronics building is $98,600, said James Dean, project inspector. Concerns are going according to schedule. Some Time John & Vicki/ Plastic One Band With Godless Narrative MONTERREAL MUSIC ANGELA on Capitol records Capitol® at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles Kief's discount price $399 Some Time John & Yoko/ Plastic One Band New Century Music IN THE HEIGHTS OF THE MUSIC NEW ALL NITON ANGELA Kief's discount price $399 are printing in industry, a two- year program, pre-management, a three-year program, and pre- technical, a four-year program. THE HASKELL administrative preparation for the fall term will be based on experience. He has been set up by Wallace Galluzzi, superintendent at Haskell. These committees will cover the areas of instruction, teacher and instructor evaluation, student work programs, faculty and student handbooks and course materials. Haskell's budget for next year, which is being prepared by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, should include a new next few weeks, said Gallurli. Capitol Plans are being made to establish an adult vocational training program at Haskell this fall in New York City. Enterprises in Kansas City, Mo. saturation air strikes around Hue. The paratroopers repelled the attack, killing 35 enemy at a cost of one government soldier killed and 29 bound. Puttel reported. Associated Press correspondent Michael Putzel reported that North Vietnamese forces followed up one 430-round barrage with a ground attack against an unseen position southwest of My Chang. About 100 B52 bombers ranged over South Vietnam's two northern provinces for the fourth successive day, dropping 2,500 tons of explosives on North Vietnam and held enemy-held Qiang Tri and in the foothills and mountains west of Me Chanh and Hue. Frontline positions on the My Chan River, 25 miles north of Haok, took more than 1,000 rounds of North Vietnamese shellfire and shot down the brunt of the fighting in the foot-hills to the west. Action on the other two fronts of the three-month-old offensive—the highways and highway 13 of Saigon—was largely limited to small jets. The air war over North Vietnam continued. The U.S. Command claimed damage to a powerful power plant 25 miles northwest of Hanoi and lameage to many other targets stretching all the way south to Vinh. Vinh is about 160 miles north of the North Vietnamese coast. Spohrensm said 2,000-pound guilded batteries dropped by 40 per cent. The plant's 'capability to produce electrical power for the nearby city' is one of its aims. The National Institute of Child Health awarded $49,137 for developing environments of retarded children. Principal investigator for this project is Todd R. Risley, associate professor of human development. Grants totaling $692,233 were awarded to Kansan faculty members that cording to announcements by Sens James Pearson and Bob Two Awards For Research Are Revealed The institute also provided $23,128 for research into the genetic mechanism governing ovulation. Conducting this work is Glen Wolfe, professor of physiology and cell biology. --- kansas Shakespeare WELFTH NIGHT With kansas Shakespeare FREDERICIA MURPHY ANNE THOMPSON AS VIOLA Directed by STUART VAUGHAN JUNE 27, 28, 29, 30 and JULY 1 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE ALL PERFORMANCES AT 8:00 P.M. MURPHY HALL SMENTS AND ENTERTAINMENT IN THE MAIN LOBBY AT 7:30 TICKET PRICES: $2.00 KU STUDENTS $1.00 WITH ID Summer Season Coupon $5.00 Box Office Opens June 12 Phone UN4-3908 University Summer Kansan Tuesday, June 27, 1972 3 Students Aid Handicapped BY TRISHA TEETER Kansan Staff Writer University field study and employment programs have provided many students a chance to develop competence in the care of mentally and physically handicapped children in the past few years. Working directly with the retarded is an important aspect of training for students in the field of special education, according to Nancy Peterson, assistant professor of Douglas County University Affiliated Facilities (U.A.F.) preschool program. Peterson, also the coordinator of education for the U.A.F. clinical training center in Haworth Hall, said some of the work was done at the LSU College of Nursing (KNU) in Toenek and at the U.A.F. center, "At first, students are usually appalled and disillusioned by the retardation they see," she said, "and they are often quick to criticize the institution. BUT AS they become more aware of the problems involved, they become converted. They don't want to terminate their relationship with KNL." Field work is being done at KNI by 14 of Peterson's students this summer. Their training will acquaint them with existing programs and will allow them to personally conduct classes for the children, according to Peterson. Mary Ann Stout, Lawrence graduate student, participated in the practicum a year ago and said she was more optimistic about it now than she was then. "I hate to be negative, but you notice the worst things in the beginning," she said. "The severity of the retardation and the futility of it all impressed me the most." STOUT SAID that one of the good impressions she got from KNI was that most residents accepted and trusted the field immediately and always were glad to see them. Although frustrating and demanding, the experience is meaningful to the students as well as the residents, Peterson said. Residents may not remember the field of study they learned, attention and affection they received from someone who cares about them, she said. That principle is the basis for a movement at KNI to enrich the lives of residents by providing them with a variety of facilities in them as many of the training facilities as possible, according to Gary Dolan, director of KNI. "We have changed the emphasis of this institution from caring for the children to caring about them," said Max H. Shaffer, director and director of the Love-In Resource Center. THE LOVE-IN is a place where the "children receive love and affection," he said. "All children need to be loved, cuddled and cared for before they can possibly learn other things." Dolan joined the staff six months ago and has tripped the number of residents participating in physical education programs. He said that therapy would be incomplete without considering recreation for the children. structures to climb, toys and, in Shaffer's opinion, a very dedicated staff. "THEY NEED a chance to let off steam as much as any other kid" he said. "It is difficult to work with these kids because their attention span is short and it is hard to keep their interest," said Steve Veenbergh, senior school and physical education instructor. Kandybowzic said that much of each child's day was spent in classrooms and the living unit, so the opportunity to engage in a diff erent type of structured activity was beneficial. "If we can get them to show a bit of self- expression, then we have accomplished our goal." Field workers can participate in many types of programs at the institution, such as speech therapy, vocational training, physical education, crisis units and music therapy. KNYS's system of “strategy charts” lists every resident, the programs he is involved in, additional training that has been introduced and new programs he has begun. "Through this system, the institution works as a team," said Dolan, "and all training facilities are united to give the residents the best possible programs." JAMES C. HAWKINS Kansan Photo by TRISHA TEETER Handicapped Youngsters Get Lined Up for Dodge Ball . . . Steve Kandybowicz, Lawrence senior, center, gets physical education class rolling Lawn Gets a Haircut Alman Karr of Tongxonake, top, and Robert Cox of Lawrence University of Kansas. University's innen Monday. Karr and Cox are part of the building. Rojas Sparks Rovals Past White Sox KANSAS CITY (AP) -Cookie Robas singled in two runs and scored once, leading the Kansas City Royals to a 4-1 American League victory over Whitney Wood and the Chicago White Sox Monday night. Rojas, who got two singles, lashed one of them with two out in the third inning to score Fred Patek and Amos Otis. Patek had hit his 18 double of the season to beat a bout out and stole second. The Royals erased a 1+0 White Sox lead with two runs in the second. Richie Scheinbulm scored his first on a bunt single. John Mayberry drove in Scheinbulm with a single and Rojas scored on two saves. BRUCE Dal Canton, 4-3, staggered through the first two innings but allowed only two hits. He finished with a six-hitter. in other American League games, right-hander Bill Slayback makes a mark. In a dust-fired, seven hitteninnings before needing late relief help he deterred the New York Yankees at 4:26. The White Sox scored their lone run in the first. Slayback, brought up from the League Monday, did not allow a hit until Johnny Callison led on a line with a right Wood, 11-7, was pitching for the 10th time this season with only two daws rest. Genetic Mutations Under Investigation HE ALLOWED another hit in the eighth and then two more and The research program is under the supervision of Dr. Shankel, professor of microbiology. But while he is away this week, Shankel students are continuing their research. Research on the mutation of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA) is conducted in Haworth hall this summer. BY BOB EVANS Kansan Staff Writer Bv BOB EVANS ACCORDING TO Tom Barman, assistant, the two types of damage being studied are metabolism by radiation and by injury. He said that the aim of the research was to see what could be done to repair the damage done by chemical DNA by chemicals and radiation. Enrollment Restrictions In Education Discounted Scannell said that the school would deal with the surplus of students and give them a seat that better placement information must be provided for teachers. Scannell said placement bureau would assess both teaching and non-teaching positions more closely in an at-risk setting, providing open possibilities to his liking. The dean said the School was also moving toward a program of enlightened self-selection and students were being encouraged to critically assess their own learning before pursuing a specific field. "The School of Education provides a good liberal arts education, an open environment opportunities are better for our graduates than those people who received their B.A.s in history and anthropology at the University." THE SCHOOL of Education better career placement counseling to steer students into areas of the teaching profession best suited to them. In response to nationwide concern over the surplus of teachers, Dale P. Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said that as many as 250 schools in Kansas had concluded that as long as their universities maintained an open admissions policy no attempt would be made to enroll a student; restrict enrollment or establish any sort of an education canny. By DEANNA VANDERMADE Kansan Staff Writer Kansan Staff Writer The research being done in the lab in Haworth is confined to bacteria, but Barknecht said, the chemical mungos would have the same effect on people that live on the bacteria being studied. DNA, Barknecht said, carries the genetic code and the RNA carries the code and the message of genetic code. The third area where the School Education sees a need for change is teachers in contact with school systems. Requirements must be added to the program that would lead students to the earlier to assess their abilities to handle students and adapt to situations, according to Scannell. available for 118,200 of the 234,000 people who acquired teaching tissues in the association so that that the surplus could be eliminated if improvements were made in the school districts, if early learning programs were strengthened and classroom loads were reduced to 24 students per class, which it called a more effective member than the average of 30. BARNECHT SAID that some mice had been exposed to the effect that cannabis had DNA and RNA, but he said that nothing significant had come of them. The National Education Association forecast that there would not be teaching positions there is a less serious teacher surplus. These areas would include reading, early childhood and foreign language training in various vocations. Scannell backed the N.E.A.'s statement. He said he thought the major concern was lack of money in the school districts. He also pointed out the inadequacy of the School to help the situation by going to the taxpayers. He said that it appeared that amphiphetine caused a decrease in the synthesis of DNA in the brain, and that it was lethal to cells. Terry Pentacost, Leavenworth sophomore, has been conducting phtamines and his phtamines have on DNA and RNA, and he also打算 his research start on the three weeks ago, he thought that he already had some startling re-experiences. Pentacost conducts this research by incubating wheat into five different flasks with different amounts of chemical mixtures. The cultures are grown at 30°C for six times, until after eight hours there is a total of 244 culture for 6 weeks. "AFTER BEING exposed to bacteria, the number of bacteria count she the number sky high," said Pentacost. "But after about five hours, the growth of bacteria falls." Also, Barkneck said that chemical mutogens such as amphinetones caused a breakage of DNA and RNA. To further study the decrease in synthesis caused by the amphetamines, Pentoschot led his research for three years. Detroit W. L. I. Pret. G. H. Baltimore 33 27 590 1 New York 27 31 468 6 New York 27 31 468 6 Boston 25 33 433 6 Houston 25 33 433 6 American League East Slayback struck out five while trying to become the only American Leaguer ever to pitch a Baseball Standings two runs in the ninth before Fred Scherman and Chuck Seeblech came on to get the last two outs and save the victory. National League 9 a.m.—News-Weather Sports 15 a.m.—Your World 9:30 a.m.—Featured Works: Haydn and Eliza YUDAY 7:30 a.m.—The Morning Show 8:45 a.m.—NewsWeather Sports 8:15 a.m.—The Theatre Review 8:30 a.m.—The Sports News 7.45 a.m.. New-weaker sports 7.45 a.m.. "Theatre Review" 8.30 a.m.. "-Campus and Community Calendar" KANU Schedule Elgar Noon—News-Weather-Sports 12:15 p.m.-Noon Hour Concert—Community Galleries Sambo's JUNE SPECIAL p. 5.m - This Afternoon p. 6.m - Theater and Courts p. 7.m - Music by Composers p. 8.m - Music by Composers-Stores p. 9.m - KANAL SHORE p. 10.m - KANAL SHORE Concertes; Moliets, Lariat and Brickwood 1.0 m.P.m.-Martha Luther King Speaks 1.0 p.m.- Song Recite: Cassel Valenti 1.0 p.m.- Speech: George Sorensen 2.05 p.m.- Stage and Screen: Bernard Hermann During June, when you purchase any dinner item you will get the second dinner for 1/2 price. All you do is present this coupon. 10:15 p.m.—TBA 1:30 a.m.—Sign Off the Atlanta Braves 3-0 SOURCE 12:15 p.m.—Noon Hour Concert— Community Calendar Oakland 41 20 59 Chicago 36 15 595 Denver 35 25 57 Kansas City 28 12 467 125 California 29 15 467 125 Miami 29 15 467 125 COUPON Rick Reuschel pitched a six-hitter in his major league start debut and the Chicago Cubs unleashed a 15-hit attack to snap a four-game losing streak with an opening of the Philadelphia Phillies. Cincinnati 38 25 650 Houston 38 26 1603 Tampa Bay 38 26 949 Atlanta 29 33 484 San Francisco 25 45 1675 Oakland 25 45 1675 Buy one dinner, second purchase of same item 1/2 price W. 19 L. Pet. G. 2 Pittsburgh 38 25 601 New York 36 25 603 Philadelphia 36 25 604 St. Louis 30 22 454 Montreal 27 35 434 Baltimore 27 35 435 Then, as the bell rang, both fighters continued punches and slams to his trainer and Dr. Campbell leaped into the ring and carried the champ to his corner and ran back on. The fighter began screaming, "Foul." LOBIANCO` ruled that the punch, which apparently hit Buchanan below the belt, was not a foul and that Buchanan simply was getting it. THE FIGHT started on a wild note when the unbeaten Duran knocked Buchanan down with a butt only 15 seconds old, which the butt only 15 seconds old. From then on, Durek kept brutal pressure on. He hurt the knee right before he left and right hand early in the round and with another right that made him look worse. He corner later. He also knocked the scout's mouth putout with a leaf in his hand. Buchanan was apparently off balance but it was ruled a knock-down. He took a mandatory eight count after jumping up. But LoBianco ruled the punch was a good one to the solar plexus. The flight ended in pandemonium with Buchanan's first victory. The champion had been carried to his stool by trainer Glan Clancy and New York State Athletic Commission Dr. Edwin Camp Adams. Referee Johnny LoBliance ruled that the punch did not incapacitate Buchanan and gave the 21-year-old a chalkie to dislodge the challenger when he cornered said he could not continue. The fight goes into the record THE CARDIALS, who won their 14th game in the last 18 spolled a return to the majors for the first time. Expos' left-hander Moore Bairn. Offer good Mon.-Thurs., expires June 30 Duran was far ahead on the cards of all officials when the bizarre ending that sent the Garden crowd of 18,821 home. Chicago Clu 4, Chicago Detroit 4, New York 3 Baltimore 2, Atlanta 1 Milwaukee 2, Baltimore 1 Oakland 3, Texas 0 In National League play, Joe Torre slammed a three-run homer and run-scoring double, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 4-3 victory over the Montreal Expos for the National League triumph. NEW YORK (AP) —Roberto Duran of Panama won the world leightweight boxing championships Monday night when Ken Butchan, floored by a low punch after the ball had rung at 108, of the 13th round, was unable to come out for the 14th round. St. Louis 4, Montreal 3 Chicago 11, Philadelphia 1 San Francisco 3, Atlanta 1 New York 2, Pittsburgh 0 LoBiance had warned Duran low punches earlier in the 13th minute. But Duran ended, Duran stunned the Scot with a smashing right hand to the left. no-hitter in his debut. Left-hander Ron Bryant fired a three-hitter and Ed Godson's bat highlighted both San Francisco as the Giants downed Skip Lockwood and Ken Sanders combined for a one-hitter run as the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Milwaukee Brewers beast. THE Cleveland Indians, held hitless for five innings by Boston's Ray Cup, exploded for three runs, six batted and routed the Red Sox 7-3. Ken Holtzman and Darold Hitter and Holtzman drove in the first run with a seventh-inning win, with the Texas Rangers 30-8. Eric Soderholm blasted his homeer and the Minnesota Twins survived a four-run California rival in the eighth inning to beat the Rangers. Soderholm unloaded on a full-count pitch from reefer Edie Fisher, who had loaded the bases with walks in the seven inning. moving the Mets to within two games of the first place Pirates in baseball's National League East Division. Fight Charges Loom Kansas Discus Standout, 5 Others Sign with KU Kansas has signed six more track and field athletes, including Charles Bockhorst, state high school champion from Lawrence. Bochorst threw the discus 172 feet 3 inches last year while attending Lawrence High. He won 45-19-6 against him with a throw of 168 feet 11 inches. Bill Welch, the Oklahoma cross-country titlist from Tulsa, signed Friday to be the second to sign with KU on that day. Other promising cross-country runners planning to enroll at KU this fall are Mitchell Powlas of Shawnee Mission South, Steve Thomas of Shawnee Mission West and Tucker Schaefer of Oak Park High School, Kansas City, Mo. Cam Danielson, standout jumper from Norton, signed with the Washington Nationals and long jumped 23 feet 2½ inches and high jumped 6 feet 4. He finished third in the long jump at the state outdoor meet. Schaeffer finished first in the Suburban Nine Conference twowhee and placed 15th in the state cross-country meet. This group brings the total number of high school and junior college trackmen signed with KU to 12. SOME TIME John & Yoko! Plastic One Band New Highland Music SMITHERSON PUBLISHING THE MUSIC OF THE NEW WORLD WE ARE ALL MUSICIANS ANGELA Kief's discount price MARIE ALLENITE $3^{99} on Capitol records Capitol at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles CAMPAIGN POLICY STATEMENT Regarding Kansas University REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR 45TH DISTRICT DWIGHT BORING SAYS: I promise to support the total KU request for $49.1 million for our faculty in our community, and increase in faculty salaries, one step increase for classified employees where eligible, and a 25 per cent increase in faculty salaries; we will also maintain on all physical plant repairs and improvements, and ensure that the needs of our students are met. These salary increases are needed, first, to avoid unionism problems in its wrenches industry. The higher the salary, the better management by better selection and training of middle management personnel in KU administration. Third, for the multiplier effect of those dollars Neither Lawrence no KU can afford conflicts of city versus administration, or administration versus State authorities. The Carnegie Commission Higher Education reported this June 16, that the day of sensational enrollment increases has passed. They issued a warning on the crisis coming in Higher Education. I want to work in the Kansas legislature to be sure that the KU administration's superiority be uppermost in any restructuring of organization of Kansas universities and colleges. A well paid faculty, a well trained administration, a well maintained plant with superior libraries will uphold KU Jacobs' commitment to academic excellence. Lawrence residents, and alums should join me in this stand. Vote August 1. (First appeared in June 24, Journal-World.) 4 Tuesday, June 27,1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Independence Ideas On Going to Class How are you going to spend the 4th of July? On a picnic? Watching fireworks? Swimming? Or just going to class as usual? In case you don't already know, then we'll be there in 2016. But that doesn't mean students are particularly happy about it, or that they plan to attend. In a poll held recently, 86 per cent of KU students were against holding classes on Independence Day. Seven per cent ceeent did not care, and 7 per cent said they'd just as soon go to class and get it over with. Of those who protested going to class, some comments were particularly interesting. One common reason advanced was that the summer session pace moved extremely quickly and there were no vacations. Another student said, "One day of class missed really makes much difference, especially when it is for something that is sacred to many, a national holiday." Another one stated, "It seems that the great scholars of Kansas University must not spare one moment from the great learned halls." Though distinctly a minority opinion, one student said. "Going to school on the 4th of July is o.k. with me. No doubt summer session requires a certain number of days of sessions, so let's get it over. Anyhow, it's safer in class than on the highway. Besides that, I'd just as soon, or rather, be in class than baking in a kitchen or on a lake." There were those who thought observing one day of patriotism in 365 was not excessive. A comment, representative of many others, was, "It seems to me that going to school on the 4th of July is unpatriotic. Such a significant holiday demands a celebration." And there were other remarks: that Americans weren't patriotic and should take it to school; that school shouldn't be held at a state institution on a federally declared national holiday. One said, "I realize that being liberal is quite avant-garde, but not observing the 4th of July is carrying it a bit far." The students who were most vehement in their attack of holding class don't plan to go. As one woman said, "I don't think we should have class, and up." We do, I hope no one shows up. "That will be the case with the Kansan. We'll be celebrating, rather than preparing a paper, so there will be no July 4th issue. Rita E. Haugh Editor By RALPH NICOL -Historical Feature BY RALPH HINCOLL Kansas Stuff Writer Activities from Summers Past They say that back in the "old days" they used to go swimming at Potter Lake. They weren't kidding. Politics has always been an important part of camp life. Throughout the first decade of this century, the campus was rocked by the women's suffrage climax in 1892 and climaxs in the summer of 1893. A LETTER to the editor of the karen complained that she was politically attacked by a "militant suffragist" who used her letter in support of letter One of the high points of each summer session through the 1900's was the student-faculty experience, and it changed the years. In 1914, for example, it was held in Robinson Gym, and all corners were crowded that time." It was warned that "anyone who dares to come in the pool" The event featured a tumbling skim, fancy bag punching, and a pianist who provided two-step, and Virginia Reel. THE INDOOR pool at the first Robinson Gym was used less frequently than Potter's for such reasons. Because of their design for women, which were designed for teachers in charge of physical training in high schools. Also, twice a week "mixed bathing" with other faculty or the faculty and their wives. In the earlier years of the University of Kansas, Potter's not only was not polluted, but was also one of the first universities wooden rafts. A review of past university Daily Kansas reveals the popularity of swimming and a variety of other during a past summer sessions. In the 1910's, swimming at Potter's Lake was popular and organized. Each summer starred a girl in a swimsuit like the fancy dive, under-water dive, 220-yard swim, cane racing for single and doubles, and boating. further complained about the "minority of women who want to force their opinions on the rest of our sex." The letter provoked an instant clamor. Within a week both a coach and a striker were formed. The Kansan quickly took a poll to find out what KU women thought of the team's success; results 67 against, 39 in favor. By the 1920's, the lake was reaching its peak popularity. It was filled with 150 people every day for fishing, rats and logs. At the indoor pool, swimming was still segregated: men swam on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and women swam on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. THE SUMMER reception in the 20's was more inclined to display violin solos and orchestra music than fancy bag punching. However, the Kanan observed a dazzling swapping "during the dances. the thrill of sports was not forgotten. During the summers the department of physical education would hold annual basketball, scrating baseball, tumbling, diving, weight throwing, and basketball with its strange new rules: illegal dribbling, running with the ball, and striking with a free throw." The most popular activities for campus males was watching the 'cafeteria skirt line', where students got as high as the knee. If a relationship went beyond the looking stage, a couple could attend Lawrence's first moving-picture theatre, the Varsity, and see such flocks as "Through a window" or "In love of love and doughnuts." The entertainment cost adults 30 and children a dime. ABOUT THE ONLY interruption of normal classes was the arrival of members of the National Guard had to miss a day or two when they were called out for "strike action" and so did not missed a day of class quell the Lindbergh Describes Tasadays By JOHN NANCE Editor's Note: On the edge of the impenetrable rain forest of the southern Philippines lives a tiny monkey. The monkey became known only last year. A newsman who accompanied an expedition of scientists to the island has reported that year tells in the following story, the second in a series. Thus an American who is no stranger to extraordinary experiences described nine days in TASADY FOREST, Philippines (AP)—"It was one of the great experiences of life—I think anyone would have to say that." Charles A. Lindbergh, the "Lone Eagle" who 44 years ago became the first man to fly solo across the Atlantic, joined an expedition of the first outsiders ever to see the Tasdass caves. a Philippines rain forest with the stone-tool-using Tasaday cavemen. The silver-haired, 70-year-old Gays Celebrate Freedom Day Special to the Kansan The celebration of what is probably America's newest holiday is now entering its third annual observance with parades, marches, picnics and dancing in the street in scores of American cities. Christopher St. Day, originally June 28, 1969, has become a combination of the 4th of July, a Barnum and Bailey Circus and a day of holy obligation for America's second largest minority group. Officially, it celebrates the birth of the Gay Liberation movement in this country. Christopher St. Day, or the Stonewall riots, grew out of what began as a routine police raid on a gay bar in New York City. It was there which Village. Although police harassment was nothing new for homosexual citizens of New York City, for some reason this time their response was different. They were meeting away into the night, they decided to fight. While the女 Liberation has since been characterized by an almost total lack of violence, the Stonewall riots were an exception. They a bane of female blood, guts and gears in the-gutters riot. THE POLICE FORCE was taken by surprise; they were obviously not expecting this sort of reaction. Gone forever was the stereotypic image of the homosexual as the limp-wrapped, meek effeminate male. Gay power in New York was born, and it was born angry. Most New Yorkers simply dismissed the Stonewall riots as a "freak occurrence." But to the millions of gay citizens in this country, this event took on great significance. More than just an incident, the occurrence was more the birth of an idea—an idea that was deeply rooted with intolerance, discrimination and harassment. pilot and conservation enteret, the jungle March 25 by jumping from a hovering helicopter onto a dwarfed platform laced into a treetop. Homophile Youth Movement of New York following the riots: "The nights of Friday, June 27, 1963, and Saturday, June 28, 1969, will go down in history as the first time that thousands of homosexual men entered the city on the streets to intolerable situation which has existed in New York City for many years—namely, the Mafia (or syndicate) control of this city's gay bars in collusion with certain elements in the Police Department of the City of New York. The demonstrations were followed by violence at the Stonewall Immediate Friday, June 27th." According to a leaflet distributed by the "Stepping onto tree from a jet helicopter was one of the most significant experiences I have ever had—it was like passing through a making glass—abandoned the modern world." Lindbergh said. The Lawrence Gay Liberation Front was one of many formed in the summer of 1969. Although it had not yet gained a community, up until that time it was largely invisible. But, partially as the result of two or three Lawrence residents who attended a Gay Power convention in Chicago that summer, the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front was born. THE IMPORTANCE of what happened on Christopher St. has spread beyond the bounds of New York City, as can be seen by the sudden formation of Gay Liberation groups throughout the nation. This year in Lawrence, the celebration took the form of an annual picnic at Lone Star Lake Saturday afternoon and a party Saturday evening. In 2015, he attended another SL. Day was celebrated this past weekend. The first meeting, held in the Kansas Union, welcomed seven people. But after the passing of another week and a good deal of publicity, there were 90 in attendance at the second meeting. violence of striking shopmen at Parsons. Although Gay Liberation as a movement is probably the newest and most controversial this country has in centuries, one thing is apparent. The world has not embraced independence day twice during the summer. THE EXPEDITION was beaten by the president of Pammin, a government-supported foundation for assisting minority girls. The aviator reached the tents of the expedition below the caves of the Tasman two days after the departure of the party entered the jungle. Linbergh, a member of Panamian's board of directors, helped plan the journey into Tasaday country but he was in Elizalde called him that when the expedition was ready to leave. WHILE OBSERVING the relatively small area over which the Tasmanian range, Lindbergh's plane and a few others coming from New York where we were dealing with the superiors traverse the Atlantic in three hours to people who have traveled no more than 10 miles an hour "just began." "I had left my gear at my place in Hawaii and had only two hours to get ready and to catch the flight to Asia." Lindbergh said, "I overcame a surplus store on 42nd Street and bought what I He said Elizalde's cable caught him unprepared. Arriving without his sleeping bag, he used a raincoat and blanket. After several days with the daisy, Lindenburgh said, "There are many flowers in the garden, the most impressive thing yet is walking up that trail to see Tadassay." In the 1930's, swimming in the gym was still sexually segregated, and the popularity of Potter's was beginning to decline. The annual summer camp needed to have very little in the way of butt but right on dancing to the music of the KU Orchestra. standing in the caves; that took me back through the ages. "What puzzles me most is their apparent lack of adventure. What about curiosity over what I see, or how I feel? I thought that was fundamental to man. But they don't seem to care. Also, they have not made a single difference in the way she sleeps or made steps to enter the caves. Why not make it easier?" I guess because it's already easy for them; they don't feel the need." "Secondly are the groups standing around their fires—that is caveman. HE PAUSED, then added, 'you know, we don't intelligent we talk about them as stone age people—and they are—but there no doubt that they are just so satisfied with their way that they don't try to change it.' An afician r荔繁 both and values "Charles is a very, very good friend of Panamn; he is a great help to us." Elizalde says. Elizalde consults the tall American frequently and values his opinions. When he was not hiking or joining a party of Tasaday on a food-gathering mission or in the caves, Lindbergh would take one of them to lift him like-ons on the ground with his hat flapped over his eyes. More than one letter to the Kansan complained that the reason KU was having a decrease in attendance was the lack of "entertainments." The showing of the weekly movies at the Memorial Union had been cancelled for the day there was just nothing to do. And, yet, whatever the activity in the jungle of the Tadasay, Lindbergh was always a ready participant. ON HIS LAST morning in Tasaday country, waiting with other members of the expedition for the helicopter which would carry him back to civilization, Lindenburgh remarked once again before the death of his dwellers had been one of the great experiences of his life. Would it compare with his flight across the Atlantic in the Spirit of St. Louis? "WHILE SOME people blame the continuing drop in enrollment to the current depression," wrote Katherine H. "182, I think there is more to it." "No, they are quite different," Lindbergh said. "I see no reason to compare them. This experience stands all by itself." In response, the University sponsored a variety of new events in the campus, sort of campus picnic and lunches were provided, as well as organized competition in horseshoes, volley-ball, and tug-a-war. The '30s also saw the organization of the first annual Campus "Sing." Set up just down the hill from Flower Hall, the entire KU summer population played the popular songs of the day. many people as possible. The GIA also sponsored picnics, square dancing, hay rack rides, supers and weekly street dances. The Campus Sing was still an annual event, but during the war years, it was dominated by patriotic songs. In 1941, the University of Kansas was caught involved in an attack on this produced on campus were both subtle and blunt. KU played host to such groups as a wounded mates, who lodged in the west end of the university building. The University also appointed a session for air raid wardens. MOST OF THE social events on campus from the late 30's to the middle '50's were organized by the Greek-Independent Association (GIA). The old basketball team had been converted into a GIA Mixer, where everyone was encouraged to "come stag" so as to meet as For active people, there was a university golf course, located on the coast of Australia. It consisted of six holes, and all of the greens were annually refilled. In 1941, the first "to recreational" swim club met for per week at the Robinson Gym in Chicago. Mr. bers its first summer, but after that sexually segregated swimming died a quick and quiet death. In the last twenty years, the University has grown so large that the number of students populous to try to organize all University parties and activities. More individual groups have been formed, each uninspired summer social activities. McGOVERN CROSS ON MAYOR The Courier-Journal "YOO-HOO. FOLKS! I'M BACK IN THE PICTURE" "... Back in the picture ..." "... Back in the picture ..." They're telling them a lot in freshman orientation this summer. Many of the members of the class of 76 will arrive on campus this fall knowing about computer grade-point averages to compute grade-point averages to the third decimal place in 17 seconds flat and be aware that the method used for identifying classroom buildings is strange. This means that Eisenhower Hall and "E" standing for Seaton. But once they get here, those freshmen are going to find they need more information in them. In fact, some upperclassmen are still baffled about daily occurrences of the weather, K-Staters continually ask, "What are these people trying to tell me?" Bark Frosh Orientation Omits Explaining Campus Idiom State speaks English. But while the message may sound familiar, the message is often hidden. I enlisted the help of a former Berlitz employee, and we are happy to hear that the students of various dialects of Purple Talk. The professor says in Purple Talk, "The text is outdated in several points, so I have added four paperbacks to the required reading list for $7.70 for paperbacks, and you won't be able to sell the textbook because a new edition is coming out next year." Griff and the Unicorn HI SIMON I BET YOU DON'T REMEMBER MY NAME... SURE I DO, UH... LAURIE "LAURIE "?! ALICE! DEBBIE! SUE? DONNA? MARY? AGNES? SANDY? CATHERINE? GLADYS? SHEREE? HOPE? By Sokoloff *Lectures will supplement the reading assignments.* The task is to read *"I will introduce other material."* and will introduce other materials. Translation: "I will read passages from the textbook and talk about my own fascinating experiential." should be back soon." What she means is: "He is out roaming around loose again. Make your sure only knows when he be 'back.' A secretary uses Purple Talk in giving directions. When a secretary says, "Take these forms to your dean's office, and have them on the desk," they sign and sign them. Then back bring the white, yellow, green and pink copies to this office. Make sure they keep only the blue copy." They also give the students something. She means: "The people over there have fouled up the records of half the students in our department because they want to keep their hands on every piece that comes in their door." "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff. Secretaries are also proficient in Purple Talk. A secretary says, for example, "Dr. Fluster is out of the building right now." He The teacher proclaims, "To help you review your reading and lecture notes, we will occasionally have them read by a Purple Talk. What he means is: 'When I was in college, we had required class attendance and my students aren't going to get by with cutting corners.'" K-Staters informally advise their friends about classes—in Purple Talk. "She has you regurgitate the book and her lectures" means, in plain English, "she wants you to read some of the book and listen in class to pass the tests." And "He relates the material to what's going on today, and he's really interested in student progress," she says. "Talk about anything and everything in that class and give away with it." Faculty, staff, students—we K-Staters just keep telling it—Till it isn't what you say, Till it isn't what you say, you mean what you that counts THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN News Adviser ... Del Brinkman Rita E. Haugh Education NEWSSTAFF News Adviser .. Del Brinkman BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams Business Manager Business Advisor . New Atlanta Doug DeTray University Summer Kansan Tuesday, June 27. 1972 5 Saxophonist Kansas Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED Music Camper Practices Marian Hayes, Topica music camper, gets in some extra practical Music Camper training. Hayes is one of the more than 450 students enrolled in the fireweek Midwestern Music and Art Camp at the University. Music Library Is Open To All Students at KU Although albums and tapes are not allowed tapes are not allowed to circulate and must stay in the library. All students are welcome to use them, according to Julia Stuart, library assistant for the library. More than 5,000 monaural single albums, and 1,000 stereo single albums are contained in the collection of the wing of Murphy Hall. Fourteen stero players with headphones on them are kept on reserve. Some records are kept on reserve for in-class use by the faculty. Stuart said, but the majority of the records are in the library. The tape players are set up mainly for the music history class. There are enough tape outlets for a class of 50. The tapes that are available for listening are chosen weekly by music history instructors. Also housed in the library are music scores, periodicals on music and a speech and English collection of spoken arts in poems and plays. Biographies and histories are up foundats. Some of the magazines, such as the "Musical Courier," date back as far as the 1800s. Earlier periodicals are transferred to film and microcards. Microscopes contain up to 12 pages of print. Stuart said the library was being kept busy, "especially now that the music campers are going to get their assignments." Although there have been no books during the summer, Stuart said that a new order would be sent out shortly for new books and manuscripts. Orientation Part Consoling By RALPH NICOL Kensan Staff Writer How do you encourage interest in a particular field among incoming freshmen with the knowledge that your school is already overcrowded? This is a problem that is being faced by students. You need to meet they meet and advise next year's freshmen during orientation. According to John Meyers, director of School Relations, about half the freshmen enrolled for next fall are coming to this summer's orientation. Part of their schedule gives them half the time to representatives from the different schools of the University. The problem for many of theewomen represent them as frickly and unfriendly studentsthe overcrowdingwithout discouraging someone who is afraid to talk. Lee Young, associate dean of the School of Journalism, said the college's highest grade point average entrance requirements of the professional schools at KU, but that the school was still packed. The university's sophomores can enter may soon "have to go by the board." The school is even considering closing enrollment for a period of time. YOUNG TALKS to an average of 30 incoming freshmen each session. By attending the optional internship, they show their interest in journalism Young said he talked to the students about deserts and deserts of the school, and tried to give them the information he enrolled. He said he told them how their freshman sophomore course relate to the school's environment. "I try to candidly point out the problems they will be facing in getting in the School. But on the other hand, I try to make it clear that anyone who has a real interest inism can get in," Young said. Young said he doubted the value of some aspects of orientation. "Many freshmen get the impression that they need pre-enrolled and must them be pre-advised. At enrollment, they come to our table expecting freshmen." BUT YOUNG admitted that it was valuable to get to meet the students, and that they got excited someone from their internet. Hugh Cotton, who works with orientation from the School of Pharmacy, said he also saw his function as that of an adviser rather than a recruiter. Out of 155 qualified people who applied for the position, there was room for only 84. Some of the freshmen who talk to him ask about medical school, because there is no medical school adviser at orientation. Cotton said he had been him and students he had talked to so far. COTTON THOUGHT orientation was good, but he would recommend having the parents come along also. The parents could get a better understanding of what their children are doing. If someone else takes a look at "the good time" of the University, he said. "These students are grasping in areas they know little about, but need to learn how to regard as a peer to help them. They ask intelligent questions. They ask questions in career satisfaction and opportunities than they are about." Pollution Controls Installed by CFCA ASHTON has been more than satisfied with the interest shown by the high school students. Duane Filikin, 15 years-old, will be a high school junior next year. He was one of 42 students who was recommended for the summer camp. In spring. He was sent an application for the summer Each of the students is also doing research in a topic of his particular interest. Ashison will work on a broad range in the subjects chosen. The students will work on their projects throughout the summer, and then present them in the law school's in the Lawrence area. "They've been very enthusiastic," he said, "much more than I originally expected." The course concentrates in two areas: aquatic biology and terrestrial biology, with two weeks of study on each area. In addition, the students help staff members with museum programs, such as the live plays. CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — a survey by the Institute of Race Relations reported that African people in the greater Cape Town area in 1970 lived below the poverty line. At that time the monthly minimum income needed for a family of six was $84.61. Seminars, Lectures to Come After Special Summer Study Ray Ashen, director of public education for the museum, is involved in a collaboration with a Biology 110 course. The course, now in its first year, is taught by school teachers in science. The students are sitting on in the By VICKI MONNARD Kancon Staff Writer Their lectures, however, will be to area elementary schools, and the students themselves are local high school juniors and seniors. THE program is designed to give the participants a broad range of experience in practical and research activities flexible and include field trips. The students are able to get experience in observing and identifying plants and animals, taking photographs, and the environment for pollution. According to Gene Comeau, CFCA's pollution control engineer, Dr. Teresa Soto pouring from CFCA's plants, a nitrogen dioxide vapor, has been reducing the mid-mid-40% four small plants were built by CFCA in the 60s but with CFCA in the 80s. Pollution control at Cooperative Farm Chemical Assn. (CFCA) speaks for itself. By RALPH NICOL Kansan Staff Writer This summer, nine special studi dents are involved in an extensio- nal research with the Museum of History. They review their reser tion in seminars next fall and then embark on a series of lectures on Most of the students going into Fine Arts have already had some previous contact with the School, through the music and art camps, music festivals or high school School offers around the state. AT THE School of Architecture and Urban Design, associate faculty of the Library they had closed admission ten weeks ago. They are expecting about 100 students to enroll this fall if they didn't accept any more than that. Filkins is enjoying the program. "We have a highly structured program. Orientation mainly deals with the mundane details of enrollment." Schied said. "It's really been an experience," he said. "I've got to observe things the way they really are." In the early '60s a fifth plant in was constructed. This plant was equipped with devices for pollutant management and equipment resulted in CFCA conducting research to correct pollution emission from the other four FILKINS is studying reptiles and amphibians for his project, but he doesn't think he will be speaking to students next all about lizards' habits and peril. But it is difficult for, an "out-sider" to take a Fine Arts course, he said. program, and was one of the nine people selected to participate. The orientation process is a little easier if the student is already sure about his field. L. Don Schen, associate dean of the School of Fine Arts, said he didn't care if students enroll in his school. Filkins is looking forward to lectures he'll be giving in October. He called the lecture arrangement "an interesting setup" and looked forward to his chance to "get out to see people by developing my speaking ability." Another of the goals of the program, according to Ashton, is to help students become school students in biology and the museum. Filkins reported that he had become very interested in teaching mathematics as a career, was considering it as a career. When a sixth plant was built in 1968, pollution control devices manufactured by facilities. Soon it was evident that the controls were inadequate and, Conmeau said, this was the cause of contamination of the yellow vapor from CPFA. According to Comeau, a new control was installed May 26 in the six plant to replace the existing plant. The result is the quantity of nitrogen The program is being funded through a donation from the Career Education Program, a federal project. XXXXXXXXXX Welcome Incoming Freshmen May we help you with your housing needs All utilities paid—Auto parking included—Heated swimming pool—Tenant storage room on each floor—Incinierator on each floor—Modern kitchen with oven and refrigerator—Hot air conditioner for heat and air conditioner—Two elevators in each building—All brick walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and quiet—Complete laundry in each building—Outside exposure room—Bath tub, shower, two lavatories each apartment. JAYHAWKER TOWERS KU APARTMENTS 1603 West 15th JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS Not more than 5 minute walking anywhere. The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing Now Leasing for Summer and Next Fall Surrounded by the K.U. Campus 300 2 Bedroom Apartments Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see Convenience — Comfort — Safety — Extras --dioxide vapor has been greatly reduced. Campus Bulletin Summer Orientation and ID Photos: 9 a.m. Parlors Personnel Training: 9 a.m., Council Room. The vapor has not been completely eliminated for various reasons. Comeau said that when a plant is in the soil, up the pollution controls were unable to function. On the average, one of the plants is shut down or started up once a week. At this time, the amount of yellow vapor is emitted. Room. KU Media Films: 9 a.m., Forum Room. RU Media Films: 9 a.m., Forum Room USITA: noon, Kansas Room. Personnel Training: 1:30 p.m., Council USITA: 6 p.m., Kansas Room. Halong Conglomeration: 7 p.m., Council Room Personnel Training: 1:30 p.m., Council Room Hydrogen is used as fuel for the pollution equipment in the four smaller plants and the CFCA's ammonia plant supplies this hydrogen, according to Omeae then the ammonia plant is released because the pollution control equipment is unable to function Comeau said that abatement was carried out by a platinum catalyst and after a period of time the catalyst begins to age. This aging is a result of physical stress on the catalyst, an efficiency of the control diminishes as the catalyst ages and later the catalyst must be replaced. Although the majority of yellowish emission is gone, clouds of ammonium nitrate vapor are still emitted by CFCA plants. According to Comeau, a pollution control system designed by CFCA will, with some degree of September calibration, of the two ammonium nitrate production units. r) MAGUE (AP) — A campfire used by hunters tracking mammals that have been years ago in a unearthied Bulgarian town of Pavlov, the news agency CTK reported, and the commandants of a fire place were found. Commonwealth Theatres Now Showing Now you can see"The Graduate again or for the first time. JOSEPH E. 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"PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM" POC Showtimes: 2:30, 7:35, 9:30 Varsity TREATMENT ...Telephone 91-2865 For those who have been accepted by the University oriented to fairly "cut-and-cut" situation of enclosing in required courses. Myers estimated that 75 to 80 per cent of incoming freshman would enroll in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This group is those people who are undecided about where they want to go. MAN IN THE WILDERNESS RICHARD HARRIS And 25 words or fewer; $1.00 each additional word; $0.1 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansas are offered by the university. Attendance may be colored, creed, or national honor. James Garner Western Civ. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them, FOR SALE 2. If you don't. Drama Classes Offered To Youths of Lawrence The classes will be held for six Tuesday and Thursday mornings beginning today in Murphy Hall provisions, provisions, dialogues and pantomimes. The children will also act out scenes in their daily you're at a disadvantage. Easier way it comes to the same thing. Analysis of Western Civilization. Campus Medicine West. W14th. 7-27 The speech and drama classes in KS and classes in creative drama that summer for Lawrence children entering or leaving third or fourth grade. Skin Game pax office open 8:00 Sunset WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 515 Mich. Large Rib Plate $12., Small Rib Plate $12., $15. Blob to go $30. Blob to eat $30. Chicken $15. Beef $18. Chicken $15. $18. Beef Brick Sand-$8.80. $9. p.m. p.m. p.m. 7:27 910. Closed Stores "The classes are designed to North Side Country Shop, 707 N. 2N. Antiques, used furniture, and lots of other items, 9-9 7 days a week. 842- 1359. Herb Altenburd. STEREO DISCOUNT. New yym. COSI STORE MAIN. 90% OFF COSI cost plus 10% at RAY AUDIO- lite Only Stero Discount House in NYC. Free tea, coffee, and Consulting Free tea, coffee, and Consulting 60 VW Black w unroot. Needs repairs. Body in rough shape. Make an offer before June 27. Day 84-3647. Eve. 843-5838. Tony. 6-28 For sale. Quality 10 speeds Bicycle manufacturers, manufacturer, Falcon and Kabushka, Manufacturer, Falcon and bicycles professional mechanics and bicycles professional mechanics. Shop 148 in Manhasset, 823-644-844 Shop 148 in Manhasset, 823-644-844 DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40 Must Sell 1966 Suzuki 150cce cycle Good cond. Helmets included $200.00 Call Gary. 843-0185 or 864-3232. 6-29 Pipes, tapers, and all smoking accessors are available at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 6-29 New shipment of India prints just in at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. £.99 Sandals handcrafted to your personi- alized taste at HODGE PODGE 15 W. 9th. 6-29 K-A-T Sunki 634 Mans. 842-6996 Fred Hundertstein to the staff of working on all major brands of moccasins and handbags. Fred Hundertstein to the staff of working on all major brands of moccasins and handbags. Good bike cycle cycl BOKONIST'S REVIVAL. New shipment of Western and Hawaiian shirts by Kualoa Ranch, for Leather Goods Auckland Bakken, 119 Vermouth, 431 Westport Road, 7-3 Persian kittens, champion dog, registered with papers; pets are show or carriage hounds and bears even Arbie Buncher could love Reasonable. B42-131-800. 7-3 Saint Bernard puppies. A.K.C. bloodletting and bloodline treatment. Payment plan available. Mont Saint Benet nurses R. 2. Box Z. 801. Phone 7-8352 2963 1961 HARLEY 74 full-dress, excellent condition, new tire and battery. 18,000 ml., $1085, 842-8039 6-28 LEATHER FOR SUMMER-Halter tops, shorts, bib overall shorts, fringed and plain tops—now at EARTHSINE 12 E.8th; 7-3 build on the child's native talents, as well as to acquaint him with the world of the arts, said Jed Davis, professor of speech and drama and leader of the program. Tank tops, peasant shirts, pants and jeans for men and women EARTH-SHINE. 12 E. 8th. 7-3 Two 600 X 15 tires for Volkswagen square-back. Very good condition. $15 for call. Born U 4-3097 7-35 Creative drama classes for children have been offered at KU since the early '50s. The classes are also held in the spring. Besides being an outlet for children's creative ability, the classes are used for observation by speech 158 students. KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days 35 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline : 5.00 p.m. 3 days before publication All Blue Jeans $6.50—now and forever! EARTHSHINE. 12 E. 8th 7-3 1971 Yamaha Enduro, 2200 miles—Excellent condition. Call 842-9320 after 6. 7-9 FOR RENT Apartments furnished, some air- conditioned, large enough for two or murders KU and near town, during parking no. 627. 843-576-77 1967 Impala Super Sport Power stering, power brakes, Atr condition- ing aAF-RR frame Excellent performance a452 2lowa M-83-220 7-29 ABRAXAS LEATHER 1965 Ford Galaxie 500. 2 door hard- top. V-8 automatic power steering This week only-$55. JAYHAWK *J.KLWAGENE*. 2522 lowa. 843-228- COLLEGE HILL MANOR APART- room, furnished and unfurnished apartments. AC pool and laundry. Room, furnished and unfurnished apartments. 19th Apt. B or call 843-822-981 19th Apt. B or call 843-822-981 One and two bedroom apartment, furnished and unfurnished at Ridgeway, 24th and Gudduh. Summer rates from 600 per month. Phone - 855- 1116 Sleeping rooms-furnished, with males, without kitchen privileges, for males, off street parking, borders KU near low. No pet. Books 643 6-27 8-2 leather goods-custom orders all sizes available CAMPUS APARTMENT LIVING swimming pool, cable TV, and lovely one and two bedrooms furnished and two carpeted apts. 1123 Bountiful, 8t 1124 Summer and Fall rentals Furnished 1 to 4 bedroom apts From $85 to $100 with Mitteen alpice privileges. $30 to $75 Utilities with 6-29 842-507-6 BEAUTIFUL ONE AND TWO BEDROOM garden spaces are being designed and Harvard; Argo, 11th and Massey Streets. These fine apartment features central a, soundproof construction, a soundproof entrance, carpet, draperies, spacious nifted or unfurnished. One call or visit the Road No. 842-2348, during daily weekends and get all details on Lawrence widest and neat selection of rooms. We will be pleased to see you at weeks end. You will be pleased to see our amenities. LOOKING FOR A TWO-BEDROOM garden apartment, adjacent to the crest shopping center and publiccrest shopping center and publiccrest shopping center with the space of two-bedroom2107-A Harvard Road No. 842-62582107-A Harvard Road No. 842-6258You rent your units in a wide variety of rooms, plant and features all being managedabs by Ms. Meryl Forney today.you are invited to meet Ms. Forney today.you can For Rent - Princesa mobile home for rent. 120 sqm, completed, completed, window w/c, available for couples or culdes. July 5, small dealer. 913-266-0284, or 753- 327-4101. ROOM FOR FEMALE in big, well- comfortable house. Free wash- er and dryer, and dishwasher. Sum- mer rent. Monthly or month. For Deborah or Jordy. 6-29 NOTICE Chauffered water ski boat rental and lessons. 135 hp 16 ft. ski boat. Call 841-2576 for details. 7-10 CANTERBURY HOUSE Epicopolis NORTHAMPTON June 16, 2013 1972. Holy Cross Catholic Muni. May 15, 2013. p.m. Thess. 9:00 p.m. Thurs. 5:15 p.m. Fri. 8:00 p.m. Sat. 12:00 Firesy Firearm open Fri. and Sat. t Wanted: 10-speed man's bike. For sale: 3-speed man's bike. Call Dale at 864-4220 or 841-3607. 6-28 17 W. 9th ERN'S CYCLE SALES Wrench YAMAHA THE sirloin 11 miles North of the Raw River Bridge Phone 853-1621 Open 4-10 Closest Minds Day LAWRENCE KANSAS LAMBERT BANK Delicious Food and Superior Service with Coffee, Wine, Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks There are no substitutions or quality WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 716 North 2nd Fivedays 15 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 For counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary sterilization care the Center at Bayonne can answer a phone number formation at 864-358-6241. Call 24 hours. Notice: Girl's summer earrings at the HODGE PODGE 15 W 9th 6-29 SUMMER GAV LIBERATION Fun events. Meet friends every Thursday at babysitting meetings, or visit our offices of activities. Gav B1-12 Ullman 654-4089 Writen Box 12 Ullman 654-4089 Writen Box 12 6-25 We Fry Harder: Vista Restaurant. 1527 W. 6th. 842-4311. 6-28 PILOTS: Do you want TAIL-DRAG PILOTS: 12 $1 per floor. Valued Valley Aerodrome 4 miles north of Bald Island. Design approved by the Feds. - SAVED THIS AD! Want something kinned or crocheted? Roll tuckers, blouses, vests, bikinis, ponchos. You name it and I make it. M48-153-7 6-0 INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842 7694. Professional child-care for children 1 mo - 12 mo. Full or part time DEPT. Specially designed environment. 2-7 German tutoring & translation $2.50 hr. or negotiate Call Nina, 843-5295 7 TYPING Experienced typist, will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate. Mrs. Mackauken. 3281 Powerpoint 7-27 These, term papers type accurately, promised. IBM I Electronic, elite type. will also do edit at casualon- klaenda Diana. DVD 822-842-3605. Experienced in typing theses, dissertations term papers, other mise-type tapes and notebooks using LaTeX's typica type. Accelerate and prompt service. Proof reading. Spelling correction. Typing done on elite electric typewriter. Prompt service. No Thesis please. 843-0958. 7-24 Experienced typist for your Theses. Dissertations, misc. work. Call Mr. Troxel, 2409 Ridge Court, 842-1400 11 Experienced typed will type your term paper, thesis or dissertation. Pica type — prompt — accurate. Call 843-0823. 7-5 WANTED Wanted: students to do part time farm work. Call 842-8153 or write Mr. Hoover, 1419 Ohio. No. 12. 7-3 Roommate Wanted! Five country living for only $47.50 per month. Private studio. Call 843-6446 or inquire at Bokonon, 819 Vermont 6-28 College Feesh (grl) needs full or part time job. Mothers help, computer-warehouse, reader for hand-made homework, homework Reviews: 7–138 ROOMMATE WANTED Female student. graduate in business with four place, dishwashers, own bedroom, to campus. owns a month plus room. LOST Loat: 4 keys with nail clip. Please take care of the nail clip. Russian Dept - Mavin Annex 6-27. Small spiral针纸, containing a set of nails. Call Gigem Glgam at 843-798-1051. Call Gigem Glgam at 843-798-1051. HELP WANTED Help wanted: Experienced bicycle mechanic needed time to apply. In person. Ride-on. Bike Shop. 14th-6 and Massachusetts. 6-28. WHY RENT? ALMORE CENTER 3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59) 0005 0000 DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE The Stereo Store UDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. 6 Tuesday, June 22, 1972 University Summer Kansan Raymond C. Moore, professor emeritus Moore Hall Construction Progresses [Building site with a worker on the roof] Carl Kuehn, construction supervisor, Gets Bird's-Eye View of Work Kansan Photos by Linda Schild PARK CITY HOSPITAL Hall Will House Survey Bibliotheca Armeniaca New Walkway Connects Buildings Bv BOR LITCHFIELD Construction of Raymond C. Moore Hall, the new Campus West facility for the State Geological Survey, is moving quickly and should meet the completion date in October. Rod Hardy, State Geological Survey director of information on the county would alleviate crowding and other problems existing in Lindley Hall and also paralleled the study in the research and development to Campus West, the University owned land just west of Iowa. The building, designed by State Architect William R. Hale and associate architect Thomas, was built in 1910 by the B. B. Anderson Construction Co. of Topeka. Construction of the six-story, $1.3 million building, completed September 1971 and is financed by $550,000 appropriated by the state legislature with the remainder from the University Endowment THE STATE Geological Survey presently shares space at Lindley University, where geography and meteorology, geology and chemical and biological resources. The new facility is not geared to academic study, although students will be employed for research projects. Hardy said. "After the Survey moves to the new location, Lindley Hall can be utilized for classrooms while students and operations will be concentrated at Campus West," Hardy exclaims, benefiting everyone concerned. "Communications has been a major focus of our research with research having to be coordinated between the U. S. Geological Survey, Campus C The new Moore Hall contains a number of special construction features including copper roofing, glass water pipes and a steel frame. Equipment includes nine computer terminals, a seismograph, a data processing and Noreleo K-Ray unit, a spectrophotometer for light analysis, which will also include facilities for an electron microscope, Hardy said. IN ADDITION, there will be a special library containing over 2,000 publications and a nearby station located on the roof. The Environmental Geology section installed five monitoring devices in the pilings when the building was built, and said. The monitors are at the level of the bedrock on which the building rests, and will show graphically the temperature and of the building at that level. "This is one of the first experiments of its kind," Hardy said. "Not too much has been built in the structure once it has been built." One salient feature of the facility is an "umbilical cord," totally enclosed and ther- mostatically controlled, which connects the USGS building with the administrative level (3rd floor) of Moore Hall. RAYMUND C. Moore Hall is named in honor of the Summer-field distinguished professor emeritus of geology at the University of Washington, director of the State Geological Survey, who retired in 1962. Moore, 80, who resides at 1640 Stratford Rd. a state geologist of Kansas from 1918 to 1954, chairman of the geology department for ten years and professor of geology at KU from 1916 until his retirement. Throughout his scientific career he has brought national and worldwide fame to geology and field of geology and paleontology. He is currently editor of the internationally official "Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology," a work which he began in 1948. "The Treatise," which contains virtually all that is known about invertebrate fossils, has received more than $500,000 in grants from the National Science Foundation and the Geological Society of America. B F L In September of that year rising flood waters on the river caused a dam to fail, and the safety of the party, when they did not appear to take supplies. When a boat wreckage was found, Mr. Moore was taken to Moore's death, but the party later showed up safely at Peach Springs. Boys were escaped by the rising waters and escaped to high ground by climbing up through a crevice in a canyon wall where they were placed to remain for several days. MOORE's research and activities have earned him numerous recognitions in this field. He has held many official positions in the country's leading geological and paleontological organizations. He is the founder of the Hayden Memorial Geological Award (1956), the Sidney Powers Memorial Medal of the American Association for Geologists (1956), the Paleontological Society Award (1963) and the Wollaston Medal, the Geological Survey of London, awarded in 1968. He has also won recognition from the Geological Society of Italy, Germany and Russia. DURING THE fall of 1923, Moore was a member of a USGS boating expedition down the Colorado River. The expedition's analysis later proved valuable in understanding the site for Boulder Dam. Moore was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, is an honorary member of the Society of Paleontologists and Mineralogists, and is a past president of the Society of Systematic Zoology and the Natural History Institute, among others. He was also the first KU faculty member appointed to a Summerfield professorship. JUSTIN LEE Steel Fittings Installed AUTHOR THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN WARM 82nd Year, No.15 Whomper Moves to Town The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, June 28. 1972 See Page 2 Bomb Blasts, Fights Mar Irish Truce BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP)—Two bombs shattered the calm of Northern Ireland's fragile truce Tuesday night and British troops were called in to halt street fighting between rival gangs of Protestant and Roman Catholic youths. The bombs, both planted in cars, exploded in quick succession in East Belfast. One blast was on Kilmood Street and the other on Queens Road, both in a Protestant neighborhood. Security officials said there were no casualties, but houses in the vicinity were damaged. The street clashes broke out on the opposite side of the city in the Crumlin Road area. Young threes stones back and forth, and the troops moved in to keep them apart. THE BOMBS were believed to be the work either of dissidents of the Irish Republican Army or else of militant groups. There was an agreement between the IRA and British authorities administering the province. The truce was the first in three years of The truce was the first in three years of violence. Militants of the Irish Republican Army had their guns and bombs in secret caches. Patrols of Britain's 15,000-man security force in Dublin strove to storm streets and return them to our outposts. IT WAS the start of a fral cease-fire that came into force at midnight Monday as the result of an offer by the Provisional wing of the IRA. Minutes earlier, the three-year-old insurrection involving Protestants and Roman Catholics had claimed its 389th death. A lured lion to his death in an ambush. Although random rifle shots disturbed the earie quiet of the Ulster summer, it seemed as if words not bullets would become the order of the day. "We have now won a valuable breathing space," declared a British minister for Northern Ireland, Paul Channon. "The talking can start in real earnest." Ti Custodian Terry R. Boyle examines damage caused by a fire he discovered in Strong Hall room 238 at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. Boyle, who was in the hall on Thursday, was stabbed. Kansan Photo by ROBERT PATRICK Fire Discovered in Strong Hall door had ignited, and Traffic and Security officers said the fire was the result of an accident. Damage was minor. House Opposes Arms Reduction WASHINGTON (AP)—Backing President Nikon's bid for sustained U.S. development of new offensive weapons under the Moscow accords, the House decisively rejected proposals Tuesday for a cutback of more than $1.6 billion. The House also rejected by 245 to 152 a proposal to order all U.S. forces out of the indochina war by Sept. 1 in return for release of American prisoners. The House backed the President's request for accelerated development of the New Trident missile submarine and B1 bomber plus a Safeguard antimissile site for Washington and tighter SafeGuard radars in the $2.31-billion weapons bill. "WE OUGHT to take the President at his word that he wants to stop the arms race," said Rep. Robert L. Leggett, D-Calif., in appeal for the cuts. The authorization for planes, missiles, ships and all other U.S. weapons for the fiscal year starting July 1 then was passed 334 to 59 and sent to the Senate. But House Armed Service Chairman F. Edward Hewlett, D-LA, had contended in a lawsuit that US weapons development while the Soviets were permitted to continue arms improvements under the Moscow accords could play with our national defense." The opponents argued the new weapons could undermine the U.S.-Soviet armies in Syria. Pike, D-N-Y, contended they should be prepared because they were too tight and not yet responsive. "OBVIOUSLY we've got the power to blow the Soviets to smithereens," Pike said. "And all we talking about here is that we're working with them and the other peoples of the earth into." Pike's amendment to reject all $445 million in the bill for development of the B1 bomber to replace the BS2 in the early 1980s was voted down 729 to 94. Amendments by Leggett to cut $700 million to slow the 2-missile Trident submarine development back to last year's pace and cut all $140 million for strengthening Safeguard radars were shouted down with voice votes. AN AMENDMENT to cut the $110 million weapons increase requested by the administration along with the $628 million decrease was also rejected by voice vote. The $110 million includes a $60 million speed up on the tighter Safeguard radar system; $20 million for development of a Navy submarine-launched cruise missile; $30 million for triple warhead development and $10 million for communications and control. The $2.1-3 billion weapons authorization bill was cut a new $82 million on the administration's recommendation because it would "Safeguard sites that had been planned." Judge Dismisses Petition to Close Gaslight Douglas County Court Judge Floyd Coffman refused Tuesday to lock up the Gaslight Tavern to dismiss a state lawsuit. The tavern, where he closed the tavern as a common nuisance. The petition, filed jointly in Oct., 1971, by Alabama Delegation Wins Seating by Slim Margin WASHINGTON (AP)—The Credentials Committee of the Democratic National Convention voted 69 to 55 late Tuesday to seat Alabama's 37-member delegation, including 22 pledged to that state's Gov. George C. Wallace. At the same time, the 150-member panel received a report from a hearing officer which held strongly in favor of challengers trying to unseat Mayor Richard Daley and 58 other uncommitted delegates from Chicago. In another major development, another hearing examiner issued findings which appeared to support front-running Sen. Cruz's claim to all 271 California delegates. THE ILLINOIS and California cases were taken up by the full committee later in the year. The vote to seat Alabama's regular delegation—which was challenged by a predominantly black faction—is almost flat, with the floor of the convention in Miami Beach. The delegation was accused by challengers of having inadequate representation of women and minorities, pointing to the delegate primary last May. In another delegate fight, the convention's credentials Committee Tuesday rejected by a vote of 70 to 64 a move to ban women on grounds it contained too few women. IN THE Chicago challenge, hearing examiner Cecil F. Poole found that Daley and 88 other delegates from Chicago had been slated in violation of party reform rules on "procedures, notice, openness and timeliness." Poole, in his report, made no recommendation for action to be taken against the Chicago delegation. The full committee is expected to take up the case Friday and decide how many, if any, of them should go to the insurgents, two-thirds of whom support front-running Sen. George S. McGoventry. the offices of Atty. Gen. Vern Miller and Doug Astley. Mr. Mellwell sought to close the Gasligh because of alleged riflicfishing on the premises of the tavern. Coffman's decision came after he overruled earlier Tuesday a motion by defense attorneys Gene Riling and George Melvin to dismiss the suit. None of the defendants had testified at that time, and Coffman denied the motion stating the court would hear the testimony of the defense. Riling represented the tavern's lessee, Reginald Scarbrough and manager, Harold Stagg, in the hearing. Melvin the Gaslight's owner, Mary Rowlings. In his deciding opinion, Coffman said that the state's evidence did not prove to him that the proprietors of the Gaslight operation had drug activities on the tavern's premises. Coffman also said that although he did not discount the state's evidence of drug transactions on the Gaslight premises, he did not believe that evidence of drug sales in Pennsylvania supported the state's argument that drug offending was continuous at the Gaslight. "I am not convinced the proprietors permitted any of these sales to go on with their knowledge," he said. "It seems to me that I am highly diligent in seeing it did not go on." In his closing argument given before the court's rink, Mike Ewell argued that the injunction for closure of the tavern was warranted on the basis that illegal drug activity was carried on and permitted to be carried on at the Gaslight. Elwell said that the state's evidence of drug sales at the Gaslight, presented with the testimony of undercover agents who had purchased drugs at the Gaslight on October 25, 2014, showed a "continual pattern of activity," not isolated incidents. To judge differently, he said, would be to leave it on the road and go home. Elwell then argued that ignorance of drug traffic at the Gaslight on the part of the defendants was not a defence against the defendant's attitude toward the drug problem was "stick your head in the sand and it'll go away." In his closing statement, Melvin argued that any evidence of drug transactions on the premises of the Gaslight was irrelevant because the state presented See GASLIGHT, page 5 East Lawrence Improvement Plan Will Be Focus of New Committee By PAT RUPERT Kansan Staff Writer At a Neighborhood Development Planning (NPD) meeting for East Lawrence residents Tuesday night, a committee was established to make recommendations for the rehabilitation of East Lawrence for the summer of 1973. Committee members will select goals and list projects that East Lawrence residents want. Projects may include the construction of a property, improvement of the sewer system, streets, street lights, land acquisition and clearance and the building of vocational schools in the committee member's projects in the projects' preference. The projects would then be The proposed East Lawrence project is a continuation of the downtown improvement program. Funds for both programs are allocated to income tax and are handed out by HUD. subject to approval by city commissioners. "WE DO not want this committee to be a rubber stamp committee," said Jack There will be $500,000 allocated for the East Lawrence program. But City Commissioner Nancy Hambleton said that a planned $100,000 grant would be available for next year. Half of the proposed $500,000 grant already has been earmarked for a project to create a plaza area south of the Kaw River bridge and another at Sixth and Massachusetts streets. Don Schaake, NDP director, admitted that there were complaints that the project so far was just subsidizing downtown business. He said, however, that it was necessary to keep up the downtown area provided the tax base for city revenue. East Lawrence residents, those living south of the river to Fifteenth Street and east of downtown to the Santa Fe Railway spur between Delaware and Haskell streets, were notified by mail about the event. Approximately 150 people attended. RESIDENTS attending voiced opposition to the NDP project. Some did not want to wait until next summer for improvements in East Lawrence to begin. "Our homes are falling down. We need improvement now." said one resident. Others were suspicious about the taxes being paid and moved on their property once l. www.ricksville.com "After our houses are fixed up, will they be 'appraised and taxes raised on them'?" City Commissioner Rose admitted that improved houses would be reassessed and refurbished. Other residents wondered why planers were brought in from the coast when there were people in Lawrence who were appointed and paid for this type of work. Commission Defers Economic Opportunity Ordinance BY BOB LITCHFIELD Kanson Staff Writer Kansan Staff Writer Lawrence is still without an economic opportunity ordinance and Tuesday's The proposed ordinance, as submitted by Ray Samuel, director of human relations at the University of Kansas recommended changes. Action on the proposal was deferred for three weeks to enable the Human Relations Commission to conduct further action. 1972 Kansas Act Against Discrimination. The existence of the new state law was brought to the attention of the commission only Friday. Commissioner Nancy Hambleton said that it would take some time to approve and that the legal staff would have to check for compliance with the state statute. "WE HAD hoped to have the first revised reading after minor changes today," she said, "but the state law makes that impossible." Samuel urged that the ordinance be drafted and adopted as soon as possible so the Human Relations Commission could begin work. Howard E. Mossberg, chairman of the Mayor's Drug Abuse Committee, presented that committee's report, based on a month study of drug usage in Lawrence. problems encountered so far had resulted from a lack of coordination among the different groups making recommendations. A cutoff date for recommended changes the ordinance was set for July 11. Compliance is optional. MOSBERG said that the committee divided into three subcommittees—on law enforcement, education and treatment—for recommendations were made in each area. Mossberg said one unresolved question was whether drug abuse was a public health problem or a law enforcement problem. The report's recommendations call for establishing a coordinating committee from July 1, 1972 to July 1, 1973. Other cities in Kansas and throughout the country have such committees, Mossberg said. "If drug activity is a felony, then the people involved must be treated as felons. By seeking rehabilitation as a solution, it becomes a medical problem." Mossberg said. REQUESTS for federal and state funds to finance the coordinated drive drug should be made, the report advised. Mossberg said that the city had already implemented a recommendation to hire a law enforcement officer for drug abuse. The report also recommended that funds be authorized for the purchase of street drugs, with emphasis on hard drugs; the program was supported by Mosberg said the study concluded that a TIP program, similar to one in Kansas City was not a viable program for Lawrence, and recommended that the program provide treatment and rehabilitation of juveniles. In the field of education, recommendations were made to continue all programs by civic groups and schools and be prepared for future youth, especially in the winter months. The committee recommended endorsement of the methadone program at Watkins Hospital, and suggested $3,000 be appropriated for its support. MOSSBERG said that while the methadone treatment was highly controversial because it substituted one addictive narcotic for another, it was the only program that public health officials had agreed to back. Also recommended was financial support for Headquarters to assure its continued operation. Mossberg said that this was debated at great length by the committee because several of the members were disturbed by Headquarters' operations and programs. The majority sentiment of the committee was that other funds should be sought, but that the city should assure its staff that they will have adequate assistance to the community. said Commissioner Jack Rose asked if the drug problem had reached a "high water point" and had called for the use of paychedelic drugs may be waning, there was evidence that hard narcotics use in general and amphetamine and barbiturate use among juveniles was in increase. "ARRESTS in Lawrence since 1967 have gone up, indicating an increased problem," Mossberg said. "The use of drugs has not subsided in the last year, but at least discussion of it among youths bas." The commission took the report under advisement. Mossberg said Lawrence could anticipate traffic in drugs because of its location "in the dog tracks of the nation, Interstate 70." Many of the proposed changes in the Human Relations Commission ordinance involved the definition of "affirmative action" and a discussion of whether the ordinance should apply only to city construction contractors or to all suppliers with business with the city. It was later learned that the state law pertains to all contracts. Sarah Scott, 1332 Massachusetts St. and KU Affirmative Action Board member, stressed a need for flexibility in the ordinance and the desirability of having specific guidelines and timetables developed before implementation began. SCOTT SAID that the ordinance should move in the direction of providing for equal employment opportunity and away from becoming a non-discrimination act because discrimination is difficult to prove. Harriet Nehring, president of the Lawrence chapter of the League of Women Voters, proposed that the Human Relations Commission conduct hearings in case of noncompliance and supported recourse to legal action. The Rev. Carl Johnson, 833 Indiana St., said that he thought the adoption of the statute would be "very helpful." interests of the people of Lawrence demanded quick action. "If we are going into specifics, I hope the people are there to back us up when the time comes. We seem to be spinning our wheels with this ordinance which has already taken six months to get on the books," he said. IN ROUTINE business, the commission approved ordinances authorizing the issuance of temporary notes in the amount of $400,000 to pay for paving and sidewalk improvements, and $38,000 to pay for the sidewalks in the Indian Hills neighborhood. The city manager was authorized to enter into a 90-day option with William A. Cherry, the City Manager. The land will be used to supply sand for the construction of the Clinton dam. The city will receive a royalty of five cents a cubic yard for砂 removed from the site. A site plan for the installation of a self-service gasoline pump station to be located on the Kwik Shop property at 1714 W. W3rd St. (205) 649-8900, concerning the implications involved. The present city ordinance is considered insufficient in regard to self-service pumps. 2 Wednesday, June 28, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs By The Associated Press Ticket Scalper Jailed NEW YORK (AP)—Richard Weissberg, who charged an undercover policeman $2 for a $5.50 ticket to a Rolling Stones concert, has gone to jail for scaping. Ast. Dist. Atty. Lawrence Herrmann said the one-month jail term imposed Monday was the first ever given a ticket scaper here. When arrested May 26, the defendant had 908 tickets in his pockets, including several hundred for the July 4 Rolling Stone event in Washington, Herrmann said in Criminal Court. ITT Case Review Asked WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate Judiciary Committee voted unanimously today to request the Justice Department to review the record of its investigation of the International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. antitrust cases for purposes of the Supreme Court's investigation of Sen. John V. Tunney, D-Chattanooga said witnesses gave contradictory testimony under oath at the committee's investigation. Castro Meets Soviet Heads MOSCOW (AP)—Fidel Castro opened talks Tuesday with the three Soviet leaders. The Cuban prime minister arrived Monday for an official visit of about two weeks and talks which are expected to focus on Cuba's economic problems. Western specialists said Soviet aid now amounts to about $1 million a day. The official news agency Tass said that Cuba is in an "opening phase" due to deepening of relations of friendship and all-around cooperation between the Communist party of the Soviet Union and the Communist party of Cuba." War Vets, Enemy Confer PARIS (AP)—Fifteen American war veterans opposed to the Vietnam conflict begin a two-day meeting today with representatives of North Vietnam, the Viet Cong and the Laotian and Cambodian forces. In Vietnam, the Americans are attempting to meet with them as friends instead of enemies," said Peter Mahoney of New Orleans, a former first lieutenant with a U.S. advisory team in Hue. The delegation of Vietnam Veterans Against the War said the purpose of the meeting was to discuss the Vietnam people and to work for peace in Southeast Asia. Welfare for Aged Down WASHINGTON (AP)—The number of elderly persons on welfare dropped to a 32-year low in February overall relief rolls expended by 87,000, the government announced Tuesday. The drop was driven by a rise in the number of Assistance—OAA-caseloaded decreased by 4,000 to 2,015,000, the lowest level since August 1940, despite a rapidily rising over-65 population. The decline was attributed in large part to higher Social Security payments, which have gone up 8.35 per cent the last two months, while the cost of living rose only 9.7 per cent during that period. House Allows Debt Extention The bill, limiting the Treasury's borrowing authority, pegs the existing ceiling at $13 billion less than President Nickel had requested. It virtually assures another professional accountant for to keep the opening options of tax reforms in the meantime. Without the extension, the bank would have to drop $400 billion next Friday. midnight, or more than $25 billion less than the actual estimated amount. He president wanted a $465 billion id进入 next February. The governor signed an Senate by a roll call of 211 to 188, the house defeated a move by Rep. Henry S. Reuss, D-Wi-, to permit amendments to plug what he has loosened favoring wealthy lawyers and corporations. Sen. George McGovern carried his presidential hopes into a politically chilly South Tuesday, and disclosed he was willing to participate in the Democratic party chairman, if he won the nomination. Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS McGovern Says O'Brien OK As Party's Chairman McGovern told a news conference that he had talked with O'Brien and was inclined to become an administrator nomination and with it the right WASHINGTON (AP)—The House voted on Wednesday to approve a $400 billion national debt ceiling, after being moved onto convert it into a bond. WASHINGTON (AP) — A bill to ban the commercial sale of snubnosed,不易 concealable handguns not suitable for sporting purposes won the approval of the Senate. Judiciary Committee The South Dakota senator made this disclosure in late afternoon at Little Rock, Ark., after he had described as beautiful the new shaped party platform includes many of his wives. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass, to tend to amend Bayh's bill to require registration of all firearm manufacturers, but lost by one-sided margins. to pick a chairman. McGovern added that this would depend on O'Brien's wishes and the ability of his two men to agree on party policy. Bayh's long-dormant bill was jarred losees by the attempted assassination last month of Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace at The committee approved the ban on the rejection, b. s. a rival measure by Sen. Roman L. Hruska, R-Neb. The ban on reliability and forunds for band In Washington, O'Brien said: "Sen. McGovern made clear in his call to his desire that a governor should be the nominee should be the nominee. "The senator did not seek a commitment and none was given," O'Brien said. Bill Would Limit Pistols Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind, chief sponsor of the measure, said it would place the weapons used most frequently by criminals . . . without diminishing the opportunities of sportmen and marksmanship to be used. Strategists for the presidential front-runner worked warily at the troublesome task of settling TODAY Campus Bulletin Enemy Troops Repulsed In Fighting West of Hue SAIGON (AP)—North Vietnamese forces attacked three government positions west of Hue under a rain of mortar fire he repulsed in bevy fighting by South Vietnamese infantrymen. Military communiques and field reports said more than 20,000 soldiers in the battles to 15 miles west of the former imperial capital. U. S. B2 bombers continued their saturation strikes along the northern front, flying 35 raids on Honduras and Vietnam's two northernmost provinces, Quang Tri and Thua Trieu before they struck Iraq's flare 240 more strikes in the OACA USYTA: 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Jayhawk Room USYTA: noon. Karena Room. Government losses were listed as nine killed and 33 wounded. U. S. fighter-bombers sweeping enemy low-range artillery pieces after a sporter plane saw an E.C.A. Camp Evans, 164, northwest of Fort Huxta. Tuesday was the 90th day of the Nov. Vietnamese offensive and the invasion of South Korea, and enemy shelling attacks on the northern front along the My Chan River. Caucasian figures killed 148 enemy killed and two prisoners captured with 49 South Vietnamese dead and 149 Speech Pathology: noon, Alcove A. SUA Bridge: 1:30 p.m. to 6 p.m., Pine Room. CUST#: 6:30 p.m. Karaus Koosak Graduate Student Counsell: 7:30 p.m. The Associated Press count of delegate strength put the South Carolina Democrats ahead, 1,598 it will take to choose a Democratic presidential nominee. McGovern's men claimed more, maintaining they were within a scant 20 votes of first-ballot nominating strength. lisputes over the seating of convention delegates. Council Room. SUA Classical Film: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota campaigned in Washington and Cleveland, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine in Washington, as they struggled to take McGovern's acting McGovern at the Democratic National Convention in Miami Beach. South, more than half of them on the northern defense line. The fighter-bombers also made 320 Monday over North Vietnam. BISMARCK, N.D. (AP)—Two governors, Conference Governors, conference take a stand against the lifting of in-mort restrictions by president Meat Imports Draw Reaction Of Governors In its daily report of bomb damage in North Vietnam. Ray did not favor a resolution on meat imports but appeared to be trying to steer the award a non-partisan approach. "I don't want to get into a partisan situation, but I think it is important that we take a stand," he said. J. James Exon of Nebraska. Monday, the U.S. Command claimed hits on a thermal power plant northwest of Haiphong and damage or destruction of four more bridges, a variety of weapons, vehicles and a petroleum pumping station just above the demilitarized zone. Hall and Gov. Richard Oglivie of Illinois were named to prepare the language of the resolution. Oglivie is a Republican. Exon and Gov. David Hall of Oklahoma first raised the issue. Both are Democrats and both repress major livestock states. Hall said he was preparing a resolution for action today. Gop lawmakers have Republican presiding over today's session, suggested that he post- THE COMMAND also announced a raid on the Bac Mail airfield and adjoining storage area at the center of Hanoi, the closest strike to the North Vietnamese base, and resumed full-scale bombing in April. Four warehouses were attacked, two of which others damaged but there was no indication of enemy aircraft loss, with server access匣 auxiliary MH173. Exon said the President's action Monday was taken without consulting any farm state governors. a shopping center in nearby Laurel, Md. Sens, Philip A. Hart, D-Mich; Quentin Burdick, D-N:D, John K. Erwin, D-N-C, Edward J. Ervin, D-N-C, Edward J. Burne, F-Rle; Hiram L. Fong, R-Hawali; Charles Mathias, R- S-C; R-S-C; R-S-C; Marloel Cook, R-Ky Bayh said his bill would pro- duce the sale of guns of the type that he had been accused of and the assimilation of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., in Washington. The only committee members needed are Bayh's list, which now goes to the president, who is Chairman James O. E. land, D-Miss. and John L. Me Voting for it, in addition to Bayh, were Hruska, Kennedy and Bayh's bill would prohibit the sale, except to law-enforcement officers, research organizations, and others. The bill would volvers with less than a 3-inch barre and of pistols with an overall length of less than six inches. handguns were sold annually in the United States. His bill would eliminate about a million. Hruska a bill drew the support of Eastland, McClellan. Thurmond and Gurney when it was off-road as a substitute for Bay's bill. Hart also introduced a bill to outlaw the ownership and sale of all water equipment it up for a vote in the Judiciary Committee. But Hart said he intended to force a vote on it in the Bayah Bay's bill came up for debate. Boyle Ordered to Prison WASHINGTON (AP)—United Mine Workers President W. A. Clyde Tuesday to five years in prison for illegally giving union funds to political candidates and was incarcerated last week at 179,000 an hour on legal bond The order of U.S. District Judge Charles Richey, who was arrested by Boyle's attorney not to send him to prison, was the latest in a string of legal setbacks for the 180,000-member union. Boyle was sentenced for illegally contributing $49,000 in union money to political candidates. He was unsuccessful 1968 presidential unsuccessful 1982 presidential campaign of Democratic nominee Hubert H. Humphrey In addition to the prison term, Boyle was fined $130,000 and Richer ordered him jailed until he could post an appeal bond for the total amount of the fines and amount of illegal political contributions. Boyle, hand-picked by the late legendary Mine Workers boss John L. Lewis as his successor, president of the union since 1983. Boyle was re-elected in 1969 over Joseph A. Jack 'Jabonski' who was murdered soon after the voting. But the election was won by the Labor party and a new election by the Labor Department ordered for next But Royle remained legally president of the union pending the outcome of his appeal on the election and the new union election. A spokesman for Boyle said there had been rumors that he would have to step down as union president if failed. Boyle's mounting legal predicament appeared to lead to a collapse of the rebels Miners for Democracy, a group of former Yablonski supporters, to win control of the party in October, ordered election later this year. "We don't know of any law like that," the spokesman said; however. Reclamation Center Is Moved To Larger Outlet Downtown December. By BECKY PAGE The University of Kansas Reclamation Center, nicknamed the Whomper, was moved downtown because larger facilities were needed. Chris 原主管 director, said Tuesday. Kansan Staff Write The Whomper is now in a building on the northwest corner of Eighth and New Hampshire streets. THE WHOMPER, which has been in operation since January 1971, is a heavy-lifting machine of bottles and cans in an hour, but it usually crushes only a few. Ketzel, Lawrence junior, said that business this summer, was slower than business during the winter. The move to the new campus may be affecting the slowed business at the center, Ketzel said. The reclamation center is now required to pay $300 rent a month for the building. The Student Senate is paying the rent. The Whimper which has made little difference in these operations if it had not received funds from the Student Senate. Archives Open Indian History Many historical documents in the White House and Washington D.C. are being opened to the public, but the U.S. has a hard time finding them. To avoid this problem, the National Archives is holding a series of conferences to inform information available to them. The purpose of the conference is to provide a forum for archivists and government officials to discuss research in the history of Indian-white relations. Various discussions were held at the conference. Ideas for new courses in Indian history and new methods of research were of interest to Robinson. He said he hoped to offer a new course in Indian history at KU next spring. One paragraph approximately ten lines in length in one of the guide books summarized 210 cubic feet of documents, and the same resource supplied Robinson with two pages of guide books two inches thick. Robinson explained that each member of the conference responds by giving a location and a very brief summary of documents relating to Most of the documents on In- terviewing are housed in the National Archives library in Washington, D.C., but copies available to regional branches of the library. W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history, attended one of the conferences June 15 and 16. XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Owens, Ill., which uses the glass to make new bottles, hauls it away. Ketzel estimated that 10 new bottles and 20 new bottles were recycled glass. Recycled cans care taken to the American Can Company in Kansas City, Mo. SOME UNUSUAL objects have been found in the bags of bottles and cans. Workers discovered a dead, moldy rat in a jar, and a human skinning machine, making sure that the smoke was harmless, workers set it free. Anyone may watch the Whomper in action. It operates from noon to six p.m. every Thursday and Sunday, Ketzel comes before 3 p.m., because the work may be finished early. Ketzel hoped that business would begin to pick up as soon as people learned about the new location. Bottles and cans may be left in the alley behind the center, but they should be rinsed and should have all paper labels removed. Alexander's RM TIRES Bottles, Cans to be Recycled . . . Alley used for depository . . . Kansan Photo by JOHN REED Flower Specials Everyday A dollar and up Klepsher Reg. $5'98 Kief's discount price $2'99 on Capitol records Capitol V12-1320 Wide Selection of Gifts 826 loway 2014.06.28 at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Sambo's JUNE SPECIAL During June, when you purchase any dinner item you will get the second dinner for ½ price. All you do is present this coupon. W Buy one dinner, second purchase of same item 1/2 price COUPON Offer good Mon.-Thurs., expires June 30 Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles Final Reduction Closing Out Spring and Summer LA PETITE PETITE GALERIE Swim Wear to 75% off Boots Tops Pant Suits Long and Short Dresses COOKING Reg. $5'98 Kief's discount price $2'99 on Capitol records Capitol. at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles Capitol COORING Welcome Incoming Freshmen May we help you with your housing needs JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS Surrounded by the K.U. Campus JAYHAWKER TOWERS KU APARTMENTS 300 2 Bedroom Apartments 1603 West 15th Not more than 5 minutes walking anywhere. Now Leasing for Summer and Next Fall All utilities paid—Auto parking included—Heated swimming pool—Tenant storage room on each floor—incorcerator dump on each floor—Modern kitchen with a central refrigerator—thermal for heat and air conditioner—Two elevators in each building—All-bricks walls and steel reinforced laundry for fire protection and quiet—Complete laundry in each building—Oridale exposure from room—Bath tub, shower, two lakes access apartment. The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see Convenience — Comfort — Safety — Extras Patronize Kansan Advertisers University Summer Kansan Wednesday, June 28; 1972 5 Schaefer 500 Practice Starts MOUNT POCONO, Pa. (AP)- Peter Revson, Bobby User and several drivers ran at at speeds in excess of 180 miles per hour Tuesday as a bright sun shines on the road for the first time in seven days. Working overtime to prepare for Sunday's $400,000 Schafer 500-mile championship auto race, Revson was clocked at 185.632 km/h (117.914 mph) and, Underer posted 185.234 in Dan Gurney's Olanite Eagle. These two thus became favorites to capture the pole position when two days of time trials begin Thursday. The fastest 33 driv The 2.5-mile speedway, a three- cornered layout that features two tracks on each side, had had been closed for a week by heavy rains connected with flooding. Unser, who won the pole position at Indianapolis a month ago with a four-lap speed in excess of 185 m.h., said the course apperence was impressive when he and other drivers got in day of practice a week ago. ers in the qualifying sessions will start the race. "Two or three days of sun will cure any ills that were left by the rain," said the older of two driving brothers from Albuquerque, N.M., "The asphalt surface is drying out nicely, much better than I expected it would." It was Revson's first action on the raceway. His car arrived too late for him to participate in last Tuesday's tuneup. He was the second starter at Indianapolis but drove only a few laps before his car out. All but two or three of the 43 drivers entered in this second event in the United States Auto Club's "Triple Crown" series of car races, some work as track officials kept the facility open for 11 hours. According to various newspaper accounts of the documents obtained by syn- derson, there is little in this new release of the papers that differs from material already published, including B. Johnson's 1971 memoirs. WASHINGTON (AP) — Another batch of the highly classified Pentagon Papers has been disclosed, indicating that at least 12 efforts by third parties from 1964 to early 1968 failed to move the documents to North Vietnam towards negotiations on ending the Vietnam War. Anderson's columns and the newspaper stories apparently are based on a summary rather than the four volumes on diplomatic aspects that were not obtained when various newspapers printed their own defense department study on the Vietnam war last year. Additional Pentagon Papers Summarize Efforts for Peace ers Favorites Score Victories In Second-Round Tennis WIMBLEDON, England (AP) - Towering Stan Smith and grevous Gwenn Gooolgong, the coach of a team that way into the third round Tuesday, but a rain storm delayed the game at All-England Championships. According to these new accounts, the portions disclosed from the records in the book by a Canadian member of the International Control Commission are as follows. But the Pentagon Papers are quoted by The New York Times of Tuesday as saying that Koskiy told American officials he had gotten nowhere with the bomb and had provoked fury in Peking. Kosygin started the British in action by making him might act as an intermediary. This was after Moscow had rejected such a role in the spring. Miss Goalagong, who drew an opening round bye as did Miss Irene and Karen Long Beach, Calif., had little trouble beating Marllyn Pride of New Zealand 8-3, 6-4. Evonne Skriver, falling down only when pressed. Chris, the 17-year back-court phenom from Fort Wayne played Valerie Ziegfenz of San Diego on Wimbledon's hallowed court. The TV cameramjoe poised for the entrance, the courts were hit with a heavy blow. The last effort involved an Italian diplomat, Giovanni D'Orlandi, who met with North Korea officials in Prague early in 1988. He attempted and failed to get both sides to stress the future of South Vietnam rather than the military situation at that time. D'Orliani failed, as did all the others from the time of the campaign. He was generally on the issue that the Italian tried to avoid: the American bombing of the North Atlantic military intervention in the South. The dozen different channels were given a various code names. "Pennsylvania" was the IT WAS another good day for U.S. players. of the eight men who played, only three lost. matches were Dick Stockton, Washington, N.Y.; Erik Van Dillen of San Mateo, Calif.; Roscoe Tanner of Lookout Bay; Tyler Gorman, and Tom Gorman, Seattle Youse will be an intern with the Kansas City, Kan., Planning Department, where she will explore the role of clientele in community projects. After her internship, Youse will enter the master's degree program in city planning at the University of Pennsylvania, where she has been involved in Science Foundation Fellowship. Between Seaborn and Pinetown, the people of placed private citizens of several nations moved through various channels in search of a key to the city. U. S. losers in the men's singles were Sherwood Stewart of Baytown, Tex. who lost to Van Kraemer and Alex Olmstead, a former Wimbledon player from Encinio, Calif., and Paul Gerken, of East Norwalk, Conn. In spite of their failure, President Johnson ordered a halt to the bombing of North Vietnam that began with the agreement to open talks in Paris. Elizabeth Gutzierer and Mary Yousele, both of Kansas City, Mo. are the first KU students to be awarded interdisciplinary of this type. Youle, both of Kansas City, Mo. are the first kU students to be a Gutterier will be an intern with the Kansas Council of Agricultural Workers and Low Income Families, in *Garden Hill* educational programs for Mexican-American migrant workers. Upon completion of the internship, Gutterier will work as a temporary public administration at KU, where she has been awarded a fellowship in National Association of Schools of Business Affairs and Administration. description of a channel used by Henry A. Kissinger in the summer and fall of 1967 to deal with Hanoi through Frenchmen Two 1922 University of Kansas graduates have been awarded educational grants for interships sponsored by the Resource Project, under the auspices of a Council of State Governments. This operation was given considerable detail by the Pentagon Study, according to stories in The New York Times about a student who had allowed much of the channel has been known for some time. Kissinger, now President Nixon's key foreign affairs adviser, was a Harvard professor in 1967 also a State Department consultant. One of the new details provided this week was an account that Soviet Premier Alexei N. The internship program is coordinated at KU by G. Warren Duff, research associate of social and environmental studies. and Ken Rosewall—were ruled ineligible before finalization of a peace agreement. Two Grads Win Internship Study Grants THE RAIN interrupted an exciting duel between veteran Andres Gimpo of Spain and dark red British players from Zealand. The New Zealander had match point at 2-0 in sets, 5-4 and 40-30 on service, only to lose the point and ultimately the next two sets. The score was 5-8 in the fifth set when the score was 9-8 in the sixth set. Richie Schienblum also drilled a Kansas City home run, his fifth, with none on in the seventh All the seeded players who maneuvered to get on camera played stop shots through without trouble. Alexander Stepanov defeated Russia, joined Smith in the third round of the men's singles with a 6-4, 6-4 victory over France's Bastien Limon. Royals Down Chicago, 6-4 In the women's singles, Kerry Melville of Australia and Nancy Gunter of San Angelo, Tex., both won their first round matches. Ms. Gunter, seeded third, beat Lancaster of Australia 6-2, 6-1; Vicky Berner of South Africa 6-2, 6-2; Kerry is seeded fifth. LAWRENCE ICE CO. Redy-Pak Ice Taste Free Crystal Clear PICNIC SUPPLIES BEER KEGS OPEN DAILY 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. 616 Vermont 843-0350 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — John Mayberry slammed a solo home run, a double and two singles for a perfect game at the plate tuesday night, powering the Kansas City Royals to a 6-4 victory over the Chicago White Sox. American League baseball THE 6-FOOT-4 Smith, an army corpse from palestine, Calif., showed more familiarity with the children of Rhodiae 6-4, 9-8. 3 Irvine with a powerful forehead, carried the tail, blond American to a sudden death in the second set but was able to carry the volley were too much at the end. Smith, the 1971 runner-up to Australia's John Newcombe, and Mey Goolagong, the defending champion, beat the downpour as did all seeded players and a strong team. The rest of four other men and four women. Smith was seeded 1. No when the professionals of the World Championship Tennis troupe—including Newcombe, Rod Lover Mayberry's home run came off starter Star Bahnshen in the eighth, but also had a double in the second, a run-scorring single in the fourth and a third. By DEANNA VANDERMADE Kansan Staff Writer Rhodes Scholar Preps for Oxford It is no small shame to be named a Rhodes scholar and Lewis Wall, 1972 graduate of the University of Chicago. He is spending the summer studying French, German, and Hebrew in preparation for his departure in September for two weeks to study at Oxford University. The Rhodes Scholarships were founded by Cecil Rhodes, South African explorer, statesman and philosopher. We bring together English-speaking people from all over the world at Oxford University in England to increase their academic success by seating them on this scholarship fund for this purpose. There are 32 scholarships chosen by the Board of Trustees in States that are Rhodes Scholars. The United States is divided into eight regions and each region must ultimately select four Rhodes Scholars selected from responses on their locations and in their personal information for tuition, room and board and allows for additional spending if a student not provided in transportation. WHEN WALL was first informed in December that he was the recipient of the award, his initial reaction was one of shock. "For the first two months I was completely stunned. I didn’t know what it it was all about or how to reckon," he said. A graduate in history and amateur science, study Oriental languages at Oxford and use vacations to travel through as many countries as possible. Now he has had time to get used to it and is busy preparing for what he hopes will be a career in academic and personal experience. Lewis Wall The school is oriented around a three quarter system with each quarter being eight weeks long. The students are geared toward individual research and there will be a lot of effort to pursue independent interest. TECHNICALLY, Wall will finish up his two years of work at Oxford with it a bachelor's degree, but it will be the equivalent of a four-year college course here. The course of study at Oxford is for three years and Wall will be exempt from the basic courses. There are only two exams given at Oxford, a freshman's exam and a senior's exam that not have to take, and a final exam. When he completed the college, Wall became bachelor's degree from Oxford. One of the most interesting things that has happened to Wallis receiving the scholarship was being asked to serve on Sen. George McGovera's National Commission. He received a personal letter from McGovera asking him to serve with 100 other selected students on the committee and campaign and after his election. Wall, a Nixon supporter, did not reply to the letter. Several weeks later he received a phone call from Sen. McGovern's national committee tackling asking for a forgotten password. "I told them the best thing McGovern could do was withdraw from the race. I'm with him," Paul said in the fall, "Wall said. Wall said he told the caller he taught McGovern was naïve; his demons were unswouled and his foreign accents were worst sort. He thought McGovern was "som sort of a screwball demoghet who has set his ideology over his life." ticularly looking forward to meeting the world renounced English scholars in my field who hang around Oxford. Although pleased with his accomplishments, Wall said it was extremely difficult to break from the stereotype of a scholar. "It is hard to live up to the gag attached to the title. People blow up your face, and turn him into a god-like specimen. I'm not like that," he "I'm getting nervous," he said. "I'm looking forward to the whole experience. I'm par- Although he is a book lover and collector, particularly of books on ancient history, he likes basketball and jazz, especially early jazz. He and his brother go golf and watch football out the United States. His favorite poet is T.S. Eliot and he 'plays at' the five string banjo. TOKYO (AP) - Southeast China's mountainous Szechwan province now has 86,860 miles of highway, 11 times more than the United States. Of China was founded, the New China news agency reported. JUNE 28, 29, 30 and JULY 1 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE Jackson 15 41 20 672 7 Chicago 36 21 623 5 Cleveland 32 15 589 5 Kansas City 28 32 467 12 California 28 32 467 12 Los Angeles 28 32 453 12 ALL PERFORMANCES AT 8:00 P.M., MURPHY HALL REFRESHMENTS AND ENTERTAINMENT IN THE MAIN LOBBY AT 7:? P W. L. W. L. Pct. G.B. netidls 37 23 57 50 alllarmore 37 23 57 50 lewland 27 31 646 6 olson 27 31 646 6 olson 27 31 646 6 olson 27 31 646 6 ANNE THOMPSON AS VIOLA Directed by STUART VAUGHAN TICKET PRICES: $2.00 KU STUDENTS $1.00 WITH ID W 28 L. Pet. G.B. Pittsburgh 9 10 671 New York 9 10 609 Chicago 36 26 541 Cleveland 36 26 541 Munster 27 15 313 Montreal 27 15 313 Baseball Standings Tuesday Scores Cincinnati 39 25 609 ... Houston 39 26 600 ... Boston 39 24 600 ... Atlanta 39 23 648 ... San Francisco 39 25 489 ... New York 39 25 489 .. kansas Shakespeare By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National League With American League Detroit 5. New York 2 Milwaukee 1. Minnesota 1 Chicago 1. Washington 8. Boston 7. Cleveland 6. Kansas City 6. Chicago 4 Summer Season Coupon $5.00 Box Office Opens June 12 Phone UN4-3982 TWELFTH NIGHT National League St. Louis 6-4 Michigan 3-7 Philadelphia 6-4 Chicago 3-7 New York 7- Pittsburgh 5-4 Houston, San Diego 8-2 Detroit 9- 2 ten innings BASKETBALL The boat followed the scheduled 15-round light-heavyweight championship bout of the team, a devastating left-right combination to the jaw of young Mike Quarry, jerry's brother, retained his title by knocking out the No.10 winner at the end of the fourth round. The end of the heavyweight match came with Jerry Quarry on the ropes and Ali hitting him at will. Basketball Is In by the fifth round. Quarry lacked steam in his punches and, at times, all lanced four and five shots at a clip. Lawrence residents and KU students get in an evening of recreation at an airtball court. It was the same in the sixth, with Quarry the 2 No challenges behind; but the heavyweight crown, busted under the skimming punches and twisting wildly Ali Steamrolls Quarry; Fight Stopped In Seventh All, 30. from Cherry Hill, N.J. began in after baking in the fourth round and also used appurts to slow his charing功. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Muhammad al outboxed his jQuery Tuesday night and watched the seventh round when referee Mike Klaplan called a baltit to their Las Vegas Convention Center. From the fourth round on, the big question seemed to be just when the end would come. The game 27-year-old Quarry, from Cypress, Calif., and sludged himself with a stick, with left and rights to the body early in the fight but failed to CLOGS of Sweden WOMEN'S Blue Suede, Brown Suede, Black Suede, White Pertarated Patent MEN'S Brown Suede of Sweden MADE IN SWEDEN Ohf Daughters of Sweden Ohf Daughters CIOES MADE IN SWEDEN McCall's The Chicest Shoes Store 829 Massachusetts 4 Wednesday, June 28, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Voter Registration Debate Mike Manning, the young candidate for Secretary of State, showed his colors at a Town Hall meeting Monday in a Tewksbury Hill Shade House. Incumbent Secretary of State didn't show. Jack Briar, an assistant, did. Manning, the challenger, appeared to have done his homework well. He cited studies and registration experiments from other states that emphasized the need for an active Secretary of State to vocational education and voter participation. Manning said the office could be a driving force in the creation of easier voter registration procedures. It sounded good to me. Briar, on the other hand, disputed Manning's contention that the Secretary of State was the chief election officer in the state and could initiate the local registration drives. He insisted that the local county clerks were responsible for the registration procedures. A contradiction? Not only does the Secretary of State appoint the clerks in the four large metropolitan areas of Kansas, the Secretary also wields a great amount of influence on the election laws that are submitted to the Court for mature each year, according to Brian. Would the chief election officer of the state please stand? The contradiction is heightened in a statement released by the Secretary of State's office in late April which criticized the Governor for taking credit for election law reform. The statement, released over Baiti's name, began "As the chief election officer of the state I" It seems to me that what we have here is an official who doesn't want to be one and a young challenger who does. Or perhaps we have an official but doesn't want to appear that way. It all seemed so confusing. Maybe Briar was right when he said that the key to the race for Kansas Secretary of State this year is recognition, not voter registration. —Mark Bedner New Paperbacks Reviewed Here are some of the summer paperbacks you'll be seeing on the shelves: Madison Jones' A CRY OF ASSENCE (Pocket, $1.25) is about learning to beginning when a young black is murdered. A prominent woman blames it on our trash-thrash her mother had her own son. Considerable moral commentary accompanies the action and suspense in this book. Terence Lore Smith's TheINE THIWE CHOO T DINNER (Pocket, $8 cents) is a racy suspense novel about a guy who becomes a cat burglar. It's headed for the movies. Donald E. Westlake's I GAVE AT THE OFFICE(Packet), 95 cents) presents us a television show that takes place at a New York restaurant but more importantly goes to cover the secret invasion of a small island in the Caribbean, Westlake's basis is a recent popular film. Stanley Ekin's THE DICK HUNT about an all-night disc jockey and the special guests who come on to show it reads a series of stories. Ruth Doha MacDougal's THE COST OF LIVING Pocket, 95 cents) presents a suburban woman accused of murder in a supermarket. Eleman Elford Cameron's (Pocket, 90 cents) BEEP, gothic—a pretty heiress and dunes and much fog and a marshland. Harry Cressy' KARATE IS A THING OF THE SPIRIT (Pocket, 95 cents) is about a karate cult—a beauty queen, a B-12 gymnasium, the boss of the clan, all of whom meet on a beach for their kicks. Editor's Note: On the edge of the impenetrable southern Philippine pine forest live the Tassaday, a tiny band of people known until last year. A newsman who accompanied an expedition of scientists to the home of the Tassaday earlier this year tells in the following story: Tasady Menus Reported By JOHN NANCE TASADY FOREST, Philipines (AP) The great island and recent visitors from the space age found ways to bridge cultural gaps. The Tassaday, who make fire by friction and have never been outside of their house, intrigued, aweed and puzzled by much that modern man has so far shown them. But some of it they want nothing to do. And for their 20th century visitors, adapting to the Tassaday's jungle brought buffeting challenge at mealtime, for exam ROASTED MONKEY head with brains, beetles, grubs, tadpoles, stream crabs, frogs, berries, nuts, leaves and flowers on side dishes for the Tasaday. They go with staples—ram-like roots, palm pith and the core of a larger tree that is made into a chewy flat cake called natak. One visitor to the caves voted unhesitatingly in favor of the cave creation, a curious cultiveer heart. The nakat was arkinite to munching a gum Manuel Elizalde Jr., the 35-year old Harvard-educated Filipino who left the expedition, had a near brush with mouse brain. AS PRESIDENT of Panamac, a government-supported foundation, he insisted that Zade has over the past eight years sampled a distinctive variability in the men's heights; "several items whose origins I didn't know when I late them and I knew." a rasaday woman proudly presented him the monkey head during a visit to the caves and waited The Tadassay were similar); the Tadassay foods. Rice brought the most favorable responses. Sugar was out; bread caused a screwing up of the dough. Clothing styles also were incompatible. The Tasday orchid leaf gairns and hearty skirts offered a fresh off-the-shoot of economy and availability. But for the outsiders, even relatively small patches of bare skin are welcome in the outdoors for thorns, bugs, leeches and raspy vines that the Tasdany used to eat. THE STONE-AGE people looked skaked at heavy boots, and they were viciously prevented one from digging in with his toes on slippery ground. The Tasaday hands, soles and knees were like tough leather from the exposure plate on the men's back, however, that he was having trouble keeping his balance on tough trails because his toenails were broken. The Tasday huddled together around fires in their caves when it was cool. If it was chilly, some warm saisons on them would warm saisons on them. During the first heavy rain, the visitors frantically rearranged their feet and used a dig drainage ditches. Three Tasaday men squatted and watched One mentioned, with laughter, that the Tasaday caves never leaked. THE TASADAY found flash-lights intrigued. Although they knew their immediate area intimately, the lights lighted to be able to light up the night. To these cave-dwellers, the only trouble with the flashlight was that no matter how hard they tried to bobble up bubu it wouldn't start a fire. Four fingers and thumbs in two circle places placed against the wall depicted in contemplates depicted one photographer, complete with a "lit" to indicate light. ANOTHER PHOTOGRAPHER, using a long lens became two fists, one in front of the other; extended from the forehead with an accompanying "gazee" noise account for a different shutter sound A leaf for a pad, a stick for a pencil and stiffly upright posture is often used to assist an anthropologist. A pipe smoke was caricatured by Balayam with a bent branch attached to the remnants of a bottle with studied nonchalance and blew out smoke depicted by a fluttering fingers in front of his face. The best came with a portrayal of the expedition's physician with a bag. Entering the cave meant sneaking into the slippery rocks for the doctor. Batayah-the-doctor stumbled, in backwards, losing an image of the cave and crestfallen by the mountainside. He gamely returned, stumbled again, and finally he himself saw the cave, breathes, and goggles-eyed. Historical Feature Laundry Rooms Needed During Housing Shortage The shortage of housing space for KU women once necessitated making laundry rooms into living quarters. The laundry rooms in Hashinger Hall were converted into rooms for upperclass women, the Oct. 8, 1964, Kansan reported. Though the rooms were somewhat smaller, they had bunks, beds, mirrors, desks and dressers were moved in to make them habitable. The laundry rooms were opened when the Dean of Women's office received late residence hall contracts. "There were a few technical difficulties at first. The girls didn't have their own mailboxes or intercoms, but everyone's cooperating and things are fine." Assistant resident director, said. "These girls couldn't have come to school this semester if we didn't found living quarters for them in the laundry rooms," Mary Watson, resident director, said. "Our waiting lists were not filled of the conditions before they came to school." "Most of the parents were thrilled because their daughters could come back to school," Delp said. "In general, the laundry rooms have proved to be more comfortable than the triple rooms in Lewis Hall." Mary Kay Amoneno, Shawnee Mission junior, said she liked the rooms very much. 'It is different from everyone else,' she said, 'something unique. There is a big closet and lots of cabinets space, so there's more space than Politics Ends Some Marriages By LOUISE COOK Associated Press Writer Politics and marriage aren't always the most compatible bedfellows. Martha and John Mitchell are the latest in a list of political couples, both Republican and Democratic, with reported martial problems. Sen. John V. Tunney's wife Mieke filmed for divorce earlier this month from the California Democrat. Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas, Republican national chairman, was divorced in January by his wife who after 23 years of marriag WILLIAM PROXMIRE announced a year ago that he and his wife were separating after 14½ years of marriage. Rep. Paul N. McCloskey, R- Tampa Bay, the Republican presidential nomination this year, announced June 16 and his wife of 23 years the then-Sen. Eugene McCarthy, like Tunney a Roman Catholic, left his wife in August 1869. 20 years after they were Mrs. Mitchell, whose husband, John resigned as attorney over his relationship to Nikon's re-election campaign, said Monday, "There is no reason that Mr. Mitchell is going." **SPEAKING FROM A sate at a Westchester Club Country in Rye. "cops and robbers game" and claimed he had been beaten up.** Phyllis Dole, who was divorced earlier this year from the senator and who now lives in Virginia has been quoted as saying: "A political wife has to decide, 'do I put my husband first or my child?' Do I leave the child with a woman? Can you pass a pagenail trail with my husband?' My idea was that you can make over a dress or a cake, but you can make over a child, so I can make over a little girl. Maybe I was wrong." DOLE, HOW IS 15 up for rejection in 1974, has been quoted as saying "We will judge me on the basis of what I’ve done in Congress and not on that." Mrs. Proxmire said that politics did not break up her marriage. She added in an interview, however. that politics did do special things to a marriage, "both in pluses and minuses." Among the minuses, she said, were the strains that "result from living in a goldfish bowl and the long separations." POLITICS ALSO interferes with family life "a great deal," she says, while very disappointing to the young people." She and Proxmime had two children from previous marriages and a son of their own. When Proxmire was divorced from his first wife, the former Elise Rockeeller, in 1953, he said, "Doubtless, the exacting political life provoked enduring conflicts in our marriage." Penn State Offers Gardening Course From Kansan Press Services UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.—A garden course offered by Pennsylvania State University during the summer session has been rated relaxing and economical by students who are taking advantage of it. The university, for a fee of $3.25 for the summer, has made available 50 to 60 foot plots, which are now sprouting peas, lettuce, and other vegetables. Melvin Kulichk, Baltimore graduate student in political science, said Melvin was a nice change for someone who grew up in the city. "When you have two kids and live on $60 a week, the things you grow come in handy," Michael Duffy, McLean, Va., graduate counselor at Johns Hopkins University. The Duffys rent a food locker and plant enough vegetables to last an entire year. They have planted corn, peas, lettuce, tomatoes and potatoes. To Abigail McCarthy, the 1968 presidential campaign "brought almost unbeatable emotional strength and disaster to our family." Masayashi Kuwata, a Japanese graduate student in fuel science, is trying to grow an American squash and cantaloupes, as well as other vegetables. "We are doing this for enjoyment and recreation," Mrs. Kuwata said. "We must save money, too." IN THE EPILOGUE to her recent book of memoirs, "Private Face, Public Place", Mrs. McCarthy wrote, "Gene left our home in August 1969. He had long since come to the conclusion that I belonged to life - long fidelity and shared life - was no longer valid." Not everyone views the strains of politics as harmful. Marvelvilla said, "You're not a liberal, Indiana said, 'Politics is unique in that it's something that a husband and wife can share so tightly together if they choose." Bayh, who had been an announced candidate for the nomination, withdrew last October, saying he wanted to be "a length period of breast cancer from surgery for breast cancer." Wardell Pomeroy, a well-known counselor, said he wasn't sure politics put more pressure on marriage than other professions, but added, "It does do some things to the negotiation. It allows the negociator in the woman as well as the man." ALTHOUGH SHE enjoys politics and likes campaigning, Mrs. Bayh admitted there were others who didn't care about one of the professions that can put a strain on marriage," she said. "They want 72 hours every day." "JUST AS IN the movies or in Marriage counselors see in politics the same marital problems as exist in professions like show business. business, if the politician begins to rise he will sometimes leave his wife behind him. The man who grows and the wife downgrades. Almost everyone interviewed was politically separated, stemmed not from increased pressure, but from a changing sense of agency. "There are no more problems than there used to be," Mrs. Bayh said, but "with changing at least 40 percent, it is able to be more out in the open." Pomery added: "Politicians now can get divorced without the penalties that use to be at risk of the political penalties that is." Cost-of-Living Index "We've finally rounded the corner and this have—uh—taken a turn for the be!… Readers Respond CIA Resident Complains of Control To the Editor: As a resident of the CIA House, I am pleased that the Kansan finds it interesting enough to have an inaccurate item, which I believe should be cleared up. I like the fact that it is not present there, but I feel that it should not be ascribed qualities that it does not possess. Notable are two: control of the house by the Kansan. The CIA is not regulated by the residents. The CIA House is owned by the University of Stellenbosch and is affiliated Association (UKSA). The board of UKSA has a contract with a group called the Co-operative Council to operate op) to operate and to do research in the CIA House. A majority of the board members of UKSA were employed are in human development. In fact, two people, Keith Miller and Rich Fellock, are in both groups. The residents of the CIA House have no voice in the contract between UKSHA and the ones do they elect Coop members. The rules that govern the CIA House are set forth in a handbook that is written by the Co-op. When a resident moves into the CIA, he must be approved by the Co-op, which in part states that he will be abide by the rules that are outlined in the handbook. The handbook also changes by a three-fourths majority vote of those people at the weekly house meetings. Since the five Co-op meetings are held and meetings are allowed to vote, their opposition to a proposed amendment to their handbook makes residents to make a change without the approval of the Co-op. Griff and the Unicorn X By Sokoloff GOOD EVENING, STUPID BLAM HOW BEAUTIFUL! l wonder if it is not really an experiment that is designed to help absentee landlords run their business, repair, cook and presently we are even painting the house. We do this not for money, but for points. Our rent money must pay for our own property in addition pay $250 per month (profit?) to UKSA. Once this system is perfect, every slumlord in Lawrence will use it and call his property a "com HOW BEAUTIFUL! "Copyright 1972, David Sokoloff." GOOD EVENING, STUPID BLAM In my more cynical moments,1 In addition, the Co-op revises the handbook between semesters according to its own wishes. It also considers its "asked" for "asked" not to its liking. —Stephen J. Schroff CIA Resident America's Pacemaking college newspaper THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN series's Pacemaking college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-4510 Business Office—UN 4-4538 NEWS STAFF News Advisor Del Brinkman Published at the University of Kannan four times weekly during the summer session. Mail subscription rates. Be a semester member and post your application as a package to us at admissions@uku.edu. We will offer to send you good, services and emailed materials offered to all students without regard to color, creature or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily the those in the University of Kannan or the State Board of Education. News Advisor ... Del Brinkman Rite E. Hugh Editor Campaign Editor New York Bob Norrland Cape Chief Photographer Carlsbad Rite E. Hugh Prin Brandtian Dave Baskoff BUSINESS STAFF Business Advantage . . Mel Adama Business Manager Doug DeYray Advertising Manager Steve Conner Legal Manager Larry Danesh National Advertising Manager Dary Bennett Promotional Manager Mark Bedner Member Associated Collegiate Press REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services DIVISION OF READERS DIRECTOR OF SERVICES, INC. 380 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10917 Wednesday, June 28.1972 University Summer Kansan 5 University Offers Study Abroad By PAM VINDUSKA Kansan Staff Writer Three University of Kansas language departments and the foreign study office are cooperating with universities in other countries for language training to students who qualify and who want to spend Chancellor Terms Budget As Modest By STEVE HIX Chancellor E. T. Laurence Chancellor E. T. Laurence the University's budget, now becoming completed, was the Kanaas Board of Regents, was a modest eight weeks of the summer in a foreign country "living" the language. "Many people have felt that the Regents and I have not been bald since 2001, and year," he said. "We are very concerned that the legislature will not cut off any of our requested funds. This is the reason for the amount requested." Out-of-state fee increases will help raise the general operating funds. The number of out-of-state enrollees is expected to drop, but the quality of the students should increase, according to Chalmers. Gaslight . . . Continued from page 1 " no evidence to show they (the defendants) carried on anything or to show they permitted anything to be carried A total of 97 students, many o-ten from KU, are participating in the summer institutes this summer, according to Anita Herfield, foreign study instructor. Riling heatedly criticized Vern Miller for initiating the suit against the Gaslight. "We... feel that he grossly overlooked the law... and the rights of individuals." Riling against his suit, the basis of this suspect, is In their closing arguments, both Melvin and Riling charged that local and state law officials had refused to acknowledge the evidence of their cooperation in preventing drug trafficking at the Gaslight and that no law official made any complaint to any of the defendants about drug sales in the city. The court found for the infunction was filed. At the day-long hearing, the last two witnesses for the state and federal courts, Scarbrough, testified William Rowlands, a son of Mary Rowlands who said he looked very light property, also testified. Ewell's first witness for the state was John Gregory Townsend, a former KU student presently serving a sentence in County jail for possession of cocaine and marijuana. Townsend testified that he made sales on the premises. Under a summation of 1971, and made drug sales on the premises. Under Townsend testified that he once sold Scarbrough an ounce of marijuana at a farm west of Manhattan. The state's final victory, Jim Haffner, patrolman, testified that in the summer of 1971 he had been at the Cashlight while on duty and as a Huskey said that he had seen cellophane bags transferred in the tawkes which brought them to the examination. Under a cross examination, he testified that he made no attempt to arrest him and that he did not drug drugs. He also testified that he never mentioned his suspicions concerning drugs in the Gaslight tank. When asked his opinion of the tavern manager Stagg, Huskey testified that he considered Stagg a "reputable man," but he never gave him a good lunch. Under examination by Melvin, Scaribour testified that he had seen marijuana at the Gaslight and Scaribour said he walked by a man who was lightning a marijuana cigarette and told him to " . . put it out or I'll put it out and then he put it out the marijuana on me Called to testify in the afternoon, both Stagg and Scarrbrough said they had no knowledge of the affe in the or around the Gaeldigh. A request for $153,999 for moving expenses was cut to $30,000 Chalmers said that overtime funds were deleted from the request made to the Regents. The money will have to be taken from general operating funds when overtime payment is necessary. This will eliminate some of the time normally given to research. Scarbrough testified that he had met Townsend once near the beach, where he described by Townsend but denied buying marijuanas at any Chalmers said, "It looks like once again many of our faculty will be jaywalking across the campus with desks on their backs." In testimony on the first day of the hearing, one nurse dressed from Miller's office, Marlon Lynn Jr. and Vikki Sinnenman, that had made at least nine drug premises, and had made numerous contacts at the Gaslight drug purchases at the hospital. More effective budget programs are being used, according to Chalmers. The computerized payroll programs decision making. The new information systems are planned to cut the time that is involved in obtaining data. "We are working as fast as our resources will allow us. The only problem now is that we are going down an untraveled path," he said. Included in the budget is a request for money to be used for the exercise positions at KU. These positions are not yet named, but are in coordination with the safety and the affirmative action board. Chaimers said he did not expect any cuts in the budget because of the budget situation, but if there are cuts, he said would the expect disability insurance program for faculty members to be the first step? "The only reason for this is because it is a new program. The state legislature seems to reject it and may not for some reason." Chalmers said. After Coffman's ruling Tuesday, Elwell said he had made no decision about appealing the case. Chalmers said that he was pleased with the budget as it now stands, and hoped that it would be after it left the state legislature. KANU Schedule TODAY 30 a.m.—The Morning Show 8:15 a.m. --Challenges in Education 8:30 a.m. --Campus and Community Calendar 9: 30 a.m. - Featured Works: Mozart and Beethoven "Most of the students are really enthusiastic when they return," said Herzfeld. "In fact, they're so enthusiastic that I hear very few complains." 10 a.m. News Noon—News-Weather-Sports 10:10 Noon-News-Weather-Sports 12.15 p.m. Nonrour Codelet 12.19 p.m. - Community Calendar ] p.m. - The Future of Control of Human Behavior 2.p.m.-News Weather-Sports 2.05 p.m.-Search for Mental Health Shrinking Together 2:30 p.m. - Managing Your Money: Economics - Phase II and After 1 p.m. - This Afternoon 3 p.m.—This Afternoon 3:30 p.m.—The Art Scene 4 p.m.—All Things Conquered Two Spanish programs are being offered, one in Barcelona, Spain, and one in Guadalajara, Mexico, for advanced students. Germany also has two programs, one in Berlin and one in Eutin for advanced students. There is also a program in Paris for intermediates. p.m. 5:35 p.m. Report From The Medical Center 6 p.m.—Music by Candleight 5 5 p.m.—News-Weather-Sports 7:30 p.m. — The Bruno Walter Legacy: The Age of Telemann Age of Treemann 9 p.m.—For Love of Music 10 p.m.—News-Weather-Sports To qualify in most cases, students need to have reached the language. The advanced programs require somewhat more proficiency. EACH GROUP of students is accompanied by one of two professors or members of the group. This summer, for example, each of the French and Spanish groups which contain 42 students has two professors who have two directors. The two German groups, which have 15 students, are one directive aides. Director KU professors selected by a liberal arts and sciences committee, and liberal arts professors in the group. 10 p.m.—News-Weather-Sports 10:15 p.m.To Be Announced 1:30 a.m.-Sign Off Transportation for the two-month trips is arranged through KU. The average fee of $975 includes overseas transportation, HERZFELD, who was a director for the Costa Rica junior year abroad program for three years, has been teaching in this type of program. tuition, room, board, special tours and cultural events. Students earn six hours of credit during the summer by taking two courses, one taught by a native instructor, and the other by a foreign instructor. —A noticeable improvement in a student's foreign language proficiency when he returns. The experience of seeing many new places. Cultural exposure is increased in students are allowed to live in prisons and the German programs. In France, students live in French schools. Herrfeld also said that traveling abroad required "an objective outlook rather than a passionate one." AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL ap proach is needed, rather than a critical one, she added. "You need to have a broad attitude to keep yourself adaptable to different customs," she said. Herzfeld said that American students had done a lot to help erase the "ugly American" Tickets $4 and $5. Available at Memorial Hall, all Burstein-Applebee Stores and LENNY ZEROS KBEY Presents B. B. KING and BOB SEEGER July 22, 8:00 p.m. Memorial Hall, K.C. Kief's discount price Reg. $ 5^{98} $ $2^{99} Capitol KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS SUNFLOWER SURPLUS, INC. 815-817 Vermont 843-5000 We are liquidating our entire line of Lee clothing to make room for more surplus. at CLEARANCE SALE Malls Shopping Center Western Shirts 6.49 5.00 Suggested Sale Retail Price Discount Diamond Needles Lady Lee Western Shirts 10.00 AND MORE Open Monday-Friday 10:00-5:30 Sat. 10:3-30 Thurs. nite til 8:00 Lady Lee Brush Denims 9.50 6.50 Lady Lee Cords 10.00 6.50 Lady Lee Overalls 13.50 8.50 image abroad. A 20-year-old is often more open to trying new things, and has the ability to communicate with the people in foreign countries, she In addition to the summer language institutes, junior year students in English and Costa Rica, France and Germany. An institute for Mediterranean studies will be offered in New York, where students interested in political science, international relations and history. And an advanced course in French will be offered in Poland from January to August. A new program in Scotland will begin this fall, with courses in literature and the humanities. Now Showing Katharine Ross Eve. 7:10; 9:30 Mee. 7:30; 10:40; 4:30 Tonight Price Good Adults Price Good Children Child, 75 Child, 75 TIM WAS A PET RATTLESNAKE, WHEN TIM GETS MAD STANLEY GETS DEADLY "Stanley" THE GRADUATE Eve.7 20;9 20 Mat.Sat.5 20;4 4:35 Twilight Prices Good For 4:35 Show Hillcrest A. James Colburn Jennifer O'Neill Eve. 7:45, 1:53 Hillcrest Mat. Sat-Sun 2:50 & 4:40 Twilight Prices Good Hillcrest LEE MARVIN & GENE HACKMAN 1 TOGETHER THEY'RE MURDER "PRIME CUT" Mat Daily 3:00 Eve 7:30,9:30 Granada THATRUE - telphone V1-3-STERA It's still the same old story, a fight for love and glory." GENE HACKMAN ACADEMIC Award Winner BEST ACTOR for 'The French Connection.' TWO OF JOHN WAYNE'S GREATEST R "PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM" PG Showtimes: 2:30, 7:35, 9:30 "THE ALAMO" Box office opens 8:00 OF KATIE ELDER" AND "THE SONS Varsity TELA121 ... Ciphegan V13-1065 Sunset DIVE IN THEATER - Wet on Highway 41 WANT ADS WORK WONDERS 25 words or fewer $1.00 each additional word 1.01 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised In the University District Kannan are offered to students of any color. regard to color, creed, or nationality. KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES FOR SALE Western Clv. Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them. 2. If you don't, You're at a disadvantage. Either way it comes to the same thing. Analysis of Western Civilization. Campus Mahonad Campus West. 14th. 7-27 1. chicken $14.15 | 1. lamb Beef Brisket -$3.00 | Beef Brisket $-8.00 Open 11 am to 1 p.m | Phone 842- 8100 | Closed Sun-Tuess. 7-27 North Side Country Shop, 707 N.2nd Antiques, used furniture, and lots of other items. 9-9 7 days a week. 842- 3159. Herb Allenberg. ff For sale. Quality 10 apes. Bicycles. Bike Shop, 1640 Broadway, Kalamazoo, Kalamazoo, Manufacure, Falcon and bicycle professional mechanics and bicycle professionals. 853-854-9244, Shop 14th & Manhattansts, 853-854-9244 STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can purchase this super-affordable COST, plus 10% at HAY AUDIO, 240 West 69th Street only via Vibe Discount House in the Bronx. Free tea, coffee and Consulting. 90. VW. Black w unwashed. Needs repairs. in rough shape, in tough. an offer before 27. Day 27. 684-347-8. Eve. 843-3883. Tony 6-28 Must Sell 1966 Sanuki 1500cycle Good cond. Helteds included $200.00. Call Gary 843-0165 or 864-3322. 6-29 Pipes, papers, and all smoking accessories are available at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 6-29 For sale: 1969 BSA 441 Starling Star- excellent condition. must well-leave- ning county. Ask for Clindy at 842- 3478 or Laye Goggle Chestnut. 9-625 New shipment of India prints just in at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 6-29 Sandals handcrafted to your person- alized taste at HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 6-29 KAT Sanki, 634 Mass., 842-town. KAT Sanki wishes to welcome their customers to our Motorcycle mechanics. He has 8 years experience working on all major brands of motor- cycles. He is the care of you and your motorcycle, and he also sells $165. sale price $1500. Also a home owner, sale price $4500. Also Honda 4500, IBSA Rocket 3 700c, IBC Harley Davidson, 700c, Bugatti. Ask about our Used Military Car watch for our Jolly Sale! 6-29 BOKONIST'S REVIVAL. New shipment of Western and Hawaiian shirts on Friday. Overall, teens eutons - 119, 81; adults - 119, 91. Vermont, 431. Westport Road - 7-3 Persian kites, champion club registered, with papers, pets or show bats even longer than we could hasten. Are the birds you need to Reasonable. Call 842-1310. Saint Bernard puppies. A.K.C. Bernard, bloodline. bloodline. health insurance. plan plan available Mont Rivail Snow 2. Box 201. Phone-733- 2063 1961 HARLEY 74, full-dress, excellent condition, new tire and battery, 18,000 ml., $1085, 842-8039. 6-28 LEATHER FOR SUMMER-Halter tops, shorts, both over all shoulders fringed and plain tops-now at EARTSHINE 12. E 8th- 7-3 Tank tops, peasant shirts, pants and jeans for men and women. EARTHSHISEWN, 12 E 8th. 7-3 All Blue Jeans $6.50—now and forever! EARTHSHINE. 12 E. 8th. 7-3 1965 Forst Golarke 500. 2 door hard- ware. 8 automatic. power steering. This week only-$355. JAYHAM VOLKSWAGEN. 2202 lowa 84KW 62-68 Porch. Sale-Clothes (some original samples), baby items, books, art, toys, more. item 110, & Mo. No. 16. Salem Sunday this week and next, to 10, to 6. 1971 Yamaha Enduro, 2200 miles—Excellent condition. Call 842-9320 after 6. 7-3 BRANDYWINE CUSTOM TAILORS Permanent Location in Lawrence Custom Tailored-Custom Styled Mens Sport Coats— $40 Mens Knit Suits— $60 Mens Slacks— $18 Deadline: 5:08 p.m. 3 days before publication 1 Knit Ski 1 Pair Matching Slacks $70.00 200 - Fabrics and Patterns 300 - Coatings Wool, Polymer Knits and Many More SATIFFANCE GUARANTEED FOR Measurement Appointment For Measurement Appointment THE sirloin Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks LAWRENCE KANSAS Fine Art Entries Place Image Entering Place Delicious Food and Sandwich Recipes Complete Menu. Stain Sandwiches. Image Entering Place 1) Miles North of the Raw River Bridge Phone 653-1431 Open 4:30 Closed Monday Our motto is and has always been . . . "There is no substitute for quality in good food." Kustom 100 amp, Plain head. 3-12 inch Able speakers. Also Stratoacoustic guitar. Both in very good condition. Music: 18 hours. 7-17 Fivedays 35 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 '71 VW Deluxe Bus. Stereo FM radio. Call 887-6228. 7-11 BEAUTIFU, BODY—1971 Honda CL 300 Serumier. Excellent condition- 845-8150 after 6 wkdays—anytime on wkends. 7-6 Glance 10-speed deluxe bicycle, blue And Zurücki Trail bike (blue) in 1970 with many MX assists beyond excellent condition. Call 643-72- 908 just. CLEARANCE SALE: We are liquidating our entire line of Ee “clothies” from the shop. Look for details in today’s paper. SunDowner Surplus - 4135 Vermont. FOR RENT LOOKING FOR A TWO-BEDROOM garden apartment, adjoining to the credit shopping center and public library, will be your best choice. Our bedrooms are on-site or call us at (812) 364-0900 to solve your problem. $2,225 will cover rent, $1,225 will solve your problem. In a wide range of rates, location in a wide range of cities, business being managed with the view of plumbing will be the most desirable. Will he be you did it? $799 Summer and Fall rentals. Furnished 1 to 4 bedroom apts. From $8 to $9 per month. Private privileges. $30 to $75. Utilities paid each. Early Bird: A2-5067 Early Bird: A2-509 COLLEGE HILL MANOR APART- ment, furnished rooms, furnished apartments, AC. pool and laundry, bathroom, 9th B, 19th B, 43-8220, 19th Apt. 5-B, AC with 43-8220 BEAUTIFUL ONE AND TWO BEDS located in Harwain Square, Iowa and Harvard Area. Apartment 9th and Avalon Street These five apartment features dishwashers, water and gas utilities closet large rooms, and are far larger than the two bedrooms to Mrs Purpure at 2017 AH Road Hard No. 842-2388, during daily spectet and get all detals on Lawn-room units. After 5:00 PM on resident students at each location. Req. active apartments, no act now? 7-27 CAMPUS APARTMENT LIVING winter suite. Sensitive and lovely one and two bedrooms furnished and unfurnished aisles 113] 845-846 For Nest-Princess mobile home, bedrooms, furnished, completed, with complex or couple cups; July 5, small requirement, 913-296-2242 or 316-876-3121. Apartments furnished, some al-conditioned, large enough for two or more; borders KU and near town, parking no. 727 843-5767 One and two bedroom apartment, furnished and infurnished at Ridggee, 24th & Guadalupe. Summer rates for Fall. Fail. Phone 8-75- 1116 ROOM FOR FEMALE in big, well- comfortable house. Free washer and wryer and dryer and dishwasher. Sum- mer clothes only. No laundry for Dearborn or Debryah. 6-29 Sleeping rooms—furnished, with, or without kitchen privileges, for adults off street parking, borders KU and new, northew. New pets. Phone 845-767-8721. Apt. for Rent, married couple or one person, please Grad. Student Reference required. No children or pets. Call 843-2402. Show daystime only. Drastically Reduced Rent. Rent for a one-bedroom apartment at a 3 bedroom unit, duffit garment all electric kitchen, central air, heat, residential area. Call 848-0255. Rent Now For Occupancy August 15th. Spectacular 30' x 20' room apartment, $950 per month. Excellent residential area. $195-$240 depending on number of students. NOTICE Chauffered water skip boat rental and lessons hp lf ff lt ski boat CASTERBURY HOUSE — Epicopal CANTERBURY HOUSE — Mon. 5-15 1727 Holy Communion — Mon. 5-15 p.m. Tues. 9:00 p.m. Thurs. 5:15 Fri. 8:30 p.m. Sat. 10:30 Pterus Furniture open Friday, Sat. and Sun. 150MPH CSC TOYOTA TRIUMPH Competition 2300 W. 29th Terr. Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 for counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary contraception call Center at 864-444-7884 or information at 864-506-3506 Call 24 hours of formation at 864-506-3506 SUMMER GAY LIBERATION Fun Meetings, Meetings in the Summer 7 p.m. in the Studio at 123rd St. 8 p.m. in the Studio at 123rd St. 644-409-9999, Write Box 242, Lafayette We Fry Harder. Vista Restaurant. 1527 W 6th; 842-4311 6-29 PLOITS. Do you want TALRIGHAD, Super Pipe Super Cruiser (DA-12), $13 per ship; Airtrodrome, 4 miles north of Haldan- berg, approved by the Féd. 7-20 German tutoring & translation. $2,500 hr. or negotiate Call Nina, 843-5295 SAVE, THIS AD! Want something crooked or broken? Rt. ticker knives, blouses, vests, bikini bottoms. You name it and I make it. 841-728-1584 TYPING INPANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-768- 7694. Professional child care for children 1 mo to 12 mo. Pull or part time 职位: Special designed educator. 床 7-12 Experienced in typing these, diar- agic writing and telephone work. Have electric typewriter with plea tape. Accurate and prompt texting. Experience using Phone: 843-2500. Mr. Wright Experimented tapping for your Theses, Dissertations, misc work. Call Ms. Trokel, 2409 Ridge Court, 842-1400, tf thorny, term papers typeed accurately, promptly. IBM Selectr, elite type. I will also do editing at reasonable kinds. IBM Dauv 840-797, 6504 Kouda 840-797, tmf Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electronic (typwriter), prompt, accurate. Mrs. Mauzan Kenney. Mrs. Raceau Kenney. Press 7-22 Fyping done on elite type- writer. Prompt service. No Thesis please. 843-0958. 7-24 WANTED Experienced typist will type your term paper, thesis or dissertation. Pica type — prompt — accurate. Call 843-0823. 7-55 Wanted: students to do part time farm work. Call 842-8153 or write Mr. Hoover, 1419 Ohio 10 7-33 Roommate Wanted: Fine country living for only $48.75 per month. Personal care, pet good care. Call 813-454-6468. Bobokon, 819 Vermont. IG certify. College Freedman (girl) needs full or job. Mothers help, company-secretary, reader for handbook, 1948-54. Household references. #2-7. 104 ROOMMATE WANTED: Female roommate required. Locate the bedroom apartment with fireplace, dishwashers own, bedroom, sink, bathroom plus month plus utilities. Roommate ID 463-04023 HELP WANTED Help wanted: Experienced bicycle mechanic needed part time. Apply in person. Ride-on Bike Shop, 14th & Massachusetts. 6-28 MISCELLANEOUS BRIDAL GOWN SHOW Sale-Size- 8-10 to 12 up to 75% off. Fall and spring fabrics, showing Thurs. and Sat. only. Galeira Bridal. 910 Kentucky. 7-27 ABRAXAS LEATHER leather goods-custom orders all sizes available 500 E.23rd 17 W. 9th DENVER CAR SERVICE Webster's Mobile Homes Your Complete Service Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts Ample Park Spaces Available IMPORTS-DATSUN 9 W. 6th 842-7700 Just West of the Drive-In Theatre OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE 0 TO 60 MPH -13.5 RECLIMING FRONT SEATS UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL. 842-0444 LOVE THAT DATSUN RAMADA INN Figure Salon 842-2323 new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule. Daily 9 to 10, Sat. till noon. 6 Wednesday, June 28, 1972 University Summer Kansan HALF MILL GARDEN Old Watkins Bank Kansan Photo ... to house Douglas County's history . . . History to Live in Bank By PAM VINDUSKA Vangan Staff Writer The Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum will give the old Watkins Bank building at 11th and Massachusetts streets a new Plans are being made to restore the building to its original Victorian state, and a museum inside will contain the collections of the Douglas County Historical Society as well as some new exhibits. Philip Humphrey, director of the University of Kansas and a professor at an adviser for the Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum, said the exact types of exhibits they would probably include some art, culture, natural and local history themes. The Douglas County Historical Society and the history and traditions of Lawrence Lawrence Chamber of Commerce are members of the board of trustees of the museum, and its staff will be involved in part in deciding what exhibits will be featured. Humphrey said. "I'd date for the museum's opening." "There is quite a lot of preliminary work to do," said Humphrey, "but we're hoping for a more complete end of the academic year." Charles Eldredge, director of the KU Art Museum, said efforts were being made to increase the "As the organizations taking part in the museum become more involved, I think community interest will grow." he said. historical Society's membership o aid the new museum. Shortened Courses A First for School According to Donald Richardson, assistant dean of the Schoo of Education, "The basic intent is to accommodate the professional person in the fields of education with him in in-service training." The Douglas County Historical Society gained use of the Watkins Hall, which generated a generosity of nine legates of Elizabeth Watkins, whose buildings were at Watkins bank in 1909. The building has been used as a city office building since 1978. By DEANNA VANDERMADE Kennedy W. Wilson The School of Education at the University of Kansas is offering for the first time a selection of courses in week short courses this summer. RICHARDSON said the School Twenty-two of these short courses are being offered this summer. The short courses are designed to cover the same subjects in a regular eight-week program on a more intensified basis. KU Receives Police Training Funding Although there are undergraduate courses being offered, the program is designed primarily for students working on advanced degrees or fulfilling requirements for renewal of certification. The University of Kansas recently granted a $141,803 allotment for continuation of its program of law enforcement and the Governor's Commission on Criminal Administration. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the Chancellor, said a state statute all persons engaged in forcement in Kansas must train periodically to remain up-to-date on current techniques in law. According to Nichols, KU has administered the program for several years, under funds by the Governor's Commission. of Education had found that teachers had a difficult time working their summer schedules around an eight-week summer break. They send calendars in public schools extend over the semester schedule at the University of Kansas. Consequently, some teachers find it difficult to renew certificates they need to renew certificates or complete advanced degrees. Elizabeth Watkins Milkens (1881-1939) made many contributions to the Lawrence community and especially to KU. She was an inspiration to all students of scholarship halls at KU. Watkins Hall, given in 1929, was her first public gift to the University. She also gave funds for Miller Hall, another university hall, in honor of her family. The schedule applies particularly to administrators whose 12-hour shift is from being free for an eight-week course. They could, however, drive to KU every afternoon for three weeks with less difficulty. Many other teachers would rather concentrate their studies in the summer than have it strung out over the summer and interrupt vacation UNDER the short course program this summer, a student may carry up to eight hours, or two days, of work in dean, but he may only carry four hours during any one four-week session. He could, however, carry one course under the eight-week program in one of the short courses. Richardson said that the short work with the children with a workshop program. In the past the School held workshops in elementary education, but they had not been taught yet. A workshop is designed to address itself to a specific problem, from the beginning and reach a solution to the problem within the time allotted. The students should short courses would present a content in an instructional manner and complete the same amount of work typically covered in a workshop. Other contributions include Watkins Memorial Hospital, Watkins Nurses Home and which had been her own home. In her will, she gave to the KU Endowment Association some 25,000 acres of western Kansas land, in part "the income from the property be used for the benefit of the University in such a manner and for such purposes as are appropriate and reserved for Trustees of the Association." Watkins funds have been used to purchase enough land to more students and to Lawrence and Kansas City campuses, and they have been used to establish the University's Library. The Wakatz Chapel and the Elizabeth M. Watkins Scholarships, the two programs women can receive from KU. Minority Rights To Be Checked Equal opportunity for all members of the program, said Gilham, in goal of the program, said Gilham. The program will begin officially July Gilham recently returned from the 1972 Summer Institute Network program at the University of Missouri, where he served until 24. The purpose of the Institute was to "train the participants in methods to achieve equal employment and education opportunities" and implement of institutional Rahul Sikh The Action for Women program is to empower members of minority groups at the University, according to a study released in November. By TRISHA TEETER KU To Get Board "We want to insure everyone an equal chance to get a job or go to school," she said, "and to do that, we must be on merit as human beings." change for women in higher education." Sessions at the Institute included a review of laws, comparison of affirmative action programs from different states and how this affects the programs, affirmative action programs in relation to students, the involvement of women in affirmative action, continuing education technology of women and the development of women's study programs. "IT WAS a terrific experience," Gilham said. "It was six days of sharing ideas and gaining new ones." Affirmative action programs are administered through the department of Health, Education, Surveillance and are subject to "competition" cording to Ghilam. She said that HEW conducted unannounced inspections of institutions with which it includes the University of Gambia. University's affirmative action board, which represents all members of the faculty, staff and student body. Affirmative Action for Women was originated by executive order in 1964 to prohibit all institutions with federal contracts or ethnic background for reasons of race or cultural background, said Gilham. Currently the board, is gathering statistics on students, faculty and classified and unclassified staff members. The director has three and two ex-officio members, with Juliet Shaffer as chairman. **IF THESE stipulations are not found, in the form of grants for research, building improvements, financial aids, are ter- was also prohibited at institutions with federal contracts. Hiring managers must complete programs and admissions to universities come under this THE BOARD is responsible for writing the affirmative action program that the University will follow. Chalmers has endorsed the establishment of an interim board to oversee the process, would allow persons to lodge complaints of discrimination by the police. In 1966, another executive order specified that discrimination because of sex The affirmative action program was set up to record and regulate University practices in education with the executive orders. The Affirmative Action for Women program will provide information and employment resources. It will also serve as a clearing house for job openings at the country, Gilham said. "MOST OF these jobs will be for graduates who want to work in higher education," she said. Chancellor L. Laurence Chalmers Jr. appointed the Although the program is not directly affiliated with the dean of women's office, Gilham said two worked closely together. She said that persons may contact her about the program or job opportunities by calling 864-3200. LOCAL groups may arrange for speakers through the Women's Center in Wesley Hall. Gilham said that the woman's mind was gained momentum as the hope for higher achievement increased. Gilham said that any outside group could receive lists of films and guest speakers through the affirmative action offices. "More women are interested in working and taking their own jobs, and there is now a real opportunity for career development and training." Bureau Starts Fall I.D. Work The Photography and Graphic Arts Bureau offers a wide variety of graphic design courses at Kansas faculty, staff and students, according to Edward A. Smith's website. Photo I.D. cards are one of the main jobs of the bureau, east of the main entrance. The summer enrollment more than 1,200 I.D. cards were made. D.I.s are also being made for the fall freshmen who are here These photo I.D.s not only help students during registration and enrolment but also make cashing checks in the area easier. the public relations work for the University. Besides supplying pictures of the football and basketball teams to agencies at the bureau also keeps a file of faculty members' pictures. Last year the bureau added color film processing to its list of services. Color slides of the University are now available to anyone wishing to place an order. One of the largest projects the bureau was a three for one long photomural of the campus. Free portraits are available to the faculty, and copies of these are supplied whenever a picture is needed to be used with a news story. THE RANGE of the bureau's work is apparent in a project done for the Special Educational Department. A new identification symbol created for the Center was later incorporated in letterheads, envelopes, personal cards, brochures, letters and mailing labels for the Center. Wescoe Will House Wilcox Art Pieces Charts and graphs to be used by the University, as well as and white slides used as teaching materials, are all supplied by the bureau. materials copied and reduced to a smaller size. The bureau can be used in dimensional projects so that they can be used in students' portfolios. and copy work, a preparation area and many darkrooms. Approximately $50,000 is allocated for equipment and supplies for the bureau. The bureau manages studios for graphic arts, photo THE BUREAU does much of Other services which the bureau makes available include portraits, aerial photography, illustration, film photos, catatapes, newsletters, bumper stickers, maps and mechanical arts. Designs for information books and individual graduate and undergraduate brochures are the work of the grahne arts studio. Most of the museum is in storage, he said. "But some pieces have been used by the English department for teaching purposes and some are used by the University museums for display. The bureau is available to students, staff and faculty for advice on technique, copying and cameras. government sold some art treasures in an attempt to raise money for the victims of the disaster, she said. Very few items belonging to the museum have been on display since 1985 when Fraser Hall was torn down, said Phillips. Coalition Eyes Formation Of Own Research Probe Graduate students utilize the service for thesis work by having Grant said that KU acquired a collection of those antiquies from a New York University professor in 1907 for approximately. $200 Julian said, however, that the bureau was not in competition with commercial studios. According to Phillips, the Italian antiques now valued at more than $50,000 are the core of the collection. The cost of the $50,000 is the inventory cost and not the replacement cost, as many of the pieces could not be Members of the Coalition concluded that there was little faculty support for such in-depth group may have to work alone. The Haiphong Coalition's Research Committee discussed the possibility of conducting their own investigation into some issues of the Iraq war at a meeting in the Council Room of the Kansas Union Tuesday. Some fear was expressed that the Faculty Council may stop the formation of a University investigation. Mostly, however, the University committee, once formed might not have enough of Phillips said he hoped that in a couple of years all the works of the museum would be on display in a single exhibition. "THE OBJECTIVE of this section of the bureau is to design something that will put the client into the Julian said. "All too often it is felt that design is an unnecessary expense. With the tremendous effort required, it may be received in the mail, along with those of other universities, design is a high element in catching the reader's attention." The Committee also held discussions on whether the Coalition should become involved in party politics, and in organizing information for becoming a recognized University group. The Coalition considered going in two directions in their investigation: finding out research areas that are relevant to people, and suggesting areas that should be researched to directly benefit the community. Among the suggestions for the project is "Science for Vietnam" project. Although maintaining an at- tention to the prospective reder, the bureau cuts costs by creating ways for projects to be done more After Being Recaptured Escaped Convict Freed The new KN inkblot calendars, designed by Jane Seymour, illustrator for the bureau, are one example. Beginning with this fall's calendars, a complete time-stamp is required. This bigger calendar will cut paper cost by approximately 50 per cent. their people on it, and would not be directed to investigate the most important areas. An agreement has been reached between the Wilcox Classical Museum and the University of Kansas to exhibit various pieces from the museum during display cases in Wesco Hall. The Michigan Department of Corrections placed James LeBeau on a probation supervision of Ohio authorities. He says he'll never again see the prison. AFTER A series of eruptions by Italy's Mt. Etna, the Italian CINNATI, Ohio (AP) — A man was charged with Michigan prison in 1986 and was recaptured two months ago when he stopped to help an Ohio police officer break into a car. He escaped in April 1968, and came to Cincinnati. A FAMILY man with a 20-month-old daughter, LeBeufwon help from friends in his request for mercy for a spot on a spot Last April 0, he saw a Cincinnati police man slumped over the wall when the officer stopped to help. The officer was arrested and charged in the report. The policeman ran a routine computer check on LeBoeuf because of a recent burglary in According to Oliver C. Phillips, Jr., professor of English, the Wilcox Museum, formerly located in old Fraser Hall, was to have been relocated in Wesco Hall, now under construction. The museum's curators reduced, however, plans for the museum were dropped, he said. The classical museum was first opened on June 15, 1888, according to Mary Grant, curator for the museum from 1949 to 1960. The museum also named after A.M. Wilcox, professor of Greek, and it listed five full-sized casts to be the most important pieces in the museum. According to Grant, the composition of the museum changed considerably in 1907. LeBoeuf was sent to a Michigan Upper Peninsula minimum-security prison for felonious assault. Quickly identified as a wanted man, LeBoeuf was arrested. The hoped-for word of his parole left LeBoeuf's wife in tears. LEBOEUF WORKS as a pressman in a printing shop in Cincinnati's Big Brother and Boy Scout programs. He Distracts Students By TRISHA TEETER Kansan Staff Writer Photo Instructor Avoids Pictures A tall, handcuffed man, struggling to free himself, was shoved and dragged down a raft of metal tubes and newsmen. He lunged at the photographers, attempting to distract them from their purpose. He covered his face with his hand and was pushed into an office. The scene might have taken place at a police station, but it's not where the prison is for photographers at the school. Journalism. Bill Seymour. photojournalism instructor. acted the part of the prisoner The act originated four years ago and was so successful that it has been repeated every year since, according to Seymour. During Seymour's dramatic portrayal. photojournalism II students experience conditions expect training in photojournalism. Working under pressure in a fast-moving situations is part of the job and the training received in the Seymour's performances have added excitement to the class and allow students an experience in working with other photographers and an un- Seymour attempts to escape from a student marshall three weeks later, saying that the first time, the students were allowed to move at will, falling on each other, and someone else coming up to call the "herd in" "I never know what is going to happen," said Seymour, although each performance is planned for variations. stinet' among photographers. The second escape requires the students to stay in one place and photo them. Seymour as he passes them. "I want them to know how much more can be accomplished if you are calm and organized," he said. The last escape takes the student outside for better lighting conditions. Seymour has somehow managed to get through his school, without injury, but not with any help from his students. He has been tripped, kicked, and hit by a bike, picked up and thrown once onto a car by an overzealous one. Photo lab assistants have poured beakers of water on him and stolen the keys to his hand. He always came up smiling. Seymour has had some surpise with the student. Once he planted a 'greiving wife' the crowd to scramble with the student marshall and student In a related incident, Seymour said, a photo lab assistant was playing with the handcuffs late in the room. He then entered the in the lab. Seymour received a phone call from the student, and he asked him to himself to a chair in the office. Seymour has always enjoyed livening up his leucites by adding unpredicted events. He has had a lot of problems with the face, has been arrested by a police officer and been served coffee and doughnuts in the kitchen. "You wouldn't believe it, but out of all the students in the class, only one or two ever took a picture," Seymour said. Kansas Photo by CHARLOTTE DART Photography Instructor Gives Student a Lesson Kevin Ragan, Sabetha freshman, bottom, and Bill Sevourn, instructor of photography, act out an escape . . . 10172453 Maryam PATRICK BOLZAN LHC - Kansan Photo by ROBERT PATRICK Anything for an Angle . . Stu Beals, Kansas City, Kan., junior, gets his picture . . SUNSHINE THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN WARM 82nd Year. No.16 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, June 29. 1972 Camp Concerts Begin Friday See Page 6 Demos Order Realignment Of Delegation By the Associated Press Democrats wrangled over new party rules Wednesday, and the forces of Sen. George S. McGovenn, in their first concert lobbying effort in the Democratic Committee, overturned the composition Georgia delegation to the national convention. The Credentials Committee voted 72-59 to realign the Georgia delegation with 17 new members representing $10_{1/2}$ convention votes. Earlier, challenges to four state delegations fizzled or were withdrawn. The four were Maine, Iowa, New York and North Dakota. The committee scrambled the Georgia delegation on grounds that some districts were malaportioned, that some persons were denied easy access to polling places, and that state officials had illegally presented a slate of uncommitted delegates at the Georgia Democratic Convention. The contention upheld by the committee was that these measures violated McGovens-promulgated reform rules on gender presentation for women, youth and blacks. It was not immediately clear what the changes in the Georgia delegation would mean in votes for the various presidential contenders. Much of the delegation is uncommitted under the leadership of Gov. Jimmy Carter. The Georgia delegation, as constituted before the successful challenge, numbered 30 per cent black - versus 26 per cent black women and 20 per cent women and 20 per cent young persons. The challenge was made on the basis of actions at district level elections, not the state level. In Washington, Democratic members of the House repudiated a plan for an overhaul of the party organization. They adopted, 150 to 50, a resolution saying the new charter was 'not in the best interests of the Democratic party.' The new charter, to be presented next month to the national convention in Miami Beach, would supplant the current national committee structure with an expanded national party dominated by locally elected members. P. J. Kline Ronald K.Calgaard Addresses Council Ad hoc committee on research asked Morning Drug Raid Results in 25 Arrests By LINDA SCHILD Kansan Campus Editor At least 25 persons were arrested and booked, including 19 adults and six sixteen. Kansas law enforcement officers, including Atty. Gen. Vern Miller, early this morning, staged the largest drug raid in Lawrence since February, 1971. A law official said a search was continuing for boat 20 other names named in the report. Sixty to the law enforcement officers of Douglas Miller's office, the KBJ. Douglas County Attorney's office and the Douglas County Attorney's office and Lawrence police force participated in the 6 At least 25 persons were arrested and booked this morning. "Some University of Kansas students are involved," he said. "Also one Lawrence High School student teacher and some Lawrence High students." Houses on Ohio, Rhode Island and Sixth streets were raided. No campus warrants exceeded 30 days. Forty-two arrest warrants were issued, most for sale of narcotics, a few for purchase. Miller said drugs found ranged from Council Votes for Research Probe By STEVE HIX Kansan Staff Writer After voting on several amendments, the University Council reached a decision Wednesday on a proposal directing the University to establish an "Ad Hoc Committee on Research." Faculty members were pleased with the proposal but student representatives said The proposal directed to Chancellor Chalmers reads as follows: "The University of Kansas has a continuing need to keep its own members and the general public informed of the sponsors of this research, as well as at the University and the results of that research. The 'Ad Hoc Committee on Research is charged with reviewing the present procedures now employed for publicizing grants received by external sources, and the manner in which the results of the research are disseminated. "In order to obtain factual data to report on the information procedures in the university related to externally sponsored research, we convene with the vice chancellor for Research and Graduate Studies, the Office of University Relations and Development, the Faculty Senate Research Committee and other staff members, to conduct a sponsored research in the University. "To obtain details about specific funded research projects, the committee will Until kangaroo meat becomes popular, Janish thought that American-bred cattle meat would continue to dominate the market. Janisch that most South American imported beef was usually high in fat and moisture which had made its use impossible in the past. Even with lower marijuana to heroin. Spoons and scales posise used for the sale of heroin and marijuana. "It looks like it would be worth a lot of money, but you never can tell," Miller The stains in the pipes could have been caused by wine, he remarked. It would probably take a couple of days to have the various substances analyzed. The warrants are permanent, Miller said, and could be used to return for those persons who were not at home this morning. interview the faculty members directing the projects. However, documents submitted and other materials contained in the files of the Office of Research Adherence are not available to the committee only with the permission of the research director concerned. "The initial investigation began in September," Mike Elwell, Douglas County prosecutor. "As a result of this review the committee shall report its findings and such recommendations as it considers appropriate for improving the methods currently employed for disseminating information about sponsored research. Information from the Committee's presentations of the committee will be available thru the Office of University Relations and will be submitted to the Chancellor, and through him made available to the vice chancellor for Research and Graduate Studies, the Counsel and the Executive Council; the Secretary of the Research Committee; the Faculty Research Committee and the University Council for information and appropriate action. A partial list of persons arrested and booked by 10 a.m. Michael Frame, 18, 2509 Montana, sale of hard narcotics (2 cases), sale of bail bonds (6 cases) Richard Patrick Cahill, 22, 3045 West 9th, sale of hard narcotics; John Alan Tredo, 24, 832 Louisiana, sale of hard narcotics; Jonathan David Katz, 18, 1229 Rhode Island, sale of land Lamb is also an imported meat, Janiash said. But lamb imported from Australia won't affect the industry here in the country, "because we're not lamb-oriented here." Kansas Union food director Dwyne Hail said that most of the foreign meat that the Union used was "inferior", filler meat. Hall foresaw no effect on the prices of prime cuts because of the the President's action. Maurice Edward DuPont, 25, 1525 Vaughan Phillip Hoper, 22, 1120 West 11th, sale of hallicensing, sold of hard man- ufacturing Donald Dean Mumford, 18, 1334 Rhode Island, sale of hard narcotics; Deborah Sue Turner, 19, 2200 Harper, sale of hard narcotics; Ronald Gene Robinson, 22, 1628 Harper, sale of hard narcotics: forum for the expression of graduate student interests, to represent the professional interests of graduate students, to advocate the rights and responsibilities of graduate students, to allocate student activity fee funds of all graduate students and to make available counsel to protect the professional constitutional rights of graduate students. John Erwin Kanzig, 21, 1524 West 22nd, sale of hard narcotics, sale of hallucinone McDermott said that Enactment No. 17 of the University of Kansas Student Senate provided for the establishment of student councils within each school of the University, but that the graduate students had not organized one before. Cecily Rebekah Stephens, 19, 1301 New York, sale of hard narcotics; He said that the graduate school did have a portion of the student activity fee but not said that until graduate students formed a group we no group could be made of the money. Tentative plans for several more summer meetings were made, and volunteers for several committees were accepted. prices meat merchants could not rely on the imported beef because of its low price. Janisch explained that imported meat was mainly low-grade filler meat, used for grinding into sausages, hamburger, wiener and lunch meat. Typical dinner items, what danish called "the good, choices, prime cuts of beef," aren't imported. Ronald Alan Reading, 23, 1311 West 6th, sale of hallucinous (2 counts); Gisela Buechler, 20, 1018 Ohio, possession of mariana: John Steven Summers, 28, 1016 Ohio, possession of marijuana: Local meat prices will not be particularly affected by President Nikon's lifting of quota restrictions on meat imports and meat merchants in the Lawrence area. “Basically, I don't see where it's going to help or hurt our business or our customers,” Don Janish, manager of the Wholesale Meats, said Wednesday. Louis Lehr, owner of Lehr Wholesale Meats and Frozen Foods, agreed with More Meat Imports Won't Affect Local Prices, Wholesalers Claim James Edward Martin, 25, 1016 Ohio sale of hard narcotics (2 count), sale of harmful narcotics (2 count) By MARY PITMAN Kansan Staff Writer Grad Student Council Sets Tentative Bylaws But although the President's action may knock down the price of meat for a week or two, Lehr said, "it will come right back up." The removal of import restrictions "won't affect anything really." Lehr said. Meat in Mexico and Australia is scarce, Labe explained. Mary Elizabeth Henly, 18, 1311 West 6th, possession of dangerous drugs; "If a graduate student has a grievance, there is at present no group or special organization he can turn to for help, no one to represent his needs," said Leroy McDermott, Lawrence graduate student and chairman of the meeting. Cattlement may, however, get a little uneasy, Lehr said. "I can't see that opening up the imports is help if they don't have anything to import." Some of the provisional by laws of the council are to provide a University-wide A newly-formed graduate council met Wednesday to adopt its first set of provisional bylaws. Twelve persons attended the meeting. Paul Isadore Paisner, 24, 820 Ohio, sale of speed (2 counts); The areas are: humanities and fine arts, biological sciences, physical sciences and engineering, and behavioral and social sciences, business, education and journalism. "One purpose of the council is to unify graduate students who are interested in graduate studies." John Phillip Kester, 21, 1132 Ohio, sale of hard narcotics (3 counts); Elwell had his office and the Lawrence police department originally handled the investigation, concentrating on suspected dealers of hard drugs. WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon elevated Gen. Frederick C. Weyand to commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam today and announced a consolidation of Army and Air Force commands in the war zone. The council is made up of graduate student senators and graduate area representatives who are elected from four areas in the University. Nixon Names Weyand Head Of Army in VN Weyland, a four-star general will succeed Gen. Creighton Abrams as commander of the Military Assistance Command in Iraq and later as commander of Army in Vietnam. He has been deputy commander of MACVN since September 1970 under Abrams, who was nominated by the United States government. "I was totally surprised to see about 15 members of the news media there this morning," Elwell said. "Our office had nothing to do with it." John David Kuhn, 22, 832 Michigan, sale of hard narcotics. "Eight arrests of persons involved in heroin were made," Elwell said. "This was not a hit and miss approach. We set up a police station where dealers passed over on previous raids. When we looked over the list of those booked, the names were pretty familiar." The KBI was invited to help coordinate the case later, he said. They concentrated on juvenile cases. Vern Miller was also contacted. Naming Vogt as deputy commander, rather than selecting an Army general, is part of the consolidation of U.S. operations in Southeast Asia ordered by Nixon. White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Weyand's post as deputy commander of MACNV will be taken by Air Force Gen. John W. Vogt, who also will retain his position as commander of the 7th Air Force, a post he recently was assumed. The original quota set for the Douglas County Red Cross after the Rapid City, S.D., flood was $1,229. After the flooding in the East, the Hodgetown flood was $1,458. But only $75 has been raised for flood victims since June 9. Aid Drive Falls Short Donation pleas so far have been made by mail and newspaper. The Red Cross has focused mainly on industry for contributions. Byers said that the Red Cross may have to start collecting contributions for the flood victims Seventeen cases originated from the county attorney's office. Elwell said. The Douglas County Red Cross drive for funds to aid flood victims in the east and in South Dakota has fallen short of being termed successful, according to Jo Byers, Douglas County Red Cross director. The Red Cross is interested mainly in getting contributions of money and supplies, and are too expensive to ship and are difficult to get to flood victims, Donations for flood victims should be made out to the American Red Cross and sent to the Community Building in Lawrence. President Announces New Troop Reduction WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Nixon slowed the Vietnam withdrawal rate Wednesday—to 10,000 troops over two months, but said draftees no longer would be sent to the war zone unless they volunteer. Nixon's action will cut U.S. force levels in South Vietnam to 39,900 by Sept. 1. This compares with a peak ceiling of 549,500 when he'd office the. 39,900 figure does not include the 67,000 participating in the war from Thailand and the 7th Flee off Vietnam. In May and June, troops were pulled out at the rate of 10,000 a month, but with the remaining force getting ever smaller and Hanoi's army continuing its Southern offensive, Nixon opted for a go-slower approach at this time. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said many 4,000 draftees already in South Vietnam, or with those holding current orders to go there would not be affected by Nixon's decision to restrict war-zone service to drafted volunteers and regulars. The White House spokesman said he had nothing new to report on the search for a bombing suspect. But, he announced that Nixon would hold a television-radio new conference in the East Room of the White House Thursday to discuss what the subject is certain to arise. The exact time of the news conference, Nikon's first before network cameras and microphones since Nov. 12, 1971, has not yet been announced. As for possible further troop cutbacks, Ziegler said. "We will have another announcement on this subject before Sept. 1." The two-month cut of 10,000 men, he said, was based on an assessment that they could be withdrawn without threatening the remaining American forces and "without jeopardy to the Vietnamese program." Ziegler was questioned about uniformed Americans was asked to sit down. A station员 was asked how many of the 10,000 involved in Wednesday's announcement would be simply transferred to Thailand or elsewhere in the area. Pentagon sources said some 45,000 Americans now are in Thailand, compared with about 32,000 before the buildup prompted by Hanoi's offensive. He suggested such transfers would involve "a miniscule number." ★★★ Inductees To Be Allowed To Join Reserves,Guard By BOB FULKERSON Kansan Staff Writer Within the last week some major changes have occurred in the Selective Service System which will affect all men under the threat of being drafted. After Friday even those men who have been ordered to report for induction will be required to report for guard unit, according to Mrs. Edith H. Cordell, administrative secretary to Local Draft Board No. 18. The registrant must do this at least 10 days before he is to be "I am delighted and I think the boys are Cordell, who has been with Local Boys." She said that any registrant who had an induction reporting date on one of the first fifteen days in July could have his induction date delayed up to 15 days to allow him time to find a reserve or national guard unit to join. "I think they should be able to volunteer for the service they want," Mrs. Cordell said. "This way they are not pressured into them, and they know whether or not they have to. "We have received our August draft call instructions and they say to send induction notices to those eligible with lottery cards. The only persons who are only three who will receive notices. Wednesday, President Nixon announced that starting immediately, no draftew would be sent to Vietnam unless he volunteered. Mrs. Cordell said she was glad that Vietnam duty had been made voluntary. "There are men who like to be in a combat situation," she said. "In fact there are some that volunteer to go back two or three times." 1 "But," she said, "if a man doesn't want to go he shouldn't have to." 2 Thursday, June 29,1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Meat Price Freeze Asked WASHINGTON (AP) — Rep. Benjamin S. Rosenthal, D-N.Y., and 23 co-sponsors introduced a measure to today freeze meat prices for 45 days at April 1971 retail levels. Rosenthal said the roll back to April 1971 would reduce retail beef prices an average of about 8 cents a pound and pork prices about 10 cents a pound. About one-fourth of the typical consumer's food dollar is spent for meat. Seed-Spitting Sanctioned NEOSHO, Mo. (AP)—Neosho has received official sanction for a world championship watermelon seed-speining contest July 8. Jim Morris, news director of KBTN radio, said Wednesday the event was sanctioned by Frank Spencer, editor of the Pawshuka Journal Capital, Pawshuka, Okla., and owner of International Seed-Spitting Institution, Ltd. In a letter to the radio station, Spencer said the $10,000 sanctioning fee would be waived due to “the excellent relationship between Missouri and Oklahoma.” New Fuel Source Seen DENVER (AP)—Fuel from oil shale will be on the market by 1982, Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton said Wednesday. He added, however, there was no single answer to the nation's energy crisis. Some oil shale leases already have been made in Colorado, but Morton said signatures of those leases would be required by the 1986. He noted the vast oil shale reserves in Colorado, Wyoming and Utah, and said, "If I am convinced that all the environmental objections can be resolved, we will proceed with lease offerings later this year." Economic Slowdown Hinted WASHINGTON (AP) — The government's leading economic indicators for May gained only slightly, pointing to a possible slowdown in economic activity, a Commerce Department report showed Wednesday. A Commerce Department analyst said no one was likely to be affected by the increase. The composite index of leading indicators increased by 0.12 per cent over April, the worst performance in a year. Debate By Teachers On Unions Emerges ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AJ) A long-simmering, bitter struggle over whether the National Education Association should affiliate with teacher groups in Texas broke into a war Wednesday. Several leaders at the NEA's 110th annual meeting said the fight over merging with the American Federation of Association ofSPHs and the 1.2-member teacher organization down the middle. works in a big union." In broke into the open before the 7.300 delegates when Dr. Sam Lambert, a vice secretary, attackers' fertilization with the AFL-CIO. He said the association's New York State affiliate, which recently opened its office in United Federation of Teachers will see how democracy really He predicted that Albert smaker president elected an union, would have "one-man control of teachers of New York. in less Shanker is a delegate to the NEAconvention, as a result of the merger. Lambert implied that the NEA should consider refusing to affiliate with the merged New York teachers. The NEA's board of directors has proposed that NEA refuse to take part in any future merger. The board will also hold a membership. But the board included a grandfather clause that would recognize the New York merger and those in Los Angeles, Cleveland, Fint and Glibratera, Mich. Supplies Now Flooding Disaster-Stricken East By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The United States senate has come to the aid of flood victims in New York and Florida, but she has a violinist in Oklahoma City. So overwhelming has been the national good will that some Americans have said yesterday—this time by supplies. "The problem has become a storage and distribution," said an official of the National Civil Defense in Albany. "We have tons of supplies coming into the country." store the material and no way to distribute it unless people come to us." Instead of food, clothing and the like, the American Red Cross suggested cash donations for flood victims—the money's easier to distribute and enables families to buy what they need In line with this, the Senate voted on Wednesday $200 million in emergency flood aid—including a President Nixon had requested. BELTS SANDALS HANDBAGS WATCHBANDS LEATHER GARMENTS LEATHER ACCESSORIES ALSO: MOCCASINS FRYE BOOTS HIKING BOOTS PRIMARILY LEATHER craftsmen of fine leather goods 812 Massachusetts PRIMARILY LEATHER craftsmen of fine leather goods 812 Massachusetts ON THE NORTHERN FRONT. Vietnam (AP) —More than 20,000 South Vietnamese marines paratroopers and armored cavalrymen plunged into the river in a night nesday in their first counteroffensive against enemy encroachment forces there. Elements of four enemy divisions have had two months to consolidate their hold on South Carolina and province since they captured it May 1, but government field commanders advancing along a S. Viets Launch Attack To Liberate Quang Tri The women braved threats and insults from the gunmen and their sympathizers. Some underwent the traditional tar-and-chain warfare they fought to outwomen who defy the IRA or fraternize with British soldiers. About 25 women have died in the sarcificial fighting that has torn Northern Ireland. Hungry young soldiers bomb blasts and gun battles. Hospitals report a major increase in nervous disorders among women of the province after an alteration either the tension on tranquilizers. Marine Brig Gen. Bui Thean Lung was asked if he expected to seize the provincial capital, Quang Trial and repiled "Maybe not only Quang Trial but also today is a good day tomorrow may be better." broad front were confident of retaking Quang Tri. The jumpoff point for the coordinated thrust along a 10-mile front stretch from the South China Sea. On June 23, the river of Highway 1 was the My Chanb River defense line. The river front is 25 miles nor- Field reports said the government paratroopers and accompanying armor got off to a good start along with a bay of enemy resistance in the afternoon. Details of fighting by airborne units were not available because the aircraft carried armed newmen from his bases. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) — The petticoat of peacemakers of Northern Ireland claim to have done what the U.K. did to protect its years of violence—force guerrilla outlaws to lay down their guns. The provisional wing of the outlawed Irish Republican Army in Northern Ireland came a few days before following a peace protest led by war-weary women. The peace revolt among the Ulster nationalist staunch IRA strongholds of Belfast and Londonderry was a major reason for the guerrilla's success. A major force behind the SAIGON (SP)—The commander of U.S. Air Force F4 Phantoms said Wednesday that laser and television guided smart bombs were being militarily deployed to Vietnam's war capability while holding civilian casualties to a minimum. Irish Women Claiming Victory Casualty Reduction Credited to Bomb Col. Carl Miller, the commander, also reported that the MIG 62s raided farmers growing as North America nelips pilots gained battle experience but the danger from enemy fire had risen north of the demilitarized zone. The 42-year-old commander of the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing (TFW) has been named newsmen the pimpout accuracy of the "smart" bombs enbaked four aircruiser do the damage 100 times using conventional weapons. revealing details of their guidance systems for the first time, said that with both, a pilot was able to retrieve before the bombs were released. A camera guides the television bomb to its objective. The second system, using a laser beam imbedded on a surface, bombs on target within five feet. Miller, a veteran combat pilot from New Braunfels. Tex.. Planes using lasers are able to veer off immediately upon releasing their bombs but TV guidance requires the aircraft to keep the target on screen for up to 20 seconds of the bombs hit home, said Miller. "Smart" bombs have an error margin of only five feet and have been dropped on narrow bridges and right into the mouths of caves Miller reported Both systems would be used by a single aircraft. He said the Air Force has been using "smart" bombs for up to two years against tanks, trucks and military targets in Vietnam. BACK DOOR SALE 1/2 "FIRST CHOICE" OF FABULOUS SAVINGS DRESSES SKIRTS SMORTS KNIT TOPS PANTS BLOUSES BATHING SUITS JACKETS BELTS PURSES ALL WEATHER COATS Open Thursday 11:30 the VILLAGE SET ALL SALES FINAL-ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED 922 MASS. City Prepares For Trouble At Convention MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) — The Miami Beach City Council gave police Cherry Rocky Poverence power Wednesday to declare states of emergency and curfews during the presidential re-election contests before retained the right to veto his actions. The emergency ordinance provided that if Pomerance should proclaim a state of emergency, the mayor or city manager would call the council into session to determine if his action was justified. If not, he reserved the power to terminate it. The action came after the council listened to a long procession of fearful citizens. Most pleaded for more power and respect against an anticipated invasion by thousands of protesters. One other ordinance, permitting the formation of police committees and associations, was adopted but the council threw out eight additional proposed statutes. The vote on such ordinance was a manual 60% on Capitol/Apple Records $299 $5.98 LPs on Capitol/Apple Records $299 at KIEF'S Discount Records 711 W. 23rd MALLS SHOPPING CENTER KIEF'S POLICE POLICE FURTHER REDUCTIONS During Our Annual Summer Sale Check These Bargains as Our Prices Come Down. SUITS Entire Stock Reduced 10-50% Double Knit DRESS SLACKS 200 pair now 1/3 off SPORT COATS Entire Stock Reduced 10-50% Long Sleeve DRESS SHIRTS one large group now 1/3 off JEANS one large group many styles and colors 1/3 off Short Sleeve DRESS SHIRTS entire stock reduced by 1/3 Short Sleeve KNIT SHIRTS entire stock 1/3 off TIES one large group now 1/2 price SHOES & BOOTS entire stock reduced 10-50% Come In Soon While the Selection Is Good The University Shop The Next to Discount Records 1420 Crescent Rd. Hours 9:30-5:30 distaff disproportion that disarmed the nation and together, a unique group of Protestant and Catholic women who began to press for peace 18 K Now Showing Dustin Katharine Hoffman Ross A for bas is Fre assi Bri THE GRADUATF Hillcrest Eve, 7:30, 9:30 Mat, Sat & Sun; 2:30, 4:30 Tonghui Prices Good Adults, 1.50, Childs, 7.50 Adults, 1.50, Childs, 7.50 Eve 7, 10; 9, 20 Mat. Sat. Sun 4, 10; 4, 35 Twilight Prices Good For 4;35 Show "Stanley" TIM WAS A PET RATTLESAKE, WHEN TIM GETS MAD STANLEY GETS DEADLY The Hillcrest James Colburn Jennifer O'Neill Eve. 7:45, 9:40 图 THE CAREY TREATMENT Mat.Sat 2:50 8:40 4:40 Twilight Night For 4:40 show Hillcrest LEE MARVIN & GENE HACKMAN TOGETHER THEY'RE MURDER "PRIME CUT" FRED FREDERICKS R Mat Daily 3:00 Eve 7:30, 9:30 GENE HACKMAN ACADEMY Award Winner BEST ACTOR The Ernest Hemingway Granada THEATRE...hiphop VI 3-STUDIO "It's still the same old story, a fight for love, and glory." Planned Picture presents - WOODY ALLEN - "PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM" PG Showtimes: 2:30, 7:15, 9:30 Varsity TRAILER - Tobias W. Hensley JOHN WAYNE'S GREATEST "THE ALAMO" AND "THE SONS OF KATIE ELDER" Box office opens 8:00 Sunset HAVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 44 Far Out Tom Laughlin Is Back IN "BORN LOSERS" This WEEKEND Box Office opens 8:00 Sunset Live In the Kitchen West on Highway 49 ned ten of hen 18 University Summer Kansan Thursday, June 29. 1972 3 KU Freshman Coach Ryun Eyes Munich Berth Takes Job at BYU After a year as freshman coach for the University of Kansas basketball team, Bob Frederick is moving on. As of July 11, he has completed his assistant to Glenn Potter at Brigham Young University. "It was a tough decision to make," said Frederick. "Both my wife and I are from KU." The major factor in his decision was the move he up'd be making to the job. The BVL. The move will also mean an increase in salary for needy people. "I'm going to take my time, look around, and get a good man." Owens said. Frederick is the third freshman coach Owens has seen leave during his years as head coach. He will lead a head coaches in other schools. "These guys come in, get some exposure, and eventually get the opportunity to position I’m pleased Bob is getting this chance to advance." Frederick said that being at KU was valuable. Kansas Coach Ted Owens said "no particular rush" to get a replacement for Frederick. "Kansas has always been a quality name in basketball so when other schools need someone to look here," Frederick said. Youth Wins Tennis Debut Bob Frederick Frederick is not worried about conflicting loyalties should BYU play in the future. As freshmen, he was a member of Cofeffey Junior College, many of whose team members he recruited and coached before he graduated. EUGENE, Ore. (AP) —The spotlight will be on Jim Riyau and his allergies when U.S. Olympic track and field trials begin Thursday over the fast wind buildup at the University of Oregon The KU freshman team defeated Coffeyville in overtime Amateur health buffs from throughout the country have suggested eurasian ranging from the UK but the Kansas star will be unable to lug any extra equipment or makes his bid for a trip to Munich. His sternest competition in the 150 meters is expected from the United States collegiate champion, and Tom Vu Ruden, an old rivals, and Tom Ryun, the world record holder in the mile, 1,500 meters and half-mile apparently has won his battle. He is also still is troubled with hay fever. There is something in this Oregon atmosphere that gets him to cry. RYUN WILL try to qualify in two events—the 1,500 meters and the 800 meters. Considerable attention will be centered on Steve P寓flontaine, the boy wanderer from the University of Minnesota to the berth in the 5,000 meters. Competition in the sprints, a perennial U.S. strong point, is considered wide open. trailing in the final set, beat Ziegenfuss of San Diego 1-6, 1-6, 3-3, 3-1 in a surging finish. Challengers will include George Young, Tracy Smith, Jack Bachelor, Frank Shorter and Tom Laris. EDDIE HART, Warren Edmonson, Ivory Crockett, Herb Washington, Marshall Dill, Ger- old Tinker and Mel Pender will shoot for the four sprint spots. Three men will go to Munich in the 100 meters and a fourth will go for the 400-meter relay team. The three men will well contested, with Larry Black, Willie Deckard and Larry Burton joining the field from the 100. WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — the Birmingham fans of British battles with a fighting victory in her debate at the Wimbledon Champions- hip. Ken Swenson and Mark Winken ried is challenged by the 1,500 specialists as well as Rick Eve Straub and Willie Thomas. The 800 field of Juris Luzins The 17-year-old prodigy from Lauderdale, Fla., after twice Baseball Standings Hockey League Director Attacks Reserve Clause That committee is considering a proposal by Sen. Wardow M. Wilson, the former commissioner of a federal sports commission to oversee professional sports. The comments by Alan Eisenberg, an Assistant to the NHL President Clarence Campbell, who followed him to serve as Senate Commitee. Committee. WASHINGTON (AP)—The head of the National Hockey League players Association told a Senate committee Wednesday to reuse the common draft and increase the qualifying talent among teams. American League East Chris's triumph highlighted a successful day for American players, but Chris Gleiber of Boston beat second-seconded life Nastassja Eagleson told the committee. "I do not feel that an adjustment He said the clause, which binds a player to the team that drafted him until that team was willing to trade or release him, was not doing its job of spreading out the team among professional teams. "What could be more out of balance," he said, "than the Montreal Canadians winning the Stanley Cup up to 12 times in the past 17 years?" W. L. Ptl. G.B. Detroit 25 34 28 18 Baltimore 34 28 18 Boston 27 33 490 7 Chicago 27 33 490 7 New York 26 34 28 18 Philadelphia 34 28 18 or the removal of the reserve clause will result in calamity." Eagleton suggested that Congress should address the private reserve clause before the various players associations decide to lift the cap. W L O P T Oakland 32 41 261 687 5 Chicago 42 21 568 5 7 Detroit 29 32 501 5 7 Kansas City 29 32 475 12 California 32 37 413 12 New York 32 37 413 12 National League East Cincinnati 41 25 621 - Chicago 40 26 621 - Los Angeles 35 38 628 - Atlanta 30 34 469 10 San Francisco 34 46 10 15 Dallas 22 23 123 8 W 10 L. Pelt. G.B. Pittsburgh 80 42 New York 60 45 21 Chicago 36 28 56 9 Louisville 32 36 50 8 Montreal 29 36 46 11 American Legion Minnesota 1. California 6 Milwaukee 2. Wisconsin 4 Milwaukee 3. Cleveland 2 Baltimore 1. New York 6 Milwaukee 3. Cleveland 2 Milwaukee 3. Cleveland 2 Cicinnata 1. San Francisco 2 Cicinnata 1. San Francisco 2 Montreal 1. Pittsburgh 1 St. Louis 2. Chicago 4 Oakland 2. Philadelphia 2 $5.98 LPs on Capitol/Apple Records $299 at KIEF'S Discount Records MALLS SHOPPING CENTER MERCY MUSEUM A CASTLE IN LAWRENCE? Probably few know the legend of the enchanting Castle Tea Room that reigns conspicuously on Massachusetts Street The Castle was built in 1894 as a home for J. N. Roberts, a retired Civil War general. He was a man of great wealth and an income from patients on wooden containers carried in the Each of the fifteen rooms of the Castle is finished in a different type of wood. The dining rooms currently in use are elegantly finished in birch, cherry, oak, walnut, swan-neck and pine. The wood carving was all done by hand by Sidney Endocott of England, a brother of Frank Lloyd Wright, and used as sculptor and artist and some of his work is in the drawing room of the Lord Holt住宅. There are five beautiful fireplaces in the house, each a unique design with various colored marble and brick. The original dining room is very ornate with an unusual built-in sideboard and chino cloak. A recess cluster of mirrors and stained glass window above the fireplace gives the effect of an altar in a chapel. The tower, which gives the old castle appearance, has a stairway leading to the third floor. Above the tower room is a roof garden which, in bygone days, was shaded with owings and used during the summer months. The ballroom with spacious window seats on the third floor is available for private parties. If you have never been inside the Castle Tea Room, come and ride in the only restaurant invocation with such a beautiful historical and cultural background. The only way to really enjoy it is to step inside. The Most Unique Rei The Castle Tea Room The Most Unique Restaurant in Lawrence Reservations Suggested 1307 Mass 843-1151 SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE 20% Off ENTIRE STOCK! Pants by, MALE LEE CARIBOU LIVE-IN Tops by, KENNINGTON FORUM ALPS BRENTWOOD Belts by, CANTERBURY HARNESS HOUSE RAM TORINO Sale Ends July 3rd Bootleger 523 W. 23rd 10-9 MON. THRU SAT. A 4 Thursday, June 29, 1972 University Summer Kansan KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. What Price Education? The recently approved rise in tuition by the Board of Regents that will be $25 more for resident students and $125 for out-of-state students at the state universities in 1973 is too important to ignore. The argument is not that we are being required to pay too much. Every student knows that his tuition pays only a small part of the total cost of his education and that the difference is paid from taxes of one type than from other taxes. We answer, of those taxes and our parents pay even more. Whether the student should pay a higher share is not the concern of this editorial. Rather, the question might well be asked, "Why not assess student fees rather than the number of hours tax was charged last spring and fall?" for the benefit of those who are profiting from the hourly rate this summer and don't know what happened last spring, a few words of explanation might be in order. Last spring students were assessed $17.50 per cursus up to six hours. For more than six hours they received a $20.00 credit. If a person took six hours, his tuition was $101.5, and the seventh credit cost him $125.50, because then he paid full fees. How many students do you suppose to take seven hours or eight or even ten? For ten or eleven, it costs $423.15 per hour, and only if he took 14 or more hours do he do better than the hourly rate of $7.50. This summer we are paying at the rate of $16.95 per hour for the first five hours and then $12 per hour thereafter. This seems like a much fairer system than the one used last spring, when a student was charged at a much higher rate if he was charged to 13 hours or if he took 18 hours or even 20. This raises an interesting question: *don't we pay in proportion to the amount of something that we buy?* (I know we really don't in life, but that isn't saying that we shouldn't.) For example, the student who earned 20 or more credits last spring paid the same as those who carried 10 hours or 12, and let's not forget that in some schools 12 hours is considered a full load. one can hear all kinds of objections to this plan. Think how much extra work it would be for the Registrar's Office to determine each student's fees by such a system. But using a computer for billing, as KU does, should help tremendously. If it would take extra time, it might be time saved for the University in the long run. At present, many students sign up for more course work than they can possibly handle. The availance of drop skips might also be affected if they dropped a two-hour course they were also tossing two credits of tuition money into the bucket. The indiscriminate dropping of courses causes more paper work and personnel time now than would figuring tuition on an hourly basis. Another objection: Let's not stiffe the initiative of those who would carry extra hours and profit thereby. But, conversely, why should we handicap them by forcing them to pay at a higher hour rate? Wouldn't it be in order for the Board of Regents and our own university administration to make a study of this and report it to the public? If the idea is good for the summer question, why wouldn't a comparable plan work for the entire year? Who knows, maybe the income from student fees would be great enough so that these latest increases would not have to be levied. -Rita E. Haugh Editor MAXON CAMPAIGN MARTHA MITCHELL "I am sorry, but the number you have bugged is not in service at this time ... Historical Feature Students Backed Hoover in 1920 By JOLENE HARWOOD Kansan Staff Writer Women were urged to join the newly formed organization and encouraged to attend all meetings. Although an influenza ban cut the attendance rate at the first meeting to a dozen members, some of them will support by its second meeting. The "Hover for President club" was organized Feb. 23. Mr. Hoyer received students resolved to favor herber C. Hoover for president on any ticket, according to the Feb. 15 announcement of the University Daily Kaman. It was supported by students and a score of faculty members representing factions of both the Democratic and Republican parties on campus. "Other political organizations have excluded the women, but their vote is as good as a man's in Kansas, according to the Hover men, who believe they will be as well as men are." The Kansas reported. Dean Oln Templin, who held the office of the director of school activities in the collegiate department, headed a ministration during the early days of the war and who was then associated with Hoover, was invited to speak to the club and offered effort to gain greater support. In support of Hoover and his interest in the University of Kansas, Templin said, "He has Organizers of the movement "door and not a sentimental dreamer. A man to whom the office of president would be a duty" been closely associated with him. He is kind, hard-working and I believe next to his alma mater, Stanford, he knows more about Kansas than any other college. At the "Hower for President to send a letter of appeal to Hower informing him of the organization and its support if he decided to go." Despite his protests, former colleagues and a committee of engineers promoted the Hoover agency to oversee his announcement himself as a candidate. This movement in 1920 was one of many across the United States that worked for the nomination of Hower for the presidential election himself realized that he had a status in either political party. On Feb. 9, 1920, Hoover issued a statement saying that the captain who was sent to this name was placed on both the Democrate and Republican tickers. Although he withdrew from most of the primaries, his name was left on the California ballot. He received 210,000 votes for the party without making a single political speech or statement. In 1927 he was again urged to announce his candidacy. His vote was not enough to primary ballots and he became the Republican presidential candidate in June of 1928. Hower, he did not vote from the Electoral College. March 4, 1929, nine years after the organization of the "Hoverover" team at the University of Bert Hoover the united the oath, thirty-first President of the United States. Tasadays Content in Uncomplicated Jungle Life Editor's Note: On the edge of a rain forest in the southern band of cave dwellers whose brain was unknown until last year. A newsman who accompanied an astronaut to a nearby prolonged scientific contact between the stone age-style these people who time forgot. By JOHN NANCE fasaday's cave homes in this southern Philippine rain forest "You are never annoyed or troubled by someone?" TASADAY FOREST, Philippines (AP)—The Tasaday man squatted at the mouth of his cave home and talked through an interpreter with members of a stone age-style people about the stone age-style people. "There is nothing we say is bad about anyone." he replied. a question about what he did with the puzzled frown to brought a puzzled frown to the cave-dweller. It was as though such a thought had never before been heard. southern Philippine rain forest. FROM SUCH exchanges and observation of the 25 tassaday, it seems that the happiness and contentment of the orchid-leaf-weeping people have grown much more man 'han he can teach them. Tasaday life gives the appearance of unique simplicity, free of the complications and tensions that beset modern man. "Well . . . a loud voice and speech are not looking pleasured," he said in an apparent reference to a girl who was the first outsiders to see the The work and play of the Tasday in their jungle environment reveal a harmony that civilized man rarely achieves. THE TASADAY contrast with much of what has been concluded about prehistoric man in other climes; there is no danger from hostile people or hordes of killer animals from freezing cold, floods or fire. The apparent lack of competition, within the band and from outside, must be essential to their harmony. Other factors that contribute to this are the sufficiency of life-sustaining resources close to home. They say the only other forest people they have known are like them and friendly although they have not seen them for several years; that their greatest fears they run and thunder, lightning and earthquakes, from which the cower but have not been numb. How and why the Tasaday, most of whom are bright and intelligent, remain unemployed as in forest resources as they have are among the many questions scientists are investigating and will continue to answer. They, together with Manuel Elizaide, Jr., the Panamin president who has led the expeditions, have collected hundreds of pages of written data and 20 hours of tape recordings. THREE FILIPINO and two American scientists have studied the Tassaday bird at various locations at the edge of the forest last June by Panamin, a government assistance for assisting minorities. Although much remains tentative, important aspects of their life have been documented: —Three limestone and conglomerate caves about 500 feet up a 4,000-foot mountain are their permanent homes and have been the Tasmanian name since the time of the discovery. Whether this means several generations or thousands of years is not yet established. I am writing this letter to complain about the University being open on the 4th of July. The 4th of July is a NATIONAL HOLIDAY. Why, then, on this anniversary of the beginning of our country, the University go to school and work on a NATIONAL HOLIDAY? Hall or Waston Library or going to classes do not foster respect for our country. In fact, ignoring the 4th of July only means that we should, in the eyes of the University, 'independence' of the Declaration THEIR UNIQUE language, in the Malayo-Posnoyan family, discloses an approximate 20 per cent of the largest known tongue, indicating to some linguists an isolation of more than 1,000 years, a difference equating generally to a higher German and present-day English. To the Editor Readers Respond Readers Respond July 4th Attendance . . . —Stone tools formed their basic technology, abetted by digging sticks and wood items fashioned with stone, throughout their known history until a hunter who chanced upon them in the desert produced bits of metal. To some scientists, this reliance upon Anyone who is employed by the university must sign a loyalty oath. Oath of loyalty Constitution and the Government of the United States. What a mockery! I sign a loyalty oath have to work on the work of the Shawnee Mission sophomore I often hear people complain that this country's spirit is dying, that loyalty to our country and a feeling of our heritage is dead. We should be thinking policy thinks that keep people working on campus in Strong stone suggests their isolation exceeds 2,000 years. The Tasaday continue to make and use stone tools, although at a much slower rate than availability of knives. The tools' edges are sharpened by grinding them against another stone and the sharp edges are fastened to them by vines or rattan. Any of several types of stone tools are produced in about 15 minutes. -Michael Lee Schwab THE AREA over which the Tasdass regularly range is remarkably small, perhaps no larger than five miles in any direction from the caves, a sharp contrast to most previously known hands, who roamed over wide areas to procure food. —The Tasaday's jungle produces abundant food near the they to make animal traps, though usually more minor inimini than their lifestyle on their lifestyle parently because they don't eat them. So their traps are relatively inefficient. Anthropologist Frank Lynch, program coordinator of the Institute of Philippine Culture, remarked on the sympathy, affection and consideration of the visiting visitors as well. They desire to share equally whatever they have to acquire. caves, particularly in and near a stream that is swift-flowing year around. One typical food-gathering party of five Tasaday collected two frogs, 18 tadpoles, two crabs, one fish and 64 leaves of leaves, flower petals, fruits and nuts in less than two hours. The Tassaday practice a natural conservation of the resources of the jungle, taking only what they need and no more. Tuberculosis, which afflicts up to 90 per cent of some mountain groups, was not noted, although it was found in chalcidial achalies that could develop into TB. One appeared in the eastern states and diseases were not a major problem. Tebong said he believed the most common achalion was minority group he had ever observed. Although the region is endemic for malaria, the disease was not noted. reveals that four adult males are cousins and the sons of brothers. All male and children were said to be brought up by the adult women say they have come from other places and groups, and have been sent to Sankuda. The men all said their mates were acquired in exchange for gifts to the woman's family. The men also told them a story. TASADAY HEALTH, compared to other mountain people in the southern Phi- pines, appears superb. Panamin is the best mountain of the people appeared to be in the best physical condition of any —The Tasaday caves—the Tasaday of oak fortress, no laveries of but a marmor or midden, runs about 60 feet down the mountain from the base of the cliff. The scientists say it may be the refuse of many generations and will help them preserve the site. - Fire is usually made by rotating a fire drill rapidly with the firemaker's hands. When the wooden base upon which the drill is twirled starts to smolder, dry fire appliance is applied to start the fire —Tasaday life has undergone gradual and in some ways profound change, since meeting a professor of metal made possible the acquisition of two master's degrees in core of trees. Dafa also taught -A TASADAY geneology Northern Irish Economy Improved in Past Year From the British Record More houses were completed than in any previous year; the number of homes by 6.7 per cent compared with 0.9 per cent for the United Kingdom as a whole, while productivity in manufacturing industry was down. Despite the unrest and violence in parts of Northern Ireland in 1974, the region was a prosperous economy of that region improved and expanded in a variety of ways. MORE NEW cars were registered than in any previous year, the amount of installment credit extended reached record levels During the calendar year 7,203 new manufacturing jobs were neglected, compared with an average of 6,136 for the years since 1987. and stock exchange turnover was the highest so far recorded. Unemployment, though higher than any other region of the United Kingdom, rose less sharply than in Britain. There was an industrial investment in outside Northern Ireland. Much of the resilience in the face of difficult internal conditions and a sluggish British economy derives from the general economic policy pursued by the UK government since the early 1960's, when the first Development Program was launched. APART FROM the diversification of the industrial structure, the need for a modern version of public investment that when complements by private investment can be more efficient. THERE IS NO HOPE. THERE IS NO LOVE. THERE IS NO REASON. THERE IS ONLY CHAOS. AND PAIN. AND DESPAIR. AND DEATH. I COULD TALK TO YOU FOREVER. YOU REALLY TURN ME ON. Northern Ireland has its own Exchequer out of which most of domestic banks have their principal underlying the financial arrangements between the Government at Westminster and the Government at Northern Government has been that Northern Ireland should enjoy parity of services and taxation with Brit about 35 per cent of the GNP being allotted for fixed capital investment. The corresponding figures from 2013 have whole has been as 21 per cent, The ratio of the Northern Ireland GNP per head of population compared to that of the United Kingdom on rising over the past few years. EQUAL TAX rates produce lower revenue per head than in the rest of the United Kingdom, because the bonus has been supplemented over the years by the Government at Westminster in order to apply the same standard of services in the United Kingdom. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN These supplements are expected to amount to $345.8 million in 1972-73 out of an estimated budget of $1.15 billion. It is expected that substantial additional funds will be required during the year 2015 to counter the effects of civil disturbances and to assist the economy. Two economic measures have already been adopted. --HELP FOR the Belfast shipyard. The British Government, with 806 4 million in debt and will make a considerable rearward investment in the construction of the yard. This should add 4 000 more jobs to the present 9 000 NEWSSTAFF News Adviser .. Del Brinkman Northern Ireland's Exchequer is funded mainly from reserved taxes, transferred taxes and suspensions. It also maintains the principle of parity. - Assistance in paying local taxes to businesses and shopping centers in Belfast, Londonderry and Newry suffering from terror attacks. Under the plan grants to 75 per cent are available. Business Advisor ... Mel Adams Rita E. Haugh Love Story. Keepsake REGISTERED DIAMOND RINGS It begins with a Keepsake Ring. Keepsake—a perfect center diamond of precise cut. There is no finer diamond ring for your love story. EMINENCE $170 MARINE $200 ALSO TO 770 WED. RING 94.75 MOHawk *$60.70, $670 94.75 McQueen JEWELERS MASTERCHARGE BANK AMERICARD OPEN THURS. NIGHT 843-5423 800 MASS Love Story. Keepsake REGISTERED DIAMOND RINGS University Summer Kansan Thursday, June 29, 1972 5 Classes Continued Over July Fourth The University of Kansas will celebrate Tuesday of next week, although some teachers may let their students celebrate the Fourth of July. Group Formed To Speed Aid For Indians A group called the Region 7 American Indian Council was formed Saturday in Kansas City, Mo. for the speed of traveling to Indians in Iowa, Missouri, Neiraku and Kansas. The group wants to be recognized by the federal government as a reviewing board that will take proposals from state and federal state area and send them to the appropriate federal agencies. Some of the agencies involved would be the Office of Economic Opportunity, the Environmental Protection Department and departments of transportation, justice, labor and health, education, and welfare. The group hopes to establish an In-vehicle staff within each department. Troll Little Axe, vice-president of the little group that the group for the group was drawn up and would be sent to Jefferson City, Mo., sometime later. A meeting concerning the new group will be held at 9:30 a.m. July 8 in the Student Union at Haskell Indian Junior College, make an Axe. The group will take a foray into its functions and will specify what federal agencies will be involved in the plan. Campus Bulletin TODAY USITA: 8 a.m., Jayhawk Roof TODAY USITA 8 a.m., Jayhawk Room Personnel Training: 9 a.m. Council Room Pol. Selenice: 9:10 a.m., Meadowlark Caterer Bristol University 12:00 p.m. Social Welfare Curr.; 12:00 p.m., Alcove A Cafeteria Cafeteria Summer Orientation and Dean of Men Room Woodstock Summer Orientation and Dean of Mei: 1:30 p.m. Woodruff 2:45 p.m. Bldg. 221 Education Orientation: 3:30 p.m. Big Eight room Hall: 1207-985-6220 Dean of Women: 2:30 p.m. Big Eight room Eight room Journalism Orientation: 3:30, International room ternational room Pharmacy Orientation: 3:30 p.m. room 302 Social Welfare Orientation: 3:30 p.m. Pipe room Every school at KU is officially following the policy of the University. Some, however, have difficulty in depreciation to individual instructors. At the School of Journalism, Jean Edward P. Bassett, Bassett aid that the school would offi- tially remain open but that could cancel their classes, could the work was made up. USITA: 6:30 p.m., Kansas room KU Parachute Club: 7:30 p.m., Pegler A According to the Office of Academics, there has never been an annelling to enroll in sciencing for the holiday. The academies calendar has been announced. Fairchild Orientation: 3:30 p.m. room 103 Social Welfare Orientation: 3:30 p.m. Pine Room Business Orientation: 3:30 p.m., Forum Several instructors are taking advantage of such openings and giving their students a day off. One of the instructors is professor of Social Welfare, recalled that the vacation was one of the first things his students discussed at the beginning of the year. The students are getting a day off. UISFA: 6:30 p.m. Kansas room RU Parachute Club: 7 p.m. Parlor A Gay Liberation: 7:30 p.m. International room SUA Popular Edm., "Monterey Pop"; 7:30 p.m., Woodruff "I don't see any reason why they shouldn't have some vacation for a national holiday," Gordon said. Leissa Gordon, assistant instructor of French and Italian, is giving his class their choice of either Monday or Tuesday off. thousands professors, however, that many have asked about the matter. L. C. Woodrow professor of biology, did not see the issue as any particular challenge. Film, "Midummer Night's Dream," with James Cagney, Olivia de Havilland, Mike Rooney; 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., Dynec Andifordium. "As far as I'm concerned, the University is in session." Woodruff said. "I'm going to hold class." "It might seem like we're having a crackdown on parking violations but actually it's just that we have five more men after us." W. Fenstemaker, a member of the Traffic and Security Department at the University of Kansas. "In the summer, the police close at noon and allow them to do other work." Drivers parking their cars on campus may be finding more tickets on their windshields this summer. Vehicle Checks Increased Fenstemaker said that the weekly average of summer eviction rates had been about 80 percent and survived approximately 200 during the regular school year. THE PARKKINGistuisse is good. You can't park at the entrance, there is available parking near the park and everyone." Fenstemaker said "There are a lot of tickets given for non-registration of vehicles.Many people in short terms and seminars are unaware to what the parking situation is on the summer." Fenstemaker said. He said that there were quite a few tickets given out the first five days of spring, and he thought this was due to the turnover from regular to summer. At some universities, the parking problem is so acute that the University provides a bus to students at the parking lot. Fenstemaker said. THE TRAFFIC and Security Department goes to enrollments in the schools as well as the main library. The enrollment registration as easy as possible. "There is a proposal to use students in the traffic control booth to relieve the men to work 'n the parking areas.' Fen- Drivers are allowed to run up to $110 in fines and before their name is put on a tow-away list. One cannot re-enroll, receive certificates or transcripts if a fine remains unpaid, Fentemaker said. stemaker said. "If this action would be approved, then we will not give tickets to students. Students would know for sure that they would be ticketed for illegal parking if they knew the time minutes after they had parked." LONDON (AP) — The Jane Austen Society museum at Chawton, Hampshire, was proud of its lock of the famed novelist's hair, but when the sun shone on it, a 35-year-old hair turn gray, an 18-year-old turn brown, and then taken to beauty experts to restore it to a youthful dark brown. The Soap Box from HAAS Imports presents soap from England, Finland, France, Germany, India, Israel, Italy, Switzerland, U.S.A. "Exciting Fragrant Gifts" 843-0871 KANU Schedule 1029 Mass. TODAY New Weather Schoo- 10-12 **Weather Intern** 9-10 **Indoor Junior Indu- cor** 8-9 **Featured Works** Schumann and Noon—New Weather Sports Noon—Concert Community Calling, Call and Counter 13-Ardoir Wind Quizet 12-Ardoir Mass Communication 11-Mass Communication and Foreign Language 3- This Afternoon 10- Sunday Woodford 8- New York Weather Sports 10- Julyweather Locker Room 6- Saturday Weather Sports 15- New York Weather Sports RADX All Season Wagener 10- To Be Announced 10- To Be Announced for THIS WEEK END! Bring this Coupon to SHAKEY'S 50° Off 50c Off on a Double or Family Sized Pizza on a Pitcher (Light or Dark) Alteration Charges P ye public house SHAKEY'S 544 W. 23rd 842-2266 Offer Good Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. Only NOTICE SEMI-ANNUAL SALE MISTER GUY SUITS values to $120.00 from $69.50 SPORT COATS values to $75.00 from $25.00 KNIT SLACKS values to $26.50 from $15.95 WASH PANTS values to $14.00 from $7.95 DRESS SHIRTS long & short sleeve $5.95 Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 KNIT SHIRTS values to $15.00 from $8.95 920 MASSACHUSETTS THE CLOTHING CONSULTANTS All Sales Final WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kauai are offered to students of the university general area or color, greed, or national origin. 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 an advantage. your at a disadvantage. Either way it comes to the same new Analysis of Western Civilization Campus Madison, Worth 14th. .27 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 153 Mich. St. Outside, Bar-B-Que Large, 150 chicken to go $3.99, 150 $15.00 bar-to go $3.99, Slab to go $8.99, Chicken to go $4.99, $1.50 chicken; $1.45, i.l. Beer Bowl: -$100. Food broth. Sand = $80. $250. Milk. 910. Closed Sim-Tue. 7:27 North Side Country, Shop. 707 N. 7 Antiques, used furniture, and lots of other items. 9-7 days a week. 842- 1359. Herb Altemberd. STEREO DISCOUNT. Now you can buy the best discount, at 149.99, plus $75.00 at RAY AUDIO. Only buy Sterio Discount Boxes in only the Sterio Discount Boxes listed below. Tea coffee and Complimentary tea service. For sale. Quality 10 spades Bicycles by Kalibron. Manufaturer: Fashion and Kalibron. Manufacturer: Fashion and bicycles, professional mechanics, bicycle repair. Shop 14th & Maissauchei. 832-644-9777 Must Seel 1964 Suzuki 150cc cycle Good cond Horns included $200.00 Call Gary, 843-864 or 843-332. 6-29 Pipes, papers, and all smoking access- series are available at the HODGE PODGE 15 W. 90). 6-28 For sale: 1969 BSA 441 Shooting Star +excellent condition. Melt-leave country. Ask for Clind. 913-628- 4378 or 5478 Chestnut, 913-628- 4378 New shipment of India prints just in at the HODGE PODGE 15 W 9th 6-29 Sandals handcored to your personalized taste at HODGE PODGE 15 W. 9th. 6-29 K A T Suroki 624 Mass. 842-906-924 A K T Suroki wishes to welcome their customers to the headquarters of mechanics. He has 8 years experience on working all major brands of motor- cars. He is a certified mechanic of you and your摩托车 care of you and your motorcycle care of you and your摩托车 BOKONIST'S REVIVAL. New shipment of Western and Hawaiian shirts on Friday. Overalls, jeans, cut-offs, hoodies. Ships to Vermont, 41st Street Road - 7 Persian kittens, champion aired, registered, with pets; pets or cats be beautiful. These long-legged Archie can also could love Reasonable. B42-133-811. Saint Burchard, puppies. A C-6 bloodbinding and tough coat. Champions bloodbinding. Plan immediate plan available. Mount Blue Santa Rush R. 2 Box 21. Phone 813-2063 LEATHER FOR SUMMER-Inlafter tops, shorts, bib overall shorts fringed and plain tops-now at EARTHISHTE 12 E.8 H 7-3 SHORTS values to $11 now $2.99 Now on Sale at the ALLEY SHOP $43 Massachusetts. 7-10 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES three days 25 words of review $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication 2300 W. 29th Terry Lawrence, Kansas Telephone: (913) 842-2191 CSC TOYOTA TRIBUNO TOPS value to $5 now $96. Now on sale at the ALLEY SHOP. 843 Massachusetts. 7-10 TOPS values to $7 now $2.99. Now on sale at the ALLEY SHOP. 843 Massa- cuitset. 7-10 Competition Sports Cars Inc. 193 Impala Super Power. Power steering, power brakes, Air conditioner. PM radio, FM radio. Excellent condition. Iowa Valley 843-230-7999 822 lowe 843-230-7999 7-29 1954 & 1955,函 Corporal Galauche 500, 2 doctor handwriting 954 & 1955,函 Corporal Galauche 500, 2 doctor handwriting This wear agency $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$-$x$ $y$–$x$ $y$– TOF$ values $9 to $14 now $3.99 Now on Sale at the ALLEY SHOP $43 Massachusetts. 7-10 ALL SWIMWEAR now $ _{1/2} $ price at the ALLEY SHOP 843 Massachusetts 71 VW Deluxe Bus. Stereo FM radio * toll 887-6228. 7-15 1971 Yamaha Enduro, 2200 miles—Excellent condition. Call 842-8320 after 6. 7-3 Purchase Selt-Clothes (some original samples), baby items, books, art, kitchen items, more 119th & Mio. kits, and more this week. Week 7, next to 10. to 6. CLEARANCE SALE. We are liquidating our online line of Lee & Co. clothing. See details for look details in today's paper--Look for details in today's paper--Surplus-815 497 Vermont 843-5000 Kustion 200 amp. Plain head 3-12 Albee翠声器 Also Stratocaster in both in very good emulsion. Sbe Bassoon. Music 18. Eount Very Reasonable 7-17 Hammond BEAUTIFUIL, BODY—1921 Honda CL 500 Seramier. Excellent condition. 843-8150 after 6 wknds—anytime on wknds. 7-6 PANTSUITS values to $28 now $10 Now on Sale at the ALLEY SHOP *43 Massachusetts. 7-10 1955 BUXCH Roadmaster owned by family since new. 81,000 miles. Excellent condition 843-5748 or see 640 W. 25th. at 7-10 Tank tops, peasant shirts, pants and jeans for men and women EARTHSHINE 12 E. 8th. 7-3 SUMMER PANTDRESSES values to $9 now $3 new Now on Sale at the ALLEY SHOP 843 Massachusetts 7-10 Blank space on your wall! Fill it with a poster from the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 7-11 Ladies, put yourself in catenity with beauty aids at the HODGE PODGE 15 W. 9th. Bubble bath, facial creams, and shampoo 7-11 FOR SALE—56 Fastback VW, 39.000 miles, good condition, $850 or make offer. Call 841-3980. 7-10 Your feet will feel cool and comfortable with handcrafted sandals made at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. sirloin Webster's Mobile Homes ... dining place Delicious Food and Super Service with the Chef Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Sweets. Our utensils and we always know Your Complete Service Dealer Tie-downs - Skirting - Parts Ample Park Spaces Available 3409 W. 4th 842.7700 Just West of the Drive In Theatre LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place FOR RENT COLLEGE HILL MANOR APART- MENTs Attached and Ample adapartment. AC, pool and laundry. Bathroom. Apartment. 9th, 10th, 19th, 4th Apt. with 843-828- 723. 9th Apt. 5-B, Apt. 843-828- 723. LOOKING FOR A B-TWO-BEDROOM garden apartment, adjacent to the cross street shopping center and public transit bus stop, a space of more two-bedroom apartments on Ward Road No. 842-2548 will allow you to live in a wide range of values, all featuring all the features all being managed with care by your local Yorkshire Yorkshire. You will be given a tour of your home today. Summer and Fall rentals Furnished to 4 bedroom apts From $50 to $80 Rooms with kitchen privileges 95 with kitchen付费 pad 6-29 812-506-977 For Rent-Princess mobile name room, bedrooms, furnished completed, with wi-fi couple or couple on calls Jools $ small, des- tached, 912-326-2482 or 527-4281. CAMPUS APAHMENT LIVING Bachelor's Apts. Apts. I & II. Include a two-bedroom furnished apartment and one and two bedrooms furnished and one bedroom. 1123 Indiana 843-2116 BEAUTIFUL ONE AND TWO BEDROOM garden apartments are being furnished with Harvard, Acre, 11th and Mistlewood streets. These five apartment features: dishwashers, water and construction, dishwashers, water and construction, dishwashers, carpet and draper, apacheous carpet and draper, nihied or unfurnished One call or email to 412-869-5300 or Road No. 882-248 during daily hours. We will accept spect and get all details on Lawn-Rated unit costs. 5:00 P.M. and on resident homes at each location. Be pleased to see our attractive layout. And for 11:00AM Opening of the Kaw River Bridge Safety Phone 853-1431 Open 4-30 Closed Monday One and two bedrooms, apartment, furnished and unfurnished at Ridgeway, 24th and Oudshull Summer Sale. 10% discount. Fax: Phone 845-751 1116 ROOM FOR FEMALE in big, well- comfortable, house friendly. Free wa- ter and towel, and diswasher. Sum- mer laundry. 64-89 6:29 = Jorah or Judy ABRAXAS LEATHER leather goods-custom orders all sizes available Chauffered water ski boat rental and lessons. 135 hp 16 ft. ski boat. Call: 841-2576 for details. 7-10 17 W. 9th Apartment furnished, some air-conditioned, large enough for two or three KI, and near town, off street parking, no pets. 843-567-5071 7-23 NOTICE Sleeping rooms - furnished, with or without kitchen privileges, for males on street parking, borders KU and near town. No pets. Phone 843-7576. Notice Girl's summer earrings at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W.9th.6-29 Nest Now. For Occupancy August 15th, 2023 from room apartment. call 866-497-6000. Room refrigerator, carpet rugs. Excellent area. $259 per room. Number of rooms: 252. Call 861-253-0532. for counseling and referrals on birth control, abortions, and voluntary contraception. Call our Women's Center at 864-3441 or information at 864-3506. Call 24 hours. SAVE, THAT AD! Want. something knitter or crocheted? Bick tinkers, blouses, vests, bikini, ponchos. Now name it and I make it. Make 143-8-5 74-9 PILOTS: Do you want TALRADG RIM time? Pliper Super Cruiser (PA-42), or Aerodrome? Aerodrome: 4 miles north of Baldfield. Commercial commercial approved by the FEDs. SUMMER GAY LIBERATION Fun Brings meetings every Thursday. Brotherly meetings every Thursday, morning at 6:48-10:48. Write Box 324, Lafayette 29. CANTERBURY HOUSE Ecopatrol HOUSSE OU LAUSANI — Summer 1972. Holy Mary Catholic p.m. Tuesday 9:00 p.m. thursday 9:00 p.m. Thursday 9:00 p.m. Friday 9:00 p.m. Fire Furnace 8:30 a.m. and 12:30 Dramatically Reduced Summer Rent. Now allow 18th August at $125 for a two-bedroom apartment, all electric kitchen, central air, fresh residential area. Call 843-0255. INFANT DAY-CARE CENTER 842-7694. Professional child-care center for children 1 m - 12 m. Full or part time. Ft. Specially designed environment. Nr. German tutoring & translation. $2.50/ hr. or negotiate. Call Nina, 843-5295. 7-5 Notice-Save money by making your own summer creations with India prints from HODGE PODGE. 15 W.9th. 7-11 BRANDYWINE CUSTOM TAILORS W Permanent Location in Lawrence Custom Tailored-Custom Styled ERN'S CYCLE SALES Mens Sport Coats— $40 Mens Knit Suits— $60 Mens Slacks— $18 YAMAHA SUMMER PACKAGE SPECIAL 1 Knit Suit 1 Pair Matching Slacks $70.00 TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSU TAXI SPECIAL PASSENGER SPECIAL PASSENGER Over 200 Fabrics and Patterns 250 Polyurethane Fabrics Wool. Polyester Kits and More. SATIFFECTION GUARANTEED Fabric Measurement for Far Measurement Appointment 500 E.23rd WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 716 North 2nd 142-0444 LOVE THAT DATSUN OVERHEAD CM ENGINE O TO 60 MPH—13.5 O RECLIMING FRONT SEATS O UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL. TYPING Experienced typist will type, your papers, papers, papers, or dissertation work. Prepare prompt, accurate work. Work Razakman. 7-47 2281 These term papers type accurately, proportionly IBM. Electronic, elite type, will also do editing in trains. Kim Daona Davis, 84-2797, #43 5635 Experienced in typing these, diner-grade keyboards. Have electric typewriters with pixie tape. Accurate and precise typing. Req. Phone # 852-9541. Mr. Wright Experienced typist for your Thesis Dissertations, mise work. Call Mrs. Troxel, 2409 Ridge Court, M4-140, IF Typing done, on eilite electric type- writer. Prompt service. No Thesis. please 843-0958 7-51 Experienced typist will type your term paper, thesis or dissertation Pica type = prompt = accurate Call 483-0823 7-5 WANTED Wanted: students to do part time farm work. Call 842-813 or write Mr. Hoover, 1419 Ohio. No. 12. 7-5 Creshman Fredhan (girl) needs full or part time job. Mothers help, companion-secretary, reader for hands-on homework. Hibernation Adherents 7-4. ROOMMATE WANTED! Female Graduate. Student in share lease. Room A, 120th Street, plain, dishwasher, own bedroom, kitchen. Monthly plus call: 842-394-991 Advanced intermediate tennis to play a couple of sets daily Call Grad. 9676 7-10 MISCELLANEOUS BRIDAL GOWN GROW Sale-Size-8-10 to 15% off. Fall and spring fabrics, showing Thurs. and Sat. only. Gala Bridle, 910 Kentucky. 7-27 HELP WANTED URGENT. Need tutor specifically for Western Civil compre- sition exam. will pay $2.50 an hour. Please call Fliere, 841-257-1 immediately. 7-10 WHY RENT? HAYSEN COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales 843-8499 3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59) RAMADA INN Figure Salen 842-2323 Specialized new facilities. Group participation welcome. No appointments necessary. Free figure analysis. Swimming privileges. Hours specifically for the busy coed's schedule Daily 9 to 19, Sat. till noon. --- DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE 044 0500 The Stereo Store LUDIOTRONICS --- 928 728 Mass 6 Thursday, June 29, 1972 University Summer Kansan January 29, 1978 Kansan Photo by CLAY LOYD Teachers Play Games and Learn Glenda Richardson, left, and Sandy Crowther attend games workshop . . . Art Show to Open Camp Concerts to Begin A wealth of talent will be presented by members of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp free concerts this weekend. A concert by the Red Band and the Campus Stage Bands is in the Lewis Hall. At 2 p.m., Sunday, in Murphy Hall, the Mercury Concert Center and Symphony Center form. The final concert by the blue Band and the Concert Band is scheduled for 7 p.m. Sunday in the Lewis Hall. According to Bob Hollowell Drawings, prints, figure illustrations, acrylic paintings, water color paintings, examples of murals, paintings will be on display Friday in the Murphy Hall Gallery. This exhibit will be the first of four to be presented by the Art division of Midwestern music and Art Camp. "The first show, very often, is a cross-section of the work done in the camp. Each show, we hope, shows improvement," said Arvid Jacobson, professor of design and art Camp of the Art Camp. Projects for the first show, representative of the work being done in the classes. The majority of works being shown will be performed on the stage. The first show will be replaced by a second next Friday. "There is a great deal of difference between the second and the third, but it takes about two and a half to some wood wallpaper very well." A final show of the best works will be in the Kansas Union Gallery July 11 through July 18. Frat Adviser Wins Honor Thomas Beiecker, associate drama professor, recently awarded fraternity's highest national honor in New Orleans this month. Beisecker was awarded the Order of Pythagoras for his work with the KU chapter of the fraternity. He is an advisor for the award and he spent the award for the time he spent in working with the chapter. administrative assistant to the camp director, the Concert Band consists of the top 80 musicians at the camp.He said the remaining students constituted the Red Band and the Blue Band.Those two groups are between Friday night concert and the Sunday night concert. Each group has a resident director and a guest conductor. The resident director continues to work with the musicians every week but the guest conductor attends the camp for only one week. Resident directors are Russell Wiley, professor of music and camp director; Robert Foster, conductor of the KU Band; George Borel, assistant band director; Gerald Carney, educator, educator, educator, and James Ralston, KU Choir director. are Sir Vivian Dunn, conductor in the music department of the University of Wisconsin for years and now reured; Rod Eichenberger director of the Michigan Musical Theatre; Jack Kern,泉 amouth, Neb.; and Kenneth Thompson coordinator of instrumental music for the Wichita Public School. The guest conductors this week The campers spent many hours preparing for these concerts in order to get ready that practice was held every day for both the band and individual sections. Each camper spent several hours practicing for each group, he said, and a majority of the campers are involved in at least one practice. The band camp presents three concerts each weekend during the session. Hollowell said that the concerts were free. Local Teachers Study Games as Student Aids BY DEANNA VANDERMADE (Address of Helton) If you happen to be in the vicinity of the University State Bank between 3 and 6 p.m. this week and hear sound scares or laughter from the basement conference rooms, do not attend. A group of Lawrence teachers creating and playing games. They are involved in a two-week workshop offered by the School of Education in conjunction with Careers of Lawrence The workshop is being held from June 23 to July 7 and involves 27 Lawrence students for two hours of graduate credit. According to Richard Ritchie, president of education and director of the workshop, the purpose of the workshop is to instruct the teachers in how to provide aid's. THE WORKSHOP is intended to supplement the work of Carers Project, trying to promote occupational education in the school nurse and to show students about different types of careers and economics, what they need to know about them and how to get started. The teachers will be making games for fifth through ninth graders and then playing them in class. The teachers will be related to current events. Teachers must establish the rules and objectives of the game, a playing surface and make the game attractive to the age group. The games will then be discussed for effectiveness by the group. ONE GROUP of teachers will be laying the ground work for a new classroom. Students will take on next fall. The school will be simulating a shopping center. Students will be running various activities, creating shopping experiences. The students will be given play money each week to spend, and they will have to plan budgets they will learn about selection of goods. The Careers Project, which is helping to sponsor the workshop, is a volunteer organization at a college where students of different types of job opportunities, something project members thought was lacking in teaching. The project moved degrarden through twelfth grade project aimed at providing job descriptions and practical experience. Emphasis is placed on local concerns, but a wide variety of careers are examined. During the school year, students involved in Careers Program local occupations as well as national or international ones. Some students could actually enter enterprises of one sort or another. Last fall one group of borrowed money, made up of many other projects are offered by the organization in an attempt to broaden the students' economics and job opportunities. Regs on Fireworks Decrease Periods For Selling, Firing Sunday is the first day that we move to the county, and the day may be legally challenged in the Douglas County area, according to the state fire Amendments to fireworks regulations by the city and county commissions went into effect this year to shorten the period that fireworks could be discharged in the county. Although firewalls cannot be sold in Canada, they are available in Douglass County July 2, 3 and 4 if a special permit is obtained. County firewalls are free to use. FIFTEEN permits had been issued as of Wednesday afternoon, when the towning office said. The majority of persons requesting permits had set up roadside stands, but only a few have been fireworks to be sold at the old White Schoolhouse, the teepees at Teepee Junction and the Knights of Columbus building. Fireworks may be discharged in the city limits from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. on July 2, 3 and 4. Bus Is Available for Trips They are not to be ignited or discharged within 1,000 feet of any firefairy, or within 50 feet of any gatehouse or building according to the 1972 Kansas Fireworks *Regulations* distributed by the State Fire Bureau. By VICKY MONARKE Koncon Staff Writer The University operates a 28- ship of faculty and staff, keith walton, director of the Office of Facilities Planning and Operating. Kurt Kirpi out-of-town By VICKI MONNARD Lawton said the bus was available to University groups and departments through the Office of Facilities Planning and Operation. A full-time employee of the University must certify that he meets all the needs and must take responsibility for the group. UNIVERSITY BUS Only one driver is employed by the University for such travel, Lacma. The department limited to an eight-hour working day, which restricts the distance travelled. LAWTON said that if the trip required more than eight hours, the group had to expect to spend a total of four days, and the trip the next day. But, Lawton said, the bus has been on out-of-town trips for several days. The KU ban has traveled to several cities in order for a period of about a week. Lawton said the bus also had made trips to adjoining states. The baseball team toured the state last summer. The bus has also traveled to Kansas Photo by CLAY LOYE Iowa and Colorado Cost for using the bus is based on the distance traveled or the hours used. Lawton said, If the trip is over 30 miles, the cost is $45. If it is over 60 miles, the cost is fares or toll costs. If the trip is within 30 miles, the cost is $5 for the first hour and $3 for each additional hour. He said these rates, which must be reassessed when they were now under reconsideration. KU Groups May Use Bus Fees being considered ... FIRECRACKERS, cylindrical and cone fountains, sparklers, comets, come floral and pachycardiac snakes, non-poisonous snacks, if they meet Kansas regulation standards, are approved both for sale and for display. SUNFLOWER SURPLUS, INC. 843-5000 There are no plans for a second University bus or a new one. According to Lawton, the present management of 1989, is in good working condition. 815-817 Vermont We are liquidating our entire line of Lee clothing to make room for more surplus. CLEARANCE SALE
Suggested RetailSale Price
LEE Riders7.495.00
Western Shirts6.495.00
Work Shirts4.984.00
Overalls7.496.00
Lady Lee Overalls13.508.50
Lady Lee Brush Denims9.506.50
Lady Lee Cords10.006.50
Lady Lee Western Shirts10.006.50
This allows the Office of Facilities Planning and Operation to schedule the driver AND MORE Open Monday-Friday 10:00-5:30 Sat. 10-3:30 Thurs. nite till 8:00 DEMANDS for use of the bus is during some weeks as many as four were scheduled. Scheduling is heaviest in early fall, spring and summer. A one week advance notice is required for out-of-town travel. Welcome Incoming Freshmen --glass or metal containers. Obey the law where fireworks are prohibited in congested areas May we help you with your housing needs JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS JAYHAWKER TOWERS KU APARTMENTS 1603 West 15th Fireworks works as illegal in the United States, cherry bombs, M-80s, bulldog and tubular salutes, torpedoes, repeating and aerial bombs and cannon fire. Surrounded by the K.U. Campus 300 2 Bedroom Apartments of more than 5 minute walking anywhere. Now Leasing for Summer and Next Fall —Do not throw lighted fireworks in the direction of any person. Not more than 5 minutes walking anywhere. The State Fire Marshal Department suggested the following rules for the safe handling of fireworks: —Do not ignite fireworks in glass or metal containers. All utilities paid—Auto parking included—Heated swimming pool—Tenant storage room on each floor—Incubator dump on each floor—Modern kitchen with refrigerator—Fridge for heat and air conditioner—Two elevators in each building—All brick walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and quiet—Complete laundry in each building—Outdoor exposure—Bath tub, shower, two lavatories each apartment —Purchase only fireworks approved for sale in Kansas. practice to sale in Kentucky Do not throw or direct fireworks in the direction of a motor-car. —Watch out for children. Supervise the lighting of their fireworks. The Ultimate in K.U. Campus Housing Call 843-4993 for Appointment to see Convenience - Comfort - Safety - Extras -Always read the fireworks label for proper firing instructions. XXXXXXXXXX OLDHAM, England (AP)—MRS. Muriel Burrell made a motorist's dream come true—the one with a police officer needed to court for a parking offense. She saw the officer leave his truck in the car and called headquarters. The policeman was fined $30. Campus Briefs 'Chute Club to Meet The University of Kansas Parachute Club will demonstrate how to pack a parachute from 7.9 to 9.p.m. today in Pararol A of the Kansas Union. The movie, "Masters of the Sky," will be shown at the U.S. Air Force Academy. We will discuss the possible formation of a parachute team at KU. Carillon Concert Friday Guest carillonier Walter Meierlans will present a concert on the University of Kansas Memorial Carillon at 8 p.m. Friday, November 12, from 7 to 9 p.m., Librengen, Switzerland, Meierlans received a gold medal in 1970 as carilloner by the Society for Arts, Science and Literature of Paris. Meierlans's concert will include "The Carillon of Salzburg" by Mozart, in *Salmone in D-Minor* by Scarlatti, and various Swiss works. Car Check Scheduled GC Another volunteer auto safety check will be conducted Friday from 9 to 11 a.m. in front of Central Junior High School, 1400 Massachusetts St., and from 2 to 4 p.m. in front of the Pinkney School, 810 W. Sikh St. Lawrence police, the Kansas Highway Patrol and the Douglas County Sheriff's Department will conduct the vehicle inspection. The driver of a defective vehicle will be allowed to repair the defect and return to the line to receive an OK sticker. Additional voluntary safety checks have been scheduled for July 14 and 21. Clinic on Children Set A child development workshop, sponsored by the Lawrence Branch of Concerned Black Parents, Inc., will be held at 7:30 p.m. tonight at the South Park Recreation Center. Joanne Hurst, director of the group, said the workshop will be geared toward young mothers and mothers of young children. Anyone may attend. The guild then areas are matched for Meghan McMahon, Dr. Helen Giles, and Dothea Blevins, nutrition. There will be no ice, and baby sitting and transportation will be provided. KU Receives Epps Grant Mrs. Epps died Jan. 17, 2011. The gift will be used to establish the Myrtle Lasyie and Frederick William Epps Scholarship Fund. The University of Kansas Endowment Association has received a bequest of $4,160 from the estate of Myrtle Laithe Epps Mrs. Epps was born in Jackson County, Mo. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, she was graduated from Iowa State with a bachelor's degree in Latin. Sev will stude Col Engli Collun July of mu knight The first Myrtle Lasley and Frederick William Epps scholarships will be awarded for the 1972-73 academic year. Sambo's JUNE SPECIAL During June, when you purchase any dinner item you will get the second dinner for 1/2 price. All you do is present this coupon. COUPON --- Buy one dinner, second purchase of same item ½ price Offer good Mon., Thurs., expires June 30 PAC List $598 ALICE COOPER SPECTACULAR $2.89 from $2.89 BUDGLT TAPES RECORDS "The New School's Out" "Kill Her" "Love It to Death" "Pretties for You" "Easy Action" Albums List $4.98 Now Always $2.99 Tapes $4.99 All Labels Specializing in Heavy Rock Constant EVERY DAY PRICES HOURS: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. M-S $2.89 Specials All Week 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. M-5 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday $2.89 Specials All Week Every Week T L BUDGET TAPES & RECORDS 628 W. 12th (Next to New Haven) This is the first of four issues of the Kampfer Kassam: Publication dates for the Kampfer Kassam are as follows: KANSAN Weekend Camp Concert Schedule No.1 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, June 30,1972 See page 2 Guest Directors Come to Camp By BILL KNOWLES Kansan Staff Writer Several well known guest conductors will direct this year's music camp. students. Col. Sir Vivian Dunn, from Sussex, England, is already here, living in McCollum. He directed from June 26- July 2. The Colonel is the retired director of music for the Royal Marines. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 1698. Post Office Available For Camper Use By STEVE FELKEL Kennon Staff Writer Students who are malling large packages would be interested to know that in the basement of Strong Hall, on Jayhawk Blvd, across the street from the boardwalk, there is an official U.S. Post Office. At the Post Office, any student can go and find out how much it costs to send packages and letters. In addition, students can purchase stamps and insurance for Packages can be measured and weighed for postal air rates. During the third week of camp, Henry John Brown, conductor of the New York State University Orchestra, will direct. He will be the musical director of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra. One of the better known directors coming to the University of Kansas during the fourth week to conduct the camp choral students is Paul Salumunovich. He is presently choral director at Loyola University in Los Angeles and is an active director of cathedral choirs there. He has also been involved with Cathedral Chorus for several years. He is particularly recognized for his expertise in 16th century choral music. Also conducting the fourth week will be collected Gabriel, conductor of the H K GOSS To wrap up the music concerts, Victor Alassandro will be conducting the fifth week. Alassandro is presently conductor of the San Antonio Symphony. Other conductors invited to direct the camp music students are George Lawner, conductor of the K.U. orchestra; Jack Kurtz, music director of smooth; Jack Kitsa, professor of woods; University of Florida; Haryan Lantz, orchestra conductor at the University of Wisconsin; Milburn Carney, managing director of Rodney Eichenberger, choral director, University of Washington; Ted Stidham, director of bands, University of Southern California, and Kenneth Thompson, director of education in the Wichita Public Schools. Technical, Research Labs Located at Campus West By NANCY CHAFFEE Kansan Staff Writer From McCollium Hall one can see most of the east campus. The buildings are becoming more and more familiar to the campers as they become adjusted to their surroundings, just another part of the campus, however, just across the street from McCollium Hall. The furthest building north of McColm is the Printing Service building. Inside this building is printed the University Daily Kansan. It is also where the Kamper Kansan and "Tempo," the camp yearbook and Journal. The campus year, many students use this service to have manuscripts and other papers printed. East of the Printing Service Building are the Low Temperature Labs. These labs are part of the Chemical Engineering department of the research done in this building deals in low-temperature research with hydrocarbines such as propane and butane. Research also deals with liquid and gaseous gases, and the temperature refers to below -200 degrees F. The Space Technology Building is directly across from the Pioneer Cemetery. This building contains many research labs. To use these labs, one must be interviewed to see if the research project is the type that can be done in the labs. The building has two other jobs that many researchers hold, there are more people using the lab in the summer session than there are in fall and spring sessions. The Center for Research, Incorporated (CRINC) is just to the left of the Space Technology Building. In this building are all of the administrative offices that run The Pharmaceutical Chemical Lab building is mainly concerned with the study of the efficiency of drugs. The McCormack lab basically with health related problems. The Geological Survey Building deals basically with mineral research. At this time they are working on environmental geology and with NASA in space research. BEST VALLEY CARES Kansas Photo by JAIN PENNER Young, Friend Supervise Campers ... Forcoring rules lies on their shoulders ... Summer Camp Enrollment Ebbs By JACKIE WHITE Kansan Staff Writer Variety was offered to the campers in 1968 in the form of music, French, Latin, German, Spanish, journalism and speech and debate. Because of a lack of interest the camp has gradually been reduced to art, art, journalism and speech and debate. Kansas State Writer Battling a high school long lunch camp, a campus feel the Midwestern Music and Art camp is overcrowded. Only three years ago, it consisted of over 2,000 students enrolled in ten major divisions, compared to this year's 1150 in four major divisions, Russell L. Wiley, director of the camp since its beginning 35 years ago, said The first campers lived in sorority and fraternity houses, and each student had to provide his own food service for the six weekends. They completed every weekend as they are this year. In the late 1930's, orchestra was added as another summer division and not long ago was called a "concert." Camp operations were shut down for two years during World War II. When it Young, Friend Supervise Dorms Bv. JAIN PENNER Kansan Staff Writer Summer camp is a wild experience for some kids—fascinating classes, hundreds of new people to meet, no more dull lessons, the ability to claim rights and wrongs . . . or are there? As a matter of fact, the summer campers have two "house-parents" to watch over them, supervisors Leslie Friend and Paul Young. THE SUMMER camp is nothing new to Friend. In 1963, her seventh grade summer, she attended the Junior High Music Camp. She enjoyed her experience so much that her career led to Junior High that year and then to the High Camp for three years after that. Friend's two greatest loves are music and working with people. By attending Few boys at Lewis Hall would mind having a mother like Friend. A Wichita native, Friend graduated from Kansas University this spring with a major in music education. She plans to teach music next year. camp, she got great exposure to both of these things, so she decided to continue work with the camp. She joined the staff in 1970 as a counselor, serving as an assistant supervisor last summer, and finally became the head supervisor this year. Friend stressed that camp is a very valuable experience for young people because they have the chance to do concentrated study in their field of interest as well as meeting people from all over the country because the experience not available in their high schools. EXPERIENCE is one thing both supervisors have in common. Young, supervisor of Lewis Hall, has been affiliated with the camp for nine years as a counselor, assistant supervisor, and head supervisor. An Oklahoma native, raised in Kansas City, Young is currently the vocal music teacher at Shawnee Mission North High School. Young felt that the camp was fantastic in that it offered the opportunity to enrich the lives of its students. Regulations Enacted For Students Science, which until this year has been a major division of the dam, was dropped. Wiley attributes the enrollment of two people to the fact that the national government has ceased to issue science grants to aid students. "Less emphasis is placed on science now and therefore it is not as popular as it once was." Professor Russell Wiley, Midwestern Music and Art Camp director, explained recently the regulations governing the camp. "Parents no longer need to send their children off to camps to entertain them for the summer. Kids are too busy to attend school. Parents don't know why one week camps are so popular." Kansan Staff Writer By DONALD WALTERS Wiley said "In the first few years of the camp, the students were not governed by regulations. But because of actions on the camp floor, the guards and the regulations and enforce them strictly." reopened, camp enrollment continued to increase. Regulation No. 1, no camp student will be charged for any failure to automobile, was brought about because of students who got in trouble from activities that occurred while the students were in school. regulation was dropped in order for the camp to keep up with changing fashionis Even with its fluctuating population, "the second oldest camp of this nature in the United States continues to be successful." Wiley emphasized. Regulation No. 2, no camp student, boy or girl will be allowed to date non-camp student. Wiley closed by saying, "The enforcement of the regulations does not please us, but we do it for the campers to protect them. All of the rules and regulations were brought about because of the students." Regulation No. 4, closing hours, 10 p.m., lights out, 10:30, was enacted at the request of the director of the Watkins Memorial Hospital to protect students from exposure to chemicals strep throat, and other illnesses caused by a general fatigue and exhaustion. In the years before 1969, a camp council was organized to give the campers a chance to express their opinions and ideas to the supervisors of the camp. the campers from local and outside trouble-makers. Regulation No. 3, there shall be no alcoholic beverages or illegal drugs, either in the camp or at any time, while attending the camp, canned about because of a rise in the number of students who are swimming and using the items, Wiley said. One other regulation once enforced and then dropped dealt with the appearance of a drug. Bob Hollowell, administrative assistant, said that he believed the general way of life in America had changed with the invention of the television, airplanes and air conditioners. "The tightening of the national economy has caused fewer students to enroll in camps similar to this all over the country," explained Wiley. "Also, campus unrest here at the University has caused some parental concern." Center for Research, Inc., left, and Space Technology Building Two recently completed additions to KU are part of Campus West . . . After 1869, the council was dropped, because the members were no longer expressing legitimate arguments, and as a result, an organized meeting, according to Wiley. Young summed up the true beauty of the summer camp experience when he said, "In all my years here, I have never known a camper who really tried." areas of art, music, speech, and jour- naying of the year that most young people waste. "I hope everyone will set some goals for themselves and then work to achieve those goals." POLYTECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF CATALINA By 1970 the music and art divisions could no longer pay for themselves. To combat rising costs classes were cut from six to five weeks. Even so, enrollment has continued to go down. Wiley attributes the decrease to several factors. Kanan Photo by DEBBIE FAWKES Wiley then abolished the council, and it has since not been resurrected. THE BEST SHORE ENSEMBLE OF THE TIME Jazz Band Gives Performance Perry Hall, S. Pasadena, Calif., works out on drums ... Jam Sessions Create Sociable Atmosphere By PEG LACKMAN Kansan Staff Writer It could be in the lobby of Lewis or McCollum or out in the middle of a field. It doesn't matter where it is, what type of music it is — from Beethoven to Bacharach or Chopin to Carolle King — or what the instruments are. It is music, the universal language. The sound of music fills the air. It could be the sound of guitars, recorders, piano, or voices, or a combination of all three of these. Music is a way people can communicate, and when a group is gathered around the plano everyone sees that is short while ago seemed so hard, fade into the background. Music is a great soother for the mind and we probably could not live without it Music makes friends. When a group of people start out at the piano, or elsewhere, there are usually just two or three of them. There are also many musicians around there are many musical friends around. A drum solo Friday night after the concert proves this. One young man sat down and began to play the drums. Soon two others came and helped him on the other set of drums. They created sound percussion sounds, all unheared. When they started, there were very few people around. But immediately the drummers attracted attention and the number had grown to nearly fifty friends. If you ever want to be in a group of friends, music is a good method to use. The sounds of music always fill the air in Lewis. 2 Friday, June 30, 1972 University Kamper Kansan KAMPER comment KAMPER comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Love Has Two Sides There are two sides to almost everything in life and so it is with love. Everywhere you go around the camp, you see couples holding hands, laughing, and enjoying each other. However, I doubt there's a wing on any floor, in either dorm where someone isn't sitting there worrying, staring at the telephone, waiting for it to ring or just plain crying his eyes out. Hundreds of kids from all over the country are thrown together for the first time and many summer romances begin. Perhaps it's true affection or maybe just the similar situation of being in a strange environment and away from home, but whatever it is, a glance outside the door of McCollum Hall just before closing will prove that the guys and girls have found each other. Summer romances have long been associated with pain and heartache. Few are thought to be sincere and many to be short-lived, but when you're in love and floating ten feet in the air, who can pull you down to earth and make you see things objectively? The alternatives are obvious. First, shut yourself up. Don't commit the capital of actually letting your emotions show if you take this choice. If a guy calls a girl to ask her out, she should quickly turn him down and inform him that one of her music, art, etc. classes has planned a field trip to Red China. If a guy sees a cool girl looking at him, he should tell himself she probably has bad breath. Hand-holding, kissing, crying, deep conversations, and other such nonsense are out of the question in real image to project is that you're asking for our studies and images. The other alternative is to take a chance and let yourself get involved. Of course, the nights of shows and dances and walks in the summer heat can't last forever, and saying good-by does hurt, but while a summer romance doesn't you can't help but gain something new from the experience with it. If you do open up and get involved, you have to expect those worries and nights when the phone doesn't ring. Yet, everyone has something to offer, and the more enrichment you give to someone else, the more you get, regardless of those few miserable nights. Human relations are nothing but a gamble, and so is romance, but I can't help thinking that people are better off for taking that gamble and being richer. As someone once wrote in the boardwalk outside Flint Hall: "Find love and you have found the meaning of life." —Jain Penner New Perspectives The camper awakens to the flushing of seven toilets next door and wonders what happened to getting up with the chickens. He drags himself to a breakfast that he is too tired to taste, and steps out into the brisk morning air. As he walks down a path longer than his hometown is wide, he feels his notebook begin to chafe his elbow. He walks into a room full of people and chokes on a cloud of smoke. In the lecture room, he studies the studies and quickly replenishes his In the lecture room, he studies the desk and quietly vocabulary with words not likely to be found in Webster's dictionary. Lunchtime arrives, and he makes his way to the most private table with him, where he already sitting there. They give him one cold stare and then ignore him. As the group at the next table beats out "Jingle Bells" on their water glasses, the girls at his table pronounce the food hopeless and give up in despair. The camper thinks of the plate of who-knows-what that is shoved at him every day at his school, and wonders what they don't like about the cafeteria meals. At his high school, there is never a choice. The students don't even get knives. The camper makes it safely to bed, only to find that his roommate is in a talkative mood. Evening comes, and the camper escapes from the claustrophobic confined space of the floor, where a blast of soul music turned for have the safety level hits. Finally there is no sound to be heard except the gurgling of the pipes overhead and the sound of the camper's roommate eating an apple. The camper sighs and turns over, dreaming of a simpler life that seems far away. —Kathy Ens Kamper Policy The 1972 staff of the Kamper Kansan consists of 11 editors and five reporters from different states and backgrounds. Because we are from all parts of the country, we hope to express varied views. in the Kamper Kansan, we will attempt to present factual, unbiased evidence in our news stories and items of interest in our features. All editorialists in the Kamper Kansan are the opinion of the writer alone, do not (unless otherwise stated) express the opinion of the entire staff. By exposing our opinions to the public, we also open ourselves up to criticism and comments. If anyone, in any of the divisions, has something to say, please let us know. If we get enough response to our articles, we will start a "Letters to the Editor" column. We aren't writing for ourselves, but for you, our reader. Any opinions you wish to express through the Kamper Kansan can be turned into Curt Clark rm. 610, phone 4-2178 or Nancy Lind. rm. 358, phone 4-6086, editors; or Jain Penner. rm. 319, phone 4-6045, editorial editor — Jain Penner. We hope that you enjoy reading the Kamper Kansan. Editorial Editor POLAND Early Settlers Buried In Pioneer Cemetery Pioneer Cemetery Rich in History First public burial ground originally called Oread . . . Many campers may be surprised to find a 17-year-old cemetery across Iowa. It is the oldest cemetery in the U.S. By CHUCK SMITH Kansan Staff Writer The six-acre pioneer cemetery was originated around 1855 and contains, among others, Elmer V. McColllon, one of the collisions' who McColllon was named after. Because of its rejuvenation the cemetery has become very attractive. It contains several large shade trees, which lend to the atmosphere. During the school year and while other camps are in session many of the students visit the cemetery, some perhaps to study, and others to learn from the hectic day of university life. The tombstones themselves are very interesting. Some, unfortunately, have been broken. Through the years the cemetery, which was the first public burying ground in Lawrence, began to deteriorate and was rejuvenated two years ago by the University of Kansas Endowment Association at a cost of approximately $10.000. As far as as Oak Hill cemetery officials none of the original records still exist. The tombstones themselves project the view of the early settler of Lawrence town, and they reflect its history. Homesickness Strikes Campers BY BILL KNOWLES Konson Staff Writer Male music camper : I miss my mother's cooking. As I went around and asked some of the campers for comments on house sickness, Two female campers went home already because they caught the dreaded disease for which there is only one cure. That cure helps them and find friends, boyfriends, and girlfriends. Homesickness: disease present in people longing for home and family while Female art camper: Of course I miss my home and family. It's really hard to The disease seems to be widespread at all but the outlier in suffering from it should not have been there. Many kids, even those who appear to be having a lot may really be feeling pangs The above definition may not pass Merriam-Webster's standards, but it does describe the symptoms some campers possess. Female Debate camper: Camp does not One of the easier ways to make friends is starting a simple conversation. A more difficult way to reach the first plateau of friendship is by spilling your orange juice all over somebody. On the other hand, if you are a jerk and the person doesn't like orange juice, you have just made an enemy. Most of all, however, the easiest way to make friends is to simply be yourself. fulfil my expectations partly in that I didn't realize there were to be groups or cliques so well established within the system by the end of the first day. Male art camper: Uh .. could you wait until I get out of the shower? Female music camper: It's hard, but you can do that to do what I'm keeping my mind off home. Male debate camper: That's a good question. I won't spoil it by answering. Female audience camper: Homeick: Female art camper: I think a lot of kids are homeworks, but put on so it won't show pointing up with an inscription which reads, "I know that my Redeemer Although campers think of home, many of them are making friends, finding people to date and having fun. Perhaps, when the last day rolls around and it's time to go back home, they'll feel the same sorrow in leaving camp. Another, which is a large stuco monument with a large bronze plaque, is dedicated to "To the unknown dead Union soldier." The stone was used as a marker for hunters. stones was used as a market for hunters. By DEBBIE FAWKES Kansan Staff Writer The L. M. Holtzlander marker is leaning against a tree. It is believed that this grave was made by settlers in the 1800s. Journalists To Explore Kansas City Also there are a large number of stones evidently furnished by the federal government to mark graves of soldiers. Simply the name and company is given. Several of the dead from William C. Miller's 1863 burial were at one time buried in the pioneer cemetery but they were at one time interred and moved elsewhere. Del Brinkman, journalism camp director, has announced the tentative scheduling of journalism field trips. The first of these trips will probably be to Kansas City on Friday, July 7, he said. This excursion will include tours of the Kansas City Star, the Associated Press, the Nelson Art Gallery, and WDAF T.V. Later, Brinkman said, a tour may be taken to the Eisenhower Museum and Library, located in Abilene, Kansas. Then, if enough interest is shown, a return trip to Kansas City may be taken to view a show at the Theatre or a Royals baseball game. Brinkman said that on Friday, July 21, an awards ceremony will be held. Speech, Debate Students Choose From 9 Different Class Offerings By NANCY LIND Kansan Staff Writer The speech and debate students work hard, attending an average of four classes a day. The classes they attend are varied and interesting. Jackson Harrell is the Speaker of the Senate of the Debate Camp. This will be his second year with the camp. Andrea Parson and Lynda Harrell teach extemporaneous speaking. The campers learn how to give speeches with a small amount of preparation. They are given a Beginning debate is one of the classes offered in the camp. It is taught by Bill Russell who is a counselor at the camp. Mentors of debate are taught in this class. topic to discuss and a half hour to do research and prepare their speech. Another class offered is speaking to inform and persuade. This class is taught by Mary Lou McCauillard, Micheal Hazen, and Elizabeth Stokes, give informative speaks and orations. Individual debate involves one-man-ism debates. It is taught by Torn Goodman and David Seymour. Communication is the main topic in the human Relations Training class. It is designed to teach you the skills of An in-depth study of debate is the main course of study in Advanced Debate. This course is taught by Donn Parson, professor of speech and drama, B.L. Ware, Micheal Hazen, Jackson Harrell, and Steve Hunt. Camp Yearbook to Cover Studies, Student Activities Kansan Staff Writer By JACKIE WHITE An aura of mystery will surround the arrival of Tempel, the camp yearbook, on The staff is keeping the theme of the yearbook a surprise, said Jackie Tennant, senior editor. they take Radio-TV Speaking as one of classes. This is taught by Richard Khan. "Tempo is not a yearbook as I define it," said Raymond. "It is a pictorial coverage of the history." complement each other and carry out the theme. The students attending the Speech and Debate Camp come from varied backgrounds and states. Of the 60 enrolled in this program, 54 live in Kansas. Some come from small towns, others from large cities, but all are here for the same reason. They want to improve their speech and debating techniques. In the meantime, the students are having a Deadline for ordering the camp yearbook is July 18. Camperms may leave their books at the camp office. The yearbook, which is printed at the University of Kansas Printing Service, will cover student life, music, art, journalism, and speech and debate. An eight-week camp will be held every week camp, June 11-16 will also be included. The cover and division pages "Because our deadline is July 12, we only have two and a half weeks to produce Tempo. That is not time enough to have the class learn all of the pictures the way school year books would." The students interested in dramatics, prose, or poetry are attending the Oral interpretation classes taught by Jim Lankford. Students will read readings in order to prepare for contests. The staff is Kelly Peres, Ft. Benton, Mont., speech division editor; Susan Boling, Overland Park, Kan.; journalism; Chuck Smith, Great Bend, Kan., special section; Reva (Ralph) Randall, Post Falls, Idaho, art; Connie Lueking, Ferguson, Mo., music and Lisa Brown, Kenesaw, Neb, music. Kansas Debate is made up of campers from Kansas. Their debate topics are extensions of national topics but are not necessarily interests. This is taught by Robert Emry. The campers are offered the chance to do broadcasting and work with television if "I think most of the people are interested in the problems that the nation faces, and that anyone who is also interested in learning about our country's role in the world, we involved within debate," said Dave Hord, a camper of the Speech & Derebate Camp. These students show great concern for the United States as well as problems in other countries. In their classes the campers rehearse speeches, debates, dramatic readings and broadcasts. They do research for their topics and hold their presentations for their teachers' evaluation. The classes are held in Learned Hall, Murphy Hall, Summerfield Hall, and the KUOK studio in Hoch Auditorium. THE KAMPER KANSAN The Kamper Kansan is a publication of the Midwestern necessarily those of the Midwestern Music and Art Music and Art Camp, which is distributed four times Camp. Camp. Editor Bill D. Hugh Overseeing editors Carl Clark, Amy Jones Page 1 editor Don Waters Page 2 editor Bill Waters Page 3 editor Peg Lackman Copy editor Peg Lackman Copy editor Jankie White, Vicki Hairings Troussier editor Katie Ken Picture editor David Belhaw, Mark Hearnock Editorial editor Jain Penner Sports editor Lavin Bailback Nancher Chaffee, Debbie Finken, Steve Fuller, Neil Nedling, Chris Shull Weekend Music Camp Concert Schedule FRIDAY EVENING CONCERT FRIDAY EVENING CONCERT 7:00 p.m. PROGRAM GEORG BERBERBACH Rand Conductor Sir Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor Jack Harweg, Guest Conductor Irish Tune from County Derry . Percy Granier March Miltaire . F. Schubert arr. Lauredeau Walt Disney Band Showcase . Arr. Floyd E. Werle The Seafarer: A Nautical Rhapsody ... Hadyn Wood St. Vivian Dung. Conducting... Mr. Herweg, Conducting Red Stage Band David Busheuse, Conductor Concert Stage Band Paul Gray, Conductor SUNDAY AFTERNOON Sonata For Band Paul Wharer Fantasia For Band V. Giannini Tango For Band Leonard V. Martino Blue Stage Band James Barnes, Conductor 2 p.m. PROGRAM Concert Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Siv Vian Dunn, Guest Conductor Kenneth Thompson, Guest Conductor Coriolan, Overture Ludwig w. Beethoven Symphony No. 6 (Pathetique) Peter Tschakowský First movement, Allegron non troppo Mr. Thompson, Conducting Three Dances from "The Barterten Bride" Bedrich Smetana 1. Polka 3. Dance of the Comedians 2. Furint Sir Vivian Jouin, Conducting Concert Choir Jamison Tassie, Director Rodney Eichberger, Guest Conductor Ani Schorick, Accomaniist Sir Vivian Dunn, Conducting All The Darth Edd Worship Thee Handel Locus iste a Deo factus est Bruckner Wondrous wood, thou woodland quiet Brahms Die Heredetsamkelt (Elencure) Haydn Webmacht Zinnmaier Ronde Folke Rabe In Dat Great Gittin' Up Mornin' Arr. Hairstor Craig Carlin, Tenor Mr. Eichenberger, Conducting Symphony Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Sir Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor Colas Breugnon Overture ... Dimitri Kabalevskj Mr. Carney, Conducting Orb and Sceptre * William Walton Symphony No. 2 in D Major Johannes Brahms First movement: Allegro non troppo A la Claire Fontaine Robert Farnon Four Scottish Dances Malcolm Arnold 1. Pesante 3. Allegretto 2. Vivace 4. Con brio 5. Sin Vivice Conducting Nante 3. Allegretto Force 4. Con brio Sir Vivian Dunn, Conducting SUNDAY EVENING CONCERT 7 p.m. PROGRAM Blue Band Robert B. Foster, Conductor Sir Vivian Guest Conductor Jack Herwig, Guest Conductor Concert March Four English Dances ... Malcolm Arnold Allegro Brillante, Concert March ... George Kenny The Dragons of Villars Mallari Symphony For Band Vincent Persicelli 1st Movement Mr. Herwev, Conducting "It's been a match with Oxford University Press, 300 Madison Avenue, New York City" Seventh Seal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . W. Francis McBeth I. Dies Irae (Day of Wrath) II. Pathos III. Surely He Hath Borne Our Griefs Mc. Koefer, Conducting **Concert Band** Russell W. Liley, Conductor Sir Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor The Star Spangled Banner ... Francis Scott Key Golden Brass ... James Barnes Music from "Hair" ... Galt McDermot Mr. Barnes, Conducting Supreme Command ... F. Vivian Dunn Antiphonal Fanfare for Brass and Band (Dedicated to Russell L. Wiley) ... Allan Street Nothem Town Square ... G. Goose Fair 1. At the Castle ... B. Goose Fair 2. By the Trent Irish Fantasy, Songs of the Gael ... B. Walton O'Donnell Pomp and Circumstance No. 5 in C ... Edward Elgar Sir Vivian Dunn, Conducting The Stars and Strikes For ... John Philse Sousa The Stars and Stripes Forever John Phillips Sousa Excerpts from "Manzoni Requiem" Glussepe Verdi Conducting Friday, June 30, 1972 3 University Kamper Kansan Speech Camper Practices Mysticism By CURT CLARK Kansan Staff Writer Pat Fine, introduced to the occult two years ago by a female English teacher, is now a member of the Order of the Bridegroom and, practicing voodoo and black magic. Fine, a 17-year-old senior from Jefferson City, Mo., is attending Speech Camp. "Black Magic," Fine says, "is used to spell and must be controlled to "The only thing the Brotherhood cannot tolerate is intolerance of others. Black magic can be used as punishment by those who inflict pain or suffering on others." BLACK MAGIC, which reliant on Satan is largely angy Christian. Its symbol is the cross. Early in the 16th century, artists portrayed Satan as a goat with horns. The use of horns was little through the centuries, and today the sign of the horns is used by the Brotherhood in their handsignal greeting—he left it fist with index and other hands raised. ingredients such as the hand of a dead grave robber. Black magic sometimes calls for rare Fine was not too reluctant to give the directions for a spell but said the chant, spoken in Latin, would have no meaning for anyone not familiar with it. A Spell for Friends goes something like this: FAST FOR THREE days, (Black magic spells work on the principle of purity of the soul.) On the fourth day, get up from bed and bolt the door so no one may enter, then lock it. Place three chairs around a table and one by the bed. Chant in Latin. Three persons of the opposite sex will come to you. Be polite and courteous and do not make any comments about your appearance. The winner will then sit by your bed and entertain you while the other two sit by the THE PERSON entertaining you will eventually give you a ring When the person asks, "How long do I please?" it requires. Mysticism is unlike black magic in that it is not anti-Christian as it comes from the Far East where non-Christians pay it no mind. Art Campers Prefer Clav, Acrylic Work By SARA WESTBROOK Kansan Staff Writer Ceramics and acrylic painting are the most popular electives for art students, according to a spokesman in the office of the associate director of the Art Camp. Artists chose these two subjects as those they would like to learn more about. Of the 120 students in the art division, 62 are enrolled in ceramics and 61 are in acrylic painting. Figure illustration is the next most popular course with 48 students, followed by 42 with 42, sculpture with 39, jewelry with 33, weaving with 32 and calligraphy with 21. All artists are required to attend classes in design, drawing and art history as a basis for their study, and they are allowed to work with other actors in which they have special interest. Instructors in the art division are as busy as the students, most teaching about 12 classes a week to campers as well as fulfilling other duties of the University. Some teach courses in two areas of art. James Connelly, assistant instructor of design teaches both sculpture and graphic drawing. Professor of design, instructs figure illustration and calligraphy. Jay Stires, assistant instructor of design, holds two of the seven drawing classes and the two printmaking classes, and Pamela Burrell, assistant instructor of design, instructs watercolor painting and one drawing class. Fine, who seemed knowledgeable in what he was talking about, said that many people who absolutely do not believe in them have cast several spells themselves. Their visit begins with completing a registration form, which is then taken to the office to be typed. The patient's file is kept in a file cabinet and he will be assigned to a doctor or a nurse. Both college students and campers find the comfort at Watkins Hospital when they're sick. Although campers suffer from many aliments, much of their discomfort comes from stomach trouble. This may come as a result of both in the quantity and type of diet. Mysticism deals with levitation and seances, and uses supernatural powers. It also relies on the person casting the spell and his purity of soul. Many campers, however, are not following the proper procedure for cashing their checks. Before cashing the check, it must be initialled by a supervisor, not a bank employee, because the check is initialed, it is recommended that the check is cached at a local bank or at the Union GA Campers Err In Cashing Of Checks According to Russell Wiley, camp director, these rules are for the protection of Pat Fine As the first week of camp ended, many campers found that they had burned their money as fast as their cigarettes. Thus, they would have to need it and necessary to cash checks for funds. "When a building is under construction, spirits will come and inhabit empty rooms. The windows were painted to make the room look like the rooms were already inhabited." One example given was that construction workers paint the windows of buildings. 'Most towns have an occult move you can't easily surprise how many people you'll find. "THESE PEOPLE think they are making the windows visible so others won't break them accidently, and in fact they have done that because came into being about 300 years ago." THE MOST powerful witches are found in the Appalachians and the surrounding country. Their culture is so much a part of them, where witchcraft has been in practice since the mountains were lived in by European settlers. Fine, who carries with him a pink briefcase said that it was just a joke between him and his debate teacher. "He bet me I wouldn't bring it here to camp with me, so when he comes up to visit a couple of weeks, I'll show it to him. Its color has nothing to do with me being a witch." "People have been into witchcraft a long, long time." ConvenienceProvided By Delivery Services By NEIL NEHRING Kansan Staff Writer By STEVE FELKEL Kansan Staff Writer For many students enrolled here at the University of Kansas Music and Art Camp, a few items are as far away as the nearest telephone. Since all of the students enrolled are under the restriction of not driving around in an unauthorized car, they must rely on services offered by stores. Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen and Sandwich shop which offers a wide variety of sandwiches and other specialties at our prices. Their phone number is 843-768-806 These delivery services are, on the whole, restricted to food establishments and flower shops. Anyone calling can have their orders sent to their respective dormitories. Here are some of the delicatessens, pizza parrners, and flower shops that offer fresh produce. The Campus Hideaway pizza parlor specializes in pizza and spaghetti; delivering anywhere. Their phone number is 843-9111. first location is 843-3516 and 842-1687 at the second location. The Pizza Hut offers a wide variety of Italian nizzas. Their phone number at the Carole Lee Doughnuts delivery doughnuts and other bakery products. Call 842-3684. Owen's Flower Shop delivers flowers anywhere. For service, call 843-6111. Also, the Allison-Thomas Flower Shop and the Allison's Flowers and Gifts deliver anywhere. Allisons-Thomas' number is 843-3256 and Alexander's number is 842-1320. Besides food and flower shops offering delivery service, the laundries in Jalapati's downtown have a wide range. For students who are enrolled in the journalism camp, Zcherch Photo Supply, Inc. is offering a discount on all film items bought in the store. Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners, 843-5155; Independent Laundry and Dry Cleaners, 843-4011; and Lawnries Launderers and Dry Cleaners, 843-3711. These are some of the services that a student can obtain by using the telephone. The telephone may be more expensive for a few desired items, campers can call and have a change of pace by ordering a good ode fashioned lunch, or going to eat in the cafeteria downstairs. Activities Scheduled for Campers By KATHY ENS Kansan Staff Writer Music Students Keep Busy In Rehearsals. Sectionals Activities available to camper through the University of Kansas include swim By VICKI HARTING Kansan Staff Writer Starting the day, when weey-eary counselors make their attempts to awaken sleeping campers, some music students can be heard singing in their dream world rather than forcing them to sleep. Kansas Photo by DERRIE FAWKES Intranurals Provide Recreation Competition between teams ignite spirit. Since some of the music classes begin after nine in the morning, these sleepy campers wake up and find that they have themselves before instructors at Museum. Music campers were arranged into bands, orchestras, and choirs after auditions. Swimming, Movies, Food Choices for Spare Time By CURT CLARK Kansan Staff Writer Attention campers: your second weekend at the University of Kansas starts tomorrow. Here is a quick list of activities,住 placeings to fill your empty hours. There are two tennis courts near Lewis and McColum halls. There is a court south of the fence. The closer courts are located south of Allen Field House, the large building to the north. A Then there's Hillcrest Shopping Center north of the dorms about six blocks, on the corner of 8th and Iowa. There you will find a few nice boutiques, hotels, plus an assortment of other stores. There is pool and bowling to be found in the subscale basement of the Union, located on the south side of the lake. Basketball courts are across the parking in front of Lewis Hall. Basketball fields are at the corner of Lexington Avenue and 17th Street. Other theatres are the Granada at 1020 Mass, and the Varisay Theatre at 1015 Mass. Besides the cafeteria and snack bar in McCollum, there is a cafeteria in the Union, along with a snack bar and the Prairie Room Restaurant downstairs. South of the campus, on 23rd street, are several restaurants and drive-ins. Also showing Saturday night at Lewis is the short movie "American Timecapsule." Showing with it is "The Wrong Box." For food you've got all sorts of restaurants to choose from. By LARRY HALLENBACK Kansan Staff Writer Intramural basketball, tennis, softball and volleyball are in full swing for campers of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Basketball play began last Wednesday with ten teams competing for the wing championship of Lewis Hall. Each team played in a game, and the top teams at the end of the conference will meet in playoffs to determine the champion. The games have six minute quarters and are being played at half-court. The 90 scheduled conference games Tennis is set up on an elimination basis with the winner of the match capturing the best of 13 sets. The players arrange their own time for the matches. non-active sports offered, on a non- competitive basis, are softball and volleyball. As a result they were about 85 in concert band, 134 in blue band, 133 in red band, 89 in symphony orchestra, and 130 in concert choir. In addition to rehearsing as a band, sectional practices are helpful. Students who do not have students interested in that field, but wasn't required. Throughout the day, student spend time in the band. When an instrument needs to be repaired, it becomes rather frustrating for someone to carry out a long and thorough search to find another instrument. Enjoying and relaxing atmosphere of music theory class, some manage to recover lost instruments. To others, sectional rehearsals provide adequate time to rest their tired minds. At lunchtime, having not quite an hour to reach McColum and return to Murphy, proves interesting for those eating in the cafeteria. These are the small things in life which make the student's day a unique experience. For some, the day does not end after evening meal. These musicians put in many hours of rehearsing for both vocal and instrumental concerts. When at last they've been called into place what blisters they've acquired during the sunlight hours of their day. LONDON (AP) - John Evans, a 28-year-old steelworker, waited for five hours for his first child—a daughter—to be born. He admired her and then fainted. June 30—"Monterey Pop" with Janis Joplin, The Who, Otis Redding, Jefferson Airplane, The Animals, Jimi Hendrix. ming at Robinson Gymnasium, Monday through Friday from 3:30 to 4:15 p.m. A varied schedule of films and theatre shows is also offered for entertainment. Classical and popular films, to be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium are: July 7—To Be Announced July 5 - "High & Low" with Toshiro Mifune, Tatsuya Nakadai. July 12—"You Only Live Once" with Henry Fonda, Sylvia Sidney. July 14—"Mississippi Mermaid" with Catherine Deneve, Jean-Paul Belmondo. July 19—"The Westerner" with Gary Cooper, Walter Brennan. July 21-"The Last Run" with George C. Scott, Trish Van Dewer. Admission for the presentations will be 75 cents. The Kansas Shakespeare Festival and Institute is offering a schedule of plays, films, and a program of Elizabeth music. Plays will be presented at 8 p.m. in Murphy Hall for an admission price of $25 per tag. Films will be shown at 2 p.m. in Woodcraft Auditorium and 7:30 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium, for a price of 75 cents. June 30 and July 1—"Twelfth Night," University Theatre. July 2—A "Midsummer Night's Dream" with Mickey Rooney, SUA Film Service. July 6-8, 11—"Hamlet," University Theatre. July 9—K.U. Collegium Musicum in a program of Elijahbentzman 3 p.m., m. 10 a.m. www.collegiummusicum.org July 16—"Othello." SUA Films. July 15, 17-22. "Merchant of Venice." University Theatre. Dulniello, *Film Friars*, Series July 3—"The Stories of Blood," by version of "Macbeth," SUA Film Friars, version of By NEIL NEHRING Kansan Staff Writer Photo Lab is actually a set-up designed to confuse students. There is fancy equipment and rigid rules on how to use it, although there is room for error. J-Campers Encounter Photo Lab Experience The first thing you do in Photo Lab is put out your cigarettes. You then develop your roll of film in a process so awkward that must have taken years to develop. Most of the hard part of developing is done in a pitch-dark room, where you wind your roll of film at once. This can be difficult doing. This can be practiced, with an exposed roll of film, with the light on. The rest of the developing is done with the lights on, and resembles mixing a new layer of paint. small tank filled with a special solution or chemicals. After that, you shake the container every 30 seconds for about $11\frac{1}{2}$ minutes. The first solution is replaced by a solution which "fixes" the negative. Now the film is ready for enlarging, after you clean up the darkroom, which takes about an hour. The enlarging process is done with a small amount of light. After selecting the negative you like, the negative is placed in a plastic bag and many miniature adjustments you project the negative onto a sheet of enlarging paper. After running the sheet of paper through three chemicals, you now have the picture to show for about two hours of work. Catherine McKinnon J-Camper Practices Rolling Reel - Jreva Randal, Post Falls, Idaho, works in photo lab Kansas Photo by DONALD WALTERS 4 Friday, June 30, 1972 University Kamper Kansan The orchestra conductor is leading the group. Above, George Eoberg, assistant band director, conducts a band concert. The band had its first performance Sunday evening at 7 p.m. Right, Elaine Dulin, Pawtucket, R.I., and Judy Lingoo, Kalamazoo, Mick enjoy ice cream and the camp picnic held Saturday. Sophia debate workshop. Below, flute and saxophone players practice in a woodwind section in preparation for their weekend concert. Above, Kay Fliyn, Cheyenne, Wyo (left), Doug Doreen, El Certrito, Califf, Kevin Koldf, N Miami, Fla., and Pat Fain, Columbia, Mo. prepare for an afternoon advance Campers Play, Practice, Study A 10542 William Bullock, Art Camp drawing instructor, looks over his students' interpretations of the environment. Many drawing classes are held outdoors, around the campus, to give the art campers a broader range of subjects to draw. Photos by Lisa Brown Debbie Fawkes Kevin Ragan David Reibman Sara Westbrook Jackie White Above, Tom Miller, Cleveland Heights, O., and Judy Johnson, Cincinnati, O., inspect their instruments between music classes in the hallway of Murphy. Below, Nancy Chaffee, Shawnee Mission, Sara Westbrook, Bartlesville, Oklaw. and Nancy Lind, Venice Gardens, Fla., work on the first issue of the Kerman Kansan. Mast. 1126. 1970s THE SCHOOL OF THE ARTS AND COMMUNICATIONS